Eastern Illinois University The Keep

November 1990

11-5-1990 Daily Eastern News: November 05, 1990 Eastern Illinois University

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This is brought to you for free and open access by the 1990 at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in November by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Saycheese ! Ourreviewer says ---- The ParentsWeek end concert the new production was picture-perfect. is worth the effort. Page 7 Page3 ......

q ready r a 'war' We're 75 er Kuwait The News celebrates a new outburst of belliger­ , Iraq said Sunday it was ready ght a "dangerous war" rather with a party for campus ever give up Kuwait. One By JEFF MADSEN an off icial warned that divi­ News editor • The News s over the hostage issue are celeb ra tes gering the anti-Iraq alliance. The Daily Eastern News turns its75th year is not going to negotiate on 75 years old Monday and the in publication ait." Iraq's information minis­ News staff is inviting the entire tif Jassim, told a news con­ campus to the newsroom to help with a special ce in Baghdad. He insisted us celebrate. history. annexation of Kuwait. which Eastern President Stan Rives Section B erran three months ago, would will even be on hand for a cake­ cutting ceremony at 12:30 p.m. "Because of their dedication, We are going to defend our in our newsroom, located in the The News has developed from a province on any condition, North Gym of the Buzzard monthly to a daily newspaper." if we have to fight a danger­ Building. We don't want to get carried war," he said , referring to In add ition, there will be away, but we're pretty pr oud, wait. tours offered during an Open too. Iraq also said it was recalling an House from 9 a.m. to 3 p. m, to That' s why we want you to cified number of retired army give all of you a first hand help us celebrate. We 've got rs to active duty. glimpse of how The News, one cake, punch, balloons, and blue cretary of State James Baker of the nation's smallest daily and grey streamers - all that isited U.S. troops in the Saudi college newspapers, operates - jazz. And it won't cost you a rt earlier Sunday and said it from the minute a reporter gets dime. s hard to say whether they a story up to the time the news- . We even have old copies of d be called into combat. The papers first roll off the press. The News from the past 75 sidents of Egypt and France SHANNON THOMAS/Staff photographer What is now The Daily years for you to look at. After ressed hopes that economic The Platters lead singer Paul Robi belts out a tune at the Parents Eastern News first began in all, we've been the Normal ure rather than military might Weekend concert Saturday night in Lantz Gym. 19.J 5 as the Normal School Schoo l News, the Te acher's force Iraq out of Kuwait. News. That's when Eastern was College News, the Eastern eanwhile, four American ex­ known as Eastern Illinois State State News, the Eastern News es were on their way home a Parents Weekend concert Normal School, only 577 stu­ and now, the The Daily Eastern af ter being freed, and fifteen dents were enrolled here, a sub­ News. peans arrived in Jordan after scription cost of $ l and each And our newsroom has been g released by the Iraqis. They a surprise for one father issue was only four pages long. in Old Main, the University among thousands of foreign­ By JEFF MADSEN • More concert and Today, you get The News free, Union, the basement of Pem­ were trapped in Iraq and and CATHY PODWOJSKI Parents Weekend cov­ and each issue averages 12 berton Hall and the Student wait when Saddam Hussein's Staff editors pages. And in a typical publica­ Services Building. erage. Pages 2 and 7 took over Aug. 2. tion year, The News prints more Now, of course, we're head­ The first POWs of the Persian Dennis Hasty never would memorable. than 1.5 million newspapers. quartered in the North Buzzard crisis - three French soldiers - have suspected he'd be dancing in The Marvelettes, best known But you can read all about Gym. a homecoming of their own in b front of 4,500 people when he fortheir late 1950s hit "Please Mr. that in Section B of this news­ We 've formally invited a out is on Sunday, but it wasn't came to campus this weekend to ·Postman," were on stage fighting paper, which is our Diamond 150 people and with this story, tly a hero's welcome. French visit his son Todd, for Parents over which one of them would Jubilee edition. we're inviting the rest of you - ials have said the soldiers, who Weekend. marry "Bill," their mutual "I'm especially proud of how that's about I 0,000 people if re captured last week, might This Parents Weekend was the boyfriend in the hit "D on't Mess hard our students have worked everyone actually shows up. e strayed into Iraqi territory, third for the Peoria-native Hasty With Bill." Amid the rucuss, lead over the years at The News," So come on down and check that they probably face punish- family. And after Saturday's singer Loni Clarkwalked into the said John David Reed, chair of us out. show, it certainly will be the most the journalism department and After all, this only happens •Continued on page 2 Continued on page _. 2 former adviser to The News. once every 75 years. andidates fly across state as election day nears to western and to got state deposits. and gentleman, we should not promote the Democratic ticket. Election In the race for comptroller, have a political gadfly in charge of Five of the six Republicans Simon answered the frequent Republican Susan Suter said $22 billion of your money." eking statewide office barn­ complaint of Republicans who say Democratic state Sen. Dawn Clark Martin, an underdog in her bid to ed Illinois Sunday for some the Democratic slate is top-heavy Netsch loves taxes and has no defeat Simon, complimented fe l­ -fa shioned partisan sniping, hit­ with Cook County politicians, management experience. low Republican Aldo DeAngelis, a g Democrats as politicians of including Hartigan. "D o you want someone in the state senator who is trailing mil­ past and even blaming their "What the people of Illinois "Roland Burris isn't a prosecu­ comptroller's office who's going lionaire attorney Richard Phelan in vals forrain. want is effective government; they tor but he'9 plays one0 on televisio n," to scrimp and save or do you want the race for Cook County Board "Yesterday the Republican party really don't care where we live," Ryan, who is DuPage County someone who's going to expand president. as in charge of the weather. said Simon, who lives near state's attorney, said of his oppo­ and expend?" said Suter, a former "We 're both running against ay it's the Democrats' turn," Carbondale. nent, who is state comptroller. state public aid director. incredibly well-financed oppo­ ep. Lynn Martin said at During the Republican tour, the Lt. Gov. , the Republican treasurer candidate nents," Martin said. "Both of us hica go 's cold and wet Meigs candidates lined up to take their Republican nominee forsecretary Greg Baise, the former state trans­ are running against naked ambi­ 1eld, where she began her day of best shots. of state, continued his attack on portation secretary who faces tion, whether that ambition be in a ampaigning against Sen. Paul Jim Ryan, the nominee for attor­ Democrat Jerry Cosentino by call­ Democratic populist , bow tie or in a $700 suit." Befort: imon. ney general, said Democrat Roland ing him " Jerry." mentioned an endorsement from landing in Moline, Dixon predict­ The GOP wasn't the only party Burris is suddenly telling people Cosentino, who is state treasurer, the Tr ibune. ed Simon would beat Martin by ving to contend with rainy skies. that he'll be a crime fighter, moved his trucking company "The Tribune said that my 700,000 votes and Hartigan would Neil Hartigan, along with although earlier he described the across the Illinois line and also opponent would be dangerous if he win over Republican Secretary of · n and Sen. Alan Dixon, flew job as mostly administrative post. obtained loans from a bank that was in office," Baise said. "Ladies State Jim Edgar by 100, 000 votes. 2A Monday, November 5, 1990 The Dally Eastern New

FROM PAGE ONE Concert attendance Concert a surprise estimate is 4,500 Last year, the UB brought cou .,.From page 1 "My co-workers had arranged "That was really a great crowd By JEFF MADSEN that and I had no clue," said and I hope they have us back," News editor try-western smger Crystal Gayle crowd to look for "Bill" and came Brinker, now 33, after the two­ said Billy Woodruffof the Drifters Eastern for Parents Weekend. back onto stage with the unsus­ hour show. "When I heard them as the group boarded a van for Although the Umversity Board show, which sold 3,481 ticke pecting Hasty in tow. say Ceci, I thought 'Oh my god, their hotel and eventually, Reno, had no official attendance records made a $3,003 profit for the U Clark and her cohorts then jok­ they did it.' But it all makes it Nev. from Saturday 's Parents Weekend which helped bring the Bo De ingly asked Hasty, who they pre­ worth spending my birthday here." Saturday's show, which featured Concert, an unofficial headcount one of the nation's most popul sumed was Bill, whether he had The Drifters, who were the stars The Platters. The Marvelettes and estimates the crowd at about 4,500. contemporary groups, to Eastern told his wife that he was dating the of the triple-bill show, took parents The Drifters was unique in that it Conceivably, that means the UB Spring Concert. Marvelettes. Innocently, he mut­ on a lively stroll through memory was the first time the three had could have brought in $4 5 ,000 on And although the UB sold m tered '·No." lane with top hits like "Up On the performed together in several the triple-bill event, which cost the than 1,000 more tickets for th And with Hasty in the middle of Roof," "Under the Boardwalk," years. UB about $4 2,000. year 's concert, this year 's bill the dancing threesome, he rocked "Broadway," "Stand By Me" and "We're on the road a lot, so we "We don 't have an official count, also about $12,000 higher. and rolled his way through the a foot-stomping, concert-ending see each other all of the time, but but we know there were more than Brown acknowledged Sund song until the very end, when the rendition of the party classic this is the first time in a while that 4,000 people," said Trevor Brown, that the UB is investigating hold' Marvelettes wound-down by look­ "Shout." we've been together," said Loni the UB concert coordinator. the spring concert in O'Bri ing to Hasty singing: "And don 't "It's definitely something that Clark of The Marvelettes, who left "Overall, it (the concert) went pret­ Stadium, which holds about 4, mess with ... " appeals to our age group," said Eastern for Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. ty well. There was a good crowd more seats than Lantz Gym a "Denny," Hasty said matter-of­ Cheryl Gillis, who was attending The show was also unique for and the acts were well-received." could attract a larger band factly. her fifth Parents Weekend Glenn Haywood, the ventiloquist­ All but the two east sections of Eastern's campus. "I was dying, my mom was Concert. comedian who served as the the 6,465- seat capacity Lantz "It's being considered," Bro speechless," said Todd, a junior, as "The kids make an exception emcee forthe show. Gymnasium were occupied for the said. "It just has to be cleared w' the Hasty's their dad basking this weekend and listen to our kind Although he hasn't played the concert, which featured 1950-60 the proper people." under the Lantz Gym spotlights of music," she said. college circ uit often, college is singing sensations The Platters, the Brown could not speculate with the Marvelettes, whose Naperville resident Bill Neff, nothing new to Haywood. Drifters and the Marvelettes. what types of band he was cons· Motown spunk has sold them who attended the concert with his The comedian was headed back To break even on the concert, ering for the spring concert. more than 3 million records. children, Tracy and Jim, both to San Francisco after the Eastern which is traditionally the UB 's "There's really nothing spec' And the concert proved to be Eastern students, agreed the performance to continue his biggest money maker and helps yet. I'm going to start looki more than a surprise to Hasty, as groups were definite hits. schooling at California's Lanney finance the student-oriented spring around and see what I can come Eastern Assistant Student "This is the kind of music I can College, where he's studying concert, the UB would need to with." Activities Director Ceci Brinker relate to; I know all the words," he directing and work behind the make about $10,000 from Past spring concert acts incl was serenaded by the Drifters and said. scenes in communications. Saturday's show. The Bangles, Squeeze, the Fixx the rest of the crowd in a round of The pleasure was mutual for the Haywood said he also hoped to Joan Gossett, director of the John Cafferty and the Beav "Happy Birthday." groups, too. be invited b�ck at some later date. Martin Luther King Jr. University Brown Band. In the past, poten · Union, was out of town Sunday and big-name acts have turned do Brown said attendance and earnings performing for the spring cone would not be counted until some­ primarily because Lantz Gym Iraq ready time Monday. less than 7,000peo ple. •Frompage 1 scored the way the hostages can be used as leverage. ment for their carelessness. Belgium's foreign minister complained that efforts The new Iraqi vow to keep Kuwait at all costs by individual nations to win their citizens' freedom Folk duo to perform Monday came only hours after a former Japanese prime min­ are eroding unity against Iraq. ANTONIA E. RICE ister, Yasuhiro Nakasone, met with Saddam - and "Saddam is creating this royal court of all sorts of By Staff writer said the Iraqi president had demonstrated "great Western pilgrims who visit him to obtain the release earnestness and seriousness." of hostages," the Belgian official, Mark Eyskens, Folk duo The Psaltery will cross the language barriers Monday ni Nakasone's visit, aimed at winning the release of said in a television interview Sunday in Brussels. with a musical performance at 7:30 p.m. in the Fine Arts Theater. Japanese hostages, comes as Japanese lawmakers are Sometimes the visitors "let themselves be lured Sponsored by Eastern's foreign language department, the perform considering a plan to send troops to the gulf to join into political discussions" with Saddam, which could will offer the duo singing a variety of songs accompanied with an acou the multinational force arrayedagainst Saddam. "jeopardize the united stand against Saddam's inva­ guitar. The troop-deployment proposal has drawn strong sion and annexation of Kuwait," he said. The performance should be just as pleasing visually as vocally, too. criticism from those who say it would violate Japan's Belgium requested a special European Psaltery accompaniesits variety of traditional French and French-Cana · postwar peace constitution, even though the troops Community meeting on the matter on Tuesday or songs with clogging, spoons and bones. Classical and 12-string gui would confined to non-combat roles. Wednesday in Rome. be pieces also are part of the duo's reportoire. Iraq's official news agency said Nakasone had told The European Community had already tried to For the last 16 years, duo members Lilliane Labbe and Don Hi Saddam it was unlikely lawmakers would approve discourage a hostage-freeing bid by former West have toured extensively in the United States, Europe and Canada pen the proposal. Nakasone, speaking to reporters, made German Chancellor Willy Brandt, who leaves for ing on the college circuit and doing community concerts and folk festiv no mention of such assurances, but the report under- Baghdad on Monday. Labbe and Hinkley perform about 300 days out of the year and received high marks from critics because of their strong stage presence.

NORTH·EAST·SOUTH•WEST -----­ Long BYRD'S CLEANERS ::a== GREAT Necks � AMERICAN & Shoe Repair Christmas Vacations Shots Heels, soles, build ups, etc. Let our experienced Travel Consultants help you plan the unforgettable family experience at an affordable price. Call South 4th St. Curve CHARLESTON TRAVEL $1.00 345-4546 Today or stop by for brochures Fri: "Shadoobee" 301 W. Lincoln• 217/345-7731 Sat: "Saloonatics" THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT A TRAIN. o!h� Eastern News The Daily Eastern news is published daily, Monday through Friday, in Charleston, Illinois, during fall and spring semesters and twice weekly during the summer term except during school vacations or examination, by the students of Eastern Illinois University, subscription price: $24 per semester, $1 o for summer only, $44 articles appearing in this paper. The editorials on Page 4 represent the majority opinion of the editorial board, all other opinion pieces are signed. The Daily Eastern News editorial Delta Sigma Pi and business offices are located in the Buzzard Educational Building, Eastern Illinois University. PROFESSIONAL BUSINESS FRATERNITY Second class postage paid at Charleston, IL 61920 ISSN 0894-1599. Printed by Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, IL 61920. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Daily Eastern News, Room 127 Buzzard Educational Building, Eastern Illinois University. Charleston. IL 61920. PROUDLY PRESENTS OUR PLEDGE NEWS STAFF Editor 1n chief ...... David Lindquist Verge editor ...... Amber Grimes CLASS OFFICERS Managing editor ...... Cathy Podwojski Assoc. Verge editor ...... Debbie Carlson News editor ...... Jeff Madsen Art director ...... Mark Randall Assoc. news editor ...... Charla Brautigam Senior reporter ...... Tony Campbell Editorial page editor ...... Mike Brown Senior reporter ...... Cam Simpson ·President Heather Weihee Activities editor ...... Evette Pearson Advertising mgr...... Shanda Bishir Administration editor ..... Susan Thomas Sales mgr ...... Denita Thompson • Vice President Tina Rafacz Campus editor ...... Lori Higgins Promotions mgr ...... Eileen Pawlak City editor...... Bob McKee Major accounts exec ...... Heather Flood Student govt. editor ...... Rudy Nowak Student bus. mgr ...... Any Dewey ·Secretary Elizabeth Reihl Features editor ...... Laura Durnell Business mgr ...... Glenn Robinson Phot editor ...... Thom Rakestraw Editorial adviser...... John Ryan Assoc. photo editor...... Eric Fultz Publications adviser ...... David Reed ·CBI Ken Kuta Sports editor ...... Chris Boghossian • Treasury Council Wendy Whalen NIGHT STAFF Night editor ...... Cam Simpson Photo ed�or...... Thom Rakestraw Trina Albert Asst night editor ...... Laura Durnell Copy desk...... Ann Marie Kutsov. sports editor ...... Ann Tastad Dawn Krywanio, Megan McGrail, Suzanrie Oliver •'• ' •I I Ii ' Eastern News 3A VIET ROCK' Sigma Nu charter hronicles ar's tragedy back home again By JENNIFER PIERCE returned nearly three weeks Staff writer after that date, Kirk said the fra­ ternity will not request police All boys become men, losing the The Sigma Nu fraternity's investigation. ocence of childhood and the abducted charter is home again, "We're very, very, very happy ssings of love as they don the safe in its brothers' arms after that everything was returned and es of "manhood." an anonymous phone call to the nothing was damaged," Kirk Allmen..then...become , killers as chapter house at 3 a � m. Friday said. er becomes the defining mark led to its recovery. Kirk said the fraternity does "manhood." It is a maturation "They said, 'Are you missing not take the theft lightly, howev­ inevitably victimizes the killers your charter? It's in the back­ er. "It hit home pretty hard in as the killed, and family well yard,'" said Chris Kozlov, the terms of the value of what was who are thousands of mbers Sigma Nu member who said he taken. If we found out who did away from any border or fire- answered the phone call. it, you'd better believe we'd t Kozlov said he found the fra­ This is the proc ess of war, any pursue the matter as far as need ternity's charter, two pictures, a be." , and its costs are powerfully flag, and one of the missing fra­ d symbolically chronicled in Sigma Nu will be taking pre­ ternity paddles in the yard. T ROCK," a theatre depart- cautions to ensure that its Another wooden paddle report­ charter is not stolen again. edly was not returned. According to Kirk, when the The items, valued at more fraternity moves to Greek Court than $500, were reported miss­ next year, the items will be hung ing Sunday, Oct. 7. In a subse­ on the cathedral ceiling. nt scholarship production cur­ quent article appearing in The "If you want to take it, you're tly running in the Playroom at Daily Eastern News, Brad Kirk, · going to have to bring a 30-foot Doudna Fine Arts Center. president of Sigma Nu, issued a ladder," Kirk said. compromise that if the culprits The show, which is based on a Kirk said he is positive that Terry script developed for a returned the missing items by the theft was part of a prank by e La Mama production, seems Homecoming weekend no ques­ some other fraternity, but he has be sa much performance art as it tions would be asked. no definite suspects. ckama. It is laden with symbolic Though the items were 'ons, gestures, music and dia­ - hallmarks of the "transfor- THOM RAKESTRAW/Photo editor 'on" techniques adopted by VietRock cast members Dierdre Schultze and Brian Schultz rehearse a .Wheatley to appear r E.T. Guidotti for theshow. scene from the production, now at the Doudna Fine Ar ts Cente1: sformation means that none the performers have the clearly nature of the prod uction may make dominant theme of "VIETROCK," roles most theatergoers are it a tum-off for some area theater­ Guidotti intertwines the parallel on battery charges tomed to. The central roles in goers. But for those who are not theme of life itself - from birth, By BOB McKEE responded with the assistance of production belong to war and afraid to leave their conventional through the innocence of child­ City editor University Police, Coles County only true characters, in the the notions of theater at the door, the hood, to the first experience of Sheriff'sPolice and the Illinoi s 'tional sense, used to chronicle show is a bold and daring exercise love, to the loss of innocence and Eastern wrestler Michael A. State Police. lievelopmentand tragedy of the that pays off largely beca use of the finally to death. The show seems as Wheatley, 23, will appear fo r a While officers were trying to war. Characters, as we are exquisitely talented ensemble of much a statement on the futility of preliminary hearing in a Coles disburse the crowd, Wheatley to consider them , only exist performers and the cohesion given life as it is as statement on the futil­ County Circuit Court Nov. 12 allegedly hit Charleston police moments, fading into new char­ to motion and symbolby Guidotti. ityof war. after he was charged with aggra­ officer James Ingram in the head. as the scenes progress and The performers, many appear­ l l It is a production definitely vated battery last week for e. ing on stage for the first time, are worth experiencing, bringing ele­ Ingram was then taken to the allegedly hitting a Charleston Sound confusing? It can be at outstanding throughout the produc­ ments to Eastern's stage that mark a Sarah Bush Lincoln Health Police o cer. s - especially during the tion. They carry off the taxing daring departure for Central lllinois ffi Center where he was treated and Wheatley, a senior, appeared 's opening moments - but it is demands of the show with grace, Theatre. It's a dare that pays offfor released. hnique that is better experi- ease and lyrical beauty. At times, the cast and the audience, offering at his initial appearance in the At the initial appearance ed by a viewer than it is the power of the moment is created up a timeless message that should Coles County Detention Center Friday a $3,000 bond was set ·ned by a reviewer. Suffice to only with a single facial expression ring as truefor today 's Middle East Friday, where he was informed and Wheatley posted $300 bail that performers don whatever or a single motion - feats that stand as it did forye sterday's Vietnam. of the charge, which stems from for his release. the moment or scene demands. as testament to the performers' "VIET ROCK" will be per­ a 75-person brawl that broke out During his preliminary hear­ e use of transformation tech­ skills. formed Tuesday through Saturday at E.L. Krackers, 1405 Fourth ing, a judge will decide if there ues and the deeply symbolic And while war is certainly the at 8 p.m., and on Sunday at 2 p.m. St., early Thursday morning. is probable cause to determine The incident at Krackers whether Wheatley committed the allegedly started inside on the offense. If there is probable astern's catalog coordinator resigns dance floor between two people cause, a trial then will be sched­ and escalated to several others, coordinator in the office of aca­ ter's degree in art from Eastern in uled. an eyewitness said. demic affairs. 1987, is leaving her position to And if convicted, Wheatley The altercation moved to out­ As the resource person for the work on a book related to her mas­ faces a possible two-to-five year side of the building and Jim tting the finishing touches on Council on Academic Affairs, the ter's thesis. jail term and a maximum fine of Severson, co-owner of the dance m's new general education Council on Teacher Education and "I have done the research, but I $I0,0 00. Wheatley pleaded indi­ may prove to be a little the Council on Graduate Studies, have no time to write the book," bar, said there was no damage to gent at the appearance Friday er because of the resignation Schaeffer answers council mem­ she said. the establishment and stated, "It and requested the appointment of staff member who coordi­ bers' questions on course propos­ Schaeffer said she also has wasn't that big of a deal." public defenderLonnie Lutz. academic course and major als for the general education pro­ accepted a part-time position as a Severson attributed the brawl to Charleston Police Chief Herb es in Eastern's catalog. gram that will be instituted with drapery consultant with Elder the closing-time crowd, estimat­ Steidinger said Friday the "in­ izabeth Schaeffer, who among the freshmen class of 1991. Bierman's department store in the ed at about 300 people, began vestigation is continuing" and if duties advises three Eastern "I don't as much make deci­ Cross Country Mall in Mattoon. pushing and shoving to leave the it identifies any individuals who emic councils to keep their sions as much as I keep track of "It's not just that it's half-time," establishment. were involved in the altercation s in line with the Board of decisions made by the councils she said, "but it ties in with the Charleston Police received the "subsequent arrests will be ors' guidelines, will resign that establish precedent," she said. visual aspects of my art back­ fight call at 1 :02 a.m. and made." . 30 from her post as planning Schaeffer, who earned a mas- ground." elaware expert: Landfill 'problem' is no problem across the state, most notably But area environmentalists Dan Rion, spokesman fo r the landfills now. We haven't had ade­

Champaign, attempt to locate new clashed with Vasuki's views. "If Illinois Environmental Protection quate time to see if they have been landfills or expand existing that's all you do, you are doomed Agency agreed with Vasuki 's crit- effective,"he said. s area public policy leaders dumps. to fail," said John Thom son, a ics: "There is a definite problem Vasuki also refuted the environmentalists struggle "The idea of a landfill shortage spokesman for ARROW, a local concerning landfills in Illinois. Environmental Protection Agency's the difficulties posed by vex­ is a myth being built up over and environmental group. We are running into a shortage of efforts at controlling waste, which waste problems, at least one over again," Vasuki told confer- "I think there are a lot of black­ available space. I don' t think includes source reduction as the says the "problems" are no ence-goers. He added that waste box thinkers out there, engineers there have been any new sights primary objective followed by: lem at all. management technicians should who think they can engineer for landfills since 1982 ." recycling, composting, incineration, .C. Vasuki, manager of the concentrate on learning the around any obstacle, and that's But Rion does not think that and, as a last resort, landfilling. ware Solid Waste Authority, newest technologies of the indus- bound to lead to serious prob­ the problem with leakage from Vasuki said that in Delawarethey nted some of his controver­ try instead of worrying about !ems," Thomson said. "He landfills is as prevalent as it once begin with the landfill, then con­ ideas about waste manage­ keeping trash out of landfills, a (Vasuki) is using 70s thinking to was. centrate on energy and material

! during the recent Illinois reference apparently made to cur-. solve a 90s problem and it'.s "That was a problem the·past · recovery, recycling and compost­ in � ··· · "· ·· · · ' · · · • · · · · · · '- · · · · · .... . ' d 1 · · - · rgy Confe re n ce,.. as . citi · · · ·� · u d ' ! tJ "· · b t · sfahaaicfffOr' - rent:recycling effo rts: bo n to a . .· u we· 11ave new 'iiig. o!��Eastern News Of Jesse Helms and target audiences It could hardly be called Klux Klan Imperial Wizard J. W. Farrands call politically correct. democratic candidate Gantt, "another crooked bl Jesse Helms, the self-pro­ politician" whose victory over Helms would h OPINION claimed defender of good 'ol boost the group's membership. American values, may have Farrands told the AP that Gantt should be elec finally crossed the line "so they can see what a black politician can do. between bad-taste politicking "If they elect him, they'll find out we've g and utterly sincere racism. another crooked black politician," Farrands said. Helms, the senior senator Helms didn't disagree with Farrands, saying I from North Carolina, began not his place to comment on the "endorsement" airing a commercial spot last MMt his opponent by such a "highly-placed" organ! page Wednesday that's downright tion. appalling, even from such a Mansfleld No racial stereotypes here. Not Jesse Helms. self-avowed right-winger. Still, we know that Helms knows his audience. Helms's advertisement shows the hands of a Helms has been able to parlay his beliefs to Editorials represent the opinion white man holding, then crumpllng a job rejection forefront of an national debate on what's "righ of the editorial board. Columns letter. and "wrong" with America. "You needed that job," the announcer says. "And Helms' public likes the idea of moral absolutes, are the opinion of the author. you were the best quallfied. But they had to give It sort of unofficial ideology that makes them to a minority because of a racial quota. Is that really insulated from a world that doesn't deal in ab MONDAY • NOVEMBER 5 • 1990 fair? Gantt (Helms's opponent for the Senate seat) lutes. supports Ted Kennedy's racial quota law that makes There may be hope, though. the color of your skin more important than your Helms might lose. qualifications." Opinion surveys published Thursday showed h On turning 7 5: If that's not enough to make you believe that we close the results might be on Tuesday. Helms should withdraw federal financial support for cam­ ahead by about 4 percentage points in one poll paigns (the moral equivalent of Helms's ideas on Gantt was ahead by the roughly the same in The News gives arts funding), just wait. other. The margin of error was 3.5 percenta Helms has. also run a radio ad accusing his oppo­ points. a nent Harvey Gantt of running a "secret campaign" The margin of error here seems to be the k history lesson aimed at black voters by running ads on stations meaning either Helms or Gantt could win. Le History likes dates. with largely black audiences. divide the margin of error. Marketing analysts might call such a practice, OK, we'll give percentage points to Dates order untidy things, make sense -of 1. 75 e "knowing your audience." candidate. Now we're even. Or, you could s times past. Jesse Helms surely knows his audience. we're still even. Today, The Daily Eastern News likes dates: For instance, another Helms ad says his opponent But somebody has to win, right? too. The people who work here are proud of used his minority status (Gantt is black) to get a Let's hope Jesse Helms doesn't know his au the fact that on this _date in 1915 this whole television station license, which he and his partners ence as well as he thinks. later sold. business started. But wait, there's more. - Matt Mansfield is the editorial page editor an We like to think of that November 5th as On Friday, the Associated Press reported that Ku guest columnist for The Daily Eastern News. an epoch, though the people working at the Normal State News, the name of the paper when Eastern's student newspaper began, probably didn't realize the significance at the time. That's the thing about history: You have to wait awhile to see what's important. Daily newspaper's don't ha ve history 's Edjtodal advantage. It's the job of the daily newspaper to get out the news, in the best estimation of a group of editors somewhere. The New York Times has a motto, "All the news that's fit to print." Well, sometimes. Sometimes newspapers succeed; some­ times they fail. Nevertheless, the newspaper comes out every morning - though it likely gets tossed in the trash at day's end. Somewhere in between, though, people read the thing, which is when all this history business comes into the picture. We have no lofty aspirations that all our newspapers will be reread and saved by all our readers- that's a facetious desire. ·sut we Your Turn do hope that the words we write every day outrage to bring Scott's family family is concerned. If the ot give readers a more informed view of their Scott Walker issue members such as Jane Walker, are granted the respect world, a clearer vantage point from which to Stan Armstrong (his brother), and anonymity, then why not consider the society at large. deserves a more Stan's fiancee Laura Robinson Armstrongs? We question Yet in newspapers it's not just the words into this whole matter. The fact that it appears the pe impartial treatment Eastern News has the right of they are attacking (Ve we write, but the words you, as avid readers, Dear editor: freedom of the press, but let's Armstrong) is the highest write to us. On this page, readers have an We are writing in regard to the print all the facts and not just the and only female administrator. opportunity to openly respond to the history Scott Walker Issue. It seems the one� which appropriately support The issue seems to be they see coming across on the newspaper's Faculty Senate is missing a major the Faculty Senate's side of the longer on the hiring of S pages, thus becoming a more integral part of element on this issue. Is Scott issue. Walker but everyone and ev that history themselves. qualified? What is the purpose of David thing remotely related to The only conclusion we come Carpenter (Easter n's Faculty and Verna Armstrong. Let's So history, with its ordering of dates, likes to over this intentionally neglect­ Senate chair) lashing out at the to the Issues at hand. newspapers, the chroniclers of the time. ed aspect is that he is quallfled Armstrong (Walker's mother If David Carpenter has no And newspapers, like history, try to come for the job. If Walker's hiring was Verna Armstrong Is vice presl­ better to do than harass inn up with some coherent vision of what's an act of nepotism, then why is de n t for administration and people maybe he should set important, which is what TheNews has been­ the Faculty Senate stooping to finance) family? Is this issue a more office hours for his the muckraking and slanted question of nepotism, qualifica­ dents. Or has he forgotten doing, or trying to do, for the past 75 years. reporting rather than letting the tions or salary? We would hope he is an English professor? Let's hope that tradition will continue for BOG decide if these hiring prac­ that the Faculty Senate's investi­ at least another 75 years. tices are questionable. gation is based on the issue of The entire matter started out nepotism. From the reporting, questioning the hiring of Scott however, it appears to be a witch Walker, but then 1 1 names were hunt aimed at the Armstrong (Editor's note: The News atte Tell the truth and sent to Eastern President Stan family only. Out of the 20 names ed to secure information res Rives and the latest issue of the submitted, who else besides the ing Walker's qualifications. ' don t be afraid. Eastern News reports 20 names Armstrong family is under inves­ reques ts were denied by Livingston C. Lord have been sent (to the president). tigation? Are the records on ly Board of Governors, the univ When is it going to stop? It is an opened where the Armstrong ty's governing board.) The Dally Eastern News Monday, November 5, 1990 SA Budley House Fraternity raises funds hosts election day readings for Peacemeal program By LORI HIGGINS other l .200 go to the different Aspiring poets and lovers of Campus editor community sites. poetry can add a unique flare to Since Eastern joined the pro­ Election Day Tuesday by reading Members of an Eastern frater­ gram in I 976. Strader said some of their favorite works at the nity raised $1,300 last week for they've gone from providing historic Dudley House. Peacemeal, a federally-funded about 450 meals to 1,600 meals a The Dudley House, 895 nutrition program for senior citi­ day, as well as increasing the Seventh St., plays host to monthly zens. number of counties they serve poetry readings sponsored by the With about 75 of its members and the community sites they Charleston Area Arts Council. canvassing neighborhoods in deliver to. The readings are free of charge Charleston, the work of the Delta However, Strader said the and open for anyone from Tau Delta fraternity will benefit numbers have not increased much Charleston or the campus commu­ food programs in about 14 coun­ in recent years. � ->;'.. "' nity to attend. "" m ties, said Mike Strader, director of "For the last four or five years, � -}-% "Anybody can come who has �.$: fu' the local Peacemeal program. The our federal dollars have stagnat­ ome of their own work they program is sponsored by the ed. The cost of living and the would like to read, original work, school of Home Economics. Jim increasing need for the program or if they have some favorite Riemer, community service chair has made it necessary to go out poems," said Gray Jacobik, an for the fraternity, said the group and raise money through . assistant professor of English at �, also passed out packets about fundraisers to maintain the ser­ Eastern. "Every time is different Peacemeal, to help inform local vices." and unique." residents about the program. Delta Tau Delta has been the The readings begin at 7:30 p.m. "It (the program) encompasses only fraternity that has contribut­ The monthly sessions are 14 counties and 55 different feed­ ed its services to the Peacemeal designed to promote poetry and ing sites," Strader said. A feeding program. give local poets a chance to sam­ site is a local civic center, such as "We do a Jot of fundraisers that ple their work in front of others. an American Legion hall, where go to different types of charities "If anyone has some kind of SHANNON THOMAS/Staff photographer volunteers feed noon-time meals nationwide, but we get the most poem about the elections, they to senior citizens. satisfaction doing this because it should bring it along," added "Love" Soccer Peacemeal takes care of 1,600 is in the community. We 're Nan Hennings, director of the Julian Martine:, a sophomore fu llback on Eastern's soccer team, vol­ meals every day for senior citi­ always willing to help the com­ Dudley House. leys a soccer ball as he plays "soccer-tennis" with other teammates zens. About 400 of those meals munity," Riemer said. - Staffrep ort on the We ller courts by Coleman Hall. go to home-bound people and the Charleston Art Expo attracts downtown business By KIMBERLY McCLEARY merchants have been experienc­ Preston, committee chair. The pete with large shopping malls by and one block off in every direc­ Staffwriter ing recently such as limited park­ expo is open from noon to 7 p.m. sponsoring other events that malls tion, no other tax increases are ing availability and aesthetics. Monday through Saturday, and use to attract customers such as involved in the proposal. The opening weekend of the The expo is headquartered in will be open on Sundays from l an antique car show, a petting zoo Preston said part of the grant harleston Arts and Craft Expo the old Fromme! Hardware store, to 4 p.m. after Thanksgiving. and sleigh rides. would also be used so Charleston ttracted more business to the and this weekend featured a vari­ Preston said the expo is the In addition, the committee could join the National Mainstreet harleston Square this weekend, ety of items such as leather goods, first in a series of projects began working on analyzing vari­ Network. The network helps keep which is exactly what its organiz­ photography, wood sculptures and planned by the committee to ous problems with the Square a members informed about new, � :ers had hoped it would do. even Christmas decorations. attract new businesses to the year ago and will ask the innovative, and successful revital­ The expo, which runs until Jan. About 17 vendors from through­ Square. "Our purpose is to bring Charleston City Council for a ization projects in the country. 1, was established by the out East Central Illinois contribut­ people downtown to see that $10,000 Tax Increment Financing The grant will also be used in Downtown Business Committee ed goods for the expo. shopping is viable here," he said. grant at Tuesday night's meeting. materials needed to renovate and that was appointed by the mayor "It's been excellent. We 've had Preston added that the commit­ TIF funds come from sales taxes refurbish the Square. to study problems the downtown constant traffic," said Fred tee believes. the Square can com- collected in stores on the Square First-ti me offender fights life sentence DETROIT (AP) - Ronald Harmelin didn't Denenfeld, a lawyer for the American Civil Michigan's if it is upheld by the Supreme fitthe flashy drug kingpin image - no tailored Liberties Union. "It flies in the face of indi­ Court. silk suit, dripping gold jewelry or gleaming vidualized sentencing." From his cell at Scott In California, for instance, no state laws Mercedes-Benz for him. Regional Facility in a Detroit suburb, the 45- regulate sentencing for drug crimes. Judges Still, he had 672 grams of cocaine in the year-old Harmelin got the high court's atten­ rely on federal guidelines to put away drug trunk of his 9-year-old Ford when he was tion with a petition that he was "unj ustly dealers for life without parole. arrested by suburban Oak Park police on May thrown into the pit of prison for all eternity "We'll certainly be taking a look at the 12, 1986. Under Michigan law, that was without the hope of release." That's the point, Michigan case," said John Gordnier, an assis­ enough to justify his life sentence without said Oakland County prosecutor Richard tant attorney general in California. "We 'II be parole. Thompson, who will argue that Harmelin 's interested in the arguments." Gordnier said the The U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to sentence is constitutional. concept of life without parole is appropriate. ear arguments Monday on whether "Michigan's law is the most enlightened in "Many of those who deal with narcotics Michigan's law requiring such a sentence is the country," Thompson said. "It provides a have probably caused someone to receive rue! and unusual punishment. Under the deterrent and permanently removes the drug drugs and later die as a result of the drugs," he te's law, possession of 650 grams or more trafficking from the community." Detroit said. "The penalty is not inappropriate given f cocaine brings a mandatory sentence of life lawyer Carla Johnson, appointed to represent the price society is paying." In Florida, those in prison without parole. Harmelin, said sentencing should look at prior convicted of selling, purchasing or delivering Harmelin probably would be out of prison criminal record and level of involvement in more than 400 grams of cocaine face a manda­ by now if federaloff icials arrested him. Under the drug world. Harmelin had no prior record. tory 15 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, federal law, a first offender possessing 650 "He was not proven to be anything but a said Richard Doran, the Florida attorney gen­ rams - almost 1.5 pounds - would face a possessor of cocaine," Johnson said. "The eral's director of criminal appeals. five-to-40-year penalty with possibility of people who end up doing mandatory life are Florida doesn't have to prove the offender parole. not the kingpins the statute was aimed at. was a dealer. "That's the difference between being busted These people are mostly first-time offenders "If you have more than 400 grams in your by the Drug Enforcement Administration and and to punish them like we punish murderers possession, the state assumes you're a traffick­ Oak Park police. It's the difference between is not right." The ACLU said it was con­ er," Doran said. Cocaine is usually sold by the one year and the rest of his life," said Paul cerned other states will enact laws similar to gram. Jazz ensemble to perform at fund-raiser By CHARLOTTE BABER alarm when someone's heart rate reaches a and Danita Cooper, will sing a medley at the Staff writer critical point. ball. A drawing will also be held and winners "One of the Lifepack advantages is that it is will receive an overnight stay at the Ramada Eastern ·s Jazz Ensemble will take local res­ not evasive," said Barbara Brogan, director of Inn with a complimentary Sunday brunch. idents back to the big-band era for the seventh volunteers. She said pacing pads prompt the "The project has been successful in the annual Chrysanthemum Ball on Saturday. heart into a regular beating pattern and signal past," said Delores Metzger, chair of the The Chrysanthemum Ball is a fund-raiser to the alarm if there is a problem. Chrysanthemum Ball. "We've pinpointed this help purchase cardiac equipment for the emer­ About 300 people are expected to attend the equipment (for the emergency room) as well gency department at the Sarah Bush Lincoln event at the Keller Ramada Convention as many others in the past." Health Center. The equipment, a Lifepack 8 Center in Effingham. In addition to the EIU For more information call 348-2500. :/ cardiac monitor/defibrillator, would signal an Jazz Ensemble, two vocalists. Susan Knoetzki 6A Monda , November 5, t 990

··, Nuke- damp gui

· . . low-level nuclear waste dump near costs at the expenseof public health ation of the proposed dump •. _- ':•.' · ,_._ -_. - . _. _- -- _- ' ·::'· �- ' - ·!:f; J;:· .. _._.,_ ':-·-. : ._ _ -:� , ·_ ..-, �f' , - - ,_. -. · .. · ._- · _ · · this southeastern town say the site's and safety. The 1,250-member 1989. WPl: a.,, 'WA�Hlli(JTQNbtlut,:,fii:i ll\.f)o '.:.. .c·&'' ®r·rRs%&excepts fromQ( '"An�:A.mer�;�iCart original safety guidelines have been group opposes the site chosen for Westinghouse, the origin . . ·· *f9rU1er'r't�§.i�r-���'Jl.;$�ys Ltfe'' 'appearin,g· 'ltt .lhe thi$ drastically altered, a published the dump, a 250-acre tract just tractor, pulled out of the �-be''d i" .ttaye w tflfuk.30 ·-� \ve¢.,k's: �diti&n·'·s :of;-� a'""! . : · report said Sunday. north of Martinsville. calling the site "problematic. ··' 1an· , Under the current plan, concrete Cloud said the revisions "obvi­ May 1989 letter to the II . . · ··.· :;:��;:" . 1:d · .· • walls and floor slabs to seal nuclear ously will weaken the facility at a Department of Nuclear S .:.1· �� a•·· •·g ·•J.n::.1. . ··.�·.. . a.. . .·. t··.. .·. ·.· .. .ki!&···-·..··'1. • . .� .••h·"l!J••ea• : �we; hcA,tile�Jl6$� �S, �"'. . _·.· . . .. • ��f>.<.· ..·. ·S�U\.&" i'1�Jl\:I: . VU'. - fo,=��-,"!.·_· ... .. i· : . · :..• waste in the the dump 's storage time when the state ought to be Westinghouse said, "The •1 ae:C6 . S-.to- exeeu>-t$ of lj.is ;eiatsJelied- .��avi!y Jntotrms";. . · · ·qn :.. cells will be 24 inches thick, com­ strengthening the design because of for adverse groundwater pa ;,memoirs ·'tjcQn ·'fronvt�raelJ; pn?f!ShedSuJt :.. ·.· . reported. public wells." The federally man­ may necessitate costly design · case. !tan-Contra which became .At.fil �t.Reag �:.sajd:·.fre:·· didn 't Paul Corpstein, project manager dated dump will store everything tions of unproven long-term want do it be:Cause "the biggestscandal of his eight- fo tfJe for dump contractor Chem-Nuclear from highly radioactive equipment bility." year the administrat ion. In case, Iranians sp onsored terror.ism. Systems, said cutting wall thick­ and waste from nuclear power "One reason is logisti weapons were sold ro Iran with But the former president said ness and changing storage designs plants to slightly active tools and Corpstein said. "The We stingh the profits se diverted to when he learned through the cretly still will meet all state safety crite­ uniforms used by power plant approach would have required theNicar aguan Contra rebels. Israelis that the group seeking ria. employees and researchers, the ing, trucking and pouring too While the Iran-Contra case the weapons did not support ter­ m But Steve Cloud, spokesman for Sun-Times said. concrete. It was un-doable." made him unhappy, Reagan said rorist activities, he didn't hesi­ Concerned Citizens of Clark Chem-Nuclear, a Waste his greatest regret as president tate. was sending Marines to Beitut, "Once we had information Lebanon where a suicide that we could trustthe people in bomber attacked the Marine bar- Iran, I didn't have to think 30 Helms and Gantt supporters clash racks on Oct. 23, 1983, killing seconds about saying yes. I was CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - er!" yelled another Helms backer, doors. 241 servicemen. told the few missiles would not Supporters of Harvey Gantt and in reference to the abortion rights Spokesmen for both campai Reagan said he was con­ significantly change the balance Sen. Jesse Helms screamed insults of Gantt and some of his support­ said they were not aware of vinced it was a good idea to in Iran's war with Iraq so I said, at each other and two people ers. Gantt, a Democrat, is challeng­ confrontation. Police said deploy Marines in war-torn O.K., one small shipment from foughtbriefly at a Helms rally. ing Republican Helms in Tuesday's arrests were made and no inju Lebanon as peace-keepers. But Israel to allow the Israelis to "Left-wing Commie pinko fag­ election. were reported. American officials did not real­ prove they were talking with the gots!" shouted Helms backer Steve The confrontation began when Helms was foregoing any c ize how vulnerable the service­ highest levels of the U.S. gov­ Jones, 54, on Saturday after walk­ about 40 Gantt supporters waved paigning Sunday after a long men were in the barracks on a ernment" But Reagan said he ing through a crowd of Gantt sup­ anti-Helms signs in the faces of on the road Saturday, said his w· wide-open space. insisted the Iranians use their porters, who were waving anti­ backers as they entered the school. Dot Helms. "In any case, sending the influence to get American Helms signs and screaming A brief scuffle erupted outside "We got to bed at 3 o'clock Marines to Beirut was the source hostages in Lebanon freed. The "Harvey! Harvey! Harvey!" Police between university student Tom we 're just using this as a day of my greatest regret and great­ hostages were held by pro­ were not present during the clash at Tritten and rally security guard Jim rest," she said. "I'm sure the will understand," why they mis est sorrow," Reagan wrote in Iranian Shiites Moslems. Alexander Graham Junior High. Grice, who said he was working "Murderer! Murderer! Murder- for rally organizers to watch fire church.

FROM THE VOICES, DOWN TO THEIR BEATLE SOOTS, YOU'LL THINK YOU'RE SEEINC /OHN, P�UL, CEORCE & RINGO! TONIGHT If YOU MISS THE BM TLES ... DON'T MISS Cl>) 8:00 p.m.

McAfee FORD Gym

EIU Students w/1 0 $3.00 eeeAS TH• B•ATL•S Gen. Public $6.00

Advance tickets on sale at Union Box Office VISA and MasterCard orders by Phone TODAY 11-3, 581 -51 22 l;llMAATIN LUTHER KING JR (Tickets also available at the door) �UNIVERSITY UNION

because Llttaalloa • a.1 Batale eorponllo... • Ceae.ral Pnctlce EASTERN is critical to our educational future. Eat.ta, Trull • Wills "Roosevelt's EmployeeBeneftta Plan paralegal • Lugeft A.B.A.-eppnnred program in IDinot. program • Effedlwemployment ...w.nce • Pou-month day and eight-month was my ...mag c1a- • Loop, ArlinpmHelghta, Oaklbook and stepping­ . OlympiaFields locatiom • Shlclat l•m forqualtfled applicum st()ne • Spring and Sammer terawbegin in Pe1'rauy and Jane to a A representative will be on your campus rewarding November 6, 1990. Please contact your placement omceto schedulean appointment. career." For aclclitional lnfonnatt.on. pleue call eollect: • Mike Weaver passed legislation funding the Coleman Hall Annex construction ... RooMYelt University Anne Hillard .� Lawyer'• A8.Utant * Mike Weaver serves on the House Higher Education Committee and has worked to k Program Leg A8.utant tuition low . .. al -..' '30 S. Michtaan Ave. ._ Chi , IL '°6Ci5 • Mike We aver has passed legislation to guarantee scholarships for Illinois students .. . cs12>f:1-H12 • Mike Weaver has been on Eastern's faculty for years and is committed to its support ...... because he cares about EASTERN'S future ... MIKE WEAVER Classified Work! for State Representative Sell it fast . . . in Tf?e Daily Eastern News Paid for by Citizens to Elect l\1ike We aYer. D. Anderson. Treasurer JA

On B roadway

The Platters, the Marvelettes d the Drift ers hit the stage and 'Oughtdown the house in Lant: Gym Saturday night fo r the annual Parents We ekend oncert. Emcee Glenn Haywood introduced the groups and buffered the time between acts with his comic ro utine and "Wendell, " his 1·entriloquist's dummy. Th e triple-bill of acts offered hits dating back to the and 60s - something the par­ nt-heavy crowd could relate to ell. The Drifters closed out the show with a surprise birthday tribute to Cecilia Brinker, Eastem 's assistant director of student activities. PHOTOS BY SHANNON THOMAS AND CARL WALK

eek the Santa is making a list of halls ... an the super savings in r just send a Th e Dally Eastern Ne ws essage to that pedal someone HOLIDAY ith Christmas GU Personals IDE Monday, November 1 � Dec. 3 in Deadline to place �n ad is TheDail y Tuesday, Nov. 6 at 7 p.m.! Eastern News 8N\DA.ONY NOV. 5, 1 990 THE DAILY EASTERNNEW S CLASSIRID ,ADVERTISING, FOR RENT

"MY SECRETARY" Resumes, Management. Fastest growing Male subleasor for spring 91 . Nonsmoking nondrinker to share FOR RENT: One bedroom papers . Next to Monical's, 903- Co. needs entrepreneurs to hire $156 .75/mo. Will negotiate apt. $125. Shower in basement. 1 across (EAST) from Buzz 1 Sth St. MWF, 1-4 p.m.; T,Th, 9 and train marketing team. Men utilities. Call Dave 348-8079 block from campus. No parking Bldg. $21 0/2 available Jan. a.m.-noon. Other times by and women needed, part-time ______11/6 348-8929 1991 , unfurnished, carpeted, Th e Daily Eastern News appointment. 345-1150. and full time call 619-476-8090 Female subleasor for Pinetree #1 ______11/6 carpor t, non-smokers, no p cannot be responsible for ______12/7 ______ca 10/22,11/5,19 Spring semester. Own Room. 2 bedroom furnished apartment, Lease deposit. Prefer Unive more than one day s Microwave rentals. Carlyle Now accepting applications for 345-6573. 1 1/2 bath, dishwasher, free Employees or two girls. Call incorrect insertion� Re port Rentals. $39 for Spring Semester. individuals to work as habilitation ______11/9 laundry facilities. 1017 Woodlawn 5646 errors immediately at 58 1- 348-7746. aides with developed mentally NEEDED 1 OR 2 ROOMATES 348-7746. 28 1 2. A corrected ad will ______00 disabled adults on weekend shitts FOR SPRING SUBLEASE. ______oo Must find female subleasor appear in the next edition. Mini storage rentals. $5 off per in residential facility. Apply at 738 RENT ONLY $150 FOR Two bedroom apartment Pank Place for this semester All classified advertising month with this ad. 348-7746. 18th St. Charleston. Between 9 EVERYTHING! MUST SEE! 345- available spring semester. next. $100 or best offer. Ask must meet the 2 p.m. ______00 am and 4 pm. M-F E/O/E 6627 $225/month includes water and Dena or leave a message deadline to appear in the Attention Students! Are you tired ______12/7 ______11/15 garbage. Call 345-6468 7889 Subleasor needed for Spring ______ca 11/6,8,12 next day's publication. Any of getting towed away? Are you NANNIES: Live-in positions -East tired of tickets? Off-campus Coast. Airfare, great salaries. Fun 1991 . Mar-Car apts. close to Available Spring semester, cozy 1 ads processed after 2 p.m. parking available at a monthly social activities. Carefully Campus. Call To ny 345-4761 for bdrm. apt. 1 block from campus. will be published in the rate. Call 345-5022 between Sam screened families. EIU Nannies information. Parking. 348-5338. following days newspaper. & 6pm. already here. Princton Nanny, ______11/9 ______11/7 Ads cannot be canceled Braided rugs, oval and rou ______oo Princton N.J. Call Martha Kleaver Female roommate to share nice 2 1-2 Subleasors needed for Spring red, blue, green $5-$15. Al after the 2 p.m. deadline. CHARLESTON COPY-X 201 581 -5004 bedroom house in Mattoon­ 1991. Parking available. Big new rollbar w/driving lamps Classified ads must be Lincoln, 345-6313. RESUMES, ______ca 11/5 Furnishe d $15 0 month + 1/2 HOuse on 1 Oth & Lincoln. mini-truck $60. 345-2473 aft paid in advance. Only resume packages, typing copies, Best fundraiser on campus! utilities 235-3915 or238-4309 Loaded. $15 0 rent. Call 348- p.m. accounts with established typesetting, much more - LOW Looking for fraternity, sorority or ______11/9 0878. credit may be billed. PRICES, large selection of paper. student organization that would ______11/6 30 watt per channel recei All Advertising ______9/ 20-00 like to earn $500-$1000 for a one Female Subleasor needed for loader $150 and green lgua submitted to Th e Daily Rhythm Guitarist - saxophone week on-campus marketing Spring Semester. Own room ft Jong excellent health and player still looking for a band. Call proj ect. Must be organized and Close to campus. Call 348-0353. Eastern News is subject to Available Spring Semester 2 $159 phone 348-0442 · Bob 345-9432. hard working. Call Jeanine or ______11/9 approval and may be bedroom furnished apartment. ______11/9 Beverly at 1-800-592-2121. revised , rejected , or 348-7746. ______ca1 1/5, canceled at any time. ______12 � The Daily Eastern News I llll llllll Subleasor JAN.-AUG. Studio Apt. assumes no liability if fo r I . IBIDI Furnished, good condition, incl. any reason it becomes Earn $300 to $500 per week I I cable. 348-7946. ADOPTION Not just a Mommy ______necessary to omit an Reading Books at home. Call 11/11 Alpha Phi Omega will meet tonight at 5:30 pm in 222 Scie and Daddy are advertisement. 615-473-7440 Ext. B 360. Building. Rick Christian will make a presentation so all actives waiting ...Gr andparents, Aunts, �------ca 11/5, pledges must attend. D :J. for hire. Must have complete Uncles, and lots of Cousins too. DIRECTORY New Student Orientation Committee will meet tonight at 9:30 We are a young infertile couple APARTMENT knowledge of PROGRESSIVE the Casey Room. SERVICES 0FJERED who want to share our happy PA RTY and ROCK music. Amnesty International will meet tonight at 7 pm in CH 309. WANnD lives with an adopted baby. RENTALS Hnr SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY. Call urgent actions! Please attend. Medical and legal expenses paid. WANnD E.L. Krackers at 348-8387 ROTC escort service Sunday thru Thursday 6-10 pm Phone 581- ______Confidentia l . We will be happy to AoomoN 11/9 From 2 to 4 NANNIES NEEDED: Wonderful answer any questions you have RIDES/RIDERS PLEASE NOTE: Campus clips are run free of charge one day on� about us, just call Caroline and Massachusetts families. Great People any event. All Clips should be submitted to The Daily Eastern RooMMAns Scott Collect (618)462-9807 agency provides guidance and office by noon one business day before the date of the event. Ex FOR RENT ______11 /1 6 networking. One year an event schedule for Thursday should be submitted as a Campus fOR SALE Remember the deadline for all committment. One on One, Inc. Phone- by noon Wednesday. (Thursday is the deadline for Friday, Saturd classified ads is 2 pm, one LOST &. FOUND 93 Main St. Andover, MA 01810 Sunday event.) Clips submitted atter deadline WILL NOT be publi business day prior to publication. ANNOUNCEMENTS (800) 688-NANY. 348-7746 No clips will be taken by Phone. Any Clip that is illegible or co ______ha-00 ca1 1/5 12/3 conflicting information will not be run.

The ACROSS 31 Notches 54 G. B. Shaw oa11y play 1903 Ea 1 Practice fo r a 35 Airport abbr. stern News 62 Something bout Misstateme nts 36 owed 5 Evans or 39 R iver in I rela nd 63 -- Arledge, CLASSIFIED Ao FORM Roberts on 40G. B. Shaw TV executive 9 Tennis coups p lay : 1932 S4 Right-hand man Name : ______� 13 Plane's fixed ove l by Jane 65 Jersey is one route 43 N ______Austen && Avoid Address: _ _ _ _ 14 M usl i m decree 44 Receiver of 67 Geraint's 16 Letterman, to goods in trust s pou se Phone: ______St udents friends 35 45 68 Cast off o Yes 0 No 17 Graham or Casablanca-to­ Dates to ru n ______Pre m i nger Tunis dir. 69 Walked on 40 18 Bestowed Distributed, as 70 Permits 46 43 Ad to read: 19 Portend cards Fifthnote the 46 20 G. B. Shaw 48 of DOWN play: 1893 diatonic scale 1 Niche 23 Consume 49 Bus passenger 2 Lane 24 Tran sg ress 51 A son of Gad : 3 Po ker stake 25 M eager Gen. 46:16 4 Unclose agai n 2e Altar in the sky 53 Female rel . 5 Toe. e.g. 65 6 Seed covering

7 Molten rock 68 Under Classification of : ______B Paradise

______Expiration code (office use only) _ 9 Activity for a decorator 29 Proportion 47 -- -la-la 56 Blockhead Person accepting ad _____Co mpositor _____ 10 Arr i ved 30 Coral isl and 50 Jerusalem is its 57 Acerbic a l 58 Remove a ____ _ 11 Always c pita kn no. words/days Amount due :$ 32 Mad e dove or 12 Cambodian sounds 52 C once r n i ng 59 Dig for e OCash 0 Check 0 Credit coin 60 Colliery Paym ent : 33 Monetary unit of 53 Swiftness entrance 15 Terminates Denmark 54 Network 61 Beatty and Check number 21 Misanthrope 34 Passov e r meal 55 Adjective tor Sparks 22 One, in Bonn 37 Polish: 20 cents per word first day ad runs. 14 cents per word each consecutive day some seamen 62 Asunder: Pre as e thereafter. Students with valid ID 15 cents per word first day. 10 cents per word 25 Surfeited m sag each consecutive day. 15 word minimum. Student ads must be paid in advance. 26 "-- Yel low," 38 Actor Vigoda DEADLINE 2 P.M. PREVIOUS DAY-NO EXCEPTIONS Huxley book 41 Possessing The News reserves the right to edit or refuse ads considered libelous · 27 Frag rance special aptitude or in bad taste. 28 Regions 42 Weird

MONl>AV t40VEMBER

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No. words/days ______.Arnount due:$ _____ 10A Monday, November 5, 1990 The Dal Eastern Ne UNI edges Baseball card show finds weekend success By KEN RYAN dealer tables which was more than said Tom Schuett, a card dealer. rookie, $500 forTom Seaver SMSU, takes Staff writer they had at last year's show. "Even the magazines are worth 25 cents fora 1986 Ozzie Guillen. "We shut off some dealers this money. The one with Bo Jackson "I have a 1959 Sandy Kouf Gateway title A Nolan Ryan rookie card, a year and even had a waiting list," on the cover is worth $15." that I would sell for $150," sai 1964 Pete Rose card and a Stan said Lueken, who added that this Hot selling cards vary from year dealer John Lyons. CEDAR FALl�S, Iowa (AP) - Musial autographed baseball were was done in respect forthe dealers. to year, but one thing that remains Baseball cards are not the onl For the first time ever, a sellout just a few of the items displayed "It gives the sellers a better chance constant is the popularity of base­ kind that were displayed at th crowd packed the UN1-Dome for Sunday at the annual Parents to get back what they spent on ball cards. show. Cards from any sport tha a Northern Iowa football game. Weekend Baseball Card Show at table fees." "Baseball cards always sell well you can think of were represen The Panthers made sure those Lantz Fieldhouse. Dealers say that the worth of and this year basketball cards are including auto racing. The exhib" ransgot their money's worth. Jhe card show was a big suc­ cards can all be found in maga­ doing well," said Tom Dunn, tion was not all related to athle Northern fowa drove 75 yards cess, according to Paul Lueken, zines. Most dealers use ihe Beckett another dealer. however. in sevt:n pia)' s late in the game to Eastern's assistant athletic director. magazine before giving the price of Dunn went on to say that foot­ Cards such as Bo Jackson surf beat Sou hwest Missouri 20-17 "The show went real well, con­ a card. ball cards are not selling well at all. ing, a Santa Claus head coach on Saturday night. The victory sidering the parking situation "The Beckett list the prices of "I could throw a bunch of cards on Teen-age mutant ninja turtles we ? ..1ve the Panthers a berth in the around here. We rounded up peo­ cards as far back as 1949 up to the the ground and nobody would displayed. 1 NCAA Division I-AA playoffs ple in the stadium and that worked present. Beckett is a monthly mag­ bother taking them." "These type of novelty cards and a!'SUred them of at least a tie well," Lueken said. azine that has baseball, football, The price range of cards varies sometimes popular among the buy for the Gateway Conference The exhibition consisted of 60 hockey and basketball cards in it," from $1,500 for a Nolan Ryan ers," said another dealer. championship. "I thought the crowd was fan­ , tastic,"" said UNI coach Terry ] Allen, whose team handed Bears down Buccaneers for NFC Central win Southwest Missouri its first con­ TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Chicago I-yard touchdown run and Kevin ed 14 of 23 passes for 213 yards Carrier returned his ference loss. "My ears are still started the season with a bunch of Butler's 30-yard field goal in the and one TD, was unable to interception six yards to th I ringing." Rory Feddersen caught IOUs for the rest of the NFC closing minutes of the second move the offense after Jim Bucs' 22 to set up Anderson' a 6-yard pass from Jay Johnson Central Division. The Tampa Bay quarter. Morrissey recovered Gary touchdown for a 14-0 lead wit for the game-winning touchdown Buccaneers received one of them The victory was the fourth Anderson's fumble at the Bucs' 2:41 left in the half. His secon with I :02 left. The two hooked Sunday. straight for Chicago. Tampa Bay 24 on the first play of the game. interception, at the Bears 41, se up on a fourth-down play after The Bears intercepted Vinny (4-5) lost for the fourth time in A third-down sack pushed the up a drive that Butler cappe Johnson had overthrown Johnson Te staverde five times and safety five weeks after an impressive Bears back to the 33 and with his 30-yard field goal wit on the same pattern. Mark Carrier set up a touchdown 3-1 start made the Bucs an Butler's 51-yard field goal six seconds remaining. and field goal in the last three early-season success story. attempt sailed wide. Harbaugh 's 19-yard touch "The first one Jay overthrew ·-· me by a foot,"Feddersen said. minutes of the first half tospark a Carrier, a safety, also had four Chicago also failed to pro- down pass to Gentry gave th "I thought, 'No way would 26-6 victory that avenged two tackles and forced a fumble that duce points on two other posses- Bears a 23-0 lead five minute they come back to it.' But he losses to the B ucs in 1989. gave Tampa Bay six turnovers. sions deep in Tampa Bay territo- into the third quarter. Dent' The Bears (7-1) won only two Shaun Gayle had an interception ry. Dennis Gentry lost a fumble interception and Harbaugh com called the same play in the hud­ of eight NFC Central games last to stop Tampa Bay's best drive to stop a drive at the B ucs' 9 pletions of 12 yards to Anderso dle and I said,'Jay ! Jay ! What season and failed to win to the of the first half and Richard and Wendell Davis fumbled and 14 to Brad Muster led t was that?' He laid it right in division for the first time in six Dent and Ron Rivera had sec­ after gaining 33 yards on a pass Butler's 22-yard field goal th there. It was a beautifulpa ss." years. They're 4-0 in the division ond-half interceptions of play that would have given the made it 26-0. A crowd of 16,324 saw in 1990, including two victories Testaverde, who completed I 0 Bears a first down at the 12. Tampa Bay averted a shuto Northern Iowa improve its record over Green Bay, another team of 24 passes for 149 yards. The Bucs committed seven when Te staverde, who sat ou to 5-1 in the Gateway and 6-3 that beatthem twice last season. Although the Bears led 17-0 tyrnovers and gained a season- the San Diego game with a tu overall. Southwest Missouri (4- 1 Chicago led only 7-0 before at halftime, they wasted three low 157 yards in a 41-10 loss to toe inj ury, threw a 5-yard T and 8-2) has a league game with Carrier, the Bears' first-round other scoring opportunities early San Diego, then had only two pass to Bruce Perkins early i Eastern Illinois next Saturday. draft pick, intercepted Testaverde in the game. first downs and 81 yards in the the fourth quarter. The Bears would tie UNI forthe twice to set up Neal Anderson's Jim Harbaugh, who complet- first half against the Bears. league title if they win. If they lose, UNI wins the championship outright. Northern Iowa concludes the I regular season with home games ' against Clarion State and Attention Graduates! 1 Northern Arizona. There's a place where you can chase your TheReal Wo rld, dreams-AOE. At AO E, you can expect a Soccer by promising career where you'll receive a * From page 12A complete training program that can help tum 1 ory at the I 0 I :25 mark. Seen Most your dreams into reality. Panther coach Cizo Mosnia said as that he was pleased with his We're one of the largest distributors of t !am 's performance. sophisticated office automation and informa­ "We played quite well," Mosnia tion management equipment. Many of our mid. "It was about time that we New Graauates r;ot some offense. But we made clients are within the Fortune 500. Tb at's big ! ome mistakes. That's how they business. And big opportunities. ;sottheir goal." Mosnia said that the reason that We'll be on campus WBDNBSDAY, so many players were used was NOVBMBBR 7th, to conduct interviews. For that he was trying to see what was in store fornext season. more information, drop by your careerplanning "I was trying to instill some and placement office. IfintervieW scliedule is confidence in the individuals," full,call orsend your resume to: LarryMod aff Mosnia said. "Tim McDonald played well, but he lacks some (708) 3S4·1100, AMERICAN OFFICB BQUIP· confidence. That is because of a MINT, 40S B. Shawmut, LaGrange, IL 60S2S. lack of experience makes him a We are an equal opportunity employer. bit inconsistent. "Jim Harkness played well today as well. We played as a team today." Waters said that while Eastern played well against the Phoenix, he wasn't too happy with the sea- son. "There are a lot of reasons for the lack of scoring," Waters said. "I am disappointed in the season, but we played well in the over­ time. Next year we don't have anywhere to go but up." Eastern was once again led by freshman Eric Manibog in the net. Manibog made five saves before giving way to junior Ken Mathas with 4:04 remaining in the game. Mathas made one save in his only appearance this season. Dally Eastern News Monday, November 5, 1990 1 tA

Gateway Conference anthers Standings Seniors bid farewell • From page I .?A al foul penalties. Fullback Ed�on Gateway Overall Northern Iowa 5-1 6-3' the Hilltopper offense out of Castillo, who compiled 36 vards Southwest Missouri 4-1 8-2 end zone. on 13 carries, picked up nine EASTERN 3-2 5-5 in final home game Illinois State 3-2 5-5 teve Donisi kicked in a 22- yards and Borkowski threw an Western Illinois 2-3 2-7 By CHRIS BOGHOSSIAN field goal to make it 7-3 eight-yard pass to split end Mike Southern Illinois 1-5 2-7 Indiana State 1-5 3-7 Sports editor ernjust 36 seconds into the Rummell and a 24-yard pass to ond quarter. Johnson ran 83 'Northern Iowa wins Gateway title Martin Ellens to put Eastern on Ten seniors made their final his interception return the Hilltopper 11. s on Saturday's results appearance at O'Brien Stadium up the score. After a IO-yard holding penalty set EASTERN 28 Western Kentucky 6 Saturday and helped Eastern to a at kind of speed shows you moved the Panthers back to the Northern Iowa 20, Southwest Missouri 17 Western Illinois 24 Southern Illinois 22 28-6 win over We stern Kentucky at speed does on a football 21. Borkowski connected with , Illinois State 28, Indiana State 24 in front of 9 008 Parents Day ," Spoo said. "(Johnson) was Rummell in the left side of the fans. ving into the ball when he end zone for Eastern 's third "We dedicated these last two ght it. It was a tremendous touchdown of the game to make it EASTERN 28, games to our seniors," junior on (Cook's) part." 21-6 with 12:59 left in the game. Western Kentucky 6 stern countered with another Eastern 's defense, which quarterback Lee Borkowski said Score by quarters after the victory. hdown late in the half. This scored a touchdown and set up a , though, the score was set up field goal last week against the Western Kentucky O 3 3 O 6 The seniors didn't sit around EASTERN 7 7 0 14 28 Eastern tailback Jamie Jones, purple Panthers, accounted for and watch the game, though. In ose 45-yard run to the Eastern 's final score. How they scored fact, several seniors had a big !topper I-yard line set up With the Hilltoppers on their FIRST QUARTER affecton the game's outcome. Eastern - Jamie Pilson 1-yard run n's second touchdown of the 41, Campbell threw to halfback Take, for instance, the play of (D'Alesio PAT), 5:26, 7-0 EIU. on the next play. Herb Davis. But Davis fumbled SECOND QUARTER preseason all-American nickle WKU - Steve Donisi 22-yard field goal, back Tim Lance, who recorded a 1th his run, Jones surpasssed the ball, and senior cornerback Juan Cox 2:47, 7-3 EIU. season-high 23 tackles. Add to 1,000-yard mark on the year. Juan Cox picked up the loose ball Eastern - Pilson 1-yard run (D'Alesio finished the day with 82 yards and scrambled down the sideline PAT), 0:59, 14-3. that cornerback Juan Cox's 51- weekend at O'Brien. 17 carries and now has 1,020 51 yards for a touchdown. THIRD QUARTER yard fumble return for a touch­ "It really hit me more after the WKU - Donisi 31-yard field goal, 4:27, 'ng yards on the season. "It sure was (a big play)," Spoo 14-6 EIU. down, linebacker John Noll's Northern Iowa game," said Noll, ings turned around a little in said. "That's two weeks in a row FOURTH QUARTER . interception and blocked pass and who also finished with I 0 tackles, Eastern - Mike Rummell 21 -yard pass third quarter. We stern now that we've done that. It was four extra points by kicker Ray including one for a loss. from Lee Borkowski (D'.Alesio PAT), tucky held the ball for most an alert play. It certainly helped 12:59, 21 -6 EIU. D'Alesio. "I was almost shell-shocked. quarter and moved the ball us." Eastern - Juan Cox 51 -yard fumble Also incl ude solid snapping (After that game), I thought I've return (D'Alesio PAT), 9:31 , 28-6 EIU. on the Panther defense but Tony Farrell did the same thing and protection from center Tod only got two games left in colle­ Te am totals held to just three points on a last week against UNI. Cox's TD Schwager, six tackles and a half giate football. I've been playing · i 31-yarder to make it 14-6 made it 28-6 with 9:31 left in the Eastern WKU of a sack from linebacker Jeff football since I was 7 years old - First downs ·19 16 4:27 remaining in the third. game and close out the scoring. Rushing 4 10 Oetting, two catches for 35 yards that's a long time. I was glad we Hilltoppers next series was "I think they played hard," said Passing ·13 6 from tight end Stan Milan, six had a great turnout." g one. After they drove to Spoo, who added that offensive Penalty • 2 0 tackles - including one for a loss The seniors weren't the only tern's 23, coach Jack line coach Bill Legg had a pre­ Rushing Attempts 35 53 - from safety Rod Heard and a ones to contribute to the win, baugh - father of Chicago game talk with the Panthers to Net yards .1 03 185 tackle from cornerback Mike however. quarterback Jim - opted to help motivate them. "They went Passing Attempts 28 24 Smith. Borkowski completed 18 of 27 the first down on a fourth­ or out and wanted it, and I didn 't see Completions 19 11 Not too shabby for a bunch of passes for 278 yards. Tailback ·two. The Panther D again that last week; of course, it was a Net yards 292 154 old timers. Jamie Jones surpassed the 1,000- its test and Eastern got the different team. I think the coaches Total net yards 395 339 Penalties 8-85 8-97 Actually, though, this "old" y a rd milestone with 82 yards back on downs. did a good job of keeping them Possession time 25:44 31 :16 group of seniors used its experi­ rushing. Split end Mike Rummell Panthers next drive was motivated." Third-down conversions 4-1 2 5-18 e ence and enthusiasm to lead the caught six passes for79 yards. ightedby two WKU person- Sacks by 5-34 2-1 9 Individual totals team to victory. Defensive lineman Joe Remke "It was just great," Noll said of was a menace to WKU quarter­ RUSHING the seniors' play. "All of us back Scott Campbell all day long. awks lose 2-0 to Kings Eastern - Jones 17-82, 13-36, Pilson 2- HICAGO (AP) - Daniel Wayne Gretzky took over the 2, Borkowski 3-(-17). seniors have been through it all Remke finished the afternoon · WKU - Smith 31-147, Davis 12-67, and we knew it was the last game with three-and-a-half sacks. e stopped 40 shots for his NHL scoring lead with 29 points Campbell 7-(-28), Brady 2-5, Hann 1-(- career shutout as the Los and extended his personal scoring 6). at O'Brien. It was ironic that the Martin Ellens chipped in four PASSING big plays went to us. It's a great receptions for 77 yards. Jamie eles Kings beat the Chicago streak to 13 games when he set up Eastern - Borkowski 18-27-1 -278, wks 2-0 on Sunday night. Luc Robitaille's power-play goal at Farrell 1-1 -0-14. feeling." Pilson, who is listed as a erthiaume, acquired from 6:44 of the second period. WKU - Campbell 11-26-0-154, Noll said that although this was linebacker, moved to fullback and Browning 0-1 -1 -0. ta on Sept. 6, won for the Gretzky had missed five straight RECEIVING the last home game, the real emo­ scored the first two touchdowns time in seven games and shots, including two breakaways, Eastern - Rummell 6-79, Ellens 4-77, tional pain came after last week's of his career. Linebacker Mike Jones 3-39, Milan 2-35, .E lder 1-20, e the firstLos Angeles goal­ before taking a pass fromTodd Elik loss to Northern Iowa, which Settles recorded 18 tackles and Cook 1-17, Grady 1-15, Moore 10. to shut out the Blackhawks and sending the puck to Robitaille, WKU - Davis 4-29, Hann 3-91 , Biggins dropped the Panthers from the defensive tackle Dan Dee had 11 'cago Stadium since Dec. 22, who rammed it past Ed Belfour. 2-18, Smith 2-16. Gateway title race and the play­ tackles and a sack. offs. UNI beat Eastern 16-10 last

ROSE MRRY POW/MIA AWARENESS WEEK SHEPHERD Mon., Nov. 5 · POW/MIA flag raising ceremony INCUMBENT • REGIONAL SUPERINTENDENT In the South Quad at 1 :00 pm OF SCHOOLS • Vote for Speaker from Charleston Comm. education, · ROTC Honor Guard experience, hard work, ALSO leadership, and service MON-FRI Nov. 5-9 1 Oam - 3pm on IN THE UNION (tables near sugar shack) November 6 Bracelets being sold in commemoration of each RE-ELECT POW/M IA'S $4 - $5 ROSE MRRY Paid forby Committee to Re-elect Rose Mary Shepherd Ho Ho Ho ...Here comes Santa with all his Christmas savings in � Joanna Swick, Treasurer The Daily Eastern News Holiday Guide. November 12 Panthers dominate i 28-6 win over WKU By CHRIS BOGHOSSIAN in the lopsided contest. Sports editor Borkowski drove Easte offense downfield on the P What a difference a week thers' second po sses sion , thr makes. ing for 78 yards on four pas Eastern 's rejuvenated offensive set up Eastern 's first touchdo unit, led by junior quarterback Fullback Jamie Pilson, Lee Borkowski, joined an over­ was filling in for inj ured B powering defense to lead the Montgomery, bulled his way · Panthers to a dominating 28-6 the end zone from the ·I-yard victory over We stern Kentucky in at the 7:21 mark of the first q front of a Parents Day crowd of ter to give the Panthers a 7-0 l 9,008 at O'Brien Stadium Sat­ It was Pilson 's first touchdown urday. his career. The victory came a week after Borkowski, who was ma the Panthers were eliminated his fo urth straight start si from the conference title chase freshman starter Jeff Tho with a 16-10 loss to Northern injured his ankle, had by far Iowa, which last week held best game of the year, comple Eastern 's offense to just six first 18 of 27 passes for 278 yards downs. a touchdown. The win moved the Panthers to "I'll tell you what, (Borkow the .500 mark at 5-5 after the non­ and coach (offensive coordin conference contest, while the Roy) Wittke spent a lot of tim

Hilltoppers dropped to 2-6. It was the office," Spoo said. "He c the Panthers last home game of back (after last week's loss) the season. They close out their did a good job." season at Southwest Missouri On the Panthers next dri State on Saturday. Borkowski m?de his only ma "I think they just wanted to go mistake of the game. He ov out and kind of show people what threw his intended receiver they're made of," said Eastern Hilltopper cornerback Mel head coach Bob Spoo after the Johnson grabbed the ball and game. "I think our seniors did a upfield for what looked to great job of showing the way." sure touchdown that would h The game was the last at O'Brien tied the score at seven. for I 0 Eastern seniors. But Eastern flanker Jason C The Panthers compiled 395 hustled his way back and cau yards of total offense and sacked Johnson at Eastern 's 5 -yard l' CARL WALK/Staff photographer WKU quarterback Scott Camp­ The Panther defense then pas Senior tight end Stan Milan runs upfield after a reception as We stern Kentucky linebacker Raji Gordon chas­ bell five times while limiting the its first test of the afternoon es in the Panthers 28-6 win over WKU Saturday at O'Brien Stadium. Hilltoppers to just two field goals • Continued on page JJA

·spJ��r��aroP� .. Soccer team ends season with 3-1 wi tYio�matche.s· By R.J. GERBER Staff writer to .Bradle.y and ,Western 8yANN TASTAD Ralston. ·•1 couldn't ask for more Eastern 's soccer squad ended Staffwriter and it's a shame we couldn't pull its season on a high note as it out a victory." defeated Mid-Continent Confer- Eastern dropped a pair of con- Kruto led Eastern with 25 ence opponent -Green ference volleyball matches this kills, 34 assists and two service Bay 3-1 in overtime Sunday at weekend, losing to Bradley 15-5, aces. which broke Eastem's ser- Lakeside Field. 15-8, and 15-10 o Friday ic r n and v e ace reco d and gave her 151 The Panthers finished the year then Western 15-12. 13-15, 16- aces for her career. Lori Olson at 5-1 2-2, their worst record in 14, 4-15, and 15... 12 on Saturday. added 17 kills and'32 digs for the school history. Eastern finished "Wejust 'Y eren 't readyto play Lady.Panthers and deib chipped MCC action at 4-2-1. The losses that(Brad ley) tnatth:" said c�b. in 14Jc ills and fiveblocks. in conference play were the first Deny Ralston. "Bradly was just Lund had 12 kHls and si� in four years. readyro breal t'ootandthey were ··blocks while Va n Eekeren added The Phoenix opened the scor- ready .Md ��p.t� the victory 29 ass�st& to help the Lady ing at the 22:5 1 mark when fresh- rmore then:We did.�� Panth�?J'S cause . .During tpe man midfielder Dan Govin took a ' The.Jlrj,y($ hadn'twon a·.®J;t� \VeSterp match,recori(e-d Lund . pass from Mark Bogan and put match .. her a UW fe renct $·htce 1988 � 19 .. · 1.000tbk ill. which.is :first" '' GB ahead 1-0. The Phoenix total..... �f � tf:JeirQ.ve victoey r :f9r ru)Easterpvolleyl.l,all P}a)'�r.:._:'' finished their season 4- 15 and 2-5 theLad}' J>an�. 'i·.· .. . . '\Vie ttad �¢�ttrn> running in the MCC. · - .Dean.na Ll)11(1Ject f'aster.n.With\ ·stared!-:::th eydy�fl9oke<,f µ$,,.;f � Eastern scored the first of its . · . J2kil!� '"" wl1t� Pi11,Je:; sa�d g�on. .� .• • ...... ,.. . !!. three unanswered goals when cap- . · l{rut6 ;t '$J� kills �n.d.J.? .. "' *�¥ beatSpuihe:r1t:fr �d.ity ·� tain Tom Pardo crossed a pass to freshman Vinko Kucinic, who !Jig�. <6it.l;4Y' , ;eJJipPetiiu. ?��c:"" a�;,pi't:tft�ly. were�'( ;kills �:JfP, .. �e .bl,ptk,s Whilt(' rriuch ..fr tjm\uS:. '��t �e. pl� . .. headed the ball into the net to tie , 1\f!:it�tl < �.28���.'; ·'.'· sfrop$p#nd it''sd jsapJ>QiJttirig.\\ie g the contest at the 72:33 mark. · • . : i! The game went into overtime "'lt\vas adi ... . g:�o:i;,.. couklJ!7(Mve gQtte'na wiit.:?. ..•. . . .nlance.:e$_P,p�i+l!lY .. ,.,. .t.�¢ ,Y ie'\V . · :;".;,Tl[# .�dy Pan:t.�e�"'\ViH. ll.9$l'' : and then Eastern went to work. thatif . .. · ·. '.tjave pl�y� �! :}Jitf!;e.'· .9tte;w�y ··con..fe?enCce ''" The Panthers scored both of their as we ··si:b;at we,dist ' minute period. Junior midfielder . bavewon /''�aid 'Ralstnn,.w]l�e So�tlletr(Illinois)a}; 1'p.rµ. ip. " Terry Dixon scored one goal and · -.. . . 1eam· .ls'now}4.;J8overaUtn'td l� ' 'Mc�f� .. ···· · · . · '' assisted on the other in a span of :. Qym.,. . .. •. . S inGa rewai,¢onf �nce.play "'·' �our .goalis tn.win twoof th· e. less than three minutes. � Tbe.· Laq.y.P�n thers played threeeo�f�re m�xt nce matches Dixon scored an unassisted this week ,'' , ;W°estern· tQa toughfiv e-game we play·· added' goal on a chip shot that found its

defeat �m and Ralston ,' Saturday Rtilsfon,, · way past Phoenix goalkeeper was pleased w)thhow her team Eastern wiJJ take on Drake Craig Sexton at the 99:42 mark. ptayed. Fridayand then will close out the Dixon then shot a lead pass SHANNON THOMAS/Staff photogr · Junior Dave Glendinning i·olleys the hall to a teammate during ••wepla yed extremely well. lt conference schedule by hosting upfield to sophomore forward t Panthers double overtime l'ictory over UW-Green Bay Sunday was probably one. of our best Northern Iowa on Saturday. Tom Waters who clinched the vie- 3-1, matches of the said Lakeside Field. year," * Continued on page JOA .,-: .• • ·Section 13· :·supp�mentto . TheDail • y_ easte�n New$ · Monday� NovembtJr 511 990 8 Pages . ' . . ;.� ·= ' . 11. • • : r, . ' .. -:.. : • .. w ' ·I. ·:: .. ,; · :: . ;.: ......

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OUR 75rH YEAR

1915-1990� . . : �-

ii . •, :; 28 DIAMOND IUBILEE. EDITION Monday, November 5, 1990

A WEEKLY COLUMN BY E. DUANE ELBERT l'J County Computer Connections THE PAGES Your One Stop Computer Shop 75T years uRNiNG ago -Normal School New'TBACs. Nov. 5, 1915 K Homecomers will see the face of Eastern bearing a more youthful appearance ...Probably the most obvious The Daily Eastern News After many trials and tribulations, The Normal State improvement will be the reconditioning of the drives News has at last been started ...The Eastern Illinois State and the new sidewalk (from) the gymnasium to the 75th Anniversary Special Normal School...was one of the largest schools in the main building. Now under construction is the new country that had no publication. As this paper is of the water tower... compo sed of a globular tank, set upon a students, by the students and for the students, all should 97 foot, supporting stem ...lo cated just north of the Hyundai co-operate in making the venture a success, and make power plant. Super 286X *** Th e News a permanent publication. The 640K alumni ...shoul d send their subscriptions in at once and All former residents of Pemberton Hall have been receive all the news from the big school. Everybody invited to the annual Homecoming breakfast ...Phi 40 MB Hard Dr. boost The Normal School News. Sigma Epsilon fraternity will hold its Homecoming 3.5 floppy *** banquet, a friedchi cken dinner, in the basement of the VGA Monitor Plans for the first homecoming have been completed Lutheran church, cornerof Ninth and Lincoln streets. at and everything now depends on the weather man. If he 12 noon on Saturday... according to Wayne is good, tomorrow's sun will rise on perhaps the great­ Saxton ...Former residents of Panther Lair, oldest coop­ est day in the history of the school...Homecoming will erative house at Eastern, have been invited to a lun­ open with special chapel exercises on Saturday morn­ cheon at noon on Saturday ... according to Cecil Werner ing. Many persons will speak. Special music will be '43 ...this is to become an annual part of Homecoming rendered under the direction of Mr. Koch. The week. E.I.S.N.S.-Shurtleff game will ...begin at 2:30 ...Special * * * 605 Monroe • Uptown • 345-1 443 yells and songs have been composed ...Tripp 's band, Eastern will soon see herself in the movies. "Life at engaged by the merchants, will leave the square at 2 Eastern" is the tentative name of a 35-minute technicol­ p.m. with a procession of rooters in its wake ...and the or picture, being taken by P. H. Kinsel ...Recently, HYUND�I Dealer blue and grey will be much in evidence. President R.G. Buzzard, Franklyn L. Andrews, publi­ ,t *** cations adviser, and Roy K. Wilson, director of public Mr. Storer 's geography class took a field trip to the relations, witnessed the first preview of...the filmwhich Rocks on Monday. They took their lunches along and is being sponsored by the campus Eastern State club. •• CARRY-OUT SPECIAL *** spent an enjoyable and instructive day. They studied GOOD 7 DAYS A WEEK rock formations... On their way home they stopped at a 25 YEARS AGO - Eastern News, Nov. 3, 1965 farm house and refreshed themselves with cider, get­ = ting home about five o'clock. Editorial comments - At long last the controversial *** constitutional amendment to lower the grade point A Large Last Sunday

...... ·.·.·.· ...... :.:;"' ''''�''''''''''''''' ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,�,:;�:'''''''""'''''''''''''''''''''"''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''"'''''''''''''"''@ 64 was perhaps the most year in the history of ent I suppose there are some who maintain I aily Eastem News. protests for civil rights and was censoring the press and firing the editor. t the Vietnam War sparked But it was libelous, period. nwide, college students swept with skepticism of rity - from the White Ken Hesler to their university admin­ Eastern State News adviser rs. 1964 d Eastern certainly was no tion. 64 was also the building forEaster n . Administrators was adviser to the Eastern State Hesler said. given the go-ahead for con­ News during the controversy and "There were a number of peo­ tion of Thomas, Andrews, resigned from his job as a result ple who believed the institution son, Coleman and the ' of it. "The investigation was was part of a conspiracy," he ed Sciences Building (now done very surreptitiously. I sim­ said, adding several anonymous Hall) - the entire South ply threatened to resign unless letters began floating around s. 1964 Eastern State News editor Jon Wo ods they fired the editor." campus alleging just that. Jon Woods, who was then tively successful editor that year. around and tried to give it to a Woods, who Hesler said now One charge was that Andrews r of the weekly Eastern The Eastern State News was bunch of other newspapers such works in public relations on the Hall was built on soil as weak as News, apparently uncov­ awarded an All-America rating as the Decatur Herald Review, East Coast, could not be. reached quicksand and that Eastern & a conspiracy in the con­ by the Associated Collegiate the Daily Illini (University of for comment. administrators failed to tell stu­ tion and alleged the con­ Press. Woods himself received a Illinois), and the (now defunct) Actually, Wood's story would dents the building may collapse 'on contracts were awarded writing award from Pi Delta Chicago Daily News, but no one have slipped by if it hadn't been since it was supported by a float­ obvious nepotism and that Epsilon, an honorary journalism ever picked it up," Hesler said. for a printer catching it. In the ing foundation. uildings were structurally fraternity. Just after Wo ods' resignation, 1960s, the Eastern State News "That was kind of a wild era," e and would eventually col- "He was a good editor," the News was suspended for one was printed at Prather 's Printing Hesler said. "I think they Hesler said. "I just didn't think it week. in downtown Charleston. The (Eastern State News staff) might oods' investigation, for would be possible to continue Hesler then came back as printer, who was about to set that have even thought that lawyers b he spent $200 out of his adviser and the weekly Eastem week's issue onto the press, read and the Supreme Court were with that editor in there. It was pocket, eventually forced the story and called his attorney, involved in the conspiracy." an untenable situation." State News became the bi-weekly r astern President Quin­ E who advised him not to print it. Hesler then went to the After the Publications Board Eastern News. udna to fire Woods as edi­ They, in tum, called Hesler, who Student Publications Board and refused to act on firing Woods, After pressure from local resi­ chief. In 1959, Doudna had also received legal advice not to asked the members to fire Hesler then went to President dents, former Gov. Otto Kerner fired former Eastern State go to press with the story. Woods. Doudna, saying he would resign in 1966 appointed a blue-ribbon 'I editor Bruce Shaeffer after "Our approach to advising at The Student Publications if Doudna didn't fire Woods. committee to investigate the t de ate between students b the time wasn't a lot different Board, then and now, is the So amidst incredible contro­ charges Woods had made, which administration over universi­ versy, Doudna fired Woods, and Hesler said totalled nearly 30. than it is now. 1 suppose there are board that governs the student ic . J y some who maintain I was censor­ newspaper. But the board balked the contents of his story to this The committee then, in 1967 It (Woods' story) was ing the press and firing the edi­ at the request and did nothing. day have never been made pub­ released a report maintaining uestionably libelous, very tor. But it was libelous, period." After all, Woods was a rela- lic. Eastern had a "clean bill of lous," said Ken Hesler, who "They (News staff) turned health."

Congratulations to Th e DallyEas tern News fo r 75 years of excellence fr om

J. Chauncey Blaisdell 1979 Charles A. Carpenter 1965 Scott & Cathy (George) Fishel 1982 Ann(Luc as) Franczak 1977 Andy Savoie 1981 Julie Zook 1986

Tbeir contributions fu nded our 75th Anniversary Op en House .. 48 DIAMOND JUBILEE EDITION Monday, November 5, 1990 D J I u

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• SPECIAL EDITORIAL •

W e're 75 years old today, and tomorrow we'll be 76. We 're publishing a newspaper today and tomor­ row, we'll publish another one. What makes a newspaper such an integral part of any community is the fact that it is a history - and history changes. Sometimes tragedy represents history and other We're not afraid to tell the trut times, celebration does. But for the most part, it's a sta­ More than 15 years ago Seventy-five years later, the newspaper they s this newspaper Jost a vita is still thriving. In fact, The Daily Eastern News ble medium. No matter what the circumstances are piece of its history. one of the smallest college dailies in the nation. though, we, the community, always find a way to We lost it in 1975. Until In our opinion, it's the best. endure. then, it had been the founda­ Not many people realize what it takes to pub And so do the students who work here. tion of The Daily Eastern this newspaper every day. Although, most of Although most of you casually read Th e Daily News. Even since then, spend only five to 10 minutes with us, we typic though, it has occasionally spend about 12 hours each day getting this news Eastern News every day, we're not so sure that every­ been whispered to the more to you. And while most of you are sleeping in the one knows what it takes to publish this newspaper every than 350 student journalists hours of the morning, some of us are still here, t day. who have worked here since one final look at the front page. It's not always In his famous speech to the British House of 1975. Jeff feet, we realize that we do make mistakes. But To us, the people who much as we try to maintain this newsroom as Commons when he became Prime Minister, Winston Madsen a pump their lifeblood into ------• fe ssional one, it is still a classroom. We learn s Churchill said, "I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, publishing this newspaper thing here every day. Usually we're criticized, tears and sweat." Granted, we 're not trying to win a everyday, it has as much magnitude as the golden sometimes we're applauded for The Daily East World War like Churchill was, but ask anyone who has rule. News. Te ll the Truth and Don't Be Afraid. worked here and the quest sometimes seems as trying. Just seven sim­ But the bottom line is that we're proud of ple words. But for us, they are the seven most revered newspaper and the work that goes into it. D The average newser spends about five hours a day in words we'll ever inherit. The motto first appeared on proud. Sometimes it's a real frustration - we spe here, helping us determine what is news and what isn't. the front page in the early 1930s. hours a day doing what we believe is right, the And there are a handful that sometimes spend 12 or 13 But the spirit of Te ll the Truth and Don't Be Af raid And it's not uncommon for someone to come in hours a day here. From 8 a.m. to sometimes as late as 1 was first handed down to us by the students who start­ with a copy of The News and tell us that we ed this newspaper in 1915, when the newspaper was wrong. a.m the next morning, we're chasing down stories, edit­ the Normal School News and the university was But when we have to choose between what ing them, rating them, editing them again, and finally Eastern Illinois State Normal School and only 577 believe is right and what others believe is right - putting them somewhere between pages one and 12. students were enrolled here. subscribe to the News motto that our predece Our press is usually rolling at 1 a.m. and by 7 a.m. (usu­ The date was Nov. 5, 1915 - 75 years ago today. believed in -Tell the Tr uth and Don 't he Af raid. ally) our newspaper is ready for you. This is what they told us when that first edition rolled We believe in that too, wholeheartedly. And offthe press: because it was taken offour the flag on the front And those five hours or the 12 hours that we spend "After many trials and tribulations, The Normal 15 years ago doesn 't mean we haven 't been a · here each day is really what we're all about. Sometimes, School News has at least been started, and this is our tell the truth. we're not thrilled about spending much time here, espe­ first issue. But in the past year, since we first began cele cially when there 's a big exam or paper coming up the We have devoted three weeks of hard labor in ing our Diamond Jubilee, we've realized one th ' working up enthusiasm, as well as soliciting subscrip­ we've done a thorough job of maintaining the hi next day. tions and advertising. We wish to thank the merchants of this campus, but we've haven't done such a But we never tum aw ay. This newspaper has a way of of Charleston fo r their liberal patronage, and as the job of keeping a history of ourselves for futu growing on you. Some of the best friends we '11 ever life of any publication depends on its advertising dents and newsers. And as John F. Kennedy on have are here, and some of the most crucial lessons, columns, we ask the students to patronize those who "We've have come too far, sacrificed too mu we'1 1 ever learn, professional or otherwise, happen right have made this publication possible. disdain the future now." The Eastern Illinois State Normal School, until And in the interests of our future, we're goi in this newsroom. now, was one of the lmgest schools in the country put that motto, Te ll the Truth and Don't Be A This Diamond Jubilee is a tribute to our newsers - a that had no publication. As this paper is of the stu­ back on our flag. Yo u'll first see it Tuesday u unique society of people who manage to make the most dents, by the students, andfo r the students, all should neath The Daily Eastern News on the front page. of everything that 's given to them - and to The Daily co-operate in making the venture a success and make And we hope it stays there. Because we believ The News a permanent publication ... Eastern News. - Jeff Madsen is the incoming editor in chief of Daily Eastern News

DON'T GAMBLE with other fast food ...

The Daily Eastern News 75 Ye ars! Yo�Rur Jackpot FoNCir homeL ERcooki n' at 703 W. Lincoln•Drive-thru•open 24 hours ··rcay·· Don't gamble with the news either The Co11111Ty'!;Best "Jbgurt ® Monday - Friday (this week onlv) Read the Daily Eastern News 7 5¢ Small Cups - Happy 75th ! e Dally Eastern News Monday, November 5, 1990 DIAMOND JUBILEE EDITION 58 Presidents offer own style Pemberton Hall in 1909, Lord "He was probably the most was denounced by a local building president except for - THANK YOU - revivalist for allowing dancing Rives," Williams said. Eastern has had six presi­ to occur on campus and was Doudna and The Daily Th e Stix fa mily would like to dents, and each has been charged by the revivalist with Eastern News clashed twice dur­ express our sincere involved in some sort of dispute , "encouraging wine-drinking," ing his presidency. In 1961, the om allowing dancing on cam­ according to an article in the editor of The News resigned appreciation to Eastern Illinois us to dealing with racial ten- 1968 edition of The Wa rbler. because of a dispute over univer­ ion. Religious groups and citizens sity policy. In 1964, the editor of students and th e community fo r Current President Stan Rives, upset by the bad publicity The News was fired over an arti­ making our firs t two months a ho has been Eastern 's presi­ demanded the decision to allow cle which made various accusa­ ent since 1983, came under fire the dance be changed, but Lord tions about the administration. pleasure to be in Ch.arleston. this February from Democratic stood firm with his decision. The The story never saw print, The ubernatorial hopeful Neil Hart­ tension gradually subsided and Wa rbler reported. 'gan and the news media for dances have continued with fre ­ Gilbert Fite, possibly the aking statements which were quency on Eastern 's campus. least-known Eastern president, onstrued to be support for After Lord's. death, Robert assumed the position in 1971 stern graduate and Republican Buzzard assumed the president's and kept the job until 1976. candidate Jim Edgar. "A Splash of Class" office in 1933. Williams said "Probably his biggest contri­ Stix "We're all human," said Buzzard was a pleasant man but bution to Eastern was the build­ lenn Williams, vice president "detail often escaped him and he ing of Tarble Arts Center." r Student Affairs, who has per­ tended to forget a lot of things." Williams said. onally known all of Eastern 's Buzzard established several After Fite resigned, Daniel ix presidents with the exception new departments in his 23 years Marvin stepped into the post in f the first, Livingston Lord. as president such as the speech 1977 and kept the position until I've never known a president department, and also paved the Rives took the spot in 1983. ARTS & CKAFfS t didn 't truly care." way for the construction of Marvin's first year as presi­ Lord, who acted as president Booth Library and the Lincoln­ dent was marred by a statement ON THE SQUARE f the Eastern Illinois State Douglas residence halls. he made to hall counselors. ormal School from 1899 until Williams said one of the prob­ Marvin allegedly advised the NOW OPEN · death in 1933, is credited by lems Buzzard experienced was counselors to watch black males Monday - Saturday 12p.m.-7 p.m. many for building Eastern from that he abolished the daily cam­ carefully while they are in resi­ one-building school with three pus chapel service previously dence halls. The statement was chers into a state-run univer­ led by Lord, upsetting many of made in response to circulating sity. Lord's former staff members. rumors that black fraternity · Wooden Furniture ·Leather "He was somewhat of a father Quincy Doudna took over for members were raping white igure and somewhat humor­ Buzzard in 1957 and began a females as part of an initiation • Dolls ·Baskets ss," Williams said. "He was a period of extreme growth for ritual. · · ery stern guy with a set rou- Eastern, Williams said. Under Marvin later apologized for Paintings Pottery/Cer amics Doudna, the university con­ his statement. AND MUCH MORE While the student body of the structed many buildings, includ­ "I tend to forget the bad 'ny teachers school was well ing Carman, Lawson , Thomas, things about the president and In the Old Hardware Store der 1,000, Lord fo und himself Andrew and Stevenson resi­ only remember the good," urrounded with controversy dence halls. Lantz Gym and Wi lliams said. "We're all South Side Charleston Square ver dancing. After giving his O'Brien Stadium also were con­ human. We all do the best we 618 Jackson Avenue pproval for a dance at structed during Doudna's tenure. can."

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Stroh's 1 O oz. G o blet s 50¢ Michelob Pitchers $2.95 Anniversary Savings! Anniver�sarySavi ngs! FREE POOL "A Splash of Class" $7.s o off $ 7 .so off 68 DIAMOND JUBILEE EDITION Monday, November 5, 1990 The Dally Eastern Ne Who's Thut? Buildings remai n after giants are gone By CATHY PODWOJSKI faculty and staff also contributed . WANT A Staff editor to Eastern, earning them the '' namesake honor. DATE'! Among those is Hiram Thut From the beginning days of the (pronounced "toot"), who is university, Eastern has grown In old days, they remembered with the RF. Thut steadily both physically and in HANG OUT AT named buildings fo r Greenhouse. reputation through the efforts of people who were dis­ "He was a very distinguished the fac ulty and staff of those JIMMY fe llow who was in the botany JOH.N'S times. tinguished. department," Tingley said. Today most of those early fac­ HUNDREDS OF SINGLE Donald Tingley Tingley, who has been a faculty ulty and staff members are gone, BEAUTIF INTELLIGEN History professor '!...,. T AN but hardly forgotten, although member at Eastern since 1953, SUB·LOvlNG STUDEN most students don't realize just knew many of the people person­ how close those early giants are. ally who have had buildings VISIT US EVERY DAY They are as near as the aca­ '' named after them. Tingley also was a student at Eastern begin­ demic buildings each student to publish "The Emerging S2.50 ning in 1939. BUYS YO spends numerous hours in daily, University," a history of Eastern One of the early pioneers at named appropriately for those from 1949 to 1979. SO Eastern, Mary Booth, was not MINUTE people who dedicated their lives Doudna and his successor, S 0 to advancing education at Eastern. Gilbert Fite, are as different as even a faculty member, but made her contributions as the head GREAT SCENER Several buildings on campus, night and day, and that difference including Old Main, Buzzard could help or hurt Fite if his name librarian almost from the time AND YO UR CHOIC Building and the Doudna Fine is ever considered for a building. Eastern started until the mid-40s, Arts Center are named in honor of "There was a very abrupt Tingley said. DF A GREAT SU former university presidents. change from Doudn.a to Fite," "She was in France during Old Main, actually the Whitlow said. "President Doudna World War I as a Red Cross per­ JIMMY JOHN� Liv ingston C. Lord Administra­ had actually encouraged faculty son. She was a very sturdy, tough tion Building, is the namesake of from research. His feeling was lady," Tingley said. "She ran a Eastern 's first president. Quincy that teachers should be solely good library, too." GOURMET SUB Doudna, Eastern 's third president, consumed with teaching." It takes several president­ is remembered through the Fite, on �he other hand, was appointed committees to name a Quincy V. Doudna Fine Arts one of the dozen most-noted his­ building after someone, with final Center. torians of the day and definitely approval coming from the Board Being president alone is not encouraged instructors to research of Governors, Eastern 's .govern­ :545·107 enough basis to name a building as well as teach, Whitlow said. ing body, said Daniel Thornburgh, after someone though, said pro­ One other building to be named director of University Relations. fessor Roger Whitlow of after a president is Buzzard "In old days, they named build­ Eastern's English department. Building, which was named for ings for people who were distin­ Whitlow and history professors Eastern 's second president, guished," Tingley said. "They Looking for a roommate? Need quick cash? Donald Tingley- and Robert Robert Buzzard. It was during seem now to do these things for Watch the Classifiedsin Hennings collaborated with sever­ Buzzard's administration that people who have contributed al other former faculty members many of the other leaders among (financially) to the Foundation." The Daily Eastern News.

NEIL HA RTIGAN COULD COST YOU $479 IF HE IS ELECTED GOVERNOR! THAT'S RIGHT, NEIL HARTIGAN WANTS TO TA KE AN ADD ITIONAL $479 OUT OF YOUR POCKET FOR TUITION!

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Paid for by Eastern Illinois University Students for Edgar Dally Eastern News Monday, November 5, 1990 DIAMOND JUBILEE EDITION 78 istorian looki ng ahead to Eastern's 1 OOth birthday the sun. If you understand history, then you The columns are a kind of by-product of here and what Ea�tern has meant to them," ial historian and is currently working on look at your whole life differently," Elbert Elbert's real work - completing research for Elbert said. k that will he published in 1994. a year said. a book of the university's history tor Eastern "I figured the best way to find that out r Eastem's JOOth annil'ersai:\'. Jn obser­ For example, Elbert explained a '·pep sys­ President Stan Rives. would be through the columns of the Elwern ce of that, The Daily Eastern News will tem" the university tried some years ago to As centennial historian, Elbert is collecting News.

re "'Turning Back the Pages:· a weekly arouse the students enthusiasm and keep tidbits from Eastern's past to prepare for the The book should be published in '994 . lumn hv Elbert that will appear every them at Eastern on the weekends. As com­ university 's 100-year birthday bash 111 1995. Until that time, Elbert said the coJUmns ay 011 page two. His first column is on pared with recent efforts to do the same, the Elbert, who has taught history at the under­ should serve as a kind of preview for the ge tw o of this commemorative 75 th two methods aren 't so different. graduate and graduate level for 25 years, said book, which he thinks will appeal more to 0\'erswy edition. "If we know a little bit about what the past two histories - a 50-year and a 75-year com­ alumni than cun-ent students. was like, what the school was, how it pilation - have already been written. "What I had intended to write eventually changed, why it changed and the role of stu­ "They were both good books, (but) the was a book that is more heavily oriented to dent government and other organizations I president didn 't want another 25-year history what things were once like and how we think it helps us understand where we are in or a re hash with some infonnation added to evolved to what we are in terms of student e more things change, the more they the whole spectrum," he said. the end," Elbert said. "He wanted an entirely body activities rather than a whole 1ot of

e same. Finding out what Eastern was like before new volume. what the budget was," Elbert said: istory Professor E. Duane Et bert, most of us came here and filling the rest of us "I think the largest group of people around Elbert was named the centennial histonan m's centennial hist01ian, can verify that in on that is the main purpose of Elbert's new who would be interested in the school are the through the nomination and selection of a column now running weekly in The Daily those in the Charleston area who have known committee. Rives infonned him of the po�t. don't think there 's anything new under Eastern News. it all their lives and students who have been coverage of student government dates back to 1917 responsible for social activities." either." Social activities included the Williams added that Lord Prom, fall and spring dances and favored the idea of a dance even long as there has been gov­ Homecoming. Today 's senate is though it went against the nonns of t, the press has been around more representative of the students the times. rton its decisions. to the administration. With the In 1920, a different fonn of stu­ The present senate has a lot of say on e Daily Eastern News has administration in 1917, few student dent government was created, the so no exception. There has been concerns were brought before Student Council. Again, its primary issues, but it wasn 't in the early days ... form of student government President Livingston C. Lord, who purpose was for recreation and not 1917, when the campus con­ wouldn't speak before the council. in student affairs. Glenn Williams f just Blair Hall, Old Main, "Now we (the administration) Even the power of early student vice president rton Hall and the H.F. Thut want to know what the students are governments was questioned on for student affairs ouse. thinking; we meet with student occasion. In 1926, the Student first fonn of student govern­ leaders because that is what they Board of Control was formed to ! was the Pemberton Hall arethere for," Williams said. compete with the Student Council. cil, said Vice President for That isn't to say the early admin­ The two governments jostled with nt Affairs Glenn Williams. istrators weren't receptive to stu­ each other until they finally merged show and did what they wanted "During the late '60s and early oday there is the Student dent wants. to become the Stud�nt Council until the house burned down in '70s, they were more concerned ate, which - like the old "In 1917, the student council Board of Control. 1940, Williams said. about state and national issues and berton Hall Council - is wanted to have a dance, but in Williams said the final ripple in Secretary of State and gubernato­ less concerned about local issues," sible for student needs. those days any physical contact was the student government history was rial hopeful Jim Edgar was respon­ Williams added. present senate has a lot of considered promiscuous," Williams the Panther Lair Council fonned in sible for separating the governmen­ He added the campus was sensi­ on issues, but it wasn't so in the said. "You wouldn 't see a couple t 934 in a house where Lincoln, tal and entertainment aspect of stu­ tive to the Vietnam War and stu­ y days," Williams said. "The walking around the campus with Stevenson and Douglas halls now dent governmentwhen he served as dents' attention was not as focused ii in theearly days was more their arms around each other, stand. The Panthers ran their own student body president in 1968. on academics.

Just because we're 75 doesn't mean our goals pave changed. Eveiyone involved with the News is still dedicated to providing the best publication we can . each and eveiy day. But we can't do it alone. If you're interested in writing, 345-VOLT photography, advertising or graphics arts, stop by or ·give 1519 Madison Av� The Daily Eastern News us a call at 2812.

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Nothing can stop the press - $50 fine on anyone's car that not even a blizzard that crippled had been left stranded on city the entire city of Charleston for roadways. 24 hours. The day was Feb. 1, 1982. It Miracle Panthers was a Monday and Eastern stu­ No. !!!!!!! dents awoke that morning to are 1 find the city blanketed beneath It happened in Longview, more than 16 inches of snow. Te xas. Eastern President Daniel Marvin After years of doormat foot­ had seen the inevitable blizzard ball, the Panthers won their first coming on late Sunday after­ and only national championship noon, when he announced the in 1978. defeating the Blue campus would be shut down. Hens from the University of "It makes no sense to leave Delaware - just barely. school open," Marvin told The With the nationally televised Daily Eastern News. game tied 9-9 with just seven The blizzard forced local seconds left to play, the Blue authorities to shut down the air­ Hens· Brandt Kennedy missed a port, railroad and all of the 45-yard field goal that would r. major arteries leading into and have made Eastern #2 in the out of Charleston. nation after posting a 9-2 regu­ The snowfall was continual lar season record . enough that snow plows Contrary to today 's atten­ couldn't keep roads clear for dance records, 2,000 students more than a couple of hours. traveled to Te xas to watch their Ambulances had difficulty get­ Panthers bring home the nation­ ting to the Sarah Bush Lincoln al title. Health Center and the Char­ The Panthers, under the tute­ leston Fire Department couldn't lage of head coach Darrell send trucks out because. roads Mudra, didn't stick around in Fiie ph were literally impassable. Te xas. but flew back to A Feb. 1, 1982 bli::ard socked Charleston with more than 16 inches of snow and fo rced Eastern admini On campus, university offi ­ Charleston that night. When the trators to shut down the campus fo r a day. Despite the campus being shut down, The News published cials encouraged students to team boarded off a plane at the sp ecial edition, which was the third in its 75 -year history. stay inside and even extended Coles County Airport, more visiting hours in some residence than 1,500 screaming fans were ebration in them, from the head- largest gas consumers, shut Staffers working for what w halls, so members of the oppo­ on the airport tarmac waiting for line, to the fi nal paragraph of down, fearing the util ity compa­ then known just as the Easte site sex could stay in the halls them with champagne bottles in each story. ny would not be able to service News reported that local mot without being subject to the hand. "Beer fl owed fre ely from a homeowners throughout the rest offered to put up students i extreme weather conditions. Meanwhile, on campus, the keg at the Ta u Kappa Ep silon of Central Illinois. anywhere from $4 to $12 a nig But that didn't keep The News reported that three nude fra ternity house as rowdy fra- The campus was officially In addition, sterile fr uit fli Daily Eastern News staff, about students streaked in front of a ternity members cheered on shut down at 8 a.m. that and dead plants presented so 15 of them, from publishing crowd of 300 students who had nine Te ke fo otball players . . . Tuesday and would not reopen problems for the Life Scien Monday 's edition. gathered in the South Quad. In "Students cried out colorful fo r a week as a result of the nat­ Department since temperatu Without any advertising to addition, Charleston Police were exclamations throughout the ural gas shortage. would be lowered in all of speak of, News staffers trudged forced to close Ike's Tavern in game. in Ike's shouts of 'Kill Students who couldn 't get off campus buildings except th to the North Buzzard Gym to University Vi llage after 500 stu­ 'em, tear his eye out and break campus and head back home where students would be stay· publish a fo ur-page special edi­ dents stormed the bar chanting his leg," were heard often. And were housed in Carman and temporarily. tion - one of only three in the "We want Ike 's, We want Ike's." once, after a questionable call East Halls, while workers in the And for Eastern students � newspaper 's history. But as the city began cele by a referee, a student yelled Registration Office scrambled to lived in the Chicago area, as "Today's edition of The Daily brating the victory at the "We've been raped ... extend deadlines so students cial Greyhound Bus came Eastern News is a little different Charleston Holiday Inn (now And "A parade of exuberant could still add or drop the campus to take students back from most day's papers - it's the Charleston Motor Inn), the fans marched around a police courses they had signed up for their hometowns. The Ne much smaller and there aren 't News staff, about 25 of them car shouting -'We're number that semester. In addition, reported a one-way trip any ads," the News said on the this time, went to work publish­ one!"' University personnel scurried Chicago cost $11.95. front page of the special edition. ing a special 12-page edition across campus parking lots to Associated Press however. "Although the university is offi­ that hit campus Sunday morn ­ C-C-C-C-Cold help students and other employ­ reported that Amtrak was fo cially closed, the News has pub­ ing. ees jump-start their cars for the to shout down 17 lines beca lished this special edition, the About 19 local retailers paid closes campus trip home. of the cold weather. third in its history, to bring our for ads to fill up about half of Monday, Jan. 17, 1977. It hit And the Financial Aids office Although the gas shortage readers the most recent and the special edition. including the just as students were moving provided last-minute emergency serious enough to close the c essential information of the City of Charleston. which stipu­ back in for the spring semester - loans for students who needed pus, it didn 't keep the Pant severe weather conditions." lated in small type at the bottom And it hit hard. travel money to get home. basketball team from taking News staffers reported how that "This ad not paid for with With temperatures plummet­ About 12 newsers went to court against Arm-strong S students trudged through the municipal monies." ing that week to 12 degrees work that Monday to publish a University. snow to local grocery stores to Each of the eight stories the below zero, the Central Illinois fo ur-page special edition - the As a result of the shorta buy their essential survival News published for that issue Public Service company reques­ fi rst in the history of The Daily Eastern's uti lity rates jumped items - bread, milk and liquor. has subliminal messages of eel- ted Eastern, one of CIPS ' Eastern News. almost $1,000 the next year.

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