Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC

April 1967 Daily Egyptian 1967

4-15-1967 The aiD ly Egyptian, April 15, 1967 The aiD ly Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_April1967 Volume 48, Issue 124

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, April 15, 1967." (Apr 1967).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1967 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in April 1967 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SOUTHER" '~~'''O'S U"'VERUT., C...... I •• llli... i. 5Cllurday. April 15. 1967 Volume 48 Numlter 124 A History on Canvas

OWLERS AT MEW ROMNEY: This pointing la, Mau ...... Emb" is one of the '00 in the Kent (England) Messenger·s .Jdtibition of that __·s" historic _.nts. 't shows "owlen·· (wool smugglers) of thO' '4th Century. ThO' paintings will b. sh_n und.r the aegis of the Deportment of Journalism. (Story 011 p.g. 2) Page 2 DAILY EGYPTIAN April 15,1967

THE TRAFALGAR MAI~: This is h_ Gra"- Mansfonl ylsHII.eeI the ani, w_ to ha_ hught at the lotil. of Trafalgar in 1805. A History on Canvas

By TIM AYERS After her marriage to the English­ man John Rolfe she came to live at Gravesend in Kent in 1617. A An art exhibi~ recalling some of statue of her was later erected the most famous events in the history at her grave site by a women's of the Engli!'lh coullty of Kent will organization in Virginia. be on display in the University Other notables who lived in Kent Center in the near fllture. and who are celebrated in the paint­ The exhibition is the result of ings include St. AugU!;[ine, William a contest spo(1!'lored by the Kent Caxton, Charles Dickens, Sir (England) Messenger newspaper. Winsron Churchill, St. Thomas a This paper is a member of the Becket, and Anne Boleyn. This is International Conference of Weekly also the county in which Canterbury Newspaper Editors, which has its Cathedral is located. headquarters at Southern. The exhibit, which includes oil, H.F, Pratt Boorman, the publisher water colors, drawings and etchings, of the Kent Messenger has been was originally ro have been shown ~ponsoring the event for several in conjunction with Journalism years. He points out that the history Week. However, in the confusion of Kent is an epitome of the History surrounding the trucking strike, the of the United Kingdom. So much exhibit was delayed in arrival. that has taken place in this County has influenced the world. It is anticipated that the pictures Because of this the paper started will be shown later this month. the Historic Art Competition, 'inviting anists to illustrate the history of Kent from the time Daily Egyptian Julius Caesar landed on Kentish Published in the o"parrment of Journalism shores to the Battle of Britain, r·'esdav thrOUl!h Sarurdav thr()u~hoU[ thE" which was fought over Kentish fields. sCllonl 'year, t>xcepr during ("nivt.·rJ=;iry \'3:,.-a­ [ion rr rjod_~. I,:xaminarinn Wt.·eK .... ~ and 1f.~,"1l Boorman thought the pictureS might be of interest in the United ~~~:I~~ ~t\i~~:~:n~';~~:l~i~~~~l~~~~'tl~~)fi:·:·\~~~: States. Howard R, Long, chairman paid at C,d.. ~,4');-;dJh.·. [iln"!oi;-; r-·2!J 1 Q. i'olich:"; (,f rh.,- ~ .::ypi~fn .,!"'_' !!":~, !'~';"-I of the Department of Journalism, :-:Ibihty ~If .~.. : ·:.:dp'Jr~. "tJr.,:.I- ~r. p ..:1 ~l":~ •• ~· agreed and so a special exhibit ht·r,.' :...In r.(,r ;,.,,,,,,:-,.c;.:.-:n!:. :--..::1" ,_t ': ':.,' (';-1;: . was held and the winning 100 pictureS (·f "h:: at!n'l:'1!-ir:i'F''i '.:- ",", j. ; :: were awarded prizes and sent off l·I1i\.·t·r~H':. Fdi!r,rt:ll l=-"J :::,.j ..q:1.::'. ,ffl to the U.S. From Carbondale the Hui~d~i1.! f-..; ..... ~-1 ....; .. :~1 ('::1":'":'", exhibit will travel to other cities I IIDa!;. rt.-It:·t,hJ>· 4~ ',-.:. ~S4. having newspapers that are mem­ F di[(lrial Cnnf·. r·~ ;:..:.~.. DiJrHh- H, ··.:H!'_ bers of the ICWNE. fim \\', A~t:r.:;. T(,hn KC"-lr' Col,_,. TF'~t. r· EL::'·l. Rob-.·!"r F(~rb...:.,::. Gl·(lr~\. Kr.'. m·.:~·_ One bit of American history ce le­ \\'iIl13m A.Kmc!r,~.1lchad! .'aLl·.·!".~~~r~2r-·.~ brated in several of the Kent paint­ F. p_·r..:.·z. f .• '.\.'ad(· ForJp. pr}:"!3Idi .-....;·r·.·~,:.,;··;~ ings is the story of Pocahontas, Thona~ P. W(~od .IT.

DANES BESIEGING ROCHESTER, 885 A.D.: T. t;. Reeves depicts the Danish invaders of the Ninth Century storming the castle at Rochester. April IS, 1967 DAIL Y EGYPTIAN Pog~ 3

The artists of Kent, England

celebrate the history of their

county and nation in a competition

sponsored by the Kent Messenger.

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~:1 L": --...------_._. f ; ..:.:~- .~ _'"." .: . ~... " .. ; : ~ .. :, . .' ~ ~ ~-~_":/ __ .;$ .. ":.J.~ .... .:-.,. ''''.... ;~ .. ST. AUGUSTINE: Dorothy Jefferson shows the greot Christion soint in 0 breaking of breod service with eorly converts Augustine brought Christianity to Kent in 597 A.D .

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-. - .~~•. : . -:.~~J.·~'·:!.'· ... '1~ ...... ~ '~·'~V~~'.':;'!'" .~ ;~~;z7." 7.:; BIGGIN HILLAIRFIELD, SEPTEMBER 15', 1940: The BOHle of Britoin-""'~ir finest hour" - is 0 favorite subject of lIIony of the ••hib· iting ortists, like L.A. White. Most of the ... were participants. DAILY EGYPTIAN AprillS,1961

A Newsman 's Probe Into the Enigma Of the Assassination

A review by CHARLES c. CLAYTON DeporfmWlt 01 Journalism

Forgive .I'y Grief, By W. Penn Cronkite on a Columbia Broad­ Jones. Jr. II.Udlothian. Texas. The casting Company network shoW. He Midlothian Mirror. 1966. 188 pp. has appeared on a number of Texas $2.95. television stations and has been in­ terViewed by the press. When this book was published W. It is his thesis that [he Warren Penn Jones. Jr. was truly a lonely Report is inadequate. that it was voke crying inthewilderness.Since made :00 soon and that many sig­ that time many others have joined nificant matters were either over­ in a chorus of disbelief and skep­ looked or glossed over. He contends ticism-and the crescendo has not th:u the FBI has Withheld some in­ yet !>t'en reached. More words have formation and has failed to follow be~'n written on (he disturbing up important leads. He points out eni~ma of the assassination of that only a perfunctory investigation President John F. Kennedy in the has been made imo the mysterious la 5t six months than about any single dearhs of several persons who pre­ subsequent national subject. Na­ sumably had knowledge oftheevents tional television networks have de- leading up to the tragedy. JOHN F. KENNEDY: Whose victim? One of the intriguing facets of what happened in Dallas on Novem­ ber 22. 1963 is Jack Ruby's part in the case. Mr. Jones points out that by other witnesses when conspiracy up and reduced to purity. TheCom­ the Warren Commission questioned became an issue. In several mission's attorneys ignored the rich those who attended a meeting in instances the Commission simply exposed evidence and began im­ Ruby's apartment on November 24. failee! to ask the next most obvious mediately to drill individual shafts the day after Ruby had killed Lee question when conspiracy was about and tunnels as seemed to suit each Harvey oswald. At least six persons to appear." attorney or investigator. It is dif­ attended that meeting. Three of ficult to comprehend such errors by them have died under mysterious While Mr. Jones' roots are deep comfletent lawyers and investi­ circumstances since that night. The in Texas. neither Dallas nor Texas gators. Yet this is the Warren Re­ offiCials escape his pointed com­ author adds: "A reasonable man port. and the starting point ~ •.- would wonder if George Senator (who menEs. Texas Attorney Waggoner historians." shared the apartment With Ruby) Carr is not presented in aflattering revealed something important that light. Even more scathing are the Much of the material in thi." to , night." author's observations concerning has been published in Mr. J,',' Dallas District Attorney Henry weekly newspaper. The Midl(,rill ';-, Tom Howard, an ano-rney. dieoi Wade. Dallas poliCl' offiCials and ostensibly of a hl'art ,luack after Mirror. There was ample oppor­ especially Assistant District At­ tunity to challenge or refute the "acting strangely" f.s on Whether Ihere was in fact a ~.;p:-:':·kluJ i!1r~~rn;liit)nat L{)mm-:nr and did !lot ask what the 'officer Alex­ spirac)' to kill the P r,:;;id"'!1t as :-'Ir. Jisrutc'. Th,' ,;,'cone! i!, rhl' currtnt September 21. 1964, but his mur­ ander's' first name was, we also derer was neVE':r indicted. Jom's, Distrjcl AunrneyGarri:;on ot ;1"\\. '".r~~:..ni{)n in Nt.'\V Orleans by dir<.:ct the queStilln to poiic"man !\:cw Ode-lns .:.nJ uthers bdiL-vc. u, D!:.( '"1,,'[ .. \ttur:ley .Jan","-::..:; Garrisol1 These unexplained de:>.ths are a Ch"ries T. Burnie\' if he is rl1e whdher th(;,'~' 1" a <':(jnspiracy ,<. •• h~,_· <'[forL, havl_' pr'luuc\'c! enough sample of many loose ends dted same Burnley mcnriuned hy :-'lrs • ._~V!1.1. ·"Ct_~ l(l ":l1PPO.ft gr3nd jury in- by the author in support of his Roberts. If Burnley is the same, ~~~~b~i~~!~~rc~~~R!~~~}'J~~~~!:J~-~~~:~~ 1!, .. ~ rill. ~ ;"int.! ~i·~t, ~h;1 th..lt tht.'rc claim that the Warr"n Reporr is 11I r!!C thc;'! we would ;J",k for rhe first nam" for h.msdf. :\di~itr<..:J!~, ti1('r( i.,; to neither comple!t: nor conclusive. w:t,.- in fa<.:l :. 1,lot assassinate of Officer Alexander who w.)uld. ample t'('om for J.!·~ui11cm un [lnrh There is t.:videncc, Mr. Jt)nes in­ rho.- !',',-,.;itil'Dr. periodically check by the roomin~ sides fit ~ht: l.:ontrl,.'VL'r~~·. -[ q t~li;:-: sists, that Ruby and Oswald knew house where Oswald lived." rc\~it.:wcr" ..;or:'h.' of tnl' char:; ... ·~ \1:i. each OIher prior [(I tilt.' assassina­ :1n(J\~1~'U(~!~; !'::~:\,~:~~I ;~~~~td i~)~~~~ Jl>ne~, makC'..; 5e~m a hir ,.;lrain~·(j. tion. There were statements made It is the author's conviction that JOIl~', i:,; far fr.>m hCiP.g laid tnrest. On orilcr char)!cs, th~Te i..; :n :lis ~ha! at least onc oth(:r man was Ruby and Oswald were acquainted. In ian, hi" is ! rJis(' no"i; seen with a rifle in the vicinity of He points out that Oswald screamed Oro",. undL'rscorin~ th,' author's in­ a reaso:1able doubT. the assas,.:inarion. at newsmen after his arrest [har tL'nri"n ro c,lntinut? his inquiry as !t sC','ms faIrly certain th~!t w~' rinl\' :Ind fU!Ufl' dt.'vdopmcr.ts per­ ,tlr. Jones does not mince words he was" just a patsy." The logical shall nN know the ..In3w<.:r for a sequel is rhat Ruhy shot Oswald [0 m;'. liE.' has bL'C-1I writing about the wh.'n he charges incomp~'tency in 10m:!; time. :-'I:r. Jones insists thl' seal his lips. and Mr. Jones adds: a,: _- -,,.:,,ination "inc~' th'" day it oc­ the handling of the autopsy report on Warr,:n Report was mad.:: at k:l"t the body o(the Pre",idcnr. Tho: author "We repear our convicrion that morc CUr,,,,": mOTt' than three YL'ars ago. fiv(' YL'ars tfiO s00n. X,: .:nl' who krJ"ws him wottle! believe bluntly state" that "many of us feel killings an: going to be nec\.'ssary tna, i!l' will SlOp umil Ihl' mystery i" that a reading of the testimony in in nrd('r ~o ke.cp thi". crim(' quie~." But re\I:lrdless of whNr..:r !h·~· will Of the Warren Report. Mr. Jones reader is inclined to a!;rcc' with \!!'. unrJ\~ ...·Jt:d. th,,' Warren Report show thar (he charges that .. the Commission's Jones' thesis, it can be- ;;ait! rr-a' h( ~ ;i~ "r!('-m~'n ,·ru~ade a~ainsr the Comm iss ion fled from any indica( ion activities might be compar\.'d to an has writtc'n :l provr;.:.n!\'., ,,!'lci in­ :P!'~ :nr-!s rc~ r\..'Si t'n thL' findings of llf a .:onspiracy:· lie add<,: "Some inl'pt strip mining cumpany with an tcr{:~.:tin~ ~()ok. K(- (,n~' CJn d· I:.Jhr th, ,\",l:'1','n l\";'l-rt ;.;1" !'rou!!ht him wirnesses Wt.'re not calkd wh~'n conspiracy was indIcated. Some wit­ area (If rich ore lying in plain vieW his sino_·rit\· or fail te, JOr!H!"t. .' II!:: !l2:i";l,l! ci'tl'l:~h'!'!. S'- ...... ral months to ready [(t be systemarically scooped diligencc'. - ag .. h,' I',:,':: !m',Tvkwed by Walt~'r ne,,:ses were made out be liars April 15, 1967 DAIL Y EGYPTIAN Poq" 5

Journalists of the Drawing Soard

By CLIFF LAWHORNE Graduate Assistant, Department 01 Journa/ism

President Johnson, who was up­ These syndicated cartoons, of st't nor to(> long ago over a pointed course, must deal with broad sub­ canoon drawn by Ilerblock, said he jects that carer [0 the interest of felt about cartoonists "like the man as many editors as possible. said about the arth;t-he couldn't find the artist so he hung the pic- Because most daily newspapers­ tUl"e.'· and a growing number of weeklies­ His comment was somewhat mild use syndicated cartoon servict.:s. compared to an 1871 statement by political cartoons are appearing in Tammany HaU's "Boss" William newspapers today With the smack \lan:y "[wct'd. whu blamcd his down­ of. a certain general ··sameness." fall on "them damned pictures" - The often criticiz",d "standard­ cartOons drawn byoneofthenation's izatiofl" of nt.'ws pages in American first and most outstanding carto­ • ,;spapers has slopped over to the onists, Thomas Nast of Harper's editorial pages by way of the syn­ Weclns roda\' ale .m I)f y... '::;lCry,'ar, startt.'d "faJ~ng L'ffl'ctiv\..' ami furcdul ml'anS of l'U­ aW;lY.·' Ouc top canoonists now ucltion. Th"y cc'rtainly ::;L'rvl.' as mll"tly arc of tht' World War II excdknt vL'llkks for humor, rid­ vim,I)!;". iCLIk and emL'nainl1h'nt. Thi,; n,"w lu",: ...'d uf canoonists. As .:ompart'd to y",sterye,u", [he whilt.' ,;Iill using; some tL'chniquL's pt.'lIple of Ihis coumry arc pres,'nlL'd lIf old, h.I" hrol1!!hl a 1It-'W type ihink­ a polish,'d pn.duct. in)!; into his :'ll"J. It i>; true th.Lt ..:.!rt .. II'llS t.",da~ "Ire 'JU"I as m.ulY political scit.:ntisrs "milder :lnd bl.llI<.h:r." .lnu th... ,y h:IV" wda, SU'L'S" hehaviorism ratht.'r ~ clualit\' l)f ~·~;jm\.·nt.·~:),. whh.:h ilk'\" Ih~m' rh,' in,,(itLH illn,IIi"m l'mphasil:,'u haire ~prL'ad to L'ui[urial pa)!L's in the past. p"lirk;l' cclrlollni:;ts !l>­ throughout thL' ..:ountry. y"t today';: day an: rnlll"e .\IlU muce str,'"sing global mind.. :d cartoonists are doing Ihe social asp,'ct of the' V,UiOU3 :In t'xp,'rt job with their blenu of hllrL~"n". p"litic;ll s" -: i 0 log: i c a 1-politkal intL'rpr ...'­ I'olil iC11 c.lrI"llnists, then, it.lV'.: t.!twns. The\' arc uoin'! this with •. lut L'v"lv~'ll. TnJ~I\" lh,'\" :Il'... ' much less b,'coming so·violt,.'ntly bitter as tlftL'n hin,'r :md d\.'p",'nd lil"l'~' on riJicule was the cas..: in thl' p.!st. rhan lin bu .. h!vllni II,!, Ca r1D{'ni:'l:' .lr,' nut "0 [j~'r.:dy "p,'rsona1 as in Overall it would appear that C,lr­ ttl<' pa,;t, lh"u~h they do USL' per­ toonists today are' giving rhe re.!Jmg Voltman, Hartford Times sonalities almost ~),clusivdy tu de­ public-gl.)bally indoctrinated b~ ra­ Miroge pict anu capture "odo -politk:ll dio and te!evisiDn as w.:I1 as n... 'ws­ trL'nds. pap..'rs-the caricature inrc" rpreta­ As C:lrtoonist :\t.lu1din recL,ntly tion it dc"manus. Page 6 DAILY EGYPTIAN April 15, 1967

Daily Egyptian Book Scene The Bitter Bierce

.. Imb"',~t' Bierr'e; A Biograll/IJ by known figure on the cocktail route Richard O'Connor. Boston: Little and soon acquired an East Coast Brown and Company, 1967.333 PP. retinue of admirers• .'56.95. 'Journalists of today will be in­ terested in reading about Bierce's Sobriquets and epithets not al­ attacks on his own profeSsion. The ready attached to Ambrose Bierce great villain of the American scene, by his contemporaries and previous he said, was the growing power of biographers, Richard O'Connor has the American press. "Fools, fakirs used in a new study, Ambf(),~e and freaks were yellowing jour­ Bierce: .-I Hiography. Surely future nalism to the point where news­ biographers of the San Francisco pap,~rs were becoming indistin­ paragrapher and Hearst Washington guishable from circus posters." correspondent will find little new [0 In building this fascinating study of call him. Among the many tags Mr. a fascinating man, Mr. O'Connor has O'Connor attaches to Bierce are a used Bierce's columns, poetry. es­ rebellious spirit, a biological spon, says, short stories, and extant cor­ a Huck Finn, a military buff, a respondence as well as the man of letters, an acerb prattler, comments and writings of others and the father of the modern black about Bierce. He enlivens his book . with thumbnail sketches of San In the hands of Mr. O'Connor, Fra,ncisco newspapermen and liter­ Bierce was a dichotomous charac- ary figures and with brief sum­ maries of a few of Bierce's short stories. As a master biographer, however, Mr. O'Connor has included RevieweJ by these digressions without intruding Jim A, Hart on his narrative. And he helps sus­ tain the reader's interest With fre­ quent references throughout the book to Bierce's strange disappearance ter. His cynicism about men and AMBROSE BIERCE: Epithets and sobriquets their motives opposed his idealism down a Mexican road. and his morality. He made pain, But when the reader arrives at the violence. and death uproariously final chapter, he finds little new funny; but he grieved, even cried, about Bierce's disappearance. Mr. at the deaths of his sons and O'Connor, however, substantiates friends. He was an atheist, yet he the euthanasia motive for Bierce's could not rid himself of Puritanical going to Mexico; and he seems to Britain's Fleet Street ideas acquired from his parents, accept the theory that Bierce, an even at one time asking to be prayed asthmatiC old man of 71, died in the f'l,'et Street. the Inside Story of for. He was a declared misogynist, confusion of battle and was dumped member Press Corps and London living only sporadically with his into an unmarkt.'d grave. J"lJrntlli,~m. A Symposium edited has its Fleet Street. The terms wife, but he always had women The book is adequately footnoted, by Vivian Brodsky with a foreword refer to the influential segments around him and he would not divorce contains a short glossary of Bierce's by Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Lon­ of American and B~::.ish journal­ his wife. He showed no love for observations, amI has a selected don: Macdonald Publishing. ism. his children and would have nothing bibliography anti an index. It is also Since so many ideas embraced to do with their rearing, but he illustrated. Washington has its tholisand- by citizens of the United States could bemoan the untimely deaths were first set forth in British of his sons, for whom, he said, he journals. it is enlightening to know had great plans. He would have been Art Buchwald how Fleet Street operates. This a kindred spirit With the young book gives us the views of the beatniks of today, except that he lords of the press, the men who would have insisted on good groom­ write the editorials or leaders, and ing. Only Bret Harte bested him as the policy-makers who must be a meticulolls and fashionable dress­ Son of Something or Other aware how far they can criticize ere the state and how they can avoid Alwaj q wracked With asthma that Son "f the GrPld Societ),. by ing it was a foreign language. sent him frequently into the hills Art Buchwald. New York: G.P. Here's wnat tney wrote: "Since for relief, Bierce, in this study, putnam's Sons, 1966. 242pp. $4.95. he did not exist, it was necessary RevieweJ by is most interesting as a journalist. to invent Art Buchwald. The inter­ Housfoun Waring Intermittently for twenty years he For many years his name ap­ national edition of the New York paragraphed for San Francisco peared over newspaper articles Herald Tribune accomplished his magazines and newspapers. His from . Then four years ago, creation immediately after the war. stinging barbs were directed at the for some still-unexplained reason, After many years here, he went to trouble with over-sensitive courts. more pompous San FranCisco per­ they SWitched his byline to Wash­ Washington. which some people think Sir Linton Andrews. genial re­ sonalities and the more ohnoxious ington. served both of them right." tired editor of the Yorkshire Post. foibles of its citiy.~nry. His caustic Where it will come from next, describes the work of the Press Criticism was directed at those Obviously this little news ruse they are not sure, but if LBJ and ,got out of hand. The transatlantic Council of which he was chairman established in military. religiOUS, some others had their way, they in 1955-59. The council was formed I jump only escalated interest in the or Civil power, a class whom he could make at least one fiery sug­ by the press in 1953 to look into held in lifelong contempt. He at­ Buchwald craze. And his articles gestion. But there's the problp.m. have been handled so cleverly that complaints about individual news­ tacked all that was corrupt and no one caught on until noYi. paper performance, and it has vulgar. His targets were the in­ heard the crackpots as well as tellectually deprived and the morally Once, even, a column, which those With legitimate grievances. naturally eventually was reprinted in delinquent. Reviewed by Over 200 adjudications against As the leader of San Francisco's one of more than a dozen books newspapers have been announced, off-again-on-again literary cults of Kennet" Starck bearing the Buchwald name, which sometimes in mild and sometimes the nineteenth century, Bierce be­ means the book indusrty has gone in stinging terms. Offenses range came the "dear master" of would­ along With the gag, declared that FBI from objectionable statements about be poets and fiction writers who director J. Edgar Hoover didn't the royal family to the glamorizing worshipped at his feet. But when a Although he makes fun of every­ exist, that he was just a composite of crime and sex. The prestige pupil outstripped or outgrew the body and everything, there's no of many FBI agents. of the council has improved journal­ master, he became a target for fighting back. Because, you see, Of course, Hoover didn't comment ism in Britain, and many Ameri­ Bierce's column. Yet, Mr. O'Con­ Art Buchwald doesn't reallv exist. on the article, at least not on any cans feel that a similar voluntary ilor, who points out many such The srory leaked out e-arly in of the telephone tape recordings agency would help in this country. instances, never accuses Bierce of December. We've put together the that we liRtened to. It's simply Other chapters are written by jealousy. He does say, however, in a pieces, and now the real story his business to know, and he knew. Gavin Astor of the Times, George BiercE;-type paragraph th;:t there about Art Buchwald can be told. Why deny your own noneXistence Murray of the Daily Mail, Lord "is no statue to ,\mbroi=le Bierce in Oddly, we first caught on through when the accltsation comes from Thomson who owns papers in several San FranciRco, a city well populatE'd the Paris':'based New York Herald 50meone nonexistent in the first countries, and others. Leonard with effigies w men who have done Tribune - Washington Post, Inter­ place? Yes, the FBI has been in Marsland Gander describes the less for her." national Edition (the expanded name on it roo. relations between the press and Later as the chief Hearst cor­ being a poor cover-up), itself. The To avoid any confusion, we do broadcasting. respondent in Washington, Bierce's Buchwald byline first began appear­ assert for the public record that Finally, there is a glossary. as epigram maric and aphoristic at­ ing regularly in the European Edition this book does exist. On the jacket, every trade and profeSsion has its tacks on lobbyists, on govern­ of the . under the name "Art BUChwald," own language. Otherwise, tt.e reader mE:ntal auth"rities, and on U.S. In a preface to Oile of the 50- it says, Son of the Great Society. of "Fleet Street" may not under­ pr,licy titillarcd his enlarged read­ labeled "Buchwald" articles in the But you must watch out for people. stand "copy taster," "fudge," or t-rship, as his invective paragraphs first issue of NYHT-WP, Inter­ including one of the book's favorite "flong." fr, r yt:ars had entertained weekly national Edition, the editors pub­ subjects, LBJ, who will try to com­ The book is valuable, almost es­ m:WRpaper readers rm the West lished their confession. But, of pound things more-if that's pos­ sential. for anyone who wants to Cf)ast. And in Washington, as in San course, they printed it in italics, Sible-by referring to Buchwald as know who is maxing up his llind­ I- r

Freedom of the Prt'ss and Fair regulation are untenable in the light Trial: Final ;~eport I!ith Recom­ of the First Amendment's guarantee mf-ndations, by The Special Com­ of free speech and free press:' mittee on Radio Television and the This leads the committee to a re­ Administration of Justice of the view of self-regulatory procedures Association of the Bar of the City of the bar, bench enforcament of New York. Judge Harold R. Me­ agencies and the press. dina. Chairman. New York: Colum­ Canon 20 of the Professional bia University Press. 1967. 99 pp. Ethics of the American 3ar As­ $3.75. sociation is declared ineffective be­ cause of its loopholes and es£ape The legal system of the United clauses. The Committee. there­ States is not one which provides fore, presented a substitute version quick and easy answers to an issue of Canon 20 based uponthefol1owing so complicated as the conflicting underlying princip!es: principles of the right to report the 1. CIvil actions and proceedings news and the right of the individual and criminal prosecutions should be to a fair trial. tried in the courtroom and not in the Much has been published in re- newspapers, over the radio or on television. 2. The professional and ethical Reviewed 6y standards relevant to the subject of Howard R. Lon, "trial by newspaper" should be ex­ pressed in simple, clear and specific terms. Specifically the new version of cC'nt months on this subject. but Canon 20 makes it the ethical re­ for a long time to come this re­ sponsibility of the lawyer to refrain port of the special committee of from making or sanctioning out of the Association of the Bar of the court statements preceeding civil or City of New York may serve as criminal trials. The lawyer is given the most authoritative substitute the further responsibility of re­ for a definitive pronouncement by straining clients and witnesses. the courts. Similarly. but with less as­ This volume represents the com­ surance. the committee recom­ mittee's interpretation of its Interim mends a code for police and lawen­ Report. published in lC)65 as Uadio. forcement agencies, which while de­ Telet·ision, and the _-Idministmtion clining to deny representatives of the "f lustice: A Docllmented. Surt"ey news media access to information, vf .tlaterials. Columbia University would specify the nature of the in­ Vietnam Press. The present volume reprints formation to be made available and the text of the Supreme Court de­ the condition of availability. cision in the Sheppard case in the Since it is already established that Appendix. trial judges have the necessary It is to be expected that no group power to assure a fair trial, the intheMud of lawyers and judges would be in committee restricts its camDents complete agreement. In general. to a review of relevant cases and the however. the committee concludes observation that judges must use this •• • • . no one seems to be that. "Direct controls on the radio power at their own descretion in the listening•••• " and television industries and on the light of loc'll conditions. press by a governmental scheme of This report is most restrained in its treatment of the press. The voluntary code adopte'f by the Toledo Blade and the Toledo Times in Our Reviewers August, 1966, is praised and re­ printed in full "because of its im­ Jim A. Hart is a member of the portance:' faculty of the Department of Journ­ The report is concluded with this alism. observation: "Moreover. the claim Houstoun Waring is a long-time of the neWa media that prejudicial newspaperman and publisher of tlie publicity emanates largely from Littleton (Colo. ) Independent. those conn~cted in one way or Kenneth Starck. a candidate for another with the law enforcement the Ph.D. in journalism. is a visiting agencies and others who are part instructor this year at the University and parcel of the judicial establish­ of Tampere, Finland. ment and that the judicial establish­ Howard R. Long is chairman of ment has not done what it should the Department of Journalism. have done to correct these abuses. Harrison Youngren. a retired rests in a solid basis of fact. When Army officer with long service in we do our part. as we can and as the Orient. is a graduate assistant we should. the dawn of a new day in the Journalism Department. may be at hand."

.A Camera in War

Vietnam In the Jlud, by James nesses of the Viet Cong, and gives Pickerell. New York: Bobbs-Mer­ his estimate of the chance for rill Company. Inc. 1c)66. 129 pp. success. If "success" is defined $5.00.

In this book James Pickerell Reviewed 6y brings us the worm's-eye view of Harrison Youngren war in V ictnam reinforced with pic­ tures he made during his work as a free-lance photographer while wading through rice paddies With as military victory followed by troops on patrol. political harmony in South Vietnam Far from just another journalist's his view of the future is dim. As "I-was-there" account of his ad­ he says, "The discouraging thing ventures Pickerell's penetrating about writing this book is that it the often us~d Viet Cong tactic of stay to repair the damage to wound­ ~alysis of the United States' has aU been said before. and yet firing a provocative shot at an ed pride and to damaged houses. capacity for snatching political de­ no one seems to be listening and it American patrol just as it enters a Pickerell's conclusi.on that the feat from the jaws of military vic­ is a foregone conclusion that no one village. After the Americans have Americans have no real talent for tory deserves wide attention. The will be listening now:' manhandled the village chief and guerrilla warfare seems to coincide author takes us with him as he ac­ In his two years with tbe fightin~ perhaps burned a house or twO the with the opinion of other experts companies US soldiers on patrol. forces in Vietnam Pickerell grewto Viet Cong slide in as the Americans such as the late Bernard Fall. as he visits with the villagers; he have great respect for the staying stomp out to cash in on the un­ PickereU's photographs are suf­ discusses the stren~hs and weak- power of the Viet Congo He cites fortunate incident. The Viet Cong ficient justification for the book. DAILY EGYPTIAN April IS, 1961

Recording Notes Conozca a su Vecino EIPeriodismo Cachipolla 8ill Evans'

EI fen6'meno especial carecte­ Aires como ctnsul de Colombia. rfstiCOde la vida literaria de los Los j6venes literarios portdi'os 10 parses hispanoamericanos es un tipo vieron como el ~ran profeta del de periodisrno dedicado a los temas futuro en la poesta, y ast fue que Cool Sounds y movimient03 literarios. Por todas se lanz6 la nueva publicacilin, todos partes existen semejantes publica­ lIenos de exciraci6'n y con un buen ciones. bien establecidas y recono­ volumen de publicidad en los diarios . By Mary Campbell cidas en todo el mundo. pero hay de la metropolitana Buenos Aires. AP Newsfeatures Writer otras de vida breve. effmeras como Pero la Revista de Am€rica sufrio la cachipolla que existe solo durante la misma sueTte que muchos otros su vuelo nupcial para desaparecer esfuerzos semejantes. Duro s610 Jazz pianist Bill Evans likes to una vez que se asegura la con­ tres nGmeroR. pas6' casi por com­ record and he likes to compose. tinuacion de la raza. pleto al olvido, y probable mente ni Not a gregarious man. he says. Estas ~blicaciones literarias, se hubieran r,7cordado de ella si "I would like to move away from medio-periodico y medio-revista, el mismo Dano posteriormente no being in from of the public a little sirven muchas veces stlo para inflar la hubiera mencionado en su ..Iuto­ Cubierto del primer numero de I.. bit. My personality has always been la vanidad personal de los poetastros biogm!(a.. donde indica que fue un that I don"t need an audienc~' o para ensayar alglin movimij!nto desfalcador quien se lIevo los fondos Revisto de Am/riCO, IS agosto 1893 around." que resulta completamente esteril. n~cesarios para seguir impri­ Buenos Aires When he performs. always as Muertas. nadie las echa de menos, miendola. y no se pudieron reponer. leader of the Bill Evans TriO, in­ eero de V0Z en cuando sale entre A causa de todo esto, entonces, gentinos Juan P. Capel y Antonio cluding Eddie Gomez. bass. and Joe estas alguna publicacion de vida los hisroriadores del moviemiento Monzon, qui~lIes por fin localizaron Hunt. drums. it's eirher in a small ef(mera que despues toma gran modernista. el mas importante de una colecclOn completa de tres nightclub or a concert hall. The significacion pn la historia literaria. principios del siglo XX en la Iitera­ ntimeros en m&nos del distinguido small clubs. he says. have a con­ Tal es la Revista de America fun­ £ura hispanoamericana. siempre bibliotecario l:; estuclioso c'Jjleno genial atmosphere of relaxed in­ dada en Buenos Aires en el ano pasan por alto el importante perfodo Alamiro de Avila Martel. EI ha timacy. the concert halls provide 1893 por dos poetas. RUllen Dar{o, formativo de los escritores como proporcionado copias en microfilm better "lianos and better acoustics. nicaragiiense, y Ricardo Jaimes Jaimes Freyre que colaborO' en la de !a public ac ion cntera y como parte Very.~ has the cool pianiSt under Freyre, boliviano. Es£Os fueron los Revista de AmcricadurantesucoTta de la conmemoracion del centenario recording contract. The company principales portoestandartes en e xistencia. del nacimiento del poeta Ruben Dari"o PUts out [we> or three Bill Evans aquel entonces del nuevo movimiento E I problema fue atacado sin em­ sc promeren cuando menos dos re­ records a year, every third one a denominado "modernista", en la bargo por algunos estudiosos entre: impresion{'s ce la misma. S{' ha trio effort. lireratura Ioispanoamericana. ellos el ar~emino Rafael Alberto lIenado una gran laguna literaria. A 1966 trio recording, "Bill Evans F n 1888 Dar(o habra publicado en Arrieta \' el noneamericano Bovd F I ('studiante de la Iircrarura, la Trio With Symphony Orchestra," Valpara("o. Chil~. su librito .. , ::/tl C. Carrer, esre ultimo, catedrarico historia, la polItic a, y utras dis­ was nominated for a National "uya prosa Y po",,,,ra esrableci;:ron de la l!nivl'rsidad de Somh,,'rn ciplinas ('n la Am[ric'l Latina se Academy of Recording Arts and firm",menre su fama y c; movi­ Illinois, y pur fin se pudo resolver. preguma cu5'mas orra" pubJica­ Sciences Grammy Award this year miento Iiterario que el ~'ncabezarr~ DCRpU['; de una l wrote 'Waltz for Debby: '[he HosEDn Pops Orchestra, led and I'm aying to get into popular by Arthur Fiedler. presents a con­ song writing. I have a natura! cert of classical and pupular music. inrere,.;[ in it. I've made appoint­ (10 p.m., Ch. 8) ments wirh lyricists and so forth. I appreciate the art involved in THURSDAY writing a good song:' ABC Stagt' 67 presem;;" The Wide This was Evan's first nomination Open Door:' an ol"iginal drama for a Grammy in the composers' . starring Tony Randall and Honor category. He is nominated most Blackman. (8:30 p.m., Ch. 3) years as a performer. In 19M. he "Watch on the Rhine'" is a 1943 won With "Conversations with My­ thriller of Nazi and ami-Nazi self." (The Verve album sold well, intrigue starring Bette Davis and [00--50.000 copies.) Paul Lukas. (10 p.m •• Ch. 8) '" w"as just blasted when they announced I'd won," he says. "I'm FRIDAY very realistic. Peter Nero and AI Hirt were nominart.'u, with their big "Ten Blocks on the Camino Real:' commercial appeal, and ~lilcl< Dav:,.; BUCKMINSTtR fULLER of $lU will discuss his geodesic dome " .. the 21st a one-act allegory by Tennessee and Thelonious Monk, very much the C ...... wy tomonow night 5. Williams, is the N.E.T. Playhouse purists' favorites. I figured rt.'3ily presentation. 00 p.m., Ch. 8) I was our of it." April 15. 1967 DAIL Y EGYPTIAN Poge 9

Journalism Award Talley Is Top Alumnus

A leading sports editor in the was also sports editor of second in a ~tate wide contest Midwest was honored Friday as the Egyptian that year. for general excellence. the SIU Journalism Alumnus of He was also a charter member the Year. and president of the campus chapter He has attracted national atrention Warren D. (Rick) Talley, ex­ of Sigma Delta Chi, profeSSional with his sports coverage at Rock­ ecutive sports editor of two news­ journalistic society. ford. following a natio!1al coverage papers at Rockford, was presented Talley. a 1958 graduate of concept. Talley annually reports the award at the annual Journalism Southern, has been sports editor such events as the Kentucky Dinner by Howard R. Long. chair­ of the Rockford Morning Star and Derby and the Rose Bowl, in ad­ man of the Department of Journ­ the Rockford Register-Republic dition to giving full coverage of alism. since 1963. Before that he was a state and local sports. He directs The award is made as a feature sports writer for the Decatur two sports staffs at Rockford, one of Journalism Week to an SIU Herald-Review. sports editor of the for each of the commonly oW:Jed journalism alumnus who distin­ Menlo Park (Calif.) Recorder, newspapers. guishes himself professionally. reporter for United Press Inter­ Talley played basketball four Winner last year was Robert Poos, national, and a sport:: writer for years at SIU. taking time out for war corres­ the afternoon Rockford paper. service in Korea. Before that he pondenr. in Vietnam. At Rockford, Talley has won five was a prep star at Pinckneyville Talley, who played guard, was Associated Press sports writing and sparked two teams which went captain and most valuable player awards, including two firsts. At to the state finals tournament at WARREN "RICK·' TALLEY of the 1958 bask~tban team and Menlo Park his sports page placed Champaign.

At Journalism Dinner 3 Area Editors Honored

Thn:<: southern Illinois area Details .)f the editors' service to Bridges is rity of John­ of Journalism's Hall of Fame. Royce L. Bridges began work on son County. member of lh,; legiS­ The three were given citations as a newspaper at the age of six as a lative committee and for mer "Master Editors" at the Journalism folder and worked his way up to thE' treasurer of the Illinois Press As­ Dinner, sponsored jOintly by the present position of editor and pub­ sociation. and a past president of Department of Journalism and the lisher of T'1e Vienna Times. the Southern Illinois Editorial As­ Southern Illinois Edito~ial As­ Bridges has lived in Vienna since sociation. He is married to the sociation. the age of six months. He was born former Zona Ragsdale. Honored for their service to area in Indian territory in Oklahoma. ROYCE L. BRIDGES jour~alism were: After his career as a folder. he Royce L. Bridges, editor and pub­ worked setting the newspaper type PAUL S. COUSLEY lisher of The Vienna Times. by hand. Paul S. Cousley, president and In 1924. at the age of 18. he Paul Cousley's family operated editor of the Alton Evening Tele­ began work in the newspaper'sfront the Alton Telegraph since the eady graph. office. After his father's death in 1900s. and Cousley has been an Willard C. Moser. retired editor 1932 he became editor and publisher. integral part of that operation. He and publisher of the Staunton Star­ In 1949 he purchased full interest graduated from the University of Times. in the paper when his mother died. Illinois in the University's first journalism class in 1929. and be­ came reporter and correspondence editor of the Telegraph. Seven years later he became tele­ graph editor. In 194:': Cousley m!­ came assistant general manager. In 1962 he assumerl the editorship from his father. who died in 1963. Cousley bt'gan writing his popular editorial column 12 years ago and has consistently campaigned for a river scenic highway and better gov­ ernment in Madison County. He and his Wife. the former Hope Jackson of Alton, have a daughter. Hope. PAUL S.COUSLEY WILLARD C. MOSER W illacd C. Moser sold his interest in the Staunton Star-Times in 1964. but still reports news and writes his popular column, "Old Man Mose.'· A native of Highland, Moser be­ came an apprentice printer With tht· Highland Journal. Bf.:cause he was more interested in writing. he joint'd the Star-Times' news staff in 1912. In 1918 he becameassociarcdwith the late Armin Kur" in publication of the Star-Times. In J 933 he formed a partnership With Walter F. Haase Sr. in operation of the paper and retainl'd the title of editor. He sold his intert.'st to the Haase family in June. 1964. SIEA OFFICERS--Kad -Monroe, (eft. president of the Southern Illinois Edi­ Moser has been a member of the torial Association, chats with Sam Smith, preSident-elect of the organization. Staunton Rotary Club since 1933. al the SIEA's spring meeting Friday. Monroe is editor of the Collinsville lIer­ and is a past president and secre­ and Smith is ~ditor of the Metropolis News. The group is meeting in conjunction t3."y-treasurer of that group. He is WILLARD C. MOSER with SlU's fourth annual Journalism Week. Chairman of the Week's events is also a member ofthe Masonic Lodge Jim Hart. associatt" professor of Journalism. and the Methodist Church. Pav to DAILY EGYPTIAN April IS, 1967 Joumalists Get 1,600 File for Graduation Approximately 1600 of an Carbondale campus. Ed­ Scholarships, anticipated 2.000 graduating wardsville's commencement seniors have filed applications is scheduled for Friday. June for graduation. 9. MEN Students who have not done Service Awards so are urged to make an ap­ plication at the records desk Scholarships of $3.000 plus in the Registrar's Office and tuition and fees for next year t11!et pay the Sl7 fee. were awarded Friday to three At the same time. students Used Golf Balls journalism students. may order their caps and • Repointed The scholarships. presented gowns and file for an Illinois • No cuts or bruises during the annual Department state teaching certificate if of Journalism Awards As­ 254 each applicable. Deadline for filing a doaen sembly. were given to Tim applications for graduation is 52 Ayers of St. Louis. Nancy May 6. Spring quarter com­ Baker of Benton. and John mencement is scheduled for JIM'S Epperheimer of Harrisburg. Saturday. June 10 on the Sporting Goods The scholarships are pre­ Murclal .. sented by the 0I1nois Dep­ artment of Mental Health for a year's combination of work: and study in mernal health educaEion. Other awards given at the assembly included a $250 Cop­ ley Newspaper scholarShip to J. Kevin Cole. Decatur. This year'sCopleyNewspaper award of $500 went to Mar­ 213 W. Main garet Perez of Collinsville. Jo Ann Fischel of Ferguson. 7-5715 Mo., was awarded the Min­ neapolis Star Scholarship and The Southern illinois Editorial Association $150 waard for an outstanding junior went to Steve Templeton of Cham­ Feoldman. Michl«an Stllte University State News paign. I WALKED IN AND THEY HANDED ME A SYLLABUS. The Journalism Students Association $100 award to the Photography Talk Set Jor April 25 outstanding sophomore went to Inez Rencher of East St. Louis. A systems approach to and Canon Cinema Equipment. Ayers and Laura Chovance. photography will be discussed will illustrate and discuss the Henderson. Ky •• won the Pi in Morris Auditorium April systems approach to micro, Delta Epsilon. national col­ 27, from 10 a.m. to noon and macro and press photography. legiate publica£ions fraternity. from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Any interested persons can Medals of Merit for 1967. Lee Niedermeyer, factory call Bob White at 3-2258 to Micheal Nauer. Chicago, representative for Besler have seats reserved. received the Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fra­ p "WALK ONE SHOWING ONLY TONITE ternity, award as its outstand­ DON'T ing graduating senior. ~ 'YARSITY AT 11:00 P.M. S RUN" Daily Egyptian awards for W! lOX OFFICE OPENS 10:15 outstanding laboratory work LATESHOW ALL SEATS $1.00 on the campus newspaper were awarded to Cole, Pam Finney. Norwalk:, Conn •• Sol Goldman. '''fL\J(LET' is II )'asf and r('gal show ofsfrong Chicago, Shirley Rohr, Flora, MIOI1RClINE cinematographic Y<1 ih1.1b. RII"i.n by ciety and the Music Library J"OTEL BORIS PASTt:R~AK Association of Washington, )fUS[1" D. C., Saturday. s~R~OJAYlOR DMffRl SHOSUKOVI(H His subject will be .. Antho­ :;'·Ol't aud [}jrf'ftinn b~ LAfHfRINf RICHARD MICHAH R[NNI' lr)gical Historicity and The ~PAAK· KARl MAlO[~' MHW~ OOUGlAS· ~ONl[· GRIGORY KOZI~TS£V Sr,und of Music," and will ~artinzJ'::,\fIKr.:n1 ;;';\zOh.'l"S-ul"KT 3" fl\\1LF:T :lcd A~.\~.'S.I.\ t£RTI~:O:K.\T.\ uQPHELU K[VIN McCAlITHYand MfAU ~B(RON .. r._ D.c.... 0"".... ~lwc by Jo"n.., ~." •. , deal with performance prac­ s...... eoonthe~trvAl"thurHaotey. Wnt[@nfurt"f>S[""et"" .1~tJP~'M~d~WENOELL Ml.:'tE II.!"",! .hm l~ITED ."RlISTS ,...."'.. tices today of medieval and D"",-"", b, R'CHARD QUINE TECHNICOLOA' FROM WAANEA 8AOS. renaissance musio:. Winner of Special Prize ·1964 Venice Film Festival April 15. 1967 DAILY EGYPTIAN Page n Westmoreland Sees No End for War Humphrey SAIGON CAP) - Gen. Wil­ the core r)f the pr"blem in liam C. Westmoreland be­ Vietnam," he said. "The lieves that, though there are Communists wam pcr)ple with­ Predicts many trends favorable to the out governmcnt leadership and Allies, it is impossible to support." say how long the Vietnam A veteran of World War II war will last. and Korea who started out as LBJ Win "I can't see any end in an artillery officer, Wcst­ ATHENS. GA. (AP)-Vice sight," the U.S. commander moreland said his battle plans President Huben H. Humph­ in Vietnam said in an inter­ for combatting the Viet Cong rey acknowledged today that View. and the Xonh Vietnamese politicans "have ups and A husky six-footer. 53. who Communists stand: downs" but he predicted that bas seen the American com­ "We'll just go on bleeding President Johnson --and he mitment grow from about them until Hanoi wakes up to hoped himself-- would be back 16,000 advisers to more than the fact that they have bled in the White House after the 430,000 fighting men since their country to the point cf 1968 elections. he took over in June 1964. national disaster for several Humphrey did some pol­ Westmoreland conSiders vic­ generations••• iticking with a VisittoGeorgia tory will be "a very fragile Gov. Lester Maddox and then thin~' unless the political winged over to Athens to ad­ war matches tbe military dress students at the Uni­ pace. versity of Georgia and answer He expressed belief the questions in a panel dis­ latest paCification drive is cussion. off to a good start. One sure One of the questions. of clue. he said, is the increase course. was the future of the in Communist attacksonVtet­ Johnson-Humphrey team. namese pacification teams "We're going to take our pursuing this "other war" in case to the American people. village areas contested by the At least President Johnson is. Viet Congo "The enemy fears I kind 0 f hope he will take that the government is ef­ me along:' said Humphrey. fectively working now right at Sboeaaallet". CIlIc: ••o". AmeItlCIMk He contended if the admin­ istration continued its present • ADVICE FROM SOME SHINING EXAMPLES' course that by election time it would "have at least the respect of the American peo­ Drug Injections Listed Cause , ple." ~ And thUS. Humphrey said. the cdds are that with re­ OCDeath in Coppolino Case spect the voters would return Johnson to the White House. NAPLES. FLA. (AP)-The elusion:' Umberger said. "If ll~ ~~t~~ rv7 Humphrey was asked his state's two key witnesses. Dr. I had my waY,l'd be out on the "{ ~ (.0 l.tU reaction to the antiwar star.::! Milton Helpern and Dr. water. not here." taken by ciVil rights leader Charles J. Umberger. both Umberger was given the job CAMPUS SHOPPING CEN1EP n m Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. testified today that they were of analyzing the chemicals PHONE M""" U l1\J "I think he is in error:' convinced that Carmela found in the body of Carmela Humphrey said. "I think it is Coppolino was killed with Coppolino. Her husband is on regrettable and will not pro­ drug injections. trial charged with murdering mote peace in Vietnam." In his second trip to the her with an injection of drugs. Humphrey answered ques­ witness stand, Helpern, chief Bailey handed Umberger a ':,~':-\ tions for a panel of university medical examiner for the city repon prepared by the defense students and faculty. He de­ of New York. was permitted on research into the effects 7 DAYS A WEEK fended the Great Society pro­ for the first time to voice of the drug. The report said 10 0 ..... -10 p ..... gram and said that although the opinion he obtained through 76 per cent of the drug re­ mistakes have been made. his own autopsy and chemical mained in the injection site • 8ar-8-0 Ribs "We're making progress." tests by Umberger. after death. When he finisheq,Humphrey .. In my opinion:' Helpern • PorI&: .8•• f got a thunderous ovation from said. "the deceased in this ~~::: about 5,000 students and then case died of an injectiOn of ""EGYPTIAN "W elcona~" posed with football coach succinylcheline." Rt. 148 south Df Herrin en s Vince Dooley before shaking Helpern is the man upon Gates Dpen at 6.30 P.M. Siud ' , hands amid a jam of students. whose testimony the prose­ ShDw starts at 7:00 P.M. After his meeting With Mad­ cution depends most in the dox in Atlanta, Humphrey told efion to prove its charge ".11IESI t~ /:§ newsmen the governor has"a Carmela: was murderedbyher M'ffiI~~_ very considerate and reason­ husband. Dr. Car Coppolino'. ~.... ! able attitude on a lot of pro­ Before the court told blems." Helpern to give his opinion. College Inn defense attorney F. Lee Bailey Space Objects lost had blocked his answer for BARBEQUE ~~ 514W.Main After Soviet launch 15 minutes with a series of .;...... objections. ." 'CA"::"~ 457-5944 712S.llIinois WASHINGTON (AP)-Eleven Bailev asked Umberger if objects launched into orbit his findings were positive ... ! COl.~ by SoViet Russia March 21 "even though a man's life ',~~~ have disappeared either by is at stake?" I...... meftdod ,.,. rna ...e audiences I NoWthruJUESJ @ 1:11£"_ falling back to earth or by "This is just as serious A P,em;er Productions: CO .• tne. I'.'eole burning up in the atmosphere. LAST a matter to me as it is to DA YS! PH. til·568S the Goddard Space Flight you or Dr. ·Coppolino:' said plus... "Cat on a C Center reported Friday. Umberger. head taxicologist All the objects were at­ for th e city of New York. Hot Tin Roof" tached to or launched with .. All I can say is that I Staring Elizabeth Tayr~, .dllT STRIKES aGaIN the Cosmos 149 satellite. could arrive at no other con- (ShDwn First} which as of March 31 was still in the Virgin Islands ...•. in orbit with four other as­ where the bad guyS... - sociated parts. metal frag­ LATE. SHOW ments or debris. are girls. ~ =~~~~ ~;;;::::~I TONIGHT! 201hCEllTllRHOX «BY? ~~ 11:30 P.M. NI~IS P. nl! RI!W ••• , FliR' aJIII!Rlart... • \ • ~ j OIl!J1NlmI] ~~" WHAr A FI!NT } ~t WEEICEND! ··OANISH ~&QI- / DIGY' m•... - r, CinemascopeJAMES COBURN • Color by DeLuxe ______SCHEDULE Pi.,.••.••• Selected Short Slarlaa' 11:30 P.M 1:JOOUT A.M AT •. Subiect Pag~ 12 DAILY EGYPTJA'" April IS, f961 Key W ilne88e8 Dead Film to Be Shou"n Oswald May Not Have Been At Lutheran Center indeeks "A Tim.;- For Burnin.:::," ARLINGTON. VEftMON-f a film depictin>! rh~ ,\m(,d.:an con5cienc..: ;;rru.:::dinl! thruul!h PUNCHCARD Assassin, says Texas Critic th..: coumn';; 're\'olurion 'in RETRIEVAL racial n:I.ltionships will Ix: KITS naw By Wade Roop tiuns, it is up to you tod.:mand shown at -; p.m. ";unday 3r tll.;­ iltyour the Congress to get somL'thing Lutheran Srudt:'nr C('nter. "The sikncl: in America done:' he said. Th~ morion picrurt;) \\'3,< today is frightening in regard Jones ste• .'rcd away from filmt.'d in Omaha, "eb., in a to the Kennedy assassina":' dirL'ct criticism of President Lutheran congregation with rion;' W. Penn Jones. a noted Johnson cxc~'pt to say that the scenes and conv"rsations :IS ~~~~~~~!KC::ES'2CO ounchcards. t5 )f. 8 ). cod@ cards. critic Clf the Warn:nCommis­ PreSident should not have ap­ they actually took pI3c':,th.;­ so~!,n& rods. Instructlon~. fIle box sion. £old an SIU audience in pointed rhe Warren Commis­ Rev. Reuben C. Baerwald. Oct.cnal netcher $-1.50 Muckleroy Auditorium. sion. lie said in his opinion pastor of (he Luth..:ran Center, Pef'" packs (50 cardS'. .. $t.15 Jones Urged his listeners the investigation should have said. "to make a commitm(:nt in been handled directly by A discussion session will A LIfESAVER \ Under&:ractuate:s follow rhe' film. FOR PEOPLE WHO, Faculty this world" by sCl:king out {;ongrl:s::;. Graduate the qUt;)stions surrounding thl' Occasionally Jone" rderrcd ARE DROWNING Students K('nn('dy assassination and to his hook; "Forgive l\ly IN THEIR OWN l Admln.str.r.ion M3ny o,ne'$ those involving governm~'nt Grief;' which is compiled of NOTES , and ()ther Issues facing the ktters and Commission text SPEAKER--Joeseph Jahn, Self contained. fi,M. simple-make\. nation today. which JonL's bdiL'ves mL'rit aU other fihn& swstems. ol)solete (,ditorial page editor of the Suf­ The publisher of the Mid­ further inve,:aigation. lie also • Saves 90:l Q of ttm-? no"", spent search­ lothian, Texas. ;o..lirror de­ folk Sun, Suffolk County. Long Ing. ~cann!ng. re~tllr.:t;;. duCi1catinit wrote assumptions surround­ not~s • No need to 'im,t yourself to liwrc'd the annual Elijah ing the deaths he believes con­ Island, N.Y., was the featured • Apples one fOt'!(~ tier caret. nor to keep rates Parish Lovejoy Lecture nected with the assa;;,;:nation. ,n any s;)ec.,,1 o~der • Petr'e·... e notl""S. speaker last night at the annual ?/inesap, ~ed and Golden 'acts. ideas Instantly. r.o m,)Uer how Thursday in connection With Am 0 n g his ass\.'rrions Journalism Week Banquet. His c;.cattered • Cr~ss'lncte .. au<:omaticall)l Journalism Week at Southern Thursday night was the st;,'lrc­ Deliciaus • all kept topic was "Building a New EACH DECK DESI;;NED FOR I1linois University. Jones, a ment that three guns were used crisp in aur starage! A SPECIFIC PURPOSE rcdpien. of the Lovejoy award Editorial Page" The banquet in the assassinatiun. lIe said • Apple Cider Paper/Thesis DecM: for CQurse and ~erm for courage in journalism, was that in his opinion the gun was held in the UniverSity Cen­ :Japers. theses ar:d cCltflpihng the "t. great for parties! erature. introduced by Howard R. Long. indicated as the murder ter. chairman of the Department of Study/Review Deck: tt.lr c:iass work and weapon by thL' Warren {;om­ • Honey e .. am re\flew fur all COu's.e I"!otl::'s. Journalism. mis,;ion was nut the gun that Baggage r\.'gulations on the camb ar extracted ResearCh Dec .. : fo~ fe.o::.e.,rcl1 data In "Today;' Jones said. "too kilkd the Pn'sident. Trans-Siberian Railroad al­ many Americans arc' on psy­ Jones said that it was 100 low "one bird in a cage" ar • Sorghum A'o;O ...;;.k ahnu! MEDICAL/SURGICAl chiatrist's couchL's or und~'r DECK: fOr rT,edlcat studl""nts. house years heforL' the Lincoln as­ no extra cost, ... ttlcers. pra.:tlc,ng phYSicians and the influence of !Tanquili,n:rs. sassinat ion was a prov.. 'n con­ 'turR.ons. fncludes 250 pUrichcarcfs.. It's time pl:lIple in thiS coun­ spiracy. lie addL-d that he cuuld <;peclal codlnR sy'S.tem. rOds. instru(.· t10~5 - fOr re~ordHl~ pHsonal clinical try starrl,d acting mor~' likl· s ..'e no reason why it should ' ".'t.tTi., McGUIRE'S ":'JlPerien.o::e . . •.••.•. S12.5O citizens lIf a democracy." tah' that long [0 prove a con­ Junt'" asserrl'd. ";\ man is Spir:lcy in the cast.' (If Juhn FRUIT outhern Illinois look not fret: When he' can'E sec' ", ..·nnedy. wh,'rt;) hl' i::; going." & Supply He said that mon.' men in , . - MARKET In rt;)gard to the as:,assina­ 'rexas art: working on the .. . nly8 Mir~s Sou'" of C·dol~.R •• 51 710 S. Illinois (ion of Juhn f.K,'nnedy,JonL's Lincoln assassination Ehan the • was quire cI'itic;1I of p"lic(" death of President Kennedy. and dty oHicials in Dallas. Long said in introducing "There's only on.:.' olld man AUf<> & Motor Scooter in a dty of /lOU.OllO people-­ Jones, "In :!S years Junes' Dalla:;--whu helps mt: and ht., book will b" considered either INSURANCE Next Time Bring Plenty r'le work of a crank ur become won't let mt: identify him," I-Uh.,h I •• I U~"'J.>··n"'lhdt!,. I-llua:"· Jones said. "Only in Dallas co11ec[Or's item.'- could the President be as­ EASY PAYMENT PLAN sassina(t:~d.'· Faculty Ius Time Set The reEired Army officer of Big Cheeseburgers! FINANCIAL RESPONSI3IL1TY said his invc,;tigation has The bus prOVided for Car­ taken him aU over the United bondale faculty members POLICIES States and parts of Mexico. attending the general faculty He said that recently he had meeti ng Saturday in Edwards­ FRA lVKLl,'V bet:n in a northern statc con­ ville will leave the University tinuing his campaign for an­ C enter at 9:30 a.m. and return IlVSl~RA;VCE swers to ev'!nts related. in to Carbondale immediately At;EiVCl his opinion. (0 the assassi­ aft ..'r tile meL'ling, according nation. to Rotand Kel'ne. secretary 703 s. IIri"o;~ A"t-. In ddianc~' of the Wdrn'n of thL' University faculty. Pho"" 457,446 J Commis::;ion Report. Jone,;; said "I don't helkvt: Oswald kill",d anyone/' IlL- bas~'u his rc'mark onl)swah,r;.: ::;[;,l!emt.'m MODEL AIRPLANE CLUB rhat h.. · was ju::;t a "patsy." .Jones added that thr\.'e Wit­ The,. will be a meeting of those interested n~'s"cs to the shooting of in Model airplane building and flying. OfficL'r TrippL't .Ilso said Oswald was nl.E the man Who shot (he Dallas polic,,'man. lie SUNDA Y - April 16 WL'n! on (Q say that IWO of at 4:00 p.m. those WiU1~'s",es have dit.'d under unu::;ual circums[;Jnces Go-Go Raeeways and tht;) [hird after surviving Family Hobby Center a gunshot wound in lht' head, Murdale 549·3457 has chang\.'d hi::; ::;wry. Jon':5 hdieves that 21 p,'r­ sons, inducting Ruhy .lOd Os­ \V.lld, have dk'd in circum­ Want a Hot Dog ? . stanc\.'s ;;urrounJing an a::;­ sa;.:sina! inn plot. "I have ,;imply said Ihc' ¢j Secret Sl'rvic,' ami FBI did and aLarge Coke not do th,' jt.Ll thc)! could hav,' done;" h\.' said inregan.:wrh\.· Warren inv.. 'sEigation. ..:\ chicken thief cas.. ' Wt.uld hav\.' gonen mort: inv\.'st igat ion." FollOWing his talk. Jon.. ,,;; anSWt' ,'ed qu,'stions ft'om the audienc .., for about ·IS minutes and tnt'n was besdgL'd with questions fdlowing the do>,,' of the program. One ;;tmlen!, who is is no. 0 door to door job. The Department of Music will newsmakers. Cusl_ers COME TO YOU. We hold a GSC 100 Lecture­ 5:30 p.m. 11 p.m. Irain you_ $100.00 per we..... drow_ Demonstration at 7:30 p.m. MusiC in the Air. 7:30 p.m. Moonlight Serenade. i'.!g account after etpprenticesJ,.:p. in Shryock Auditorium. The Sunday Show: A round­ 1.1ber81 camm;ss;on.. ,,"1,. s~ior 6:30 p.m. undergraduate and graduate stu­ The Anna State Hospital Spring up of the week's events. OVERSEAS DB.IVERY Camp will be held at Little News Repon. d ...." n .... d apply. Wri'e: Grassy Camp 2. S.e 7 p.m. 8 p.m. Student Work Office will hold Special of the Week. job interviews from 9 a.m. Broadway Beat. IPPS to 5 p.m. in Room B of the 8:35 p.m. University Center. ,8 p.m. LUMBIA REAL TV CORP. Bring Back the Bands. Masters of the Opera: This P.O. 80x 52. Dept. EG. Young Republicans Club will week Georges Bizet's life lCJ; .~, have a bootb from 10 a.m. o. Manchaster. Indiana. -46962 8:15 p.m. and work as a composer to 5 p.m. in Room H of are reviewed. the University Center. Bandstand. ··~e-· &.~ The Depanment of History 8:35 p.m. 11 p.m. Highway 13 Eost will present a lecture at Jazz and You. Nocturne: Light claSSics. 8 p.m. in the Morris Li­ trary Auditorium. 457-2184 10:30 p.m. MONDAY 985·<4812 CHEMEKA will meet at 9 News Report. p.m. in Room C of the University Center. U p.m. The Latin American Organi­ Swing Easy. Dependable zation will meet from 9 t\-.e. n a.m. to 3 p.m. in Room H 12:25 p.m. /(niih ' tnvok.. of the University Center. News. Actien Party will meet at 9 It's Shell Time! USED CARS p.m. in Lawson Room 231. 12:30 p.m. Sign-off. Make a shell with our new cotton, nylon, or -'t,; Con,"l'l Stalion Wa)!;on, SUNDAY TV Slates Film acyrlic yarns. Full Power, F:lc ,\'r •• 10 a.m. 549-2044 f)j"c Brake". New C:l1" "The Magic [low;' a bi­ Warranty. Fac. FXl'C. C:lr. Salt Lake City Choir. ography of the fam€'d violin­ Murdale Shopping Center _.1>:; Plymouth spun Fury. ist Pa).;ar:ini, stars Stewart 2 Dr •• lIardrop. 42h Fngill~" 10:2:; a.m. Granger on "Contio"'nt;l! C in­ -I Sl'c'l'd. 1-t.OtH) i\1iks oi cfTla"n Ilj p.m. ~,tonll:.ly on News. Fac W:Jrranry Hl'maillillg. WSIL'-TV. -'6.'; Dodf(l' Dan 1:-0. 4 Dr.. OrtH."r prn~rarns: 10::\0 a.m. il.lu:;:ic flail; Brahms' "Tc)­ I! Cyl. Standard I"rans •. (If )!:ic OVt'rtu-e.·' BCL'thovL'n':;: e Check Cashing :l-l.O()(l ~llil'" F'll:. 4::'hJ p.O"l. Warrant\' Hl'maining. "Palht~tL;ut: Sonata;' :lm..i ",,\""a;-:.-; ;\:("~v '~Tor fhlnd'" eNo'ory Public -'(,S Ch,'vv Impala: 2 Dr. n" ,·'i:~.r~ uf a ;,.:;t\- h&}\" e Money Orders DROP-IN AND SEE US! lIardtop. 211:1 V-So Stan w(~rk!n~ lin 4 Dod)(c Dan 270 ... Dr-. (, Cvl. ,~;.ilndanJ i'rallS. J",'/. l" .1,;u.lI: ~.td '! "rme /""""'-. • • Frigidaire Wrt:r.he-rc-. epublic Stenograph.r -'(,4· Valianr, ;\t1.OOO :\tik's. ami il", !knny Banh Trio. t and Dry-CI",ftnctt;. Day License Plate • 2 -t Dr. ;\utumaric. at Service -'6;1 Old" Curl as,.; Convert •• 7 p.m. • Travelers Ch.cks SC1~'nc, HqlOrt~'I": ··Pro­ ,'WI),ltil V - 8 Automatic. file' 01 a I fi~lw;ay." "I'I).Iti)' Store Hours Laundromat ~ p.m. I',a

-LP's -45's Stereo's & Color TV's Williams 212 s. IIli"oi~ Cow.di EYEWEAR Your eyewear will be 3 we,ll rorred al Conrad: 1. Corr«f PrwcripfiDn Made with nippy, taste-tt'mpting cheddar cheese, es­ Z. wn't'd FIItiIy{ 3. wmd Apprartlll£e pe.!ially prepared for ~tcDonald·s. Grilled with juicy pure beef hamburger, ground fresh daily. Served in sec· ONE DAY wrvi« available for Il1081 eyewear • 9 50 onds ... piping hot .md delicious on a toasted bun. McDonald's ... for cleanliness, cOIl\"enience and value. •r------~ OUR REG. $69.50 • r------,• TIlOROOGH Ell: • ICONTACT LENSES' • EXAMLV. .. no.~ • 50 • now 549 • • .350 I L ____ -----~ '------.... CONRAD OPTICAL McDonaldi~ll~ 411 S. lIIinoi5-Dr. J.C_ Hetzel Optomekist 457·4919 16th ond Mon~oe, Herrin-b~. Confad, Optometrist 942-5500 Murdale Shop ing Center April 15, 1967 DAILY EGYPTIAN Odd Bodkins Yolleyball Sdedu Ie Set For Play Next Week The Intramural volleyball schedule for next Wednesday and Thursday is as follows: Wednesday 7:30 p.m. - Sigma Pi "B" vs. Delta Chi "B": The Gray Goose vs. Draft Dodgers. 8:30 p.m. - The Slammers vs. Park Sharks; Pierce Dead Bears vs. Abbott Rabbits. 9:30 p.m. - Boomer I Loaf­ ers vs. Rat Patrol; Felts Overseers vs. Felts Hall Raiders. Thursdav 7:30 p.m. - Tau Kappa Ep­ silon vs. Sigma Pi .. A"; Per­ si~ Eagles vs. Sapuki Net SIU Soccer Team Captain Give8 Explanation of Game Balls.

By Rich Lewis a team-the goal keeper, two head) is an imponant part Playing time of a game Want to Fish? backs, three halfbacks and in offense and defe.nse." va r ie s. The international Soc c e r. considered the five forwards." said Lums­ Some of the contact rules games require two 15 minute world's most popular sport. den. are: no tackling or hitting halves with a 15 minute half­ will make its profess.,mal The "w" pattern was the from behind, said Lumsden. time, he said. There are no debut Sunday in the U.S •• when old formation, with a forward but hitting shoulder-to­ time outs. the new soccer league opens at each POint, S'aid the shoulder is allowed. Block­ its regular season play. ing a player from getting the "If a player is injured and Jamaican. "This is not as ef­ he's on the field. they'U stop For a better understanding fective as the 'four-two-fuur ball is also illegal. "You of the game, Frank Lumsden. build up,' which is called the must go after the ball," he the game and let him leave," a sophomore from Jamaica Continental style." He said said. said Lumsden. "then start and captain of the budding SIU the "w" rattern requires long An offside is created when again. soccer team, has provided passes wt.ile the Continental the attacking team gets ahead some basic information. styte used shorter, more ac­ of all the defensive players. "To stan a game one team curate passes. At least one defenseman and gers the choice of first kick the goal keeper must be be­ or defending goal," he said. "The goal keeper can touch tween the goa] and the at­ PIERCED The main objective is to r:et the ball with his hands with­ tackers. "An attacker may the ball between the goal in the penalty area," said beat his man with speed. then posts which stand 24 feet Lumsden. "But outside the no off side is created." he EARRINGS penalty area he has to kick apart. said. andup A soccer ball is made of it."" "If a foul occurs inside a 52 leather. "sonu::what smaller "The rest of the players penalty area. the other team than a basketball but larger can't touch the ball with any is allowed a penalty kick (a 400 styles to choose than a volleyball," the busi­ part of the arm below the free kick) at the opposing from I new styles ness administration major shoulder. They must kick the goal." Lumsden said. The arriving all the said. ball:' he said. "But 'head- ball is placed 10 yards from time. "There are 11 starters on (hitting the ball With the the penalty kick mark line. S_H'~S'•• k (90z. New York Strip) with soup or salad and fries

(in Steak House till 5) S 2 5 (in Little Brown Jug or 2 Pine Room anytime) 121 N. Washington Steakhoo8e DAILY EGYPTIAN CLASSIFIED ACTION ADS The Daily Egyptian reserves th. right to reject any advertising copy. No refunds on cancelled ads.

1965 Honda spon 5(:. Inquire ar -IlH Honda: [511. t..'xc('llenr run ~ond. S]25. Murphysboro houfl:e~r2i1cr-. lOx50. Annour.cer~ full and pan rime. muc::;t FOR SALE W. Frc't.... m<1n ;)pt. ::4 aft~r 5 p.m. Call 7 -~025. Tool kit Incl. ;W)U Phone 54Q-l778 after 5 p.m. or any have lTd cla.s~ IicensC'. WlNI Radio. ~;o(f dub:.;. orand nt:w. n... '\'cr u:->~. .'a. 20'Kl time week ends. RBI028 Murphyhorthand 3nd tYi,in~ 6 private :"ooms and ~ ::emi-privare skill. and Cit}· re~idency required. 25-50. S;1720 '059 l05 Honda Supot.·r Hawk. Excel­ 1960 Studebaker Lark. 6:~('w rire~, For sale, IQ63. n cylinder Crevy. rooms for ~ummer term. Cooking Age 10 .Iarr lent condo :\1u!oOt .~'ll. I..·ht.'ap. Ooug need~ work, 5[00.. (,JOS F.. park :J"32. Good condo Call 457-5486. BAHl25 prlvlle~"s. 307 West College. Pho"" Water Plant Trainee. Writr('n f('<;::(. -; - 7nOo. lOM~ 2092 9-2835 or 7-8b80. 8810:1.. ctty re5!idcncy. wiJ(inp;n(':::~ w work 1957 T .. Bird. immaculate condition, evening ~hjfrs required. 55040 ~ r 'Ill Vhlk~wa~L·n. ~ood ~hare. call Q­ I ~o5 mobile home. IOx51J ai r condo c:la5~ic. serious buyers call 54Q- FurnishlE'd or unfurrts:hed apes. Two year after six month$. i2~1 ~- - p.m. Worth St'lUO .. ~dJ for ~ic(" location 5·N-l bO~~ after o. 2OlJ:\ 1526. BAI027 bedroom, ajr conditioning. central Both exceUc-nr p(l5:"ition:: offl'rin!t! S,i)(lfl. 20(10 !ocation. Contact steyer Reality. Ph. liberal frin~t:' bt..~nl·fit~. job ::;ccunty '(\2 F()rd converriblc-, ,~Qo. 3uro.,good Siamese kittens; call 6B4-2"51 after \185-4858. Fvcning call. Tom Grntry and excellent. chaHcn~in:.r. tutUTt.', IlH'~ ..\U;-:rar4..' ::.;(1 ",;c. CaU Run. ':xc...... ond:tion. :X1usr .s.dlo. Call afrer (') 5:';0 p .. m. QH:;-4705. AA 10.\7 Apply City ~tanJ~t.·r·~ Ofrin·. 2nd. 51 or qq2-.!~~I. r f1W mllea".!l' rm. r.m. ~57 -75<>4. 2OQ" Floor, City H!lH. Carhondak. HCIP"'::; ~~ ~~ I Q65 Suzuki s;:port. 80 cc., low mile­ Room~ mate graduate $fudenr. 4) 7' aile, excellent condition. Ph. q-114tl. W. Jlck~(,". RRtO-lO ,t,.·r·,·" r:!J'l' rt·l'l'rd,..:r." tra,:k ":~·(>d. Con.·vd[-l'-powcn·d :\u .. rin U(>aI!'y; fl,\I(H2 I \, ,Ir 1.1 ... 1. (,.,,(,~! ;.'"nd. :~-..J7..J1. :!II-O r.ll:in~ road.<:::tt.'r. herfJr\' new COl'­ Ho\;~e i:1 :\1urphy!=:boro. 204(' Hor­ WANTED va:rrt.' .!2-;"· ~h.') UP HInck. T-IO, .J l.i~(·d sailooar. ··CSCOW:· re3~on­ tem:,,~ ST •• 2 b.,·dr(1{'m. S~O a month, u ,'I"r r·,hr~.'ld ;:1')4. W/fl.:1~h. ih'- :-O:iX.'t.>d. Call .ft, ff. 5..J . -:-~'40. JOO~ able', Call 5~Q,I~H2. 11.-\10 .. 1 g3~ ht'at, unfurl.l~h(..'d. C:tlJ f't,'''~ in ~t' !'.1.1it:' ~tt;J.t.·n( wt:n would qU.liH~ .1"­ after .... RH!d~~ :I.IL~" ; ,~~~" .... ·11 S>~c). C.Il) 54t~ i~;~ rt';O: id~ fir r:; ..I:;i.I).!t :. ,f ,.If ~ .:I nl ~ u~· !"., 'u,. ••• 10 fro sailbo;l[, n~'w Sl25. :~o HI' :\;·,pru\,,_,J l:; .. t :-:1·.. ·_ !".-In. \.\'tll : .i". ournu;1rd moti,r S~5 .. C311 (,)-1('1 ..... Cnrvt-'rr\..', in :\Turphy~brJr(). i""f\6 ­ t:mirt.:' ;-:; !"l:'""'.I; r~l,.i.:"··~·r·~ -rl.·r;t. !'h;,j.: 'i ;; ',··r!II'·r. j';f',,., '~··w ~.!p .... n, ,)1xll). 1.1,:3\1'{' phrm.,· numlk:r. owr'I.'T will '·t.'rnhl .. ·• J2-:". " ~re(-tl. Call ~!'.f.. ~-2 'I,.... 2. _'. -t"-;--.J~JI~ nl' 'i4"-l:"lli. 211-;-l; coma,:!. '~o(J2 1'11/<', flr\11I42 HELP WANTED

.:. ·';.1·-~ "'I iff·:\(~:l. ~.II'I'l mli'l·~. VW. PU'2 "':'u!;rlJ(,f ";.,.'r.!an. ~t'w'y rl~­ ['-,:57 Ford, SJjLl. Call 5,N-5'HH :in\'­ '\\'J.:":tf'd: Lid to ~l.·:- ..ile .. l.! ...... lr:...:·j .-.~!,. i'UCH''''~'I... d "~ .-:'~;;>.:i'!~ r,' ... 2-t· I ,.~ "ft,. T. (" 11) t 411 i. PilJI. ~ng:ir."... F XI..·C'! It: lit C< ):1ditinn. Ht'a­ tim!..·. ('j(j=; 1.2 \\'. n,lk. r ..'!.I(;4{ fnr r.llly F ~Yrrt.ln. 'Tu;-\~ r'l ..: fuB· rf) .. d.ll..'t trJ!" .... '... mmt..·r !-. '''l:--t'I;:'-: .!1l~2 ..:on fpr' !-=('lhnll. rrnfl.'~":f)r'~ f:lmlly nme ~n.:c,.'nr. f: ...., .... ffJur nm.-;,_·.:t..:.ril.'t.: nn lonjlt,."'r nc(,d:=: two (ar:;. -IS':' 4022. hnurJO; ,;irt..'rr'loQ(i<;;. ;"'f(·:,day thru Fn­ W(Lll!t'n ,<.,rf :'~t'7:1:'·_·r. \',~II ..:(,nS;lc.!!:!" FOR RENT :-=r.ari.:;·,z. t:.ill •..... C. \L.. 'CJm .. :I,":" "'!2·). i ·.f::" I f" ,\y~1t ~!.!llPti ...... ;, C"n\'t·rt. dlY, arid !'-..:.' '.:nn.l!l·d .H ...;O.J.!=:[ [hr()u~h 21".;, :H', ·'·.:r-",,'d. ~. x. "und. C.lli What\~ with Wll"on Hall') It'.;: fur ~ummt..·r [("rm. For :q'?IiCJcion form ~~- ':22- ifr.'r f"l d p.m. 211:-"" Cam('r3 [('per,n SU"',. Port3ble taf:'.~ men and it·:; a:rCJt. Ch('ck tt out: Jnd a~f" ,brm~,.':1t. rl,(,n~' '3~· 2.;54, n.·;..:ordci, SU~o. Phc,rw '1-4131. 1,004 for summer and fall tt:>rrns. ~.:J­ ~1r:::. RcrnJt. or .lr'pl:. .ir Daily r ~:.T­ f\·~,I~ .... ~<~!" Tr:.lIkr 1t1x:=;'5. Clrpd('(i. cared clo~e. at th~' corm·r (It F',1rk fl.1n. IlId~, T, 4'. IOOC LOST r,\ •. 1.... ·J:'""('nm ..... C.II! '14-\.j-..f--l-7. :!1I~7 l~~ItJtI PoTU air (ond. Likf I"It"W. C.111 &. WalL ("onr.l .... r Don CIuC.1~. -1 ..... -­ 4:=;7 _ li."(, 1tr. d ...... :t·w F ra 1!(,..1~~. ir;",rr. F'~. Ikl' "L' ·W. ,';-'1. :\nd '",=) H".,d:J Carbondalt· tK.1U~(·. Wir.kl('r I1rt',l, \nz .2 t'ledr(.om hou~('tr3i1£"r. ncu,.·.j .lr rcotl Mrarifl:1. ';(It:~hw·~' -t r ·..'3ch·:r~ r .; - .! 'J l i. ,~ ,.~ J 'II~L q-,:;. r:.11l .It i·PI­ Frit'dHn(·. !~I-ll·Vt.-'I. j bf.'drf'lorn:-o:. WiJ ...1wopd P.3.rk on (;ianr elf'\" 1 !.l~·k, .'~ 1l:' n .. \. 1,11 ~ l" \ "I~ r ,i I .... \'.... :x .r·. "1.1- .:!lllj~ l.J.r!Zt.~ rf·..:rt,'3t1-:,n n1om. 2 bath~, ;~t· r... p. For anf(,rm1r:('n c.1I .... ~.i- .... ~ ~. ,)r : .... qut·rqut;. '".\~, if/12 rr':il'~h;'\, Y!'ar round I:u,.. h.: ..'arw.'. 4::;7 -28-:'4. 2"';~ ~:!(i.thln. Ih' (jWr"i~'r. 54CJ-ltif'-. :\0:; ::;', ;-:I;m.. · ,~ ", .... mh'Y,.'st :(·;)fI. :\1)11)0. ,~"t (Inh' .... : WI!~(')"'1 H.ll:l "h. ;i. W'. .;:r Ir..,ilj'· fln ... : 3 i"t>'" L":1{.1.;t (':- :'It!'lP SERVICES OFFERED off .. ,Im;',u:- Jorm. r>U! :--:.l.~ r~:" ii" '.-p :;-:. IJr ,if I,":.. ,. r ~' . .:.i~;:'"",l:!("'r: .. I"'· lor.hi'. \,..!!U j~oar. r-.II :'!" ~kr..: f:1. '" r. '·\·.'!"t:r ....~!..:., " I ,', ....'t,ll.r,l~:"~ ... ;-,1·. -.: Wf" "L, ....-· yr.Jl.!. :.,,; l:, \",01,' ,. !t: •.'!" io.'l'"' .! .... ~f ;',Ij :?:~,::\...,,,;prk'~. Lmrk~( r..: ~'..1: :<,.:.-~ !~'.~. : '"wr;- !.,; .... , .. -'1. ! n.,',f " J_:.-{,j"i. l:"l p~ .. ,...... J:- ";' :. 'il;'. '.. _. :,,- ". r .) s_ \\ J."'~- . 1 ...! ! . .:: ~, : ~ • .: ,_. _ ! . ;, 1 • - J '."' t'\ • _ 'i 1 University May Need State Okay to Build Rooms

By Mike Nauer hotel in connection with the em Illinois in DeKalb already due to the lack of facilities House Committee on Higher University Center. have sim ilar facilities. North­ here:' Isbell said. Education. A bill is before the Illinois Williams said. however. the ern is currently considering Isbell Cited Indiana Univer­ House of Representatives that portion of the bill applying to adding another JOO rooms to sity as an example. He said Isbell said the only proposed would require state univer­ dormitories may be amended its facility. Indiana has a hotel with about construction the housing bill sities to seek approval from might affect. is the graduate out. Paul Isbell, director of 400 rooms and in spite ofthis, housing which is being con­ the General Assembly before '<1 don't think a state uni­ business affairs, said the local motel and hotel interests sidered for the urban renewal building dormitories. apart­ versity should build an apart­ addition of the guest rooms at in Bloomington have enjoyed ments or guest rooms. ment group or hotel when pri­ area east of the IllinOis SIU would serve to improve a constant growth. Central tracks. Gale Williams (R-Carbon­ vately owned facilities are the city's economy rather than Williams said he didn't know dale) introduced H.B. 1172 available:' Williams said. talee money out of it. the bill's prospects. He said He said other proposed con­ which. if passed as it stands. The idea of a university the legislature is nearing the struction is far enough along would place the final approval building a hotel in conjunction <'With the added facilities, end of its session and has a in development that the bill for university construction of with a University Center Is SIU would attract more meet­ backlog of work. would not have a bearing on housing facilities in the hands not unique to SIU. The Uni­ ings and conventions that are The housing bill and four its outcome. of the state legislature. versity of Illinois. and North- now held on other campuses companion bills are nOw in the Williams put forth essen­ The bill is a spinoff from the DAlLY EGypnAN tially the same argument that recent bill enacted limiting the .tfdi"ilie8 .tfPNe1l1. has been used for passage of line of merchandise a campus the bill restricting campus bookstore can sell. Williams Page 13 Local News Page 11 bookstores. That is. "a state said the housing bill was writ­ Page 16 supported institution should not be allowed to compete ten because of SIU's recent Volume 48 Carbondale, III. Saturday April 15, 1967 Number 124 proposal to build a 96-room against private enterprise." Morris Named fMr. Southern "';no;s'

-II .. Area Newsmen Confer Honor· ·24,558 Shown In Absentia at Frid