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Southern University Carbondale OpenSIUC

March 1966 Daily Egyptian 1966

3-30-1966 The aiD ly Egyptian, March 30, 1966 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_March1966 Volume 47, Issue 113

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, March 30, 1966." (Mar 1966).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1966 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in March 1966 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. · ~ 'Cycle' Parking Ordinance Readied An ordinance that will per- was scheduled for adoption if more than four c ycles are mit the parking of four motor-· at the March 28 meeting of parked in one regular park­ cycles in one automobile park- the council, bas been revised. ing space . all will be ticketed. ing space will come up for If meter time expires. all final reading before the Car- The revision specifies that cycles parked will be subject bondale City Council next each regular parking space to overtime summonses. All wee k. will be painted to indicate four cycles must be parked parallel As the law now stands a :~~~~b~ll: s~t:~~~ within each to the c urb. EGYPTIAN cycle must use an entire park- In council ac tion earlier ing space. The original ordinance did this year an ordinance r e­ Stua'elfM 'JUUuJi4 1tlfiq.n~ City officials have been not specify tbis painting. Gehel stricting the seating position of a second rider was passed. Carbondale, Illinois treating cycles like cars for par [s of the proposed parking purposes. ordinance r emain unchanged. Passengers on a two-seater vehicle are required to sit Volume 47 Wednesday, March 30, 1966 Humber 113 The new ordinance, which According to the ne w plan, astride a nd nO[ II Sidesaddle ." S'enate to Get Apportionment Plan * * 1 Man, 1 Vote Is Student Hurt Bill Philosophy

In Collision The first plan CO re­ structure representation of Of Cycle-Car the Cam'pus Senate will be pre­ James M. Helm, Dongola, sented tonight at the Senate's received minor injuries in a first meeting of the spring car - motorc ycle accidem at quaner. Several plans were about 10:45 a.m. T uesday on discussed in February at a the Campus Drive near the r etr eat at Little Grassy Lake . Arena. David Wilson, General Stud­ Helm was a passenger on a ies senator f will introduce a motorcycle operated by Daniel blll to divide r epr esentation J. Maloney, Chicago. Maloney intO four geographical areas was not injured. created by the intersection of According to Maloney. he Street. was driving east on Campus . Under Wilson~s plaIl. the Drive when a car driven by rules and coordinating com­ E lmer L. Fluck, Marion, mittee of the Campus Seq,ate which was heade d west, turned would then award a senator to in from of him. each "definable unit". Pos­ Maloney swe r v ed 'the sible units WOuld be University motorcyc le to tbe left to avoid City, Small Group Housing and hitting the car ~ but a minor others. collision occured, knocking The r emaininR number of both motorc ycle riders to the senators - from a total of road. 16 - would be appontoned The car passed over He lm's to the districts. Districts legs, but he r eceived only would be set up within the bruises and contus ions. geographic area if more than one senator were to be elect­ Lovejoy Lecture ed from that area. As a r esult. the Campus To Be Delivered TIME FOR A CHANGE- Sectioning Center is a charged. Saturday will be the last dey to add Senate representation would busy place these days as students line up to a course or regis ter for the spring quarter. be apponioned as closely as By Irving Dilliard make program changes. to register or to add (Photo by Ling Wong) possible to tht:- "one man, one classes. To handle the crowds, Sec tioning stay­ vote" concept, while still Irving Dilhard, author, lec­ ed open until 8 p.m. Tuesda}' . A $2 late fee is allowing for special interests turer and professor of jour­ of housing groups such as nalism at Princeton Univer­ ' No t Too Difficult· University City, Wilson said. Sity, will presem the annu al Wilson said he hopes the Elijah Parish Lovejoy Lecture Hospital Administrator Cites Advantages plan could be in effect for the In journalis m on campus April Senate election on May 10. 14. In other business tonight. He will appear at 7 p. m. in In Placing Blood Type on Student ID's 8arde -Grosse. Libe ral Arts Muckelroy Auditorium under and Sciences senator, will in­ the sponsorship of the Depart­ By Bob Smith [he University, many stude nts could starr with a group of troduce a measure to establish ment of Journalism. The pro­ Second of a Series would vo lunteer if they kne .... volunteer donors who probably standard academic criteria gram is open to the public at their types. had the correct blood type, tor pantcipation in student no char ge and will be a part of "Basically, having all stu­ Holden Hospital has always Z ilmer said. As it is, the hos­ government and other student Jo.¥nalism Wee k activHies at dents' blood typed is a good receive d e xcellent coopera­ pital orten has to c heck many activities. Presently the SI ll!. Idea," said Clen E . Zilme r, tion from [he Univer s ity when volu nteers to get a few with me grade point average require­ A graduate of the Uni versity administrator of Ho lde n Hos­ blood was needed, he pointed needed type. me nts differ among organiza­ tions, according to Grosse. of Illinois, Di lliard was for pital. «And putting the type on OUt, but c hances of geuing The idea of allowing home ­ ma ny years a reporte r, s tude nt ID's would have some enough volunteers would be town doctors to do students ' Student Body President edicorial writer and finall y advantage since it is the one greatly increased if all Stu ­ blood typing on a general scale (Continued on Page 11) ' editor of [he editorial page of thing s tudents al most a lw ay~ dents knew their blood types. has been questioned because the St. Louis Post-Dispatc h. have with the m." Z ilmer cautioned that stu­ of the possibility of the results He is the autho r of nume rous Il s chief advantage, said dents ' knowing [heir blood being incorrect. Gus Bode books and a nicle ~ a nd ha s Z ilmer. is that if a general types is only a s tarring point. Z ilmer said he saw no written a syndicated column. call for blood were sent to Firs t of all, t ilmer said, reason to worry t90 mu ch there a re enough e rrors in about who does the original blood Iyping to make it neces­ typing s ince it is retyped. Tickets Are Now Available sar y for a hos pital to r e type Agai n, he poimed !O [he fac t blood ro make s ure it is of that [his original typing is For Eugene O'Neill Tragedy rhe type nee ded. Then, if {he "only a beginning place whi ch blood i~ of the correct type, could save precious minutes Ticke ts for the firs t produc­ Pete r Goetz i !": Cwd will be high sent to President Johnson to­ gramming Board will sponsor foreign applicants wh o s e school students on campus for day by the Crab Orchard Play­ an April Fool's dance from 8 native language is not E ngUsh. Education Group the High School Visitation Day ground, a Southern Blinois to 11 p.m. Sdrurday in Lentz Foreign s rudems are nor­ on Saturday. area tourist promotion or­ There will be no admiSSion H all snack bar. mally expected to e nroll at the ganization. Chooses Officers charge and the exhibit will be .Muslc w!ll be by tbe Bus h­ Carbondale campus because of Petitions opposing the fees open from noon to b p.m. men and no admission will be housing and Engl1sh training Louise Temple ton has been are being distributed through­ Friday, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. charged. Dress 1s informal. Jacilities. elected pre S ide nt of Pi out Southern Illinois and will Lambda Theta, honorary for Saturday, and from noon to also be sent to Preside nt John­ women in education. 5 p.m. Sunday. son. NOW PLAYING THROUGH Other officers elected were A total of 50 exhibits will be The promotion group be­ SATURDAY Maria Grana, vice pres ide nt; included in tbe display, with lie ves that cbarges are not ONL Y TWO SHOWINGS DAIL Y Mrs . Wanda Slus her, record­ 38 academic areas and 12 justified for the under­ ing secretary; Mrs. Rachel developed r ecreation facili­ Wendt, trea s ure r ; and Lynda YMCA to Offer ties of the widlerness type Ho.ughland, educational cor­ area, according to Gilbert respondent. Summer Jobs Todd. president. Jane Richey, past president Representatives from the Todd says that fees are al­ of the honorary, was selected YMCA will be on campus April ready charged for se rvices in ''io atte nd the organization's 6 in the Mississippi Room of camping areas and other con­ national convention in Cleve­ cessions . He ass e ns further land, Ohio. the Unive:r.sity Center between 9 a .m. and 5 p.m. fees w 0 u 1 d discriminate They will interview students aga.inst the low incom e r esi­ Republicans Seek for summer e mployme nt. dents of the are a and would They are also interested in discourage visitors from out­ Con ven tioneers talking with seniors and grad­ s ide the area. uate students. The organization estimates The Young Republican Club a loss of se ve-ral million dol­ will have a ~ boot h in the Uni­ Students who wi s h more in­ formation should contact Bru­ lars [ 0 the merchants of the versity Center today at which area, because the fee s will inte rested persons may sign no Bierman at the Stude nt Work Office. "speed tourists from St. Louis up for Midwest convention in past [he Crab Or chard Lake St. Louis this wee k end. area to Kentucky Lake, wh e r e The convention will feature Women's Honorary there are no fee s ," according Sen. Everett Dirkse n, R-Ul. to the petition. and M. Stanton Evans. editor Adds 6 Members The entrance fees are of the Indianapolis News. scheduled to begin May 1 and All persons interested In The Alpha Iota cha pter of continu e through Sept. 15. atte nding the convention Zet a Phi Eta, national speech should attend a meeting at arts frate rnity for wo me n, has 7:30 p. m. Thurs day in Morris initiated the following: Bar­ Green Giant Sets Library Audito rium to obtain bara A. Blood, Judy A. Car­ more information. ter. Ursula F. Jennings, Job In terviews of 8 Academy Awards Carolyn S. Quinn, Linda L. A representative of the Students Sought Gree n and Barbara L . Bris ­ Green Giant Co. of Belvidere, tol. will be on campus April 7 including Best Picture. For Arena Jobs The frate rnity will ho ld an to intervie w s tudents for Temporary jobs will be o pen rus h from 2 until 4 p. m . s ummer jobs with the compa­ sWillv HOllOWAY available a t the Arena Friday. Sun day in the Family L ivi ng ny. Ailll~~ ~t r B~~N ' ~tx ~~~~I~ON 15 wor ke r s ar e needed to work Lounge of the Home Econom­ Students s hould contac t " AllIS COOIIR ... " " iii" aOI 2 8 I\I U ~D H1IX ~1II11 ..... _ _ iii..lOO0lll.. w •• _ 8lll._1 .= . ~ m ~ = "'.: ~ I " two s hifts, from unti1 p.m. ics Building. All wo men in­ Bruno Bierman or Bob Julius -:::;;-..;" " "" .... ,. MANJAiiiiiNIRIRlrniiiilOl WI MAN.iii iiRNIR JAcKiWAiiNI R a nd from 11 p.m. Frid a y to terested i n the communicative at the Stude nt Wo rk Office 7 a. m . Saturda y. arts are invite d to attend. befor e April 6. Gf()RillWiOR TECHNICOLOrSUPER PANAVISI0N"70FROM WARNER BIIlS.1f Applicants s hould e ithe r call Larr y A. Schmale nbe rge r ADMISSIONS CHILDREN ALL SHOWINGS 7S~ Daily Egyptian ADUL TS MATIN!ES S1.SO EVENINGS S2.00 al 3 - 2321 or apply in per son al Room 11 7 of the Ar e na. P l.l bi'Sh.,(I 10 lh(' J)~'p an mcm " , JOl.l rnaJ . Today's ,sm 1 u ~· ... (I ~) , h r ou @, 11 Salllrda~ Ih r o l,jjt hol.ll Ih(' ,,; ..· 11001 }·.·ar e.-Cl·p' du n n >:. lin,,·t· n 'II) va"a' ,on p,:r,od!\ . •· ~ a m , n a'lUn ..· ..·~·~s. a nd I ~· ~ al n..I,da}s b. Soulh(·rn Ilhnoll'Un ,v('TslI' . Weather (";r~>r.dal, ·. 11 1'1"10'1;. S ..·c ond c las,.. I'OS l a~ .. p,;Iu:l a r ~ aroondalc. II lInc"5 nl<,jOI. Pol,c".";; t.of Th~' I' iyp" an ~H· I h~· r ,·;;pon. s,b,II, ) uf Ihe ('d"01S. "'3r"' m~'ms publ ,sh,·d h,·r ,· do nOI O('''' ';;sarll) r dl.. c' , h.. "prn,on of 111,' ad m ,nl1;lTa " OIl I) r all' d~'p3 r lmt-n t III II's Hayride Time! Ih.· Un ,v(' t s ,t, . I·. dllonai 311d IIl,Is , n,·"" 011 ' .... 5 lo,al('(l ,n Il u ol d,n~ ·1 . ~ I\ . I ,seal o U,cer. lIo wa r d K. Lon).: . T .. k phon, ~ ~ J _ 2J ~ ~ . F dLlonai Confer ('ncc t , moth ) W . A.)·, · r~. 1-. ' l'l,-n M. Au," u ~ ! !n. I-" r("d W. ' ,,-)"('r. John v.' . I·PPl'rhel m('r. I lo l~nd A. ( .111 . l'an,,,I; J. (. 11" i1 10 n. lohn M . C.oodnch. I·rank ... . ~ \ ("s · senmuh. John Ocl\ol nkb·. MUltil n ·t 1-. l't'rt-1..I- (lward A.. RlIp"'III. Uob('n f). II('t n" t ". per person. MIte '>c hwebel. UO DCfI F . o.; m f!h ~ n d I.lIur !;' 1 W(' rth. Slightly coole r today with The Action Party Presents the high in the 50s. The record high for this date is 79 set in "The 1938 and the r e cord low of 18 was se t in 1964, accordi ng to New Christ the St U Climatology Labora­ NOW FULLY OPEN FOR BUSINESS! tor y. Minstrels" the finest in Plus ... Crab Orchard "The Entertai'ners" shoe-repair STABLES Fri . Aprill (Wo rk done whil e yo u wait) 8 p .m. Settlemoir's NEXT TO THE CRAB ORCHARD MOm SIU Arena Ticket. $\.$2·$3 Acros s from th e ~ar s i l y OPEN 8 to 5 daily On Sal. at The We dye SA TIN shoes ~ 9-4588 University Cent'e'r Information De sk Pove 3 , Ma{~~ I 3~r 1!.~.6.. jJ • JCr. ~ .' Activitht.····· ...... •...... -...... -.... _. . -_._._... .- ..... -.- mber· Music if)r :Winds" Gymnasts, Dancers To Be Presented onWSIU

Lawrence J. Intravaia, as­ Beethoven, and I, Rom<.:o and Scheduled to Meet sociate professor of mUSic, J uJi ~ t" by Berlioz . will present "Chambe r Music WRA Tennis will begin at 4 The Jacques DeMolay Club for Wind Instruments · ' on 5,30 p. m. p. m. on the north courts. will mee t at 9 p.m. in Room • ' The Department of Music Ne..... s Re port . WRA class volleyball will be· B of the Un iversity Center. Present s" at 8:35 p.m. today gin at 4 p.m. in the Large Pi Sigma E pSilon, marketing on WS1U Radio. G)'m. fraternity, will meet at 9 Other programs: 7 p.m. The Aquaettes wilJ meet at 5 p.m. in Room 101 of Law­ Their Ot h ~r World: Pro­ p.m. at the Univer sity son Hall. 8 a.m. duced by the National Aero­ School swimming pool. The Morning Show. na utics and Space Adminis ­ The Gymnas tics Club will Chamber Choir tration. meet at 5 p.m. in the Large Gy m. Completes Tour Pop Concert. 8 p. m. The Modern Dance Club will Geor getown Forum: Na tion­ meet at 7:30 p.m. in the The SIU Chamber Choir re­ all y pro m inent figures dis­ Small Gym. cently completed a six-day 12,30 p.m. REBECCA E . BAKER News Report. c uss the major public iss ues The Young Democrats will tour. of the da y. meet at ; :30 p.m. in the Under the di r ection of Rob­ Seminar Room of (he Ag­ ert W. Kingsbury. assistant 1,30 p.m. riculture Building. professor of musi c, the 22- SIU Educator Vienna and Broadway: Vocal II p.m. An Audubon program, "Mor­ membe r choir sang at Se sser, a nd instrumental excerpts Moonlight Serenade. mon Land Highlights," will Charleston, New Trier East Named Officer from operettas a nd Broad­ wa y productions. be shown at 8 p. m. in Furr and West and Manteno high 12: 25 p.m. Auditorium of Univer sity schools. Of Hc-dd Start News Repon. School. The programs included An SIU educ ator has been 2,30 p. m. compositions by Brahms . De­ na med r egional training offi­ VIrtuoso: C lass ical and Training Program bussy, Paulenc. Chopin and cer for P roject Head Stan popular music by soloIsts; 3·M Company DisJiiaJ Gibbons. Piano soloists Susan operations in the lower half this week featuring Zino Scheduled forTod~ Franoescatti, internation­ Seeks Participants McClary and Russell Riepe of illinois and the southwest The 3-M Co. will ba'OS ally known concenviol1nist. Students interested in par­ prese nted selections by Bar­ quaner of Indiana. display of duplicating iiIE­ tok and Hindemith during the ticipating in tbe Illinois De ­ Rebecca E. Baker, asso­ chines and o[h~r products, ~ tour performances. ciate profe'ssor of ele menta r y 3:05 p.m. panmen( of Public Aid Concert Hall: Symphony No. cluding tape recorders aJHE. summer training program The choir performed in education, said her work will dictating machines. from Evanston and participated in a be In IllinOis counties from 9 by Schubert, Quartet No. should contact the Office of 14 in C s harp minor by 9 a.m. until noon today in the Student Work and Financial s pecial rehearsal unde r the Springfield and Decatur south Ballrooms of the University Assistance before Friday. direction of William Ballard, and in 3'S counties of Indiana. Cente r. choral director at Northwest­ It will be done unde r a grant Pianist, Violinist To be eligible to panicipate ern University. of nearly $35,000 awarded In the training program, stu­ Southern nl100is University by dents must be Illinois resi­ the U,S. Office of Economic To Give Recital Award dents who have completed two TV 'Ports of CaU' Opponunity. He rbert L. Levinson. lec- Winn in g years of college work and have The SIU program, Miss cure r in the Department of Beauty course background In sociol­ Will Be Visited Baker said, is involved with MUSi C, and Ke nt W. Werner, Specialist ogy, psychology, anthropology, in-service training in'commu- instructor in the same depart­ Waiting to economics and political " POrts of Call" will be the Serve you . Passport 8 program at 8 p.m. nity action project s that al- ment. will present a joint science. ready have been granted funds. faculty r ecital at 4 p.m. Sun- today on WSIU -TV. They are primarily year- day in Shryock Auditorium. The training program will Other programs! last for two months. around projects. s he said , Levinson is a violinist and Var$il'l dealing with persons who work Werner plays the piano. 4,30 p.m. Selection of participants with children from three years They wUI play " The Devil's HAIB f ASHlONS tr;i.". What's New: The firstdi no ­ u, E. lIIioois - ewtf~' will be on a me rit basis old to school age. He r work Trill" by -'fartini, ' 'Concerto saurs , 230 million year s . Phone: (57 ·SUS . through competitive examina­ will be with project directo r s. No. 5 in A minor by Mozan, tions and interviews along with ago. Miss Baker , who is on " Improvisation" by Kabalev­ the evalua tion of the students' special assignment from the sky and "HavanaiseJO by Saint­ Southgate :~;;; college r ecords. S t ud e nt~ will 5, 15 p.m. College of Educat ion, will Sae ns. HAIR fASHlONS -t:p~I"'s receive a s alary during the Industry on Parade. spend 20 per cent of her time Levinson will also play 7OC'h s_ lUiAois Gene viev program. Phone: 54.9·2833 5tonl ey 6 p. m. with the Univer sit y unde r the Sonata for Unaccompanied Our Slyl.. lor_ Supr_ Education Schedules Gr ear Decisions: .. :a~rr~a:ng~e~m:e~n~t.:.. ______~V:i~ O~Ii~n~b~y~H~in~d~e~m::;i~th~.~ ___..!:======::; Ame ri ca." , Advisement in Wham Academic aClv ise ment for 8,30 p. m. For the the College of Education has lorertel: The Me n i~ Black. been moved from Bu ilding T- Uncommitted ... 65 to Room 11 0 in the Wham 9,30 p.m. seeking a way of life ... Education Building. The phone The Stories of Gu y de number is 453-43Q4. Maupass am. For Catholics s eeking an up.to.dote knowledge of their faith s . For Christians seeldng interfaith fellowship. TONIGHT THRU SUNDAY STARTS7 :15 For you .... seek ing a better understanding of yourself. SHOWN FIRST SHOWN SECOND Mr. Ge'('e Urbik Fr. Melvin Hass Director of Adult Education Pas tor ~~ " ~_F_'__ ':" _._ ~ NATURISTS· . • :. " as they frolIC 1 on the exotIC ' : , Catholic Information Series '. Isle of •• 10 weeki y talks presented hy 5 1. Francis Xa\' i ~ r Church J' Corsica ! .. ~- A serieS of talks and discussions on the Catholic Faith, J conducted by our Director of Adult Education. Mr. Gene 1. ~~M~:~: Urbik. Such topics as Birth Control, The ii ~ co o in today's world, CI"Id others, are frankly discussed. This Week ... March 29 or 31 ~ .. .. .~,~. , . · How the Universe Happened .. "Biblical and Pagon Accoun_h of Creation" YAHNICK" · The Origin and Foil of Man ... \. ' .. IGI';.I II' I DI IIII '"The Psycology of temptation" '* ..: ..':::' ''.' Til rpe COil venient Times, .. Ph. 549-:~359 l 1) Tues. March 29 at 8: 00 pm 2) Thurs . March 31 at 8:00 pm 3) Tues . March 29 at 1:00 pm .. Acti vity Center. 1 st floor · 306 S. Beveridge St . . Sc.uth of C~rc, Iij~ Everybody Welcome---QucstionsAfter Talks

" "ilI.'" 4 'N;[;;';=-- -_. •. _ _ • ___ ._•••••••••••• _ .. .--.-.--...... -.-~ .. --. - .. . Dail)' Egyptian Editorial Page OUR FAVORITE SIGNS OF SPRING Privacy Deserves Ml)re~ Pro'mction, By Ro;r/\rrltCbinS ~ m oqwhich ~e Fed is ~ovin g is a s mall part of the wh ole. Not long ago an advertise ­ The co mmission can deal only ment appeared in the New York With devices that e mit radio Her;rfd ,Tribune featuring a de­ waves or that use public com­ vice ' that "permits two dr munications 'Systems. Admit-' more' people to 'listen in on a tedl y. these add up [Q a 10[. phone conve rsation without the There are cufflink micro­ other party knowi ng it . . . A phones, foumain pen micro­ , fun buy at $4.75." phones, throat micr ophones This kind of fun the Federal and microphones dangling Communications Commission from fishing Ii nes. A micro­ has now undertake n to prohibit phone was pate nted [he othe r - except when the police a r e day that is the si ze of an e njoying it. aspirin table t. So far so good, But it is not In addition. there are tape nearly far enough. In [he first r ecorders that ar e for all place , why should the police practical purposes invis ible have fu n of thiskind?Theyare and t har can be scarred by the at present large buyers of sound of the hum an voice. e I e c t r o n i c eavesdropping These r ecorder s probably equipJ11e nt. Whe r e there are cannQ[ be reached by the com­ lawS" ,or regulations prohibit­ mission under its present ing '.i ts use, the poUce notor­ definition of its powers. Frank YiUUama, Dell'Oll Free Pre •• Letter 10 the Edilor iously violate them. The Nor can the commission F e d era 1 Communications cope with the infinite memory' Commission may have thought banks that are being built in Writer Replies to Views on Viet Nam ~ ft': did not have the power to more and bigge r compute rs, "i'nterfere with other agencies store houses of infor mation ,{if gover nment- but Congress about eve r yo ne and e verything Offers Other Options for U.S. Policy ~ ~ and the state legisla[Ures he ever did. . 'should give somebody [he To the editor: third world war? If so, Presi­ case ends are not defiled by F or example , exper ime nts ! . power, and soon. Prof. Kun Gl aser, in a let­ dent Johnson, senators such m eans? : In the second place, the FCC are now being conduc ted that ter to the editor of the Daily as Mansfield, Kennedy, Mor se, eliminate cash transactions by He also tells us that because has proposed no adequa te pro­ Egyptian printed March 10, and F ulbright, not to mention we oppose escalation of the telephone communication in gram of enforcement. Evi­ has stated that a "group of U Thant. the pope, our" al­ war, we are urging that H we which the computer s make all dence j~legalIy obtained is in­ professor s on the Car bondale lies, OJ and all our own r ecent really shouldn't win the war." the de bits and credits. The admissible in a criminal Campus is collecting faculty ambassadors of peace are How does Mr. Glaser propose tendency will be to develop a prosecution. But this rule ap­ signatures to an IOpen Letter panies to such a u universe" to win a war in A sia without computerized r ecord of every plies only [0 the introduction to the P r esident and Congress' and are as Hfooled" as we. action of ever y citizen' s life. "taking out" o r taking on of evidence of the (terns ac­ on the Vie t Nam s ituation. " Does Mr. Glaser have ac­ China and, conceivably, the tually gathered illegally; it The constitutional law of That is a fact. cess to a purer universe of Soviet Union? The generals in does not prevent building a privacy is not worked out. In Mr. Glaser adds that the discourse? Let us see. He Washington would be happy to case illegally. a case founded the Connecticut birth control lO text of this letter is a tragic r ejects a r e stor ation of the know. on knowledge obtained by [he case, some jus tices of the illustration of how weU-mean­ 1954 Gene va agreements, Finally, Mr. Glaser tells us most outrageous violations of Supreme Court began co insist Ing liberals . . • c an be fooled since they "were an atte mpt that the statement in the Open privacy. that privacy was protected by into accepting a Communist­ to s tabilize the unstable." Letter ("escalation will not No effective procedure and the Bill of Rights. Tilese jus­ dictated unive r se of dis­ What he wishes fo r the sake contribute to securing ... co­ no effective punis hme nt have [ices held the s tatute uncon­ course." of stability Is a partitioned operation" on the pan: of our stitutional on [he ground that bee n devi sed to bri ng offe nd­ That is an inte rpretation, Viet NamontheorderofKorea adve rsa ries) "flies in the face er s, e ither private persons or it could not be enfor ced With­ not a fac t, and, as such, is and Berlin. of eve rything we have learned " law e nforceme m offi cers, " out putti ng a policeman imo open to Question. about Communist be­ e ver y bedroom. The reason for this is that [0 justice. As for the FCC , its Is one apan y toaUCommu­ to lOhold elections ... as havio r •.• " program of enforceme nt wIll This new attit ud e in [he nist- dic tated unive r se of dis­ agreed in 1954 ... means to Does it? Ou r harassment of do little to dimini s h the e n­ court a nd the ne w rule of the course " when he urges an end s ign South Viet Nam over to Cuba when Castro fo r ced the thu siasm with whi c h [he vi o­ FCC are promis ing. But we to the s laughte r of human tyran'1Y." Is he s uggesting withdrawal of American finan­ lators of privacy go about the ir have a long wa y to go. beings, Ame ricans and Viet­ that the United States is to cial interests from Cuba drove inte r esting and profitable namese alike , o r when he allow "free" elections in Viet that island into the arms of worl< .. Copyright 1966 seeks co halt a course of action Nam (and possibly elsewhe r e) Russia and China, with the In the third place, the field Los Angeles Times that threate ns to preCipitate a onl y when the res ults are r esult that we had an atomic foreknown to be in our favor? showdown that shocked the Government Units Puff at Cross-Purposes What " unive r se of discourse " world. When we desisted. that is that? love affair e nded. He informs us that .IAny Our war with the Viet Cong, In the Haze of the Great Smoking Battle s tudent who has taken SIU' s who have scruggled for na­ By Arthur Hoppe dustry was gravel y concerned. "Frankl y, I didn't care introductor y course in inte r­ tional independence fo r mor e San Francisco Chronicle The dilemma seemed in­ much for it. 'Psst, kid!' I' d national relations could have than two decades and who are soluble. But the Depanment of say. 'Want a new thrill? Nor told the professor s that the the traditional enemies of T he smooth interworkings Agriculture has now stepped a cough in a car load.' And Communist s ha ve been pro­ China, is at this momem driv­ of our Governme nt agencies into the breech. It's spending while I realized I was serving moting INational Libe ration ing them into the arms of have never been better de­ $210.000 on a filmed com­ my country in the finest tradi­ Fronts' in unde rdeveloped Chil]a. And forthis predictable monstrated than in the Great mercial e ntitled "The World tions of the E. O. P. Service, countries s ince the 1950s." con se Quenc ~ we hold the m Smoking Battle . No informed of Pleasur e ." It's designed to I neve r could stand all that Is one to infer from this state­ r esponsible and, hence, justify Citizen can deny that in their stimulate mor e cigarette coughing and s plutte ring. ment that every moveme nt our demands for even greate r constant effons to protect us s moking. But that's okay, be­ " So when the Chief called toward inde pe ndence is Com­ escalation of the war! all these agencies are holding cause we're only going to s how me in to offe r me a new as­ munist-favor ed and that the re I a m Quite awar e that suc h their own. it abroad . Signment, I was ready. 'We're is no possibility thar s uch discussions as these a r e bound move ments may a ris e in­ For years, as yo u know, The Depanment says the giving you a bigger job, Petti­ to be s implistic. The situa­ digenously? tion, give n its ramifications, the Depanment of Ag ricul[Ure film will be s hown in J a pan, bone : he said. 'Pus hing mari­ is fa r too complicated to be has been s ubs idizing farme r s Thailand and Austria as pa n juana.' This non se quitur "packs ," in Mr. Glaser's words "a c la r ified by char ges and coun­ to e ncour age them to grow of a " pr omotion program to .. 'Marijuana. si r ?' s ays I. r s ubliminal punch which pro­ terchar ges. But whatever our more cigareqe tobacco. Wh ich help buffer any damage to .. 'Right Pettibone' he differences, I belie ve that M r. was fine until another agency, Ame rican tobacco sale s " says . • Aft e r all, the ' world fessors of philosophy and the the' Depan ment of Public supply of marijuana is limited. social scie nces s hould expose, Glase r and I wo ul d agree that caused by the cancer scar e ar a major function of imelli­ Health announced that c igar­ ho me. The Depanmenr didn't The more we can get smoked not r epeat." It Is no doubr true that every uprising in the gence is to find all possible ettes probably c aused cancer, s ay what the rest of the pro­ up over he r e, the less there futu r e is bound to attract some solutions to a situation and to hean: disease and chroniC gram consisted of. will be for those beatniks at coreopsis. home. So get out there , for Communists, as the r ecem discr iminate a mong them ­ An alarmed Congress, con­ Actually. I'm in r eceipt of the glory of your country, and r evolution in the Dominican that s ingle-mindedness is a cerned with our welfare above another charr y lette r from the hook those kids .' Republic demonstrares, but is sure sign of intellectual im­ all, took the momentous step noted CIA Agent, Home r T. "Well. I can't tell you what this to say that all uprisings mobilization. of orde ring warnings printed Pettibone, Yale ' 07, which m ay a joy it is to see the way are therefore Communis t­ I think too that Mr. Glaser on all cigarette packages that shed funher light on this these kids' e yes light up. It s ponsor ed? would also agree With me that the coffin nails therein might interesting new concept: s hows you the value of s ha r ing, He speaks toO of setting up the United States s tands in dire be bad for us. It the n voted uI've bee n in Japan these doesn't it? But I must say, "puppet leaders of movements need of a foreign policy that continued subsidies to the past few months on loan to I do hope the Chief doesn't take that r e main und e r s trict Com­ does not call for aggr ession farmers to go on gr owing more our new supe r secr e t E. O. P. me off m a rijuana and put me munist control." Had Am e ri­ first and reflection afterward. cigarette tobacco. Service, old bean," he writes. on the he r Oin det ail. c ans nothing to do with insti­ The value of the "Open J3l,lt many a s moker, on "That stand for Export Our "To tell the truth, the motto tuting the present "puppet Leuer ," as far as I am con­ viewing the warning, cried: Problems and I don't mind of us dedicated agents in the le ade r s " of the South Viet Nam cerned, lies in e ncouraging "Good Heavens! Cigarettes telling you it's been pr e tty Marijunana Branch appeals to government? Or does Mr. the se a r ch for options and fo r may be bad for me . I never dreary work- hanging around me most: • For the good of Glaser r eason that whateve r shaping a r e asoned for eign would have thought it." And. school ya rds offe ringthese Ja­ America, hel p the world go to the United States does is bound policy. na turally, tl)e cigarette in- panese kids fags. pot.' .. to be moral and that in its Sidne y p . Mo ss :OAn.y· EGYPtiAN . ....· .. 5 ii To 'New Left' Even Yevtushenko Is·Old Hat Cynicism Among Soviet Youths

By Ernest J. Simmons against the Soviet substitute for parental author­ boards crammed with announcements of the latest Reprinted from The National Observer ity, tbe party, which preaches through every atrocities of American imperialists in Viet Nam, avenue of communication the vital necessity of and insist on calling everything by Its real They paid no anention to the huge. illuminated, Communist political orientation in all things. But name. white-lettered signs against red bunting that tbe rebellion is muted-they just refuse to talk. When the older hero of a recent novel gallantly covered the sides of bUildings with blown-up politics. tells tbe young heroine Katya, upon first meeting plnraits of members of tbe presidium and slogans ber, that she Is a woman before whose feet a of tbe day on peace, the glories of communism, Pie in the Sky man might throw a cloak. in tbe mud, she tartly and achievements of tbe party. Like Americans replies: "Nowadays they don't talk that way. They'll throw under your feet only the wrapper on the Founh of July. Soviet youths appear to be It among Soviet students the re is impatience nQ longer concerned with the real significance of of a chocolate ice-cream s tick. OJ with slow progress in standards of living and the The attitude and activities of New Left students tbeir celebration and thing of it mostly as a time inescapable propagandized socialist pie in tbe sky, for jollificatlon and the exchange of gifts. are most vigorously expressed in intellectual there also appears to be a firm belief that the causes and in an and literature. They evince a As tbe evening advanced. well-dressed sons country is moving forward to something better. and daughters of affluent parents repaired to fervid nostalgia for the 1920., the only real And their patriotic convictions in this respect revolutionary period in Soviet arts and litera­ fashionable restaurants. There, at tables reserved are more often than not strengthened by un­ tor considerable sums, they ate expensive din­ ture, when there existed an uncontrolled upsurge discriminating Western criticism of the system of experimentation in anistic form and content. ners, drank: copiously, and danced far into the under which they live. In culture their tastes tend night to jazz bands. Youngsters of less affluent The recent widespread revival of interest in this to be conservative and nationalistic, running to the wbole period is a response to demands of youths, parents crowded imo the slightly larger apartment an, mUSiC, and literature of the Russian pastor to of one member pf the group for co-operative Hsafe" old Soviet writers such as Mayakovsky, although older liberal writers and editor~ have also supported the movement. - entertainment in which each contributed what he Fedin, Leonov and Sholokhov. On the other hand, among the " angry young men" could in food and liquor. The poor found their fun Among this large stud ent body in higher edu­ in the streets, sometimes ending in hooligan cation, however, there is a minority that might of a few years ago, Yevtushenko, whom they~ow r egard as more political than poetic, alr.ea.dy antics. bear some resemblance to the American New The special auention paid to the large segment Left Movement. Similar to older emancipated seems outmoded. Their taste runs to tbe diffiCult scientific symbolism of of youth involved ' in higher education is some intellectUals, of whom they are a more demon- Voznesensk~s verse~ ' the measure of the party's deep concern for them as personal emotional content of the poetry of-the future leaders of the country and ideal material beautiful Akhmadulina, and the pure art of the per­ for New Soviet Men and Women. But the difficulty secuted Brodsky's poem s which tbey can read only of directing effective propaganda at this group is in manuscript copies. However, they do admire the usual one: How to educate them, even along Yevtushenko's courage of dissent. Marxist-Leninist lines, and still prevent them In general, students of tbe New Left a r e con­ from doing their own thinking? temptuous of Soviet writers of fiction today. They It is as hard to generalize about Soviet univer­ regard them as moreorless untalented purveyors sity youth as it is about those in the United States, ~I of the official version of Soviet life, devotees of which is perhaps a tribute to their relative Socialist realism who are un aware that they a r e emancipation from propaganda s hibboleths of the conducting a dialogue with the dead. An exception past. No doubt one of Khrushchev's reasons for aRId their overwhelming favorite is Solzhenitsyn, urging national polytechnical education several whose artistic integrity - a phrase constantly years ago was that students in institutions of occurring in their literary discussions-compels higher learning wquld be less refractory in their him to grapple with the unvarnished truth, with the behavior and less independent in their thinking virtues and evils of an existence they recognize if they were F mpelled to rub shoulders with as indubitably Soviet. peasants on the farm and workers in the factor y. These students also praise cerratn stOries of Though students and parents don't particularly Tendryak:.ov, Kazakov, Aksenyov, and Semin that favor this prescription, old Bolsheviks continue deal with anti-heroes and anti-heroines frustrated to praise the progressiveness and ideological by vicissitudes of Soviet life that seem to bear a probity of real workers as opposed to question­ sensible relation to its realities. asking, intellectual snobs in the universities. And in translation they gobble up the tales of Salinger, probably because he appears to be sympathetically concerned with the psychological Where They Find R efuge compleXities of youth living in a society whose conditions of existence constantly challenge their And some novelists still dwell tiresomely on own groping for values. the Soviet mystique of labor, co ntrasting in their Though art and literature of Europe and America fiction the "good" working class [Q the "bad" hav~had some influence on the taste and ideas of intellectuals. The hero of one novel seeks redemp­ these students, they can also be quite critical- at tion in operating a heavy dump truck on the theory least, in conversation With a foreigner- of what that «the greater the ordeal, the sweeter the they consider the more extreme aspects of West­ spiritual cleansing." Of late, however, some "HlL TON HEARD ABOUT OUR 'SPACE HOTEL' . ern modernism. In addition. they have directly or Soviet c ritics have begun [0 ridicule this non­ THEY WANT TO BUY IT'" indirectly learned much from the writings of sense, pointing out that ju st as people once sought Kafka, Camus, and Sanre of a work of human refuge in secluded cloisters to save their souls, strative reflection, their quarrel is nOt with the relations and thought that hitherto they scarcely now they find refuge in construc tion projects. regime as a whol e , but with what they consider knew existed. Most university students, even though they the party's un warranted interference In freedom represent varying social strata, would agree with of expression and in the right to live their lives this condemnation of a widespread propaganda as [hey see fit. A Responsive Chord emphasis on excep[ional virtues of [he laboring The party's highl y moral parental attitude, its man. As yet, there is no firm class s tratification aggravating posture that it always knows what is The Bob Dylan of the Soviet New Left is the in the Soviet Union. Children of peasants and best, serves onl y to intensify the cyniCism among brilliant, Singing. guitar-playing Bulat Okudzhava, workers can achieve university s tatus if ' they young men and women of the New Left. There is whose original lyrics evoke such an enthusiastic have unus ual capabilities and take advantage of perhaps more truth than fiction in their portrayal r esponse from young people because they throb the opportunities of the system [0 get ahead, in literature as anti-heroes whom party-minded with the anxieties and que sting, they joys and although their progress will not be as easy as critics devoted to the type of the New Soviet Man sorrows that are pan of their own daily exper­ that of the sons and daughters of industrial mana­ stigmatize as loafers, morally depraved, alienated ience. In fact, as with American students of the gers' professors, and high party bureaucrats . youths consumed with phoney angst and given to New Left, a favorite entertainment is group sing­ Student motivation is pretty uniform-they know un-Soviet self-communings on who they are and ing to the guitar of Okudzhava's songs, as well as that the door to a career will be opened only by how they should live. concentration camp songs of Stalin's victims, and the successful completion of a higher education. The traditional struggle between fathers and even such imports as "We Shall Overcome." Exceptions exist, but they are rare, and corners sons, which the party press unwisely scoffs at, There is much evidence that youth in general may be cut only at a risk, Sov iet educatOrs, unlike seems to be particularly virulent in the Soviet and the New Left in particular have become the many in America, do nO[ believe in a democracy Union and especially among youths of the New conSCience, the troubled conscience, of leaders of brains. However, there is a democracy of Left. For the propaganda apparatus regularly of government and party. opportunity and the race, by and large. goes to presents to the sons a glowing picture of their In an effort to remind them of the future role the ablest. To assure one's children preferment elders as paragons of moral rectitude who tbey are expected to play in the party's campaign through money or position is extre mel y difficult. endured untold hardships In the Revolution, Civil to develop New Soviet Men and Women to cope In their reactions to contemporary e nvironment, War, and World War in order to build a happy with the country's urgent problems, a recent Soviet university swdents, no more than Ameri­ socialist future for later gener ations. article in Literary Gazette belabored this revived can, do not easily fit into precise molds, but The picture must annoy the young today not only interest in the free-wheeling, non-conformist, certain behavior patterns can be disce rned. because of its irrelevance to their own experience, and daring experimentation of the revolutionary For one thing they seem deeply conservative but perhaps also because they missed participating 1920s. And.;. only a short time ago [he head of the as befits young people primarily interested in in those glorious heroic years. Further, in many Young Communist League, deplored youth's dis­ careers and security. They are definitely apoliti­ cases youth may wonder about "moral lessons" respect for their elders and excoriated their cal with the exception of Young Communist from parents who a r e now .well-enough off to admiration for modern bourgeois art. League activists, and many of these appear to be coddle their university sons and daughters in an "The place of real heroes," he declared," more concerned with the career advantages of effon to provide amenities of life of which they "people capable of action, struggle, and exploits, membership than with the league's propaganda themselves were deprived. is taken by amorphous pesonalities who are objectives. Trapped by these conflicts, the cynicism of absorbed in their own feelings and flaunt their No doubt this apolitical ness has been induced youth in the New Left mounts. They resent dic­ social and civic oassivity." in large measure not only by rebellion against tation, cut classes if they feel like it, ignore politically minded parents • .but also .by. .rebellion Young Communist League university bulletin (To be Continued Thunday) .. ···,po ... .6 ; . : Johnson to: Se · ~ · k ' T 'ax · " B · oosf If Prices Contin'ue -to Rise WASHINGTON (AP)-Presi · the valUe of the do llar go ter that, he s aid, Hif prices dent Johnson indicated Tues­ "down,'· are still going up, we will day he will ask Congress for Holding an impromptu news have to have a tax bill." a (ax inc r ease if prices con­ conference in the state dining The news conference de­ tinue to rise. room of the White House, veloped in the middle of a He mentioned a JXlssible Johnson s aid mos t of hi s ad­ coffee and c*e reception for hike of $5 billion .. more or viser s believe anti- inflation White House Fellows-young less" affecting both individual measur es take n so far will people chosen to work one year and corporation taxes. not do the trick. He said they aides to top federal officials . Johnson s aid no one likes to are talking about governme nt Johnson invited their ques ­ / 1 , \ 'I" seek a tax incr ease-es­ control s . a federal spending tions and swung inca a regu­ Oliphant, D"n" er P O.I pecially in an e lection year ­ c ur of $5 billion ro $'10 bil­ lar ne ws conference 'WELCOME! YOU WILL NOTICE WE ARE GRADUALLY but "if we need to take ac­ lion, or a tax increase of "5 On other topiCS, Johnson ISOLATING THE UNITED STA TES" tion. we 'U take it." billion more or less." said: While emphasizing he has Johnson said no one wants - The United States this made no decision on [be ques­ controls and he a rgued that year may Ship to famine­ tion, Jo hnson expressed this any mass ive spending c ut threatened India more wheat Rise of Living Costs Highest view: "Congress would rather would be impossible. than it consumes at home. have a modes t tax increase The Pres ident said the -Communis t China, not the of 5, 6 or 7 per cent of the Bud2:e t BUreau will make a Unite d States, is blocking Since End of Korean Conflict tax bill, corporate and per­ s urvey next month of possible more open dealings between sonal. than to see inflation and economies in government. Af- the two countries. WASHINGTON (AP)- The impose standby controls on in­ government r e pone d Tues­ s tallment buying. day' the steepest Fe bruary rise Reuss said an a mendment in living costs s i nce tbe Ko ­ carrying these a nti- inflation r ean war. The ups wing was led devices will be offered when ~------, by soaring food prices which the House Banking and Cur­ in the case of meat climbed r e ncy Comminee considers an : DAILY EGYPTIAN SUBSCRIPililON COUPON : off rhe rop of Labor Depart­ administration-b a c k ed bill YOUR NAME I ment charts . renewing the Defense Produc<­ I The rise of one-half of one tion Act. This act is designed I ADDRESS I per cent in the consumer pr ice to insure that production for index measuring typical national defense is given pri­ I CITY STATE _ _ _ ZIPCODE__ I family living costs put the in­ ority over other bus iness. dex at 111.6 meaning it took The over-all jump in the 1 I $11.16 last month robuyltems consumer price i ndex-only I Pleose send subscription to: I that cost $10 in the 1957- the third inc rease of that s ize 59 base period. since 1958-chipped another I NAME I Meat prices went up a nother half-cent from the purc has­ I 2 per cent to 19 per cent ing power of the doll ar. : ADDRE~ 1 I above a year ago, edging off Over-all living COStS were I CITY STATE ___ ZIPCODE_ _ I the top of the chan at 115.7 2.5 per cent above a year ago, per cent of 1957-59 prices, the biggest annual inc rease Pork alone was 37 per cent I 3/30 I s ince 1958. L ______~~e;a;A~~: ~~U;;~IQ:~~~~~~~c;.: I highe r tha n a year ago. "The worst of the inc reases F r esh vegetables soar e d appears to be ove r," Assistant 10.5 per cent, poultry 8 per Commissioner Arnold Chase Cent and eggs nearly 4 per cent of {he Bureau of Labor Sta­ to lead the rise in food prices tis tics said of the sharp rise This coupon, plus just $2.00, thar made up 75 per cenc of in food prices over much of the February inc r ease. the pas t year . The r est of the rise was in "There is no indication of will thank Mom and Dad ho us ing, clothi ng, medical panic bU Yi ng," he said. s uch as care and virtually all con­ there would be if "inflationary s ume r services. psychology" gripped rhe pub­ The only major ite m in [he lic . five days a week. index char dropped was trans­ por tation, which edged down Newsman Notes one- tenth of one per cenc, large ly because of lower auto Information Lag DAILY EGYPTIAN prices. The decline in trans ­ NEW YORK (AP) - A news­ ponation COS ts was less than paper corresponde nt s aid S 0 l J T H [ R N il l I ~ j, I ~ I ' ro.. I " [ R SIT 'f . us ual for Februa r y. Tuesday the lack of r egular In another development, White House news conferences Rep. He nry S. Reuss, O-Wis., forces the people to get in­ said an attempt would be made formatio n by "ne ws -ooze" i n Congress Wednesday to re - and President Johnson "is a big loser." Groupo! Collegians Richard L. Strout, Washing­ ... Because it will send them a copy of your college parer ton correspondent for [he every day it's printed·· for 0 whole term . With a gift subscription Plan Charity Walk Christian Science Monitor, to the Doily Egyptian, your parents will b~ able to keep abr~ast suggested that the, President of what', going on at SIU ·· and it might even tell them a couple DE KALB, Ill. (AP)-A hold more news conferences ­ of thift9S you forg~t in ,your I~tters! group of collegia ns plans to and ban radio and television walk to Chicago to raise money coverage. Dad i. sur. to get a thrill out of watching the Salukis go, to help c rippled people. Noting that a White House go, go (on to victory, we hope), and Mom is sur~ to get a chuckle Members of Phi Epsilon Pi aide recently described news out of Gus 80d~. And ~v~rybody·s sure to be interested in the fraternity at Northern ll1 i - confer ences covered by radio editorial pag~, reflecting student opin ion . And there is campus nois Univer s ity plan to collect and televiSion as ~ "circ us," news and activiti.s and intellectual things and lots more . money along the route for the Strout said admission of the Easte r Seal Society, which broadcas ters to the con­ So, why don't you just clip out the coupon, mail it in with handles funds for cripple d ferences had "changed their two bucks (or be a sport, and enclos~ six dollars for four terms )? c hildren and adults . whole character." Mom, Dad, brothers, sisters, grandmas , grandpas, aunts, uncles , The distance is 60 miles " I yield to nobody in my a s rhe c row flies, bu t they'll admiration of radio and TV," girl friends , boy are just 0 few of the people who might ffi~nd s run up mo r e mileage on foot Strout added . " In their own be int~rested. Moil it in today . during the four-day hike. field they are super b •.. But The ma r che r s , carrying -I think television should be cans for donations and ac - outlawed in three places, any­ SUBSCRIBE TODAY! companied by a fl oat, are wa y- in the Supre me Coun, in scheduled to leave DeKaib at [he nuptial bed, and in White 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. House pr ess confe rences." Girls! Girls!

on Spring and Su m mer SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY NEWSPAPER SPORTSWEAR DAILY EGYPTIAN TED'S LADIES'S linoi5 Morch.'!O. g966 Brezhnev Sets Ecuadorian Junta Bow ~ Out; Conditions for Civil i~ n to Head Government QUITO, fE cuador (APl - The fate of the three-man Fresh Amity Ecuador's inilitary junta was junta was not known. MOSCOW (APl-Communist ousted by the armed forces The high command met with party leade r Leonid I. 8rezh­ chiefs Tuesday and replaced political leaders to select the nev said Tuesday the Soviet ' by a provisional civilian pres­ Union wants better relations 62 - year - old Yerovi within ident, economist Clemente hours of announcing they had with tbe United States and Red Yerovi Indaburo. China. But he set conditions taken over. He was proposed Tbe cbange came swiftly for the job by his old boss, both nations have rejected. after the military high com­ ex-preslden[ Galo Plaza On the home from, Brezh­ mand announced it was taking Lasso. nev told the opening session over to pick a president with of the Soviet Communist par­ the advice of polictcalleaders. Ye r ovl, politically Indep­ ty's 23rd congress that the The command said it fully endenti is considered a lib­ eral. As news of the junta's name of the all-powetiul supported Yerovi. ouster spread, s tudents who pany Presidium has been The junta' s overthrow cU­ changed back to Politlburo­ had demonstrated against what maxed a wave of violence they called military d.ictator­ the name used in Joseph V. and anti-junta demonstrations. Stalin's time. ship pou{"ed on to [he streets Yerovi, in the pon city of of QuitO and Guayaquil. Brezhnev said the Soviet Guayaquil when notified, ac­ Union is ready to develop re­ ROSES FOR THE PRIME - Mrs. Johnson presents a cepted and appealed by nation­ All students taken In cus­ lations with the United States bouquet of roses as s he and President Johnson welcomed India' s wide radio for a return to tody during demonstrations If the United Stares abandons calm. were freed. its war in Viet Nam. prime minister, Mrs . Indira Gandhi , on the White House grounds He declared the Moscow­ Monday . (A P Photo) Peking dispute will be over­ come eventually if China gives ROOMS FOR RENT- up many present JX)licies. The Senate Hearings Begin On dispute can be discussed 408_W. Freeman either 1~ Moscow or Peking, New Transportation Cabinet he said. Brezhnev spoke for more WASHINGTON (API- Sen­ mit~~e which has handled • Close to campus (1 block) tban four hours to almost 5.000 ate hearings on President tranSponation problems for delegates representing the Johnson's plan to bring all many years, said the adminis­ • Remodeled pany's 12,471,000 members modes of U.S. transportation tration "bas no particular and 1. 000 guests from 86 other unde r a single new cabinet de­ pride of authorship" in its plan • Large rooms Communist and Marxist par­ partment began Tuesday with but subm'.tted the biU as a ties in the Kremlin Palace of a warning that some forms of starting point for drafting a • New furnishings Congresses. transport are in shocking de­ final product. His remarks on the United cline. Magnuson said he is con­ • Carpeted lounge with fireplace States a nd Viet Nam repeated That came from Sen. vinced the committee will be comments he· made las t Sep­ Warren G. Magnuson. D­ sold on the need for the fed­ tember about better relations Wash., s ponsor of the bill, e ral government to bring all • Upperclassmen preferred with Washington being blocked who spoke of a 50 per cent transportation activities un­ by the war. The remarks decline s ince 1950 in rail­ der one coordinated agencYa • Quiet neighborhood Tuesday were milder than road passenger miles and de­ After Magnuson, the first previous Soviet c riticism of clared • 'our merchant marine admini stration witness was (Dead-end street) the U.S. role in Viet Nam. is in dire need of improve­ Budge t 0 ire c tor Charles ment if it is to s urvive." Schultze. He told the senators Limited cooking privilege May Draft Call Magnuson was [he first wit­ t be proposed department ness before the Senate Gov­ s hou ld make its greatest con­ ernme nt Operations Com­ tribution in bolstering fede ral For information, call: 3-2877 or 3-2847 R aised to 34,600 mittee on what he described safety programs. WA SHI NCTON (API-The as .. a very major, complex Defense Department issued a piece of legislation." call Tuesday for a draft of He agreed with Chairman 34,600 men in May, the highest John L. McCle llan. D-Ark., monthly quota since January. who ope ned the hearing With AU the May draftees will the comment that" no one need SD8! be assigned to {he Army, the e xpect us to r eport out thiS Pe ntagon said. bill in half a dozen d a ys ~' The April draft , also for the The new departme nt which SHAVING EVERY Army. totaled 21,700. Johnson proposed in a special In January, a total of 32,280 mess age to Congress March 2 DAY IS SUCH A men were summoned to ser­ would weld [Qge ther various vice, 8,980 of them with {he independe nt agenCies which Marines. now e mploy almost 100,000 UGH-DRAG! In February, the quota persons with annual budgets dropped to 29 .400, with 3,000 that total $6 billion. The for the Marines. P r esident's main focus was on WHAT CAN SAVE The March quota originally the need for one agency to was set at 32,900 but was cut promote travel safety. MY TENDER, to 22,400 when enlistments Magnuson, Veteran chair­ exceeded expectations. man of the Commerce Com- BEAUTIFUL SKIN? DISCOVER THE See the New $"'ilging~orld " Tw in Jet 100"

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.,.. - .... '...... m I ria'untm Eoin O'Mahony Is Visiting Professor Eoln O'Mahony, well-known also interested in bringing Irish barrister, journalist, southern and nonhern Ireland commentator and artiSt, and back together. At present contender for tbe presidency nonhern Ireland is under of Ireland, Is at SIU this term BritiSh rule while southern as an artist-tn-residence and Ireland is an independent visiting professor of jour­ st8te. nalism. He conceded that tbere is A leading expert In gene­ little chance for his nomJna­ alogy. he bas been featured tion as a candidate for the for years <>n Radio Erleann presidency since H nomlnatlng as a com.mentator on Irish procedures are set up to pre­ families. While rourlng the vent northe rn Ire land county United States last fall inter­ councils fro m nominating viewing Irisb-Americans for candidates ... his program. he spen[ some time at SIU. By running for the preSi­ Along with his work In the dency, O'Mahony said "I have Department of Journalism, he will work With the staff of the R are Books Room at Morris Library on its extensive Irish collection. He is bidding for the presi­ dency of I reland because to r want [Q restore the idea that the pre 5 i de n [ is above politics," he Said. "If the president is in politics, he serves no purpose. 01 think. it is dreadful that VISITING JOURNALIST -Wilfredo Mayorga(cen- and news and sports broadcasting. He chatted a man who has put in more ter, editor of a newspaper in San Pedro Sule, infonnally with Frank MesserSmith (left), a than 50 years of service to Cortes, Honduras, is on campus visiting com- student reporter\:ror the Daily Egyptian, with his cou.ntry s uch as Eamon munications operations. The journalist is in the help of Jose Gonzales-Fontany, a Depart- de Valera (present president) the United States under the sponsorship of the ment of Stete interperter. should have to be nominated Department of Stete to study small news papers by a political parry," he said • .-.:...------....;;---_.;...:...-______..... "There is a need for one who can draw together all good In the nation. The president should work for cultural im­ EOIN 0 ' MAHONY provement of the coumry, toward beautification of vil­ demonstrated that the small lages and increasing the im­ man cannot be nominated. I portance of an among the know local council me mbers people. " are willing to vote for me to He said he also feels that put me in [he fi eld, but they are the Irish language is equal forbidden to by party bosses with E nglish. SO the president In Oublln." should spend at least half of Should O'Mahony he nomi ­ his rime in the Gaelic-speak­ na[ed he feels he could put up ing areas of the country. a "quite respectable show, O'Mahony. who comes from s ince many people are tired of Belfast, northern Ireland, is politics."

Yes! And we could give you twenty-five reasons why you'd like the job of a United Air Lines Stewardess.-But we'd run out of space. YOUR BEST SLACKS,JEANS and WALK SHORTS So, see our campus with DRESS SLACKS FaraPress "" representative instead. at Casual Slack P1;ices! Interviews on AprilS & April 6 NEVER NEED IRONING 8:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. ..-.... For appointment call Mr . Shell ..... 453.2391 UNITED Un iversity Placement Office -. CO .• '.C .• EL PASO . '~UFACTU".C T~lIIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii7"'/ An Equal Opportunity Employer

1...- Valuable Teaching Experience CoedsApplyTheir Train.,ing By Teaching Clothing Class Coeds In the School of Home a valuable teaching experience to learn. They are already Economics who plan to teach for them,'- said Mrs. Vesta asking for a second workshop after graduation applied their Morgan, supervisor of home to follow the current one. training by helping to give ecor1omics student teaching. " We have had to turn away demonstrations and teach UIt gives them an opponunity others who wanted to join the clothing construction to a [0 work with adults. [0 work class, because of lack of room class of homemakers orga­ in a diffe rent environment than and eqUipment," Mrs. Juhlin nized by [be JacKson County the school classroom, to work said. HWe have only six re­ Public Aid Depanment. in a cooperative community conditioned sewing machines The 13 girls met, four or program. and r eally need one for each five each Monday night during "But I think primarily they class member:' winter term, with the 16 volunteered because they The student volunteers have women enrolled in the class wanted to use their training demonstrated and gtven su­ in the communit y room of the to help lOW-income families pervision to the women In public housing project. use tbe resources they have every phase of clothing con­ ~'Few ofche women enrolled to better advantage." struction -- from selecting a in the class have ever sewed Girls dotng their s tudent pattern. cutting and use of a before," Mrs. Mynle Juhlin, teaching winte r term , students sewing machine, to fitting depanment Case worker. said. who plan to specialize in ex­ sleeves and collars, insenIng "They are delighted to feel tension service and several zippers. making buttonholes they ar e learning a skill that student s from a class in home and the final pressing. will help them stretch the economiCS teaching methods The volunteers1nclude Dor­ family clothing dollar." ' took pan in the program. othy H. Hener, Jan Kelley, All the women have c hild­ It is the workshop's goal Barbara L. Biggs, Judy J. ren at home. One has se ven, to help each woman enrolled Flickinger, Joanne M. Strine, another has five of her own to complete one garment. Jacqueline Carlson, Che ryl and four of her husband' s Mrs. Juhlin and Mrs. Mor­ Prest Wilson. Julia Rouggly young brothers and sister s [0 gan agree that the class mem­ Lorenz. Nancy Colben, Nancy care for. bers have shown keen interest K. Cazel. Gail P. Guyer, Do r­ "Our students feel this Is in the project and are eager leska L. Wiley and Sue Ellen Stombaugh. 7 SIU Chemi~ts Attend Meeting Five facul[ y members in the Department of Chemistry and twO chemistry students are :i~~n~~n~eth: ma;;iu:aln ~o~;~~ = cal Society this week in Pittsburgh. Faculty members are Roger E. Seyler, MelVin D. Joesten, Get Boris Musulin, Donald W. Slo­ cum and J ames W. Neckers. Slocum will present a re­ search paper . closer Students are Savio C. Vig­ lielmo, Chicago , and SCOtt W. Hinners Jr., Carbondale. -with a . Beauty HONDA , .. . Begins Closer to class. Closer to the fraternity house . •• And a lot closer to the opposite sex . Honda ~ ! witn Q flatterin9 offers you all these advantages plus economy: I hoinl., styled by \ one of our arti51ic: price, upkeep and insurance are all irresistably low. Why not join the crowd?

1("'lUlbeaU~;~ ty Free Blochure: Write American Honda Motor Co., Inc, "7 Lounge Hair Styli s1 415 S. Illinois W.~AI Univ. MAKING PLANS - Mrs, Myrtle Juhlin (left), Jackson County Public 457-4525 Aid Department case worker, and Mrs, Vesta Morgan, Stu home HONDA of CARBONDALE economics i nstructor , c heck JeSSon plans for the cooperati ve cloth· WALK IN SERVICE ing construction workshop for low-income homemakers which they OR HIWAY 51 NORTH are supervising, CALL 457-4525 Page 10 r" 'f .'1

Top Co mpetition

Now Tennis Team Gains there's a double-date. 3:'2 Mark on Trip Southern's young but tal ­ of tale nted brothers to play e nte d tennis team, facing the for Southern, is currently tOP competition in the nation, holding the No, 2 spot, Thad e nde d its annual spring trip Ferguson, senior from Blue with a 3-2 mark.. Island, Jose Villarete , sopho­ more from Manila, Phillip­ With only o ne senior among pines . Al Pena, junior from his top s ix playe r s, Coach Bogota. Colombia, and Johnny Dick LeFevre can we ll be Yang, so phom ore from optimistic, even though his Manila, Phillippines, r ound team will be facing [he out the [Op six. [Oughest sche dule in the Lothar Hansen, a sopho­ school's hi s[Ory. mor e from Schweinfun. Ger­ The University of [he South m any, completes the va r s ity wa s the first victim o n the squad. spr ing tour, falling 8- J. Georgia Tech the n whipped Committee to Study Southe rn 7 - 2. Bouncing back. the SaJuki s [Oa k Ya le 5- 4 be­ Visitation R ules fore falling to the powerhouse A s tude nt committee to of tennis. the University of Stud y regulations concerning Miami, by a 7-2 margin. visitation in student housing Coco-Cola add ~ extra f un to dat in g- ~ingle or dou ble. Th a t'~ b eco u ~e Coke ho ~ • Miami has dropped onl y one wi ll begin wo rk next week. the taste yo u never g et tired o f . .. alw a ys refreshing. That's why things g o better I m atch in its las t 151 outings. George p aluch, student body with Coke . . . after Coke . . . after Coke. Army provided a ni ce end- president, said Tuesday he has sent letters asking Stu ­ ~==:..: . :":-:.':.-: ':'-=":'' :.. : ~:'-:.:.':.':':' .:.':.':.:' :c:.:,ro=co:<:. .:c :o ,:. :.:o ':":'n:, :~:om:p:. n:,:o:' :C :" :bO:':d':' <======~ ing for Southern, falling 9 -0. de nts [Q ser ve on the com ­ r With re gular season pl ay mi(tee. They will meet Mon ­ To place YOUR ad, use this handy ORDER FORM ~~flin~~gwi~t ~loe2'B;:~~~r ~ day morning, he said . A !,ill pa ssed wimer qu a rter CLASSifi ED ADVERTISING RATE S INST RU CTI ONS f OR COM PLETING O RDER ~~p~~sm ~~~ fr O~a~u e;: ~n~:C~~ by the Campus Se nate asked ! ... ~ ...... _ 2 1...... 1 • c. ... p • • 'c ou"O'" l.S ...... 1 boll ...... 0"" Paluch to appoint the com­ .' ,""n' ", ... CAPITAL LETTERS r ate d as the No . 2 player in I DAY 30< pc , ..... · I ....u,_ s, his ho me land. minee of e ight stude nts. The J DAYI 60' p • •• , ,,. O" ...... b. ••• I. ... . p ...... ,. • O...... p ...... p_ ...... _ purpose of the group is to study SOAYS 80< " ...... SIr.., .pM '" b.'.o_ ...... Mike Sprengelmeyer. a the University rules towards DEA DLI HES · MoC;;:;" :=!o~~: ::..::~:: ~/.~ ',:lIc :':::.II.". sophomore from Dubuque , a IXl ssible re laxation, Paluch • 0o,', EorP I, " ...... 14.. """ '0 •• ,U' _, Iowa, and the third in a line said. . W.. d ...... Sa' 0,10 ' _ 0 " ..... ,,",0' '0 p~b"< . ' , o" . ... ••• "., .. ,<0,., . T '" ..,10 ...... F, .d".., u Batmen'Get Set for Game :1 DAILY EGYPTIAN CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM Mod o.d ... t .., .... , ,,", ...... 'ftonU 10 0001,. Evrpluln . Bldg. T ·4 . SIU ,After Completing Texas Tour NAME ______DATE ______SIU's baseball team , back Sramek, a left handed junior ADDRESS PHOHE 1'10 Irom a fast-paced Texas [O ur, from Chicago, led the pitching staff, hurling 13 innings with­ 2., KIND OF AD 3 RUN AD 4 CHECK ENCLOSED ~",~~t:in~a:ue:d :~ r ~thse nhO~~ out all ow ing an earned run. O fc .. Sol.. D E... plor .. '" 0 P .... ono l lOl o I DAY FOR .---:--:--:--_To.... d ,a.... CO". Salukis meet Memphi s State in ~ The first three games were OFo. R.. nl "'ont.. d OS.. ... ic: .. ~ 03 DAYS ; ... ~ ~:~;.::~O~:;;:b;:.:: I.,:: ;. ::~.~:.: .~:'.. .;:: I a doubleheader . The game is one- run losses bv the Sa luk is. O F ...... " D Enl., lo,nlOlU<1 Off .. , .. " 05 DAYS .. . ,. ~ I,,,c 0" I• ••.• ~ do ... 'o ,.i c•• ' .• ~ 4 00 I slated to s ta rt at I p.m. on as 51. Edwa rds U'nive r sity and Olou O H.lp WOnl .. d OWonlt.d START____ ~~O;;~~O.?;, D' ; ~"'.~:~... :!:,D~ D ~:.:~D~D.'.\~:.. . the SIU d iamond south of the Sui Ross College won by 5- 4 scor es and Ra ndolph Air ~======:::::~....:..: ;.:':":.;:..= ..: .:": '~ ....:======;-: Ar~~:ded by Coach Joe Lutz. For ce Base [oak a 7- 6 de­ 5 I the squad came back from the cision. Southern then dropped nine day, 13-game s pring trip Pan- Ame rican College in 12 with a 5-8 r ecord. This, innings, follow ing that with a however, may not indicate the s hutout over Fort Sa m Hous­ r eal strength of the ream, ton. Err or s pr oved costly, as the Four losses followed, as Salukis committed a total of Randolph A F B. Trinity Uni­ 37 during the trip. One-run ve r s ity, Sam Hous ton State games also figured in , as and Baylo r L'nive r sity took the Southern dr opped fi ve games Salukis. SIll then won over by that mar~in . SL Ma r y' s. dropped a 5-4 T he te am hit at a . 223 clip contest wi th Texas Lutht:' r an, 10 ove r all. with thr ee regu l3r s and ended the tri p with a double topp in ~ the . :\()f) ma rk. Wa yne win ove r Fo rt Sam Houston. . . . - DAILY· EGYPlIAN · Rumor Denied Hartman Has No Plans to Go, Is Charting SIU's Cage Future By Bob Reincke sidered a smaH or major col­ mates while playing basket­ lege:' Hartman said. ball at Oklaboma State . Basketball Coach J a c k The 39-year-old coach Said It was announced Monday - Hartman said Tuesday he ha s it is hard to evaluate the night at a banquet honoring no plans to leave SIU. results of the recruiting done the Salukls tbat So uthern would It had been rumored during since the end of the season. be co mpe~lng In a holiday the recent NCAA college-di­ "Most of the boys won't say tournament With Texas West­ vision finals at Evansville that anything definite this early. ern. Also in the tournament, Hartman had received attrac­ Our main interest is mostly to the Sun Bowl Cla·ssic, will tive offers to coach elsewhere. check on tbelr ability and be Drake and Southern Meth­ The rumors were probably odist. The tournament will be bolstered shortly after the held Dec. 29 and 30 at EI tournament when Hartman left Paso, Tex. on a recruiting tour. Although Hartman may not "No, I wasn't looking for have any plans now for leaving another job. Our school has SIU, It Is probable tbat be a lot of potential for the future will move on in tbe near future In basketball, especially If we if his present s uccess con­ can establish ourselves 1n­ tinues. st~ad of being In this middle In four years here, his ground between being con- teams have rackedup anover­ ~ record of 78-33, and bave Campus Senate gone to the national finals three years. The only year 'Remap' Offered Southern didn' t make it was when the Salukis were beaten (Continued from Page I) by eve ntual national c hamp George Paluch will ask the Evansville in the regiona l Campus Senate to approve final!'. Robert E, Hill, dean of the Befor e coming to Southern, School of Business. as Honors Hartman led Coffeyville (Kan. ) Day speaker. J unior College to the national Committees are scheduled JACK HARllIAN c hampionship With a record of to r epon on the following 32-0 In 1962. Also that year, he bills : whether or not their grades was named ' #Junior Col ­ Establishing mocorcycle en­ a r e good e nough to make it in lege Coach of the Year." forcement rules, such as re­ college. After doing that, we quiring the wearing of safe ty mostly jus t try to keep in Soccer Meeting THIS ONE WON ' T GET AWA Y - Pat Cox, a sophomore £rom Mur­ helmets, no sidesaddle riding [Ouch with the m," he said. phySboro, cuddles the trophy presented to the SIU Athletic De part­ and others. While gone from campus , Set for Sunday ment Monday night. The trophy , awarded by the United Press Inter­ Extending of check cashing Harrman also attended the national, was given to the Salukis for finish ing first in th e UP1 hours through evenings. NCAA univer s ity finals a nd Students interested in en­ basketball poll of coaches. Prohibiting use of Room H the national junior college tering an intramural soccer of the Univer sit y Center by tournament. tournament will meet at 2 non-student groups. Hartman was particularly p.m. Sunday east of the Arena. Freshmen Sought To Play Baseball Sponsoring a contest to de­ interested in Texas Western, It is important to be present sign an alternative to the pro­ the team that won (he national at thi s meeting, according to Coach Joe Lutz has aske d Those interested are asked posed University seal. c rown by upsetting Ke ntucky Glenn (Abe) Martin, bead of that any fres hmen interested to bring gloves and s pikes Awarding academic credit in the championship game. He intramural athletics. because in playing baseball report to With them when they report. for seIVing on the Campus and the Miners' coach, Don dates for the tournament will the diamond south of the Arena The team will pr actice daJly Senate . Haskins. we r e collep;e (eam- be set. any day at 1 p. m . at 1 p. m . at tbe diamond. Studying the system of awarding Seleclive Service *"'~&/W.Wr,f~P!f:IJ::] deferme nts of college stu­ I I i I I dents . Increasing the minimum \ I I ' wage for the student wo rk pro­ gram to $1.25 an hour. L!:'~>L~ Th. Dally Egyptian reser v es the right t o re ject any adver tIsi ng eopy , N o r e funds o n e aneelled ad s. Volleyball Club S~v ... ra l vacancies ,,"xisl al Plo lemy Room fo r 2 men s pring. I 1/2 balhs Male roommale In Ple annl Vall~y To ....' e r s . 50 .. S. Ra ....' h ngs. T h~Tow ers plus show~ r. kitchen, elghl r oom s. T railer Ct. Cheap. Call " 57-5008. Sets Com petition FOR SALE feau,lres spacious t'fhclenc), apls. 710 W. College. Ph. 457 _7005. 999 14 The ne wly formed SIU vol­ equipped wllh the most modern k i tch~ n Sponsear. 10 511 T n umph TR - 3. good co nvenl~nces as well as pr tvale balhs 3 vacancies at Hean's Dorm. Boys leyball club will compete in itS condilion. See al 1'10 2 Sk, lint' Dr. o r and independenlly coni r oll ed alr­ s pring term. 71 5 S. Marion. Ca ll firs t conference meet Satur­ call :" -1'15.' 1. !lest off t' r, 8 conditIoning unllS. Lt ve In pr lvac)' .. S7_ .. 872. S8 .. ,00 ler m In advance. One ma lt' to share 5SxlO trailer wllh day at George Williams Co l­ and comlort al r easonable rales.C all 2 one olher . Car I ~ga). 7-2077. 17 r. j Honda. S90. low mIle age. Lt ke new. DenniS 9- 18 16. 997 lege in Chicago. Good s pnng blk\·. Besl off er. Q-1 53 ... Basement effi c ie nc y apl. for boys 2 miles CUI ofCarOOndale . 457-5767: The club, which was forme d 10 3 gLTlS apartmem c l os~ 10 campU!i . this year, will be playing with Spnng qu.,lel". Call 7_ .... 72. 9! 5 • Riders wamed. Share expense 10 1>,1 (\S dark bluC'·Mus lang·ha r dlOp, V. II , Bour bon Siree l. Leave Thurs. Return 11 othe r clubs in the Mi dwest­ su ite I1tll.' r s . rac.e cam. " o nlhe rloor. Une private room, large balh, 201 S. HELP WANTED Sunda y. 992_2S6 1 Ext . 38. 18 e rn Intercollegiate Volleyball Lall alt~·r ~ p. m. I'1fq_ .. 2 1 ~. 13 Poplar. C all 7_7:27 r.. 9!9 Association m e e L Other (AJOd e l~·e' TI( rdn ~(·ral o r SSO and Co mpelenl and ex~ rienced ba li ~ t leacht'r 10 t~ach locally. Wnte 10 s chools r epr esented include chdlL-nL ~J ' . ;:35 S[O\' ...· S·III . IOgclhe r Apanm<:"n[ o n.:- block from campu!i. Mar c us D. McCo y. R. R. I. C arbon­ four Big 10 clubs and Ball <;1'10 . l-a ll ~ 5, _ 1"1' !:I , IS larg ~ spaCiOUS r oom s newl y r e ­ Us ... d Allstate MOlorc),cl L· I is or modeled and furnished. Carpeled dale . 984 2~c , regardless of cornhl1 on. or any State University. Goll c lubS lnu o th~· r golf cqulpmi" m . lounge Wllh firt"pl ac.:-. Uppe r classman olher make mOlorcycle. Wnte R. W. N ...·\, (· r us ... "d , In plasllc cove rs. Firs t pre ferred. QUl e l neighborhood, limit­ WANTED Schnaart·. 235 BreL"5e. Cenlralia, qualn ), ...... 11 s dl lor .30'.: u f t. Call ed cook ing pn vileges. Localed al IllinOIS. 20 :" -H3-1 . 22 .. OR W. F r et; man, for info rmallonca il HELP WANTED 3_2877 or 3_2847. Q98 Male to s har e 5hlO traile r . 2 miles off campus, Malibu VII. 7_5 154. 979 Iionda '''['' r ed s te pthrough mode l 50. Male SludcnlS only. Inl ernal Lonal cor p. MALE OR FEMALE 1250 m lh- .. , pt'rfecl condlilOn. Call Person with ~Ieclrlcal knowle

See Page 14 C)ai Iy No othe r medium exists that penetrates to u se your E rt,.. and persuades as effectively, efficiently, Selective gyP Ic9n inexpensively and consistently as your Selle.'! classified NEW Daily Egyptian classified. Pagen DAILY EGYPTIAN March 30, 1966 ' o~ ' j~';;c;;~p, Sial! Ex-Saluki Standouts Help 700 Dropouts There are nine former SIU Flamer won eight letters at athletic standouts working Southern as a leading member w1r:h the mOTe than 700 of the track and cross-coumry trainees. mostly school drop- teams from 1958 to 1961. outs, at the Breckinridge Job Flame r works in the com­ Corps Ce nter near Morgan- munity relations department field. Ky. at the center. He is curre ntly Three of the athletes are planning a series of summer connected with the center's meets which will be capped by spons and physical education a junior olympic event. progTam. The othe r s are em- Former Olympic star Wilma played in adminisrrative posi- Rudolph is expected to help (ions, such as processing new Flamer in directing the pro­ students and community r ela- gram. tions. Pulliam aided Flamer in Saluki sJX>rts fans will coaching the Breckinridge recognize the names of Sey- c r oss-country team last sea­ mour Br yson, Harold Bardo, son and tied two SIU s chool Paul Henry a nd Thurman records, one in the 100-yard Brooks , aU fo r ~e r basketball dash and the othe r in the 220. players at Southe r n. Denle , former captain of The track team is re.pre- the gymnastics team in 1956- sente d by forme r tracl(men 57, is as sociate director of John Flame r, J ohn Saunders s tudent developmental ser­ and Al Pulliam. Two former vices . gymnasts, Gene Salmon and The other gymnast, Salmon, AT BR ECKINRIDG E _ Three of th e nine former J ohn F lamer, both trackme~ , and Seymour Bry­ Jerry Oettle, complete the was a n all-around performer SIU athletes now on the s taff of the Brecki nrid ge son, who scored 1,535 points during hi sSlU bas­ r oster. for Coach Bill Meade. He is Job Corps Center are shown outsidelhe director's ketball career. Br yson. now coordinator of a senior instructor in recre - o ff,i~e, They are (left to right ) John Saunders, and student processing a nd r ec- r;::a til:io~n::..:a~t ~th:e~c e;,:n:::t;:;;e.:.r.______-::- ______, ords at Breckinridge, was named the most valuable play- er during hi s senior year a[ F.N SIU afte r compiling a ca r eer tmal of 1,535 points ...... m He nry coache s [he junior .... varsity basketball team and is '

he~orb~ wai~is ~lg~~:~~gSouthe rnf's~6 ~n:;seco~~~nd~ leading scorer. for half the pn·ce. Bardo won thr ee var sity le t ­ ters in basketba ll and three more in trac k while at SJU. He now is a student counselor. The fourth forme r cage star, Brooks, pl ayed in three NCAA Braniff International's new tournaments for Sourhe rn and fa re. for anyone twelve through now is in char ge of s tudent twenry..,ne, virtually cuts the cost of loans . flying in half, Saunde r s, now head of (he vocational s kills pr ogr a m for At these prices, the fl y·in may s tudents inte r ested in becom­ soon become as popular as all ing recr eational aides , still the other in things that are going on holds twO SIU r ecords in trac k. today, (We will pennit guitar­ He set two confe re nce records strumming and folk -Singing and nine s c hool r ecords at SI U. on route, but no noisy political Sub Landrum debates, please,) Eligibiliry requirements are simple, Likes Filling In Just send us a $3,00 registration fee. For MVP Mays and we'll issue an identification card ;"hich, when validated, will entitle P HOENIX. Ariz. (APl- Don Landrum holds a unique JX>si­ you to buy tickets at approximately tion in base ball this season half fare on our flights in the as s ubs titute for the National United States, League 's Mos t Valuable P la y­ Of course, chis will be subject er, Willie Mays. co availabiliry of space at departure The forme r Chicago Cub cente rfie Jdc r, wh o came {O time, and does not apply during the San Francisco Gia nt s with certain holiday periods. pitche r L indy McDanie l 'fn a Soon, the same card will qualify winte r t r ade, sees many ad­ you for di >councs on hotels and vantage s to hi s c urre nt posi­ other services. ti on. Make your application in person . 'I knew the job they had in mind for me " Landr um says . at any Braniff office. " You know eve r ybod y likes to Or mail the coupon below, pla y r egularly. but here I'm coming from a lose r 10 a wi n­ nero .. And I' m going to be pl ayi ng in m y home {Own area ." Landr um was born In SaO(a Rosa, no rth of San Franl"isco, and lives in Pitlsbur~. across the Ba\', " 1' 11- do anythIng 3S we ll as I can do it as long as I can I" Braniff International stay wiLh (he club and be tickled to death they want me Youch Fare Manager on [his team, II the 30-year ­ P,O, Box 35001 , Dall as,Texas 75235 old outfielder declares. Mr, Mays can't pla y all 162 Name Mrs. games at age 35 a nd didn't Miss Age ___ last year when [he Giants Address ____ _ -::_ _ ___ =-;:::-;-_ _ _ had Matty Alou a nd r ooki e Ke n He nderson to fill in for Ciry State Zi p Code ___ him in center fi eld wh e n Date of Birth ______necessar y. Signature_-:-_--:-::-=-::-:--;-______;-__70-:- Now Alou has bee n traded Be sure to enclose $3.00 ,check or money order p aya~le to to tbe Pittsburgh Pirates a nd Henderson sent down to the Braniff International. Giants ' (arm s ystem for needed seasoning .