Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC September 1966 Daily Egyptian 1966 9-28-1966 The gE yptian, September 28, 1966 Daily Egyptian Staff Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_September1966 Volume 48, Issue 6 Recommended Citation , . "The gE yptian, September 28, 1966." (Sep 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 September 1966 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. I ' q.- Protest Meeting Sends Derogates To sm -Officiah A representation from a said, "I didil't believe a stu­ protest meeting on student dent should be forced into a bouslng will attempt to conler dorm owne\l by out of town With SIU officials today. If people, I don't believe the they are successful, others University should help tbe hlg from the protest meeting plan business force out the little to gather on campus in a show man.. It of suppon for the negotiations. Lannin said Sfudents are N Committee bf two students being forced to bteak p,e con­ and tWo Iandldrds to flleet with tracts they m;tde. · for un­ offiCials was ;to be IIPpointed approved housill~, . He S3ld after' ~e 'meeting' at City Hall a number of Jati!U~da are mt [f~sday night. The committee going to releaslh,\,e ~tudents ropes to meet with president from these contracts if the Delyte W,' Morris,' . -- University forces them to live Carbondale anor0I'Y and in approved housing. / landlord ·John LaiInln. who One student asked Lannin if chaired the meeting Tuesday he would hold a student to a night, told the group tbat they contract or bring sult against sbould be concerned with two him if the University forced major problems. the student to break the con- The most immediate is the tract. WIDE SIDEWALK-Students use the south lanes by the weather, but the city expects to complete position of students forced to . LanDin replied, "I am hoping of Mill Street as a sidewalk during the rainy sea­ the work this fall. Meanwhile, it's the widest move from unsupervised this isn't going to come about. housing by the stricter en- I think [he University will act Son. Construction on the street has been halted sidewalk on campus. for cement of Sill housing rules to avoid these suits against the and the Status of their students. II Homecoming landlords. ~ Leland Hubble, a household- 1.)- :J .. The long-range problem is er. said he held a contract the role of the smaller land- With a student Who became SHow Tickets lords scared when the University Among the proposals that clamped down on housing and ~ . T· · ·· ' ~ .' . ' i Ready Monday were put fonh by students and signed another contract in ap­ landlords alike were that Stu- proved housing, Tickets for the 1967 Home­ dents 21 years or older should "Now be has two contracts . coming stage show will go on be allowed to choose where I won't hold him to my con­ sale at 7 a.m. Monday In the they want to live without Uni- tract, but other householders University Center. verslty regulation.. might." Tbose wishing to que ue up Some students also used ~e Among the students present, EGYP JAN early for tickets sbould form opportunity to voice dis- were members of the student a line outside the west door pleasure with off-campus government. Bob DrInan, stu­ of the Center. This will be the housing, dent body preSident, presented Ca'........... lIIi..,.l. first door opened the morning Peter Malone, an SIU stu- the student government's po_ ·t1ckets go on sale, dent. suggested that leases sitton of the issues. ·Vol"me 48 Wodn ..day. s.p'_1>., 28. 1966 The show will be beld at and COntracts should be limited He also criticized the 8 p. m. Oct. 28 at tbe Arena. to only one quarter rather than bousebolders for their lad of Tickets for the show are $I, for the full academic year or support for tbe srudents at $2 and $3. otlier periods of time. other times. He referred to KA KI,Cks Off Fourth Year This year's sbow stars Many of the landlords felt Issues in the past when the Harry Belafonte, Nipsey Rus­ that the firms owning the large householders were either hos­ sell, Nana Mouskouri and the private dormitories were to tile to students or did not come In Today's Daily Egyptian Belafonte Singers. blame for the current problem. to their ald. As In tbe past, half the They felt the large concerns "Now, when it hits you in KA, two pages of student &.nd written by a separate staff. Arena seats will be available were pressuring the Univer- the pocket book, we get your opinion .lnserted In the Dally Besides Dawes, tbe staff on an unlimited basis and the aity to create rules that were suppon. Please, in the futta'e, Egyptian each Wednesday, will members are Larry Busch, other half will be reserved detrimental to the small think a little bit beyond the begin Its fourth year of publi­ managing editor, and Bard for those wishing to buy less householders. present," Drinan concluded.. cation in today' s edition. Grosse, assoctate editor. t~n nine tickets. Wayne Severs, a landlord, When asked if the ad hoc uKA Is an independent George T. McClure, associate committee might press legal publication dedicated to the professor of philosophy, Is action against the university, free written expression of stu­ faculty adviser for the publi­ New Lounge Provided Lannin said no one had brought dent opinion, It according to c ation. it up and would not comment Tom Dawes, content editor The KA office \s In Bar­ further. At another point in of the publication this year. racks H-3-A, northwest of the meeti ng, though, one of the the ' Agriculture Building, The On Cel\ter 2nd FIO(lr The name KA means several students asked where the com­ editors can be contacted by A temporary lounge to re­ scheduled to be held In the different things In different mittee would turn for money telephone either at 3-2890, lie ve the congestion in the second-floor area, Dougherty languages. For example, it for legal fees if they were the otftce number, or at the Magnolia Lounge has been ~et Said. needed. means peninent in Hindi, Student Government Office (3- up on the second floor of the "The area is not only a mosquito in Japanese and is Lannln replied, "Legal 2002). University Center, according good place for small meetings used as an interrogative pani­ counsel for the committee will Contrlhutions to KA should to Clare nce G. Dougheny. di­ and programs," he said, ·'but be no cle in Korea. problem." be .<kIressed to KA World rector of the University Cen­ it is also a qUiet, Informal Although KA Is printed In Headquaners in care of the ter. place to study. the Daily Egyptian, lit is edited Student Activities Office. Supplementary lounge area . "The lounge will eventually Gus Bode was needed in the center, be a table-service dining area Dougherty said. because the and public lounge," Doughe rty Kerner May Contact Morris num ber of students at the Uni­ said. · ·Construction on these versity has outgrown the ftrst­ plans should be started earl y On City Landlord's CQmplQint floor space. In 1967." The second-floor lounge has Gov. Otto Kerner plans to ner appoints the SIU Board been open to students since Taxi Ordinance contact Preside nt Delyte W. of Trustees and, therefore, the beginning of this quarter, Morris concerning a telegram isn't usually involved with ad­ Dougherty said. The lounge Is Change Delayed asking for an investigation of ministrative workings of the connected to the sectioning An amendment to tbe city the student housing situation in University. and advisement area of the taxi ordinance due for second Carbondale. Schoen said Tuesday that center. and final reading at the City The telegram was sent to he is still Hvery much in­ "The lounge stU! has a Council meeting Monday night, Kerner Friday by Sidney R. terested!' in having Kerner bare concrete floor," Dough­ was put aside after the Council Schoen, Carbondale landlord Investigate the bouslng situa­ eny said, "but we have set heard a letter from Philip and manager of an investment tion. up tables and enough chairs M.. Kimmel, owner of Yellow firm. Mrs. Anita Kuo, coordinator to accommodate 200 students Cab Co, Kenneth Utz, assistant to of off-campus housing, and at a time for study and re­ Kimmel wrote that he looked Kerner, said the telegram Ralph E, Prusok, dean of stu­ laxation. upon the amendment "with wasn't detaUed enough for dents for the Carbondale cam­ "The students have not been disfavor." He particularly Kerner to be fully Informed pus, inspected Schoen's apan­ talcing advantage of these new cited change In the zones and about Schoen's complaints. ment units Monday morning, faCilities," he sald. "This is fares charged cblldren. Gus says he dldn't have to Kerner will contact Mor­ according to Schoen. probably due to the fact that City Councilman Gene Ram­ read the Daily Egyptian to ris to determine what aspects "They are to discuss the only a few of them know that sey noted that the proposed lcnow that a new food service of SIU bouslng policy .Schoen possibility of having them it exists .. " ordinance change puts the Is operating at the University is criticizing, Ut2 sald.
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