Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC May 1967 Daily Egyptian 1967 5-4-1967 The aiD ly Egyptian, May 04, 1967 The aiD ly Egyptian Staff Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_May1967 Volume 48, Issue 137 Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, May 04, 1967." (May 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 May 1967 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. I)~ New York Knick. Draft Frazier sm basketball star Walt that he is interested in playing guard from ProVidence. The Frazier was drafted Wednes­ pro ball." Piston choice was tipped off day by the New York Knicker­ Frazier has one year of Tuesday when they signed bockers on the first round of eligibility left at Southern, but Walker to a $250,000 contract. the annual National Basketball could be drafted this year be­ Baltimore. which drafted Association college draft. cause his class graduates in second, chose Earl Monroe Jimmy Wergeles, Knicker­ June. of Winston-Salem. who was bocker public relations di­ Should Frazier stay at the top college scorer in the rector, said Wednesday in a Southern for the 1967.,.68 sea­ country in 1967. The Chicago EGYPTIAN phone conversation with the son he would go back into the Bulls followed Baltimore and SHittitlUl IJttUuU4 1(~,,,~ Dally Egyptian that he as­ draft pool next year and the chose Western Kentucky's sumes the Knicks have been Knicks would lose any rights Clem Haskins. The Pistons Ca~I •• Illinois in contact with Frazier. to him. used Los Angeles' fourth place Wergeles Said. "A pro team Thurs.,. May .c. I 967 Frazier was the fifth player draft. whicb they received usually doesn't take a chance to be drafted on the first wben Rudy LaRusso didn'tre­ on a college player who has round. Detroit led tbe ses­ pon to complete a trade. to NUlllb.,I37 eligibility left unless he has sion off by picking Jimmy choose Sonny Dove of St. given some indication to them Walk e r. the All-America John's. Coleman Report Blames SIU Faculty Student Unrest Now Blamed To Instrudor-Student Relation By Margaret Perez greater rappon between stU­ dents and faculty. The Coleman Repon. finally Recommendations include a released in its entirety after serious study of reduction of two years of planning and re­ teachin,g load. encouragement search. blames the faculty of tbe teaching faculty to re­ rather than the administration turn to campus at least a week for much of the student unrest before resumption of classes and dissatisfaction at SIU. in the fall to assist in The once-controversial re­ orientation programs; the ab­ pon is in the form of 27 olition of classes for one hour apecific recommendations a week for the express purpose covering 40 typewritten pages. of creating a faculty-student The recommendations con­ Visidng hour; and the con­ cern the role of the Univer­ sideration by the Faculty sity in society and the role Council of ways and mea:Js and panicipation of students of combatting wbat appears in University affairs. to students as faculty With­ The first half of the re­ drawal. pon was released last fall The commission also and tbe second half was com­ recommended an "immediate pleted. but not released. at reversal of the practice of the end of Winter quarter. granting higher rank and The entire repon is reprinted salary increases regardless today in a special supplement of effective teaching. \V e rec­ to the Daily Egyptian. ommend that effective teach­ The repon, drafted by a ers be sought out and re­ special commission estab­ -warded'" lished by President Delyte o the r recommendations W. Morris. puts strong called for a dismissal of any emphasis on the failure of rioting students. a committee student-faculty relationships. for the study of student rights• • 'We (the faculty) have failed student representation on all underclassmen in a variety of University councils. a ways." the repon states. "Not strengthening of the judicial many of us bave established or board system. a new system maintained healthy. continuing of adVisement, a new plan for contacts With freshmen and Convocations and a review of In Search or Dollar sophomores. "We have as­ administrative attitudes. sumed. unwisely. that under­ The first recommendation graduates would continue to be in the second half of the re­ Questionnaire Reveals Southern Freshmen apathetic. docile, and uncriti­ pon called for a study of the cal:' "free university" program. The repon blames the ab­ The reponed states that a Not Willwut Interett for Financial Pur,uit sence of an effective faculty few non-students. "those who on the fact that few faculty inhabit campus communities By Cynthia Kandelman grees. It is interesting to note men found at their respective members have an opponunity because they wish to live in (Second of Two Stories) that 65.5 of the freshmen at schools. Also. a higher per­ to develop a sense of loyalty the collegiate atmosphere the other universities rated centage of SIU students rated to the institution whicb pays Without collegiate re!!pOn­ SIU freshmen questioned their academic ability above their classes as usually in­ them. sibilities:' have taken lead­ last fall in a study conducted average while only 51.7 per formal and that the students "Their emotional involve­ ing parts in the establish­ by the American Council on cent of of the SIU freshmen were like numbers in -abook-­ ment extends to their research ment of free universities Education, on norms for en­ rated their academic ability or more impersonal inter­ project and their 'team' of across the nation. tering college freshmen, were above average. action was found at S(U than researchers. to their depart­ The commission empba­ more interested in financial A higher percentage of SIU the students have found at ment chairman who secures sized tbat it makes no rec- pursuits than were the fresh­ freshmen who entered in the other universities. them funds. salary increases. men at other public univer­ fall of 1966 found SIU's at­ "In this study of norms for- special appointmants. and (Continued on Page I O) sities across the country. mosphere more snobbish and local publicity. or to some More SIU freshmen were social than the other fresh- (Continued on Page 7) state or federal agency; not interested in receiving de­ to their university:' the re­ Gu,Bode grees than freshmen from the Record Set pon states. other schools. Interested in The practice of rewarding receiving no degree were 4.4 successful teachers by as­ per cent of SIU students and signing them oniy to upper­ 3.9 per cent of tile students Weather Really Cool class and graduate sections. from other schools. Seeking the commission report con­ associate degrees were 7.6 A frosty 33 degrees Wed­ low reading in Carbondale for tinued, has deprived the fresh­ per cent of SIU students as nesday morning set a May 3 the entire :monthr, 30 degrees men and sophomores of a compared to 2.6 per cent of record in Carbondale. set on Mayl. 1963. group of effective teachers. other students. SIU had 44.8 The previouS! low for the The U.S_ We'ither Bureau Concern was expressed that per cent freshmen pursuing date was 35 degrees. recorded at Cario recorded an over­ the faculty is too involved bachelor's degrees and 31.0 in 1961. The reading Wednes­ night low of 44 degrees, three with graduate studies. re­ per cent pursuing masters day was at the Carbondale degrees above the May 3 re­ search projects and advance­ degrees. E<<!wage disposal plant. and the cord of 41 !let there in 1921. men t. and teaching and This study revealed that records are from the records The record high for the date interest in students seems to 42.1 per cent of the freshmen of the Climatoh)gy Lab­ in Carbondale, according to be secondary. Gus says Carbondale's the from other schools wanted to oratory. the Climatology Laboratory The commission recom­ only town be knows of where obtain bachelors degree~ and Wednesday's reading was records, is 89 degrees set in mended (he devising of ways he can get a sunburn and frost­ 31.2 per cent masters de- three degrees from the record 1915 and tied in 1959. and means to bring about bite in the same week. DAILY 'EGYPtiAN Foggy Days Ahead For Bugs, People The bugs are starting to bite vaporized diesel fuel and vari­ again, and many Carbondale ous other chemicals." residents are preparing not "There is very little of the only for the dreadful nuisance lethal chemicals used in the of the mosquitoes, but also spray,n said Burnett. for the sometimes irritable The fogging, which usually mosquito abatement insecti­ begins about dusk on the cides. "weather permitting" days, is NOW thru SAT. done on the average of five Several students and resi­ BOTH DRIVE.INS dents "react unfaborably" to night~ per week. the chemicals used for mos­ "We do not spray on Sunday ROBERT ELK& fW'''': quito abatement and have and there is usually one or Jl'ASK SOMMER KWAH asked that a spraying schedule two other days out of the week be published. In which we cannot spray," Burnett said. 1. L. Burnett of the Mosquito Burnett suggested that in­ Abatement Committee, said dividuals affected by the in­ that a definite spraying sched­ secticides call one of the two ule Is nearly impossible to drivers for information on establish.
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