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Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC January 1967 Daily Egyptian 1967 1-21-1967 The Daily Egyptian, January 21, 1967 The Daily Egyptian Staff Follow this and additional works at:http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_January1967 Volume 48, Issue 72 Recommended Citation , . "The Daily Egyptian, January 21, 1967." (Jan 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 January 1967 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please [email protected]. Traveling America SOUTHERH IL.LIHOIS UNIVERSITY Co, ....... , •• lin .., . ( Volume • SaturdO)' •.~ nuary .21. 1967 I Humh.r 72 Page·i' Jc..u.ry 21-, 1961 See America First • • • By Howard R. Long Americans always have lo\l';:~ to bears in a national park, voyaged a motorcycle laShed to t'he front travel, whether it was {Q migl ate . on a river boat, or at least a harbor bumper. to a new homestead, journey to a rug. crossed a ponion of the Great , Considering the investment in distam state for a visit With rela American desen, or sat at the top equipment, the cost of maintenance tives, or JUSt take the family roo of the Mark over drinks on a sunny and the additional comsumption of the county seat for the Chautauqua afternoon to watch the Lurline glide gaSOline, i[ is doubtful .if these season. through the Golden Gate. do-it-yourself tourists achieve any Long before our own recognHion Modes of travel are fully as real economy over the conventional I ocaf uoseudr puso si[tQi onb ecaosm ae wthoer ldg rejXaltweesrt dviivleegresde afesw t hes tialnl raricdtieo nisn. pAri vparite mmootreoLri st Bwuhto thheoyp sd o freonmjo ym tohtee l into junketers on (he globe we were dependence of setting their own busy exploring our own land. The railroad cars. At the other ex pace, of taking whichever side treme are the hardy survivors of cynical rohibition era cry of frus the golden age of hitch hiking who road appeals to them, fairly ctroautirosne,, ·w'saese aA mceorrricuap titohnir sot,f" thoef still manage to move around the esvafeer itnh eyth eS tOkPn oaw lsetdagtee othr atn awtihoenra l country in transportation furnished earlier isolationist slogan calling park, or some enterprising mun by others. upon our people (Q stay at home and icipality, will have provided water, anend to their own business. Now Air navel offers much for thoiOe drainage. and other facilities to [hat all os us have become world affluent enough to fly to distant perml[ them to set up housekeeping travelers it seems just a little Cities and hire a car for local in comfort. Certainly motor camp more fashionable to take Qur va nansportation. My Irish friend ing offers rich rewards for the cations in one or more of the fifty Liam D. Bergin. who has seen much venturesome, for family parries. states. We completed the circle more of America than I, arrived and for those who prefer [heir when the President, suuggli:1g co once on our shore with a ticket own cooking over the fried meats even up the balance of trade, made purchased abroad for something like and french fries of the typical road if official by calling upon :;s to one hundred dollars, which allowed side resrau,ant. "navel in America." him unlimited travel for thirty days In spite of a11 the efforts to And why noc? on our domestic feeder airlines. improve the accomodations avail There is more 1O be seen and Mr. Bergin puddle-jumped through able to the motoring public, mid done within the area of the United America on an itinerary wl:!.ich in America remains a gastronomical States than anyone person can cluded such diverse places as Car wasteland. Between Philadelphia absorb in a lifetime. From scenery bondale, Denver, Seattle, Anchor and Denver. unless one has per to slums, from grand opera to self age, San FranCiSCO, Los Angeles, sonal knowledge of an eating place taught fiddlers grinding out Eliza San Diego, Phoenix, Dallas, Chi celebrated for its cuisine, the safe bethan tunes learned from fheir cago, Detroit, WaShington. and Bos choice is egg sandwiches and canned grandfather, from culture co cor ton. It was a demanding journey. soup at a local beanery or the ruption, America has it all. however, which exhausted the seat bland institutionalism of the cen Visas and assorted stamps in a of three pairs of slacks and a pock trally operated of licensed cat collection of passports are not etful of Sf. Christopher medals. erers. enough to paS'S judgement on the There are other exotic ways to It is the same story with sleep wonders of (he world until he has travel across the country. such as ing accomodations. Ie is .a brave seen a New England covered bridge, hoofing it every step of the way, soul who dares to take his chances walked a dog in Manha(ten, attended riding a horse, or goi ng coast to with an end of the day booking a running of the Hambeltonian or coast on a motorcycle. But for in a nineteenrh century motel down the Kentucky Derby, observed Ni most people, travel at home is by a railroad track, or an old agara Falls under lights, seen the dependent upon some combination fashioned mom and pop tourist COUrt. £iun rise over the confluence of the of four wheels and an internal com The motor courts, motor inns. motor Mississippi and f>hio Rivers, gone bustion engine. hotels, or whatever you call them. to {he top of PiKe's Peak, fed the For more than ten years I was become more pseudo something or determined never again to drive a other with each proliferation. They car to the West Coast of the United also become more impersonal, less States. But last August when the accommodating and a heck of a lot airline strike made it impossible more expensive. But they do make to keep an appointment in Vancouver it possible to travel from coast to with a passenger' ~teamer, Mrs. coast with the next night's rest Long and I broke our rule and hi[ safely reserved in advan'ce and with the road. Before we were in the assurance of such amenities as Kansas City, seven hours and one airconditioning. hot and cold water meal out of Carbondale, 1 was con in a reasonably clean bathroom apd vmionbceilde thaaitr cthoen ddietivoenlionpgm eanntd ofi naUte[Qr e~ vesur pplliby aotifo nf reoen ei cew itsoh ecso otol wenhjaoty state highways had made my notions after a hard day's drive. about travel as ridiculous as the It is a sad truth that the American actions of a friend of my grand tourist traveling in America sel father who always insisted uJX>n dom eats as well, or sleeps as carrying a buggywhip In his Model well as he does at home. The T rouring car. souvenirs ate monstrosities and With an early start the next most of the commercially oper morning we made it in daylight ated attractions are fakes. But to Cheyenne. Because the season the byways, taken at a slow pace, al flow of vacation traffic was in still offer rich rewards for those the opposite direction th·e long haul who like people on the half shell acrolss the plains provided the op and are willing to hunt out the portunity to observe in detail the few remaining unspoiled land highway equipment of our vacation scapes. A([er all, it's our land; ing countrymen. it's a great land, and. we should Small foreign cars, rooftop lug see as much as possible before gage racks piled high with out all of the countryside is littered door equipment carried as many as whh wornout automobiles. six persons. Campers mounted on Don'[ worry aoout the budget or pickup trucks were almost as cash in your pocket. Stay away numerous as house trailers. The from your friendly small loan sAark variety of vehicles and the in and go instead to a major oil com genuity of {he people who preferred pany for a credit card universally to provide roadside living quarters acceptable in lieu of cash at fil for themselves, their children, their ling srations and motor hotels. This pets, and perhaps even their in is the real way to finance an in .. laws was beyond belief. The prize, stallmenr plan vacation because it we decided, must go to a family will be at least next February be which had its living quarters on a fore the last of your charge slips GASTRONOMICAL WASTELAND: "Botwe;n Philadolphia and ne pickup truck, a power boat show up with the monthly state Denver, unle •• one 1105 personal knowledge of an eating place trundled behind on a trailor and ment. celebrated for its cuisine, the safe choice is eg9 sandwiches and conned soup at a local beanery or the bland institutionalism of of the centrally operated or licensed caterers." January 21,.1961 DAILY. ·EGY.PTlAN Pogo 3 BACK IN FASHION: Mt. Rushmore and other American attractions are more fashionable now that we hove become world travelers. To Appreciate It Better . • • • By Tim Ayers (Tim Ayers, a senior in jour mOSt b.:::.i," rL'quiremem for U.S. nalism and member of thL' Dail v motel Ill' hnlt:'l 3~tomodations. This E g ypl ian Editorial Confcrencc~. is cen .. l'll~ n ,\ hl..d C;lse in other spent last summer working in Jre coumrh;--;, (i\ V" 'I. ..d v bl." 3n inll."rest and on the newspaper T h C' jng SIU":~ ~" f:::(1 IJut whetiler thiS Nationalist. In {he following artick was hl..'C£iIJ<.;" 'm."T1C3n~ were' he discussL':-; some' of the diffcrL'nCL'~ clc3nl-r din i·~·· Ih..lr othl.'r ~nc.ounti..:l"l:t1 b\ tilL' travdVT in rhL' nalionaiitl\ :-,). United Stale,!::.' and in rhe British On thL' Hthc-r h.wd. till" usual Isles.) arrangl·ment ('UI~~.h \hl~ ":lJul1lr~ IS for a commun.il h)\I.. (Lom01~nal UnAitneyd cSotmatpeasr iasnodn ooft hterra vceol uinnt rtihees ~~/~rl :\~~~~ ~~~el~j\~~~)~Sl'd b~ all, is bound to be somewhat weak be In a small guest house- thiS m:ly cause of personel prejudices. mean one bathroom for ~111 rhe Your car breaking down in the guests. In a large hOiel it m~y be middle of Texas or being robbed IO or 15 balhs per floor. by a London cabby cannot help but This situation, in no W3Y dl.:nvtes influence your opinion. second cl ass est abl ishml'nt Bur raking dll thiS imo account, The largest and one 01 the !1("SI travel in the states # as compared run hotels in Europe, The Regent with travel in the British Isles sC'ems .. Palace' in London has well over a to be a good deal less personal. thousand rooms. None wirh a bath. An American traveler can mote) Then rhere's breakfast. The one hop across rhC' whole country ex- " cup~f~lack-coff('e rraveler in changing no more than perfunctory EngJand and Ireland is faced With messages with desk clerks and the prospect of eating a very sub waiters. He drinks from sanitized. stantial breakfast that he has already waxedilapered wrapped glasses. He paid for as pan of rhe room. eats prepared packaged foods that. This situation is particularly may never have beC'n LOuched by terrifying in England, where he may human hands. And he uses a toilet be served kippers for breakfast. bowl sealed with a strip of paper Wirh all this eating and barhing Copley to assure cleanliness. going on, the traveller does run the FAR FROM THE MADDING MOTEL, Room. without both. ond hBau'Trtd h eLstOhe ecy"o amndoevw a nbtya cgoaeunst "s idaeal mrteho es at Ub.bSiet. rpiesokp leo.f met.'ting a good number of akcipcpuesrtso mfeodr tbor eAamkfearsict as'sh omcko ret hmeo dguerens-t ifa tm o0r1e\ iEmnpgelrissho nianln_ swerhvoi cies. duplicated by checking intO one of America is known fOl- its hospi the plush hotels in almost every tality. Pos~bly rhis reputation is foreign capHal that functions as an an outgrowth of journeying long island of Americanism. In these distances without talking to anyone strongholds many tourists feel -fo and then finding oneself surrounded secure that they will even drink_t~ by people. Of course. the natural water. reaction is a good deal of back If, however, you are on a more slapping and glad handing. , limited budget while traveling, On the Q[her hand, outSide the you may find yourself in a native United States. travel neccesit3teS hotel or guest house. Probably much more contact with a good the thing most striking in any number of people. Because of this, comparison would be the bath the hospitatlity of tHe Irish and the situation. English is a bit ';lI'h subtle. It's A room With a bath is now the just as sincere, only less noisy. Page 4' DAILY EGYPTIAN January n, '957 Traveling / A 'whaling They Went By Frederick C. Whitney c· Copley Hews Service From the time of Christopher provided seasoned Oregon fir mast Columbus to our day of the super replacements. carrier, {he tides of America's Along the cobbled waterfront are fortune have ebbed and flowed with all the little shops: The counting the sea. 'house, trade center. the tavern, The namEjS of our ships are very news center and the wood carver's big in ou~ history: Nina, Pinta, shack where figureheads were made. Santa Maria ... Mayflower, Merri Some skippers were so proud of mac, Maine , • . Old Ironsides, these ornate masterpieces they dis Nautilus and Bonhomme Richard. played them only in port, carefully On the Connecticut shore. a little stowing them away from harm at east of New London and partially sea. At the Fishtown Chapel a re protected from the restless Atlantic corded ~ermon urges forebearance by the tip of Long Island across and they sing the "seaman's hymn" the sound, stands Mystic Seaport, , . . "for those in peril on the Here a good part of our seafaring sea ..... heritage has been gathered together Over at the clock shop from a in an authentic CObblestone setting. tall mast the red "timeba.ll" drops A working seaport in its day. at noon exactly. so ships in the COBBLESTONE HISTORY: The restored 19th Century whaling villoge of Mys Mystic is a mid-19th Century New harbor can set their chronometers, tic Seaport, Connecticut, welcomes tourists to its waterfront main street. England whaling village come to life. and if you're lucky enough to be Appropriately, it is dominated by the there at noon you're assailed with HCharles W. Morgan," last of the a rhapsody of tinkles. chimes, booms old wooden hull whalers on which and cuckoos 3S 226 clocks compete of good chowder. He can buy a little of life, not simply with a piece of dsoep emnudcehd offo Nr emw oEren gtlhanadn 'sa ecceonntoumryy. for attention. sshtoipre-,i n-oar- bsoeett lea fabatu lotuhse colsleeacptoiornt _geoRgerlaaptehdy too rt hiSa- , ipt e:rsi oodn thoef wtiamteer. Whaling was a tough, dangerous Everett Latham, who presides of larger ones at the museum, to and subtly the coastal panorama, and dirty business. A vessel like over this crescendo, says it's a gether with ship models from the the salt sea smells, rictal sounds the Morgan wasn't big. scarcely bit of a problem to keep them all ages, colorful figureheads and and feel of the cobblestones under larger with her 100-foot length and synchronized and tt takes two hours scrimshaw, or whale tusk carvings foot blend all together into a total 300 tons than a fair size yacht. a day just to wind them all, done in the long, long hours at sea. impression reinforcing the scraps of She'd carry a crew of 28. For the visitor, walking through Mystic differs from other history which catch the eye. "Thar she blo- o-o- ows" was history here, there's a little shanty restorations in two respects. Func For a day you don't simply see the call to action, and over the side where he can get clams or a bowl tional, it deals with a seagoing way the past. You're in it. I into the icy ocean went the crew in the whaleboats, leaving the ship's boy, carpenter and cook r:o sail the Dialect in North Carolina vessel. ~ Everybody did a little of every thing, including the master. The • harpooner was known as "boat The Fritters IS Noise steerer" because he'd take the steering oar as soon as he'd made a strike. During the "Nantucket Sleigh By Pete rvey ride," the wounded whale often towed the boat out of sight of the ship. \ Reprinted from The Chapel Hill (N.C.) Weekly After he tired, the crew edged alongside for the kill, trying des North Carolinians had bener be came out as "A brine ki find arind the lips were not as rounded" when perately to keep away from the ware - JUSt as flower girl Eliza Doo in the sith." saying things that rhymed or sound thrashing flukes or the huge under little did at the market place - who's Prof. Morgan said, "I found the ed like hoy toide. "i practiced the jaw, either of which meant almost overhearing them when they talk. hin heist deviation to be every bit sound with un rounded lips, letting my certain death. Professor Lucia Mor.gan from as interesting as hoy toide- probably tongue do all of the work." Towlng him back to windward was Chapel Hill may be jotting down more so because i(vtas unexpected." But Miss Morgan couldn't seem to a long hard chore, and when he was what they say and marking it in The UNC speech professor make a go of the imitation, until she lashed to the starboard "cutting her cafldid camera phonetic stopped at a restaurant and ex tried a new technique. She placed a in" stage, the job was still just notebook. plained to the waitress she was pencil between her teeth. "I clamped beginning. He was gradually sliced Eastern North Carolina - east of collecting food recipes. She avoided down on it as the old seamen \ do up with long-handle knive~ and the Rocky Mount and especially the far saying sh~ was a phoneticist, their pipes," she said. By thiS blubber put into "try kettles" on east costal regions - is populated because f'residents were getting a means, she was able to duplicate deck to extract the oil which Went by many people who still sound like bit sick of tourists asking them to quite accurately the sound made by into emptied water and provision natives from southern England, from say something in your funny way." the Outer Bankers. She associates casks while the ship's cooper made Cork and Belfast and from the docks "What native dish do you recom this connection with the Englisl) new barrels. of Liverpool. Their fO,rebears may mend for dinner?" asked Prof. Mor seamen ancestors who talked with The Morgan made 37 voyages, have been seaman from England. gan of the waitress. pipes clenched between their teetb. some as long as five years, during Dr. Morgan explained the special .. The klem fritters is noise," said In the mdO.ntains of North Caro her 80 years of active life. She Tar Heel type of language in a the girl. lina there are three diphthong treat brought more than 2,500 whales lecture in Chicago to the Speech The waitress was Saying, "The ments that help identify the home alongside to try 75,000 barrels of Association of America. clam fritter.s is nice." area of the speaker •• 'In the moun oil worth around $2 mill ion to her She explained to the speech con "How are they made?"asked Miss tains we hear nas, rat and brat owners and crew, vention about the "Hoy Toiders." Morgan. for nice, right and bright," said Years out of contact, away from People of the Outer Banks are called "The klems is first grind, then Miss Morgan. home, bad food, the smell- was Hoy Toiders-the dialect sound for mixed wif a little fly and froid." She .heard one student at Chapel awful and the footing slimy with oil. high tide. Hyde County in the far said the waitress. Hill whose home was in the moun There were low four-foot ceilings, east is also pronounced Hoide. Dr. Morgan interpreted that to tains refer to a girl as the "kwat cramped quarters, fraying tempers But Prof'";, Morgan found anOther me'an the clams "are ground, and tap." and constant danger. There were oddity. She calls it the "hin heist" mixed with flour and then fried. He was saying the girl was the no doctors, rather a pathetic re phenomenon. A young man who said The waitress was asked about " quiet rype." liance on apothecary's magiC, and he was from east of Rocky Mount the effects of hurricanes in the lbiukrei alt hea t Mseoarg awna sa ncdo mthmeo nw. hsilr\r.ohgs wMaosr gaans kehdad toty pesda:y "tAhi s hothunatd dDorg. rheags ioenve. r fbOlToow nm dii nene,"u isnhze, saniod . h"Pehi"sits Daily Egyptain~ days are testimony to the incredi sniffed around the hen housl~"'" The is translated: "To my knowing, no tbolerE sev, nerdyutrhainncge oefl soeu r aYt aMnkyeset iacn cwesa s tJhTle'Sa nhh eisn a iwhder, oisItIet A.:" h.i, nAd bdroogw snn icfofewd faoruinndd hthoeOu scneeo ahsahtsu. nePdvrreeorfd . bMlmowoilrneg sad no iwnhlenaa.n"rd d tfhreosme ed"":alCi~f~C 'keupb5Illh. l d.rloU,hmu(r-djol~: nh lIIl~nl"lo l.n:alHlhI oHu.·rh droD>ai-l)ucd p}a aI,,h·n ,.1.rm 'o:,b1ut}1'~n 1hl0o- ."u.oo ~luf l nhJItuh.o'd.ur:ln irl n!. I'oatl"chluhuno(mmlaIll n~ l.}3l1K"l lra'ulsrln , othtehreer s toin csluedrvineg tthhee s"hJiopsse. pShe vCeorna l around town in the south countrv" proFnluyn-vcieartsio -nsf:o r flowers. 1>1'"loI.'l! '"oUlIl,I(·)'d.I ,lC·lSo~ rr0fib1.o lnhdo<a.·; lucFt..p -lmPilI,i·Imll.OJn"l ... oHp!'- .u.]t loh1o1s"0hl..·.( > cr!l 'sPtOKIl'!r'e1 bIdJoII ~ noufl mraidle"- laorneg anrcohpoer edw ahlke retW. iTshteed h atlhfe 1l~~ . OOuurr -Hoivueser - iver heist on"r .Fca,d·n&L}sl ,o1~tn~,,l1r) Tarmnd"dl <nt·Hl. dloS fII InlIo..~.I·'<~ '" u Ip(nl,,1n1,l,·oc."nr. _''o "t~I O.IhC t3.'1 .:a-dc !mIIII nIIS'IlUrl~lldIlloln~ more than 10 miles of rope a whaler 1\..ain showers - rin shivers. .Tf5·1.f·/)B. 5F.fu. .cal orfh"r. Ilo .... arel H. l. ... ng. h·I,·pho ....• carried. The taU sail 101' rigged Dr. Morgan watched the eastern !·dilon,,1 Conl,·r.·r.., Dianne H. An""r~on. 11m W. tphaei recdan tvhaes , hTulhles , liatntlde tshhei psypaarr ds hreed leifpS~ .,aasn ?t)he~y~ .t~a~lk.~ecd.l,: so.bs"e1r v~oin.t~g? t htheairt . IW,li~'.c) illc\i\\r·uz'!-'m".. '0 1JJ,o\r. h.. n\ \Ia'tdr",l.,d:" ·l1.1 R1 o\1o1r!.'o.1 'l ·.f.,.i v1n aIIO,ldh n' .!I u\\, .r..,. F~ \pq1.r:-l:.r '~rohrlorh.t·oU'1mT k·air"., ,J~nu.ry 21. 1967 DAILY EGYPTIAN Page 5 / Church of Presidents The day after President Kennedy's summer Sunday about one-fourth to assassination. President Lyndon one-third of the congregation is Johnson walked head down inrq. St. made up of tourists. A good many -John's EpiscopalChurch and be6.me of our regular members are the 34th American president to have embassy people." prayed £n "The Presidents' Now shouldered from all sidee. by Church:' 12-srory governmerlt and office Only (WO minutes from the Whi~e buildings. St. John's promises to be House across the green block called a gem ~ in the Lafayette Park restora Lafayette Park, St. John's has wel tion program that was inspired by comed every president since James Mrs. John F. Kennedy. Madison. The old bronze bell that still Designed by Benjamin Henry Lat summons members to Sunday wor robe, famous early day Washington ship was installed in 1822. Church architect, St. John' 5 has changed legend has it that the bell was little since it opened its doors JUSt cast in Bosrpn by the son of Paul before Christmas in 1816. Latrobe Revere from British cannon cap PRESIDENTS' CHURCH: St. John's Church, just across Lafayette Pork from was the church's fi~st organist and tured in the War of 1812. It was the White House, has welcomed every President since Madison. choirmaster. presented to the church by President A small church, built in the shape Madison. His wife. Dolly Madsion, of a cross and featuring a glazed was baptized. confirmed and buried cupola, St. John's originally boasted from the church. ,only 86-high-backed pews. Pew 28 History has it that Madison, cousin When a president plans to anend John's approves or disapproves of was set aside as the president's of an Episcopal bishop, practically services, the minister said, the the cause involved," the Rev. Mr. pew, free of rental. A redesign in ordered the church built near the Secret Service usually visits the Evans emphasized. "The church 1883 gave the president pew 64, White House. He became angry churCh on Saturday, looks over the policy is to help them as human but it's approximately in the same several times at riding miles interior and notifies the pastor. beings in need. U CspatPJthtr oeaslsii cdt,h e.en n teo vriegKri ennaantl teepdenywd, e d28 a .a SRuonmdaany tslhotrcroeauteegtdsh tmWo isaleessrhv ifnircgoetmosn a'ttsh aern uoPtttrheeedsr, i dcmehuundtricdahyl rsaeig"dPu.l rae"rsblyiud te tonh te SJhuoanhsdnnas'yot ncs oeumrsveedi c oetfost e,cn"o fmhoeer cinh Ianar tteesrdpie oertch hSe emcfruaertRtuarirney g oSthtf eew Sta1.r5 t0 JtohU hdanan'ls l worship service in the church, bur mansion. well over a year. Perhaps one of niversary of Lafayette Square and he did come on a Sarurday morning During the Civil War Abraham the reasons is the large number of St. John's. ' fmoirn irshtee rsi.n sWtalhleant iohne odfi edon, et hoo:!: f btehlel sLpineccoialnl vseusgpgeers tseedr vthicee sc ,fhourr cmh ehno lidn tourists. U • pla. y'Nedo ao tghreera tehri sptoarnic ind tihsetr ihcits tohrays in the gilded church rower tolled uniform. The rite still continues. On several occasions. St. John's of our nation for so many years," his 46 years and private services Woodrow Wilson was a regular has opened its doors to protest Udall said. were held. worshiper. Franklin D. Roosevelr groups picketing the White House. .....S r. John'se hurch will proba "St. John's has a permanent mem came to St. John's to pray an hour It has offered them coffee and bly witness another century and a bership of a little over 1,000;" says before he delivered his 1933 in facilities to wash. half of significam national events pastor John Evans. "But on any augural address. "This does not mean rhat SL. and people." BEACH SPEED LIMIT IDMPH \ STRICTLY ENFORCED B t A travel agenc'y B&A Travel Agency is the place where your dreams come true just the way you wont, with the eO$e of iust one simple visit. You see, B&·A specializes in tr_ovel plans that will toke you anywhere -in the world. T~ey think that your convenience and pleasure is the most important consiaerations, ana the only thing that you have to ao is pick up your tickets. If the ola saying is 'hot half the fun is getting there ..... , 8&A ;s out to ) make it even more so. lf you are planning on a trip or vocation now or in the future, make it easy on yourself ana see 8&A Travel. alte} all, ,hat's what a vacation is all about. 71SA S. University Page 6 OAIL Y EGYPTIAN January 21. . 1967 Daily Egyptian Book Scene A Critic's Faulkner Faulkner: 7 lit. .' lIajor )/rurs, by fold: 1) to portray the artistic growth Melvin Backman. Bloomin.gron: of Faulkner as he discovered Yok Indiana University Press, 196/i. 212 napar3wpha County and found his pp. $5.75. major themes, and 2) to study each book as a seperate work of art Writing a new critical study of and at the same time relate it William Faulkner is a formidable co the larger panern of Faulkner's task in view of the attemion that work. has been given [0 him by. a num The book is divided into eleven ber of outstanding critlts. Yet chapters, one for each work d!s this book appears at an opportune cussed and a summation. Each time. Four years after Faulkner's chapter is skillfully blended with death, at a time when the canon is summary and explication of the apparently complete, interest is high individual work, and with draWing for book-length scholarly studies. "r relationships among recurring Admittedly. "Faulkner: T,he Ma/or Situations, characters. symbols, and Years is slight-only 212 pages in themes of the various books. The cluCling bibliography and index. be~t chapters are. as might be ex However, the oook is well-conceived pected, on the bener novels- Til,' and the execution good. The book Sound and 'he I· ury and ,I b!wlum., ., bsalom ! • In the chaprer I)n The Sound and rIll' Fu ", Prof. Backman sees Reviewed by Faulkner as thl? artist coming to Donald H. Cunningham age creating his masterpiece early. Here is the greatest aChievement, "one of the great tragiC novels of is restricted to rhe writings be the twentieth century. U Here is tween 1929 and 1942. Prof. Back the master of the difficl!lt scream man has chosen SUT/(lri ... :, J 1/1' :'iflll/Hl of consciousness {~chnique, com and till' Fur). Sal/l'llIar~, I ... I Ill.' plete] y in control of his language lJying, I.i"hl in ·1 II It, II." I, -111.'w/ol1l, and original organization of mat ·Ibsalflm !, Th(' llll·anqlli ... lted, 7 "I~ erial. Here roo is the major "ild Palm.'), Tltt' lIamhl, "Tlu' FauJknerian proragonist, Quentin Bt·ar." and the other stories from Compson, whose plight is aliena (;/111 Utili fl. 1J1I.,,·.~ 111/(1 (JII,,'r Slori,'.,. tion and "neurotic estrangement for analysis and to build his thesis from life"; a character who appears thal "out of Faulkner's struggles from Bayard Sanoris ro Isaac Mc with society and self were born Caslin. As with all the novels. the great works of his major years." Prof. Backman con~iders the over The purpose of the book is [WO- all design of the novel as well as the action and meaning of [he pans. From Downwind 01 Upstage Specialized The best chapter in the book is on I//.',alllm. I '1.~UIIlIll! The first pan of [he chapter is concerned with the history and myth of the A COARSE ACTOR: How to sU'ccessfully scuttle any production. Photography South and irs founders. Then with exposition on the method of nar ration. rhe history of the Sutpens is For Artists traced and the lmpact of their ex Amateurs on Sta~ie periencl..' on Quentin Compson is /lhllr'I,c,rup/llll,:':' I", by Robert E. dtwisoc uQ~5u'e;I.n'dti. ns Hisi ss osutnadt:e ment on the Mates, New York.: Amphoto, 1966. The Quentin Compson of 1/1.,aloll/ $6.95. is not quite the same as (he earlier phAotnoygornaep hsw ohof sthilals- lifteri eodb jetcot s twakilel Qtihfuiaeendn tpifnoe:rr shotihnse a cl omanoncsde~ r\hnpi sai rsT tso o\l\ec' iitaihsl ari adctehenent r NIIefI welo 'dIIlYlr/.l,ol,r'l klI.-d:1 t '/HIIIIIaIffw. . tlh,boly.r"M/nU i~c(Bh·:o aoeTkliGslt.' reIniencn.. ethxraTomhuepgalhetorsue t.o .. fgt hoceeo traesrx stae nf udar ctnhtioosrshes h wiunhm aoco wtriooorunks. appreciate the usefulness of this tral quest in the novel-the quest 1966. 175 pp. $4.95. in any phase of theatre. be it amateur rather slender volume by the man to discover the tr,uth about the or professional, will find thiS a Mmwheuons te hueomaf dtishn etN heSew opl hoYomotoorkgn rCRap.i thyGi.cu gdeenphaeritm rmiusALc'l hta hnodtuo g fha ltlh Peo rfo stfch. he oSloa13ruatschhk.i mp ano f oIwrves "too An eM iwchhcooa aelcr asnGe rreeeamnct'esOm rdb, eefr inatichtcieoo nrld,i nienigss fGwinirliedselhny. isfW uenivnthey n tbbheoinosk e. rs ufthbroajemnc tB esmntacahnttl eeytro.. outA t thtaht~ othuitss eti s it nsOh[o ual dm baen upaoli ntfeojr innogr . !lowaen d andt oW tihllei amm aVrcarni aOl 'Cpounb-- cboutm en:o't Hteh ei s orrhdee rb ~i ti[ l plwayhiecrh (g(ehney The Walk the novice photographer who is short lished in Ilofiman and Vick- erally untouched by talent or zest on technical understanding, ' ex ory's I: if/jlllll FIlIIl1. II/'r: II,r,"· for hard work) of amateur theatri peYrieetn cnee aitnhde re qduoipems eMnta. tes assume {m)"e'r·IeII/l,y·. , re"Jw or(k,filnllgl ·I.e,I.x'Iha, ushete di s soniolt. caualths.o rI. n a/d)/m1/1v1u//e1 djulyd IaI f cllo'a."rfsJe~l ·a ctthoer Lifaen dh aad cbrlootwhned h haitm p uinl lae dta tdtoewrend u Spuoint that his reader is an expen. What ,. The summaries of scholarly find himself, delightfully catalogues the his brow. he has tried to do is presenr a ings and rhe depicting of contend misfortunes that occur in amateur lie cradled a bottle in his arms working volume for those who need ing critical opinions on the var production both onstage and back as he pushed on through the wind, to take representative photographs ious books arc a welcomed clear stage from falling scenery and [Orn And I followed him into rhe nighr. of objects for documentary pur ing house. Furthermore. Prof. tights ro [he performer who trans JX>Ascesc.o rdingly, the "Jnsy" ap eBxaicsktimnagn ,b oadt yl iomf ecs,r igLoiceiss mbe ytoo ndp otshiet foomrmittsi nga thder amcao m[m0 a a inc omtheed yl inbey, folploovweerdt y do.w,. n tired streets of proach is absent. Instead, the author new assertions and to further ex HHas the doctOr seen her. Fanny?" as J walked on past alleys [hat concentrates on more pragmatic plicate images and symbols. The or who wrecks a production of cried book also contains helpful foot 1/11, 'wl!, by running on and saying. as wind l:arried sharp crystal~ Reviewed by nOles. a good bibliography, and an "The Queen, my lord. is ""t dead." that pierced the cold gray bricks. Jock Fought extAe nfsiinvael cinodmexm. ent sCI..'ms in order. whGosree" cn acisco uan t veorfy ~hWakilclYs pewarrietaenr folloWL"d past bar:o' winging of One would expect :l larger book on women Faulkner. Sincl..' his writings be wirh bOdie;o::. burning in wintC'r's matters: the photOgraphy of paint forC' 1919 apparently merit no book. ni~ht. ings in black and white; problems :m introduclory chapter to cover the Reviewed liy and solutions to photographing foreground of the 1920's· would be Christian H. Moe followed him a:o' hL' climbed rhL' drawings, watercolors and collages. helpful. There are also some works stair~- Ultra -violet photography. in from the 1930's which could be treat stairs moaning. with years arc-ach frared and regular black-and-whi~ ed in a single chapter; no mention ,tep. fsiulbmj ecatr e oafl som daekainltg wigtho oads qisu al~ity Tisi l,·m ...a ,·d e1 3o af n1d'\ ,n,,r". o!JrU thrltI:I' IsOt oflrllide s( }f,rIot,m'r opfr oIdI"uIc/nti onI s daulornineg (paa rfltuic uelapridlye moniec He awraclkhl.w.'da y.t hroup.h the saggi~ slides. The special problems of ." ;'ll1r;l'· ~. The achievement of the with actors dropping like flies) is There, I ,to·prcd . sculpture exhibition photography and book is [hat it provides an excellent worth [he price of the book. :\1- - museum photography indoors and out augmentation for the reader of though the author's point of Rut my eye:;; flxl·d upon hi:;; we2r~ are also treated. Faulkner, be he the college student reference is the local British bodv Clearly this book is not a manual in the classroom or one who is in Amateur Drama Society, his ob as he 'climbed thl..' ... ;,[airs on photography. Rather it is a dependently cultivati9g a taste for servations are equally applicable to :-tairs that led 10 four walls specialized work intended for those Faulkner. The r<;jl<ler who is fa theatre on our side of the ocean. of crumbling plastC'r which he who need the techniques it includes. miliar with Faulkner will neces Also provided is whal amounts to breathed. An collectors. lecturers. and ... sarily gain from the summaries and a hamlbook of hintS as to how coarse Thomas R. Hobb museum directors will find it a fresh assertions. The reader who is actors or backstage workers can useful addition to their shelf of unfamiliar with Faulkner will need successfully scuttle any production. Reprinted from The Search: Sixth utool" books. the commentary. And photographs and drawings USe.,rjiveesr. sCityo pyprriegshst. 1966. Southern Illinois ',J,anuary 21,; 1967 OAIU'I!&YPTIAN PAVe 7 Maltreatment 'The Thread of Life' Of the Press Biology for Laymen In Europe / Till' Tllreud of I.i{e: ,.. In Inut)_ into an individual of unique char The Histor), .lfakers. by Kenneth dU("linn In l/o/~cu/~r RioJiu8:. ty aCter is explained very well. Di\.'A E. Olson. Baton Rouge: Lousiana John C. Kendrew. Cambridge, (deoxyribonucleic acid) has been State University Press. 1966, 47 J Mass.: Harv3rd University Pr(':::;s, found to have (hree functions: self p, $10, 1966. replication; the direction of protein synrhe'sis; and the storing of hered- If nothing else, this book clearly ThiS material was first publishe~ itary information. I makes one point, namely (half it is in somewhat different form in Great Alsu studied are the vi ruses, one • impossible [Q deal adequately with Britian in Dect>mber of 1963. The of the smallest forms of life, at the history of the European press in author was a joint winner in 1961 one time called "filterable vi one volume and get away with it. of the Nobel prize in chemistry. ruses," so small that they possess Consequently. the author used a Hanno Hardt Here is one of those instances only' pan of the normal attributes hop-skip-and - jump method tbar in which a scientist working in a of living organisms. But small as resulted in superficiality which was East' Germany is confined to one particular field is able to write they are, they are on the orde;r of compounded by an awkward -Style and one-half pages and laCKS any well and lucidly for the layman. a thousand times larger than and poor editing. presentation of how the Communist The author was trained as a chem ordinary protein molecules. A virus This wrHer realizes only [00 much press works in the fram·;?:work of ist, and was especially interested cannot eat Or grow, and reproduces the need for mOTo(! English language the political history of thal srate. in organic chemistry, the branch only inside the cells of a host material dealing with press systems Also. Denmark's news agency is of the subject dealing with the com organism; it is in the true sense other than the Anglo-American one, called Ritzaus. but the founder was pounds, of carbon. He tells of the a parasite. Viruses are of great but he does not believe that the E .N. Ritzau (not Ritzaus); Chresten study of the large molecules, those interest, especially to molecular quality of scholarly research should Berg and €thr1st ian Ferslew are containing thousands of atoms. biologists. for several reasons. be replaced by the quantity of coun names in Denmark's press history specifically [he proteins and the They are the cause of many of tries covered in one book. Obvious as imJX)rtanr as Greeley or Pulitzer nucleic acids, found in living organ man's most intractable diseases. ly. the author bit off a piece too big in American journalism. Both isms. He stresses the importance As a disease-causing agent, they to chew. sho~ld have been discussed in the of the new techniques which have are difficult to deal With. as they The book would have been a wel realm of the Danish press hi~tory; been developed for studying these lack so many ofthe norm·a1 functions come addition to the existing press while the chapter about the Czech large molecules. of living things, and thus have only histories, if the author would have press should have included a few The book is particularly con concentrated on a few, major his words about Egan Erwin Kisch, one cerned with a few basic questions, itpsor,re istchsae l abseo voake n"pthrsei sstaeonmrdy s tamh eraa ktrehorel.er" s oufAp set hrie t ohfa vOE~nu rdtohopen eeo' st hwmeir0t h3hota unfta dm.s uothcuehs rbcoeoopmko. rmcteoeunrltsds. dHsuoocewhs daao se:vs aHistot lwrye pdcrooomedsup cleaic aicttseeedlll f?mw uoHlrotki~? RRiecvhiaerwde dR absyc he ficial treatmenr of European press as "Americans travelling in Den cellular organism, such as man, mark art;! always am.<1zed to see the develop from a single fertilized fat papers displayed on news egg? How is it that one species Reviewed by standS;" or "II (the Rome Daily of animal changes into a new species Hanno Hardt Arn':rican) made a place for itself ... as the result of desirable mutations? a very limited number of points at ttoil l lOtoudraisyt s it frhoams bReocmome t:>t o aA gthoednsesn."d baTsihci st o isa n noutn dea rslotanngd ibnogo ko. f bmutu cihs awthtaicchk tnhoety o nalrye mvaunln eanradb oleth. er Tahneiy The author also ralks about "lovely that is being discovered and written mals, but plants as wf;l1, and even history that doesn't add anything (Q Iinle Austria" and he calls the Hun about today. Most chapters begin bacteria. Viruses are· also wonder the existing literature. Further garian Erno Gero a fanatic "Mus with a few sentences reviewing what ful tools for biological research: more, this writer feels that the covi[e," a description of an in has just been discussed, and end In them the function of reproduction cibnei't>reltriaonignartlaiyo panh ayhl.e plapr elftshosor ,u thgmehi ssstleuedndeg stnhrayom f. ;a?t: hnoedf HhaubMnigtoaarnrety . eoxfa mpRl~l!sss ica oulrda thbeer cittheadn. fgwooilotlhdo w. ai annfged w c hallaiopnnteges r .w oTift hhp er tdehivea ige5wr2a mpohfs o atthoree olaanr cdk lehthesesr edpiointw y eircs oaolnfa tbigeor nosw, ttushdi nieacnded mhthoaveryee the mar..! importanr articles and However, the point JSI hatom;Fsions graphic illustrations, are essential no metabolic function. Viruses are bAolosok,s mreolsatt eodf [tQh et hme Eatuerroiaple aCni ptreess~. tEeunrdo [pQe adni splOrtr;!t sst h:en inthveo lhviesmtol.:rnyt ooff tthhee Ttoh e anp huontodgerraspthasn dinagr e ogf rothuep edte xatt. amnadd et heo fl atptreorc eciann abned eintuhcelre iDCN aAc iodr, fotasstohioftpoe arpImnnettreehs eeia gde ~ notFet fhaphd rserraE eo eetnuu isicn"rrnshofc tt erp ehoowieEsafdSn .,n u,td ecghc tealihGtit iseasotetwthn nri; amo e innsnad ettsn th yxwh e-coes efe ofosh puauitto.u srr ttct.hohnfe.ooears "yrrr , esccvtb,leooIiixodearnoprnewkktre iae nerntstcreisf oo.ton wunrr1r .hait hwcsobl e~ oe pdsughRrii.ai lefmdnesfs a nipscCndi:(nu o-i0owntleg m t sgi frtsi .~rehelianloocu rouondiyutTmsne gh n trmhtoweeg l saimo;o Iftpnho/no\idse nrf . - o ;d/raruIh(iiIhennnit"de g s etttDiwhhhssN heeeTsi Alihiet bmetap ar tarcmceeenasmksa(e rO sdnre oisrilnneeefydt gh lsao.yoe tf uhi fyns ea gf Dna dapNbs Imcob aAioayopn ck uaaak,ns tn iitsndwn e aghosnR.i fh cdN e hoAir nnef n oHfdeaonoiacntrwlhyd l cotthsRhiuruacNe cMpsu Amspcluoeae.eos ldrnseer ss ce Oi uMa,r tI:lpd o auavpunt cr~irrdhh rioi a unsawvb goscieie bfhol lots l htaoo.hp tcekgoer h y o ip wberbaveaaiisebossst de lloy9a tog ed0rncyrncnoea he nmwy tpediawhnaaitiiicusrrtChh se but a look at the table of content re them of [he severe limitations. mation needed by the cells to develop doing so for qUite some time. veals that only 23 nations were cov~red and no mention was made of . Iceland, Ireland, Luxemburg. not [Q speak of Monaco and Liechtenstein. It is also distracting for the reader [Q discovl!r the frequent misspell ings of foreign words and names. This is panicu]arly obvious in the chapter about Germany and could ha\'·~ easily been avoided by careful editing. But apart from typographical errors, there are factual Slips and omissions. For instance, one of the factors that distinguishes the German press council from mhers is th~ panicipation of [he magaZine publishers; Axel Springer is not associated with but owns the Ullstein Verlag in Berlin; he does not publish Abend=eilung, but the lIamburgcr Abendblall ; no mention is made of Bild Am Sonntag, Spring er's Sunday paper with a 2.4 mil Ii)n circulation. The diSCUssion of Our Reviewers Donald H. Cunningham is an in- \ ' structor in the Depanment of.. / English, Christian H. Moe is a member of the faculty of the Department of Theater and assistant dean. School of Communications. Jack. Fought is on the Department of Journalism faculty. Hanna Hardt. who .. completed his work for the Ph.D. at SIU, is on the faculty of the Department of Journalism, University of North Da kota. HISTORIC HOME: Parish churches and manor hous •• , side by sid'., dot the English countryside. Rare, however, is the Richard Rasche is one the staff manor house which has been in continuous use as 0 privote residence since it was built, This one, ot Appleton, is one of Morris Library. of the rarities. datins to the days of King John, (Sketch by J .. H. Brookes from TheO.ford (England) Times.) Poge 8 DAILY EGYPTIAN .....0 '121, 1967 Conozca a Su Vecino EI Automovil y EI Progreso , P roducto del ingenio e ind6stria cualquier debilidad en el mercado noneamericanos, y desenvuelto cas! o en arras aspectos del comercio en Sll totalidad dentro do la cultura adjunto resulta seria, si no de de los Estados Unldos de Nprte crucial imponanc.ia. am~rica. el autom6vU es causa de En los pafses en desarrollo los muchas problemas gubem-ameotales problemas son otras: el cos[Q y de salubrldad publica y salud original de 'los coches, r.amione~ prlvada en el pals de su origen. y autobuses es tal que eIlos re Es, sin embargo. indispensable presentan una inversi6n importante. El mantenimiento tambi!!'n es caro. ~:nt~t~%o!a ~~~~~a :~~al~~noo~~~ Ni la econom{a nacional, ni la bulsa parses [odavCa en desenvolvimiento. individual pueden aguantar 10 que en Algunos creen que los problemas la 4. econom{a del derroche" tfpica de trmsito ,y de la contaminaci6n de Estados Unidos se toma como del aire son d1.f{clles .51 no rutinaria. La ffobsolescencia in imposibles de resolver en las ciu genierizada" se caIcula como una dades grandes de Norteam~rica. necesidad para poder m antener el perc hay cuando menos mayores equilibrio de la ecvnom(a esta EL ANGEL DE LA GUARDA recursos para Sll resoluci6n denrro dounidense. Esta carga sobre I a .. jVamos, hombre, anfmate'!'. de la economi'3 totalmente indus econom{a de los pa{ses no indus trializada que en la de las naciones triaUzados es sumamente pesada, sature de contaminantes gaseosos muchas veces de serviclos sani en desenvoivimienro, y adem!s del problema de la poca y s6lidos. taxicos. muchas veces tarios p6blicos y particulares. Geograt"tcamente las ciudades duraci6n del coche que represent a en -alto grado. La resoluci6n de esros problemas como San Luis de Misuri, Los una inve.rsion de dos a cinco veces Son dos eje~plos, estos parses, parece ser imposible de encantrar, Angeles y San Francisco, California el costG al menudeo de un coche de la economla en pleno desen cuando menos en la actualidad. y Nueva York est1n de tal modo en Estados Unidos. el use prolon volvimiento que necesita los medios Cieno es que el mercado de esros situadas que el problema de la gado do los carros en mal estado de transporte que son los auto parses representa una Craccid'n tan polucl6n del aire, por eJemplo, se de mantenimiento agrava mucho la m6viles. camiones y autobuses, peora pequena de la producci6n entera complica mucho. La Hamada uin_ contaminacion normalmente pre codos los rres aumentan apreciable de la industria automovilrstica. versi6n" atmosferica que se crea sente en el aire como result ado mente los problemas de la salud creada y desarral1ada dentro de una debido a cienas condiciones tem del trinsito urbano pesado de auto publica y el volumen de enferme situacid'n culrural y econ6mica tan porales y la presencia de barreras m6vUes. dades respirarorias que afligen a distima. que los iabricantes no van naturales en forma de cerros. Debido a SU situaci6n geogr{fica una poblaci6n mal nutrida. mal a preocuparse. ni 10 pueden hacer. montaffas, e inmensas masas de aire cuando menos Lima (PerCi),la Ciudad provista de vivienda. y careciendo AGB frCo ayudan en la formaci6n de de Mexico y el Distrlto Federal, combinaciones de neblina v humo.a Santiago de Chile, y BUenos Aires que can presencia del sol se con en la Am~rica Latina tienen ya vierten en gases t6xicos. No se sabe :i~~OsSfj~~~l.emas de comaminaci6n la manera de resolver estos pro blemas, pero si se sa be que va a Se calcula que en M~xico entre costar muchos millones de dolares sesema y setenta toneladas de con y que resultarl una carga fuene rarninantes s6lidos y gaseosos se sobre los habit antes urbanos. sueltan rodo~ los d{as en el aire £1 transito pes ado y voluminoso de la ciudad capital. Los se resuelve en pane mediante la automoviles. autobuses, y camiones, construccion de costoslsimos mal mantenidos 0 ya pasados de viaductos y autopistas que quiz~ mod a originan una gran pane de no se pagarln n1 dentro de la esta contaminaci6n. vida de la presence nl d~ 13 proxima Lima es una ciudad que debido generaci6n en Estados Unidos. pero a su situaci6'n en la ori11a del mar tales construcciones en las ciudades en una especie'" de [3zon terrescre, de los parses en desenvolvimiento entre Ja sierra andina v la co son una carga aun mas pes ada , rriente frfa antartica del Pacifico cuando no imposible. suCre seis meses de neblina cada La economla de la naci6n norte ana. Los vehlculos de mowr de americana depende hasta tal punto combusli6n inrerna son la causa de la industria automovillstica que principal de que es(J. neblina se \ Television's Week -tEssay on Women' Helen Gurley Brown tried. So did and looks far (he answers-to the Betty Frieden. Now Harry Reasoner question. "00 rhe Poor Pay More and producer Andrew Rool}eY are and Get Less?" (8:30 p.m., Ch. 8) out to try to clear away the cobwebs' about the role of women in the TUESDAY modern world. The two. who teamed up on the Essay on Women. (9 p.m., Ch. well-received '~Essays" on doors. 12) bridges and hotels, present "Essay Biography features the life af on Women" Tuesday night. They'll General Douglas MacArthur. (9:30 show what women complain abour p.m .• Ch. 8) shoppil)g, caring for children, working on jobs-and where they WEDNESDAY complain-their clubs and profes sional groups. All in the lighthearted "Lizzie Borden," a modern to manner of the earlier essays. American opera, probes the motives Other television highlights: of the frustrated Fall niver, Mas sachusetts, spinster who axed her TODAY father and stepmother to death in the 18905. (41 p.m .• Ch. 8) AFL All·Star Game has the best players from the Western Division THURSDAY meeting the beSt from the Eastern Division. (4 p.m., Ch. 6) _\ ABC Stage oi presenrs "The People Trap," a dramatic specu SUNDAY lation on the results of the.. .... popu lation explOSion. The program was WlMllei,emt tFheu lbPrirgehsts, chhaasi rmSeanna toofr thJe. f3i)r st shown last fall. (9 p.m.I, Ch. Senate Foreign Relation!; Committee as its guest. (12 noon, Ch. 6) FRID1Y NFL Pro Bowl features all-stars of the National-Football League. Leonard Bern~in and the New (2:45 p.m .• Ch. 12) York Philharmonic present their eighth annual "Young Performers MONDAY Concen." Nine young artists, rang ing in age from 13 to 2J. are featured. . . __ I:-/,E. T. Journal asks the quesrion- (6:30 p.m., Ch. 12) . 205 So. Illinois Ave. Jan ..r y 21 1967 DAILY EGYPTIAN P ... 9 Taylor to View Vietnam's Economic Aspects ....C !''' t> Men's Store .. Dealer of Lee Leesures SAIGON, Soulh Vietnam raids and terrorist attaCKS on American fighler - bomber nonh of the border and the (AP) - Gen. Maxwell D. Tay Saigon. ~ pllols slashed for Ihe founh U.S. Command announced two lor said Friday progress is Elements of Ihe 3rd Bri straight day Thursday al the of the planes were lost from being made in Vietnam, but gade, U.S. 251h Infanlry Divi IWO rail way supply lines link unde:. nnlned causes. The the question is: "How much sion clashed twice wjth Com Ing Red China with Hanoi. four men aboard them are progress, is it enough?" The mufust detachmenvs in the They said Ihey CUI one line In missing. The planes were a former ambassador to Saigon central high lands I 65 miles five places from 60 10 lI8 Navy A6 Intruder from the returned for a personal 1n northwesl of QUi Nhon.ln each miles northwest of HanOi and carrier Kitty Hawk and an spect~on as a special adviser case, the enemy broke contact. pounded Ihree marshaling Air Force F4C Phantom Jet. to President Johnson. The' Americans said they yards from 50 10 60 miles Taylor told newsmen that, killed 18. Their own casual northeast of Hanoi on the ~~ a ~~~~-ta~c;~~i~:t~:_~rr~ atise sl igwhet.r e officiall y described othAedr.v erse weather held the PPrleasyenmtsa .•t. e briefings on all Uniled Slales ,A task force of 1,500 gov squadrons to 67 missions of problems here, With the ernment troops launched a ~~f~i~~~:. ~~os~on;:~i~[~~ ~earch and destroy operation McNamara Releases Se'Pte~ber in An Xuyen Province, at Mi ss C"anJ/~, range from direct economic Vietnam's southern tip. f.n this Construction Funds aaiudt htoo rcitoioesp erinal loa nc woullnht rSyawigiosen eanlsde wfohuer resc, atttheer ed Vskieitrnmaimsheeses WASHINGTON (AP) -Sec CloEt.hAe. S'c ...T ra. . cGleanA' (Tor yEou .1 715a tS o. University pacification program. command said, 43 Viel Cong relary of Defense Roben S. TODAY American officials viewed were kJlled. McNamara released $564 mil CLEANERS with concern a reduced pro Communisls lobbed 30 1035 lion Friday for Ihe conSlruc duction of rice and rising monar shells al Ihe U.S. tion of military housing, bar prices for Ihal slaple food Marine base camp and airstrip racks and other projects. The grain. South Vietnam, which al Phu Bal, 390 miles north of money had been appropriated exported surplus rice co other Saigon. U.S. headquarters said by Congress in 1965 bUI never Southeast Asian nations as both casualti~s and damage spent. recently as 1963, is now im were IIghl. McNamara's action means poning il by Ihe shipload. U.S. B52 bombers hi in Ihe that consuuction will begin On the military side, troops nighl al Communfsl targels as soon a.s possible on nearly of Ihe U.S. 1961h Lighl In 360 miles aparr. Tbe bombers 52.000 barracks spaces, 8,500 fantry Brigade probed a mas struck first at a supply center sive tunnel complex in the 27 miles southwest of Hue, the ubnacithse loofr f aomffiilcye hr ousspiancge, s5 ,a0n0d0 DR. C. 1:. KENDRICK Hseor vBeod w oaosd s Ithhea l Ilhoenyg -bseoluiegvhet ocolda sitm. pteornisa lo fc aepxipllaols. iDveosw wn eIhree several hospitals, chapels and OPTOMETRIST headquarters of. the Viet rained on an enemy base camp SChools on 285 bases in 42 Cong's 4th military region, a 22 miles northeaSI of Vung sbtiaat easn,d tohvee Drsiesatrsi.c t of Colum OFFICE HOURS. 9:00 to 5:30 Daily springboard for guerrilla Tau. THE "KEE"TO GOOD VISION China's Internal Issue Hurts &iii CONT ACTS: $59.50 GLASSES FROM 549-2822 Communist Image, Says Russia MOSCOW (AP)-The Soviel paign for a world meeting of , "Apples Communist party in looking CommuniSI parlles. The bad over the torturous course meeting would rally support Winesap, Red ond Golden of Red China's cultural for Moscow's dispute with Pe Delicious· all kept revolution has concluded (hat kJng. crisp in our storage! Phuekrti ntgh'es iimntaegrne aaln tdr otuhbe lepso wcaenr ed Tthoe bPer apvadna aorf tiac lset eappppedea urp "Apple Cider Florist says ... of the world Communist move Soviet campaign for the world great for parties! ment. meeting, which Red China op Remember to Pravda, the Soviet CommuI poses. • Honey nist party paper, used this It followed the disclosure comb or extracted order early assessment Friday as a new Thursday that tbe three top " Sorghum . argument in the Soviet cam- Soviet leaders held secret Board Fires lalks Tuesday and Wednesday ~ Fri., Sat., Q'ld Sun. 't.1 Spring' for the R.O:r.C. in Poland With Polish leaders. California's LeCoonmid mIu. nBisrte zhpnaervt,y Prleemadieerr Ball, Feb.4 Alexei N. Kosygin and Presi Clark Kerr dent Nikolai V. Podgorny all attended the talks, underscor- BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) ing Ihelr importance. Diplo- 'y 8 IOn .. Sou", 01 C·dol •. R,. 51 607 S. III i n 0 is TUhniev ebrosaitryd ooff Craelgifeonrtns iao fF trhie tmioant sf ohre trhee bweolireldve md eeptrienpga wraas- r~ =5==w ==e== a= =t:sh:=ei~r= =t = .=5 =a == I=e == =.I.I= ===========~ day fired C lark Kerr as Presi a major topic. dent of the ~ nine-campus in ueOd lshpeera kSoinvgi etto luerasd earros ucnodm tlhne- stiTtuhteio vno. te was 14 to 8 favor country, stressing to local "Long & Short Sleeves oNLY$-2.25 ing Kerr's dismissal. ~ii~:I~aslh:~le~:~ aCI~~:~~ "All Colors Gov. Ronald Reagan voted, dangerous stage." but it was not learned immed . Marshal N.l. Krylov, a "All Siz'es iately whether he favored deputy defense minister and Kthee rrm'se edtiisnmg isbseaflo. rRe eatghea nd liesf t commander of Soviel slralegic h " A I·I1 T1y· pe s . b k & I missal was announced, btl[ he Irhoecskee t lifnoersc ense,a r splaokkee Baalioknagl 50ut ern I InOl5 00 5UpP Y didK neortr mheanst iboene nit .p resident of in Ihe Soviel Far Easl. 710 South Illinois the gigantiC university system since 1958. ~~I~~!'~~~!!' OPE'N· -MONDAY Thomas Sorensen, vice I president for universi[y rela tions, emerged from a closed t executive session of regents at so 3 p.m. PST -an hour afler Reagan had left-and announc ed: why "The regents of the Univer worry? "Thank You for Your Patience" sity of C aliJornia roda y ter minated the presidency of Dr. I..- ~ Clark Kerr, effective today. 06-5. Illinois NEW The vote was 14 to 8." TIFFANY m GUIT-ARS Select From *Gibson *Martin *Fender *Guild *Mosrite Strings and Accessories PARKER MUSLC CO. 713 South University G'till open at 11 o.m. to I :00 a.m. Mon. to Thurs. 606 E. MAIN ST. CARBONDALE, ILLINOIS ,Coffee Shop open at 8:00 a.m. Mon. to !tat. Fri,· ~t . .O R.~ till 3:00 a.",.

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This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1967 at OpenSIUC. It has been conned soup at a local beanery or the bland institutionalism of .. liance on apothecary's magiC, and burial at .. For Artists. /lhllr' I,c, rup/llll,:':' I", by Robert E. Mates, New York.: A
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