daily illini 1971

28
The Cage (Staff photo by Rob Click) The Cage, a play written by prison parolees which describes the harsh realities of prison life, was performed Thursday night at the lllini Union. See review on page eight. AAUP report asks 12 per cent hike Calls for minimum salary levels By JIM GEHRING Daily lllini Staff Writer Twelve per cent salary hikes for academic staff members for the next two years are essential to pre- vent a widening of the gap between " salary and quality rankings " at the University , according to the Committee on Economic Status of the American Association of Uni- versity Professors (AAUP), The committee' s report , which was released Thursday, will be considered for adoption by the Urbana chapter of AAUP Nov . 11. The report calls the five per cent salary increase made possible by transfer of funds this year , and the six per cent raises included in next year ' s budget request " grossly inadequate. " Seven per cent in- creases would be necessary to match estimated increases in other universities, and an additional five per cent would be needed to bring University salaries into line with salaries at other comparable schools. The report states : "We are distressed at the use of overhead funds , chiefly from federal con- tracts , to provide general salary increases . These funds were paid to the university as part of the price of research services ren- dered ... Any diversion from re- search and related activities ap- pears to us to be a misuse of the funds. " Martha Friedman , AAUP chapter president , said it was not incumbent upon AAUP to say where the money for the raises would come from . Recognize fiscal problems The report recognizes fiscal problems of the state government , but says that the funds provided for salaries are "by all reasonable cri - teria , ... inadequate ." The report contends that 12 per cent increases will not be pro - hibi ted by federal wage restraints because they are necessary "to correct inequities . " The report calls for the elt- ablishment of the following mini- mum salary levels : instructor , $8 , 000; assistant professor , $11, 000; associate professor , $13 , 500 ; pro- fessor , $16 ,500. The present salaries are $1 , 200 to $1 , 700 below average minimum salaries for comparable universities, accord-' ing to the report . The report also says that aca- demic salaries are below those for nonacademic staff members performing duties that are no more demanding than those of academic staff. Strike a balance The committee also recom- mends that " a balance be struck between merit increases and across-the-board increases. " Finall y, the committee recommends the adoption of " normal" merit increases each year at the department level . The report will be mailed to all facul ty members next week before it is discussed by the chapter , Friedman said. Todays weather Partly cloudy, warmer today. High 67 to 72. Low tonight 37-42. Chance of precipitation zero per cent today, 10 per cent tonight. Cooler Saturday , high 46-52. House adop ts m easures designed to slo w pace of b using WASHINGTON , D.C. (AP ) The House voted Thursday night to clamp harsh restrictions on the government and the federal courts in an effort to pre- vent forced busing of school children to overcome segregation. Acting in what Rep . Emanuel Celler , D-N.Y., called "haste, excitement and hysteria , " the House adopted a series of potentially far-reaching amendments that could sharply slow the pace of desegregation . One amendment would prevent expendi ture of any federal funds for busing . Another would prohibit the federal government from requiring a state to spend state or local funds for busing. Still another would delay a court-ordered busing plan until all possible appeals have been exhausted , which could mean two or three years. All the amendments were added to a massive, $21.7 billion higher education bill and could be subject to later votes before final action on the bill. Southerners clapped and cheered as Northerners with a long history of opposing antibusing amend- ments when only the South was affected by them trooped down the aisle to vote for the amendments. Refuse discrimination ban Earlier , the House refused to ban sex discrimination in the admissions policies of under- graduate colleges. By a vote of 194 to 189 it adopted an amendment to a higher education bill that would exempt un- dergraduate colleges—which enroll 95 per cent of college students—from an anti-sex discrimination requirement . Voter bill passes ; no student restrictions SPRINGFIELD, 111. (AP)-The Illinois House Thursday approved a bill establishing voter registration guidelines which are free of restrictions opponents had said would "disenfranchise " college students . By unanimous vote the House sent to the Senate an agreed bill which eliminated curbs to students ' registration but which contained provisions to allow county officials to prosecute college students , or others , who falsify registration . Rep. John C. Hirschfeld , R- Champaign , sponsor of another voter registration bill killed by the House Wednesday, said the amended bill would " shift the onus from the student to the county clerks " in determining valid registration. Eligibility by a ffidavit To establish voter eligibility under the proposal , the registrant would only have to sign an affidavit presented by the county clerk stating his local address is his permanent address. Permanent would not mean permanent in the sense of forever , according to drafters , but per- manent to the extent a person can reasonably know how long he will live anywhere . Hirschfeld said the mea sure is " eminently fair " in that it permits county clerks to conduct in- vestigations of sta tements sworn to by a voter in his affidavit. Hirschfeld ' s defea ted bill would have required individuals to register in the county where they were listed as dependents for federal income tax purposes. Rep. Mrs . Robert C. Dyer , R- Hinsdale , said the affidavit would serve as a guard against possible double registration by students and other voters . Enforce honest registration The affidavit is seen also as a means to enforce honest registration since false in- formation could lead to perjury charges by local prosecutors. The approved bill , sponsored by Rep. Gerald Bradley, D- Bloomington , would require a person to have lived in the state six months and the precinct for 30 days to be eligible for registration . Sena te kills tuitio n ref u nd Democratic proposal loses SPRINGFIELD , 111. (AP ) The Illinois Senate Thursday defeated 25-10 a Democratic proposal to refund nearly $700 , 000 in tuition increases to students at three universities under the control of the State Board of Regents. The money represents revenue generated from tuition increa ses approved before President Nixon ' s wage-price freeze and in effect for the fall term at the schools. Meanwhile , the Senate awaits a House bill which appropriates the same money for use by the universities themselves. In a report opposing tuition in- creases , Sen. Thomas C. Hynes, D- Chicago, said , "The present un- wieldy patchwork state scholar- ship and financial system is so confused that no one knows whether needy students are being properl y considered. " The House bill seems in a rather hopeless situation since Democratic assistance is needed to help the Republicans pass a bill in the Senate . In other action at the Senate Thursday, the Democrats generally join ed with Republicans in a pproving bills to transfer $6 million from state University fUnds appropriated for new buildings and equipment to use for personal services , including salaries , student jobs and library services. They noted that none of these could bear the cuts but said if they did not retreat somewhat there would be no personal service im- provement. The governor vetoed the per- sonal services expenditures when he cuts $50 million from state university budgets as approved by the General Assembly. The Democrats said they wished to provide approximately $6 million from what they termed surpluses in special interest funds earmarked for horse racing, and fairs . Dewey here to investigate Wilson case John D. Dewey, assistant Big Ten commissioner and examiner , completed a two-day campus visit Thursday to investigate possible National Collegiate Athletic Association violations in posting bond for lllini halfback John C. Wilson. Dewey will report his findings to Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke . A Big Ten spokesman said Thursday Dewey would not comment on the case until the investigation is completed . Wilson , 19 , of Miami , Fla., pleaded not guilty to a charge of deceptive practice Oct. 19 after he allegedly attempted to buy gasoline with a stolen credit card. Champaign police records in- dicate assistant football coach J.C. Caroline posted $2, 500 bond for Wilson after his arrest Oct. 18 at Uncle Heavy ' s service station. NCAA regulations prohibit " special arrangements designed to provide an athlete with extra benefits not made available to the student body in general. " At least six actions are specificall y banned by the regulation including guarantees of bond and allowing an athletic staff member to sign or cosign a note arranging a loan for a student athlete. Serving the University and the community for over a century

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Daily Illini 1971

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  • The Cage(Staff photo by Rob Click)

    The Cage, a play written by prison parolees which describesthe harsh realities of prison life, was performed Thursdaynight at the lllini Union. See review on page eight.

    AAUP report asks 12 per cent hikeCalls for minimum salary levels

    By JIM GEHRINGDaily lllini Staff Writer

    Twelve per cent salary hikes foracademic staff members for thenext two years are essential to pre-vent a widening of the gap between"salary and quality rankings" atthe University, according to theCommittee on Economic Status ofthe American Association of Uni-versity Professors (AAUP),

    The committee's report , whichwas released Thursday, will beconsidered for adoption by theUrbana chapter of AAUP Nov. 11.

    The report calls the five per centsalary increase made possible bytransfer of funds this year, and thesix per cent raises included in nextyear's budget request "grosslyinadequate." Seven per cent in-creases would be necessary tomatch estimated increases in otheruniversities, and an additional fiveper cent would be needed to bringUniversity salaries into line withsalaries at other comparableschools.

    The report states: "We aredistressed at the use of overhead

    funds, chiefly from federal con-tracts, to provide general salaryincreases. These funds were paidto the university as part of theprice of research services ren-dered ... Any diversion from re-search and related activities ap-pears to us to be a misuse of thefunds."

    Martha Friedman , AAUPchapter president, said it was notincumbent upon AAUP to saywhere the money for the raiseswould come from.

    Recognize fiscal problemsThe report recognizes fiscal

    problems of the state government,but says that the funds provided for

    salaries are "by all reasonable cri-teria , ... inadequate."

    The report contends that 12 percent increases will not be pro-hibited by federal wage restraintsbecause they are necessary "tocorrect inequities."

    The report calls for the elt-ablishment of the following mini-mum salary levels: instructor,$8,000; assistant professor , $11,000;associate professor, $13,500; pro-fessor , $16,500. The presentsalaries are $1,200 to $1,700 belowaverage minimum salaries forcomparable universities, accord-'ing to the report.

    The report also says that aca-

    demic salaries are below those fornonacademic staff membersperforming duties that are no moredemanding than those of academicstaff.

    Strike a balanceThe committee also recom-

    mends that "a balance be struckbetween merit increases andacross-the-board increases."

    Finally, the committeerecommends the adoption of"normal" merit increases eachyear at the department level.

    The report will be mailed to allfaculty members next week beforeit is discussed by the chapter ,Friedman said.

    Todays weatherPartly cloudy, warmer today.

    High 67 to 72. Low tonight 37-42.Chance of precipitation zero percent today, 10 per cent tonight.Cooler Saturday, high 46-52.

    House adopts measuresdesigned to slow pace of busing

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP ) The House votedThursday night to clamp harsh restrictions on thegovernment and the federal courts in an effort to pre-vent forced busing of school children to overcomesegregation.

    Acting in what Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., called"haste, excitement and hysteria," the House adopteda series of potentially far-reaching amendments thatcould sharply slow the pace of desegregation.

    One amendment would prevent expenditure of anyfederal funds for busing. Another would prohibit thefederal government from requiring a state to spendstate or local funds for busing.

    Still another would delay a court-ordered busingplan until all possible appeals have been exhausted ,which could mean two or three years.

    All the amendments were added to a massive, $21.7billion higher education bill and could be subject tolater votes before final action on the bill.

    Southerners clapped and cheered as Northernerswith a long history of opposing antibusing amend-ments when only the South was affected by themtrooped down the aisle to vote for the amendments.

    Refuse discrimination banEarlier , the House refused to ban sex

    discrimination in the admissions policies of under-graduate colleges.

    By a vote of 194 to 189 it adopted an amendment to ahigher education bill that would exempt un-dergraduate collegeswhich enroll 95 per cent ofcollege studentsfrom an anti-sex discriminationrequirement.

    Voter bill passes; nostudent restrictions

    SPRINGFIELD, 111. (AP)-TheIllinois House Thursday approveda bill establishing voterregistration guidelines which arefree of restrictions opponents hadsaid would "disenfranchise"college students.

    By unanimous vote the Housesent to the Senate an agreed billwhich eliminated curbs tostudents' registration but whichcontained provisions to allowcounty officials to prosecutecollege students, or others, whofalsify registration.

    Rep. John C. Hirschfeld, R-Champaign, sponsor of anothervoter registration bill killed by theHouse Wednesday, said theamended bill would "shift the onusfrom the student to the county

    clerks" in determining validregistration.

    Eligibility by affidavitTo establish voter eligibility

    under the proposal, the registrantwould only have to sign an affidavitpresented by the county clerkstating his local address is hispermanent address.

    Permanent would not meanpermanent in the sense of forever ,according to drafters, but per-manent to the extent a person canreasonably know how long he willlive anywhere.

    Hirschfeld said the measure is"eminently fair" in that it permitscounty clerks to conduct in-vestigations of statements sworn toby a voter in his affidavit.

    Hirschfeld's defeated bill would

    have required individuals toregister in the county where theywere listed as dependents forfederal income tax purposes.

    Rep. Mrs. Robert C. Dyer, R-Hinsdale, said the affidavit wouldserve as a guard against possibledouble registration by students andother voters.

    Enforce honest registrationThe affidavit is seen also as a

    means to enforce honestregistration since false in-formation could lead to perjurycharges by local prosecutors.

    The approved bill , sponsored byRep. Gerald Bradley, D-Bloomington , would require aperson to have lived in the state sixmonths and the precinct for 30 daysto be eligible for registration.

    Senate kills tuition ref u ndDemocratic proposal loses

    SPRINGFIELD, 111. (AP ) TheIllinois Senate Thursday defeated25-10 a Democratic proposal torefund nearly $700,000 in tuitionincreases to students at threeuniversities under the control ofthe State Board of Regents.

    The money represents revenuegenerated from tuition increasesapproved before President Nixon'swage-price freeze and in effect forthe fall term at the schools.

    Meanwhile, the Senate awaits aHouse bill which appropriates thesame money for use by theuniversities themselves.

    In a report opposing tuition in-creases, Sen. Thomas C. Hynes, D-

    Chicago, said, "The present un-wieldy patchwork state scholar-ship and financial system is soconfused that no one knowswhether needy students are beingproperly considered."

    The House bill seems in a ratherhopeless situation sinceDemocratic assistance is needed tohelp the Republicans pass a bill inthe Senate.

    In other action at the SenateThursday, the Democratsgenerally joined with Republicansin approving bills to transfer $6million from state University fUndsappropriated for new buildings andequipment to use for personal

    services, including salaries,student jobs and library services.They noted that none of these couldbear the cuts but said if they didnot retreat somewhat there wouldbe no personal service im-provement.

    The governor vetoed the per-sonal services expenditures whenhe cuts $50 million from stateuniversity budgets as approved bythe General Assembly.

    The Democrats said they wishedto provide approximately $6million from what they termedsurpluses in special interest fundsearmarked for horse racing, andfairs.

    Dewey hereto investigateWilson case

    John D. Dewey, assistant BigTen commissioner and examiner ,completed a two-day campus visitThursday to investigate possibleNational Collegiate AthleticAssociation violations in postingbond for lllini halfback John C.Wilson.

    Dewey will report his findings toBig Ten Commissioner WayneDuke. A Big Ten spokesman saidThursday Dewey would notcomment on the case until theinvestigation is completed.

    Wilson, 19, of Miami , Fla.,pleaded not guilty to a charge ofdeceptive practice Oct. 19 after heallegedly attempted to buygasoline with a stolen credit card.

    Champaign police records in-dicate assistant football coach J.C.Caroline posted $2,500 bond forWilson after his arrest Oct. 18 atUncle Heavy's service station.

    NCAA regulations prohibit"special arrangements designed toprovide an athlete with extrabenefits not made available to thestudent body in general."

    At least six actions arespecifically banned by theregulation including guarantees ofbond and allowing an athletic staffmember to sign or cosign a notearranging a loan for a studentathlete.

    Serving the Universityand the communityfor over a century

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  • Alaska blast f oes start last standWhite House rejects protests

    The cremation of Sam McGee

    WASHINGTON, DC. (AP ) - Ahenvironmental group asked ChiefJustice Warren E. Burger Thur-sday to halt Saturday 's un-derground nuclear explosion offthe Alaskan coast, pending ahearing by the full Supreme Court.

    A spokesman for the court said adecision probably would comeFriday.

    The White House turned asidemounting protests against theexplosion, which would be thelargest one yet conducted in theWestern world.

    It is scheduled for Saturday at 5p.m. EST on Amchitka Island totest the five megaton hydrogenbomb warhead for the Spartanantiballistic missile.

    Asked about White Housereaction to continuing protestsagainst the blast, press secretaryRonald L. Ziegler said the decisionto go ahead was made after acareful study of environmentalrisks involved. It was decided toproceed with the test , he said,because of overriding interests ofnational defense and security.

    The appeal to Burger was filedby lawyers for the Committee for

    Nuclear Responsibility, one ofseven environmental groupsprotesting the explosion.

    The lawyers argued that theappeals court erred in not issuingan injunction postponing the testand called the blast "a majoraction significantly affecting theentire country."

    Among Senators protesting theblast , Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine, said it risks environmentalcontamination , tidal wave orearthquake.

    Sen. Democratic Leader MikeMansfield of Montana toldreporters he hopes the court stopsit.

    Sens. George McGovern , D-S.D.,and Mark O. Hatfield , R-Ore., alsojoined in protests.

    Two members of Congress ac-companied Atomic EnergyCommission Chairman James R.Schlesinger on a flight to AlaskaThursday to observe effects of theexplosion. They were Reps. CraigHosmer , R-Calif., and OrvalHansen, R-Idaho, both members ofthe Joint Committee on AtomicEnergy. Also in the party wereMrs. Schlesinger , two youngSchlesinger children and Mrs.Hosmer.

    Plans to stay on islandSchlesinger planned to be at the

    Amchitka Island Command post 37miles from the site of the blast ,code named Cannikin. The ex-plosion is to take place almost 6,000feet underground.

    Mansfield said the test posesdangers of killing sea life , in-creasing radiation and creatingtidal waves, as well as harmingU.S. relations with Canada andJapan. Governments of those twocountries have protested the ex-plosion .

    The basic controversy is over theAEC's site for the test. AmchitkaIsland is in the Aleutians betweenCanada and Russia and near anearthquake belt that runs fromJapan to the California coast.

    Lawyers for the environmentalgroups contended there is evidencethe AEC violated the NationalEnvironmental Policy Act of 1969by refusing to include adversecomment on the test in its en-vironmental impact statement.

    They pointed to formerly secretdocuments that showed PresidentNixon 's chief environmental ad-viser concluded almost a year agothat the test could trigger a largenatural earthquake and releaseradiation into the sea.

    The statement by Dr. Russell E.Train , chairman of the Council onEnvironmental Quality, wasreleased Wednesday at the order ofthe U.S. Court of Appeals for theDistrict of Columbia.

    Asked Thursday if Nixon hadread Train 's report , Ziegler saidthe report was one of many en-vironmental studies included in thedecision-making on the blast.

    Scientists prepare for blastShock waves to be measured

    PALMER , Alaska (AP ) -Minutes after the undergroundexplosion of a five-megaton bombon Amchitka Island, scientists herewill be checking to see if the blasthas triggered a tidal wave.

    The scientists operate thePalmer Seismological Observa-tory of the National Oceanic andAtmospheric Administration. Theobservatory , nestled in theMatanuska Valley about 40 milesnorth of Anchorage, is able topinpoint earthquakes or tidalwaves anywhere on the globe.

    Stronger than HiroshimaHere is the way the system will

    work Saturday when the bomb250 times stronger than the onethat leveled Hiroshimaisscheduled to be detonated:

    The scientists at Palmer will betied by multiple communicationssystems to Amchitka and to theAtomic Energy Commission'spress center in Anchorage.

    About one hour before the blast-now set for 5 p.m. ESTthe

    scientists will issue a tsunami, ortidal wave watch message. Thismessage will be delivered todisaster agencies, the media andother earth-monitoring stations.Observatory officials said such awatch message is standardprocedure before any nuclear test.

    Will check readingsWhen the bomb is exploded , the

    scientists will check seismo-graphic readings and tide gaugesthroughout Alaska and theAleutian Islands to tell what sort ofearthquake the blast has generatedand whether the quake hastriggered a tidal wave.

    If the explosion causes an ear-thquake measuring 7.0 on theRichter scale, Howell M. Butler ,director of the observatory said, atidal wave warning message willbe issued. He explained that themagnitude of 7.0 is consideredpotent, enough to generate such awave.

    On the Richter scale, anythingfrom the magnitude of 4.5 up is

    considered potentially destructive.The San Francisco earthquake of1906 measured 8.3.

    After issuance of a warning, thescientists will wait to see when thefirst water wavesif they occurreach a tide gauge at Adak Island.Butler said it would take at least anhour from the time of the explosionfor the waves to reach Adak.

    Butler also said, however, it wasunlikely that such an event wouldOccur. He said no tidal waves havebeen generated from the Amchitkaarea since records have been kept.

    1-57 Buckley-Rantoulsection almost finished

    According to Illinois Highway officials, the Buckley to Rantoul sectionof Interstate 57 will be opened to traffic on Nov. 20.

    The 22-mile section will close the last remaining gap on the 358-milenorth-south route that extends from Chicago to Cairo by way ofKankakee, Onarga , Paxton, Rantoul , Champaign-Urbana, Mattoon ,Effingham, Salem, Mt. Vernon, and Marion .

    The longest of the routes on the Illinois portion of the 42,500-milenationwide network of expressways, 1-57 will diminish the eight-hourdrive from Chicago to Cairo by two and one-half hours.

    The completion of 1-57, a major goal of Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie's 1971road program, is a few weeks ahead of schedule as ideal fall weatherconditions enabled construction workers to accomplish more in a shorterperiod of time, William F. Cellini, public works director, said.

    DR.. GENE MASON. Franconia CollegeRep. John C. Hirschfeld, Illinois State LegislatureJohn Lynn Ronsvalle, U of III. graduate student, Psychology

    . Susan Fox, U. of III. graduate student, Educationdiscuss

    "SHOULD STUDENTS SHARE THE POWER?''WILLIAM K. WILLIAMS - MODERATOR

    SATURDAY 11 AM ILLINI ROOiVIS A; B, GASCUR

    FALL SYMPOSIUM ON GOVERNANCE* _ with the cooperation of the George A. Miller Lecture Series

    Rent hikes banneduntil new guidelines

    A U.S. Commerce Departmentofficial in Chicago has warnedlandlords not to raise rents untilthey have received clearance fromthe Office of EconomicPreparedness (OEP).

    Gerald Marks, regional officialfor the Department of Commerce,cautioned landlords not to makerent increases until the newlyestablished federal price com-mission has issued sufficientguidelines.

    An official of the Office ofEconomic Preparedness inChampaign, Rodger Fisher, said"the present rules will continue inforce until they are changed."Rent changes, Fisher said , will beissued by the Stabilize ti%nProgram Board.

    The Champaign office of theOEP has not yet received anyguidelines from the ProgramBoard, Fisher said.

    All rents were frozen for a 90-dayperiod ending November 14 underan order issued by the President.The Cost of Living Council has saidthat during the gap between Phase

    1 and Phase 2 rents would not beallowed to be increased.

    Fisher cautioned landlords thatalthough the freeze endsNovember 14, rent increasesstarting from November 1 are inviolation of the law.

    Persons having any questions orcomplaints about violations of thefreeze can contact the ChampaignOffice of the Internal RevenueService at 352-5177.

    THE DAILY ILLINI

    "In its 100th Year of Service tothe University and Community"

    MEMBER OF THEASSOCIATED PRESS

    The Associated Press is exclusively en-tiled to the use lor republication of alllocal news printed in this newspaper.

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    Staff Editors: Gary Wold. SPORTS; KathyReinbott. CAMPUS; Chris Johnson. FEATURE;Edward Epstein, CITY; Charles Stierman.STATE; Kim Williams, NATIONAL; BarbaraRoth, SPECTRUM; Kay Mitchell, COPY.

    Managers: Rick Lockmiller, NATIONAL AD-VERTISING; Mark Tolliver. DISPLAY AD-VERTISING; Dan Normile, OFFICE; BarbaraNowak, CLASSIFIED; Gary Budd, MAILINGSUPERVISOR.

    DAILY ILLINI SUBSCRIBERS

    If you are to receive The Daily lllini by car-rier and your paper hasn't arrived by 8 a.m ,please call 333-3730 by 10 a.m. so that wemay get a paper to you.

    Office hours Monday through Friday 8 a.m.to 5 p.m. Phone 1217) 333-3730.

    Second class postage paid at Urbana, Illinois.Published daily except Sunday and Monday inthe fall and spring semesters at the Univer-sity of Illinois. Not published during summerschool, on days following holidays, nor when-the University of Illinois is not in session.The - business and editorial offices of TheDaily lllini are located in Gregory Hall, Ur-bana, Illinois, and in the basement of llliniHall. 620 E. John St., Champaign, Illinois.The public office is in the latter location.Subscription price $10 per year, $6 persemester mailed or delivered anywhere inIllinois. Outside state of Illinois (U.S. & Can-ada) $12 per year, $7 per semester. OutsideU.S. & Canada $19 per year, $11 per semester.

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    By DAVID HELLERDaily lllini Staff WriterConcerned Citizens from N.Harris St., which has become ahighly organized and dedicatedpressure group, voted unani-mously Thursday night to file acourt suit against the constructionof an additional public housing pro-j ect in their neighborhood.

    The group, which was disap-pointed when the Champaign citycouncil voted to continue the N.Harris and Fourth St. projects ,also voted to begin accepting dona-tions to finance its legal endeavors.

    $2,000 neededJim Cross, spokesman for thegroup , explained "I have already

    contacted a local lawyer and havebeen informed that $1,000-$1,500would be needed to cover initialcourt costs, barring any appeals.""All money that is collected forour cause," he continued , "will beput in a trust fund under the titleConcerned Citizens in an Urbanabank . I cannot stress enough thatthis is a fight which the entire cityand not just the northeast part ofthe city should join and support."

    Cross also said that althoughexact details of the suit have yet tobe drawn , he has receivedvolunteer offers from Universitylaw students to work on all re-search.

    Cross told his audience that Rep.John Hirschfeld, R-Champaign,has expressed his support of thegroup. He said Hirschfeld believesthe group has a legitimate basis onwhich to file a court suit.

    Robert Pope, a Champaignlawyer, addressed the 150 citizensat the meeting on the "rocky roadwhich lies ahead in your struggleagainst a stubborn city, state andfederal government."

    Harris Street group Ivotes to file lawsuit

    Editor Paul IngrassiaSports editor Debbie RetelPhoto editor Sam Lang hamAsst. editor Ed EpsteinAd manager -Dave HarrisWire editorMike RosenbaumAssistants Polly Anderson,

    Tom Carkeek, Jon Langham,Mike York, Jeff Harris,

    John Swope, Linda Peck,Rick Pope, Charla Krupo

    TODAY'S STAFF

  • Bicyclists ride to register to voteMeager crowd meets same troubles

    By ROBERT BAYERDaily lllini Staff Writer

    It was more of the same Thur-sday as a meager crowd ofbicyclists pedaled from the llliniUnion to the office of Dennis Ring,Champaign County clerk.

    Thirty-five bike riders made thetrek, but only 14 tried to register tovote. Eight were successful.

    Jack D. Brown, freshman incommerce, was registered on thebasis of his student identificationand Naval Reserve cards.

    A veteran , he said the deputyclerk accepted the Naval Reservecard as proof of financial in-dependence, and the University IDas proof of 30 days in precinct.

    He listed his permanent addressas Carr Residence Hall and said hewas told he would have to maintainsome type of residence in Cham-paign County over the summer.

    "I'll get a post office box ," he

    said.Susan Rowe, a junior in LAS,

    said she was not asked to provefinancial independence. Thedeputy clerk accepted a passportfor age, and a lease and scholar-ship for residence as sufficientproof , she added.

    Those turned away could notprove "permanent residency" tothe four deputy clerks, who refusedUniversity IDs.

    A deputy sheriff stood in the doorto the voter registration room andbarred television cameras fromentering.

    The deputy told the film crews ofChicago affiliates of CBS and NBC,plus local television stations, thathe was acting on Bing's orders.

    Bing was speaking at ParklandJunior College at the time.

    Newspaper reporters wereallowed in the registration room,but the deputy clerks questioned

    applicants out of their hearing.Since the Coalition for Voter

    Registration's (CVR) drive startedMonday, tess than 40 students havebeen accepted onto the voting listsof Champaign County .

    Bing said Wednesday that theregistration of Rita Wysocki , whotook part in the march to thecourthouse Monday, has beenplaced in the "incomplete file."

    Wysocki , a freshman inagriculture, used a food stampcardwhich is certified by thestateand a bank account card toshow residence and a Chicago'sdriver's license to prove ageMonday, when the deputy clerkaccepted her application.

    Michael Salmons , a former

    student, was rejected using thesame documentation , as wasreported Tuesday.

    5-foot longBing, asked to explain the ap-

    parent discrepancy, said he haddecided to review Wysocki's ap-plication.

    He said she had not furnishedenough proof even thoughregistered . Asked what would beenough, he said he could ask for asmuch as he wanted .

    "Then you could ask for a stringof credit cards 5-foot long?"

    "Yes, I guess I could ," he an-swered.

    Publicity responsibleWidespread publication of Bing 's

    registration procedures and

    requirements was responsible forthe poor turnout at Thursday'srally, according to Jim Clemans,chairman of CVR's legal actioncommittee.

    "Most of the students have readabout the delays and requirementsand don't want to go through thebother ," he said .

    "They failed to realize that amassive turnout would help keepon the pressure," said KeithPatten , CVR chairman.

    CVR spokesmen could give noreason why the Students for En-vironmental Concerns and thePrairie Cycle Club did not show forthe rally. Those groups wereoriginally supposed to co-sponsorthe rally .

    Student registrationbacked by Johnson

    "Personally, I think only theperson himself can determine hisvoting residency," Larry Johnson ,Champaign County state 's at-torney, said Wednesday night inreference to the controversy overstudent voter registration .

    As state's attorney, Johnson iscurrently defending Dennis Bing,Champaign County clerk, in thecase against plaintiffs Rick Popeand Mary Ellen Janik , Universitystudents who were unable tocomplete registration after theclerk's office determined they

    were not county residents. Whenasked what he thinks the outcomeof the case will be, Johnson replied ,"I wouldn 't want to call this one."But he urged students to "keep upthe voting effort and to register."

    "I have no conflict representingthe man ," Johnson said after beingasked whether defending Bingconflicted with his personal phil-osophy on voter registration. "Ihave a statutory obligation asstate's attorney to representcounty officials," Johnson added.He explained an attorney canrepresent a man whose phil-osophies are inconsistent with his.

    Speaking to 15 IndependentCollege Democrats Wednesdaynight , Johnson, who has beenmentioned as a possible Demo-cratic candidate for U.S. Repre-sentative from the 21stCongressional district , con-centrated on "how to win elec-tions."

    He said, "There is no substitutefor door-to-door personal^ votercontact ," as a means for "gettingto the voter ." Secondly, the candi-dates that are selected must have astrong desire to win and not tomerely seek publicity or to "helpthe ticket."

    Housinginvestigationsdelayed

    The necessity of conductinginvestigations into each case hasdelayed by about a week thehousing division's schedule forsending students who are living inunapproved housing to the Uni-versity discipline system.

    Lawrence Gaffney, associate di-rector of housing for administra-tive affairs, said Thursday thecases would be referred to thediscipline system at a rate of about50 a week beginning next week.

    Originally, the housing divisionplanned to refer first 750 studentswho had not replied to^notices sentthem that they were living in un-approved housing. However ,Gaffney said many of the studentshad since replied , and the restshould be disposed of within a fewweeks. He said he "couldn 't evenguess" how many students wouldstill be referred for discipline, butthat the number was "in thehundreds."

    The first 20 cases sent by thehousing division earlier this weekwere returned by the referralcommittee of the discipline systemto be investigated more thoroughlyto establish that the student wasdefinitely in violation of the hous-;ing regulations. Gaffney said theinvestigations involved tele-phoning fraternities, college of-fices and other places which wouldhave a record of a student's ad-dress to make sure the housingdivision had the correct currentaddress.

    At Chances R-Tonight-

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    Parkland voter drive setSpeakers scheduled next week

    By ARLENE MENNENGADaily lllini Staff Writer

    A voter registration drive atParkland Junior College beganThursday with Dennis Bing,Champaign County clerk, speakingto students.

    Voter Registration Week ,Monday through Thursday, willfeature more speakers and a busrunning from the Parkland StudentCenter to the Champaign CountyCourthouse. It is sponsored byParkland Students for Peace andSocial Awareness to inform andorganize students qualified to vote.

    Rep. Gerald Bradley, D-Bloomington, sponsor of a bill onvoter registration , will speak tostudents Monday, in the JeffersonAuditorium of the Thomas Jef-ferson Life Insurance Building, 202W. Hill , Champaign.

    On Tuesday Larry Johnson ,Champaign County State's At-torney , will address students atnoon in the formal lounge of theStudent Center.

    Wednesday's speaker will beMayor Charles Zipprodt of Ur-bana . His speech will be at 11 a.m.in the Formal Lounge.

    Marilee Clore, Parkland historyinstructor, will speak at 1 p.m.Thursday in the Formal Lounge.She is scheduled to summarize theweek's activities and speak on themerits of the Dyer bill , a votingregistration bill which stipulatesthat residence qualifications be

    determined by where the in-dividual intends to live for an in-definite period of time.

    A bus will run from 10 a.m. to 2p.m., Monday through Thursday,for those wishing to register.

    The main concern of the VoterRegistration Week is gettingpersons who are unquestionableresidents of the county registered.Approximately 60 per cent of thosestudents attending Parkland areconsidered permanent residentsbecause their parents live in thecounty.

    The question of permanentresidency was most frequentlyraised. Bing suggested thatstudents "bring in whatever youthink will determine permanentresidence" and that changing one'sdriver 's license and other iden-tification to a local address wouldbe helpful and indicative of per-manent residence.

    REP. BRADLEY...to speak at Parkland

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  • Marine recruting uneventf ulRvHAI PRATT Kj - J

    Contrasts with last May's sit-in

    By HAL PRATTDaily lllini Staff Writer

    The setting in the northwestlobby of the lllini Union wastypically quiet; only a few groupsof chatting students strolled pastthe Marine Corps' recruitmentbooth , most without evenacknowledging its presence.

    Last May, at this same setting,about 150 demonstrators held a sit-in to protest this same MarineCorps recruitment team 'spresence on campus.

    Major George Ostermann, aMarine recruiter who witnessedthe sit-in last May, remarkedWednesday on the quiet receptionhis team has received this week.He then began to explain what typeof man the Marines are interestedin recruiting.

    When asked about his receptionat other campuses this yearOstermann replied, "At all thecampuses we've visited this year,the reception has been eitherwelcome or indifference . We havehad no response in terms ofdemonstrations."

    "Between 30 to 40 persons haveexpressed interest in the Marines'recruitment programs here thisweek," Ostermann said. "Thisweek there has been an increase inour activity all over the state," headded in reference to therecruitment teams that works inthe northern half of Illinois .Ostermann's team of one officerand one enlisted man will be oncampus until Friday.

    Ostermann, a recruiter sinceOctober 1969, declined to give hisimpressions on the May sit-in herelast spring because he said, "Ithink the sit-in, in itself , is a deadissue, but what it brings out isn'tthough." Ostermann said he wasreferring to attacks made on theUniversity discipline system afterthe Urbana-Champaign SenateCommittee on Student Disciplinedismissed charges against those inthe sit-in. The University Board ofTrustees has requested the ad-ministration to make a study of theentire discipline system.

    Today was quiet, b u t . . .

    May 6, 1971 was different

    Last dayto drop class

    Today is the last day a studentcan drop a course without specialpermission.

    The end of the first eight weeksof the fall semester, today also isthe last day a student can take acourse off pass-fail. A student musthave already put the course on thepass-fail option and now want totake the course for a grade.

    Students should consult theircollege offices.

    Learn Now About thenext CPA Exam.

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  • The Cage' well donePortrays pr ison nightmare

    ByEV BASILLEDaily lllini Reviewer

    A brilliantly done anddramatically gripping productionof the day and nightmares of prison"existence" was given last night inthe lllini Union Studen t Activities(IUSA) presentation of "TheCage."

    "The Cage," written , producedand performed by San Quentinparolees, gave an all too realisticpicture of the world of theAmerican penal systemwheredeprivation , brutality , and sadismgo hand in hand. In the dark cornerof ju dicial reprimand repentanceis demanded through de-humanization .

    "The Cage" shows the austerityand fr igid atmosphere of theuniversal prison cagenot cellinits opening scene where a cry for

    human dignity is consideredcontempt of the "rules."

    Hatchet , a stark raving madinmate of the cage played by JackLemons, calls us the "upright ,uptight , lily white citizens" whoblindly call upon justice now,reason later as our tarnished codeof morality .

    Hatchet along with Doc andPunk, both homosexually inclinedcriminals played by Don Ross andBobby Kool respectively, begintheir ritualistic harassment ofJive, played by Gary Pettinger , ayoung student who is accused ofmurdering his 17-year-oldgirlfriend. The intimidating trioeffectively creates individualinfernos of hell not only for Jive,but also for the audience with thefascinatingly hypnotic aura ofmadness that Hatchet continually

    sparks with his fantasies. Jive isconstantly subjected tohomosexual passes, a warped andtwisted baptismal ceremony oftoilet water, and even a night-marish version of his own trial andjudgem ent.

    Jive is sentenced by Hatchet tobe condemned to darknessto gonameless and forever wear anumberwhere he will no longerbe a human being, but rather blendinto nothingness that will even-tually surround him. The frenzygrows and Jive is throttled to deathduring one of Hatchet's maniacaloutbursts. Hatchet faces theaudience and soberly washes hishands of the murder , reiterating tothe audience that he has only doneour will.

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    Blacks tellpark needs

    Representatives of Champaign'sblack communit y expresseddisappointment with past efforts ofthe city's park board to meet therecreational needs of the NorthEnd but added they have hope formore success in the future .

    At the last of the district'sforums on park and recreationalneeds, Ernest Westfield noted thedisparity among facilities invarious parts of the communityand asked why the board had notmet the North End's recreationalneeds in the past.

    Donald Bresnan , boardpresident , explained thatrecreation became the district'sresponsibility only three years ago.Vernon Barkstall commended theboard's progress in seeking todevelop a bond issue packagefeaturing a recreational center forthe North End.

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  • Sy mposium will discussstudent role in governance

    By VICKI WHITNAHDaily lllini Staff Writer

    Approximately 100 people fromout-of-state universities will attendthe national Fall Symposium onUniversity Governance in the llliniUnion today through Sunday.

    "The main focus will be onwhether students should be onboards of trustees and how farstudent participation should go inuniversity government ," saidSylvia Ronsvalle, coordinator ofthe symposium and spokeswomanfor the campus AssociatedStudents Council for UniversityReorganization (ASCUR).

    Sponsored by ASCUR , thesymposium will feature well-known speakers , studentdiscussions and workshops con-cerning student governmentreform through state legislatures.All events will be lllini rooms A, Band C.

    Anyone from a four-year publicinstitution may register for theconference. Students from as iaraway as California , Washingtonand Maine will attend, Ronsvalle

    said.Harold Hodgkinson , project

    director of the Center for Researchand Development in HigherEducation at the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley, will openthe symposium at 8 p.m. today .

    He will speak on "The Ad-vantages of Student Represen-tation ." Joanna Fley, of theUniversity of Illinois Departmentof Higher Education will respondto his remarks.

    Earl McGrath , former UnitedStates Commissioner of Educationunder Presidents Truman andEisenhower, will address par-ticipants at 1:30 p.m. Saturday.

    "Students today, perhaps moreclearly than any earliergeneration , perceive the arrestingcontrast between the democraticviews of the academic guild ondomestic and international issuesand the restricted humanrelationships they condone in thesociety of learning," McGrath ,director of the Center of HigherEducation at Temple, University,

    Philadelphia, wrote in a recentbook.

    Workshop scheduledRodericjc Groves, of the Illinois

    superintendent of public in-struction office ; Tom Morlenson,University of Minnesota ; andDennis Daley, Montana StateUniversity, will lead an evaluationworkshop at 3 p.m. Saturday.

    John Ronsvalle , graduatestudent, and Gene Mason, ofFranconia College in New Hamp-shire , will discuss "ShouldStudents Share the Power," withRep. John Hirschfeld , R-Champaign , and Susan Fox ,graduate student, at a panel at 11a.m. Saturday.

    The Committee of IllinoisGovernment will conduct alegislative workshop at 9:30 a.m.Saturday.

    The convention is financed by theGeorge A. Miller Lecture SeriesFund.

    ASCUR, which has existed in-dependently on this campus forover a year, is trying to form acampus senate consisting of 50 percent students.Celibacy resolution

    disrupts synodVATICAN CITY (AP) - An

    unexpected row on the question ofa married priesthood threw theWorld Bishops Synod into con-fusion Thursday and disrupted itsvoting schedule.

    One briefing officer said it wasthe most spirited meeting in thesynod's five weeks. Bishops both

    for and against a marriedpriesthood sharply questioned thewording of a resolution on thematter.

    Minor changesDespite 91 written suggestions

    for revising the resolution, aspecial committee came up withonly minor changes.

    As it read Thursday, theresolution said : "The priestlyordination of married men is notadmitted, not even in particularcases, unless, attentive to the goodof the universal Church , the HolyFather in his prudence would judgethat the matter should be subjectedto examination."

    One liberal synod member saidlater that the conservatives "hadtried a power play" to insuredefeat of any possibility of havingmarried priests and had come upwith an impossibly hazy resolution .

    Vote tallies released Wednesdayshowed that while the synod hadstaunchly upheld the rule thatpriests may not marry, it rejectedthe original resolution on marriedmen becoming priests.

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    The seminar is sponsored by theAmerican Association of Collegesfor Teacher Education and theDepartment of State. Each par-ticipant will be assigned to a unitwithin the State Department, andwill work with officials, read in-coming and outgoing dispatches,discuss policy, attend staffmeetings and contribute his ownviews.

    Pelczar was a Peace Corpsvolunteer working with savingsand loan cooperatives in Ecuadorfrom 1964-66. From 1969-70 he wasa visiting professor at theUniversity of Antioquia , Medellin ,Colombia.

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    Rogers getscouncil p ost

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  • Retroactive pay hikes hit by NixonReporting AP news

    WASHINGTON (AP ) President Nixon denouncedThursday an effort by the HouseBanking Committee to give a greenlight to the payment of retroactivepay hikes negotiated for unionlabor before the current wage-price freeze .

    In a statement , Nixon said anamendment adopted earlier in theday by the committee "wouldprovide for special treatment toone segment of the Americaneconomy" and would "seriouslyjeopar dize" the . administration'sentire program for counteringinflation through the post-freezemachinery of a Pay Board andPrice Commission .

    The c o m m i t t ee - a d o p t e dprovision would require paymentof all but "grossly dispropor -tionate" pay raises negotiatedbefore Aug. 15.

    Prices dropWASHINGTON , D.C. (AP)

    Wholesale prices registered theirsecond monthly decline since theprice freeze began , the govern-

    ment said Thursday. Ad-ministration officials called it thestrongest evidence yet that thefreeze is working.

    The Bureau of Labor Statistic 'sWholesale Price Index declined 0.1per cent for October following a 0.3per cent decline in September.Before that wholesale prices hadrisen every month for nine months.

    "The who' isale price figures forOctober represent the mostreassuring report on inflation thatwe have seen in a long time, andprovide encouraging evidence thatthe wage-price freeze is putting thebrakes on inflation ," TreasuryUndersecretary Charles E. Walkersaid at a news conference.

    Post askedUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP )

    Peking wants one of its citizensselected for the high U.N. postformerly held by Ralph J. Bunche ,an official source reportedThursday.

    Bunche, a winner of the NobelPeace Prize, was for 14 yearsundersecretary-general for special

    political affairsthe highest ad-ministrative post ever attained byan American. Bunche retired inJune and the post is vacant.

    The source for the informationabout Peking 's goal said theCommunist government used athird party to communicate theinformation to Secretary-GeneralU Thant.

    Red China , as one of the Big Fiveworld powers, apparently feels itshould occupy a top U.N. slotcommensurate with its in-ternational status.

    Aid slashedWASHINGTON (AP) - The

    Senate Foreign Relations Com-mittee chopped the defeatedforeign aid bill into separateeconomic and military sectionsThursday, while the House beganwork on a resolution that wouldrevive temporarily the currentprogram.

    The Senate panel , on a series ofclose votes, slashed the funds forthe aid measures to $2.3 billion ,retained an array of restrictive

    provisions opposed by the Nixonadministration and sent themeasure to the Senate which sixdays ago rejected a $2.9 billion bill41 to 27.

    Consideration of the twomeasures is expected to beginearly next week. Asked if hethought either could win approvalchairman J.W. Fulbirght , D-Ark.,told reporters "I think it'smarginal."

    Ireland fightBELFAST , Northern Ireland

    (AP )British troops fought a one-hour border gun battle with IrishRepublican Army guerrillasThursday after arresting 51suspects in massive raids onRoman Catholic strongholds inNorthern Ireland .

    The firefight across the sensitivefrontier with the Irish republicexploded as a sequel to stop-watchinvasions of Belfast' s An-dersonstown and Londonderry'sBogside districts by 1,400 soldiers,,supported by armor.

    The raiders found big caches ofarms and ammunition.

    Urbanasign lawdebated

    By CHARLES EPSTEINDaily lllini Staff Writer

    The Urbana Plan Commissiondecided to postpone further actionon a proposed sign ordinanceThursday night despite citizenswho spoke unanimously for itsnecessity.

    Plan Commission membersdecided to delay action aftermembers raised questionsregarding the ordinance's am-biguous language and subjectivecriteria.

    'Too subjective'Commission member James

    Gosset agreed that Urbana shouldhave a sign ordinance but calledthe present one "too subjective.""It will make it extremely difficultto enforce because it leaves toomuch to individual in-terpretation ."

    Another commission member,Michael Tepper , agreed calling thepresent draft "inadequate. "Tepper also raised the question asto whether the sign ordinance is anabridgement of free speech.

    (Continued on page 19)

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  • Are you a Pal?Student volunteers befriend young community residents

    By ARLENE MENNENGADaily lllini Staff Writer

    Being a friend is the idea behindC h a m p a i g n - U r b a n a 's Palprograms.

    Although the University YW-YMCA has the only program of-ficially called Pal, the VIP cluband the First United MethodistChurch of Champaign, 210 W.Church St., have similar groups.

    In all programs, the volunteersget together with children from thecommunity and try to establish aninformal , one-to-one relationship.For the senior volunteers, it offersthe chance to become involvedwith the Champaign-Urbanacommunity outside the campus.The junior pal has a chance toestablish an informal relationshipthat will allow him to have a good

    time and will provide him with newsocial and educational op-portunities.

    Children selectedThe YW-YMCA Pall program

    tries to involve the volunteer, thechild and his parents. A parentgroup in the neighborhood selectsthe children , ages 8 to 11, that itfeels could benefit most from theprogram. Currently some 250youth participate and some 50more volunteers, mostly male, areneeded;

    The senior and junior pals meetat least once a week, frequentlymore often, for activities together.An understanding with the child'sparents about the activities andinterests is recommended. The twousually decide what they want todo and create their own good

    times.Group activities are also part of

    the program. A Halloween party,get-togethers around Thanksgivingand Christmas, a February suppergathering, a week-end camp-outand a picnic are some of thechances to bring parents and palstogether.

    Pal is in its 11th year and the co-ordinator this year is Jim Burnett.The program, initiated by com-munity parents, is funded by theYW-YMCA, the Campus Chest,donations from residence halls andprivate agencies, and a benefitdance.

    Friendship programThe VIP Friendship program

    was established in 1965 to helpthose children who were havingproblems getting along in school,

    with other children or with theirparents.

    Recommended by a socialworker to the program , 80children, from second to ninthgrades , and 80 volunteerscurrently participate and theestimate for total participation thisyear is 110 to 115. Thirty to 35 morevolunteers, again mostly male, arestill needed.

    Activities between the child andthe volunteer are emphasized, andthe main objective is to be friends .

    According to Phil Tanner , headof Friendship, some group ac-tivities, such as a Christmas party ,an Easter egg hunt, a spring party ,small group field trips andswimming, are now being planned.

    Also new this year are meetingsbetween the supervisors in theprogram, volunteers, and socialworkers. This gives the volunteersa chance to discuss problems andthe progress they are making. Bytalking about the problems withthe social worker and othervolunteers they can determinewhat needs to be done.

    The Community Outreachprogram , sponsored by theMethodist Church, works withneighborhood children fromColumbia School. The children,from first to sixth grade, meet with24 high-school youth from thechurch on Saturday mornings.. Crafts , art , reading and.recreation are some of the ac-tivities this group encourages.Projects which the children canmake and take home are em-phasized. This program differssomewhat from the others in that itnot only gives the children anopportunity to relate to his seniorpal, but also encourages childrento develop relationships betweenthemselves by assigning twochildren to one pal.

    Mrs. Betty Wills, chairman ofthe program , describes theprogram as a "fellowship andsocial program" designed to helpthe child "build (his ) own self-esteem."

    Wo rkers union, not violence,needed in world Cederval

    , By LESLIE DUPREEDaily lllini Staff Writer

    "Violence just won't work in thiscountry," Frank Cedervall, long-time member of the IndustrialWorkers of the World (IWW) , saidat the Red Herring Wednesdaynight.

    Cedervall addressed hisaudience in a stated attempt togain support for the IWW. "I camehere for one purpose only, to sellIWW cards," he said .

    He cited three ways to"eradicate the conditions of thiscountrythe bullet, the ballot , andthe IWW." Cedervall blamed faultsof the economy on capitalism and"the smart lawyers in Washingtonwho run things."

    After taking a stand againstviolence, he also discounted thepower of the vote. "The Pied Piperof politics is lining up the 18-20year-olds now to elect someoneelse when the job can only be doneby the'IWW," he said.

    The IWW is in favor of one largeunion of all people who work forwages. "There are two kinds ofpeople," he said, "those who ownfor a living and those who work fora living." Cedervall maintainedthat the idea of take from the richand give to the poor in unnecessaryin this country because there isenough in this country so thateverybody can have what theyneed without taking from anybody .

    In a question and answer periodafterwards, Cedervall was askedwhy the IWW hasn't been suc-

    cessful. He answered simply that"the workers aren't smart enoughto join."

    "I would also say," he continued,"that in the next 25 years there is a

    great possibility of awakeningpeople. We must work while thepolitical climate is less severe thanin other years. Now even the lousypolice want a union," he added.

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  • YAF doubles membershipOff icers reelected

    By LYNN CAWLEYDaily lllini Staff Writer

    Young Americans for Freedom(YAF ) more than doubled itsactive membership of 15 Wed-nesday night with the signing in of18 freshmen who then moved forre-election of officers.

    The motion was amended by DonWeber, last year 's president , toretain Don Inman in the office ofpresident until the regular electionin May, but to hold elections forother offices in two weeks. "Weneed some continuation of leader-ship so the organization won't fallapart ," Weber said.

    "If you want to change the entireorganization , you ought to just goout and form your own," VirginiaRulison, current vice president ,said.

    'We always lose'Vernon Fischer, a freshman

    member of YAF since earlySeptember , made the motion forre-election on grounds that the pre-sent officers were not getting any-thing done. "We've done so manythings this year but we always lose.Something is lacking ; it's thedrive, I think. We are too willing tocompromise on everything we do."Fischer said.

    Blame for disappointing resultswas placed on the members, notthe officers, by Doug Lauffen-burger , freshman in engineering."We should direct our criticism atthe members for not supportingprojects instigated by the of-ficers," he said.

    YAF also resolved that theUnited States should withdrawfrom its seat in the United Nationsin response to the removal ofTaiwan and seating of MainlandChina.

    Tenants plan actionThe Tenants Union decided Thursday night on some specific beginningcourses of action to take on tenant education and against certain locallandlords.The Union formed groups to work on rewriting and updating theTenants Handbook that appeared in The Daily lllini last year, preparinga publicity campaign involving newspaper letters and a possible programin the South Lounge of the lllini Union, looking up in the ChampaignCounty Courthouse the various property owned by landlords which theTenants Union judges to be unsuitable, and investigating the property forbuilding code violations.The Union also decided to use the property list as a basis for a door-to-door campaign to inform residents about building codes, tenants' rightsand the purpose of the Tenants Union .The union will hold an open meeting Thursday at a location to be an-nounced.

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  • Kids look on as Sindelar,Lombardo enter county j ailBy RONALD L. KNECIIT V JBy RONALD L. KNECIIT

    Daily lllini Staff WriterThey put mommy in jail

    yesterday.In the afternoon of a bright ,

    crisp, clear autumn day, threechildren, two girls, five and nine,and a boy, eight, watched theirmother, Sharon Sindelar, and hercomrade, John Lombardo, go tojail.

    She will serve 14 days and he 60for their part in a demonstrationhere last spring that erupted inmomentary violence.

    For three bewildered kids thatwill probably seem like an infinity .For Sharon and John and theirapproximately 25 supporters whorallied at the county j ail the twoentered Thursday, it was a minorsetback in their struggles againstthe state. Their worries are verytangible and they are moderatedby the anticipation of further anti-government activity when the twoleaders of the local chapter ofYouth Against War and Fascismare freed.

    Nameless fearThe fear that will haunt three

    children for two weeks is namelessand incomprehensible to them.

    When they arrived at the jailwith their mother and John, theothers were already there with redbanners and a bullhorn. Motherstopped and squatted and gavesome last minute words of en-couragement and instruction to thethree, but no amount of talk couldpossibly have prepared them.

    The demonstrators felt visiblyawkward and held back. What doyou say at such a time? Only tworeporters were heels enough toimpose themselves on the two,asking what books they werecarrying and other suchirrelevancies.

    As the group marched andchanted an old man passing byscowled. John and Sharon spoke,saying some things they had saidoften before to people who hadheard it often before.

    Posed on stairsJohn asked if the two reporters

    wanted to accompany him andSharon inside and they did. At the

    (Continued on page 19)

    (Staff photo by Kevin Horan)SHARON SINDELAR, who entered the Champaign CountyJail Thursday to serve a 14 day sentence for battery, takesa moment for farewell before beginning the sentence.

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  • Abolish approved housing ruleThe University should take no

    disciplinary action against thosestudents currently living inunapproved housing in violation ofUniversity regulations.

    Further , the rule requiringstudents who are not seniors andnot 21 years old to live in housingapproved by the University shouldbe dropped.

    The issue is tar from simple.First, the housing division's en-forcement of its own rules hasoften been arbitrary , leadingstudents to regard housing rules asmeaningless.

    The housing division announcedlast spring that it intended to seekdisciplinary action againststudents who move out of approvedhousing without approval.

    But later that spring the housing

    division announced a cutoff date.All students who signed leasesbefore that date were not to bepunished, those who signed afterwould be.

    The result was simply anenhancement of the confusion thathad been built up over the past fewyears.

    Of more importance is the effectthat a mass dorm exodus mighthave on the local housing market,and on the poor persons in thiscommunity who are often at themercy of that market.

    It is conceivable that such anexodus, which is likely, would forcelocal rents, which are alreadyhigh, to rise further. It would alsopossibly increase the competitionfor the lower-priced local housing,and thus it might cause some poorpersons to be displaced.

    On the other hand, the evidencefor the above is inconclusive andthere is evidence to suggest itmight not happen. As a result of arecent building boom there are

    currently about 1,000 vacancies intown.

    These unexpected vacancies willhelp ease the pressure, and furtherbuilding could further help thesituation.

    Also, a mass dormitory exoduswill hopefully make the Universitymove to make the dorms moreliveable. Progress in this area hasproceeded very slowly mainlybecause the University has notbeen pressed to move.

    There are students who wouldprefer a more liveable dormitoryto a private apartment because ofa lack of transportation andbecause they do not care forcooking and housekeeping.

    There is also some evidence to

    suggest that, at least nationally,public, low cost private housing isnot the answer to the needs of thepoor. Low-cost, non-slum privatehousing is simply not as profitableas higher priced housing, and thusthe private sector tends to expandin the latter area.

    Finally, the annulling of the"dormitory rule" would be a largestep in rejecting the in locoparentis attitudes with which theUniversity has traditionally dealtwith students.

    The housing issue, again, is notsimple. There are many variables.But the best course of action is todrop disciplinary action, and theapproved housing regulation.

    Change UIcalendar

    When the Urbana-ChampaignSenate meets Monday it shouldapprove the proposal to change theacademic year calendar.

    The proposal, to become ef-fective in 1973-74, would have thefirst semester beginning in lateAugust and ending just beforeChristmas, with a break forThanksgiving.

    The second semester would startin mid-January and end on May 25,with spring vacation coming inMarch.

    This new calendar's advantagesare obvious when one looks at thecurrent calendar. Students mustmake three round trips betweentheir parents' homes and thecampus during the next threemonths. Better spaced, longervacations would satisfy everyonemore than does the currentschedule, which chops up theschool year into short, bothersomepieces.

    Students would find it easier toget summer jobs if school wasdismissed during May rather thanJune when many of the temporarypositions firms offer are alreadytaken by students from otherschools.

    Tenant p articip ation disapp ointingIt is regrettable that participation^ in the

    newly-formed tenants union has been sosparse; students as well as other membersof the community are evidently eitheruninterested in solving their housingproblems or do not understand ju st howimportant the development of a tenantsunion can be in enforcing housing rights.

    Dealing with a landlord is a businessmatter , not a social one. Tenants haverights, and whatever a landlord does for thetenant in the way of maintenance andservice is the tenant's right , and not a favorby the landlord .

    Champaign-Urbana is overrun with land-lords who take advantage of people throughhigh rents and poor service. Many com-plaints have been received by the Undergra-duate Student Association (UGSA) concern-ing such landlords as Anthony R Martin-Trigona, who plans to run for Secretary ofState on a "consumer advocate" ticket ,Gloria Dauten and the Nogle family.

    These are actual statements from localtenants :

    "...there were several plumbing problemsthat were never fixed though we notified theowner several times. The house and-groundswere not cared for at all , lights having to befixed by the tenants, and, when we movedour security money was taken for minorfaults such as paper being left in the apart-ment , though we left it in far better condi-tion than we found it."

    ...long time before he got rid of bugs,pigeons in the attic."

    "...we pay for a furnished house, but thereare hardly any furnishings." ";..the walkway of the second story isrotting away and he won't fix itmaybe hewill after someone falls through and sueshim."

    "...for three months, we cooked on twoburners and with no oven before they finallyfixed the stove. We had a bucket under thesink since June 20 and now a bucket underthe tank in the toilet for two months. We'vebegged and pleaded to get these repaired."

    "...She did not tell me that the room wasnot heated or that it gets about three inchesof water during heavy rains."

    A tenants union at the University of Michi-gan in Ann Arbor ran a successful rentstrike in that city, and proved to landlords ithas the power to operate as a bargainingagent and protector of tenant's rights.

    A strong tenants union here can do thesame things. A rent strike is a somewhatextreme measure, but this probably wouldbe unnecessary if tenants join ed the unionand collectively demanded their rights.

    Even for the tenant with no currenthousing problems, a tenants union is pro-tection aginst future violations of rights.

    And most of all , a strong tenants unioncould pressure city building inspectors intocomplying' with building ordinances' con-

    cerning building inspection and violations.This is something the cities seldom do,especially when it is a case of a large busi-ness interest , such as the Nogle family,against a student, who is considered by thecity governments to be a less-than-equalmember of society.

    During the summer , UGSA submitted acomplaint to the office of the Champaignbuilding inspector , saying the new buildingof efficiency apartments at Fourth andChalmers Streets, owned by Kermit Nogle,was in violation of floor area ordinances.The ordinance, in both the Champaign CityCode and in the code of the Building OfficialsConference of America , says the minimumfloor area in a dwelling for a single person is150 sq. ft., excluding bathrooms and closets.

    When I measured an apartment , the areawas only approximately 133.2 sq. ft. Build-ing officials, however, refused to take astand on UGSA's complaint, and said that insome cases, the code was either inaccurateor not applicable .

    Tenants unions have worked beforeh andone can work here. Whether the Universityis your landlord or you live in privately-owned housing, and whether you have hous-ing problems now or not, participate in thetenants union. Decent housing is a right , nota privilege.

    BARBARA ROTHSpectrum Editor

    Feitfer-;; I ' - . : v - ; ,v . < U

    Editorial Page(Editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of themembers of the Daily (Mini's editorial board.)

  • regard ,o the following: Letters shou.d bTJXd ^ ^.^ IST S S^S^'

    douWespaced and must be signed by hand. Signatures will be.withheld upon reques" but preference f^ 0enera ly given to s.gned letters. The Daily lllini reserves the right to reject any lette which is libelous lalacious or in bad taste and to delete portions as may be necessary for copyf itting

    Shocking displayTo the Editor :

    The most shocking display at lastSaturday's football game was not the team'svictory,.but the band's half time show. Thetheme of the show was "Man's GreatestAchievements," and the portrayal of two"achievements" were unabashedly racistand sexist.

    The first episode involved a group of"squaws" dancing in fron t of uniformedband members in military formation . Someband members pulled out guns, aimed themat the Indians and shot off smoke charges.The squaws then prostrated themselves anddisappeared. The story of the white man'sslaughter of native Americans is horrifyingin its barbarism ; the glorification andpopularization of that history by the bandwas horrifying in the flippancy of its pan-tomime.

    The second incident illustrated anotheraspect of man 's "progress." As they played"The Girl Watcher 's Song," band members(whose ranks have only recently beensexually integrated ) formed the infamousPlayboy bunny profile. Certainly the socialand psychological processes involved in theacceptance of the Playboy atti tude towardwomen qualifies as an exploit , but I denythat such acceptance even approachesprogress. I can only wonder if the women inthe band knew what they were helping torepresent and whether they compliedwithout protest.

    If campus advocates of organized athleticcompetition are correct in claiming that aschool is identified with its teams both byspectators and by the students at thatschool, the message seems clear that theUniversity of Illinois is tolerating andprompting the most despicable attitudestoward critical social issues.

    SUSAN FOX

    Illinois prioritiesTo the Editor :

    Much has been said about Gov. Richard B.Ogilvie's 1971-72 budget for the University ofIllinois. Staff and faculty salaries are ef-fectively reduced , and vital Universityfunctions will be curtailed. Many of the bestteachers and researchers, around whomrevolve the most creative activities of theUniversity, may leave. Faculty morale ispoor , and a serious erosion of academicquality is a definite possibility.

    We question the priorities that havecontributed to this state of affairs. Rep. PaulStone has noted that cost-of-living raiseswould be equivalent to the price of a fewmiles of superhighway. The acceleratingnumber of cars is becoming an en-vironmental disaster , considering thatnearly three-quarters of air pollutants comefrom private cars. Yet the Ogilvie ad-ministration will be distinguished partly byits highway programs (the latest thinlyveiled by calling it a "mass transportation"program.)

    At a time when the Army Corps ofEngineers is being attacked nationally andlocally for the adverse environmental ef-fects of its dams, the state of Illinois plans tosink tens of millions of state money intodams. The State Division of Waterwaysunder John Guillou bids fair to become amini-Corps.

    While Gov. Ogilvie chooses to ignore thereal plight of the University and therefore toimpair the extensive and undeniablebenefits that flow from it , he commits statemoney to dam projects with trumped-upbenefits and enormous environmental andpractical hazards. To the Oakley Project hewould commit $14.5 million of state money ;to the dam proposed for the Middle Fork ofthe Vermilion River more than $5 million ; tothe Lincoln dam project of the Army Corpsof Engineers he would commit $10 million ;to the Louisville dam , another $10 million,and to the Helm dam, several million.

    The state furthermore is consideringdams on the Iroquis, Kankakee and FoxRivers; on the North Fork of the Embarras;on the Little Wabash north of the presentLake Mat toon, and on the Salt Fork of theVermilion near the proposed Middle Forkdam.

    By now it is clear that Illinois' few

    remaining token wildlife habitat will besubmerged in muddy , nitrate-laden water ifpresent Springfield policy continues.in 50 to100 years, these dams will hold back silt-filled mosquito-breeding mud flats.

    What will our grandchildren think of ourpriorities, encouraging such temporarysolutions to our problems while allowing amajor university to sink into mediocrity?What will they think of the political systemthat nurtures these events? And what nichein history will they reserve for the officialswho control the state bureaucracies?

    We do not wish to minimize the very realenvironmental steps taken by the state inrecent years. We do suggest that major newrealignments in state priorities must soonbe made.

    JERALDJ; WRAYChairman

    Prairie Group, Sierra Club

    Interrupted activitiesTo the Editor :

    After arriving early last Friday night atthe Auditorium to insure getting good seats,we hastened to the first row of the balcony,feeling that this would be the best placefrom which to view the latest offering oflllini Union Student Activities (IUSA) .

    Seeing that a multitude of paper airplaneswere already either in flight or upon thestage, we were disappointed when werealized that the evening 's activities hadbegun without us. Despite the fact that twodozen members of the physics departmenthad already established themselves asunerringly accurate, two gentlemen fromthe department of graphics, backed uplogistically with two reams of paper andmore reinforcements on the way, seemed tobe running a close second to the physicsteam with their saturation bombingtechniques.

    Both of us felt that the activities werecoming along fine. There was, however, oneviolation of the rules. In an effort to be thefirst ones to hit the screen, two boys behindus tried to launch a gas-powered scalemodel of a Boeing 707.

    We were folding our" fifth airplane whenwe were both shocked and disgusted to findthat at exactly 7 p.m. some idiot hiding inthe projection booth shut off all the lightsand apparently for his own amusement(since no one else was watching) , beganshowing a motion picture of the screen.Although we attempted to continue, we wereeventually forced to give it up, and thecompetition had to be called off on accountof darkness. _

    We wish, therefore, to register our disguston behalf of all those loyal students whoturned out Friday night only to have itruined by some inconsiderate, incompetentAuditorium employee. We trust that IUSAwill take the proper precautions so that nexttime its activities will not be interrupted.

    GLENN WEISSMICHAEL BRANDWEIN

    Injustice to ChinaTo the Editors :

    While the Nixon administrationis tryingto make it perfectly clear that the UnitedStates wants a peaceful and lastingrelationship with both the government of thePeople's Republic of China and that of theRepublic of China , the state department,however, did the Chinese another injusticerecently.

    On June 17, 1971, the state departmentliterally included Tiao-Yu Tai Islands("Senkaku" in Japanese) as part of Ryukusto be reverted to Japan. The Tiao-Yu TaiIslands are a group of eight tiny, uninhibitedbut oil-rich islets northeast of Taiwan.

    For several centuries they have been usedexclusively by Chinese fisherman as anoperational base. The Province of Taiwan,including these islands, was ceded to Japanin 1895 after the first Sino-Japanese war.These territories were returned to China atthe end of World War II , according to the1943 Cairo Declaration , which stipulatedthat Taiwan be returned to China. This waslater reaffirmed by the PotsdamAgreement.

    Presently, the U.S. Senate will considerthe ratification of the Okinawa ReversionAgreement Treaty. We sincerely hope that

    the senators will adopt an impartial standwhen they encounter the issue sometime inlate October or early November.

    Tiao-Yu Tai Islands belong to China , notJapan. Unless the senators exclude Tiao-Yufrom the consideration of the treaty, it willbe hard to avoid creating the impression inthe minds of Chinese everywhere that theAmericans are deliberately sowing theseeds of conflict and that the U.S. is willingto fan the revival of Japanese militarism inthe name of containing communism .

    The extent of their feelings can beillustrated by the actions taken by theChinese people in the United States. On Jan.29 and 30, 1971, some 3,000 students par-ticipated in protest marches held in NewYork, Chicago, Washington , D.C., Seattle,San Francisco, Los Angeles and Honolulu.On April 10, 2,000 people gathered inWashington , D.C., to protest the support ofJapan's claims by the United States. Ac-cording to The New York Times "Adispute...brought thousands of Chinese andChinese-Americans into the streets inWashington and other cities this weekend...The demonstrations involved over 2,000Chinese, a figure that , taking into accountthe size of the Chinese community in thecountry , is proportionately equivalent to amillion Americans."

    The U.S. Senate has the unique op-portunity to correct a serious blunder of theexecutive branch. We appeal to yuu , con-cerned Americans, to urge your senators inseeking a truly neutral position in a way thatis not prejudicial to Chinese claims to theTiao-Yu Tai Islands.

    TYT ACTION COMMITTEE

    Prayer proposalTo the Editor :

    Under way in the United States Congressis a struggle filled with human interest andpossibly of historic importance. A full 218Representatives and 51 Senators aresponsors of a proposal which would amendthe Bill of Rights for the first time since itsratification in 1791. The object is toresurrect the custom of religious mini-services in the public schools.

    The danger is that legislators, schooladministrators and courts will have to

    decide which among various religious ob-servances will be permitted and which willnot. This will introduce that divisiveness ofreligious argument and contention whichhas been avoided by permitting no exerciseof religion in the public schools.

    What can be done? Write to CongressmanWilliam Springer (House Office Building,Washington , D.C. 20515) or call his localoffice (356-8633). Tell him you don't want thegovernment making religious decisions andthat religious indoctrination should be left tothe family and the churches.

    Ask your minister, priest or rabbi andmembers of your parish or congregation todo the same. Do it now ; the crucial vote inthe House of Representatives will comeMonday . Unless he hears from many peoplewho understand the dangers of the