Senate Sets CBWVote .Nixon: Give the Poor For Monday Fixed Annual Income WASHINGTON 1m - The Senate WASHINGTON 1M - Pr...sident Nixon held world", fvllilme I. Intligibt. .... ',mlly If four .. m In lnother Itltt, agreed late Friday to vote Monday on a proposed Friday night to scrap the pre­ w.If..... the P.... ident 1I1d. Officlll' Iller IIId comprehensive proposal to limit the test­ sent welfare system and to replace it HIs proposals would more than double theM twe extremes .... In New "'.... y IlIg, shipment and storalt! of such \etbll with fixed federal incomes. present welfare recipients of 22 •• million tnd MlulSllppi respectively. chemical and biological warfare (CB W) The fixed federal incomes for the poor and add $4 billion to present federal out­ "So great an inequality is wrong," be agents as nerve gas. are the key part of the program, which lays of $4.7 billion a year. said. " No child is 'worth' more II Olle The proposal was developed in day­ would cost $4 biUion more a year than N"IXon said his family program Is not state than another." long conferences between sponsors of the present system. a guaranteed income in the widely under­ The present system also drives fathers eight different amendments and Sen . The President also called for a 'I-bil­ stood sense because it would require to desert their families so their children Thomas J. McIntyre (D·N .H.) chairman lion start on sharing federal tax revenues able-bodied adult recipients, except can receive aid, the President said . of the Armed Services Committee's spe­ with states, for a shift of manpower pro­ mothers with children under age six, "to The Presidenl described his new plan cial research subcommittee. grams from Washington to state and accept work or training provided suitable this way: local control and for reorganization of jobs are available either locally or at Introducing the combined propo.al, "For I flmlly of four now en weHI"', the antipoverty agency to almost total some distance if transportation Is pro­ with no out,lde Income, the basic fedor­ Mcintyre said it incorporales the es ..n­ emphaSis on experimentation. vided." ti.I. of Ihe other amendments. II payment would be 51,. I yetr_ "I propo .. thlt the feelerll government Work IncentivH would Include fret Stites could add 10 th.t lmeunt .nd Earlier, he told reporters the Pent­ build I foundltiOft under the Income of d'Y·Clro cenltr. for children, I $30-1- mosl would de ... agon had made clear during the negoti- .v.ry Amerlcln flmlly with dependent month bonvs for tho.. plrtic:lpltint hi "In no case would anyone's present " aUons that it opposes the proposals. chlldr.n thlt Clnnot clre for itself - lob·trlining progrlms ond the retention level of benefits be lowered . At the "They don't approve," he said, "but wIIerever In Amerlc. that f.mlly may of the fint $60 I month of tlminp wItIt­ same time, the foundation would be one they weren 't strenuously objecting." live," NhcOft said In I broadclst to the out welflre benefll reductions. Bey. on which the family itself would build." nltiOft lbout hi. comp ...henlive domestic the firsl $60, benefits would be reducetl I The most controversial part of the to 50 cents for oach $1 elrned. A family of four , for example, could , \ package deals with open air testing and policy outline . remain eligible for aid until Its over-all acts strict standards for such tests. He traced what is expected to be The President said the total welfare income reached $3 ,920 a year under the his domestic program's emphasis for the savings to the states under his program plan. For such lests to be legal, it would coming three years . Requests for specific would be $735.8 million a year, with all "By Ihe same token , 8 family head al­ require approval by Ihe secret.ry of legislation are to start nen week in three states benefiting. .fense under guidelines provided by ready employed at low wages could get messages to Congress. He said his program "aims at ending a family assistance supplement," thf the President, as being essenlial to na· The President wants the present de­ the unfairness in a system that has be­ President said. "A family of five In lion.1 security, as well as approval by pendent children's aid program absorbed come unfair to the welfare recipient, un­ whIch a father earns ~ , OOO a year - the surgeon general II not presenting I into a new system that would subsidize fair to the taxpayer." public health hazard. which is the hard fact of life for many President Richard Nixon look a ca .. poor families regardless of whetber the The President described the present The approval by the two officials houeshold head has a job. system as a colossal failure that "breakJ families - would get family assistance for reform of the welfare syslem to the payments of $1,260 for a total Income would have to be provided to six con­ A flmily of foul' Inywhere In the nilion up homes.. .often penalizes work... American public Friday night. Nixon of $3 ,260." gressional committees, at least 30 days said h. would send to Congress nut would receiv. I minimum feelerll ply­ and robs recipients o( dignity ." A President Speaks He added that I flmlly of ..ven ',rn· " in advance of the tests, Including the week messages discussing the change. m.nl of $1,600 • yllr. Und.r p... sent Benefit levels .re now grossly unequll, Ing S3.0OO I year would hive Its Incomt names of the agents to be tested, the - AP Wirephoto r.gulatlon., I family with the hou ..hold ranging from $163 In OM .1... for I time and place of the tests and the rea­ rllsed to $4,360 under his progrlm. sons. Nixon made a sharp distinction be­ tween a guaranteed income, which he Other provisions In the combined opposes, and his family assistance plan . amendment would: The PresIdent called for a small-scale • Bar procurement of CBW delivery systems; start in 1971 on sharing revenues with hard-pressed states and cities. He wants • Blr storlge of CBW Igenls outside Congress to provide $500 million in his the Uniled Stites without prior notice fiscal 1971 budget for revenue sharing, hi the country involved; ail with the payments to probably start In Serving the University of Iowa Iowan I and the People uf Iowa City • Require the surgeon general to ap- December, 1971. prove as safe any ~ransportation of Established in 1868 10 cents a copy Associated PreiS Lealed Wire and Wtrepho:o Iowa City, Iowa 52240-Saturday, August V, 1969 This Is to build to a rate of $5 billion CBW agents to or from military bases; annually over a five-year period . • Require the secretary of defense to H. Slid th.re would be I "mlnimum notify Congress and other federal offic­ .f feeler.' rtsfrlcflent en hew tfIt .. r ials of any plans to transport CBW dollir. would be used," but th.re would agents to or from military bases ; be I provilion Ih.t I percentage be • Direct detoxification of all lethal Grad Students Present Parking Plan ch.nneled 10 loc.1 governm,nl,. caw agents before transportation; and The PresIdent said he wants the $1- • Bar storage of CBW agents outside A group of graduate students who bers have had interviews with a cross­ papers, library books, etc , would provide a more equitable system billion-a-year federal Job Iralning pro­ the unle,s the secretary sent University parking officials letters section of meter-users and with John • "The option that any student be al­ and thus would considerably reduce the grams transferred to slate and local gov­ of state reports it won't violate interna­ detailing University parking problems Dooley of Parking Lot Operations, Sher­ lowed a written appeal to the traffic level of negative feelings toward the ernments. tional law. and specifying recommendations Aug. od said. Committee members also con­ court in a manner similar to faculty and parking authorities which exists now "What 1 propose Is not a sudden dump­ 2 have as yet received no response . from sulted the University Motor Vehicle and staff memb~rs ." among large numbers of meter-users." ing of these programs on unprepared the officials, according to one of the Bicycle Regulations Manual and the local authorities but a careful, phased • "No tickets be given in any park­ Sobin said, "W. have tv.ry conflde~. Grades to Be Ready students, David Sherod, G, Birmingham. University Financial Summary of Park­ transfer, wIth benchmarks of readiness ing area where more than 50 per cent that thu. proposel. will be vl.wed and incentives (or performance," he The letters were mailed to the 14 Uni­ ing Operations for statements to aid in of the parking spaces are vacant, since lairly." For Pickup Aug. 21 support of their grievances. said . versity Parking and Security Committee the stated purpose of meters Is parking Sherod said Friday evening that the members, John Dooley , director of In addition to a ~a·month incentive Grades for the current summer ses- Th. committee found thai rev.nue control and not the collection of re­ only response to their letters came lor welfare recipIents' lob training, he sion will be available for student pick- parking lot operations, Pres.-select Wil­ from parking and lab equipment bruk· venue. " from Student Body Pres. Jim Sutton . lard L. Boyd , Faculty Senate, Student proposed a computerized job bank to up in the Registrar's office, Room 1, age fines for Ihe 1967-68 school y.. r The committee also said that "the Sherod said that Sutton 's letter "agreed match jobseekers with job vacancies, University Hall , on Aug. 21 and 22, Senate, Graduate Senate and The Daily was $77,195 - up nearly 2,100 per cenl implementation of the s e programs I lowan last week. with the committee's views" and that 150,000 new training spots for welfare from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. over the revenue of $3,567 ...celved would, first, improve parking control at Sutton would refer the information to families and new day-care centers that The letters, first action of Ihe Ad Hoc from the 1964-65 school year, the University; second, probably reduce the Graduate Student Senate Parking Grade sheets remaining after 5 p.m. Student·Faculty Committee on Univer­ would provide jobs lor so me aid reci­ r Aug. 22 will be mailed to the student's The parking and breakage lines are the cost oC that control, and, third, Committee. pients. sity Parking, expre5Sed dissatisfaction reported together in the University fi­ permanent home address as listed on with the present policy on overtime His permanent record card . nancial summary, but the breakage fine parking ticketing . revenue is "negligible," according to Those wishing to have their grades Members 01 the steering committee ~ mailed to an address other than the Sobin. of the group are Roger Chalkley, assis­ Soviet Dip/omat Ousted on Charges one given on the record card are ask­ tant professor of biochemistry; Tony According to the letter, the committee lI ed to bring a stamped self-addressed Sobin, G, Oxford, who is also chairman feels that "with the present, highly ef­ envelope to the Registrar'~ office be- of the committee; Sherod and Frank ficient level of parking meter enforce­ fore Aug. 20 . Rodden , G, San Angelo, Tex . ment, no rational person would deliber­ Of Spying; Soviets Oust 1 in Return The ad hoc committee was formed ately leave his meter expired, nor would Happy Vacation six weeks ago because of " OlD' mutual he allow it to expire." WASHINGTON (.fI - The State De­ is Milton Kovner, 39, listed as an eco­ in the United States ince 1958, except complaints of campus parking," said The committee said that "virtually all partment announced Friday the expul­ nomic counselor with the U.S. embassy ill 1963-65, a tate Department spokes­ The DI, too , will be taking a short Sherod. overtime violations are unintentional sion on spy charges of a Soviet diplomat there. man said he "was engaged in intelli­ vacation this month . The paper will "We were also dissatisfied with other and that the $1 fine for a short period long stationed at the United Nations . Kovner, who arrived on his Moscow gence acquisition activities in New suspend publication today and will re­ group efforts," Sobin added. or overtime parking is out of proportion Moscow retaliated by ousting an Amer­ assignment a couple of months ago, was York." sume Aug. 25. Since committee formation, mem- 10 the nature of the offense and to the ican embassy officer. previously in the State Department in­ Andreyev left the UnIted States on intent of the offender." Secrecy surrounded the case against telligence section. But the department July 22 after U.S. representatives The committee proposes : the expelled Russian , 44-year-old Igor said the Soviets made clear they were brought the complaint against him to L. Andreyev. State Department officials ordering him out only In retaliation, not • "A $1 iee, paid to the University, the of [ice of U.N. Secretary-Genera! U indicated that on security grounds they for any improper acl\vities. He is to Thant and to the Soviet mission at the of all students with parking privileges leave Moscow Tuesday. in University metered areas to be used would give out no more than the first U.N. July 14 , a State Department spokes­ for payment of the first 20 overtime announcement. As for Andreyev, a counsellor officer man said. The Soviets denied the (parking) violations. The American ordered out by Moscow at tbe Soviet U.N. mission who has been charges against him. • "Establishment of a few free park­ ing spaces in each University metered area for five minute maximum occu­ pation for the purposes of dropping off -Lunar Ice Cream, Too- Birmingham Man Apollo Toy Sales Booming Shoots 4, Self By LOWELL MAY last December, he said. nauts against a background of BIRMINGHAM, Ala. 1m - A man shot Wall plaques picturing the Borg said the increase in the their spacecraft circling the lunar astronauts, a toy man sales of the Revell Company's shining face of the moon. and killed four persons, wounded an­ named Callisto - a green I.. brand wid Thursday th.1 other, then shot himself to death Friday small Lunar Module kit could "mysterious alien with ad­ also be attributed to the rela­ he hid hid the pllque for only as scores of policemen surrounded a vanced mental powers " - and tively low price of the new kit. lboul th.... dlYs but thlt It suburban Birmingham home, authorities "lunar cheesecake" ice cream WIS ..lIing wen Ind he plln­ Bruce Isebrand, manager of said . - it's all part of the new space ned to order more. market generated by the recent Scott's Five and Ten in the The plaque is priced at 57 First reports from the scene, according Apollo moon landing. Ward way Plaza, said the de­ cents and is distributed by S0- to Mayor George Seibels, indicated the In toyland the impact of the mand for space oriented toys roka Sales, Inc . man had been shooting at passing mo­ moon landing has been felt 11ad increased in his store, Another in this series of Cl­ torists. most in recent days. Scott's carries an entire line amples of the new moon·inspir­ ed market can be seen next door However, a report from the sherlff's Ron I I d 80rg, luisllnl of space toys from Mattei's Man in Space series rUnning in to ScoU's - the Baskin·Rob­ office said it appeared more likely the manager of Woolworth's In bins ice cream shop. the home dead were members of the man's fam­ lowl Cily, Slid recently that price from about $2 to about $30 and including the alien Callisto. of the new lunar cheesecake ice ily and a preacher. slle. of In Apollo Lunar Mod­ cream. The dead and wounded were not identi­ ul. model kil had rocketed Other toy. in the line in­ In gentrll the lunar mlrket, Two of the estimated lola I of nine hun­ fied. nelrly 100 per cenl since the clude such specialties II a like mlrkot flds of the plst, i. dred students who Ire eligible to grid­ mon Ilndlng. He Slid thlt "spice bubble," I "tllklng Deputy Sheriff H. H. Brooks said I h e I commercill ...sponH to uate this Augusl pick up their degroes Illes of tho model. hid in­ comm.nd consol.," • "power 11, public inte ...st In I .pecl,l Friday In Room 121A SchaeHer HIli. house is located off U.S. Highway c.... Hd to lboul six I day about five miles west of Birmingham. He Iplce suit plk" and I lun.r I ..... Th. ,tud.nll art Cltherln. Borchardt, said three bodIes were found i.n the front during the first week of Aug· baH command stltion." The new lunar market mBy be A4, Bryan, Ohio, and Ron J,ckson, A4, usl. yard, two others in the back. Isebrand said that even related selling new pleasures to thE D{iploma) Day Ced.r Rlplds. In In eHort 10 .conom­ Borg said the earlier Mer­ articles like toy telescopes had public but. with references to Iz., University officials eliminaled Ihe The man held police at bay outside the increased in sales recently. green and men and green home for about 45 minutes. cury and Gemini program kits Augu.t Commencement Ind the F.b­ "didn't sell at all." The Apollo Scott's also displayed a wall cheese, it remains doubtful that ruary Comm.ncement n I x t y.ar. A news photographer at the scene said sales have been on the increase plaque featuring a painted it will help disperse some old Grads from bolh ..meslers Irt Invlled the house is about 300 yards from the ever since the moon mission Image of the three lunar astro- myths. to .ttend June Commoncement ntxt highway and the highway is not visible yur. - Photo by Llndl Boettch.r Irom the house. . , ' Ih~ 'Daily Iowan From the Hygienic Lab Director Say OPINIONS people To the Editor: His Facilities Not Hygienic in re: State of Iowa vS . Albert G. Marian, et at By TOM McELENEY the University Medical Labor· Hygienic Laboratory since the do" txt.n.lv. work with .fIi. PAGI2 SATURDAY, AUGUST " "" IOWA CITY, IOWA It has come to my attention that The lowa's first line Of defense atories Building. Originally titl. 1930s. m.I •• Th. work i. mllnly con­ Daily Iowan has reported that I have against public health hazards, ed the State Bacteriological and Th. Ilboratory conducts ctrntd wIth the polSlblllty " I'vltll"", ...... Jehn 101, A_I", 'hy .nlm.I.' btlng carrl ... of I~ '_Ite,111 A,,"IM' ...... L" a ..wn Idllo, . ""It...... Llndl ...tlcher ordered that the cash bails deposited the Stllte Hygienic Laboratory, Epidemiologicat Laboratory. it most of Its r ....rch .nd .dlMr '" ...... La_II Forto Assocl.t •• '41110' ...... To", Itl" with the Clerk of the District Court of specimen anllysi. In four ftetious dl ...... , ,nd wl~ ",,""In••• 11., ...... L.rry Ch.ndl.r ,.rt. spends much of its time de· [unctions as a service agency N,w. 'dlltr ...... I.n.. .. AII.c1.t. Unl ....lly two·story frame houses. The the ob.erv.tion of anlm. '01. '41".. • ...... K,r.n Oood Iowa in and for Johnson County in the fending itself against its own to the state. The laboratory was City I Unl ....lty Idlt., ...... Mark Rohnor housts ere located .t the dud that have b"n Inject" will \ '.Itorl., '",e Ult ...... /II. • • Mooro ....ocl.t. City Idll.r ...... • ",nn. W,I'on above case be refunded to the persons health hazards - of inadequate established by the Iowa General 1.,11 ••"., ...... 'hn D.nt •• ... ..I.'.n' Now, 141110' ...... tt•• , .n... ""n and organIzations who deposited money end of Melros. Av.nue, four viru ....nd g.rms. .,.ril 'dlto, ...... Mlk. Slul.ky .....rtlllnt Dlrtcto...... !l.oy lIun.",o,. working conditions, according Assembly in 1904 as a perman· 'h.... '.'hy HIte, ...... Ikk Grunow," Clrcul.n.n M.ntl" ...... h"'" C.nllll with the Clerk or who contributed mono to Dr. W. J. Hausler, laboratory ent part of the University Col· . blocks southeast of the Mtdl· In reference to the anima~ ey to the "Student Bail Fund ." director. lege of Medicine. It has been cal Laboratories Building. Wong said, "The limited spa No uch order has been made. The Laboratory is located in gcnerally known as the State The four houses were con· available for animals restri ' The purpo e of tbe October 15 hear· strucled at the turn of the cen­ the amount of testing that Cili new ing Is to determine the legal questlon tury and needed six months to a be done . The amount of WO!\ A GOP? of whether the Clerk, under Iowa law, year of remodeling before the could be notably !ncress« Blrry Goldwateor's effort to realign active party doing things, not relegat­ must disburse the cash balls to the de­ Hygienic Laboratory could be· with better working condltIO",~ fendants irrespective of the fact Ihat gin to use them, according to "Because of the lack of spa the Republican Party into a southern, ing itself to be the defender of the some of the funds were deposited with we tern coalition may finally succ I'd. prin ci pal virologist and Assis­ we are not able to work wi ,latus quo. the Clerk by persons and organizations tant Laboratory Director Yau highly Infeclious agents, sue A book, based On exten~ive resl'arch , other than defendants, or whether the But it mav become the faithful Wai Wong. The houses were as the psittacosis agent, whi has predicted that it i likely there Clerk, under Iowa law, must disburse acquired one at a time over a is commonly known to ea~ standard bl'a~er of the status quo if the cash bails to the persons and organ· will be u a dominant RrpubJican party five-year period dating from the parrot fever, or richettsia, whicli the realignment OCClirs . The party Izations who depoSited the funds with ~ ed in the heartland, outh and summer of 1963 to the spring of causes Q fever - I cattle . could be conservative hut still not he the Clerk. agam t a minority Demo­ 1968. feclion that can cause pneUJTYti:. a party of inaction. It could be con­ In the event. and only in the event, nia in humans," .lIe said. if cratic party based in the ortheast that it is determined that the Clerk is Of the houses, Hausler said, srrvative without being racist. It "We have very excellent equip­ lnd in the Pacific northwest." legally required to disburse the funds H.u.llr, too, •• Id, " ...... could be conservative and still not to tbe persons and organizations who ment and top diagnostic labora· agtnt, could bt .tuditd If It" The book was written hy Kevin ignore the prahl ems of the cities. Bul deposited the funds with the Clerk , will tory people working in four fire proper 'PiCI wore avall.ble.' PhillJps, special assistant 10 tty. Gen. it may be (.'on crvative and aU these determination be made as to who they traps." Another major problem great concern to both Hausle John N. Mitchell. Phillips was the things. are and the amounts they are entitled "In a recent mishap at on. voting patterns and trends analy t for to receive. of the houst5, human lubtr· and Wong is the condition 01 th We feel that while the Republicans houses' construction. Ixon during the campaign. In this event, the funds would be dis­ culosis specimens ovtrhtattd may rt'align and become the consen'a­ bursed only to those who directly de­ in a clothes closet.turned·in· Wong pointed out sever ' The book should shake liberal Re­ tive party, they would till need to be posited funds with the Clerk. For in­ cubator and were compl.ttly places wbere the construction ~I publicans to the bottom or Iheir ·hol's. active in offrJing their own solutions stance, no disbursement would be made destroyed by the sudden rise the houses was substandard. ~ in temperature. Many doctor. While it predictions are questioned, for these problrms. If they don't, to individuals who contributed to a fund , one building, there Is a vel! its research is still considered imprc­ which fund was then deposited with Ihe and possible tuberculosIs pa· steep staircase that has 10 t til re status as majority party would tients depended on the proper used to carry many glass instMf cable. Clayton Fritche)" who was Clerk ; the disbursement would be made L be short lived. to the fund 's authorized representalive. diagnosing of those specl· dlai Stevenson's pre s officer during ments up and down the ~ At the lea.~t , the Edward Brookes Only those who directly deposited mens," he said. during a normal working day the 1956 campaibrn, said while he and lelson Ruckefellers and Charles funds with the Clerk should file written Hausler said that there is al· Anothtr building ht•• It.l ~ I could question the book's eonclmions, claims with the Clerk [or refund . ways the possibility of acci­ Perc) may be left wilhout a home. cu. leadIng to the b.stmI!II Do he was still "impressed by the sys­ Harold D. Vietor, dents in any type of laboratory that hIS btcome curvtd 0'111'1 Ripon Soc.·iety might e\ en find itself tematic research and study that went Judge, environment but that the con­ the yta ... , Th. r.llon for Iht t'Ourting oblivion. ditions in these 70-year-old into .it." Eighth Judicial Di,trlct curve I, th.t the b.N"",,' - Larry Chandler Cedar Rapid., low. houses greatly increase the w.1I It i. built .gtln.t I. buQ. The important conclusion of the probability. ling und.r the con.t.nt pre .. book is that Democratic power will be There have been mishaps in­ ,urt of the ..rth out,lcIt it. centered itt the lortheasl and with volvi ng the people who work in the houses, according to Wong. Three Inadequacies are co the blacks, while 10 ing thr re t of the College Press Service mon to all of 111e four hou country. The book predicted that the "These mishaps usually In· volve infection by germs and Wong said. First, large incu Republicans would be able to lose viruses due to the crowded con· tors housing human cultur Massachusetts, and ~Jichi­ WASHING* TON (CPS)* - The* natiQn's The* Student Non-Viol* ent *Coordinating Idition of the laboratory rooms," are all converted clothes clos gan without election problems - and graduate school s have felt the Impact that are far from being ad Committee has announced that the "non­ Wong said. ately equipped , according would probably only win them in of the elimination of graduate school violent" has been dropped from its In addition to the .x.mln.· Wong. Second, all of the ba deferments ; however, estimates I a s t I tion and protection of human landslide years. name and that H. Rap Brown has been ments contain highly specializ summer that mate enrollments wou ld specimens, the Laboratory Phillips said that the Rppuhlican~ I and expensive equipment thaI drop by as much as 70 per cent were reappointed chairman of the organiza­ surrounded by steadily disint will not need to mobilize "liberal up­ unfounded. tion. in the big c:ities, aprE'aling to grating sandstone brick wal of hou ses port According to a study made by the "If the situation demands that you reo 'liberal' youth, empathizing with 1i­ Scientific Manpower Commission , the he said . received lallate vio lently you would no longer "Tht third common pr half of bera\' urbanization, gaining sub Ian· draft policy announced in February, be hindered or hampered by 'non·vio· 1968 took Its greatest toll among first· I.m," say. Wong, "Is the gen. than it Hal black supporl and courting the lent' in the organization's name ," Brown eral environment.1 cont.mi· year, the year graduate students. Second·year stu­ told newsmen. affluent young professional classes o[ dents were also significanlly affected . n.tion possibility thet Is I~ value of a suburbia." The manpower commission, a private Renamed the Student National Coord· wllys prt.tnt in the houst • ." $25 ,489 The book'~ anal is means that corporation, questioned 568 university inating Committee, the organization Of this problem. Hausler said 1968. America's poHtical parties wiIJ split departments of chemistry, physics, and will have no relation "to the concept o[ "The contamination cannot ~ stopped because dust and dir down a liberal, conservative linf. This psychology, and received responses non-violence as a solution to llie prob­ lems of oppressed people ," according to continually come from the wal Is exactly what Barry Coldwater from 356 of these representing some 10,185 graduate students. Muhammed Hunt of the Brooklyn, New wanted in 1964. The study shows that 15.9 per cent York chapter. The book c1a .~sified 1968 a~ It YE'ar of the graduate males in chemistry in With the announcement or the change l of a major po Ii ti<'iI 1 upheaval, hut per­ the fall of 1968 were eit~.er in the serv­ in name, Brown outlined plans for "a S;~di~~ Begin hap It is merely an aherration, nol ices as or last month or had already new dimension" for the organization, the beginning of a trend. But Phillips received induction notices. The figure for physics graduate students was 12.5 including a People's Medical Center for contends a trrnd has alreac1\' starl('d free medical care and a People's Sew­ per cent and for psychology 13.3 per On Computer and the Rcpublicans arE' in 'the posi­ cent, i ng Center" to build the concept of black people controlling their own pro­ tion to be the t.rend 's ht>neficiarv. I ndications are tha t the impact of the ductive forces ." The influence of this thinki~g has changes in the draft will he felt more For City Hall strongly this fall . According to the elearly impressed ixon. Nixon work­ A computerized data proce ed hard at courting theollthemers study, "One normally co-educational chemistry department (which cannot be HOUSTON* - (CPS)* - A 48-unlversity* ing system Is going to play and westerners during the 1968 rler­ identified) reported that its entire in· consortium has been formed to create role in Iowa City governmen tion. After the election wa~ over, coming class for 1969 will be female ." cooperation among universities for the according to City Manag his course of action was 110t as ('on· In March 1968, the commission, with advancement of space research. Called Frank R. Smiley. Smiley. Glen V. Eckard , ci servative as hr had stated in the ram­ the Cou ncil of Graduate School s of the the Universities Space Research Assoc· iation (uSRA ), the consortium intends clerk and finance director, an paign; but 'ixon still had to tourt United States, made a report that pre· dieted a 70 per cent drop in male grad­ to plan and operate research facilities Joseph B. Pugh Jr. , the city' this conservative "majority," al least uate school enrollments . While the fi· and education projects associated with new assistant finance direclor in his own mind, to win. gure proved overe tim ated , Mrs. Betty space science and technology. spent most of Wednesday . I Ames examining operations But the "upheavaJ" may not be of Veller. executive director of the com­ The consortium has submitted a pro­ lasting importance, rather, just a pass­ mission. said recently that "as far as the city's municip al compute posal to the Nalional Aeronautics and A. E. Loven, Ames finan ing phenomenon. For the trend to 1 can see, the ultimate prediction is Space Administration to take over the right. Only the time schedule was ofL" director, told the Iowa City re last, it must conquer many peoplc's managemen t of the Lunar Science In­ resentativcs his system She accounted for the less·than-ex· stitute in Houston, now under the di· strong party identification; bul it pected drop in enrollments by pointing handling 15 different admini could be don e. reclion of the National Academy of Sci· tralive tasks. Loven said Ih to the "unbelievable slowness of local ences. One wonders thOl'gh, that if this boards in reclassifications, the relative· computer cost was partially de-' realignment dors occur, what Ahra· Iy low draft calls last summer, the The consortium formally was born on frayed by charging for handli paper work for the Ames mum ham Lincoln and Theodore Hoosevdt large number of reclassification ap­ the day of th e successful launch of peals by draft registrants, and the fact Apollo 11 . USRA functions under the clpal hospital and for the city would have had to ~av? that, for financial reasons, no military authority of a Council of Institutions owned elect ric company. Before the likes of \Villiam Howard physical examinations were conducted composed of an official representative Smiley said a computer s~ I Taft and Harding, the COP was an during all o[ August 1968." from each member university. cia list from Iowa State Univer sity, C. C. Mosier, is to surve Iowa CIty administration dBt procc ssl n ~ needs next monlh Smiley said that Mosler woull then recommend a computer pl'Ogram Ihat would get under way sometime next year 8 I that the city would then beg! to make plans. The City Council has provid ed $20,000 In the 1970 budget to help launch the new record keepmg. SyH tem . J I 3 Endorsed Three candidates for election Sept. 8 to the Iowa City BoanI or Education were cndor Much of the State Hygienics Laboritory'. work i. carried on Friday by the Political Actio In fo ur hou ses, parts of which art pidurtd. Laboratory of· Committee of the Iowa Educa ficials complain that thest four hou ..., loc.ttd .t the d.. d tors Association. end of Melrose Avenue lust .bov. Highway 211 south, .rt Endorsed by the Political A ~ overcrowded and unsaf.. Crumbling floor. and wall. In the lion Committee were Robert & bail/ment of the building .t top make proper temperature r'g· Engel , 913 S. Summit t.; Mrl ' ulation and cleanliness difficult for the .t.ff. C.nt.r,. I.b Bruce E. Spivey, 17t3 E. Couri Clean Giene? room in another building is clutterld with equlpmtnt, mOl' of St.; and James P. Stier, 2_ which should bt stored mort car.fully, official, •• y. And, Mayfield Rd. bottom, modern t.pen,iv. anlly.i. tquipm.nt doe, lit work Also Friday, Phillip E. Clin~ , amidst. turn·ol·th.·century environment. 39, Route 3, announced he - Photo. by Linda Boettcher and would be a candidate in lhe the Stat. Hygi.nic L.boratory school board election. THI DAILY IOWAN-lew. City, IIW--s.t., Aupst " lMJ-P.,.1 Teamsters Strike Slows Pan American WASHINGTON fA'! - Thou- World Airways. Ilargest overseas air carrler,/ belieVed the negotiators still aling Its first contract with ' Wor kers Uruon' , i nc IU di ng sew- sands of foreign-bound travel- A tentative agreement hung canceled all out-bound flights had tentative agreement on the Pan American since being de­ ardesses, pledged not to cross tbe Unes , ers shifted to other airlines or in the balance as bargainers until 5 p.m. CDT, when so m e major issues, KUCIt as wages signaled bargainin.g . agent in delayed departures Friday as recessed for . six hours to rest 10000 ground employes walk- and other money matters when February, is seeking a 16 per weary negotiators tried to end and to conSider the latest pro- ' , cent I . f Nork with 1ft!. the MILL Re.taurant a strike by the Te~ters Un- posals. ed orr the job early Friday al bargaining ceased. thr annua wage Increase lor RATUl'N' I. m.lnly COlt · P A . th t" . ts f N Y k to S ee years for some 1,500 c er . Ion ag a Ins t P an Amem!an an merlCan, e na Ion S alrpor rom ew or an Meanwhile the union s a I d 1 I d T~"" I po ••lbillty eI ______..:-.______. ' ca an cargo employees, 1,- c.rrllr. of it Francisco. Inbound nights re- mllllary cargo nights for Viet· 400 stock c1erits and 100 nurses. • II, .nd will portedly operated at normal nam would be enmpte< 1, B.IIYI., I ..... 5%533, 1-. plumbln, Ibturt Yocum', S.I· down the Tift IlIIII1itft •• Month .. $1.20' v.,e Co. 100 S. Dubuque, 337-2331. DIAl'U RENTAL rvlc. bye.. ~ made round-trips to the moon. GIRLS - clun sleepln, room., car· 9-8 Proc. L.undry. 31S S. Duhuf\ue al working daYI If usual Soviet practice is fol - peted, rdrlgeralof. private en· ______'R"" fifo EacfI Celumn Inch ______PhOll. ",,18K. U'A~ trancei off street parking. Summer or f.1 . Acroo, trom Cur riOI', 430 N. MOBILE HOMIS CIIIIATER SLICKS; IWO Whll. ".11 IDEAL Gm _ "UII', portrait ~inll h••• Itli/'\ J Clinton. Resident MJr. 337·5Sc.I. Own. ------PHONE 331-4191 Flr ..tone ' ,5S·14, .'5.00 each , ~hUdren or aduill. Prndl, char o "" b... ,"", Don/t Slow Building or 337·7787. '·lJlIn 8"42' SPARTAN, .Ir condllloned. 351·11011 .f~t 5:30. ,.1 eo.1 ~ . OO p.atrl 120.00. 011 &M.O( ", curved over wllher, and dryer, . klrled. Call lip. 3Il1-0140 ..OIt C 338·1983 Arternoona. lot BOUGHT AND OLD furnltul't, .... , ,..•• on for the Soaring interest rates have I January and June, 1969, was You get APARTMENTS FOR RENT pll.nce~L dbh... el e. 0111 85f- ILECTRIC SHAVER REPAIR 21 2932 or e3601581. "U hou r letvlce. Meyer' B.rber Shop thl b... ~ not prevented the planned con-I $25,800. $04 19511 - l'd3' rRQNTn:R , carpeted, RIDE WANTID a little oUAllt skl rled Av.llable ­ IIlferent admlnis dlY tIIrou,h Friday. Loven said Ih Trult ••• , Boord 01 Studenl Publl was partially utlons, Inc.: Bob Reynoldson, A3, NATIONAL P.m Au.U n, AS; Jerry Patlen, A3; IIHOME OF THE FAT CITY JUG BANDit rging for handllr . Carol Eh rlich G; John C.ln, A2; r the Ames munl Fred L. MOrl·l,on, Collello o( Law' WIlliam C. Murra y, Deparlmenl 01 POK·O·GOLF and for the city En,lI.h; William P. Albrechl De Write ad below using one blank for tach word. plCtmon! of Economics; and Whilom BE YOUR OWN BOSS company. J. Zlm., School of Journalism. a computer spIlj I Part Tim. or Full Tima 1. 2. 3. I 4. S. 6. ,wa State Univer Be your own boss and run your 7. 8. 9. \ 10. 1l. 12. sier, Is to SU1'l'e own bu ,In eB •. NATIONAL POK­ ._- ministration dal O·GOLF announces availa ble di s­ It·lbutorshlp. In your area. Th is 13. 14. 15. I 16. 11. 18. - leds next month I• • hnla.tle opportunity (or un· ,; c limited money·mAklng potentl.I 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 1St Mosier wou~ "'"h our ,Olt TlulllnR mo chlne. end a computer W. I.el our producl can pro­ duce more money pe r location 25. 26. 21. 28. 29. , 30. would get under than the wen·known coin oper· 44-24-36 ~ .... e next year 8 .ted bowling machine. Our com· pany \\IIIL se L up your bu stneu would then be for you In a proven method or Print Name.Addr.,,-Phone No. ow: . ucoe.$. AU you do I. service a., I, de.lera. uncI! has \lfovld· the 1970 budget Publicly Owned Company NAME ...... I ...... , • • • • • • • • •• PHONE N~. .. I I I ••• t • I ••••• t ••••••••• 1 the new record II .ccepled. you will .b.re In J BABETTE I / til. pro/lll or on. of the ful• • t ADDRESS ...... CITY ... ,...... ZIP CODE ... , .•.... m. growlnl/. aggresslv. companl e. or Its Iype which has dlversl· fled Into olher Ileids. C:lllnt the nllmlter of w.a III yIIIt " ••• thin multl"" .... II\IInlllr '" wer. "y III .... No 'ranchls. F., To Figure COlt: IIIlaw. B, count eddresl _ntl /er "hone nu",III,. .. "",,,. III. lorsed , , .ur. " MinImum Inv ••tment of $4,975 1 DAy ...... , ..... Ik JIIr werd dates for elecUon BARDOT throu,b ....~ The Simple .d at left contains 10 words, 3 DAYS ...... 2tc JIIr went Iowa City Board Bab.tt. has appeared on: 25% Down' SAMPLE AD The cost For .li~ insertiON would be 10 x 23c were endorsed 5 DAYS ...... Dc JIll' went Leasing available with Ipproved DAVENPORT, ~; Cbt.. 11 101ln,. or $230 : Political Actio • STEVE ALLEN SHOW , • JOE PYNE SHOW credit. 7 DAYS ...... 2k JIIr word ch.lr. po; 0.11 de.lI. aI ISI-UD. .. .. the Iowa Educa SIc >n , • DICK CABOT SHOW • JACK EICKER SHOW AVlrag. Earning Pot,ntial 10 DAYS ...... JIIr werd Cost eqUll , the Political M and appeared in five movies Of $1,500.00 A Monthl I MONTH ...... Sk JIll' went (NUMBER .WORDS ) (rate per word) c were Rober! ~ WRITE US TODAY. Pit... In· Summit St.; MI'$ , elude name, address .nd tele­ Clip this ord.r blank and mall or bring with -yo", 'heck to: phone nllmber. Full descriptive ey, 1713 E. Coon Opens MONDAY at llteratur. wlU (ollow. es p, Stier, 2411 NATIONAL POK·O.GOlF the DAilY IOWAN. Phillip E. Clin~ 10. 50' 1~7 Utte,ly 201 •• announced he KENNEDY1S LOUNGE It. Louis, Mlnou,l 63131 Room Communicatio". Center candidate in 1m 314-423·1100 !Iccllon. 826 S. Clinton Str ..t ....1( FOIt MR . DENTON ColI.g. and Madison Streets Iowa City, Iowa 52240 '''' 4-THI DAILY IOWAN-lewa C:1ty, 1awe-Sat., AUf\IIf " ,,,, N Grid Exhibition Pits I B~,~:~~I sco~~.~~!.d Merger Discussed c

• Ro,·ders 'f~:~Cleveland 'U47 67 m~:.412 3)~ 4~~~;"Mpn!r ..1 ''U35 77 .~313 35~i~ Between NBA I ABA Colts vs Wilt Wilt The spotlight will be on the Unilas, in a 1().game pro foot· their pinup target for the day. MInnesota 68« .607 Cincinnati 59 45 .567 NEW YORK IA'I - Walter in the leagues .5 well IS to t.lked about several ponlbill· DES MOIri BOS Oakland 65 44 .59& 1 ~ AUanta 64 51 .557 y,. I . h If t I . ht I d glamor quarterbacks. headed ball exhibition program tonight Veteran Babe Parilli will SeatUe 45 64 .413 21~ ,San Francisco 61 49 .555 " Kennedy, commissioner of the .ny appliclble law." hes t at u 1m •• y mig .. miIlion in sla Mana I by Joe Namath and Johnny Kanl .. City «86 .400 2.'! xLos Angele. 59 so .641 ! Natl'onal Basketball Assocl'atl'on I to a merger" 10 about 2,OOC Boston and Sunday. share the quarterback duties Call1ornil 42 65 .393 2.'!~ Houllon 58 53 .523 4\1" Kennedy said the three own· I . . ;;======1 Eight of the w.rmup con· with Broadway Joe. yChlea.o 43 67 .39) 24 xSln Dlefo 35 76 .315 27 (NBA) said Friday that owners The NBA has teams In Atlan· dents for USE Wedne. y - 2nd ,"me not Included x - La e game nol Included of the ' NBA and the American ers who represented the NBA ta , Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Bill Ru tuts will be played tonight. E.rl Morr .. lI, the backup Frida,', hlult, FrldlY's RISUItI d year, Dr. ROl Olkllnd 5.0, New York 3.$, 1st New York 4.0, AUantl 1·1. Il In . Basketball Association (ABA) during the meetings were Ne Cincinnati, Detroit, Los An· leading lose 10 Ibs. in The two big ones match Balti· quarterback who subbed for I Wellborne, armlOr, Johnny Unitas last '"g'.~~~ ~~g~~,o 3, 2nd ,a me, N nI2f~clnn.U 12, Philadelphia $ have held discussions that "uIU· Irish of the New York Knicks, geles, Milwaukee, New York, ships it m 0 r ,', National Football I , Higher EdllC: 10 days on U • ~alOn and became the NFL ', Clevelano 7, Kanll. City 4 Houston 5 Mont ..al 2 mately might lead to a merger." Sam Schulman of and Philadelphia, Phoenix, San Die· AIsoc~ L • a g champions, 1·0, Baltimore S, Minnesota 5 ' sion, told the .gainst Oakland's West.rn CIli/ornll 7, Boston S Chicago at Los Angele., N The NBA heed said th .. t Richard Block of Phoenix . Ken· go, San Francisco and Seattle. Grapefruit WlShlngton 10. SeatUe 3 SI. Louis It Sin Fr.ncl"'~t N th~ OW"-r" of NBA 1_.1 ABA nedy said that Gardner, Ray I The ABA is represented in In. grants averal 'robabl. Pltchl" Pittsburgh at San Diego, N • ~ .- • .... r $40 to $1,000. kingpins, 0·1, at Oakl.nd, and Olkllnd Dobson (13-7) at New 'roblbll Plt.hl.. tums IMt both Thursd.y Boe of the New York Nets and diana , Kentucky, New York, Diet York. Sto!tlemyre (15-8) New York, Seaver (1:;'7) at At· Fr,'dlY with attor-y. r.p. Joseph Gear of Dallas repre· New Orleans, Dallas, Los Ange- the Super Bowl champion Kan,.. CIty , Butler (5-6) .t lint I. Jarvi, (10-7) , N ._.1flU .~ • • A computer Clevellnd, Harlin (4-1) Montre.l , Robertson (3·9) .t resenting both circuils. sented the ABA owners. les, Denver, Carolina, Pitts. choose the 2,t HOLLYWOOD, CAL IF. New York Jets, '·0, of the Mlnnelota, Chance (3-1) It BIIU· Hou ston, Dierker (13·9), N (Special) - This is the revo­ AFL against the NFL Cards, more, Pllmer (9-2), N Chicago, Hands 03·8) It Lo. An· As a result of these meetings, "As far as I'm concerned, burgh, Miami, Fla. and Oakland. applicants for lutionary grapefruit diet that 0·0, at St. Louis. In~:~Il~h~f:~~::r(4~8) It Wuh· ,e~~~ , e,~f~al~rl~)' (~1.9 ) It San Kennedy said, he and James there 'll be nothing further done Minnesota moved to Pittsburgh the 1969 legisl everyone is suddenly talking Callfornll, McGlothlin (5-111 at Francisco. McCormick (8-5) at Gardner, president of tbe ABA at this time," Kennedy said. and Houston to Carolina since Other games on tonight's card Bo.ton. Culp (15·7) PhUldelphla, Chlmplon (4·5) About $4 m about. Thousands of copies Detroit, McLain (18-6) It Chicigo. Cincinnati , Maloney (5·2J, N Iand owner of the loop's Carolina "W.'r. looking Into it. We the close of last season. • have been passed from hand include: Detroit. NFL, 0-0. at LI ..r (0.0). twlll,hl Only game. scheduled Cougars, issued a joint state. -----~------quired to me~ to hand in factories, plants Kansas City, AFL, 1-11 ; Chicago, plicants, Well and offices throughout the NFL, ().1, at Miami, AFL, ()'1 ; I each of the U.S. statement said, "Walter quested woul New York, NFL, 0-0, at Green I m~~~Kennedy, commissioner of the 5 C'lncinnati Homers, ' Because this diet rea II y Bay. NFL, ().o; Denver, AFL, I The legis la works. We have testimonials No Track Boycott National Basketball Association, , ().O, at Minnesota. NFL. H) ; At.' million for lh reporting on its success_ If and James Gardner, president you follow it exactly, you lanta, NFL, 0-0. vs. Philadel· of the American Basketball As· Bury Phl'III'es, 12-5 Ithe program should lose 10 pounds in 10 phia. NFL, 0·0, at Portland, sociation, announced today that , private colJeg days. No weight loss In the Ore.. and ew Orleans, NFL, But Hot Discontent they and their attorneys have CINCINNATI ~ - The Cin· top, 6·5, and Bench followed first (our days but you will a-a, at San Diego , AFL, ()'1. begun exploring the possibility cinnati Reds cracked five home with his 15th. supposedly poor accommoda· suddenly drop 5 pounds on On Sunday, Cleveland. NFL,I LONDON IA'I - The U.S . of cooperative arrangements be· runs and exploded for a pair Pete Rose homered in the * the 5th day. Thereafter lose tion. But Frenn said that this 0-0. takes on San Francisco, track and field team lifted Fri· tween the two bas k e t b a II of five·run innings to shafter seventh as the Reds scored five Kenn one pound a day until the di spute "was just the tip of lOth day _ Then you will lose NFL, 0-0, at Seattle in ana· day night its threat of a boy· leagues. Philadelphia, 12·5, Friday night. more runs. Chico Ruiz contri· , WILKES-B Uonal television game on CBS, DARYLE LAMONICA cott of the Britain·United States the iceberg. "The form of luch arrlng,· Lee May and Johnny Bench buted a two·run double in that 11'2 pounds every two days AFL's 1961 Player of Year took under a until you ~et down to your beginning at 6 p.m., EDT, and meet next week, but team "The trouble is that once we mentl have not betn agreed cracked consecutive homers in inning. hours Monday proper weight. Best of all , Boston, AFL, ().O, opposes Cin· Player of the Year, Ind John· members served notice of their get back to the States, we split upon but it II hoped that they the sixth inning as the Reds The Cincinnati victory In· autopsy Disl. there will be no hunger cinnati, AFL, at Bowling Green, ny U. will split the paning determination to revolutionize up and can't organize anything. will be Ihaped to conform to Ishot in front. May's 31st hom· creased its western division lead pangs. Revised and enlarged, lor his Sept. 3 Ohio. duties for the C.lts Ig.inst the Amateur Athletic Union. Here we are all together and the needs of the varioul cities er of the year put the Reds on over Atlanta to If.. game. Mary Jo Kope this diet lets you stuff your· I "The Union is rotten right united ," he said. . self with formerly "forbid· Namath, who played three Oakland. Judge Bern den" foods, such as steaks I and one half periods in the Jets' Daryle Lamonica , the AFL's through ," said one of the ath. Jesse Pardue. ~he preSIdent mon Pleas Co trimmed with fat, roast or 26-24 victory over the College Player of the Year In 1967, in· letes' spokesmen at a meeting of the AAU, de.clmed to com· \ would be abou friend chicken, gravies, ma~· AII·Stars last week, is expected jured his right wrist early in in their hotel. "And unless we men! on the views expressed Unknowns Moehling, Marti - before a he onnaise, lobster swimming In to play only the first half lhe Raider' 23·17 loss to Kan· change things, the Europeans at the meeting. butter, bacon fats, sausages scheduled on against the Cards. There will sas City a week ago. Lamonica will swamp us at the 1972 an autopsy, and scrambled eggs and still says the passing hand is okay * * * lose weight. The secret be· be plenty of excitement in that Olympics." DES MOINES 00 - The , Kopechne 's p hind Ihis "quick weight 10 s" lime because the Cards' front now and he'll start against the Tie for Milwaukee Golf Lead The noisy meeting was at· President of the United States Dinis, the N diet is simple. Fat does not four linemen have tabbed him Colts. tended by most of the 125 ath· Track and Field Federation MILWAUKEE (A'I _ Ed Moe. ecutor lookin · form fat. And the grapefruit ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT juice in this diet acts as a cat· letes who are here to compete called Friday for replacing the ling, taking a second stab death in a car alyst (the "trigger"), to start with Britain next Tuesday and Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) at making a life on the pro tour, , Kennedy , did the fat burning process. You Wednesday as part of a Euro- as the nation's representative shot a second.round 69 Friday er he would g stuff yourself on the permit· pean tour. in the International Amateur and tied Fred Marti for the half· or postpone it. ted food listed in the diet Speaker after speaker charg· Athletic Federation. way lead in the $100,000 Greater plan , and sUII lose unsightly fat and excess body fluids. A ed t~at the junior system w~ "Inept management by AAU Milwaukee Open Golf Tourn· * copy of this startling success· ~akmg the~ second class Cit· Iadministration of the Russian. ament. fuf diet can be obtained by lzens and hable to make them British Commonwealth meet Each had a 36·hole score of Poi sending $2 to second class athletes, too. with the United States in July 141, three under par for two DES MOINE Citrus Diet Plan The athletes are going to call in Los Angeles and the current trips over the wlnd·blown 7,f1l5- potentially h 5211 W. Jefferson a meeting next month in Cali· dissatisfaction of American ath· yard, par 72 North Shore Coun· , • Iowa may for L.A ., Calif. 90016 fornia of all interested parties, letes abroad give ,ample evi· try Club course. poison gas thr including for mer American dence that the national and in· Marti, a 28·year-old Texan in bert D. Ray sa Money·back guarantee_ If Olympic champions and form· ternational competition can no his sixth year on the tour and after trying the diet you have Ray said fed not lost 7 pounds in the tirst er officials to set out a plan longer be left in AAU hands," still seeking his first victory, until his office seven days, another 6 pounds of action . E. Wayne Cooley of Des Moines had a second·round 70. ment had occ in the next 7 days, and 11'2 The athletes' committee, said. One shot back of the pacepet· few days afte pounds every two days there· which includes Californa ham· The control , Cooley added, ters was rookie pro John Miller, train had trav after , simply return the diet mer thrower George Frenn and "should be put under those who who had a 74 for 142 and was plan and your $2 will be reo and North. Wes funded promptly and without 5,OOO-meter runner Gerry Lind· truly represent the interest of tied with Steve Oppermann, 73; There was FOLLOW THE }:t\GLE-"Suy lIonds where you work. We do." More gren, were drafting a letter to athletes , coaches and institu· England's Peter Townsend, the argument. Tear out this meso Ihan ..ven out of 10 of our fi~htin, men ift Vietnam hllY U.S. S•• in«'! Monday about sage as a reminder. Decide Honds Tf~ularly undt< Ih, I'ayroll Savin~ ['Ian. For Americln. "ho President Nixon. tions upon which the existence first round leader who went to a proposed for now to regain the trim attrac· wondff how thty ran htlp, buyin, Bond. and the new Fr.edoln Shires The present trouble blew up Iand the development of the 75, and South African Allen Hen· the near futUre tive figure of your youth. I... rnuln an ans .. er. at Augsburg, Germany, where sport depends." ning, 73. there were so the athletes complained about Cooley, citing support of the Most of the top names in al Railway A 'iiiit--_iiiiii._.... -.iiiiiiiliiii.. United States Track Coaches the game bypassed this event sidering the shi D I APE R Association, said the USTF, to practice for the PGA Cham· long at war with the AAU. is pionship next week. * DRY CLEANING SERVICE ready to assume responsibility Moehling has won only $166.67 (5 Do,. per WHld for international competition. this year. Miller has been a pro Job - $11 PER MONTH - less than six months. I Rel.t.d FrH pickup & delivery twJc. IOWA CITY Gary Player was the only mao PITTSBURG SPECIAL • wttk, Ev.rvthing i, fur· TYPEWRITER CO, jor name among the leaders. demonstrators FREE Pickup .nd Deliv.ry The little South African shot a ONE HOUR MARTINIZING nlshed: Dllptt", containers, I struction jobs deodorant •. 2031f.t E. Washington 337-5676 70 for 143 and was tied with U through Pittsb 10 S. Dubuque 338·4446 NEW PROCESS Typewriter five others. p Against a Tree- I down 10 conslru Phone 33M'" Repairs and Sales Arnold Palmer rallied for a than $200 millio Steve Oppermann of San Francisco is backed up against a 71 and 147. Five 01 the pr NOW SERVING YOU IN TWO tree in the middle of the 12th fairway Friday during the sec· ond round of the Greater Milwaukee Open Golf Tournament. of march lead closed Sunday n LOCATIONS Oppermann shot a round of 73 Friday to pull into a four.wa y .lion of police. tl. for third place at the half· way point of the tournament. a! the other site 2nd LOCATION - AP Wirephoto BIG /lB/I ONE HOUR CLEANERS THE MALL SHOPPING CENTER Lower Muscatine Road 351·9850 The Daily Iowan * , Cuba HAVANA IA'! SHIRTS charges that m galion were spi SPRINGFIELD, III. IA'I - MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. LAUNDERED '-0 • are "completely will close Gov . Richard B. Ogilvie Fri· (JPI - The Big 10 approved The official IIPERFECTION" da y appointed Ernie Banks, Friday the use for National Granma said th Chicago Cubs' first baseman , Football Leilgue games of the Cuban diplomat FOLDED or ON HANGERS to the Chicago Transit Author· ity Board effective Sept. 1. Univ.ersity of Minnesota'.s Me- / 25, and the refu $129 The job pays $15,000 a year. mO~~I. StadIUm by the Mmneso· Boza Hidalgo or 5 for The 38-year-old baseball star ta tlkmgS Sunda.y, Oct ..5 , 8?d more than a ne\ launched by re MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY for a vQcation period was named to a seven.year I Nor hwester.n Um v e r Sit. Y s term expiring in 1976 filling Dyche StadIum by the ChIcago 1version of lhe g AUGUST 11, 12 and 13 the post vacated by J~mes E. Bears Sunday, Oct. 12. States, the FBI Rutherford. The exception to the confer· gence Agency a Mon., August II Tues., Augult 12 Weel., Augult 13 ence rule against use of campus AMHERST, Mass. (A'! - Ron facilities by pro sports teams from Sellers, the nation's No. 1 pass I was granted by the alhletic di· FREE receiver at Florida State last I rect?rs' . contingent _upon . ba~e. year and the Boston Patriots' ball s Mmnesota Twms being m· SHORTS , INSURED . first draft choice, came 10 volved in an American League "Sc terms with the American Foot. playoff and !be Chicago Cubs Storage ball League team Friday in a reaching the World Series. SLACKS for. By JOA CHARGE for telephone call wilh Coach Clive , Rush. OAKVILLE, Onto - Hit near STORAGE or . Republica NO A team spokesman declincd the heart by a lacrosse ball. ~ I Schwengel said - ·AUGUST 10th INSURANCE TROUSERS to give the money figure for the lI·year-ol d Lloyd James of agreed with Re CHARGE for contract but said it involved a Oakville collapsed Thursday (I).[owa City) I NO MOTH period of years. night and died shortly arter· 80 had too many 'ROOFING ward in a hospital. The boy ,of the accidents Pay Only the Regular SWEATERS WESTBURY, N.Y. (JPI - Ne· was practiCing for a game at ty vehicles Ihan Cleaning Chargel the time. until vele Pride goes tonight in the "J think studie Mondiy, TuesdlY, $50,000 American T rot tin g cident record pe WednesdlY Championship at Roosevelt NEW YORK ~ - Lefthander PL. SKIRTS ,I' state) Is down 0 Speclll prices do not Raceway and if he doesn't' win Al Downing, going the distance i lems ," Schweng Ipply to stor.,. Pleats Extra it will be the biggest up et of for the first tim e this season, the year in harness racing. fired a four-hitter as the New Mezvin sky, IV OPEN 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. 6 DAYS A WEEK The 4·year·old colt will he York Yankees defeated Oakland, citation (or his AT BOTH LOCATIONS after an invitation to the ~ 100 .. 5·0, (or a solit of their ~'riday , ,highway safcty, AUGUST, 23rd 000 Roosevelt International Tro t iight doubleheader . l:a(e system fo a week from Saturday. 'rhc bid La/'ry Haney's tie· breaking dents from 1967 NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR 1 HOUR SERVICE automatically goes to the win· double keyed /I three·run 10th According to t ner of the ATC. a 1I '.·n,i\e t.est. inning (IUrI'y that gave the Ath· Public Safely, NEXT ISSUE: AUGUST 26th Nevele P"ide i~ in hp ~ hf\p e Ie ic a 5-3 victory in the twi· ' . a'e were up 28 accordin '! I~ trainer· d.ive lign rp nrr. enu ing New York's Schll'engcl sal ______... ___ ~~------. Stanley Dancer. I winning tring at five ga m\'s. er MczYinsky ha

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