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ByK. PATRICK JENSEN Robert Ray', budset propoul and the ts' complaints that~"can't live" with students expected to enroll in 197'-78 at losses to date, has taken no action and is p1a1ned of the eroeIon 01 their buying AlIt. News EdItor subcommittee', preI1mInary plans. the preliminary budiet proposal has the s~te's three universities. an arel not expected to take no action on loues an­ power for equipment and library boob. A joint HOtI8e-Senate appropriations Last week the subcommittee had sparked the expeded decisioo to post­ previously covered. In the subcommit­ ticipated for next year, according to Horn and Van Gilat said they hope to proe. subcommittee appan!nUy win not vote recommended state appropriations tee's pfOPOllll for the repnta' tm.77 Hom. , arrive at a bill that II agreeable to both today on an operatlna budget for the totaling ,173 million for regenta' The '173 mlIlion in approprlaUoIII 110 ~~tlons budget, Is a major flllldlng The subcommittee has recommended HoUle and Senate subcommittee mem­ Board of Regents u had been expected, operations in 1987-77, about '" million far recommended by the subcommittee pnonty now, according to the two chair­ ben. according to the subcommittee's two lea than the governor's represents a ,19 million Increase from pel!Olll. an approxima&e 2.6 per cent increue In recommea­ the regents' operation keeping in chairpersons. datiOlll and $24 million lees than regen­ the regents' 197$-76 budget. The regents had requested mllUon budcet, The regents' approprlatioo II the last ,3.3 line with strictureI by the Democratic part of a total educational pacltage for Rep. Wally Hom, !).Cedar Rapids, said ts'legislative reqllelts. Same legislature memben have been 10 cover enrollment Increases while the Monday night that Ho\llle leadership in a The joint subcommlttee has already pressuring the subcommittee to prevent leadership to keep state budgetary the state. Horn said Holme and Senate governor has recommended about half growth arolmd evening meeting then had urged him 10 agreed upon an avengle 8 per cent salary further budget increases through a this. at 2 per cent. members have thus far reached • c0n­ cancel the scheduled meeting of the sub­ hike for most regents' employees during tulUoo hike or by limiting enrollment. sensus on all other areas of the education Van Gilst said the subcommittee is c0n­ Hom said the HOUle leadership in­ J committee he chairs with Sen. Bus Van 1976-77. No actloo hal been taken yet 00 Regents meeting in Iowa City Thur­ package except for the reaenta' ap­ sidering a bill allowina the regents to structed him Mmday night to allo In­ propriation. Gilst, D-OskalOO88. regents' special needs or capital im­ sday said they are committed not to in­ YeStigate adding to the 2.8 per cent In­ I keep approximatly tIIOO,OOO in fuel fundi I Van Gilst said earlier Mooday he hoped provements. crease tuition after a 10 per cent hike last being the I that would nonnally revert to the 8tate crease for building revamping, and for After voted out from subc0m­ I 10 urge the subcommittee to postpone the The subcommittee postponed a vote on year and claImed that limiting I treasury to cover enrollment Increases. equipment and library books. Hom ad­ mittee, the bill will 110 to separate ap­ I vote until later this week. the budget last week lDltil today in order enrollment would not have an immediate ded the leadenlhip was concemed with propriations CClIMliu. for both houa. I to allow the regents time to discuaI the effect on the The 1UbccmnIttee, whIdI voted Jut I Both legislalors said theY hoped to budIet. . IY maIn&aInlni Wlivemty Wore ... to .., f'IIPICtIve floor for close the • .7 million gap between Gov. budget Thursday. Apparently, the 1'ejl8I- ProYidlna hIndI.to cover the ema 4,300 week to eover ~ rN1IIon In federal bid = while lnItitWiaal hive eom- CDIIIdeIaUon.

"Iowa', Making' films: ailernatlve 'it is delicious' Tuesday, February 17, 1976 Iowa City, Iowa 52242 10' By BECKY COLEMAN television series, Assignment : America, Staff Writer produced by WNET in New York. She , The film business is the "toughest corrected the penon who asked her business I have ever seen," said about it: "I did not work for WNET. I author-poet-screenwriter-dlrector Maya work for myself. " Angelou Monday as she opened a panel Someone In the audience asked Rec centers' in growing demand discussion on black portrayals in the Angelou why IIhe wanted to direct films when she wrote so well. movies. EDITOR'S NOI'E: nil II ... lint til facilities in Halsey Gym are regulation, "Human beings can do 110 many "Film business is tougher than 'the tw.pari,...... so all of the women's programa are in the thinaa," Angelou 8I1IWered. "The Idea of life' or the streets," she continued. pnbiema faeIq tile VI Beer, 'Ie ... Field House and the Rec Center." a RenaIuance man or II ....,. "Heavy doors without knobs face the per­ woman -aad all &lie ...... DIfferent programs in the same space son who wants to make commercial Everybody II bom wI&b taJG...... etesm tile VI WIbdWIIIty. PIn tn, is this lib bound to cause conflicts. Earlier nIms. "Talent II electrtdty,", .. wIIIda will ..,.. Wedaelday, II I winter, for example, head wrestling "So many people - writers , directors, said. "We doo't euctIf IIDdenIIDd bow It queItItaDaire willa wII IHempt te Coach Gary Kurdelmeier expressed con­ actors and actresses - have been broken worb, but it ctn HIlt a CIIIIIdraI Of Pille both &be need aad tile desire for cern that staph germs were being spread electrocute IIIIneIIII till by it. But nature abhors imbalance. To 111 dIIJr. DeW reereatioaalfllcllltiel. 00 the mats in the wrestling room u a make films is gratifying." She paused. Electricity doeIa't gift I dIma. result of the Martial Arts Club's "It is sweet. " She smiled broadly. "It Is "All of us have talent. We are told, "I think 400 wins in any facility 'You can dance - don't sing!' If you barefooted use of the room. Indeed, Iowa delicious. I will be an important direc­ is enough. Why don 't we bum this wrestler Brad SmIth was sidelined for tor." respect an art form, you can learn that thing down and start all over craft. two weeks with boils from a staph infec­ The panel was a feature of Image Us, a again? This would be a good time tion. program sponsored by the "People put labeII IIIICb u 'poll' ell to kick the thing off." Ostrander attended the Big Ten's an­ others either out of ignorance, which is Afro-American Studies Graduate Student -Iowa ba.ketball nual meeting of recreation and In­ Association. Other panel members were most usually malicious, or out of Coad, L.te 01800 , laziness. That way they don't have to tramural officials in ChIcago in early Sarah Webster Fabio, G, and Cheryl after IOWI won ilS 400Ih December and wu misery with plenty of deal with the physical fact of the other's game in !he Field House Fabio Morris. company. But unlike Iowa , several of the Angelou has written two \?xistence. Saturday. "I bring the same intensity to Big Ten schools are involved in, or have autobiographies: I KDow Why tbe Clled By MIKE WELLMAN just completed, expensive construction Bird Sings and Gather Togetber In My everything I do. I am totally present here - everything I know is marshaled for SlaffWrIter projects as they try to cope with the A third volwne will be publlabed Remember the uncluttered days of steadily worsening situation. fall . this seminar. I may be wrong in what I say, but I mean it. It might be that out of childhood when there wu nothing to do Michigan hu built two new recreation She also wrote the screenplay for with time except play? A yard was a . buildings at a cost of between ~ mIllion Georgia, Georgia, which was made in this intensity that I get so much work done. It might be." field, a drtveway, a court, a puddle a and ~ million. The buildings ate being 1972 . pool. paid for via a $30 student fee usessed as She mentioned that sbe · was- not She was aSked about the ~heme of death in the screenplay of eeor.... • n does not work that way on'ce you • a part of the - ~ta ' overall costs. allowed on the set during the filming, have grown up, though. You seek out an Faculty and staff members are not One of the faculty members of the schools have instituted a system of user even though she was composing the score GeorgIa. She drew an arc 00 the chalk­ board. "The issue I deal with as a writer official play zooe, a "facility" - in our allowed to use the buildings without RAe, Neil Salisbury of the geography fees similar to the me at Michigan. Thi8 for the movie, and had to corn·braid . case the Field House or the Recreation paying a user's fee. Incidentally , officials department, is heading a special is now being considered here, according Diana Sands' hair because no one else is the human condition. " She pointed 10 the arc. "That is the main plot." Bullding- and upoo finding one, see if at Michigan fmd It necessary to post suI>committee which is investigating the to Salisbury, but only as a last resort. M knew how. Sands played the title role In guards around theIe- buildings as a possibilities of building new recreation Salisbury explained, something must be the movie. ~ drew a line underneath and said, you might be able to use it. "The subplot of my work is death. LIfe These days, chances are you will not be deterrent to vandalism. Similatly, bar­ facilities. done to alleviate situations like the one at When the film premiered on Broadway bed wire surrounds the facilities at Pur· "What we're interested in doing at this the Recreation BuIlding where, despite as a benefit for the sickle cell anemia comes out of death and returns to it. able to - at least not when you would "Death is the only promise not to be like. America is evolving from a nation of due. time is finding out from students if they the fact that student fees paid for the foundation, Angelou said she received a . Ohio State is building a $10 million perceive the need, and if so, what kind of building, students are being squeezed out call from someone that identified himself denied us. In this country we have such a spectators Inlo one of participants. high rate of literacy and the most ap­ Schools and communities across the recreation center, In addition 10 the facilities they want," Salisbury said. more and more. as a member of the Black Mafia in­ nation find themselves with the same school's already vast facilities which In· "It's my personal opinion that recreation The building wu constructed in 11M19 at telligentsia. "You've written a piece of palling Ignorance - of death. We are all hoping for immortality. I write the problem - recreation facilities that are clude 66 lighted tennis courts, 12 lighted time has been significantly eroded in the a cost of $2,1 million, and paid for shit," she reported the caller as saying, Insufficient to acconunoclate everyone football fields, and eight lighted softball past year. To give a specific example, the through the assessment of a student and added that he threatened to "get" shadow of death in aU that I write. It is t7 one of the ways I can teach." wantInJ to use them. diamonda. . women's P.E. classes have moved into fee, according to Ostrander. her for it. The list goes on - Illinois hal recently the tennis courts of the Rec Center, and She said she called her son, "who Is She said she wrote because she wanted At Iowa, the Field House and "In order to construct this building the Recreation Building are beginning to comPleted a structure, Wisconsin is that was not Included in the plans when athletic department agreed to give up a six·four, 240 pounds, like a moving wall, " to say two or three _soBut she added that the work had a life of its own. It wobble under the pressure of ever-in­ remodeling its, etc ., etc. the center was built." ,10 per year student fee which had and other friends to accompany her to What about Iowa? If we need a new Salisbury should know. At the time the the premiere. became greater than the artist as other creasing usage. The pressure is coming covered students' athletic tickets;" said people added their interpretations to it. from aU sides. Intercollegiate athletiCs' building, how should It be designed? Who Recreation Building wu built. he was Ostrander. "Seven of the ,10 covered "When it was over. I received boos and couId-should pay for It? Who should be bravos, but I didn't deserve either, " she "It is important to be in love with sear­ demands have increased, due in large chairing the Building and Grounds Com­ went to the Rec Building. The athletic part to the expanding women's prOiram. allowed to use It? mittee of the Board in Control of department lost money on this, and it said . "That is when I decided to direct ch for truth and 10 be u fickle to the position as a young wife to an old Student usage has Increased, too, both in These are among questions being pur­ Athletics, and he wu involved in the was a guaranteed income they could and went to Sweden to study sued by the UI Recreational Advisory planning of the project. He is in the cinematography. husband," she said. She thought that It terms of su~rvised intramural com­ borrow on. Students now purchase was important to stick by the truth as one petition and casual, or, "drop-In" ac­ Committee (RAC), a group consisting of unique position of being able to ap­ athletic tickets on an individual buls "Somebody had to pay those dues for tivity. three faculty members, three staff mem­ preciate the overall situation from a rather than through the payment of a black people making films," she said. "It saw it, but also to abandoo It when it wu no longer tenable. In addition. sports clubs have been bers, and live students. The RAC acts in supervisory standpoint while being fed blanket student fee, which charged not is a pity that the precflilng generation an advisory capacity and is responsible up with it from a frustrated recreator's has not paid them." "I read your book and I felt that I knew proliferating in recent years. There are only tbose who atteDd athletic events, but now between 20 and 30 of them at the UI, to its administrative adviser, PlUlUp standpoint. . those who would not. . Angelou has directed two movies for you, .. began a young woman, prefacing a the exact number being undetermined Hubbard, vice president for student af­ Salisbury has IIOIIIe definite thoughts The original plan called for inter­ the public television series, Visions. The question. because there is no university definition fairs and dean of academic affairs. on what is causing the problem and bow collegiate teams to \lie the Rec Building first movie will be aired Oct. 3l. "Thank you," interrupted Maya Angelou. or regulation of sports clubs. Hubbard is responsible for taking any it might be alleviated. He pointed out that from 3:30 to 6 p.m. dally, according to She worked 00 another public So pity poor Harry Ostrander who of the RAC's recommendations to the ad­ there are basically three usen of the Ostrander. Now they get it from heads the Dept. of Recreational Services, . ministration for action, according to existing facilities: inter-coJleglate 2:30-6:30, while the women's P.E. classes and Is in charge of scheduling who will Julie Moore, a senior. in recreation athletics, stlldents (intramuraIs and are In the building during the momings \IIIe what area, of what building, at what education who is chairperson of the RAC. drop-in activity), and the physical for tennis c18llel. time. The RAC also assists and advises Ostran­ education departments. The'refore, said It is interesting that, according to "Several things affect our needs," said der in the performance of his many Salisbury, there should be three basic Ostrander, the Rec Bullding was Ostrander. "For one thing, none of the clJties. areas of ffuancing facilities. Many CualiDued DD pep etpt Parties seek control of senate , By ROGER THUROW addition to his vice presidential runnlng Bragg noted that he baa been makinla senate, and said he may terminate the SIalfWrHer mate, Steve Santacroce, 84, fonner conscious effort to put people on btl slate unless he finds several additional With four parties vying for control of president of the Asaociated Residence ticket that are not currently IeI'VIng ell petltlonen during eleventh hour Student Senate, more than 50 UI students HaIls (ARH) . the senate. barpining. are expected 10 officially announce their Outlining his pariy's platform, Stodden Bragg 8IInOWICed that btl McGarry noted that if elected, btl par­ candidacies for the 21 senate posItlons'by said the number one priority is "to get vice-president II KrtI KrieI, A2. ty would insist 00 clearing up the perletal the 5 p.m. deadline today. housing in this town. " Guldlng the c8ft1)llgn of tile lI-mem­ rule controversy. He said he would also Interest in the campus-wide election Stodden said the "Happy Days" Party ber UNlCO Party, Kutcher and btl vlee continue negotiatlOl1l with the UI ad­ lCheduled for Feb. 26 has been running would also strive to get bus routes to the presidential candidate PhIlIp Hilder, AI, ministration to protect student Intereata high recently. The leaders of the four east side sororities, end mandatory both served on the senate thia year. Kut­ and he promised to make the Recreatloo slates have attempted to recruit married student fees in favor of an optional flUl­ cher I. currently president of the ARH. Center more student-oriented. housing, fraternity and IOI'Ority ding system and re-open the parietal Mile According to Hilder, the number one McGarry hal served 011 the senate for representatives, off campuII residents, lawsuit. goal of the UNICO slate is to create "in_ . two yean, while his vice p~ldent"J /KId dormitory students to run on their The parietal rule requires freshpel'lOlll ter-aJmmunieatioo" between the nllning mite, MIke CUclno, A4, II en­ tickets. . and sophomores to live in dormitories. aenators and the students, UI oIfleiall ding his first term In the organization. Making a bid for the senate presidency Bragg said he expects 11i students to and the community. are Woody Stodden, Al, of the "Happy fUe petitions Wider his party', name this Hilder said his party would attempt to Days" Party, Kirk Braa, A2, of the afternoon. Bragg II former president of get more student housing, pUlh to Weather " Union of Student Activists, Larry Kut· the Uberal Arts Student AIIoclation and eliminate the parietal rule and try to get ~, Al, of UNICO and Dale McGarry, a current member of the CoJlepte more funding for CAMBUS. . Al, for the Studenta' Coalition for ActIon. Asaoclatlons CoImcII. The top plank 01 hla The election hopes for the Students' Partly cloudy 8I'OIIId theM parta In addition to the candidates running. party's platform iI the enforcement 01 CoaJItion for Actloo are a bit dim at the today, they say, with hIgIw arowKlll 00 party ballota, aeveraI studenta are ex­ stricter budietinI and auditing present, according to McGarry, aInce the and lows tonight neer m1d-30. RaIn In pected to run u independents. . procedurea, speeIftcalIy In the funcllnc 01 party hu only nine studenta to nil under the picture for later this week. Bill A senator for the past two yean, Stod­ the Gay Uberatlon Front and IMblan Ita banner. McGarry noted that 11 me. den said he has 12 students on hla slate In Alliance. senaton are needed to control the 21-seat She was taken fint to an apartment In a largely black neigh­ U.S. Embany ~po~ ..penon In MOICOW, asked to comment on borhood where she say. ahe wa. held In a coat closet for a Guerrillas in 1I.,.,,01a the Globe story, said: "We have seen various stories about the Daily Digest month, then sped to suburban Daly City, about 10 miles away, for By The Auciclated Prell ambassador's health, aU of which are Inaccurate and mil­ a look at another elOlet In a lIIIaU stucco house - the hideout Western-backed troops were reported Monday haraaing Cu­ leading. It would not be appropriate to comment specifically 011 wbere.she was taken by kidnapers the night of Feb. 4, 1974. ban soldiers In newly launched guerrilla action In Anaola and the ambassador's health or on that of any other individual. Hearst's judie, defense attorneys and prosecutors followed sources said a shipment of arms from Zaire WII airlifted to the "However, the ambassador feela fine, keeps a busy schedule, .4B.4 raps plan her In a caravan of cars, and the jury traveled In a large U.S. anti-Marxist forces deep in the bush. leads an active life, has not undergone medical treatment and is marshal's bus. It was a dismal drizzly morning, and the jurors Meanwhile , Britain blasted mercenary intervention In the not at the present time undergoing medical treatment." PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Portions of a plan designed to in­ appeared somber as they entered the two buildings. embattled southwest African state, and South African shares Earlier news account. out of Moscow said Westem residents sulate the Justice department from poUtical pressures were At the first stop, the small, slender Hearst was hustled feU on the stock exchange amid mounting concern over l8Iume the Soviets are directing a microwave bugging device opposed by a high-ranking department official at the American through a crush of camera crews and reporters. A group of burly gains by Communist ..upplied troops in Angola. toward a section of the embauy'. three top floors where Bar AIIociation convention Monday. marshals elbowed a path for her as Hearst's matron, Marabal Two planes from Kinshasa, Zaire, loaded with arms, defied . cll8llfied work is conducted. Deputy Atty. Gen. Harold Tyler represented the department Janey Jiminez, held her arms around the newspaper heiress. patrolling MIG17 fighters to bolster between 15,000 and 20.000 The mystery over the reported microwave radiation beaming on the ABA's 340-member policy-making House of Delegates Hearst appeared disconcerted by the mob of reporters and National Union - UNITA - troops deep In eastern Angola's and its possible effect on the health of embassy staH member. during debate on the proposal. curiosity seekers gathered in the street outside the apartment bush country, UNITA sources said in Lusaka, Zambia. and other persons within the embauy continues. In a memorandum and an interview beforehand, he said the house. The informants said the latest arms consignment included A State department medical technician Is in Moscow, appar­ department objects to proposed record-keepinll requirements Reporters were not allowed inside during the visit, and at­ antitank weapons capable of piercing the armor of Soviet T34 ently to check blood samples of embassy staffers to determine if and a provision for appointment of special· prosecutors by a • tempts !O interview members of the .prosecution. f.~ their !lc­ and T54 tanks. the radiation level hu created hazards. three-judie court. ,. - ~ count were unsuccessful. Johnson, however, later reported on UNlTA leader Jonas Savlmbl,ln a statement recorded in east­ But no one in authority would say whether any illness related The recommendation, drawn up by a special committee of the the trip at a news conference. ern Angola and flown to Lusaka, said his men have already to the radiation had been dlseovered . "No comment" responses ABA in the wake of the Waterllate scandal., caUs for leKislation begun to nip at the flanks of Cuban troops assisting the Soviet­ were given to reporters that poled such questions. requiring detailed lollS of aU con~acts with the department by Zip in flour poe~et backed Popular Movement - MPLA. officials of the White House or other executive allencies. "We are to continue our struggle because we think that we "We think it would result in a lot of silly memos and we don't WASHINGTON (AP) - Higher postal rates are inevitable to Testfl over testieles overcome increased costs and lagging revenues, the Ford ad­ cannot accept a minority regime imposed on our people by think it would necessarily deter the relatively few people who Cuban troops and Russian tanks," Savlmbi said. "So long as might want to make some kind of approach," Tyler told a re­ ministration said Monday In opposing additional federal sub­ NEW YORK (AP) - While parents are stili recovering from sidies for the U.S. Postal Service. injustice continues, we will continue the struggle until our porter. people have a democratic government." the cost of Christmas 1975, toymakers are looking ahead to the The ABA committee opposed havinll a permanent special Budget Director James T. Lynn told the Senate Post Office profits of Christmas 1976. And consumers will find lOme Committee that pending leKislation to provide additional sub­ About 200 British mercenaries are fighting against the MPLA prosecutor. But it recommended that temporary special pros­ In Angola. Britain's deputy foreign secretary, David Ennals, potentially controversial items on the market. ecutors be appointed either by the attorney general or by a panel sidies "provides neither an answer to the underlying problem of Among the toys on display as the manufacturers started rising costs nor any incentive to increase efficiency." said in his lIovernment's strongest condemnation of the mer­ of three retired federal appeals court judges, to be appointed by cenary issue so far: showing their wares to buyers on Monday were so-called He also called it unfair to taxpayers and said it obscures the "anatomically correct" baby boy doUs. Two major manufac­ the Chief Justice for a two-year term. "It's time this dangerous nonsense stopped .. , The presence of true costs of postal operations. turers, Ideal and Mattei, have included dolls with genitalia in "Without a much stronger showing that the public at large those who sell their killing power for money is more likely to their 1976 offerings. prolong the conflict than to end it." Pattfl Hearst distraught derives benefits approaching those that Inure directly to mail Don't the companies expect criticism? "Yes, but we think the users," said Lyn, "we can see no justification for further shift­ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A distraught Patricia Hearst, tak­ time is right," said a spokesperson for Ideal, which is showing a ing the burden of postal .!Ieficits to the general taxpayer." Bugged about mi~rowave en with her jurors back to the scenes of her captivit~-;.oobed and "drink and wet" doU named "Joey Stivic" after Archie Lynn said time and some sacrifices may be required for 'nec­ nearly fainted Monday as she viewed -It ·clo.et once used as her Bunker', lIfanelson. essary cost cutting and added that "ce-:talnly, some further " MOSCOW (AP) - The American Embassy on Monday termed A spokesman for Mattei said the company tried to import such torture chamber, her lawyer ~. ~' "inaccurllte and misleading" a published report that U.S. "At one point, I did in fact have to hold her up," attorney Increases In postal rates seem unavoi~able." a doU several years ago, but ran into protests. Since then. the But he said that "compared to mail rates in most other Ambassador Walter Stoessel has a mysterious blood ailment spokesperson said, the climate of opinion has changed. Besides, Albert Johnson told reporters after the tour, conducted during a countries, our postal system is still a bargain." He lIave no possibly caused "'or aggravated by high level microwaves rainy holiday recess of her trial. "I thought s!!e was going to he added, "we're not calling attention to a particular feature. beamed at the embassy ' b~ the Soviets. faint It was seeing the closet that did it.'; specific estimate of future increases. The first elass letter rate It's a doll." recently went to 13 cents. It said Stoessel has gone cross-country skiing and played He described her as "quite shaken" by the experience. Real-liCe figures are again starring in the toy lines and one of To put the Postal Service on a sounder financial footing, Lynn paddle tennis in recent days. ' .. the most unusual is J . J. Armes, a Oamboyant Texas private The 21-year-old defendant, on trial for bank robbery, was said, some hard questions are going to have to be answered. The Boston Globe on Monday quoted sources as saying Stoes­ rushed through the rain-!licked streets of San Francisco at detective who lost both hands in a dynamite accident when he "Would the public prefer to pay increased rates for the same sel's aUeged ailment resembles leukemia and was a major fac­ was a boy. breakneck speed, driven in a marshal's car under 'heavy se­ or better service, or would they settle for less service at tor leading to an American protest to the Kremlin over micro­ curity. Ideal is offering a J. J. Annes doll - seven inches high , relatively lower rates?" he asked. wave transmissions. complete with an assortment of mechanical hands. . .

"amER THAN EVERI" - K' •••'.off .N . Y. Tim .. ,Plaza Centre p'lan before council HUROK presents aMual1y ; Westinghouse Corp.'s the city and Old Capitol that By MARK MlTl'ELSTADT local business group that owns Capitol Associates, wouid be Associates. loans to partnerships such as Mil_ Plaza Centre Associates at interest rate on the remaining eventually were accepted by l" '.CEIS, s.lIS, Ita. StaffWrHer 85 per cent of Olq CapiwJ transferr..ed to Plaza_ Centre The trust contract with Iowa Sf.,..' Associates 0- and Richard F: Associates, which woUld then State Sank; - hOWever;' - .js.. interest rates of more than 9 per $500,000 is 14 percent annually. both parties. The provisions 8pm A complex plan for ownership -cent. Today's Interest rates on Meadow Link "does all things include making Plaza Centre and financing of the first Hansen and John H. LInd. convey the title to Iowa State negotiafed by Meadow Link, February 24th Hansen and LInd are with the Bank and Trust Co. to act as a I~., which owns the remaining such loans are mIlCh higher, she necessary to complete building Associates liable for building to be constructed Wlder said. at (the) written direction of construction of the building with 1=1 Hancher Auditorium Iowa City's downtown urban local architecture firm Hansen, trusteeship. Iowa State Bank, 15 per cent of Old Capitol Lind and Meyer, the designer of for a fee, mortgages the Plaza AsSOCiates and acts as a The 9-per cent Iirnltation does (Plaza Centre Associates) ... Old Capitol Associates, insuring renewal program, Plaza Centre not apply, to corporations, according to the proposed that the deed to the property One, is to be considered for Plaza Centre One, and Centre One property, pays out fund-obtaining agent for Plaza scheduled to occupy at least the lOOney for construction as Centre Associates. It is Hieronymus said, and thus arrangement. would not be issued until a preliminary approval tonight Meadow Link can afford the Hayek said Monday his certificate of completion of by the Iowa City Council. top three floors of the building. directed by Plaza Centre necessary that Meadow LInk Associates and then conveys act as a separate agent to obtain Interest rate on loans to finance "major concern" In the building construction was WILSON'S The plan, originally not on Plaza Centre One. The interest agreement " is that nothing approved by the city and tonight'S council agenda, will be Title to the land, already title to the land or holds the title fmancing, according to Old purchased for $189.375 by Old as directed by the Plaza Centre Capitol Executive Director on the New York Life Insurance happens that would dilute the requiring that the real estate DOWNTOWN brought up at the request of Old Co.'s share of the loan, around control that the city has" in contract be made public record. Capitol Associates, the firm Wilfreda Hieronymus, because • • Iowa's usury laws prohibit $2.06 million, is 9.75 per cent assurances that the Piaza Hayek said these ATHLETIC SHOE contracted by the city for the Centre One is built. Hayek amendments satisfied his renewal work. Old Capitol Warm weather credited proposed five amendments to "concerns about the dilution of CLEARANCE SALE representatives said approval the real estate contract between liability issue." of the plan would help the firm Bank site discussion to lII'ake way for get a definite conunitment on ·to 'queer' ·altitude winds By MARK MI'M'ELSTADT proposed for construction just new 1976 lIIod.l. Plaza Centre One financing . south of the UI Pentacrest. The Old Capitol has recie,ved AlIt. News EdItor WASHINGTON (AP) - Queer things are happening with high The sale of a city parking lot air rights would allow for the MAJOI IIANDS tentative approval of a $2.56 city's construction of a million mortgage loan from altitude winds. While the National Weather Service isn 't sure at the southwest comer of Clin­ why, it thinks this may have something to do with this winter's ton and Burlington streets, as a two-tiered municipal parking New York Life Insurance Co. lot over the shopping mall. and Westinghouse Corp. for unusual weather. . part of the downtown urban Buy I pizza­ construction of Plaza Centre The weather service says preliminary Indications are that the renewal program, is scheduled The air rights would not be SUEDE LEATHER One. City Council approval of current season is breaking a paUem of generally mild winters for discussion In a 7: 30 p.m. available to the city until next the United States enjoyed for (our years. the proposed ownership public hearing today at the year, however, so the city has BASKETBALL "We had a pattern of warming and stayed with it when we put meeting of the l~ City Coun­ I structure and fmancing plan requested Old Capitol to put up get free out a forecast (or this winter," says Dr. Donald Gilman, chief of cil . No council action on the sale SHOES would allow Old Capitol to get a $.WI ,000 deposit before taking ORDER 2 PIZZAS OF EQUAL VALUE, AND concrete approval of the the weather service's Long Range Prediction Group. is scheduled tonight. . "And, frankly, it's not working too well." The parking lot is to be sold to ~ion of ~ parking lot WEUGIVE YOU THE SECOND ONE FREE. mortgage loan "In about 30 and sOme SUlTOW1ding proper­ Gilman said the 11 winters before 1971-72 were not as warm as Old Capitol AssociateS, the firm JUST PRESENT THIS COUPON. days," according to Don ty. The depOsit would be retur­ the ones that foUowed and in those 11 winters it was colder than contracted for the city's urban 211 lSI Ave., __ Offer good on any Scatena, an Old Capitol normal in the East. ned once the air rights become representative. renewal program, as the site for Coralville ~ Tues. or Wed. bel- "My guess is that we'll end up this winter with it warmer than available. 1921 Keokuk, Iowa ween now and Feb. Plaza Centre One is to be a a new drive-In office for Iowa I!m normal in the West and cooler in the East," he said Monday in an State Bank and Trust Co. and a The lot to be purchased by Oid City :Out 18, 1916. reg. 19.95 SALE 1~. 99 flve-story retail.«fice building interview. Not valle! on "-II located at the comer of ColleKe new building for Perpetual Capitol includes the parking lot, deliveries Gilman said the warm December and cold January this time Savings and Loan Association, an adjoining alley and a Men's & and Dubuque streets, now were so different that it's hard to put together a total picture of Our people make it bett\'!' SMOOTH surrounded by a colorful both to be constructed by Old me-block section of the Capitol Ladles the current season to see if the country is returning to the colder Capitol. Street right-of-way west of the construction fence. Total cost of pattern of the 1960s. LEATHER the project is estimated at about Under the Old Capitol con­ lot. The meteorologist said patterns of high altitude air circu­ tract, the firm would take title $3.3 million by Old Capitol buildingA resolution plans . approvingfor the Iowathe ,.______, TENNIS lation, which brings in weather, "are usually quite consistent for to the lot in exchange for air representatives. similar winters." Patterns for the 1960s were similar, as were rights above a two-block State facility is up for Plaza Centre Associates, the ones for the warmer winters of the early '70s. Bank also which would eventually own covered shopping mall, council consideration tonight. Plaza Centre One, has "'50,000 In order to handle the first two lOOnths of construction, Scatena told the council Monday. He Dutch Way I, . reg. 23,95 SALE 15.99 said this would carry the coostruction COlts WltiJ the $2.56 Laundromat & Dry Cleaners Clleck oat tbeae , JIIIIIy million mortgage loan was 351-9409 vtber aboe barpJaI: definitely convnltted. S2Washers 21Dry,rs Convene .kldgrip and Courl.lar .. It is the desire of Plaza c.anViI tennis shoes-men's " Centre AasocIates to commence Always Air women" SALE a" construction of Its bulldlnl Attended reg.12.95 " immediately In order to take Conditioned full advantage of a favorable ADIDAS OLYMPIA OOilding season, meet the Soft Carpeted Water Free Parking occupancy requirements of the reg. 2B.95 SALE I." OOilding'. tenants and obtain the benefits of current DIDAS GAZELLE IE construction costs," Old Capitol reg. 28.50 SALE I." IBid Monday in a letter to Paul Moil-Sat 7 AM-.10 PM Alexander, the city's urban ~un8AM-9 PM 11is ta man 2IaSS renewal coordinator. "We \s 1rte \IAlen ~ ADIDAS VIENNA therefore request that the ' ~W're~ reg.019.50 SAU II" conveyance of title to this 1216 1/4W. 5th St Coralville property take place at the tis week. earliest poIIIlble date." Here's an oHer 100 good 10 HYDE IUCISIIN I· pass up. You buy a ,&-ounce Under the urban renewal T_II Shoes-Men',,, Women" f ' l. contract, tltle to Plaza 49< Pepsi al Henry's and you ' B-210 the can lake home a co\ortul car­ Halchback reg.21.50 SALE 14" Centre One site cannot be loon character glass. This transferred to Old Capitol Wltil week's character Is just one the firm presentl deflnJte 01 -oa' whole series you can Tlw Dalsun B-210 is (' EPA dynllll1onll!lnr HUllcird. of 'AilS evidence of financing. City Atty. collect, Ihe lup gllS -SHI'I!r. Allain. I!slilllultl. Manual on SALE It Low PrIctI John Hayek told the council that Come into Henry" today. In EPA losls of 1976 Iransmission. Acillul Monday'. loan docwnentation You'lI come fNRf with a lIIode/s . lIuvorilgcd II MPC; 111111' bl: 1Il0rt: or by Old Capitol dldnot meet that smile. whopping 41 MPe; requirement. less. dop;:nding on Iho • ~ 4,1 011 Iho highwuy. (thl! The more ~lex problem condition of your c:ur with Piau Centre One, besl of all tars Il!slcd) . and how you drivu il.) bowever, II the fJn'ancinc and 29 in Ih e cily.' Good SELECTION of ownership arranaement Three roomy modt!ls 10 SIZES IN ALL STYLES propoeed by Old CapItol, which choose from . All come the City CotIIclI will be with l1iHh siandards. c:alderlng tonIiht. And a low Dalsun prite. JOllIILSan By that arrqernent, the ' DOW PIau Centre A.uocI.1eI Heory'sN T.:SPORTS VIIIture \fa lit up u • 40. I. Coli ... It. partnership between Old open till i:OO Mon. ''l1uI. Clpltol BIIIineII Center Co. -. Hlway 6, W•• t, Coralvili. ., PlIo ... "'·J101 'I1Ie DIlly Iowu-Iowa CIty, Ion-TIeL, , .... 17,11'7f.-P1p' • Geaerates fDads UI library reopens today UI offers rides for disabled after water line problem.

By KRISTA ClARK City since the program's ~ as oppoaed to the chrmica1ly tation needI are still '* b!ing hydraullc lift. Cost for the van 8y KRISTA a.ARK ~trons of the cloIinI were f1nt have fIniIbed by lor 2a .m. Ne1nEdIW Uon. She said that In December disabled," would have met. with the lilt would be around New.. EcItor posted around noon. Ubrary of· Woody said the pbyIlcal pIm AUItransportationsyllem another student IpOI1IOI"ed by WlIimited access to the aervlce, She said thre Ire at least two $13.000, she said, while the The UI's Main Ubnry dOled ficials said they received few Qff bad met with UI Ubl'll'lan for the orthopedically handlca~ the Vocational RehablUtation sbesaid. students who, because they are schooJ bus would cost around early Monday night after It was complaints from students or Dale Benz and made pJana to ped is belni opened 10 the "tem­ office in Des MoInes was allO Cost for the service to the \l'l8ble to transfer themlelves f»,OOO. She said grant a~ discovered In the rborning that staff about the Iihort ncltlc:e of "try to get put the buly Ume of porarily" handJcapped In hopes L8Ing the UI service. temporarily disabled would be Into the station wagon now p1ications have been made by a leak In an old water line on the the closing. the day" in corr.,Jetlna the that the extra busIneII wlU The station wapi rented for per day for the unlimited beIni used, cannot make \lie of her office, but that federal fWi­ west side of the buildlq "had WOOdy said the water leak repairs. ,I gotten generate enough revenue to the program costs ,140 a month ridershlp and students could the service. What is needed, ac· ding usually isn't provided to . ~uch worse" and needed was In "an old abandoned "We were shooting for a con­ keep the entire program from and the cost includes the first pay for the service by chargtna cording to Bonney, is a van or buy vehicles for the handicap­ lInmediate repair. The library lwo-Inch pipe which feeds I . venienttlmetorepal.rtheleak." , . go\ngunder. 1,100 miles and the first 1,100 it to their lJ·b11Is. Thoee In­ IIChooI bus equipped with I ped. was scheduled to open as Ulual ' six·lnch pIpe" to the library Woody laid. "Becalile of the The transportaUon program, gallons of galOllne. Bonney said terested In using the service at7:30a.m. today. and that the water wu leakIni ball game tonlght, we fI&ured called "Services for HandJca~ that to date the program had should call 353-411161 during the Accordlng to Tom Woody, into the tunnel entrance direc:tly there would probably be a ped," was started last Novem· managed to stay within the day or contact the driver, assistant shops manager at the west of the loadin& dock 00 the lighter load at the library." He ber by Sharon Bonney, a mileage and gasoline limits. Ronald Missildine, at 354-3218 at UI physical plait, the leak in west aide of the library. explained that the pbyIlea1 , ... graduate studelt In public af· However, becaUle one of the night. the water line was first Although Woody said he didn't plant Qff bad pIamed to live fain who works out of the office handicapped students uslni the To raise funds to help keep the discovered last week during a eKpect any major problems In patrons several days' notice of of the vice president for ad­ service dropped out of the UI at program in operation through routine tunnel Inspection of the repairing the leak, he added the closlni for the repairs, but ministrative services. Accor· the semester and another Is May, Bonney said the UI main wa~r lines to the library. that because the water line was because of the worsened con­ ding to Bonney, who is herself likely to drop out, the pI'OIram Veterans Association is plan· WOOdy saId the physical plant made of old cast Iron and had clition of the pipe, "we couI~'t con1Ined to a wheelchair, the is no 10llller able to raise the ning to hold a benefit dance crew had "hoped it (the leak) two kinds of fittings there could let the repairs 10 Into next Pl'Otlram was originally set up $140 needed each month to pay Feb. 21. Money raised from the v.ooJdn't get any worse," but be lOme trouble In completlna weekend." Woody laid a to help only the pennanently the cost of the car and funding is dance will be used to start a when the line ~as checked Mon· the repairs. physical plant foreman bad disabled. But because of a shor· currently in the red. foundl\tion grant, she said. day momiJlll. It was determined Work was expected to begin checked the pipe over the tage of funds, it Is being expan' The station wagon for the Bonney pointed out that there the pipe needed immediate on the water line at 8 p.m. and weekend, but at that time the ded to serve the needs of other pl'Otlram was originally dri ven are other chronically disabled ~Ir . Woody said the four people leak had not appeared to have disabled UI students. by volunteers from PanheJlenic UI students whose tl'8l1lpor· 'nle library was closed at 8 working on the repairs Ihould worseoedslgnilicantly. Since its Inception, the Ser· and the Inter Fraternity Coun· p.m. Monday and signa telllni vice for Handicapped program ell, who drove the car five hours has helped five UI students. a day, five days a week, Bonney Each pays $30 a month, which said. CA C passes resolution BUSY? helps to defer the cost of a In January, however, when JOBSI Try station wagon rented from the the program received a Corn· n.. ... 110.000 1Ummet' lObt UI motor pool. The car travels a prehensive Emplayement Wilting for sludlnll In fun fixed route around the campus pI_. Mke Yellowstone, San training Act grant, a full-tIme to ensure fair elections Frenc:llCO. Honolulu. Allakl. Wee Wash It twice each hour. eight hours a driver was hired who w\lJ serve New , Colorldo day. five days a week, Bonney through June. SprinQI and 1he c.tlkllal The QUICK SERVICE .. I .. said. She explained that the car During the 15 school days in 8y~KEAVGSPURGER campaign purposes is golni to didate's rights to use the postal SUMMER EMPLOYMENT 01. SWfWrIter be brought before the UI ad· system and to conduct free RECTORY tell you where !he Wa8h, Dry C usually begins its route at January, 79 rides were gi ven to lObt ..I 201 [E 2151h edI­ Hillcrest dormitory at 8 a.m. the four handicapped students The CoUegiate Associations visory court by CAC President speech as set by the U.S. Con· IIonI SencI $7_85 nctudes poet. and Fold ...... 20 lb. Council (CAC ) passed a Norman Coleman, AJ. stitution. " & hand.) to 0.1. .S., 3920 E. and is In operation lDii "five or uslni the service. So far this Indian School, Phoe nl ~ , N . 226 S. Clinton six" during weekdays. month, 39 rides have been resolution Monday night to help Coleman used his ltem·veto Coleman said he will brillll the BoMey said the five UI provided for the four stude/lts. promote a fair and properly power to kill the restriction on issue before the court sometime students who have used the Temporarily disabled studen· conducted election of CAC personal funds . CAC then voted this week, and If the court rules transportation service have had ts wantlni to use the servIce, executives for this year. to override his veto, 6-2, with in his favor, he will then bring it their costs for the program paid those Bonney described as The resolution states that the two abstentions. up before CAC at the Feb. 23 School of Letters Film Series by the Vocational havlJlll "broken bones, tom president and vice president Roger Carter, AJ, sponsor of meeting. Rehabilitation office In Iowa ligaments or a recent operation will be elected by secret ballot the resolution, defended the "I am not dolni this for per· presents at CAC's April 12 meeting. Any item, citing examples of can­ sonal reasons," Coleman said, defeated candidate will have didates buying CAC members noting that he will be Town to take trash the right to count the votes im· their lunch, a beer, or sending graduating from the UI this Oscar Wilde's mediately after the total is an· llterature through the mail to year, "but for a candidate who nounced, the resolution states. selected CAC members. is not known by CAC members county court collected Last year, then CAC President Another item In the very well needs to have the The Importance of John Hedge refused to release resolution, Carter noted, gives same chance as other can· .,IIAU M1TI'ELSTADT Although Iowa City's Director the vote tally. each candidate the chance to didates who are known by CAC AlIt. Newt EdItor of Public Works, Richard The resolution states that use the CAe equipment and members." Being Earnest Plastino, had sent the county a "only those ballots containing mailing to send up to 12 pages of bt,•• DAILY IOWAN ,ia,_ Several piles of garbage letter about the discontinuation the names of both a presidential campaign literature to CAC in color at 8 pm, Feb. 17 behind the Johnson County of service, council members and a vice presidential can· members. CIRCULATION DEPT ,."i'. 8IlIlOUIl­ .t., Court House, accumulatlllll sin· seemed to agree Monday with dldate who have each After the meetlni Coleman HOURS: tt Hancher Auditorium ce Iowa City limited garbage Mayor Mary C. Neuhauser that ced their willingness to serve said he is going to bring the 8 • 10:30 a.m. col1ection to residential areas, the city should haul the garbage together and who have been restriction on personal funds 2 - 5 p.m. wll1 be hauled away by the city. one last time "just to get (It) oominated as a team shall be before the advisory court to get FREE But after that the Court House Is disposed of" in light of recent considered valJd." a ruling. He said he feels the Call 353-6203 on its own. media stories on the city·county Persons seeking executive item "violates a person's rights That was the consensus of hassle. positions would have to declare as guaranteed under the First four City Council members The garbage behind the Court their candidacies by giving Amendment. Monday as they discussed the House comes from the county written notice to the CAC attor· "This is a serious con· •• county's current garbage offices in the Court House and ney general at least one week stitutional action, " Coleman dilemma, the most recent clash the sheriff's office and county prior to the election, according said, "because it limits a can· between the coll'lty and the city. jail immediately behind the to the resolution. The garbage has been piling Court House. More than 25 An item in the resolution Perpetual is you'r up alollll the back of the Court plastic disposal bags filled with preventing candidates from House for the past three weeks, garbage and a box of refuse spending personal f\llds for t:~o:d spilling recently into a parking were seen plied behind the Neighbor. ' space reserved for the han· Court House Monday evenlng . + . . dicapped, because the city will Last Friday, the Johnson no longer haul the county's County Board of Supervisors College Teaching Workshop refuse. The city recently a~ approved (presumably in jest) saving link. ted a garbage and refuse col1ec· a motion instructing the county Computer-Assisted Instruction­ tion ordinance which engineer to dump the garbage Using CAl specifically limits garbage in front of the Iowa City CivIc collection to residential areas. Center. with Dr. Bobby Bl'own Tuesday, February 17 7:OO-9:30P.M. 30¢ ~raws 301 lindquist Center & CAl Lab sponsored by Graduate Student Senate :Today 8 pm to 11 $1.50 Pitchers - everyday 3-9 MAM~§ ~ I)II)T" [)f)Uf3§ 5 S. Dubuque 1..1.,,"'''' DE

Recipe #]2 For Veterans EL VORADO: A 3-hour course . .. * Add ice to a mixing glass or jelly jar, Saving money today is tougher than ever. Often it seems as if the money you for the last two years of college depending on your financial situation. that pays $2,500 * Pour in 2 oz. of Jose Cuervo Tequila. earn is gone before you see it. About the only way to break the cycle is to pay * The juice from half a lime. 1 tbsp. of honey. * yourself first by saving regularly. The interest earned on insured savings at Plus * Shake. * Strain into a cocktail glass or t I '- peanut butter jar, depending on your Perpetual is currently 5~ per cent. Stop in soon and open an account of your A job with a starting salary of at least financial situation. $10,839. Your service time is valu·able. Con­ own - your link to secure saving. tact Russ Farrow, Room 9, Fieldhouse·Ar­ mory, or call 353·3824-3709 . Since 1875.'i

SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION CornerWS'shington and Dubuq~e 'r------, 132 Ea.t Wllhinglon • Iowa CUy, Iowa • Telephone 331-'9751 HOURS : Monday 9 10 6. Tue .-Fri. 9 10 4. WI-)C Home Office ' 110 Second Ave . S. E.' Cedar Rapids . Iowa Closed Salurday ~_ ~!I_ ...... Highest rates paid on insured savings, JOS£ CU£RVO~ TEOUILA. eo PROOF. IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY Ci 197S, AEUBL£IN. INC., HARTFORD. CONN. Pqe4-1'IIeDal1yIOftD-lowaClty, lowa-Tllel., Feb. I?, 11'1'1

Interpretations

Schorr's switch consistent Daniel Schorr opened a new faucet for news of the document outside the government. to leaks last week. Usually the recipient of in· cooperate in what might be the total suppression famous gushers in his role as CBS News of a report originally meant for public correspondent. Schorr leaked the Selel;t House distribution ... Intelligence Comm ittee's secret report to the Schorr is to be commended, both for his ap­ Village Voice. parent realization that contemporary television Schorr made the donation through The Repor· is incapable of dealing with such a complex sub­ ters Committee for the Freedom of the Press - ject in depth, and for his decision to further aid an organization that provides legal defense in the public interest by making the report free press cases. He sought to insure his and his available to the magazine. " source's confidentiality, he said. But to com· But Rep. Samuel Stratton, D-N .Y .• said he pound the reversal, someone on the free press would move today to find Schorr in contempt of committee leaked Schorr's role. Congress. The maximum penalty could be a year The committee has been lambasted in recent in jail and a $1 ,000 fine . weeks by the administration for the numerous In turning over his copy to the magazine, • articles on the committee's activities. Chairper· Schorr was merely acting to further report the son Otis Pike, D·N. Y .• responded that the ad· information, through a means unavailable to ministration might have leaked this report, to him in his professional position . • discredit the committee. - - To prosecute him would be consistent only if Schorr and had issued all reporters who published "classified" infor· detailed drafts of what the report would say mation were punished. And while the more before the Voice's publication. paranoid in our society and government would When the report·s release was prohibited by support that, such a practice would severely House vote on Jan. 29. Schorr realized he could limit the public's right to know - and thus to make it public, as the House committee had in­ make intelligent decisions. That might be good tended. He said: for ramshackle poltiticians, but it's certainly "I felt myself confronted with an inescapable bad for the rest of us . decision of journalistic conscience. "It was whether. as possibly the sole possessor CONNIE STEWART .. I letters CIA 'mistake' must have been a dozen of them. maybe we're looked at as a big , greedy landlord, said. Behind Nassif's article was her belief that PIRG office. Newton was incorrect. more. bring them all into one organization wanting to rule the world. at whatever "The United States as a society is han· a cut in U.S. military aid would tip the however. in saying that ISPIRG would con­ so that the President would get one report cost. As I.F. Stone said ofYietnam. "In the dicapped in fighting by secret, Illegal, un· balance toward the Arabs and force Israel tribute I per cent of its budget toward the TO THE EDITOR: CII what was going on in various parts of war of the peasants. we're on the side of derhanded means. We are, fortunately, into a settlement it should not have to live national organization. Should the Central Intelligence Agency the world. Now that made sense. and that·s the landlords." .. . restrained by moral principles. And we with ; a settlement similar to the ones that As I told Newton when I spoke with her exist? Was it a mistake to have a CIA to why I went ahead and set up the CIA. I The justification for keeping the CIA cannot keep our dirty linen private. We failed to prevent lhe last three Arab wars CII the phone the evening before the article begin with? ... think it was a mistake. And If I'd known runs something like this : the Russians cannot expect that a national trait of which on Israeli existence. appeared. the ISPIRG state board of direc­ we have been proud from the time of Peter Nassif's article failed to consider the tors will vote at a future meeting on The Select House Committee on In­ what was going to happen, I never would have the KGB ; it gets involved in , telligence went out of business last Wed­ have done it." "Angolas" all around the world . Their one Zenger to the Pentagon papers is going to simple fact that Americans like Israel. whether ot not ISPIRG will be one of the . nesday. Its final recorrunendations in· The CIA was not set up to do covert main goal is to rule the world. They use be put aside when faced with one more have supported it in the past, and will PIRGs that contributes 1 per cent of itll c1uded: forming a permanent House Com­ operations; it was set up just to gather in­ any means possible in bringing about their argument about national security, " he continue such support. to whatever extent budget for funding the National PIRG of­ mittee on Intelligence; requiring presiden· formation. It was to be one small agency, goals of world domination. And because said. is necessary. Final peace in the Mideast fice , Jeff GoudIe We made a mistake forming the CIA. can come only when the likes of Nassif can , f ts to report every covert operation to it oot as has happened before. the CIA just they do it. we should. ISPIRG Staffpe ..... within 48 hours; outlawing covert U.S. aid grew. .. . Is it our goal to be like the Russians? Our standing In the world would Improve accept Israel's unquestioned right to exist fteCIoaal to foreign forces, such as in Angola. except Gen. Georlle Marshall. designer of the God, I hope not. As Robert Fisher, immensely if we did away with it; in our b!lhind secure borders. in time of war; and outlawing Marshall Plan to aid Eurojll! after World professor of law at Harvard. told the House open style of government. we can debate Funny how the most vocal criticism of 'Nuff said' assassination attempts. War II. warned Truman of what could. and Select Intelligence Committee (as repor· all sides of an issue. U we make a mistake. American support for Israel comes nol we have every peaceable provision to from the hard-working taxpayer. but from TO ntE EDITOR: . The House conunittee also sUUested did. happen with the CIA. According to ted in the Des Moines Register, Feb. I), In regard to Phillip Starr's letter of Feb. splitting the CIA into two agencies ; one for "Plain Speaking," Marshall. in a memo 200 correct it. Truman, not one to look back at the Arab sympathizer. "Almost years ago. when we were far 11. I would just like to ask how a fake gathering intelligence. the other for covert about five months before the agency was weaker and far more vulnerable than we what he did in the past. was strong enough Marc SpriDger, G to admit this mistake. Are we? Kung-Fu instructor can put down a legit operations. set uP. said: "The Foreign Service of the are today. this country made a basic JoarDallsm martial arts instructor? You see. In every Jolin Paul Dornfeld, AI \ I take issue with ail of that. One CIA is State Department is the only collection decision that in time of peace we would 3Z8Z Lakeside true school of Kung· Fu there is a lion head . ooe too many. Or as President (Harry) agency of the government which covers fight evil with good, not with evil. We N3M HIIIcreIt the whole world. and we should be very and a lion drum for the performance of Truman put it in "Plain Speaking," right established a govenunent dedicated to the ISPIRG contributes ceremonial dance. If an alleged Kung-Fu after the Bay of Pigs fiasco, "Why they've slow to subject · the collection and proposition that we don't fight crime with We like Israel... . school doesn't have this equipment. say for got an organization over there in Virginia evaluation of this foreign intelligence to crime; we don't fight corruption with TO'nIEEDITOR: other establishments, especially during TO THE EDITOR: The article by Lori Newton which ap­ - ahem - reasons of poverty. the school is oow that is practically equal to the Pen· corruption ; we don't fight delinquency by phony . ThIs equipment is donated from times this Anyone who read Cyrene Nassif's article peared in the Feb. 6 DI contained a critical tagon in many ways. One Pentagon is one of peace. The powers of becoming delinquent. your (ahem) school of Kung-Fu where you too many. " proposed agency seem almost unlimited "We committed ourselves to fight closed on the Israeli request for U.S. military aid mistake. allegedly took your training. Starr is one Truman formed the CIA in 1947. In and need clarification." societies by being an open society; to fight (DI , Feb. 13) might have received the Newton was correct in writing that impression tha t she was writing on behalf such poor Kung-Fu instructor. HINT, "Plain Speaking" be was quoted as Pray tell. is this just a coincidence. or is the evils of police states by being a govern­ representatives of VI Iowa Student Public HINT. SAY NO MORE! saying: "I needed. the President needed at there more? At the end of World War II. ment under law. At a time when there was of the poor U.S. taxpayer who has been Interest Research Group (lSPIRG) joined that time a central·organization that would the rest of the world wanted to be just like far less democracy in the world than there paying through his teeth to maintain peace with other student state PIRG members in DaDJelKnI bring all · the· various intelligence reports us '.... Then came the CIA. Korea. Ylet· is now. we chose our weapons and we chose in the Mideast. attendance at the National PIRG Con· S. 145 Currier we were getting in thoee days. and there . nam and a host of other blunders. And now well. We will fight wrong with right," he Such an impression was. of course, false. ference to agree to establish a National Former aulltut JOW-GA K ·Fa AllIe. · . One f.E. for all?

I was originally spw-red to write concerning the proposed derogatory attitudes when rarely encountered. Perhaps some will call-me down for my optimism, but I main· merger of the two physical education departmenta alter reading I refuse to belleve that a majority of women students here have tain that all it takes for the great majority of male athletes to ef· Anne Krautmann's letter in the Feb. 9 DI ... After reading Paula such delicate egos that such infrequent encounters with sexism in fect a change in attitude ... Is a brief exposure to seriOUl, Klein's article Feb. 12, I feel It imperative to expl't!ll my the classroom. on the jogging track or the playing field as I have hard· working female athletes. Effecting a change in the attitudes viewpoint, IeIt it be thought that all women involved In the field of witnessed will so utterly destroy their self direction and desire to ol male coaches and athletic directors is a whole different ball physical education support Klein'. separatist arguments. participate. Such a fragile ego will have a desparate time through game. Their intransigence in the face of having to share facilities In proposing a postponement of a merger of men's and women's the typical college career. and monies is notorious and epitomized by the National Collegiate P.E., Klein argues that "the Interference of sexist attitudes" on The proposed combination of men's and women's P.E. is long Athietic AssocIation's reaction to Title IX. Perhaps Iowa coaches the part of male classmates would seriously Impede the overdue. Separate departments are an elpenslve, self-defeating and administrators will prove exceptions to the rule . seIf~very and active partlelpation of women in physical ac­ anachronism. (When I speak of a "merger." my meaning Is a And what effect would the proposed merger have upon tivity and sport. total administrative combination of tW() separate departments In· academic P.E. courses? Theoretically none, from the student's • t to ooe entity with one set of policies, one department head, and viewpoint, since all. counes are presently open to men and Aside from the fact that all courses In both departments are now -Tle.y, February 17.lt7I. Vol. No. lit- open to both men and women, and hence such postulated inter­ one set of course offerings - Dot merely cosmetic name changes women. The stumbling block is the changes envisioned by I., ference already is taking Its toll. there are Innumerable in­ ol"men's gym" to "Field House. It) faculty ; i.e. will·I·loee-my·job worries. I see no reason why any ~ dications that an Increased mixing of the seles in P.E. c1asses .. . Although initially freighted with mind-boggling amounts of red facul~y in either department should be squeezed out by a merger EDITOR ...... DI.ao. Cou.blla · would be to everyone'. benefit. tape and administrative problems, a merger mot take place If of the two. NEWS EDITOR ...... , ...... , ...... Krista CI.rk Klein conveniently Ignored- Krautmann'sletter which documen­ the welfare of all students is the prime value at stake. Cootrary to There should be a reasonable constancy between pre- and ASSOC . NEWS EDITOR ...... Marl. L.wlor ta at least one woman's satisfaction with, and her preference for, Klein's assumption, I believe women students would be the prtme post-merger periods in the number of students choosing P .E. as a ASST. NEWS EDITORS ...... M.rk Mltlel.tlldl. K. Palrlck Jenaen . LAYOUT EDITOR ...... Tim Sacco the men's skill courses and lnItrudon. both of which are still beneficiaries of such a move. A vastly expanded skills c1aJs of· major. and hence in the number of studenll requiring professional CHIEF COPY EDITOR ...... Anita Karar overwhelmingly male. Last semester as a graduate instructor in fering would be available to women who now more often than not P.E. counework. Again, all faeilltles could be used more efficien­ EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR ....••...... Connle Stewart the men's P .E. department. I felt that the few women who were in assume only thoee offered by the women's department are open to tly and ~proprlately by all atudenll than Is now the cue. ASST . EDITORIAL EDITOR ...... Rhoncl.Dlckey them. And what happens at the graduate level, where faculty of the FEATURES EDITOR ...... BobJone. my classea received no flack, even of the more subtle variety, SPO:TS EDITOR ...... , ...... BIII McAuliffe. from their fellow claamates. I was Imble to discern any The use of both gyms and pools would provide greatly Improved two departments might well have overWpping specialty Interests ASS . SPORTS EDITOR ...... Tom Qulnlu Sgniflcant difference between the behavior of male students in facilities for many c~ already taught In both departmenta. and only one aection per semester of (the coune) needed? These CONTRIBUTING EDITORS ...... Kim ROI.I. R.ndy Knoper coed and In all-male classes. For example, the Halsey pool is far superior for the non-swim· are the thornier problems. but certainly some equltable solution RIVER CITY COMPANION EDITOR ...... ChrlsBrlm mer. as Is the women'. building for dance counes. Coovenely. can be reached ... PHOTO EDITORS ...... Lawrence Fr.nk. Dom Funco Were these women venturing Into previously a11·maie courses ART DIRECTOR ...... C.tOoly only those with well developed sk1111 who would not have to "prove the Field House facilities are far better for advance aquatics and For instance. If different standards for promotion have been • themselves" more than once? Not always. Were they only thole the racket sporta. used within the two departmenls till a merger. then certalniy Mlc"eI8IrltkU •• PIIIII.II.r wIlth extra atl'OOl egOl and well establlJhed .oala, an exception to Need we mention the financial savings to the unlvenlty and criteria other than prolessorlal rank also should be considered Jerry Bell. A.II. Plbll.lIer the rule? To believe that Is an Insult to the vast majority women theoretically to studenll In the elimination of duplicate facilities when decisions of tenure and such come up before a combined Celet. McGee. R.I.II Adv.rll.I •• M... ,.r of WIIII.m ell.Y, Clre.I.IIe. M.... er CIl the VI campus. and. even more elpelllive, duplicate administrative positions (a department's administration. Dirk WII •••• Pr04lcllel Slperl.I...... 1 Do not mlsundentand me; lelism of all sorts 11 ltill alive and touchy subject alnong administrators)? Last but not least are the legal considerations engendered by P.lIl1.lIed by 8IM.II P.lIllc.II.II, I.e., 111 C••••• le.II ••• Cn' thrlviJli In the hearts II1d mIndI 01 many men II1d women. Sexist Although Klein only implies the conaequencea of such a merger the long overdue enaetmeti of Title IX guidelines. Further ter. I••• City. I•••• IH4I. ".Uy lIe.,1 Sal .....y •• S..... y •• 1.,.1 types wUllnevitably crop up In P.E. cI.-. u In any class In any for the Intercollegiate athletic programs. here again such a move arguments and diatribes might well be academle If eeparate Nlld.y •••Id d.y ••, IIlv.nlt)' unll•• . S.ct.d d ... po.I." , ... .1111. , ••1 .lflc•• 1 I••• Clly ..der Ill. Ad .f C••• rell .f M.HIII, IIliverslty. Nooetheleu, that IOI't of attitude manlf... In a felloW can only be for the better in terms of facilities. Her contention that departments by gender are ruled contrary to tbe spirit If not the 1m. lItudent merita a quick complaint to the instructor and the offen­ "women have rarely been given the respect and support they need letter of the law. SlII.ulpll•• flleI. I ••• Clly ••d C.r.lvlll. a ..... 111., ...... , der him-herself. Any perceived seJdlm In the lnatructor merill an to develop as skilled. serious athietes" i,largely true. But It Is In· Now is the time for·thOIe wbo feel atl'OOlly to speak out CIl the Ill...... , I ,rl.l", y.ar .1 ..... M.II ••lIlCrl,1I0 •• J •••111. ".H.• eyen quicker and louder complaint to the Ikllll ehalqJenon or creulngly leu 10, I believe, with tbe dramatic inerease 01 serious prOI and COll8 01 the creation of one P,E. department at the VI ...... 11. U. .... I prl.I... y•• r ...... sports programs for high school glrll. Ttl. O.lIy I•••• I..... depo .....lu •• '.,. •• rltl ••• 141 .dll.d lIy . department head. It Is I.., past time for thole of UI who believe In the merlta of one 11.41 ••11 .111Ie U.lv.nlly.f I•••. T.. A.lld.led Pre •• I. utllled " Where I must differ with Klein II In ber UIUIIlptlCll 01 an Entering freshmen and women will have had an Inereuln. ex­ department to actively work toward that goal and to critically IlIe tld •• lve ••• '.r r.,.IIIIe.II••• '.III.ul ••••11 •••U AP •••• all-pervulve sexism that will stifle women In their aulonornoUl posure to females who are dead serious about achieving athletic question admlnlstraton of the Uberal Arts College and In both ••d .1.,.ltll". • diIcovery of the joyI 01·phyaic:al activity and aport. My contacta excellence. My perception of the attitudes of men on the VI IWim P.E. departments: "wily the delay? I" Pi .... dl.1 JIJ..... U y.. d, ••1 rte.lv. y.ar p.per lIy 7.1t •••. team toward the women swimmel'l working out with them (due to Ev.r, elf.n .m lie ••d. I. urreelill•• rr •• II" Ill ••esll ..... Clr- with the male Instructort In the men's department have been e.I.II•• fflc. II.. , ••re ,·•• •It •.•.• 1.$ p.m .. M.... y 111 ....11 predominantly positive and often supportive. The rnales com­ "Integrated workouts") Is largely favorable. The men swimmel'l SUe BloomIIeId FrId.y. Jll'iIIng lOme 16 per I.WIl of my students· were at the Ieut polite that three other women and I worked out with my Junior year at UUYenII TIle .pl.lell tI,r... e ••• 1111. p•••• re lile .,1.1•••• f Ill ••1 .... , Inc! often conpnIaI. Teachinl for the fll'lt time, and to prepon­ Oberlin Collese quickly leamed to respect UI u we lIogec1 ••••• n. nil ••y ....te .... rll' 1I,'tI. 'lIe .,...... f Til. D.U, · derately male c'-, I wu acutely aware 01 ".. lilt" or through the same gruelm. workouta together, ..... CIt1 I ••••. 'DIe Dally lowu-lon CIty, lowa-'heI, , Feb,l1, 11'7l-Plp1 DAILY IOWAN CIRCULATION DEPT HOURS: a neN play by Nea Bell U.N. lawyer: trade laws 8 - 10:30 a.m. P .ostseripts 2 - 5 p.m. call 353-4203 Wilde iii. need world uniformity Avoiding The School of !.etten Film Serlel will present "The Importance of Bein, Earnell" atl p.m. today at Hancher Auditorium . By RHONDA DICKEY "All of these thinp have been II IE Freud AlIt, EdItorial Pqe EcItGr unified for over 100 years" Le~ture Ever· wonder what happens because unifonnlty hu been TAIVING a Playwrlghfs Workshop production. Mar,uerlte Itnayan. author, will lpeak on " Tbe AesthetlCl of Ea· when an Importer of PoIJIh "imperative" both tecln>­ pr_lon in Early Nlneteenth-Century France" at • p.m . today In sausages in one nation tries to logically and commen:ia1Iy, a=TI-E Room EIOI, Arl Bulldln,. collect damages from the ex­ Bergsten IBid. porter In another country? Trade within the United DlIREW Seminars Eric Bergsten, I fonner UI States has been governed by the Friday-Saflrday: A aemlnar on "Glvln, BeUer Care to the PaUent with Cancer" will law professor, delcribed to belin at 7:30 p.m. today in the Medical Alumni Audllorlum, General Unlfonn ConwercIal Code, he Hotpitai. about 40 people Mooday aome of aI.so noted. 20-21 Feb. 2 pm the legal problems such mer­ Since membership on the IOWACIINTM A seminar for thOle Interested In creative survival within a univer· chants might encounter In inter­ commission must be distributed fIaA 1'H. ART. tity contnt will belln at 7 p.m. today. Call Catbolic Student Center ••C.M .... ~ SU1day: (Center E ..\) for relervatioDl, 337-3106. national trade. Berpten on a geographic buIs ("a claimed that unlfonnlty In such IIIOre-or-less formal rule of the Uwll:N\a ~ourse trade laws could alleviate lOme U.N."), the ~mber com­ 22 Feb. 8 pm. Refresher Ii theIe problems. mission alJo includes repreeen­ The annual relrelher tourle for family phYSicians will open at ':45 a.m. today at the Union and will conUnue through Feb. 20. Berpten, now deputy direc: tatives of developed and un­ !Dr of the United Nations Com­ developed countries, socialist Bergsten 301 MacI..ea1 Hal Wheel Room mIs8Ion on International Trade and market-«OllOmy nations, Regulation and Law, told the and civil-law and corrunon-Ia w pay?" - an issue he said has Eclectic Films preaenll Laurel and Hardy In Lelye 'E. L... ~. no 1ickets recpJired. and Man Brothen abort Tile Grea' Jewel a.lll1ery I p.m. tod';y and group that, while the U.N. com­ countries, according to received a great deal of legal at­ 'nCI['" Ser,l Eilenllein', P ...... al. p.m . today in tbe Union Wheel Room . miIsIon, created by the General Bergaten. But, he added, though tentiOIlin the United States and HANCI ...ax~ Assembly In 1988, II quite new, these distributions provide other market economies, That • Summer in l'eni~e the drive for unlfonnity Ii laws representation for people in all problem doesn't come up In the center for reN performilg arts The University of California Eltenlion Service I. sponeorin, a hu precedent. Bergsten cited parts of the world, their varying socialist natio .. because "the three·week pro,ram In Venice this lummer, lead by a specialilt in air travel, and telegraph and interests , and backgrounds credit of the govenunent" stan­ latb century art and architectural hillory, wbich will concern illelf telephone systems as examples cause problema. ds behind the buyer, he said. with tbe development of the city In the Renaiannce and III contem· Ii international concerns In Bergsten mentioned as an Bergsten's speech was spon­ porary problems. Fee Is ,,75 ncluslve of travel to Europe and credit Official Notice II avall,bl,. For more Inform,tion call OIES, 353-6241. which legal unlfonnlty hal example the question, "What sored by the UJ Dept. of happens If the buyer doesn't Business Administration. Goodwill van existed for many years. The Goodwill mobile van will be at the mlni·park al Collele and Student Senate eandidates­ Dubuque street. from 10 l.m.·5 p.m. today. Donations will be .p. precialed. Electronic hanking places Journalis. in Europe Petitions Due Anyone Interested In spending the summer in Scandinavia, U.S.S.R., Austria and West ~ermany should attend a meetlnl for the Dloney in computer's hands 4:30 pm, TODAY, Feb. 17 at Student Senate Office School of Journalism's Summer Session In Europe Pro,ram at 5 p.m. today in Room 209. Communications Center. The Irip is open 10 non·majors as well. ups may become less attract­ '9' WASHINGTON (AP) - Par­ Security checks the choice of ents may find it more difficult to having them deposited directly ive, but home burglaries might Candidates meeting r Candidate petitions control spending by their teen­ in their bank accounts by mail. increase. Studenl Senate candidate pelltions are due at 4:30 p.m. today in Ihe agers. Home burglaries could In a few years, it expects to do -There may be a big in­ Senale Office. increase while armed robberies this electronicaUy. crease in so-caUed computer Wed., Feb. 18 Yale Room, IMU 4:30 pm decline. individual and business But as the nation moves to­ crimes, or other crimes in­ f'ren(!h ex(!hanfle privacy could be threatened. ward this system, the study said volving embezzlement and mis­ All candidates must attend InternatiOnal Siudeni Exchan,e of Black Hawk County, Inc .. k Those are some of the prob· the following kinds of problems appropriation of funds. non·profit organization. wllh endorsement from Ihe Iowa Bicentennial lems likely to arise as the nalion will arise and should be dealt -'There will be the creation of Commission. is seeking host families lor 500 french teenagers, large quantities of information together with a few chaperons, for a four to six week stay In the State moves toward a system of with in advance : Election Thurs, Feb. 26 of Iowa this summer. Interested persons should contact Imre Takacs, electronic banking and pay­ -Parents may find it more on financial transactions of President, International Student Exchange, 2587 Saratoga Dr., ments, according to a study re­ difficult to keep watch over individuals and organizations Questions or information call Waterloo, 1010' , 50702. Deadline for application is March 15, 1978. leased Monday by the National spending by teen-agers once a "in a way that may threaten Science Foundation . teen-ager has gained access to individual and business priva­ 354-1599 or 353-1345 Try-outs Electronic Funds Transfer, the system through a family cy." Try-outs for Hooey Babe. an original (ull·length play by Liz Greene, as it is coming to be known, credit card or a like item. The study said most of the will be held from 2-4 p.m. loday In Room 301, MacLean Hail . Parts are already is being developed. It -Since Americans would be problems already occur in available for nine women and one man. will be computer operated and carrying less cash, armed hold- society. 8 involve such things as the auto­ VAN HEUSEN ~The Take' matic deposits of a worker's IMAGE US will presenl the (lim Tbe Take starring Billy Dee paycheck directly in bis bank Williams at 7:'0 p.m. today, Phillips Hail Auditorium . A discussion account by his employer. will follow . Payments for purchases at . ... aual supermarkets or other retail MEETINGS stores could be accomplished DRESS SHIRT AND witb a credit-card type docu­ SPORT SHIRT - Tbo Iatera.llo.. 1 WI ...' Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Social Hall. Gloria Del Lutheran Church. ment inserted in a computer , . terminal. This would automati­ Tu ..day Night OpeD Pair. will meel 8t 7:30 p.m . today at Elks' cally and instantly transfer . .. wearit Country Club, 600 Foster Rd. money from the bank account of TONIGHT IN THE WHEEL ROOM the purchaser to that of the your way! Th Ro.olaUoaary Stud ..t Brl,ad. will meet at 7 :30 p.m. today in the Union Purdue Room . seller. The Ecleedc Film SO(!iety The study, done by Arthur D. Here's your chance Tb C.ffeeh.a.e wili sponsor a Bible study o( Galatians al4 :3d p.m. Uttle Inc. of Cambridge, Mass., presents: at a Van Heusen today , corner of Church and Dubuque streets. said the system is being first. A one·piece, Tbe CbrilU" Sclooce Colle,. Or,aaluti.. will meet at 7 p.m. developed even though most Lea ve 'E. Laughing \ . today in the Union Michigan Hoom . Americans are satisfied paying no·seam convert· bills with cash and checks. Be­ ible collar shirt, Cillae .. for Ea.lr.omeatal Aclloa wlil meet at 7 :30 p.m. today In with Laurel & Hardy Conter EaslBasement. cause they are satisfied, It One smooth·flow· probably will be many years ing collar. No 81m,Ie Livia, will meet at 7:30 p.m. today at Center Easl Library. before it is in full operation. The Mark of Zorro The study said that eventually neckband. No in· fbe W... ded Kaee Soppert Committee will meet at 7:30 p.m. today 70 per cent of the current starring Douglas Fairbanks terruption to the in the Union Activities Center. volume of check payments will 8:30 (ish) pm pattern or solid of be handled by "electronic sub­ your choice. Open stitutes. " The advantage for the or closed, it will do banking system will be- lower - FREE TO ONE AND ALL- Mock legislators costs. The study estimates that things for you. See each check transaction now for yourself - on costs about 30 cents and a credit yourself. ban cans, cut pot fines card transaction costs about 50 Use DI Closslfieds!!!!! ill cents. The study said a DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - model legislature's time during "significant fraction of these High school students attending the afternoon . • costs could be eliminated." .- a model legislature voted Mon­ It was proposed by Rhonda It estimated there are now day to decriminalize possession Simmon~ of Bloomfield. about 250 billion payments of small amounts of marijuana "We are not saying that transactions in the economy but turned thumbs down on marijuana isn't bad," she said. each year, including about 28 -' , . raising the minimum drinking "We do not advocate that ev­ billion checks. age to 19. erybody go out after the session The federal government al­ They also approved a strong and smoke it. " ready gives recipients of Social "ban the can" measure to pro­ ,., . vide that the state could revoke licenses of beer and liquor es­ tablishments refusing 10 handle 0ww Q~[3[Z]vD[i] returnable soft drink and liquor containers. t • But they rejected as Imprac­ tical a proposal to crack down on persons who oblain food 8wW[il][JJ LJDwmuCJOc. stamps illegally. It was the first model ·.. legislature set up by the House [j[3[rl[i1D~[ij]DII1[d 0. ~[][3rn[31?1?'bJ public relations office and tbe Dept. of Public instruction, The students unanimously agreed it should be repeated &MuaUy, "this has been one 01 tne most worthwhile educational [3 [l]0GQ[U][3 experiences I've ever had," de­ clared James Waters of CarroU as he offered a resolution urging continuation of the program. His resolution was adopted tH. "I had a lot of fun and I hope • you will continue ' this," said John Burke of Clinton. "It'. a great way to get a lot of people more Intereated in govern­ ment." ·( All the students Mid they hid fun and learned a lot about the leglalatlve process and how Distinctive portraits much work goel Into It. • 1'. "I've always wondered why the legislature met only lix month. at a time," Mid Steve Noel of Iowl City. "But after T. Wong Studio • going through one day of this, I don't see how anybody could 1831 Lower Muscatin~ Phone take a whole year." Across from Doughnutland 337-3961 The bill to decriminalize I , marijuana occupied mOlt of the PIId-Tbe Dally lowa-lon CIty, Iowa-rue", Feb,17, 1m 'The Importance of Being Earnest'

By JUDI'nI MIUIOUS . girl; boy loses girl; boy 8ett "mythological proportions," a plausibly set at his front door. other thlnp first," prepl1'in& UI later, directors are stili looking SpedaitoTheo.tly Iowa girl." Wilde's literary an· let of much older lovers and The question of pace has for the girls' teaecene. for ways to avoid copying SALE Editor', Note: MIIbou II ID tecedents Include writers of nUcellaneous servants. The worried some critics, but I ex· Cectiy aDd Gwendolyn believe Evans' Lady BrackneU. If the 16 oz. COLT 45 Malt LiQuor _1Itut profeuor 01 tpeeeb Restoration comedy, whose ver· amount of polilh to EarDeI& peel ,an American audience, ey are both engaged to the same .cast ls not your ideal, by all IIIId dramatic art, bat sparring he polishes and In· varlet enormously from especially one not familiar with man, and a deadlier battle has means dream up a better one. Somethlnl . !egrates into his plot, W.S. production to production, but the script. needs time to absorb seldom lleen wlied acn. a tea You will not only be playing the Dtfferent! 50c TIle Jmportaace of BeIn& Ear· Gilbert, from whom he took the neither actors nor directors the language. The traditional table. Upon dIacoverin& that game directors have always A bucket ot Bottle Beer S2.25 Dell, one of the few Victorian Insane logic of many of his seem able to keep their hands pieces of business are largely their mutual finance II a myth, played with EII'DeIt, you will be plays stili In the active theater characters, and some specific off It. Experienced actors enjoy preserved (Jack's black-edged they join forces and turn again· following Wilde's dictum to repertoire, is usually Identified situations and Brandon EarDeIt at least as much as handkerchief, Ceclly's rose cut· st the men, thoughonlymomen­ "treat al\ the trivial things of .....--~IJ() as a farce. We asaociate Thomas, whoee success" amateurs, finding It an Ideal In- tIng) . Film allows some touches tarily. Promises that both life seriously," and nothing rapid-paced action anct sight OIarley'. AIIIIt, he seems strument with which to exercise Impossible in the theater, such Algernon and Jack will change would please him more. gags with that genre and con· deliberately to have challenged. . tbe!,r timing of comic dialogue. as the belljar that the famous their names to Ernest solve the EarDett, another entry In the sider It ideal for the film Wilde had no particular in- (Most of the movie cast had handbag is ensluined LIIder and lovers' problems. But a larger School of Letters Film Series ·.OU.·LG medium; but Oscar Wilde's terest in the formula he was already been In several produc· the butterfly motif throughout. obitacle, Lady Bracknell, In· will be shown at 8 p.m. today U; genius lies in his word·play, and purveying, but he was . quite tlons a\ levels fl'OOl university Much of Wilde's wit operates trudes and batUe is joined Hancher Auditorium. Ad. most of the language In Earllelt serious about ma~ his to Broadway and West End Loo· on simple reversals, and having again, this time between the mission is free. stubbornly resists viJuallzation. position as the molt amusing don.) And directors are forever noted that principle, the Iiterarx generations. Jack fights Lady KJ\HLOFF The challenge to a director writer In Loodon. Gwendolyn dreaming of their ideal cut for critic moves on to more com· Bracknell with her own weapon, fUming the script becomes, as voices his credo ~ "oIn matters of the show. p1ex plays. The actor, on the legal guardianship, and In a Tony Asquith, director of E.· grave Importance, style, not Thus when Tony Asquith ap- other hand, recognizes In Wilde final scene as hectic as any 1IeIt, puts it, "to allow the sincerity, Is the vital thing," proached Michael Redgrave both the perfonner and the Keystone Cops chase, Wilde un· dialogue to make Its fullest 1m· and nothing mattered more about the possibility of a film, astute analyst of competitive veils a "hidden secret" and set· pact on the audience with a than style in the business of ad· Redgrave was Interested behavior in social situations. ties all questions to everyone's minimum of visual distrac· ding a second hit to the one because he had already done Algernon warns Jack early In satisfaction. lion." But why make a film of Wilde already had playing In aeveral stage versions, but felt the play that "women only (call With tile possible exception of yet another talky play, the spring of 1895. He made such he had not exhausted the script. each other sister) when they Greenwood's, theperformances especially one so often produced .a nuisance with his suggestions And a film would, of course, have called each other a lot of are brilliant; Indeed, 20 years and so uncongeniaJ to the at rehearsals that the ae- preserve the performance. Sin· medium? Several answers oc· tor·manager In charge finally ce 1950 Redgrave had played cur to me. entreated him to leave town. the title roles In II8mIet and The Dlack (at In strictly visual tenns, the Although the original produc· Richard n, Hotspur In 1 Henry period offers Irresistible char· lion was closed shortly after IV, the Chrous In Henry V, A mad architect-soldier builds a fantastic structure on the ruins of a rns for the designer and temp- Wilde's arrest and imprison- Prospero in Tbe Tempest, a,n.d Ends Wed castle he betrayed in the First World War. and stashes the corpses of latlon for the director. The ment (to dlsaS80Clate the the lead In Odell' CoaDtry Glrf, Shows: 2: 00-4: 20- The true story that has young girls in glass cases in its underground passages. This is one of the clothing and houses or the 1890s producer from the scatlt1al);'Dy . all ~th great personal success. 6:40-9:00 great horror classics of the 305. and is an expressively directed mixture can too easily become an excuse 1909 the play had proven itself In Not only did Wilde offer a captivated over for cinematic tricks, but the commerical theater on both change of pace, but at the age of "A fine film." 8,000,000 of necrophil ia, sadism, and satani sm . Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer. Asquith limits himself to a very sides of the Atlantic. The first 44, Redgrave could not expect - Penelope Gilliatt. few such jokes. The clutter half of the twentielhcentury fir· many more chances to play recedes into the background, mJy established EarDest as a even the stuffier of the two except when he has a point to "classic" play, regularly young men in EarlIest. The make. revived by professionals and Redgrave was by far "Swept Why this particular amateurs alike. Asquith's greatest coup for this f1n-de-siecle play? It Is a strictly The play requires few people: film, but he was also able to get Haunted formulaic comedy : As a two sets of young lovers, an ob- Dame Edith Evans (Lady AW"ay... " Hollywood scriptwriter once stacie to their love in the shape Bracknell) , Margaret Ruther· swrunarized it, "Boy meets of a Victorian Aunt of ford (Miss Prism), Miles Malleson (Chasuble) and Strangler Michael Denison (Algernon). Boris Karloff (James Rankin), a kindly novelist . is convi nced that a George's farewell, For ingenues he chose Joan hanged man did not have a fair trial. As he investigates. he develops a Greenwood (Gwendolyn) and dual personality . Atone moment he 's a respected novelist; the next . a Dorothy Tutln (Cecily). neither Jerry"s jobs veto or whom could be called deformed, malevolent and repulsive creature on a murderous rampage . established actresses, but both The horror aspect is further manifested in eerie graveyard scenes and in WASHINGTON (AP) -Two presidential messages were read BAN LIFTEDI of whom showed promise. In 1HE· a blood-curdling episode in a notorious insane asylum. The final to Congress Monday - George Washington's farewell address and Gerald R. Ford's veto of a bill Democrats say would create keeping with his respect for the pursuit of the mad killer leads to the grave of th e innocent man whose 600,000 jobs. . script, Asquith made very few execution he had on his conscience . Directed by Robert Day . In the House , the address was followed almost immeQiately by changes in adapting the play to HIDING the veto message. Washington's words, given a spirited reading film. Small cuts In dialogue by Rep . Herbert E. Harris, a freshman Virginia Democrat, may sadden purists, but do not Tuesday drew polite applause. The veto message, intoned by a clerk, got disturb audiences that have not none. memorized the lines. PlACEm 7 &. 9:30 p.m. "The molt SCarring JUUE HAIIRJS The House set a vote Thursday on an attempt to override the Asquith exercised great ElLan HECKART veto of the $6.1 billion public works employment and aid to local restraint in adding acenes. They controvenlal ARl"HUR O'COfI"!U Both features, only $ 111 governments bill. are largely re-Iocations or film In tntmducing American JI!Nt"Em cuff The Senate heard the veto message first, the address visualizations of what the script "...... --.... somewhat later. later reports. Thus, part of the hl.tory.- ~ -.. ------.... ~-- Ford issued the message Friday when both chambers were In first act takes place in Jack's CINEMA I THEATRE recess, so the official reading could not come before Monday. rooms at the Albany; we glimp­ On The MaO The official audiences would not have made a living president se Gwendolyn, then Lady Weekdays : 7:00-9:30 CROSSWORD PUZZLE Bracknell, in the train; Jack's happy - not even one preparing to retire. Fewer than 10 Sat & Sun: 1:30-4:15 Edited by WILL WENG senators attended the reading. In the House the high point was 19. entrance In mock·mourning is SHOWS: 1 :30-3:30-5:20-7:20-9:20 -7:00-9:30 ~;:::=~ h .. lIlI S,,-, ACROSS 48 Silencing sounds 12 Educ. degrees 47 - one's stars 14 Pelts by Garry Trudeau Locamo 48 Fine rain 18 Enroll OOONESBURY achievement SO Substantiate 19 Regrets 5 Bat wood 53 Cornered 23 Low-cut, as a Pia),"),', guide to the rite. 01 'pring! 8 Declaim 56 Ski·weekend summer dress (j()(){) '3 Spirit of a specials 24 Empty a sack HI. 5a?J(Y !VENIN6, Sure, there are literally hundreds of nice, sunny places you can go this season people 58 Drug·pushers' 25 Fjord country I'M /ATe. MR..PIn,tM for your spring break. But where will the real action be? 'Read our authoritative 15 " ... for the foes, for short 27 Get out while grac~, of God , MR.l..I, P!PIITY survey and find out. In March PLAYBOY, on sale now. 59 Merry month. in the ~etting's I MINIST6Il. Of Paris ~ood You'D also dig an Intimate profile of rockdom's newest superstar, Bruce 16 Blanched 28 Skillful qualitie,: 17 Pitcher Walter 60 "The drinks Springsteen, Nixon trickster Dick Tuck's Inside look at the upcoming elections, _melt 29 Engagement Johnson's mark 30 Literary Jane an eye-opening sneak peek at Emmanuelle II and much, much more. 20 Following 61 Cigar. for one and family 21 'Deep dishes 62 Newt 22 Dispatched 63 Basic nature 32 Fear·inspired 23 Kind of music or 36 Animal-like fish DOWN 41 Behave like lightning Eve's snake It's aU in PLAYBOY's March issue. On sale now. 24 French article 28 Lock up, as a I Nuisance 44 T·shaped crosse~ jury 2 "-boyl" 45 Formal 31 Flaring star 3 Tennis star headpiece 33 Team scores 4 Print fabric 49 Gawk 34 Linger 5 Eager SO Hogan and Blue 35 Concocts 6 French coin 51 School test 37 Philippine tree 7 Go to bed 52 Kind of phobia 38 ANTA member 8 "Merry Wid()w, " .;3 Apartment, for 3t Correspond for one one 40 Diplomacy 9 Pimlico or the 54 Slaughter of 42 Wlndy·day nier Big A baseball 43 Runs afoul of a 10 Medicinal plant 55 Slave of old meter maid II Sea bird 57 LummolC

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • Ides of • • February DoldrulDs? • • Your Valentine has wilted? : Your tax refund Is late? Headlnl down : Your pet groundhog .norl«la' f Villt COLLEGE EXPO '76, : '. saw his shadow? Daytona Beach, March 20-24. Exhibits! Giveaways! Fun. lun,lun! : wh, not co";ti :1iown to THE MILL. for ..-pper .nd • 81 ... of wine' : ~ : .. . Jf Privately owned The surroundings are comfortable and: .. Nowaltlng the price Is reasonable. : ' ,.. ,Convenient hours " .• ,.. IProfessional Service You just might feel better: ,.. Ample close-by about February. : Free parking • • f'h. Mill R•• taurant • • tlO ...... on, low. CItr. • , • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. I I• David Patt ~ -- PERSONALS MISCELLANEOUS A·Z HELP WANTED MUSICAL AUTO SERVICE When the Hawkeye wrest1e1'l der," edges of Oklahoma'ssmaD mat INSTRUMENTS boarded Roy Carver'lI luxury Doug BenscbJter, a fIrIt·year to ward off Cyaewskl's ad· - ...,--.-.-y .. .."....--.. • jet-\lner In- MolIne Jut Friday heavyweight wrestlInc only his vances after the Iowa co· l,At'I)1 IJ" ' .... ' '", ' .... ',A " ',A ' ',All 1,.1' p I SENIORS • ~ Coil. ~eduatea. JOHN'I Volvo and SUb repair, F&IIInd AniNT10N .- players: Alf Of bran~ gt.aranleed 33&-7679. H6 Interelled In a cIlalenging C.Mf. world 3S3-6201 =~35~~lnIeed . lo:': morning, they were eaJ'I')'ing a sixth match, was forced to ex· captain lot an early lead, "Cys. Four Cushion's tables have recently , 11ave1. job 18OUrity. ekeelenl pay and eel- IU season record and a string tremes to try to pin his man In ewsld wrestled con · been eel We IT II DARKROOM for sale. used once, one vancement, tIirty days annual paid v_ FelDER Jaguer electric guIIer. $200 or ----:---:--:---:-~- cj Sf tie said a cocr::=.~~. :-be":tn ~ prlca laklll all . 351-5117. 2·19 tion. MIIlree medical and denlalbeneftt .. best oller. PtIone 353-1S13, 3-1 ATLANTIS VW Service · Qllllltv, dual meets withoot a lCJII order to salvage a for the servatively," Gable , "He "Everyday In.very way, _" 3-5 Positions available In management bull- Narrenteed lebar, Int, to Norman, Okla. By the time national champions, and wound got a lead and he tried to protect JIIC Cll!l&8l1e deck, like new. $50. BSR nelS, engl"ng. NoellpeflenceMc.. HAOSnlOM Basa. good condItlon,$loo reason e bl e . l5 1. 9"7.2 -25 they got back to their hotel In up sacrificing valuable points In it. He should have won." IF YOU DIED TONlOHT "",WII'lrequency equalizer. eight sary. U.S. citizens only, For lurther 1nIor· ftrm.62&2813. 2·19 FURUARY Scledall Oil en.,. .. Norrman at a quarter to twelve his efforts. BenIcl¥lter, Gable ONLY THREE HAWItEYES do knowforlUAltlal MUd It months old. $50 , Call 338·6972. malion cal coIect, 31&-338-9358. 2-18 • and lube lor yoAI c.. Only $e,iS:'" Saturday night, all they had left said, was also victimized by the be ~ God? The 8tie'fGJ go ..enlngs. 2·19 BANJO lor sale, StOO or belli offer. Cail 1.80 OX. Phon. 351-8713 for - Brad Smith, Chuck YaaJa, know lor (I Joh 5' l:i:) ~~ WORK·Sludy seer.tary • Typing and Bob. 353-1013 2·19 IPPOIntment. 3-22 was a severe case ci the bluet poor officiatiflg as he put Herb and ChrIe Campbell-rnanaaed .... n . -'..- SOFA sleeper, $60 or oller. 351·2922,2· general ot1Ice war\(. SeIec1rfc Corred/ng __-:- ...... ' ______and a resolve to Itart wrestling Calvert on his back with a full :: F~~ ~T~ 11 lypeM1ter.353-7028, 2-24 MARllN 00$ guitar and case , one year -V-O-L-K-S-W-A-G-E-N-R-e-pa-I-r-s.-=-i-v-IC-. to win, with YagJa scoring all of ' p.m. . , old and used albu"", blU88.)au, rock , Solon SI/. years factory trllntC!' like national charnplons. nelson, but no near" all points his 10 points In the third period r======. OLDER model rtfrlgeralorfor ..... workt OVERIEAI JOIII • Temporwy or per. Basi offe,.. 337-5789 or 351-(1095, 2·19 644.3666 or 644.3661 2.18 • "The Hawkeyes dickl't were called, Benachoter loat 7-', to shut out Kevin YOWlI. good, 535, DI-' 626-2275. 2·17 merIIInl. Eurcpll. Aulllnlll. S, AmerIca. . , wrestle welll!llOUlh to win," ex· Mike McDonough alIo lost a won't this . AIrIca. etc, AI nelda, $500-$1200 month- BANJO lor aale withea ... ellCtllenl·v!r· JACI(· • ...,RnJ·~c.dItIII, "The Hawkeyes let SUPPORTIVE ABORTION , U.ED vacuum cl.an.rs.rea.onabl. Iy, Expen.- paid, IIghtMeIng. Free in- luaJly new, $250. 354-1769. 2·20 ct...I up MIl _job. $50. c.11351.871S plaIned Iowa Coach Gary Kur· 7-' decision at 128 pounds to un­ bother them, We're made of SERVICES pnc.d, Ihndy's Vecuum. 351-1453 .3-22 formation write: Intemlllonal Job Center, lor IPPOIntment. 2-13 delmeier. "When' we were defeated Okie KenNelJon. "Mc· good fiber, and we'll probably allailable at the Emma D.pt. ,IG. Box 4490, Berkeley, CA MARTIN 0018 Acoustic gullar, super\) "---JI!I~!I!I!!III--. ahead, we were content to let Donough wrestled very weU," Goldman Clinic. Call 337.2111 FIREWOOD · Large pickup load; 94704. 3-2 condiUon,exceilenlsound, Newmacline TOM'S come back stronger," Kur· for more Intormalfon, I cui, split and slacked, .$40, 338· heads, cae, $285. Contact Mike after 5 ' t( said Gable. "It's a shame they the matches stay cloee. We delmeier emphasized. 9132: 338.5538.2-20, ~ p.m. at 338-8071. 2·20 flANSMJSSlON were trying to win with a took it away from him. " The Hawkeyes · wt1l have to minimum of effort." IN THIS AFFAIR Gable said come back strqer indeed 81 _ MIDL4HD wnp-raoeIver, 2OAMS, $100; ATTENTlON SruDENTS OUAUTY Yamaha 12 SIring Acouellc SflVlCf GA~-Y-ld-be-r-a-tioll--F-ron-t-cou-nS4l-II-'~ I)WO EJectrQvoIce 3-way epealIIy low.., needs c..... for lIIe have returned to the Sletes) for • when Neumann suddenly step­ TIm Cysewskl. Wagemann lost newsfeatur. article. Call SOb of Bikes, 518 S. Cepltol, 35H1337. 2·28 lad"ties; $82; 337·9759, 2-18 ped over his back in what the ref his first dual meet match of the followtng routes: Jones al 353·6210. BLoo~ Antiques • Downtown TYPING .• S. Van Buren, S. Gilbert, ------~---, Wellman. Iowa· Three buildings FlYE·speed Engish bIcyde, good condI· ROOMS with COOking privileges, Black', called a reversaJ and what season, 10-S to wtdefeated Keith RAPE CRISIS LINE full. 3-<4 lion. $65, best o«er, 351-6547. • 2.18 Gasligh! Vi •• 422 Brown, 3-29 Bowery. S. Johnson. A women's supporl service, Gable said was after the buzzer. Steams. 'Wags' suffered a hip SPEEDY· New Smfth Corona electrfc, , 338·4800. BICYCLES ROOM for girl, cooking prIVIleges, .. I know it was after the injury in practice last week, and ;. S. Clinton. E. Court, S, experienced, reasonable. Call Raleigh Close In, 338-4647 !'Ingers,337·9671. 2-19 for everyone buzzer because I was watching was Wl8ble to work hard In Dubuque, S, Unn. DRINKING problem? You're not LOST AND FOUND Parts & Accessories the ref and the time," Gable practice, The lapse caught up ;. S. Dubuque, S. Clinton, E. alone, AA meets Saturdays 'at Repair Service ENGUSH graduale, former secre1ary. reported, also pointing out that Benton. Kirkwood Ave .• [ . noon, Norfh Hall Lounge.2.23 APARTMENTS with him as he tired late In his LOST · Magenla Indian bag wilh mirrors, experienced, IBM Selectric 11 . Gloria. 351· STACY·S FOR RENT Neumann did not have suf· match with steams, but he Prentiss Sandmenlal attachment Reward, 338- 35Hl340. 4·2 Cycle City ficient control of Palmer to admitted. "The guy is pretty If YOU .re Inter"l~ in lII ..e routes, 9827. 2-23 WHO DOES IT? ~=-~....,,_-:-:_.,--:-:~_ TYPING ServIce • ExperIenced. supplies +10 Kirkwood Ave, 354· 2110 SUMMER sublel March· end July. one justify the call, which gave the decent." pIe ..eull353-6203 MI!llSkfor LOST • Family pet, female golden re- fumi,;,ed, fast service, reasonable rll... bedroom. $150 monthly, prefer couple, no Oklahoman a 3-2 victory, "I thlJik laying off for a week BlY Casey. lriever, six ye.s Ok\. BroirporIIIad" . V...... ~ ....' : OMEGA B66XL enlarger. Opemus en- Cedar Rapida • Iowa C"y areL Dulles 10 1orI .. It.ch. • 1!I'Q8', tImer, lIays, aI in excellent conctI- Include eel sales and newl gathering, •••••••••••••••••••• lion, Alia B.ndmaltar cornel and Salary based entirely on ad sale, . .po 9, .,.,.,.", .. " 10." , ... ",, , .. " 11 ., ."., ••. ,,, 12 . . ••••••••••••• PanalOlllc 1 Inch reel • 10 • reel deck. All proltimately $ 125 per week to slert, Must SUPPORTtVE.lowcoalaborllOnatrvtcea for lIIIe, c.11353-2604, ask for Michael be willing 10 live In and become part of 13. " . , , , , .. , 14 .. .. , . . , , ... 15. ... , . , < , , , • 1• . , , . , ... , ... I would like to respond to Monday's letter to the editor from the avaIIIIbIe at The Emma GoIdmM Clinic, carey 2.20 rural communily, "Hullle" is e_ntial; members of the Bellescithe Ball balketball team, 715 N, Dodge 51. Call 337·2111 lor ...... or ~ experience helpful. Good 17. . , , , . , . ' . , , II. , , . .""" ,. ,19 .. , .. , ,. ,., 20 . , , . , . , ' , . , . To say that I overemphasize who wins intramural contests Is, I Information. 3-24 CAnETTE player· Panaaonlc under· opportunity lor man·wiIe learn wIIh one . ARDIAN P tctio ,,-' dull autl>-reveree, $80 with apeak.,., m.mber attending college. Excellent 21. .. , , , , •. ., 22 . . , , , •.. :,. ,. " 23. """ ..• ,, . 24 . , , . , . . . , .. , think, lnacurrate. At the risk of being misinterpreted let me say GU.. trIOnII Prot n ...... y. 337.7849. 2-20 ~owth potandal·lulureownerah!p pas .. that I could care less who wins. lne1anl def.... agaInat auuatt. Some- flit, WriI.BoxH. The Dally lowan.2·18 NAME.______~ ______The women said in their letter that they had fWl playing in­ dme, somewhere, you 11M may depend or CONTEMPORARY heavy metal and Guardian. For Inlormallon caM. 337· lealher dlring room !able and six maten· TWO noon supervlso,. : One deily; ant ADDRESS~ ______~ ______PHONE ______~_ tramural basketball and Intended to continue doll18 so, Well, I 4629, 2·11 Ing chaIrs •••eelenI condition, Cal 35f· Monday, Wednesday, Friday. 11a.m.· l hope they do becauae I have II much fun reportiq their limes II c: •• _ 0 II"'e of 4874 , 2·20 p.m" $3 per hour. Sixty hOUri college CITY ______ZIP ______they do playing them, Any mention of a team'. name Is not inten­ ~ III credit required , South_I Junior High LATIN AMERICA FINE came" • Mamlya C330 Prol.. • School, 2501 Bradford Drlll8. Conlact, TO FIGURE COST ded as a malicious critique of Its member'. IndlvldualabiUties. If M~II complel.d Ad al~nk (, Tho lionel : New NRt.t.lens, flllerll~ , Bryce Hansen, 351-&!42 . 2-17 Count fhe number 01 wordS Iione with ,heck or money order 10 : I make mention of the fact that a team ICOred only two points in a W out ot black bod'l lens, large Ilumlnum cam· In your ad, then multiply THE DAILY tOWAN game It III simply becaUle of the uniqueness of that particular Qeutzollmpom a,. case, $350. Cannon FT . 35mm : MAINTENANCE Worker I, 20 houra thr number of words by tile MIN IMUM AD 10 WORDS Room 1 \1 Communiutlerls C.nler 114 fGlt C...... NRML lens (1.8) Cannon lelephOIO weekly , $3.46 hourly ....nllorill rreinte- rate below. 8e sure 10 count 1·3 DIYs .. " ... ,., 26.5c per WOf'd low~ Clly, lowl 52240 total, given the ruieI and history of the game of basketball. I -r 135mm (2,5) fllle,. (5), cable "leaN, nsnce of civic cenler and adjacent address and·or phonr num· 5 D~YI ...... lOe per word or Stop In. IUlint that the Belles of the Ball take these reports In their inten­ HCIII Mal uptIQIn loc;al length doubler Vlvlllr cloM up flciIiJi .., Ability 10 work Independent· ber, CDSI equals (NumMr 10 DlyS , , , , . , ... , , .. )I( 11ft' WOf'd Ail Ads pay ...l. In athl"'. ded spirit. If they play the game for fun, II they say they do, that Ie_, aluminum CIIM , $3&0. WIII ..11 Iy, wlthoul cIOl.. upervlslon . Apply ~ 01 Words) x (Ral. per lO o.ys " .... ,.'". IDe 11ft' word -No R.funds. CONI'IDINTtAL Pregnancy T.. tlng • whole kit and kaboodleala dilcounl or F.bruary 18 10 Civic C.nler, 410 E: . Word) . Dtallllne: 111.m, for " ••1 dl, shouldn't be hard, OtherwIse'they'd better try to let their offen­ Monday. 8:30 • 7 p.m,; Tueeday, 8:30 · wlll ..11 peril of .lther 1)'Ilem 81 ad· W.hinglon, The Cily Is an a"lrmallvt live average 81 high II mine Mems to be. 4:30: 9alurday, 10 • 2 p.m, at Emma IUlI.d price, Afl.r 6 p,m,. Mike, 337' action, equal opporlunily employer, ... . " And finally, I did not, 81 the letter advlJed, lit on my article. I do GoIdnwICInIc,337-2111 , 3-24 "74. 2·18 male-huNIe. ~••• !11!1, ".1111••••••••• " •••••" ••••••••"'" put them under my pI110w at nilbt, thouIh. Pqe I-The Dally Jowu-I.... CIty ,Iowa-Tues., Felt. 11, 1m Routine win ------....:..-- CGadaaedfrompeaelDe "deli~ u a workout facility explained. "Rlaht now the Elliott said, "and there IlIOIIle for athletic teams," even UnIon, the Rec Center, and Han· aerioua thinking going min thI.t for UI eagers though student feel bore much d1er are still being paid for, and area, but the economic aspect d the financial burden. Had the IDle on these are due to be paid has been holding us back." By TOM QUINLAN NORTHWESTERN (18) intent been to build a center for df In the '70s," he added. EUiott said that there have Asst. Sporta EdItor Hiaer 0 ().() 0, Svett 1 ().() 2, student use, "We would never U there Is to be a new Inter· been some studies made m the Maybe Iowa basketball Coach WaUace 2 ().() 4, McKinney 11 7- have designed the building the oollegiate facility, Hubbard feasibility of a new building of Lute Olson was right when he 10 29, Teasley 8 2-3 18, Boesen 0 way it II, " said Ostrander. uld the Athletic Dept. aome kind of recent yean, but It "there's been nothing con· said earlier this week that "400 1·2 1, Allen 3 (HI 6, HIldebrand 2 would have to pay for Itself, or raise the requisite funds crete - construction costa wins in any facility II enough. 0-04, Fields 1 2-2 4, Klaas 0 (HI 0, Salisbury haS at least one idea would of course be greatly af­ We ought to bum thI.t place Endsley 00-0 0, Trompeter 0 0-0 that would effectively eliminate through private donatlOlll. "The Field House proper, Ita fected by what type of building down." O. Totals 28 12-17 68. one of the three main con· we wanted. U It's strictly a Win No. 401, 81" over IOWA (811 sumers of what he calls "space ticket office, the baseball stadium, the golf course; all of Umlted facility to play basket­ Northwestern here Monday Frost 9 7-11 25, King 7 2-2 16, time." ball In, the costs would be night, was definitely an Iowa Habere<:ht 2 3-4 7, Thompson 5 I- "We're one of the few IChooIs these were paid for by the Athletic Dept., " Hub- drastically reduced ... victory, but far from a 211, Wulfsberg 42-2 10, Peth 02- left that sttU haS a P.E. bard said. - So now we have reached the barn-burner. 32, Gatens 3 2-2 8, Hairston 0 ().() requirement," he said. ''ThiI But the Athletic Dept. staRe where there aren't enough "It wasn't a crowd-pleaser, 0, MaYI 1 ().() 2, Mayfield 0 0-0 0, surprised me when I learned of is not In a position to undertake yards, driveways and puddles but we did what we had to do, Magnusson 0 (HI O. Totals ...... but a recent survey of 20 state It, to play In. A new place is needed and not much extra," swnmed 26 81. llliversities revealed that only the building of a new facility at this time, according to Athletic and. oresumably. sooner or ~ Dan Frost, who led the Halftime : Iowa 3., Nor­ two of them still require P.E. Chalmers (Bump) later someone will find a way to Hawks In rebounding (12) and thwestern 30 . Total fouls : 1bere hasn't been a serioua at­ Director Elliott. In fact , ticket prices for pay for one. 1bat much seems scoring (25 points) . Northwestern 23, Iowa 18. tempt to change the P.E. inevitable. But what II much bad bold off the football 1l&meS may be The Hawkeyes to Fouled out : Thompson. A: regulation here. " less certain is whether the 10,561. ~ next year in order to help Northweltem'l dlna-1booUq Salisbury would like to see a building that is eventually built pardi, pII1iC!lll8rly finance the renovation of Kin­ separate building coostructed will be an efficient respon.ee to IbIrp-tbootiDl 1OUtbpa. Billy the end of the game. Fred nick Stadium. for Intercollegiate basketball. the overall needs of the unIver­ McKbmey, wbo ICOl'ed ZI Haberecht also showed his He claims that the plans for one "There is certainly a tremen­ dous need for expansion. " sityc~unity . polDtI, and a bit 01 tllelr OWII presence with some slick were ready to go when he was lackllllter play to beat the shot-blocking as Iowa bottled up chairpenon of the Building and It WlIdcatl. the center lanes. GrouncIs Committee. "Nobody was going to run "The ,tory of the game was "At the time It was my under­ away with thll one," said Iowa the boards," 0II0a commeated. standing that building the Rec forward Bruce King. ''They oaly got four IeCOIId Building was phase one, YOU. WIN- "Northwestern's a good ball abut, as a result of offelllive renovation of the Field House club and we knew we had to be rebouDdl, aDd that'l the least was phase two, and phase three ready." we've beldaaybody to aU year was supposed to be the new JOE'S DRAWS "It was a good game, but Joaa. B~UUq blocked (Jim) basketball arena," he said. we're still not playing up to our Wallace', flnt Ibot 8IId tH "Roy Carver made a gift to the potential," chimed in Scott iDtlmldator became the Pboto by Dom ~'ranco 1.IIiversity and we had It deter­ Joe's Place 1bompson, whose shooting was iDtlmldatee ... I .... forwards DaD Fr'DIt (ceater) aDd Bruce eoatroIIed the boardI, 8IId tile game, and moved mined that a new facility could a far cry from previous games. Iowa (7-5) II now In Kia« IriPt) eombIDed for Z3 reboaDdI a,alaat iIIto c:GIIteDtioa for tIdrd place la the 811 Tea wttlI be built for about $3.5 million. "It wasn't a flashy game, and contention for third place in the Northwesteru here Moaday alpt. Iowa aBl'-wlD. but the administration decided offers 25c draws to­ we didn't overpower them, but Big Ten, only half a game to emphuize the campus u a we won." behind Purdue (~), which least temporarily. Two jumpers there were other people to make work underneath with Frost fine arts center rather than night to celebrate the It was almost apparent from dropped a 74-71 game to No. 1 by Thompson, who hit just 5 of up for It. KIn, aDd FnIIt reilly slipping in some slick aUocate money for a new the start that this game was to indiana. Iowa travels to Ohio 14 for the night. a tip-in by came to play tcJai8Id. Il was a underhand Iaylns and three free athletic structure. " be anything but flashy. Iowa state Saturday, while the Haberecht followed by a scoop .little quiet aad sIqgIIh oat throws for a 13-po1nt lead. The administration, in the per­ ,Hawkeyes' weekend stat1ed out missing its first two Boilennakers must contend shot by Frost put Iowa on top there at times, dIoaP. We Deed The reserves cleaned it up son of Dean Hubbard, pointed shots, and the ever-present with second-place Michigan, quickly, 23-16. . a Uttle sometblDg extra to get UI after that, and Iowa had its 17th out that part of a 1971 Carver Thompson couldn't find the and then Michigan State, both Then Northwestern went to going. " win of the season against six donation of $3.5 million was victories in basketbal range for his classic jumpers.

Benjamin Ft:anklin Independence Day

Benjamin Franklin, born 1701, died 1790. Benjamin wu a On the Independence Day printer, writer, philosopher, scientist, inventor, dlplomat. That is July the fourth, Pit "'rtOII. But we remember him most as Inventing Electricity. He It'll be our 200th birthday, SolI Of became interested In the study of Electricity about 1741. He Nr...... Mrs. WNliMI ...rIOIIS (Which everyone should know) . 71t N. JoIIlllOII St. developed the theory that electricity consisted ·of a single Of oourse we will go all out to show, Graclt' fluid. He first used the terms positive and negative. In 1752 That we love our natim truly. Franklin performed hiI famous ezperlment of flylnJ a Idte In a stonn.' He showed that lightning Is electricity. Franklin's sclentlflc interest ranged far beyond electricity. He became the first scientist to study the movement 01 the Gulf Stream In the Atlantic Ocean. Franklln was the first to The American Revolution show scientists and naval offlcen that sailors could calm a rough sea by pouring oil on It. It started on April 19, 1775, when minutemen and recIcoata Franklin was the only man to sign all fOW' of the following fired upon each other. The minds and hearta of the documents : The Declaration of Independence, the Treaty of Americans. called It a revolution. Accordini to Jolin Adams Alliance with Franoe, the Treaty of Paril that ended the the revolution began fifteen years before blood was shed. It Revolution, and the Constitution. lasted from 1~1783 . Franklin traveled to Europe many times representing the Before the revolution began, the Americana were IUbjectl by p.rmlssion of THf BElTMANN AR( HIVE colonies.·He wu elected to the second COntinental CqreII d the King. He Jived three thousand rnJIes away from the in 1775, and served on a committee Inspecting the anny. oolonies and at least eweeks salling Urne. The BrItiIh kln&, Later he diSCll8llt!d peace terms with Lord Howe m Staten KIng George, was destined to be ,the Jut monarch of Ialand but the ta1ks failed and the war went on. England. He wu only at the time, twenty-two. When Kl'na 1776: Down with the King. Franklin returned to PhIladelphia In 1785. For the next two George became·king, he was wlnRlng a global war apinlt years he served as president of the Elecutive Council of Pen­ France. They were fighting on the cootInent of Europe, in In­ Now, we are armed with our own declaration offree­ nsylvania. dia and the West Indies. 1be Brltilh aIJo fOUlht all oYer the seven sea. 1bey fought In North America, too. The Brltqh dom. We have proclaimed King George a tyrant, unfit held thirteen colonies. They are, Mauach...tta, New Hamp­ shire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, Pennsylvania, to rule a free people. Thomas Jefferson's Declaration New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, VirIinIa, North Carolina, of Independence has been approved and adopted. On • • South Carolina, and GeorgIa. Dlvld 110lIl .. July 9th, General Washington sends its message to .... Of ·For seven yem, starting In 1771, BritlIb aoldiers and Nr...... Mrs. J __ 1tOIIIup AmerIcans · fOUiht together and did haute together. They his army in New York. Along with an order "that this .. ,.lre"lld fought against the French and their indian allies. They were Gr.... beating France and that pleaaecl George the III. important event will serve as an incentive to every George had poIital pIanI of hla own and that made him want the war over fut. HiI mother wu always aaytna to him, officer and soldier to act with fidelity and courage "George, be a kine!" and that', euctly whit he Intended to .. ." We listen, and we are stirred. We gaze at the be. There's now a graYinl sign in Bolton, on the Uberty Tree. 4,OOO-pound lead statue of George III towering over After It had been hacked with fire by BrItiIh, the sign OIl It us on Bowling Green. Soldier and citizen alike, we aill remaina, sa.yin«, "TIle people will boldly ...rt their freedom ." have one thought. Throw it down! Later, we realize how handy it is made into rifle bullets. ~

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