WASHINGTON (AP) - President The 8 per cent increase In eduCation The reason for the decline, Johnson receive less total income than adult next fiscal year will be about $400 Nixon asked Congress Monday to vote benefits being paid about two mill ion told a WhIte HOUle briefing, Is the welfare recipients" under recent million more than in the current year, an 8 per cent cost-ot-living increase In veterans is necessary, Nixon said, "to decline in the number of veterans Social Security amendments, Nixon Johnson said, with most of the in­ GI bill education benefits and to re­ keep pace with inflation." Presently, enrolling in the program. said. crease going for medical programs. Nixon proposes vamp the pension system for 2.3 a single veteran receives $220 a month Nixon told Congress that the VA In addition, the administration wan­ Nixon said in his message that a million veterans and dependents. while in school full-time, and some pension program "has so many ts widows to receive the same amoun­ record $276 million will go in fiscal Outlining a $13.6 billion legislative congressmen have introduced problems that it cannot be corrected ts as veterans. he said, eliminating a 1975 for VA hospital coostruction, and package in a special message to legislation for a 13.8 per cent Increase unless the entire framework of the dual rate system. that funds will be sought for an ad­ Capitol Hill, Nixon asked that Nov. 11 in benefitS-substantJaUy more than program is restructured." ditional 7,600 medical personnel to in­ He said legislation is being new boosts in be redesignated as Veterans Day, Nixon proposed. . Administration oHicials said crease the ratio of staff to patients in wiping out part of a 1968 law whlch While the administration is seeking prepared ~ grant "cost-of-Hvlng ad­ present penSioners would be allowed VA hospitals. switched Veterans Day to the fourth a boost in individual payments, justments in VA pension payments to stay under the present plan but, Monday in October. veterans administrator Donald E. tJed to the automatic Increases now receive a 4 per cent increase under In asking for the redesignatJon of The message on the veterans was Johnson said the new budget wlll seek available to Social Security recipien­ Nixon's plan, as well as automatic Nov. 11 as Veterans Day, Nixon said GI benefits the last of a series of three Nixon has $2.6 billion for the education program, ts." cost-or-Jiving increases tied to in­ 31 state legislatures and all major sent to Congress prior to his State of $600 mill ion less than Is being spent The legislation also would raise VA creases In SocIal Security payments. veterans organizations support such a the Union address Wednesday night. this year. payments for "thole pensioners who Total proposed spendinJ( for the move.

Tuesday January 29, 1914 lowl City, lowl 52240 Vol . 106. No. 133

10c Sheriff endorses students'plan for supervising jail recreation-

By B~UCE DIXON only allowed access to tbe tblrd Hoor better relationships between inmates education-recreation can apply their Staff Writer recreation room .ce each week for a and the jail staff. " supervision time toward the 150 service A proposal for University of Iowa period of one to one and a balr bours," Graversen and Donahey propose in­ internship hours required by their student supervision of recreation ac­ Graver.en and Donahey said In a Joint creasing recreation hours by at least major." . tivities for Johnson County Jail inmates statement. five hours a week by opening the rec­ Graversen said his interest in county was endorsed Monday by Sheriff Gary "It would seem that one of the most reation room between the hours of 1 and jail inmates developed while he was Hughes, according to two UI students irritating factors among jail inmates is 3 p.m. three days a week at the outset. doing a research project as an optional who developed the plan. the complete idleness of time." They also Intend to repair equipment, class assignment. Gary Graversen, a recreation and Graversen said the jail recreation expand tbe supply of book. and He said he became acquainted with education major, and Michael room is equipped with a delapidated magazines, and show films. work done by the halfway house in Iowa Donahey, who is majoring in sociology, pool table that doubles as a ping pong Graversen said he hopes to start the City operated by Project HOPE, whose said their proposal calls for expanding table, a television and some reading project sometime next week . members visit jail inmates once a recreation hours and types of material. "The sheriff is perfectly willing to week. .recreation available to inmates, and to "Television and reading can only do co-operate with us," he said. "His only Donahey, a HOPE volunteer, has repair presently available recreation so much in the relieving of tension," stipulation is that everybody knows been participating in the Tuesday equipment. they said. "We feel increased access to about the security regulations." sessions with inmates. "II Is our understanding tbat the In­ the recreation room would not only Hughes was unavailable for comment "Through these visits he (Donahey) mates of tbe Johnson County Jail are benefit the jail inmates, but also foster Monday night. got to know some of the guys at the ------Graversen said student voiunteers (halfway) house and that's where I met from the UI sociology and Mike and we combined forces," Ehrlichman to subpoena Nixon education-recreation departments are Graversen said. needed to implement the plan. "If we don't get volunteers, we'll go (AP) - John D. The Times reported that Douglas He said that besides himself and ahead and Implement the p1ab our­ Ehrlichman, indicted top former aide Dalton, one of Ehrlichman's lawyers, Donahey, eight other students have selves on a smaller seale. But I see no to President Nixon, plans to seek a sub- confirmed he had sought Nixon's volun- expressed an interest in donating their problem In gettinl help. I don't plan on poena Tuesday compelling Nixon to ap- tary appearance in court but was tur- time. lettht. tbl. drop." pear at a court hearing here Feb. 26. the ned down by James St. Clair, head of Graversen said .Ix of tbestucients are Graversen said he didn't know what Los Angeles Times reported. the White House legal team dealing women and Hughes "Is reluctant to let' would happen to the program In the The newspaper said in its Tuesday with Watergate-related matters. girls go up tbere with the Inmate •. " summer when the students leave town. editions that Ehrlichman's lawyers "We need about four to six more Currently underclassmen are being Thud! would seek the subpoena from Judge Ehrlichman and co-defendants G. volunteers," Graversensaid. "We want sought to carry out the program. Gordon Ringer in Los Angeles County Gordon Liddy and David R. Young Jr. somebody who will be at the jail when Joe Frazier lands a p.unch to the chin of Square Garden Monday night . Ali won a "Maybe we'll find someone who 'll be l\luhammad All during the second round of the unanimous 12-round decision . See story plge _Supe""_r_io_r C_o_u_rt_ . ______a_r_e_ac_c_u_sed_of_co_ns ...p_ir_ac..;,y_an_d_bu_r;;.gl_ar..;,Y_ . _he is supposed to be . Students in here (this summer) ," Graversen said. heavyweight right in New York's Madison eight. Make grades 'equitable' EPC grading proposals receIve• mixed response

By CHUCK HICKMAN wish to represent their efforts. ween 2.8 and 3.2. Any average score out­ which develop individual expression an'd ce." He told Huntley, "The (proposed) . mal distribution curve," Bovbjerg said. Contributing Editor -Eliminate the letter grade system, to side the range would require a statement abilities, thus making evaluation difficult. system is just wroag, I don't know what The committee discussed possible ex­ be replaced by a floating six·word code, in­ explaining that ability of the class was Much of the current grade inflation stems your teaching experience has been, but perimentation with' the six-point scale in A proposal to adopt completely new tended to restore symmetry to grading above or below average. Faculty lI)embers from classes, such as music and art, which you're making grotesqlJe assumptions" some UI classes, but delayed action on the grading procedures at the University of evaluations. who turned in such explanations on a award a high proportion of A's, rather than about the ability of faculty to award grades proposal. Hornsby said he would oppose Iowa received a mixed and confused Discussion focused on the third segment" ~egular basis would be told to differentiating between students. The Hun­ 011 a fair basis. any testing of the plan. response Monday as the Educational of the plan, with EPC members expressing "recalibrate" their grade scale. tley plan would award "three" to these Hornsby added, "1 have the impression More favorable EPC reaction was given Policy Committee (EPC) launched debate confusion over differences between the, Defending the plan, Huntley noted the UI students, thus haltill& the tendency toward you (Huntley) don't teach at this univer­ to eliminating the computation of grade on the plan. six-word code and letter grades. grade system is of little value for com­ an unbalanced grade scale. sity" and that problemsoffair grading are point averages. Huntley said the move was After avoiding discussion of the com­ The Huntley scale would include marks parison because some departments give Recent EPC adoption of a limited .. a problem for the English Depart­ to "remove the convenience of the GPA" plicated proposal during the first of : much higher grades than others. The satisfactory-no credit plan is an attempt to: ment-classics can manage quite well" from graduate schools, employers and ,~ aeme~ter , EPe heard an explanation of the -Zero: the "student was not able to do 2.8-3.2 restriction would force all classes deal with the same problem. without the Huntley plan. others who might use the figure as an easy , system by English Prof. John Huntley. The enough for this course" to be fairly into an equltablf' range, he said. Richard Hoppin, professor of geology, Liberal Arts Dean Dewey B. Stuit index of student performance. plan is designed to make grades given by evaluated. A. an example of current 1nJ..~lce Hun­ contended that advanced classes must questioned whether Ul faculty would The GPA inadequately measures individual academic units more equitable. -One: performance markedly lower Uey cited some departments witb bllb en­ maintain high grade levels because poor co-operate with the adoption of a new academic achievement and has come to halt the spiral of grade point averages and than the class norm. trance requlrerneu,ts and low ....de levell, students have already been eliminated by grading system, adding that he has reflect on students· personal worth, Hun­ de-emphasize the stress on scores both -Two: performance slightly lower than and compared tbem to UI edueatJoa lower level courses. "Three" would again pressured for more balanced grading with tley asserted. Adoption of the six-point Within and outside of the university com­ the class norm. classes wbere blgb gradel are given be the appropriate mark, Huntley said. little success. scale. where "three" grades predominate. munity. -Three: performance consonant with despite le.s restrictive admluloa standar­ Though several EPC members said the EPC members James Lindberg, would force interested parties to probe fur­ The Huntley plan would : the class norm. ds. Huntley system deals positively with professor of geography. and Richard Bov­ ther into individual qualifications before -Eliminate computation and -Four: performance slightly higher EPC members noted inflation of the let­ existing grading problems, they doubted bjerg, professor of zoology, said the making employment or admission publication of student grade point than the class norm. ter grade system has caused B to signify the practicality of its implementatiQn. system would improve the equality of decisions, he said. averages (GPA). -Five: performance markedly higher "average work," thus limiting scoring Department cbalrmea wlIJ not enforce grades between academic units. No vote on possible recommendation of -Allow students to strike from their than the class norm. alternatives open to faculty . the median standard, aeCOl'dlbg to Roger "It would make us break step. The the step to the liberal arts faculty was academic records, up to the time of Instructors would be required to give an "Three" differs from C In that the Hun­ Homlby, profeaor of dUlles, who war­ system might work for awhile because it taken by EPC, which was without three of IJ'Ilduation, any classes which they did not average grade for each class section bet- tley code could be better applied to courses Ded tltat the IyItem would beeome "a far- enforces the principle of grading on a .nor- its nine voting members.

il the news ------repo- rt- ed--tha- t -s·yri· an-·fo·rce- s·m· o·rt·a·red-·Is·ra·e·1I-·di·c·at·e· ..· Stan- da- rd· -achi·e·veci- a· 1·2.·9·pe· r· ce· ·nt· re· t·u·rn--me· n-t-; ·37-a·re-necessa-~·ry-to-m-ak·e-lt"""'a ·c·on·---TZlhlllelDglI'"o"ve"mm"""'enlit·'s·ma-in-l·ine-o·f ·de·f·en·se-in-the--~ positions in the third straight day of clashes on on shareholders equity In 1973 compared with the stitutional amendment. States have until 1979 to south is along the Prek Thnot River but a sizable /. f I ' the Golan lIeights far to the north. The spokes- inadequate level or 10.2 per cent In 1972. Thil act on the amendment, and legislatures such as rebel force has entrenched itself north of the man in Tel Aviv claimed the Israelis held their brings our rate of return to about the average or Georgia's which have rejected it may reconsider river. near Prey Veng. J ' fire and said there were no casualties. all manufacturing Industry." the amendment at any time. b, I After 72 hours of hectic packing. the Israelis Fourth quarter earnings were $121.5 million, Do I-ght r e completed their pullback from the southern sec- up 53 per cent over $79.5 million in the final quar- Com" 0 die a Y I Y tor of their bridgehead west of the Suez Canal by ter of 1972. U ~~.ocuot';on noon, formally turning the area over to the Standard, the nation's sixth largest oil corn- WASHINGTON (AP)-Sens. Dick Clark, ~ &I • United Nations Emergency Force. pany, said that PIG.& million of its tsll.2 million PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) - Govern- D-Iowa. and Mike Mansfield, D Mont .. Monday They remained In control of about 700 square earnings came from U.S. petroleum operations. ment Infantrymen and armor met sharp jointly introduced legislation to repeal the SUEZ (AP) - Israeli soldiers sang and waved miles of Egyptian territory west of the canal, resistance Monday In a drive against Com- year-round Daylight Saving Time. gaily from armored personnel carriers Monday captured in October. plus the largest part of the Eft'" munlst-led insurgent forces that had broken They said the recent SWitch to Daylight Saving as they evacuated about a third of the Egyptian Sinal J>ellinsula, captured in the 1987 war. .It through Phnom Penh's southern defenses, field Time has posed great safety hazards for school . territory they captured In the last Middle East reports said. children and achieved no demonstrable energy war. ATLANTA, Ga. (API - The Georgia Four battalions of government troops, num- savings. The Israeli army radio said Egyptian soldlers Oil profits Legislature rejected the proposed Equal Rights bering 80me 1,400 men and backedby2hrmored "I think it's time to recognize that we may fired rockets and machine guns Into the air to Amendment to the ConstItution Monday when personnel carriers, failed to clear an area about have made a mistake," said Clark, referring to mark their jubilatioo as they moved in and took CHICAGO (API - Standard 011 Co. (Indiana) the state HOllIe of Repmentatlves voted 11M to 70 Beven miles IOUthwest of Phnom Penh. Field increasing reports of school children killed and control about six hours after the Israelis left. announced today III Income for 1973 jumped 38 against it. reports said the government suffered 30 killed . injured in pre-djlWD accidents. The pullout lifted the 97-day siege of Suez City, per cent to tsll.2 million . The vote came after a 31~ hour debate during Ten of the dead were left behind by the with its 15,000 civilians, and freed supply lines to A year ago Its Income was 5374.7 million. which opponents argued vigorously the amend­ hard-preued government battalions and were the lOme 20,000 troops of the Egyptian 3rd Army John E. Swearingen, chairman, announced ment that Is designed to mate men and women later spotted by a reconna\sance team which 40s encircled since the closing hours of October's that the estimated earnings for 1973 amounted to equal would subject women to military drafll reported the corpses had been beheaded. flthtlng. $7.33 a share or 36 per cent higher thall the t5.37 and unisex toilet facilitlell, and would sanction Government forces around Prey Veng, about Highs today will be in the 405. Increasing As the Egyptians regained the some 300 square for 1972. homoIexual marriages. eight miles southwest or the capital, also repor­ cloudiness tonight will send the temperature dip­ miles of land, the Israeli military command Swearingen said the preliminary figurel In- Thirty-two lltates have ratlfl~ the amend- ted no progress against the Insurgents. ping into the teens. Pile Z-'I'1Ie Daily lowln-Iowa City, Iowa-Tues., Jan. H. 1974 Because ... ------.. You Want to Look postscript .Oil price hike '~ecessary~ Your Best.. Compltte ...uty Servlc •• WASHINGTON (AP) - John oil. later this year. adequate advan­ could include authority to close For H.r .nd HIm. Sa whill, deputy director of the Thus, he said, some home­ ce notice will be given to the gasoline stations 00 Sunday. Correction Federal Energy Office. told owners pay 50 per cent more for public. and to limit hours of operation A story in yesterday' s Dally 10... incorrectly Congress Monday the price of fuel than their neighbors. The Bureau of Engraving and and place limits on gasoline DOWNTOWN said Feb. 2 would be the third concert date domestic oil should be held Reading a statement pre­ Printing began printing ratio­ sales. missed by CUE this academic year. within the range of $6 to $8 a pared for federal energy chief ning coupons last Friday. The "I think it is very important 105 S. LI N N CUE is allowed the use of the Field House for ' barrel. WiUiam Simon, Sawhill said the operation will continue around that we get that authority 337 2383 three dates per semester. CUE filled two of those He did not indicate how this energy office is proposing a rule the clock until 1.6 billion cou­ quickly ," Sawhill said. ...____ PLAZA SAL ON could be done but said some to assure all dealers a fair share pons are printed for possible use dates last semester and could possibly still Meanwhile. Sen. Walter F. program three concerts this semester. price increases probably are of the No. 2 heating 011 by March I. I necessary to create incentives available. This would include Mondale. D-Minn.. said hints to explore for domestic petro­ the cheaper and more expen­ Meanwhile, the emergency from the energy office that the This Area's Exclusive Deafer 'or leum. sive varieties. energy legislation that would price of uncontrolled domestic Book exchange Some method must be found "The result would be that no give President Nixon authority oil will be rolled back to $8 a STEINWA~ EVEREn "of capping the price." he said. supplier would have a greater to order such rationing ap­ barrel but that would not be and other fine pianos Without such a limit. he said. percentage of Inexpensive prod­ peared in trouble. A coalition of enough to stem wha t he called Plus Students may pick up books and~r money the price of domestic oil will uct than any other supplier," he Senate Democrats and Republl· "the tremendous windfall price HAMMOND ORGANS from the Iowa Student Association (lSA) book continue to creep toward that said. cans mounted a strong effort to increases" the oil industry is exchange from 10 a.m. .to 1 p.m. this week in the set by the Arab oil nations. Sawhill and Simon appeared send the bill back to conference . obtaining. Lucas-Dodge Room of the Union. Current domestic oil prices before a unit of the Senate Gov­ with the House. Mondale said in a statement HILTBRUNNE·R'$ Books not picked up will be given to charily. range from $5.25 for a barrel of ernment Operations Commit­ A final Senate vote had been the suggestion "apparently is 116 SeCOftd St. S.E. oil under price controls to more tee. scheduled for Tuesday. an attempt to defuse rising con­ 'Cedar Rapids 363-2667 than $10 under uncontrolled Sawhill said that while spot Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis ., gressional support for a strong prices. shortages of gasoline are oc­ who is expected to offer a mo­ rollback of domestic oil prices." Costumes Sawhill said his office is act­ curring in several areas of the tion to recommit the measure to Ing to correct one example of country, a general shortage conference, Is said to support The Univel'5ity of Iowa Opera Theatre will sell price unfairness caused by var­ large enough to trigger ratio­ the principle of taxing windfall its costume wardrobe from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. ying prices of foreign and do­ ning has not occurred. oil industry profits but claims Saturday in the Opera Rehearsal Room. Room mestic petroleum. He noted that Holland, facing the provision in the energy bill 132 of the University of Iowa Music Building. He noted that in some areas. a 15 per cent shortage, recently is unworkable. The sale will include both period costumes and chiefly New England.lndepend­ called off its rationing program. Sawhill said the energy office modern clothing costumes. ent suppliers have been forced He said he believed the United needs the authority to impose According to Opera Theatre Director Martha to rely on more expensive for­ States also could handle a 15 per rationing as well as the author­ Letterman, the sale will include at bargain eign imported oil while the ma­ cent shortage without rationing. ity for mandatory fuel conser­ prices many hats and costumes which can be jor companies have been able to Simon told the committee that vation. restyled into wearable clothing. sell cheaper domestic heating if rationing becomes necessary He said the latter program Petition Student Health treats A petition calling for university payment of employee medical insurance is being circulated among employees by the StaIr Employees psychologicial difficulties Collective Organization (SECO). According to Jean Kendall. state SECO vice 8y JOHN McCLEARY such as church counseling, university coun­ president, the petition calls for "full payment of . Staff Writer seling, the Crisis Center or the Iowa City Mental Health Center. medical coverage." Marital problems, interpersonal relations and Kendall said the organization had "roughly motivation in academic situations are among Ideally, Dr. Singer gets to know a person as an 1,200" signatures as of Monday afternoon. She the problems students bring to Dr. John Singer. Individual and helps him by working with stated that the petition will continue circulation University of Iowa Student Health psychiatrist: elements in his background rather than by until next week when it will be submitted to the Dr. Singer sees four or five students a day in the changing his beliefs. university. Student Health clinic for "acute here-and-now In problems such as drug or alcohol abuse. Other regents institutions pay part of medical problems" relating to a university environment. which he says are infrequent, Dr. Singer tries to coverage, Kendall said. but no such program "Our goal is crisis intervention and brief see the person behind the problem and solve exists at the UI. psychotherapy." he said. His services are free , associated problems that may have created the Although the university does pay medical costs but they are also limited because there are no situation. for employees above basic policies. payment of In-patient services at Student Health and he is Associated problems are hard to 'put into Blue Cross-Blue Shield premiums is left to em­ the staWs only psychiatrist. specific categories, he said, but some examples Pirouette ployees. Just talking to the student Is an Important part Include difficulty 01' failure in scbool work, Inter· Beauty, Employees wishing to sign the petition may personal relations between men and women and of the therapy In most cases. An Interview and Quality, Heritage contact the SECO office at 338-9495. some psychological testing may be used to ascer· the transition between childhood and adolescen- taln the nature 01 the problem. But It Is Impor· ce. to symbolize tant that a penon wants to be helped, Dr. Singer He said these problems exist in all persons but your love said. some have more difficulty than others with on the day for Named "Treatment depends on the person's belief that them, particularly younger students who may be it is the right place to go-trust is very impor­ away from home for the first time. love. Ray A. Muston has been named the new tant. " Singer said. The core of most these problems is the univer­ associate dean of the University of Iowa College He said that it is not always possible for a sity, and Dr. Singer states his main job is to help of Education. psychiatrist to treat each person who comes for students g\!t through school. He said he tries to Muston replaces L.A. Van Dyke. who retired help because personality conflicts may develop give a student a positive feeling toward his UERTEEH & STOCKER after 32 years with the UI. Van Dyke had served between doctor and patient. school work and clarify his commitment to an as associate dean of Instruction since 1968. In these situations, and for long-term education. @ Muston joined the UI in 1970 as assistant dean psychotherapy. he refers students to UI Many students are intellectually mature of administration and an assistant professor in Psychiatric Hospitals. enough to handle university work , but the ex­ Jefferson Building 338-·4212 the College of Education. Dr. Singer handles primarily what he terms perience is emotionally traumatic for them, he Earlier the Dally Iowan reported from infor­ "adiustment reaction and mild personal said. mation received on a University press release problems" which he says are common in a Part of Dr. Singer's work at Student Health is that Muston was named the new dean of the VI university situation. helping students who were under psychiatric BRING A FRIEND: College of Education. "There is a new adjustment for one quarter of care before coming to the VI. He al~ par­ the student population every year, and a certain ticipates in summer orientation for dormitory percentage find their way here. " resident advisers and consults with them by ~ PRICI * Rescheduling He added that some persons use other services phone for some problems. SALE TO GET YOU IN

A lecture by Richard Demarco scheduled for Thursday evening at the University of Iowa will Arab group fosters friendship be given Wednesday evening instead. . TipTop · tivities we have are basically on association "live and flourish" Demarco, director of the Richard Demarco By GAIL WILLIAMS Gallery in Edinburgh. Scotland. will speak at 8 a different basis." and improve Arab-American Staff Writer relations. " I think there is a p.m. Wednesday In the Art Auditorium. His talk, The Arab-American However, most activities are Ihopel, very excellent chance for rela­ which will be open to the public, will deal with the Association at the Uni versity of difficult to sponsor, he said, Edinburgh Festival as a cultural catalyst. tions on diplomatic, economic, Iowa is a group of Arabs and because of inadequate funds . and social levels." IN TIME FOR SUMMER Demarco also will talk about the art school non-Arabs whose goal is to Last semester the association which he conducts before the festival each year. foster better understanding and received $142- from Student The association is open to I Dema rco is one of the organizers of art aspects relations between Arabs and Senate. which it still retains. anyone interested. and all are - of the Edinburgh Festival. which will feature Americans. welcome, said Dahab. "There is * TotheFIRST16tocall. Last year, Dabab said tbe Dutch art in 1974. Mohamed Dahab. E4. a lot to be shared between the First person regular price, as~latlon brought a represen­ two countries and I hope to president of the association, tative of tbe Palestinian see second person V2 price. says it is open to anyone in­ Liberation Organization (PLO) the association taking Interest CALL 351·5577 NOW! In this goal." Plasma terested in the Middle East. to s pea k at the unIversity. The association is not However, the representative Dahab stressed that the The University of Iowa Department of PhysiCS political, per se. explained was not paid for speaking, and association is not a propaganda group . "We are just trying to FREE FIRST VISIT and Astronomy will begin a plasma seminar Dahab, although individual , ~mber8 paId his airfare from by appoIntment starting at 4 p.m. today in Room 309 in the members may engage in their their own pockets_ represent the Arabs to Physics Building. own separate activities. Americans. and just trying to Scheduled for today's lecture is Akira Hirosi of Dahab hopes to see the get a picture of the Americans. " the University of Saskatchewan. who will speak Although the group's 15-20 on "Acceleration and Concurrent Turbulent members meet perIOdically LAWYERS Heating of Electrons. " Dahab said Interest in the needed to work In welfare rights association is very low, and • coun se II ng, consumer protec­ Other seminar lectures are scheduled for Feb. tion, cooperatives, research 5 and 19. noted that no VI colleges offer studies, credit problems, housing any courses about the Middle rights and other areas. Make ap­ East. pointment to see VI ST A Lawyer Januarv 30. C811353-5742. However, tbe 8IIOCiation Is offering a course In Arabic In co.njunctlon with the Action Studies program. Interest was mInimal In the course last Campus Notes semester, said Dabab, but be noted that enrollmeat I, up this term. He bopes the course will Today go well enougb to penaade tbe Ungulstici Department to offer WICI-Women in Communication will meet at 5 p.m. in Room liS. Communications Center. It Oa a regular basis. CORDELIERS-Cordeller platoon will meet at 8:30 p.m. at the National Guard Armory . Squad meets at Dahab, who was born in 7:30p.m. Tripoli. Libya, said the BAHA'I-The Baha'i Revelation Action Studies cour­ association's activities have • MODERN GYM l\opalt Ie (to study the history and teachings of the Baha 'I changed somewhat since the faith) will meet at 7 p.m. in the Wesley HOUle • SAUNA ROOM auditorium . earlier Middle East War . SHALL WE DANCEY-International folk dancing will At that time, he explained, j$taltb (tnttt be'held at 7:30 p.m. in the Wesley House auditorium . many of the members were in­ • WHIRLPOOL SIMS-Students International Meditation Society will volved in activities related to it. present the second introductory lecture on the PLIASECALL technique of transcendental meditation at. p.m. in Lec­ He said his group published a • YEAR ROUND ture Room 2 of Physics Research Center. letter to the editor in Tbe SWIMMING POOL Dlily Iowan that drew "a very 351·5577 negative response," and con­ • MON.·SAT. WednesdbY sequently, they decided not to noon· 10 PM try that method again. CANTIIURY INN SKI-Water Ski Club will hold a crucial meeting at 7 p.m. In the Union Miller Room . "There are few people in the. • SUNDAY 1-4 PM CORALVILU media that give Arabs fair representation,': Dahab said. "on the bus line" "In the face of that. all the ae- L--__~~ ___--.- _____'_.M_.U_.____' The Dally Iowan-Iowa City, Iowa-Tues., Jan. %9, 1974-Page 3 MATH-SCIENCE dtt ...... : Peace Corps needs 200 people with degrees or minors to teach In university, secondary, and elementary levels and to train teacher s, develop curriculum anti Im prove teaching VI may turn off some hot water techn iques . Call 353-3147 for ap­ pointments. The University of Iowa in UD.lverslty buildings be fur- prove 20 foot candle lighting would be maintained on des~ tubel, special energy conservation tiler reduced to lower electrical levels for work and service surfaces, lecture rooms, offices, Before lights are removed, committee has unanimoUsly costs. areas, including food and general reading rooms. the consent of department A ceiling of 70 foot candles heads and collegiate deans will passed a recommendation to Earlier r~dl!Dl by turn off hot water in UI would be placed on desk or table be receiVed, as well as in­ tbe commIttee re.alled III surfaces for work involving buildings. Domeent IIptina tabes beIIIl dividual room occupants, The plan would exclude reading of fine print or detail Scholz said. removed by tile tboaUDdI from work . Uni verslty Hospitals, dor­ VI baUdlals, ud geaenlllpt The committee voted not to recommend having vending mitories, and those portions of levels belDl recIaced to an These light levels were buildings that requlre hot water recommended to the committee machines removed from averale of 80 foot caaclIeI Ia university buildings. for other than restroom use. anlt used to measure by Frank Kilpatrick, UI direc­ Scholz noted research of that Committee chairman Paul lllamiDatioa levels" tor of environmental health, Scholz, associate professor of and were based on values of the proposal revealed revenue mechanical engineering, has Now the committee suggests Illumination Engineers Society. received by the university from forwarded the recommendation that light levels be limited to The electrleal· costI savillg. vending machines far exceeded to George Chambers, executive one foot candle on tile floor in relul~lIIg from this reductloa III the cost of running them. vice president, for his possible hallways and corridors, and an IIgbting could total aD ad­ The machines consume ap­ approval and implemeJ;ltation. average value of two foot can­ dltloDal 8 to 9 per ceat over the proximately $4,000 worth of dles on floors for stairways. preparation and task work. same amount belllg saved e.. eb electrical energy each year, but Turning off bot Wlter Ie OIIe Members also voted to ap- net about $100,000 for the UI. furtber method the committee An average 50 foot candles month by removing lighting suuests tite university com· munlty undertake to conserve the amount of fuel.()UIt usel for CROTON $4" heat generatiOll. Albert predicts impeachment vote reg. SI2.50 - Beautiful High I Both locations Scholz said preliminary WASHINGTON lAP) - assumes some House member vote on impeachment now Rep. Paul N. McCloskey Jr., studies undertaken by the com­ House Speaker Carl Albert said would exercise his right to stand would result in overwhelming R-Calif., said, meanwhile, Con­ DOZEN mittee show energy cost Monday he believes the full up on the House floor and rejection. I gress should grant Nixon 1m- ROSES $10value $2" savings resulting from this ac­ House will vote on whether to demand a vote on impeachment Albert also told newsmen at munity from criminal prose­ tion would not be as substantial impeach President Nixon. then and there. his daily news conference that culion if he resigns. MUM PLANTS $2" as others already implemented "I have been led to believe by Impeachment by a majority he d~sagrees with House Reo "The President is in precisely S7.50-ltOvalu e throughout the university. pretty strong talk in the House ALL SPECIALS vote in the House would put the pubhc~n L~~der John J . the same situation al Vice (I. ,_ CASH & CAR Based on 1972 costs. the that one of these (impeach­ President on trial in the Senate, Rh~d.es posltl~n that any President .Agnew was a few university would save ap­ ment/ resolutions will be called where ,a two-thirds vote would JudiCiary Comml.ttee member months ago," McCloskey said. "I.e n,eJt f\Q(lst proximately $10 per day by not up," Albert said. be required for conviction and who advocates Impeachment heating water, he said. Albert told newsmen the full removal from office. should disqualify himself on the Downtownll04 S. ~ However, the increases in fuel House would vote on whatever Any olle of the 431 House issue. 9 5 1nondOI,j. SatUf'dO\j oil prices probably increase recommendation its Judiciary members could demand a vote Albert said he believes every Please Recycle GrHMo\M & Goto.n Center Up the down staircase the saviQgs to $18-20 per day, Committee delivers-to Im­ on impeachment without wait­ House member should vOte on -410 KIrkwOOd A"9, It's a long journey from the top noor of the Jefferson Build­ and these figures are conser­ peach or not to impeach. ing for the Judiciary Committee impeachment, just as on any Your 89 mOl'ldocJ-frIdot,j Ing to the gfound by elevator, but even longer by fire escape. vative, Scholz said. And if the Judiciary Commit­ to act but backers of impeach­ other issue, even if he has taken 16 Sot. 9 5 500, This particular fire escape is located on the north side of the The committee has also tee decided to make no recom­ ment do not want that because a stand for or against it before Doily Iowan building. recommended that light levels mendation, Albert said, he indications are that a surprise the vote. "II phoMs 55I-QOOO State hegins its own audit -~~-~-----~~~------.~------of county financial records

Despite a request by Johnson state auditor. challenging Bums for hls seat County officials that they be Calling tite arrival of an on tbe Board of Supervisors In allowed to contract a private auditor from tbe state office at the JUDe 4 Democratic primary. STORE· DE SAVINGS auditing firm to audit county this time an "outrage," Bartel Burns, who has been a financial records, an officer of said, "It would appear tbat tbls frequent critic of Rogers in the EVERY COLUMBIA, CAPITOL the state auditor's office showed Is. a refusal Uo tbe c.ouaty past, said he is "delighted" at up at the Johnson County Cour­ request for a prlvlte audit), and the prospect of running against thouse and began conducting a not a very poUte one," her. & APPLE LP state audit. The state auditor's office only Supervisor Richard Bartel In recent meetings the John­ completed last year's audit last also mentioned after the son County Board of Super­ month . Cilek said, "It seems meeting that he is also con­ IN THIS SPECIAL SALES EVENT __ visors voiced dissatisfaction strange that it has happened sidering the possibility of with the speed, accuracy and this way ." challenging Bums. cost of the state-conducted Lynn Frantz, the auditor sent If Bartel were to win Burns' audits and requested per­ by the state office Monday, said seat he would have to resign mission to conduct the private 65~8 $4~~8 $49Pr~~~o ',, ~ he was informed on Friday taf­ from the remaining two years of LIST LIST TAPES audit in a letter sent Friday to ter Bartel and Cilek had talked the seat he presently holds on $3 State Auditor Uoyd R. Smith. to Smith) he would be assigned the board, but as the new holder Supervisors Richard Bartel to the Johnson County audit. of Burns' seat, he would have a and Lorada Cilek also talked to Frantz asserted that it was "not hand in appointing a successor 3 BIG DAYS! Smith Thursday about the aU that unusual " for the state to to the seat he resigned. All Budget Labels MAJOR LP LABEL possibility of a private audit in begin a new audit a month after TUESDAY JAN. 29 thru PURCHASE Des Moines over the weekend. another one was completed. ODYSSEY, NONESUCH, VICTROLA Supervisor Robert Burns said The supervisors also beard etc. OUR ENTIRE DGG CATALOG . he objected "vehemently to an from Jobnson County Auditor audit at this time, until there is Dolore~ ~ogers MOIIday, who THURSDAY JAN. 31 Any 5 for $10.00 time for a response," from the said tbat she is conslderln, L·1St pnce• $4"*disc minimum of 5 LP's COLUMBIA. EPIC. CAPIT L. r--=-.."...... ,.....-,.,,--= DYLAN Over 200 Pairs ~

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THE BAND and MoondOV Moti_ CAPITOL SW 11214 DAVE MASON THE O'JAYS t U's l ike You Nlv,r lef. Ship AhoV LEO""'­ KOTTKE COLUMBIA KC 31721 PHIl. INT . KZ 32408 HIGH BtIWftn Nothtn8"61& Eltrnlly DONOVAN MAHAVISHNU ORCHISTRA LM ESSENa TO ESSENCE o....".k troWlr .. ~:="W::" TM~,.'U"",.o.L ..... - .....ow -. 54OI'~NoI'he s... ZIP·UPS ...... -...- • &.~.. )~ .. .' ,. ~ ',NK FLOYO LEO KOTTKe ' . '\' .. - . AN...... I.. WI'" . . , . HARVEIT SAil 112117 CAPITOL ST 11262 ". .-.. \ A SpocIoIly Prlcod Two LI' Sot ~ \ \ ~ SAV INGI MAHAVISHNU ORCH. OONOVAN ~... ",'I;"~ U.. EoHnc:, to e...... ~'" iscount"recor s' 21 South Dubuque Iowa City 351-. "ter . ShOe Ce 10 S. Clinton. Iowa City ------... _------_ ... ------_., Page 4-The Daily Iowa_Iowa Citv. Iowa-Tues .• Jan. 2', 1974 In sell _Need for federal cfu1ftIW Co fi®WC1lffi

Twe\lty,o~i gun legislation dIacuss\ng 8EI tlliversity sti Movie terence SPOOl There was a call for it after the assassination of week~d hosu tile Midwest I President John F. Kennedy. The same call came after the •• current attib assasination of Dr. Martin Luther King and once again af­ reView profession. ter the brutal murder of Senator Robert F. Kennedy. Despite these three senseless murders the Congress of Speakers d the United States has still failed to put into law any kind of eluded KarleJl criticized College of N gun c(mtrolleglslation. University of In the ten years since President Kennedy's death. all and Ann Hof that Congress has been able to accomplish are the weak EdItor'. Nate: Today'. Eqaal TIme Health Center ColumD is a coatrlbutJoa of Martel Pool Many of the restrictions of the 1968 law which, despite the controls im­ of Iowa City. posed on long guns, rifles, shotguns and mail order sales, local nurses \1 in "The Way We Were" is a much settings or failed to cope with the problem of handguns. Despite tbese deal with cond controls, there are still approximately 50 mUllon more better movie I think-than Jim "Everyone guns loose In this country today than there were in 1M3. Fleming reviewed it(I·I~74). I think he corne to this,' missed a few things. Uy voiced thl When this legislation is discussed, it always comes down First of all, let's criticize a film for to the same two factors-the proven facts against guns and Iowa City nurl what it's try\ng to do. No one demands people to talk· for tighter federal controls against the always powerful "reality" from the stage, but perhaps a their sexue gun lobby in Washington. heightened reality. Similarly, just :(:> because film-making includes professionals; photographic techniques, It need not always be visually "real," that is, ac· curate. -:''-'''' .. This film was not intended to pass for Let us take a look at*** the facts for tighter control first: 30's cinema verite; It expends most of CrJ The case for tighter federal control is airtight. A series of its time, language and visual details ex· investigations and studies have confirmed the relative fac­ ploring a love relationship between two RIO DE Jj ts. people who personify two archetypes of (AP) - A boo modem American society-where they In his study, The Saturday Night Special, Robert Sherrill ian school of ! came from, politically, socially and live" art is sel presents the facts. examines the arguments and com­ economically, where they are now . rocketing. Visi pletely rips apart the myths, lies and distortions used to mail tbe 1)111,-1 .....'0 -"et;;ome. ;~ur ~per·crust ( justify continued Congressional indifference to this al,.ed Ielten a.d opinions. 1t,~"",, )..... f1!. So F leming's complaints of South Americ national scandal. Ho .. ever, you musl Iype and "showroom shine" of the automobiles like to see thei double',plc, your contribution, newspaper soc Some of the examples used in the Sherrill book help to .Id, 10 Illeresls of space. ..e are rather extraneous if not wrong, as ~elling out hu destroy these myths : r~quelt that letten be no longer is his failure to see the last scene of the thaa %5' .. orol •. movie as a framing device (The Way for simple wat -Claim: Holdup men would use other weapons if guns We Were) lending all that had gone on scenes and sea were not available. I tages of birds . assuming that the reader those who want their proposals bef ore a certain rem em tiered The big qUE -Response: A former stickup man in Joliet prison com· agrees with the editorialists' to pass undiscUS$ed want to quality(heightened reality?) which I tllentic or mer Bogus bills found very moving. But If it doesn't ments : "with a gun in your hand, it's easier to control the point of view. Critics 1 here eliminate politics. AB for the move you, it doesn't move you. situation ... I mean, man, you can't go in with a broom­ To the Editor: What the Student Senators propriety of recommendations, Some of the nE stick ... should discuss in their meetings the Student Senators are quite (Besides, studios don't have big ly are humble Mallord aDd "bogus" bID., bucks anymore and the cars could have -Claim: Guns are vital for the protection of home and the editorial in the January 24 in resolutions dealing with able to decide for themselves, lIbo started I "matters of interest on the been rented from collectors. Anyway, ~rkers an d , store. issue of TIle Daily Iowan, is a without condescendi ng why not relax and enjoy a beautiftJI cheap. though timely, piece of national level" have been suggestions from The Daily recome artists -Response: Most gun casualties result not from passed until recently. Last period of American design. I believe oomit they g[ mud·slinging. Iowan. The same goes for how this was what was intended.) self-defense but from trivial family and neighborhood It is cheap for several semester the Student Senate much paper to use and what to live" pieces be arguments, disputes over parking space, raking leaves, passed at least one resolution tlle market for reasons: it insults Mr. Mulford; print on it. U.S. banker traHic accidents and the like. True, other w~apons might it tries to forestall debate by in· calling for, if I am not mistaken, " Who really cares?" Ap­ ih lill lli Hit for the impeachment of ler recently V! be used, but guns kill people more easily than do knives or directly impeaching his charac­ parently the Mulford proposals paid $120 for ~ rolling pins. ter; it assumes that the students President Nixon. If it is true were Significant enough to cal artist Nel are either blind or unconcemed, that most Senators do not see touch soft spots in Mr. Haddy lIbo said he t and stupid, have not read the ar­ the Senate as a place to air their and Mr. O'Vorkin; they cer­ equal ticle on alleged "block voting" views on national issues, how tainly cared. and, If they have, are not in­ was the impeachment The individual student at the 'r Pogo telligent enough to understand resolution passed? By a University of Iowa is a better What about the gun*** contollobby? it, hence the call for a new ex­ minority vote? If Mr. Mulford thinker than some people would time The simple fact is that Congress is afraid of the gun con­ planation ; and, at expense of !lad proposed that the Nixon Ad­ have him believe. He can see trol lobby . Gun owners spend $2 billion a year, at a fellow students, it uses or, ministration cut off relations through the choice of cartoons with "imperialist" Brazil and minim urn , and that in itself is a good reason for the lob­ ra ther, mi suses valuable and through the choice and newsprint to viciously discredit "fascist" Chile and establish, in manipulations of newsprint. byists to do their work . But the gun lobby also has far (to whose benefit?), Mr . turn, relations with The editors of 1be Daily lowe t ranging alliances; it ties in with all sorts of interests. The Mulford (and by extension, why "democratic" North Korea and should be a little less pompous~ pressures these groups can exert are tremendous. not those who supposedly "democratic" North Vietnam. a little less condescending.I Also bis criticism of the inaccurate The whole problem, lik~ so mllny others, comes down to "block vote" him?). his resolution might have Tltey should be a little more That Mr. Haddy and Mt. passed and Tbe Daily lowe humble. They should remem­ slang: Again, this film is quite different just one thing-politics. We cannot look . to presidential in purpose from " American Graffiti." ! O'Vorkin should so attack a editorialists would have ber tha t they owe their positions leadership for help, because President Nixon is in the han­ student is regretable. That probably praised Mr. Mulford. to student funds. They should Slang is slang if that's a !lon-detracting ds of gunmen, so the leadership must come from Congress. they should underestimate the never mind about the im­ also ask themselves, and an­ detail beyond the essence of a situation. They must rid themselves of the fear of the gun lobby and average student's intelligence propriety of such proposal in a swer for the students, soon , Secondly, Fleming was maybe asleep just once act like elected officials. is insulting. That they should do Senate meeting. whether they are serving their for Barbra Streisand's acting. Stresisand. at about 30, is maturing The majority of the people of this country are sick and both these things at tb.t Let no student be misled : . creditors or maybe, only using cohtrary to the editorial's with her prodigious gifts and becoming, tired of Congress failing to act on this issue. The only way student's expense is proof that a student money to further their new editorial staff is in order. suggestion, Mr. Mulford's own self·interest. like her or leave her. a fa:jCinsting we can get action is to make gun control a major issue in The quality and the attitude of recommendations were not con­ If the editors want respect for example of an artist responsive to her the cam paign of 1974 and flush these elected officials and the editorial's writing is an in­ sidered simply because a their opinions (Heaven knows, time, a representative. One who ex­ their opponents out into the open on gun control. dictment of Its authors. The dubious vote-rounting method so many of them) they should plains and helps define. authors obscure and downplay and a quick and timely call for speak not with a hysterical in­ Redford and she play themselves in a Wayne Baddy the importance of Mulford adjournment. And further. tellectually debauched and way, over a period of time, which I proposals not by discussing anyone who thinks that there forked tongue, but with wisdom, suspect takes courage and is more dif· their lack of merit but by at­ should be no politics in the justice, and truth. ficult than one would expect since few tacking their author and then by Student Senate is wrong. Only Senator Jose Stelle peo\lle reaUy know who they are or where they're from or the way they were. Especially, her clarity demands praise. If anything, her professionalism and presence tower compared with a common feeling that the director has begged out the perfonnance. Pollack here was correct in allowing another artist help create the role. Several david stamps THe DaiLY iowan scenes displayed her range, and her ex' plication of a moment's feeling can Vol. lOG. No. 133, Tues .. Jan. 29. 1974 withstand or even needs reviewing. lewis d·vorkin . ea,lor: mary wallbaum . news editpr; bill roemerman. associate news e\litor; stu cross. editorial page ed,tor: chuck hickman This artist has already made an un­ and lowell ma y. contributing editors: bob foley deniable mark on American entertain· and dorolhea guthrie. night editors. ment; her musical admirers include bob craig. feature editor; jim fleming. Louis Armstrong, her films are seen assistant feature editor; bob dyer. sports editor: Crises and commercials ' greg lund . assistant sports editor: tim sacco , worldwide . So it all means copy editor; bob keith . survival services editor ; if you paid attention, you might learn wayne haddy. editorialist. something you didn't know before. Since America began to crumble some to accept as part of the American big cities and all too often drop dead in the driving to the supermlrket takes as much jim Irumpp . photo editor; pal cannon . art months ago, I have been trying to keep business mystique. street,leaving driven stranded. gasoline as I can afford. When I do drive director ; dave rubenstein . special e!fects. abreast of our nation's various ills by wat- Another network goes directly from a Last week my ownear began to cough up cross country, I no longer feel particularly Will Norton, publlsber Finally, which were the "do-nothing ching the news broadcasts which the "cancer on the President" newlltory to an such a cloud of smoke that I had to have It free, nor even that I am seeing the USA. Jerry Belt, Adverllslal Director scenes?" After all, even the D·enll Crotty, Retall Adverlislag_Ma!'ager major television networks present nightly. ulcer in the stomach commercial. And 10 it towed away before it infected the whole A million dollar interstate i8 engineered popular movie Is growing ar· Jame. Conlln. Circulation &f ••,et tistically. It's possible you may "let The pictures they depict are'not pretty: in- , goes, as the news darkens, stomacha chum parktng lot. to look much Ilke any other million-dollar Dick Wilson. Prod.ctlon Superlatendent not f1ation, energy crises, Watergate, floods, and the nation groans. It isn't Ilkely that America's love affair interstate. If one dare leave the beaten Publlshed by Sludent Publi ~ ations !':lnc . , III it" all the first time around. The movie and, worst of all, commercials. . It is fitting that news broadcuts share . with the automobile is going to end over- path to sneak a look at pre-bulldozer Communications Center. Iowa City. low8 . 52242 had enough intemaI order and filmic With more or less success, commerclall their time with 011 and health companies, night. but many people are beglnnlJII to America, he finds that the luo\ine daily except Salurdays. Sundays. legal tmlidays. rightness for me , anyway. Katie days after legal holldays and days of .university crossing the street at bea\nnlnl and Third ti have always attempted to ally themaelves for their commercials give as realiltic a have second thoughts about their stations away from the tourist path have vacation. Second class postage paid at the post with our national image. One network picture of America as does traditional gas-guzzling monsters. This dlaenchant­ dried up and taken whole towns with them. office at Iowa City under the Act of Congress of end, always the doer. the forler-ahead, news program II even sponsored by Mrs. news. The Image they portny II poulbly ment, however slight and however briefly Or he finds that hia car is proarammed to March 2, 1879. the two contrasting boat scenes, some We are reall of The Da lly Iow an is an Independent newspaper very apt transitions, \he repeated slow Smith's Apple Pie. That rosy image more realistic, since most Americans are It may last before Detroit begins cranking fall apart when driven over bumpy roads. written and edited by students at The"IJnlverslty AM-FM digita American virtue is currently threatened more concerned with psoUne and con- out IWlury rnInl-models, provides a lood of Iowa . Opinions ex pres sed in Ihe editorial, swing of the camera from a three quar· November of • ter view to profile in a sort of hooked however. Amore telling Image of our coon- stipation than Wateraate or war. opportunity for aelf examinaton. What lies The fact is that bil businesa does not just colum ns a re Ihose of the write rs . Itopp'ed for DO The Associated Press is entitled to the ex· fashion, etc. try comes from the oil and laxative in- AB a nation we b!Im more psoUne than behind our fucination for cars? Why are ally itself with a national image; rather, ty witb a $5 clil dustrles. anyone elae, and we slso swallow more we a nation on wbeell? elusive use for republication of all local as well bil business creates national images as all AP news and dispatches . A month lat. . For instance, one network begins with a pills. For the average American, two of I myaelf come from just one of many throuah commercials. Automobiles have I agree there were some rough edges tile news story on the invo:uted and indicted life's most worrisome concentl are aenerations trained to believe in that areat chanled the face of America, contributed Subscription rates: Iowa City and Coralville 3 which is characteristic of innovation. A now time double dealings of Wateraate, loes nen to keeping one's car nmning and meeting American image projected by car ~­ to rural de-population. urban srawl and months $6 .00. 6 months $10 .00, I printing year small deficiency and 10 what. HpUle bad been wor $18 .00. Mall subscriptions 3 months $8 .50. 6 man· there wal lOme progress made in thit repaired! Wt a report of suspiciously hiah oll profits. medical expenses. . men:lall. See die USA Ia a CllevrDlet. It is McDonalds. Ihs .1t.00. I printing year $22 .00. aDd then shiftl smoothly into a commer- So the commerdallmqe of Americans strange that even though it Is mau Conceivably the energy crisis cou.Jd popular movie-not only for preeentiDa Jlltinlng tbe dI cial message in which Exxon assures us I as sick people on wheell carrIea an alar- produced to look \lke a million others. the change that. What II good for General Telephone numbers : a modem woman's aensibillty but allo reImburse U8 that It is working for our benefit. The fact rning tina of authentlclty. Furthermore. car hu somehow been the symbol of aelf Motors may ceue to be IQOd for America. Edliorlal. new5 ...... 353·8210 stylistically·. The movies have more their mIstake. Survival Llne ...... 353-6220 significance than brittle (perfected) en· that Euon profits increased se per cent in that 1male II developlJll eerlOlll com- expression and freedom . CruIae down the It II a drastic notion. but II profits faU far All adverllslng ...... 353·8201 Today were 1973 and that the llant corporation atIIl plications. It now appean that the open road, go see the mountains in pioneer erteJUih, auto maten may 10le their om· Business office ...... 353 ·6205 tertainment. bunement, bu One last thing, I think in the future refuses to releue information to the very automobile Industry Itself II sickenin&. tradlUon.!JI naraJ Iowa, where soclalille nipotence. 'I1Iat meBIlI that our identity eire ulallon ...... 353 ·8203 deep, agly gal Please dial 353-6203 'lf you do not re ceive your we'll find more "novels" which an­ news medium whole program it sponsors Sales are down one-third from thiI · without a car w. Impossible, such ideu will not depend on whether or not tail fIna making. com are all paper 'by 7:30 a.m Every efrort will be made to ticipate movies for good reason. ThiI II mysterious; but like commercial period last year. Vital profits are fallinc. were aU too easy to beUeve in. revived in 1875. We Ihould keep an correct the error by Ihe next Issue. Circulation lub wal DOt have eye on the comrnercia1a to lee what the ClMot be validly crlticbed; it only mellaies themaelves, IUCh news stories What'. more, autmobiles have themIeIv. But lately I eeen preclOUl little office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through ~werenl , .,-e things which Americans have learned become disease carriers wbltb defoul our open road. AI with many Americans, just future holds In store. • Friday . makes for better movies.

., The Daily Iowan-Iowa City, Iowa-Tues., Jan. 29 , 1974-Page 5

",. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY 'J,;. In seareh of new insights I'} National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. I'} • 360 Lexin,lon An., New YOlk, N. Y. looi7 Conference eXamlneS huma n sex ualit y "*iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiGiriiiiiiiiii.-s: -Glr-.-S! -Gir-)s-! -*iMiii of any help. Or even II they are, sometimes it's group viewing sexual films and then expressing ' Sharing of experiences, past problems encoun- A G I' By JERI NtJ'IT tered,andgeoeralknowledgeheldbyindividual •• FMtare Writer hard to talk about leX with patients. The c0n­ their feelings within a small group situation. The teur Go- ° ,-,on test ference provided information as well as making sessions were designed to desensitize the group members provided a variety of infor- EVERYTUESDAYNITE ':OOP,M. Twe~ty-odd people gathered In a room se" discussion more comfDrtable." profeSSional health worker 110 that sexual mation ranging from how a nurse could suggest Free Admission to All Stag Girls discussing sex isn't always a group of drunken Another nurse related, "I always thougbt I was material no longer makes the individual feel un­ alternate metbods of sexual release to a sexually All Stag Girls' Drinks at Reduced Prices \J\Ivenity students. The Human Sexuality Con· open minded, but now I can see my own bias and comfortable. Other methods of desensitization aroused patient as well as the effects of certain • ference sponsored by the Collete of Nuning Jut I realize how my feelings affect my work and suggested by Schmitt during the conference in­ drugs on sexual drive and function , Also ~ _tend hosted 25 participants from throughout relationships with patients. " • cluded attending X·rated movies, browsing suggested was the availability of masturbation $100 to the winner * the Midwest who came to study sexuality and According to Kerfoot, the purpose of the con­ through magazines displaying nude photognphy as an acceptable form of sexual release for the $15 to each contestant current attitudes about It within the health ference was to increue knowledge of normal and reading books including slang terms and hospitalized patient, and the role of the nurse in profession. sexual functions and how they can be affected by passages about sexual activity. The desensitized providing an accepting atmosphere for patlentt GO·GO MATINEE physiological and psychological malf\1llCtions. individual bas a tolerance to the wide spectrum needing to discuss sexual needs. 4:30·6:30 MOn,-Frl, IVlry wHk In Speaken during the three day conference in­ In addition to normal female and male of human sexual response as well as being able to Other suggested methods for dealing with cluded Karlene Kerfoot of the Unlvenlty of Iowa pbysiology and ~unctions, malfunction and communicate with people about sex on their own sexuality included squelching current myths and The DUGOUT College of Nuning, Florence Schmitt, of the variations in sexual practice were introduced. level. providing correct information. Rumors were University of Wiaconsin, Milwaukee D1v1son Stress during the conference was on the Interviewing to include the history of sexual corrected so that it was known thalmarijuana is and Ann Hoffman, of the Iowa City Mental variation in the concept of "normal" as defined ' development and function, an area In which most not an aphrodesiac and vaseline is not the Sportsmens A Go-Go Health Center. by the patient and society. nurses have Uttll! knowledge or practice was also lubricant of choice for couples In need, but that 312 1st Ave. Coralville 351·9977 Many of those attending the conference were introduced to the group. Nurses were en­ water-soluble jelly is preferred or, better yet, an IocaI nurses who either work within psychiatric In many Instances what means "normal" to a couraged to modify the interview format to fit increased amount of foreplay should be used by settings or in medical areas which frequently patient Is considered abnormal by society. And the personal situation of their patients and per­ the couple. deal with conditions Involving selual function. sometimes the patient will think bis behavior Is sonnel. In addition to questions concerning "Everyone in the health profession should abnormal when it Is not. physical sexual functions, questions regarding In the past, sexuality tended to be omitted come to this," was the statement mOlt frequen­ The conference pointed out the nurse's role in effect of family, c\llture and Past experiences · from most medical or other curriculums but tly voiced throughout the conference. As one both instances as a mediator; she should help the are also included in the interview . Areas in the Human Sexuality Conference participants en· Iowa City nurse put it, "Dear Abby always tells person accept their own practices and if they hospital where such interviews were considered . thusiastically endorsed the addition of sexUality people to talk to their doctor or clergyman about want, belp them define new practices. especially beneficial would be gynecology and . information to all curriculums. As one nurse their sexual problems, but sometimes Sexual Attitudes Reassessment (SAR) a obstetrics, urology, psychiatric and coronary ' stated, "Sex has been with us for a long time, it's If. lb. bltf,IIHuCI professionals aren't informed well enough to be unique part of the conference, consisted of Ute units. about time we learned about it. " tomato, C,,"II, m,yonn,lse ketchup, mustard ,nd ,II thl trimmings / I I Critics question va~ue of 'pr~mitive"J art The All American

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil rials for his creation in dime 23, dropped out of school at an country where the average per­ galleries here, noted critic Wal­ ing them. Reg. 79 c (AP) - A boom in the Brazil­ stores and junk shops for early age and spent most of his per son income is $500 a year. mir Ayala writes that of the 600 "Primitive" artists who grad­ ian school of so-called "Primi­ around $15. young life trying to scrape up Most of their customers are new art expositions a year in uate from sidewalks or outdoor tive" art is sending prices sky­ Santos, 48, started out as a enough to live on, through car­ Americans. Rio, "maybe 50 are worth­ fairs to big tourist hotels or rocketing. Visiting gringos and watcbman at Rio's Museum of pentry and other odd jobs. Now These painters represent ..mile." chic Rio galleries increase their TUES., WED., THURS. ~per-crust citizens of this Modern Art "I didn't know he is much better off, selling Miat William Moore, an Ameri· incomes tremendously. Paint­ South American country who anything about art before J got paintings at the "Hippie Fair" can art critic living in Brazil, Nonetheless, the "primitive" ings in an art shop next to the like to see their names in local this job," he declared. But now to American tourists and rich calls "consumer art." "Brazil­ painters and sculptors keep famous and expensive Copaca­ Jan. 29, 30, 31 newspaper society columns are he harbors dreams of becoming Brazilians. ian primitive art is a function turnin g out new canvases and bana Palace Hotel range in shelling out hundreds of dollars an international figure in the Morais specializes in colorful, of tourism, " he says. "Tourists creations. And people keep buy- lI'ice from $300 to $800. £Or simple watercolors of street art world. The U.S. Consulate­ traditional scenes from the Mio come to Brazil are attract· scenes and seascapes and ml:!­ General and the American northeastern state of Bahia : ed to primitive works, because tages of birds and flowers. Chamber of Commerce in Rio sugarcane fields , steep cobbles­ Miat they really want is a The big question : Is it au­ recently sponsored an ex­ tone streets leading to old souvenir. They don't get gen­ Today on TV thentic or merely a ripoff? )Xlsition of Santos' work. churches, and Negro women uine art." Critics I here are skeptical. Pedro Paulo da Conceicao, cooking native dishes on the "Primitive painters use the By JOHN BOWIE that anything can be funny Some of the new artists actual­ l), was earning around $50 a sidewalks. He has never been same tired subjects over and T V Specialist without some cheezy oddball set ly are humble men and women rronth as a [reelance house to Bahia. over again: macumba (a Bra­ IIho started out as unskilled cleaner until he discovered Evandro Norbim, a 39-year­ zilian voodoo cult), black wom­ of circumstances "justifying" workers and were inspired to "primitive" art a couple of old electrical engineer, also has en in traditional costumes, fish­ 7:00 THAT WONDERFUL the humor. Karen Valentine b!come artists. Others frankly years ago. He now makes $400 cashed in on the "primitive ermen, street scenes. If they CENTURY, THE 1950'S. Since plays a farmer's daughter admit they grind out "primi­ a month selling paintings at a art" boom , but with a vari· ever left that rigid style, they the actors in Happy Days are all aw·shucksing through New tive" pieces because they know Sunday "Hippie Fair" in Rio's ation. When he gets tired, he Would bse their market," older than the characters they York City in search of a the market for them is hot now. chic Ipanema neighborhood . hands the paint and brushes to Moore added. p I a y , t bey ' reg I v e n husband ; if she keeps it up, she . CORAL VILLE U.S. banker David Rockefel- . "I can knock off about 15 his wife, Ana Esther, who Few Brazilian art critics take " young-sounding" names : could be ·the Eve Arden of the ler recently visited Brazil and paintings a day," Conceicao ~inds out colorful street scenes the so-called "primitive school" Richie , Potsie, Fronzie, and so 70's. On 9. Highway 6, Coralville paid $120 for a montage by lo­ ,said. "I stick to solid colors, in the same stereotyped style. seriously. Despite the fa ct that on. The plots aren't young, 8:30 THE BRarHERHOOD. cal artist Nelson dos Santos, because it 's easier and faster. " The Norbims currently gross more and more "primitive" though; tOnight Richie (Ron According to Hollywood, the who said he bought the mate- Arnaldo Carvatho de Morais, around $1,700 a month - in a works areJurnirJ.g up at fancy Howard) goes home after a black community in this COWl- bachelor party with the girl who try is interested only in either ~C!!!flR~O~S~S~W~~O~RD~-~P"U~Z~Z~L-E~ popped out of the cake. If there sex, drugs, violence, and law Pogo by Wott Kelly are a half-dozen people in the' enforcement, or sex, drugs, world who've been to a party violence, and crime. Television Edited by WILL WING where someone popped out of a keeps the same standard, cake, I'd like sworn affadavits. removing the more obvious ACROSS 46 Like brides' 12 Building wing biscuits Nostalgia and fantasy- a tacky sexual and narcotic exploits. It 1 Singer Paul 13 Anthem name combination-on 9. wouldn 't be so bad if there were 5 Places for crow's 47 Oner 21 Elder: Fr. 7:30 JACK LORD GIVETH... something to balance the scale, nests 48 Julius Caesar's 22 Excluded trio 25 Luzon native and Jack Lord keeps on giving. but there Simply i5O't- no 10 Hide-and-­ 26 Yen He's a salesman, and with comedy, no straight drama, no 14 "Conceal . 54 "Of - I sing" 57 Vapid 27 Take-- Hawall Flve-O he's selling him- talk or variety- just the likes of 15 Yellow pIgment (be 58 Do newspaper firm) self-his monster ego-to Shaft, who tangles with arson 16 ~~~~!~heOn work 28 Rosebushes, e.g. anyone who doesn't outright and treachery tonight. On 2. 17 Newt: Var. 29 Jinx 59 Draw a salary 30 Writer Rostand refuse it. If it weren't such an 9:00 CONSUMER GAME. 18 Characteristic 60 Snoops 31 Thick soup obvious mania it would be sad- Some valuable pointen In this 19 Duckling or 61 Rank high 32 Hayworth yean ago he shipped several half-hour, most especially how Am~rican 62 Give forth 34 Shape crates-full of his paintings to to break the dating code used on 20 AdVIce to 63 Cary or U. S. 37 Spider's work the New York Museum of ' packaged foods; it helps to Rom~n s~oppers 64 Pour 38 Under cover: Fr. · th didn't kn th t "D~X119" 23 SpanIsh fivers DOWN 41 Musical Mod em Art . Smce e~ ow a IW" means 24 Brightest star in want to spend the tune or your frankfurters were a group renditions Tumbleweed~ by. T.K. Ryan 1 With, in Paris 43 Time before l money to ship them back, he processed during the Harding 28 Glossy surfaces 2 Russian river Christmas now boasts of their "owning" 8 Administration. On 12. 31 Godchildren 3 Ukrainian 44 Honorarium HHOJ.P!:THe L..OWeST FORM OF HUMAN major portion of his work. In 33 Podge's partner capital 45 Most uncivil ACe PE SIL.K, I FINP the same vein he searches for 34 "The Ghost and 4 Other self 47 Fine writing t..lfeJ A UECH UfUN -me Vt:RY JUGULAR OF FIN!:: 25% ! YOU 6(JIL.lY OF CROOKEP sunken tre~sure in this 35 ~~s . -" 5 Maxims paper SOClerY, WHose HEINOUS CRIM£: CRIes OUT OF YOUR NEXT 6 Character in 49 "Shall we stay G-AM"-'N&! evening's episode. On 2. WIDE 36 D~~iSh resort FOR TERRI~L.E ANP SWIFI JUSTICEl ... WEEK'S iAKI: "The Rivals" -goout?" WORLD OF ETC. Whatever 37 Out of- 7 Ersatz 50 Ducts, in biology happened to the people who 38 Cantata part 8 Stumble 51 Zoological suffix wrote television comedy? The 39 Japanese herb 9 Property 52 Summon people who wrote for the likes of 40 Guilty, for one disposers, in law 53 News paragraph Sid Caesar who made humor What is sin eating? No, you 41 Disdain 10 Michener title, 54 Toa-- out of tying shoes, winding a wiseacres out there, it does- 42 In good faith with "The" 55 Radio operator watch, making breakfast- in n't have anything to do with 45 Cheered II Energy unit ~ Silkworm other words, out of the human . the Burge Careteria. I don't experience. Tonight's The Girt think It does, anyway. Who Came Glft.Wrapped seema to deny that they ever existed, '-______-'

bob keith Repair problems with clock-radio

handling In tbe mall. Can you get Reaitone to give us some episode and turn on more readers to a truly great l'roductlon, Third time's the charm decent service? It's worth watcblDJ. The sbow Is run at 10:30 Saturday nlgbt We wrote to Realeast DiviSion of Soundesign-Realtone for 01112. We are really upset! Ia 1871 we were liven a "ReaitOae" you suggesting that they send you a cover letter to enclose Sorry for the delay in answering your letter. We wrote to AM·FM digital clock-radio wblcb worked beautifully uatll with the radio this time, notifying their service personnel that the Friends of Educational Broadcasting. P.O. 1758, In Des November of this past year. Mlhat time tbe clock luddealy you should receive special attention when the c1ock·radio is Moines and we just received their reply answering most of stopped for no appareat realOa. We aeat It In per tbe warran· repaired again. You should have received a letter of that sort your questions. The series was originally run on CBS in 1968. ty wllb a S5 check to cover part., labor, postale aad haadllng. by now which you should enclose when you return the item. IEBN bought the l7-program series under a two-run contract. IOWA 800KI A montb later we got tbe the radio alain, oaly to flad that U.P.S. will pick up and return the clock-radio for you and The first run has just been completed, but another will likely DOw tbe time adjlStment knob 011 tbe clock dlda't work, II charge Soundesign for shipping. begin this summer. had been working fine before we aeat tbe radio la to be You won't find out from early episodes exactly who the For ALL repaired! We aent the c1ock·radlo back wltb a letier ex­ IEBN series "The Prisoner" prisoner is, or where he is, or who his captors are. You may Your N.. da, plalalng tbe dlfflcuty and requeltlnl tbll time tbat'ReaitOae Our memory faill us and we're 100ini too mucb sleep over get some addi~ional specific information by writing to Mark relmbarse us for tbe mailing coat we bad to pay beca\lle of this problem, CbaanellZ Ill'1IIInlq aa excellent aeries called Douglas, IEBN Public Information Manager, P.O. 1758, Des Stop in at Iowa Book their mistake. "The PrilOner", Whea was the aeriel flnt run? On wbat DeI­ Moines . Open Mon. 9-9 Today we received the dock·radlo in the mall with no relm· work? How long did It run? We suggest you try to catch the series when It comes out Tues . thru Sat. 9-5 bursement, but that was DOt enoulb! Tbere wu allO alarJe, MOlt Importantly: II Does cbannellZ plan to run tbe entire again this summer. Friends of Educational Broadcasting deep, ugly Ilih acroal tbe wbole front face of tbe clock·radlo aeries or are they going to cut If off sbortly? ZI Wbat the bell publishes an program guide called Advance which you might mlldag a complete crack la tbe plaltlc face of tbe clock. ThIa happeaed In the first episodes; I mllaecl tbem botb times the be interested in. It's a nice little TV Guide-type magazine. pall Wll DOt there wbea we leat tbe radio Ia for repair, aeries Wll run,l.e, wby did be retlp ... ? You can get 8 year's subscription to it by joining Friends and 11Ien were DO alps that' tbe ~ub wu caused by Improper Please help me and othen recap tbe aerlel to tbe Clll'rellt contributing $10 to the organization. Bot Stove League CHARLIE CHAPLIN F, NEW • first ba: In Sam" 1 basebal chuck hickman erans. They Yankee I recently received a book authored by sided the score. He was what baseball is all games, which have tended to drag while elected Brendon Boyd and Fred Harris, two gen· about." Harry Carry Is out getting a beer. ation of tlemen who very obviously enjoyed their Earl Torgeson: "On the back of his card Mercer says teenage bonus baby David All fil childhood . Also very obviously, they spent is said 'Torgy likes a good practical Clyde will remain with the Rangers this inducte most waking moments of this period at the joke'-which is the biog writer's subtle year, despite his need for minor league ex­ ,Augusl ballpark. way of suggesting that he enjoyed perience. Clyde lacks endurance and a The ' book is "The Great .American knocking people's teeth out." breaking pitch to go with his impressive Botto Baseball Card Flipping,Tradingand Bub­ Rocky Bridges: "His head looked like a fast ball, but Short will keep him as a dinals a ble Gum Book," and for those who once sack full of rusty nails, he kept about six in· drawing card, according to Mercer. Car· of the upon a time thought that meeting Joe Ad· ches of chewing tobacco lodged in his lert petbagger Bob ought to think again, he's driving cock (I was a Milwaukee Braves fanl in cheek, and his uniform always looked as if already got Pete Broberg and Steve Dun· Brookl) person would be the ultimate reward, it 's a he'd just slept in it-which of course he ning, two bright pitching prospects who ·must. At a very early stage, before girls, probably had. to were burned out by being rushed to the grades and various other complications, "Spook" Jacobs : "I don't know, you tell majors too soon, on the Texas roster. life stretched no further than the nearest me." In any event, a staff 0( this trio, Fergie playground. Read this book for a few Toothpick Jones , Dave Nlc:hobon. Coot JeDkIu, Jlm Bibby and Uoyd Allea leta minutes and it'll seem as simple as an Ed· Veal,. Cot Deal, Rip Repulakl, ' Leola world recorda for bard throwers. If the ar· die Mathews home run again. Wagner, Tex Clevenger, Hector Lopel, ms aad beada can learn control, tbe They're all here, the heroes aDd the Smokey Burgess, Fellx Mantilla, Glao Rangers wm be Iough. villains of youth. Tbe Immortals aad tbe Cimoll, Ed Boucbee aDd Vic Power, or The receiving end of the flames could with clowns, each frozea intO memory on a "tum off tbat radio and go to .Ieep," very well be manned by ex· Hawkeye Jim baseball card, which serves to Illustrate Where have yoo gone, Vince DiMaggio? Sundberg. Only a year out of Iowa City, tbls volume. It was beautiful. Sunny had a big season at Pittsfield in the Remember Jay Hook? "He looked like Double A Eastern League. and will get a Jackie Coogan Wally Cleaver and eitched like zazu Pit· White Sox radio announcer is Bill Mer· long look from Manager Billy Martin in ts ." cer, who tired 0( working for Bob Short and spring traininl!. A deal with Cleveland for Minnie Minoso: "He loved to play the Texas Rangers after two seasons. A mittman Dave Duncan feIl through and baseball, was in every minute of every veteran of Dallas Cowboy broadcasts, he'll Texas badly needs stability behInd the game and never let up no matter how one be a welcome addition to the Chicago plate. Negotiates pro contracts

Sports love drives Hayes and IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - just a client, but a friend. His in­ keeping or dressing become a addition to income, we arrived When you walk into the office of tense involvement in the case. chore. Do you know how easy it at the $3.5 milllion figure by A Rare Chaplin Short James Hayes, you think you which charges University is to leave a stove on or miss a looking at other opportunities, have wandered into the haven of Hospitals in Iowa City with curb?" such as endorsements, that are a sports editor or a coach rather negligence In the treatment of a Hayes is channeling these no longer available to Speed. " than an attorney. severe sinus infection which left questions into the trial, which THE ,IDLE CLASS But Hayes. who is currently Speed permanently blind, is ob· includes calling up some 40 wit· Hayes has been working on defending James Speed in a $3.5 vious. nesses. Hayes said the greatest the Speed case since 1970 and million lawsuit against the State "It's a real personal adjust· conflict arises from Speed 's pa­ was t the hospital the day the with Edna Purviance of Iowa, is truly a fan- right ment to be blind and operate in tential for a career in pro ball. former cager was released. Sin· down to his Chicago Bears a sighted world," said Hayes. "The median salary of all ce that ti{lle they have been th wristwatch. "Routine things like house· players in the NBA is $65,000. In close friends . TUESDAY JAN. 29 ONLY 7 & 9 pm "I've Just always been inter· ested in sports." said Hayes, a BALLROOM IMU '1.00 students plus tax lean, youthful man with fash· Theismann wants NFL job '1.25 non students ionably·long hair. "After I lost my bid for attorney general in MONTREAL (AP) - Joe simple," said the former Notre pick in 1971. In exchange, the '68, I had nothing in mind but Theismann, who probably could Dame who was to Dolphins got a 1976 draft a UPS films presentation general practice. Through poli· have written his own ticket have talked to Berger Monday choice. tics. I met Mike Cilek ('67 Iowa with the Montreal Alouettes, about a contract with the Cana· qua rterback drafted by the has cancelled his reservation dian Football League, but Cleveland Browns I. That was with owner Sam Berger in the called it off. • the first pro contract I ever hope of signing with the Wasn· The Redskins acquired the worked on, and I've been doing ington Redskins. NFL rights to Theimann last it ever since." "I want to play in the Nation· week from the Miami Dolphins, Other athletes receiving con· aI Football League. It's that who had made him their No.4 Tasteful English rock and roll, tract assistance from Hayes are: Craig Clemons and Larry Horton (Chicago Bears), Charles Bolden (New York Gi· pl~s 'Powerhouse Chicago blues! ants), Layne McDowell (origi· nally with the New England Patr[ots. now in the starting lineup at British Columbia). B'URGER PALACE Paul Laaveg (Washington Red· skins), Jim Sundberg (Texas 121 Iowa Avenue Rangers), Jim O'Malley (Den· ver Broncos), and Jim Miller Dave Mason was an original (Atlanta). Broa.ted il the Be.t Chicken Anywhere "I am now oolOg some work member of Traffic, a superb with some Notre Dame play· 2 urge pieces of chicken, french friel, ers," said Hayes. "I enjoy and buttered roll guitarist and composer of some negotiating and working with of their classic songs like athletes. Advising them on in· vestments and income tax al­ "Feelin' Alright" and "You loWS me to stay current. Snack Pack They 're very self·assured, very Can All Join In.'' Since leaving straightforward people. I can say that I haven'tCound a phony Reg. $1.07 e Traffic, he's made fine albums among them. Besides, there are 8g like Alone Together (with songs all those free tickets!" Hayes shares that same feel· like "Only You Know and I ing for James Speed, who is not You de.erve a treat Know") and is just now making Problems? TUES., WED., THURS. a full-scale tour of the U,S.A. ... somebody cam Jan. 29, 30, 31 On tour, Dave Mason and band 351·0140 eR.I.I e•• '.R · Try our authentic homemade Italian Pilla have been getting a great ... S. O.buque II A.M.-r A.M. after 5 pm Mon.·Thurs. reception-" Every thing a rock band should be"-N.Y. Times. THE Fri .. $at.,$un. after 12 noon, IICIELOBEOI Schlitz on tap anytime. 208 N. LInn FOOS'BALL TO\J RNAMENT TONIGHT Buddy Guy/Junior Wells Band Iowa Center for the Arts -when you talk about the blues, you talk about this band, University 'of Iowa Nothing forced or put-on, they play and sing like the masters Dance Theatre they are. Known as one of the great performing bands around Auditions for New Members from gigs with J. Geils and the Allmans, they make a good Tuesday, January 29th complement to the Dave Mason Band. This is going to be a 7:00 p.m. Mirror Room Womens Gym great night of music.

All Men and Women Welcome! Saturday, February 23, 8 p.m.\ at U of I Fieldhouse, TIckets 53-, available February 4 sportscripts Eamers NEW YORK (AP) - Three long-time National Leaguers­ :DAILY, first baseman Swmy Jim Bottomley, outfielder Samuel "Big Sam" Thompson and umpire Jocko Conlan-were voted into baseball's HaU of Fame Monday by the Committee on Vet­ erans. They join two American Leaguers-former New York Yankee stars Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford-who were OWAN elected earlier this month by the Baseball Writers Associ­ ation of American. All five-Bottomley and Thompson posthumously-will be Bu.ln ••• inducted into the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, N.Y., in TRIVIA answer Is under Lost PRIVATE tutoring In Spanish, Opport.nltl •• L. Road Antiques : Open LARGE room, close In, share com- 12x60 1972 American two bedroom. ,August. Found . 2nd column this page . Degree. Experienced. Call Iwe'ekdlavs and weekends, 10 a.m. ~Iete kitchen, girls preferred, $90. Carpeted, 1'/2 baths, Bon Aire. Call Bottomley, who spent 13 fuU seasons with the St. LoUIS car­ Just received cherry Phone 351-8339. 351-7455. 2-11 "IMMEDIATE m set and rocker, two 2-11 dinals and Cincinnati Reds and two with the st. Louis Browns beautiful brass beds, refinished CONSERVATIVES INCOME" kitchen cabinet; have many LARGE , furnished, refrigerator, remodeled, heated water- of the American League, set a major league record by DIstrlbutor---part or full anliques. 351 ·5256. 2·5 Til, radio. $100, share kitchen, bath. stUdy ·bookshelves, air, driving in 12 runs for the Cards in a 1924 game against Call 331·3700 time to Supply Company BL.OOM Antiques, Wellman, 354-3643. 1-3t, ______skirted . 338·0428 . _ _3 .5 Brooklyn. He closed out his major league career by established accounts with Iowa . Open Monday·Saturday, 9 managing the Browns for the last half of the 1937 season. after 7 P.M. RCA-CBS-Dlsney Recor- a.m.-5:30p.m. 646·2650 or 646.2887. CO-ED house-Rooms for ___--::--_:-- ____1-29 338.9513; 337-2085. His lifetime batting average was .310 and he collected 2,313 ds. Income possibilities FIRST Annual Jackie Jocko Film hits and 219"home runs. Bottomley led the National League in Festival, for information call Bob 1______up to $1,000 per month Mu.lca I NEEDED-One or two people to 1972 12 wide two bedroom , fur . runs batted in in 1926 and 1928 and tied Hack Wilson for the ur Brazzy·T at 354·1285. 1-30 with only $3,500 requIred .n.tru •• nt. Share trailer, Hilltop. 338·5981. or unfurnished. 350168 :::-:::=--.__ =:-:-::::-:-::-:-:-:-::-1-29 . p.m., weekends. 2·4 home run lead in 1928 with 31. The Osrlesbv. Ill .. native was for inventory and ::: THE IOWA GYM·NEST . I -C II COLLECT GRETSCH solid wood guitar, QUIET, pleasant single for male, t/le league's Most Valuable Player in 1928 and appeared in OLYMPIC GYMNASTICS locket, t rain ng a erfect condition, extras In . no cooking, 545. 831 E. College, SHORIN RYU KEMPO KARATE ' ~eel""~'" foof'World Series with the Cardinals. ALL. AGES 2-.4 for Mr. James (817) luded , for reason'able offer. Mrs. Verdin . 1·29 ------461-6961. Phone 62f>.2521 after 5 p.m. 2-5 ROOM In medical fr."t.'rnlt,,--I------The mustachioed Thompson. whO played all but eight DIAL. 337-7096 2·8 L.OST- Striped black·gray-wh ite FOR Ie-Qo esnon FI g Ihorn One block from L Estate lOx60-Unfur· games of his major league career in the 19th century with the ~jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!i' female cat near Burlington· EX C L U5 I V E F RAN CHIS E excell~~t con~itio n , PI~y: nice: Room and board is S100 · rr,onl~ ut inc ludes washer, . Governor. Reward . 337·2508 . 2·4 AVAIL.ABLE Excellent Income 5230 Call T Wilcox 338-3547 2.5 Phone after 5 p.m., ask for house er, air conditioner. $2,700 . Detroit and Philadelphia teams of the old National League, . . . .". manager 337·3157 1.30 1829 or 351·6587 . 1·30 FOU ND-Sk l boots-<>wner may potential It you are selected. ~ork .. . . also holds an RBI record, though an obscure one. CONGRATS claim by Identifying . Call 338·7048 from home fu!'. or part.tlme . GOYA G. .1Q claSSIcal gUItar . Per- ROOMS with cooking, one extra after 6 p.m. 3·7 Mechanical abIlity helpful. All fect cond ItIon , 5100. 351 ·2872. 1·29 large BI ck's Gasl'ght V'llage He drove in .923 runs per game. ahead of such Hall of LITTLE WIENER, tralnmg , tools, materials, and . a I I , Famers as Lou Gehrig's .920. Hank Greenberg's .915. Babe L.OST-Female Ir ish Setter, six sysl~ms provided to Insure PEG V-4 head. B·42 boHom , 422 Brown . 2-20 I Ruth's .886 and Joe DiMaggio's .885. The 6-foot-2. 207-pound Hope you get what months old, answers to "Gi nger ." maxImum succ~s. Very small . covers. Excellent condl - H' I W t d Homeowners Please contact Denn is Felton, Inve~tment r~ulre~ . tlon . ·0920 . 1·29 Out ng an. Thompson also was the first National Leaguer to collect 200 you've been promised. 1217 Burlington 1.29 For Informahon wrIte : P.O. Box ------Mabile Home . t 2603, Sioux City, Iowa. 51106.1-29 MEDICAL. sludent, wife seeking Matorcycle hits and 300 total bases in a season. Wanted to Buy Auto (alsoSR-22) . LOST-Brown leather coa, rental of part of Older home Boats The Danville. Ind .. native compiled a career batting aver­ 1·16·74 in Joe's. Reward . 351 -7245. SKI boots wanted , size 10 or 10'h starling late May. Will help with Ginger Gee & Wiener 1-30 WHOLESALE Also want good pair of bindings. chores. 351 ·0715 . 1·31 L.ife-Rates you can live w!!h age of .336. He played with Detroit from 1885-88 and Phila­ :-L-::O-=S=T-~Sm-a~lI-w-:-h::-it-:-e7' te-r-:ri-er-,-=-ch:7.ild- DISTRIBUTORSHIP Call 353·0152 . 1·29 ONE .bedroom apartl)'lent-Close IRVIN PFAB delphia from 1889-1898 and was lured out of retirement for LOOKING for interested compan· ren's pet. If found , 338 ·6174 . NOW AVAILABLE IN need of The History of italian In, furnished or un.furnished , INSURANCE . eight games in 1906 at the age of 46 by the Detroit Tigers of ion to travel in Europe for Reward I 1·29 Be In Business For YourselC Renaissance Art by Hartt, borrow reasonable . 351 -3664. 2-1 Maiden Lane 351·7333 the American League. He died in 1922. summer. 338 ·5083. 1·29 ~ Full Or Part Time. or buy. 354·2423. 1·30 DISTRIBUTOR NEEDED-NOW! Hou •• for R.nt His 126 lifetime homers stood as the National League I'm looking for Information on r ___ U A and Service Company e$. WANTED-USed TV's ; llsed gOOd supposedly (or otherwise) I ~ 1,./ accounls In Ihe Local Area bicycles , no racing . Call 351 ·3487. record until Rogers Hornsby broke it. haunted houses In the Iowa City 1.31 WANTED.Two mellow women Conlan. 71, played only two seasons in the majors with the area. Please contact Bob Jones at Sin eat og is an old practice in whlcb rent large, furnished house, 337-9723 aiter 10 p.m. (I'm out a person, usually destitute or M I.e. for Sa I. in, free parking, second semester Chicago White Sox in 1934-5. But he was a controversial Na­ haunting bars till then) . hungry. w.as payed by a family to Sellin, Experience required as $75 each . Phone 338.7653 after tional League umpire from 1941-65 who twice had kicki(lg in­ ,.... ______.. theslnsofadeadrelatlve. will Irain and work wilh AR amplifier- 50-SO rms In to 2·1 cidents at home plate wi'h the volatile Leo Durocher.} i.S.A. Le_cture Notes H.lp Want.d Ihese ac

AT 1 : 30-3: 30-5: 30-7: 30-': 30 Alligator spurs Knoedel MAT. $1.2S-EVE. $2.00 CHILD75c By STEVE HOLLAND triangular victory over Nor· die." Staff Writer thern Illinois and Western ,Fieseler may be right Maybe it·s the alligator in his Illinois. because his roomie has quite a dormitory room that has Bill That alligator actually list of pre·season injuries going Knoedel high jumping over the belongs to Mike Fieseler. for himself. seven-foot barrier. Only a foot ~noedel 's roomate. Fieseler. a Last spring Knoedel chipped long now, the gator has the hurdler from Des Moines. calls his tooth while playing pole WED. potential of reaching five feet his pet "eretz." which is short vaulter. This fall he sprained 7:10-9:20 before Knoedel , a sophomore. for track coach Francis X. Cret­ his ankle in a volleyball game. STREISAIID graduates. zmeyer. Thinking that his· ankle was The reptile has an appetite for Explaining the name. healed, Knoedel two weeks later • REDFORD worms, Insects and fingers. Fieseler said the gator "has the attempted the triple jump. That Who knows what the creature same smile as the coach when idea resulted with a re·sprained will chew on in the future? It's he te Ils you to run 660 ' s faster ankle. enough to keep anybody than you have ever run them Keeping himself together leaping. before. " isn't the biggest problem that Saturday afternoon Knoedel Despite the gracefulness that Knoedel faces. It's guys like leaped 7-feet Itf~- inches . higher Knoedel. a former Iowa City Fieseler who cause him to won­ than any Iowa collegian has High School athlete. shows in der. ever gone ; the best in the nation his specialty. Fieseler illBists There was the time when this year and surpassing his that his roommate is awkward. Knoedel was traveling with pall own personal goal. "He Is the clumsiest guy, I and they decided to introduce "When 1 landed everything know," laughs the blond-haired him to the world. went bo-iUllng." said Knoedel. hurdler. "Once I was walking "Ladies and gentlemen." one "Golig tbat high Is something on a sidewalk with Knoedel and shouted . "Meet the world's that you always dream about." noticed him missing. When I greatest high jumper." His performance sparked the turned around, there he was Knoedel could do nothing but rest of the track team to a lying face down In a mud-pud- blush.

Still Serving Our Traditional MEXICO GAIETIES Italian Foods ... at reasonable March 9 to 16, 1974 prices ,., for your din.inK pleasure! l Palace of Fine Arts Folkloric Ballet Flamenco GEORGE WELCOMES VOU And i. AnXlou' to Pi .... Vou with Dellciou. Food. Proparod '0 GI .. Vou Mexico City Bull fighting llI" Ho". Cooked Fl • .." and Quality . PIZZA GeOfil 's Genuine halian PizlI SOUP .....Cup ..•.40 SOwl .. •. . 55 Cuern4lvaca The Pyr4lmlds of the Sun and Moon ' ,4 Vlri.ties in 12 and 14 Inch Si.es ITALIAN DINNERS Small Large SmoI112" LMvo 14" Artist worklhopl Acapulco Sliver factories SPAGHETTI with Italian Sauce .•..... •... . •..... '" ..•.• ...... SI45 SI.95 CHEESE ...... •. .. •...... •...•...... $1.95 $2.45 SPAGHETTI & MEATBALLS with Italia n Sauce ...... •..•.....••... 195 255 ONION ...... •.•...... 1.95 2.45 Yacht cruise ConventofChurubulCo SPAGHETTI & RAVIOLI WIth Italian Sauce . . .•. 195 255 SAUSAGE ...... •...... 2.35 2.115 SPAGHETTI & MUSHROOMS with Italian Sauce ...... • . .•••.. 195 255 BEEF ...... 2.35 2.95 SPAGHETTI & CHICKEN WIth Italian Sa\Jce ..... ]00 765 GEO RGE 'S GOURMET SPECIA L (~" U ... ge. Gree .. Pepper On,,,,, ) ...... •. .. 2.35 2.95 SPAGHETTI & CHICKEN LIVERS w,th 1I0100n Sauce . }oo 265 PEPPE RON I ...... •.... 2.35 295 writ., call or see SPAGHETTI. RAVIOLI . MEATBALLS with Ita"an Sauce ] 25 295 KOSHER SALAMI ...... • .• ...... 2.55 3.15 Ex". Me.. boll - $.30 GREEN PEPPE R .•...•...... •..•.. 2.55 3.15 Orders SlMd WIth Tos ..d Salad. Roll & B"tl er MUSHROOM .•.• . ...•...... 2.55 3.15 RAVIOLI AND ITALIAN Meat Sauce ...... 5195 SHRIMP • . •...... •..•. . ... 2.S5 3.15 ITALIAN LASAGNE Enc ....rol. " ...•...... 775 TUNA FISH . ... • . . ...•. . • . ...• 2.55 3.15 Orders ~ved With Tossed Sa ldd , Roll & Bulter ANCHOVIE • ...... •...... 2.55 3.15 FRIDAY SPECIAL IS hr ",w. Tu"a. Gleen Pepper . Omon) ...... •..•...... 2.85 3.45 DINNER SUGGESTIONS HOUSE SPECI AL ...... •...... 2.95 3.BS unlblnk blq. - Coralville One half GOLDEN SROWN BROASTED CHICKEN ICut Upl 579, . ~lIInhtrl,lttlll1'i ur & ' UHort r~tluttSl One·quarter GOLDEN BROWN BROASTED CHICKEN ICut Upl 775 [ .It II I\dlhltllll,llltlq... ·dtt'1I1 S 35 E~tra 354·2424 BROASTED CHICKEN LIVE RS . •...... , 15 HICKORY SMOKED LOIN BACK BARBECUED RIBS . 395 SANDWICHES ON FRENCH BREAD OLD STVLE POLISH SAUSAGE & KRAUT . .. . . 755 \1[ATBALL .jEROu" F"·,,.h BI.",I ....•...... •.... $1 .25 JUMBO GOLDEN BROWN SHRIMP W,th Hot Sauce 3·15 FA'IlCY S\10KEO HA M U" Fr.llch B.ead . . ..•...... •.•. 1.35 FILET OF HADDOCK With Tartar Sluee ...... 7·15 11AlIA'Il tlEEF 1111 Frc"d) Bredll. 5111010 01 Be.1 Au Jus . Orders served With French Fnes or Broasttd POlaloes, Tos5l'd S.II.tCt Roll.IIHf Blllll" Chi"t"" 11 .. 11,111 5,-,\1(1' Oil French Bread ' ... , ..•...•....•.•.. , 1.55 CENTER FOR NEW MUSIC CHOICE OF DRESSINGS - French . Thousand 1.land 1t.1I." Blc" Che,"" 5 30 E ",., li()UR\lr T ITALIAN SAN DWICfi . 0" Garhc Butt.red French Bread EnlllV s!tI,;l'll Gt'!ltk! S"I,Hlll . SWISS & Provolone Cheeses, 8:00 p.m. 5\"'"t'1 ij,tllII,lI\d PI'I.flt" , dlld Onion Rings ...... •...... •. . , 1.55 KIDOIE MENU (Childr.n Uncler 12 Ve ... ) COH .'Il[ lJ BEEF "" B,uwlI B"·d(1. SWISS Cheese & Kraut ...... • ..•...... 1.65 HAM . BEEF . or MEATBALL SANDWICH on French Bread . S 69 CA POCOlA UI.llhlll H.1I111 wl lh Cht'eS~ on French Bread , ' ...... •..•...... , 1.45 Sunday,3 February 1974 SPAGHETII & MEATBALL DINNER - Includes co le slaw. roll & hUllcr 1 75 (j[ 'lOA SALAMI 1V,.h Sw," Ch •••• On French Bread ...... • . ••..•.. .. 1.35 CHICKEN DINNER 12 pet.) includes cole slaw. roll & buller 1 45 Clapp Recital Hall $.IncllNlches Garnished With Kosher 0111 Pickle The University of Iowa CHAR BROILED STEAK CHOPPED SI RLOIN- Onion Rings ...... •...... 5745. ONE FOURTH LB HAMB URGE R WIt h KOSher D,II & Tomato ...••..•...... S.75 no tickets required CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN - Onion Rings ...... 545 ONE FOURTH LB CHEESE BURGER w,th Koshor DIll" Tomlto ...... 85 SefoIed WIth Fro .. Of Broasted Potatoe.. Tossed Salild . RolI ...o Bulll'r Willi Cull' SI.IW "md FriLlS ..• ...... • .• ,., . . ,85 Extr.

GOURMET ITALIAN SALAD A Combination of Lettuce . Tomato. Mild Ch,lI Pepper. Green Pepper. OnIon Rln",. BOIIo,1 Eqq. FORMANTS I . __ ... __ . __ ... _.. _. _. _Bernard R~nds BI" of Provolone and Swiss Cheese. SalamI and PepperonI S 1 45 DESSERTS BEVERAGES Blou Cheese S.30 Extr. V,lIu ll J Icc Cr~,JIl\ · S.45 Soft Oronk. . ...•...... ' ..•...•.• 1.25 lV,th Choculd t. T01lPlll 9 · .. 55 Peps, . Cok •• 7 UP. Ropt liter solo harp ALA CARTE Slllitno"l , , .. , •.••.•.. · ..55 Coif .. or Sank...... 20 Onion Rings ...... S.B5 Ice Teo - Hot T.I ...... 21 fronch fries ...... 50 MIlk ..•.. . . .•...... ••• .••25 • .40 KU\\ BrOisted POlltoes ...... 50 Ch,cken CUI Un Lemonade (In ...son) ...... 25 agreen­ Cole Slaw ...... 35 4 pIeces .. . • . • ..... S 1.85 MA" WE SUGGEST WINE THE VIOLA IN MY LIFE (3) .....' .Morton Feldman TOIled Salad ...... : ...... 50 B pIeces ...... 3.70 WITH VOUR MEAL sian G\ Garlic Bread ...... •• ...... • ..45 12 PIeces . 5.50 BEER 8u.gundv R"",' SouI . role terest j viola and piano Gloss ...... • ...... S 60 Drall .•...... •....25' .40 Pitchers . .,., .....•...... , 1.50 and .B CALL fOR CARRY OUT SERVICE - YOUR ORDER WILL BE READY - DIAL 338-7801 W,ne Cooler. W,ne Cocktail ..... " .. , .. 65 " liter ...... • ...... 1.35 Botti. Botr •. •...... • . .•...... • .50 reporte I" Li ler ., ..•••..••••..•.•.... 2.80 Impolled (LOMnbrlu) ...... 10 Gave INS IDE ...... -..... Kenneth Gaburo the rep .Dining .Soup 'n Sandwiches theagr quartet for solo string bass player (2 :30"':00 p.m.) Gulf .Take Home tiCipati .Dinners Served more tl • N oon Lunches refuse • PIERROT LUNAIRE ...... Arnold Schoenberg 5:00 p.m.-12:00 Mon .-Thurs. agreerr . (11: 00-2 :30 p.m.) 114 South Clinton PHONE 338·7801 .reciter and ensemble 5:00·) :00 a.m. Frl. and Sat . mlniste for C.rr Out Service