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, \ S1II11 dime c 1980 Student Publications Inc. City's Morning Newspaper Tuesday, April 8, 1980 a Van Allen Carter breaks ties with Iran ments. By Unlled Press Inlernallonal parliament, which may not meet for two Carter said he would retaliate with and medicine shipments, which will drop months or longer, to decide the fate of four steps now, and more later if needed. to a minimum or cease. "It must be made clear that the Ayatollah RuhoUah Khomeini Monday the hostages. And a leading Iranian "First, the United States Is breaking -Effective immediately, no existing failure to release the hostages will in­ ruled against transferring the 50 judKe said the hostage question was diplomatic relations with Iran," he said. visas allowing Iranians to enter America volve increaSingly heavy costs to Iran Building American hostages from the custody of "secondary" to other issues on the Carter ordered all Iranian diplomats to will be honored and no new ones will be and its interests," Carter said, adding he the militants and President Carter agenda of the 27Q..member parliament. leave the country by midnight Tuesday. issued except for " compelling may take further steps if these do not responded by breaking' diplomatic rela­ Iran's "hanging judge, " Ayatollah Only 35 diplomats are still accredited in humanitarian reasons ." Carter said the prove effective. asked tions with Iran and ordering other tough Sadegh Khalkhali, also told a news con­ Washington but many others remain in order would be strictly enforced. About THE WHITE HOUSE also was expec­ new sanctions. ference that the 50 Americans should be the United States. 11 ,000 Iranians have entered the United ted to announce today a tightening of its By LIZ ISHAM Carter, abandoning hope that a con­ tried for espionage and those convicted Diplomats at the United Nations were States since the crisis began. immigration policies for Iranian stu­ StllfWrlt" ciliatory approach could defuse tlie 156- should be sent to prison. not affected by Carter's expulSion order. -AU Iran's assets in the United States dents and others already in the United had been frozen previously and Carter States by forcing them to leave when A ill rhetoric instructor has day-old crisis, said the United States has acted with "exceptional patience and CARTER SAID the Iranian govern­ THE OTHER three steps Carter an­ ordered an inventory of them . Carter their visas expire - unless they apply i1unched a campaign to have the restraint" in the crisis, and added tha t ment "can no longer escape full respon­ nounced were : said claims against Iran also would be for asylum. UI Physics Building renamed in further steps against the Iranian govern­ sibility by hiding behind the terrorists at ~Of[jcial sanctions w11l be imposed on studied and he would introduce legisla­ Carter also ordered Iranian diplomats honor of James Van Allen, dis­ ment would be taken as necessary if the the embassy," and ordered the im­ U.S. shipments to Iran. Most trade bet­ tion to help those, including families of put under surveillance and said they can­ coverer of the Van Allen radiation "illegal and outrageous" holdil1g of the mediate break in rela tions and the expul­ ween the two countries has stopped since the hostages, who want financial settle­ not move outside a two-mile radius of belts and chairman of the VI hostages is not resolved. sion of Iranian diplomats by midnight the crisis began, but Carter said his or­ ments for their grievances. He implied their homes while they remain in the Un­ Physics and Astronomy Depart­ Khomeini Silid it is up to Iran's new Tuesday. der would go even further to include food Iran's assets could be used in the settle- ited States. ment. Steven Vibbert said he is presenting the idea to his rhetoric classes this week. If the students agree, he said he will encourage But officer, she was them to write letters of support to U1 and city officials or the media as an exercise in persuasive only roller skating writing. Vibbert said he feels the VI has The worst thing that can happen to a three goals - education, service person while roller skating is a) to fall and research. "No one has done down , b) to meet someone from Califor­ these three things like Van AUen," nia , or c) to receive a traffic citation. he said. "He's kept up with stu­ Probably b, but at least for Jennifer dents, his research ability is un­ Stewart of 422 Brown St. the answer is questionable and in service he's c. helped not only Iowa City but the Stewart said she was roller skating world at large." south on Gilbert Street early Monday morning when an Iowa City policeman VAN ALLEN, who is recognized drove by and began shouting to her from as a pioneer in scientific research . his patrol car. using rockets, and space Stewart said she thought the officer probes , received a master's was telling her to "stay in the street," so degree in science and a doctorate she continued to skate toward the inter­ in physics from the VI. He holds section of Gilbert and Bloomington an endowed professorship created streets. by Muscatine Industrialist Roy J. After she turned right on Bloomington Carver and 12 honorary degrees Street, Officer Daniel Dreckman pulled from colleges and universities Stewart over to a parking lot and gave across the United States. her a ticket, charging her with "coasting in the street." The Dally Iowan/Steve Vibbert said he has not met Van Jennller Stewprt kicks up a tu .. atter Allen, and does not know how VI STEW JU: protested, saying that she receiving a tlcke, for "Clouting in the buildings are named . "I jlllt"tmrtk ~ad misunderstood Dre<:kman's warn­ .tr " on roller .kates Monday. It's a nice statement for {he un­ ing. But the officer said that he gave her iversity community to make . the citation because she was creating a property. '\bose kind of folks don't come hazard to motorists by forcing them to VI Campus Securlty added that per­ along very often," he said. "That steer out of their way to avoid her. sons may skate on campus sidewalks but ought to be recognized. "I can't believe they 'd do all this for not on the VI's institutional roads. something so trite," Stewart said. Stewart is scheduled to appear in Iowa "When you have a person who's Dreckman said that the only legal City Traffic Court next Monday at8 a.m. got a distinguished chalr and a list places to ska te are on the sidewalk in Dreckman said that the fine is up to the of both earned and honorary residential areas and on priva te magistrate. degrees as long as your arm, there 's not much left to do for him. I'm surprised the university has not done something for him 51-cent gas draws before. He's our most famous and renowned faculty member." SUGGESTED• NAMES for long lines downtown campus buildings are submitted to In these days of spiraling gas prices, were offered some consolation in the President Willard Boyd's office over 80 Iowa City motorists lined their form of gas at $1.06 a gallon. and paSsed on to the VI Building cars up around three downtown blocks Steve Klein, a 21-year-old Iowa City Names Committee, according to Monday for a shot at 51-cents-a-gallon painter, was the fir st to pull up to the Wendle Kerr, UI associate gas. pumps. Klein said he learned about the professor of pharmacy and a At the peak of the city's late afternoon bargain earlier in the day. member of the committee. He traffic rush, radio station KIOI-FM and "I didn't have much to do today, and I said suggestions are u.sually sub­ Lon 's Gas and Grocery at the corner of came by around three and there was mitted by a department. Clinton and Burlington streets sold gas nobody here so I got right on it," he said. Kerr said he thinks the Lindquist dirt cheap to all motorists who could get Klein received the first of some 517 Center for Measurement was the to the pumps between 4 and 6 p.m. gallons of low priced gas sold duri~ the last UI building named for a "We like our listeners to have fun ," two hours. Brown said that with current professor. E.F. Lindquist, a said Steve Dahl, the radio station's sales prices - regular, for instance, at $1.16 a professor of education who manager. Dahl and program dIrector gallon - on the average each motorist developed and directed standar­ Mark Vos explained that the idea to sell would save about $7 on the maximum 10- dized testing programs (or the gas at 1978 prices occurred to them a gallon purchase. state and the U.S. Army, taught at couple of months ago while the two were Between sixty and seventy cars lined the VI from 1927-1969. He died in "brainstorming" for promotional ideas. the block, winding down Clinton Street, 1978. Vibbert said he got the idea Service station owner Lon Brown said, around the corner east on Court Street after observing what he called the "They came to me about two weeks ago and then continuing back up Dubuque "arena silliness" - the state-wide and said they wanted to sell gas for 51 Street. speculation abOut who the new UI cents a gallon and I told them they were Mark Wenderlich, a graduate student sports arena should be named for . The Da lly Iowan/Steve Zavodny crazy." in thea ter, passed the time by studying lines for a play. "I figured I had nothing "OUR ATHLETICS are solid" Fun in the sun CRAZY OR NOT, it happened, and to lose," he said. "I'm sitting here he said, "but we I;Iave an impo'r­ Sunny skiM Ind highs In the 70. MondlY broughl out tumbling down I hili on the Plntac,..l. Balking In the lUll motorists waited up to two hours to get listening to good music and going iant intellectual community as eprlngllme energy In ....yOM, Including Ihne two IIcllera will be ahort-lived; le"'lM'lturM In Ihe 501 and rlln Irl at the cheap gas . Those who waited in through some lines. It's just what I'd be weH. This is a good way to honor a Iorae•• t lor lhe ,..t 01 the weak. line but didn't make the 6 p.m. deadline doing at home." person in the university in their field." Vibbert said he has discussed the idea only with other rhetoric instructors. "They think it's a Airlift of 10,900 Cubans urged Inside beck of an idea" he said. He said the Van Allen name LIMA, Peru (UPI) - Peru appealed tempt to negotiate a solution, but their asylum-seekers as "deliquents , anti­ could send medical personnel and volun­ The local poll would be easily recognized. "Some urgently to its South ' American flight was delayed and the officials were social vagrants and parasites," in­ teers. " I Page 3 buildings are so· uncreatively neighbors Monday to organize an airlift still waiting in Lima . cluding "gamblers, homosexuals and drug addicts ," but sald all who obtained The Cuban Communist party named, like East Hall," he said. of 10,000 Cubans besieging its Havana newspaper Gramma . charged Monday "The dorms have to be named for embassy for asylum. The Red Cross CUBANS BEGAN crowding into the (oreign visas except the 25 in the bus Campbell would be allowed to leave Cuba. that Cuban "gangsters" are making IOmeone. They just don't come up Issued an international SOS seeking embassy grounds Friday after Com­ plans to invade the United States' in­ Page 6 • with names like Burge or Rienow. water, food and medicine for the munist President Fidel Castro, charging terest office in Havana and kidnap the I know Jessup WflS a president of fugitives . the Peruvian and Venezuelan govern­ PERUVIAN RED Cross President Spanish ambassador. Short of full the university, but I don't know the The Peruvian Foreign Ministry an­ ments were incitil)g Cubans to defect, Augusto del Solar Monday sent a telegram to the International Red Cross diplomatic relatiolL'l, the United States Weather otber people up on the Pen­ nounced tha t at the request of Foreign ordered all Cuban guards removed from and Cuba maintain "interest" sectiOllS Minister Arturo Garcia y Garcia the An­ the compound. A guard was killed Tues­ In Geneva which said in part, "We are Day 70 - Weather held hostage tacrest. " in each other's capital . It was a sparkling day, a day to When told of Vibbert's proposal, dean Fact foreign ministers will hold an day when 25 Cubans smashed into the deeply concerned over the desperate emergency meeting in Lima Wednesday embassy in a bus. situation of (the) 10,000 refugees surpass aIJ days. The tem­ Van Allen said that be was "quite The article, transmitted by the Cuban peratures hit 70, the sun glowed . pleased and bonored" that such a to consider the evacuation of the Cubans Castro's announcement, widely dis­ because of a lack of water, food and news agency Prensa Latina and trying to leave the island. medicines. Loretta glowed. But not everyone suggestion has been made. seminated by the state-controlled monitored in Mexico City, said the plot­ enjoyed the nice weather. Some The Peruvians, saying they could not media, sparked a human avalanche and "We request immediate action to help ters were inspired by the Peruvian em­ take In all those seeking asylum, asked sat in darkened rooms, surrounded VIBBERT SAID that [or his stu­ in less than 72 hours an estimated 10,000 bring a solution . We suggest the bassy situation. by pharmaceuticals. They did not dents the project is "not so much the other Andean Pact countries, Colom­ people,' t Including thousands of women presence (in Havana) of a member of " ... gangster elements have begun to tan, they did not glow. They are an uslgnment, but a chance to do bia, Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia, to and cruldren, packed the 2,OOO-square the International Red Cross so that the the weather staff. How 'bout somethlnc. It' 8 an elcellent sltua­ take In some of the refugees. yard compound, its gardens and sur­ Cuban Red Cross may provide aU needed elaborate plans to kidnap the Spanish .ambassador and to penetrate by force remembering them , buh? With lion, and an elcellent potential for A group of Peruvian diplomats and rounding streets. help and protection to the refug~l . highs in the SOs and rain. persuasion elists." se<:urlty agents was to fly to Havana to and occupy the United states interest of­ help control the milling mob and at- Cuban authorities denounced the "If need be, the Peruvian Red Cross fice," the Gramma report said. ,...2-l'IIe DIIr Ie ••, I•• CIIf. ___T.....,. AId 1,1_ Briefly Council will open bids Professor Jessie Bernard for hotel-store project Ida Beam Visiting Professor u.s. pr_ures USOC By ROD BOSHART A bid is expected from Iowa urban reDeWal block 64. now a Staff Wrltw City's Old Capitol Associates parting Lot south of the J.e. to support boycott and also ODe from the Turner Penney building. Women's Studies Program WASHINGTON (UPI) - Coogress and the Defense Bids on the doWntown bote)­ Construction Co. of Chicago in The councll also disc:ussed a Department pres!Ured the U.S. Olympic: Committee department store project will association with the Worsbarn proposal to sell the city's Professor of Sociology and author of American Family Behavlo" Academic Mooday to support PresldeDt Carter's boycott 01 the be opened by Iowa City officials Construction Co. 01 Atlanta and sewage treatment plant to the Women. Remarriage: A Study of Marriage, The Future of MarriaQ!3. The Future Moscow games to show "other freedom-loving nations" at 000II today. Iowa City investor George m once the city's new treat­ of Motherhood, Self-Portrait of a Family. the United States disapproves the Soviet invasion of A decision by the Iowa City Nagle. ment facility is constructed. Afghanistan. Council 011 whether to grant a Berlin said that both bids are Monetay, April 7 II noon - Discussion: The Female World (forthcoming. The The committee, nearinc a decision on whether to sanc:­ two-month delay in opening the expected to include an RANDALL BEZANSON. m Free Press). 206 McBride, Sociology Dept. Lounge. tion U.S. participation. was warned non-support could bids was averted Mooday when Annstrong's department store vice presideht for finance, told threaten the governmental and pubUc: support the Olym­ the attorney representinc an franchise. the council tbe Ul is interested TUftdey, April" 1:05 - 2:30 Seminar: Approaches to Women's Studies, 304 anonymous group of local in· in purcbasinc all or part of tbe pics, and amateur sports generally, bave enjoyed. Berlin said Monday the coun­ EPB Lounge. "Any other outcome would c:reate widespread doubt vestors seeking a fiO.day elten· cil must award a contract on 13·acre parcel north of sion withdrew the request. Highway 6 where the city's Ihrougbout the world about the natiooal will of the United the project by April n. Noon brown-bag lunch to discuss the Femele World - EPB Lounge States a.nd Its resolve to defend its national interests ... Robert Downer. the local treatment plant is located. bipartisan House leaders said In a letter to the commit· group's attorney, said the ex· Bezanson said the Ul would Wed"...y, April .. e. I pm LecturE!: The Rise and Fall of the Good Provider tension request was withdrawn THE COUNCIL originally tee. awarded the hotel project in continue using the plant for Role". 304 EPB Lounge. Reception follows. because City Manager Neal treatment of sludge and, If it Berlin and project consultant October 19'77 to DEY BuIlding Mount St. Helens quiet, Corp., but DEY represen· purchased the entire parcel, for ThuMa" AprIl 10. 1:05 - 2:30 Seminar: Approaches to Women's Studies. 304 Donald Zucbelll recommended tatives told the city last June coal storage and construction EPB Lounge against delaying the bid open- of a power plant. but Itlll dangeroul that they could not finance the Public Inylted. inc· the project without tax-exempt Council and Riverfront Com· VANCOUVER, Wash. (UPI) - Mount St. Helens Is "Our people didn't see fit to industrial revenue bonds. which mission members expressed still an unpredic:+.able and potentially dangerous volcano make a big issue alit," Downer concern that the plan might despite reduc:ed activity and a cooler crater containing aald. "Our people thougbt, if can be sold by cities to banks or other investors at interest rates create an eyesore I.n tbe area small lakes , scientists said Mooday. this is obtainable, fine. but if and asked if the Ul would ex· Easter w_end rain and snow storms cleared enough • to 5 percent less than market not, we didn't wish to cause any rates. . pend resources to preserve a to allow aerial observers to sight four depressions cootroversy In thls matter." lOO-feet·wide strip on the river­ holding mud and water within the jagged bole. The city decided to re-bid the front to " buffer the objec· Jim Unterwegner, a U.S. Forest Service spokesman, IN ASKING for the delay in project with the option of tionable uses ." said the water, some of it from ice that has fallen into the bid opening , tbe group saId It revenue bond finanCing. In Bezanson said the Ul ls will· craler and some from two days of heavy snowfall, drains needed more time to assess the December the council altered ing to pursue beautification Into the vent leading to the volcano's interior and Is blown uncertain economic outlook . the bid prospectus to allow measures along the riverfront. out in ash and steam. Some of the water faUs back Into Even without the group's bid, developers the option of in­ He said the m and the city the small pools. he said. two proposals for a comblna· cluding a department store in would have to make a decision Dr. Donal Mullineawc, chief .apoltesman for a U.S. tion hotel and department store the complex . on the possible purchase within Geological Survey learn, said the water pools were project are llkely. The project will be located on three months. slgnlflcant because they Indicate "the rock Is cool enough for liquid water to sit on. If it were fiery hot, there would be no liquid watE'!' " Two more to run for ~ sS>~ New York transit strike Board of Supervisors Wedding · Invitations ~ 13> expected to be lengthy Two more persons announced against Republican candidates, candidacies for the Johnson if any, in the Nov. 4 general ond Supplies~ NEW YORK (UPI ) - Bad as It was. "Nightmare Mon· County Board of Supervisors election. day" proved to be little worse than any of the other six Monday. So far, no Republican has an­ days that 5. • million daily riders have gone without sub­ The two are Betty Ockenfels, nounced a candidacy for the ways and buses during a transit workers ' strike for better board, which is currently all­ CARDS pay. a Ul nurse from Hills, and James M. Kinney, an Oxford Democrat. Official said the morning rush bour flowed more Ockenfels. 48 , served as ET CETERA smoothly than had been expected, but talks to end the farmer who manages Iowa 109 S. Dubuqu. Cltv's state liquor store. health service supervisor at the walkout were making no headway . county care facility from 1969 " It looks like we might be In for a bit of a long haul They join Incumbents Lorada to 1977 and is a member of the before it's over," a mayoral spokesman said . Cilek and Donald Sehr and county Democratic Central BOOK SALE Officials had feared a massive traffic jam with the end county employee Robert Lynch Committee and the League of April 11 (Friday) of Jewish and Christian holy days and the return to school in the race for Democratic Women Voters. 7·9 pm of some students. ParlY nominations In the June 3 Kinney, 57, has worked for the But Eugene Connell, the mayor's emergency planner, county primary. Democratic Party and Is a April 12 (Sat.) said about 241 ,000 cars flowed Into 'Manhattan's central The three who draw most member of the Knights of 9 am· 5 pm business district, compared with 185,000 on a normal day. votes in the primary will run Columbus. April 13 (Sun.) Mayor Edward Koch, who has taken a hardline stance against what he calls the "unreasonable" salary de­ 1 - 4 pm mands of the union, was out early at his usual post on the ':::"~~'··t.0'·~~'~:.::"::':::··············~ Iowa City Rec. Center Brooklyn Bridge promenade to greet the thousands walk­ L,~ \.~ ~~ e.~ ...... : sponsored by Friends of ill6t to work. ~~~·.A~tF... : Ihe Iowa City Public Library OItage n*tlatlon. :~e ~J:j~"''''' l ~ ~~~ ~~~ .... complete i G n I.. I I. show no pro re8s ~~ ~~ 'fj:f salon services: : BOGOTA, Colombia (UPI) - Representatives of the Colombian government and leftist guerrillas met Monday t~~~~~ · cuts \ in an effort to reach a solution to tbe 41-day occupation of :9 ~~~.. 4) • perms , RIVERFEST'S the Dominican Embassy. but the talks broke up after less than two hours without any sign of progress. i."" ...... • tints j The guerrillas are holdinc 20 hostages. including U.S. ~. .' • PH plus . Ambassador Diego Asencio and 17 other foreign : a" : INTERNATIONAL diplomats. Of the original group of 57 people seized by the r @REDKEN® products l guerrillas, 36 have been released and one other, Uruguayan Ambassador Fernando Gomez, escaped. :· closed Mondays .: EXPLORATION One of the released hostages, former Nicaraguan Am­ · . bassador William Barquero, said the M·19 guerrillas will · , , , ., continue releasinc hostages until they reach "the final ...... seven" who will be held untll the government frees 3ll FRIDAY, APRIL 18 • jailed leftists and interested parties put up the demanded $50 milUon ransom. TWO EXCITING EVENTS THAT WILL TAKE YOU TO FALN member. arraigned • Economy Individual Fares THOSE PLACES YOU NEVER THOUGHT YOU'D SEE! EVANSTON, nt. (UPI) - Eleven suspected FALN • 25 and 50% Family Plan Fares terrorists, including the FBI's "most wanted" fugitive, • 25% Discount for Senior Citizens and the Han­ were pushed and carried Into court Monday, some dicapped INTERNATIONAL NIGHTCLUB shouting and kicking, for formal arraignment on a long • Convenient Schedules list of charges. • Comfortable Accommodations Police and FBI agents, meanwhile, continued to search WHEEL ROOM, IOWA MEMORIAL UNION 7:00 - 11:00 PM for an FALN headquarters In the Evanston area and For Information & Reservations sought c:onnections between the suspects and reported Call or See A NIGHTCLUB SETTING THAT WILL TAKE YOU plans to disrupt this summer's national political conven­ Trav.l.S.rvic •• lnc. tions. AROUND THE GLOBE. FROM BELLY DANCING "I am a freedom fighter, fighting for the freedom of 216 Flrsl Ave. Coralville, Iowa Puerto Rico! " Carlos Alberto Torres, 27, yelled at the 319/354-2.2. or 800/272-&461 TO LATIN AMERICAN GUITAR, THESE INTERNATIONAL judge. ENTERTAINERS WILL CHARM YOU ALL EVENING LONG Torres beaded the FBI's "most wanted" list wben be and the others were arrested Friday as a result of a tip AND MAKE SURE TO LOOK OVER THAT MENU AND {rom a suspicious Evanston resident. EXPERIENCE SOME OF THOSE INTERNATIONAL DELIGHTS. Quoted ... Come Join the These kind of folks don't come along very oft.,.. That APRIL IN PARIS ought to be recognized. -UI rhetoric Instructor Steven Vibbert, originator of TRIANGLE CLUB BALLROOM, IOWA MEMORIAL UNION 8:00 • 1:00 AM • drive to rename the Physlca Building in honor of Prof8llOr Jam .. Van Allen. Sailing Club Come to an Informational Meeting Postscripts Wed., April 9. Physics Lecture Rm .'1 Even.. 7:00pm THE ROMANCE OF A 0p0f8 PIIIIC ..... wi • .now a 111m of a-g Buchner'. play FRENCH CAFE COMES woyZCek al 7:90 p.m. In Lecture Room 2, Pt1ytiu Building. c ...... , I BoIIvt.n film, will be ateown In Aymara Ind ALIVE RIGHT IN THE SpaniSh with Engiith IUbtI1Ioo at 8 p.m. in Room 107, EPB...... jIea with UI enaamblo "Six O'Clock Shadow" will HEART OF IOWA CITY . be pr_onlld al 8 p.m. al Old Brick. Exhibit. THE MAGIC AND THE ArIItI ~ L.-:e ... .,..... finII wlU .now worIIln clay MYSTERY; THE SIGHTS In the Ew Orowlowe Ollory, April 11-11 In tho Fino ArtI Bulkllng. AND THE SMELLS; THE Art.IIOne .... wllilleow hit photographlln tho Terrace Lounge dllPlaY C8IOI AprI 11-1. In tho Union. MOOD AND THE MUSIC Announcemenll OF PARIS IN THE SPR­ The ....., .... will be gr-: 10 a IIIMn! arts llfilor who oIIoWI hlgMlt prom_ of achtev.mont In 1"r8duat. progrllll. ING. S1udentI InIet.-cl in compoIIng IhouId dllCUII It with a facility member whO will make a nomination 10 tho departrnont 1ieOd. Nomination 1oIt.. are 10 be filed with tho Or8duat. College by AprIl 11 . For more Information, call Dun Muon, A 353-SSM. Class teaches polling techni'ques By JULIE VORMAN television were also considered by the thinks." quickly costs can run up ." SIan Writer class of 25 undergraduates and Computer tabulation of responses Theisen's course, Survey Research graduates, according to Ellen will begin in early May with a summa­ and Design, was offered for the first Question : Do you agree or disagree Heywood , student coordinator, but tion of the results soon following in or­ time this semester, he said, and was !lith the statement that women should were determined to be less practical. der to complete the project before the created to meet the introductory take care of running their homes and end of the semester, Heywood said. research needs of VI graduate students iuve running the country to men? " We wanted to pick an issue that A comparable survey produced by and faculty . "The major thrust of the would not be quickly abated and would More than 500 Johnson County resi­ Gallup , Roper or one of the other course is how to do it," he said, with & denlS are being asked that question and be relevant when the results were national polling oganizations would students from various departments U others pertaining to national issues published ," Heywood said. About 70-80 cost significantly more than what was learning how to design and use reliable percent of the Johnson.County Nati9nal .-=VIlION IS part of a county-wide survey now un­ spent by the class, said Theisen, a for­ and valid questions, and sampling Issues polls are expected to be retur­ derway by a UI class in the College of mer staff member for the national Opi­ techniques. ned for tabulation, she said, since class Education. nion Research Center in Chicago. ENSIMILE members will be telephoning residents The poIl now underway grew out of a The 25 questions deal with draft "A professional survey organization desire to expose students to the ski Us registration, U.S. foreign policy and encouraging them to mail back the sur­ vey . would not have touched our survey for needed to devise a representative sur­ women's role In society, and are being less than $10,000, " he said. Major vey, Theisen said. Class members Saturday, April 12, 1980 ~ to a carefully selected sample of Although the survey was sent only to organizations spend about $15 to $100 were able to pool various experiences 511 Johnson County voters. The results, about every 14th name on the list of per person surveyed , Theisen ex­ 8:00 P.M. - including computer programming, Hancher Auditorium according to Gary Theisen, faculty registered Johnson County voters, plained, and polls often cost more than sta tistical reseatch, typesetting and coordinator, will be made public and Theisen says the results will be a fair $50,000. printing - to produce the final Tickets-$2.75 each forwarded to area legislators. representation of all area residents' product. Available at r "There are 10,000 things we could opinions. IN CONTRAST, Theisen received a Hancher Box Office bave surveyed, " Theisen said. "But $400 grant from the VI Council on " We could have done a mock roost of the class felt a survey of the "THE NUMBER of people surveyed Teaching to fund the class's survey. questionnaire and wouldn't have had draft and women's participation would represents about 1112 percent of county "Surveying can be extremely expen­ the time constraints," Theisen said. be of special interest. " residents," Theisen said. "I expect sive," he said. "The fact that we did "But the joy of surveying comes from we'll be somewhere within 3 to 7 per­ have a tight budget was good for tbe finding out what people actually IOWA CITY'S mass transit and cable centage point of what the population students. It made them realize how think. "

EVERY Arens: Devine voted to CAC posts TUESDAY CI The Collegiate Association Council tion, no one filed to oppose Arens and Kerr was appointed to that post. the budgeting and auditillg committees elected Incumbents Dave Arens and Devine. .of the Student Senate and CAC. [)eMis Devine as president and vice "WE'RE GOING to take the in­ "In particular, we hope to coordinate president in an unopposed race last Arens was elected CAC vice presi­ itiative on the things we 've promised, the committee guidelines and funding night. dent last fall , and took over the office and we look forward to working with methods so that we 're not limited to Candidates had until 5 p.m. Monday of president when former president the CAC councilors, the administra­ funding only a certain type of organiza­ to file their candidacy with the Student Neil Ritchie resigned . The CAC appoin­ tion, and the new senate in the upcom­ tion," Devine said. Elections Board . Although that ted Devine vice president at that time. ing year," Arens said. p,es yoU mOre deadline had been postponed several • Devine maintained his duties as Devine said he hoped to pull student A secret ballot was used and the vote times to permit publicity for the elec- treasurer until last week when Hazel organizations together by coordinating total was not disclosed. 9 .All- You-Con-Eat Salad Bar free with our dinners-== ~ -">. " Ogilvie guilty of sexual abuse Sadat arrives • No tipping The week-long trial of a Coralville man ended Iowa City police responded to a telephoned com­ in Washington Monday when a local jury found Charles A. plaint from the victim. WASHINGTON (UPI Ogilvie guilty of third-degree sexual abuse. Following the incident , an examination by UI - Egyptian President Now End, Wed. Ogilvie, 0-8 Holiday Garden Apartments, was Hospital physicians confirmed the victim had flew into detennined guilty of sexually abusing a 17-year­ suffered bruises to the face, shoulders and legs, Washington Monday for Academy Aw.rd Nomln" Dinners also old female at her Iowa City home on Jan. 30. according to court records. talks with President Car­ BEST ACTRESS Jurors began deliberating Friday but could ter, and predicted a include Eads scheduled an April 30 sentencing for baked potato 1101 reach a verdict before Johnson County Dis­ Ogilvie, currently held in the Johnson County breakthrough in the MARSHA MASON trict Judge William Eads dismissed them for Egypt-Israeli stalemate and warm roll Jail on his original bond of $10,000. Eads ordered with butter. the weekend. The jury of three men and nine that a pre-sentence investigation be conducted over Palestinian women resumed deliberations Monday morning by the Iowa Department of Correctional autonomy . and returned the verdict. Services . Arriving from Cairo for Extra-Cut RIB EYE Court records state Ogilvie entered the vic­ three days of consultation CHOPPED BEEF STEAK Extra-Cut Urn's residence at about 5 a.m. and "struck her Under Iowa law, third degree sexual abuse is with Carter and other DINNER RIB EYE STEAK several times" before she was overcome. In­ defined as a Class C felony , which carries a American officials, Sadat DINNER DINNER vestigating officers reportedly found the vic­ maximum penalty of a ten-year prison term and said as he left the plane tim's living room "in a state of disarray" when a fine of $5,000 . at nearby Andrews Air '2.49 Force Base, Md., "Once '2.59 $3.59 again, we are joining our Reg. $3.19 Reg. $3.29 Reg. $4.09 efforts in our holy pursuit Man charged in sex assault for peace."

An Iowa City man has been charged with the Intending to obtain change at the Gilbert Nell Simon 's third-ilegree sexual abuse of a woman outside Street Quik Trip, the ~man said, she feared the Coralville 516 Second Street The the Burlington Street laundromat early Monday man would steal her laundry while she was Chapter Two (5 blocks west of First Avenue) morning. gone. As she loaded articles of clothing into her Mill Restaurant A complaint filed by city police alleges that car, she said, he approached her from behind, I ~L,=,!.~-=,,!:j ~ Connoe be used III combinolion with • David Dean Whetstine, 2016 Hollywood Blvd., forced her into the back of her station wagon Opens at 4:00 pm Sundays other discounts. At Portidpating sexuaUy assaulted a 34-year-old Iowa City and committed the offense. (& Ihe resl of the week. 100) Steokhouses. , woman at about 2 a.m. . Following the incident, the woman called 120 E. Burlington , The woman stated that her assailant was police and authorities arrested Whetstine ap- : loitering in the BurliDgton Street Laundromat • proximately 25 minutes later. Ishortly before the incident. In a statement sub­ He is being held in the county jail on $10,000 bond set by District Court Judge William Eads TOO MUCHl : mitted with the complaint, the woman said she CROSS 51 Piedmontese I was nearly finished washing several articles of during the defendant's initial appearance Mon­ • "Once­ SZ Strayed the 1 The red planet brew, .for short twice Shy'" clothing and discovered she needed more day morning. Eads scheduled a preliminary 34 Kind of driver i 5 Get rid of 10 Ike's British 10 Goodbye, in or baseball , cbange. hearing for April 17. • Thermae colleague in Guadalajara play 14 Wordsof arms 11 "Oshedno 3S Agrand understanding .1 As-asap!n -I": Keats 37 Jackthe iRadioactive water found 15 Female beauty .2 "Think-" 12 Injure Ripper was one

I ~ ,...".,.".~ _ JoICMUOOCCon>otwIion '" 1. Utopian (dieter's 13 Moroccan port 38 Angler's tactic 'R1 imperative) I' o ~AIgI>IIRe_ 17 Feather 21 Deps!de is one a Like windows WRI1I one's- ZZ Hitchcock's Inear Three Mile Island . APARAMOUN T, ."" DOWN in winter which now holds 600,000 gallons PICTURE \ ~... .: "The Thirty­ « Least common ! HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI)­ 18 Regionof 1 Chinese Nlne-" 45 "-Begin to I Technicians at Three Mile of highly contaminated water. !'I COME TO ... 1:30-3:30-5:30 ancient Greece dynasty Z5 Mathematical . Tell You" However, Polon said techni­ OFF . ~ Island have detected slightly 7:30.\ 9:30 II Papal 2 On the briny relationship 41 Balkan capital above normal levels of radioac­ cians believed the radioactivity headdress 3 Musical 21 Belief system 47 One-man stint tivity in ground water' in wells was more likely leak.ing from INRA_I WOOD ZO Volume I of a notation 27 Where 48 Whence Cain I recently drilled nea rby the another reactor cooling . 6 S. Dubuque Churchill opus, 4 Adam's third gladiators was banished system. L--______-,---' son gathered 4t Circus prop I crippled nuclear reactor, a with "The" Polon said test results ob­ ZS Theater sign 5 Inventor of a %8 Hawailan 51 Egad's cousin ! plant spokesman sa id Monda y. 24 They preyed on practical neckwear 51 Genie's However, the spokesman tained Monday showed that the Pueblos gyroscope zt French painter offering emphasized that the radioac­ water samples from three of Z5 Certain • Sun: Comb. 31 Raise one's 52 Start of. play , tivity levels are well within eight on-site wells had levels of property form voice 53 Slow a horse, lederal safety guidelines. radioactive tritium levels 2 to 5 zt Bearing 7 Where 31 Theater with "In" . 54 I Sandy Polon, spokesman for times greater than normal. • Haggard novel banshees wall audience Partner of Metropolitan Edison Co., said He said one well sample con­ 33 "A poem lovely 8 Camounages substance tile water may have leaked tained radioactive cobalt-58 as-" I 34 Fastener , from the crippled Unit No. 2 slightly above detectable 3S God with a , reactor containment building, levels. hammer I 31 Volume II of a Churchill opus st Free electrons TH~' FIELD HOUSE 41 Parisian summers 41 Awaken U Explorer Johnson OLD STYLE QUARTS a Steinbeck's THE SHOW MUST GO ON! "Tortllla-" « Trounced 45 Kind of horse or curtain $1.00 41 Sodium Till Midnight chloride 47 Title of a six­ HAPPY HOUR 4:30-8:30 Mon.-Thu .... volume Churchill opus, with "The" 54 Pops II Plentiful 51 "Bltter-" HAS BEEN (Italian film) 57 Suffix with RE -SCH EDULED fraud 58 He wrote "The @fi]D~M ,,!8J ~3@ m Angry Hills" HAUNTED BOOKSHOP IN THE Whee/room AND Live OVER KRUI NOW 227 S. Johnson St. IMU R~OIO (belWMll Col. Gretn Park Incr Burlington sq by Bertolt brecht Tuesday 6 pm·g pm &C!.\GJ6~~~lJi)~: fOR THE APRIL 15 SHOW Wednesday 3-6 pm Dlred~ by Joseph Losey ~ Thursday 3-6 pm A free ,howlng on Tuesday, April 8 [f fndl~~ c .£,)?Eg ~ ~ A UNIVERSAL PICTURE Friday 3-6 pm PO .,_UNO"' ...... "I'... UOOOII..: 8 pm, Shambaugh Auditorium 3:30-6:00 fH - Ohio Stdte. Room A "'l ~a "(SEIMD Saturday 12-8 pm 4:40-7:00·8:25 The need to vote The Daily Iowan • Students should go to the polls today to elect representatives to the Tuesday, April 8, 1980 UI Student Senate. Vol. 112,. No. 170 In early Marcb the Elections Board tossed out results of the Feb. 28 c 1980 Student Publications Inc. election, citing inadequacies in voting procedures. Since that time Viewpoints the balloting procedure bas been revised; the complex computer card system bas been replaced by paper ballots that will be counted by band. Some candidates and their supporters have predicted that the new race probably will not draw the record number of voters who cast ballots in the previous election. But the importance of the election Eliminating bas not diminisbed. Students must decide which candidates will form a responsible governing body. The senate is cbarged with allocating approximately $120,000 each the foreign year. It presents student views to UI administrators, the state Board of Regents and state legislators. It can and should be an active organization - one that not only voices student concerns, but solicits opinion and provides the impetus for student action. language The new senate must begin its work late this year. Candidates have addressed such issues as campus safety, conditions in the Union , mass transit and budget reform; these problems bave required ac­ requirement tion for some time. Students bave the chance to make changes. The fact that the first By ERIC CASPER and PAT INGRAM election was ruled invalid is no excuse for passing up this opportunity This Is the second 01 four articles. to act. One of the primary issues regarding the continued requirement of two years TERRY IRWIN of foreign language for the B.A. degreE University Edilor is equity. The Liberal Arts College is the only college at the university that re­ quires a foreign language. Why should Liberal Arts students be the only ones required to achieve the transcendental A time to reflect experience that foreign language January 1979 was the beginning of the Linda Eaton sex discrimina­ tion controversy. In June of that year seven blacks filed charges of racial discrimina­ tion against Woodflj!lds, a local bar and disco. Eight months later Marion Coleman, a black teacher in the Iowa City School District, filed with the NAACP a complaint of racial alle~e

, , - . Early reactions to America were mixed

By DAVID M. MAXFIELD me as a model and promise of the world's nation gave little thought to anything but gauged the future influence of both Russia Smithsonian News Service future," be exclaimed. To Sarmiento, the present. The American, he wrote in and the United states, some views of there was "no country on Earth which has 1906, has no idea tlla t his business ac­ another visitor, from Russia itself, have "Their starting point is different, and more rational human beings." tivities and private pursuits "affect other not withstood the test of history. Pavel ~ their courses are not the same," the Since its founding, America has been ex­ people and the world forever, and caMot, Svin'in, secretary to the Russian General I yooug Frenchman, Alexis de Tocqueville, amined, praised and attacked by thou­ as he imagines, begin and end with him." Counsel in Philadelphia between 1811-13, coocluded about the United States and sands of travelers from abroad - repor­ LIKE TOURISTS anywhere, the visitors wrote that "no two countries bear a more Russia back in 1835, "yet each of them ters, social critics, artists and authors. striking resemblance than Russia and Un­ • Coming from Europe, Asia, Africa, South did not always understand everything they ited States." seems marked out by the will of heaven to saw or heard. A young Japanese, for ex­ sway the"destinies of half the world." and North America, they have scrutinized Svin'in was struet by the rapid develop­ U.S. political institutions and business ample, described the new telegraph ment in both countries of impressive Early attitudes about America, both pro system he Observed this way: "Wires are and coo, began taking shape as the first practices, manners and social customs, hung above the roads ...and a letter can be cities - St. Petersburg, Philadelphia, risitors from abroad, curious about the climate and cities, personal values and New York - where, little more than a attached to this to be dispatched before, there had been nothin, but new democratic experiment, arrived here family life. automatically from one station to century I obgelW "impenetrable forests and marshes, In­ . to and pass judgment on the another." , young nation. "WHAT MOST OF these travelers felt habited by bears and wolves." Svin'in, But one of the earliest and most percep­ however, also wrote this : "In each coun­ From their letters and first-hand ac­ in common was a sense of intense tive visitors was Alexis de ToquevilIe , counts, often filled with perceptive obser­ curiosity about the future and about try, the unfortunate and the persecuted author of the classic Democracy In find an asylum and a home." vations and predictions that are intriguing America as a country of the future," says America. Arriving here in 1830 on the eve to read today, came a batch of mixed Marc Pachter, a historian at the Smithso­ of the Industrial Revolution, he was nian Institution's National Portrait A viSitor during the 19th century em­ reviews. struck that "Americans of all ages, all barked on what Pachter calls "the moral Gallery. He is also the editor of Abroad in conditions and all dispositions constantly equivalent of a Grand Tour. " The "AMERICA IS THE land of experi­ America, a collection of essays about v many of the foreign visitors. . form associations." The Frenchman, who itinerary was likely to include ment," Swedish author Fredrika Bremer is viewed today by SOCial scientists as a Philadelphia, as an example of rational enthusiastically wrote after a visit in 1853. Not all visitors, of course, were prophet of the coming 20th-century city planning; the factory towns of "One of its sons drew lightning from the sanguine about American goals and poten­ organization man, added that Americans tial. "The future will tell the tale," for­ Massachusetts ; Cincinnati, one of the clouds; another crea ted wings out of "have not only commercial and miracle cities of the West, which had sud­ steam. And all of this has been accom­ mer French Prime Minister Georges manufacuring companies in which they all denly sprung out of the Wilderness, and at plished in the early morning of the coun­ Clemenceau concluded shortly before his take part, but associations of a thousand least one of the country's Utopian com­ try's life." death in 1929, "but I greatly fear that other kinds, religious, moral, serious, munities, possibly New Harmony in America will reap the consequences of Even more excited, perhaps, was futile, general or restricted, enormous or Indiana. Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, a president her extraavagant pride. " diminutive ... • The British author, H.G. Wells, ex­ of Argentina, who had sailed from New FROM THE OUTSET, the visitor to York in 1868. "I take the states away with pressed Similar thoughts, sensing that the IF TOQUEVILLE had accurately America found that the business of the country was business. "There is one DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau single point to which all are driving, and this is 'wealth,'" concluded two Hungarians in 1844. "Business, bUSiness, business, from morning till night , that is al! you see, read and hear," Sienkiewicz )E4H, MY NEXT THEY.. 6UIiST IS wrote about New York. "Wealth is the chief criterion by which men are measured." r =. As for the political system laid out for / the nation by the founding fathers , there was a wide range of opinion enthusiasm, caution and skepticism.

Bolton H.,bor .net Old North Ch ..ch t.k. on Orlent.1 ...tur., In thlt dr.wlng b.Hd on the Imprealon, of • young J.p.n.,. vl,ltor to the Unlfed St.t., In the 't84o.. . . Big Band · Jazz with the atmolph.,. PRESENTS FILMS BY WOMEN , "SIX O'CLOCK SHADOW" about women. Highlights of elll't help but IIBI'S A 17-piece UI Jazz Ensemble the weekend are: Presents brlng.lmll. Directed by Ed Sarath Tuesday April 8, 8 pm JOUANIES FROM BERLIN: 1971 121 low. Av •. ("A Mid-West Premier") Old Brick Free Admission TONY BROWN WOMEN THE BEST OF THE NEW YORK WOMEN'S FILM FESTIVAL

Hancher Circle for the Performing Arts/ JULIA LeSAGE, Guest Speaker, University Th~ater present / on: Feminist Film Theory and Feminst Films

A MUSICAL COMEDY TICKETS are available at the Women's Resource &Action Center CURTAIN RAISER Tuesday, April 18 Opening Night Dinner/Discussion aoc HI·Balis 9 • 11 Friday, April 11 • 8:00 pm Hancher Cafe, Hancher Auditorium

Cat_ by Tnl Gator ... "Sonahelm Ina...... tn. Mod ..n 101_" Poulot grilio.- "" Dllblo Chi''' DrObny (.nldl.., broiled wltn multord & herb.) Broiled tomlto "'_OVUl Yinlllll_ Solidi dllour BIJOU ... p.... Mou ... Tick ... $1.10 .y.I...... It fIIIcIINtw WI" 8«1. H.ncher Bo. Offtce, 353·41255 FAR FROM VIETNAM 11~71 1-----'.:..:....:...... ---., An Im_'oned ,'.. mllie coIlogI by F,.,.,nlllmmikors JIIn. Luc Godord. Aloin Aeonll •. "0- Vlrda. Chll. Morklf Ind otho". So,"," Include tho 1000Ing 01 US wI.. nlpo ; how frogmenllflon bombl ~ ; Nortn Viet­ nome .. con.trucUng bomb .heft.... 1M g,..., poilUcol redefinition by the chore. of the fMmm ...... In Froncn (110 min.) Color. aT..... t7:00 DInIy Arzw D.... I. NANAI1934) Artlll/'1 fr ..""HMng edlPlltlon of the ZOIl nowtI II.jfIIW.. t l.. turN Annl St.n (111m GoIdWyn prollON' II lie ., brlln wno cllmbl fram tIIo .t_ to cont., II Thelt. Ind. brief reign II tho moot 1OC1l1y. With Mil CII,k TONIGHT _·c·",c._." ...1 ~~OI'og"'~ltoCIby Gregg (Chla!t K."I' RED WILLOW BAND No Cover Sam P'oklnpah', Wlltern Cla ..lc RIDE Tt-itE HIGH COUNTRY (1962) Vettrln _y letart J<* McC,.. ."d Alndolph 9coIt IIIve momor.bl. P«for­ m__ IOlng gunllghltrl, FeNco oil PIlI WI. relYing on IMIr wilt••• perl ..... nI 00II'10110 l1li them IMOugh alii 1111 mlNl.,1. II Ilndmlrk WN .... n Irom the dIroclof of rM WIld IIIlICh. Luolin Bolilleta penoromtc p/lotogllphy II lIt.tMlklng. WIllI lot ..... HI~. /14 min.) Color T. I: 41, WH 1:110 505 E. Burlington ------~ PERSONAL dictionary defines medievaJ metapJ'lors SERVICES New ·IIOLFING by Certified Rolf PrlC;. By BARBARA DAVIDSON Dictiollllry of Early Medieval LeanliDg. you try to get one meaning which you claim work. as Campbell explains, "will be of use tltioner: Bodywork for rel,.,lno Stalf Writer Most little kids don't fantasize about is the meaning, even though we know in to anyone who wants to know both the chronic tension. enhancing baJancI in and human growth. Call The Clear. growing up to write dictionaries ; the reading modem poetry, ambiguity Is where literal meanings of words Medieval Latin lng, 337-5405. S-12 The game of football u a metaphor for reasonable questioo is how Campbell got in­ the action is. With medieval poetry people and their spiritual ramifications. The latter Iile of the nation crops up frequently in volved in such a large, tlme-consuming, and have worked on the theory of one true text, is partlculary important for students of IIRTHIIIGHT "....., American political rhetoric. Without con­ - some might say - arcane undertaking. which is not true, one true translation, religion, philosophy, and literature, as well Pregnancy Tnt scious analysis we nod or groan, un· which is not true." as the history of the period. The literal Confidential Help derstanding the referent. This lind of The beginnings of the projecl go back to definitions are important for anyone who metaphorical peech is not high art; is a Kansas State Teacher's College in Em· CAMPBELL IS A persuasive defender of wants to read Medieval Latin texts." natural enrichment of our speech, adding poria, Kansas, where, following a teaching the literary sophistication of these early ITOIIAGE.ITOIlAGE clarity, fancifulness - or triteness - to Mlnl.warehouse units • all 'Iltl. stint, Campbell found herseU without a job. writers ; "Early medieval literary and THE MANUSCRIPTS are drawn from the Monthly rates as loW u S18 per everyday language. At the suggestion of an adviser, while linguistic theory shows that medieval 1855 Patrologiae Cursus Completus, an month. U Store All, dial 337-3506. 4-4 While a football metaphor might have receiving unemployment compensation writers were much more flexible in looking Italian priest's 218 volume compilation of poet, confounded a medieval a spiritual from the state of Kansas , Campbell began at allegory than we and were at least as all medieval manuscripts then known. The OVEIIWHELMED • metaphor certainly would not have. cataloging entries from several medieval aware o[ semantic ambiguity. For early authors were the more than 400 "Church We Listen-Crisis Center Kathryn Campbell, a Ul a istant professor manuscripts. Christian writers, spiritual mea.nings were Fathers," doctrinally acceptable Catholic 351-0140 (24 hours) of English specialiling i.n Medieval Studies, as much a part of the lexicon as the literal 112'h E. Washington (11 am-21m) scholars writing between 100 to 1300 A.D. 6-i is compiling a dictionary of the piritual as THE DlCTIO ARY is a logical out­ ones ; an organic language that forms the Although the Patrologia is indexed, the dic­ well as literal meanings of words occurring growth or her academic specialties, as she basis of the poet's language is fully in­ tionary is scarcely redundant; according to in the major medieval reference works - tegrated with a technical language that has ENJOY YOUR PREGNANC~ explain . " I did my dissertation on Campbell, "the index is less than 33 percent Childbirth preparation cla_ lor lists of plrltual mearungs of words in holy medieval lyric (in Old orse, Old English , its own system of reference; the best correct - it completely omitted one of the earty and late pregnancy. Explore scripture as well as the three major en· klthryn Clmpbell, I UI "llltlnt Old Irish and medieval Latin ) using a new known scheme of the Middle Ages Is the more important dictionaries." and share while learning. Emm. cyclopedias that were compiled between profMlor of Engillh, II compiling I die· critical approach, as uming that there Christian one, in which poems have a While the value of Campbell's dictionary Goldman CliniC. 331.2111 . 4-25 the beginnings of the Latin Middle Ages and IIonary of Iplrllwll meanlnp In major there are kinds of language other than figural and a spiritual sense which are un· to Scrabble players may not be im· the 12th century. medievil rlfll"lnCIL everyday language that were playing a role . ilied by words that refer to both realms." mediately apparent, its publication IELF·HEALTH Slide presenlatlon. The dictionary, by collating "spiritual Women', Preventative Heallll Care. sometime in the next two years - assuming Learn vagln~1 sell·exam. Emma THE BE1TER PART of one wall in 40,000 file card fill those drawers. Two "It was a maUer of doing new transla· definitions " as found in 12 medieval texts, funding becomes available - should be oc­ Goldman Clinic. For Information, Campbell's office in the English·Philosophy computer text editing programs and tions that would show up ambiguities rather will allow scholars to form a better picture casion for interest on the part of 337-2111. 4-25 building is occupied by a card catalogue several hundred hours of data entry will than hiding them, which is the usual way of or the way that metaphoric language was medievalists, and some justifiable pride for unit, the kind libraries use. Approximately transform that catalogue into a book, a translating; normally when you translate, used in medieval literature. The completed Kathryn Campbell. LA Iglesia De LOl Clelo, Azule .. Wlnt to get married but don't want to Join. • church? Non·denomlnatlonal , ... . vlce8 for ev"ryonit. Marrlao ... funerals, baptlsmals. 363-4636. Ad. vocates of the good IIf.. 5-12 Filmmaker Capra comes to town PREGNANCY screening and coun· sellng . Emma Goldman Clinic for Women. 337-211, . 5-6 By JUDITH GREEN making days with A PockeUul of especially in the decade between Mr. and Film , will present a film analysis Staff Writ,r Miracles in 1961. In between he made Deeds and Wonderful Life, was the of Meet John Doe (1941 ), followed by a VENEREAL disease screening for howing of the lJlovie . His lecture, en· women . Emma GOldman Clinic. 331· movies like It Happened One Night way in which he used optimIsm as "a 2111 . 5-6 Frank Capra, one 01 the grand old (1934 ), which carried the four top Os­ dynamic force, making possible what titled " Frank Capra's Machine of men or the American cinema, is the cars for its year; Lost HorllOa (1937 ); was thought impossible." Clark Gable, Cinema and the Mechanisms of COUNSELING BY MAIL. Our trained subject and star attraction of a Con· You Can't Take It With You (1938 ); and Jimmy Stewart, Ronald Colman , Gary Liberty ," also begins at 7:30 p.m. in staH specializes In giving prompl tinuing Education mini-course that Mr. mltb Goes to Washington (1939 ) Cooper and Glenn Ford were among the IMU Ballroom . answers to ali your personal qUH­ begins this week with two lecture­ - films that brought Capra three Os· the screen personalities "forever cast tlons. All letters personally and !XIn· Capra 's Ul visit includes a dinner fldentlally answered. $10 per qua .. screenings of his films . cars [or Best Director in five years. or recast under his direction ... tion. Write Slerling Enterprises, 48 Capra will revisit the VI campus (he previously inert actors who acquired with the participants in the Continuing Regal Lane, Iowa City, Iowa 52240. 4· In addition to his Hollywood films , animated Sicilian gestures" in their Education course Tuesday evening 10 Capra also directed a series called Wby Capra films. before the Hancher showing of We Fight during World War II , Wonderful Life and a discussion with 30% annual yield . Penz Invel1menl I Films documentaries on the origins of the "Mr. Capra Comes to Town" begins students the next morning in 304 EPB. THE VERY BeST IN ~~ ROCK & ROLL Club, 5-7 p.m. 353-5278. S-2 war and the sources Qr Fascism, used toDight in the IMU Ballroom with a Wonderful Life, incidentally, will be v was last here for the 1973 Refocus Film RAPE ASSAULT HAIIUa.. ENT by the War Department for G.I . train­ cultural analysi s of Mr. Deeds by John shown in 35 mm on the largest screen RAPE CRlalS LINE Festival ) for three days next week to TUESDAY-SATURDAY ing Conversely, Capra 's feature films Raeburn . His 7:30 p.m. lecture, in Iowa. 338-4800 (24 hours) meet with film and American studies are so full of determinedly American students and to attend a hawing of II's " American Myths and American optimism that they have been held up Dreams: Frank Capra in the 1930s," Capra's visit is jOintly sponsored by a Wonderful We (1946), admittedly his ALCOHOLICS Anonymous - 12 as examples of " lhe evils or will be followed by a screening of the Continuing Education , the Film Divi· favorite film , in Hancher on April 15. noon, Wednesday. Wesley House. capitalism": Mr. Deeds Goes to Town ion o[ the Department of Speech and PLAIN JANE Salurdey, 324 North Hall. 351. Capra, a spry and vigorous 83 (he film . Raeburn, a professor in the (1936 ) was retitled Grip of Ihe Dollar American Studies Program, is the co­ Dramatic Art, the American Studies 9813. 4-22 was born in Sicily in 1897), is the direc· for its Soviet showings. editor (with Richard Glatzer) of an Program and the School of Lellers. tor of almost 40 feature films in as Tonight anthology called Frank Capra; Tbe The mini-eourse requires a registra· WOMEN many years. He began with sHents in "Optimism is critically suspect," CONTROL YOUR OWN LIFE. Inslead Man and His Films. tion fee of $25 , but many of its events 1923 - he is especially well·known for Stephen HandIO writes in an article SOt Draws'· No Cover Of Jusl "going along." SystemiC Con. are free to UI students, including th~ Irontation Counseling tor Women can his work with comedian Harold called "Under Capracorn" in Film Tomorrow evening Dudley Andrew , lecture-screenings and the Hancher put you In conlrol. Goal-directed Langdon - and ended his active film- CommeDt. Capra's strength, he says, professor in Comparative Literature showing. Biggest Beer methods In an Informal seltlng, wHh no "clock hour" limit. NO FEE FOR FIRST VISIT CALL 351-0445 NOWt 4· Thl Downtown 10 Testing 14 oz DRAWS ANTI·DRAFT counselling on C\NCER Mill Restaurant campus? Only It you vote NEW procedures pens at 4:00 pm Sundays WAVE AprilS. Ad paid by New C\N BE BEAT. ~ (& the fest 01 the week, too) Wave. 4-8 t(rbe open • Cancer Societu 120 E. Burnngton Ame ncan ., • To pl8r» your claultled ad In the Dt Use Classifieds _ 10 room 111, C_nlc:atlonl to public CIfIIIt, C«IIt< 01 CoIlOge • MIdI_ , 11 .m II ,he dMdlM tor pllCInt '"" WASHINGTON (UPI) - canc ••ng eI ...... Hours: • 1m·' pm, Mend., "'"' Thu"'y; ...... College entrance exam pm on FrIcIIJ. Open during ,he _ procedures will he opened to '*'r. more public scruLiny by i publishing used tests for analysis and giving students a PERSONALS chance to · double-check their liB S scores, the College Board an· nounced Monday. Presents HOWDY! Critics have questioned the ,JJtJJMA.. accuracy of Scholastic Aptitude Thl3rd Street Sli ders Our birthday cakes are non· I Test scores and the lattenlngl Glva one to 'hal sptClal meaningfulness of the tests person on their blrthdayl Como 10 themselves. About 2.S million Room 111 Communications Canlt1 high school students take the Wed. to order your cakel tests each year to qualify for college admission. April 9 ADVENTUROUS male seeking com· New York has a state law panlonshlp of temale grad student. which allows students to get P.O. Box 1493. 6-9 their SAT exams back to com· $1 60 oz. pare the questions and WOMEN: Take back the Senatel VOl. Pitcher. NEW WAVE (again). Ad paid by Naw answers. About 20 states are Wave. ..8 conSidering similar laws . 9 -10 Draws LETTERI for love, re,um ... "We believe the actions we buslneea, other occasions written to are taking will serve students your specHications. Call Kelly 81338- 3235 or wr"e Box 1315, Iowa CRy better than any law enacted or The Slider's Single "Baby It's You" b/w 52244. S-12 proposed ," said board presi· "Secretly in love" now available at B.J, 's & 7:30-10:00 pm dent George Hanford, adding GAYLINE • Information and pelf they "demonstrate the board's O-OP Records counseling. 353-7162 Monday. desire to satisfy legitimate and Thursday, Friday 7:30 p.m.· 10 p.m . 5- reasonable concerns expressed 16 by consumers about the tests." tCARED, worried, wondering aboUt Classifieds bring results being gay? Gay People's Union .uP­ port group, 8 p.m. April 9, 18, 23. THE CHANGES,effective Gayllne 353-7162 for Information . ..9 next fall, are: Iowa Center for the ArtslUniversity Theatre present NEVER ACOVER CHARGE ILUE Cro .. Blue Shield proteetlOn. -Students, usually high 223 E. Washington Open at 7:30 $26.90 monthly. Phone 351-6885. .. SChool juniors, who take the 15 Preliminary Scholastic Ap· tltude Test will get a copy of ADVI!NTUIIOUI female looking for , companionship of male grad stuclenl the elam back along with the P.O. 622. ..8 correct answers. The board said this will better prepare them for the actual SAT which - must he taken for college ad­ HELP WA~TED _ I mission. WE'VE COME THIS FAR BY FAITH FIleE room and board for live-In ~ -For about $4, students will help. Hear hospital •. Ideal Iitu.tIon for rlghl person. 351-0070/337- be able to get back their SAT 5043~ . 4-14 score sheet and Qther informa· VOICES OF SOUL tion to let them to compute the AIIIITANT lwim coach .. for IoAU I age group swim program. M.y Ii­ score for themselves, U there August S. Apply In writing to VIvlll1 are errors, they wjll be correc· presents our StrauII, 254 BlICk Spring. Clrdt. ted and the fee refunded. Iowa CIty. 338.8071. 4-10 -Each fall, an actual SAT by David Freeman IARTINDER wanted, Am.rlc,n administered during the Legion Poll No.H, 351.1902. 4-1. previous academic year will be DIAMOND ANNIVERSARY April 17, 18, 19 It. 8:00 pm April 20 at 3:00 pm CAIIIUI .. NOW HilliNG WOIIII· published along with a lTUDY DIIIVEIII '011 THI! IU. 014 Armory '1'heatn MIR. ITAIITING WAGI II statistical analysis cootaining SUI/HOUII. A""LY NOW . .. items such as mean scores and April 12, 1980 ...... standard deviations. The board !lie opq prariI. The pt YOi4. tile ubo1ru. Gtll" O1It of tile DlIht said that will allow researchers come two gaiteD ridenlll. sU.er lIcne. U's J_J&IIIes. a1lc1sia 110041" Clapp Recital Hall- 8:00 PM lOT, "'"III nltdl bartendlrt, and the public to better BtlIt $\an. tile Bu4it QllIIII. willerl,...ltre_. Apply In penofI, scrutinize the tests. Thurld.y·Saturd.y aner 7:30 p.m" Donation: $1.50, Children under 12 free 12005. GlibartCourt. 4-10

-Education professionals 'II"I~T" nMd. I perlOn, In­ who belp develop the tests will For further information 353-7170 (Brenda) or 338-3248. ter.. ted In 'NOm.,,'1 'uhion, 10 bt. be Instructed to mate sure the SIUmI SUI r.au.u 1125 full-tlll'll ""'IOn conlul1lnl. For If! Intormallnterview contec:t Mr. Will tI au tl&y Sly. >IIIluI .. II _ IMlIact 2f1UIft tests are free of racial, cultural J'en!.u 11331-7587. ... or sexual bias. •

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First test awaits golfers in Big Four By H. FORREST WOOLARD careers, the Hawkeye coach also are expected to batUe for the "It's a healthy situation to be in. " Tbe Big Four meet will begin at Sl,ff Writ" developed and gathered as much second and third spots on the Iowa The veteran coach has recruited 8:30 a.m. at the Des Moines Golf and bome-state talent as possible. roster. three freshman [rom the state this Country Club . Drake, Iowa State and Few coaches would be as optimistic Junior Dave RwnmeUs, wbo was "Both Tom and Brian played well year and he said that they have a Northern Iowa are the other entries. as men's golf Coach Chuck Zwiener if ineUgible last year, returns as the in the big state tournaments this sum­ definite shot at breaking into the line­ Iowa won the annual event last year. they were competing without the Bawkeyes' toughest competitor. He mer," said Zwiener, adding that the up. Included in this group are: Mike "We will hopefully win the in­ ,talents of three top perCormen from led the Hawks in a sprinR tournament veleraus bave steadily improved. Hasley of Davenport, Doug Lock.in o( vitational, but you never know what last season. Bu t a good recrui ting at Cape Coral, F1a . Rwnmells was a Zwiener anticipates that there will Aurelia and Gary Claypool of Cedar will happen," Zwiener said. " U we crop has boosted Zwiener's outlook former blgh school Class A state be considerable competition for the Rapids. play well , I think we can take it." for the 1980 campaign. champ at nearby West Branch High last two or three spots on the six-man As much as Zwiener would Jike to A win in today's Big Four tourna­ Stil c I Iowa lost three golfen last year, in­ School and is a Rood all-around squad. put 0(( deciding who belongs in the ment would give the Hawks their first cluding No. 1 performer Julius Boros player, according to Zwiener. "They're going to be riRhting it out six-man roster, time is running out taste of victory in the young season • Jr. While Zwiener's three stars went Tom Louden (Fairfield) and all year and 1 expect a lot of fluctua­ with Iowa 's first tournament set for after a 12th-place finish in the Cape on to pursue professional golf Brian Eilders (West Des Moines) tion in the line-up," Zwiener said. this morning. Coral Invitational.

Mason resigns under pressure School of Social Work BIO-RESOURCES presents a lecture by TUSCON, A.rU. (UPI) - Tony M.uon training. The newspaper said state Sen. Luis bowed to the preesure of an investigation "I've had all of about an bour to think Gonzales, D-TuCSOD, told it that his sources $SS$$$SSSSSSCOUPONSSSSSSSSSSSS S NEW OONOII S Into alleged irregularities In travel, about this," he said. "It's obviously of vital also reported the inlonnation to a GISElA KONOPKA recruiting and other expenses and interest to get a new coach. We're in the Wliversity official in mid-February about I 318 E, 81oomington 351·0148 I resigned today as head football coach at middle of spring practice and 30 people two weeks after discussing the matter with DIRECTOR: Center for youth development the University of Arizona. have signed national letters of intent to Gonzales. & research. Emeritus Professor of Social t Appointment Hqu ... : I "In view of events of recent days I have come to the Unlversity of ArIzona. "However, I see no evidence that the Work, University of Minnesota. T, TH, F 8:45 to 5:30 DI. 4-"'0 S decided it is in the best Interests of the "It'sa real concern to move as fast as we infonnation was divulged to the UA's S M-W10:45to7:3O S university and of my CamllytbatI resign as can to get the best coach available to us in internal investigators or the Arizona "Coping with the Stresses & Strains of head football coach," . Mason said In a the nation." Board of Regents' auditing staff," the S Bring Ihis ad with you on your first donation. You lIIitt S letter of resignation. "PJeaae accept this Schaefer said the investigation Into newspaper quoted Gonzales. "In effect, Adolescence" S receive a $5 bonus when you have donated 5 times . S S C.nnot be combined with .,y other off.. S letter, then, as my resignation and my expenae account aUegations against the some sort of cover-up seems to be going Wednesday, April 9, 1980 request that it be accepted at once." coaching staff will continue. on.'" SSSSS$$SSS$SCOUPONSSSSSSSSSSSS University President John P. Schaefer, "The Issues rai.sed in the newspapers are Mason, 50, is the second major PAC-lO 4:00 pm Ulinois Room, IMU who lust last Wednesday Rave Mason a certainly of concern to the state offices but coach to leave his post in the past year. Reception follOwing in the Old Gold Room, vote of confidence, said the probe "was a thal's up to them," Schaefer said. Last October, Frank Kush was fired as tremendous strain on Tony's family." Sunday, the Arizona Dally Star said in a head coach at Arizona State University IMU Student Activities Board Presents Besides the coaching position, he said, copyright story that a university vice after charges he punched a player during a Public Invited. Mason also will leave his academic post. president was infonned nearly two months 1978 footbaU game and then tried to cover The "Evolution" of a Student He said he has made no decision on a about alleged misuse of alrline-tlcket up. Ida Beam Lecture Series successor althoURh he aclrnowledged that receipts by the coaching staff but a~ A native of Sharon, Pa., Mason was Organization Workshops time Is critical with the team In SPrinl parenhy did not act on It. graduated from Clarion State.

Workshop 1: Tuesday, April 15 7:30 Players, owners to continue talks pm Ohio St. Rm ., IMU B.I.N.W.U.B.R.! The Birth and Survival of an NEW YORK (UPI) - Major leal{Ue Both sides seem to be taking a hard line Angels, has been the most outspoken on the Organlzetlon baseball players and owners, falling on their positions, however, and not much issues and he has even suggested declaring Th is workshop is designed to help to get as far as first base in their contract progress was expected to come out of a moratorium on the season. talks over a new basic agreement, resume Tuesday's negotiations. B.IN.W.U .B.R.! student organizations get started on negotiations Tuesday with Cederal "Frankly, if I had my say and the other campus and also gives tips on how "The No, 1 thing I'd like to get across to B.I,N.W.U.B.R.! mediator KeMeth Moffett once again owners agreed with me,l'd close down for to stay recognized and use the ser­ serving as an umpire. the fans," said Cincinnati's George Foster, the season," said Autry. "What's the sense "i.s that It's not simply money. The owners in going out again. It's a waste of time, (Beat inflation now with vices of the UI. are telling the fans we want more money. The regular season is scheduled to open their time and a lot of money. There's no used Books Records) Workshop 2: Tuesday, April 22 7:30 Wednesday and the players have said they But we're more interested In protecting reason for It and I would just as soon forget & pm Ohio St. Room , IMU would open the season on time but would our rights which we won in the courts. the season." A Short Walk from Downtown Stand on Jour two f ... not play past May 22 unless a new basic "It'll take some time to reach a set­ Autry flnnly believes public opinion is agreement is reached. tlement now. It won't be done overnight. on the side o( the owners this time. This workshop deals with the inter· right now both sides are talking at each "I'm sure there was time when the nal problems a student organization Moffett was caUed Into the proceedings other, not to each other." pendulum was aU on the side of the owners JIM'S USED BOOKS has. Tips will be given on how to by the owners at last week's negotlatlons The owners, angered over the decision and that the owners took advantage of the and, although both sides seem to be far keep a strong UI student organiza • . by the Players Association not to play the players. Now, it's all on the players' side and RECORDS tion. apart on the most Important Issue of final two weeks oC the exhibition season, and it may be that the only way to get it compensation for free agents, he did say are determined to stick together. oack, to get it back in the middle, is 610 S. Dubuque Reserve your spot early by calling" the tone of the meetings was positive. Gene Autry, owner of the California through a one-year moratorium." Open Noon-5:30 the Student Activities Center at 353· 3116. Players choose Sonies Spring Mon. -Sat. Closed Sunday ~ as favorite to win title SALE! I By United Press International but Sonlcs' Coach LeMY Wilkens is cornident his Dress your table team is ready (or the Bucks. for Spring in MORE REQUIRED CLASSES? "Thls Is the kind of momentum we want going Teamwork and defense. Into the next series," said Wilkens. Arabia of Finland Despite a general lack of discipUne and helter­ If the Sonics are to defeat the Bucks, most Dinnerware and STUDENTS: On Wednesday, April 9, you will find a ballot in your Daily Iowan. This sim­ skelter play which has become customary In observers believe it will be Seattle's defense National Basketball Association regular",eason which decides the series. save 25% ple clip-out ballot will give YOU the opportunity to VOice yourself on the proposed action, those two ingredients are still the co~ "They're a very good defensive team ," said changes in general education (core and skill) requiremnts. This survey of student opin­ nerstones around which champiOnships are built. Portland's Tom Owens. "You can beat your man ion will be presented to the faculty by the Liberal Arts St(Jdent Association at the Therefore, it is not surprising that many pro against Seattle but they always have another guy basketball players are leaning toward the there to pick you up." faculty discussions of the requirements next week. Thus far, student input has been defending champion Seattle SuperSonics as the limited. This will be YOUR ONLY CHANCE to persuade the faculty to bring the require­ team to beat for this year's title. The Los Angeles Lakers are expected to I. "Seatle has as good a chance as any to go the chaUenge the Sonlcs for the Western Conference ments in line with student opinion. At present, you PAY OVER $400 A SEMESTER to title and the Lakers begin their quest for the title I distance," said Portland's Bob GI'088 Sunday receive an "education". Make certain you are getting YOUR MONEY'S WORTH. Take after the SuperSonics had defeated the TraU Tuesday night by hosting the Phoenix Suns in the Blazers 103-66 to win their best-of-three series, 2- first game of a hest-of-seven series. the time to express your concern. As an aid to your voting, here are some explanations I, and advance to the semifinals of the Western Phoenix whipped Kansas City 114-99 Sunday to SALLA of some of the proposed changes: Conference playoffs. "their secret is they play win their first round best-of-three series, 2-1. well together. They haven't changed much in However, the Suns may be hurting against Los three years. If they can avoUd injuries they wiD Angeles if Truck Robinson, Phoenix' leading be right there at the end of the finals." rebounder, remains sidelined with a knee injury. PHYSICAL EDUCATION SOCIAL SCIENCE Seattle, which turned in Its best defensive In the NBA's Eastern Conference playoffs, effort of the season Sunday, will meet Milwaukee action will continue Wednesday night with Currently, students are required to At the present time, two classes in the Tuesday night In the first game of their best-of· Philadelphia meeting Atlanta in the second pass four hours of P.E. to graduate. social sciences are required in the seven semifinal series. Milwaukee, the Midwest game of their hest-of~even series and Houston The Educational' Policy Committee College of Liberal Arts. The Division champions, defeated Seattle the last two facing Boston in the opener of their hest-of-seven times the club's met durinl the regular season showdown. recommeded elimination of this re­ Educational Policy Committee quirement. A two-year old survey of proposal would retain the reqUirement, r------,NoIoHo_ .., 1-_ .....c..-. - -... I student opinion found P.E. a close allowing upper level classes to fulfill it · I ~ I FAMILY PLANNING second to foreign language as a re­ as well as the present deSignated core 1- I FLORA quirement students believed should be courses. A survey of students done two 1- ~ I . CLINIC I __ I eliminated, Because the Committee years ago agreed with this recommendation . . Ic... I Birth Control Services was sharply divided on this issue, stu­ 1 .... _ ·_,._ ... I dent Input is especially important FOREIGN LANGUAGE IL. ______.JI Fee based on income • before the faculty votes next week, The proposal would not change the 356-2539 present foreign language requirement LIT AND HISTORY (2 years for a B.A., 1 year for a B.S., FENNICA The present literature and historlcal­ B.M., or B.F.A.). To combat what the cultural requirements are redefined in • Education Policy Committee called .a STUDENTS the proposal. The new categories "severe problem in motivation", the would be Humanities, requiring three proposal adds a new requirement of a COLLEGE classes (one of which would be Inter­ class In foreign civilizations which can pretation of Literature, 11: 1), and be met through the humanities, social Historical Perspectives, a requirement SCience, or historical perspectives re­ OF EDUCATION of two history classes. This would quirement. In the student survey con­ represent an increase to five the num­ ducted in 1978, foreign language was Students interested in representing their RUSKE ber of required classes in this area, one the requirement that students felt most divisions on the STUDENT ADVISORY more than presently required. strongly should be eliminated. COUNCIL to the Dean for the College of Education during the academic year of I • 1980-81 can become/candidates by CAST YOUR BALLOT TOMORROW registering at 200 Jefferson Building before 12:00 pm Friday April 12. & Scandinavian Imports 215 Iowa Ave.

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