Weekend Sports Report Forecast low. Iymna&ts did worsa tt..n axpectH «o'norally ,.It tod.y, conlinued unse.· ever tile "'"kand. but the wrolfler, did WMbl, wann wltt.1 hlr,lJ around so. Part. Iy (Ioudy tonl,ht and WtcllIHd.V witt. little Ioettv. A "'rap-up of wHllend tournamonts ...,.,.ratv.. w ..... on P.... . oil ...... r' Iowan Serving the Universit!J of Iowa. and the People of Iowa City ; secretary, Cindy Apr Des Moines; and treasurw' EltDblished In 1868 10 ceQlI a cop), As.socIaled Press Leased Wire and WIrepboto Iowa City, Iowa SZ2~Tuesday, March 5, 1968 Leipold, N3, Belleville, III ' • • YAF MEETING Young Americans for FreedixD YAF) will meet at 7:30 PJII in the Union HOO\1r • • FRENCH FILM Hawks Clinch Big 10 Cage Title Tie French film with En . . lIhtit.I,.~ "Les Dames du &is By PHIL HADDY Boulogrle," will be shcronl II MINNEAPOLI - The smell of the blue p,m. Monday at 225 ~ gra of Kentucky and the NCAA regionals Build ing. Admission is frft. came closer to reality Monday night when PiSiCUl,SICID and refreshmentli d Iowa d feated 1inne oIa 91·72 and clinched at the Language HOUIf, at least a tie for the Big 10 basketball N. Clinton Sl. Parking Space Reduction title • • Only Michl,an stands between Iowa and COLLEGIATE VETERA~ the Big 10 championship. The Hawkeyes The Association of Colleliai4 and Wolverines square 0(( in the Field VelterllDS will meet at 7:30 p.m. }fouse Saturday night. at the Union Minnet1114 For Students Considered Led b), the record·breaking scoring of Sam William , who scored 34 points to • a, KAPPY BRISTOL lots contain mosUy student parking. The presenl sy tem o( purcba iag parldn, break out of a three game slump, and FILM LECTURE Students may be in danger of losing 10 of these lots would total over 300 slickers. Chad Calabria, who hit 26, the Hawkeyes J 0 h n Ebert, veteran Ion over 300 reserved parking spaces In the spaces. lis leColgsn said that if the spaces wore down Minnesota mid·way through the ex pedition leader mid-campu area next ),ear, The Dail)' Even the gain near the Field Hou e and were metered, the tudent rates for park­ ODd half and "idened a six point lead aa~'eDl. ure photographer, wiII Iowan has learned. the Stadium would still leave the students ing would increase, while faculty and staff to • commanding IS-point gap. tecture at ! 31 Marjory McColgan, A2, Silver Spring. with 170 fewer spaces than this year, be­ rat . would remain the same. cause of los es in other scaltered areas. In Macbride AIIIIi· Md., and Garold Lane, 1.2, Riverside, Student parking fees are used for the BIG 10 STANDINGS members of the student·faculty Parking Most of the remaining spaces will be on . Season and single admiJ. upkeep of the parking lots, which would BI, 10 Overall tickets will be available II and Security Committee which formulates the west side of the river, they said. be used mo tJy by f culty members. most University parking regulations, told w. I. w. I. auditorium The reduction in student spaces is nec­ Anoth~r suggesUon broueht up at recent IOWA ...... 10 3 U 7 the 01 • • late last week that proposals now eShary because, according to the commit­ committee meetings was to eliminate atl Ohio state ...... 10 4 17 7 CHRISTUS HOUSE under consideration by the committee call lee. the faculty will lose Lots 5 and 10 be­ undergraduate parking, Lane and Mi.5 Purdue ...... 7 S 12 9 The Rev. David Belgum, .. for a total over·all reduction of 170 student CIlUse of additions to the Physics Building lcColgnn said Wisconsin . .. .. • .. . . 7 5 13 , reserved parking spaces. professor of religion, wID and the Main Library. Northwos ..rn ...... 7 , 12 10 on sj!.nsitivity training II The Diversity doe operate torage lots This is in keeping, the)' said, with th e The priority system for parking, as set who raIl' are Ie than tho e for re­ llinols " 7 1111 m. Sunday at the Chriaaa University's parking priority 1> 0 I icy of by Pres. Howard R. Bowen in his pre i­ served parking Anyone with 8 University Mlchl,an St... 5 7 II 11 The public is invited. "isilors first, then faculty and staff, and dential report, the Green Book of 1965, I MI(hl,.n ...... S • 10 13 visitors first, faculty and staff second, and sticker can use ther. There is one located sludents last. on Harri on and Capitol Itr ts and one Minnesota ...... • 10 717 Students will gain approximately 300 students third. on RiVer ide Drive. Indl.na ...... 3 9 913 spaces in new lots, located near the The committee has been tryina-, Lane Airport Lot Denlopod football stadium and at the old tennis said, to find the most rea on able way to Williams' 34 points sma hed Don Nel­ eaction courts near the Fietd House. A commuter lot I~ being developed at Interpret this policy in light of both stu­ the Old Land Fill ncar the airport with lon's Hlwkeye mark of 572 )loints in 8 Propolal Conlldered dent and faculty needs. room for 500 car . However, there will be slnele leason et In the ]96J.62 eason The proposal under consideration by the Met.ring Space no transportation for stud nL, to get (rom Before Monday nigh!'. game, Minnesota committee, they said, would give faculty Other proposals submitted by a ubcom· the parkml: lot to the campu . Coach John Kundla said, "If we let Jowa rangle and staff at least half of the Library or mtttee on parking to ellicicnUy allocate play their type of game and let them run, Old Iowa Field parking lot and the lot the remaining student spaces include me­ With fewer parking spaces, students th y'li run u out of the arena." Whitaker said they received who do not live within walking distance iOn(lenmlllg letters from several north of Union. Both of these mid-campus tering all student lots or maintai~ing the And this Is what beat the Gophers of campus will probably hav to depend Williams and Calabria paced the Hawks' such as Washinttoo. on thi' bus syst(>m, which i. in jeopardy and Canada. run· hoot first haIC oCfense, William sink. * * * * * * of endiM in Jun unle the city and the Ing 21 and Calabria 12. "We got some religious pamph. Iowa City Coach Co . can iron out the pres­ rowl played their type of go- top game with sermons and Bible pas­ ently tanilled contract negoliullons. throughout the first half, working for the telling us that' 'even Ihough I. Parking Proiects Move Miss McColj(an and Lan said that the open ahot and after falling behind 5·3, reo sinned,' God would forgi ve most oplimi\tJc picture for the next year gained a lead it never rellnqui hed. he said. would be fewer parking pace and the The Hawkeyes' first-half lead was par­ could tell by the attached pre .. nt ineffiCient, unreli ble city bus tially due to the stone~old foul shooting how distorted the sl.1Irj , Ahead With Council OKs system. 01 Minnesota, which faUed to score on four in some papers," Final policy recommendations for Bow­ IT'S THATAWAY - Mlnnasota', Tom Kondra rise. 1o the basket as low.'1 RI(h.rd straight one·and-one Huatlons. Vhi'f.I<,.r said. "We also received ay RON GEORGEFF on Smiley's recommendation, al 0 decided en 's consideration have not yet been made J~/lsa" appears headed the other w.y In th.lr ai, 10 basketb.1I g.me Mond.y IIl'ht Minn Ola was able to score on only half letters of support /rom to have Barton and Aschman Planning ( The College Street parking ramp project by the committee. A o( now the e ar In Minn •• POlls. Tho Ha"'ks clipped Ih. Gophers 91 ·71 for al le ..t a share of the (on· 01 ill 36 foul ~hots In the entire game, telling us that they wert received a shot in the arm Monday when Consultants of Chicago conduct a compre· only proposals. but thc situation of not ftrenee IItle. - AP Wlrephot. but the Hawks were abl to hit 23 of 35. same boat and, 'good the City Council directed City Manager hensive study of future parking needs (or finding enough space for parking is real Foul played a major part in the fir t he said. Frank R. Smiley to recommend an ar­ Jowa City . and some ralionin~ of pace must be half pIa)' when Iowa's Dick Jensen and the publicity, Whitaker', chitect to make a preliminary design of At the informal council meeting. Smiley done, Llln and Miss McColgan soid Glenn Vldnovic were s ddled wIth three refused to sign penni5- the ramp. estimated that the preliminary ramp de­ The Parking and Securit)' Commiltee and Calabria, Dick Agnew and Hus· necessary for the In a closely related matter, the council, sign might take 60 days. A ramp cosling i to continue its diseu. sian of the pro­ ton Br edlov bad two (,Dch Minne­ II~Jrr""'" license, because Whit· about $1 million i planned for the eastern po. nls at it mcetlng today. Hubbard Gets Petition sota was not enUrtly free (rom the was under 21. The couple two-thirdS of the parklnlllot at College and closely-officialed game since the Go· planned to be married Sept. Dubuque Streets. phers' LeRoy Gardner, AI Nunc sand Whitaker said. Frisco Teachers The propo ed ix.level ramp would pro­ Wayne Barry were in trouble with three vide space for 425 cars and would be built Viet (ong Shell To Lengthen Vacation foul at the half. so that It could be expanded, according to The scoring of William and Calabria By JUDt PIER The majOr r('ason for Ihe exLen ion of was the complct . tory of the second half. Back On The Job, a City Planning Departmcnt r port reo A p!'tltion signed by B,145 tudent a k· spring vacation I "to make compensa· leased last December. William scored 21, while Calabria scored Cities, Airfields ing for an xtension of Eo ter vacation tion for stud('nts who wllnt to aet home 14 of bls 26 POIDts in the period. The comprehenSive parking study, which wa. presented to Philip M, Hubbard, d an 101 vacation," Robert said. lie pointed out Th lIawkeye lead varied from 3 to 8 Others Stay Away is to cost an e timated $8,650, will toke of acadrmic affairs, 10nday. that spring break was the only vacaUon points during the first 9 minut of the about four to five months, Smiley said. The petition, spon ored by A. oclated this semester and that It would be the II t second half. Then, with 10:30 remaining In ay TijE ASSOCIATED PRESS He said that the primary purpose of the In New Offensive Residence Halts (ARlIl, a'k that Easter opportunIty many tudenls would have the second half, Williams tarted a scoring More than 1,000 San Francisco public study would be to determine the financial vacation, scheduled from Thursday, April to l:et home befor the nd of th school binge that netted ]0 straight points. The school teachers ended a brief strike Mon­ (ea ibility of future parking facilities such SAIGON IA'I - The Viet Cong shelled ye r. uperstreak by Iowa's n w single sea on as lots and ramps. five provincial capitals and two airfields 1I to Thursday. April IB, b,' extended to day, and far away on an Island off the Monday, April 22. The major objection to the rescbeduUne scoring ace widened the Hawk ye gap to The study would also Include estimates in the Mekong D Ita below Saigon early of spring break apparcIIUy comes from coa t of Maine a little one·room school· According to Hubbard , the petition will a commandine 73·58. house rcope ned (or the first time si nce of how much parking expansion would be today, the ~ccond straight day of wide­ lIl" faculty. due to the problem of re­ During this period the Gophers experi. needed in the city's immediate future. spread Communi I attacks. be discu ed by the Student·Faculty Coun­ scheduhng cia es. enced a five minute lull in which they IWllltaker said that whether or its only teacher went on strike a week cil on Teaching at It meeting March 12. ago. In other busine s, the councilmen ap­ Initinl I' ports indicated light casual· Robert pointed out that cvery class gets failed to score a point. a student received birth coo. Th council can make a recommendation behind at lea t onc every semester be· pills depended on which doc­ Meanwhlle, a statewide teachers' strike proved using money from the street im· tie 8nd damage. Government military On the game, Iowa shot 49 per cent from headquarter said 13 Vietnamese civilians to Pres Howard R. Bowen, who , according cause of unscheduled events. Com pen a· the field on 69 hot and the Gophers hll she saw. entered its third week in Florida, and provement fund of the city budget to fi· to Hubbard, has the final authority in de­ classroom walkouts continued in Pitts· nance new curbs along Iowa Avenue from were wounded at Can Tho. lions are made in uch cases and could 27 of 62 for a 43 per c nt mark. The The Student Health policy Is ciding whether vacation hould b<, extend­ be made if vacation was extended. Hawks also out·rebounded Minnesota, 36- burgh, Pa., and Wellston, Mo., a suburb Gilbert Street to Muscatine Road . City The Reds mounted their heaviest coord· ed . oral contraceptive pills are of St. Lou is . Engineer Melford Dahl e timated that inated attacks across Vietnam in two Rescheduling Possible 83, after being out·performed on the boards distributed only to married weeks Monday. Enemy shells pounded Thomas M. Robert, A3, Williams, said in the first period, ]7-14. Th e San Francisco strike by about 1.100 $14,000 would be needed, Smiley said. that tudenl support of the petition was 11 a decision was made early enough of the city's 3,400 teachers shut down widely scattered allied military installa· concerning the exten Ion of vacalion, the Iowa wlil return home Saturday for its The street improvement is being made tions and a Viet Cong squad shot up a hos­ strong. More signatures, he said, could final game of the eason again t Michigan . Whitaker said his fiance re­ schools there at noon last Friday, in the at the request of 8 city beautification 0 f&culty could reschedule classes without pital rUn by an American wOmBn doctor have been gotten if ARH hadn't becn A victory would give the Hawks clea r·cut the pills (rom a privale climax to a wage dispute. Mayor Joseph group, which is planning to plant shrubs short on lIme and publicity. much problem, he said. MOst students will Al ioto announced an end to the s t r ike for peasants in the central highlands, mi. s only one meeting time if the change ownership of their first conference liUe after being refused by stu- and trees on the six·block median strip of Robert aid ARH ran into apathy from since 1956. Should the Hawkeyes lose, how· Health. Sunday night. and cia rooms returned Iowa Avenue. .S officers reported. O<'curs. to normal as the new school week got lin­ students who favored the petition, but who Two petitions had been circulated con­ ever, Ohio State and Iowa would be forced couple dropped registratloo Mayor Loren Hickerson said that the OfCicers noted there were no follow·up to have a playoff Tuesday, March 12. derway. ground attack after the shelli ngs and did not have faith in its being passed. cerning the extension of spring break. beginning of the fall Ie­ group, known as Grow to Reach Environ· The 6ite of a possible playoff is still ten­ On r~mote Matinicu Isle, Maine, 13 declined to de ribe them a the start of Cl.utl Won't Be Held The ARH petillon presented to HUbbard and went to New York to mental Excellence Now !GREEN), had in­ tallve, according to the Big 10 office in pupils were on hand to greet their new an expected Communist third·wave offen· According to RolY!rt, man), teach<'rs differed slightly Crom olle sponsored by Chicago, but it would probably be North· The Whitakers now .vort teacher, Henry Blagden, 29, o( Bremen. dicated it would par (or the purchase and said that they would not hold classes April Bordwell Hou e of Hillcrest. planting of the greenery. slve. western , Evanston, III. Iowa City and plan to retun He arrived on the island Sunday by lob­ Guerrillas aimed mortar. rocket and 1nand 19 regardle s of whethcr the cxten· The AR H petition required students to the University this summer or ster boat, The council agreed with Smiler's pro­ recoilless rlOe rounds today :It some o( sion was approved. include their student lD numbers, where­ Blagden replaced Tadgh Hannn, 32, who posal that two streets around the Univer­ the major population crnters that had been He said that about 60 to 70 per cent of a the Bordwell House petition did not. was fir ed after he went on a one·man sily ~"ield House be changed to one way. hil in the Communi t Tet offensive at the the students approached said they would By including ID numbers, it was easier strike in protest against what he called Smiley said that South Grand Avenue end of January. not return April 18 regardless of thc aca' to check whether or not the signatures NEWS brary Displays unsanitary and firetrap conditions in the would be made one way going south Hnd Airfield Atl~(ked demic calendar. Were authentic, Robert said. tiny , 109·year-01d school. Byington Road would be made one way One target waS the Tra Noc airfield, ilroad History Teachers Shake Hands going north in an attempt to improve traf· the government's biggest fighter plane IN Hann a sat in his car outside the school fi c flow. base, at Can Tho, 80 miles soulhwest of research collection of LeVi as hi replacement reported. He said : "I Smiley said that Merritt C. Ludwig, Uni­ Saigon. No damage was reported. on the Union Pacific asked Blagden if he intended to cross my versity vice pre ident in charge of planning Other provincial capitals hit were Ben Senate Imposes Cloture will be (eat"roo dm 'picket line.' He smiled and said, 'Yes.' and development, approved of the change. Trt - where the airfield came under mor· BRIEF in the display room of the I smiled back , wished him luck and we The council directed City Atty. Jay H. tar fire - My Tho, Cao Lanh and Chau 5o~ook hands." Honohan to draw up a resolution for the Doc. Ben Tre had been heavily bombard· ALSO IN THE NEWS LAST NIGHT: In Florida, 25,000 teachers walked out change. ed by aUied forces counterattacking after On Rights Bill Debate ATLANTA, G•. - The Rev. Martin Lu· was the official bis­ of classrooms two weeks ago alter their the Reds' Tet assaults. ther King Jr. said he will meet soon with for the Union Pacific Rail· WASHINGTON IA'l - Senate leaders lin· amended, were withheld until the I a s t from 1921 to 1924 and later union, the Florida Education Association The aWed military installations shelled civil rights leaders who are "prone to Monday included six air bases, two U.S. ally corralled enough votes Monday Lo reo minute. a research assistant in rail· (FEA I, called a new $329-million educa­ violence" in an effort to make certain tion bill inadequate. The bill still awaits Herky Rug Safe, command posts and four other installa­ strict further debate on a compromise civil These were cast by Sens. Jack Miller there are no riots during his poor people's history with the Unlversit)' tions. Damage and casualties were reo rights biU, apparently assuring passage o( (R·Iowal, Frank Carlson (R· Kan ) and E. ' nA!rtmpnt of History. the signature of Gov . Claude Kirk, who campaign in Washington this summer. has until Thursday to act on it. ported light. legislation carrying 60me form of open· L. Bartlett CD·AJaskal. SAN JUAN, P.R. - The U. S. Navy, display deals primarilY The FEA says it represents 55,000 of To Return Today The U.S. Command said only one of the housing guarantee. All three announced their votes as the Coast Guard and the Puerto Rican govern· the period from 1862 10 Florida's 60 ,000 public school teachers. attacks could be regarded as militarily On the fourth attempt to invoke cloture, roU call was being recapitulated and just ment fought a giant oil slick in an attempt I. Herky will return to his Union nest the Senate voted 65 to 32 in favor of im· the trans-eontinental ral­ The National Edllcation Association said significant: a strike at headquarters of before the announcement of the total. to save San Juan's main tourist attraction: \l"as being built. it is ear·marking $2 million in support of today. the U.S. 4th In(antry Division at Camp posing the debate-limiting rule. The three senators either had been vot· its sunny beaches. President Johnson has Negotiations for the exchange of the This gave cloture adherents the bare will consist mosUy of plio­ I tiKo Florida strikers in which about 22,000 Enari in the central hiehlands. ing against cloture before or were an· ordered a team o( conservation experts in 1 teachers are now involved. '1,500 Herky rug, missing since Feb. 20, U.S. aombs S"i,on two-thirds majority they needed. Three nounced as against it. to help local authorities. Before leaving letters and c.ther doctI­ were completed this weekend. Since Sun­ previous attempts starting Feb. 20 fell covering construction, tile About 1,000 of Pittsburgh's 3,000 teach· ArtillerY thumped and propeller-driven Two senators who bave been voting for Ramey Air Force Base in western Puerto day evening the rug has been at the Sigma AIR Skyraiders dive·bombed a section of short by 7, 6 and 4 votes respectively. Mobiller scandal of 1171 ers struck last Friday, in a demand for a cloture, Sens. Eugene J . McCarthy (D. Rico, where he spent the weekend, John­ Pi House. Saigon four miles from the city's center The vote seemed to assure Senate pass· son also promised to propose legislation other incidents coanedId coUective bargaining election. A hearing age of the administration·backed civil Minn.l and Harrison A. Williams CD·N.J.l for the striking Pittsburgh Federation of n was the Sigma Pi pledge class which early today. An American spokesman said to deal with damage from oil spillage. t~e building of the raDrold· 1 began collecting the 5,000 jelly beans called rights protection bill with its added-on were absent Teachers was recessed while the judge at. the attacks were "our standard harass· WASHINGTON - President Johnson has for by the ransom note received by The open· housing provision. But it remained The third absentee was Sen. John O. tempted to settle the dispute. ment" to keep the Communists out of Sai· Pastore CD.R .Ll, who is recuperating received a leiter purportedly signed by aD Daily rowan Feb. 21. gon. uncertain just what form the housing pro­ the Pueblo crew ur)!ing him to admit the I ThousandJ Converge vision will take. from a heart attack. Pastore has been Meanwhile, thousands of Pennsylvania James Bishop, AI, Davenport, who di· Earlier lhe U.S. Command reported announced as favoring cloture. U.S. intelligence ship was spying inside University students eacb Ieachers converged on the state Capitol rected the jelly bean campaign, was first American infantrymen had fou ght 8 14- Supporters E .press Confidence North Korean waters and to apolol!ize. Would Outlaw Discrimln.tion fined $15 and ~ 4 costs ill at Harrisb!lrg, for a one-day demonstra· contacted by the rug·napper Wednesday. hour battle Sunday at a u pected as· Opponents still might resort to unlimit· WASHINGTON - President Johnson told Court Friday morning GIl tion. They heard Joseph Standa, head 01 Friday afternoon the thief told Bishop he sembly point lor Communist troops in ed debate to block final pas age of the Mu ch o( the opposition was based on the company and union neeoliators the 234· wanted to deliver the candy to Children's measure. but supporters expressed con­ bill's open·housing amendment. As origin' Iorl~er:lv conduct ch :,~ges. the Pennsylvania State Education Assoc· Saigon's northwest outskirts. day copper strike is weakenin!! the U.S. iation, demand higher salaries and in­ Hospital personally. In the talks the rug· A South Vietnamese informant s aid fidence that this would not happen . ally proposed by Sens. Walter F. Mondale dollar In foreign trade, threatening Amer· fines came after rlJ'eCl'8Ci' creased school subsidies. napper gave no indication of why he had allied troops and police were dispatched Technically, Monday's vote was on "per· (D·Minn.) and Edward W. Brooke CR­ ican prosperity and may pinch supplies were thrown on the roo! rJ, I Elsewhere, at Renovo, 93 seniors reo taken the rug, Bishop said. It was finally to strategic areas around Saigon during fecting" the bill with some 80 amendmenls Mass.!, this would have outlawed discrim­ for the war in Vietnam. ination in the sale or rental of an esti­ Campus Security buDdiIC turned to classrooms at Bucktail Are a decided that the fraternily would deliver Ule Monday night curfew after reports that have been offered during the seven CHICAGO - A team of Michl ~M 1"'Iffii mated fY1 per cent of all housing in the Fr Iday morning. JlDlior High School so they can graduate the jelly beans. reached headquarters tha t the Viet Cong weeks the measure has been before the cal scientists is experimentin" with a Senate. country. students, Bennett C. Vobe. It the end of the school year next June. A total of 15,000 jelly beans were col· had planned to blow all th e bridges in and serum which it believes may elimin1.e The gga·pupil school had been closed for out of the city. Three of the key votes that put over clo­ The covp.rage was whittled down to Council Bluffs, and Richard lected. These will be donated to Children's the body's tendency to reject transplanted Dearly three weeks after 43 teachers struck Hospital and other organizations around This report could not be confirmed with ture, the rule restricting each senator to about 70 per cent in a compromise version hearts and kidneys. Toon, A3, Des M(lines, -" lor higher pay. U.S. officials. one bour's speaking time on the bill as by an Jowa HiehwaY PI' the city. worked out last week. -8'1' The A510clated Prtt' officer. The Ga"clen 01 Opinion .... u"" ...... m"l -me-'Dotly Iowan 'Our Mother's Housel called A. ~ President Nixon? ! Court OBSERVATIONS j][ aesthetically successful film t ...... by Rick Garf By NICHOLAS MEYER to be working out rather well. What the Schoo AND COMMENT JJIIl Childrcn, noted Welsh novelist Richard kIds are doing may be iUegal, it may be While the nation has been momentarily inspiration going into battle againll" Hughes. are e enliaUy mad - mad in ghastly, but it is working. taken aback by the hasty retreat of Mich­ divided Democrats. WASHT GTON ~ Ulat Uleir set of values and standards is igan's Gov. George Romney fro m the h CI es pawned PAGE 2 TUESDAY, MARCH 5, ,'" IOWA CITY, IOWA completely different from those of adults. Until father arrives. Father, the divorc­ And , in spite of Nixon's long ex~ New Hampshire Republican primary, and in government, even if he were to ,"-. ism and by the 'Tv illustrate his point Hughes wrote a ed and damned husband, is a good Ume while New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller ue that book entitled "A High Wind in Jamaica," Charlie, excellently played by Dirk Bo­ come the loser tag, il would seem 14 lit begins to form his plans for the race he that he must do even more to get my flllt enerations of Am,pr,I'A' in which he re-works the classic tale o( garde. His arrival and ensuing residency is going to make, the question we should t.U.en on by the children kidnaped by pirates - only the causes confusion. conflicting parental al­ Perh aps what I ask is the impossible, 1M No transportation possibility al] be asking ourselves is wheUler former only Nelson Rockefeller may be able It \ Monday. children are real. not "literary," and the legiences, and a fascinating battle for sur­ Vice President Richard M. Nixon should pirates never stand a chance. vival. I shall not here be so stupid as to offer in in the GOP, but I believe R~ , Tile), Ie t whether be given Ule chance to lead Ule nation. Nixon lacks one major quality we n«d. ..bool children have 1uch in the same vein is a lilm by Jack et down who is trying to survive, much our next President: the ability to _ ctayton (director of "The Pumpkin Eat­ less reveal who does. Like every oUler polillcian, Nixon surely be taught the evoluUoni should be overlooked wanls to, and to a point he is qualiIied; the people . that man has cuu",mm er" and "Room at lhe Top") with the Given the somewhat difficult ·to-swallow wfl h Ule apes is concerned. That would be for t11e somcwhat Chekovian lille, "Out' Mother's but, is he the man we want? Is he the We have to face it. The news lelJJ • Friday Ule bus fare in II)wa City basic premise o( the film, everything Calls ,roup of Iowa chilldr~n ' House." As in "High Wind," Clayton's brand of potential President we need? Let every day how ugly things are getlilt increased to 15 cents. This was a re­ nivel"'ity to run its own public trans­ into place beautifully. For one thing, Ule us see. and no matter how ha I'd he tries or 'Itut po>e the film deals with real children. and like acting of the children is on an impossibly ..urinl black sult of a breakdown in negotiations portation system. The adminbtration William Golding's "The Lord of the Flies," It is relatively simple to dismiss Romney he does, Lyndon Johnson only ~ high level of eompetence_ English child uglier himself wiUl every issue he handles. school. for a new bus contract. It is a pos 'i­ is known to be l.,()ll~idcring this po~si­ it uscs them for allegorical purposes. stars have it all over American tots seem­ as a fuzzy thinker who just doesn't have it, and Jt is just as easy to give Rocke­ The fir t case sets bilit\' that local bus service in the area bility, The children arc seven in number and ingly, and the acting on Clayton's direc­ We mu st have a President who tall no feller sympathetic support because we I muted replay of the Iii I' in a house with a very ill moUler . The tion ranks with some of the best kid stuff late our government's efforl$ to our III­ will' b discontinued by the present It is this possihility that should be know so little about his position on the tional history so that we can see thJI • k~y trial" - the d moUler dies, but the children love her so ever put on film. and that includes Alex­ ton. Tenn.. legal operator after June lO. given further careful attention. There that they refuse to acknowledge h er ander Mackendrick's masterful handling issues, especially Vietnam. spite of the dirty work we have to do " Not so with Nixon . We know who he is, will do it as a nation, not as instruJmda ~ Clarence Darrow For a little more than a year the probably would be no major prohlem deaUl. Everything is ju t as it always has of the children in his very able film ver­ Jennings Bryen, been, and they go to bizarre lengths to sion of "A High Wind in Jamaica" and what he stands [or, what he is offering, of on e man 's vanity or stubborness. city and the University have been sub­ ell figures of their involved in the University's furnishing keep it that way, including seance·type Bryan Forbes' junior stars in "Whistle and many Americans like what he says. Personally. r have long been a N~ sidizing the privately-owned bus sys­ of such service to it~ students and em­ sessions in which mother is consulted about Down Ule Wind ." The photography and Sure, he has to shake the loser image, fan, because despite his Crowns IJId ta tem. The subsidi7..ed system had b en ploye ·. But even the possibility of important decisions. The children tell no script are likewise superb. What "0 u r but if Rockefeller doesn't enter any pri­ jowls and the stubbled beard, Nixon lui one of her death. conceal her body, and Mother's House" is all about is food for maries against him and if write-in cam­ always seemed to be an bonest IlIA able to operate with reduced fares, niversity operation of an entire mo­ go on living under th e authority of the considerable Ulought, but leaving such paigns for Rockefeller don 't get off the Perhaps this was 8 subconscious liniInI If which have brought more passengers. nicipal transportation should not be clde t as if nothing had happened. The guesswork profundity in the hands of the ground, all of Nixon's victories will be him with Grandpa Ei enhower; maybe I But the subsidy of $5,000 a month was overlooked. mother cult makes some mistakes - one viewer, I content myselC with recommend­ virtually meaningless. The nomination will was his image as a fellow bourgeois, I quite bad one - but in general it seems ing what I found to be a very good movie. mean hardly as much to a party needing don 't know. found to be too large according to ac­ * Needless to say, Nixon 's reputJtiaI countants who studied th problem. While* such consideration *is going among Ihe press as a sort of dull GppIr. Hence negotiations on a Ilt'W contract tunist has caused me some emba~ 011, tyP's of tran porlation other than ment with my colleagues, but this _ were started, involving a more COIll­ the regular cily bus should not he caused me tess grief when I have IIG!II plicaled arrangement than Ihe straight overlooked. For instanct', it is po~~ihle his accomplishments in the party. &Irt subsidy. he plods along; sure he's camp; but It!'1 that Iowa Avenue west of Old Capitol also very bright and he thinks about II­ The justification of anv type of sub- will eventually become a pedestrian sues as they affect the nation, not RQ. idization i~ the reduction in traffic mall. West of the river, most of what ard Nixon. parking problems in 1111' downtown So, it is very painful to scorn him; be is now Newton Hoad will be the c\­ has been my friend to long. I can't ell'! area and on campus that comes from tension of that mall. him the Romney boot because be kilo'll inlTI'Il~('d USt' of bllst's. There are few a lot and he Ulinks he can help, as be bas And with the ever-grOwing call1pu~, people who SCI' the maintenance of in the past. it becomes more difficult to walk from The Presidency, Ulough, is the one offkt bus service a~ undesirable. one side to the olher. The length of I, the average citizen, do not lake ligbU,. All alternutiw to a subsidizrd pri­ For Ulis reason. it is imperative that" this proposed mall seen IS to be an vUldy-owncd bus system would be have the best man for the nalion. ideal path along which to put some Bu t, look at it this way. If Nixon, 01 onl' 0\\ nrd entirelv hv the citv. This type of mass transportation system, his accomplishments as p'resident, iJ the po~~ibilit)' has b~n i;1Vestigat~d and best man. the country still may nol be preferably underground, but possibly found to be probably undesirable h e­ aware or it. We would then be just • some type which is ahove the ground prO!' calise of pl'ohleJll.~ iovolved in man­ disgruntled as we are now, and our and still aesthetically plf'a.~ing. 0 ress In so many other areas should seem aging slich a sy~tem. FREE GAS - Conlidlrlng that thl rillul.r prict of 1111 In first glance to be a Mecc. for • penny-pinchin" driver- beclun S\.uoted. possibility should be overlooked. There seell)~ to be annUler alterna­ low~ City Is about 34.9 centl • lillian, I drlvlr would conlldlr It glv .. the Illusion of gas beinll so ld for 30.9 cents •••1I0n. Lyndon Johnson bas been a preUy fau 30.9 cont a II allan to be qultl I bll'1llln. A IllIn In front of I Upon closer tumln.tion, howlver, Ihe silln t.II, quite a diffl.· tive, at least a~ tar as the University - Bill Ncu;bl'ollgh President in reality, but it is so hard ~ gas Itatlon along South Rlvlr,ldl Drivi (11ft) would .ppelr .t Int Itory. - Photo by Dave Luck nolice this that his merits are losl In I :. PERSHING RI sea of vain blunders. Pershing runes Jack Kennedy was almost the opposilt 7:30 tonight in the l He didn't really do a lot, but everybott! Armory. There will YR chairman wants officer support JLa Traviata ends successful run knew he was trying, and we all supported meeting at 7. Uniform him. He led. He wen t on televis ion and • io thl Editor: order prior to announcement o( the elec­ rlcclion \87-\33. it is certainly di{{icull lo By STA.N l.EGEL Il~ned on Wednesday. and it was heart­ totd us Ulal the dirly old men In tilt $\ I CENTRAL. As Chairman of lhis region o[ the Iowa tion results. Instead, Branstad supporl­ undct' tand how the 133 votes for Bran· For Thl D8i1y lowln warming indeed to see him present roses business were trying to sell us a biU If Application goods, and we wouldn't stand for it In, p rt t ~ College Young Republican Cl ubs, 1 would ers chose to await the announcement of stad constituted a majority. tt seems to The Opera Workshop closed its produc­ to his wife on opening night amid the more than he WQl\ld. I, a y en er a like to clarify the very confusing situation the vote; then, seeing that they had been b,· his conlention lhat the election held at lion of "La Traviata" Saturday night cheers of the audience. Nixon would probably be more lilt! for .the s~ond senleste~ with some people in the balcony of Mac­ arising out of the University of Iowa defeated by a 187-J33 vote mal'gin, they the meeting of Branstad supporters after "1've never sung in opera before," said Eisenhower than either LBJ or JFK. avaIlable In the Young Republican Club election held last erled fout and sought to upset the elec­ bride Auditorium giving soprano Constan­ Nixon would go through Ule proceduII'I ~nter. The apl)Ucau~ the regular mceting was adjourned repre­ ta Cuccaro a slanding ovation . The house the pretty artist la t week, "but if I can wlek. Particularly, I want to correct the tion results. SI nted the majorily. It is beyond my com· of the office and make lhe decisions and Y 5 p.m. many distortions of fact contained in a was full , containing many members who sing Ule lead in 'La Traviala' well, it When th e defeated Branstad Corces prehension how this second election can life would grind on day sIler day, bi.i INtcr 10 the editor written by John Eids­ thought they would hear the best perform­ means I can also do this . . . and sought to thwart the exprcssed will of the hav~ any efficacy whatsoever. By Eids· ance of the run on a night Miss Cuccaro like now we wouldn't give a damn empt , moe. apPl'aring in Sa 'urday's issul' of moc's own count there were \04 persons this . . . and that. . . ." She can . to pounce on him in indignation when hI The Daily Iowan . Eidsmoe wrote the let­ majority, they did it on th e ground that was singing. "After all, she won the Met absentee ballots were illegal. Beyond the attending the second meeting, of which auditions. you know." Others of the two casts of Ule Cour night slipped up. We'd go our way and the natioa ter a~ Secretary of Ule Midwest Region !l9 were Branstad supporters. It is sig­ would go on some way too. I)f College Republican Clubs. So t hat oiJvious fael that even a valid objection to run who distinguished themselves, be­ the election would have to have been made nificant that these J04 p r ons. which Eid - Those people only fooled themselves. The sad [act is that, unlike Jack Ken­ rl'ildcrs can hold his letter in proper per­ moc claims represented a majority, eon­ Thcy missed hearing Violetta's part sung sides Miss Cuccaro, included Ronald An­ nedy who was facing the future and dar· &pective, it should be pointed out that 'rer­ prior to the announcement of the result, derson as the baritone Germont. Singing this particular objection is clearly inval­ st itutl'Ci less lhan one·third of Ulose voting by Carol Webber. Miss Webber not only ingly striking out with new ideas, Dick ry Brl1nstad. the defeated candidate, list­ in the cicci ion and Icss than one·half o[ sings well, but is a good actress too - the strophes o[ a plea for tenor David Nixon is tragically linked to the past. Hp ed himself in his campaign literature as in In cstablishing election ,ules, the Exec­ an important thing in opera. She doesn 't Jones. as AlCred. to return to his home utive Board provided for absentee ballots. those voting in the election even with ex­ is the captive of old ideas: law and order, Absistant Secretary of that organization. clusion of absentee ballots I have always have a big name yet, but will have when and [aillily, Anderson was quite touching. tight budgets, and a strong fist in the faC! and having done so. the only question is she is heard more. Her Wednesday per­ Ira Hawkins, as the physician, had but a Could it be that some bias or self-Interest whether a reasonable Executive Board understood that less than half is a minor­ o[ Communist Olggression . has clouded Eidsmoe's judgment? ity. Jormance wa s admirable, but Friday's few lines to sin!!, but they were dellvered Worthy though some of these may be. could have believed that absentee ballots brought down Ule hou se. The entire audi­ with such fee ling Thursday by his deep. The governing document which must be were a reasonable and proper adjunct to That Branstad and his upporters are a they don 't say what the future may re­ used to determine the legality or illegal­ ence - not just a claque of relatives. but bass, voice that he was quite able to set quire of us. And, as Lyndon is learning, other election procedures. The Executive small mmority is precisely the point. For the entire audience - rose in on mol ion to the mood. This was especially nolicable ity of the election is the Constitution of the ideas of the 305 and the 40s somelitn!! Board sought a system of voting which )ears Young Republicans have been give Miss Webber lhunde rous applause and in the death scene when he sang "Tonight th University Young Republicans. The would allow maximum participation in plagued by a right wing, extremist group, just aren 't enough. We need ideas [or the Constitution slates: "Officers shall be to call her back for numerous curtain it will all be o-ver." the election. The fact that more people namely members of the John Birch Society calls. 70s. elected at the first regular meeting in the voted in Ulis election lhan in any other in alld Young Amcl'icans for Freedom, who Not everything in the production was I grit my teeth as T backhand Dici scrond semester." (Art. IV, Sec. 2.) Ulr history of the University YRs serves have sought to capture control oC YRs. The real tragedy of the production is Dot perfect though. Of the two girls playing Nixon across the mouth and reject hi! By long usage and force of precedent, to verify the ucee s of the Executive j"or the first time, because of their ex­ Verdi's plot, but Lhat Miss Webber will Annina, the maid, one of them will be re­ sincere ofler o[ leadship. We need him Board 's objective. not be singing again at this university. membered as the girl who c10mped across somewhere. But is it Ule White HO\lsel th is has always been interpreted to mean cl'llent campaign organization and be· During the run, her husband (a Navy pilot> that lhe polls could b open for a period clluse they have disguised Ulemselves to the stage as though she had never worn In addition to his fallacious reasoning, received orders to report for ex tended duty shoes before. Other distractions were th~ general membership as other t han of limr prior to the meeting and Ule re­ in regard to absentee ballots, Eiilsmoe in Texas. The couple has already left Iowa noises from too much traffic in the light m~' mbers of Ule right wing, the extremist Animals invade Union sults announced at lhe mreting itseH. charged that failing to allow a certain 43 City. Webber had returned from duty in booUl, and rude people entering and leav· Thus, there can be no question Ulat the persons to vote constituted fraud on the group attracted more support than ever Vietnam a few days before the show bclore. Some Df this su pport was rrom ing the hall during the performance - To the Editor: election was held at the [irsl meeting o( part of the Executive Board . especially Salurday evening. second semester as required by the Con­ responsible elements in th e Republican He who thinks we are civilized animals stilution. Eldsmoe says in his letter: "On Feb. 5, Party. Both Branstad and his running mate The Opera Workshop, directed by Her­ should have been in the Union Terratt two days before second semester classes hnve been members of Young Americans alcl Stark, will present Offenbach's "Or­ Lounge between 7 and 12 Saturday mont­ It i~ a canon of constituljonlll construc­ Student hits bl'gan. Branstad gave the vice chairman for Freedom. Though both claim no long· pheus in the Underworld" in May. If it is ing. linn thnt All organiZAtion may do all thinlls 4~ memberships, plus dues, which he had cr to be members of YAF, it shou].! be produced as weH as "La Tra viata," it James D. Nardin, AI 1'1 1,onahle ani proper to implement the solicited. " noted that the backbone of their campaign will be excellent. N8 Hillcrest d~man1s of its basic docum ent. In the testing system llnivprsity of Iowa YR Constitution, this The manner of the solicitation is most organization Is composed of members of interesting. On Feb. 5, without any author­ authority i. delegated to the Executive ). oung Americans for Fre\!dom. To the Editor: Board . ization from either the Executive Board :Branstad has repeatedly charged that I ... must complain about the testing 01' the University, Branstad and mem­ I Thr CO"S' i"l'hn SI~'PS, "The EXC('ll­ thl' Executive Board established election system. Being new at thi s university, It''rs of the Young Americans for Free­ rules which prejudiced his campaign cf· had nol been exposed to this type of final tivr B0 1r ~ shall iJn rc ~po"~ibl' fm' I h e dom Ret up a booth at second semester t" 'nsa"l'r, of any busin~ss of th~ clu b rr.gistrHtion in a space reserved Cor the fort. In one sense he is absolutely correct. exam system. I do not Ceel they are too n, "ro' By allowing Ihe polls to be open for a PCI'· difficult, but I do believe 100 much em- Itudcnt trustees elected by tne student body and (our truslees appoinle\l hy lhe \1[C~\II."0. \ br'W f' ~'l J'c '!ulur m 'plin'l< lU1fl sh~1l sprve D'iI ~ ':'LoE~ib! ~"'~?'~"~b~ Hillel Foundation. At thiS boolh were signs iO . Rockefeller may be able te )londay. tions. they said tney were demon· the GOP, but I believe IIkim Thty te t whether Arkansas strating for a truce and to mourn one maior quality we need • school children have the right to war deaths. Prp~lIrlpn't·· the ability to _ bt IIU.rnt the evolutionary theory "The right to IreI' speech em· Rig~tin tep that man has common ancestry ~ie~ in the First Amendment with the apes and whelher a lS a hfeless right unless encour­ Wlthyour group of Iowa children could op. age,d during school years." laid pose the Vietnamese waf by their appeal. big step Wfarin black armbands to Federal courts In Denver and lChoo!. in Des MoIne have ruled against P lans of all kind for your wed· the school children. ding-and 10dem Bride i ri&hl have a President who Ao The first case sets the stage for Theory Forbidd.n IN THE SPRING. A YOUNG MAN 'S FANCY ••• - And lhe City anti .11 aero.. tho 11110. In. matt.r .f w.. b, picture, can tht're wilh YaY . Calehintnour ro­ efforts to our a- I muted replay of the 1925 "mon· Arkansas and Missis. ippi are .Ir! who .. f.ncy he'. turnl", to ....,·t Hem t. mind. II', slill Uk. thll OM will 1M old 1m. kty trial" - the dramatic Day· the only two states that still have manlic mood with dresses (or so thai we can see that i nol spring yet, .f courH, IHIt It f." IIko It w •• IMrwI.y. In IDw, - Photo lay Dayo Lucie youn, bridl' in the frrlh. new work we ha ve to do " ton. Tenn.. legal duel between laws making the teaching of lhe aummer mood. leetin, your a nation, nol as instllllMlll Clarence Darrow and William theory of evolution. crime. ------Jenning Bryan, colorful and not· Echoes of the once.hot is ue racticaJ. h.ve-to demand. with s vanity or stubborness. . Obscene Call Bill OKd r.~t-on · lhe Jround help Cor gifts rd figures of their time. will sound in the staid courtroom Ration Board Iy. I have long been a N'IIIII WASHI GTO CII - Long-dis- to ~he and bint for .•• cookin, ••• despite his frowns and The cond brings the court in next fall with claims that the Johnson Proposes table and room arrangemenls ••• stubbled beard, Nixoa hi! touch with another form oC dis· rilthl to teach and the freedom to lephone callers bo Me e'en booklet to !lend forto make senl from the Vietnamese war. learn lire violated. Considered to be an honest _ The possibility of or,anilin a ne1ll' wifery ellier. The Summer The Ju tiel's already have under These claims are being made 1 lie offers lots more, 100. A was a subconscious ~ /I federal rationing board 10 John· Grandpa Eisenhower; maybe j consideration claims that the fed· by Mrs. Susan Epperson. a red. ht'artfuJ of honeymoon localt'S to eral ban on drafl-card burning haired Cormer Little Rock biology Drug Price Limit liOn County WI discussed at a I moon over- l he Vir,in ) lind , image as a fellow bourgeois, quarterly meeUnIl of Civil ~. violales free speech rights. teacher. and by H. H. Blanchard. Canada'. ummer·fun pr o ~in c e , The deeislon to rule in lhese who says hi school·aged childrl'n WASHINGTON"" - Pre id~nl 1969, .Iso called lor added efforts Cense and Em rgency PI ann in, the It.lian teene in and around to say. Nixon's reputatlol cases came in a raft oC orders should be exposed to all scient!· Johnson proposed Monday an un­ to hold down medical costs. officials last week. Veni e. Tip. on makin, yourself press as a sort of dull OJIPII'. The President also asked Cor Such board h ve the power, Th legislation, applying to in· handed down by the court afler fie theory. expected federal move to hold t r late phon calls. provides for more allracth·e. decorating to caused me some embam.. a five·week recess. The t928 Arkan as law forbids hlg Increa es In pendIng to pro­ upon notice from th PI' ident make your home more atl rae Iii e. my colleagues. but this Us down drug pricE'S a part of a vide poor worn n with birth-con· durinG naUonal emer nci , to a maxi mum penalty of SIX months ·C.ndy· CI .....11 the teaching in any tax· upporled "Health in America" message to imprisonment nd a $500 fine. Felturt'! on the ddilll crre­ less grief when I have D«eI In olbers. the justices: school oC "the theory or doctrine trol d vices or drugs and with pI ce a five-,en Oaily 7 • •m .· ' ,.m. • HAIRSTYLING FOR MEN in the pursuit of excellence, • HAIR COLORING • HAIR STRAIGHTENING the Iowa State Highway Commission thinks we are civilized animah becn in the Union Tertl(t will be interviewing on campus 7 and 12 Saturday mort LLOYD'S James D. Nordin, AI LLOYD MURPHY "HAIRSTYLIST TO MEN" March 11, 1968 NI Hillcrest in the HOTEL JEFFERSON OPENINGS IN 01.1 351 ·9902 Appolntm.nt Pr.ferred O.,lgn - Construction - Planning - Material. RighI of Way - Maint.nance; choic. of rola·

Is governed liy a board of nil tlonal training, or assignment to 0 choten field, appointed by the rrclli\~ columns of the paper should be locations availabl. throughout Stat. of Iowa. and n'lt the eXIII'clISion 01 (Xlii

PROVIJUENT ...... ZIP ...... For """pie box of 10. send IDe to Meds, BOl lOoS, Hwy. 6 West - CORALVILLE MUTUAL.... LIFE M~lIown. N.J. 08850. Indicale Reaular or Super• ...... c. co--..... ~

•# fJdtifil 4--1 HI: &JAIL. .,' IOWAN-lew. ",",u "1, •••- IUU., mo. 411 ~~ I ''1M Miller Lauds Gymnasts Finish Stead -Griffith Loses Crown Bright Future Ahead Record Play "_ NEW YORK t.f! - Nino Ben- crowd of 18,000 in the new Mad- Virgin Islander now Uving in New For Hawk Wrestlers 3rdi NCAA Next Hawk venuti, a 2-1 underdog, sent Emile ison Square Garden rocked the York, for the 160-pound crown. ~riffith spinning to the canvas rafters wilh a resounding tri- Gr lH11h F~ Once . By JOHN HARMON point award given to Hudson on Of Williams By TERRY SCHECHINGER they "hit," could beal del • •'with _ 8. thunderous left hook in bute . wresUmgHe . floored away Gn{filh the champIon·once. 10 Sports editor a predicament call. Iowa's gymnastics team muffed NCAA cbamplon Southern IlliIIIIiL - the nmlh round and then con· Griffith finished gamely, scor· ship last April 17. but he was a After three years In the wrest· Mih.1 lipped his w.y to the Although Iowa's offensive punch an opportunity to take sole pos- The Hawks were plagued . linued 10 hammer away at b i I ing with terrific shots in the fin· victim of Griffith's savage come­ ling doldrums, Iowa can look lor· 160.pound litl. by bealing Pat was somewhat stymied at the session of the Big 10 title Salur· several minor but costly tniJIata 'Oazed opponent for a unanimous al round, but Benvenuti refu ed back the following Sept. 29 wben ward to hrighter days. Karsl.k. of Michiglll1 St. t., starl of the second hall in last day by placing third in the Big from lwo o( tbeir defending B Rich Heinzelman of Wisconsin night's victory over Minne ota , 10 meet at East Lansing. 10 individual champions. J5-round decision Monday nieht to go down. he was chopped up by Griffith's "This team could very possibly 1 and Otto Z.m.n of Northwest· Coach Ralph Miller said he The Hawks needed only to take Don Hatch on the still ringJ I11III lhat sent the world's middle- m u r d e r 0 u s lefts and body be a springboard for the Iuture." "n",nutl 1+1 punches. said Iowa Assistant Coach Gary em by identical 6-2 scares. thought the Hawks had already second place to win a clear cuI Keith McCanless on the tidt weight boxing championship back Releree Johnny Lo Bianco and In this third and rubber meel- Kurde1meir after the Hawkeyes "Rich looked very tired Satur· 1ad the Gophers well contained. title but were forced to settle for horse both slipped on tlleir dio I 10 Italy. one judge, Frank Forbes, both ing, tbe first balf of a double- finished a SUrprising second in day," said Kurdelmeir. "but of "If we would have had a litUe third In what Iowa's trampoline mounts at the end of their IQIo It was a close bout that end- marked it eight rounds for Ben. header pitting big Buster Mathis last weekend's Big 10 meet at course a tournament such as the . betler conlrol game," said Mil. veteran Don Uffelman phrased tines. Big 10 championships can pul a ler, "I think we would have run "the worst scoring performance UCCelman said that Iowa, ed in high drama, with the Ital· venuti, .Ix for Griffith and one and Joe Fra'I• 'er for th e N e w the Field House. ian's legs weary and wobbling even. Jud- AI ".rl bad l't even York version oI the world heavy· "Our only senior is Russ Sill strain on any wrestler." away with the game early in the of the team this year." ern minois, Michigan, MidJia under Griffitb's furious fusillade in rounds,.- 7.7, withDC one even but we'ghtI ch ampi' 0n sh'IP Benvenu Ii and our sophomores are really Though tired. "I'" 'hal was s\I' 11 second halI." I owa, M'IC h'Igan and MIC. hi gan Statet and Penn State wookl br ' in Lh e final seconds, while a outboxed and outfoxed his sleek starling 10 come around. We also a bundle of optimism after his The Hawks also faltered a bit state tied lor first place in the the eams witb the best dlillCf gave the decision to the Italian opponent for lbe first four rounds. have some real good freshmen," [I' tIe match .' near Ihe end of the [l'rsl half B' . h . oC winning the national tiUe. on points , H with the knockdown Ig 10 WIt 13 total points. whIch decisive. Then suddenly the bout look added Kurdelmeir. "W.'re going to b. lough when the Gophers narrowed the consists oC points earned through. DickSOl1 Bright SptI CARTWRIGHTS The Hawks scared 50 points next year," predieted Mih.l. Hawks' lead to 42-39 at haUtime. out tbe season and at lhe Big 10 Although the performance If OF IOWA CITY The Associated Press scored It a sharp turn, with Griffith ap- to finish in a thr.. ·way d ••d· I've never b,.en in the NCAA "We were forcing too much at championship mel!l. the gym team was disappoiJJti=: Carpets - Area Rugs 7-6-2 for Benvenuti. pearing to come out nf a stupor lock for second with Michigan tournament and I'm really look. the end of the half," said Miller, there was a bright spot on and to start an aggressive aUack "and that caused us 10 make a Winners To NCAA day when Iowa's Bob Dicta Draperies 1t was the second lime in less thaI won him fC!Ur rounds in a and Northwestern. As expected, ing forward to it . Of course, ·stakes." All th ree Ieams WI'11 represen t qualified for the Olympic .ft.... · Mlchig.n St.t. won the me.t the Big 10 meet Is .bout " few bad mJ th B' 0 th N ' I Col "1- 730 S. Dub",," lSl.US} than a year that the tall, classic row and appeared to make a 'One Of Top Gam ••' e Ig I at e ahona Ie· with a score of 104.90 . ItaUan bad beaten Griffitb, a mockery of the rest of the fight. with 74 points and thus kept rough as they come." • giat h . h' el' T the canference tille for the third Even though the Hawks did e c amplons Ip me ID U· Three-lime Big 10 cbampioa straight year. Mihal added that lowa "should have a few shaky momenls. the scon, Ariz., April 4-6. Dave Thor of Michigan ~II be ranked among the best in the Hawkeye coach called the Minne. Iowa's Roger Neist said he was topped the (ive·man compe\itiol A FREE CAR WASHI WITH 12 GALLON Iowa finished in eighth place the last two years and Dinth in league ncxt year." sola game "one of our top games glad to see all three teams going with a score of 106.10. 1965. In 1963 and 1964. however. SiU defeated Indiana'S And y this year." to the nationals because he fell Neil Schmitt of Iowa qua~ ------the Hawkeyes placed second and Thomp on Michigan's Pete Corn. "Whenever you win by as mucb they w.ere three of the str?ngest for the Olympic tryouts earller GAS PURCHASE, AT NORMAL GAS PRICE in 1962 tbey won the title out· ell and Michigan SLate's Rod Otl as 19 points on the road." said teams m the ~ountry . He saId this this season. right. to b come the 167-pound cham- Miller, "you've got to be play· would make II "more fair" to all A score of 104 poin!& or better ion I ing well." Ilhree teams. in Olympic compulsory competi. Nearly the entire team had a p .. .. . Miller said thaI everyone hit Iowa gymnastics Coach Sam tion is necessary to qualify for til! hand in boosting Iowa back inlO Sill WI estled his best match of w II against the Gophers with the Bailie said last week that either trials, which will be held II firsl-division territory over the the ye~r whC~ he "defe~ted Corn· exception of Ron Norman , who Michigan or Michigan State, if April. weekend. Six Hawks advanced AUTO -MAT ell . Fr~?ay . D1ght, said Kurdel· scored only three points. ------(};,i!t!lJ into the semi· finals and three melr. Durmg .the fmals he was S.m Highly Pr.ised reacbed Saturday's finals. not as aggressive as he usually Sam Williams, who pumped in The Hawk finalists, Ru s Sill. IS. but he seemed to be a much 34 points and broke an all· time Badgers Defend Title Verlyn Strellner and Rich Mihal, tougher wrestler." . season scoring record. was again might have been joined by Joe Carstensen had he not been in· Slrellncr also advanced IOta the highly praised by Miller. volved in a disputed call by a final round only to be defeated "Sam has done a great job ' all by defending In·pound champ year," Miller said. "Not only does As NOe 1 Track Tearn referee during his Friday eve· nlng lao-pound match with Lou Mike Bradley from Michigan he score a 101 of points. but he "Where You Watch Your Car Come Clean FREEl" State. is also a good offensive team Sophomore pole vaulter Joe two-mile, and won it In 8.54.1, Hudson of Michigan. Viktor gave the defending cham· I breaking the old record held b7 ONE BLOCK WEST OF WARDWAY PLAIA The dispute concerned a two Other H.wkeyes who advanc· man." pion Wisconsin Badgers tbeir Micbigan State's Dick Sharkey br ed into the semi·finals were Miller said he was also pleased second consecutive Big 10 indoor 7.1 seconds. It was also the belt Jo. Wells in the 14S·pound di. with the offensive play of Cbad track title with a conference rec- two·mile Lime of Wieczorek's r. vision and heavyweighl 0 a Ie Calabria, although he was disap· St.arns. pointed with Calabria's defensive ord vault of 15·81,2 in the I a s t reer. POTTERY play. event o( the meet Saturday at Mondane and Wieczorek ,,11\ Columbus, Ohio. represent Iowa in the NCAA ll- (Hand Thrown) NEW PROCeSS "Chad played much too conser· Knee laundry Service For The Student vatively, giving his man too much The Badgers trailed Michigan door track championshipS Mardi going into the event, but VIk- 15 and 16 in Detroit, Mich. qui et Original Art DIAPER leniency," said Miller. "I wanted pcling in his defensive game to be tough tor's record - br~aking victory At Low Prices SERVICE cording to TWO TYPES OF SERV~CE all the way, but he often slacked gave them a winning total of * chronic burSitis - $11 PER MONTH - 51 points to the Wolverine's 48 'h. * (5 Doz. per Week) off his man." * lorn ligaments i The Roost Fret pickup & delivery twice Foul Trouble Hurt Iowa finished a (Ilstant eighth But Bonney, 226 S. Clinton Dick Jensen would have been with 10 points although the Hawk­ Indiana Wins I 222'h E. W.shington • week. Every thin" Is fur· Ihe same Vill a nished: Di.pers, con'aln.r., off to one of his besl scoring eyes had two individual cham· thaI brought such (above Barbara's Bake Shop) deader ants. nights. according to Miller, if the pions in Larry Wieczorek and gymnasts 8 S Neil DOWNTOWN WEE WASH IT Phone 337-9666 sophomore cenler wouldn't have Mike Mondane. Swim Crown t Scorza and Keith run into early foul trouble. Mondane. the defending Big 10 Ind iana scored a record 4 used to In juries. Miller said he was not yet look· 4

The tremendous ~rowth and development of Los Angeles presents c~allenglDg. career opportunities to y,?ung. engi. neers, helpmg to bUild the fastest growing major CIty In the nation. Our starting salary is $n6 a month . In addition to ex­ cellent salary, we offer job rotation and tuition reimhurse· menl. Arran,e with the Plaelment CHiee to t.lk with our Ingl. neerin, rep,....nl.tlv. who will be an umpul H2\bbnH 300" TUESDAY, MAR. 12, 1961 natural for Spring Handsome glen plaid " Abbott 30(Y' suitings for Spring ••• so fresh, so natural. Shape retcntion dacom polyester and med­ ium weight worsted wool, blended by Abbott of New England. A combination that's (.'Orrect for 300 days of the year. - 2 MORE 65 00 BRITISH Show Start. at The finest natural shoulder suit in its category. STERLING

111 model , •. 79.50 So fine a gift, Our Rossline You 8a1 you were for Romney and you have the feeling that you've been brainwashed. Bul your shirts have tbe fragrance it's even sold like they haven't been Wished. Launder your shirts al PARIS In jewelrJ stores. CLEANERS. The men at PARIS CLEANERS would appreciate After shave Open eM) Open your supporl (so would the candi­ from $3.50, MOil. TllIIrs. date of your choice.) tW9 lUi 9 Cologne 1teAwooA , Ross from $5.00, traditiolJill excel/tine. ER S & SHIRT LAUNDRY WEEKDAYS - 1:. · 5:30 1208 S. GILBERT FEATURE AT 1:. 7:24 • • : 26 S, Clinton 121 Iowa Avenue SATURDAY - 1:00 ·1:00 W"EK DAY'" EVE AND SL NO CHIL~ • 1M1 DAILY s Finish Steady Bonney Helps I Save after 7 DAILY Next Hawkeye Gym Tearn Call long distance ton~ght after?:OO and save! Only 85¢ or Ie .. for I 3-mlnute stabon call to they "hit," could beat def By TERRY SCHECHINGER " Injuries are ju l about an oc­ ph\Jnes nationwide. Additional ~---- NCAA champion Southern JllioeIL either chronic bursitis. torn cupational hauard with gym­ The Hawks were plagued . I minutes each 26,! or I .... Same ~4.~~~~~...l IOWAN ligament nor a dislocated elbow na t ." said Bonney last week. low rate ell dey on Saturday several minor but costly mistakes could prevent sophomore gym· "But you learn 10 live with the from two of their defending B na'

Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regular You'll develop a talent for making hard'llosed, imagina. kinds of guys. Except bigger. tive decisions. And you'll know how these decisions affect And that can be an advantage. the guts of the operation, At the grass rootl!. Because you'll How? Well, for one thing, you've got more going for have been there. you. Take Ford Motor Company. A giant in an exciting If you'd like to be a giant yourself, and your better and vital business. Thinking giant thoughts. About develop' ideas are in finance. product engineering, manufacturing, ing Mustang. Cougar. A city car for tbe future. marketing and sales, personnel administration or systems Come to work for this giant and you'lI begin to think research, see the man from Ford when he visitl! your campus, like one. Or send your resume to Ford Motor Company, College Because you're dealing with bigger problems, the Recruiting Department. consequences, of course, Will be greater. Your responsibilities You and Ford can grow bigger together. heavier. That means your experience must be better-more complete. And so, you'll get the kind of opportunities only a giant can give. Giants just naturally seem to attract top professionals, Men that you'll be working with and for. And some of that talent is bound to rub off. Because there's more to do, you'll learn more. In _4.. ,... AWAICAK aOAD, OIAaM;JaN, WICH IO",. more areas. .AX IQUAlo _IUlUn 1WlIoOfU. it I­ to work '- for a giant?

and anything else that you might think of. The 165-year history of Du Pont is a history of its people's ideas- ide88 evolved, f~, and engineered into new p~, products and plants. '!'be future will be the same. It all depends upon you. You're an individual from the 6mt day. There is no 1 r------~ fonnal training period. You enter prof8llllional work : E. I . du Pont de NemoUlll &; Co. (Inc.) I immediately. Your per90nal development is stimulated : Nemol1l'8 Building 2500- 1 I by real problems and by opportunities to continue I Wilmington, Delaware 19898 I your /lcademic studies under a tuition refund program. f I You'U be in a small group, where individual :: PJease send me the Du Pont Magazine along with i the other magazines I have checked below. contributions are swiftly recognized and rewarded. We promote from within. o Chemical Enrineers at Du Pont You wiU do significant work, in an exciting o Mechanical Engineers at Du Pont technical environment, with the t-t men in their fields, o En.gineenI at Du Pont and with every neoBIIIIlI'Y facility. o Du Pont and. the College Graduate Si!l1l up today for an interview with the Du Pont H.. ,______rncru;ter. Or .nail the coupon for __ information

i '>out career opportunitim. on- oppartunitiN lie both a.-\______M~, ____~~- .....______i 1 technical 6eld3- Ch.E., M.E., R.E., I .E., Chemistry, Phyaice and Nlat.ed ~------M7 .... disciplines - and in :auau- 1 ~· ______~ 8YaY'-______J'~"PCMh and IIBIIOCIated functiOD& -...._ L---.-_------___. _____ -..d