.I , ~Get Grants Campus Cops Keep Peace, ~Iy member "HI of the ~ ~ te granted h, H~tJon on !be ·ties. Serve 'As I nve stigative Arm Prole-.. " By PHIL FLEMING arrest a penon if a crime is commltted in jurtsdictinD of the University president. a leJlior lei. StaHWrlter their presence, but can't arrest anyone on Phil Connell. assistant to the president, I. ' Barnea, _ IOn's just the campus police. They can't lIuspicion of cOmmitting a crime. Is the director of the security operation. do anything." Confusion &lao ariaes when a student The campus Security and Parking Com­ ~ Engll8b, ~ This (!omment is likely to be overheard finds hirneelf dealiJlg with the Iowa City mJttee also makes recommendations con­ I~ lor YOUIIltr from students who are not familiar with Police Department. The campus police is cerning the department's operations. len O. Rowe, ... the duties and powers of the UniversitY'1 completely separate from the city police The law which directs the security men Campus Security Department. rorce, however, both work closely to­ is the University's regulations handbook.. 01 claulea, ~ Most students come in contact with the gether on investigations. Besides checking for parking violations, lellOWshlp. campus police when they receive a ticket The security police have the right to officers may be called upon to direct trar· Gets 0,.... for violating a parking or auto registra­ determine the identilcation of a lIudent fie and give directions to visitors. The tion law. Other students express a more . Eugene lIeirn or a vehicle which may be vlolaUna a security police are also responsible for friendly attitude toward the department University regulation. checking all University buildings and of muslc,-: because they have been helped in time of grounds to make sure they are In proper . trouble. "We are permitted to stop and question operating condition and are safe. Ion reBearth a student concerning hili preseoce in a liona! Wrltlq Campus Security Pollce Chief John H. Av.r... Ale II 40 Hanna said his department was responsi­ particular area and we can open the door Hanna feels a recent decision by the ~ being d~. ble for keeping the peace on the campus of any vehicle to determine the owner Stale Board of Regents putting nooaca­ aul Engle of !be and serving as the University's protective from the registration," Hanna said. demic employes under a statewide civil I received an eel. and investigative arm. Can QuestIon Students service system would not have any ef­ W$10,000. No Arrest Pow",. Hanna said his men had tbe right to feet concerning the age of the officers. The king on a bla­ "We have no arrest powers as police order any student to come to the Campus average age of the 25 full·time officers In the 19th cen. officers. We only have a citizen', power Security oUice for questioning. A student working in the uniform and investigating tes. Under the of arrest," Hanna said. He said members can allO be ordered to appear before the sections Is 40 years old. of the force were not allowed to carry Dean of Students or before any other Any legislative action would probably ~tinue his reo HAPPY WITH THE RESULTS, two coeds I.n. the Union Ball· IVlnlbl. n.xt wHk It the Reglstrlr', OffIc.. All ,ride, not any weapons because or University regu· department head (or questioning or as­ concern hiring new employe • and would verslty this lum. room Friday aft.r picking up their first MITI.... r grade,. Grad.. nplete hil Work picked up by next Friday will b. mailed to students at th.ir plr· lations. sistance. probably not affect current personnel, war' IVlnlbl. Thursday Ind FrldlY In the Union, and will be manent .ddreulS. -Photo by M.rlin Lavl.on or 11168 at the Hanna said his men have the power to The security police operates under the he explained.. ry in San Mar.

, PIIIIMII hi.s fellowship y investigation a critical ed. Clubb On China:' lume works 01 Cooper. He wU! araries at Yale y of Texal, and ail pare a bibliog. Serving the University of Iowa and the People of Iowa Citu "No End In Sight' es for the pr~ EitabJished in 1868 10 cents a copy Associated Press Leased Wire and Wirephoto Iowa City, Towa-Saturday, February 18, 1967 By BILL EDWARDS spoke on "The Chinese Revolution" In con· tor of the Cen. Staff Wr,"r junction with the Mldwe t China Confer· tudies, a divi. The current revolution in Chl.na origin' ence, sponsored by regional organization tment or Eng. ated 100 years ago and shows no sign or of the Collegiate CounciJ {or the UnIted on of a 22·vol. ending shortly, O. Eward Clubb, noted ex­ Nations. is headquarters perl on Communist Chine, said Friday The Taiping Rebellion of 1850 was. ac­ ark Twain and evening. cording to Clubb, the true beginning of the edition of T~ Clubb, a 25·year veteran of the Stste problems manIfesting themselves in China Department's Office of China Affairs, today. On O,ltlon. In 1949 the unrest again became appar· spend the com. CIA Th reats Disclosed ent with the Communist take-over. From the University that time until 1957 things went well for search on (fie Mao and b1a followera. of the orations ProblMlI Blgln a Greek of the In 1958 with the unsuccessful "Great Rowe plans to Leap Forward" program, problems began a series of ea- for the Mao government, according to Clubb. pe (his .emest· By NSA Board Cha.irman After that program's rallure the pragma· tists who now oppose Mao began to be­ research pr~ come apparent In China's government. i miorma\1on , WASHINGTON (.fI - The CIA received the presidents and international vice pre· in 1965 that the CIA aid was "intolerable" "CIA, as the action agency for a high­ e music IIlld These pragmatists, experts in economics 'sensitive information" from some Nation· sidents, officers who served for one year and decided tp sever it. level policy decision of our government, and foreign policy, demanded better rela­ ilipp Emanuel al Student Association (NSA) members and some staff members. Humphrey said he never discussed the made it possible for American students ~ohann Sebast· tions with the Soviet Union and revisionist abroad and warned the student leaders Oath Requlr.d situation with President Johnson. to present the American side at Interna­ policy In China. pected to con· they might go to prison if they disclosed He said that before being told of the CIA A member of tbe Senate Armed Services tional events," he said. Their power became obvious in Septem· there this sum. [" the link with the spy agency, an NSA 0(' connection, these youths were required Committee, Sen. John G. Tower (R-Tex.) "CIA did not control the students' acti­ tion grant and _ ficial said Friday nightt. to take an oath of secrecy and were warn· said any argument the student group was yities or their association. The students ber of 1966 when a special meeting of the University in Sam Brown. chairman of the NSA suo ed that "violation of the oath could lead "somehow infiltrated fY the CIA" was did not work for CIA. powerful Central Committee was called pervisory board, told a news conference to jail penalties of up to 20 years." contrary to fact. "Eor myself, r can see no reason why (0 demand that Mao seek better relations IhopNotecI that some of the NSA officers were aware Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey de­ Oi,pute "Ov~rblown" the United States should apologize for with the Soviet Union. Mao refused and grant for !he clined comment on reports he knew about TQwer said in a.spe h fIJI' a Young R . h (ping send students to Internatlona) con­ the euri'e!lt pw e of offlciH Is opposing the of the student group's 41$soci4ltion with tile leader began. tin, Program CI~ and gathered sensitive information the CIA aid to NSA for several months - publican leadership conference that the ferences as voices (or the free world. Strugill. Chang" to the Trans­ "and reported It to their CIA counter­ since NSA leaders came to him to discuss di spute over CIA activities had become Communists send their carefully coached which has their money problems. "overblown, with a good deal of emotion· spokesmen. Some of our allies do it open· This purge changed what had formerly parts." been a policy struggle between Cbinese the Univer· The information. he said, dealt with NSA officials have said they concluded alism squeezing aside rational analysis.II Iy, too." the world to leaders into a large-scale struggle for personalities and politics in student or­ poUtical Ufe or death, Clubb said. into and out ganizations abroad, ratlJer than hard in­ as Turtisn, le\\ipence. After serving for the State Department hinese, Pub· Brown said the CIA had used some 20 Chinese Tradition in China and the Soviet Union for 2l years. The grant is loundations and individuals as cover to Clubb retired to bis present position as a member of Columbia University's Ea t ncourage new channel (unds into the NSA - the lar~est foreign lang· college student organization in the coun· Asian Institute. riters. Iry. Upset, Prof Says Clubb received his B.A. from the Uni­ Brown I, Shocked CL U · Seeks Larger Role versity of Minnesota and advanced de­ A By DIANE YING grees from George Wa hlngton University, Brown, a Harvard divinity student, said !he board was "shocked at the ethical trap Defending civiJ liberties has been the ACLU has had lobbyists on the Congres­ around the country. Reitman said they Staff Writer Washington, D.C. before first journeying to Peking In 1929. young men of great integrity were placed business of the American Civil Liberties sional level (01' a number of years . Theil' needed educational involvement in civil Communist ChIna seems to have over­ in" by the intelligence agency. Union (ACLU) for many years, but the main responsibility is to "interpret civil liberties. thrown aU the essential elements of Chin· A second speech on "The Sino-SovieL Earlier in the day, a House Armed Serv· new feeling .in the organization Is that this liberties to the executive branch of the ese tradition, but in lact, it still cannot Split" will be given by Clubb at 1:30 p.m. Commenting on the fundamental way today in Macbride AudJtorium. ices CIA SUbcommittee praised the CIA is "no longer sufficient" by itself, government. ,. ACLU operates in the Iitigative field, Reit­ outgrow the shadow of the tradition. action and said it bad been needed to com­ This feeling was related by Alan Reit· He said he realized the importance of man said there were two ways ACLU be· This was stated by David Hamilton , 9S' bet Communist influence in student groups man. associate director o( ACLU, to the this type of work, but added, "We musl came involved in cases. sociate professor of history, In his speecb overseas. Graduate-Faculty Club of the Department "Contemporary China in Historical Per. * * * do a better job in interpreting civil lib· ACLU usually files a brief of amicus The espionage agency made no attempt of Political Science in the House Cham­ erties to local communities." spective" Friday afternoon in the Mac· to exert direct control over the student ber of Old Capitol Friday afternoon . Hi s curiae. That is, the orKanization advises bride Auditorium. Reiected Chinese Included in a current plan to do just as a frJend or the defendant. The second group, Brown said, but did have "more topic was "Bringing a Case to Court: "The Chinese Communists will not say iublle influence. " Pre·Judicial Decision Making." that is the desire to also reach high school method is by intervening as direct coun­ students. Reitman said high school stu­ sel. they are simply the heir of an old tradi­ . The CIA also "may have attempted to Reitman also emphasized the funda· tion, but they see China now as what a~ Influence &election of officers," Brown mental way in which the Union did its lit­ dents should know what civil liberties Involv.d In Scope, Trial Cause Dilemma are. idealistic China should be," Hamilton told laid. igative work. Reitman said the ACUL had been in­ an audience of about 100 who attended By FRAN PUHL Over the years. Brown said, only a few Besides litigation, the ACLU works in The plan would utilize many of the 95.- volved in stirring cases since the famous the session of the Midwest China Con­ StaH Writer NSA officers were taken in on the CIA legislative and educational areas. 000 members of ACLU in 39 slate affiliates ·Scopes trial in 1925. For that case, ACLU ference. leeret. Tbese in<:!luded, he said, most of In the legislative field, Reitman said, sent Clarence Darrow as defending attor· The dilemma of the unaccepted Chi­ Tredltlon R.jected nese people in Soutbeast Asia constitutes ney. According to Hamilton, Mao Tse·tung There are three ways cases are brought a major problem to the Asian countries, and his followers have rejected the tra· Gerald Maryanov, assistant professor of to the attention of ACLU: by telephone or diUonal Idea of the family as a model unit mail, by newspapers, and by attorneys who political sciences, said in a speech in Mac· of the society and state, of light govern­ bride Auditorium Friday night. Graduate Students Air feel their clients are innocent. ment control, of the superiority or the He said that local communitJes didn't scholar and official . Maryanov, who spent the past year as always relent when they were flfmly con· They have made each family member a guest lecturer at the University of Ma­ • viIjced of a persoll's' guilt. But he pointed participate and identify himself in the laya, spoke on "Overseas Cbinese" as Dorm-System Criticism out that ACLU has had success. The suc­ nation. They value wealth and strength a part of the Midwest China Conference, cess might be because the organization of the nation far above Its barmony and sponsored by the regional organization or By LOWELL FORTI! period!. always looks for some constitutional vio­ abolish ~e gap between the hand-workers the Collegiate Council for the United Na· StaHWrlt.r The first semester would cost more than lation of the defendant's rights, he said. and the mind-workers, he sald. tions. Graduate student residents of Rlenow the second under such a plan, the com· "The old pictUre of seeing man in nature Maryanov said that the Chinese people in mittee said. The first semester's addition· One example of ACLU success in re­ Hall aired their criticisms of the present cent yeBrs is the Dr. Samuel Sheppard has been changed by the Chinese Com­ Southeast Asia were not accepted by the dormitory system Friday to members of al · cost would serve as Uie premium paid munists into one of seeing man against natives of the countries. ''They have been by a student who "wanted out." The total case. In it the ACLU flied a brief that !be UniverSity Committce on Housing. set down standards for guidelines to pre· nature." he said. forced to assimilate into the culture or The biggest complaint of the more than year·end cost would remain the same. vent abuses of the right to a fair trial. On the other hl¥1d, he said, Confucious' get out," be said. In recent years they ~ students present was that they were Want R.la•• d Room Rulli The Supreme Court remanded the case concepts of a gentleman, of seeing a man's have been returning to China by the thou­ larced to follow the same social rule. as A majority of the students also said to the trial court level. value only in society, of considering poli· sands. 1IIIdergraduates. Said one student, "Most that room rules should be relaxed. Pre· ties an ethical activity, and of universal­ The 12 million Cbinese in Southeast Asla o( us are 22 to 26 and we don't think we sently, a student can not bring his own SUppOrts 4th Amtndment ism can still be traced in the Maoist ide- Another example Is the Dolores Mapp make up only a small percentage of the Ihould be treated like children." lamp into his room without having the ology. . population in the countries in which they In the discussion, the group decided the one supplied with the room taken out. The case in Cleveland, which ACLU entered in For instance. he said, they still revere 1952. The defendant was under suspicion live. Forced tit' tum to the Asian govern­ University should provide graduate stu· lighting was claimed to be inadequate to the leader of their ideology as a man with ments for help, these people comprise 3 dents in the dormitory with an exclusive read or study by. of being inVOlved in the pollcy racket. the general knowledge of a gentleman. Police searched her house without a war· major problem to the governments, Mary­ living area to be run under thetr own The stUdents said that the option of They rejeet individualism, consider poli· anov said. ruJes. adding easy chairs, carpeting or bureaus rant. During the search police found ob­ tics a virtue, and Bee world revolution as The rules proposed would allow more should also be added. The desk chairs are scene literature which belonged to a board­ their new verlion of universalism. Maryanov called the problem of the lOcIal entertaInment In the rooms and the only chairs in the room. All the rooms er. The defendant waa arrested. A spec­ Chinese a "vicious cJrcle." The native pe0- 6-Montht ,. Strikej Hie point was made by the poliee that no History Repeated ple tell the Chinese that they must prove IIOeIibly liquor. are tiled. ]n a senae, it seems that they are only AU graduate students are now housed Oradl Will B. PolI.d warrant was needed for that type of sit­ their loyalty before they will be accepted uation, under state law. The Supreme Court repeating the Chinese history of the tra· into the community, he said. But the Chi­ on noors 9-13, but updergraduate. allO oc­ It was decided that all the graduate Settled I n Harlan ditlonal anti·feudal peasant revolution, cupy rooms on these floors. students living in the dorm would be poll­ established that the Fourth Amendment nese have diCfjculty abowing JoyalLy to a Hamilton said. people' who treat them only as inferiors. Critical ed for further criticisms and llroposals. I.fI - did apply to the case. Of Dorm Contract. HARLAN The six-month-old strike Yet. what they want is more than that. They cannot teach their children to be In connection with the rules complaint, Edward V. Savard, y, Tupper Lake, at the Western rowa Pork Co. in Harlan Reitman said that such IUccesses were ''They want to relieve China of semi­ N. Y., will collect the proposals and give has been settled. plant olficials said Fri: performed by members of the ACLU staff loyal to a country which treats them as if !he Itudents were critical of the Univer­ feudalism stemmhig from tradition and they were not wanted. Maryanov said. ~ty'. regulation that dormitory contracts them to Robert F. Sayre, auoeiate pro­ day. of lawyers, which numbers between IlOO semi-coloniallsm un'der the western pow· CillDol be broken. . fessor of English and chairman of the A spokesman for the firm said formal and 1000. He said that the attorneys were ers. But they also want to have a victory Originally these Chinese came from the StUdents who had wanted to leave at eammittee. announcement of the agreement will come' not salaried. The organization estimates over western imperialism. And the Marx­ poorest, most populated areas of southem the semester break said they were "co­ The students also proposed that the Uni· later, but that striking members of the that it savel $2 to $3 million annually on ist doctrine is their answer," he said. China. They were among the most under· Irced~' Into staying because of the pre­ versity take Immediate action on the pro· United PackinghOuse Workers Union ~ad legal fees because 0( thi •. To achieve their goal, they also bor· privileged people of China and sought a lent regulations. Posals because o( the disgust expressed accepted a company offer and will return rowed from Russia the technique of revo· better life in Asia. Many of them migrat­ One unidentified student was said to over the present system. They saId the to work Feb. 27. lution and the or,anization of a central ed to Southeast Alia when it consisted of !\ave iran.rerred to the University of majority of the graduate students housed The walkout began last Aug. J8 and Forecast party control. European colonies, and their hard work ISlS4 Mlryland In order to get out of his con· In the dormitory were not planning to flared into violence Oct. 3 which prompt­ Because of Mao'l experience of victory was welcomed in ~e newly developinc 811 !tact. come back because of the present situa· ed local law enforcement officers to caU Ocaulonal IIIOW likely tMay and In 30 yean of guerrUla war, he baa de­ lands. all40 '1'0 alleviate ihls problem, the committee tlon. for help from the Iowa National Guard. tonight with Kcumulatlon. of 14 IIICft veloped an over-confidence In the power Tbese Chinese brought with them a cul­ • "Id Ihere was the possibility of a spUt­ Sayre Is planning a similar meeting next Gov. Harold HUKhes refused to send lik.ly. Colder todlY; hlght 11-. north of organization. Mao's confidence In man­ ture which was nol necessarily the classic I lemesier contracl system. The system week with the members of one of the guardsmen, and the trouble finally sub· to tIN lis touth. Moltty cloudy, a Iittl. power to subsUtute for the lack of material Chinese culture, but the culture of the :OIIld make it possible for a 8tu~ent to women's dormltorles to get their views sided into d series of minor vandalism In· warmer Sunday with cIMMI of IfIOW haa caused the failure ot the Great Leap cnall villa,es from which they came, teak hla contract within eertain time and criticism •. cidents and court appearances. north. Forward. Hamlltoo explained. 1W78DOV aald. • I 1

'The-1lony Iowan Is your city

of AND COMlt1EN7. worth saving? I! The first By ART BUCHWALD present form will never get through. and Revoh SATURDAY, " ••JtUAltY II. "" IOWA CITY, IOWA WASHINGTON - The Joint Chiefs of There must i)e a fairer way of select­ IOred by Staff have just made a proposal to pro­ Inc the cities that will get missile protec· League wi! tecl 50 U.S. cities from missile attack by lion as agaiMt those that will have to Monday in defending them with the costly Nike-X be .acrlficed in a nuclear war, and I've Room. '!be Ignorance and wisdom antimissile system. The Pentagon said the been civinlil it a lot of thought lately. Ruling CI~ cities were selected on the basis of site. Here are some of the ideas I'm running Elite" by There were signs of both ignorance refused to give grades. As long as but it turned out Clat many ciUes chosen up the flagpole to see which ones the reading is were. in fact, smaller Joint Chiefs of Staff will salute. and wisdom when the State Senate Barnett does not give grades, Univer· Jellue. than those left off the The first thing would be to select 25 • voted to send the Bamett issue to the liity regulations state he cannot be list (Le. Charleston. cities that have Democratic administra· E' Education Committee. paid. Either the legislator was misin­ South Carolina. popula­ tiona and 25 ciUes with Republican admin. The Eve tion 76,000 and home of The ignorance was illustrated by fonned or Is ignoring the facts as they istrations. In that way, after World War ,II! be opel L. Mendel Rivers. chair_ 1II. the United States could preserve the Folksinging 24 senators who voted for firing Don­ are now. man of the House Arm­ two-party system. !be enterta ald Bamett because he is withholding ed Services Committee. meni. will We commend those senators who would be protected; San The next thing would be to select cities 1l00d It charge is 2! student grades in protest of tlle Viet­ voted against firing Barnett. They Diego, population 1 mil­ that are in shape financially. has . ,.;..--::::--- to be assumed tbat after an all-out..mls· • nam war. The wisdom was shown realize such an act would be a breech lion, would not). YOUN When senators and lie attack the country will have some ec· by the majority of senators who vot· academic freedom. They realize. John R. ~ of congressmen from un- IUCHWALD onomic problems. and there is no reason ed to send the resolution to commit· too, that the University and the State It sbould be bur~ned with additional fi· protected cities heard about the list they nancial diCficulties from urban areas. tee. Even more wisdom would have Board of Regents can handle the mat· hit the Capitol dome. and some of them The cost of making 50 cities bomb·proof, been shown by simply defeating the ter themsleves. The Governor has haven't come down yet. It·s obvious that the Joint Chiefs' antimlssile plan in its accordinl to the Pentagon, is in tbe neigh. Oakd resolution. llltated that this is an internal matter borhood of $20 billion, which is quite ex· What we feared earlier has be· for the University. pensive; and there may be some resis· come a reality. The Legislature did tanee from those taxpayers whose towns The problem of Iowa politks enter· are not In the protected areas. But this Sets attempt to lake the Barnett case into Today is shortsighted, because it is economical· its own hands and to directly inter­ ing into academic matters is analag. Iy unfeasible to save everybody. and those fere in academic freedom. It is a ous to the deplorable situation in Cal. citizens whose cities cannot be protected on WSUI will at least expire with the knowledge To Ci shame. Iowa has had a good record ifornia. Reagan di5Hked the flurry of that their taxes kept so many of their • All bets are off. Whatever our pro­ A banquet of "hands off' policy regarding purely ifornia. There Gov. Ronald Heagan fellow Americans alive. gram guide shows for this morning. it is ebrating the academic matters. But now the body mastenninded the removal of Clark subject to change. , There also may be people who live out in the country and suburban areas who Th. other guerrilla war the Univers has tried to interfere, and one legisla­ • For example, there will be a musical ment Unit f( Kerr as president of the University of comedy this morning at 8: 30: the original might feel they have as much right to tor has even said that University ap­ of protest demonstrations on the Berk­ cast recording of "On a Clear Day You survive an atomic aUack as the city folks. held Sunday Can See Forever." but here again they're taking the small At the ba propriations may be cut if the Bamett eley campus just as some of our own Dr. Leo B. situation not satisfactorily resolved. • Clear days over Red China, however, view. is legislators dislike some of the hap. may also add to the confusion. In order pids psychial Some of the legislator's criticisms As as industrial nation we need the for his man) penings on Iowa campuses. Fortun· to give what help it can. WSUI is carry· cities for commerce, advertising, televi· are ridiculous. One person disliked Ing live most of the activities of the Mid· in the lrealrr ately, Gov. Hughes is not as anxious Ilion and mass transportation. Except for A citation west China Conference presently in prog­ farmers, there's no one worth saving in the idea of the state paying Bamett's as Reagan to meddle in academic ress on the campus. Today (note the time E. Hughes e: !alary when the assistant professor the countryside. Besides, city people are gratitude fOi affairs. change ). at 9:30 a.m., there will be a so much beUer dressed than people who ~owa panel discussion on "China and the United pres~nted to The state legislature has the duty live out of town that if you must make a Poor Donald Barnett. Despite heavy Warning to coeds: "If you are atllek· aerved as ae Nations." Participants are to be O. Ed· choice in time of war you have to go OffiCIAL DAILY BULLETIN of overseeing the general operation of mund Clubb. a prominent "ChEna hand"; publicity on his refusal to live grades, ed inside a car, attempt to remember ... Oakdale unit with the clothes·conscious city folk every especiafly the license plate number." Di, Iowa schools, not the minute details. Professor Cheng Hsi Leng, State College of the Vietnam War It ill receive! top billing months of or time. .on news fronts. Feb. 15. Need we say more? Dr. James University Calendar Iowa; and Professor James Murray. bead But if they couldn 't agree, I think the Acting on budget requests is one of of the Political Science Department. • • • • • • , appoJnted di TodlY their duties, hirillg or firing profcs· best solution would be Jo hold a Miss An· The truth is finally out. Sheriff Schneid­ Luci Baines has not registered at the last July. A 8 a.m. - American College Test, 114 • "Thlt Challenge of China and the tim./ssile Contest on television. 50rs is not. American Response," another panel dis· er is actually a secret agent commission· University of Texas. Perhaps she is lak· bave receive University Hall. cussion, will follow the principal address , Each city would send its most beauti· ed to find hidden entrances to the Field ing a correspondence study of birds - unit. 1:30 p.m. - Gymnastics. MichiiBD We do not approve of Barnett's re­ ol ful girl to Atlantic City and she would House. trying to decide, no doubt, what to name Former p Stlte. the day. "Soviet Revisionism vs. the fusal to withhold grades; we vehem­ Cultural Revolution ," by Clubb. These actio be judged according to beauty, intelli· • • • the lillie one. If she has twins, her course Iowans inter' 2 p.m_ - Associated Women Students vities will be broadcast beginning at 1: 30 gence end talent. The jury would select Elizabeth Taylor plays a scene nude in in furniture appreciation may come in programs wi Undergraduate Festival : "Women at the ently oppose such an act. We also p.m. 50 girls as Miss Antimissile, and the cities a soon-to-be released picture. Marlon handy .:.. she can cafl them Chip 'n :m persons a Heart of Things," William Debbins. Cor­ they came lrom would be spared. Brando plays opposite her in the role of Daie. nell College, Union Ballroom. vehemently oppose legislative inter­ • After lhe Ball (ga me ) - Wisconsin program whi vs. Iowa at 7:25 p.m. - there will be a Another suggeslion has been to give a homosexual. That's what you call a sad open house ! 7:30 p.m. - Basketball. Wisconsin. ference. N ic Goeres • • • discu:3ion (at about 9:10) of the forthcom· the Nike-X to any city with a professional affair. The difference between a Marxist and lollowing the ing campus Cilm festival. "Refocus," with football team. on the theory that people • • • a conventional anthropolo.gist : a conven . open meelin ~ Robert Wiltshire. chairman of the event. are going to need something to take their The latest misprint 011 Adam Clayton tional anthropologist uses a hammer and onymous at 1I and Don Pasquella. who made the cinema minds off the inconveniences caused by Powell's recent recording: "Keep the chisel and a Marxist anthropoiogist uses Ding. selections. another world war. Baby, Faith." a hammer and sickle. Judge Ray . Moines. origil University Bulletin Board of court cia: Unl",,.lty aunltln lurd noticol mu.t 110 r,colvi. It Tltl Dlny lowln Ifflco, 101 Co",. now followed mUnlCltlon. Clntlr, by noon Of tho ••y bof.r. ,uIlIlCltltn. Tllty "'UI' bo ",.•• n. , "In" Ity .n .dvlltr or officer of tho o,.""lItion bolne ,ubllcll•• • 'ur.ly toel., functlonl municipal juc .ro no ••/lllbll for Ihl ...etlon . • Clergymen speak out on war will speak al TH. "H.D. ""INCH exalllinatlon wUI bo In, alUer •• c.1l )Ira. Ira Harbo" 351-1820. Sedlacek will mven on Wedneaday. March I Irom , to 9 p.m. meeting. lit 321A Schaerr.r Hal/. Candld.te•• hould sl,n STUD.HTI WHD WISH to bavo their class (Th. following Is tho IOcond of tw~ take the initiative in developing effective that injustices are prevented or properly As we face a difficult and dangeroll! UP on lhe BulieUn Board outsIde 305 SI{ prior rank Inlor",.Uon lorwarded to their draft The invoca to thl exam. BrIng 1.0 . card to tb. exam. No board shou ld "pIck up r~quesl forms In B Unl· parts of II stat.m.nt praplrad by II programs for speedy repatriation and hu­ rectified. period in the history ol man. we remem· dIetlonarlel are allowed. verslty Hall Inform.tlon wlll be sent only at lion at the ba the request or the atudent. group of minil.or. who Ira OPPOled t. man treatment of prisoners. with special VI. OUR ONGOING RESPONSIBILITY ber that our task is not to assign blame by the RI. 1 ITUD.NTI •• GISTIIt.D with the Educa· tho WIr, .nd IIr. m.mber. of CII,.,Y attention to nutritional and medical needs. We know that millions of Americans for the past. but to accept responsibility Dingman. chI Uon.1 PI.cement OWce (CL03 Ea.t Hall) .hould TH. IWIMMIN. ..OOL Ln the Women', Ind L.ymen Conc.rned llbout Viet· report chan,. of address and any academle GymnaSium wUl be open Cor recreational Under no circumstances can our nation share the anguish we express and endorse fM the future; not to cast the stone of MI' Deese of D. Information necelllary to brIng their creden· ~wlmmln. Monday throu,h Friday, 4:15 to nlm. Editor.) condone brutal treatment of prisoners on 'the alternatives we propose. If they have demnation , but to offer the helping hand Rev. Robert tIaI. up·to-date for the second semesler. 5:15. Thil " open to women .tudenta, atalf, self­ lactllty and lacuity wives. V, RECOMMENDATIONS FOR the ground that the other side does so. been silent heretofor. we plead with them of reconciliation; not to proceed Trinity Episci ODD JOI. for women .re .vall.ble at tb. FURTHER ACTION to speak up now and pledge them our righteously and vindictively, but to walk City. "inanela! Aids Otrlce. Houfitkeeplnll Job. .... UNION HOUlI, 4. We must immediately support efforts avanable It 11.25 .n hour, and b.by.lttln, Job •• oenor,1 luI/din, - 6 I .m.-Il p.m., Sund.y· There are further steps thaI Ameri· to insure that victims of bombing and ter· support. If they have spoken earlier and humbly and repentently. ' 10 cenb In hour. Thurs!)IY; • ..III.-mldnlJht, Frld.y and Sat· urday. cans can take to indicate our desire to rorism , particularly those who have been lelt no resonance oC public response. we We who are so deeply involved in tbe I CH.ISTIAN .CIINCE Orglnlutlon bold. In'.,,,,atIOll D.lk - T a.m.·11 p.m .• )Ionday· play a creative rather than destructive burned by napalm . are given proper hos. plead with them to speak again. so that immensity of the present war must have 'Weekly lelUmony lIleetln,. .1 5 p.m. every ThuradaYi 7 a.m,·lIIldnl,ht. Friday and Sat­ role in the future oC Vietnam. together we can create the new ground· ~he courage to initiate the steps that win ThuridlY In Danforth Chapel. AU Interested urd.y; • I .m.-ll p.m. Sunday. pltalization wherever adequate facilities Mece swell of pubUc outcry that will force a lead to peace. If we do not take those atudenta and fI.culty ...e welcome to attend. .K"ltlon A'.I - • 1m•• 11 p.m .. Mond.y· 1. Our Congressmen will shortly begin are available, including the United States. Thursday; 8 a.m .•mldnl,ht . Friday .nd Satur· debate on an appropriations bill. Their We welcome the formation of the Com· reappraisal and a new direction. steps. we firmly believe that God will .DUCATION ...SVC'HOi:OOV Libr.r)' Houri: d.y; 2 p.m.·l1 p.m. Bunday. We reaffirm our own responsibility to judge us harshly. and will bold us ac­ )(ondly·Thurad.y, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Friday CI,.,.,la - 7 '.m.·' p.m. response to that bill will say much abOut mittee of Responsibility tbat is working to and Saturday. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday, I p.m. .... " ••thO, ._ - 7 a.lII. to IO:tli p.m .. this end and urge governmental support urge that new direction. We pledge to countable for the horror we continue to Long to 10 p.m. Mond.y·Thursday; 7 • .m.-1I :45 p.m. FrIday; our true intentions in Vietnam. We urie 7:,0 a.m.·lI:4I p.m .• StturdlY; I p.m.l0:tli p.m. lhat additional time be allocated for a lor its efforts. lay this burning concern upon the con­ unleash. But if we do turn about. if w! I MAIN LIlIIAItV HOUIIS: Mond.y-Frlday. 7:311 Sumlay. careful estimate of the costs o[ the war sciences of our religious bodies, through seek to undo whatever measure we CIII By FF • . m.·2 • .m .; Saturday. 7:30 a.m.-mldnlcht; Sun· .11,. ~_ - 11:30 a.m. to 1:311 p.m. aDd Those with special skills in such fields day. I :30 p.m.·' a.m. 5:30 p.m. to ':30 p.m. Monday throulh Satur· by a number of congressional committees. as education. land reform. housing, nutrl· our local congrcllations. our denomina­ of the wrong that has been done. tbest Stai Service desk hours: Monday·Thursday, • day; 11:10 a.m, to 7:30 p.m. Sunday. tional agencies, our councils of churches, we al a firmly believe that as we wa~ Shamrocks, ' .m.·IO p.m.; Friday, Saturday. 8 •. m.·5 p.m. such as the Joint Economic Committee. lion, medicine and job training can be llo.lrve deak also open Friday a.nd Saturday. ITUD • .,T 'U.LICATIOtlfl, INC •• nomlnaUon the Ways and Means Committee, the Ed· prepared to help in Vietnam during the and our involvement in civic groups, so lhat long and hard and often discouragiJli illg students l 7·10 p.m. peUtlonl for atudent truateel lIIuat be flied that increasing pressure can be brought road , God himself will be with us, to auide hUnters will a before 5 p.lII:.r. TueldaY.t.Feb. 28{ 1967. In the ucation and Labor Committee, the Judici­ long and invol\led period of negotiations. IMMaDIATI lIGIST.ATION at the Buli­ Dally Iowan lIualn... urflce 20 Communlca· ary Committee and the Foreign Affairs The resources of various Catholic, Protest­ to bear, through the pulpit, the public lor· and chasten and sustain us and that he • n ... IIId Induatrl.1 Placement Office, 102 Old will deign to use even us in restoring lOme . val of MECCA tIonl Center. Coplea of petilionl, and full In· Committee. in addition to the Appropria· ant and Jewish relief agencies can be urn, the mass media, and the ballot box, Dental Building, ror senlotl and graduate atu­ ' formation on requlrementt are avanable In pOl'tion of the divine creation we have 10 This annual dent. (with the exceplion of engineer.) Is ad· the 1kIIIn... Oillee. ions Committee and the Armed Services coordinated for these and other ventures, upon those in public liCe who make our vised for .11 who will be looking for jobs In :ommittee. to determine what costs are policy decisions. grkviously misused. lege of Engine, bualnelll, lndu.tryd or lovernment durllll the TH. II~'CIAL "H.D•••• MAN l.amlnaUon and we urge foundations to support ex· lrish'spirited comln, year. Stu enta lOin, Into ~ervlce 1m· '1'1/1 bl ,Ivln on Thuraday. F,b. III from 1:30- nececsary (1) to maintain the current lev· tended opportunities for service in these lIIedlately Ifter rradu.tlon will lind re,latra' 4:30 P.III. In 315 Schaeffer Hall. Tnill eXIm I. bas acquired tlon nOw eapeclJllly valuable aller leavlri, the lor tho.. "'enta wbe Itave Blade prior ar· el of military operations. (2) to finance areas. well 8S its ev aenlce. ran,emenb to praparo the work prIvately. new stages of build·up and escalation, and .rID, boo'" .nd article. and 10 cards to thl We are eager that many of our citizens history. ..AlINTS COO .... ATIV. a a b , II I tin I o.tIII. All tbose atudeato ,.1\0 plan to talle the (3) to provide the type of military and pledlle themselves to acts of mercy and Lucue: For memberahlp InformaUon, call exam must re,later prior to Feb. II. 103 Audience criticized The Irish flS1 civilian security that would be needed rebuilding and reconciliation . These are ...... Loui. Hoffman, "7~48. )(emben dealr. Schaerler Hall. during a period of prolonged negotiaUon. To The Editor: ful is rightfully famous Is derived, Mr . lion is deri ved a particular American responsibility be­ It is too bad John Shebek had to public­ Shcbek, from bluc-grass music and fJ'Ol1l the patron of t~ In this way, members of thc Congress can cause of the deep measure of American choose the type and degree of military op· ly display his lack of concert·going ex­ lhe Negro blues. It did not come by way fession and tra involvement in acts of injury and destruc­ perience (not to mention the gaps in his of Britain. In fact, it owes much to Amer' 1edged as the eration they wish to support. tion. Such acts will have enduring mean· 111~ 'Daily Iowan 2. We ask the Congress to re-examine musical knowledge ) in Tuesday's Dally lean folk music. the kind Jack Elliot! St. Patrick's inll only when our nation has pledged lowan. vainly tried to get across to his Iowa first held in 1! the international agreements to which the itself to seek negotiated flC8ce in more 11a. Daav lowoll II Wf'Ut.,. lind .Ju.d by .,ud,nU lind /I gOtHmllld hy • hlJllld of flu Uniled States is pledged. To an unprece· Agreed, Saturday night's Lovin' Spoon­ audiences Saturday night. runner of ME( courageous terms than have yet been un· event consisted ...... , ,"",H' a.d«l by tIa. IIwt.nt budy lind Iru6UM /lppoiIIIMI by ,,IN preNk"'"' lented degree, today's world order and ful concert left much to be desired. But At the 7 p.m. concert, the audience ,our dertaken. Otherwise we will appear to be Plrade of nove l at ,,,. Unlwr-"y. '1'1 .. Vuily lowo,.', ~/tJJ polWy II noC /III npr-wn of U,IitletI1l~ hilman life itself depend upon the exer· the group's "fumbling and stumbling (composed in large part of supposedlY using small gestures of creativity to ex­ from each clas. Gdmlmm.1on ~'fJ or QPlnicn, In tJfI!I ,.,WtII4r. cise of constraint In the conduct of for­ c:use massive acts of ongoing destruction. around on stage," Mr. Shebek. Is a netes­ open-mind ed college students) jeered Jack eign affairs. The origin and conduct of sary part of any concert featuring elec· Elliott off the stage befol'e he ever ,ot of engineering Publlalttcl------.------~------by Slude.nl Publlc,tlonl Inc. • Com· "ullll.htr . .. " .. "" .• " .. "...... ,. • ....tt . the war in Vietnam must be examined other projects should be initiated even tronic equipment - especially the huge started. No wondl!r he sounded miserable itow in the ev munlcatlons Center. Iowa City, ~ow • • dally "Iter . . " " " " " . " " " Nk ",,.1 as neJoUations proceed, and we urge that except Sunday and Monday. and lega! holidays. Mln"n, ..... "" ...... a.,l ••~ in this light. Particular attention must be speakers and amplifiers the Spoonful (and he did ). We wcre nauseated by lhi! 'Mecei Entered al lecond-clalS matter at tbe poat Cltr IIltlr ...... DouI HlrKIl focused on the destruction of civilian life further suggestions be sent to, Clergy and brought alonll. unbelieveable rudeness. Tn 1913 an el offlco .t 10,.. CIty under the Act of Con,"" MOWS'''''' "" """""""" .... -" .. hllcll Laymen Concerned About Vietnam. 475 engineering stu of )(arch 2, 1171. I,orh! ...... ". ~IIII M.rtI and property, the use of gas and other Certainly the Spoonful ad·Ubbed between We can understand that moat people =~llIIor ...... Da". Mat,.,IIt. chemicais, and the treatment of prisoners Riverside Drive, New York. New York were "set" to hear good rock 'n' roD. bill quet were add, ,.,,,,, ...... Mlrtln LftlNfl 10021. for appropriate implementation. numbers. Informality is the heart of the ..,.,.,... .,tell By carrier In Iowa City. '.Itor al ..... U/tor ., .... D.",. "o/l.n of war. Our country must pled,e Itself group. Perhaps. Mr. Shebek. you would common tastl! demands giving a perfOrlll' ties. The name $10 per yeu In ativance; ,Ix montha t3.5Q; three Au• • Newl ....., ...... Cllarl .. Wannl",I' anew to conform policy and practice in leD for the I _t118 p . ,..1 mall lubacrlptlons. flO. per A.... CIt'('''''' ...... 1 .. ••" L... ",ecktr In all such ventures. however. there is have had John Sebastian announce. "You CI' sorne attention ....even if you never '111'; III month, t3.eo; tbr.. montba, p ... A...... I...., """"" .If! 11111 Vietnam to international law. 85 embodied a danller to wbich Americans must be have just heard our rendition of 'Summer have hea rd his name or his music. It'. each letter of C.,t_llt . " . " ...... '" T"" Mllkl",.n • lenling one of Mowsr_ Alit• ...... 1111110 khr... r in the several agreements of Geneva and particularly sensitive. We must not leek in the City.' We would now like to play no wonder the Spoon ful never came back DI., W-4", (rom noon to mldnlllht to report , menls in the co ANt...... ,."'" ...... Da.,. Luck the Hague. the Nuremberg judgments, the to export the American way of life or im· 'Blues in the Bottie.'·. for Mr. Shebek's desired encom - ,!Itt IIOWI Item. IUd IUnouncementa to The DailY ••/10,1., AlvllO' ...... '.",unll M. Midura Io.. charter of the United Nations, and other pose an alien culture on the Vietnamese. baving played for a bunch of five-Yell­ - mechanical, an.. EdItorial ofllc.a are In th. CommllJli. A.,.rtl", Dlroctw ...... ley Dunll'llON And the "wandering guitar player" Mr. eetlonl Center. CI,"!f1ed ~.,.rtllllli Man ...r .. J .. COIIWlII luch documents. The abandonment of con­ By inaiatinll that our belp be channeled olds. chemical and Clrcul't.... .!. I. Lyon Itraint leads our country and the world through international agencies. we can Shebek refers to. the "poor Imitation of a The outrageous display of poor \alte lineering. The A...,."I..... ='If ...... ,...... ","110, •• rl Tile "-'lflii ..,... fa mtltl.,. Ilicluat.,.ly to folksinger," was Ramblin' Jack Elliott, a Plrtment has sh tile _ lor republlc.Uon of all local n.w. A,""",", AftllOf' ...... • •• Ie"" 1(1tt",," down the path of brutalization and des· claru·y our desire to serve only as others Saturday night made thJe University .po printed la thli new.paper u well •• all AP tructi.OD. choose to USe us and not as we dictate. giant of today's folk music. who i. usual­ pear as if it Is full of hicks. We III ' by the Departll' _ ud dlapatchel. T'...... INN ., """'IClt,..... IIICif ly classed with Phil Ochs. Tim Hardin and D.Yk1 HlclallaD...... ltv...... ,.... ,Jobn_• .\o(.\..al We must convey by word and even more aBhamlid. Engineering. RoHbrook, L!i ltawart Tru.... n. A3.; ,Jon van· 3. Our religious bodies muat alsume a by deed. our desire to let the Vietnamese the young Bob Dylan (did you ever hear lor,y G. B.rnlOn, A3 The MEC CA Dial W-4", If you do Dot reeelv. your III DlI_ldarp. to; Dal. )(. Benta UntVarllty LI· of Bob Dylan. Mr. Shebek, before he lIy 7:3e a.m. Evory oflort wt11 be IIIlde to brary; Ie••. lIre8uIer. SChool of Journallllll; particular respoJlslblUty for prisoner. of be the arbiters of their own deltiny and co,.I"lIIo Planted by the 1 ~ the error With the aoxt Jasue. Dl Itf· WlIIlam )(. Murray. O.partmt.nt of ZII.lIlh,' war in both the north and BOuth. We can insist only on luch International controls electrified his guitar and lI1'ew long hair?) Paul J. DI.I..... A4 ftco bour. are • a.m. to I p.m. Monday tiu'oulh and Orville It. Hltcilcd, Department 0 l'rlday IIId • • to I LBI. Sttunlay. Speech and Or_.U«: ArIa. upon International religious agencieS to al will temporarily be needed to insure The music for which the Lovin' Spoon· C12S Hllle, ..t ---~- I. C. Iy------Johnny Hort Ilml BAILlY Iy Mort Walker , Data F

I/-IER:E:S THe ~/." ' WI LAt-lPSD AT Olf COUIIR, T~T MutT x DON'T· ((NOW WioIICH ., To Exp WHAfTt4E: HECI( /&0 I'r DOIN& IF THeY 66f MA~RleD DAWN, NOV: 3, I~ •• eHM I.ld ANCIINT HI'TtlRY ~AR&' ""'JO'tW MORl'­ n.l1 "~A"'" WAf 'TO~. IT AU. f.W>PaNIO PLlTTIN" OO'WN TIll .;IH I OIJr 'IN ~E: DAYTIMe WEt!.. NevEIe 6er A workshlp 0 r MY OWNOue~Y NIIOIPa ')tII.I W'UI ~ OIl fIOUT11Nio DOWN SLEePj' / Programs in Da QUliT-- loT. Fun !econdary and 1 IIid Colleges" w leb. "'·28 at Ihl Sponsored by t. ~r lor Educatior lin" a division 0 I ','Or Educationai 'AEnS ), the we o anyone in terE tructJonal progfl ~ :tiling. ,.. "------:------" / \ AEDS was lou ~ ___ .... _..;._.:...... ~_~-;a..... -- hat the educa • I IiUld exchange J~ • I I ~ , . he impact of m( THI DAILY IOWAN-I ... CIty, I• .-w., ~ 1', 1"'-P... J Arions Face Service Frat Sells Music Center l 1st Drill Meet • To Be IStar Candy For Chanty ..."Z: =":'"';:"':''';~~ WHBF·TV (Channel 4), Rock Is· ISL SEMINAR Firat DJatrict representative, will Of Year Joday SI. Valentine has come and nut, chocolate chiffon and I fruit land, m.. at 9 p.m. Tuesday by The first "Capitalism, Struggle speak on "Two-Party Govern. gone this year, but dispensers of candy went on sale this week .t mUliicianl from the Center for and Revolution" seminar spon· ment in Iowa: Can the Democra­ The University of Iowa's Order candy are ltill with us. The Al· $1 a box. New Music. Videotaped at the lOre

At the Daily Iowan Office ~:"Northwe.tern' ~.Ol i7;.:..~nrl2 Mlchlgon 2 J lf WIsconSin 3 4 Mlnnesot. 2. Sponsored by the 201 - Communications Center western winner in home starts against Wisconsin (3-4) and last· : place Minnesota (2-6), respective. Phone 337-419.1 Iy. Two matinees round out today's five·game confe~nce program. They are Ohio Slate (3-5) at Michigan (2-5) and a regional TV game taking Purdue (3-4 . t, Illinois (3-4l. An outside Midwest attractioD is the Chicago Stadium double· Where does header Saturday night, pitting flllTHEAI Bradley against revived Noire Dame and Wichita State against . , Chicago Loyola. ; an engineer intern? The 14-game Big 10 season's only Indiana-Northwestern meet· ing finds the Hoosiers weakened considerably by lhe iujury losa of the eefore you decide on the job that's to start you on your professional of thei r third highest scorer, Erv lnniger. He was for the career, it's lood to Ask a few point blank questions ••• like, season with a fractured \eft wrist suffered in Monday night'S Indiana loss at Michigan State, • Will this job let me rub shoulders with 86·77. engineers doing things that haven't been Said Hoosier coach Lou Wat· done before, in all phases of engineering? son: "IMiger was our belt out· , 'College of . side sbooter and his speed pft • Will I be working for an engineering us a good fast break with Vem oriented management whose only standard Payne and Butch Joyner, We is excellence? can still run without him, bIIt not as well." • Will I have access to experts in fields Northwestern not only hal the other than my own to help me solve problems important home court IdvlD' and stimulate profession.i growth? tage, but also confronts lndiana with the league's beat scoring • Will I be working with the widest range of , average, 92.9 Cor seven gal)\eI against the Hooisers' 81.8 malt. USIO profesSional competence and technological " . 9RUARY 2~ an(j 22 facilitils in the U. S.? • Are tngineering careers with this company Arbitrator Assail. stable ••• or do they depend upon ,proposals Tracie Flare-Up and INIrket fluctuations? NEW YORK (It - ArbJtrattr F~ CAPITOl BUlbDING Why not Isk this. questions .bout Bendix Kansas Citv when Mr, R. t Theodore Kheel slapped the wrlltI Cox visits the of both the AA U and uS'll'F Friday and asked them fer , "two IIltle pieces of . papet" " · OLD d H0WSE CHAMBERS smooth out the latest Univtrsity of Iowa campul n..... in the nation's track aDd field SENATE an .' . February 2., 1967 war . There was no indicaUQII tbIt • A/ill Be Held At I.M.U. New Ballroom either side would yield - tat Or you write Mr. Cox aft immediately, anyhow, So Ibe Luncheons vV PH S Ciaht goes on, TICKEl'S AVAILABLE AT ILLIP HALL ' lox 3Q3.MR, KonlGl City, Mo. ~ 131 FEB..--21st FEB. 22nd Speaker: ..111£ CONTUCTD. FDa THE Ale Bendix.. Kensas City, primJ eon­ Speaker: tractor of the Atomic: Enlray Commission and Iqual opportunity tmplOYlr, prodUCII Ind procures Ileclric.1 and mech.nic.1 DR. ARVID V. ZUBER non-nuclear components and ",emblie. for bombs, millii. ROBERT H. LAKAMP from NEISLER LABORATORIES Only $100 .wn-N...... _rhtadI and tXplrim.ntal WIlpon devices. ,I, In stock now. 'rom J. C. PENNY CO. or UNION CARBIDE c...... , ...11,. 1 Speech: Speech: BENDIX KANSAS CITY / [xcIl/lnel tbl w,Drld dlplnds 01 VOLKSWAOIN 0) CONSUMER PROTECTION THE CORPORATE ENVIRONMENT IOWA CITY INC. • , 'hone 337·2115 _00". ST~1I11'\1\ 'e" H"hw'Y , -- THI DAILY 10WAN-I.. a city••• .-Iet. , '011. 11, lH7-P... , ...... 4COUPONI ••••••••••••••• ~ At T S k M d IFormer Student Working : THIS COUPON WORTH $1 .00 : --,,::: : AT LASSIE'S RED IARN : h~:' -cm($'~I~ : on the purchas. of : c UF~ry ~ peeaf M dO~ ay lAs Volunteer In Tunisia NOWI MUST END WEDNESDAY ed : HENNY PENNY : On Inanclng e Icare A former University student, entation from Tunisian child care . Sue E . Rogcrs, has been as!lgned instructors and did practice UANTHONY QUINN IS IRiWANT!" : GOLDEN FRIED CHICKEN : "Problems In Financing and Federal Judiciary. Myers has to work in Tunisia u a Peace teach in, ill the Boston area. - 80sl.y C/ow/hlt. N.Y. Times • Coupon Good On Pollowlng It"", OnI' y • Cost Estimatcs for Medicare" been Involved in missions of Corps volUllteer. • Between 7 p.m •• 11 p.m. • will be the topIc of a graduate technical assistance to social ~ I Working with 30 other .olun­ Miu Rocera arrived in TunJ· : BARN No.1 - , PCS ...... REG. PRICE $2.3. • leclure to be given at the Uni· ANTHONY QUINN curity and pe~sion prog.rams In teers, Miss Rog. .ia Wedneaday. joinine fellow • BARN No.2 - 12 PCS • ...... REG. PRICE $2." : versity Monday by the chiel numerous foreign countries. ers will work : BARN No.3 - 18 PCS ...... REG. PRICE $4,2, • actuary for the Social Security corpamen at work in archltec· AlAN BATES' IRENE PAPAS • (OFFER EXPIRES FE.B. 26, : A recipic:lt of the Distinguished with Tun I s I a Administration In Washington, Service Award from the Depart. child care pro­ ture, educatJon, health, rural pub­ M'OiAaCACC1T'ANNIS~1ON • N.m...... • D.C. ment of Health, Education, a~d grams, teaching lic works. teachine Enel\ah .. I Robert J. Meyers, who receiv· :• Addr...... :• Welfare, and the Care.er Servlc~ in ki'1derga rten foreilll langwJl,e and rural Head -zc 11M1MI ClIIIIK- ed his M.S. degree In actuarial Award from the National Civil and helping to • "THE HOME OF 10 MIN. SERVICE" • mathematics at the University Start programs. Service League, Myers is also train Tunisian - CO"'ATUII- in 1934 and his LL.D. degree at the author of a book tilled "So· women to work : LASSIE'S RED BARN : Muhlenberg College in 1964, will COM,.UTER SPIICH SIT- : 713 RIVERSIDE DRIVE : cial In8urance and Allied Gov· in child care ( Stephen Hecletniemi of the Unl· speak in the Senate Chamber of ernment Programs." centers. , '" : CALL - 338.7533 • Old Capitol starting at 4:30 p.m . versity of Michiean will lpeak at ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• The lecture is open to al1 inter· MYers has been instrumental in The new vol· .'. • I computer science seminar It ested persons. the expansion and continuation of unteers recently ROG I ItS . 4 p.m. Tuesday 301 Physic. Re­ Myers has held actuarial posl· a scholarship program for ac- completed 14 weeks ~f trainln. &earth Center. Title of Redetnl­ Shop At Iowa City FIRST lions with the Social Security Ad· tuarlal students at the University. at Wheelock College ID Boston, emi's talk will be: "Homomor­ ministration since 1934 and has The program is financed by var· w~ere they stu~i.ed Tunisian Ar.· phisms of Graphs." Interested been chief actuary since I1M7. ]n ioul companies. consulLing actu· blc and TunISian hist?ry In~ faculty and studenta are invited addition to serving as actuarial aries and other Individuals. culture. They allO received orl- to aUend. conSUltant to various Congres­ NOW sional committees and to the I Daily I~wan Want Ads I DELIVERING U of I Nurse Is Awarded ~iiii~~::~HO~U~SE~S~FO~I~R~I;Nf;:~r=~AP~"~O~V~E~D~I~OO~~~~~~11~OO~~~PO~I~I~en~~~:1AP~AU~M~I~Nn PO. RINT Advertising Rates NEW I BEDROOM unfw-nIJbed du- SPACIOUS SINGLE or double. Kltcb· IIALl!: TO SHARE Lokelld. unfur- OUR OWN plex carpeted, drape', n ove. t'e­ en prlvlle'~!1 walldn, _ dl.tanee nllbed. apt. S51·IW. 2·18 .,...... D.,. Ilc • Word lrlleritor. air condttloned!... beat and PIZZA SPECIAL RECIPE waler furnished. »8-7... aner .. ioU fro... c.... pu... ale . OW ~. 3-S APPJlOV1!:D apartment for lIlale Itu. Scholarship II. Dayo ...... Itc • Word 2 BEDROOM unfurnl,bed, no petll deeLt. Pilon. 338-5837 alter.. s-s Ten Dayl ...... 2k • Word or children. Av.lIable now. Newly GIIlL WANTED to &hare efficiency ORDERS FROM 2 to 40 Laura Reilly, N2, Ames, has decoraled. ,1211 month. 131-7MO .partmenl. C10M tn. Phon. 331- aner 5. 3-, been named the recipient of one On. Montto 44c • Word ":It. Un CHICKEN WANTED TO .uble... ror aummer, PIECES· DINNERS TOO of two scholarships to students Minimum Ad 10 Word, PETS Z bedroom lurnIJhed .p.rlmem in nursing being granted In Iowa CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS with Iwlmmln, POOl. Call S51~1ae . I·U by the Allstate Foundation of ~OUCED PRICES on Pekin,eM and IIALE ROOMIIAT1!: tor tar,e. nJ~!J TWO BEDROOM turnl.hed aparl- 7 DELICIOUS 0... I"Mrtlon • Month $1.35' ment - nWllber 8. 502 5th Strut. Kansas City. Mo. terrIer pup pi... Dial 337-f584. ioU doubl. room. Phone. linen.. ~ 1111,0 InMrtlon•• Month . . $1.1S· E. Davenport. ~23. 107 Coralville. ,HO and up. No cblJdren o SANDWICHES VARIETIES The scholarships, providing full WANTED or petll. 3J8.,H05. 8-JO NICE ROOMS - lDen. Non ....ok ..... tuition for three years, are Tett InMrtlono • Month $1 .0S· TYPING SIRVICI NEW MODERN .pt. 3 block. from ..,.AST CASH" here. on aulllmoblie. CeI1 ••..aSl.. Un c.... pua. !:ver), convenience. 338- DELIVERIES MADE IN HYDRO THERM OVEN awarded with the cooperation of • R.tta for Euh Column Inch ELECTRIC. Experlencad Mcntllf1 radlol, IUrnlture, motor bike,!. 011 I MALB STUDENT to aIIltt a bed· 4116. 2·16 J anythln, YOU have to MU. 'J'own room .nd "ud),. Un * * the Iowa League for Nursing and Thesel el.e. J38.5ftl d.YI, 331·117b Crelt MobUe. and Sales Co. 2312 .,,·,.71. WANT1!:D - femal., ,raduat~ .lud,mt. MINIMUM - $1.25 the National League for NurSing. evenln,s. 1·2OAA IIUlCatlne Ave. Phone 331,(711. 1-2 UN - '>i doubte" with kitehen. to .hare apt. C10.. In. 351.lf~i Phone 337-4191 CIOM 1.0. Pbone 337.5728 . tlll a Visits Selection of scholarship winners MARY V. BURNS: typln" 1Il1m ... "UNIVERSITY employe need. to buy ,raphln,; Notary Public. (15 Iowa ,DOd 53 to 51 model car on pay­ ROOMS approved for student ,lrl.. LARGE VNFURNlBHED I bedroom in Iowa is made by the Careers I"MrtIon 4.. dllnt neon on d.y Slale Bank Bulld.n,. a37·2IH. a·IAR aenu. Donald Butler R.R. I. RIver­ .04 Brown 5t. 317·2958. 1021 .panment. Car reI. d, electrlo Committee of the' Iowa League ~..acII". publlc.tlon. JERRY NYALL Typln, ..rvlee . !ide. Iowa or clo Pbytlcal pt.. llt. I SINGLE roolll.. lIale. Clott In. ron,• • nfrlcerator. Couple or J'l'ad· Electric IBM. mlmeo,raphllll, typo UOOCI aecurlty." 1-11 uate atud.ntll_prefelTelt Rent paid THE for Nursing from candidates sub· C.ncell...... mUlt be rocelved In, Crom tape recordln,l. »8-1330. 337·2573. 1028 unW liar. I. I3H1t4. Ifn mitted by schools and colleges of 3-1AR FIRST FLOOR room, prlvat. tn· SUBLEASE FOR iummn 4 room Ity """ lIoN,. publlcotlon. trance, kitchen privilege.. ~lt N. nursing in the state. LEGAL SECRETARY, electric. per- AUTOS, CYCLES PO. SALI clo.. In. una.l'.proved apt. for 3 Governor. loll ,Irl• . Call S5:~12. 2·2t The grants are made Cor study lonaUzed Jjf:["vtce, your convenl­ ellce. WUl complete all job. even In,.. DOUBLE ROOMS ror 1CC0nd Mme. AVAILABLE March 1, lurnlJhed J RED RAM • and weekends. thete' rererencel, SA VI: MONEY on ear lnaur.nce ter ,'r'., .ummer .nd f.lI. Clo.e io league.accredlted schools. room apartment lor slll,'. perllOn or wIth Farmers Insurance OrOlip and In. )37·711,. 2·2t Pre~ent/ltion of the scholarship Mrs. Weyer. Afler e p.m. a51-l~5\R Ben See 351-3710. 1-1t married couple. Hlde-a·bed In IIv· Phon. CHILD CARE JlOOMS WITHIN l'>i blocll. froon In, room. 8 ~Iockl north 01 campu •. Opt" to Miss Reilly was made at the 1963 RED CHEVROLET Convertlbl. camp ... for men over 21. Cooklnc, $9~. 337-33U. 3-8 lU LEE STIMSON. Experienced.. accur- - new top, full power, clean In· 11 a.m. D.lly College of NUrsing Thursday by INFANT TO 3 years. My home. Ex· ate. IBM electric. 337·94Z1. 3·\ linen. lurnl. • hed. Maid eervlce weell­ 3 ROOII APARTMENT. Near campus. 337-2106 perlcnced. references. 338-4585. :t-21 side and outliCe. Low. low mileage. Iy. 337·4387 artlr D. Anytlma lat or l.wI Av •• Ron McDowell of Iowa City, a HOME TYPING ot .ny type. Experi­ Write 141\ lAke Ide or call 838-0tlS. Sunday. %·)8 UnfUrnllhed or pertly Curnlwhed. Deliv.rl.. 5 p,m. Sund.y t YEAIIS OR older my home - enced typiSt. Phone 33a.3873. 1-11 Un PhOne 337·43.2. :t-21 representative of the foundation. fIIU LARGE SINGLE room - new home, - 5 p.m •• 1 a.m. - or part Ume. Call 338'1660. 3·3 ALICE SHANK - IBM electric. Ex· II1fi6 SIMCA, Chry.ter p('Oduct. ~~/OOO THE CORONET - WESTSIDE - Lux· The valedictorian of her high mile over ZI, private bath. en· ury 2 bedroom, 2 lull baths, 1 bed· WILL BABY SIT, my home. Experl· perlenced and accurat.. 331·2518. len on warr.nty. la-2e88 weF. tr.nce. 338-4"2. 2-21 school class, Miss Reilly is treas. enced. 15% JUverolde Park. 2·28 So7AR Branch .Cler 6 p.m. 2· ... room and efficiency suite •. From Wol , SINGLE MALE ....duale prelelTed. Choice location.. t~ Crc. t St. Ind urer of McBroom House in Burge BETTY THOMPSON - electric. th. 11164 WHITE HONDA 60 '123. S20R Walkln, dllunce. Second aeme .. JtIOII Broadw.y. Rwy. • Bypa.. E. ses and 101111 papers. Experienced. HallIcraJlers AM and SW raeelver. Ier rate. »7-5340 alter 5, 3-15 Call 3sa. '1OS8. Un NOW Hall Last year, she was a rec­ LOST AND FOUND 338-5650. 1I-7AR f25. Phone 838-7"1. 2-24 reational volunteer at the Hospi­ BINGLE AND DOUBLE. Clean All nBRUAAY rent rree - luxury 1 OPAL BURKHART - Experienced. 111&3 CHEVROLET, Illpal' Spor!, IU, home prlvUece .. Male. 35J.l66i 804 bedrOom apartment. Stove, rcCr1J:· SHOWING ' tal School for Severely Handi. LOST - Woman', ,llIse.. lortol.e accurate, Calt. aU type. ot typing. ver blue. 327-300 4 lpeed. nuret erltor dIJlIOaal, dr.pe•• w.ler. beal. i 0 IInka,e. posllraetlon, vlbralOulldlc Davenport. ' .I! i 6'J shelI [rame In tan leather case. 338·5723. 8-7RC ('hl car~tJ .Ir conditioner. Edon Apt. capped Children. She has worked nw~~ ~U lIa,el. One owner. 3~J.l297. 2·25 NICE SINGLE room. Men over II. TYPING./. EDITING 9 to 5 weekdays. Cooking prlvlle,e.. 387·2203. 3-2 Dial :.o1.:sH3 or 337·7&68 aCter 5. 3·8 SHOWS AT 1:30 • 3:00 • 5:00 • 7:05 • 9:1 0 part time last year and this year Mr •. lJon Rln,. ~15 . a·1AR 19st CHEVROLET. door ledan ~95 . in the Burge Hal1 dining service 1959 Buick convertible "25. Phone ROOM FOR GIRLS o.r student CoiJ. TERM PAPERS, book report!! theses, 338-5486 or 338-6956 ."er , p.m. 2·22 pie In racull~ home with rood and to pay part of her college ex· RIDES dittos. etc. Experienced. "all 338- 4858. HAil. 11163 CHEVROLET, 4 dr. hardtop. work arranl1ement pollible. 351-3i~j penses. Imp~1 automatic, power. air con· TO IOWA CITY Crom Cedar RapIds ELECTRIC typing - .U typel. Ac- dltloned. 337·3717. 1-211 MEN - Unlver Ity approved hou. . - morning c1 ..se.. M. Wand F. curate. Fast. 351,(107. 2.22 In;. Completely furnished, carpel­ VICE SQUAD RAIDS ~ Call 3611-5759. 2·21 l'lIS FORO VB. Besl orrer. IlIe7 II· ELECTRIC typewriter - theses and COllte Included. 351-3201. %·28 ed ., paid uUllties. Llncns laundered University Choir lerm p.pers. 351·1'". 3-10R.C. weekly, TV· n.ck room. 1112 Musu· STUDENTS' PILL PARTY '6$ MUSTANG 200", t , 3 .peed aulD" tine Av • . &fter 5 or weekends. 333- tonight, Iowa LOS ANGELES MOBILE HOMES IBM ElectriC typIng any lentth, 331-6527. Faltl.. 2·2:< 1317. '·IIAR -Ol'o ...k ' -Sev..... n teen.'.... carbon ribbon uted. Phon. 138- are expect. en lnto ¥ioe Sets 1st Concert 3765. S·lI FOR SALE - 11164 T'1Ilrd. Power. the league , The 70. member University SAVE MONEY on mobile bome In· CALL 338·76.2 evenings and week· tilt leala, automatic speed con· IIItanCe wllb Farmer. Insurance trol, Good rubber, ucellent .hape APARTMENT FOR RINT Indiana.North. I Choir will give its first tour con· Group and Ben See 351-3710. 2-19 ends for experienced electric typo nl50. CaU Dave at S$S·5181 arter Now Available In. service. W.nt papers Of any • p.m. 3-6 cert at Culver-Stockton College. 1863 TOWNIiOUSE by Rollohome len glh . 10 pages Or Ie .. In by 7 p.m. DOWNTOWN ernclency clean, In· Girl Dies From C t Mo Su day followed by IO'xS6' 2 or 3 bedroom. Central compleled same evening. 8-14 '86 MALIBU 6 cylinder - blue. r.· expensive. Furnished. ~5L.(3U2 eve· Furnished ndings an on, ., n heaUnr. air condltlonlnl. Mrs. Ba. diD. heater, power Iteerln,. 337· nln,.. concerts Tuesday at LeMoyne den. 351-1720 or North LIberty 5~fi TYPING SERVICE - exrerlenced. 5131. 2·18 W L Eleclrlc typewrlt.r. Cal 3~4. WANTED - male Lo share furnllhed J , LSD Overdose at College, Memphis, Tenn., and ...rdu. 8-15 Completely 'PI. Lantern Park. 35t-4984 alt., 5 or IIlInol. J , R t C 11 g Holly Sprl'ngs 19$9 - 10'x40' Travclo, air condl· p.m. 3·24 Ohio It.t. 3 S Sorority Party us 0 e e, • tioDed. June occupancy. Carpeted. EXPERIENCED typist. T.rm JI.per..... Mlchl"n 2 S Miss. can 338-3010 evenings. 3·2AR thues and dissertation.. 1183·27~ Sensible FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for Unfurnished 2 , No loll. !IoIB 2 room apt. Clo • In. Cookln,. .,8 Mlnn ••ot. Conducted by Daniel Moe, as- letS RlCHARDSON _ excellont con. ELECTRIC typewriter - ehort PI' Ulilltles patd. 351·1197. 2·22 . te f f music the dlUon . Address 15C - Meadow 1, 2, 3 I.droom ApI •• in home starta socia pro essor 0 , Brook Court. Come out evening•. 3.2 perl .nd lhele.. 01.1 337.77l~'8AJt TOYOTA WHY NOT SUBLET? 6 mo. IClle. (3-4) and last· : choir will present works by 1__ IO'x57' Valiant. Excellent con. No Feb. rent. Edon .pt. 351 ... 257 or MILLY KINLEY - Typinc eervlee. Corona for '67 SS7·7eet. 2·24 2 & 3 .edroom Townhou.e (2-6). respective. Schuetz, Bruckner, Milhaud and dltlon. Extras. Furniture Included. 1.B.M. 337·4378. 3-IIAR NEW TWO bedroom rurnlshed aparl- H.at and Water C_.o;.Pl.aiiiin.d'_ii.i_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l JohnSOn MobUe Home Park. Lot 2?i3 ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER. Thetet mcnt. Free I.undry. Married cou· .nd short papers. Dial 337.3843. pie. Or up- to 4 .In,le person •. Park ~. A BRAND NEW 2 b"dr~l de: a·18AR Yair Inc. 338-9201 or 337·9160. 3·14 Furnish.d ~. ,500 down and 157 monthly UNION BOARD PRESENTS: or your own {Jnanelng. Used IO'x50' WANTED FEMALE 21 to share new for ,240f)' Used 2 bedroom 8' wide. rurnlshed apl. Call 351-4807. U Many, MallY Fin e Feature, The Weekend Moole Clean. $1300. Prices Include Iqtup WHO DOES In p.m. 2·22 and dellvery. Shelor MoblJe Homes, % ROOM Curnlabed Iparllnen!. Clean Colchester. ·UUnols. Contact lor Iowa and quiet. Phone 337-3285. 1·1t North Edgl of Lantern P.,k City - 338.2709. a· 7 ELECTRIC SlIAVER repair - %4 LAN GE·B USTAD I BEDROOM fl'tnl.hed apartment HI,hw.y 6 W.. t Ccortlvlll. Bus Stop FOR SALE OR RENT : 8'''30' molli le Ilour service. Meyer'. B.rber Shop. MOTORS convenient to Unlveulty lio.pllal. - explodcs .croS5 the 'Arlzona home. Good condition. $80 351·\466 2.lIAR Avallahle ~·eb. I. Dial 337.311M d.y,. countryside Crom • ranch 10 a or a3H77? 2-23 ALTERATIONS and In types of Highway II West 3118.8817 att.r 5:30. 2.19 Dial 337 ~ 5297 'OR THE AD~LJ MINOED ...the revealing story of today's ... dance hall to an e.cllln, rodco. Din Murroy I. a rancher who FLUNKINGsewing. 351·4107. MArH or SlaU,tJca? CallZ·2II1.===~:::====:; ======i l ,ii.!!=~~~~~~~~~~ goes to the city to rope a wlte, 338·9306. 8-7 AR and like It or not, MarHyn Mon· HELP WANTED roe Is II. I DO SEWING and .lteraUons. Call I lURING • complete I.rvlce .t.Jr ror 351-3454. 11-7 ____ HAllUCINAlION F,b. ,. and 19 dillin, room .nd (ountaln. Ne»l WESTSIDE AUTO-iiepalr - com· Lakeside 10 season's appe~rlnce. nice personallt) . Some pletc auto .ervlce. 107 Zltd Ave. Ii1hwestern meet· A 7, 8 p.m. In th. IIllnol. Room uperlence desirable. but will train. Coralville, 337·2226. 2.1B Tickets available at the door. and p.ld v.c.lIons, me,ls, unlrQ rm.~1 In· IRONING - lIudent bOYI. and ,lr,ls. weakened ~[ifElE~n®~ In the Activities Cenler lor 25c. lurance rurntshed. Call 351·U7111 or 1016 Rocheller. 337·3A4. 3·7 nil. injury loss apply In person. Howard John.on Apartments Restauranl. IntersLate 80 at Rout. IRONINGS, reuonable. CalI 331- Apartments scorer, Erv I. 0609. 3.' benched for the ~1IiIJl SEwMONIGOMERY,sTOYNf: BOY SCOUT summer camp employ. NEED HELP In Sp.nlsh? Call 351· MAKE YOUR NEXT fractured left es, co mmissioners, aquIUcs Ind 1903 evellln,s. Sole -=~~..!::."'_ N'iGElOOX'EOwARDiiANN'ATRANSAMER!CAN REllASE rifle directors. Age 21 or over by VISIT YOUR Merle Norman Studio MOVE THE Monday night's __ rFtd '4 ;)1 Sep. Write or phone Hawkeye Area lor a Iree demon,tr.lIon on coon· 302 Sixth St., Coralville Micbigan State, Coullcll. 211 ORC & B Bid,. • Cedar Ple.llion care and proper make.up. LAKESIDE "ENDS Rapids, Iowa . 366·2A27 . 2·23 2217 Musc.tlne Ave. Mn. Deada From the cellar clubs in London ... NOW! WEDNESDAY" LINOTYPE OPERATOIt - psrt time. Lewis. 3-14 APARTMENTS coacb Lou Wit· SHOWS - 1:38 • 3;55.6:35 - ' :15 Newspaper r.roductiOn laboralory. DWAYNES RADIATOR SERVICE, to the opening nights See Henry A rica, School of Jour· auto healers, tank.. Tune ur,. Open For Inspection our best out· HIGHEST RATINGI nallsm. 2·18 broke work. AIIO,as .pace to repa r Unfurnished and furnished Paris ••• speed ,aye in AN EXPERIENCE NEVER PART TIME ",altre", 211 hours your own car. 121% S. Gilbert. ,,1- Efficiency Apartments and with Vel'll per week. Apply In person. The 6890 . SoI4KC Daily, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. • We to the wild way out world TO BE FORGOTTEN I Beer Garden. 206 N. Linn St. 351· o JAPE RENE renlal aervlc .. by Ne. Two Bedroom Townhouses t755. %·19 froee.. Laundry. 313 S. Dubuque . S",nday, 1, a.m. to 6 p.m. him, but of the continental - N. Y. D.lly News STABLE HELP wanled - male or Plione 337·9666. 3-tSAR female. Interested enough In hor· SEWING .Iler.tlons, Oriental .nd ADDITION UNITS FOR SEPT, Th, Price Is Rightl Iwingers •• • IT GRABS YOU, ees 10 Illnore lon, hours allet hard formals Included. Prof.llionally work. Houaln, furnished. Dial 644- RESERVE NOWI IT HOLDS YOU, 21417. 2-18 trained. 351-4086. "IIAR Frigidaire Appliances comel a story as difFerent Air CondlLinning IT INFLAMES YOU I NEED A BAND FOR and exciting 81 the mUlic Heat and Water MISC. FOR SALE YOUR PARTY? Included of the man called C.II JOHN lOYD If ,UVDlJ: PACKS - Carry baby on (lands Un"",It"' INJOY your back. 337-5340 Irter 5. lI-2AR 153..... SPRING .nd SUMMEIt SPECIAL: GIbson electriC lultar - MONTHS AT ·1 .tereo, Verltone. Reason.ble. 3M· Some of Midwest'. RAY Ties before e. 2·18 Top Rock Bands PLAY PEN ,10, space heater '10, ~iii~~~iiii=::;:".iiil~ LAKESIDE "'" condlUoner. 14,800 BTU '140, , white utility cabinet ~ . 338-(714. 2·23 MONIY LOANID CHARLES UNIVERSAL 38" gas stove deluxe RECREATION IN FrUldalre Ventle .., electric dryer, Dlam.lllt. C.",.,.II, - Armtra. 331-1486 aller t . 2·23 GuM. the ..mill ONE TWIN liED Complete. Good T~"""'.W"" CENTER Lilli.... Mu*aI I ...""' ...... and US'11'1 COndition '23. 12 "u,e .hot JUll, et1iJJe Dew. 338-tl41. 2·13 them ftr I HOCK·m LOAN Featuring: CONVERTIBLE sofal sn; roll-awlY DI.I m..uu Heated Swimming Pool of paper" " BLUES bed '20. Tim 35J.l~IS . 2·24 Health and Exercise Rooms latest ~ Fl:NDER ELECTRIC bus ,ullar. ------. Steam Bath. track and Cuatom whItt. New atrlngs. eaee. field 331-41188. 2·22 IGHITION MODEL OPEN 10 a.m •• 8 p.m. DAILY Cocktail Lounges ORANGE BLOSSOM diamond ring CARIURITOItS PrIvate Party kooms roVERS ..t and Sony Stereo Tape Reeord· GENERATORS nART.I. SUNDAY - 1 p.m. • 6 p.m. Brldlle RnoID or. 361·3047, 2·25 IriHI , It,...... ,...,. Color TV 8UPRO BLl:CTRIC luit.r. Jim 353- Quiet 1 and 2 unitt $125 Bl11iard Tahles 1266. H3 PYRAMID SERVICES bedroom from PinI PODI Tables Toi"'BfiLL ~ FAClT PORTABLE typewriter. LeiS • Near University i'lcnlc and Barbecue Areas than 2 year. old. Just cleaned. 337· '21 S. Dultuqut Kiddie Korral 152'7. 1·24 • Heat and air conditioning furnlsh.d h HAlf PEACH • H.ated Iwlmming pool for Iprlng .,f Private Lalce • Drapel, carpeting, Ito v., refrigerator, hoI and cold for 1-...... _....;..-'--...1 , DAW~ ADDAMS REGISTERED NURSES Swimming water, dlspoaal furnished fre. of charge Fishing Do you mill the satisfaction of nursln,' ...urn to ''' 'iI-.\", "'OOucrO'T • TV and FM anlenna Climeing active nursing through an orlentCItlon COUrM In con­ Ice Skatinll ITTr kIIW,W, Lun WPLIIf .. '10M'...... II ..AllAln • Sound proof ...me ,. 'oWL 111111. "0 ~::~:~:~ PAUL IENUI' _ I U ITt~ wut temporary nursing p!actlce. Re,llt'r for Sprint da.... Uve Where The Acti!'n hi • furnished or unfurnl.hed now. Information can b. obtained by contactln" St:e Our Mtldel Apartments -N...... • Many oth.r extras Cd • fer PIOGRAM and HEALTH OCCUPATIONS IDUCATION TODAY THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA Let us Dtrectiona:AcnJIIS from the Procter and Gamble Plant on 135 M.lrose Av•. Iowa Cltyr Iowa show you your new apartment Hlpway No. 6 In Southwest IOWA CITY , I Phone 353-3541 .10 W... nten , ...... 13 ..1175 : Open from " 8.m. STARTS TODA YI 4 DAYS ONLYI

t; p ... '-THI DAILY IOWAN-.... City, le.-Mt., ~ 11, 1"' ~ Mollenhoff's 'Ren~agOA' 'Is Paris Burning?' is bad , By NICHOLAS MEYI!R son for his stunning decision (or Indeed, scenes (Simone Signoret on for rougbly Stiff R.vllwer the scene in which actually makes such that as a cafe owner,> plus our box office It is the summer of 1944. The Allies a decision ) to spare the City of Light is heroes Kirk Douglas, Glenn Ford. R0b­ ert Stack - where was John Wayne?) have landed alld the green countryside of never shown. As we see it, he is simply playing generals and looking very serious ( called unfair, unreliable Normandy is being stained an indelible a rather introspective man who sort of and military. crimson a8 they proceed with their in· falls accidentally into the choice and nev­ The movie is Iik~ a lead balloon, nal. By LEE WINFREY Economy is an argument that has never tended offensive which Is to take them 01- tening out anything and anyone caught Inltructor In ""'mell,," weighed very heavily with professional er quite realizes that he has made it. beneath it as it topples crazily back 1.0 ''Tbt P.ntqon," by C.. rk R, Molle.,. military men, and it has apparently not directly to the Rhine and across it to Ger­ what its significance is. - fIoff (N.w York: Putnem, 'M7), $7,tS, many. earth, never having quite managed to eet swayed Mollenhoff much, either. Paris itself, which ought to be the star off the ground. We all wind up playing In Waahlngton, the belief is widespread Few, if any, impartial readers, how­ In premature expectation of the arrival of the movie, has little or nothing to do that Robert Strange McNamara is the ever, are likely to be convinced by Mol· "Oh, lOOk, there's Rory Calhoun," and best secretary of defense since the job lenhoff that McNamara is a bad guy. AI· of the Allies, the feuding factions of the with the film . We are told that it is a mat· after two hours even that begins to paU. was creat.ed 20 years ago. Newspaper re­ though he has had two more years than French resistance in Paris have seized ter of thousands of lives beIng at stake. It's a crying shame because the res­ porters who write boob about the De­ Raymond to gather critical evidence, Mol­ all public bulldings, post·offices, etc., and To be sure this is true, but it is true in cue of Paris was assuredly one of the p fense Department, however, do not share lenhofrs Pentagon study is much infer­ are engaged in endless street hattles with any war in any time. Surely the signifi· most dramatic incidents in the war, which, this sanguine opinion. ior to Raymond's. Mollenhoff's book, plain. as there is now a generation who did not the patrols of the controlling German cance in this case is the symbolism In· In 11164, Jack Raymond oC the New York ly speaking, is biased, unfair and unre­ commander of Paris, Von Choltitz, who live through It, seems to be Cair game Times, in his ''Power at the Pentagon," liable. bas been ordered to mine the key posi­ volved . Paris, one of the greatest centers for the movie·makers to tell us about. criticized McNamara's management. Now To \)egin with, Mollenhoff assembles hi, tions in the city and if necessary to burn !if not the greatest) of art, culture, civ· If you want to see two really great films comes Clark MollenhoU oC the Cowles evidence like a prosecuting attorney. Mc­ It rather than deliver it to the advancing ilization and history in the world, is a about the liberation of cities during the newspaper. (Des Moinea Register and Namara's arguments are generally kiss· Allies. But the resistance is running out prime factor in the telling of this story - last war, I recommend "Open City" and Tribune, Minneapolis Star and Tribune) ed off with a sentence or two, hard to of ammunition to keep up their barrass­ but it is ignored. Also left out is the gal· more recently a wonderful film enllUed with a more vebement attack. find among tbick and solid paragraphs of menl. The Allies must alter their , strat· lantry of the Americans who deliberately "The 4 Days of Naples." Next week I Raymond and MollenhoCC reach the same quotations from his critics. egy and time-table and liberate Paris stepped aside to allow Free French troops see we have a movie about Tobruk al general conclusions: that McNamara'. McNamara's critics are never subjected rather than force their way directly to to be the ones to liberate their capitol. the Englert. Let us pray that the "Holl 5 control over the Pentagon ia too tight, his to critical evaluation. MoUenhoff leans Germany. And they ha~e to do it right Instead we get familiar and meaning· We Really Won the War" series seeming. authority too absolute, and that the ex· heavily, for example, on the acerbic out. away - before Von Choltitz decides mat­ less vignettes, endless reels of street figbt­ ly beginnning at that theatre will improve PEORIA pert advice of generals and admirals ill bursts of Rep. L. Mendel Rivers (D·S.C.l, ters are serious enough to burn the city. ing, and glimpses of a lot of talent going before the movies run out of battles and Dounced 1\ too often ignored or overridden. chairman of the House Armed Services Will they come? Can they even be reach­ pathetically to waste in ' thirty second in.cidents to retell from World War II. penalty fOl McNamara's critics, who include sever· Committee, without once mentioning that ed? And what of the German commander with murd al congressmen as well as Mollenhoff and Rivers is an erratic, opinionated man and blmself and the decision as he sees it? in Chicago Raymond, bale their criticisms of his one of the least admired committee chair­ "Is , Paris Burning?" is a peculiarly William judgment on three principal cases: men on Capitol Hill. Dey, said lOUSY documentary. The fact that a cast trial's opel 1. McNamara's refusal to start build· McNamara's virtues are never mention­ of box office names and considerable tal· Ing a new bomber, the 8-70, to replace ent into the bargain fails to prodUce any jury to fu ed. You will learn here, for example, how death. " the Air Force's aging B·58a and B·52s. he has kept U.S. troops in Vietnam ade· results no longer astonishes me. The mov· EEKEND The secretary thinks missiles are more ies have done that too often in the past. A Peori, quately supplied without a single major tentative ; reliable. domestic war-profiteering scandal so far. What I do find past belief is that a story ~NDERINGS 2. McNamara'. award of the contract with so much inherent drama, meaning from the p for tbe TFX fighter plane to General This book is the testimony of a hostile and excitement in it could be made intol­ By SUE RICKEL It's as if these local denizeqs have in· Gerald W. Dynamics Corp. of Fort Worth, Tex., in· witness. McNamara and Mollenhoff have erably boring by a writer with the stature Staff Columni.t culcated all kinds of sensational epithets Six pros stead of Boeing Co. of Seattle, Wash. The not spoken to each other without irrita­ and ability of Gore ("The Best Man") from whatever reading material does fall cause bell tion for years. Mollenhoff's sources of in­ One aspect of Iowa City that never plane, now called the r·llI, is still in Vidal, and that it could have been direct· ceases to amaze me is the way that peo­ their way, and focused them on Iowa City production, so the airworthiness of the side information, like Raymond's, have ed in an equally hum·drum fashion by students. 'Students' for them means anti­ General Dynamics model has not yet been heen the dissenters - the generals and Rene Clement. ple who work in, around and on top of Americanism , disintegration of racial bar. determined. admirals who chafe under effective ci­ the University have managed to main­ riers, unclean1iness and unGodliness. I£ vilian control and long for a return to the Of course in the original version each tain their hostility towards students. Per­ Cal 3. McNamara's refusal to build a sec· nationality spoke his own tongue. but Par­ we look 'respectable' in their judgment and nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to free-and·easy Cold War days when they baps this attitude is better called an ada· - i.e.. have the time and inclination to had only to ask and it was given. amount has committed the disastrous fol­ follow the U.S.S. Enterprise, wbich was ly of dubbing French and German into mant provincialism - ·l. be neatly and/or well-dressed - they are launched by the Eisenhower Administra· Beneath the rivers of propaganda flow­ English. However, even allowing for a di­ anyhow, it's the feeling a little mollified, but not duped. tion and is now in use off Vietnam. The ing out of the Pentagon press informa· lution here, the film has been awkwardly that waitresses, clerks At any moment, they are aware, any Dis carrier U.S.S. John F. Kennedy, now un­ tion offices, there may indeed now lie cut (with the ends of scenes clearly om· and other local people one of us many undergo their version 01 der construction, will use conventional scandals drowned and covered up. But mitled) and the episodes thaI remain grow we students must en· a Kafkaesque metamorphosis : the boys power. Mollenhoff hasn't found them yet, and he counter are either be· might grow beards, or let their hair grow. increasingly trivial and synthethic as the ing unctuously condes· Pre·marl! In each of these three cases, McNamara doesn't offer enough evidence here to film proceeds. The girls might sta. _ dressing solely in based his decision principally on the pre· back up his belittling opinions of his enemy cending or blatantly hos­ jeans or sweatshirts or something. And discussed II mise that his way would .ave money, McNamara. The character of Choltitz and the rea· tile. everyone knows what that means! These I don't mean to imply lofty guardians of the peace know atudenl.l :hat all the small shop· to be latently capable oC lnflnltles of evils leepers and restaurant and perversions - the better dressed Jersonnel can be classi- MISS RICKEL among us are merely slier, craftier. So DelilJ Rich man's sport: fied in this way - many are gracious, they arrange the ranks against, ready at reasonable people. But the extent to which the slightest opportunity to treat all stu­ this studentphobia exists is shocking in it­ dents with disrespect. abruptness and ,en­ self, at least to me. eral distaste. ReSUi big game .hunting How unpleasant it is to be caught late Had I not lived in other college townl, at nIght in this town fJeling like having I might have assumed that what is true The Daily By TOM FENSCH wanted him forever so you could recap­ a snack. The prospect of going into par­ in Iowa City is true everywhere. I might - campus hou Staff R.vi,w.r ture the day. ticular restaurants and being treated in have learned that to be a student in a I a new circu "Use Enough Gun, Ruark On Hunt· "This is better than letting him grow a a surly manner by waitresses is humor­ college town is to be a persona non grata duced to iJ inll Big Glm.," by Rob.rt RUlrk (New few years older, to be killed or crippleq ous to some extent, I suppose. But when to many of the local people who work students. York, Th. Am.rican Library, '9"), by a son and eaten, still alive, by hyenas. I have to tolerate this self-appointed core there. Fortunately, this is not the case. ' During th $6.95. Availabl. at Iowa Book & Supply Death is not a dreadful thing in Africa - of resistence as they snidely or openly In other towns, students, strangely, are II dence ",ill 1 / Co. not if you respect the thing you kill, not deride other students, simply because they regarded as human beings. to be given riel' as part IBest Times : Dos Passos There are few activities, in this shrink­ if you kill to feed your people or your wear beards or long hair , any humor may treatment no better, no worse than other carrier serv ing world, that are still the exclusive memory." have felt quickly gives way to irritation human beings who may vary in the way a card to c( By TOM FENSCH Dos Passos shows none of Hemingway's province of the wealthy and the famous. Rua~ 's style is interesting. He inter­ and humiliation . they dress, shave or wear their hair. other studen Staff R.vi'w.r bitterness. His portrait of Scott and Zelda And there are few areas on this globe un­ sperses' the langua~ of the Swahili. the This inColl one paper il "Th, B,st Tlmll" by John 00. PII· Fitzgerald, burning as they did, lighting spoiled by man. Masai , the gun-bearers and natives es­ sential to a safari. Again, Ruark's tricks dents, the sos (N.w York: Th. N.w AmtriCin the 1920s for their generation is warm Big game hunting in Africa, is one of Library, 19"), $5.00 Avall.bl, a' Iowa do not intrude on the narrative. Publications and pleasant. these activties in these areas. An ade· Ruark does not make the I11lstake, made The card Book & Supply Co. quately equipped safari. complete with "It was with relief I said goodby to all too often, of attributing human char· \ instructions The early careers of John Dos Passos trucks, guns. supplies and men, capable Tbe carrie them. . . At the last moment they were acteristics to animals. But there is sym· REFOCUS begins Monday and Ernest Hemingway ran parallel; they of existing for two months, will cost $10-, metry and meter to life apart from man, phone numt 01' REFOCUS, an educational exchange of speak Feb. 25 at 8 p.m . in the Union Ball· both saw acUon in World War I, in the both charming golden haired children 000 , more less. The white hunter in and Ruark recognizes this well. prove carrie again. We parted friends and I think reo charge, practically guarantees lion,rhino. the best in contemporary student cimema­ room. same general location. Their books reo "Use Enough Gun" is probably the last New subsc mained so." tigers, buffalo or whatever else the bwana of Ruark's books. He died suddenly, in tography from campuses across the coun· Originated and sponsored by the movies semester by suiting from that experience, gave them and memsaab (The hunter and his wife) Hemingway's relationship with the Fitz· London , in 1965. He wrote prolifically. try, will open Monday. area of Union Board, REFOCUS will spot· time student success at a relatively early age; Heming­ want. light new developments in student and pro· Irar, These 1 gerald's ended in bitterness and recrimi· "Something of Value" and "Uhuru," were The six·day festival will bring leading way's "The Sun Also Rises," and Dos nations. Unfortunately accounts oC sa faris often his worst but were best-sellers. At his fessional photography. Two feature films lists. are reduced to the most maudlin and sent. best, "The Old Man and the Boy," and photographers and film makers to the will be shown during the week - ''The Currently , Passos's "Three Soldiers." Dos Passos chronicles so much traveling Burmese Harp" by Kon Ichikawa at 7 (he admits that he lost count of Atlantic imental writing imaginable. "Use Enough Gun," he is excellent. He campus to take part in critical discussions carriers, ran But when Hemingway returned to Michl· The grandeur of the African plain, the wrote well about what he knew; hunting p.m. and 9 p.m. Feb. 21 , and "Eclipse" Outlying par gan to nurse his wounds, Dos Passos turn· crossings) that it is difficult to judge the and to evaluate students films and pho,to­ by Michaelangelo Antonioni, starring Mon· volume and depth of his writing. He brief­ majesty of the mammoth animals exist· and life itself. graphs. Ail sessions will be open to the by mall. Da ed east. Always an avid traveler, Dos ica Vitti and Alain Delon, at 7 p.m. and Icriptions, i~ ly mentions that he was busy writing and ing as they have for centuries, reduce Passos saw the Russian steppes of the man's ability to write coherently about public . 9 p.m. Feb. 23. Both films will be shown 19208, and traveled by camel across the specifics are not mentioned. Dos Passos, in the Ballroom of the Union. • l1lil1li111111 of course, wrote the massive triptych it. letters Policy Major speaker of the session will be deserts and plains of the middle east. 008 Even Ernest Hemingway ' had a hard John Szarkowski, director of photography Student films from universities including Passos was a shy, myopic traveler, un­ "U.S.A." and the poignant "Manhattan L,tt.rs to the tciitor art w.lcomtel. Transfer." "The Best Times" is hilt 22nd time with Africa. His "Green Hills of Af­ All I,tters must be IllIntel, should be of the Museum of Modern Art in New the U of I, the University of Southern Cali­ acquainted with tbe languages of the mld­ rica" is not one of his best books. He is York. Szarkowski, who was appointed ex· fornia, Columbia University, Boston Col­ dJe east. But his insights of that locale and book. typed .nd doubl. Ipactel. Letters should maudlin and the result is almost embar· not be over 500 wordl; thorter Ittttrs ecutive director of 'the White House photog­ lege and Northwestern University will be GU( that period are the best this side of T. E. Unfortunately Dos Passos's lilerary rassing to those who love Hemingway', raphy program by President Johnson in shown Feb. 24 and Feb. 26. Film showings Lawrence. "The Best Times" echos mid· reputation seems to have faded. Critics ·.rt apprtciattd. Th. .dltor m.rv.. best. the right to tellt Ind shorten latters. 1965, has'received two Guggenheim fellow· will be followed by panel discussions on dIe east impressions he recorded earlier, don't seem to like the combination of ob­ Fortunately, the late Robert Ruark is ships for his own photography. He will the works shown . in "Orient Express," 1m, and "In AU servance and social commentary in prose. not. His prose remains clear, his des­ Countries," published In 1934. Dos Passos flirted briefly with the com­ criptions unblemished by cant. Ofl Reader. who expect a volume similar munism of the 1930s, the Sacco-Vanzetti The spector of the death of a lion is • to Hemingway'. "A Moveable Feast" will case and other liberal causes. Thus have fascinating to him and he relays it well : be dlsappointed. Hemingway', book shows his books heen dismissed as political " . . . If you properly respect what you various degrees of jealousy and the fa· scrimmaging. are after, and shoot it cleanly and on the race: Bucl