"'owa's alternative newspaper'

Vol. -108, No. 159 Monday" March 1, 1976 Iowa City I Iowa 52240 10c Ford favored among county delegates

By K. PATRICKJENBEN delegates aelected for the dlltrict con­ be elected and six dele8ates-wih be IU~ Reagan IUpIIGrterI buIt.a1Iy qreed RepJNIcan to be eIeet.d It the countJ AlIt. Newt Mtw \'WItion and found 22lUppOrted PresIdent mitted by the state cearaI committee for with Reagan'. stated pblloeopby OIl IeYel In receri )'WI, said there 11'1 DDI President Gerald Ford hal the malt Ford while CIlly nine deleptea would an­ coosIderatloo, she said. federa1 ~ and states' n,bts. Democrata In the Caurt Ifjge IDd announced aupport amq JohnIon C0un­ nounce a preference for Ford'. main OIl­ In all, 18· delegates will be Ielected In "He'. more CCIIIIeI'VItive," one delegate =""'leans would need Democ::ratlc .. ty Republicans choIen Saturdly II JIOOent, fonner CalIfomia Gov. Ronald the two cenvent1oos, she said. said. "I au- Ida pblkw\*Y IDd mine port to win election dis,.,. "w. ban delegates t4 the GOP dlltrict and ItaIe Reagan. Madlen said the Repu1ican .ystem II are more cloeely aligned. '.' lOme pod Demcx:ratlin JoImIaD CouD­ ronventiOlll, a DI telephone poll reveall. However, 26 deIeptea laid they were desiJned 10 that delegates can remaiD ~ Gov. Ray supporter said, "It'. too ty. but we have ...bid 0IIeI and DDI . More than 204 _atea and jlllior IIICClIJIJnitted, many inIIatlng they prefer II'lCOI1lItIitted. She said the nameI IU~ early to tell euctIy where PreIIdem I'IIl dinpu"" - and 1 won't IJIIIltiGft delegatea gathered at the JohnIon C0un­ neither. Ford nor Reagan. mitted Saturday night were cboeen 00 the Ford and Gov. Rapn milbt fiDally Ricbard'. name," IIuIIa said. ty Republlcan ConvRloo Saturdly nIgbt Four delegatea indicated they would basis of party interest. "No questionl QJIne out. I peraonaUy feel Gov. Ray Is Tom L)'Ul, ~ cbalrperIoo, to select 112 delegatea for the district con­ aJppOrt a favoritHon campaign by Iowa were liked concel1Iing their preferen- one of the beat qua\IfIed people, baed 00 ea\Ied 00 RepJb!iclna to submit their his record In Iowa, t4 be president. " venUon June 18 and state COIlvention Gov. Robert Ray, one supported a ces, ".said. bi11a to the county forpayma, a refenn­ J\DIe 19 in Des Molnea. presidential bid by Sen. Howard Baker of However, Madlen admitted that The Des MoiJIa fteIIster, In a ce to Bartel'. IlteqIt to haft the COUD­ Delegatea aelected· Saturday will vote Tenn., eight refuIed t4l1111Wer. delegates · may ·vote for national oopyrIgbted story Sunday, reported that ty pay his lepl f. after a dIal1qe for 00 which ·of the 38 national delegatea Under the Republlean presidential delegates 00 the buts of a natlooaI Reagan and F«d appear 'to be rumina his supervIaora' _t from Iowa will go to the Republk.n eelectlon system ill Iowa, delegatea are nominee's preference for a presidential ''neck and neck" In Iowa. The Register Tbe GOP recuIan rejectecl a party National Conventloo Aug. 16-19 In KIDIu announced 81 uncommitted, according t4 candidate. polled various tnDy couventioos Satur· . plank calIInc for dec:r1mInaIizaU of City, Mo. Jen Madlen, delepte aelectlon commit­ County delegates indicating support day and found Ford with a·1lIcbt lead, I1IIrijuana, IUbmItt.ed by Bill Crews, a The party regulars aIIo adopted a tee chalrpel'\lOl\. for PresIdent Ford In '{be DI'. IU1'Yey primarily becauIe 01 his support In urban deletate fram Preeinet 22. county platform and took pot Ihota at LaVerne Larsoo, COIJIlty chalrpel'\lOl\, said they favored his actioos thus far In areas. Party recuIars cId approve a pIaIIk the Democratic Johnaoo CoImty officiala said the delegates aelected Saturday will office or did not agree with Reagan'. JobnIon ~ RepublicanI at the ca1ling for continuation of the federll at the convention held at the county elect three · national delegatea, at the proposed policies .. cmventloo took some pot shots at loca1 work-study pl'CJll'll11 for eaIIep Ita .... fairground'! . CoogressIonal district level COIlventloos "I feel he (Ford) Is a man wbo hu Democratic Party offtcIala - mostly at and supported (mtlnulQI fiDandallup. The Democratic Ccunty Convention 00 June 18 and nominate two delegatea assumed a great deal of respooslbt1lty county SupervIsor CbaI.rpenoo Riebard port for biper eOJcation The Ford ad­ will be held this Saturday. for at·large representatloo. and wbo Is doing an honest job," one Bartel. rrinlatratloo bas JII\4ICIII8d ",.hecb In The or Sunday contacted 70 of the 92 On June 19, the at-lal'l(e del&J!ates will delegate said. Sheriff Gary Hupea, the , only the work-atudy JIl"OII'IIIl. Dormitory meals: there's plenty left

By LARRY PERL variety, better recipes and hotter food. plate. Staff Writer "The most criticism that came out of If the dish is not being taken - or 81 Here you are, precisely at 5 p.m., and the survey was to shake up our com­ Stokely said, "if studenta take one bite the supper 1ines In your donnltory have binations so that we wouldn't have and leave the rest 00 the plate" ~ the just opened. chicken and liver on the same night (for new dish will be dropped from the menu. Well , what looks good to eat as you am· example), " Bauer said. Stokely and Bersinger mentioned the In­ ble down the line with your empty tray? . DinIng services have now Instituted a famous tamale pie as one new dish that OIl, there's meatloaf. You'll have three new five·week menu. Managers of the six did not go over well. A new dish will pieces, please. What? Only allowed one donnltorydiningservlcesmeeteach week usua1ly be served more than once, before serving of meat at supper? In that case, t4 evaluate the success of the previous a decision Is reached for continuance or you'll just have three baked potalOes. week's menu. SUpervilOrs keep strict discontinuance. As you walk throuih the liDe there's a production records of how much of each DinIng service employees used to dish poster across from you which shows item during a given meal was prepared out several servings In advance t4 help someone carvirI& a pig, and reads, and how much was left over at the end of the line of waiting students move along "Don't go the whole hog." But you don't the meal. faster. Since students have complained see it because you're busy taking three Substantial leftovers will not be reser· about cold (ood, however, employees are dishes of green beans. Yed more than once, Margaret Stokely, Instructed to serve food only upon Half an hour later, you put your tray on ' Burge dIni.n& service manager, said. request. The Unes move more .lowly, the the conveyor belt and it goes back to the "We might compenSate and serve lea of food stays hotter. dishroom. Half a piece of meatloaf, two a scheduled dish (on a given meal) In or· baked potatoes, two di~ of green der to include a leftover. But we wouldn't Bersinger said the new menus are ap­ beans, the salad you never touched and a feel safe re-heating something more than proved by various student food commit· melted dish of ice cream go down the gar· once," tees in the donnltories. She also men­ bage disposal. Stokely and Carol Bersi.llger, Hillcrest tioned feedback from dining service ern· Steve Bauer. head of the UI domrl!4ry dining service manager, mentioned that p1oyees. "We've got 10 per cent of-our dining services, di8cussed production there Is a ceJ1ain amount of overproduc· cust4mers working as employees," she and serving aspects of donnltory food, tion in the preparation of meals. said. and the problems o( what he called "There's always surplus food," Stokely Bersinger said a typical menu will In­ "unlimited food. " said, "so if people want it, we've got It. " elude something popu1ar and something "There Is very little waste (of food) In Because of strict production records less popular, as main dishes. "We'll nm the kitchens," Bauer said. "We fan coo­ and a knowledge of how much of a given liver against something popular like roast beef," she said. "We'll make only trol our meat portion sizes, our produc· food will be eaten, based 00 past ex· countris, thole answers would be dif· perience and records, there are rarely 250 servings or so of liver, but we keep It "What students want moat of all," Bur· If they take icrnetbin" they're going t4 tIoo and receiving procedures. But it Is eat It." ferent. In this country, there', a lot of the person who takes four glasses of substantial leftovers In the dining ser· 00 the menu because there's a crowd that da said, "is Jelectlon variety In the The waste of food, then,·1s not the fault abundance. Food II ava\lable who vices. During one meal, for example, 50 really likes liver." menu." Burda strives for this In his orange juice and leaves two creates of tboee who prepare It, of thole who everywhere, In restaUI'IIU, In arocerY food waste. " cases of chicken were fried. By the end of Berslnger said, "In the dining services Unloo menus, 81 evidenced by the in­ lIut Bauer said the donnltory dining ser· the meal, 32 seMnp were left over. For we've got a captive audience for nine troduction of sudt W1UIIU81 foods u shark eat it, or do not eat It, 81 is often the case stores. So there'. ""." In the dormitory dinlnllIl'vices. Bauer said, .~ money we spend 00 vices are sensitive to students want. amther meal,:rr gallons (500 servings) of IOOIlths, as opJQIed to, say, someone in and octopus. , what On the UI survey, Berslnger said, "We food II a budIeted expenJe. But In­ A survey taken last December of studen­ beef stew were prepared. Six galloos (70 the hOlptial for seven days. We only Burda said Unioo customers rarely make a certain number of recipes waste food. "People who eat here take a got some answers t4 the effect that creased amount of ~Ioo means ts with meal plans showed that of thole servings) were left over. an , Increued food budpt. Someone'. who returned the questionnaires, 73 If, for example, thoee remaining 70 ser· (within the five week aehedule), 110 we Uttle longer to decide what they want and 'We're paying enough for a meal plan, we have to strive for variety In that menu how much they want," Burda said, can waste food If we ~ to.' If food JIDing t4 feel tlIat In their U-bW, maybe per cent sald the overall performance of vings of stew were served once more, and iMIt t&Ia year, but at some point." the (ood service was satisfactory. there was still some left4ver, only then repetition. We have t4 stick in something "because they're ..ying cub each time. were scarce and preciws, 81 It I. In lOme Only 52 per cent, however, sald the would It be thrown out. new every 10 often, t4 break the menu selectioo was adequate, "percent If dining services are trying out a new monotony." sald the taste was acceptable, and 47 per dish, supervisors will keep a careful Tony Burda of the Union dining ser· cent said the temperature of the food wu check of how well the dish Is going over, vices said he recently attended a Big Ten adequate. eYen to the point of standing by the c0n­ food services meeting In whlch a ·recent_ Book cost~ stacking up The dining services have responded veyer belt to see how much of each ser· Gallup food poll of college students waS with a new menu, more comblnatloo ving of the new dish has been left on a presented. By MARK KLEIN price, the paper 00 wbicb this ItOry II a110wed to give WIderIraduate students IIaft Writer printed costs _ per too, whi\e jUlt five ~ were etIgIbIe $150 for boob. ThIs Just \ike everytIIiJII elle, book expen­ years ago It COlt CIlly $1 •• too. year the students can pt $175, aceonIIng _ are on the Increue. Publishers' joumalJ aIIo note In­ toJobn Moore. direetOr of admIIUona. FIfteen boob chaIen from the Iowa creues for other Items, sudt 81 for the If a student'. actua\ cost for boob Is Book and Supply Co. indicate that cotton \lied In hard bowId coven - In greater than fl75, Moore added, the current . book prices have risen an short supply durIba the summer of 1"4 Itudent can aet more moaey In Illowan­ average of ~.1I1ince 1988. -1aborer'. w.,. mel poatqe COIItI. ces. Tbe larg. price Inereue durinl that . Unlvel'lity IIbraris join ltudents In '{be allowance Increue Is a jump of 11 period W81 for a book titled...... , feeling the· bite of book COlt ~. per cent from 1J'12. In ccnrut, the eoatI RIIuIu Grammar, which jumped from The average lIat price for books pur. for UI houaiD& mel tuition for the 1liiie ".50 In 1911 to a current $12.95. On the ehued by the lIbrarIea wu $lU1 for late perlojl IDcreaIed by • per cent. (The other hand, the book A CGane" R..au 1r75 and early lJ7'I, aceonIIng to JUcbard \waIDe ClOIt was figured 00 the double IIIstGry stayed at •.116 for the pertod. Kolbet, a.lltant univenlty Ubrarlan for roam rate wltb full board, IDd the \uitJon The 15 boob compared were thole technlea1 Jervieel, 'IbIs figure comparea wu bued 00 Uberal uta \IIIIIeraraduIt used In a variety of departments. to a 1I7Z average \\at price estimated at -.) , It Is diffieult to find boob published in $10.45. 'IbIs Is a • per cent Increase. . In tota\iDI.-.-tultIon, bouaiai and _ which are IWI used for cl ..... 'l1IIs Kolbet pointed eM that the price Indes book costs for 1f'12. boob were 1 per cent means either the book hu .been In the 1976 Pub1llber'. Weekly WIt $11.1', fl the fi&ure. For 1171, tile Ibare of book eliminated from a cla. reading list or axnpared with $14.08 for jlllt one ,... eoatI rose to. per «*t. that new editions have been printed eerlIer. Most of the boob In this study IDcreasq the prIcea of their boob. wbIeh '.'raIaeI the · price of everythIq were DOt specifically Ieldboob, aJtbouIh parently Im't tile GIlly way sdlIlsben are (sueh u p~ and labor eoatI)," ae­ most could be used for a CIOUI'Ie, he said. ItteInptInc to meet Iqher IlUbIIabInI cordinI to CIndy BrooU, manager of the In 1r71-72 aavenlty llbrarIea could eoatI. Broob IIkSIhe baa aotIeed fewer Unloo Paperback boobtore. Broob said purchase 10,000 boob with fIaIInc they blank .... in tata mel Kolbet aid be rmat new edltlooI are updated tecbnIcal are a\\oeated by tile Board 01 ReedS. In ... seen · many boob with IDIfIIaa books. IS75 they could buy only '1'0,000. IIII'l'OweI' tbal iD the pall. New book edltica ... new boob used Thea.cdS hu been allied to live the for clusea pment students from belni U1l1brariel a 15 per cd iDmue ill fwI­ IIble t4 buy ebeaper \lied boob, wbeII the ding this ,.ar, a\tbqIlthla stUl will not used boob areoutdlted for the~. mate up for the _ fl lIu1inI power Book prices have u.naaed because resulting from kG 1M. d book prIeeI, Hawkeye booster the prices of atber ecmodItIeI have aIIo Kolbetuid. Increased, aecordIng to Bob SUtherlln, of The price iDmue Is a\ao reflected ill MIlIIoDaIn ~..., can. .. _I... atJ...... dIIre ID wWeJa ....,...... pia"" ... 1&_ Iowa Book and Supply. He pointed to the iDcrelled book alJowanceI II'IIll*I to IrIeDdI ~y ...... ta 1& die V1 ...... _ .... I'IIIDInd IIIa& can...... t ,..ovIIIe die ...... Ikyroc:ketIn& price for paper u the maiD students by the federal pemmen&. 10 WIllS tile 1...... 111 t...... 'I1IIre lias...... Ida __ By" WIly, CInw'. prll.lce" contributor to the iDereue. Under the aIIanDce procrUn, in IJ72, talk ...... tile VI of ...... te ...... &III 1IIt1lelp"""""; alley ...tllel"~'.' M 1ft eumpIe of the mc:r-in paper the UI· omce of FInIncIal Aid wu Page Z-The OaUy Iowan-Iowa City, I_a-Mon., Mareh I, 1t71 Judge rules against new trial for Hall Daily Digest • By LINDA 8CHVPPENER court had ordenld a hearing to denying a new trial. ruled did oot eontain ex­ 1be jury awarded no necUient . in 0VIl"IIIiDC till In Staff WItter eumine the minutes of some The murder victim. Sarah James Hall, A.1, convicted of grand jury testimony which cuipelDry evldeace Involved cIamag. and exonerated raldent phyaiclllll wbo bill Demos, Ford ~Ifu" Ann Ottens, WII alOphomore at tatbiMif' liVID to the .... Drerihaft of the alIeptlonl ~ the 1m murder of a VI nllJ'ling wu not provided to the defen­ the time of her death. She was IftICribedand achInI*td WASHING'OON (AP) - Political money II the root ~ the ,Jury which indicted Hall and Imlu8bt by BcmIe the drua treatmeri. student, had his motion for a se and which was not presented found stanaled March 13, 1m, 1IIIliaenc:e latest clash developing between concreuloaal Democrall and In teltlmony liven to the COIIlty Lqhlin Parker In ecmectIon new trtal denied Friday by court at the time of Hall's In Rienow Hall Dormitory. attorney's office. President Ford. DIstrict Court Judge Loula W. May 1"4 trial. with the Aprtl1971, death of her Ehrenbaft ccdended tbI& tilt The Supreme Court on Friday gave 20 da)'llD Hall had been a member of Iuband Jobn L. LqhlIn. Concreu more Schultz. Schultz ruled that no Hall's . attorney, William the UI football at the time In other court action Friday, dnJc doIqe ... within DIInIIII pass legislation the Federal Election CommIaaIon team 1be Cedar Raplda woman had reatnJcturIni evidence was auppread at 'lUcker, said Friday that he ~ the murder. He eerved a million. malpracUae tolerance and that I..qIIIm 80 It can continue dIaburIIng millIOIlI of dollars in carnpaIjn fill­ ,2.1 contended &hat a cine overdole died from a widNpreId _ Hall's trial that would have ten­ belleves two recow"8eS for Hall six-months of 5O-yeal' priIon alit bfOU8ht by Cedar Rapdl cis to presidential candidatel. a a had been adminlltered to her ded ID exonerate him. still exist : a petition to the Jentence before being released woman acalnat a UniYel'lity aeroua growth. It wu iJmNo. The RepubUcan President immediately uraed Cangre.1D eel Iuband, In the COUl'Ie 01 treat­ Although Hall', 1"4 c0n­ IlUpreme ·court for a rebeartng CIt $50,000 appeal bond In Jan. HoIpltal ph)'llelan. Dr. J. L. Uy reported In the Feb. it DI within that period ID give the WhIte HOUle the power to appoint ment for cancer which had BnIIk ... I11III. viction ofaecond-dearee murder on the orglnlal appeal, and a 1"5. He Is presently enrolled at Drenhaft, WU decided In favor that Dr. Fred lowered hiI realatence ID party In the 1UIt. He WII _ all memben ~ the comrniIIIcxl, a feature the court IIid wu was upheld last Nov. 12 by the new appeal which would seek ID the VI. . ti the phyaldan by a Jdmon defect CUI'I'8It pneumonia. Parker had CCIlteft­ necessary ID correct a COIIItltltloaal in the law. Iowa Supreme Court. the high overtune Schultz's decision The transcripts which Schultz CIuIty Diltrict Court jury. ped from Parker's IUlt beleN But the Democratic majority in both bouIes ~ eaocr- II ded that I!2Ireahaft ... the cue went ID trial Feb. 21. debating changes the Democrats view as correcting other defee- taas well. • Rep. Wayne Ha)'I, J).()hfo, who heidi the HOUle- committee with j urisdictloo over elecuon legislation, wants a provilloo that Nixon back hODle to controversy would alter a oommiI8ioo ruIina that permillcorporaUonlID let LOS ANGELES (AP) - For­ ~ committees to IOllcit campaign funds from their employees. Nixon Cox, aDd two members of ranklna lovernment official what be called "the week l1li\ Hays wants to probIbit companies from lIOlicltlng funds from mer President RIchard M. Nix­ the auaese mlulon In the U.S., -Ina Nixon off wu Yao Uen- cban&ed the world," be ... blue collar and low-level white collar workers. on retumed ID Callfornia Sun­ Identified by airport omclala u wei, vice cMirperIon ~ the p-eeted at AndNwI AIr FOftI day after basking in the pomp Other Democrats want ID eltend pubUc finlllc:lna to Houle Yang ShU-Chana, second «andInc committee ~ the BIle by thouIandl of c:beerq and Senate campaigns. It now applies to presidential cam­ and ceremony of an elaht.y ranklnc mialon official, and National PeopIeI' ea.r-. countrymen led by Vice China trtp that brewed con­ YIIII Yu-Yunc. An aide, John Brennan, ..1d Prelldeat Spiro Apew. paJgns. troversy at bome. Ford threatened to veto any bill that "wUl create confusion." In AIuka, the former Prell- the former president wu re- But his vlalt thia time ~ Nixon made no public state­ plane the quiet IOIIIe In the United The WhIte HOUIIe Iallt said hislltltement did not necesurily ap­ dent remained aboard the turntnc to nonpubllc criticlam ment upon leavinl a jeWDer at during a stopover of one hour llfe he hal led In San Clemente States. Prelideftt Ford baa Aid ply to any of the prcpoaals currently under consideration. LoB Angeles International Air­ While maneuvering continues over the eletion eommiIIlon, a and 45 minutes at Anclloraae in the 18 months between his Nlxoa'i trip probably hurt bIa port, and an aide said durtag a Intematloaal Airport, where reslanation and the trip In the New Hampihire primary heated partisan fight is scheduled to reach the Senate floor on to stop In Tokyo that the former cualDma ~flcia1a received a China. In ChIna, Nixon refilled race aplnat Ronald Reapa; • Monday. President plaMed no public ap­ declaration of Chiaese gifts and to laue ltatemeats or meet with controversy ltill lwirls II'OUIIIi pearances. coUeeted an undiacloled duty 'on reporters for interviewt or 1 Nixon', banquet tout In P_ Candidates on busing Police rnarlJIrneft wearing ...... wo;m . news conference. He did have a that lODle _ u_1_,_", an indirect_...... Oak jackets could be seen on a 'I1Ie departure from CanIDn, relaxed 2I>-mlnute chat with attack on the Haaiu...... BOSTON (API - About 3,000 demonstraton marched peace­ hanaar rooftop, and aecurity ChIna, was Informal. There pbototP'aphers. and Sen. Barry GoIdwa", a­ fully around South Bolton High School on Sunday to undel'!Jcore elsewhere at the terminal ap­ were no ceremonies, lpeechea In 11172, when Nixon returned Aril., ..Id Nlxoa violated UJ. ail issue that I1lOIIl major candidatel in the state', upcoming peared to be tight. or departlna ltatements. The from his fint trip to China after law. presidential primary have chosen to Ignore: buain& school The Nlxo/ll and their eatour­ children for racial Integration. age of 20 arrived in the lime c:'.;r:,.;.r.';;"lfA1f.~fAW'A.M.".';fA1fA• .rA'II'A.MI'Mr"'UAI'r.'lm'llAur. As the South Boston demonatralDn called for and end ID American-built ChInese airliner OOsing, one of the candidatel, Sen. Birch Bayh of indiana, said that took them ID China. The at bue leathers... §] ~ ~ Boa in a television panelappeararlCe in suburban Needham: "If I plane touched down at 5:32 p.m. I were president, I wouIcm't be running against black school PST under gray skies to end the children or trying ID nul against yellow school buses. " return trip (rom Canton, with He said he supports busing as a lut resort ID achieve public stops in Tokyo and Anchorage, for sehool integration, but his comment came In response ID a Alaska . question. Nixon, wbo lives an hour's I · Bayh and other entrants of the Massachusetts race have drive away at his seaside San e * generally failed ID address the issue of school busiilg - a con­ Clemente estate ID the south, trovel'Sialone in the state!slargest city. smiled and waved to a small I crowd as he left the plane and i *js a game people play. in· 'Spy' takes ow. life immediately entered a nearby limousine. SOUTHBURY, Coon. (API - A former Mobil Oil Co. engineer He walked only a few steps to I For the II] Ej ~ B hom, brass who reportedly 80Id important oil industry know·how ID the the waiting automobile and by­ standers saw no sign of the limp r Soviet Union before turning double agent for the FBI died Sun­ he had during his China visit. ~ finest, [I ~ ~ IIll b& wood ... I day of what authorities said was a self-inflicted gunshot wound. 'i begun Amona those on hand ID meet I An autospy was ID determine the callie of death. selection 0 r.1IfIll.J ~ Norman Jolut Rees, 88, admitted accepting money for infor­ AP Wireoho\o Nixon were his daughter, Tricia II mation he gave to Soviet intelligence agents and said that from !. of chess soapstone, I 1971 to 1975 he acted as a double agelltfor the FBI, according ID a published interview. His work was considered so Important that I!I; sets 1n. t.i ~• II EJ• alabaster ua,/0\ I the Kremlin gave him medal, according to the interview town " published in the Dallas Times Herald. Rape p'rogram finally funded e Rees said in the interview that he agreed ID work as a double By BILL GRIFFEL made to the supervison on Dec. there was "no funding available I ~~~ilPewter. I agent in 1971 when he was coofrmted by the FBI, and continued Staff wrtter 15, and has been stymied from county funds." I tin that capacity until 1975. He contin~ ID ~ Sovi~ cop,tacts The hiring of a coordinator for because of a wrangle over Supervisor Lorada CUek :at FBI instructions, allowing the agency to observe and identify the Rape Victim Advocacy which agency would provide the inquired as ID the availabllltyof ffi sai~ . remember-GBUC LEATHER,s ~ I , a number of Soviet inteUigence offlcen, he . I Program to be funded by $2,800 funding. $50,000 in flllld

".. DaDy ...... -. .... CIt" ....___ " Mardi I, 111...... 1 I In.dians get taste of law Hearts open fon Hughes, OOONESSURY in fight to regain land if not VI parking space

.,. UINIWtD IICRNIDT the DIGIt left. The CImabu ..... BIll tbeae stories ... quietly By BRIAN HIlL his concern "about the IIIItn­ 1Jdans. A gnqt 01 DItlft ..."...... • peaceful people. MIn)' followed by soberinI eumpIea 8IaIf WrIter Iitlvity 01 our people to the AmeIbDl are DOW beiaC weItem tribel who lOUIht.re In 01 points . just made. On Harold Hughes couldn't find. minorities In our midst." He "developed to .u wIib tbeIr . III the pul year, ''the 0InIba better Ibape." JIImel'OUI octwkJnI he lubed parking spot In Iowa CIty Sun­ laid "different types 01 len­ own people" ill the aM of IIibI bu received an ·edueatiGa '!be Omaba tribe'. elf· cd .t Jerry Jerome, who II In­ day. Iitlvities are needed" to cope a1cobolilm "In spite ~ l1li 0lIl ~ the law," IClDOI'dInI to trlbIl fIeultlel, he codUued. ranee voIved with the Iowa Conser· The former Iowa governor with the problem 8Il*II blacb wantlnC it to happIIl. " he said. QIIlrperlODl'AI ClIne, ...... fram rac:IIm - ''nat to SouIh vatlon Dept., for "1tirrIns up and U.S. IN!IIAtor, wbo UIed to than are needed IUIIOIII whIteI. . Alter ~ bow l1li . to approaimltalY 40 people In IliItatI\ N...... II the wont" farmera.pInIt the Omaha. " have rnotorc)'ele etCIltta .c. Hughes, who bad left Men· reHgIous beliefs · helped 111m awnbaUlh Audltartum Friday - to • Id 01 commitment by ClIne concluded hili talk by CIDIIlpallY his vebtcle, was for­ lana 01\ Saturday, heavily em­ conquer biB alcohohwn and ~. CUne, wtae appearIDCIe the I&ate and lederai pem­ reQUeItinI thai all concerned ced to park "in a blockecktf, no pbulzed the need to IIlderItmI have IiDce iqroYed Jds life. ... tpOIIICII'IId by the Wounded n.u to protect lIIId that II Indlvlduafs encourage their parking zone" near the Union another .group In the United lfLIIbea reealIed the tine billie held In truIt 101' the IndIanI Knee Support Committee, IIId u ..-onand~ We to a lack of other space, he States, "who don't necesurily ~tlea ''tbIt I have tried to be WII the f\rIt "tribal chall'­ provided In an IBM treaty. The to support BIll DIIO and the said. think thiI 8iceIiennIal rI*l to become. member 01 the treety ••ve the lederai pent­ JoInoa-O'MalIey Act, which Hughes wu featured u the celebration II 8II)'tIIq to He said the flrIt II ''tbIt the JDdIan mO\'llDBt that IhoWI n.a 40,000 acftII 01 land. and deals with the pubIlc funds that guest speaker at the 10th an­ ciebrate - the AmerIcan In­ JIlI'POI& 01 Ufe is to lowe God. " AmeI'k:a what II hIppaUna to thiI point II the ball 01 • legal accaunt lor 10 per cent 01 the niversary banquet 01 the UI'. dians, the native Americans." The IeCODd II the ImpartIDce be JndiInI." He II Involved In lepl battle over the 11,000 aereI. cast In educatlnllndian youth. AlcohollBm Center. He said that to them. the pIaceIln Pial villi bIB famUy, don apInIt what be calfed Cine ..Id the pyet'I\I'DeIIt, U. He laid It II being threatened by "I was a nWe fearful that BIcentennial II "like Columbus "beet.. it Is a lIoIy in­ .. tten," who, he cIIImecI. truItee, II rIIPCI1Iible for Day; they look at it u • BIll es.a, .". seIf-deter· lOIlleOIle milht draa away my stitution. " . . .:-tryIna to "ecnroa" 11,000 ptbertac ·lDformatIaD fOl' the lrination .ct," wbIch he ..ys II car," he said to 8 8eIJ~ crowd national traaedY rather than • The third priority cme from acreI .Ione the MI.auri River IaWllllt. The CImabu, be laid, a "good" bill but would, In Its . 01 over 800 people In the Ullion day of victory . deep InI1c1e 01 I*D. Evei)Wi III low.. He added that the have bad to pay aU their leaal poeIeDt fonn, render the John­ MaIn Lounce. Many were for· "They don't really think IiItenIng could feel bow far ..«era are led by five men ,. and the peswilent, ....o'Malley Act VCJid. mer a1cohoUca that had been there's much to celebrate In 00wn it bad come from. that preaently cuUOI 8,000 01 throqh the .ttorney pneral, treated.t the center. relatiOlllhip to what has hap­ H\IIbeI stared, .".,.In. thole 11,000 .eI'II. hal been trfInI to get them to Bill 81010 would repea1 Public "And I coudn't find anyone pened to their people In thiI trance, .t the lcuIIe'. far wall In merved tooeI, ClIne 1111 the property. Law." whieh~IIYI would here who felt they might hive nation." when he laid it, u if he wu. dIICIIIIed both the probIemI 01 "They've goUen to .. that reduce the jurildiction 01 gover· enough bifluence to prevent that Hughes said the nation'. In­ remembering - back In Ida indiana nvin8 and -1CCIedInI1n lIIId lor 40 years and we fiIure nment aBendes on the reaer· (having his car towed). 'Ibey aensltl vlty to Indian needs has Grove, before he WIt • IO"l" Amerlc. today and their we've IGt IOine t.ck rent due. vatlan . . In hII argument for used to keep the whole l~ out created a mustve IOcial nor, or .....tor. Badl to wbm IltrVllIel to maIntIIn their own '!bat', why we're IUeIni the 82010, Cline cited IIIJ1IeI'OUS In· there v.cant for me." problem. he bad been. chronic .Icobo1Jc, cultural tiel IIId Idd1ty. banker, who's one 01 these five cidents of fanners Ihooting .t The-audience laughed and .c· "There lBn't • people and he only had hII wife. ''Thole who've met the white people, (leadlna the IqIIattera) the Omaba'. tNc:kI. He laid cepted him, if they hadn't anywhere In the world more "The Jut II the ability to mill fInt are In the 1fOI'It for $55 million.!' when . complalnta were made, before. deeply or more trqicaUy Ieam to love one othB' perIIIIl," _pe," huaid. ''11Ie IndIanI 01 ClIne'. preeentation .... often COIIIerv.tion officIaJB laid the But the parking Incident aero devastated by alCXlhol than the he laid. "Because we can't love MaIne hive to brinI In punctuated with hlllllCll'ClUl fanners were Ihooting.t ducks. ved to demOll8trate the new American Indian." many unIea we can team to Rich iii Don's 1bose oIflcIaJB, he .dded, Canadian IndIanI to teach their anecdotes .beut lndianI and status, and Its accompanying warned that In­ Jove one. ADd to ltay with Q\at deallnp lpIred the time 01 the Hughes the dIlIdren the old wa)'l. Yet thole their with "govern­ role, that Hughes has assumed dians anyone penon DO matter what mIItakeI IhootInp -11 p.m. would reject that Hair f'/air who've fOUlht the hIrdeIt have rmnt people and lIIId IPOilm. " during the last ~r. would "go there and try to force they make or wbere they ao 01' He wu at the banquet our ways upon them. " 00w btgh or bow low they may beca~, • former alcoholic The problems of thillegment rile or fall . And to tnaly love ~.K Board rejects Bartel's claim himself, he had played a major of our population are not jUll them." role in establilhlng the center Hrntted to a1coholl'lrn, he laid, He talked more 01 hII 0"',..,,;" 1.\'(; (.'O .lll'I.";"'''; .'i'l'n.l.w; when he was governor. Since because the priaona In areas devotion to '.'the service 01 "'0" .1I f.'.\' liJ Jrt ".If;.\' then he has been instrumentsl with large a Indian population JeIUI CbriIt, "1M the rest 01 the for $11,417 in legal expenses In obtaining funds to support Its are mostly filled With "our IIIOI'dI awept by. SIX TRAINED SPECIALISTS in H.ireuttin,. Hair activities. natural Americans." Suicide 'lben he left the podium. ae­ coloring. and Permanent waving . By BILL GRIP'FEL III the validity 01 the claim. favor and Bartel took his IIe8t on Hughes had dectined to run rates are "five to 10 times eompanied by • I&IndIng l&alfWrtter l«Ida CiIek, the other board the board. Walters appealed the for I'Hlection In 1974 to become higher" aniong them }'tI!an any ovation. I·h, :U8··J:l8() The BoIrd 01 • riIorI member, WU not pretem for ndlng and DIstrIct Court Judge IIS80clated with a reUgious other category 01 people In our And almoIl half 01 the 100 filled J.O Friday to diIalIow that vote but told The Daily William EadI afflnned the elec­ organization caUed the midst," he added. And In crowded fonrard to IbUe bII I ,j ~ ,'i, /),,11"'1"" dIairpenon Richard Bartel'. Iowan abe .... agaInIt allowinI tion board', findings. However, Fellowship In January 1975. teenage deaths and btghway hand. daIm for $11,417 In lepl open­ theclalm. Eads denied on April 30, 1875, Though his home Is now In tragedies "you find the same •. Bartellncurred the-expen­ Friday, Barte1 abstained, Bartel'. rtque&t that his legal Washington, D.C., he said hlJ thing." • u • reauIt of an election lA!nz changed ta mind and fees be ••e.sed against reUgious respoMlblliUes take "Everything we do II not dIalIenge by p.e. Walters In voted with CIlek to diIaIlow Walters. him "all over the world - working. This is because we 1t'1Z. Bartel'. claim. . AccordiRg to Bartel It WII at wherever the service 01 the don't have a point of reference If this bag looks suspiciously like J. Patrick Mite, IIIIJtant p.e. Walters, a defeated can­ Ead!s SUUestlon that he file a Lord takes me. " to undemand the total lO8I of COld)' .ttorney laid, "I csmot didate in the election, clalm with JoiIIsCII County for When the time came for his identity, the depth of the lind any ·.uthorIty-which 11)'1 challenged. Bartel's election to hIIlegai expenses. -speecll, Judge Louis F. Fautsch sptritual need and the the one you've been wanting, tIU lIa pennllslble claim." the Board of !qIeJvlIon In 1m Bal'tel also Iuhed out at the (retired), who eerved as the disassociation that we have On Feb. 210 Bartel and Robert I1JedaiDl that Bartel wu • COlI­ PreII-Citlzen saying that its master of ceremonies, didn't helped to bring upon 8 wonder· then we had it pegged correctly. Lenz voted to approve pa~ vIcted felon. AceordInI to . Iowa coverage · of the election run through aU the honors and ful and beautiful people In God'. rI Bartel'. claim. Bartel law • convicted felon II cballenge was "politically positions Hughes has received creation, " he said. during his lifetime. requested that PI)'nISIt be IneIllatbie for pubUc office. corrupt." But Hughes said he wanted to delayed ~ a deter· In December 1m, a county Before the election. "The "What can you say when you're Introducing the Great "thank God that we had a few nination by the COWIty attorney eIectlon board voted In BIrtel'. PreD-Cltlzen bad my FBI 'rap people willing to lay their guts sheet' (Including a ·list of One? " Fautssch said. "A man who gave up all the power and (II the line" In working on charges and their dlIpositlon) solutions to problems facing the Food costs creep down and just before the election they -glory for an apostol8te to publilhed a story that portrayed Christ." By The Aaodated Prell me as a felon." A standing ovatloo accom· AlA8'S 1m( SI1H Anotber l'OIIDd 01 decllaea III the price 01 butter and ega Bartel claimed that the FBI panied Hughes to the podium. helped COIIIWIlm at the IIIpeMIIlrket during February, an "rap sheet" proves he was He began by remInlsclng about IFSAlE1IISWEAI AIIoclated Prell awUtbuket survey Ibowa. But lI'oceI"Y never a convicted felon and that "when it was unpopular \Jlder CCIItI at the ltart 01 March remained aIm ..t 30 per cent hlgber his election chaJIen&e began any circumstances to publicly Also: than they were three years tao. prior to the 1m election when discuss the problem of Feltills The AIIoclated Prell drew up a random lilt of 15 commonly he was "tried In the press" by alcoholJ.sm." He said he wu purchued food and nonfood Items, cbecked the price at one the Prell Citizen. Bartel said proud that he and others are by JUpenI1II'ket In each 01 13 cltlea on March 1, 1973 and baa that beet.. of the "poliUcally oow able to help fight the PAIl rec:becked on or about the .tart 01 each succeeding month. comIpt" coverage given his problem In public "even though '!be latest aurvey abowed a coatlDuatlon of the encouraging candidacy by the Presl-Cltizen it still bears a stigma." _RAM price drape that occurred In January. he wu "lW'])riIed" when he He then blended comments '!be martetbuket total at the cbectllIt .tore WII down durlDi was elected. about fighting alcoboItsm with ...... ____ iii February In 1.201 the citiel.urveyed, with an average drop 012.7 per cent. The only IDcreue WII III Seattle where the total at the cbeckliIt .tore weal up 2.2 per cent. Comparinl current prices with those at the start of the year, SUMMER EXCITEMENT '!be AP found the marketbasket total bad declined at the checkllst.tore In ~ery city, down an average 01 jlllt over 4 per cent. ,, -Army ROTC Summer Camp f Police Beat- , I Six-weeks starting May 28, June 11 or July 15 \ ,-~~. - - By ...... The victim, 25, delcrlbed the • • A tfOInan told Iowa City ...Ilent U white, about 30 ,I police Friday MIIInI that she years old, 5-feet-S, and 01 \ IIId tJeen IIc:

A NEW EXPERIENCE ALL EXPENSES PAID plus $540 Hang one on. Lloyd.Jone. Without Military Obligation Yurce. SInce 1172 ...... bien. Act before spring break member 01 the EIIemal Ad­ ...,. Cemm1ttee on Can­ Call Captain Farrow 353-3624/ 3709 or tIIIIInI Education for Women It theUI. Write Army ROTC, The University of Iowa Locally ~ hal _. Army AOTC-L,.rn whit It tlk,. to l'ld 116E. wei OIl tha Iowa Qty Ubrary Washington BaIrd. the boIrd 0I1lrecton 01 tbI CardiDaI CatmcIl 01 Girl IccdI and • presIdInl and ntIIIIbar 01 tbI baird 01 tbI unti19 p.m. Ion City UIIIt.d NItIoaI ~~. ..------~~~------~--~ Page 4-The Dally lowln-Io". City. 10"I-Moa.• Mare .. 1. 1171 . Aj a4 Interpretations a,HA 8t Law lebo (lie forp... _toapa neyt lpeak Women In 1 attheUlLa' The panel . tel' Law Sell of the coni 8pOIIIOred t Time for nuclear concern of Women Staff It's time to pay serious attention to those who Opponents of the initiative are inadvertently Sylvia Le1 calling nuclear power into question when they say II the UI protest that nuclear power is unsafe, when three of HawkeyeL those people come from the higher management of the initiative would amount to a ban on nuclear by the nuclear industry itself. plants. If this is so, it must mean that they can't be The controversy was given new fuel with the proven safe to the satisfaction of a legislature, and resignations of Gregory C. Minor, Richard B. Hub­ they caD't be proven safe enough that. a utility bard , and Dale G. Bridenbaugh, long-time would consider them a worthwhile risk,. if the managers within General Electric's nuclear utility had to be responsible for any possible division . (GE designs, manufactures and sells disastrous accident. nuclear power plants.) The three quit F·eb. 6 to join Project Survival, the The letters of resignation of the three GE engineers will be printed on this page starting California group spearheading a drive for a Safe Nuclear Initiative which is scheduled · for a tOday. They make important statements about the statewide vote in June. Under the initiative, safety of a technology upon which the federal nuclear plants cou.ld be built only if the federal $650 government is still relying for America's energy million ceiling on a utility's liabiljty.1or nuclear ac­ future . cidents is removed, and if two-thirds of the Califor­ Perhaps it's time to change our energy priorities. nia legislature casts a vote of confidence for each nuclear plant. STEVE FREEDKIN

EDITOR'S NOO'E: Gregwy C. MIDor It oat 01 *"-...... for"lp 01 major lIiItI ...... Uoa ud eoatrol.ya&ema. who reslped from GeaeraI EJedrIe'. Duelear power dlvllloD, lie .... MrVed .. muqer of Reactor Coa&roI 8)'..... proteltlDg tbat "tbe lIIfety of ellltJq ••clear pner ...... Eapeertq. wbere be wu rellN*lWe for tile deIIp of pntee. beea badly COIIIpI'GIIIiIe by tbe ...... vy •• rub Ie ...... , C'Glltelmneoof _ reWed lIfety HDtnl.yRemI. IDOI'e Ind more new pIaDtI." At tile time 01 ilia ...... be wu mpoaIIble for tile MiDor wu lDIIUIIerof Advueed Coatrol ud 1uU'am..... deIIp of lIIfety 1)'Item, COIIIrOl.yRemI, ud eODtnl room c.- when be resigned, lifter 11 yean wItlt GE. He ...... ~r ftpnUoa. . wltb GE ia IMO wIleD be wu aulped to a .,.atloa at IIafGrd, lie .... eqIDeerIat depeea fnIm tbe VDlvenity of catIfonIIa Wublngtoa. In IIU be MrVed .... EIedroIIIe DeaIp .. _S&uford. I Letters Development eJ1IIueer a& SaD JOlt. wbere be wu ~1Ile FolIo.. 1t .... 1eUer of 1'HIp.... frem Geaeral Electric.

article were limited to the reasons she had stated to me. This is select group to control the student body. This Is to infonn you that I am resigning from the GeneJ'DI I cannot be part of an industry that Pl'OOlotes a policy that Electric Co. effective today. no different than a reporter stating the reasons why lOIlleone Is 'tWIIId lead our generatim to consume 30 years of nuclear power running for office, except my report was accurate. My reason for leaving il a deep convictim that nuclear reac­ for our own selfish PUl'pOlleS and leave behind radioactive Furthermore, as her campaign manager I felt that it was my tors and nuclear weapons now present a serious danger to the wastes that will be a health hazard for thousands of generatiooa responsibility to provide thole reasons to the public. I DeVer future of all life on this planet. to corne. falsely signed her name to the statement and purposely did not EDITOR'S NOO'E : Cuc:lDo IIIbsD.Itted a lta&emeat Ie 'l1It I am convinced that the reactors, the nuclear fuel cycle, and In recent months I have become increasingly dismayed at the use the questicmaire to prevent this misunderstanding I waste storage systems are not safe. We cannot prevent major industry's oppoIIt.iCI1 to the Nuclear Safeguards Initiative. I Daily 10"" OD belaalf of CberyI RIaoadI wIdIoIlt IIer penaiIaI& apologize to 0Iery1 because The DI was not perceptive ~ 11Je point It .. wIIetber that ..&e .... c.rreedy hal!.,. .. accidents or acts of sabotage. I fear that continued nuclear bave seea the attempts to confuse and whitewash the iIIUeJ by to reallze this. proliferation will quickly consume the limited uranium supply ~ tbat there are no unaolvable problems and appealing to RboacIs ' views or DOt - tboaP la fact RIaoadI ...... Ie 'l1It and force us into a plutonium-baaed fuel economy with even indiVIdual's fears for their jobs. The public must be told that 1also feel that The Dl owes Cheryl an apology. The statements DI tbat tile sta&emblt wu lima teo blud" for w. ne ..... _ greater dangers of genetic damage and terrorist or weapons ac­ there are many problems. I am confident that an infonned I provided were written on yellow legal paper on consecutive tbat tbe .tetemeat bore 1lIIoIa' DIllIe at tile top, .. pve ... tivity. public - given the truth - will decide against continued nuclear pages and were DOt DI questionnaires. They were intentionally dieation tbat It wu wrtttea DOt by ber, bat by CUdIt. From my earliest days at Stanford, I have been deeply concer­ proliferatim. presented ooly as the reasons why theae candidates were run­ CuclDo'. aDalogy about flDCdoldD, .. a reporter II a ... ned about the dangers of radioactivity. I can still remember my I am also Sure that there are others In the industry who share ning . Most Importantly. they had expressed these l'e8!1Ons to me • . A reporter doH DOt make .p qaotea for peepIe .... m several occasions. The misunderatandlng lies with The Dl for IDOtber byUae OD &lie repart.er ..... wife's shock at having a container for urine sampling·placed m my coocema and 1IqIe my decialon will ca~ them to atop and pe,...'. a ...,. our front doorstep for the use of our family. I won

When is The Dally Iowan golnl to stop editorializing stories Because I work in the HiUcrest mailroom, I can penonaJly preferred party! Notice that the SCA w.. not given an equal that should be reported objectively? All year lone people !lave testlfy that both USA and UNICO used campua mail for thelr chance to respond to the front page headline, "3 DI question­ complained about DI reportinl on everytl1lJll from homeccImlni campaigning. I rnyaIf ~fed propapnda from both partia In­ naires 'ghosted,'" and Happy DaY' If.. not liven the oppor­ queens to national news, ecreaming that The DI needs to be to the mallboxes ofllllllSpeCting recipients on Feb. 24, the day tunity to react to "Big Money Powers Stodden." Significant, more objective. But the molt blatant editorializing I've Men thII before Woody Stodden'. campaign materiall went out. WhIch lIIh? year was smeared allover the froot pile of the Feb. 21 DI. 1 means the other parties violated the ruling fint. WhIch It a fact Dianne Coughlin It a creative writing major, not a jouma1lIm thought "yellow journalism" went out with the The DI never mentiooed. I have in my poaeuIon poItcardI major. OrdInarilY,·I would not hold that against IOmeone Spanish-American War! fl'Olll USA aDd UNICO which dearly uy "Campus Mail" ia the aspiring to be editor, provided they were COI'IICientlous about - MOIId.y, Marth 1. Vel. I., N.. I .... Section 10 of the By-Laws of Student PublicatiOlll, Inc. (SPI) upper right-hand comer where the stamp should have been. ethics and poIIible libel. DIanne ICIenII to be oblivioUl to ethics. EDITOR ...... DIa_C..... Board, the goveming body for The Daily Iowan, ltatel, "The According to the editorial, Stodden "hal been a low And how many of the members of the editorial staft have taken NEWS EDITOR ...... Krl.1I Clark vote-tet­ Lepl of Daily Iowan shall not, as an entity, endorse candldata for IenIte the J-school course 11:102, and EthIcal FOUDdatlooa ASSOC. NEWS EDITOR ...... rl. L."lor tel' during hII put two teml4, eelting hII way into ASST . NEW S EDITORS ..•.. M.rk Mlt ..IMlcIt . K. I'1trIclt J'" political office. However, individual .talf memben and readen cbaln." The fads are that Stodden placed IICOIld among the Qmmunlcation SyItemI? It II required of all joumalism majors. DI of the Student Senate electlOlll would in­ LAYOUT EDITOR ...... •. .. •. • . ... Tim SIeCI II the paper may do 80 over their own lilnature OIl the editorial contenders for dorm ..ts one year and third the other. PouIbly cove. CHIEF COPY EDITOR ...... Anlt. Kllar page." . if thiI the reuon he received few votes It that there were few voten. dicate that they did take course, they leamed no_. EDITOR IAL PACE EDITOR ...... Connlt Ste"art Since when is page one the editorial page? By IiIninI tbelr DI (The fact that "eking" w.. mlaIpened in the above quote II Woody StocldIIl u a penon II not the Iasue. Twelve people ASST . EDI TORIA L EDITOR ...... Rhonda DlcklJ were running with blm. That', 12 people'. chancel for electim FEATURES EDITOR ...... , ...... 8obJ .... staff positioos aloog with their narnea at the end-of the letter, beside the point. We can't expect the ecIlton to know 00w to ~ ndned becallle IOmIDIIe OIl the Dl ItaIf hu a penonal grievan­ SPORTS EDITOR ...... "...... Bill Md~ Dianne Coughlin and the rest allltronily Implied thiI wu DI dlctlonariel. ) ASST . SPORTS EDITOR ...... Tom Qulaln staff opinion. ThiI is further reinforced by the editorial'. belnI ce againlt Stodden. Twelve good people were never even given. CONTRIBUTING EDITORS ...... •.. Kim ROI.I. R.nd, KnoptI' framed In red Ink. Suppoee 12 m1scellaneoua univenity Itudents It took poor judgment even to print that editorial. It took even ftgIaing cbance. That It the iIIue. RIVER CITY COMPANI ON ED IT OR ...... Cbrl.8rt11 had gathered together to write aleUer to the edi~ lUPJIOI'tInIa peorer judgment to put It on the front PIle, violating aU jour­ What the IlTeIpOIlIible edItorIalltaff did borden mllbel. Ala PHOTO EpITOR S...... LIII' r. nce Fr.nk, Com Fre.tI different party.

. ~. 'Love,' RhYDlin' SiDlon <= After a dip in law schoo~ -tt~ . win top GralDDlY Awards CARDS a cold plunge in reality LOS ANGELES (AP) - Arts and Sciencel, "Tbe OIarIes earned biI loth Gram· "Love Will Keep U. TOIether," H.. Ue" by Van McCoy and the my II top male vocalllt, Earth, ., MARYICHNACK and added that IeUinI up Iowa City 100ft and orpnI7Jng pointed out to her that "I'd a topotelling IOIlI that propelled Soul City Symphoay WII Ie­ Wind , Ftre WII named belt ETC private which II very an Iowa Women's LIIw Center. Ita performers t m.. lca1 ltar· Iectid belt pop Instrumental, group and the SlIver ColI­ 8&aIf Wrtt.r pndice. make a areat legal MCretary, " 10!1 S. lJubuqu(' Law IChooi dca not prepare expensive, II an "lnvatment In It will be a non-profit, tal exem· "Law school is IIOf'IIetIIIng dom and a television series, and the Eqles were picked u ventlon's "Fly, Robin, Fly" WII ooe for practicing law, accor· the future." Buaineu groWl by pt center. Ita motto, Ibe said, is they make you do 10 you can do shared top honors with linger· belt pop group for "Lyin' choIIen belt instrumental. cInI to a panel of women attor· word of mouth, Mellon aaJd, and "Power .Through Learning, SOOlething you want to do," IOIlI writer at the Eyea." neyI speakIni Saturday at a she finds It very difficult "hit· SharIng, OrpnizIng, and Ac· Conlin said. There were three record industry's Grammy Linda RoIIItadt and Willle The Chicago Symphony's 3S3-6Z01 women In Law confermce held tIng cUentlfor money." tIng." The center will perfonn womeR In her law school clus Awards. Nelson were declared top fe­ "Beethoven: Sympbonies (II) It the VI Law School. Judy Redmond. a 1172 legal help and ClCMRIeIlng, but and, upon graduation, they "l

OOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau WHYUVE AUFE JBL's newest bookshelf: wmdJT MEANI~? The Horizon 166. Too many of us nre in places ing the Gospel of Christ to the You've got to hear it. we don't want to be. Doing things American people. For over 100 we rea lly don't lVant to be doin~. years the Pauli~ts have done this We can talk about "dis­ Sometim~s, it's because we can t through the communication arb­ think of anything better to do-but book.. publications, television and persion" and "definition" tllat's no way to live. I ~adio-?n co!le.ge ca.mpuscs, in pa.r· Sine .. you have only one life to I,shes, III mIssIons .111 the .U .S., III live you mi ht as well live it with Idowntown centers, m workmg with and "power handling capa­ JOY' . . . wit~ a feeling of satisfac- I young and old .. Because we are flex· tion and nccomplisl1ment .. . and 'able'r we ~o ntmuaJlYt~IOneer new bility" and "frequency the knowledge that you are giulng , P(l oaches .. To do h,s we need not taking. Why not decide to live dedicated, mnovaltve men to carry response:' (Horizon has for the best .. . for a great p'urpose on our work. ... for something bigger thnn you To flnd out what road God has AiRkfT, are? cho en us to walk is one of the most more of all four than any ALRl6HT­ U you want to change the dl. importan.t tasks of ~ur life. JUST tflME rcctlon of' your life, you might In- WhIch road WIll be yours? bookshelf speaker JBL has PUTMYR4NT5 vestigate the Pauli,t way of living. For more information on the ON, OKAY?! The Paulists are a small group of Paulists, flll out the coupon and ever made,) I Catholic pries ts dedicated to preach- mail toaay. 111'\;;:0":: ':;OO:-A::I<-.------I But specs aren't sounds i - and words aren't music, I IWJLBIS Name I Addreu I woodburn Come listen to Horizon. Mall 10 ; Clty ______I Rev. Frink (>t IAno. C.S.P., RoomCl45 $375 each, You've got to PAULl S,. FATIIERS Sta'e Zlp __ I sound I 41~ W.II ~9'h s" .., Colle,. L New York. N.Y. 10019 a't.ndln' _____CIa •• ol __ ., Highland Court hear it. --1 Pale 6-The Oaoy Iowan-Iowa City, Iowa-MoD., Marcb I, 1t71

tempts to create a helped create military force, II AllIIn. In one _, both Marlon or message? "revolutionary" fUm. StarI brouaht back by the BrttiIh In ftlrna, while valorisationl tI. Inhibit the apedators' im· order to eradicate it. The revolutionary ~, are presslons of what is actuaUy guerillas are wiped out 10 a man alia studies of how thInp .. 'Your local 80l'nl 'or being dlscUlied on 1CNen. Do In the classic opentian of ....• done. In AJPn, the film viewers attend ... for III ch and destroy. WboIe vIllapI 'Burn' mixes Stardust, Marxism ItudIes bow to eonduct a By'n ideological rr-. or to catch are moved out, removInc the modem, urban auerWa aetion. exploration Into revolu&ionary Algeria wjthout ura, In an at· a glimpse of Marlon' The film guerillas' bale of action. the_ Anmk>}=I The By JOE HEUMANN story deallni with the c:reetlon also reveallni the pltlaIII of FUmCrtUe situations which bepn with tempt to create an hiI&orIcaI at· and suppression 01 a II one of the eumpt. of the dIf· II neceuary for than 10 IWIm IUch a movement. In ... the ferenc4! Battle 01 AI .... In the latter rmsphere. With Bura and Bran­ revolutionary movement. The flcultlealnherent In such a mix, in, In order to IUl'Vive. The aile ume themes are studied apIn. c.1I 354·2424 quiet I Bana, directed by Gilles Port­ film, Pontecorvo IItroYe for abo do, Pontecorvo took a step back· \lie of stars II always an fl· tift of Stardust and Marxism. of the illand enablel the BrItlIh A movement II created, it II Rupp ) tecorvo, II a continuation tI. the aoIute realism, IhootInI In ward, employina a star In a pIoeive iuue when a director at· Brando plays a professional 10 I)'stematlcally c:ruIb all destroyed, but It halleI'Ved Its ebalDpJ revolutionary hired by the reel.stance. The petrtota- reI\11e purpoee. The populace has without ••,rlCII "'_...... U.lnr.lly " •••• will meet al • p.m. to surrender. They are willing become aroused, be.! made Utile r1 lotI.yla lb. PubUc Llbr.ry Auditorium . BrltIJh govenunent to help create a guerilla army bn a to die to belp CJWte a new .... aware, been poUtlclJed, anta. smaU Portuguese colony. The IIblity on their IsIInd. radicalized. But Postscripts ....._ C.... , " ...... p.lll1e.1 C"eI' .111 meel at 7:10 p.m. , Once BrancIo · bas succeeded In AJpn the IpeC8tor II tuck)' today In the Public Library Story Hour Room . Brltllh are Interested In accetl to to the Island'. wealth and want In his 'miIIIon, he II ready to allowed to canoerVate on the the Degree deadline n. C.lle,I••• A... elat .... C.. IeU .iII meet .1 I p.m. today In the creation of a govenunent leave the 1JIand, nus time be people thernaelvee, and are crop. the Union Mlchl,.n Room. Fat Cit Studenll .ho .WI to be cOnllder.d 'or the 1.7' May Graduallon favorable to their Interelts. does not make It. He is IdIled by apared the c111111c peydIoJoticaI mUlt flIe an Appllc.llon ror Deline .Itb the Reglltrar'. OUlce, an Islander In a claalic IUIrllla IIepth created by the Then n. N...... n DI ...... 1 V.'nnl., will meel .t' p.m. today .t Brando II IUcceasfuiln helping preMnCe Je.. up H.II, 00 or berore March 5, 1.7• . Every Iludent .ho pl.nl to terrorist operation. The raaee ,raduate mUlt rile an Appllcallon 'or a De,ree berore the de.dllne I. Vi . Benton SI. to pl.y bridle. For reterv.tlonJc.1I 337-4773. mold the Island patriots into an of a Brancio. A common theme professional is kllled becauIe weIIkncl d.te ror the lellion In .hlch he or she expects to Ir.du.te. effective fighting croup. The II qendered by a c:oncen­ lellt••• 81bl. Stilly will meet at 7:" p.m. todar In Ihe Union Miller the spirit of the revolution that tratioII on common people. In battUni Room . . guerillas IUcceed In helping champ! Recital overthrow the preeent colonial he helped create II IUD aUve. BIn. the revolutionary theme He hal mlscalculated the sue· With Suzanne G.rramone and Melanie Buckley .111 pretent. duo-pl.no P.I G•••• N. will meet at , p.m. tod.y .1 the Brown Bottle niles. Another group, more II watered down, IOIIleWbat of his COWl­ reclt.lat ' :SO p.m. tod.y In Harper Hall. Resllu r.nl. amenable to BrltlJh wishes ceaa cllaintegrated, beca\lle of the ter·revolutlonary ~. concentratiGII on the Brando 1Ie,la.en Felk Duee .111 meet tod.y II the .m.lIum. Women'l takes over. Revolution has been Lecture exported In order to facilitate Once the 1aIanders have Men persona, ThIs will make Brando Gym . the ldeall of liberty, the death of fans happy; he giveea good per· Noah Her.hko.itz. PhYllcs and Allronomy • • 111 spea. on "Cylin­ the growth of capitalism. There patriots only becomeI an exam­ drical Solilloni and Shocks" at 3:30 p.m . today In Room SOl. Physici 8IMy Or.. , I.r "e.ls. Prayer lI.. k.1Ii meet.t 7:30 p.m. today.t Is only one problem. Once the formance. But Pontecorvo. In Bulldln,. Hillel Found.tlon. ple be The revolutionary movement has to followed. IIIina a star, attacb his own establishment tI. fear and terror notion of revolutionary cinema. Film Festival n. C.ICI.. I.~Ia. " .. eric•• 81.~e.t V .... • 111 meet at 7:30 p.m. been created. It II hard to II a two-way Itreet. The life lotIay .t the Chlc.no Indian America Cultur.1 Center. 3GII Melrote eradicate. The patriots believed His main message II IOIJIeWhIt of colonial ~rs The Firat Annual 10 •• City Experlment.1 Film Fe.llval will Ave . In their cause and unhappy with dly. the obIcured by a Hollywood preMnt rum. by n.tionally .ccl.lmed IUmlll.kera rrom Ne. York the exchange tI. one white man are numbered. In effect. Bran­ aesthetic that he had p-evIOUIIy Clly. Iowa C;lty and CalUornia al 1 p.m. tod.y In PhUlips Hall . 8,.•• 8a, La.clte... 111 feature Julie Zimmer. director 0' PALS for another. decide to go back do II killed by his own hand, at· been careful to avoid. Auditorium . Admlilion 1s.1. Pro,r.m. apeaklnl 01\ "Companlon.hlp.The MI,,'nl Llnk".t 12 :15 temptIna to return to a past that by p.m. tod.y at the WRAC. Into the mOWltaina and begin Prelented Bljou FIlms, their struggle anew. he helped destroy. Ban will be shown today at 7 LINK U•• arrle..... ben S...... Gr•• ,.1II meet at 7 p.m. tod.y Illhe The· IUCCeIIfuI elements ol and 9 p.m. In the Union IDinoll LINK can put you in loucb 1"lIh someone Into celeilial navlgallon. WRAC . ChUdcare.iII be provided. Branda, the man who hal BInI are IimlIar to those tI. Room. Call Action Sludlelll353-3eIO. bet.een 1-5 p.m . ne M•• te C'''DlIttee. 100.1n, Into new loog boob 'or the Catholic Wheel.oem Student Center •• iIl meetll' p.m . loday al Center E ••1. Ho.ard Weinberg .111 hOlt Open Mike 'rom '-11 p.m . today In tbe C...... I Pe••• e. aervlce.1II be held.t I :" p.m . today at Center U of I Lecture Committee Union Wbeel Room. E.,1. presents ne Sl." E.'..,.... C.IlecUve Or,.,IIIII... 111 meet at 5:15 p.m. Continuing Education today In the Union North.ellem Room . The Kopp Center for Conlinuln, Educallon II now accepting ap­ plication. 'or Internships In III alternallve learning programs scheduled 'or Summer. mI. T.o lelalona will be offered: Session I (I Angela Davis .eek.)·June '·July 31 and Sealloa II (4 weelta)· Au,. 1·21. For more information caU or .rit. Anne Hym.n (312) 411-0550. Kopp Center 'or Continuing Education. lOlA S. Boulevard. Evanal.n. iii. • 60202 . Chicago Trip March 15, 1976 UPS Tr.vell. offering a bu. inlo Chicago on Marcb 5-1 .ilh return March. and Marcb 1S-14. Roundtrip COlt Is ,U. For more information 8:30 pm caU UPS Travel. 353-5257.

IMU Main Lounge PC' "',. "" M_.- PrI. 5a30-8a30 1 ...! ..." L 1 MEETINGS Watch for Tuesday SpeCial Speaking on ala,I•• a., Ie... wUl meet to discu .. "It. Sin,le's PercepUon of Bucket of Beer Us Married Life" at 7:30p.m. today In Room I) Cenler Eill. All Week "Organized Struggle Against Racist

P.bUc Meell., willi City Co ••ell Me.lter David Perret to discu .. , ...... 10 ...... proposed bUI fare hilte will begin .t 1 p.m . today in Center E.II. , , and Political Repression II · The keynoles of the depreSSion period are struck as never again with ., such warm Intimacy. . Admission is free Film festival today CLIFFORD ODETS' • By BECKY COLEMAN SWfwrtter An experimenta1 film festival. to be held today at Phillips Hall Auditorium at 8 p.m .• offers a unique opportunity to realize the AWAkEaNLSING ! I aesthetic possibilities of film . AN IOWA CENTER FOR TH E ARTS PRODUCTION The festival, sponsored by Action Studies and the Video Theatre March 26·21 ; 30-31 ; APRIL ' -3 . 8:00p.m. Project. will show experimental films by UI filmmakers and by E.C. Mable Tneetre known filmmalters. nationally TICkets Available al Hancher Box Office ~University~ Films by UI people include Pictum 01 tile CIty. by Franklin ·" ...... " Miller. asst. professor of speech and dramatic arta: Tea BIrd and FUm for FilII by Stephen Etrlnier, G, and AprIl I', lf75 by ~chaeIFTo~,G. Looking 'or • Other films !If UI filmmakers are B~ m, Dean uti ImIIIIie pI.... nt SurprIH? ~S phony~ Palls by Joe Orr, G, which shows a deterministic view of space, INDSW.D. without a directDr's viewpoint; P.... ' VIsit by Chuck Hudina. SHOWS: 1:30, 3:30, G. which started as a "home movie" and won a prize at the Athens 5:20,7:20,9:20 Film Festival; and WIDdow Framea and Cruy Jaae OD God by Geoffrey De Valois, G, which stresses the visual impact of film by Victoria destroying the narrative fonn. rcHestra.~ Films to be screened by nationally known American film­ Playing a mixture makers include Off 011 by Scott Bartlett, which Ihows the graphic Symphony No.9 in E-flat minor potentials video offers film art; AII1IreI and CalmOi by Jordan & a little out of the ordinary (The Pioneers) Philip Greeley Clapp Belson, which atternptl to show In film deeper levels of visual per. 8pmto12pm (leption like those experienced during meditation; 11IIP LIM Lyre 1'rlupIar by Stan Brakbage. which describes a father'. Don Juan, Op. 20 Richard Strauss emotional state during the birth of child; Poem FIeld No. I by The Stan VerDerBeek. an example of computer animated film; LapII Concerto No.5 for piano and orchestra, by James Whitney. considered one of the most beautiful and most Cp. 73 (Emperor) Ludwig van Beethoven famous of computer films; and PermatatloDl by John Whitney, ~fl\ERD1P1TY another example of a computer film. 1310 Highland Court KENNETH AMADA, piano JAMES DIXON, conductor

Wednesday, March 3, 1976 8 p.m. Hancher Auditorium I BACK TOGETHER AGAIN r-J[EE-~ r-R-EE-~ No tickets required

I . II I , I au~ I., .... Iu"' \'izza II ... , .n, DINNE. I . I AI II...... , prle. I I AI II.. , ...., .. prlu I I I I I I C.I '"""CI' />IZZ. I I c., 'do.Ii.. , D''''''' I I FREE I I FREE I STUDENT TICI~ETS NOW ON SALE I I I I Non·Student Soles Oegin March 8 : • NOW GOOD ON DlUV.' . I : .,., ....1 c.r.,...,."" .I I YESTERDAY'S BERO I. YESTERDAY'S HERO I 1. Variery Series Mar. 22, 23 4.5O-J.5Q.2.50 Studenrs 1'2IJD O)LllItT COU"T 33f.3OI31 I '2IJD Olllf"T COU"T l3I-lN31 Count Oasle (M & Tu) 6.00-5.00·4.00 Non-Students r I EXP. SoS-7~ I I EXP. SoJ.76 I 8 p.m. II One Coupon Per Customtr AI I II One Coupon Per Cuslomer AI I 2. Chamber Music Mar. 28 4.00 a Thl. Lotilion Onlyl I... This Lotltlon OnIV! I Oertin Philharmonic Octet (Su) 5.50 ~------~ ---.------~ 8 p.m. (zone 1 prtce only) j Dive Brubeck QUlrtet Ippelrtng In 1956 3. Special Mar. 29 6.00-5.00-4.00 IIJ()Uimu Msrlslav !\osrropovlch (M) 7.50-6,50-5.50 March 4, 1976 8:00 pm 8p.rn, 4. Opera Apr. 9. 10 4.00 The J BRANDO "The Love for Three Oranges" (F, So) 2.5Q.UI srvdents & I, ilver Anniversary Concert 8 p.m. other students .:. of the , Apr. 11 3.00 DAVE BRUBECK QUAR.E. (Su) 1.00-UI srudents & with 3 p.m. other students Paul Desmond 5. VarieTY Apr. 19, 20 3.5Q.2.5Q.1 .50 . Joe Morello New York Jazz l\eperrory Co. (M & Tu) 5.004.OO-J .00 8 p.m. Internitlonilly acclaimed director Glllo ( BAT· Eugene Wright TLE OF ALGIERS) Pontecorvo dIrects Mlrlon and 6. Chamber MUSic Apr. 26 3.50 Brlndo In I more rt.eent role - I 19th century Solnt Paul Chamber Orchesrra eM) 5.00 Idventurer sent to the West Indle. to provoke I Two Generation. of Brubeck colon III uprising. Ten yelrs liter he Is forced to 8 p.m. (zone 1 price only) I combat his 1111 ... The film focuses on Bran'do's .Tlclceta on ..Ie a' Hancher Box 0Ifk:e 7. ConcerT Series May 1 6.50-5.504.50 . Inner conflict between duty Ind morality. Student: 4.50 4.00 3.50 Oeverty Sills (So) 8.00.7.00-6.00 Non-student: 6.00 5.50 5.00 8p.m, MONDAY ONLY $1 6-&-10 pm 1=1 Hancher Auditorium TIle o.Oy lowaD-lowa CIty, I_~-MOII .• Marc:. 1. 1t1I-Pa,e 7 College basketball Pia" MSf] toda" roundup Michigan ,runs past cagers ~~~PnMTb. Soutb.a.t.rn Con- Mlchlaan "lipped .., IIICCDd tie trouble lettirW started. 'lbe now II that rJ regrouping ill ;;;~~~;;;;~=;;;~~~~~~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ference uaed to be a niee, place In the BII Ted bllketball Wolverines. led by ezplOlive tJme to beat Michigan State and , qui.t place where Adolph race wltlll"7hrln over Iowa Rickey Green (22 paints) and Purdue fortbird: MISCELLANEOUS PERSONALS AUTOS Rupp harvESted lubell 01 here Saturday. but thanks to a Wayman Britt Gil). jumped to a "We've been geWnc all the A·Z DOM ESTIC clIamplolllhipl every winter Mlehilan State 101&. the 11-2 lead. then lidded a final breaU." I18id Gatenl. who without much fanfare and Hawkeyes are stI.llln ccntentian 10-p0int burst before the end 01 draws pralle from the COIChea It70 Maverick 6 cylinder IItU. revolt from the pea- for third place. theflrsthalfandhelldedintothe lor his never-say.·attitude. =C~~E 'Awomen ' ssu~ PIONEER casseHe tape player automatic, new paint. Very clean. hi.. _01.1.... locker room with a comfortable "We·ve· just a..k to _ .... In an . . . with FM radio, S60, cheap.3S4- 338·4232. 3-1 an ts . Whit e MI c.... an WII ... _.. a.... CiIIII' 2352 3 2 TYPING But Iince the kina 01 KeD- pat the Hawiteyelln the FIeld ~advantqe. them, now. We're weren't AIRPLANE ride. · LOCIIIorJongcjstance. --.---.------lUCky butetblll baa retired Houae with Ita deadly fut Scott 'J'bornPaon kept IOWI', playins our tempo, but that'. Wafter 6:30 p.m.• 337-3570. 4-10 8511 turntable, Harman Kardon 1170 JEEI' CJ5 • l.-peded. some new to the leiIure 01 hiI tobacto breM. up north In MinneIpoUa "'- 11 In the b cbi ~ to chan&'e by Monday. " PAOFESSIONAL palm rea6ng Tueldey receiver, speakers. Wl/I seft fOr GIR L Fr'lday Pror.t.slonal tvPlfIfI p.m. wi. contIder trade lor moIorcya.. Crop. the SEC II 110 10000er the neilbborinl Gophers dealt ~~a;efor 25 :::..Jth: "1binga haven'l changed." and Thu~y. I t a.m. ·5 p.m. ;" caJ/ for best offer. 353·2792 . 3-4 and QuIck servIce f 8,., SelectrIc.. $2.000. 351-1291. 3-2 Fat City lor the Wildeall. Iowa a I''''"' b~L. by I.a.otlftft .....-ted jwnp~. But other 0Ia0n noted. "It', still ""' ...... ly appolnlmenl . 351-9412 or 336-4507. . 354·3330. A-14 tNt PLYMOUTH FURY· New power ~ ,-.. -.. t-M'" """'" an our .",_.lde- ...... ~-::.U Emerald CIty. Hall Mall. 52.00. 3-22 THREEroomsol.-tu... ture·Spec:ially · liee brakeS JlO'I'er ste«lng automatic. 'I1IereIl, for inltance, Ten- MIchilan State, 71~1. Purdue. than the 8park from reserves 81...... • .. ,,'cu_ "~ ------eeIecIedlouneenpiecesollumfture · L/II· PERSONALtypingHMc» .• xperienced. • • .... and Alabams-two Mlchilan State and Iowa all MIke Galena (10 ....I ..... 9 belnthirdouom.oneellewilL DflNKINO problem? M meels S81ur. Ing room. bedroom and dfnene. $199. locaIadlnHMlreatlll THE DAILY IOWAN . ITOIIAQ I BSR lurntllble for sale, Ilx months more responsibility, more III- lnapec:tad. 353-3009. 3-t paled ,cenlralair. twoutlltysheds. SelNng Stat. .ole po .....lon of S.nd this ad blank filled in Room Itl Communlc.tions Center , EITOI'AGI old, bt,t Ofter. 3$4-1338. 3·1 precl.tion, a better chance for ad·' unfurnllhed. CIIII 6045-2833. aec:oad place In the Pacific .. ,long with Ihe check or money Mlni-wtrehoult uti! ...... aIHI. Monthly vancement. We're open till 9 every. FOR .... . 1972 V.... W""'" . Air. ------·ceS .' (ornerotColl.,.andMlldlsenStr"ts - .. U...... •• U.ED Ulcuum claan. lonable , ...... - .. CaIIIereDee. order.or ... Sloplnouroll, 10WI Clty •• u --...... u--month-"...- ...... ",r.. _k·nlght. LOOKING GLASS ' . ~.IpHd . radall. $t .700 01 best oller. t2d4GlO8EUASTER,tumilhedorun- I---______....;,;;.::.:;;:.:.. ___ ...J DIll 337-3506. 4-8 prtoed. BrIndy'. VIICUUm. 351-t453.3-22 .t·5504. 3-17 ~ 35t-3827 after 5:30 p.m. H ~m1Ihed. 1Ir, 35t-5812a1l. 5 p.m. 3-2 Page 8-The DaUy Iowa_Iowa City, Iowa-MOIl., March I, 1971 Iowa sweeps

on Big l~ meet; liquid silver jewelry and supplies Tuscon next Vol. 1 By BU MeAtJLIFFE Purdue ·(2714), N~m tlrJ'P 0 ri un\ the H~ Mall Sparta EdI&or (1814), Ohio · State (18%), above Jackson's ThInf time's a chann,' they ll1ino1s (15%), and indiana (5) . • y, and no one', beUeving It At 158 pounds, MIke more right now tJsaD Gary Kur­ McGivern arrived In the finals de1meier and his Ion against Wisconsin IOpbomore s wreatlen. Lee Kemp, whoee claim to fame "There are no aecretI," Kur­ Is not 80 much a 1975 NCAA run­ Thanks Its deimeler ..id about winning a ner-up title behind VIllIa but a third cOllle<.Ulve Big Ten defeat of Dan Gable at the Nor­ DESMO championship and qualifying an thern Open In November. Kemp liayau working entire team for the National proved too strong for McGivern, Collegiate Athletic AsIociatioo previallng 8-1 and keeping his final51n two weeks. "It's just a record untarnished at~ . of the hard "He Is the best in the nation," CROSSWORD PUZZLE Jot time on mat·and Edited by WILL WENG wort. If tbeIe kids are wlIIinI to McGivern said wblIe he IIUI'Ied do that, they'll be wInnen." a shoulder which Kemp, who ACROSS 41 Bone: Prefix 11 Act of PhotO by Lawrmce Frank 51 Father's gift swallowing EucUy three Hawkeyel were won three tournament matches Third time wa, a charm for 1 Boast 51 Antelope 12 Attract just that In the final round &m­ by falls, nearly took apart. "But 5 Kind of apple 58 Numskulls 13 Swiss town day night In the Field HOUle I honestly think ·I haven't Iowa', Bif{ Ten champion wre,tler, or chamber 80 Remainder, in 21 Anklebones before a loud crowd al nearly wrestled well since Ouistmas. PLAY TENNIS?! I Stock·market Paris 22 ~,~roPShire 9,000. Chuck VagIa, defendlni My riding ability helped me get second Big Ten championship. lU. grouping 82 Tree trunk Big Ten and national champion second here." Bud Palmer quickly- revam- Nevertheless, Iowa will be 14 -poly 83 Baseball's 28 Tree resin at 150 pounds, succesatully ,Du Wq_ weatlaiothe pedhis reputation as a "boring" sending all its starters to the 15 Famous traveler Slaughter 28 Talks too freely 18 Boredom 30 Jumbled word: retained the first half of that ftaal m1pte of tile 111.,..... wrestler by exploding away nationaia at TuIcoo, Ariz., since 84 Bar On a 100m 11 Give backin, to 85 By any chance Abbr. title with a 7-1 deciIIon over cIIamploasllJp - lied with from MInnesota's Evan Jobn- not a one finished lower than 18 Lags, finanCially 31 Legislators: Michigan's Mark ChurelIa, the two-t1me Tell ..... mplol 8OIl1n the 88 Lonesome tree BII the last 10 seconds al third. II Brazil's Rlo- 81 British service Abbr. rookie who dealt him his only IMry 7J.lverberJ al MbmNo&a, ~pound match_ An escape K.anIelmeler WII "uppoIn­ 20 Word for Jenny women U Vacation place Lind 33 Town in uganda 10IIII this year. bat w. !'evened ad yielded and takedown nearly caused the ted thai C)'IeWIkI aad SmIth 88 N. L. players there's a 23 Poetic word 34 Turned up, .~. "LIke (A.aIt. Coach · Dan) .e poiDt oa rtdIaa time to ...., crowd to shake down the Field cIdD't 1tTeItJe lIP to par. 8IaMh 61111~~F~i~n:a~"y, .. Matinee days: 24 Ratifies, old nose Gable says, 'Love Is great, but House as Palmer broke from a WII besteD by IathelllllWlaall No 1Jlverber& ~ l1li store for you, Abbr. 35 Activists revenge Is· s.6 tie to win the championship, by Pvdue'. AlIIoaIDer, tile Nt. st~le sweet: Somethin& tbIrd cbam,...... , wrettIIIIt 25 Mints' relatives DOWN 39 Burrowed like that," grinned Vagla, who OIIIy .e week after MInIItI &-e. , teed IIId eveabaal elMmpIoa, and you alone. 21 Precarious 40 Contemptuo~s will now face · the stlffest from bee AI'Iery, aad W8I At the buzzer, an exhausted bat Cyae.waki kilt l1li ftrIt mat­ perch, at times 1 Lifting device ones challenges to his national tiUe wtecI tbe meet'. oatlta"l1 Palmer, now 2U-l, and an ell Saturday to _~elled Pat :.19 River deposits 2 Round- '3 Flustered ~tate! from Iowa State's Pete Galea, WftItler. equally fatigued Johnson (38-4), Nell 01 Min uta.. It ippW'ed TENNIS SERVICE PRO SHOP 32 Of basic 3 Designer Cassin! 45 Cal- importance et al. 47 Kind of horse and Vale's Jim Hemett. "It was God's work the way it nearly stared each · other to be. repe8t alJaayear, wIleD 1908 Mt. Vernon Rd . • Cedlr Rapids, Iowa or power 38 Marie 4 Declaration V.... '. wID pve tile came out.... explained through the floor before rising CyleWlklIolt wIy &lid failed to Antoinette, e.g. 50 Old card lame Open pm signer Hawkeye. tile .....ry Iteam Wlllemann. "'Ibis is just where from their knees. place Ia the ...... (319) 363-9767 • Man-Sat. 9-6 31 Mars: Prefix 52 For-(not after Mille ·(UI), I came out this time. I'll just "I told bIm at the duallDeet, qaallfy (or the 1IIIUDeaI.. 5 Rearing a future tooling) McDoDaaP 38 Insects often brat 'Om CylewUI (a.), ad No.1 have to go harder with him next I'd ,et him at tile Big TIIII," "We had two bad matches," strained at 53 Aroid of S. A. • Local resident Ieed Brad 8mldI (la) eoaId time." Palmer esplaiDed. "Bat I cotdcI Kurdelmeier said. "But to put 41 Sound of lament 54 "-Wantto 7 Shake- Get Well" OIIIy tbIrcf pIaee As always the crowd expected lee b In l1li eyea; be W8I uytq that many good matches 42 Deadened .....,e 44 July 4 8 Bonheur and 55 Curves fIaIshes, 10IIDg Ia earlier roaD­ the most when CbrIs Campbell be'd get me at the aadoaaIs." together shows we're doing decorations others 56 Waxed ell. Keith Mourtam at 111 lito took the mat at ITT to regain the Palmer 100t to JoIIIIIoa at MID- well." 48 Marines' training • One making a 57 Approach grabbed third from Ids four. championship he woo as a DeIOta Ia a dual meet earUer "We're there," the four- island bridge error 59 Relocate th-pIace aeedIq, bat the reG al freshman but lost last year. tbIs 8e&IOIl. tb-year coach added regarding 48 Snicker- 10 Chemical suffix .1 Hamilton', bill the Iowa IiDeup bIIttIed ita way Campbell worked his way to a At heavyweight, Doug Ben- his squad's pace toward an un­ IDto tile c!uomP'-"1p matebeI. tense 3-2 decision over schoter coulcm't maintain the precedented second double Iowa had the team title wrap­ Michigan's · Mark JobnIon, fairy tale he has weaved this championship (Big Ten and ped up after the semi-finals and scoring the decisive points on a season by taking-over Cor the In- national) . "It's just a matter of finished with 97~ points In spectacular double-leg jured John Bowlsby In January staying healthy." HINGSTODO dominating the meet for the takedown with 1 minute 38 and compiling an 8-3-1 rt!COrd. In ·the lightweight champion­ second straight year. MInnesota seconds left in the match. Benschoter, seeded third, ships, Mike McArthur of MIn­ WHEN YOU VISIT was second at 57~ and WiscoD­ Campbell, who after pinning scored what was ·considered to nesota extended his record to sin, which was expected to be Dlinois' Warren Seamen Satur­ be an upset in beating No. 2 :n-I for the year with a &-4 Iowa's chief challenger, was day said he wanted to "pin my Kevin Pancratz of ll1lno1s In the ride-out of Mlchl,an State's MEXICO. third with 54. way through the nationals," ad­ semi-fiDals, 2-1, but w88 mauled Randy Miller at 118. Michigan's Following were Michigan mitted he· didn't wrestle well by WISCOnsin's Gary Sommer In Amos Goodlow defeated Kevin Look at the sky. (49IM, Michigan ·State (3514), Sunday despite · taking his the tournament's last match, Puebla of Illinois, ~7, to take hooors at l26, while Pat Go into an elevator and press 3. Milkovich of Michigan State Have lunch. woo his third consecutive Big Ride in a taxicab or bus. ren championship, beating Neu, 5-1. Milkovich·1s alJo a Ask a person for directions to the nearest twl>-time national champion. At post office. 142, Housner defeated Andy Di Have breakfast. Sabato of Ohio State, 6-4, to win Walk on the sidewalk. the last championship match in­ volving non-Hawkeyes. Chuckle. The top three place-winners Have a shot of Jose Cuervo. at the meet · qualified Deliver a lecture to the Mexican automatically for the nationals, With six wild-card fouth-place National Assembly on the finishers being named after the historical significance and potential Jt Privately owned meet by cooference coaches as peacetime uses of the nectarine, Jt No waiting quiaifiers. They were: Jack Reinwand (l26, WiIconsIn), as seen through the eyes of Keats. .. ,Convenient hours Sam Komar (134, IndIana), .. IProfessional Service Alex Rlccomlnl (142, North­ western), Ed Neiswender (167, .. Ample close-by Miclligan), RIll Jeldy (ITT, parking Wisconsin), and Pancratz. Free

DAILY IOWAN u..... IIIt ..... c'lRCULATION DEPT -c.r,lvllle-454-2424 HOURS: 8-10:30 •.m. 2 - 5 p.m. \ Photo by Lawrence Frank Call 353-8203 JOSE CUERVO-TEQUILA. 80 PROOF BIa Tea wreI&IIDc ..... m,...., from left: Lee Kemp, IMPORTED AND BOlTLED BY Cl I97~ . flEUBLEIN . INC .• HARTFORD. CONN. WlIeoulD (111 poadI); Larry ZIIverIIe'l, MIa u" 1111); CIIrIa ClqaIwdI, IOWA (177); BIIII PUDer, IOWA Do your speakers (111); Gary Sommerj WIIcaMIa (Hwl.). BoUIID row, from left: MIle McArtbar, ...... (Ill); AlDol Goodlow, Middpa lUI); PIll MIIbvIdl, MkWpa St. (1K); AI Have a different spring break.. a ...... , Pardae (141); a.ckV...... OWA (1M). have legs? IILSOI'S SPEEOO~ 1976

Speaker stands now

Pr.cl.lon ••d. for ..IIIIIUII available for ·30/.,.lr .p.td, co.fort .Id durlblllt,.

«19 338-9505 k- IILSON'S KIRKWOOD