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Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1967-06-13

Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1967-06-13

?lPet. C.lI . •120 .596 1% .$21 G .510 ~% .5 10 _% ail Iowan .500 6 .{."O 8% S(1TV'ing the Ulliversity of Iowa and the People of Iowa Citu .451 81', .412 101', .40'1 11 1U --cenlS------a copy ------Anoclaled Press Leased Wlr~ and WII'ellh010 Iowa City, 10w_Tuellday, JUDe 13. 1967 II reSults} f ~d 0, first ~ rs 5-3) at Bo .. or Pele" lIOn ~3.0) . .• f'h'7f~~ .t Kanll$ Israelis· To Go It Alone ~ California, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS about their business normally after mas­ Baghdad, Iraq Amman, and Jordan Beir­ bustling with people shoppIng . For the first Prime Minister Levi Eshkol of Israel sive demonstrations over the weekend ut - had broadcast martial music, war time since before the figbting, soldiers warned the world Monday his nation alone belped persuade Nasser Lo reconsider his communiques and news bulletins. back from the front strolled through the will decide what fl'uhs it will keep in the resignation. shaded bazaars on brief leave. In Am­ s Blackout restrictions were eased for the In Damascus the radio eased off, but man, capital of Jordan, King Hussein 3p­ victOry over the Arabs in last week's six­ did not stop completely its virulent at· day war. first time in 10 days. Cairo radio said it pealed for calm. The streets were crowd­ would return to normal programs today. tacks on the West. Instead it praised the ed. Refugees from the israeli-occupied ns 1hus he served notice to the Soviet Un· Since the Mideast crisis began, Cairo army for its role in fighting [ rael. west bank of the River Jordan were con­ ion lha. stl'aLe&ic gains won at the cost radio - and stations in Damascus, , The Syrian capital of Damascus was spicuous. pt in thre~ 01 Israeli blood and treasure will not be of them yielded at Lhe conlel'ence taoie. The Hus· slans have been demanding Israel's army re.uln to lhe lines it occupied before the three-lime ou,break of war. a 6-5 vic. "We alOne are emhled to determine the Clemson, ,"'lire 01 .oe VlLal In.,,res,s o. our COUD­ omen by II, ~ •• u now our lO~ereH' mu~, De secur­ Tampa Riots Spread; his third t.u, ".'I~O, .old .t'aruament in Jerusa- off series. 0:111. r - for lh'~ •.U!, lue Imel na.lOnai communily be in­ (orm~Q Lilal LOt! Shua,lon wrucn exJSLed on Colle"e unlll now Shall not Oe allowed to return. e openin ~ 'Ioe IIOI.·Uers 01 Israel are no longer a no Guard Brou·ght· In meet Ohio man's lana open 10 murUer and saoOtalle trom without. " Israel's aims were not spelled out fur­ TAMPA, Fla. (Nt - Rioters moved out When tbe guardsmen took over posts Crom the usual 150, patroled the street.. The riot ther, OUt it seemed sale to assume it will from the heavily guarded central Negro police, hundreds of Negroes poured into shattered hopes for a summer of "quiet De unW1Ull1g to &ive up these pomls: district Monday night, setting fire to bomes the deserted streets from their houses. negotiations" for Negro betterment In in Spanish sections, stoning police and But a double line of police, elbows linked, Florida. I t;ommand of the Gulf of Aqana, from N.. ,.... Angered which .l!.gypt barred Israeli shipping in an threatening to burn down the clty bus moved through ordering the Negroes to get barns. off the streets. Angered by a report that a Negro youth edJc~ that helped bring on the contliet. At fleei ng the scene of a bu rglary was shot the head of the gull lies Israel', oil-im­ And three miles away at Lake and 22nd Pollet Cars Stoned A FLORIDA NATIONAL Gu.rdsman ...m. to be happy with his wo,k •• h' pr.c:lleu Street, 400 Negroes smashed windows, in the back by a white palrolman, the mob porting port of EJa th. During the day Monday police cars were riot eontrol techniqu .. at the Guard Armory in Tampa. Th. Gua ..d wa. acllva : ~ throwing rocks at shotgun-toting polIce stoned and snipers fired at passing taxis. attacked and beat terrified whites, 0- I Strategic heights over the Sea of Gal­ Monday to man pori. Dn the .Ium .,.... h.~ N.. roes riD led. - AP Wlr.pho'D rushed to the area in paddy wagolll. [t was the second night of rioting which changed shots with pollce, and sacked and ilee, from wtticn Syrian guns have ahelled burned a block of white-owned .tores in a already had sent at least 15 perlOns to Israeli settlements almost from tbe day National Guardsmen, under order of Negro ghetto. Gov. Claude Kirk who was in the riot zone, hospitals. A deputy sheriCf suffered a fatal In the middle of a hot, muggy night, cloUi I Or the Arab-Israeli war of 1948 ended. held their tight bayonet·piked cordon on heart attack Sunday night during a gun ~ or unfur. Negro leaders' hopes of a peaceful summer I location. • The west bank of the River Jordan the central Negro district where a full battle with rioters. 01 civil rights gains exploded when Martin North Viet Air Force . : f.%lAR and the Old City of Jerusalem, lacred to hlock of stores was burned during Sunday One Negro in the riot 10:- ~ was wounded Chambers, 19, was shot and killed as he tile Jewish religion. night's rioting. by gunfire, ran from patrolman James R. Calvert. • Possibly the Gata Strip, from which "They're burning houses," radioed I ~ Arab commandoes staged terror raids into policeman from the Ybor City section, Police and sheriff's deputies had eUec­ Calvert said C)- ~ ~-')era and two other ti vely ended midnight riots Monday after youths had broken into a store and he fired Hit Hard, Still Strong Israel. Egypt had been administering the where many Cuban families live. about six hours of shoot 'lg, looting and only as "a last relOrt." Negro leaders dld Itrip. Another officer radioed from lOutheast SAIGON (Nt - The number o[ enemy nown over North Vietnam Sunday ere As Eshkbl spoke, his .government was arson. not question that the shooting was in the Tampa that a crowd of more than 100 More than 350 city police, instead of line of duty. MIGs d troyed or damaged by American two raid on the Uong Bi power plant 14 lurning to the problem of handling the 1.5 youths were moving on tbe Tampa Tr8lllit pilots stood al about 115 Monday - aa mil northea t of Haiphong. million or more Arabs they swept up in Company bus barns. many combat planes a5 North Vietnam Cmdr . Jack Monger, .1, Brawley, CaUL, their swift conquests in Egypt, Syria and "All the reserves we had were sent to had when the air war over the North an air wing commander on th carrieL' Jordan. Lake and 22nd," the police dispatcher started in February, 1965. Bon Homme RiChard, led the first attack, Food, Medlelne Sent radioed wearily. "We 'have 400 people mob­ Welfare Budget Voted; Reports from military spokesmen added He said bombs ripped throu~h the roof of able The U.N. Relief and Works Agency for bed there and it's uncontrollable. We bave up to T1 MIGs downed in aerial batlles the plant d. nrlbed as North Vietnam'sl Palestine Refugees announced in ' Beirut, no one to send." and 9 more probably downed. Unofficial largest in terms of eleclfl capacity ani. l£banon, that tood and medicine are be­ Gov.rnor In Ar.a reports of MIGa hit on the ground total " li terally blew It apart .. Ing sent to Arabs in the Gau Strip and 011 Gov. Kirk was in the original riot area about 30 destroyed or damaged, Railroad Attach.d the wesl bank of the River Jordan. Night 'Session Planned· supervising the troops he mobilized. But But U.S. officers say North Vietnam 's U.S. f1icr also reported hitting Ut r. i - The agency called for governments, vol· air Corce is nearly as big as it was 28 SheriIl Malcolm Beard was assigned by DES MOINES (Nt - The Iowa House spending authorization at $750,000 a year, road cars on Une between lIanoi and ~ed d untary agencies and private donors to Kirk to call the shots for police and troop., voted '29,895,000 a year Monday to the leaving only $250,000 for other child wel­ months ago because.the SOviet Union ha. China. ' send money or medical supplies to help About 100 guardsmen cordoned off the State Department of Social Wellare to run fare programs and for administration. been supplying replacements to keep It Ground action in South Vietnam coo- ', Aptt, the refugees. The agency said antibiotics, the ten-by·six blocks central Negro diI­ its programs of public assistance (or the Mrs. Lipsky and Mrl:. Doderer tried to at about 100 combat planes. linued at a lull. . dreuings, tents, blankets and vehicles trict, keeping out everyone but law offi­ next biennium. get reconsideration of the over-all child The .S. Air Force said the Kep air base B52 bombers resum d raids over Quanq nhouse were urgently needed. cers. Other guardsmen 'n jeeps mounted The appropriation was an increase of $5 .1i welfare appropriation to restore $270,000 area northea t of Hanoi wa raided Sat· Tri Province after a month's interruption urday and Sunday for the eighth lime sin e The agency resumed relief for about with machine guns cruised the area •. million above Its present appropriation, but cut out by the committee, 80 that the total reportedly due to North Vietnamese sur­ e( April 24. It said Air Force pilots de lroyed QOO,OOO Paiestine refugees who have been Kirk went on television to plead with ,4 million below what the Social Welfare appropriation would have been $1.27 mil· fa ce to air missile placed threateningly in Lebanon, Syria and east Jordan since Tampans to stay home under a voluntary Apropriations subcommittee previously or damaged six MIGs in the first attack near the demilitarized zone, None of the lion. and Navy mers hit (our more in the the 1948 war. But it said Jordan's total curfew. had recommended, and $3.55 million below sec­ bombers has been shot down in two years had been swollen by 80,000 registered ref­ "Law and order will be maintained," the (~M'_~ """""" m'n~loI.,nml~_ ",,_nnrINmiftl ond. of raids. eaturel the amount requested by Gov. Harold E. MIG21s made one firing pass at the ugees who fled from west Jordan last governor ssid after rushing to Tampa for Hughes. On the ground, U.S. soldiers and Korean American raiders, t~en left the area. marines reported klllin ll llO North Viet­ Parle week when war broke out. the second time Monday. The bill, first o{ the major appropria­ AP correspondent Paul Kohn reported tions to go through tbe House, was passed NEWS 4 U.S, PI • .,., Hit namese regulars in a number of cia hes ralvili. I from Jericho, however, that many of these 9l·13 and sent to the Senate. North Vietnamese ground fire downed in the northern mo 1st Corps ar a of refugees were returning to the west bank, The Iowa Senate, meanwhile, made plans four American planes, bringing the total South Vietnam. U.S. 10 ses were lhr e 97 aoating across the Jordan in ralts, boping Russians Beat to debate a legislative subdlstricting bill IN of U.S. aircraft lost over North Vie1nam to dead and 18 wounded. (0 lind their old homes intact. today and a liquor tax revision proposal 581, and American spokesman said. Three Forty-seven U. . Marines were wounded Rlfvl_' Return tonight - the Cirst night meeting this legis. crewmen were rescued and two were miss· In a series of enemy mortar, rock t and Apparently, the refugees preferred their U.S. To Gun lati ve session. . BRIEF ing. artillery attacks on Marine and Army old mud-roof homes in Jericho and in vil­ Majority Leader Andrew Frommelt 10- I_"i"~""""' Communist China's New China New. artillery sites ju t south or th demilitar· lages around Jerusalem to tbe uncertainty Dubuque) announced this work schedule ______"" Agency reported that seven U.S. planes ized zone . of new refugee camps in Jordan. Monday afternoon. Minority Leader Rob· CEDAR RAPIDS III - Cedar Rapidl were downed and many oth.ers damaged Twenty of the enemy were killed by Despite the setbacks, the Arab world In, Venus Race ert Rigler IR-New Hampton ) objected to voters soundly defeated Monday a propoeal over Norlh Vietnam Sunday. U.S. Army forces in south rn Quang Ngsi Among the 87 strike missions reported and Quang Tin provine . showed no sign of abandoning the hope 01 MOSCOW IA'! - The Soviet Union rock­ the evening session. He said they seldom that would have had the city back a pro­ lmashing Israel some day. eted an unmanned space laboratory Mon­ Iccomplish much and only add to the bur­ gram to build up to 400 living units of pub­ Premier Muhammad Mahgoub of Suo day on a journey of more than four months den o{ a hard worked staff. lic housing Cor the elderly, The vote W81 dan announced in Khartoum that Presi­ toward Venus - just two days before the Mtttlnt Schedu .... 9,906 no to 3,990 yea. Under the propoul, dent Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt had Frommelt then formally moved to sched­ the seven-atory bui1diug would bav. COlt 7,500 Expected To Enroll agreed to an Arab summit meeting in plans to launch a scientific capsule toward the same planet. ule the night meeting, and the Democratic $6 million. that Sudanese capital soon. majority was joined by a couple of Re­ Mahgoub told the Constituent Assembly The Russian c: aft, named Venus 4, is the tirst announced Soviet Venus probe publicans in an unrecorded vote adopting DES *MOINIS II!* - For the* sixth tbe jl,rab debacle in lallt week', conflict the motion. stralght night, tornadoes were reported in For Summer Session Here on waA only the beginning of a long struggle since November. 1965. At 2,438 pounds - nearly 111. tons - it is several hundred The House in the welfare budget cutback Iowa Monday evening_ A Iffi8ll twister re­ Some 7,500 graduale and undergraduate The 29th annual University Fine Art to IcbJeve Arab alms. was in line with demands of various legis· portedly caused lOme property damage in Preside.nt Houari Boumedienne of Alger. pounds heavier than the biggest of 's studenls are expected lo enroll today in Festrval, which began Monday. will con­ m. three previous Venus probes. lators for a reduction of some 10 per cent the soutbeastern Iowa community of Sig­ 900 summer school courses and 40 work ­ tinue through Aug. 9. Festival proarams ia, who declared the war against Israel In the governor's budget figures to help ourney. There were no reports of any in­ m, had just begun, arrived in Moscow prob­ The Soviet news agency, Tass, indicated shops. More than half of the students, will Include four plays prc enled by the that one assignment for Venus 4 i! to provide money for property tax relief and juries. Another twister reportedly touched many of them teachers, will be working Summer Repertory Theatre : concerts by ably to ask the Russians what they in­ down fi ve miles lOuth of Fairfleld, but tended to do about bel ping the Arabs get gather infOf'mation helpCul to Russian en­ provide {or other state needs. on gradullte degrees. the Dance Theatre and the Unlver ity didn't eause any lerioua damage. Twiaten revenge. gineers designing future spaceships. It said Rep. Leroy Miller (R - Shenandoah), Registration will begin at 8 a.m. today Symphony; a production of "Die Fleder­ The Russians indicated they will pro­ the probe will collect data on "super-dis­ House Appropriations subcommittee chair­ also were IPOtted aloft near JOWl City. in the Field House, and c.lasses will open maus" ; recitals by the Iowa String Quar­ vide lOme new weapons to replace the tance measurements" and will take elden­ man, laid that even with the retreat {rom Corydon, south of ottumwa and IOUth of at 7 am. Wednesday, according to Howard tet, pianist William Doppmann and violin­ , hundreds of tanks and planes destroyed in sive scientific observatiolll in outer space. the amounta the group previously had rec­ Keosauqua, Iowa City lutboriti. bad re­ R. Jones, dean of the College 01 Education Ist Cbarles Treger, and a number of lec­ the war. The U.S. National Aeronautics and Space ommended. the welfare department still ported no damage from twilten by )ate and summer session director. tures and art exhibitions. Monday night. Life began to return to normal in Arab Administration intends to aim a Mariner would have some $16 million a year more The regular eight-week session will end lations. spacecraft Wednesday to pass witbin 2,000 than in the current biennium, when fed­ Aug. 9. An extended 12-week session, in­ eral funds are taken into account. Lift Return. To Normal miles of Venus. Marine~ 2 came within CHAnANOOGA* III * - Teamsters* Union augurated in 1962, will ofCer required In Cairo, reports laid, people went 21.643 mi~es of the planet Dec. 14, 1962. Most of the criticism of the reductions President James R. Hoffa, claimin, he is courses for undergraduates who wish to Truck Reciprocity centered on cutbacks in aid to dependent seriously ill, asked Monday tbat his fed­ complete bachelor's degree requirements children and child welfare funds. eral prison sentence be suspended. Law­ in tbree calendar years inStead of four . Rep. Dan Johnston IO-Des Moines) said yers for Hoaa said In a U.S. District Court The 12-week session will end Aug. 30_ it was a "niggardly approach" to welfare brief that the labor leader and bis wife Four on-campus institutes are being Rules Probe Set programs to limit the aid to dependent are ill, and charged the elgbt-year lien­ sponsored under the National Defense Ed­ d Call children program to $6.2 million annuaily, tence on jury-tampering cbarges is too ucation Act Designed for public school lkeside as proposed by the committee. It previ­ severe. Hoaa's attorneys said he suffered IJ6rsonnel , including teacbers and super· I erful ously had settled on a figure of $7.2 mil­ from diabetes and a hernia which may visors, the institutes will be held in econ­ By State Senate lion. The present ADC appropriation is $6_1 have been responsible for a massive bem­ omics, educational media, advanced com­ DES MOINES III - The Senate in two million annually. orrbage he sufCered at Georgetown HOIpi­ position and molecular biology. Re..... atlon Fl,ht Lo ... tal in Wasbington in January, 1961. Other on-campus courses will include relOlutions asked for a cbange in truck Rep. Joan Lipsky IR-Cedar Rapids) led the ninth annual Far East Institute, and reciprocity regulation Monday and called a fight to restore $800,000 a year to the workshops in school admlnlstratioo, high­ for a study o[ the whole subject. ADC program. She said this would permit DAVENPORT* III -* Only seven* perlOns remained hospitalized here Monday night er education, parent-teacher relaliona, fam­ One resolution, adopted by voice vote payment of ADC granta at tbe level of Ily bousing, journalism, mUlic, library sci­ and sent to the House. caUs on the State about 97 per cent of hare subsistence, after several hundred persons were forced ences, museum methods, Dursing aDd soc­ to nee the Oscar Mayer " Co. pork pack­ Reclprocil:)' Board to rescind its ruling of whereas the committee proposal would re­ ial work . last May 1 in which it refused to recog­ duce them to about 84 per cent. in, plant here earlIer In the day when an Special research and study progams in ammonia line broke. Twenty-seven perSOIll nize a special registration Minnesota grants Rep. John Mowry (R-Marshalltown) op­ music, speech and dramatic arts, and to farm trucks with gross weight of more posed the amendment, saying Iowa now were rushed to hospitals, but 20 were re­ journalism for high school students also leued after treabnent. The other seven than 12,000 pounds. The board continues ranks eighth high among the states in the will be held. to recognize the apecial registratiaa for subsistence percentage of ADe granta. were reportd in satisfactory coodltioD. All Four courses will include European field available fire equipment was ruabed to the trucks of leas than 12.000 pounds grose Mra. Lipsky's amendment 10lt 39-70 after trips. The European Ichools study COUI'Ie plant in the weJtem IIIrt of the cil:)'. Fire­ weight. Miller explained that the present ADC a~ will examine scbobla in Britain and Scan­ proprlation includes medIcal treatment men wearing g88 maaka smashed windows dinavia. The European field course in Those over the 12,000 pound limit have which wiU be taken over by the new "med­ to let some workers out and about 20 work­ textiles and clothing will include study of had to pay an Iowa fee considerably higher icaid" prolP'am enacted earlier by the ers were rescued from • third-story roof the fashion and textile indUltries in select­ than the MinDesota fee il they operate in legislature. so that actually the commit· with a new snorkel unit. ed countries of Western Europe. Iowa. tee's proposed appropriation is a consider­ Two courses in Italian RenaiasaDce art '!'be reIOlution asks the board to reco3' able increase_ WASHINGTON* II! *- A ,overnment * ad· will concentrate on the .tudy of Venetian nile an Minnesota farm regislration re­ The House allO voted down an amend­ vlsory committee recommended Monday a art - aDd will include visits to muaeums gardless of the weight of the truck. . ment by Rep. Mlnnette Doderer (J).Iowa five-year. n,&-billion eCfort to protect in Rome. Vienna, Munich and Paris, II City) to place the ADC appropriation at Americans from pollutants IDd other well U Itudy in Venice. 16,610,000 a year. bealth hazards. including nolle. But It em­ Two other ofC-campua proeraml will be Forecast The House balked at a committee pro­ phasizes Its belief that this sum, even wltb offered ill conjunctiOll with other unlver­ posal to limit spending for fOlter home some added funda from local sources, ~Ues - the fifth Far Eastern Language IOWA - Pertly cloudy .. cleudy care of children at $300,000 a year out of would provide only 8 modest Itart toward Institute, to be beld this year at the Uni­ tlnUth W~ with ecclllentl A WOUNDID ARAI LIGION ....., h .11ItH II, l.rNIl P...... I" Le.1 Ilhktl. a $1-mlllIon appropriation for child ... el­ meeting threats whIch the committee says versity of Micbigan. and courses in biology ...... ,.. er thu".rttorm., Little tlm­ lilt """"" teure4 H...... H.... UnI ...... , MMlcti C'"'" 1ft Jerusalem MIft. fare pro,rama other than ADe. are extremely serious and will grow more and geology at tbe Iowa Lakeside Labor­ "",atvrt c:htt¥. High today lower ., .. YlIItM min, wev .... ,""""" tf wlr. . - AP Wlrephote Il voted 116-47 to leave the fOlter home acute. atory at Lake Okoboji. MI_ PII' 2-THE DAILY IOWAN-I.w. City, 1• .-TUft., .AIM n, 1"7 Verdict Is In: U.S. Guilty 'IIAE IDITOR'S NOTi - Clrl Ogllllly, PI" and esse.nUal to say so. French Union forces withdrawing below it opportunity to suborn Vietnamese against "- Irtl11e prelidant of Stud.nts for I Democratic That is what the tribunal i8 all about. from the north. their country. It therefore perpetuates a [lieU I Society, WIS I m.mber of I.rtr.nd Ru.· If it finds evidence of crimes, and if it • An international diplomatic interven· fUndamental misconception of the histori· IIII'. Int.matlonll W., Crl.".. Trlbunll iF quite powerless to do anything about lion originating in Washigton but tolerated cal and legal situation in Vietnam to argue ~lI'in8 (at least ) by Moscow and Peking required \VIIi! htld thl. spring In Stockholm. Tht follow· them, these conditions don't seem to be about the presence or absence of "infil­ lpecifi Ing II Plrt of In Irticl. wrltttn by 0g1.1- the faull of the tribunal. CriminaUty and the Vietminb to submit to popular ratifi· trated invaders (rom the north," as if we Inllmi by In tht JUIII 5 ISlue of Tht Nation. victimization will or will not exist in Viet· cation in an election scbeduled for July, were dealing here with two separate and J1Iage By CARL OGLESBY nam wbetber the tribunal says so or not ; 1956 sovereign Vietnams . In point of unambig­ and on tbe matter of the tribunal'S isola· • The French withdrew ahead of sched· uous international law, there is only one ten'S I STOCKHOLM - Bertrand Russell organ· :0 nll ized the International War Crimes Tri· tion from Itate power, Sartre's opening­ ule, forced to do so by the Americans and Vietnam and it is not possible for one I address remark that this is in fact the in any case weary of the position, and country to invade or aggress against 11.1Ul1 bunal to raise unfriendly questions about (via Bao Dai, who had no status) deUvered itself. oot It I America's fight to save the southern half tribunal's leading virtue seems to me quite • enough to lay on the subject. their interim custodial obligations over to In this case, it is legally pointless to ~ of Vietnam for the free world. People who argue about the relationship between the are embarrassed or made furious by such The tribunal set Itself the task of find ­ lhe Diemist cabal, which had no more leg· court, ing the law and the facts on five ques· al authority to govern Vietnam than Mon· DRV and the NLF. If the evidence shows laW r questions invariably deal with the tribunal that the DRV did not create the NLF, j tions : tana, and which would have been incap· , Uo!1ll I by changing the subject. Instead of talk· then that is merely something for the ing about aggression and war crimes, • Has the U.S. Government (and have able of even pretending to have such auth· the governments of AustraUa, New Zea­ ority were it noL for the direct and mas· DRV to be ashamed of. U it shows con· CiUr they talk about the tribunal itself - Its slve poUtical and economic intervention trarily that It did, then the DRV was cial c form, its members and its fairly con­ land and South Korea) committed acts of Ilggression according to international law? of the United States. For its part, the only doing what it had a very clear - terrac spicuous partisanship. To discredit the very legal - right to do , namely , resist man , apparently, is to refute the argu· • Has there been bombardment of tar· United States had no claim whatsoever on !tI' gets of a purely civilian character? 1 square inch of Vietnamese land and had an aggressor against its national saver· bas r ment. no business even being there. In deaUng eignty. One and only one political force, U's never hard to lampoon a group to • Has the United States made use of or Ho Chi Minh 's, spoke for Vietnam at tween with Diem, it dealt merely with its pur­ their i its political enemies; and the tribunal, experimented with new 8IId/or forbidden chased man . Geneva. And since no legal elections rich in enemies, is also quite a soft target weapons? • Over the period roughly from 1955 have ta ken place since to change the sit· \ a!teI 00 its own . lL comes from nowhere, with • Have Vietnamese prisoners been lub­ through 1958, the U.S.·Diem regime made uation, one and only one government, Ho's " are II neither constituency, mandate nor cus· ,Jected to inhuman treatment forbidden by clear its intention to frustrate the Geneva again. has the right to speak for the of eql toms, announces its intentions in an anti­ the laws of war and in particular have Agreements bearing on the unity of Viet· Vietnamese, from the mountains in the The American broadside or two, Is ignomini· nam. Under U.S. prodding and protection, north to the Camau Peninsula in the Rieha ously booted out of Paris by a politically they suffered torture or mutilation? Have there been unjusllfied reprisals against the Diemist puppetdom declared Itself the south. You and 1 and the U.S. Govern· old ~ sympathetic head of state. and arrives ruf· the civilian population? government of something called tbe Re­ ment mayor may not approve_ It reo and t ned and internally disquieted in Stockholm public of Vietnam . Legally speaking, this mains the fact. to bear in pubUc eight days of often pole· • Have forced labor camps been creat· wHe, ed? Has there been deportation of the pop. government and its "republic " came from Legal realiJ.ies do not, of co urse, uni­ they' mical testimony which it in fact had col­ nowhere. Its claims were based on an formly coincide with political realities. lected by and for itself, and then produces ulation or other acts tending to the ex· Jlbertl termination of the population and which election which, besides being notoriously There is evidence that the DRV. for rea· on the ninth day (May 10, 4:50 a.m.) a fraudulent , it had no right to bold in any sons which need not detain us here, may Jaw iJ Judgment which everyone supposes could can be characterized juridically as acts cess I of genocide? case. have been prepared to concede at least just as well have been drafted a year be­ • Thus deprived of that victory which temporarily the occupation and de facto ment' fore. Its membership contains no really These five questions subsume four it supposed had been legaIly consolidated severance of the south, and that the post· '1'0 big-name jurists and only a few lawyers. criminal acts: aggression (or crime at Geneva, Vietnamese nationalism again 1954 resistance arose in the south inde· IreedC It is a politically selective assortment of cgainst peace, jus ad bellum ); war crimes began to mount a violent resistance to pendtly. That is a maller, however, for basis left-wing writers, intellectuals, politicians "properly called" (jus in bellum ; ques· the new foreign rule. Hence, the second the DRV and the NLF to settle between embo< and ombudsmen without portfolio ; and it lions 2, 3, and 4); crimes against- human· Indo·China war. themselves at some later date when the silicat beems so clearly less judicial than poUtical ity (distinguished from war crimes by There is no civil war in Vietnam . There invader has been repulsed. No outside na· sive ( that almost no one on the outside (which their greater scope and intensity ) , and is, rather a war of nalionisl resistance tion or people, and certainly not the Unit· includes a lot of space) has been able to genocide. The first session of the , tribunal against an invader - the United states ed States, has anything at all to contrib· -- take it for anything but a stretched·oul arrived at affirmative verdicts on the - which appeared on the scene iIIegaIly ute to that forthcoming private conversa­ and fancified party rally. £irst two questions. The remaining three under the fla g of truce and wh ich lost no tion. 'This time, how about a solid foundation?' C.L. Sulzberger went bUnd with exasper­ will be taken up in a final session to be ------ation about aLI this. He says (The York held in the fall. Times, May 12) that besides Lord Rus· Consider the first, that the United Stales sell , who at 94 is only a "decrepit symbol" Government is guilty of the crime of ago and who wasn'l thel'e anyway, and Jean· gression. The tribunal does not affirm this Paul Sartre, who he admits is a "famous in any loose moralistic sense. It bales Mancllester-Kennedy feud lives on · sot existentialist," the tribunal consists only of its finding upon a crucial clarification of I.+l - "mediocrities" and "nonentities." This chick! the political entities which are involved in Iy GORDON YOUNG &< outburst, Corry kept on covering the law· J sort of sneer can be taken on rather eas· this war, and this clarification requires us publication post mortems. Talese writes Look and Harper Row were champions 29 he i1y: Mehmet AU Aybar is not unheard of News Editor about the heartaches, headaches and of the free press. or out to make a quick suit. He became increasingly hypersensi· ), Lo re-examine most coldly one of the stap­ humor Corry experienced in getting the buck . Jackie and Bobby were entitled to day. in Turkey, people know about Ali Kasuri le arguments oC the peace·movement "rad· In 1965 the Sorensen and Schlesinger live and distraught - just the type of per· story. Moreover, we are informed at the their privacy, or were reniging on their San J in Pakistan, and it is an odd set of med· icals." books on Kennedy were best sellers. Last sonality the Kennedy hatchetmen were as· The iocrities and nonentities that includes Vlad­ From the 1961 White Paper to date, our year it was "]n Cold Blood. " Later this end of Talese's article that Corry is writing agreement with Manchester for strictly a book about The Book ! politica I reasons. Manchester was a blab· serting Manchester was . He had all sorts es ba imar Dedijer, Isaac Deutscher, Lelio Bas­ government' 5 position bas been that the year we'll have SveUana's memoirs. But CaliCo In other words, Esquire published ber-mouth hypochrondiac who was a of influential people angry about his COy· I, so, Simone de Beauvoir, Sara Lidman and trouble in southern Vietnam is ordered so far the biggest news in non· fiction has said, Peter Weiss. and directed from Hanoi , whose creature been William Manchester's "Death of a Talese's article out of Corry's coverage damned fool ever to have agreed to let the erage. The most deliciously ironic moment out of Manchester 's book. Probably by the Kennedys edit the manuscript, or he was a trying But that's beside the point. The import· organization, the National Liberation President. " came when Manchester assented to an· traUel ance of the tribunal, the measure of its Front. is therefore illegitimate. criminal The book was the biggest thing to hit Lime John-John is old enough to run for the misunderstood author maligned by would· Senate we'll have a TV series titled "Son be censors. other Interview but insisted on the privilege on th, goodness or badness, lies in much differ· and deserving of the violently, repressive publishing since the Bible, and it has en­ The ent tefl'itory. treatment it receives at the hands of the gendered not one, but two articles in the of Manchester Runs Again!" Among the more astounding tidbits Corry of editing Corry's copy before it was \ Kennedy, Int.rest 'Peopl. turned in! lasted A long tradition of positive international American military. To this line of reason· current issue of Esquire magazine. uncovered was Jackie's brasb boast that beyon (I.e., Western ) law holds that there is ing, the opposition movement - at least Esquire long ago abandoned the colle­ What could inspire such a spate of words Manchester wouldn't dare cross her be· Corry presumably is now somewhere a bout words? 10 ot such a thing as an act of aggression - in its more "political" sectors - has U8U' giate crowd to Playboy and has concen­ cause "anyone who is against me will look working on his book about the fiasco, and The question is similar to the old jow" cause ;. crime against peace. This is a fael. ally responded; not so. We have been say· trated on depth reporting of current events. like a ra t - unless 1 run 0(( with Eddie it's likely that somewhere else tbore is a killed There are also such things as crimes of ing that wbaL has been bappening in the it recently has carried an acid but accu­ nalism problem. "How do you define Fisher!" grad student waiting to do a dissertation news ?" The best answer is that news is car. }var, and these also, in a long series of south in the late middle fifties and onward rate critique of the Kennedy mystique by By the time the reader gets through nine about Corry 's book .. Fou conventions, protocols and treaties stretch· whatever interests people. The Kennedys is indigenous - a gathering of a popula­ Gore Vidal, an absorbing profile of Harri­ pages about the lawsuit itself, he might or hal ing back to the Hague Convention of 1907 tion increasingly outraged by Saigon's dic· interest people. They project more images Who will have the last word ? One won· son Salisbury and a masterfully written despair of reading Talese's story about ders if eventually JFK himself- who surely reds c and including the Paris Pact, the Nurem· tatorial terror and cornered into a choice series on Jack Ruby. than a cracked mirror : political courage, Family Life, political connivjng, The Merry Corry's misadventures. It really does get would have been bemused by the whole , hundr' berg Charter an 1 the Charter oC the Unit­ between annihilation or defensive violence. Stories Are Lit, ed Nations, have been most carefully des· The Nl..F, so this argument runs, is main· Widow, sexy sophistication, the Bostonian to be a bit too incestuous, rather too much spectacle - might call down from Heaven nutter The only problem with Esquire - a sit· the Fourth Estate in joke. But for anyone Fift: cribed, defined, and registered by the na· Iy a southern force, and not, as the gOY' Brothers, validated virility, The Charming and exclaim in his inimitable Bos ton ac· uation common to all monthly magazines­ I tional powers of the so·called and self-sty· Hnment maintains, an invader from with· Kiddies, and pounds of pizazz. who ever has pounded a newsroom type­ ment, "Amen!" men led civilized Western world. Nobody Js oul. is that its cover stories are no longer cur­ And don't think they don't know it. The writer, Talese's article is better than hay· eo CII trying to pull any wool over anybody's What may not be immediately appar· rent topics of conversation by the time the clan long ago outgrew its gaggle of politi­ ing a beer with the boys after deadline an d I round eyes; these Jaws really do exist, have ent about the tribunal s verdict on U.S. magazine hits the newsstands. Some might cal press agents and has enlisted prac­ reminiscing about Big Stories. One he bored with Esquire's continuous cov· Bnd 0 been officially adopted by oWcial aels of £I ggl'ession is that it rejects both posi­ tically the entire Eastern Establishment Corry NMdtcI P.tl.nc. erage of Kennedyiana, but the articles usu· Today by ac the heads of state, are in fact the law of tions. The line of reasoning the tribunal to let the Little old lady in Dubuque know Cony is described a ~ a mild mannered our land, and all the outrage in Washing· puts forward - in my estimation,'simple ally are sufficiently inte resting to compen· for whom she should vote in '72. reporter with SupermM patience. He indoor ton and sarcastic obscurantism in The and unanswerable - is as follows : sate for these shortcomings. j caugb The .June issue's articl es by John Corry On, Could Do Worst needed it. on WSUI New York Times will not change that fact. • Starting in the 1930s and continually And don't think we don 't eat it up. 1f it At one point he managed to get an ex· There is also a war in Vietnam. This gathering strength, a Vietnamese rebel· and Gay Talese entitled "The Manchester Papers" are a case in point. Who would isn 't a movie magazine it's MacBird that c1usive intervfew with Manchester, a genu· • What would you like to hear? Lislen· war has a very cocrete life in a very con· lion took shape against French colonial· we read to keep abreast of what's up with ine scoop, sure ~o impress his editors. Tape er suggestions are welcomed at WSUI, crete set of events. Il has an internal ism . This rebellion was both nationalistic have thought that anything more could have been written about the subject? The the Holy Family. Why not? Our parents recordings, reams of notes, pounds of particularly for Bookshelf selections , clas· historical density about which it is possi· (aiming to break Vietnam's subservience did the same with Lindbergh and the Duke memoranda were his. He returned brealh· sical Illusic preferences and classroom ble to gather data of a more or less veri· to France) and social (programming the feud was front page ntlws for so long and was such an essentially trivial controversy of Windsor, so why shouldn't our genera­ lessly to the newsroom and was told the presentations. We cannot always guaran· fi able type. destruction of the exploitative landlord tion enshrine the Kennedys? The British editors had decided they were overplaying tee to respond , but - in recent months , system). that one would suppose it had about as Pur( That is to say, there are findings of law have Elizabeth and Philip, the French have the story and to write it tight. particularly - listener preference has and f to be made about wars in general, and • This revolution, waged across the much general readership interest as the had a measurable impact on the selec· Chicago grain futures . Because the Des Le Grande Charles and we have, well, we All those precious quotes - how could I I were findings of fact to be made about the breadth of Vietnam, achieved conclusive have Lyndon and the Birds. One could do tion of programming materials. underj Vietnamese War in particular. These find · military victory over the French Union Moines Register and Tribune are owned he sacrifice them? worse than to admire the Kennedys. Depar l ings having been made with as much care forces in 1954. The crucial diplomatic event by Gardner Cowles who also publishes He sweated, summarized and watched • Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s new book , There is no question now but what Jackie mtic ~ as a body of serious and inteUigeot (who at the Geneva Conference of that year Look magazine which serialized the Man­ anxiously as copyeditors yanked the paper "The Bitter Heritage," is just now wind· and Bobby stubbed their toes in their ef­ re's B isn't partisan these day? ) people can chester book, Iowans were subjected to a out of his typewriter to meet the deadline. ing up its stay on the Afternoon Book· was the formal surrender of French c'll­ quet r muster, it then becomes poSSible, approp­ onialism to the Vietnamese revolu'jon. particularly heavy dose of news lIbout the forts to ban the book. Typically enough , He went home exhausted. He went to shelf at 4 p.m. His suggestions for policy riate and essential that the facts and the Geneva was very much like York! ..' wn in squabble. whenever a VIP tries to cover up a contra· sleep. changes in Vietnam are provocative. To I laws be exposed to each other tbrough this respecl. Artlcl.. Are AblWbing versy, the press - quite correctly - spot­ • The Best of the BBC, at 8 p.m., is must lights the most miniscule details. As Cor­ The phone rang. The editors bad just man I the very simple question, "Are these ac­ • To provide for orderly transfer of Yet, the fact is, many readers will find currently offering a three·part saga called themselves reacting to the two Esquire ry's article makes clear, the lid wbicb the learned that Newsweek had obtained an "The Anger of Achilles"; part two is more tions criminal according to international power to the new oaUonallat re,tn:e, the exclusive interview with Manchester. Thev I must law?" This questi.on can be answered yes. l'ountry was temporarily partitioned at articles with chagrin, amusement and per­ Kennedys tried to clamp down on the situa­ scheduled for tonight. Il's based on Rob· haps even sympathy. Journalists and those lion became a sieve of leaks to the press. were holding open the front page ; he had ert Graves' translation of the Iliad of lere.t no, maybe or insufficient evidence. Ir lhe 17th Parallel, the Vletminh forces with­ ouly a few minutes to write up his Inter· throug crimes exist, it is possible, appropriate drawing above it from the south and the interested in politics will find them espe· Anyone who bad read the manuscript in Homer. any of its forms was only too happy to view. livitles cially absorbing. • An important talk called "Violence John Corry was divulge the juicy parts on the typically "Go to hell," Corry said quietly, and mUsl Imug not-for-attribution basis. and the Mass Media" was delivered reo I I 3. 0 grl reporter who covered the story. Gay Talese hung up. cently on our campus by Prof. Otto Lar· is a former Times writer who frequently Wht's Good, Who's B.d? Well. like they say, the guy had IUts! Ie Ma: me- 'Daily Iowan sen of the University of Washington; it Ige fo comments on the good gray newspaper. There were the good guys and the bad '.apl. Angry With Itwy was recorded for presentation this Thurs· Corry's article is an account of the contro­ guys, but which ones wore the white hats Hone Although he alm08t l08t his job over that day night at 8. I presen Tlte Vaily Iowan i.! written and ed/fed by students and i.! gooemed b" " board uf fille versy itself and ends even before the post depended on one's perspecliv •. student trustees elected b!l the studetlt bud" atld four trwtees appointed b'l tile president mores uale I at the Unloersity. Tlte oplnwl1.S expre8sed ~n lite editorial column.r uf tlu! paper should b6 considered those of the writers of the arClclB8 concertled alld nol the expreulon at policy University Bulleti n Ivera8 OFFICIAL DAILY IULLITIN BOard eligibl! 01 the Universitl" any group Q88QCiated tv4th tlte University or the staff of the newspaper_ Unlv.rslty Ivllltin lei,. netlcel MUlt be ,ecll,," at Thl Dally IOWln oHlcl 241' e_ , cause munlutlonl Conte" by n_ If thl .ay beforl publication. Thoy mUlt be' typtd Ind published by Stuclent Publlcatlona, tnc., Com- 'ublhhtr ...... ,...... I.warll 1 ....1t 11,,,,d by In 1.,,1.. , or oHlc,r If thl .,.,nl.ttlon being ,Iubllcl.l. Purely IOCIII tuncllo.II at the munlcatlona Center, Iowa ellY lOW•• dally Idllor ' ...... 1111 Nowbrou.1I aro not ,'".l1li ftr thll tlCtllII. • The e~cept Sund.y and Monday, .nd ie,al bolld.Y'. City 'dltOf' ...... _...... Ir" IClo ..y U~iversi~ Calendar Entered II aecond-cl... m.tter It the polt Newa Idltor ...... rtltn YOUnt MAIN L11.,•• V HOURI tn~rIJn period : ITUD.NTI WHO WIIH 10 havI their ell" lIe: E office .t Io",a City UDder the Ad of Ccmll'eu _portl Idltor ...... Mlko I,rry June 8-13, 7:90 •.•.-5 p. •. HIMrY" book room ranktnformatlon forWarded to their lIfan ralls. of March 2, 1879. Ctpy '.Itor ...... De... MI~Sh" closed JUDe 10, entire bliUllln, c1111tC1 June 11. bOlrd Ihould pick up requelt lorml In I Unl· I bIc Iptl .... • ._ '.lIorl,' ,.,' Idlttr ...... ,.. Dill a,o, Beilin IUlllJller ecbtdllle lunl 14. 71. ..m.· venlty Hali. Inlormatlon wilt be lent only It I I riei. I u r on II y cen1er In ..,w. at" PhMotra"",r ...... Itn I.cllll ..n SUMMER INSTITUTES J l' 17 INti I G midnight. the ~equest of the .tudent. lO per year In .dnnce; alit moatlll 15.10; Aut News ••ltors ••11 Lentanecktr une 't- - owa a ona ymnastics - be hree montha~ . AU IIIl1IllUblCrlptiona. ,tG.per· ...... lI.. y Alt June 5-July 14 - Iowa Summer Pistoril Clinic, Field House North Gym. f IDUCATION-PIYCHOLOOY LIbrary Houri: TH. 'WI"""'IN. POOL Ig the Women'. Cleveh year; all mon III, •.80; thf" .Dntill. 'UII. Aut. 'porta ••It., ...... JDhn H.""ttI Care Institute. SPECIAL IVINTS Monday.Tbursday, 8 ._m. to til p.m.; hlday Gymnulum will be open ror recr.aUonal Il1ask' Dial 337-419' from noon to midnight to report C.rftonlst ...... T_ Millcltllt" June ~Au" , 25 - Relidlon and Alcoho- Tod Ind SltUI'd.y, ••.m . to • p.•. J lunday, I p.m. .",Immln, Monday throu,h Friday. 4:15 to Newlr_ A...... Debllv Dttlo"." ... ay - Registralion for 8 week and to 10 p.m. 1:16. Thll tl open to women rttudentl, 1t&II, l.Iarsh: Dew' Item. IIld tIIIIIounc8IIIenu to Tbe OtU, 'dltorlll Ad"l ..r ...... llImund M. Mldur. Uam InstItute, Treatment Unit, Oakdale 12 week Bummer sessions, Field Hou··, 8 lacully ,nd faculty wives. I Vilgini tOWIIl. Editorial office. art In UII CoaIalllllc.. Ad"ortlaln, DlrtCftr ... . .ey Dunltll.r. Hospital. "" tlons Center_ Claulflod Allvertlaln. Mtn ... r ..111 C.nw... a.m. DDD JOII lor W01llln .....",U.bl, .t the UNIO- N MOU ••.· Purple Clrcul.tlon Mln ..or ...... T.'. LYIII CONFERENCES June 14 - Opening 01 lummer clalses, Financial Ald. Office. HDusekllPln, 10'" arl 1- IOwa ( Tho A_I.tH IIr... I. entltted uclullvely to Ad ...rtlaln. Mln"lr ...... Wlllllr larl J 12 D aII bl t ~ 2& ho II b bJaitUn ' General BulidUl ...... e a.m.-lO:30 p.m, . the u~~ for republlc.tlon of all loc.1 ne "'" A..... rtl ..n. A.... I.. r ...... I. ~tfln KItt",.n tI uneP -13 - "0ental Continuing Educa- 7 a.m. :x"" cena.! ... an our. . an ur,.n a , job., InformltlonOffiCII - 8 &.InDe.k>" p-,m. Monday.slturdlY I Uthorf, prLnted In this newspaper u WtI1 .. all AP Trult.., ...... If ItuIIInt ....tlcetl ..... Inc on rogram : ral Surgery for the Gen· June 14 - Welcome Coffee, Commons - a.m..lO::IO p.m. and I p.III.-IO :30 p.m. sund.y. Il1ask ' new. and d1ap.tches. David Hlcllman ••U. Bubtr. Johluml. A4,; BIU eral PracUtioner." Dental Building. Room. Communications Center, 3:06 p.m. TMI I•• AILI 1I0LKOA~'N. ~JI will C.relerl. - Daliy, 7 a.m.·7p.m. 01 beck ~ DI.I 337-4"1 If 'OU d·-o-n-o-t-r-.--:-IV-O-,,-oVDi ~~=f3::p, LA': s~r.ar:..T=;:.'u~f~:r~'V~ June 12-15 - College of Nursing Con- June 16, 23, 30 _ Family Night, lJnion. :::~::e~: ."Ir, TUI I, III I Union ,:'Ici Feather - Monday·Frlday, 11 a.m.·l::IO Dona ~:rr:~s:' t~em.e,!Y:r~l~fftc:.~ n~~ I:u~·gr ::. ~~tr~.;o~~ "~~~D~e::=~~f ~~~tt.'t,! tinulng Education Program: "The School June 17 - Saturday Night Film Seriel: ' ....NTI COOPliiTiY... b,slttln, Lea- 1 ; :r~III~oom - Monday,"rlday, 11 :30 a.m.' GaUr .. flce hDurl are a •. m. to 5 p.•. Jlonda)' ",",lIIh IIld OrY\lIe A. Hltch_k, DtpartatDt 0 Nurse and the Mentally Retarded Child," "Ipcres5 File," Union Illinois Room, 7 and fiue: For momberal!!p Inform.tlon, c.n Mrs. AMlvltI .. Center - MondaY"rlday, 8 a.m: ~al __ .• ______litters, call Mrs. P.t Pur.w.II, IItten..•. c.1I Mr.. Robert Gate., "7-3232. PtIrple F_rtid.~y~U_d_' to~,~.~ ~._"~I~t~~=y~. ~ ~8~~=h:=an~d~or~ua==.~ti~e~A~~~ ~Se::c:o:nd~Se==U:I:on~,~U:n:io:n~_=-~~ ~~ ~t~~~.m~.~(a~d~m~i~ss;i~on~,~~~~~~n~t5~.~) ~on~'~ld~~~2m~,,~~~~~~6~.~M~e~.~be~'r~I~II~~=~n='~~.P.1-1_ , \ kings, I. C. Iy JehMy Nort IEITLI IAILlY Iy MDrt WDlk., lIIah ' MilS: :. ~ ·'·· .. tii YMATt:tes IT " • ..:.. .. _- / .r------...... , Carlaoi PUrple __ A2 , St. ' ~E '--1~~'"l.NV"r_'-'--= -7J_oo~__..:.A1 C~p C-iJ .. :i__ U-~. illtntio New 't' . ~Q5 . , Michie &! I City _ Ed"'1 da~, ~ 'IIhitty, lI:arlet G, TYII Jalne. - SCir G'Oml David • l 'IIis, _ Alex I ~rlo_ Milk War Goes On .Unabated High Court OKs As Combatants Shun Truce Milk prices were left up to If Hamil ton rules tha t the Dis· Mixed Marriage the District Court when combat· triet Court has jurisdiction , he anta In Iowa City's milk war will be called upon to rule on WASHINGTON (.f\ - The Su· at the helrt of the 14th Amend· lailed to reach a decisiOn Mon· Benner's request for a tempor· II )l'eme Court sounded the death ment, Is aurely to deprive .11 the dlly. ary injunction. Benner also has tntll Monday for state laws out· stat~'s citiuna 01 Uberty without Attorneyl for Benner Tea Co. asked for $9,000 in damages . ~wlng racially mixed marriales. due procesa of law," Warren .ald. of BUrlington, and Randall's of Randall's cOllt.ends that Ben· While the unanlmo~ decision In the filial d.y of Ita present Iowa City conferred Monday ner was already breaking the IpecUically applied to Vlrglnla'i term, Mto~ qulttinl until next morning for about two hou rs. On law by selling milk for 69 cents IIItimlscegenation law, the Ian· Oct. 2, the court in a burst ot June 1 in Johnson County Dis· a gallon at Star Wholesale Co. !IIsge of Chief Justice Earl War· peed handed dowlI rougllly • trict Court Benner asked th at Randall's al 0 said thal the De· ren's opinion was so sweeping a. dozen opinions of major Impor· Randall' 5 be prohibited from sel· partment of Agriculure must !o make It clear that Ihrillar tallc. alld sources of orderl ill ling milk below cost. rule before the court could take _. ,tatutes of 15 other statea could other caaea. In Iowa City, Benner Tea op­ jurisdiction. DOl stand under legal attack. And Justice Torn C. Clark I erates two Giant stores and Sta r L.w Cited Speaking for a unanimous made final hit retirement, - an Wholesale Co. Randall's, listed The case is based on a 1965 ecurt, Warren said the Vlrglllia action taken to avoid any cOlI· in the suit as a SOuth Dakota law which in part requires dis­ j "W rested lolely upon di.tlftc· flicta because his IOn, Ramaey company, operates two Super tributors of dai ry products to .1 Uons drawn accordlllg to r.ce. Clark, now ia attorney lineral. Valu stores. file a sc hed ule of prices with the Citing earlier decisions ill ra' l fa major Ireedom.of·the- Before the suit was fil ed, a secretary of agriculture. I' number of Iowa City chai.n gro· cia! cases, but not involvlnl in· press decision, the court threw The law also makes It Ulegal terracial marriage, Warren said out by a 9-0 vote, a $500,00 libel eery stores cut milk pri ces late list month. The result was a to discriminate in price by sel· .. IIIIpnmI Court eonslstently : judgment against the Associated ling dairy prOducts at prices has repudiated distinctions M · Presl won by retired Maj. Gen. milk war III which prices tween citizenl loiely because of Edwin A. Walker in state court. dropped from 89 cents to 49 whic h could injure competition their ancestry aa being odious to In one major decision the court cents per gallon in warring or tend to creale a monopoly. a free people whose Inatltutlon. struck down New YOrk'1 elec· atores. However. the law provides that founded upon the doctrine tronic eavesdropping law . Two RuJlnt' it is not illegal for competitors • are to meet the lowered price. 101 equality. The court dlvlded S to 4 in The action in court here may The VirgInIa case Involved holding the statute defective on call for two rulings by Judge Benner stated in its petition Richard P. Loving, a 33·year· the ground ita allows a blanket Clair E. Hamilton. Randall's con· that it had fil ed an objection I old white construction worker, Igrant of permission to eaves· tends that the coort does not with the secrtary of agricultUre , aad his part·Negro, part.Indlan drop without adequate judicial have jurisdiction on the maller late in May. Action is sti ll pend- I wile, Mildred, 27. Warren said supervision or protective proce- until a ruling is handed down ing. Benner said that th e whole· they were deprived by law "of dures. . Crom the Iowa Department of sale price of milk was 59 cents liberty without due process of Justice Clark, author of the AgricultUre. a gallon. law in violation of the due pro- court's majority opinion, apoke , cess clause of the 14th Amend· of the fervor which some per· AI h I- p. 5 II d ment" to the U.S. Constitution, sons regard electronic eaves· CO 0 1S I "To deny this fund.mental dropping al a most Important m ro ect ta e freedom on so unsupportable a technique in law enforcement. DES MOINES (.fI _ A bill to sive treatment and rehabil itation basis as racial classifications He answered this argument by give belated legislative approval embodied in these statutes' cIa.· saying "we cannot forgive the to the Iowa Comprehensive Alco. of alcohol ics on the local leve l. sifications ao . di~ectely subv~r· requir.einent of the 4th Amend· holism Pro' ct ran into stiff 0 o. It was suggested by Gov. Har· sive of the prinCiple of equahty ment In the name of law enforce- 't' d Je '1 d t ' pp I .. f 81 Ion an fal e 0 wm appro va old E. Hughes. himself a former ~ent. The 4th Amendment or· of the House Appropriations Com. alcoh olic, and was launched last ?' bids unreasonable search lid mittee Monday. year as an experimental program seizure. , Herd, Flock 'Ive otber atates bave legal. The bill received a 17·11 fa vor· scheduled to ru n into 1969. HURRY TO THE HAWKEYE ized elveadrllPping law., but able vote, whIch was 11 votes Republican Atty. Gen. Richard ·1 eke n Clark's opinion, addressed en· short of the number required to Turner rul ed over the weekend a C bring the measure out under that the governor exceeded his PI Y h tirely to the New York .tawte, committee sponsorship. cons titutional authority in eslah- O n 'I H SAN GABR L lif gne no due aa to their fate. He The alcoholism proJ'ect is a IJ'shing the prol'ect independentlv For SOUT IE , Ca . noted, lor example, that tbe ' L!l - A truck carrying 3,'100 court has In the past, under .pe. pilot program financed primar ily of either the Iowa AlCO holism erin g the law· 1 chickens and another l'!Ided with cilic conditions and circum. by U.S. Office of Economic Op· Study Co mmission or the Slate Iy hypersensi . .J. 29 head of cattle collided . Mon- stances sustained the usc of portu"ity fund s 10 pl'ov ide inlen· Board of Control day . The result: chaos OIl the dro i d' • SERVICE Ie type of pel'. San Bernardino Freeway. ea~:s lart ~~e :=~~ eoncern l!llen were as· [ The accident easl of Loa Angel· with the New York law It whe. SU MM ERDA NeE had all sorts es happened at 4:30 a.m. when ther Ita language permits a tres. lbout his cov· I, California highway patrolmen passory invasion of tbe home. CLASS S said, the livestock truck-trailer bv a "eneral warrant, contrary E • SELECTION fonic moment · th h' k k'" tryUlg to pass e c IC en true . to tbe 14th Amendment. ;ented to an· trailer jacknlfed and both flipped "Aa it is written, we belleve BALLET and MODERN ~ the privilege on their sides. that it does," Warren Bald. eiore it was \ The ~reckage and confusion Justice Hugo L. Black, John JUNE 15·AUGUST 8 lasted five hours, well into and M. Harlan, Mter Stewart and FOR 5 YEAR OLD THRU JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL • SATISFACTION beyond the r~sb bour .. There were Byron R. WhIte argued, on the AND SPECIAL HIGH SCHOOL CLASS /I somewhere 10 other mlRor aCCidents, five other hand that the New York REGISTRATION : WOMEN'S GYM he fiasco, and c ~used by one steer before i~ WII law Is entl~elY constitutional and UnIversIty of Iowa Ise there is l killed \1\ a headon crash With a is not an unreasonable search a di ssertation JUNE 12 and 13 car. and seizure. 9:30 a.m, to 4 p,m. Four ther steer. were killed l liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiii I'd ? One won· or had to be shot to death. Hund· • SUMMER STAfF If-who surely reds of chickens were killed . Two I MODERN DANCE • LINDA cox • DIANA DINSMORE _ LJNDA LEE by the whole J hundred or more eacaped IIId I Welcome Summer from Heaven nuttered about all over the place. BAllET Ie Boslon Ie· Fifty sheriff's deputiel, patrol· _ TONi SOSTEK men and policemen became r0d­ Students FOR INFORMATION OR REGISTRATION BLANK eo cowboys trying to Jasso or CALL MARSHA THAYER AT 353 .... 354 YOUR TOOLS ARE BOOKS I roundup the livestock. One steer got off the freeway and onto the grounds of a near· Blackstone -I by school. Tbe pupils remained BEAUTY SALON the Hawkeye makes every effort to , indoor~ until tbe beast w a I OPEN TO THE PUBLIC JI ~ , caught. "One of IoW4', Largest have the right tools at the right time. hear? Cis(en· & Finest Beauty Saloru" CHILDREN'S ed at WSUl, 23 Receive lections, clas· 16 HAIR STYLISTS Id elassroom Mask Prizes DANCING RECITAL ways guaran· w. Speel.lI.. In HaIr Celert,.. USED OR NEW BOOKS :cent months, Purple Mask, Scarlet Mask I HAIR COLOR IN JUST MIN. eference has and Honorable Mention Award. UTIS! With the R_ark..... ~ n the selee· I I were given to 23 graduates and Ntw "ACCILOMATIC" Naw· Students Of ial s. Iy RemocItltd and R... • undergraduate stUdents in the ' ratH S...... Rtd Ca,. __ s new book, Department of Speech and Ora· I ty Servlct. Mary Lea Leitch . When possible we try to supply both st now wind· mtie Art at the University Theat'l ernoon Book· re's annual Purple Mask Ban· "Over 25 Yrs. of Beauty PartIcIpants - .g., 4 through 17 y.a... lO S for policy ~uet recently. Service in 10W6 City- new and used books for each course. :ovocative. To receive a malk, a Itudent Ballet, Toe, Jazz, Acrobatic, Tap, and must have been an upperclass· CALL at 8 p.m., is authentic Hawaiian; TabHian. ,t saga called man or a graduate student for I ~ more than one semester and 337 5825 part two is , must have demonstrated his In· • 3Sed on Rob· Macbride Auditorium the Iliad of terest in the Univeraity Theatre "------­ through participation in it. IC' 1,. S. DUIUQUE Wednesday, June 14, 8:00 p.m. ti vities. In addition, a student JUDGE FOR YOURSELF THE SAVINGS ~d "Violence must have attained at least a , . delivered reo I • 3.0 grade average for the Purp­ At prices '100 can afford ADMISSION FREE of. Otto Lar· le Mask, and a 2.5 grade aver· ashington; it age for the Scarlet Malk. ON USED BOOKS n this Thurs· Honorable mention awards are I presented to freshmen and sopbo­ mores and to firsl·semester grad· mTHE BRIDE uate student.8 with a 2.5 grade average. These studenls are in· ·d eligible for the other awards be· INTHE BOX: Ie., 2t1 COni' • cause of their short time spent PENS • FILLER .. typed I"d at the Uni verslty. • NOTEBOOKS ..:1.1 fu"ctlon' The students and their award. • ve their cI ... are: Bruce Wheaton ,. A2, Cedar • STUDY AIDS • SWEAT SHIRTS o their droll Falls - honorable menLion; Pat· ~rmB In 8 Unt­ Il IIe1It only .t I I riela Dougan, A2 , Independence - bonorable mention ; Elbin the Women'l Cleveland, G, Iowa City - purple I:" recre.tlonal 1II/Isk , Mary Beth Supinger, A3. Visit the complete College ) rlday. 4: L5 to ,tudenis, ..all , Idarshalltown - purple malk; I VirginIa Scott. G, Iowa City - Paperback Department on Purple malk; Edward Soatek, G. .. , 1:30 p.m. . Iowa City - purple mask, John ... oyr Second Floor ~ a.y-S.turdIYJ • Uthoff, A3, Iowa City - .carlet p.m. Sunaay· 1II/I8k; Bruce Frencb, A4, Rein· "IHIU'r. cooped up 1111 dinky J .carlet mask. ,- 11 l.m.·I:30 beck - ~, Donald Childs, AS, Ml. View IPIrtment, ifs hiP time yow ~, 11 :30 I.II\.' CaUl. _ acarlet mask ; Margaret looked into I modtnl Mobile !"'rldlY, 8 1.111 : ~ham , 0, San Jose, CaUl. - _OIIe Ifs fully fur"lshell, 317-3282 Purple mask ; Lynne Sauuer WI!· apacious, be.utlfully appoiIt. --.:..-- I \ kings, A.3, Peoria. 111 .1 - lICarlel td from "001' to cellini. And • Walk., III .., ; RoberL Miller, 0, Malden, you CIII probably DWII one If Mus. - purple mask; Linda ."ese superb new mobil. Carlson, A4, Edina, lOla - homes feN' less then you .. 1lI1rpie ma. k; Donald Muench, now payinl fO( r.nt! A2, st. Louis, Mo. - honorable II1ention ; Nicholas Meyer. A3, 'an't it tim. WUI f Ntw York City - Icarlet milk; ,..,. Michael Ruggere, G, New York Iook.d Info I I

, I

Star-spangled key Is Coming July .8th to a home 01 your own

A key to your own home is a You can purchase extra copies mighty nice thing. Especiall~' 1f it has stars and stripes on it. The way to get one is to save at the Daily Iowan office U. S. Savings Bonds for the down ,with a GAS light payment. Or if you're beyond that point, for furniture or applil\nces, or have copies mailed anywhere , . Moonlighter ••• that's the versatile gas light on your front yard or or the other things inside a house I . that make it a home. backyard patio, It does a number of worthwhile jobs, all for I few pen­ A nellt egg in Bonds can go a I ' long way towards providing'a nest nies a day, I-;;IR=A:N-:;p;'- ---- : ' .IId it.'! contents - because each :1 t • Series E Bond pays back $4 at ~ For instance, the soft glow of a gas light brings out the charm and THE DAILY IOWAN I , maturity for every $3 you save. I 201 COMMUNICATIONS CENTER beauty of your home, and provides all-night moonlight protection against Another thing you'll get is a nice I IOWA CITY, IOWA 52240 I ., . prowlers. red, white and blue feeling. The I ' kind you get by giving your coun­ Enclosed Is SOc far my orcl.r(s' for the 1967 I Well over a million families enjoy dependable gas lights alr~ady. Ask try 11 financial hand while you're I Unlv.nlty Edition . ..ving. your appliance dealer to show you the many styles available. It's easy to start saving Bonds I Plea .. mall ...... cop'. to: I Let a gas light moonlight for you. tooay. A call to your payroll de­ partment, or a visit to your bank I Nom ...... \ .. I will do it. I AclcI ...... " .... , .... , ...... , ...... I. Price covers cost I ' Buy U.S. Savin•• Bonds I City ...... liP ...... I' IOWA·ILLINClIS GAS and ELECTRIC of paper, handling STAll SPANGLED SAV INGS PLAN ~ .... I Stat...... :, ...... , ...... ", I FOR ALL AMCRICANS ~';'J ' and postage USE ~x~u. SHEET fOR ADDITIONAL ORDERS I Supplied by Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America ne u. S. Gotw"""", ,1414":' II " f Jifl)' /,, 1' lI'I,tt ";/'~"" :' I·m "l/t. /I ;, JII'ftIMIff'd tI. ,. ,,'IIP/If Hrl'u'" 1ft 1.'lHlp",.j/hrm 1I 'I IIt l ite L 1'~ J)epN-tln,.,.' Grid 1 'llr A,/I~rti'''rI' (..'Ottftc,l. ____ ----....I \. Grad To Assist • House OKs Loan Fund Fans, Celebrities Attend Tracy Funeral HOLLYWOOD I.ft - Hundreds bride northea.!t oC Iowa City. Wagner, Robert Mitchum and di· In Restoring Art Debate To BMJin ·cal Stu ents of tans and some of the movies' IIrt were among pallbearers for rectors George Cukor. Stanley For Me d d top stars paid final tribute to Tracy Iwo-time Academy Award Kramer, John Ford and G.rson A Univer ity student will pend ~y Spencer Tracy Monday at • Re· .' , d d Kanin. the three summer months in DES MOINES fA'! - A $200,000' cused after the recipient had quiem Mass .nd at private grave- wIDner who die Satur ay o( a Katharine Hepburn, Tracy's fee. Italy applying what she has On Dodd Censur ~ 'de -rvl·ces. beart attack at tbe age o. ( 67. t t d I ....- d 1t fund is klan fund for medical students practiced in Iowa thereafter un· 51 - ... __ f I d quen co.s ar an c ose u ""n , Jearned In art cia ses on how to Iplayers lor who agree to become general til the entire loan was discharg· Frank Sinatra and James Stew· Ou"" amous names I~ u ed was not seen at either the He- WASHINGTON III - Will! the Dodd for conduct that "ll'!ld III Grellory Peck. Walter PIdgeon, quiem MUI in ImmacuJate Heart store and conserve works of art. vexing problml of money in poll. porting 10 practltloners in Iowa was ap· ed. bring the Sena ~ into di hon!) ..... Qeor,e Murphy . al60 told n wsmen available at the bank if a medi· an award given annually to • there is no dispositioD 10 compro­ the size of loans and the Interest debated by the Senate thil MI­ u worka of art Decticut Demo- DODD ruce How· to be charged. cal student needs a Joan." Mc· student in lICience, engineering mise. sion, it wound up $1.43 million or business administration. Miss Asb new to Florence last crat Is that be \lied political fundi I if he won The measure provides 50 per Cray said. more than Gov. Harold Huebel week to begin her lummer'l for personal expemel. The ethics committ~ 'a report we made it cent of the loan would be ex· The scholarship, which will to the Senale on April rt said But Rep. Elmer Den Herder recommended but well under the· /COver tuitio (or the 1967·1968 work. She bas pent some time In a second count the six·mem· r in a row. Dodd had used at least 1l16,~ in (R·Sioux Center) said rural com· $11.3 miJJion requested by the academic year. is named lor in Florence two yean .go while ber bipartisan panel found that in eters both munities are particularly hurt poliUcally raised funds for his ConservaUon CommluiOll. Tbe Lloyd A. Knowler. professor of on a tour of Europe, seven instances Dodd billed both by the growing shortage of doc· commission'. appropriation for mathematics. who has been at the Senate and private organiza· personal benefit. if anybody SHERBET tors. capital outlay this bieDnium was the University since 1939. The DRAFT RESISTERS' UNION UOI15 (or travel expeDSel OIl The committee said this was with the only $2.7 miJJion. award was estabUshed by the The Draft Resisters' Union wll\ speech • making trips. Dodd says out of a total of ~50,273 received a game," The biJJ goes to tbe House. Iowa section of the American S0- meet at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday at these duplications were due to (rom a serie of testimonial af· think rll FREEZE The commission's budget In· ciety (or Quality Control in rec· 219 E. Bloomington SL A di cus· bookkeeping errors In his office. fairs for Dodd between 1961 and cludes a request of 1120.000 for SPENCER TRACY ognition of Knowler's contribu· sion of the summer program is The committee's finding and its 1965 and from contributions to his SPECIAL land acquisition at Lake M.c· St.n P.y Tribute tion to the society. on the agenda. proposed resolution to ceulure 1964 re-election campai D. Regular 33c TUES. and WED. Dally IOllVon Want Ads ErIV L G.B. I ;} ~ I 24; I ~ 25 , WANTED HOUSES FOR lENT MISC. FOI SALE APAIlMENTS POI lENT ~ i~ ~~ BASKIN· ROBBINS 7 27 511. Advertising Rates WANTED: GrRLS WHO hive .p.rt­ VERY DESrRABLE 2 or 3 bedroom WANTED - CLEAN, tollel·lraln d LARCE PARTLY lumllhed I ~d· 5 29 7'h BALDWIN e' ,rand pllno Exeellent ment but need roommlte for next unrurnWled .pll. In uplown duo eondltlon. Rellnl hed. roomm.t. for Lake Id .Wclency, room. Clo.. 10 camplU - . vall· ~26 31 8 31 Ie. Cr.am Flavon Three Day, ...... , .. lSc • Wen! fill. Write Bo. 231 - DIUy Iow.n. plex. Available now I.n We.t Btanch. ,,50 E.&­ thl. wmmer. Spedll deal C.II JS3- .bl. Au,uIL S$1-4017 art • S tin ~ 32 a OPEN" to 11 -7 DAYS -AND- Dill 337·8MI, Iowa CII),. 7·7 nln,. 3l1HlIII7. I·IV 23 32 10 Six D.y...... • . .. ltc a W.rd AIKMAN .tlUoned In Turkey wlnts NEW !:U!CTRIC typewriter. Auto­ 100& after mlclnllhL tin TIfIII WESTSIDE _ D.iu •• effklency I: Monday'. WARDWAY PLAZA "THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN Till D.YI .. " ... ,.,. 1k • W-" to Ihlre aplrtment, Sprlnl ... me. RURAL HOME. Ideal unlveralty cou· matic return. 5 yelr IUlnnte.. . URCE 2 bedroom apL CI..... In. .nd I lMdroom IUlte .45 <-'relt ler 88. Returning to .tate. In time pie, no pell - ehlldren. 883·2225. '160.00 . 351·99111 33a.as35. Newly decorlted. 6-15 t. r-.<>m 5. R ... lor Jun. and IN THEIR FLYING MACHINES" On. MontfI ...... 44c e W.rll to llart Junior year. While: Ale Un -In Color- Allen Clausen, Box 136 Tu.log Del 8, SPINET PlANO, used, like new. can NICE 2 bedroom turnllhed or un. ".,ptemberl Apply apt. SA or cIII Apo New YorK 08284 . 7• • be seen In Inll vIcinity. Cub or lurnl.hed In CoralvWe. Now rent. J31.7058. tiT, r~l:y 2 Minimum All 11 Wenh MISC. FOR lENT terml to relpOl!Jlbl. party. ror InCor. In, lOt ulftmer or 1.11. Plrk ""Ir THE COIlONET - luxury I ~bed~ ~~' N. W ANTED TO BUY - vlcuum clean· lIl.tlon wlrte: Credl~ M,r.• Acme PI · Inc. 13I-eZOl or m.fUlo. I-ZIAR rOOm and I bedroom. I full bath CLASSIFieD DISPLAY ADS er In lood conaJtlon. Call 338-0-113 GARAGE FOR renL US"71M1. ..II ano Compan),. $21 EUClid Avenue, lult... F'rom ,ISO Re r •• now lor r~n after e. Ifn De. IIolne., lowi. 50313. &-30 P'URNlSHED 3 room apartmflll 2 to ~une Ind Septembe'! 1906 Bro d.l~ 1.5) ~nd Ale· gir! .. One In ..rtlen • Menth ... . IUse 4 Idult.a. "70321$. .11 "",>,.' bypau e Call »1-7051 ur brnla. Oar',. GUNS ANY condition Dr t1J)e. Pbone AUTOS, CYCLES FOI SALE BAR STOOLS, earpet. de Ill, IUto- Plve In •• l1Ion, • Meuth .. $1.15" 317-4888 evenin,.. 6·14 mlUe wa.her. TV .nl.enn., mlacel· MAU: ROOMMATE to .hare with I LARGE J'URNI- liEO Ipl. lor Z 0 lTadu.t. ltudentL S b droom mod· 3 ,radu.u men. '90 ummer; '12l ,t':tnlf:r:ial ENDS ENDS W ANTZl> 2 ,trls to ahare Sevlll. Iineous. SSS·liIw. 8-13 NOW WED. WEDNESDAY Ten Inllrtlon. a Month .. $l.IS· apt. ror >"mmer. Contlct Sue AUTO INSlIRANCE, Grinnell Mutual. ern apL 1121 Church SL 1111 ..708 . rlu. Wilkin, dlsllnc. 10 101 I clm Wllhlngton, Room 101. 6-15 Youn, men leating prollram. We. RUG hiS, DIVAN, kitch n oel~ end ,.URNI HEl> .ptl. elolle to elmpu ou m~49 7' IMNMt\ • R.t" hr Eech C.I""", Inch ~I Agency, 1201 Hlghllnd Court. or· lable, kitchen cabln.L 137· ,4.81. SheWI' 1 :30·3:05-5:'5·7:05·9:05 ~ to fllO. can 331-t041 or 331- OW> GOLDCO RT ~ Spleln I 0, t) at Bolton. ------1rice. 351·2159; home 337·3..,. 1I-2tAR 1-15 14M. 7·10 S bedroom - lurnlahlOd or unCur TYPING SEIVICE IBM BSA \\lARK 11. all fletor), modi· AUTOMATIC~er. CIII 338-M30·. rEMAL!: over 11 needed to Ihar. nllhed. QUlet conn'nlenl IO("l Uon I t Minnesota, Phone 337-4191 lIcallon, $1200. 351-35Z1 . Un 1-l1 with on. other. CION In, 138-96111 . 731 lllch.el L 151-4231. .lIAR )[=-A-:;;G~N;:;O;;CV;:;o:;:x;-:;,,:-:e ::re:::o---;;;T;;V-"'~I.-B;;e:7-d . .11 FURNISHED APARTMI': NT1I . Glrii. d.. en JERRY NYALL - Electric, IBM Iyp. MOTORCYCLE repalr .11 m.ke •. In ..l1Ion dllne _ d.y Ing "'rvlce. Phone 338·1330. 6-28AR Speclall.lng BSA Tri umph. YIIIII' room lulte, couch. chllrl kltch n LArew'a SOl N Cllnlon. Dial precedl,. publlc.tten. eet. IbIS clrpet, child'. 7umlture., IDEAL APARTMENT lor Z ml.. 33'1.14112. e17 BETTY mOMPSON _ Electric h • . Weldlng. 351-35U. Un blcyc.le, tractor. etc. 33J.34e9. 801. Evuythlne turnlshed . .,5. 6I3-~7. Canclll.tloni rec:.ly" Ihe... s, and lon, P'p4!1"11 Experl. TRIUMPH 1862 TR4 Blue. Excellenl must 1M .nced .338-5650. 6-12AR condition. 3311-3290 fl.14 eet by MIn before ""ltIlc.tlon, KI~o~~ b~~k~Kf38-722rrry b1~.~3tR SPA IOUS 3 room and bath, :~: TERM PAPER book repOrti Ihe"" .1 JII6I VOLKSWAGEN. ElCeellenl reo and refrlg rltor Curnl. hed, Welt dittos. elc. kxperlenced. Call 3J8· buill en,lne. Transmission needs THOMA ORGAN (like Lawrence Ilde. 838-3901 . Stella SeotL 8-21 4115/1 . 6-IZAR repair. 8esl oller. 337·3188. 7·1 Welk UIOl) In like new condition _ walnut nnah. Cln be leen In DELUXE nJRNlSHED 3 room Ipt. KLECTRIC, experienced secretary. 11963 14GB. Excellent condition. this ores. Someone mlY Illume Avallible June for mlrrled couple theses, ete. 338·M91; 351-1875 eve- $1 ,100. 33S·54M, 5 to 7 p.lD. p.ymenll. Write to Credll Mana,er, wllh &mall baby. carpel, IIrbl, dl. 'ork Aeme Plano Co.. Box tOII3, II. P. pOaal . waah r and dryer. Mliit b. CHILD CAIE nlngs. S·22AR 1954 MG.TF. CllIsle ear. Be.ullful MILLY KINLEY - lypln, service, condition. 351 ·1042. 7-13 Station, Des Molnel, lowl &0313. 8oJ3 wlilln, to de some hou ... work In u· WANTED .tudent wlCe or woman ~ IBM - 937·4376. 6-22AR 3 VR. OLD Fedde ..- Ilr CclniiTti'iiner, ehlnge ror pltrl or renL 337.$S49. 8023 care lor 2 children In Our home. IILECTRIC typewriter Theles t.nd 11,1500 BTU. ,175 II" yr. old Ken. PURNI HED APT~r iO'r2. AVIij: Now Ava·.lable D.ys or full time. cln ssa.7633. II-U .horl papers. Dial 337-3843. 6-22AR HELP WANTED more dl.hwllher. ,150, 338-41114 arter Ible June •. UUIIU.a plld. 110S. WANTED - blbyll1ltln" my bome. S 6·20 338·6415. .. II Reterence. Dial 3Sl-226e. 6-15 DESK, KITCHEN eablnets 1""1· mE WEST IDE DELUXE .rnc· i- Fred .J. bo.rd, Quonset eutUln~ . ~37-4328 . I ncy .nd I bedroom ulte>. 1M5 Furnished 6·15 Cre>l I. Cirri, drApe , air ~on· look at the dillon, dl ~po.. , tinge, refrl.erllor. ,mis tourna· ANGELS heat a"d waler Included In renl or in Madison MOilLE HOMES Prom 195. Apply .pt. 3A from I p.m 10 a pm. d.lly or ull 351·2,\38 or Unfurnished pronounced ""40' TRAILER. I..ARGIt 11Inu. 8uut 3)8·7051, 7.. RC in deill. Ide.1 for . tudenl couple. TiiECoRONET - luxury 1-.n

Eight South Clinton St. If It'. A Boole 't's Our Business ,. ,