Wrestlers After Title Iowa', wrestling team, sporting I 15,2 Forecast "cord, the best In school history, will bl .It.r lis first 8\g 10 champlonlhlp Iinci Clou4y .nd chanel of oeelliolMl IIIOW I ,", at the conferenci meet that optnl In tod.y, P.rtly eleudy Ie cloudy tonight .nd Ent Lansing today. The Hawkl art cur· Saturday .nd wlrmer Saturd.y, Highl "ntly ranked fourth In tht nation. Set Iowan ~ 'DOll leU, U Ie 35, stDr'( Pa,. s. Serving the University of Iowa and the People of Iowa Cit"

Established in 1868 10 cnt. a CODY AJaociated PreSt Leased Wire and Wirephoto Iowa Cit,., Iowa 52240-Friday, February 21, 1 5-Year Plan Rome in Turmoil Organizing For Parking As Nixon Arrives Called Key ROME tA'l - President Nixon, warmed tinian Arabs who tried to march on I h I by a rousing send-off in West Berlin, ar· To Change Considered palace. rived in Rome Thursday to a cheering Blocked by barriers composed of truck· welcome by thousands of Romans - and Fee Hikes, 3 Ramps, loads of helmlted and armt!d police, lhey 'Diaper Tactics' Use later the worst ri()[iJ.g .his capital has turned away and stormed down 10 the Shuttle Buses Cited seen in years. Chamber of Deputies building next to the Criticized by Alinsky The President was safely inside the premier's olfice where Nixl-ll i~ scheduled Three new parking ramps, a substan· Quirinal Palace con'erring with Italian to continue his talks Friday. lSI' CHARLA COLE Saul Alinsky is m;-ldle-aged. middl~ tia! increase in parking fees and the pos. officials whpn the violrnce erupted in Wild rioting erupted in the Piazza Colon· IZed, but DOl middle-cl . Th~ Image of sibility of a shuttle bus system are in· downtown Rome. Within minutes, rioters na in front of the Parliament building. cluded in a five·year plan for parking lot called out by Italy's Commun ist party an active activist came through loo'il and operations which was presented to the were battling police only a few blocks The violence swirled through some of clear. in di tlnctive nnal tones. Th'lrsday Parking and Security Committee Thurs· from the pa la.:e. Rome's biggest and most famous piazzas nJght ill the Unioo Ballroom. day afternoon. in hit·and·run battles, including Piazza Alinsky. founder of the lnatr.trlal Ar 'l1le plan, drawn up by John D. Dooley , Thousands of p.rsons, shouting "Nix. Vcnczia . where a little earli2T Nixon had Foundation IIAF) and n,e WoOOlswn Or· director 01 parking lot operations. is an on go homel" and chanting "Mao, Mao, received a welcome from thousands 0( ganization ITWO l in Chicago ~id organ · attempt to cootinue the prP.Sent system Mao Tn·tung," hurled rocks and battled Romans. ization in commun ities wa the key to I and at least maintain the present rallo club.swinging polic. amid clouds of t.ar Store, oflice and theater windows in getting power ar I power was the key to o{ parking available to faculty. staff and g.s. lhe Piazza Colonna were shattered. Side· gettlni change in rad l or di!;Crimina· . !tudents. It would also provide for con· The light raged alone avenues and walk tables and chairs were reduced to tory po:ici of a socIety. tinued exopansion 01 the system with an crowded side streel.'3 ;n the heart of the kindling. urr you want change, you must organ · ultimate increase 01 more than 2,300 park. jw capit~. At the Trevi Fountain, demonstrators Ize. because otherwil;P it's "ort! in ing 5paces by the ]973·1974 school year. tre wind ," he said. "If people concentrate One student was killed and scores of overturned a car and set it afire. Tour· Th. elements of the plan for the ,,,,. isu; fled Irom the area. on r~etoric Instead of revoluliun , con ,.70 school y.ar would InclucM: demonstrators were injured. Laler in the fTODtation ba.omes a synonym lor rrap. night, thousands of other anti·Nixon demo In a related development. high·ranking because it doesn't act action." 1. An Increase of $12 per year which onstrators clashed with police in front of French atficials revealed Thursday that Community Organizer at Union would raise the price lor laculty and the U.S. consulate in Milan . The Com· Charles de Gaulle regards President Nixon SpeakIng to .bout 900 persons, hi crit· ic/rtd w;,.t ha ulltd the "diaper tactics" stafl parking permits to $72. munist party said there were also dem­ as Ule United Slates' last chance to reo Community organizer Saul Alinsky told. crowd of about 900 In the Union Main Loungt onstrations in five other cilipoint. Nixon got out and and th~ cffectivcne. S 01 the board. raliooali'lation ." fields south of Unil'ersity Hospjtal~ which thaI Robbins' view of tlle board was fine be a beller plaee to live in," would yield about 200 sna-ces. began to mingle with the well· wishers, he The activities b()ard is a seven· member in theory but failed in practice. Allnlky ulld II .n exampl. a tribe of waved h is arms in delight. Augustine apparently could not a~ Indians In C.nad. who Immadlalaly be· 12. Asphalt·paving 10L~ in the following student committee designl'd to coordi na te "The bill may not be the purest docu· ar· 1· with th group's philosophy. Thurs­ came offend.d when hi lugg ..ted to th m locations: Ihe 101 below the Law Bu ilding. The violence occurred after Nixon and calendar campus activities. ment In tlle world. but in practiee, our rived at Qu irinal Palace and began his day night. while Jalkut and Evan were th.t they org.nlz •. They Slid, "Org.nirl· the Newton Road reserve l()t, the lot sooth By a 3 to t vote Wednesday night, the original ideal has not been effective," sitting at a table in the Gold Feather tion II the whit. min's 'PPl'OlKh." of Sou!h Quad , the lot north 01 Hillcrest, talks with President Giuseppe Saragat board gave its approval to the idea of in· Feir said. and other leaders. Lobby, selling literature and lLstening to He said he asked them how they dilft't'· tbe lot south 01 the Field House. lot 'l:I eluding members from the Union Board, By including union Board. CPC and music from a passer·by's tape recorder, near the ohysical otant and lot 32 east of More than 6,000 dcmonstrulol'S ~nswcrf.'d the Ccntral Party Committee (CPCl and ARH representatives on the board, Feir ed from the whILe man 's approach a n rt AUiUmine removed several sians bearinK they said they fished creatively. wh it the Cflmmunications Center. the call from the Communist party. They Associated Rl'sidence Halls CARH ) on the said lhe membership would be "recogniz. the organization 's initials. He lhen asked 13. Lighting in the Myrtle Ave. lot !I'I1d included students, workers, anarchists board. ing a reality." wa "quiet and you can hear the wat r Evans who had given him the authority runnlng." In lot 29. and. small groups of Africans and Pales· The one dissenter was Jim Robbins, Robbins agreed that some sort of com· to play musIc at the table. 14. Expansion of 101 13, north of Hill· munication would have to be established "Where do you think whk men (i~h :' crest between the board and campus groups . Evans rcplle h.ndled by the Department of Athl.tics II want playf.'d here," Aug' groupo in a conglomerate advisory group, polite about the whole thing, but there a. but this is highly speculative at this point, II Feir said. ustine replied. He also told the pair that they should no reason to be polite." The C()st of these operations. along witb "For activities board to be effective, "do sonmhing about g Uing their name Alinsky 'd community Ofganizor$ had a capital debt retirement of $250.000 lor we will have to start working with CPC WIder COIltroi " to ~ the question. "What would you do money bon'owed to finance the hospital and Union Board not against them," Feir if you don't organize'" He 8 a [d doin /: Approximately 40 people have signed narking ramD. would ~ $656,885. The pro­ said. . nothing is the nadir or all imJ1lOrality. jected income would be apprOXimately up 00 the organization's mailing list. Roger Augustine. associate dean 01 AllnskY Slid eompeta'" org.nlJers look $862,608 for the t969-1970 school year. The Free Underground Culture Kitchen student affairs and boJrd adviser. a Iso for wrong "'ason I, II walt IS right onll, At the Dresent ti me, Ille plan has not agreed with the idea 01 ;nc1uding activity will hold iu; lirst official meeting al 7 to g.t the right thl",s don.. "Tbi right p.m. Mardi 6 in the Union Northwestern been vol.ed on bv the committee. Mem· members on the board. "'... ons uluilly com I Inla play affer I Room. , hers of recognized student, faculty and "The board (his year has had a singu. period of rlllonlllzitlon," he II id. stafl grooDs will be inlormed within the lar lack at good retatiens with the s e A free "music demonstration" is plan· He said the fact that society does Ihl' nexl weoek as to the date of a hearing on groups. In our best interests. we mllst ned by the group for 12 :30 p.m. today in right things lor the w ron g reason i~, next year's prop05als. Representatives have communication," Augustine said. the Gold Feather l..oIJby. "just the way life i .u 01 these various groups will oe asked to voice objections to the plan at the hear· ing and to suggest feasible alternatives. In the period t97~1974, parking pennils for faculty and staff areas would increase Sex Education Advocate Says Time $12 each year while torage lot parking and night slickers would increase $6 each year. Dur'ing the 1972·1973 school year. student meter I'lltes wouk' inerea to 15 .For 'Hushing It Up' Is Long Past cents per hour. The shuttle bus system would oe need· "You haven't got the possibility 01 lion abom human reproduction as part 01 YMCA I e a d Irs and bUliniu men In the ed as more p~ripheral lots, such as the hush ing it up anymore," says sex behavior a biology course than to teaching about. org.nlzation mailn luch charg.s leu one on Harrison Street, were developed. expert Ira L. Reiss, soeaking on the need the family system, traits of masculinity credibl. th.n the prob.blt polition of r.d· It Is ooped that this System would be in to olfer instruction about sex in public and femininity and the establishment of a icals th.t the g~ is too conlln.live, ht operation hy 1972. schools. exual code, he believes. Slid. ReiSli , professor 01 sociology and an· He would like to He SIX taught In the The co lmlttee will vote 00 the pro­ Reiss leaves Il1e University in Sl'1~rm thropology, contends that Iowans con­ !lOSOO system lor Ute parking lots at i18 now context of history, Ie_mic, Ind lif.r.. ber to become chrector of 8 new i~titu ", sidering the public proposals for and ture instaad of IS a unit by itlttl. Mor.I­ next regular meeting after the hearing. at the University of 111 inneIiota. He pm ' a~ain st formal teaching about sex are not izing abovt HX codes should be Itft to par· II it passes the committee, it will be sent in the po5ition to ask themselves, "Should the University for il.'3 record of ileademJe to R. .nts and churches, he betitvlS, btu",. Pres. HOlYard Bowen and , ultimate­ you introduce sex into the lives of your freedom , noting that exchange of ideas hali ly, SWte Board of Regents wUl thert Is no "best sex code" for IVery_. tile vtt. children?" not been regulated here, as it ba in lither 01\ the plan. Reis1i said that since people differ in Sinee humans are learning and experl· their sexuality as in other characteristics, ltates. menting about sex from infancy, the ques­ the best solution is for people "to be whitt "[ kn()W because I teach about sex," hI' tion really is whether adults. through the they are" without being made to feel gullt said. "I haven't had any trouble." school system. will introduce another ele· ahott it. Feeling guilty does not necessar· News in Brief ment of sexual inlormation into their chilo ily restrain people from sexual expression, .LSO IN THE NEWS LAST NIGHT : dren 's lives, Reisl; said in an Interview. he said, but it does mak e the behavior DE5 MOINES - The Iowa Senate killed If tht answer Is no, parents must rill. "much more costly psychologically." I {Of good the cOn(roversial abortion bill, it. they art weakening their own positions Reiss knows of no evidence showing but ]lI'OpOnen or Iihera IIzed abortion in competition wIth their chlld~'s friend I, that having more information about sex lat.'! haven't given up yet. Sen. Minnetle w~o will be spreading around whataver resulu; in more scxual expl!rimentation. iloderer (D·!owa City) said she will intro­ sex information they have, he said. He uggested that society may properly be dU!!tI two bills to amend the slate's cen· Th e professor's principle argument in coocerned about an opposite effect: strai· luryo()ld law banning abortions unless the fa vor of sex education in that sinee the ghtforward understanding of sex may "de­ pregnancy threatens the Iile of lhe mother. w01'ld of sex underlies the social, politi· sensitize" people to its attnctioos. C.PE KeNNEDY - The common cold cal, economic and religious aspects of our Last month, Rei ss completed a three­ and exhausllon itounded America', $340· culture, it must be und erstood by any· year term on the board of the Sex Infor· million Apollo 9 earth orbital flight at one who wants to under tand our civiliza· mation and Ed:lcation Council of the least three days - from today until Mon· tion. United States (SIECUS ). The organization day. This is a stronger argumr,b9 ~ 1".0 j the total of both types of undeserved -+J.e. expect his draft board Ul request or de­ being realistic in classifying undergradll­ they take a higher percentage of the r~bates is probably less than 5 per 'The missile may not be so hot, but - boy - mand that he ask his college to provide ate students who may be a few credit income of low income Individuals cent of the $13 million of sales tax evidence of his enrollment as a fuB-tlme hours behind , If the registrant can make than of those with high incomes. This what a delivery system I' student. The reason his board is liable up these hoUl'S and advises you that he credits. --- to make such a request or demand de­ will - consider him for a continued U.s." I is hecause people with low incomes The Rnal objection voiced by the rives more from bureaucrat.!c intransi­ Section VII of Information Bulletin No.• must sp{'nd virtually all their earnings opponent~ of the credits is that it is gence than fr.ml malevolence toward the 203 (20 August 1968) states, "Our plea while those with higher incomes can registrant. That is. it's an established ad­ to be lenient on undergrad uate student! a handout. This is simply not the case. He got his 'draft' notice ministrative practice in the Selective who are a few hours behind is renewed." save some. a It is partial refund of sales taxes on By ART BUCHWALD "It's worse," Larry said . "He's just been Service System to base judgments about ln addition to the above-quoted sources, student deferment claims upon the pres· This inequity can be largely over­ necessities already paid by low in­ WASHINGTON - "You'd betiter g« accepted for college." I"wa registrants who are freshmen 01' r come by one of several measures. One come families. over to the Diamonds' right away," my "That couldn 't be &0 ence or absence of evidence from col- sophomores can cite and quote two other wife sa id wtlen I came home the other bad." 1ge registrars. and such entrenched ad· is to exempt necessities, such as food, The sales tax credit i'i an efficient rurces. Section IJI o( InlocmatiOll Bul· 1 night. "He's been accepted ministrative procedures often acqu!r4l the letin o. 193 (30 January 1968) reads, :1rugs and clothing from the sales tax. and ecluitable method of easing the "What's the trouble?" at the University of statllS of legal obligations In bureaucrac· "In several instances State Htadquartm • Or a lower sales tax can be charged burden of sales taxes on low income "1 don't know, bllt they sounded terribly Wisconsin," Janet iell as cumbersome as Selectiv~ Service. has suggested a registrant be continued . My advice would be to insist on the upset." cried. in Class 11-8 if he is a freshman or 8Oph- l for necessities. However, the admin­ families. Jt should be retained. I didn 't know what to letter of the law In the face of requests I dashed over Ul the Diamond house and omOt·e. and has not progressed satis/ae· istration of different rates is cumber- - William P. Albrecht say. or demands from your local board for tocily due to being a few hours behind. found Lan-y and Janet ill the living room Larry hook his head. evidence from your college registrar with looking as if the world bad fallen apart. If in these cases when the registrant ad· r "You wock all your life regard to a claim for student deferment. vises that he will make up the required "What is it?" I asked. for your children and If your board persIsts in denying a de­ "Billy got his draft. notice ," Janet said. credit hours during summer school he :hen one day out of the ferment in the absence of such evidence, should be considered (or a conlli>ued JI. Give them another chance "He's been drafted?" )Iue, they grab them BUCHWALD exhaust your appeals within the Selec­ S until Auausl. (sicl." Section I of Infor· and that's ie" (and If an amendment that Student Sen­ To coordinate activities, the board tive Service System and if that fails mation Bulletin No. 206 (16 October 1968) "But even if they accepted him, he if you are sufficiently determined about states, "Local Boards are encouraged to lite will vote on Tuesday is passed, mllst be able to effectively cooperate doesn't have to go," I, said. the matter). take your argument ir.to the be lenient when considering Freshmen the membership of Student Activities and communicate with the activities "You don't understand ." Janet said. courts by bringing an injunction against and Sophomores for student defermoot." Board next year will include repr&­ on campus. This simply has not been "He wants to go. He said he can't sit at your local board or by refusing to sub­ under the tea mit to any subsequent indUttion order Ed Hoffmnns, lentatives from thrce major activities achieved this year. home doing nothing when so many college kids are sacrificing so much 00 the cam­ while you remain qualified for a student Ha wkeye Area Draft Informat/OI\ !In campus. Jim Rohbins, chairman of the board, by Mike Lally puses." deferment. Be sure UJ scek the aid of a competent attorney before instigating lit­ Center and New University By a 3 to 1 vote Wt'dnesday night, voted against what he tenned "bllUd­ Larry said, "He wants to be where the igation. Conference ~ members of ActivtiE'S Board endorsed ing in interest groups" on the board. Mtempting to replace, or counteract, action is:' news stories of rebellion and struggles the inclusion of Union Board, Central But the three other memhers faced a "Billy always had a sense o( duty," I for change with alternative actions like said. Party CommitteE' and Associated Re ­ reality and decided that Interest "milk-ins" or the "silent majority·, is like "I bied to talk him into going into the sidence Halls representatives on the replacing a news story on the Nat Turner group membership was far superior Army instead." Larry told me. " But he Yearly quotes .since 162 board. sla ve revolA. wit h one on how hard the to distrust and inaction. "house niggers" are working. said. 'Dad, r would be shirking my res­ This year, what appeared to be the ponsibilities. That's the coward's way out. The wide variety of activities on First, "it ain't news·' and second, It Ideal policy regarding activities board [ have to go where my friends are fight­ this campus needs to be coordinated avoids the issue be it slavery or the con· ing,' " have seen Viet victory members broke down in practice. Rep­ t.rol of one's lire. in order to insure the best entertain­ Janet sobbed, '" told him to go Into the resentatives from existing campus ac­ The war in Vietnam continues with the By TUN VAN DINH men. I say this because I pereonally bt ment and cultunll opportunities avail­ Army for four years and then perhaps the tivities - intNes! groups, in effect - death toll still mounting. the bombing in fighting 00 campuses would be over. But COIII,I Pr ... Strvice lieve this is a war the Vietnamese mUlit able for the campus. But wben three the South intensified to balance the halt· he said. 'Mother, I could never face my fight. 1 don 't believe we can take 00 t!l.II WE're exc'lud!:'d from the board in the (CPS ) - H the 1968 TET offensive bru· major groups are excluded from a de­ ing of the bombing in the North. which children if they a ked me someday what 1 tally awakened Washington and Saigon combat task for them." - Sec. Me­ hopes of a.~suring the protection of the 5eK . Johnson. l'ubll hed by Student Publlcallon. Inc., cam· TrUll ..., ' •• rd 01 SIud.nt 'ubllullon., Inc.; through. so I didn't take It ~erio usly. II r reached a peak and will start to-level Ofr." Army Chief of Staff. in U.S. News 8llIi mllnl.. ond clu. matter lL the Fred . Morrison. CoUe,_ or Llw: William to college, I certainly wouldn't have en· New York Times, May 12. "U.S. miJitary officials said today thai , ~o.t aCllre at low> C[t}'. under the Act 01 C. Murray. Deportment or English; William Many slaves wanted to return to slavery. couraged it." (ulliresa 01 March 2, 1m. P. Albrechl Departmenl 01 Economics; and 1961 (11,000 U.S. troops) : "The South lhe "fightin g efficiency" or the Viet Con, L as did serfs to serfdom, because slavery I Ul ------William J . ;olma, SchOOl 0' Journaltsm. tried cheer my friends up. "Maybe Vietnamese should achieve vi~ In three and North ViDtnamese troops had prt Tha .....""Iat.d "ro .. I. enUtled OIclullYely to can have its benefits: security familiarity, he' II be aU right. Don't forgft, not every­ the use lor republication of 8n locol new. "vlllttl., ...... J.hn Xu, no need to make decisions, etc. And of years." -Admiral Harry D. Felt. com· gN!ssively declined in tile past iii prlnltd In this newsplper as welt at an AP '.llar ...... Charvl ... rvld ••n body who goes to college ge1.6 At'I'etted. If mander in chief of U.S. forces in the Pa· monLhs. The morale was dEIIICribed II ne", snd dispatch ••. course slaves were always the worst vic- . N_•• dll., ...... D,bby Dono.an he comes out of it without a criminal rec· eific. in the New York Times, January 12. sinking fast. "We have 600 documd ----- Ums of the propaganda of their masters. ord , It could be 8 very broarling experi­ Jubl

8EEn! JtJ,T ~~tJs~e" How MlIt.f-I wlLJ,.. THAT FLOOIl. W,"l. SOMEoNe NICe GOING:.,fR!;:AKFAce. !)(PLAIN TO Mli ~y I '(OJ &v'S ~a ....rHIE PIN S~Ipe;S JU6.r 1A1l6E IS MA"IN6 ~ I M DO IT A6A11oi1 ~THIS ~ ME: 500 CLANt .. t O{..~ GHE I.I. r """,,-_--,\ 511fol:f: THI DAILY IOWAN-low. City, , • .-Frl4ey, Felt. II, 1""-"... ,

! IStudents Charged IMore Dog Owners C 'h~rged · dR· I U t R· With Having Beer 10 a Ity poli~ char f'(! ix Iplamt., the poh~ dt'partment ha ·aC I a ron IS e I File rni.~er<;i\) stu.dents \let Iadditional Pft'~ \\'edn day cracked down . on the \iolatlOn . t U FIn S n e S charged With pos es.,on of beer With allOWlDg their do S tD run In SI!\eral IncUleots. dogs have S d So Y as minOl"S by cit)' police Wedn loou, bringinll the total of per· I reportedly bItten childrl'll. Wi\SHlNGTON IA'! - The group found. had become more main~ far apart in their per. lives. Nor has it offered tho e comm itment mUlt comt lOOner. day night. n charged with th off e to I The city may eU unclaimed nation may be "sowing the sophisticated, less violent. . ceplion oC slum·gbiitlo problert\$ who might wan( it the alterna· L"er m.y 1M too I.... " Arrl!ited wer lark Schwab 12 in Ie than 2 wk . animal at auction after three e eOOs of unpl·eceden4.ed future In all other fields, the follow·up and the meaning of civil disor· live of escape." Ln Atlanta the Rev. Ralph AI Daenport. Ricbard Hi d' BecaU'l' of numt'roU! com· ,days notice is given. disorder and division" by failing rePOl"t found black ana white cIers. The lIap had widened by In a news conference at whicb Abernathy of the Southern Chris· Ai' D ~port : Robert Th n -, 10 respond to the Kerner re- Americans still drifting danger· the end ol the year. . . the report w a 8 oHidally re- ian Lead hip Conference said ' a\en : oms. , pott's year-old warning or a ra· ously apart. "The nation has not reverlJed I~sed, Chairman JohIl W. Gard· the progress report "may well be Al, Bettendorf: Jostph .lcGrath, cially diVided liOCiety, an incle· There bas been "some change the movement apart. The deep- nee of the Urban Coalition said the third strike in the urban A2. Davenport, atu! Craig Engle- pendent progress report con· but not eoough," the report ening ol concern abo u t condi· the report "makes it clear that cr' ! ." mann, EI, Ders fOlDes. LAUNDRY SERVICE eluded Thw·sday. sajd, and "more incidents butles! Uons in the slums and ghettos the nation' re ponse to the cri· "One year ago," the black Police say 8 car dri\-fn by 'tc- I "A year later." it sa i d, "we full·scale disorder because of on the part of some wbite per. sis of the ciUes has been peri· leader said, "the nation toolc the Grath WlS topped for speeding are a year closer to being two improved police and military SOIlS has been COIIntecbalanced lOOllly inadequate ...We h a ve Kerner report as strike one and after being clocked by radar on For the BUSY STUDENT societie5, black and white, in· response; a decline in expect.a· - perhaps overbalanced - by a not made the total commitment did nothing. Then we took B,OOO LexIngton A\'enu~. Poilee said creasingly separate and scarce- lions and therefore in short-run deepening of aversioo and resis· that is 80 urgelltJy needed if we of the poor themselves to tfllSlify Ihey disco\'ered beer In the car Llu".., e! WASH DRY Iy les unequaL" frustrations." lance on the part of others. are to make this a livable 8QCiety Ihrough the Poor People's Cam· after the occupants attempted The follow·up study was made With crime at the forefront "The mood of the blacks ...Is for every American." paign and Congress sat hack, 10 conceal it. icGrath also face De· II ·Yoursolf prlc .. 14 t Ib • AND FOLDED hy Urban ~ca, Inc., and rrf the n.tion'l thinki"" t h. not moving in the direotion ol pa- MayOI' John V. Lindsay of took the econd strike and did a charee of speeding. the Urban CoalitWil, two non· .-.port I. i d , " By the end of lience. New York, who was a member or nothing. profit urban-.aICairs organizations. 1.68 It W'I evident that millloni "The bl.ck neillhb0rhee4s In the Kerner CommissiOll and the "Now \I have the lhird !trike UTILITY REVENUE UP- Entitled "One Vur Later," of Amerlc.n. we,.. tired rrf the citiel rem.in sluml, marl!. adviJory board for Thursday's coming UI March of 1969, wit h DES fOINES!II - Electric: ill .im II to as_. the progrell he.rlng .bout the .. conditionl" tel by poverty .nd cleu.,; the., report, eaid a crucial obstacle to no plan or program to deal with and ga sales revenue Increased WEE WASH IT - or lick rrf it - in Ihe crtl· of life in the slums and ghettos. remain ghettol, marked by r.· progress is "cities are starved ror the main crisis beine faced by $5 million during 1968 [or the I 1 ic.1 .rees where the Kerner It said the nation has failed to ciel concentration .nd confi_ operating money; they have our nation . Instead, we are lalk· Iowa Power and Light Co. oC Des I Commill ion found the root respond adequately to the Ker· menl. stretched their resources alma t ina about antiballistic missiles ~oines, the company reporfed Ph. 351·9641 226 S. Clinton St, c.u_ of rlo's alld civil dilord· ner Commission's recommenda· "The nation has not yet made to the breaking poinl." sy tems. which are just another Tuesday. ers. tioos about betJter hou ing, edu· available - to the cities ol the Urgi", the feeler.1 ,ovlm. subsidy for the military.indu. ~~~------"-~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The report is pessimistic in all cation and Job s for urban blacks themselves - the re-- ment t. ahl... ill rtvtfUlel with I trial complex. If we stand by and areas except that of police·mili· blacks. SOllfceS to improve these neigh· statel and clti .., lindl.y s.id' i watch the third strike called tary response to disoroers once "Black and white AmEll·I· borhoods enough to make a sig· " I believe m 0 r t ....ply now against u~ , it may be the la I WITTNAUER they break oul. This, the study callS," the report said, "re· niCieant change in the residents' thin I did I ye.r _.. the! thil inning of We~tern civilization." .. ,.II . DII " O. 1 o "' ''' ''' f1 .... '" ...... ,.

Priests Strive for Arbitration 'AII or Nothing' Sentiment Chronographs Time Any Action! Time any contesl to the plil second with On Voting Age Issue "Rising l ;d~~~~~~;~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ the Chronographs of the Pro' •. Witlnauer', DES MOINES fA'I - Some Iowa fused. on a 7 to 6 vote, to recom· .~eat;1 Of. Van. Nostrand Bald. the 60,000 Roman Catholic priests able to get your case on the court "Scuba·Chron" olTers dl~er ' s elap ed time legislators are developing an Imend passage of a proposed con. Let s eIther do It all, or not do lin the United States will start list . beul, yacht timer faCility and i walerproof' 'all or nothing" point oi view sUtuti~al amen~ment to lower it at all.·· the wheels turning ne!!t . month "The bill que tion here is real. to 600 feet. Model 23SToffcrs a IHour about lowenng the minimum the mmnnum votmg age to t9. Efforts to lower the minimum IOlliard a new legally ~mdmg de· Iy due proce,s of law. How do regi ler, while either model features 60 stem ecolld counter, 30 minule regl ter, weep wting age. I unBaUn~I' mtohueSlycomtmoitteel.eportdid allTheee voting age to 18 failed in both fense sr . for prle ts who you hand le the grievances of II t 1965 &lid 1967 sessions of the c1a.~h With thel~ .bishop oyer reo Ipriest ?" second slop·action hand and a Tachymeter If the voting age goes down, amendment out to the full Sen. legislature. aSSIgnment dectslons. -- scale to determine peeds from 60 to 700 mph . ~ey want the age for doing ate Cor its consider8'lioo. He predicted the public i8 less When the National Fedfralion Both are A11·Proof9 protected again t water, everything else in Iowa 10WEll'ed, Sen. Charlene Conklin (R· Wa. likely to buy a lower voting age of Priests' Councils (NFPCl dust, shock and magneti m. Several more . d 'nk' te '100 I was rebuCfed in her ef now than a lew years ago be. ho ld~ its first nationwide assem· Wittnauer Prole ional Chronographs to see! .00 - f or marrymg, rr 109, I _ . . bJy March 24 Lo 26 in New Or. ~ntering contracts. etc. forts to have a prOVISion added cause of today's rebellious ae· leans. it intends to urge a form Scuba-Chron ... $85 Model 235T. .. $100 to the amendment glVmg 19· livities by youths. He said older • N Ion ••• ClW, ,r)5t.1 and Cro'4n rem l lD inllCl. Onl Itgislator said Iowa vot· year-<>Ids the same rights and peepl" resent these activities, of civilr recognized .arbi!"'atlon erl w. u I d "slaughter t'lat privileges as adults. even though they involve ooIy 8 that Priests would Sign In ad· 1111 .," 10 it would luvt the minority of young people. I vance --:- agalnst. the day any ,of minimum age for voting and "I can't see the logic in jus t Ulem might run mto trouble W)th letting them vote," Mrs. Conk· "Many think the majority higher Church authority. Itgal .cllons rights wh.re h, 220 E, Washington wants il in the first place - lin 1id. could do something about it ," he The Baltimore province, n",n· She Idded, however, thlt said. 21 . bering 960,000 Catholics in four '37-9510 she h a I r.servationl tven ~$ other legislators favor a 19 or dioceses in Maryland, Virginia, about Ittting 19·Yler·olds vote, Delaware and West Virginia, re­ J;WElER5 m year old minimum voting "I am not concerned about the cently created a regional arbi· rightl, but .boul the responll. Flood Danger I ~e, but frown severely on alh. tration board along those lines. 1•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ( ••••••••••• bilitiel," Ihe uid, ~r rights and oblig:ltions for From time to time in other • youths of those ages. "Nineteen is a very dilficult places, however, priests some­ • period of life for many. To me, In North Iowa limes make headlines when they • The Sen ate Constitutional voling is such a serious thing. defy their bishop over reassign· • 'mendments and Reapportion. I question when they ought to ment decisions or ught a trans· CHIROPRACTIC fer to another parish. Subject to • nent Committee Thursday reo do it." 1. Relieves Poin Sen . Gene Glenn ID·Ottumwal, Seen Possible the bishops whim and authority, ------.i another committee m em be r • priests can either give in or turn Without d,ng.roul drll,1 Ii favors lowering the voting age By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS to public exposure. I 2. Restor., Heolth • THIEVES MARKET • to 18. Threats of serious flooding in Yet priest! never seem to ' Without unnecen_" • "I think they lds) parts oC Iowa and the presence wind up suing in civil court. The IUrgtry. • = Campus are better educated and better of potentially dangerous heavy Rev. Patrick J. O'Malley. 36. oC 3, Prolongs Lif. • • informed than at any time in river ice were reported Thursday Chicago, elected NFPC president N.tur.lly ,nd • • history," Glenn said, adding by the Weather Bureau. when the federation was formed economically. • SATURDAY, MARCH 1 that they ought to be able to go The possibility for very serious last May, explained why in a •.. • Notes to the polls. flooding was listed for the Mis· telephone interview Thursday. Dr. A, p, FankhauSl" • Glenn said the franchise also soUJi River tributaries in north· "Going to court would be D,C. 10:30 3:30 CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP west Iowa, South Dakota. eastern against the spirit of the GospeL I 111 E. Burlington • a.m. to p.m. would stimulate young people's Nebraska and southwestern Min. 1 don 't know of any priests who • The Inler·Varsity ChrLotian FeI· lOterest in the political proceSil. n!'Sola. Dial 338·8507 for .ppt. • bwship will meel at 7:30 tonigllt would really want to go to cour t / • • "I see no hazard to I?,y party, lee jam flooding near the as long as there is effective re­ X.rays Avail.ble if • MAIN LOUNGE, IMU kl the Union Minnesota Room . th~ Democrat party, Glenn mouths oC tributary streams and Necessary. course. Closed on Thu,..dIY. • Dr. Brian Mawhinney, assistant saId. " in constricted reaches may occur " In fact, because the prie t· • proCessor 01 radiation reseach, The H 0 use Conslltutl(~nal because of the presence of heavy • wili speech on the divinity oC Amendments and Reapportion, Iriver ice the Weather Bureau • SET UP 9:30 Christ. men: Committ~ !S drafting a said. ' • • • • proposed c~nstitubonal . amend- The Kansas City River Fore. • = CAMPUS ELECTIONS ment lowermg lhe vOtlOg and cast Center said it was likely ice l·STOP SIGNS • "legal" age to 19. rrom the mouth of the Nishnabot. <0 There will be a campus elec· • tion candidates and campaign "We want the voters to vote na River down stream would • APPLICATIONS DUE FEB . 28 managers meet.ing at 8 p.m. Mon· on the whelt ball IIf wax," said break loose this evening and • day in lhe Senate Chamber of Rep. Maurice Van Nostrand would do so upstream as far as FOR STUDENTS • Old Capitol. Positions on the (R·Avoca ), commilt" chair· Nebraska City, Neb ., today. • ACTIVITIES CENTER hallol will be drawn for at this man, who favorl retaining 21 The Missollfi River, which was • time. II the .g. for doing aU thin,l. at 18.4 feet at Nebraska City • • • "[ do think giving them the Thursday, was expected to drop • UNIVERSITY CLUB rigU' to vote younger without 10 17.5 feet today and to 17 feet • have sto\lo Marshall Lovrien , head of the giving them the other rights is I~aturday . Bank-ful lerel there is • New YOI'I University Motion Picture Pro­ the silliest, shallowist thing I've 18 reet. : •••••••••••••••• J•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ duotion lInil, will be the guest of the llniversily Club at a 12 :30 p m. lu~cheon Tuesday in the trnion Ballroom. Several films which hay!' been PI',J(juced by the HARRAH'S I ~ unit shall be shown . [neluded in the program will be educational. animated and political films. Lake Tahoe, Nevada Etc iteJt Specials • • PAN AMERICAN LEAGUE ! ~ I The Pan American League will meet at 1 [l.m. Thursday in the SUMMER Uni vel ity Athletic Club, Uni· I ROSES versity Heights. Mary Daniel, professOI' of SP3Jli;;h and Portugu. JOB OPPORTUNITIES 98 ese. will speak and show slides of A ONE DOZEN - Only $2 her recent trip to Brezil. • • Be a part of one of Nevoda's lorges! caslno-rlltaurant "V (Ca.h and Carry) EDUCATION TALK School Children Believe Gary WaU s. Washington . D.C., operations, Spend your summer at Lake Tahoe , •• director of the Field Service Di· the west's recreational wonderland in the high Sierras, Green Thumbers: vi ion oC the NaliOllal Educatioo This Sign Proteds Them Associ~lioo. will spe.ak on the ••• and our customt,.. know that 1M '·STOP ~opic ""eacht'r Values and Teach· A group orientation will be held on campus ('f Nego!illtions" at 8 lonight in sign provid.s protection for Ihem. It stond. Macbride Auditorium. The lec· Large Geraniums $2.50 Value ture 18 cosponsored by the Alpha for quality dry cltaning and wa.hlng of Upsilon Chapler of the Della THURSDAY, MARCH 6th their clothing. We',.. conveniently located Kappa Gamma Society and the ONLY (Cash and Carry) College or Education. Harvard Room, IMU nearby to atrv. you btlttr. Heed the signs 98¢ 2 DIE IN KOREAN CRASH- - on the rood , •• and the I·STOP ,Ign which SEOUL IA'I - Two crewmen in Rex Begonias $2.50 Value • U.S. Air Foree Phantom jet CAMPUS INTERVIEWS We!'e killed Thursday moming wh~n the aircraft crashed 3() WILL BE CONDUCTED ~ .. ·~;~;':;·;~'I~"~~;~~I" ONLY (Cash and Carry) mlle ~ ol1th~a t of Osan U.S. Air 98¢ Base near h re, a U.S. military 6pokesman said. One of the two MARCH 6,7, 8 crewmen bailed out, but the al· Shipment of Artificial Apples titude was too low roc hJ para· rhu\e to open, th spokesman Minimum age 21 - p ~.se nt a draft card or birlh certif· String of 18 - $5.00 5aid. Icate as proof of ag., NEW PROCESS DIAPER Good appearance and grooming required. SERVICE florist (5 DOl, plr W"k) CONTACT PlACEMENT OFfiCI - S11 PER MONTH ­ 14 South Dubuque - 410 Kirkwood Ave . Fr.. pickup & .... Iv.ry twl" FOI PUIlTHH DIT AILS 207 N. Linn • wtlk. evtrvthlno II fur. Iowa Cily nished : DI.perl, conllln.,.., Acroll from P•• rlon's Dr",. *odorlntl, Equal Opportunity Employer 337-2614 Phone 337·"" ..... 4-THE DAILY IOWAN-IDw, City, I•. -Frld.y, Feb. 21, I'"

Freshmen Host Wisconsin Tonight I AP Names All-Americas !L--'r: OFF I C BV CHUCK STOLBERG I ward from Del Moln .. II right forward and Dpve Egelhoff. The inary game against the Intra- Iowa's freshman behind Lusk with I 20.5 aver- guards are fWbert Fra or, 6-1, mural champions Tuesday night. team ends its 5eaSO!I against ag.. and Tom Barao, 6-3 . H. hal been taking tr.at. I Wi.""""w· with its third ID' 1-. LI d Ad forward menta and Van Em.n laid h. "".,..., ~ oy arns, a 6-5 The Wileonlin staff rega ds probably would start. Univl collegiate test of the year ill the from New York City led the I th.lr team as average, but "We've hit a dead spot," Van Field House at 7:30 tGnight. Badgers over the IUini with 29 they have had two tremendous Em3J' said in assessing the A victory would mean a win- I points. freshman. squads the past two Hawks' progress. "This usually CON~IiIlIN ' ning season for the Hawkeye vear. which could account for happens. The kids don't get too Todly·Mat'1 The We.1 Stude, yearlings who now have a 1-1 id ~ Hawk ~:I t that said Iowa freshman Coach excitl'