.'

It," elr beat =:lining, ~Ir IIId Willard: 'double agent' in ~~mmers case IIItoUs the 211 . By AlARY SCHNACK Willard, an ex~vict at the Urne 01 the "go to the Grand JW'Y" with the case, said County Court d1ll'inl the Renuners trial, several defendants and their attorneys." same gun. dOdged II1II DAVE PYLE events precedlna Millner's murder, Is now yesterday he and his assistant, Paul ZoII, stated that Hughes was present at a When questioned during Renuners' trial Willard then added in his letter, "In a ~1IId staff Writers serving time In the llUnola State have decided that the Washington, D.C., meeting concemin8 the ltake-out of the as to the "trustworthiness" of Willard, further attempt to keep the fOI chasing his Kro1lnd Penitentiary. He said he became an in· department must be contacted "due to the grocery store Remmers was going to rob. carpenter stated, "I trust Mr. Willard .. . 1 tail, I told the poUce that I suspected , yards. 8ud Willard, in a letter to TIt. Dally formant in ezchange for his release from extreme set of circumstances" surroun- Tbis information was suppUed to poUce by think maybe he (at) one time or another Renuners might be going to conunit an II'ds for loWO" last week, said he acted as a jail. ding the case. "We've got to talk to them to y.'iIlard. has avoided telling me the whole truth, but armed robbery at a local grocery store. ~st con. . "double agent" between poUce aDd his Willard and Remmers were arrested see whether or not there are bases far . Willard, in an interview with the 01 I think overall he has been pretty truthful The poUce proceeded to set up a stake-out IWI baa Irltnda, and kept the "fol (poUce) chasing together Nov. 8,1975 on \lnII charges and yesterday, said he doubted that Hughes or and trusting to me." operation at the store. Nothing happened. I III tall." Willard was released on his own PoUce Chief Harvey Miller knew of the Hughes also has aUuded to this trust- called the poUce and told them Renuners led the WWard was the poUce informant singled Bud Willard's letter to The 0011)1 recognizance. Iowan Is printed in full on page 4. events taking place before the MeJner worthiness. A month ago Hughes said he had backed out 01 his plans." ltistlcs, out in a letter to The Dally Iowan by The return 01 the gun to Willard has murder. "Hughes and I did have contacts had picked up an escapee from Fort oore 15, r.ftdIael Remmers, convicted of the Jan. 10 resulted in a federal probe of the legality of at several pointa but not at all times. I was In the depositiOll8 filed by Carpenter and Madison on information supplied by PoUce Detective Bill Kidwell, both men shOOting death of Kaye Meaner. police actions in returning the firearm to a further proceedings," Perry said. He said Bob Carpenter's man and any information Willard and had no reason to doubt rith the I Willard said his own letter "ezpre_ convicted felon - illegal under federal they should reach a decision by nelt week. said Willard had called them before the Hughes may have had more than Ukely Willard's word. r, Cited mY truth in ita present form." statutes. Johnson County Sheriff Gary Hughes came through Carpenter," Willard said. stake-out was set up, and consequently, ioblem. Willard said he obtained Remmers' gun According to court depositions and The U.S. Attorney's office in Des Moines would not comment on any part of Willard said while he was in the Johnson and gave it to authorities to prove that oniy the Coralville poUce took part in the many Remmers, Remmers gave lUI gun to has examined a report by the Alcohol, Willard's letter saying, "I'm tired of the stake-out. pedIGo County Jail his mail was "intercepted, Remmers did not commit an aJ;med Willard when Willard said he wanted to Tobacco and Firearms agenta for possible lies and innuendos being printed by The censored and in, some Instances totally robbery in Cedar Rapids on Dec. 11. Cedar commit an armed robbery. Willard, ae- In a personal interview with the 01, proeecution 01 the oIficers involved If the Daily10wan. I know your motives." Newly withheld. " Rapids police believed Remmers com· Remmers said he did not tell Willard he Cltding to both sources, then gave the gun federal statute was Violated. The U.S. re-etected Hughes would not say what the Willard said when be became an in· milted that robbery . Bureau of Criminal poUce to be test-flred. PoUce reportedly was planning to commit an anned rob- to AttorneY'1 office said if the gun was D1 's motives were. formant to be released from jall, his was a Investigation ballistics reports and Cedar bery. returned the gun to Willard after the testa, part of returned as poUce (informant) Hughes, when previously contacted by "double-agent plan." Rapids Police Detective Dan Burns have Willard said he wrote the letter to the 01 ~ he would return the gun to procedures, there may not be grounds for' the 01. said, "I don't know what happened "I remained in continual contact with confirmed that the gun used to shoot Remmers. Remmers apparently used the to gain "some protection for myself and to such prosecution. for sure on that deal I(the Remmers the several poUce agencies and fed them Mesner was the same gun used in the protect the people I lived with and loved IU'I, four days after the police had It in U.S. Attorney George ' Perry, whose case)." Sheriff's Detective Bob Carpenter, all kinds of bogus information. At the same robbery of the Cedar Rapids grocery store. their posseSSion, to shoot Mesner. with," as well as to clear up some of the department must rule on whether or not to in a deposition filed under oath in Johnson Urne, I was in collaboration with the Willard said he now believes that it was the issues surrounding the case. Strauss to resign with Demo advent

DALLAS (UPI) - Democrat:­ nor would he seek an office in Ic National Chairman Robert S. the Carter administration. Slrauss, credited with bringing Strauss said 10 days before the party from the defeat of last Tuesday's election he was @1976 Student Publications, Inc. Tuesday, November 9. 1976, Vol. 109, No. 93 Iowa City, Iowa 52242 George McGovern in 1972 to worried carter might not carry Jimmy Carter's victory, said Tens. But, he said, carter's " Monday he will leave office Jan. swing through the sta te during 21. the last days appeared·to make Strauss, chainnan since 1912, the difference In the outcome. called his decision not to seek He praised the presldent-elect Discrimination, harassment cited. in -grievance another term "irrevocable. as "compassionate, serious and tough-mlnded. "He also has one . . "I have done this for four tremendous asset outside of a discrimination and harassment to Wingfield's representative, from his file , he would receive a evaluation, unlike' previous ones nurse, Marilyn Jamison. "She years. I'm tired. I'm ready for By THERESA CHURCHILL very high IQ. immy carter just Staff Writer because I am black," said Greg Les Chisholm, business agent letter of apology and there he had been given. He refused to has had negative converstations some one else to go on." doesn't believe there are any Wingfield, UI psychiatric for the American Federation of would be a "cessation of sign it because he said his with people in the office about Strauss said he made the unsolvable problems," Strauss EcUtor', note : This i, the nursing assistant. State, . County and Municipal discriminatory behavior." behavior on the job had not me," he explained. "She has no announcement because of con· said. "He just beUeves prob­ second of four article. about ' Under the state Board of Employees (AFSCME) . Wingfield, 'll, has worked on changed. " All of a sudden they business discussing me with stant questions about whether lems are solvable. He is going to discrimination complaint. at Regents merit system, his Should the arbitrator's the psychiatric ward for three teU me I'm not dong my job." other people and prejudicing he would continue to serve after level a cautious, but aggressive the UI. charge against the university decislonl>e in Wingfield's favor , years and said he first noticed In mid-October; Wingfield them against me. " Carter takes office. attack on the problems facing will come to arbitration within Chisholm said a negative job discriminatory behavior last said he received a reprimand When contacted by The Daily "It was my intention before the people of this country." "My ' grievance is the next few weeks. according evaluation would I>e removed March. He received a poor work for beingo five minutes late one Iowan , Jamison declined to very long to caU a meeting of morning. "They tell me to sign comment on Wingfield's the Democratic National the late board," he remarked, allegations. Dean Borg, Comlltee ," he said. "The A ttorneg recounts colorful coreer "then some nurses would come director of hospital information, primary purpose of the meeting in late and nothing would be also declined comment, ex­ would be to select a new and said to them ." Wingfield said he p\aining that "it is not in the differen t chairman. I had was not ptlmtitted .to read employee's best interest to discussed thIa with Governor From NnreJllberg to civil -rights InD,,"e.lnent· newspap'ers (turing working discuss It. " Carter and hlI staff and they hours, as were other employees. Mary Jo Smau, all8istant vice agreed." "I've tried to deal with these president for administrative He said he would not seek a B)I MARY SCHNACK much basis for confidence in second set of trials were held by Germany in September 1948, bombing of dikes in North people honestly and give them services, agreed to discuss it, post in the Carter administra­ Staff Writer either of the two major political each of the Allies to try she said she "began to see a Vietnam and the carpet bom· the benefit of the doubt, but too but only in general terms. "I tion, but would return to private parties because they 're defendents lot: ated in their replay of what happened in Nazi bing of Vietnam," Kaufman much has bee n going on. can 't deal in specifiCS because d life in DaUas, where he is a Mary Kaufman, a noted at· dominated by business in· zones of occupation. The United Germany. HiUer rode to power said. "We were involved ,in They're trying to make me quit an employee's confidentiality partner in the law firm of Akin, torney during the Mccarthy era terests. She said we must begin States conducted 12 trials and on the claim communists would (investigating) the wholesale or get me fired," Wingfield must be protected," she said. ~eep 00 Small described the job 'Ve, bill Gump, Strauss, Hauer and and a prosecutor at the to establish a third party Kaufman was on the trial team override the country. too." commission of war crimes and said. "Right now I figure my job's evaluation system of the .ork 00 Field. Nuremberg trials, lAid movement with the people as persecuting I.G. Farben, one of She was referring to the the crime against peace. We 's wbo I Strauss made the aMoupce­ Presldent-etect Jimmy r the base. the three industrialist cases .passing of the Smith Act which (the commission ) martialed lost," he continued, "but I don't department of nursing as • This ment at a Dallas news con· has "made lots of promis&, and " Carter can 't spend $103 tried . made it illegal to form an evidence and made a record of want other people to go through "sophisticated and well thought of my ference, saying It "appeared he how many of them he can fulfill billion on armament and at the I.G. Farben was a huge in· association or be a member of a It. " , this. I want a fair, impartial out." As for a grievance of orlani. had done a job." depends on pressures exerted same time repair damage to the ternational cartel which made group that taught or advocated At one time, Kaufman was investigation. " harassment, she said, "Unless to play "There are many things I can on him by the people." cities the heavy military budget products such as chemicals, the overthrow of the U.S. under investigation by the His first step to obtain an it can be demonstrated to be · se and do from the private sector to aid Kaufman was in lowa City has caused," she said. The synthetic rubber and poisonous government by force. It was Internal Revenue Service. "I investigaiton was to contact the overt, the grievance procedure team," Ole Carter presidency," Strauss last week to fulfill several damages, through lack of gas, and made major economic aimed against the teaching of didn't know why because of my Ul's Human Rights Committee. doesn ' t lend itself to will 1. uid. "I be helping plan the spea1cing engagementa at the funding, have been to contributions to Hitler. They ideas, and on Its face it violated tiny income," she said. He said he was told that com­ resolution. " same Inauguration Jan. 20." College of Law. In a personal education, the housing system, were accused of participating in the first amendment, she said. " However, later on I un­ mittee chairman Howard She added that each case ) domy Strauss, 59, said he would help Interview, she said she is health facilities, and job op­ "crime against peace." Kaufman tried four McCarthy derstood the IRS was used to Porter would be out of town for being considered for arbitration e, work Carter and his aides in their currently involved with the portunities. "They had a heavy role in era cases, across the country; harass pople opposing Nixon ." six weeks and that the com­ is evaluated for a possible learnw ..r ch to fill administration question of the nuclear arms Kaufman was one of two developing the military each case represented seven to In 1972 she began teaching at mittee was "out of function ." conciliation without arbitration. pick up posts. race, and in developing theOries women out of the 200 students to potential of .Germany," 13 people. Antioch College in Yellow Wingfield then went ' to AF· Two advantages of this, she rIneeci "The formation of a new of law and action. graduate from St. John's Kaufman said. "Their plan was In the early 1960's she Springs, Ohio, where she stayed SCME and filed a grievance. said, are cost and time savings. administration means the loc.a. I1g willi " I'd like to stimulate a University School of Law in to dominate European defended in several civil rights for two and a half years. Then His immediate supervisor, the "We want to be fair to em· ling w lion of several hundred new poUtical climate in this country 1937. She went into law for economy. They also helped cases. she went to Hampshire CoUege department head, and the ployees," shj! explained, "and them. " persons to fill posts." to compel the country to stop economic reasons and didn't build the Auschwitz con· During the Vietnam war she in Amherst, Mass., to teach for director of the hospital were it's always better to resolve o work He said Carter plans "swee­ this insane build-up that makes have difficulty in finding a job. centration camp. They had an was the director of a defense two years. . contacted in sequence by AF· disputes between parties than to paNeS ping" changes during his term. many sober scientlsta believe "I had more problems because I integrated role in the atrocities office whose first task was to When asked If she thinks SCME, and Chisholm said each turn it over tosomeone else." , game. Strauss said he told Carter nuclear annihilation of the was Jewish , rather than of the Nazi regime." defend 1,000 ColJmbia discrimination has changed in responded " not guilty" to Wingfield said his opinion of III be three days ago he will remain world is a real possibillty, " she (because I was a) woman." Kaufman's job on the team University students arrested this country since many of her charges of discrimination. Affirmative Action has dropped as the crhainnan until one day after said. In her speech Friday night Since so few women were en· was to "show they participated during the student strike there. trials, she said, "No, but the Wingfield's complaint now has considerably, due to his el· Carter's inauguration. 20. In at the CoUege of Law, she said . tering the field, Kaufman said, reached the fourth stage of the periences. "Sure, it 'provides for lie skill in crime by espionage and Kaufman said the office also depth of hostility to the Com· much early December, he will caU a that in nine years, 35 nations sex discrimination wasn't so propaganda activities around defended priaoners involved in munlst Party has receded grievance procedure, which is equal hiring, but that doesn't ; I can meeting of the national commlt· wouid be able ,to make atomic prominent. the world." She said by ex· prison rebellions, welfare considerably. Racism is getting arbi~tion . mean discrimination stops there," he said. Although d sIlO" lee for Jan. 21 to select a new weapons, and that nuclear war In 1940 she joined the National ploring the international con· mothers who protested cuts, even sharper. We 're com· "The grievRnce is that the ~ is aU chairman. will "become inevitable." Labor Relations Board and was nections of I.G. Farben she had those who . demonstrakd fortable while Inner cities look univerlJi ty acted inap· AFSCME has been "very I want ije said he would give Carter She said the United States has a review attorney. She then was a "real eye-opener." against Nilon's election in 1968 Uke bombed-out cities of World ~ropriately in disciplining Greg helpful," according to of Wingfield, he believes the IY~ hia recommendation for his enough nuclear arma built up to asked to be a prosecutor at the Multl-natlonal corporations and many others. War II. ' We're comfortable and are therefore guilty , successor. wipe out the world 12 Urnes, and second set of major war crime operate in under.developed Kaufman was also an ad hoc whUe 40 per cent of minority discrimination," Chisholm said, university should be able to "Gov. Carter and I agreed the Soviet Union 34 times. The trials at Nuremberg. countries by supporting member of the International group people can't find jobs. adding, "There is no doubt in handle a complaint of that I wbuld remain through the Soviet Union could "do us in 13 The first set, Kaufman ell: · poUtical figures whose role is to Commission of Inquiry into U.S. However, the allies among my mind that Greg is being discrimination. campaign and tha t after it I times." She added in her speech plained, were trials of top move the economy in their (the war crimes in Indochina at its minority groups are growing, abused." "It's oniy natural that there's "ould leave," Strauss said. that It Is the "profit motive" leaders of Nazi Germany , corporation's) direction. Much third session in Copenhagen. "I too." Wingfield alSo has filed a going to be some trouble and Strauss said he wu not in· that "drlvl!$ us to overkill." before a tribunal which Uke IT&T operated in ChIle." took evidence about the nature Kaufman has now "retired" grievance of harassment with some discrimination," he said, terested in l'unn ;nl( r~r Jlovernor Kaufman IBid she can't find represented all the Allies. The When ' she returned from of the focus on Cambodia, the to lecturing and writing. AFSCME against his head "and it has to be dealt with." in the news ....----,.---:- alao said, "We're still trying to fili the (Dec. 4) reopening .major highways and ultimately en· requests by Gilmore that he be shot by a firing date," and IUnted that he had possible shows to ding the civil war, now in Its 19th month. squad as scheduled in seven days. substitute fOf the canceled Zappa concert. "We Rightist leaders have also declared their The court did not specify the length of the Schaben' have a ~50 chance," he said. support for the plan. delay, which was requested by two court­ DES MOINES (UPI) - Former state Sen. appointed attorneys. James Schaben left the federal courthouse in Des Geneva Moines Monday afternoon a free man, hoping to Lebanon Fish.ing .: salvage a reputation he said was severely BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - Syrian troops of GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - IvOr RIchard, damaged by his indictment on federal charges the Arab League peace-teeplng force Tuesday chairman of the talks on the future of ZImbabwe TOKYO (UPI) - Japan said Monday it will earlier this year. advanced without miltance into both Christian (Rhodesia), fiew home to London late Monday to refuse to recognize a U.S. decision to enforce a Schaben, 50, an unsuccessful candidate for governor in 1974, was acquitted Monday of Zappa and Moslem territory in the central ~Ountain8. consult on how to prevent the ~lemated talks ~e fishing zone off its coasts starting At nlghUall, fighting and shelling swept across from collapsing into a guerrilla war solution. March 1, sources at tfle U.S ..Japan fishery talks charges he illegally transported 18 disease­ Frank Zappa hal crappa-ed out on us, folks. Beirut despite appeals from leaders of both said. exposed caWe acr088 state Unes in August, 1975. The man and hIa Mothel'l have canceled their sides. Richard told a reporter at the airport that he Shlnichiro Auo of the Japanese Foreign The seven-man, flv~ U.S. DIstrict Court scheduled Field HOUle date (Dec.4) . Leftist chief Kamal Jumblatt announced his was "not at all despondent." But the conference Ministry told the opening session of the confer­ jury spent more than two-and-one-balf hours Jack Rovner, head of the CommlIIlon for support for the Arab force and asked hta Moslem appeared locked in a hardening black""hite con· ence that his country opposes the U.S. fishing reviewing the evidence presented d1ll'inl three Univel'l1ty Ent.rtalnment (CUE), which wu followers to aid the Peace troops in their ez· frontation 11 days after Ita formal opening. lIm1ts until there Is an international law full days of testimony befare returning the in· 1p01lIOI'm, the show, said Monelly that Zappa pected march to the capital - a major boost for An official said Richard would return Tuelday estabUshing such 'an extensive zone. nocent verdict. bad • previous commitment to do a televlalOll the peace plan 01 President Ella! Sarkia. to try to Bet up another working seaion with Deputy Assistant Secretary of State RozaMe apeclal. "They were auppoaed to start rehearsals "We welcome the entry 01 the Arab llecurity black and white delegations. L. Ridgway said the U.S. decision demonstrated for the IIIow on Dec. 10," Rovner ..lei, '''but forces, particularly because they have taken into the advent of a new internationai era of fishery Weather decided to ItIrt the reheanlla ahead 01 consideration the necellity of ba1anclng their control. She rejected in effect Japan's aemand schedule." movement" into Moslem and ChrIatian areas at Death dela" that It be allowed to catch as much fish in the Dec. 4 WII the lut date 011 ZappI's tourtnc the same time,>Jumblett said. future as as It did In the past, the sources said. WeD, let's see here. Today in the Dl weather achecIuJe. AIlIs'not 1oIt, however. Romer IBid It wu Jumblatt'. fir" open indication of SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -The Utah SUpreme The lOurceS quoted the U.S. delegate as telling grab bag we find lun, wind,·tempa in the 4QI and CUE has been promlIed that "~'n be the nnt support for Sarkla1 plan, which aims at creating Court Issued a ltay of elecutiOll Monday for Japan that ita recognition of the U.S. juriadlction just a few clouds. Mix 'em around any way you da .... GIl Zappa's nat tour thlI8prina. Rovner Arab Leaaue buffer &oneil in front Une are., convicted killer Gary Mark Gilmore, deapite two should be the precondition for the sil-day talks. Uke, it still comes out the same. Hive a good one. "'lIe Z-Tbe Dally Iowa-lowe City, [owa-TlIHClay, November t, lr7. 'Council rejects overtime policy I. BIG

Editor's note By THERESA CHURCHILL Williams said, adding that the resolution of the Issue yet." awaiting a final decision by the Basement The PoItIcrIpli column Ia an information forum of Til. Doil, 10000an Staff Writer council is "leaning toward" State employees originally Iowa Executive Counell. "I and II Intended u a public aervlce for III readera. PoUUcal advertlae­ returning to a 4().hour plan. were put on the ID-hour over­ assume the regents will follow Sale menll and evenll or aervlCII charBina admI ..lon or fees are not The Iowa Executive Council State employees now are time pay plan following a U.S. suit and confonn to whatever suitable material. llecauae of IpSce and Ume IImltaUOIII, the 01 wiD Supreme Court ruling late July overtime pay policy the council publilh In PostIcrtpta only thaIe Items that are conaldered to be of denied Monday a recom­ awarded overtime, often in the generallntertllto the univenlty community. All submiaalons must be mendation made by the Iowa form of compensatory time, that state and local ogovern­ decides," Williams said. typed - TRIPLE-SPACED - on.v. III paper (regular alze): any Merit Commission Sept. 24 that only after working over IKI hours ments were no longer required Mary Jo Small, assistant vice Iilbmlllion that faila to foDow thla fonnat will not be pubillhed. The would have put state employees in a two-week period. to pay overtlme under the president for administrative deadline Is noon of the day prior to publication (noon Thursday for weekend POItacripts). back on an overtime pay policy The recommendation has federal Fair Labor Standards services, agreed with Williams' based on a 4O-hour week, ac­ been returned to the Iowa Merit Act, which calls for overtime to assumption. But she said that if African classes cording to David Williams, Commission for recon­ be awarded for any work in there was a rule change of any Prof. Zvobgo's dUMS in Modem African History and in Afro­ assistant area director for the siderlltion. Williams did not excess of 40 hours a week. kind to be made, "the regents American History will meet as usual thla week, beglnnlna today. American Federation of State, know when a new recom­ Reacting to this, the Iowa will follow correct procedure County and Municipal mendation on the matter would Executive Council adopted the and it will be advertised over II Reading Employees (AFSCME) . come before the exectuive oo.hour plan, implemented on period of time before the change Sigurdur A. MagnuSlOll and StaVros Deliglorgla will read poems and The executive council's denial council, saying that he doesn't Aug . 9, under emergency is made." This would be in translations tonight at Alandonl's Bookstore, 810 S. Dubuque St. was based on a disagreement know how the merit commiSSion statutes. The state Board of contrast to the state's mOre Link over the use of compensatory " will react to it." Regents merit system, which abrupt, emergency-statute time, awarded in lieu of "In practical terms," he change to the ro-hour overtime Feeling iaolated? Do you think you're the only penon In I,pwa that includes UI employees, did not • wanta to talk about biofeedback, tarot, Sufism, or "the sweet and payment for overtime worked, explained, "there is no adopt the oo.hour plan, and is pay plan last August, she said. natural blue?" You're not the only penon In Iowa; you lust haven't run into the others. But you can't find them wandering in the streets. You have to call LInk, 353-LINK. CAC vice president quits: lack of time Cl inton at College .Meetings • The UI Judo Club meets Tuesdays and Thursdays in the Martial Arta By S.P. FOWLER enough time to do an efft!ctive decision to resign. seat and willing to spend the Room of the Field House (nelt to ~ Wrestling Room) from 7-8 p. m. for Staff Writer job as CAC vice president. Taylor took office last June time. CAC will be accepting children and from s.s: 30 p.m. for adults. The instructor is In Cheql "I'm carrying a pretty heavy after Maureen Ose, fonner CAC applications until Nov . 15 , Kim, fifth degree black belt; beginners are welcome. Collegiate Associations course load and the projects vice president, resigned two Dilley said. The United FanRlDOf"ke,.. Support Committee will meet at 7:30 p.m. Council (CAC) President Benita CAC is involved in require a weeks after she was elected in If no qualified person applies, today at the Stone Soup Restaurant in Center East. Dilley, A4, Monday night ac­ great time commitment by the order to take a job with Nor­ Dilley said, the " present PRSSA (Public RelotioMSIude1rtSociet,o! America) wiD meetat7 cepted the resignation of CAC executives," Taylor said. thwestern Bell in De" Moines. Cabinet can function without a p.m. today at the Mill Restaurant. Vice President Steve Taylor, Taylor, who is also vice Dilley said she Is "not vice president indefinitely . . B4. president of Business Senate hopeful" that the position will "Theoretically, under our by­ Taylor told The Dally Iowan and will 'retain that pOSition, be filled immediately. She said laws, we can leave that seat t3 ...... Monday night that he resigqed said there were "no personality it will be difficult to find vacant," she said. 17 ,', . , .... ' . because he doesn't "have conflicts" involved In his someone both qualified for the Until someone is selected, the 21 ...... '" HEW names doctors duties of the vice president will 25 ...... ~------~~~------~ be divided among the other executives, Dilley said . _" The 29 ...... 30. .. with biggest income book exchange and lecture Print nime. ilddress & phone number below notes projects will be assigned Name ... to the treasurer," she said, "and CAC's Committee on Address .. Conunittees will be assigned to from Medicaid the executive associate." Dilley . Dial 353-6201 Zip ...... will assume any other duties To figur e cosl multoply the number or words Oncludlng address andlor phone number) li mes th e appropriate rate given below.' I WASffiNGTON (UPI) - About 2,500 doctors, dentists, labs and nonnally assigned to the vice president. Cosl equ.ls (number of words) i (rilte per word). Minimum ild 1• • drugstores each received $100,000 or more in taxpayers' money words, $~, " . Because of the additional last year for Medicaid services to needy patients, the Health, 1 . 3 days .28c per word 10 days ....•...40<: per word Education and Welfare Department said Monday. workload, Taylor's $199.16 per 5 days .... 31 5c p'" word 30 days ...... Me per word HEW released for the first time the names of those who make month salary will be divided Send completed ad blank WIth The DAlly IOWAn the biggest income from Medicaid. The list - which drew an equally and added to th e salaries of the treasurer and the check or money order. or stop 111 Communlu1iollJ Center immediate protest from the American Medical Association - executive associate. on our o((ices ' ' corner ColI~ & MlIdIJOn ., showed they range from Harlem to Waianae, Hawaii; from Regarding Taylor 's lOWil City, S2l42 central Indiana to New Orleans to Detroit. resignatlon, Dilley said, " I HEW said it Issued the names under requirements of the hated to see him go_ He was a • Freedom of Infonnation Act. But organized medicine criticized very good vice president and it . the public identification of Medicaid's big-income doctors as will be difficult to find someone r------I ----!,. '!l1 "nothing less than an attempt at guilt by innuendo." qualified to replace him ." The 2,533 doctors, dentists, laboratories and phannacies listed • In other business, CAC I mrf~ 1lJ21r1> 1r'ml~ :,~ I ' received a total $445.3 million for their services - or 16.3 per cent recognized a new student J1J>JJ::d JIJ)I1\\JLJJ::dJr nrl . of the $2.7 billion paid to so-ealled Medicaid providers in those organization, the Student I ~w l' categories, HEW said. Committee for a Just World ~Olt J5)/ff) The total Medicaid bill to federal and state governments is Order. I ~ expected to rise from $15.2 billion in fiscal 1976 to $lB.4 billion in CAC Treasurer Geoff King, I I 1977. A3, explained that the com- A Onemll"lule call 10 anyplace In Ihe I "The fact that the medical providers received the stated mittee 's purpose is two-fold : I Conllnental United States except Alaska IS iust \ amount from the Medicaid program should not be construed as "First, they want to educate I ,35C or less plus lax Just dial wllhoUI . _, I, any evidence of wrongdoing, nor do the amounts listed students. as t? the current '-IKld fi)l.Ir e a SWill!.!. Cl!O ~f1!lJ1d wee nds necessarily represent 'earnings' or 'profits,'" HEW said in a I' . order slt~atiq~ and s~olld ly" .• I .. j ., ... " .. , ... , 'I ,,+ I' '~ r' nlDtI!I!' '. . statement accompanying the 346-page list. ' they 'd like .If/

• THE DAILY IOWAl\I

Iowa Press Association Newspaper of the Year

Editor Bob Jones ~ng EdHor Anitl KI'er New, Peter Clroea (City). K. Pelrid< JenMn. Randy Knoper (Univerlllty)EdIors; Mwy Schnack. 01'" HemIngway. BII JchMOfl. R.C. Brandau. 01118 OeWlt1e FHlu," 11m $lOCO Edtor; LMy Ptr1 A.. OCMt. : VtJeri, Sullivan Sportl Steve Tracy EdIIor; Jullln Telan ~e; Steve Nemeth. Roger Thurow DIXIE HI FI that's who! EdlIoItIl ... ~ DIcMy EdItor; WInttOn Btrctay AuocIet. Copy DIIk B.J Salabury ChIef; Day. ~. Nancy Gilliland, GInny VI" We're one of the oldest and largest audio mall order houses in the PIIOtogrIpIIy lAwrence Frri DttcIor: Com Fr&nQO. Art Land, Mary Locke country. We know how to save you money. Dixie's all new 1917 ContrIbullng Ytar Tom Quinlan UMrtaM ~" RyWI. SUt S1uekerjlelgln Cltalog will show you how to save when you order by mail. You'll Art Dlractor John s-ffi, see the best known brand name audio components with specific. AdmInllINlion Wlilam c..y PublIher. P8ter Vllllegen. lor"', WIlson, tiolls, comparison charts, and some honest advice for stereo enthu­ PIfIl Trudo AdWtIllngJlm Le3nIl'dMenr,v, AudreyCollay, MlkIConnel, LuanntUnk, siats who Wlnt the .most for their hi-Ii dollar. Of course. every­ Laurel Sacks thinl is shipped in factory seated cartons With full manufacturer's PfodIICItlon 01,* WIaon Su".mtwtdant; GtnI OIlken, Bob Foley MMIQIfI; Wlrrlnty. All this and Dixie's low prices tool Write lodav for your Gllnda Buenger. Jamea DlVriII, BIIh GIuper. Tommy Hinthft, C.E. Kelty, Undl MaIMg, Nwlcy McfIlWld, JWy Raw, T".. Rodriguez, FREE Dixie 1977 catalog Or a p;n:· ce::qu~o:te~. ___...... ~ ___~~~~~~~_ ConrHWlIlon Clroullllon JennlI. Pc*ch Mlntglf; IIIe¥t Ktntlnger, Vidd. Mc:Ooktic:II. Clwit Montl(j. SCM RIte, KIm !II",," I'IIItt OIl Tht DIll( low ... cIroullllon dIP trbMnt, 3IH203, 1/ you do DEO!!l lIOl l'IOIIyt your IIIWIIIII* IIr 7:JO 10"" WI'. do ..... WI ClIft to 2040 THALBRO ST. RICHMOND IIA. 23230 rICIIfy till proIIIInIlIr "" .. 11M. CIfouIIIIon 0liioi houll.. • Master Ch .../Bank Am.riurd .11 10m. IIId H ,,""" fI1andIy IIIfOUtIII frlclty. lubIGrtpIlon": IDWI CIty ItId CcnIwI .. a1lI0IIIIII11, 11lI0IIIIII1'0. _"_" Mo. 1 ""nang yee, 1''.II1IIlIIIII0II,,: a lIIOIIIIIa ...1ID, I rnonIIIl 128 E. ,'.. , prtntlng yell' UI. 338-41~ The Dally low.-lowa City, lowa-1'IIetday, November I, I171-Paae I ~ Garry Tn Ideau City contemplates Court Street closure

By DAVE HEMINGWAY bowever, cars rarely slow down Citians. night on the street. now. enforced," he said. S&aff Writer for this. "CbIldren are dwn\). One of the Court Street Mayor Mary Neuhauser said "Any problem that might Showalter said, however, that .founded when a car stops for residents said closing the street she thought the closing of Court arise from having the stuff in keeping the provision would I Street closure was again the them at the crosswalk," he said. to help maintain the quality of Street might cause additional the 'parks could be handled by help prevent the posslblllty of topiC of dlscussIon for. the Iowa The group suggested that the the neighborhood would benefit problems to residents on our disorderly conduct dirupUve behavior. City Council Monday. council close Court Street where the entire city by giving it Summit Street and other small provisions," Foster said. He also said that allowing Seven Court Street residents it meets Muscatine Avenue, or something to be proud of . streets in the area. Dennis Showalter, director of beer and alcohol on park land with houses between SwnmIt where it meets Clark Street in "When ] go to other places, Councilman Pat Foster the parks and recreation and playgrounds would in­ Street and Muscatine Avenue this segment. They also made other cities" .. and I tell people proposed that the street department, said he favored creaae the amount of litter the came to the council to address alternative suggestions, in­ I'm from Iowa City (and from segment be made a one-way keeping the provisions. city would have to clean up. the laue of arterial traffic cluding prohibiting right turns this particular neighborhood), street going west. However, the "We realize that it's part of The council deferred through their neighborhood. on red at Burlinton and Summit, they say 'Oh yes, I've been residents said this would not American tradition to have a discussion of the proposed "~ut we would also like to get putting bumps or dips in the there' and 'Isn't that such a nice alleviate the problem of can of beer on family picnics," ordinance unW next week to your feeling on whether It Ia road to slow vehicular traffic, place to live,' " the resident speeders on the street. Showalter said. "The current allow the Parks and Recreation important for the city to help or constructlng an island in the said. The council reached no provision prohibiting alchohollc Commlssion to discuss other preserve neighborhoods," said middle of the street to slow Councilman Robert Vevera concensus on the problem. beverages on park and considerations of the ordinance Joe" Patrick of 1190 Gourt St. traffic. said he would "resent" the In other action Monday, the playground land Is not strictly with related agencies. The Court Street residents Public Works Director closing of Court Street and that councn discussed the problem relayed problems caused by the Richard J . Palstlno said It would make "everybody else of double standards in city proxlmlty of their street to Burlington Street could handle want the same thing done." government relating to a Burlington Street. the traffic that would be "l( we would (close the proposed ordinance Motorists heading east on generated by closing Court segment) it wouldn't be very establishing new guidelines for RUPTURE Burlington Street often use the Street now. But he said he could long before we would have only the parks and recreation l.II UI InIroduoe you 10 • new WOIkI 01 LASTING reII_ from the clMbiIily 01 Court Street segment as a not be certain about tb1s in the two streets going east and west department. rupC", • • -NO SURGERY -NO BELTS shortcut when stopped at future. and two streets going north and Th~ proposed ordinance Burlington and Summmit Plastlno told the council to be south," Vevera said. provides a list of activities -NO INJECTIONS -NO STRAPS Street. There are no stop signs aware that the move would "I will, however, go along prohibited in parks and SEE or lights on the stretch. benefit a small number of with anything to make It in­ playgrounds in Iowa aty, which One crosswalk exists on the people and that it would close a convenient for traffic on your Includes a provision that beer, MR. JOHN MULDOON t.IdwtII w.n.g. 01 ~. HImII ConIroI SeMOI stretch at Court Street and dedicated public right-of-way street," he added. or other alcoholic beverages, Oakland Avenue. Patrick said, which belongs to all Iowa Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Neuzil bf will not be ailowed. FAlOAY, NOV. 12 - 10 All - • PII 1178 Court St., who have lived on Councilors Foster and Carol TRAVEL 1.OOGl_ HIGHWAY. 211 the street for 39 years, said they deProsse said the provision - ..... cny also object to truck traffic should be removed because it is 8yq. ...,.,.. Control ...... ® • E...... CIII-.o IDI04 Senate considers budget proposal which continues through the not strictly ~nforced by the city GIVE LIFE! GIVE BLOOD· GIVE LIFE! GIVE BLOOD· GIVE LIFEI GIVE BLOOD· GIVE LIFEI GIVE BLOOD · GIVE LlFEI GIVE BLOOD· GIVE LlFEI GIVE ~Y-lOGER THUROW least 10 per cent of the $83,000 must be kept financial status of many student groups. ~ Writer In the budge\ to handle student organisations seeking funding during the Round two of the UI Student Senate'. fall semester. In addition, senate funneled allowsco~~~c~fw~~hn:8~r:s~:~~~ groups to use money allocated for ~ U3S'~ ATTENTION ~ anaual budgeting rltuai Ia approaching the more than .,000 of the unallocated funds specific programs in fund-raidng efforts a rlnal bell with 20 UI student organisations from one of the spring's funding divisions seeklng a slice of the '14,900 fundin& pie. into the fall appropriation total. moneynot allocated borrowed by senatefrom . anAlthough allocated all § UNIVERSITY. BLOOD DRIVE Under the direction of Senate Executive Senate receives $1.97 per student from program must be replaced, Porter said ~ . ~tary Bill Porter, G, the seven­ the mandatory student fees each semester, this contract addition will afford w member Budgeting and Auditing Com­ which then reverts back to the students organizations 8 chance to use senate funds 8 Nov. 8, 9, 1 0 • 1976 mittee has presented to the Hnate a thrOugh senate's budgeting and funding to generate their own revenue. recommendation for the allocation of sessions. Following are the budgeting com- if! 10:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. IMU 2nd Floor Ballroom $11,431. The senate Ia alated to act on the AIlbough senate has '14,900 available to mittee's funding recommendations, with ::::; COIIIJnittee's proposed funding when it allocate this fall, Porter said the budgeting coitvenes Tuelday at 8 p.m. in the Union's committee has recomml!nded the ap­ th~~~u~~o~:~o$i.~r;;-~~~s~~ ~ More donors needed on Nov. 9th and 10th G, Hawkeye Room, and Porter said he Ia propriation of only $11,400 because five Amateur Radio Club - $275 ($1,025); Q GIVE BLOOD GIVE LIFE'" <: ezpecting no great challenges to the student organisations missed one of the Associated Resiqence Halls - $2558;;! -... ~ pI_ge of the budget. deadlines of the budgeting process and will ($1,255); Black Genesis Troupe - $370 ~ " Porter, who co-chairs the budgeting have to reapply for funding later in the ($640); Black Student Union - $932 ~ .. For info - Call 353-671 0 ~ !!) ~ttee with Mary Pruess, A3, ex­ year. ($1,300); Boleo Day Care - $1,350 ($2,000). a m~ pi.!ned that any UI students, especially According to Porter, 20 groups requested Citizens for Environmental Action - _ belonging to organizations seeking senate funding tbIs fall, asking for more $407 ($1,890); Own Own Childcare Center ~ ______Sponsored by these organizations ------~8 s~ate funding, can attend tonight's than $30,100. Each of the groups have been - $560 ($600); UI Fencing Club - $143 meeting and question any aspect of the recommended funding by the budgeting ($316); Free Environment - $886 ($3,989); ~ 0 c+nuttee's recommendations. But he committee, iI\.C!uding 12 organisations Hawkeye Soccer Club - $795 ($1,558); ~ G'l nOted discu.lon will probably be light. which received senate funding last spring. Hera - $1,ZA5 ($3,447) . 0 * Iowa Book & Supply ~ The fall funding se.lon Ia a supplement TJle largest share of the committee's ]owa Public Interest Research Group - 8 * ARH * Iowa State Bank & Trust * Eagles #157 c to the much larger budgeting proce. in recommendations is to Boleo Day Care $450 ($1,430); Protective Association for af * CAC * McDonalds * Evans Distributing Co. ~ April, when the b~ of senate's funding is with '1,350, followed by Hera, a women's Tenants - $450 ($900); Revolutionary W * IFC * First National Bank G'l IOocated to various non-academic student psychotherapy group, with '1,725. Other Student Brigade - $115 ($577); U1 Sailing 8 * Panhellenic * Mr. Steak * Gilda Imports ~ organiutions. Last spring, senate ap­ top recommendations include Alice Day Club - $500 ($3,500); US-Chlna Peoples w * Student Senate * Perpetual Savings & Loan * H II C I 'll aJ propriated more than $81,000 of its $83,000 Care, $1,000; Black Student Union, $932 ; Friendship Association _ $240 ($1,460). ~ ASSOCiation y-v6EI - or8 VI e 8r 10.. ~ organizations, holding the remainder and Free Environment, $886. UI Veterans Association PUSIi Com- w * Things * Randall's _ Coralville * Sa/terts rA the funds back for funding throughout Senl\te exerts Its greatest influence over mittee-$743($1,297);UIVoicesofSoul- <.:J~ * Joe's Place' (;, *The Airliner '? the year. the students through its funding sessions, and Yoga Center - $310 BLOOD. GIVE LIFE! GIVE BLOOD . GIVE LlFEI GIVE BLOOD _GIVE LIFE! GIVE BLOOD - GIVE LlI'EI GIVE BLOOD· GIVE LIFEI GIVE BLOOD - GIVE According to the senate constitution, at often holding the determining key to the ~J.$1.450);

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. \ , Pqe 4-n.e l>aIIy lowu-Iowa t1ty, lowa-Tllelday, November I. It/' mE DAILY IOWAN o Iowa Press. Association Newspaper 'of the Year Tuesday, November 9f 1976, Vol. 109, No. 93 ©1 976 Student Publications, Inc. Publlh4ldbyStUdtnl PubliClllionI.Inc. 111 CommuriCIIlonlc.nter. IowIClly, 0' IOWI 52242 daily llcept SatUfdIlyt. Sund8y1, holder- and u~vtnIty vlCldonl. Second ct. poatage paid It til. p«*I. ollie. " Iowl CIty und. the Act 01 eonv... of "'.cIl2. 1In . ,Opinlon •• !IpI'tU«! on the .. paget lit tit opI~onl 01 the Iigned IUthcn, and may nol neceuarily be thou of The o.IIy lowln. Cooperation: just an amenity? Tbe voung machines have barely stopped recording the suspect of being remiss in their duties, or of Wling procedure. voters' choices In this year's election and already the facades that are not consonant with their' roles as guardiana of the that some elected officials have affected during the elections law, the press mWltletpeople know. But In pursuing the truth are being dropped. we need the cooperation of the police and sheriff's offices. Take the newly re-elected Johnson County Sheriff Gary You cannot get to the truth If you run Into a wall of "no Hughes, for example. DurIng the campaign The Daily Iowan comments." That Is not cooJ)l!ration. If Hughes believes or received only limited cooperation from the sheriff's office In knows that we have printed "lies and Innuendos" In the the paper's attempt to determine the truth about the clr· Remmers case he had enough opportunities to set us straight. cumstances surrounding the Michael Remmers murder He never did and now refuses to cooperate with us even on the case. But at least we had some cooperation. minimal level an elected official should. The sheriff's cooperation consisted of a few statements that We do not want to interfere with the duties of the sheriff's did not, however, shed much light on the case. Mostly he office. Nor do we want to accus& the sheriff and hla deputies confined Iilmself to the "no comment" and "not guilty" of wrongdoings when there Is no proof of such actions on their variety of statements so dear to many of our public officials, part. And we have never accused them of any wrongdoings. but he did "cooperate." He talked to us. We have simply relayed to our readers the information we The day after the elections, the Dl contacted Hughes to get have received. Before printing this information we have his reaction and comments to a letter sent to the paper by always called the law enforcement agencies and inquired William "Bud" Willard (elsewhere on this page) who was about the truth of the Information and asked for their com· Involved In the Remmers case. Hughes would not cooperate, merlts. apparently because he felt that even limited cooperation with the DI wasn't necessary anymore. Hughes' refusal to cooperate with the DI does not stop with The sheriff refused to talk to a Dl reporter, saying, "I am the Remmers case. Hughes and hls department do not Willard: RemDlers victim of his tired of the lies and Innuendos being printed by The Daily cooperate with the DI on any case. Iowan. I know your motives." Not knowing what Hughes Hughes's negative feelings toward the DI and his in­ meant by this remark and being impressed by the sheriff's security were well-masked during hla re-election campaign. extra-sensory perception, the DI staffer asked, "what are our Now that he has been re-elected he doesn't feel the com­ psychological need for donrinance, motives?" The sheriff answered, "You know what they are punction to be cooperative. Not until closer to hts next re­ and I have no comment." He then hung up. election campaign, that Is. To the Editor: ,the person with the most pertinent in· rage. He wanted the gun back and I Whatever he thinks our motives may be for pursuing a case Cooperation between the media and law enfor~ment I have recently had the oppportunity to formation that would lead to the exposure complied with his wishes. I had no idea at • In which possibly unlawful prodecures were used by his and agencies and officials Is essential to the community. We are read several articles printed In Iowa City of what In actuality had happened, and to the time what his intentions were, nor did I ' other Iowa City law enforcement agencies, Hughes Is wrong. on the same side. It Is not unreasonable to ask thdheriff to newspapers concerning Mike Remmers overcome the charges against all of my know of hostilities and arguments with The Daily Iowan serves the community by printing in­ cooperate with the 01 and tell us the facts Instead of refusing and myself. In light of the blatant people. . Kaye Mesner that same day. I had met formation and news that we feel Is pertinent to people in the to tell us anything while at the same time accusil!ll us of not misapprehensiQ.ns , and·or assertions Knowing full well that I would have to be Kaye briefly on a couple of separate oc· community. The performance Qf law enforcement agencies getting the facts. therein , I would like to take this op­ ' in direct communications with the now casions and assumed that things were and their employees is very important to people. If and when portunity to rebut and clarify matters defendants and their attorneys I came up going well with Remmers and Mesner. 1 there Is a case in which these agencies or their employees are PETER GROSS from my personal·knowledgeable per· with a double agent plan. I simply con· went out of town early Saturday morning , spective. A brief historical review leading vinced the authorities that I would be the and only heard of the murder over the ' to the Kaye Mesner murder seems best informant they ever had, and give radio the next Sunday morning. I regret, A crusade to end 'all crusades evidently necessary: them all the information they needed, if I and am truly appalled at, what happened. I am a 12-year veteran of jails and could be released on my own recognizance Although [ am not considered "legally liable" in the Mesner murder, I do feel and problem, which the public wasn't it Is our sociable Instincts being appealed prisons all over the country. During my and stay close to the select group of people. share at least partial moral guilt. I was not By GA YLE GOSHORN necessarily aware of before but which will to, more than our altruistic ones. Or, as incarcerations I became a staunch It worked. The authorities were hungry for on top of a potentially volatile situation, as spell doom for all if it doesn't receive their some country singer once yodelled, the last movement·activists person, and a convictions. I was released on my own One fuzzy golden afternoon after the I should have been. immediate attention. Then they just word in lonesome Is me. relatively proficient jailhouse lawyer. recognizance. election hoopla had just ended, I went Throughout the turning of all the -aaJll'!ln to have the solution handy. It's the N~dlella to say also, I became a pretty I remained in continual contact with the meandering through the main library. But after the election, I opted for the &lregoing M~ i h ve. been in a really same angIe the deodorant industry W88 g~ con Dian and my strong sJits were the several police agencies and fed them an What better place to escape the present? to what....You·mean·we, kimosabe? syndrome unique postion I have been privy to all the founded on, almost as altruistically. It's law and prison reform activities. 5lnds of bogus information. At the same size u~ the insignificance of the campaign The golden afternoon was back, and I was parties and participants. The select group, the most proven sales formula around Upon reversal of a 1972 federal can· time I was in collaboration with the stars against th~ archives of knowledge? If lost in the sequoia stacks of the library. AI; viction, and release from Leavenworth several defendants and their attorneys. the pollce agencies and with Remmers these days: create-a-problem. .1 wandered through the 16th century, nothing else, I was relieved the election Straying into linguistics, I could ignore it Federal Penitentiary in early 1975, I came Through these collaborations, and the himself. Two things are, from my per· was over merely because I was sick of thingatude shifted into 'that all­ spective, incredibly clear: no longer. All those guys are out to do Is set to Iowa City to work and live with several legal expertise of the various defense those guys tromping across my attention­ transcendent sense of the classical, where Mike Remmers has always had the us to worrying about all kinds of Issues, not people who were, I then assumed, of my attorneys, we found the original search Issues must take their proper places on the blatant propensity for hostility and scape. I don't know about you, but politics wholly resolvable, but with a little faith ... same activists-political persuasions in and arrest warrants to be defective, andoOr shelves and shut up. violence as a result (of) his psychological in particular, and The News in general, Then they offer up, as the nearest solution order to perpetuate movement and prison illegally obtained. I so testified at a need to be number one; or to keep his ego usually strikes me as some self-glorlfying we can get our hands on, a voting booth. Granted, those bookshelves are stacked reform activities. Enter Mike Remmers preliminary hearing of one of the defen· inflated in his own eyes and the eyes of mass hallucination being churned out by And we all know what an Issue Is. It's solid with all kinds of debatable Issues. But who in fact sent me the money for a bus dants, and the court so ruied. Although the others. A lot of people tried very hard to distant, (n·like men behind the media something that all good crisis-fearing somehow I sleep no worse at night knowing ticket to Iowa City. state appealed the lower court's decision it love and help Remmers in dealing with his ; curtain. We never really see it or touch it citizens should be ashamed not to worry they're all there, always have been, In the fall of 1975, for financial reasons is highly unlikely that the ruiing will be anxieties and frustrations. Some of these ' but we all agree to pretend it exists. about. It's something we're supposed to always will be. Maybe it's because, In and the inability to find meaningful em· overturned. For all intents and purposes is people were very astute in these matters, Trouble nobody's willing to stop not sleep quite comfortable at night for historical perspective, they're not issues, ployment, Remmers and I successfully my objective to overcome the charges pretending lon~ enough to check if it but themes. Now if you want to take up a pulled off a burglary. (Remmers has against the several defendants is in hand. others were just friends trying to help. He ' knowing, but resolve to jump up the next always eventual1¥ reCiprocated with doesn't exist. morning, or some morning, and do worthy issue and make it a cause, fine - admitted to this). Had it not been for Anyway, the sun was filtering in between providing you don't do it, as politicians too Remmer's insatiable need to satisfy his A Zot of people were hostile actions and mtimidation of those something about. In media translation, an closest to him . Kaye Mesner wanted to the slats on the venetian blinds In the Issue Is the civic duty that a news editorial often do, just to show what a good guy you inflated ego and talk about our activities, library, and stacks towered overhead, are and what a great leader you'd be. And that should have been all there was to it. fearful of Remmers, and help Remmers, and from time to time, do points us at, or the hope that a politician her own thing. Remmers saw himself as silent as trees in an ancient forest. offers in the form of himself. It is the if you choose to transcend such temporary Nevertheless, Remmers finally talked to what he might do. Unfortunately, the distress of midterm earthly cares to seek higher and greater the wrong person; a person who we now being emasculated by Mesner in that h~ witch's broom that (n sends us after, the was not able to master total control of her time creeps in even there. Not only was my Ban rolloOn to save the day. things, that's probably even better. Just as know to be a po}ice informant. Through Although all of the foregoing is a prelude assignment to commit a few of those books long as that transcendent means, be it collaboration with the Iowa City Police, to the Remmers-Mesner murder, I was in life. A very fearful thing for Remmers' Always, an Issue concerns "us." The psyche. A recent letter to the media from to memory, but I also had to take . a stand advocates of Issues and causes will reach scholastics, drugs, meditation or Hostess the Johnson's County sheriff's department continual contact with Remmers. Rem· on the editorial page and say mers had become totally disoriented in his Remmers verifies what I have said. He to apocalyptic proportions to convince us Twinlties, doesn't become another cause In and the informant, I was apprehended­ something relevant. Straddled between the efforts to perpetuate his personal ego admits guilt, but i,neffectively places the ' that "we're all in this together." Worry is, its own right. We have enough crusades arrested on various charges on Nov. 6, classic and the momentary, I was stuck on arOund already, and chances are the rest 1975. Remmers was arrested earlier the inflation. He had what he said was Kaye blame on others for his actions. The sooner after all, a unifying force among humans Remmers concedes that his actions are his the favorite student question, what to and unity nets a bigger market, or bigger of us are tired of hearing about them. same day on unrelated drug charges. Mesner's gun; had brandished It several write? Visions are most believable when viewed Through my arrest, and erroneous in· times ; had threatened several of the own, and tltat those actions were vote. A real issue minimizes the selfish calculated and egomanlc, the better for all So 1 turned right at Shakespeare as my individual, and stresses we, the public. But privately and In quiet places. formation given to police by the Informant people closest to him with it; and had even brain sunk Into thingatude, that hazy state (who was with me at the time of arrest) gone so far as to shoot out a tire of our concerned. of idea-grasping somewhere between a illegal warrants were Issued for the search friend's vehicle beClluse she wouldn 't give The other area that has an effect on the blank slate and some foggy abstract WIle and seizure of property at a prominent him a ride to some unknown place at some citizenry as a whole, and should be of cosmic consciousness. It may be one River Street address. Although the search ungodly hour of the night. A lot of people relatively clear by now, is that of the thing to wander around in the past, whlch of the River Street address produced no were fearful of Remmers, and what he tactics andoOr covert activities of various Is, In a sense, 'iYhat the Ubnry stockpiles, stolen property (which the warrant was ' might do. I took it upon myself to get the police agencies. The CIA, FBI and IRS are and another thing to present the here and • issued upon), under the "plain view gun from Remmers under the guise of not the only agencies prone to unethical now, which The News IUIIl8 up, as doctrine" poUce made arrests of the needing it for robbery purposes. With the practices. It's happening right in your own something equally important. Which Is owners and occupants of the River Street gun In my possession. and Remmers now town. The police will utilize any available eactly th~ reason that politics, within the address on other alleged drug charges. living with Kaye Mesner, relative calm means to get their man. Particularly as in' contelt of the news, fights so fiercely for Suddenly now we have a select group of ensued. the case of a select group of people wOO olD' attention - because, boy, does It want people arrested and in jail - The police then advised me that they had they may designate as detrimental to their MARK hlstorical sense. It has to go down In simultaneously getting prearranged TV substantive suspicion to arrest Remmers elevated position, or antiestabUsiunent. Wri« history. Face it, political eras are as and newspaper notoriety. All of this select for a robbery in whlch a shot or two had They have no qualms about who, what or "I'm I llllilor. I competitive as any other culture-ltem. group allegedly known to be an· been fired. They also IdentHied the type of how they might compromise in order to In)tlint tan be ICC Each one wants to become one of the un­ tiestablislunentoOriented. In the words of gun allegedly used. After some very subtle reach their own result. I suppose that there neclliveallilude," • in., ~eyed brunet crumbly Doric pillars of human Sgt. Bob Carpenter of the Johnson County talking and questioning with Remmers, it is a justifiable need for pollce agencies, for achievement. became obvious that the gun in the rob­ now. Even so, they should bear dOlt! "Adi.,.1 WhaI c sheriff's department: "We've been trying &ft I" 0I(1aimed Sara I hung a left at Yeats and pondered on. to get all of these people for a long time .... bery and the gun which I now had In my scrutiny by the people who they are SlIP' Hard enough to write, god knows, without JtI(.pDIIeIMIi. the 2! we were lucky to get them throu~ your possession were not the same. I told the posed to serve, and not be allowed to carry thinking up some topic to write about flrst. Us ah.ly pluted arrest" in a private conversation with me. police that they were about to make a false •on their nefarious activities under tM (Oltilltd. of the tbe 1\ am convinced there Is a black hole In Within a few days all of the select group arrest, and could give them the Remmers facade of a cloak of respectability. Clpll'1. space where all inlplratlOll8 go one you were released from custody via bond or gun for test fire purposes to prove that Siltinc in h« dow Bud WiUord need them. And there Is an added recognizance release. All, that is, with the Remmers had not used this gun for rob­ Iplltmert, which i. obll&atlon when commandlng the public', exception of me. I was considered by the bery purposes. They agreed, test·flred the Menard, Ill. pilY Jtq>t aoo cnlin attention. You have to talk about to iIII' by iiend., F authorities to be the "heavy. II My ball pistol, and returned it to me. In a further ~ that affects the public. The remained excessively high and the court attempt to keep the fOI chasing his tall, I ~... d_. more clvlc-mlnded and ethical It Is, the told the police that I suspected Remmers "I I'!W '" in I refused to entertain my being released on Mi 1IOIII'i." .he bet better. might be going to commit an armed Letter Policy recognizance at the insistence of the acbooI WII too ..... In that ,ame, poUticIana have it euy. proeecutlng attorney even though I met the robbery at a local grocery store. The police They just pick an issue, any ls8ue. But production.. N we balc criterion for recognizance release, proceeded to let up stake-out operations at mlllical. and I wil i det rates lpace on the edl&orlal page? pending prosecution. I remained In the store. Nothing happened. I caUed the acbooI , f".... let Sa Best imitate the poUttcianl, molt Leu,,, to til, editor mu.t '" t~ to u Cllltody, virtually incognito, with all of my police and told them Remmers had backed (doub/,·,pac.d), with alidr... . and pilon. llleo:Ied 51 .... C newapapers do. All made another)eft at incoming and outgoing mall being in­ out of his plans. numb,r Included for "trllicatlon; ""O~. bil, Mo .• whn abe, Voltaire, I knew the euieIt way to find • tercepted, censored and In some Instances All again seemed ~ be relatively calm. nu m be" will not b. printed. The DIlly major role, in PuccU theme wu to pick I common iIIue. totally withheld at the hands of the Unfortunately, it was juat the lull before Iowan r.. ,rWI tit, rt,ht to .harr.n .nd An,dieG. "h took me tJne) What 'lbe Nen and poIWcIana do alike the stonn. Remmers came by my .dlt copy. L,tt." ,holdd nol uc,ed ItO 10 Johnson County sheriff's deptrtment. ....,.. c-ace to II': residence In the evening of Jan. " In a 150 word •. II preaent then- pubUc with an laue, a , Unfortunately for all concerned, I was Fair ncaItd. -I , ~fL(Ot1f TO THf

Bv TIM SACCO W.dt. anllll/lOWlCina the faD audilion thelllr diviuon claues. "A Id of Hakanson am Swa Filler, whose a"ornlllicaDy overlooked. requainl only four adors. Doel this F,lIwei fDii cr a&odule. the mailing till iSll-awn from lIudertidiacovlI"thar thelllll" is lid whlll staies can be found elsewhere on this "h' s nd true thll freshmen ..en't diacourage hal.nen adcn~ N c:t nectl­ ''When my frierr:ll hurd I wal aoi", the DIllIes of high schooillud'e.t. who they wart aftll" all, arr:I Ihey go itto page. Doproven talais 6ke Hakanson call."Co/f oaid. "They're a.s eJisi>Je u swily. anybody elat." CoIf poitted 0" thlll to col* to Illmy adine, lhey aded have viailed or contaded the th.-er dhll" dep~m ...s." Coff explained. arr:I F.Jler have a bettll" chance than Ltydon and Coon. after two IIIOItIu yo.-. ''They lim that Ihealer requi-es hard one of his produdiona lui Y" gave Iik" 'Oh no: <:.nivallady. CWIY: .. divi.on thrin. the precedine freshmen of Idlina call ~ of Adina I clalle ..... philoacphicaJ .J""'ed Gina Coon, A I. Shady afill" CIa... 1 btiPn in the faD, werl." role. 10 II many freshmen aderl as Frankly. yes. Coff poitted 0" thll aboIt ther flture chances to provo Coon, • theater maicw from JcIfcr· lhe thelllr facu~ and lIuded. hOIl an Leydan lecorr:led Goff s auertion. eitlw.r wadulle or MFA lIuderts. thematlves in lhe UI theller . I0Il, [owa, had lw.r own milliviAti. open h_ for new lIadem,. The "I had never been arourr:l ..now directors feel "acme oblillllion to call . "There ..e fewa- calling opper. She didn't know whlll 10 uped III lhe neaph)te ador. have an qIpOItuniy 10 thellll" ~Ie before," she said. "I our MFA prowam ade ...... Talen il lweies thi. faD beeauat th.ere was no "['ve aotteo a 101 nit of my adina Uf. She worr:la-edwhlll thefacu.y and u1: questions, tour E. C. Mahie gueu [ expected a 101 of stranae ~Ie alao culed from amona '\he bettll" Hancher musical," Goff oaid. In addi· cia ..," Leydon said. "It has h~ . _~ltl in the theller diviuon would be Theatre, and le.n the procedures fer hll"e. B" the deparlmeli headl and the urr:lerwadua. adorl" who auditionecl tion, the I... ·min.e aubaliI.ion this fall Arr:I aa f. a, Idling call in piaYI well like . And Ihe dreaded auditionl, their ~omiDi auditions. lIud.rts take ~ ..nously." fer and woa places in the Ading of The Clau Menagerie £or The if you've got the talm, they'D !lick tch«Iulod for tbe bqpnni", of the M.y Leydon, AI. waa one of the Two who 'ak. it I,,;oolly art Harvy Work.hq1 cia.. Bit freshmen ..en't Frolic~. left lhe divilion with a play you." lG11'-lr . new fremeo who stopped by the alf Coon welllhered lw.r audiion UnivlI"aily Theatre office e.ly thi. aM 1m called back twice. Arr:I wthin achooI yo.- to viail wth Golf. An the frlt two _hi of her cone.e daYI, urr:lecl.ed major from Peru. III.. Coon wa, wakina bn the trt! clau. The the [owa High School Drama Coofa-· clau ireroduces new lIudenh to inllrUc· .nee each faD, audtion for the 1;-20 tal of II-ama, voice, movemeli. film, openinp in lhe UI's Summa- Adina arr:l radio arr:l tdeviaion. They also En_Ie. mttt delianll". and an adviler from the The theater diviuon maila Idlers to U I C.eer StrviCtl and Placerneli pro!ptdive fremen each AuplI , 0It· Ceatlr. '1"he cia. aives new atudelila lini", theater c_ses open to freaiunen, chance to mttt arr:I kncIW who variOUI At le/t, Sara Fidler meticuloudy a/>pli.s her ma~eup be/ore a nmifying them of the division' I open ~Ie .e." CoIf said. p.r/ormance o/OurTown. A bOlle, Fidler paus es in drea my re/lection houle activitiu during Orientation There il • certain allrilion r.e in durin, Jacques Brei i. Alive arr:I Well and Living in Paris. SUGce,ss: T'aient, 'eenlaets, and dr·ive as a backstop . I By VALERIE SUllIVAN Ryd;;?, and Imaller roles in Phil yearl leaching .peech and dramatic Co/ney. The Taming 0/ the Shrew, art. in a Cedar Rapid. junior high school. He had .ome opportunity to "I don't think I could ever see Staff Writer The Prime 0/ Mis. JUln ~roJie. Ccuous,l and Th~ RimerJ 0/ EiJritch. act while al UN[, bul he admitted hacking around doing odd job., trying You can't ruffle Harry Hakanson. lhat hil put interells focused on teach· 10 lind professional work," hesaid . "It no mailer how hard you try. He Uk .. playing comedy. but he ina rather than acting. would jus I b. too damned depreasing. also enjoyed his dramatic role in Red [ don't think I could handle it." Hakanaon, 29. i. a former high Ryder: "Wei-written, beefy. large He returned to school and the school teacher and graduate of the but not too Iarle. " MFA program to enjoy acting and 10 Hakanson is currently earning Univeruty of Northern Iowa (UN[) gain a beuer background in teachiDi half·salary while on a .abbaticalleave who enroUed at the UI in 1975. He is But despite the prolifie number of and direcling. It was alao, he admit· from lhe Cedar Rapids school system. presently in his second year of the hi, rolel, Hakanaon dotlll't think he led, a kind of "self·interest thiDll." an amount he win not have 10 repay if MFA a<;ting program in Ihe division haa done much more than &Dy other he returns to the school Iystem to teach of dramatic art. actor at lhe UI. This interview with "After live year. of leaching," he for Iwo yean. He i. considering Ihat The Daily Iowan didn'1 faz. him : explained, "I needed a break ." possibility now. But he also has rela· In the [Vt yean he has been in tbe lives living in Europe. so he i. inves· Department of Speech and Dramatic "There are only Iwo male acton in HakllllOn think. other U[ actors tigating what kinds of grants - Art, Hakanson has won rol.s in "10 the second year MFA ading prog. have performed as much as he hu, al "coins" - he could receive to study in or I [" lhow. (by hi. count), including ram," he explained. "The way [ loot leaat from the alandpoint of the quality England or France . the leading role in last summer'. reper· al it, I had a ;0.;0 chance of being of the roles they have tackled. A lot of lory production of The Show-Off. He interviewed. " his own roles, he said, "were not Ih. [deaDy he would like to lather hal also played a large supporlinl role biggies. Mostly coming on Ilage, together an MBA "who's gol his shit in Any/ling Goe., a dramatic role in Hakanson returned to Ihe UI after burping or farting. and then gains 10eelM and .om. coins" and a couple When You Comin' Back, Red three summer ,,"ion. acting and five oIf . " of performers t~ start a dinner thealer • f out in the Northwest United States . Hakanson conaidera himaelf mOlt succellful as a comedian. He espe­ He has found his MBA, he said, cially e~ya The BobNl:uJh07l Show's and also an MFA actrell and profes· lubtJe. deadpan humor although. he sional dancer who are interested in confessed, he also likes Mel Brook,' ioinin8him. It ' sa~ream. he admitted. llodgehammer approach to comedy. He would welcome lhe chance to do "Why am I talking aboul it? It wiD films or lelevi.on work - "You bet [ probably never happen," hesaid . BUI Harrll Ha~anJon ond Fidler (abolle) were both memberJ 0/ thi, together in The Show.offandWhen You Comin' Back. Red RyderHn couldl" he exclaimed - but he laid he il', an attractive alternalive to the lind ileor'J Summer Repertorll actin, company. and thell performed An)'hina Cotl laJI summer, Fidl" uamped Ha~onlon to Cole recoaniua the difficullies that lie in the of 6fe. the hardships. and the lack of Porter' • .. ductille "Let'l Miabehaue." path of anyone purauinl a profuuonal opportunities and choices that an actor must err:lure when he'. slriving to make it in lhe profe.ional world . And - He i. ...Iy hurl: "I cry when dream or no dream - Hakanson people don't call me in the role I want. already has the acenario pretty well Acting: Habit~forming or cd my .,.ork rotten." he explained planned out in his head. with just • hint of aeriouanetl. He ha .. wife arr:l a child he wouldn't trade for The kind of dinner theater he haa in MARK GORANSON Brookl sll'l'OUl1ded by a 1&111 of Yves an open relationship." Fidler Royce Of aabIe COlI .•. bit 1'1 lake them explained. "We boIh have worked if they come my way I" anything, and he il jull as inlerested in mind would be a ciailY place - no Writer Sairt l.acred .. " toaslw.r and enjoyed it tremerr:loua\y. comfort as he is in puraWnl a prof.. • redi·burgen. A place "where the "['01 a amiler. [ don't believe "'­ Recertly Filler haa been doinc lele· Whil. appear in. in Silter vi.on arr:I radio commerc:iala. "I'm lional career . atmosphere and the cuisine, not 10 'ft)lli,. can be accOft1ltished with • seen dftc­ "I wew up in the 19601. arr:I I'm mention the theater, draw people. " A n,./icd. FIIIIer was by a trying to lot in the time' .-.. N tlII lletllive altitude." explained tile; t. 04 very alad thai I did," Fder .aid. "I "1 "I would gueu il'l insecurily Oft my ta who ohed hlrthe role ofCuinevlI"e ..-i .. I'm moving 10 New York and Hakanson mused . in .• ~t)'ed bnmoae. wu once a femini .. , !xi now . I'm • part," he confe.ed. "bul I jUal don'l in a summer alOCI production of audiianinaforp"son Broadway. Joff "Adina I Wh.I (an I ..y~ It's my Camelot in Midi.. cay. 100. She hum ...... " know if I could III oul and do what you He'l nOllure that Cedar Rapidl il 5fe I" exclaimed S.a Filler. SlrikineIY hal to slay here for andlw.r yelt. and leaPed tile off•• and dwina the run of ·Soon after btiPnnina ~ ..adUlle have to do arr:l 80 throuah what you the place 10 locate . Friend., he ltIf-polltla«l. the 2;·yew-olr:l .drtII that me&lll 1'1 be alone. the play .. IDIt lw.r Ewur. husband. _k inthelllll" II the UI, Flllerhetan have 10 III Ihroutrh 10 let what you explained. are not ilway. the people hal ....ady plarted lw.r fee on two Jeff Goodman. audiianina fll" v';ou~ piaYI. She won "I'vehadloworkhwd," Fsdleroaid. want," who atterr:l your perfonnances. He COlCineds of the theIIer: ,hma uK! leadinlrolelinFiddleron theRoo/. ,"So r. luck has liven me acme lood would mo .. lik. 10 planl himaelf in Ihe aport. Ai.. elfni .. lw.r wr:I ....adulie de· TheP/al/', the Thin,. Codlpell. bruits. bot I'm lid an .pill. I realize A good actor, he explained, need. Northwest (where he hal • brother Sib .. in hll" downtown Iowa wee in 1973. F.dIer lDO¥ed 10 T ulaa. cay No Sex Pleaae, We're Britilh. lhol I'm llil • biby in thil proftMion talent '00 contact I as well .. s drive. and an ex· ...er·in·law). where the II*Imm. which il dtcorlled wih okJ Okla .• to lIudy .oice and muuc . Our TOUln, Caroule/, 110 in the am bave a let 10 Ieorn." She lIill He tlinks he has the talenl and said almoaphere is re~ and counopoli· pl.y prq)l arr:l Cliiinal paittinls';VeI\ "When 110111 in TuIaa I ~. ~ iii. Shoe/e, AnI/thin, Cael, When lotllorribly Ile"'\'OUS before any perfor. that he miaht be more tempted to try lan, arr:l where Ihe people are wealthy tei IIIr by ilerr:ls, Fseller reuUed ... wilh lIIytudHr and what I wudoina," You Comhl' Boc~, RedRllder}. mance. ud abe oaid she probably lor a proftuional career if his family arr:l leave big lips. ICIiIll deW. F. Mid, Mao I .. on the couch fer The Show-Off and Jacques BreI always wil. utuatiOll were different. BUI without "I I'eo' up in a amaI lown in aboIt lis months ~ to think thinp I. Alive ond Well and Liuin, In his wife', encourqemenl he probably A lood..dinner theater. H .kanaon MillWi," Ihe be.an. "My hi.h 011. Then one day I 101 a phone cal "What's .m10 me.-. is my would not have returned 10 school in explained. can coat abo,st S I O· [ S per Pari •. marria •• aod my career." Fidler achooI wu 100 lind 10 ha,e any Iq "II1II J., who hid n'lI'Md to low. the fint plac •. In any event. be said. penon. "And thal'acheap," hewd. produdillns, bit we a .. Ciy. and hepenuadod meto come up. Wouki she like to be a "~.," nplainill. ~.? "Maybe 1OIIIe­ did do aU he probably wiU always Uat teacWna "Hd. I'd take 'em for $20-25." mlllical, and I wu in i," At.... "I al!Ciilionad '11" Prof. Herold like Ba-bra Streiaand or Liu MinndIi} day," lhe r~. bit abe it IAI"-- . achooI. f"d. leA SaIi.bwy. Mo. She Std." r .... continued. "and he of· "No." abe replied, wihow heailation. live. "I'm iutt 100 buty ri-'- now. I "«dad St .... CoIIete in Cobn· f~ed to lab me 011 a. a .adem. So I "I've always waited to be Sarl Filler, would walt my chikhn to have a hia. Mo. ,wI.e abe lOla. call in lw.r fWsl we.. back toTuIaa anI.,.cked ICI, ami and I still do. c~e family tire." major role, in Plsccini's opIra SII ter c_ to Iowa Ciy ud Hved II Black's , "I wart luccell," she continued. "I Any~} "Well. maybejuc Credits An,e/lca, ca-. Vii • ." walt to be able 10 luppat myaelf. B~ I on.," sh"aid will IImile. "I'vebeen "h tool me tine yews belen I hid '. In [974 r.dler mlltied Coodman , a don't wart to be a II •. I walt to be addided 10 N_~e since I wu Phd.,.....,. ...•..••....•...... J ••••• , ••• • • l.,awrence Frank ~ (011". to try .. fll" a p"," UI ••It, .uded in theIII ... and aood and fortvlI" wowina in my craft. in .evert" ..ade. B" .....e Ire wone Fidler Idn. "/ Cet a Kic~ Oul 0/ You" in Idlt lummer'1 Cr..,hiCl ...... , ....•...... Susan MitcheU F".n. recaIad. "I ,.. like 8GYIie ti;.i,. cieqn. "Jeff ami I have such I·m ...... euning ~ haviAt. RoDs tliop in tire that Ire addidina I" production 0/ AnI/thin, Go". p. (1JIIClIIll and deaan ...... " ...... , ...... Tim Sacco , GABE N' ,WALKERS SALOON THE ~j . IIlf:1ILODlOI::'~" 'r'" presents

preteflll "HOT CIDER" HEC will be accepting

8y The Alloclated l'rea. applications until Nov. 12

The oU cartel seems sure to ralse oU prices in the new year, a move that will probably mean higher prices at the gas pump, in heating and electricity bills, at airline ticket counters and many other places. ·r"'~~~~>I*.-.oa< ' ~~~~ Ministers of the 13-nation Or­ U. of I. Frtends of Old Tlme Music _ ganization of Petroleum Ell· porting Countries meet Dec. 15 In the Persian Gulf sheikdom of Qatar to diacuss oU prices, but I A Festival of the mOlt Influential members I have already said they want in­ creases ranging from 10 per ~ .' I rish Music ' cent to 2S per cent. Even Saudi Arabia, the larg­ est oU erporter and the most reluctant In recent years to Today raise prices, has said It wants a "moderate" increase. That has at been Interpreted as about 10 per cent. I Joe's Iran, the second largest oU THE exporter, is thought to favor an Increase In the area of 2S per cent, whUe Venezuela, another influential OPEC member, $1.00 AIRLINER- wants at least 15 per cent. 8:30-10:30 An • offlcall at OPEt Free Popcorn headquarters In Vienna, Ahmed -Tues. NlahtS­ Zaheri, said last month he be­ I 1-5 Daily lieved the price would be "ad· justed," which In oil talk means increased. FREE The present OPEC price of 5 m"",,", .""... /kid.,'" _- Joe's $11.51 for a 42-gallon barrel of I whistle,00_ condertlna, ""'". accordlan, paino, bodhran and I Popcorn standard grade crude has been in e.ffect since Oct. 1, l!Y1S. on traditional slngrng. Featur1ng LIZ CARROU, 1975 ministers considered raising I AU-Ireland Addle Champion. I Place prices at their meeting in Bali in I' May, but took no action, largely ' because of Saudi opposition. Sat Nov. 13 Adults Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, I 8:00 p.m. $1.75! the Saudi oil minister, said In August that some OPEC mem­ bers wanted a "very drastic" ! ~=m C~';;"; increase - "somewhat similar to what happened In 1973." Arab l~'*<.'*<,.,~~*<~~~_ oil nations put an embargo on exports during the October 1973 Mideast war, and OPEC ,followed with the quadrupling of . Perlor81& oil prices. Yamani said his government would resist a large increase death-defying Studenb: .7.50. $6.50. $5.50 this time because of concern for "-MIl NODltudenb: $9.00, $8.00, $7.00 II-.II/uI the economic recovery of the -'c: West. act. o/rlo. "We are not going to slaugh­ lSrIo ter the hen that lays the gold rio"""" 17", eggs," he said. "There is a limit TONIGHT, November 9·8 pm Cen"",.. to what we can do. And I think Belong. Amold: The Philharmonic Concerto we see that limit a little bit clearer than others." ReclCross. Debussy: LA Mer 'ow·Elld. Wed , , Beethoven: Symphony 3 in E Flat, Op. 55 .. :30-3:30-5:30 4 Datc:hWay .~ (Eroica) 7:30-9:30 • the Laundromat & Dry Cleaners TOMORROW, November 10·8 pm THE WORLD'S FAVORITE 1216'h W. 5th St. Coralville , BED·TIME STORY . Haydn: Symphony 95 in C minor IS FINALLY A BED-TIME Mahler: Symphony 5 STORY. ,. .52 Wathm .21 Dryers BILL OSCO'S .Always Attended ·Carpeted .!,i~ L I ' ~~~~4f¥.~ ~ I TIP S • -Soft Waler oFree Parking ?lt~~ *~~~ ELLIS -Nr Conditioned SENI RllY REELS Friday, No.,~ber 12 TAO.OET.ASH.AlE Hancher Box Office hOUR: 11·5:30 pm, M·Fi 1-3 pm., Sun. E L S T R E E.S (f U LS- 8:00 p.m. _HENRY.UNSURE Phone 353-6255 Students: $~ . 50 ; Nonstudents : $5,(10 P ~ GIE1Sr'f A R N~r U N Hancher Box Office hours : 11-5:30 p.m., M-F ; ATE EIRRED ELO 1-3 p.m., Sun Phone 353~255 . I ~Il.l P 0 0 R R I IS ~~. CAS E S 'I AN K·IlATED MUtlCA\. COMIDY " ,~ ~ Slp REA H A N_ A GENERAL NATIONAL II!!IIIII _OONER0lr 10010ES WOOD lJ~ ~ 'xl~ FILIII REI.EASE IiiMiI ~T I.TR4 T UE -I liP CLINTON STREET MALL IMon .• SM. 7 •. m. - 10 p.m·l 1=1 Hancher Auditorium 1=1 Hancher Auditorium Sun. I ...... 9 p.m. BRACEI*.\l-.¥1~i~~i~E H 0 R ~.],.J.: E SIT .SSTS SPED tARif . "" . , ~_""!l."_ 351·9409 AIIIWIII TO PIIIYIOUS 'UUU a,l1s • Girls ACROSS 49 Map location: 21 Balbo Abbr. 22 Game of chance T T T 1 Merchant guild 51 Toady's response 26 Classic composer r GO·Go Contest 6 Semiprecious 52 Month: Abbr. 27 Head or stomach stone 55 Farrow woe Every Tuesday Night III So-so poker 57 Nitric or boric 211 Musial An Evening With: holdinl 59 He was shot on 30 Author AI.n $100 for first prize 14 Darlinl, in live TV ~2 As it- Ireland 65 -dow!,\ (so to ~peak) $25 each contestant (limit 5) 15 Front: Prefix (modify) 34 Chief 16 Lilht color 86 Tenth: Prefix 38 Running a tape 17 Collele oUidals 87 Spanish title again Beer • 7Sc 18 Dart along 88 Insects 38 Singer Nelson 19 Box-score entry, 6» In a while 39 Wise one Erery 1hurda, Night 8· 12 for ~hort 70 Neplus- 40 Hooks' partners 20 He ShOll ted 71 Bread and 42 Preliminary I. IN., "Sic semper whisky theorem '*' """ tyrunnis!" 72 Pealed 43 Gran -, area Sportsmen's Lounge & Dugout 2S Abominable 73 T. S. or George of S.A. Snowman 48 Jndlan military \ Co,./rille 24 Weeks in a year, DOWN chief to Clctro I Pilgrimage 50 Carllon-copy 25 Legal matter 2 Of Mars: Prefix paper '" 26 College degrees 3 Webster 52 Church area 29 Airfield area 4 Jol80n's boy . 5., Showy flower ~I Compass reading II Respond IW French Income 33 Proceedings 6 Out of bounds 58 Gen us ot oa ta 35' Truth evader 7 Tyler's sucressor 58 Reside 37 Honkt.rs 8 "Tempest" 80 Nazi who flew 41 Her victim WIS character to Scolland ... In his bath 9 Admits 61 College study: 44 Therefore 10 Ar.apnlco money I\bbr. 45 After trosh II Ba rrymore, e.g, 82 Con 48 Brink 12 Upset 8:J Monk parrot 47 13 Babe and 84 Mild oath -4 AND THE MOTHERS ZAPPA ..., .4 8:00 P.M. ..., I FIELDHOUSE Rqyal Wedding / OO ffiID ffil1l TICKETS ~ ijU(i)~ I Belle of New York Reserved Seats @ m ffi l:l ~( @(i)~ ( 8:30 pm Mon & CJJIJOU Tue •. 6.50 • 5.50 • 4.50 vmrn [ Tlcktts on ••It WEDNESDAY .t 9:00 •. m. U of I Fleldhou •• Box Office (Wid. only), Copper Don.r & World R.dlo ~ill~~ OO Beginning Thura: tlck.t. on ul•• t IMU BOil Offlc •• Copper DolI.r & World Rldlo TIGER SHARK CHECKS ACCEPTED Edward G. Robinson stars in Howard Hawks' (Bringln' Up Baby, The Big Sleep) adventure film about Tuna Fisherman. A concert you won't want 10 miss! (1932) J. Monday & Tulld.y 7:00 • 'Io'wa City to host 2 days XMAS IDEAS WHO DOES IT? WHITE MountaJ n Jewelers (Phoenix LfGHT HAUUNG Arizona) has Ii large ..!ectlon In gOld anci Reasonable. 351·80n silver. Your friends can buy at WhOlesale 11· 10 p~ces . You r8C8lve your choice free When you. arrange a powala showing at YOUr CHRfSTMAS GIFTS 'f Lon'don Philharmonic place of residence. Ideal for sludtnta. Can 354,5556, before 10 a.m. 11, 19 $25Artlst, '011.s pqlerlence, p.m. 11-15 sale prices on a variety of to 1.35 ounces. The Nestle bar Is noting that cocoa beans which IBM Selectric. 3514147, moonlngs. 12·8 I No rolu'" if c ..cJleJ I chocolate products, At the retail smaller - 1¥4 is equal to 1.25. sold for 75 cents a pound a year VISIT our annual ChrIstmas giH show 01 WE have eight used poano trade ins pnced THIS IS III Two bedroom ; 1'1, baths; TYPIHG SERVICE I 10 uJob .• J ~ • S2.81 handcrafted 1I11ngs from India. Hundreds Irom $275 to $500. The Music Shop, 109 carpeted; $220 per month: avalfable De­ level, a typical chocolate bar The smaller, cheaper Nestle ago, now are going for close to I Electnc IBM 338·4283. I 10 woJ. .• 5 dot/' • S3.18 I to choose Irom at Hawkeye Room, fMU. E. Cotfege. 351·1755. tHI cember 18 or January. on bus route. eon wtll go from 15 to 20 cents, the bar costs 13,3 cents per ounce; $1.50. The finns said the choco­ 12-8 338·9308 aner 5 p.m. 11 -15 10 woJ. •• 10 do", • S4 .03 Saturday, November 13, 10 a.m. , 8 p.m. ~ company said. the larger, higher-prlce variety late increases would have come I ,. --- I Sunday. November 14 , 10 a.m.. 5 REASONABLE. expenenced, accurate, EFACIENCY · Subfetfurnlshed, I SO. bus The Nestle Il'\,Ove was not un­ will cost 16 cents per ounce; the sooner if it had not been for the ! DI Ct...iIioJ. ,., _lui I p m. 11-12 HELP WANTED Dissertations. manuscripls. papers. Lan- hne, avaltable November 21 . 33B, upected since the Hershey increase is 20 per cent. For drop in the price of sugar which guages. 351·0892 , 1,23 5785. 11-2 ------FOUR Heil AMT·l speakers. $950; ~rp" M&M and Peter Paul an­ Hershey, the per-ounce price has declined about 90 per cent AN Inquiry into basic Christian OocIrine, Yamaha CA·600 amphfier, $280; Sony IIOUIICed similar price boosts increase works out to 19 per from 1974 levels. sponsored by the Episcopal Chaplaincy 00-1000, $SO. 644.2535, evenings and COUPLES 10 manage family business, THESIS experience· Former unlver51ty SUBLET two bedroom, furnIshed Oark .t the U of I. First session: "Authority .. weekends. 11.10 profiteering, retirement plan possible. secretary New IBM Conectlng Selectnc. Apanment aV8llabie December 15. 336, how does one know what Is Irue?" =_~-----_____ Phone 338·59n fOf appofntmenI.11 -22 338-8996. 11-23 3056. 1H 1 Lecture/discussIo n meet s at Wesley THREE rooms new furniture · Fourteen House library, 120 North Dubuque Street pieces speaally setected furniture aU lor PART·time help· Radio tield measure­ LARGE eNIDency, bus fone, quiet, clean: al 7 p.m. on TueSday, November 9. All $199. Goddard's Furniture, West liberty, ments through about January 1. 354· 351,2685. keep tryIng. 11,18 Interested persons welCome We deliver. 627·2915. 12-13 1921; days: 337-4242, eve"'ngs. 11- 11 MOTORCl;CLES ' ONE·bedroom, unlurnlshed SeVIlle a Thanksgiving Show: ------PROBLEM pregnancy? Call ElIrthnght, 6 NIKON, Canon. Olympus, Hasselblad, Apartment aVSlfable December 1. 354- p.m. ·9 p.m., Monday through Thursday. Fujca and more. Area's iowest prices. HONDAS - All 1976 and 1975 al close out 5732 I H 7 338-8665. 1·10 (319)263-4256. Camera Corner, Mus· prices. Starll's, Prairie du Chien, Wiscon· LISA 'COMPANY sin. Phone 326·2331 , 12·10 catme. Iowa 11-24 Is developing this area with FURNISHED, one bedroom available CRISIS Center · Call or stop In, 1121'2 E. November 15. Air. bus. parking , 5180. Jewelry Demonstrators and • f'" .' WashIngton . 35 I ·0140. 11 a.m.• 2 USED vacuum cleaners reasonably 354·1260. 11-10 Managers. No Investment. AUTOS • ~ .' ~.;.-;; (. ;:. RY COODER a.m. 1-10 priced. Brandy's Vacuum , 351-1453.12.3 , ,.: r. " . ., \, Generous commission and FOREIGN \ . ~,-<. '~·i . SUBLET one bedroom. furnished . wr, _and his B pc., Chicken Skin Music Band RIVER CIty Emp4num ;:.f, ne handcr Ned . ,. ~nus. • f I ,:.~". · . ~A. $170 per month. available November 13. jewefry for all ocasSlons. jeweler'S ooIs Call Toll Free, '989 TOYOTA, inspected,,(adlals, must 354·1725. tl·9 and supp.es. In the ~all Mall above CHILD CARE sell, only $200. 351·3092: IIvenlngs. fl· Osco's, 336·4926. 1 H, 8g,<>.63 t - t 258 22 CLOSE In, large. new two and three­ bedroom delu.e apartments. 806 E. Col· LEATHERWORK ' Cuslom deSIgns • EXCHANGE baby·sittlng Wilh a group of 1!E.&i!E!E!iiE!iEE!!!!i=S!!W 1968 VW Fastback . Fuel injected, in­ lege avaIlable aHer December 1. Clark TOM WAITS PlaIn GraIn Lealher, Hall Mall above Apartmenls. 338· t800 or 337· 7972. 11· mo«hers In Hawkeye Court and Hawkeye NIGHT auditor wanted. Immediate open. spected, runs perlectly, $750. 351, Osco·s. lH8 Drive. Call Barbara, 35 1·3158, Ing. Apply In person, Ramada Inn, Hwys, 7109. 11·15 16 mornings. 11-22 218 and 1·80 N. 11.12 PREGNANCY lestlng done Mondays. 1971 SlMCA 1204 - Front wheal d~ve, NICELY furnIshed two-bedroom trSlleron These two musicians offer a performance to please 9:30 to 7 p.m.; Tuesdays. 9'30 to 4:30 : COOK, immedIate opening , fUll time 2. Inspected, $700. 337-4354 aller 5 bus route. $180 plus u!ohhas. 354· Salurdays Irom 10 to 2 p.m. No apPOint· 10 p.m. shih. Apply In person, Ramada p.m. 11, 10 3581. 11-9 everyone, Cooder's B piece band includes steel guitar, ment necessary. Emma Goldman CII,,"c TRAVEL Inn, Hwys. 218 and 1·80 N. 11-12 UNFURNISHED one·bedroom. lower lor Women. 715 N. ~odge, 337, 1975 MG MIdget, Excellent. 4.900 IT1Iles, levet of provate reSIdence F"eplace. accordian, horns, and strings, Waits is normally backed 2111 11-16 WANTED: Instructors 101' general Interest AM·FM , 4'speed, radlaf IIres. 351, beau"'ul View, home·hvlng. Preler mature classes. eor,tact carOlyn Hinz, Iowa Oty 3040. 11 ·10 by a stand-up bass, a guitar or piano, and often 'a hom. WANTED - Siorage space.for a molOfCy· Community Education Center, 1816 professlonsllady. One block from UrllVer· slty HospItal. $t85. References. No pets. cle , preferable heated. 353-1305. 1H6 UPSTAAVEL Lower Muscatine Road, 338·3658.11, t2 1972 VW Sedan - AutomatIc, stereo, InqUIre 338,2936 11·9 Activities Center - IMU ------. radio, Inspected. Excellenl, $1 ,700, CITIZENS for Envlronmentat Action ...... negotiable. 354-4711 . f 1·19 Nov. 22, 8 pm needs vOlunl_s for Solar/Wind energy 353-5257 , INDUSTRIAL : BASEMENT apartment WIth beautiful gas conlerence. 337·7075; 337·2779. 12· t6 ! fireplace; also sleeping rooms with cook· • Weekends Hancher Auditorium Chicago : SALES : 1975 VOLVO 245 wagon. 4·speed. 109 pnvlleges. Black 5 GaslIght Village, ·INDIAN and turquoise jewelry repair. Nov. 19'21 • w,',. IOOIbng 'Ot • penon with ,",1"11 • AM· FM. lIke new, onspected, 26,000 422 Brown 11,16 • Ski Trips • for peopl., , A ,.,101'1 "",*,0 w"'h 10 ,tit ,... : miles. 35104264 . 11 ,1 6 Iowa City, Iowa Emerald City. Downtown. Hall·Mali. • tIIctption.lllne of INOUSTRIAl. LIGHTING • 35109412. 11-12 Vail Jarr. 2·9 : PRODUCTS Ip ,irtu,"'" ''fltt, tyJ)t! 01 cOm- • JANUARY · Close In, furnished, accorn, Tickets: $3.50 students Telluride Jan. 2·9 • mera.! buflnnt. • 1972 TOYOTA, 32 mpg. Slick. radlafs, mooates four, ullhtles paid. $300. 337· PREGNANT WOMEN : We need a - IF YOU DESIRE.. . : cassene, FM, negotIable. 354·5637. I 1- 7243. 11 · 12 • Spring Break '77 • A. real DppOrruml., • It woman who would be wiHing to be pholo. Caribbean Cruise Mar. • A VOUI'IQ 'JI.,.nd ng eomJ)lnv • $4.00 non-students only : graphed du"ng the binh 01 her Child. : 'nltfnll promotions • • 'I... '~ 20-27 A pt uMilles. 338,0680. 11·2 ijO(i)[J' ~(i)~[J'ffi[l]ril ffi[l]~ ~~W@[J'{8 ~[l]~OIl'lIl[[J](M[I)Q@~ TO GARDEN BECAUSE ENOUGH TELEPHONE • .. -t' , ... :, ': @rnlA\m~IDro@ ~IA\OO~@IA\~~~~ •••••••••• 0 •• 0 ••••••••• ~Gllll[J'~@@ rnffiW@~ PEOPLE CARED. PETS BOOKS MOBILE HOMES . ~O®[J' [[J]@ttRril ®~U&[l](i)p a~mQ~, @~~~(i)p ffi[l]illIDHGl[l](i)~ South Coast BOlan ic Garden In FULL OR TRANSMISSION California . A dump transformed I~to a paradise, tmpossiblW'l Not when TROPICAL ftsh tanks · Complete set·up, PART TIME SERVICE TIRED of renting? Nice 12x68 two.three vmrn ~~vv~rn ~&®&®®~~W 30 gai on, $100; 125 gallon, 5400. Re­ ' -D-v Sorvtce-' bedrooms. partially furnished . 351, enough people get together and work. Mon or w_n ovor 18 with au, 7345, 11 ,1 5 You can help by becoming a duced prtct. 354,2912. 1f.12 tomobile. Ire nttcled in lowl City. AI wort< G_Hd community volunleer In your area . 338.6743 20S Ktrhoo4l ~m~~~~[IDffi~ ~ @~ ~ W~~~~OOuu ffi~ ffi ffiOO@ ffi©~ ®mm®~~~rn~ ~ HALF PERSIAN KlnENS Oxford, Tiffin and Solon. 006"11 10x45 mobile, home, good conditIon, W"I\I: Keep Amerl ci Beautiful. Inc. ~ tiP.rhAyenue, Now York. N.Y, I001S DIAL 354,4607 .tart. about Novllllba- 22nd . Send carpeted. North liberty. 338·7426. 11·9 nllDt, Id9reu, I,t, telephone ' number, typ< of auto, in.urance Real Estate I 1913 10.58 trailer, fully fuonlshed , air ItO" poIution. ,"'. FREE puppy, trlendly, frisky, fourmonlhe. condllioned, 54,200. Call 337·5425 or ~ comp&ny and h...... ailable COl a ..... can .... it. }'. ' Will be small dog. 338·6467 . 11 -11 . 35H5n anytime. 11 , 12 pool card to D,D.A. Corp., BOI ~~~~@frfrm~ rn@~~m~~ rn~@©~ fr + 141"'.1 LOOKINO 101' a downtown place to Open PROFESSIONAL dog grooming , Pup, N-I. The Daily Iowan . a boutique, gr88r)ery, offIca or whalever? WELL kept. two bedroom trailer · Fur, pl~S. klnens, tropical fISh, pet supplies . AN EQU41. OPPORnJNITT Free parking , newty painted, aJr con' nlshed, air Condolloned, washer/dryer. [ij)OO®~©~ moo~fr W@~~~ A Public StrvlCI 0' Ih lo N,w'pI""r & Th. Ad •• nliing CounCIl. (.OUlC~ Bren'l8ffian Seed Store, 1500 1st Avenue EMrLOYER dtioned, carpeted, at 302 S. GIfbet1. Call Call 626,6238 after or weekends. Sout11, 336,8SO 1. 1-10 337"'779, after 5 p.m. 1,.,0 Ra.onable priced. 11 ·9 s $ , ===:;'_. Pitt is It MATH REVIIW FOR East gridders lDove into first Q.R.I. By The A.. oclated Pr.,. (Oredu-. Rtcord ElIM'IIn.lIonj , 1,228-1,076 in points and 57-5 In braska turned back Oklahoma and allowed Alabama to climb . flnt-place votes. A review of basic algebra and geometry to help studen" State 14-10. back Into the Top Ten for the l The Panthers 01 the Univer· UCLA, which routed Oregon Florida's loss to Georgia first time since the third week of prepare for the GRE. sity of Pittsburgh replaced 46-0, received seven No. 1 votes dropped the Gators to 15th place the season. Michigan Monday a8 the na· and 1,093 points. The Bruins Five S888ions (November 29. December 1,3,6,8) 7 to 9 tion's No. l-ranked coBege foot­ have an 8-0-1 mark, including a The LOp twenty pm, Michigan Room, Iowa .Memorial Union conducted ball team. 1(}'10 tie with Ohio State. by Prof, Michael A. Geraghty, Department of Mathema. 9-0..() 6-3..() After occupying the No. 2 p0- Southern Cal, a 48-24 winner l. Pittsburgh (49) 1,226 11 .Missouri 218 tics . Fee $20. , (7) 209 On sition behind Michigan for six over Stanford, received two 2.UCLA 8-0-1 1,093 12.Houston 6-2-0 consecutive weeks, Pitt moved first.place votes and 1160 points. 3.S. Cal (2) 7·1-0 860 13.Arkansas 5-1·1 174 For Registration or Information call the : Into the top spot In The Associ· Despite Its loss to Purdue, 4.Michigan (2) 6-1-0 816 14.0klahoma 6-2·1 137 CENTER FOR CONFERENCES & INSTITUTES ated Prell8 poll following Satur· Michigan received two first· 5.Texas Tech (1) 7-0-0 772 15 .Florida 6-2-0 114 , day's 37·7 trouncing of Army. place ballots and 816 points. The 6.Maryland (2) 9·0-0 666 16.Texas A&M 6-2-0 7~ Minl·Cou,.. Coordinetor 7.Georgia 11-1-0 620 17.0kla. St. ~ 67 Room 210, IMU while Purdue's 16-14 upset of Wolverines had held the top spot 353-5505 bla Michigan dropped the Wolve­ for each of the eight weekly 8.0hlo St. 7·1·1 541 18.Notre Dame 11-2-0 31 rlnes to fourth place. reguiar-6eason polls. 9.Nebraska 7·1·1 503 19.Colorado 6-3-0 22 UCLA, third a week ago, Texas Tech remained fifth IO.Alabama 7·2-0 'ITO 2O.S. CaroOna 6-3-0 17 moved up to second while with one first-place vote and 772 Southern California climbed points after downing Texas from fourth to third. Then came Christian 14-10 while Maryland Michigan, Texas Tech, blanked Cincinnati 21-0 and ~PIONEER Maryland, Georgia, Ohio State, stayed In sixth place. The Ter· Nebraska and Alabama. raplns received the other two ANYONE CAN HEAR THE DIFFERENCE Pitt, which has a ~ record, first·place ballots and 666 received 49 first-place votes and points. 1,226 of a possible 1,260 points Georgia, Ohio State and Ne­ from a nationwide panel of 63 braska were also seventh, sports writers and broad· eighth and ninth, respectively , a 8X-S35 casters. Last week, with 62 week ago. Georgia whipped Buff.lo BUll' .tar O.J. SlmptOa (IZ ) Iud.. j.b on New EUl18lld board members participating, Florida 41·27, Ohio State ADVANCED STEREO RECEIVER P.trlot Mel Lua.ford Sund.y la Foxboro, M•••. Simpsoa w•• the Panthers trailed Michigan crushed Illinois 42·10 and Ne· ejected from the g.me for uuportamlJlllke coaduc&, lad the P.tL Tuner Secllon weat 011 to wID, »-10. Good FM listening IS the least you can expect from this Purdue'$ ·Dierking practical unit. A low· loise FET and frequency·linear 3·gang variable capaC itor, coupled in a one·stage RF amplifier, result Miami short on ends in spec ifications ot'1.9/-1V (/HF) sensitivity, better than 60dB MIAMI (AP) - Nat Moore, The injuries leave the Dol· honored ·after upset image rejection . spurious rejection of more than 75dS . In the Miami Dolphins' leading re­ phins with wide receivers Fred· the FM lF'section Pioneer has used a high·performance Ie that forms a S·stage limiter to ensure stable limiter charac· ceiver, will be out for the re­ die Solomon and rookie Duriel WEST Lafayette, Ind. (UPI) "I got tired, but at the time 1 mainder of the. season becauae Harris. A spokesman said tight teristics and result in a capture ratio of t .OdS (IHF) and' - Purdue football Coach Alex didn 't think about it," he said. signal·ta-noise ratio of 70dS. For high selectivity and low 01 a fr.cture of the fibula in the end Jim Mandich can play that RMS at 8 ohms or 22 watts· at 4 ohms from Agase is an alarmist. He is "For a game like Michigan, I'd distortion, phase-linear ceramic filters are used in the FM lower left leg; the N.tional spot in an 1!IIlergency. worried because his tailback, practice eight weeks. They just Football League club an· Solomon, the fleet·footed IF section. The MPX secti on features the Phase·Lock·loop 40Hertz to 20,OOOHertz with no more than Scott Dierking, means so much buried us the last two years and circuit for extraordinary stability and a wide separation with nounced Monday. Tampa University quarterback to the team's offense. that hurts a lot inside. We really 0.8% total harmonic distortion and drives one Or Moore, who had 33 catches for In his second year with the Na· low distortion. You tune the FM mode with accuracy, thanks two pairs of medium·slzed speaker systems. An all·stage When Dierking missed the wanted to beat them." to a FM -linear dial scale, signal-strength meter and center· 63S yards, was injured Sunday tlonal Football League, earned Illinois and Ohio State games Dierking's first touchdown In direct-coupled Oel ty~ power amplifier is distinguished by in Miami's 'IT·7 victory against All·Rookie honors last year In tune meter. The AM section uses a one·stage AM RF ampli· wide response, while paired NPN and PNP driver and power with a sprained ankle, Purdue's the opening period was a four· fier for excellent Automatic Gain Control, thus low distortion, the New York Jets. making the transition wend. rushing game was In trouble . yard run. His second was a 25 transistors are employed in this deSign for low crossover Moore leaves behind him just and ceramic fi lters and balanced mixer design to further distortion. In the equalizer ampl ifier section Pioneer has cho· He wasn't well against Michi· yarder, and it was somewhat reduqe distortion and improve AM reception . two healthy wide receivers go­ gan State, either, and the spectacular. He broke four sen low·noise transistors in a 2·stage direct-coupled Negative ing into next weekend's clash Feedback circuit to assure a wide dynamic range and low Boilermakers were blasted, 45- tackles before reachlng the end Seclion with the two-time Super Bowl BII MARK JEPSON Audio distortion . Even the tone control amplifier, section is ad· 13. zone . No watts are wasted in the- SX·S3S. Efficient use of power champion Sleelers at Pitts­ Staff Writer. But lut Saturday against He took his Iwnps, too. vanced , since low·noise transistors are used for precision burgh. helps to avoid distortion and gives you more value for your and click·stop controls are employed for preciseness. Warren G. Slebos, UI in· mighty Michigan, Dierking was "My arms are bruised and "Just when we start to get our ready . He ripped through the my left thwnb isn't working and sterE~ o investment. The unit producesanample,Contlnuous . defensive people back, our tramural director, has released NOTE: Walnut Q,a lned vinyl lop and side panels are used In the construcUon the standlngs for participating for an entire game I was hit the power output of 20 watts· per channel, min. of this cabinet offensive people start going points. Following are the top 10 hardest I've ever been hit," he .down," Coach Don Shula said flag football teams as of Nov. 5. said. "But I'll be okay for ' Measured pursuanl to Ihe Federa l Trade Commission's Tra. de Regu lalion rule on Power Oulpul Cl,lms for Amplifiera . after the Dolphins' victory in Delta Sigma Delta 396 Iowa." New York. "Nat's one of the Alpha Kappa Kappa 323 The week before he sat out the COMPONENT PACKAGE #3 real winners on our team." Beta Theta Pi 305 ~ last 20 minutes of the Michigan "The dude made the tackle Tau Kappa Epsioion 300 u.s. Pioneer Model SX-535; BSR 2320W Changer!Tumtable, Base, Dust Cover, Cartridge; Pi Kappa Alpha 293 State game, but Agase was and landed on my leg and it counting on him to lead the Pair Ultraline?r #100A Speakers: Retail Value· $619.85 snapped," Moore said of the In· Steindler 274 Daum 5 263 charge against the Wolverines. jury. "His weight was on the STUD 259 The cold weather stiffened his leg, and I tried to jwnp to get Our Price -- $369.951 ' Delta Tau Delta 252 ankle again about midweek and You Save - $249.901-- That's Over 40 per cent Discount to all Students 1 the leg out from under him." Sigma Nu 240 Dierking sat out Thursday's Moore was lost just a week Frida.f is the last day for en· practice. The next day it · felt after torn knee ligaments side­ t.erlng 1fl1! pre-hond~y basket· I fine and, obviously, he had no UNION SUP.PLY COMPANY, lined wide·receiver Howard ball tournament. FIrst round trouble Saturday. 700 South Dubuque Street Everything In Electronics games begin on Nov. 16. i Twilley. I lilt was a fun day," he said. :l "The ankle felt real good. I L.._"""'-__.... __ ..... didn't twist it once. sport®©rro [p)~® When both wire services While Agase refused to single award you their weekly kudos. out any individuals In the upset, you get to feeling good. Purdue he thought Dierking was Coach Alex Ague Is feeling "absolutely great." TO CHERISH Trade great now that his tailback Scott "How much he means to our ST. LOUIS (AP) - The st. Louis Cardinals completed a Dierking is playing again aller team is alanning," he said. "He ALWAYS slx-player baseball deal with the Montreal ~xpos Monday, a midseason ankle Injury. made more carries than any acquiring right-handed pitcher , outfielder Purdue back ever and he made and Infielder Pat Scanlon. tenacious defense of the coun­ the crucial yards to keep us In Montreal obtained right-handed pitcher Bill Greif, left­ try's No. 1 team for 162 yards position. Once we had fourth handed pitcher Angel Torres and outfielder Sam Mejias. and two touchdowns en route to and about two feet on our 29 and The three players coming to St. Louis, all 01 whom will be a rousing 16-14 upset to win UPI we went for it and made it. placed on the major league team roster, played last year for Midwest offensive player of the There's no doubt in my mind . Cardinals Manager Vern Rapp at Denver in the TripJe.A week honors for the second time that if we'd had Dierking the American Association. this season. last I few games we 'd have Dierking, who has scored 11 beaten the big two and Illinois." touchdowns this fall, also won . Dierking said beating Michi· Cross country the offensive accolade early in gan was a "real good win for ••• And For The Student Iowa placed eighth at the 62nd Big Ten Cross Country the season. He had his career us." The senior power runner Championships in Glen Ellyn, Ill., Saturday, with 217 points, ~st against Miami of Ohio with from suburban Chicago hopes to Ginsberg's Makes Your improving on their ninth place finish In 1975. 2fl yards and three touch­ get a shot at pro football , but Michigan took its third straight team title, edging out downs. that's not on his mind these Illinois by 67 to 78 points. The Illini's Craig Virgin led the Saturday he carried the ball days. Diamond Purchase Just pack over the rolling five-mile course In 23 minutes 16.7 38 'tlmes for a school single­ "We want to finish the season seconds. Iowa sophomore Joe Paul took 34th and Jim game record . real strong," he said. A Little Bit Easier Docherty and Greg' Newell were 41st and 42nd, respectively. Coach Ted Wheeler's harriers close out the season at 5-4. Only the top four tearns and the top 20 runners from Satur· day's championlhips are eligible for the NCAA District IV We Want To Be Championships this Saturday at Champaign, Ill. Try Your Jeweler Rugby Wee Wash It The UI Rugby Club closed out their fall season with a 22-10 QUICK SERVICE home victory over the Quad Cities lriah. "When You're Ready" AI Matthews scored two tries, and AI Kainz and Peter Wash, Dry Schnell each added one for the winners. Kainz also kicked three conversions. and Fold ...... UI's fall record was 3-6. Their spring schedule opens with STUDENTS ONLY· Please bring .tudent I.D. " lOme other ldtotlflcatloll. the Mardi Gras Invitational Tournament nelt February In Good oa Diamond WecIcUag IUq Seta Oaly. Offer ,ood tIJi.aqb Dee • .li, 1m. Hammond, La. ,. , . Gilsberl's Jewelers 181 1- .H()NG K()NG , Mall Shopping Center . (Q)[Ti) ~~® ~ ~ U'D®ooo Iowa City , Iowa 52240 . 11 _ with the 01 sports staff ~ • "". CUITOII T..... In _ CIIy I I ~ ~Mov • • 1~""'.Wed . Pay to the order of I $ 2510 IAVI III AU. " ... Mea MIn', Si. '/IQoI Sui " •.00 lIdl.. We goofed. In Monday's Dl tiebreaker game. Send your MIn'S Y. Ib.ond WI .: .'. m .• II1II IIOTTII you may have noticed a choice ISMCE L.... " i · Twenty-five dollars &.0'180 , I ~ entry (one entry per person) ~JDItI ... .. ,,, ...... IIcQtt . . IllMUTT ' -. I ~ between Colgate and Rutgers. through the CampUl or U.S. SIwIs CIIIan...... $I•• S81 :' Unfortunately. that game II not ~MoII' 1 1~ Cools ... .. ,. il Mall to On the LIne, The Daily .... Mc...II. Mill', May be UBed only untll Nov. 20. Thls Saturday Iowan, 201 Communications CIII Mr .... I.ny TIt 111414 towards purchase __.. 1..... ,. Inlt " I '· Ginsberg'S Jewelers KIanI ..... IIIIItI S27 -- i finds Rutgers at Tulane and Center, by 'lbunday noon, or lilt see of Diamond Wedding I: Colgate at Army. For those of drop It off pel'8Olll11y In Room RIng Seta! I· you who have already entered, 111', Communications Center .. I, It can't hurt you - it's jUlt one before noon'lbunday. ThIs check may DOl be ued .. coaj1lllctloa • Dy .... ,pedal"'er. . less game to call. the , Only two more weeks remain LET US DESIGN YOUR In the On the LIne cOntest and Purdue at Iowa 0:: HAIR FOR YOUR PARTICULAR the chances of winning are Wilconain at Indiana ~> LIFESTYLE getting better since more people Oblo State at hllIInMota :r.-- are getl1n8 dlIcouraged and Nebruta at Ion State . Ginsberg's ·ewelers fewer are enterinl, Once again Millourl at Oklahoma '- .. REDKEN products we present a mixture of con­ Alabama at Notre o.me == Iowa City CedarRlpldi Del Molltet , ference cluhes from around the Teus AiM at Arkanus SYCImore Malt Downtow. South Rld,e M.II natlon'l gridirons. ~.tAuburII On BUI Route· Towncrest Remember to circle the 'nebreaker: Yale at Harvard Name:..' ______IO 'lO WILLIAM ST . 11H·97/111 winner or circle both team. for Addre.:: ______II tie, and predich ICOI'e for the t