and the People o/Iowa Cit!l .st.It... h.eI I. 1861 low. City, low. 52240 - Fr.eI.y, Sopt. 18, 1970 10 ce.t. • copy Seek I Students to niunction Aga'inst. 'ROTC Charge ORTHERN R~quirements Students Ask R TOWELS Violate RegelJts Rules Several university students plan to at the bottom and will not extend seek an injunction against the Depart­ beyond a line drawn parallel to the 'Day Care 'Space ment of Military Science, It was learned ground from the bottom earjpbe." Thursday. Herrick, who also is enrolled In the By LOW!LL MAY Kohen aaId that partlclpanll at I) Sam Sloss, G, Iowa City; Helen Her­ ROTC class, added that the hair restric­ DI Auoc, News Id..... earlier meeting of Hawkeye Court par­ rick, G, Iowa City; and Frank Leone, lion does not apply to women. Residents of two unlversity.()Wned ents had asked T.H. Rehder, 8S!OCiate Al. Iowa City; claim that ROTC class Sloss said that "by denying conscien­ dean of dormitory housing, for the space enrollment requirements violate regents apartment complexes decided Thursday tious objectors into the classroom, the night to press University of Iowa housing to tart a center. rules, past university policy, and state university is restricting class enrollment officials for space and facilities for a She said Rehder had turned the ~ law. on political grounds." The freshman Reserve Officer train­ parents' cooperaUve day care center for quest along with his favorable reeom· ing Corps (ROTC) course 23: 10, has Sloss also charged that the age, hair , their children. m ndation over to university Director of stipulated ,in a handout that students who citizenship and full time student status About 20 student parents from Hawk­ Space Assignment, Richard Gibson, and attend class must: be a citizen of the requirements violate students' rights ac­ eye Court and Hawkeye Drive came to Vice Provost Phllip Hubbard, from United States, enroll as a full time stu­ cording to past university policies. the Methodist Student Center, Wesley whom there has been no response. dent, swear .or affirm a loyalty oath, Sloss, Herrick and Leone. who aU sigll' House to discuss plan. to orgalliu c0- The group consensu was that the wear uniforms in class, and Initial a ed up for the course, were told of operative day care for children in 3 unlver ily should prOVIde th child care statement that the cadet is not a con­ th~ requirements Thursday night by meeting that was a follow·up to a day facilities as an alternative to pnvate scientious objector. Capt. Lawrerlce Jackson, the instructor. care census taken Sunday to evaluate baby liters for tho e stud nil who must Sloss, who is enrolled in the class, told Sloss said that to enter the class, the stu­ child care needs at the two complexes. leave their children to attend cia or The Daily Iowan Thursday that the dents had their identification checked Jan Kohen, G, Iowa City, a Hawkeye work to pay university co ts. ROTC enrollment requirements "breaks and names checked against an enroil- Court rtllchnt, diltrlbuNd the rflult. " Members of the group pointed out that the state discriminiation law on sex, ment list. r the lurvey, whleh was taken by volun. there is space avallable for the service Women must buy their uniforms while Daily Iowan news editor Lowell May teers belonging to fh. New University in basement room at Hawkeye Drive men are supplied theirs. . said that he was turned away at the Conference, 1o tho .. who attended. and po ible space in 8partmen that Sloss also said that the hair require­ door. Jackson told May that it was his She said that the cooperative day care might not be rented within Ih complex­ e ment for men is different from that for prerogative 10 deny access to reporters concept offers free child care service to women. The ROTC handout stated that: parents in return for a minimum number John B.tkl, G, Iowa City, who attend· and photographers, and was doing so. ed Thund.y night'. m"ting, ..Id he felt "Hair on the sides will not touch the Sloss said that Col. Robert S. Kubby, of service hour donated to the center by ears and will be tapered evenly to the each parent. The service is e pecUly that the group h.d a "v.lld compl.lnt" head of the Military Science Department, and .ald the group should .. p.... 1 the top .. .sideburns will not have a flair told class that "ROTC is designed to aimed at working or student families . At present there are coop centers university" for day UI't f.ellill .., ev,n provide officers for the Uniled States If It m.. nt building' IOper.le .truetu ... Army in conjunction with unjversity of­ operating In Iowa City at SI. Paul's Luth­ eran Church , Wesley House and the First for that purpo ... ficials." He added, according to Sloss, Hawkeye Court resident Nan Lower, Mitchell Labels that the course was designed only for Mennonite Church. Similar service Is also being organized at th Episcopal A3 , lowe City, said thai the only place males. for children to play In the proximity of Sloss said that of apprpx.imately 30 Church and the Unitarian Church. their apartments at that complex was ~ Terrorist Bombing. students in class, five were women. "Of According to the urvey, which involv­ on the court balconies. the 25 males, 10 had hair 100 long for ed 693 housing units, about 400 children The group made plan at the meeting ROTC requirements," Sloss said. Jive 10 th t'Omplexes . Parents of 120 to continue the Inquiry with university During registration, the Students {or children - or 30 per cent of all children officials, 10 ek non·university space Work of Maniacs Democratic SoCiety (SOS) circulated , - expre' ed a desire for some sourCe near th complexes and to Initiate a pe­ WASHINGTON IA'I - Atty. Gen . John leaflets calling for students to join of day care. tition wlthm the complexes a. king unl­ N. Mitchell labeled terrorist bombings ROTC to "destroy from within." An answer to Iowa City'. hou.lng pr .. "When the children under flv. yurt V r Ity officials {or lh n eded space, Thursday as the work of "maniacs," Sloss said he is not an SDS member. bltm? Thll tree house il IDcated on the of ag' are conlidered, parenti txpreu and said that although he thinks a num­ He did however write in a letter to the corner of Colt.1II .nd MUlc.tin. Str..... day cart n.ed for .bout <10 ptr cent of th.ir pl't5chool children," the report ber of organized groups may be involved, editor, printed in the Sept. 9 issue of Getting High Hopes shouldn't rise to high, however, a. the Daily Iowan, ". . .our only altern­ Dutch Elm dlse.1O continues to wipt out .. Id. Police, Chicanos there is no "single, unified effort" direct. ' the 693 units , the report aid, repre­ ing them. ative as concerned students is to change the potential houling sites. ROTC'tO conform to regent rules." - Photo by Diane Hyptl "II about Ii:; per cent of all university Briefing newsmen on discussions with married student hou ing, officials from nine Midwestern cities He went on to say, "We need to make ------~------Skirmish in [.A. where bombings have occurred recently, . ROTC 51 per cent women, demanding equal rights ...Next we need hundreds LO ANGELES (-'I - Denial of a col· Mitchell said he thinks the terrorist Moves Against Uprising- lege stadium for a rally was blamed activity can be curbed through restrict­ of freaks, radicals and liberal students to join the program (ROTC)." Thursday for touching off Mexican·Am­ ing access to explosives and stiffening erlcan violence Wendesday night that penalties for their illegal use. He added , "Once in, we must de­ stroy all forms of "onesided commit­ Injured 88 persons 18 day after an out­ "Certainly there are a limited number ment." Hussein Baffles Guerrillas burst that left lhree dead, But communi­ of these maniacs," Mitchell sald, "As Thursday night's class, according to ty leaders say the causes run deeper they are incarcerated, they will be taken Sloss, was basically concerned with the BEIRUT (A'! - King Hussein fs armor­ and were mopping up pockets of Radio Amman listed th" secured capital than that. off the scene." rules of f.nrollment, attendance, and e~ columns struck at Palestinian guerril­ guerrillas resistance. They said the districts but significantly failed to men­ Education, housmg, Jobs, health, re­ Mayor William Dyke of Madison, Wis., behavior. An outline of the courses las across Jordan on Thursday in a army was moving successfully else­ tion Wahdat, the northern suburb where lations with the law - th catalogue of where an explosion at the University of and commanding officers were also move to crush an uprising against the where to re-establish order and guerril­ some or a II of 54 hostages from last complaints on the city 's teeming East 's Army Mathematics Research presented. desert nation's new military regime. las were defecting. week's hijacking were believed held in Side is remlmscent of black problems Center claimed one life and destroyp.d The army claimed it had broken A guerrilla broacast from Baghdad guerrilla stronghold . There was no men­ that triggered the Watts riots of 1965, claimed the Palestinians controlled all valuable research dala last month, Ylas guerrilla resistance in Amman and the tion of the hos tages by either side And a n w militancy Is on the rise In pessimistic about the short run, however. guerrilla strongh~ld of Zarqa , 15 miles of northern Jordan from 15 miles north throughout the day , But tbe fighting of Amman to the Syrian border, calling Los Angeles County's lImated million­ "I see no reason," Dyke said, "to be Plan Survey to the northeast, by nightfall. raised fears for theIr safely. plu Spani h-surname population - se­ it a "liberated area." It said the area There was no word on the whereabouts optimistic about the forthcoming semes­ J Egypt's official Middle East news included Irbid, Jordan 's second largest cond in size only to Mexico City's. ter. I see no reason for any campus to be agency reported early Friday in Cairo of King Hussein himself. His wife and city, which the army said earlier in the children are in Britain and a friend of "Tio Taco Is dead!" Is the new slogan, optimistic about this fall. It Of Industrial that plans were being made for a . day was in its hands. the ramily in London said Princess MUlla, Uncle Taco being the Mexlcan·American Mitchell, Dyke, and Mayor Eugene A. summit meeting of'"Arab kings and heads Another guerrilla broadcast - from equivalent of Uncle Tom. Brown is , Leahy of Omaha, Neb., acting as spokes­ of state in the Libyan capital of Tripoli Hus ein's Brill h·born wife, was in dally Damascus, Syria - said the reported de­ COntilct with her husband. beautiful. The name of the game is pride men for the federal and local officials Waste Dumps to deal with the explosive Jordanian fectors were only "wounded men who and power. who met in Mitchell'S office, agreed that situation. Arab League headquarters in bave been captured ." The Israeli government watched de­ A county supervisor, a congre sman's closer cooperation between federal, state WASHINGTON IA'I - After years of Cairo called for an "immediate and un­ The guerrillas said they appointed a velopments in Jordan closely. There was aide and a Mexican·American communi­ and local law enforcement agencies can prodding by Congress, the Interior De­ conditional halt to the massacre in former Jordanian arm y oHicer, a likelihood the I raelis would ''Ike some ty leader said immediate cause or the be achieved. partment agreed Thursday to ask in­ Jordan." Mahmoud Rousan, military governor of kind of aclion of the Palestinian guerrillas new outbur twas lrustees' fefusal to Mitchell repeated his promise that "the dustries to tell the government how 'SACRED DUTY' the northern district. should succeed in overthrowing Hussein, allow the East Los Angeles College sta­ much and what kind of poisons they A joint statement by Egyptian Justice Department and the FBI will 55 \000 a moderate. dium to be used as a di persa! point and dump into the nation's streams. President Gamal Abdel Nasser, Sudanese Hussein's army totals about I ,... -..... _... T continue the policy of i.mmediately advis­ men while the guerrillas' rolls list 32,000. The. guerrillas began their present for a rally after Wednesday night's ing local law enforcement agencies of The department said work toward leader Jaafar Numairi and Libyan Mexican Independence Day parade. making the first voluntary national in­ strongman Muammar Kadafi published But the Jatter are scattered and their campaign against Hussein after he ac­ any information we obtain relating to Friday in the semiofficial Cairo news­ organization is splintered and disordered. cepted the U. S.-initiated Middle East Trustees of the Community College THPASTE bombings, plots or bomb threats, and ventory of industrial wastes will begin within ·a month . But the public will not paper Al Ahram said "the preservation Late Thursday afternoon, after day long cease-lire and peace talks. The guerril­ System voted 4 to 3 against use of lhe threats to the lives of policemen." of the Palestinian revolutionary forces fighting that sent balls of black and gray las have vowed to disrupt any possible facility, recalling the three deaths in the When federal laws are involved, he be privy to all the information. The decision was . hailed by members is the sacred duty of the Arabs." smoke swirling over Amman, the mili­ peace settlement with Israel. earlier riol. added, "Ihe Justice Department, includ­ tary government urged the guerrillas to Thousands of marchers were left mill­ ing the FBI, will marshal all of Its in­ of a House Government Operations sub­ But the statement , addressed to both , committee, one of the congressional evacuate the capital and move up to the ing about, President Esteban Torres of vestigative resource to apprehend those sides in the dispute, added : "We the Congre of Mexican-American Unity panels which has long sought it. appreciate the self control King Hussein cease-fire line with Israel "while the Pat Nixon Says responsible ... chance is still open to you." told a news conference. On the latter score Mitchell acknowl· But skepticism persisted. Because has always shown" and called upon some of the information will be kept Hussein to "contain the critical momen­ ARMY BROADCAST County Supervisor Ernest E. Deb edged something less than success. agreed, saying Sheriff Peter J, Pitcbess Trying to find perpetrators oC the ter­ secret. Rep. Henry S. Reuss (D·Wis .) tum" of the confrontation. "Save your lives and the lives of civil­ Expel Disrupters said he fears a government coverup of AJ Ahram said Egypt's position was had asked use of the stadium. rorist activity, even after they have been ians," the army broadcast said. "We "There were too many people and no the names of polluters and where and based on "support for the Palestinian shall facilitate your transfer to the CHICAGO fA'! - Pat Nixon, wife of the identified, is like "looking for a needle President, said Thur day that "educa­ place for them to go,' said Edward I In a haystack," he said. when . they dump industrial wastes. cause, despite the deviations" of some of front. " But Undersecretary of the 1nterior its elements. tion is a privilege and students should Avila , field deputy to Rep. Edward R. Mitchell said leaders of the radical The guerrillas, who proclaimed earlier Roybal (D-Los Angeles) . Weathermen organization, Indicted this Fred J. Russell' and David D. Domi­ Reserve Gen. Haim Herzog, former be expelled if they jllst want 10 cau e that is was "a fight to the finish," re­ trouble." Rocks, bottles and chunks of concrete summer on charges of plotting to bomb nick, commissioner of the Federal Wat­ chief of Israeli military intelligence, said jected the proposal and called on their er Quality Administration, said the pub­ In Jerusalem it would be "impossible for The First Lady added, hoI\'e\'er, that flew from an angry crowd estimated by police sta,t1ons and other buildings, have forces to seal off Amman with roadblocks deputies at more than 1,000. gone underground. lic will receive eSsential information. Israel to stand idly by shOUld Iraq and "95 per cent of the students in school FAMIL and mines. today are there for an education. Just A bullet wounded Mike A. Lincon, 20, What will be kept confidential are Syria intervene. . ," Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird trade secrets covering operations and a few manage to damage the reputation as he a sisted officers against the crowd . Both nations have threatened to aid said in the United States that his govern­ FORMULA processes of plants, Russell said. the guerrillas. of the others." Later he was reported improved. ~ , Rubin Using Legalities The policy will ' be to tell the public Jordanian troops and guerrillas battled ment was prepared to evacuate Ameri­ She made Ihe comments when asked Another civilian and a deputy sheriff cans from Jordan. But the Defense De­ Oz. Size what an industry is doing with indus­ from house to house in Amman, and an what she thought of student violence on suffered lesser bullet wounds. Thrown For Revolution -Ichord trial wastes, not "how he did it," Rus­ indefinite curfew was imposed on the partment stressed that the position on college campu es. objects cut or bruised 55 other civilians this was unchanged from previous state­ and 30 deputies . one was hospitalized. R,g, 52c WASHINGTON {A'! - House Internal sell said. The information will be so­ capital. Government broadcasts told the Nixon, a former schoolteacher who Security Committee Chairman Richard licited by a questionnaire sent to in­ city's 600,000 people that anyone on the ments noting that Ai r Force planes were says she "knows of no generation gap," Business building windows worth $2,400 II. Ichord urged today that the tax­ dusti'ies, along with instructions. streets would be shot on sight. standing by in Turkey for use in case it met with the lirst graduates of a special were smashed, fires were sel in trash exempt status for Yippie Leader Jerry Dominick said one thing that held up was necessary. Chicago school for dropouts. She encour­ cans, a county· owned truck destroyed AMERICANS SAFE by names. Rubin's foundation be revoked on the Invento.ry proposal was the extent The U.S: Embassy in Amman A pooled dispatch reaching lhe outside aged them to "work hard and get your grounds it did not file a required an­ the data obtained would be confidential. informed the State Department In world from U. S. correspondents quoted education and go right up the ladder of nual l'epryl·l . He indicated also there had been dis­ Washington that all offiCial Americans guerrilla officials as saying Palestinians success." "J' i., Rppal'en( that the Ylppie Party agreements by high officials. were safe and there were no reports of in refugee camps were mowed down by "The world is yours," he said. "You Clearing I.esde · i~ Irying to use legalltlee to Reuss demanded the names of the casualties among other U.S. citizens. the score during bombardment by heavy might even ·go on to become president A littl. ct.aring In tho ..ather Is finance his reyolutionary endeavors by • officials responsible . Dominick and Both sides reported many casualties army guns. of the United Stales." " nptCtocl Frldiy after a "ring of chilly. hlelding royaltles from taxation," said Russell held their ground in refUSing to and guerrilla officials in Beirut spoke of As the fighting began, army forces Nixon talked with the 29 inner city r.iny days. Warmer IImper.turH .re chord, R Mi.,sourl Democrat. disclose them. . "hundreds of martyrs ." Cross-fire controlled the hills around Amman while young people, most of them Negro, at predicted for the .fternoon with limper. He sa id Rupbln's lax-free Income pre­ But in Dominick's written statement, between army troops and Palesintians the guerrillas held key sectors of the the Chicago Posta I Sfl'eet Academy. atvres In the upper 711. sumably Includes not only rOf81ties he said the Bureau of the Budget re­ killed hundreds of civilians, capital. funded by grants from the Post Office SIIit. will COIItinue cloudy Friday ni .... from his book "Do It" but also lea lor fused In 1168 to approve a proposed Army communiques said Jordanian SILENT ON HOSTAGES Department, the Department of Labor .nd Sltvrd.y with Slturda,'. high_ WA speaking engaiements, queatioMaire. troops coJltrolled 16 districts iA AnunBII The army communique broadcast by - and the Office of Economic Opportunity. predicltll III tht MI. . m~ 'Daily Iowan From ,the people :

OPINIONS dent r~eS 0/ those who have no wish to people to be governed I representaUon what he believes to be an unjust war ICLU report defended support it, 01 those who are forced by In th~lr govl!rnment. Moreover the ab­ In the hope ot maintaining his pride In To Ih. Editor: the system to sustain their exploiter. solute absurdity of his reasoning Is dis· his own and In his nation', Intesrtty The Daily - Iowan has done well to It shows again that the Dl Is living II played In the very fllct that if his rell' and devotion to justice Is not allowed I'AGI2 FRIDAY, SIPTIMIIR 11,1971 IOWA CITY, IOWA publish Professor Schmidhauser's critl· lie. It uses the building, machinery, and soning is correct he is not eligible to be to consider himself a loyal citizen. cal remarks on certain parts of the re­ money of people it hates or scorns. H • governor of Iowa . Why? Because he is Analogou8 to the studeot's sltultlon ,,,!lIIlh.t ...... 'HIIk ...... --'I'tt ...... 11.. ···i ····.. u\fII.n M'; Is the plight of the developing nallons '1Illtint IIvlllltlM, ...... ,., .'W"I ..... 1ft CIty.UII"'nlty lilt., , ...... port just Issued by the Hawkeye Chapter, the editor and staff were the real people an lowln and for him to be governor of IIIlto, ...... L..... I"rtt ...... :..."1:...... !C,'.""I ",,.,..n they want others to be, they would mo". Jowa would be fir him to be chlel of «eking U.S. development aid but frus­ IIInl,III, III'ttI' ...... A",y CIt.1M!It1l _.... Clty·.....,..,.It. Itltl, . . . Iowa Civil Liberties Union. Although ~'.I 141110, ...... _...... At Clew ...... , ... ,<: ...... D...... ",In. copies of his statement were distributed oul and refuse to live by tainted aid, ataff of a rt!gulatlng agency (I.e. the traled In the Ittempt by pressure to :6~, Idllo, ...... Jthll ell"'; A.teel ... 'Mm .lIlltr ...... J."~ IIICII.,d, lind would publish real paper. I urge state government) which was I!stablished IIffirm U.S. policy as a quid pro quo Idllo,iII "If' .lIlto, ...... Chl,.,1 MII'1r AIIYIHllln, DI,KII, ...... Rty Dun,more to the press along with the report itsel/ a llerts 111110' ,...... I.y Iw.'" (,,.,,1.,1111 Mlnl,I' ...... Jim.. Conlin them to do this , not 10 live a lie, but to to regulate Iowans. If he Is correct In for any assistance proferred . . F'nl A,ts Ullo, ...... CUN ',"Nn on Monday, Schmidhauser was unable to present his views in person, and they show their conviction and their contempt his philosophy the government of Iowa The D.lly Iowan by its new pollcy [ therefore did not receive the Ittelltion for "corporlte capitalism." should be turned over to tile citizens of hIS tlken a practical step towlrd a re­ due them . In fairness to III concerned • "rtf. Dlvld S. Chlmberlaln another State. dUction In the level of the rhetorte of however, It should be pointed out that Dtp.rlmln' of In,II'h Jf such turnover were seriously ug· the war. Radicals and reactionaries • The' civil right. of the SchmldhBuser's statement as- originally IDITOR'S NOTlt W. did not Inlln te gested I have no doubt the citizens of alike shoUld take note. The pollcy issued concluded with an unquatlfled en· 'purn the ...IeI, .'c. WI, ttl, .,I.vI for Iowa would point to the experience. of serveR objectivity. By reference It al· dorsement of those sections oC the ICLU tIIet ,'"dlnt who 10.' hi. IIf. Ind for the South during reconstruction ("hieh firms the conclusion that one does not college athlete report which dealt directly with the con· the .. wh. Wlrl InlurH. Our .nly pur· I believe has contributed to tht develop­ have to participate in another's rhetor. tent of the Uniform Rules of Conduct, pell In ",nnlno the .rllcl. wa. to offer ment of A reactiollary philosophy ~hlch Ic, cOhvlctions hOr loathing In order to The new sellson o( coJlegiate athletics hl,ts low .. with perennial rah-rah to· the manner 01 their promulgation, IJId IIIr rllde ... beth .Id.. of the .tory, not l!eems to predominate there) and ask be either loyal or friendly and In need morrow, but there are apparently •. growing num~r of people both within and judicial procedures to be adopted In .p­ tl 'Ik. .ldI. ounllv... Thl feet thlt the legltlmllie questlon, "who is to pro· of help. without the university community who are rooting (or the elimination of all plying them. Unfortunately this part of , wt ,rlnt Nh"n'. or AOnow'. rldiculou. tect the governed from the governors?" Holid.y GlnItttt, 0.. !'he_lc d.. , not Imply I,r.. mlnt wlttt JOtI WIOht, L2 sides as they now exist in bigtime college athletics. Schmldhauser's Was omitted from your Obviously In the CaM of this unlver· guest editorial. them. W. ftlt ttllt ttl, .rtlel. eontlined sity it· is not the AdministrAtion which, The problem has been highlighted in the put few months by the attempted As a memlrer of the local ICLU com· Inftrmltl.n whIch wa' not IVlliabl. t. by virtue of the authority given to It by The ACLU and Blum breakaway from the college scene to the pl'08 by Michigan State junior bask!'t­ mlttee responsible [or drafting the reo ,the .-.r.1 public; In,oflr .. II providld the Board of Regents, is Inerely an ex­ ..me uncItrtt.ndl", of the "why" of thlt T. tilt IEdlt.r: ball star Ralph Simp on, who, because he hu two years of eligibility lei t with port on the Regents' Rules, I naturaUy tension of II and which, In abuse of that J am not really clear what Shelley , the university, is being restrained from pro ball in spite of It signed contrac,t cannoL share Schmldhauser's view that bembl"" It WI' I vllulbl. arlic". authority, has promulgated policies Wh.ther you Iflor rlldlng bettl Blum Is Implying about the ACLU In his with the Denver Rockets. Ihe ICLU was under some obligation to .0.... which are against the best interests of Daily Iowan column oC sept. 15. While I await the /lndlngs of university groups .Ide. tha' the "why" Wit ,,,Hlciln' I. the student body (the e tablishment of R am always glad to see the ACLU get The conflit1 is just beginning, but background has been laid, sorr\~ battle before expressing Its Independent con· n.t Impertlnl - whl' I, Implrlan' I, 18 ex-judge Garfield THE judicial sys­ publicity, I do leel that the distortions lines have been drawn, and the I~sues that may weU lead to the death of advanc· cern with Issues 01 "broad pubUc polley" ttll' YIII were abl, 10 rlleh your COlI· tem is the most common' example). My in this column do 8 grave disservice to related to order and dissent on the cam· , elll,"n, Iftlr r,edln, III ,h. 'ICts IVIII· answer is that for the protection of the ed college athletic - along with its sophisticated recn.liting, trainjng, and play­ the clluse Mr. Blum see)