Serving the Unir;erlity of Iowa Iowan and IlIe People at Iowa Clly

EstabUshed in 1868 10 cents a copy Associated Preu Leased Wire and WIrephoto Iowa City, 10WI 52240-'ftlursday, September 4, 18 Ho Chi Minh ' Dies After Grave and Sudden Heart Attack Related Story and Picture Page 3 French in 1954. the country's cause. attitude, Ro studied In Hae Ind SaJp, SAIGON IA'I - Radio Hanoi announced Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, the military Not regarded as an immediate contend­ then went to Europe at 19 as cabin boy Thursday that Ho Chi Minh, the wispy leader who masterminded the victory er for Ho's mantle was G en . Nguyen on I French steamer. His goal already Uttle Communist Vietnamese who over France. was listed No. 7 on the Giap, the famed victor over the French was Vietnamese independence. crushed the French colonials in Indo­ funeral committee immediately after Le at Olen Bien Phu and stiU chief archi­ In France, he met the leading day'. china and has fought the United Stales Ouch Tho, who heads Hanoi's delegation tect or Hanoi's war machine. Glap. ex­ Socialists and in Moscow, he met LenIn, to a seeming standstill, died Wednesday to the Paris peace talks. perts here said, ranks below the top Stalin and Trotsky. "after a grave and sudden heart at­ No. 5 was Pham Hung, a vice premier three and would more likely be expected For more thin a Ytln 'n exile, He .. tack." and member or the nine-member Polit­ to support one of them rather than bid wted hlm ..H ,. oro-nlzi", an under· buro which holds effective executive for power himself. ground c.mpelgn a,.Inst FrtIICh rvle The illness of the 79-year-illd Ho was power. Million. of Vletn,me.. looked on He In Indochina. first disclosed by Hanoi Wednesday Announcement was made on Radio Chi Minh a. the father of Vlef!lame .. He returned 10 his homeland after the (broadcasts that made it clear the end Hanoi's normal dawn news broadcast. It Independence and affection.'ely refttTtcl Japanese invaded Indochina in World was near) . was read in unemotional tones by the to him as Uncle Ho. Wlr II and revived an old antl.Qtinese Broadcasts announcing the death were newscaster. The son of a minor government offi­ underground organization to fight the heard in Washington , Paris and else­ The broadcast was confined to the an­ cial, fired by France for his anti·French Japanese. er where over the world. nouncement of the aging leader's death In S.n Clemente, Calif., the Western and gave few details. 19. f White House said President Nixon would Informed sources In Saigon believed have no comment on Ho'. death. the veteran revolutionary'. del t h ! Sa/ly Rand- The broadcast, heard in Saigon, named wouldn't bring about any Important Some Members ~ a special 250man committee to plan the changes in North Vietnam 's war policy. funeral. Western experts on North Vietnamese It was headed by Le Duan, first secre­ affairs based in Saigon agreed that no Ageless Beauty tary of the North Vietnamese Commu­ immediate, significant changes In North nist party. Vietnamese policy - either on the battle­ Of Campus Police No. 2 on the list was old party faith­ field or at the Paris peace talks - could ful Ton Duc Thang, the 81-year~ld vice be predicted. Still Performing president of the party, who is regarded " I think all of them - the North Viet­ as a likely interim leader. namese leaders - are dedicated to the \ . No. 3 was pro-Peking Truong Chinh , struggle in the South and simply might Tech 0, Able to Arrest the outspoken chief rival of Le Duan for subordinate their own disagreements," 10, Notre By KAREN GOOD ture last se ion allowed the Board of the Hanoi regime 's leadership. said one. UlII~lll~'I·. 7, Hanoi watchers in Saigon began specu­ Campus Security has moved quickly Regents and state university presIdents Cal· I No.4 was Pham Van Dong, premier lating on the political impact of Ho's ill­ this summer to take advantage of the to designate campu officers as peace 14 . 1931 ; I and, outwardly , the heir apparent to Ho, ness as soon as it was revealed . There go-a-head they received last spring from officers. tie, 1968 ; who came to power in 1945 and led was general agreement on the most the University to give qualified sta£[ Und.r the I.. w, when In arrest I. 14, 1924 ; North Vietnam to victory over the likely candidates to succeed him. members peace of£icer status. mid, by design,ted umPUI ..curlty of· 20. Texas Three top-ranking men on North Viet· Nine supervisory members oC the 24- fleers, the CIA i. no longer consldertel 20, nam's nine-member Politburo were seen member-starr received peace o£ficer sta­ under University lurisdietion, but I, ; and , tie, ' handled by the court under who .. Iur­ as the most probable group from which tus In July and five more are expected 1946, and Ho's successor would emerge : to receive such status later tbis month, I.diction the cast com ... Georgetown NEWS • Le Du.n, 62, fint secret.ry of the according to Director of Campus Secur­ Whelher campus secunty personnel l Lao Dong workers party, I prlgmatlc ity William Binney. will be allowed to carry arms or not political boss who tend5 to sid. with the Peace officer 81 atus means campus has not been ettled. The arming walta CLIPS pro·Sovlet el,ment in political disputes, security officers will have the same ar­ [or approval by University President emily J but is known as an independent and mili­ rest powers as city police officers. Willard L. Boyd. tilnt Communist. Information (rom a reliable source -Malignant Prior to the go· ahead by the Univer­ Indicated cerlaln campus security offic­ I • Truong Chinh , 61, the chief party sity's Clmpus P,rking ,nd St(urity ribute WASHINGTON tM - boctors at Wal­ theoretician and chairman of the stand­ ers have begun carrying guns this sum· Committee last May , campus security mer, but Binney said that no campus ter Reed Army Hospital said Wednesday ing committee of the National Assembly. officers had no arre.t power. town. Chinh, whose name means "Ion g security personnel carry "any kind of from around the tumor removed from the right lun g march," is identified with the pro­ Previously, i[ a campus security of­ weapon on their person or in their car. It former oppo- of Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen was malignant. Chinese wing. He has regained consider­ ficer was 111 a situalion where an arrest "They don 't even carry nigbt sticks, It who won 49 able influence in the last 18 months after should be made, he had to call Iowa Binney said fights, 43 A final pathologists' report. released several years in political eclipse because City police who could make the official The Irming Issue clme before the By JOANNE W ~LTON al.;o li .(es And 'ew Wyeth - the through the Illinois senator's office, said , elder better than his son . of his role in the disastrous land reform arrest. Campus PI.nnlng and Security Commit. "How do you feel about leer­ however, that there was no evidence the Arrest powers were given to what High Mass Ing at a woman old enough to .. Perhaps when he gets a lit­ program, in which thousands died in t.. lut spring. Th. committ .., how. Thursday tumor had spread and there was no need riots, in the 195Os. Binney called "staff supervisors" this ,ver, could not resolve the issue and de­ be your grandmother?" I h e tle older . . ." she mused ill "for further surgery or other treat- 's Ro­ • Pham Van Dong, 61, North Viet­ summer after th y completed a one I.yed further action until this fall. pert little blonde asked from an interview Tuesday. men! ." where "When you're young, no mat­ nam's premier since 1950 and considered week course III policE' procedures. The legislature approved a bill last under a big, black picture hal. by many observers as the most likely The nine men who received the peace winter giving the State Board of Re· Bar· The 21·year~ld photographer ter how deeply moved you are, , Mass you ha ve lo live a little longer * * * heir apparent. He is believed to be the officer status ear lier this summer at · gents authority to deputize and arm se­ never paused in his shutler­ chief government administrator. While a tended a University sponsored polic. lected campus 'ccurity officers at its Saturday at snapping. "re my grandmother to be able to catalogue it. No Gas Stop Fort Lauder· hard-liner in public, Dong has a reputa­ procedures course. Tho .. five wt.o will three universities. looked like you do , I'd leer at "Your emotions don 't neces­ DES MOINES IA'I - It would be un­ tion as a flexible politician who leans .ttain their arrest powers later t his The law gives pre!>ldenls of the uni­ had made her too ," he said. sarily become stronger or deep­ Lauderdale constitutional for the Iowa Commerce toward pro·Soviet elements. month went to a similar course in Ft . versities the option of accepting or re­ At 65 , Sally Rand - yup, the er, but you 're better able to Commission to block the interstate ship­ Some observers thought it possible that Dodge. Jecting th authority. one with The Fans - is indeed evaiuate them," she said . ment of poison gas across Iowa, the all three men might et up a triumvirate The course mcludes study of state However, thus far, the policy has not put together unlike the stereo­ Sally said she's never felt Iowa Attorney General's Office ruled government designed to forestall internal la \\'s and arrest procedures. been given official approval at the Unl· type 01 Grandma. She's got the "generation gap," but it's Wednesday. battling that could do serious harm to A law enacted by the state legisla- versity. the same 36-24-36 figure s he not because she's been preoc· 8howed SO much of at the 1933 cupied with staying youthful. Chicago World's Fair. "Older people who work so And she's still showing it. hard at being young are piti­ Good Luck in the Presidency, Mr. Boyd Sally was supposed to be per­ ful, " she said. "[ like being the forming her famous fan dance age I am. (Hit's exactly the same dance " If nothing else, it gives you - same fanny, different fans ") status !" at a club in Gulfport, Miss., Her outlook on many things Richard belies her age. Bills' splil this month, but Hurricane Ca­ miDe cancelled that engage· Asked her opinion of the cur­ the Sa n Diego rent trend toward nudity on and mellt. As a result, Sally Rand there Broadway, Sally said, "If It one of the Is struttin' her stuff in Iowa CIty. She leaves Sunday for will cure our Victorian and pur­ League itanical attitude toward it (nu· quarter· Des Moines. then to "would­ you-believe Oelwein?," and on dity) , J think it will have ac­ 10 Raleigh , N.C., for a stint in complished its purpose." IfA Funny Thing Happened on She said her only objectioll the Way to the Forum." to topless night club perform­ , Born Helen Gould Beck, Sal· ances was that "the girls who do it are usually topless too." he planned to t,. ,tarted profeSSionally a a quarterbacks tutu-clad ballerina. She came Sally said she's tried at dif· lip With the fan dance in 1932 ferent times to teach her In he has three - dance and bubble dance to Flores a R d , "'"Ie she was working in a ~ lpelkeasy. She performed the girls new to show business, but was that dace the following year at the "the ones who really wanted to learn couldn't dan c e welt use Kemp ('l World's Fair and returned in bait and keep 1134 with the bubble dance . enough , and the ones who could h's been doing both ever dance didn 't need to learll it." who appean to She travels an average of 40 prospect. _, lJId the crowds are still combtg. weeks a year, but while she'. AI long as they keep com­ home in California, Sally does Iq, she'll keep golng, she says. remedial speech work with 'nIere's more to SaJly Rand emotionally disturbed children. than meets the eye, however - Using a system she developed bel eonsidering how much of herself, she gets children who SaUy frequently meels the eye, are "sound-blocked " (mute due that's saying considerable. to psychological rather thaR At the age of 52, she enrolled physical problems ) to move III college - Citrus CoJlege, the 1h e i r bodies simultaneously Glendora, Calif., junior college with when they are trying to her 21-yeaNld son now attends. speak. The diversion frequellt· She has half a semestet·'s work Iy "surprises" them into mak­ left before completing her bach­ ing Ihe sound. she said . . elor of science degree in chem­ Besides th e regular college Istry and physics. classes she attends to get her She's a dog fancier. n sk illed degree, Sally occasionally moni­ horseba~k rtde" and highly lit- tors olher cour.es. ("J don't get trate. An ama' cur painter, she credit for it, but what the hell.") Stanley Redek.r, president of the Board of Rtgtnts, right, stopped into greet WiI· said one of the best things She tells a story of appearing lard Boyd on his fint day in the University president's lob. Boyd was given a about appcoriig In th Mid­ once on B radio talk show mod· surprise coff .. by the faculty. Stow PtrIOl'lS, professor of history and (hairmln erated by a newspaper column­ West WIl Ihe r pp r unity it Surprise Coffee for ~oyd of the Faculty Senate, cent.r, and the University'. new provost, R.y Hefher, left Continued Page l 1 gave h :. [1 ~l'~ th lora I col­ center, also appeared to wi.h Boyd well. Boyd,..k oVlr the Pr"idtnt's job of· ltclions o[ (jl'On. Wood art. She Ste S.lIy ficially on Sept. 1. - University News Service Photo

.... • ••• -t ...... ''' •• _ ... ~ •• U;.I ...... ------m£' 'Doily Iowan ,.. By Walton I.(

1------Tlte monogram on Ihe office stationery Iftd bottle opener. Alld 80, when word In addltlon, both McIntosh ud hit wife TIl. CllUplt 'flU """ Mae woulda'i ~ 1 OplINIONS W!) .. reached The Daily Iowan office that grim are alum, of the UlIlveully, a"d t.helr It to th'rn. h•• n 't ellinged, Ind It 't. Policy hasn't chanied yet, snd perhaps it won't afternoon that a whole whizbang of Re­ only daughter II married to In In.trucf.c)r "H. w!MIld have TOLD usl" Daughter ejthllf, But \Villard L. BIlyd ~ ~t last lIents was gathering in the 10w/l House - in the Italian department here. The old IlQl.ttd. il\Slalled a pre ideJit or Locill U, just coinCidentally at a time when I h e sentimental angle, She tn •• proc:elded to relate a .. PAGI2 THURSDAY, SI'TIMIU 4, 1'" IOWA CITY, IOWA Tlte old "Howie must go" placards University presidency was expected to In keeplnll with Its pQIIIlY of l'cul1 th. III anecdoto' aboqt It... IUrprise-iovin ~he I .. whe 10 will hive to be revamped or discarded. be parceled out - we went into action . falsehoods from real new., and then famtly d the fltber Ollce flew ~ultll"'" ___ .. __••••.• •• _...... J.hll 1111 print the whole schmear Inyway," the Japan without tellln. allybody. "1'0,1.1 .Itv'- ...... __.. _.. _. LH I,.w" ""r.c~:~' . ~~~~~ ...... Llnll' lUll'" The transition np", complete, It seems That Willard Boyd, then vice president ""0' _...... Ltw... ,.,., for academic affairs and dean of facul· DI sent reporter. tD " ~tlke out" the low. The prllP hunl ill there until 2 I.m., INn,.In. IlItt...... LI.ry Ch,lI4Iler .....,., •• ,.". Idlter ...... 'IR! .. ". II thOUgh Sandy Boyd's name hi. alWlY. N'Wt .lItt...... , ... I,,,.,. borne the prefix "President-select," It ties, wa. much in the running wal never House and the presidential manllon. III when Carl McIntOlh telephoned - ~ , City / Unl ••: llty ....'0 ...... 101 ...... ".r "'V:t:::· ..~~~~"~ ... ,...... Ih,," .ood a question. the newsroom, people with furrowed beilltlful dow"town Lonl Beach - to .dlto.I,1 '''' .tIIt...... M. I. Mttr. elly ...... WIS e.. y to mike the title hop lo "Presi­ .,It 141110' .. _...... 'hll D,,,t,. A""''''.~I,"n' II",,, .... ., ...... I".'J""i II.trlll." W,,,.n To leave out hi. n I m e would hive brows and telcphpne books methodically academlc.lly Inquir. lUll what the beD S,.". Idlt...... Mike "utlliy .1I.,rll.,", D'rlCt ...... 1I0Y un_r' de lit. " went through the Yellow Pages, a.khlll ,hot",."" ...., ...... lck .'UII, •• tt CI,cullllon """"" ...... J ...... c,nll" been akin to omitting Raquel Welcb from wa. ,olnl Oil. But there are those of us who remem· a list of the world's foremost women . every motel manager whether he WIS MOl'llh11 lied, Willard Boyd beeamt , ber the nleht of March 19 - the night the Bllt Inere W8I aJ)oth~r name being holding a room for Carl Mclntq,h. A .... Univeulty I're,ldent and scores ~ Dl r president was chllllen - Ind weep, The w~opped arollncl considerably, and It was porter and photoKrlpher - Iccomplllied Itinere became bot ...y majors. night that was so 101lg, we kept looking supported by the most plausible network by a strineer for one of tne wire ,~rviee. Now, tne Ic.r. not yet totally hl4led, for aurora borealis. of rumors since the Piltdow" Man. - were di~p,dched III the home of Mclll' the .tuden! body pmldent leaves office Inconsistency pays off TIle sIQry, _ Ihey say, ,Cl" nqw be Carl W. Mcintosh, retiring president tosh's daullhter and 80n·ln·llw. Ind w.'re field with another succeui02 told. of Cilifornia Slate College In Long Said daughter and son·ln-Ia,. were If.c)rr, It'. IllllOJt mllr, than Immortal ruchard Nixon l1)~y be synon,'lllQUs and other ppllstf'J'S havr found young NewsPliperfolk .re by naillre • sUlpicl­ Belch, WI ...id to have made airline found sittlng stupjfj~d In front of tllelr pmJ can bur. television lict, lis/eninll each IQCII atl' AI Iny rite, welcome to office, with enigma. The Pre Ident cam· pt'Ople exprt"Ssing, the thinking of ous lot. Cynical attitudes Ir~ dilpelllltd reservltlORl that would put him In Cedar to Saady. Rlpld. It midnight. He was flylDe in lion in turn tell them that Mclntolh wu GQod luck, Jim Rercul.,. " ) paigned on a right-of-~nter platfonn. these Nixon staffers seems ludicrous. to the cub reporter 8B .tln4ard equip­ ment, right alonl with Ili. pre", wd just to conKrltulate Willard maybe? en route to Iowa City and Ihe Be~a Of· Good IIlJhI, ~et. pmmiBing t.w a,nd order in the lih'eets More Importantly, in studies done C'moll. fice in 0\' Cap. Good lliibt, o.v1c1. and maintenance of today's institu· by political scientists, it has been tions against the assault of change. found that the people who frel they Sex ad. panic 'Killers' or 'assistsrs'? but we now see Nixon propoling /lre Republiclln~ tlll;e considerllbly Jlrem tItt NIA Newt IWf'eping rdorms (or the wrlfllre SYi­ more liberal positio/lS on th j ~ sucs W.6.SHINGTON, D.C. - Thomas Paine tem, visiting Commtlni~t Rumania than their party leaders. Thus, Nixon once observed that "Panics, In some cases, have their uses; they produce Green Berets a mystery and propo ing a thaw in American­ is aotually doing JlIst what the maj­ as milch good as hurt." The good he By RICHARD I'IA~WOOD double agent alld dumplnll h'- body In It Is this ml!.lon In South Vietnam Red Chinese relations. ority who elected him want - be pro­ spoke of referred to Ihe fact Ihat panics I~iter'. Note _ C.Ued "prof,nionll the ocean. that hal prodYGlld moat of the literature grr~~ive , but not too progressive. sometimes bring the otherwise hidden What can explain thf' Prt'iidrnt's klll.r." Ity 11m" "Puce CVrPI-typt "They hi'" mltl. u. I_ Ilk •• "unch .nlt mo~t qf the flcUQII about Ihe GM!eJlI facts of life to light. Berets. They are depicted as ruthl" ~; apparently inconsiNtent actions? Prac· This also brin", up illlportant Clues­ ..,1st,,.." by .th'r', the U.S. Army's of goddamntd Mafia characters who sit Th. curr.nt p.nle .v.r "I( f4l1cofl.n Sptci.1 F,rces have /lten the ,ublect of around fingering peopl. 10 kill," laid • World War II type comlJlandos !Iho tical poliHcs proVide the an~lVer. ix­ tlons abolll the flltme plans of the 'n the publiC schMI, C'" enly Itt .,.11ttI ",,,ell cemm.nt In rec.nt w"ks rllulting colonel wilh long experience in the divide their time between ~U1it1l IId l on recogniZt'd the fa ct that while ixon administraHon. What kind of love-making to the native gil'll. by • ctlm, oblectlv ••",..1"1 of lu.t 'r.m the .,,.It of .Ight "Grtt" 1.,.'1" Special Force$ (GrN" Berets) In Viet· many of his party worktlr and cam· programs will !xon be trying to tart wh.t II btln. t.u,ht, .eell'dl", ,. '.ul for .rr'Vtd1y murdering I Vi.tn'm'" nam. "And this Is a damned Ii" W. Some of the generals in the pentag(D\ plIlgn workers could btl classed .~ lifter he has paid off his apparent E. 'utn.m, .....,.t. .x""lIv, ""e· elvili.n rum,," tt hl~' !tttn I dfUbl. don't have AI Capontf in this outfit." ihin~ of them that way and are unhaWY town conservatives, mo t of the people (hts debts to the louthllmers? ,.ry fer .,.cl.1 ..rvlc ... f tilt N.ti.... ' ..,I", ...... nt, The D.ily I.w,In ,oday What they do have in "this outfit" Ire wilh the who'e idea of Special Forces. A Djpis "silent majority") who have voted Re­ Eduution AII.. I.tillll'. C''''''''ttl''' .n pr,"ntl the first of • two·potrt J,ri,s, about 10 ,000 young and old men who are genera) with four stars who was a promi· wno We hope that he will c-ontinue his nent adviser to Presidenta Kennedy ari Dinis publican are not that conservaH e, .. rot ...I,n.1 "-lgIIt ••tId 1h1"",lblll,it,. wrl...,. by • Wuhillf'lIII PlSt Itaff prepared mentally , if not in fact, ~ deal obYiousl¥ inconsistent da 'h tl1ward NEA bas taken a firm, positive, of· writ", tM .. II", wl,h till. ""tn,v.r,I.I, in v.:ry fundamental ways with real and Joltnson I, appalled at the cos t of the dcnce Special Forces and wonders vaguely Thus, we have I Presldpnt who ap' progre slvism. Washington a,\d its ficial s tan~ on the controversial matter , allft "my u"lt. potential "wars 01 liberation" througlJout which whether the Army has need of them. points a conservative southern judge slightly musty but he/wily bureau· ~laUng tbat "&ex education which pro· !'ART I the world. porarlly Wh.ttlltr tilt It Ihlt qUfttitr Mr . to the Suprrme Court wh ile acting cratic hilUs could lise i\ good house vide$ ~ niJ~ren an~ youth with informa­ F'J'. BR~{lG , N.C. - A few months They trained the Bolivian troop- wbo ",lIwtr l . HIt" I, nt tlou", tI! t th, Whitt HOUN ne of Uke a progressive on ,,:elfare. .cleanit)g. tion appropriate to their age is basic 4iO, .~ sprin,g )elt its marks 01) Ine NQrth ran Che G~eVllrll to the ground In 1987. to healthy, w/!II-adjustecl me"tal atti­ Carolina hills, a Jitt)e ceremony was held They have beeJi instrllc~ing troops In 11l1li 'h. It.,. D.".rt"""t regln! tIM hid Nixon's political realizations hal'e One area NiIi:on needs to do hetter tudes. " The resolution, adopted by the at tile Speci;al W~rfare School here. Ethiopia this year to delll with dl56ident .,,~I.I f,rPI II • erllel.! instrum.nt ift of great significance for the country. In is the racial area. 11 appears that Associatjon '~ RepresentaHve Assembly Its name wa~ changed to the John F. tribesmen. They nave worked wil~ the ~m,'I5II" "r.I," ",11.y, 1n Phih1delphla In July, adds that "the president John~n " foreign policy ad This means lhat Ni~on is not listening he is not r\l ~ hing vi"orou.,ly for in­ Kennedy Center for Military Msislance, Knuds in Iran BnQ are eve" trllh)i"&, thll public school ll1U ~ t B$SUll1l! an increas­ Iranian gendarmerie in '''counter·ln· vlser III the Whitl! Houle, Walt W, Ro to those on his personal staff \Vho are I ritner bland but pompous title lor the te"rlltion. The time for waiting has ingly Important role in providing this in ­ bag of tricks popularly associated with surgency" tactics. They have carried ()ut ~/.ow, Pllt it this way in 1~64 : "An out trying to persuade him to forget the passed, If hon ignores this fil et, he struction and . . . teachers must be the "professional killers" of tne Ameri· similar mi s~ iollll in Liberia, the ConiQ, slqer OllllllQt ~y ~imself win a guerilh problem.~ of the eilies btocau se the nelV wHl find him~elf ens narled in domes­ qUlllified to teach in Ihis area." can Army who wear Green Berets. and numerous Latin American coun· Wllf ; he CJll help create conditions The resolution urges that "courses in tries. They have "contingency pllln~ " for wbieb it CliO bl\ wlln ; IIn4 be can direct! Rl'pubJican majori ty is in the con· tic problems that will do the same "Th. IItW n.m,," expl.i", th. c.nt.r'. .elVa tive West and Sou tho thing at the polls to him that Vietnam se" education be developed with eare commlndtr, Brig. Gen. Edward M. intervention in "coul1ter,insurgency Jitu­ lI~si~! UlP~ prllpared to light for the' lind that classroom teachers who teach alions" throughou t Asia, MrLc~ , Centrlll Indepen~/1c •. W~ are det~rmined to hel did to Lyndon Johnson. FI.n.gan Jr., ".mphasitts the positive Ihe courses be legally protected frOIll and South America. cjes~rpy this internllt\olllli disease; lh , These staffers have justified their things wt d,. W. Ir' .ui.t." - a ctn· stands by research they have done on We commend Nixon's progrpssiv· irrespol)slble censorship." In setting up .tructlylt f.rce." • They lend m''', fr/.m time ,. Ii",., t, is, guerilla w.r de~igl1ed . initiated, sug the programs, ~chool officials and fa­ plied lind L~ from outside an indepen the 1968 election - callin the el ec­ ism in foreign affairs and in the wt'l­ The center's training director, Maj . A. the Central In,.llig,net 4V'"cy "r '1It~· culty should "work with parents to main­ lal assignments. Th.y tr.i/!lll fila TIt.-1 ent naUQn," tion one of political uphea val. The fllTe arl'a. He has ~ho\\'11 the willing­ Lineol" GcrmaJ), goe~ /I bit furth er. t"in harmonious ,school-community rela­ troops who _r' "'W ~ptr!lli", In Jevt/l Her~ lit Ji't. Brllgg, the /ipecial For ~ upheaval melitis large nUlllbers of vot· ness and the imagination to meet the 'I tions," "In a way ," he says, we're a kind of Vietnam. Th.y .,. wllrk;"~ wltl! N.-· commander~ are of II like mind on th~ ers changed parties and poti tical changing times, He does have a lot Til. ~urr."t IItt~c~ pn IUC~ ... Muu· Peace Corps ." tiona list Chine" 'r"pi 0" r.h¥." ."d iSSlle. They lire s~eptical of the noti~ vjew,. Hut their analysis doesn't seem of lost time to make lip in the area of tio" .nd "mily lIying covrtt., which That is not the Green Beret image that have a tr.ill;"8 d,I"hm.,,' ;11 Itvth ~hllL Ille Unite ~onle/1d that the gen­ ComlJlunist peril. d.v.lI,ped" countries .f till wtrld ., j realigning fllmo t always 0 c (' 1I r $ But mo t importantly, perhaps the nationals in to a civilian army - Civilian eral public is alarmed by the sex educa­ Nor is it tpe image that has come out Irregular Defense Group - that numbers from ~fri" to L"tln Am.riCi. AM th IIlllong the young people whose views Repuhlicans have found Ii RppuhJjean tion courses being given. Yet ,. recent of Soutil Viet/1am in recent weeks as a 40,000 men at the pre~ent time. Since the ar. c.unti"g 011 A",.ric.n int.",.ntio InQ allegiances afe not pennal]ently who knows what John Doe Hepllhli­ newspaper article 'rpm 1\ lars!! SQuth­ result of the arrest of eight Green Berets early 1960 's, it is estimated that Special in ,"a"y .f tiles, IIt"oItia",. fixed in their minds, 11)is me"ns that Clin T"illly wil ilts - and a political ellstern city reported thllt only ba)f of (including lhe former comlllqnder of all FOfPes troop ~ have trained aPout 200 ,000 "We are in ,10 insurgency er.," 'I , the youth of today would he the Vijn­ 'stein cilll 't he rcsprll1si ve wh en it thl! parents of si¥th grade PIIplls in the Green Berets forces in South Vietnam , Soulh!!~ s t Asians to fight the Vietcong Gen. Flanagan . "We t~ill~ that the Spe cOllnty eVlln bothered to r~1l1y (Q ~ qlles­ guard of a conservative fi hift. In light doesn't I'vl'n understaJld what its CoJ. RDbert B. i1heault, anc! Maj . David and l'IQrlh Vietname~e in various ways - ial forces can clo more to eountera tilll1n~ire on their feelin~s abpll~ sex E. Crew of Cedar Rapids) who are under as conventional soldiers, spies, saboteurs, of progressive feelings George Ga lJup members want. - Larry C/umdlcr these things than anypodY else around. educlltion, ~uspioion pC assassinating a Vietij8mese and propagandists. lind Plrt I

P A response to an intellectual UI Arab dl By ALBERT N.KIMIC'~ be apy - mea/llng they would all be These lJew Israelis are as eager to af!· the .\r/lbs of the West Bank to Israel, a n~ tile plight of Jllwish communities in example , provides that If , )tIlM ~ Editor'l Not, - Th. "Iltwlng WI. dead . Nasser and Shukairy unlike Arab quire the culture of their new country becl!use pC Ihi,s assumed "cultural alien­ Arab CQlllltrios, but mOst of 1111 in view clares pu~licly t~/lt lJe j~ • Kurd written ,,, ,~ _n .rti~" which ation " or incompatibility, is doomed to respo'''' iJl~Jl,ectulIl~ , 110 Ml prelenq to be JMCl­ as immigrants to Americil were snlt/ous of tlJll apparent Arab proclivity for the nQt pn. Aril~ , he is liable for /lrrest a Cl 'PPtlrM !III "'il "... I" tIM All" ,. tllllllr!!. In (lIot, Isr!!e) has never at­ suppression of minorities . "!j,eportation " - (rom land Q" whi jlrllte. to ~ecQme "merjc/ll)s. furthermore, Ine Dilly I,W'''' TIl. wrl,., It I .r,;u~. tl!mpt~d slIch lin IIlmllJlltion , nor docs it Ar~b partisans should protest against his people have lived (IIr ti)nIHlnds n~ J~r~el .tud.nt III q"''I_r.tln mtr.hlrt, FIII~e also is antj-Jsraeli ~fm~thy 4rabs within have been RUarao' Qesj,,!! Pile. !srael's aim in regard to the brutal suppression suffered by the years. t I PI The ~rllb propagandl 1.8111"6t Israel fpr the plight of Israeli cjtiz.ellll w nP tee~ tnejr culturlll iclelJti~i' ~y the 1811 t~1! Wf.lst a/ln~ has bee 11 security and nOIl·Moslem blaoks in the Sudan at the 1n /In interview with Eric fl.ouJeau, ~ PrQCI/lmlitlo/l of 1/1~peJldell.ce, alld by lh. IIQrmlll fllnctillning of society. Iu presented by this newspliper Alj~st ~, Clime IIriHlnllllY from Arllb cOllnlrles; hands of their Arab rulers, and the COlI­ Kllrclish 1~lIder , B!lrzani, IIJ1Sw~red their children lire IJOW bem~ ~illed by IIlt.er le~is'atjQJI . Tbe !lltimll~e politioll) status of lhe linuing efforts in Iraq and Syria to Arid) . r!lQuest for j{ljrcjjsh lid in I su departs from earl~er elllmsy Mi~ ~r­ Mlln !lOmmlinifos. These Jews tied to Propllgan~ists oitf,l, for o~t!mple , CliP­ WII~t flilnk inhlllnlllnts, Ii~e a solution to crush the Kurds. slrll~8le IIgJlinst Isr jlel by s~rini. ' " F~ forts by cleverly prll~entllJg b'lItll/1t J~r_el Mlln Ij.ost@y . H~ ho.· Ine! minister Anba En/lIJ's CIInf!'r" the rf!fUle~ »>,oPitm in general, awai ts Professor Smith, a cantetnporary sil( years You nav!! pe~n f)~tlnl ~ sui falsehoods with /l calculatedly reIlSO'" rrpm this tlli~y JIOt IHlen real, Ihey wOllJd h~ve aliout the edYOlltllmll1 pmblems pf Ihe pe!l!;8 neglltllltjo"s, The claim t hat scholar of Islam, writes in his book, tryillg 10 wipe out I/le J{urdjsh peopl m able tone . .6.rab partisllllS try to win for ~" liS i~jlnsitive to ~ionisl clllIs for Isrllelis !rpm 4ran OO\Intries. Hi~ IlOII­ ~lIce \Yllllid bl! IIssllr~ by a "de-Zion­ "Islam in Modern History" (1957) , that so /JPw cal) you cpme nQW an~ .sk I Arab terrnrisl4 t/le /lypport of ~meri· Sll emmlplltilm liS .6.mericljll Jews . 1/1 fs­ corll is 1I0t II sj/i1l of r8oism, bill of o~· ISlltilln" Ilf ISrllel 8/ld Its abandonment "nowhere in the Moslem world (except my help ?" can students Cl)fIcerned willl civil rights. nlel, Immi~~Jlt~ suffer tile lIifnclllHes ficiil' IItlentjQIl to t~e di_tulVII"tlllea, mIIny ~~III,sjve)y Jl!wi~h characterist· perhaps in Indonesia) do Moslems feel Neit~er Israelis Ilnr KJlr~~ ~all affo, ' re The propjlllanqists strly!! to mas.k a fight of immigrllnts I1l1ywnerll, Li~8 Hle Poles, Tne Henrf.lw UniversitY is IItt!!,,~ by ic~ fflilst rilla bill/IIW , oot only in view tha~ a /lon·Moslem Is 'one of us '. And to surrel)~~r to the emply aS4~r.nc for land lIS a fignt ;lgltinst racism , tile Irish, t~e Ilali;ans, lind the Jews Israeli Jews, liS Willi as by Ineli 01 the r/lCllnt history Qf the conflict, the nowhere do minorities feel accepted." 01 prO' AlIl'p proP!lsal)~a ~llelJ liS th I They prellloo that Ar/lbs Itre them­ l !1J1!hl/!Wis~ 11 6Jl1lcts ()I Arllb propaganda , 1'I)e Syrian polic}, against Kurds , for written by Mr . G~8zl AI·G"illi/l1. UI woo ImmiBl'll ell to t~e U.S, , t/JJIy suf­ Arllbs, boUl MQJilem lind Christl(l/l, a"d \ selves JIOt Inti-Jewish , J{owev~r rell'­ fer name1lIllIliIlK II/ld some dlscrlminll' $~lldeJ)t$ frpm .\~III and Mr\ll.· It j. . al suring it mllY be that .\r_b intellectuals 1101) be!!IIIISII pf t~ t/Jclugi)tl8ss~SS IInIl untrpe t It II ~ ~he l~rlleJi Pl'ollibilimt fo are nol, IIJt,-J~wlsh sentiment pJIlY~ lin iJI'IQrll"ce PI .lIQme inqjv!du/lls. Illai/lst i~t8r-rell~iIllls mllrrjll~e II fill!' important ~art tile efforts of Arab 'HOW, SWALLOW HAIOr Se 'I) I8rlllel, liil. the U"Ir.eq stlltes, I~ ot· jst in Ilat!lre, like al)ti'mi~!!e"I),~iI)t) lelders III mobilize the 4rab mil" for fici,IIY III1d ~vefllmellt/lIlY opPO~ to I/lW$. t~ the "holy wllr" against Israel. A'so, I~e ,nYtn'''f le56 lh(ll) CQmplete Meilll lind Mtmillse il) Israel Is ,0Vern" by. present felrful~ltuatio/1 IIf I~e tillY t. politlca aqul!lity, and it bBl!~s ita prll)· rllle~ Qf the rell~iOlls lell~8r~ mI~' r~' temllanla left In Arab cOlJ/ltries of o~ eiple. with _peei.1 lIello,"" suah .s a HSion 10 w~lch t~ inqiviqq/ll bllmI ••. thriving Jewi&l! commllllltil' effectively "Hellqstllrt" p""v,.m tor p'r"-~hQQ~ ~m' In hrllel if YQU ttr~ a memPer II' a r" 0111 destroys any lIIusiDIIl may III" miJl'ant chilQrel1. Israel, I,ke rnll/1Y Ilt~· ligiOfl willen allows 811Gb mllrrilllQ, · 2 about preaellt-dIlY Arab toleralio/l. ar CQUlllrj.s, has ita own prefl!re/llllll Ihey are IBilll. They .re !lilt II.al fer hal Israel has IIl'ee4 to a U/lltad flflltle", irJllnipa~iIlII )IOlic;'~, bIIt, like ,he Upil· Isr/le,1 J~ws sil)ce Jlldllism, liS Iflt!!r­ jac lnvestig.tjon of the lituatio/l of Ihe Pal· 1ft -*111'8, It JIlar."tees without com· prete~ ny Ihe pl't!~"t r., .. 1i ""bbl. estlnlana In IlI'leli-OCCllrtied lerriltrj_, prllmjse lIIe Il;vil I~ reliJiQus ~d po­ with political power, fIIrbi~, t~"' , '"" • 7 on the conditill" t~at the .itu~m. of IiHctd rlJltt. of ii, citizens. IQea or fBligiDIIs mtirriIJ,' I. IIOt rlol.t AP Jewish CORlIfIUllities in Arab ceu/ltrl., To .I!ow that racism a.ista In hrllll, any mQre Ihl!I) i~ th~ CIIIUIllIIjl I".I .../!!!_ bot be similarly il'lVe~tl.ated. 4rab r~jlilC· t~e prqpl!.l1/ldi~ta completely mlsj~ter· Ih.t the chil~l't!/1 of ,. mlud·mM'l'l •• e .~ lion of tbis cOlldition i. a tlclt c:IIIlflr· pre! II" qlll Zillllist jllke, A FrllllCh J,w­ with • Ctltholi/! hi! raised II " C_tl!llllc, lu sl mation Itt J'wis~ f.~r~. I.h lipclor a.ked wftq t~e "barrel~he.~· If the bllsis of I~e PIII'stifliall ,tro.· spa The Islarnlc Conv~.. hel4 III Amma" ad" Ifllifll clnek Wllrker. Wire, Ind 10 ,Ie witn I$rul w!!re gll",~i""Y A•• iII~t In September, 11111, adopted a r~ hi. ~rpri~ rlj!.iv~ t~1 PI'(IIId III~wer !ilion reli.ioll~ innlj~llI!e II" 10"'rflma"t to I tion whlell co"c,uded that "4n t.f"'I~'" that ther were ~,w~: T\JI jPke illu.­ IIQliey, tbl" the pal!!.""i."a .~Id II.· peoples, logelh" a"d li,,-,y, _ boy· t'III •• JI9t a "pulturlll a1iertatlo/l," bUt jClllly be IIppqsed to Pakistal) ,lid SIIlIdl catt the Jews a"d treat them a. ,wllra r.raeli pna. ill th. f11lfilhl1ept IIf ,.rt Arabia which .re jlvPw'flly Jtfllile", enemies," E~Jllian Pre_lda"t Nliller IIf Ihe Zlcmllt drellm of creatinl a atat, .llIles. 'fhi~ inmlendll of racism I_ ol •• r· said, in I .peech on May., 1..." "'lbt where Jew, "lIIIld f\llIClkln 1111 ~V"I')' Iy cllr~lj!(j jOWlird ~meric~". CCI/lCfI1l' battle will be a general one and our ecoftOJl1ie ltvel, ,nd not be afraid to ed with the American civil rights strug· basic ®jective will be tQ d~~roy Is· ,et their hinds dIrty, Jews who choae gle and Invites them to draw false con· rael. " til abandon .fier many .eneratioll! their clusions. III fact, there are black Jews When Palestinian diplomat Ahmtt hQmes ill Arab ~ntrles are not aUe,.. who as Jews face 110 religious or civil problems under Israeli marrialle Ilw.: ~•••• I Shukairy WIS Isked whit would becom. I~. of the Jewish refus", lIter tjIe war, Israel Is proud of I~ ~ ill inti­ Finally. pro-Arab propag,ndists imply be said that be, dida't thiU there would ~ 11'_ thUI 1110_ their JeW bome. that Israel'. supposed i1ieaUOI to IIDU - Continued from Pig. 1 on Chrillian ethles at the time Iher and bee n the subject of with two ostrich plume lans, and . t with a reputation for goading she visited Ihe pro_ram, and, countle cartoons and ne\l'l she', been using similar onel his ceiebrity guests inlo ma~ing when she was asked the fatal slories I! an aulhoress, lecturer ever 6lnce. 'The fana are valued embarrassing statements. One question IIAnd what is the most and actre s as well as a dancer. at $500 apiece and weigh about of the columnist's favorite ploys import8~t thing In yOlJr life She talks excitedly and at length sel'en poundi each, he aid. was to flatter the celebrity inlo Miss Rand? " she relorted, "My about her son, Sean, and her B8- Each one is made up of several a vulnerable complacency, arid relationship with God- now do yeaNld mother. hundred feathers, then ask what the most import- me somelhing you IQnofa- She says her act stemmed It's not hard to believe Sally ant thini in h~ life was. If Ihe bitch I'" from her seeing a flock of Rand was propositioned follow- guest replied, for example, that Th ltd d h ' th herons take 1.0 the air once wben Ing ber first performance in his wife was most Important to ., e co umns oe er nu - she lVas a child. She IIIld h~ Iowa City. him, the host w rot e his next tn. was so moved by the light that As she left The Dally 10'" column about the "sex hang-up" The gal who" had a football he wanted 10 recreate the feel- newsroom, one male staffer re- o! the celebritr. play (naked reverse) and a ing in din c e. She finally marked, "There soes IOltW SaUy was monitorins a course salad (no dressing) named for achieved 111 effect she wanted broad!" Boyd ~ , scores of DI r majors, totally h~led , leaves olfice successlll2 than Immortal Motion to Prevent Autopsy Denied WILKES·BARR~, Pa, tII- A judge denied Wednesday a 1Il0tion Li/l Bill' s May Lose Permit; by the parents of M/lry Jo Kopechne to prevent an autopsy on her , bllt asked a ~assachusetts prosecutor 10 show, withjn 20 days, how an I'IIIOl)"V would resolve "the dou!)t and ~uspicjon surround- 111-..... 1--______Oct. 7 Council Hearing Set 'l'he ruling by Judge Bernard Dinis' petition, saying he has Il's finally happened . LI'l tavern and complaints of sellini C, Brominskj of Common Pleas jurjsdictlon to order exhuma- Court came about an hour after tion jf II was "il'J the public in- Bill's - that c:ampus In liIulion beer to minor., a judge in Edgartown, Mass., terest in the administration of ~ Is up against it, Gary Reynolda, 35, • bartend- officially postponed an inquest justice." Oct. 7 the Iowa City CounCIl er at LI'I Bills ha been charged inlo Miss Kopechne's death in a At the same tjme, he said in These five men ere considered tM top contendln from wlll conduct a hearing at Its with selling beer to minors after ear driven by Sen. Edwaf(j M. a nine-page opinion, Dinis must which e new North Vlltn.m"l president will 1M thoSlfl. The Kennedy (D-Mass.). "set forth sufficjent facts un-l P055ible Ho Replacements five Ire, from left: Le Du.." TIVIfIt Chlllh, Pham V,n Dong, regular formal meeting to de- two youths were charged with The Inquest was to have been der Pennsylvania law to war- Vo Nguyen Giap and Ton Due thing. _ ., Wlrephlto termine whether to revo~e the po ssiOl1 ot beer Aug. 27. opened Wednesday in Edgar- rant an autopsy ." He said Dinis tavern'a beer permit. Smiley'. report also I d that town by Dist. Atty. Edmund must resubmit his petition be. *. * * * * * * * City Manager Frank Smiley. apparently the tavern operator Djnts of New Bedford, Mass., cause so far therl! was "not one * *. who also seeks the autopsy . single filet under oath" before H H 'E t d S did F t' City AUy. Jay Honohan, and has not been asking for idenU- Dinls maintains autopsy evi- lIle court to show why there . 0- e n ere on a n a e ee Police Chief Pal rick McCarney ficalion. As a result, Smiley denee is vital to the inquest, should be an autopsy. have jointly recommended lhat sald. a large number of com- which hu been bLockJ!d tem- Miss Kopechne, a former sec- .' peace but later _ IJ'ke your bribed," J was told. th e counc II revo ke th e IIcense.' paintsI have bee n nce1 ve d. porarlly by Kennedy's lawyers. retary to the late Sen, Rohert BY STAN SWINTON I words I Mr. and Mrs. JOIIeph J Angeles - wbich played the Only liven timel in the lilt over San Francisco if divisional "The thing we need most is Denny Green , a junior letter· shared the fullback duties in New York Mets in a late West 49 Yllr. hlva II mlny II play had not put them in differ· scrimmaging," Nagel said, man , and Levi Mitchell , a soph· Wednesday's scrimmage. Mel· The Dynamic Duo- Coast game - 1¥.t games back thrH tums remlined In can· ent circuits. "and you can only do so much amore, both performed well in endez set an Iowa place kicking of San Francisco in the National tenllon on Labor D.y. The Cubs boasted a five·game of that. We're limited in the the scrimmage at tailback as record last year and Smith was Two ,pots low. footblll COlch R.y N.gel ntad net worry League West. The loss dropped In 1965, four clubs were margin over second·place New amount of scrimmaging we can Mitchell broke loose for three an AII·America prep fullback .btut thil 1I'lOn Ir. middle linebacker Ind offensivt ,ulrd, the Cubs' lead to 4'" games over jammed near the top. The York going into Wednesday do because we have such a runs which would have gone at Waterloo East High School. thtnkl te the "..lInca .f L.rry EI" top, Ind ..... Me.kI"... the Mets In the East. Dodgers finished first by 11'. night. ,mall squad. The thinness of the for touchdowns and Green also Bill Sheeder is another candi­ Ely Iwitchtd from the oH.nlive interior to IInebac"-r .fter \earn Is the big difficulty and had numerous good scampers. date for the position but is out two g.mal lISt year and beclm ••n inltlnt SUCCI... Meski· injuries will jusl deplete our The deftnllvt llCOndery with a sore leg. Replacing Sui· mtn was named to the All Conferlnc. Iquld last yt.r II1II HI ranks." .nd the fullb.ck polltion Ire IIvan, however, is a task which been mentioned II • pollibl. AII·Amarica this year. Before Injuries, cholastic dif· the two preblem Ire.. which is just about impossible . - Photo by Rick GI'HII'WIIt Starr, 12 Teammates I

c. On AII-1960s Team DES NEW YORK IA'I - Sonny Jur· si"'rtd centtndt... fer ttIIt Grogg, gUlrd Jerry Krlmlr, cleared center , fI.nker vio ..tinll gensen, and Johnny allllm. Itlm. boards of Unilas - all still on view for Jurgensen, now with Wash· , hllfback Plul Hornung, fullb.ck Jim T.y· Bllt It pro football fans - have been ington, has completed 1,7. lor and beeq a named to the all·I960s tea m passes for 23,876 yards and 191 m.... the tum. Defenllvely, whether Code commemorating the National touchdowns . Starr has hit, on it WII WlIlie D.vil ., end, of Football League's 50th anniver· 1,552 for 21,262 yards and 135 RlY Nitschke .nd Dive R.b· had been sary season. touchdowns and Unitas has inIOn It lineb.dctr, Herb Ad · 11 ~aid The trio of premier pluerl, completed 2,272 for 33,160 yards dar ley It h.lfblc:tc .nd Willie who combined hIVe Ittempt. and 254 touchdowns . Wtad at Slltty• • d .Imolt 10,000 p.sses for Starr. the quarterback during Besides BrolYn, Sayers, Hor· ; I lome 45 mil.. In completion the Green Bay glory days un· nung and Taylor, y.rda;e, w.r. lis'ed on I 40· del' Vince Lombardi, is joined and were the man .qu.d th.t .Iso included, on the team by seven learn· other running backs selected. besides SI.rr, 12 other memo mates who worked with him The receivers. besides Dowler, bers of tht Gr.en B.y Pick. on offense and five Packer de· are Gary Collins, Del Shofner, erSt fenders. and John Mack· The players were honored by On offenl., Ilcklt Forrest ey. '.' the NFL with their inclusion in ------'------a book called "The First Fifty Off · E I · Years, " published by Simon enslve Xp 0510n5 and Schuster Inc., as a salute to the NFL's 50th season. The B 8 team is one of five selected, d .t .I • one for each NFL decade. Expecte n g An alltime NFL team will be KANSAS CITY 1m - If 1968 Hant running and passing quar· announced laler and almost cer· was the year of the offensive terback, shoots for the all·time tainly will include some of the explosion in the Big 8 Confer· hurricane the likes of which members of the al1·1960s team Big 8 total offense mark. ence, 1969 cou ld be the year of Lynn Dickey, Kansas Slate's headlined by the three quarter· the holocaust. Camille was a ever seen. . backs and such other outstand­ Four of 'he Itlgue'l brig"t. rocket·armed passer, bids to ing stars such as Jimmy Brown est offensivt sl.rs of If.. re· break aerial marks just hung and . this country haS nl11ght~f ~~gust 17th,It tum, .nd that mun, Inoth.r up by Oklahoma's departed Bob Jurgenlen, Slarr Ind Unit· reft of confer.nce record, Irl Warmack . II all would have to be con· likely to f.lI. And, Kan ..s fullbldc John '. s-tarting-on-the u h LOUISiana, Steve Owens, Oklahoma's punishing lailback , gullS for all· Riggins comel thundering 't waY thro g a time collegiate rushing and right behind Owenl .. one ef scoring records as a prime the I.. gue', all.tlmt top ripp~d ~ 5 i and AI~barY1d \Nest Virginia. Heisman Trophy candidate. Ireund glinars. AI • "ph.. Bob Anderson , Colorado's br\l· r mort I.. t yt.r, Riggin- MiSSISSIPdP d Virginia a~e hundreds. I.ined more y,.rd.,e thon Owens .d hi, first lel,on. td It floo e 0 Ie bY t he thous.a nds. In addition, there are somPllrd ta highly promising newcomers. lJ·rest • I It killed by busJnessmenand this category are tailbac~s Ron whi PI g~:J11es ~rY1all Jessie of Kansas, Dennis Mc· I J ; Donald of Iowa State and Bobby Ul stroye. unties? ~ Cole of Oklahoma State, quar· cit r de , pled CO rn1en. f Americans terback Jack Mildren and t he AM •• 'C;=' LI.OUI flanker Roy Bell of Oklahoma, It en P nd fis nOs 0 ' Hallimort -:!4 ~e~, ~I ~~;:er a~JffO~~!~:~~:c~f ~~~ (5 a hOusa ~:!rg: ~ ~ In W~ Brownson of Nebraska. f ~::I~~~~n ~~:; : ~ ~' ~ Despile the abundance of of· armed it left t aits. are. there right 191 NFL Touchdown TOlSes Clevoland 54 B2 .,!/'7" fenslve talent, the defenses are Mlnnesola w.:: 52 .m what lhe coaches think might . An erate str lunteers can, butthe g:m~~~la ~ ~ :mJ~ decide the teBm championship Twins Up Leacl Kan ... City 54 M .403 2B - shared last year by Okla· ~~!~~~o ~: :;;: r. ~ homa and Kansas with Missouri In deS! croSS1/0ything thrr tlJ'ke $15,000,000 To 6~ Games W • I 'Iy'a a.lUttI a close runner up. Mlnnesot. 7, Clovellnd 1 na Wi Over Oaldancl Oakllnd 7.!, BOllon 4-5 Oklahoma, Nebraska Bnd Mis- su Re ing ever saYs i,t. f ,American g:~oli.!ie:"~:d~~~ , souri all can be expected to bt MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL 1m Tu ••dIY '. Lit. Itllult. championship contenders be· rei - Tony Oliva's single broke a New Yorl< 5, Seattle 4. 15 Innln,. cause of thei r defenses . 'Mle ) now, d~stirY1ate u~an05 on pack on their feet 'roINbl. Pitch ... scoreless tie in the sixth inning Mlnnesotl, Perry (11-1) at OI.It· Sooners, porous much of 1968, At lind, Nash (7.7). N I d b C h Ch k F . wher. ~el un re and Harmon Killebrew followed Chlclao John (&-10) II CIlllornla, are ra e y oac uc air· latest thOse thO d child Right now, MIY (&-ul... N banks as vastly improved de· ture II • with his 39th homer as the Min· Kan ... 1..,ly, Drl,o (7·11) .t Se.t· . a I nesota Twins and Dave Boswell tie, Gelnn (2.'), N fenslvely , While Nebra ka could foreign to put rflen an can. - (IW) D.· fOi defeated Cleveland, 7·1, Wednes· Ir:.~~t1~~~~ ~m:u, It have one o[ the naUon 's tough. like u/llor 0 U day. Only ,1m .. ..,heduled. eat units, and Missouri Coach sociatlen men, '1'1 e/11 aII yO . The Twjps, who erupled for NAnoN'A'LL ..oul Dan Devine always sartA by bargliJIin , . t five runs ill the sixth, increased 1It:t L I'cl. II constructing a rugged defense. At lb •• ive th \/e go " ChlcIIO derUn,. G Iheir lead to 6~ games over xNew York " H :lli 41 ~ However, the oHen.es .tln , 811 they runnerup Oakland in the Ameri· PltIBbur,h ~~ ~ .531 t~~ Ire e.pected te ."Ie the .....t the gov.r St. Louis you re can League's West division. The XPhUld'lrhll 53 7. :~i 28'h In 1N', .nd thl", why Kin· head Ilf t · 2 A's split a doubleheader at Bos· Monlrea n t5 .301 421t liS Ind Color.do ar. includtcl Was forc Wilt har ton. Sail ~'rallcllCo 78 ~i . 5&3 .mo", five telml IIlven IIrl. ALibi ~ jac, xLol Angeles 73 St .553 1IA1 ous title conllder.tlon. l><>rtunlt)' . Rod Carew doubled 10 open Cl ncln n.tI 73 St .553 10,; 07 the sixth inning and scored on Atlanll 74 13 .540 J Kanss Slate and Iowa State, quesllo/le Hou810n 70 M .522 S ~ AP Oliva's hit. Klliebrew slammed xSln Dle,o 40 14 .m S5 ~ both rising ra pidly under the Sincerity, bou a two-run homer to the opposite l - L.t. 'Ime not tn.luded eager coaching of Vince Glb. whether w.dn ....y" Itttult. oM field off Indian starter Sieve CIII

Warren Resigns as Iowa GOP Head 'I · th t ren's SIIee.llGr. but that It Sild Warren had done I" out. DAILY owans now recognIze a would be premature for him to standing job in the post. . discus I them now. 8y ateppillg dOWII now. Red- my and The I!lVllmor. • qid he milQ ,aid.. It &lve! wh~ver perso' nal - poll·f,·cal knew Wlwtn·. reaip.tiotl wu o$ucceeds him an opporturuty to IOWAN • C1lmh!& up. praiJed the tor,,"r get well . established [or I h e

'n~res~a~un~~~~ be~.~~"~'~~~*~. missed. He played a major "The poor guy has been un· -~~~=~=~~~=~~==~~~=~~~~=~~~===~lAIN FOI SALI MOillE HOMES CARE DES MOINES (All _ Jack conflict. role in our great success of duly maUgned ." said state Warren. Iowa's state Republi- In a prepared statement 1968." highway commissioner Koert TEN ACIIU I.. 1a,.1 ~... . Alta I'" - a'.,,' rIlONTlEJI . e.... l.d. BABYSITl'EII IIIJ' ho ••• n,u IIbrcy III .... tina. Ph... "'.... , . Irtl" A.tlabla ellat.. 1317.13 IlD.,ttai and W, • )1._ 137. etn chairman whol' trucking Wedne.day. Warrell .aid. "I Others also tossed III bou· ~oorheel. a Cedar F.lla Repub- 1.. 11 Itt., •. ... 71,1. .."

tMublls Itlrred a controver.y 1m confident that knowledg. quets. . . U~~. ,.,..,.. DeYI I It ...... Wtr4 ' over his effectlvenes. III run. abl, Iowans now reC1lgnize that Charles Wltt~nm.y.r , lI.tlCllI· . We have Ittempted to treat AUTOS, (Y(LIS 1101 .tiI II'" De., ...... Uc. W.~ WANTED ~ ~ u/ .. :;..I;!.. oJt;t IIing the GOP POlt. resl..,ed my personal and political Illter. II GOP commlttlllftU f r II III hiS firm In the same way we III' IUlex IKYLAIUt ...yortt_t- T", DI'fI ...... 1ft • W.,. -rr-Y-O-v-NUI)....--.-'D-O- ...-llll-te- . -I &MI. ... Wednesday. ests were unrelated. Therefore J).venport. "id he "" ,':'"1 Ire~ IllY other. ~ut u~fortun· - ,011, .f,r"... I'll... .,...... 1,.I.r II.. lIu ••nt •• ~ .,Irt. WAHTEtl lI11oll~ IIIJ' 11 .... , Warren co-owner of Wlrren I can resign with • clean Ilate to III Warr.1I leave. H.. Itely It hll ~mehmes .ounded -:::==.,---=-::~-:-..;;..~l. 0tIt MIIItIt ...... SSt • Wtr4 1II ••t t. ell,.. for I" ,ur. ""If ii._ --' 1, W • ••v i.ti IftWl.Y rewln'. "tl,u'n M..... a .. ,. W...... "rtl.r do·"to ..... Uti. I'bU JleiMl· CIII ... AI;." ....· ..• ...... 1·' Transport Inc of W.terloo for reasons thai are truly Jl4:r. been I fine chairml/l," Witten· .s though he as a person is reo '"fin, ..o,k Jull ...""I .• I.td.... If ...."",,,, - ..... lor. IDI lOS J ....U . tt. ... phon, __--__ M_. ______took ove; the ·.t,te'l RepubU: sona!." meyer laid, "working dUi~~IIl- Sponsible for crowded high· PI In . tVI.lnfl. IIMNI. .." Cl.AIII"IIO OIll'LAY ADS 111.." . ..,. HVMPTY.DUMl'TY , uno". kb ..l 1111 coltvnn: Cou,.. p,rt•• l. """n1n. In Seplt1llber Ilu fill can chairmalllhip In 1167, reo Wlrren's resignatloll marked Iy ••nd we will ml.s him . w~y •• bumpy ~oads and evert j~ Chl.Y Lillo •••••,...... 0... I ....rtl'" I MItIth • ,,.'" iii GU GIIAD l . STUDENT IPh D. ...and .. lor nU.ltO' "'hool I.d placing Rllbert D. Ray, now the second time thls summer Redmln. c.IlI,~' the lob I~ lhll)g ela~, WhICh is wrong m 17 '001 1I~.r .11" """1 ..lib .. .._..... In Arl Cd., ,,'!ED HOUSE OR ~ ·'h I II" S ~. H I S'- L R.I'. M"oul')', ,,041 .,.dlU.n l,,· "'v. I...... Mt • -.. ,'.35' APARTK!NT end aooMMATS , •. p·laI·'-••070...... p 0 1:::11' Iowa's governor. a leading figure has stepped .tate ch.irmlll a real crtnd, the Itate. eluclln, tr.lI,r• •• ¥Ir.... . II1J .... T I__ ~l__ ...... '1 _. HAVJ: rUIlNITUR&. Writ. 801 3U. D ...... ~ 11 Dr. C.. I...... ,I.!JII or .SIot ••, OIL .. ----...... •• .... Dilly 10 ..111. ... The trucking problems pop- down from the state GOP or· * *...... 21t .., ;=.======;;;;;;:;; WUlTED - 'UY IIItJu - 1ft)' j'"~ IJON'DA ... 'u,.r.llift. CIII ' ..... ,., ..... Celumll IIId! hOlDe. I'lnkbln. P.rk 3,l'o!SN ped up when the Iowa HighwllY ganization. CHI T k H · WUt. Llb ..l, 'ZHOH. 1O>llrn PHONE 337 ~191 IAlYIiTTER NEEDID H. , . Commission accused Warren Richard Redman. executive ost a ts rue earlngse 4U'I'0 JNIiUIIAHCIi. GI'/II.'II Jly. '" CONJ'lDINT dill. u .....k dl1L Transport of violating over~iz· secretary of the atate central , lUll yOU"~ ,.11' -t."ln. U"Iv ....1ty f.mllr ".... 1N1ty. Lor •• Ind •• r pll~ rOOllI lI.ar Ctly WelHI A '.oY. nos 'r...... NI,1I1lnd. .Itter It m., heme, _ .... _., HI,h. "'UI. ... ed load permits. committee for several years. CDurt. Ofl • SlI .UN; hl ... 1 U,· -- 341$. Considerable publicity sur· resigned to organize a private Group/s Ch·lef Doubts Valu ..fI.... Ift.mHIIl. 12·5:30 p.m. Twe WANTED - .llt'f IIlemoM M08- 11117 }fONDA OA"11k • . ','" .1111. ,hIWr.", 4-5 ye.n ,1,11 .y·Jl'rhIl1 oro,. Pltk uP ...y .... rounded the dispute. with crit- political fund raising firm . e £,.,II •• t fondltlon. hr., up Ie $1.18 If light.1eI. httu ... 1!!:!"4. til ______.Id 'lrl II Monta""rt Pr• .scb.ol at ics c1aimini Wlrren'l effective· The GOP headquarters here ~""~ it." ,1. II. Pr.'.r older ness as state chaIrman was said a successor to Warren AMES III - St.le HI,lnJlY lruclcera InlenUonaUy load their IGNITION "..,111, .tltIed. Own trlnlpor. 11'0",," Inl ....t.d In ChUdrID. CIII '1'1," prtferrtd. C.II .lter· ' ...1011 bel... • p.lIIo ... hampered by the dispute wit~ would probllbly be lIamlld at a COrnrnisliQn Chairman Derby vehjcles. they do nol intend CAUUIlITOlt' nHns .... Int.rvlew. the highway commission. central committee meeting next Thompsoll Wednesday question. wUlfully to violate the law . GINER.TO~S STAltTI.1 SEUCTIIIC TYl'EWJlmll. " ... HI,..,.. Warren, rill. In In"oullelnl his week. lid the merit ot hearing. bejni Commissioner Koert Voor· Irl'll & Strltf811 Mettrt .Uta. Laltlro. 1II0rl p'pI". th. la 1'------' WHO DOES IT? JI\oe~ln'. U1-t31t. ' ·J7AR resignation. ~aid he had con sid· RllY , reached lit the National he Id for truckers wh 0 violate hees (R-Cedar Falls) . who rec· PYRAMID SERVICES T HAJU) TO m 0' hi'" to pi ....' ered making the move last Governors Conference It Colo. JOW!!'! overaizlld vehicl, laws . ommended the 30 and .5 day MARY v, IVRNS; Iypln,. /111111.0,· HilI' WAN ED Ripley Shirts IIU.r mid. I. fout 621 S. Dubullue 0111 U1·S1U raphy. ollIY Publl •. 415 I.... m.. uromont.. rro"" ,1045 13'· spring. but had helll on in an r/lpo Springs, Colo" said there "The cOMt of holding these suspellsions after he conducted lilal. I.nk lIulldln,. 5I7!"" ' ·27 CAR HOP 11'0/1 DAYS. lull or parl. 7214 . 100C effort to clear the air of any are several possiblllties as War· hearings may go beyond Ihe a hearing for the truckers Aug. ______Jl:IIIIY NY .... LL . I:la.I,le 11M tf'" A;~'l'; ' In IU::~O"~ A:~r~rt~~ . WASIIIM AND 1lI0NlNGS It.. . llood they do." ~aid Thompson . 1. did not oppose the two-week ItO OMS FOil UNT In, forvt.a. "henl I,.ISIO, I·IIAII Coulvllli. 10,.1'" lonlbl •. "h.1 I$I~ IIo!7AJ1 a Burlington ReN'bllcan. "I postponement recommended by ------ELECTJlIC mmo - ,dIUn •. ~l ' IDOHIN'" tud nl boy. In" 1'" INGLE 1I00MS _ .,111 _ , .. du. ".rlln". CIU ISI·MII. "\llIn "AltT·Trn I'll Ell. E.perl.nr " ,, - C.II 337: think there are some other Commissioner William Gray Il.. prol ...... d. p .... ln.. SSM.. _S\'. •.d~ 'll~ob~" E.... " K.n·, st.r. ...:: 21fJrl'~ lOll IIM_hllter. 1.30A1t ways we can handle this with· (R-Cedar Rapids ). • I Ethics Committee j hid' h . " Be' th . t t' MiSe m. SAL. -- fl,UNIUl'fO KATH ., lIu1e IiIIU., ou. 0 Ing eanngs. .ore elr nex mee Ing. NIC"; ROOMS lor lil'l.. C)o.. to _____._ TTJDf;NT or .M. to operat Ilrlv ~ . ~t ''''~ . NlJA[t Thompson directed the com· commissioners asked attorneys •• mpu.. Dill .....,., nl.I~~ WJfJlIVOOL ..... h.r Ind drr.r. 0 In D.I O' lon 337.",1. ,... HAND TAlLO 110 hIM 11I,,"lIon •. mis~ion st~ff to dlltermine C1)SI. to define "willflllly" for them ROOMS WITH eookln, ,."II."a. w:~:~~IC T,*~:I ...w~~::/II dJ~~ ; ;VLL TIME .nd plrt.Ume "I"'l ssa.~;!t dtt .. Ind Iklr ll. Pb~~ of the five hearings held since so they could read trucker's tes· 101.1 ••tudlnt. ~VlrJ1 . CIII In. lwln b.d •• compllt •• th'fl d• •k men. Apply In person. Ew " - --- Clears Stanley 2211' UO. U',ll' ",I..,. ""1 S. DIAPER by March which have resulted in timony with the definition in Inor Clo .. In. 10 · ~ I~d I' .4 ",.n·, Stor., ,. Cltnton. ~ RENTAL ServIce Neiw ------ru, Procesl Laundry. 113 S. DubuquI. DES MOINES 1.4'1 - The Senate Ethics Committee on a 4.3 vote numerous permit suspensions mind. ROOM FOil 'tldu'l. ",.""p. N. 'MITH.cOIlON~ 11"."rll... wid. Phone 137·"". t.z3AII .mokln,. no cookln, Jlnl~I, wilk. .Irrll,". u.ullanl tondlllM. C.· cleared Senate Majority Leader David Stanley (R·Muscatine) of ror truc kers. The firms invo Ived are : In, dlltlnee. 315 s. lohn.on. 10.3 dar Rlpld. 3M ·nOt. ,.to SPORTSMAN'S LOUNGE IDEAL GIFT "U,l·. portrait - . I' th Se • h' I Th . . t d Al'~ { M h' Co B L --- - - ch lld ..n or Idull.. P.ntU. chi" VIO atmg e nate s et lca code by appearing before two local e CO/1IIl)18sI0n pos pone ",r er ac Inery .• . . L"RG! POUIL! fOl)". I!I~ St, KqBIL! "/'ID I" ! 01 111.110 •• In· . NHtlI 11111 tllM 1Nrttn4er. •.. 1 0.0 •• Pllttl ,00, OU $8; 00 boards of tlU: review. SIIspending annual permit. of 17 ~nderson Inc., Ba~sett Con· prlv,te b.th . <'rpttd. HOI' hoI' lenn...... Iii 'Ie. lh.. onlbl" 1 up . ....0210 8-IRC But It said there would have for the Crane Co. on it. plant In Iowa trllcklna firma fOllnd to be struction Co. , Denniston & Par. lliis. No wokln,. no omokln,. IS?' IoIS.5U. Well ,In b ovenln... """'lfr t.r Dv,ou'. Aile l;i;CTRIC ,HAVJ:R REPAm M n ruo. ,u ,., part tl",. blrtend.n, fII" I!Id hour ...vl ... K.~lr · . Buber Sbop beeQ a lOS e rio u s question" Washington. Iowa. Slanley • • n "willflllly violating" the law tridge Co .. Delermann Blick· SINGI,E, doub'.I. ~an or wo",an, IIII ACRE rAR)r {Oint •• SU,I' Bo\. llirt time w.il ...... , tvll e.a whether Stanley violated the attorney. was retained by the because , truckers Slid. they did top Ipc ., T. E. Mercer Truck- ~Ilch.n prlvlle,". TV. 1$1 .77:.'. tom ,ov.rn",.q ,round H.. old 11m. til" _Ir' 11\41 IllArt tllM I k h d fl . Co E I Co 338-6513 . "JT hOl/", ·barn Ind d.ep well. Mo U ~ ..... Code of Ethics If a state agllPcy irm to represent it. not now ow to e ne "will· Inll .• b en nstruction Co .. ONI! HALr 01 doubl. rop.. - hl.h .roun4 ... It~ ,ood vIew. Whit. "itch." help. TH' WHISTLING GYPSY , had been m· volved. Brinck said Stanley also In. fully." Farmers Mercantile Co .• Glese mill, clo .. In. DI.I 151..1115. 1ln,·K,rr 1I_lIt~ . UHIU. 1.lnln._ ,.. e·SOtln It .... ,,~$IO . .., Jlhone 251-9601 .r m·"77 Utttl fIIl'llllur, If prlc ... : It said some of the statements pesred before the Newton Muni· -'I am nol convinced they are CoIlstruction CP., Grosse Trans· SINGLE-- - IIn.n. furnl.hed. Impt. UiED rURNl. TUIlI:. .appll.nee., fit.r I". n ""n t • 1" attrjbuted to Stanley in his two W.. k4IY' - 1:00 '" p."'. see~iIlg property assessmenl re- state of ·mind ." Transport Inc .• Kiburz Seed CO. G I\~~~ ;';ul;:,l~fi:tin~~r• . ~,~~ : J~II'::'ta:u.,1~r'" .t.. DlI. ~ .n hour I~ '.Ylnet S.lunl.ya - n:" t. S p.m. ' ductions for two Iowa firms. Mercer argued that while and SPJlhn & Rose Lumber Co. 33 7_.24_47__ _ __9._ 21_110 -- ,t... ,.1. .ftm,I", clreyl", .1 h • ." '"' JSI"%42 In a statement issued after an "Ott ,ALE, SPINIT PIANO YI. HI ","trl.1 '0 .UW .r "". afternoon-long closed door ses· WI au,,.., Iv,rythln,. Itnd ..II Wlntl'" ~ ..,."Illt'l ,Irt, It ~ion to consider the charges. MEN STUDENTS 'lk. ,Vtr I... .,oMhly plym.nu .iitt.... IlImp.' Invll.,.. "'coe"," Coralville's Got Busesl I~ I IlIln.1 ,II~ •. C•• be ..an VI,,, .~, N.... lI.i.1I DIP"I. lrought against Stanley by Rep. Itc.lly. ~,"uctt UnU",IIU. '"r. Al·ln. Adriall Brinck (D·West Point) 21 .r OVI~ W.. dlturv. N.J. "'nl. Wllk ~"',I" Ind M'". Wrllt c;r.~r, ""nl"" '10" ,llneiGuill,... """'. dru"..... ,In. & the committee said: ' .0. !I'. 176. Ih.lbyvilll, I"dl,n. .,.,... 1 •• 11 1",lrutll.n "This committee is of the But They Don/t Know How South Quadrangle IILL HIU MUSIC nUDIOI (, •• ' ',Ithl,', fl~w., Shop) opinion thal the conduct a The City of Coralville is oper· · Transit Authority for similar In.I1I' ot HOUSES ~It ItINT legislator should be the same be. ating buses that used to pelong equipmel11. is now r'f,rv,d WANTED fore local and mUQicipal boards. i. • I I .... bel th I I f to Co~munJty Trans t. ",C., ""t Although Blgeiow said Ihe I ...IN' •• ow e eve 0 a state agen· the C.lty government isn t Jure Council was not sure Scheetz.s for you. ond cy. as is required by the rules h t t th Seve th ... r.nl m~s', h b f o,~ I g? em. ,ofter was a "valid" one, coun· .,~ For It"m 11141 •• Wlt'~ .,.ur .qully grow :ge~~y8~pearing e ore a s I ate I We eLthe~ bough~ the m or cilmen voted to accept the lIift. LIM TY they were gtven to us." M.yor . . Dr It.. ", O!t'y N.w h.m•• from $3,tsf ...... AT•• The Senate Code of Ethics. Clar/!pce WiJ/iOn said Wednes. . Wtlsoll said ~Vednesday ~at UNIV IlSITY HOU,tNG U*, him" fr.m $1.7S0.oo ~tIIt Illttl plym,"h. Pull or Part-Time adopted by the 1969 le~lature. day. "It'B nllt certllin yet." htles to the vehicles. were bemg 3i3.,,~ prohibits appearances by legis· The city government has been transferred to the ~Ity. but tb~t YALUY HOMES - s.. - iator$ before state agencies on Ioperating the former Community officl.ls wMe shil uncertam ~~~~~~~~~= 4SS~ hi Ave. $.f;. Ced.r l.,IIII, lewl Mr. Sc~m.,.h.' behalf of clients for pay. But it Transit. Inc.'. buses beLw~e/l w.hetl1~r the buse w~re beill~ A'A.TM~NTS !£'OIt ~INT 3"·7101 tel.ph,"e makes 110 mention of local gov· Coralville and lowl Cily since gJvj!n or sold to the city. rHE D'llY IOWAN ernment agencies. Tllesday. WANTED - Grad . •tudeql ., ",.1. '.::;;;:==;;;;;:;;;;;~~;=====;;;;;~ • E d over %I. har, Seolad.11 Ipt. 2 i" The committee &aid 8 local Commu,uty Transjt c e a sed IT WO SItes ye b.droo... . fu.. Jlh,d. p.ol. "H~7 . board of review does not con· operation with Friday'S last run. ·n COMMERCIAL ARTIST stilute a state agency and there· SEN. DAVID STAN~IiY The Coralville City CQIlllcU I For Iowa City's ~~:'~~ro:~oru~~~d "~l~~yjrr:. Ct4,r R."ltI, ~yertl'I"I/P.R. Firm W."tl ctm,".rcll' for~ t~ere was no grounds for Clured by Ethics Comm;tt" had acquired AUi. 1 an option JIll 13704514_.___ ..u .",IIt 10 w,rk en per/ jelt f.. 1t.11,. MUI' h.v' OWl! IUPl'II.1 Brmck s charges against Stan· to purchase Community Trlnsit Federal Building LARGE STUDIO rOom with eookln,. I,", working I".' Shouh' h.v... me ~".wlttlge of Gr.""I. ley. lower property assessment for after Coralville voters had au. co:l~.~ ~~4rno", ,pI. ,"d , • r~~ Arh ,ntI lit r.... nlilly "mlllir wllh camm,rcl.t 'IKII"I· ~ue.. ProfeSllon,1 'lIptrience i. nice bul 1101 thlt impor. But it said It would recom- the Maylag Co. He saId Stanley thorized in • July ~ referen. Two locatlons are b~ini serio AMANA. TWO.bad.""", _ unl"r~ '1 "",t. rJlltlfll, erutlvjly .,,11 • 1"9 mt4el mlnll I., a"t mend to the 197~ legis~a~ure that was not hi~ed b~ May tag but ap- dum. c~nti/Wation of the bus ously c~n~idered for the site ot I~~ed , 15 mlp"" C9",,,,ijl,. W. ve,y. W. ""lllIer 'V' Im"rt."t only in win,1 I!III ch"Ie.' the Iowa Public OffiCials Act peared as 'a fnend of the court. service undep ,. municipally Iowa City s soon to be built led. Chrl,ten. "OX 201. "H1I1. ' ·It r ... lometltin, they lie .t '/ldljlnapolll; en4 ralliioul ,.lth passed in 1967 and the Senate ~o to spjlak.'· owned system. era I building. City Manager WESTWOOD Ulln·lulUty • b.d. I IIInny nem. f,r .. girl . Fae Is $10,00 ~r 1)0", If you I,e Code of Ethics be amended to He accused Stanley of using That referendum was held Frank jimiley told the Iowa City hQ~~~ J~I\~' r2~ ~q~~~.r~~~. t~~ r •• lly tH4. $10,00 ptr ~our If you "re rully .... d .nd we inciudll "loca.1 ~~d municipal the sta~;ls "po.Litical po~er after Raymond Scheetz. presi- City Counoil Tuesday. ~~ . ~;~/O'k . Adult. only. rom VaG foolishly IIlrlt4l ytu e/lYw,y, boards or bodies . structure to gam sub~ta~bal dent of Community Transit. an· The pre~el1t Post Office _ite '1'W HIGH 111,1 A"A.TAo\~"'TI ,.11 "4.1," CMlr Re"ltll .ft", Sept. : for IPpolll'men' Br/llck aid Stanley l1a.d ap- property assessment . rj!ductlon8 J1o~nced that his lirm would and the Clinton Street parking MARRIED COUPLEi. Gnd .IU •• "'I. ,itlter low. Clly 'r Ceda, Rjllitll. pear~ before the ~ash'"gton for both com.pames an.d have to fpld because of financial lot are the two proposed loca· de~r:r:::: ~t~nf:.J:o~ s~:~\~ ~~: ~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~••• ~~iiiiiiii~~~;;;;;;~ i County l3j)ard of ReView to seek e¥pre,~, se. d the. opmion .t.hat Ihls lIiff,'culties _ despit- a f15-per. tlon. tor the buildjng. .\,,0( p.,ktn,. S'''''l prtv.,. I>UI. ddt t h hi r, ".. All uIUlU.. paId - hone IS... ., ... a re uce proper y assessmen was Ig y Improper. day SUbflid >,. Whthlch fllhe ~i~y /1i~t Smiley told t~e Council memo ~~~. ~t.YI'LOWXII. l1l0 No. P-:'j been prov ld In~ e rm BInet I bers that P 0 & t Office officials e f d d Oa'~be .. SPICIA" ~UMIfI" RATIIII. Ja,.. eft wa8 oun e In .., r. are conaidering acquiring the Itudlo~ also NOIII. with __ oU"• . OU t cropplngs 0f DIscon en A tbr.·1l111n bQard of trustees remainder o[ th e block where ~pnp':n ·~on~~:. IlM~9: G(J~blth«r. was formed . to . Illake . Irrillge· the Post Office i. now located ,•• , . m Brown. ,",U" m~"ta for brlnllni a cltY.Qwnl1d on 28 S. Linn St. or trading the rtlMALIL ROOWKATI flu •••t II - Amang Young Govt I Lawyers bus line ~"todopeFrarjhd· oll. H A present Post Office land and ..r . ;n~~~~511.lx roo .. ,parl ••t. That 0 y IIY 0 ere." building for the Clinton Street ~"'kE; ' RQPlCj\I~'f.l'l or ~o~pl, for WASHINGTON III _ In three The lawyers at lUSt' nd Scheetz 8 total 0' f3,50!1 fQr h,s par~iJlg lot. Iwo bedroom lurnlshed. Ilr cOn' In ~ Ice a firm 's three buse$ _ plus IijO for .. 4ltloned. Sept 'I!\',OO. Byron III_II. gov~rnment offices where poli· t~e I!ntipoverty agency ques. each of three coill boles hlstal. S~ll1ley said, the ~econd alter. !Jo IdlY narden .. pt. If". e·, cy IS SUppo ed to be followed, lioned Ihe direction their offices led in the vehicle_, n/ltJve WQul~ l~volve the pur~h. n:~r M~~! . G~I~ ~:~~~!~ 'ii03.; ~~c~::;~:~ th:~e S~~de~IY ~r~ were heading _ policy. M State Sahetlz iJldlf."tJ~ . rejected ~:t =~ ~et~~t~I~:~~~;:lng monthly. 338-4326. t.aQlfp amonl young lawyers Shi::d ~o the Issue was internal reform. the ~ffetr ·d~ ~fl"lIed"rtldIC~ltt " o~~pr.~~~QQrurnf:t~ci ~~~,~V1l1J'i . , an d lOS e/l 0, er ° lIya "e L D " , utUlU.$. '115.00. 33'.7148, ....1;'41 . do t~e Nlloll admlnistrlltion ~ FQremost. HIe I1'QUP wants bu... to tile city. Coralville Tne ar y owan fo27 hendlwork. the State DI!Pllrtment tp recog· cQllncil/llll!l Jllm •• ~Icelow. who 'ubll.hld by Itu •• nl 'u~t1C1' At t~e State Department. IIi ze the Foreign ~rViQ8 AS~Q' was mayor prQ te", Fri~ay tlon, I~C . C~"'II!U~le_I'.n' C;t.· where decorum I. as second n8' clation as their sole bariaiuillil while Wilsoll w.~ OIlt of town. ."iJ~'Jt::~ ~~:jjl~I~II,::IIYh;I~~:~! GO HAWKEYE ture II • sharp tro~ser crease. agept and to sign a contract said then that the price offered :~'"r!': ~:y '!~:~d 11~I~SI~~.,:rl.~ 1.2 •••11, .. '" " .... "'.,... f?reilll service officer. t.alked giving the IssociatjOl\ this auth· Scheetz w.~ eoftllllrable lQ tIla~ I. tho ,Oil .ffle, " I.w. City ftr like UJllon men ISkin~ their IS' orily. asked lIy the Ceda, Rapids ~~~:~ ~h;a,~ct .f Cln ..." at sociatlO/l be recognized as a The Dally lQW~" " ,..rIU.~ Ind bargli1lln« alent. Idlted by .tud.~tl .1 lb. Vnlv.,· I CONVENIINCI At the Justice De~rtment un· Ii\}, .t 10WI. Oplnlo,," I,prtiiad In ,_. ~djlorlal colul1ll~' of thl piper derlinll refUBep 10 repre~ent The Daily Iowan', ore IhDII of lb ...rll.n. o .",.... 1ft the government In court and the A... parkin, .,,'" C.mpu' '"I clltt41 "111 I. entilled ~ubll( , PI'IVI" ~, head of the civil rights division ' tn~ ,,,eluslv. III' lor rlgubllc,. II,,,. \lOll ill loCal II ".U II III AI' a.w. was forced to do It. University Cal ndar Ud "'p,tchea, Op. At the Office of Economic 'UII'~'~t10" 11" ... By •• ,rl., In portunily, 1I0vernment lawyers I~"'. Cit • 118 p,r rur I" Id.~.Cl i III lI!a~t • ,a.1I01 IJlre ...~nth •• 43. FI .....,. questianed the adrninlstration's All 1II1U IU)II<;,llItle",. '25 plr Yllr, "jllljt~'i\' IVI" sincerity. wondering out loud II. II!Qnlh , "1; lhr .. PlonU", 118. 1

PROOF YOU MAY I In RIDUCE YOUR RIO D , terrorists WEEKLY FOOD Charles E '9 demanded . BILL UP TO 150/. prisoners OR MOREl Four gu ambushed

SHE SHOPPED ' EAGLE AND , SPENT $21.82 AS COMPARED TO $23.78 AT ANOTHER Shopping tests like Mrs. A. C. Dembinski's are proof Eagle tells it like SUPERMARKET. it is. Mrs. Dembinski shopped Eagle and another store of her choice, purchas­ ing comparable items of her own choosing at both stores. The register receipts fro m the two stores confirmed savings at Eagle. Mrs. Dembinski saved $1 .96, THE ITEMS which is 8.2% less than what the comparable items cost at the other super­ PURCHASED WERE market. Test price Eagle today, you'll be glad you did. COMPARABLE AND OF HER OWN CHOO§ING. l~EDUCING YOUR FOOD COSIS IS OUR BUSINESS!:\~)

Illf .us 0A '-"'!I1!!IIP.9'1~ ION OED IIEI .U .' OA.INSPICIIO _~... IONOEO IEEf u.s 0 A.INSPEC1EO Chuck Rib T.Bone Roast Steak Steak t ~129 tl.4'o I'OlnRHOusr IflAK l • • S 1.U 'AllLIU

ION Of 0 aEl' · u.s° A INSPEClID • • VA'.U· ",," N.'URlollY FlESHER Grade A Standing 10NOED IEEf u.s D.• INSPECTED 80NElESSAtu V.lU ·fIESH .GRIoOf. OSCAR MAYER YmOW 8."10 ·REGUlAR OR lHICK III Roast Beef Stew Meaf .;::M7" Fryer Breasts ••HD'U: I 6" Sliced Bacon ~i~ . 15e Fryers CENIU CUI fROM lE.N YOUNG 'ORKIlS VAlU ·'IESH .GRADE A DUIUQUE'S fiNE ROV.l IUff El 1·lb. 7te Pork Chops '.t..,I'MII . 'I' Fryer Thighs ••• O'U\I. 6" Sliced lacon p'g. ION OED 8EEf .U .5D •. INS'ICTID ,.w.nl" VAtU ·FIESH GRADE A OSCAR MAYER .ymOW I.NO 10 1&1 'NIU .'H IllIll., • •• t' l.IT""O 'MIU 7tH I,ll Beef Short Ribs II. 3,e Fryer Wings •• HOC UT II. 3" All Meat Wien ers~~~: 79c (OUNliYSTYlE ·OELICIOUS,IoIE.TY EAOLE 'URE 'ORK All MEAl SKIN LE SS C 1.l b. Spare Ribs VIoLU.'"'" ll. 71 Link Sausage !.:;: 42' Eagle Wieners p'" 6" 80NOEO lEEf .u .s 0A INSPEClEO .FUSH C.".IN HOOK .FUll VCOOKED OSCAR /MYEl · YEllOW lAND Beef Liver •• tU·ll,.... . sse Fish Sticks ::;: 25' Bologna 12·0UKO. ••• ~i; : 41' "., ., 8 ' LEAN AND MEA TV ·fRESH f-OU-I-fIS-HE-RIoI-E"'-O-C-EA-N----- EAGlE·SLICED .F'NI FlAVORED lEAN HAM .' "".AtU·TlIM 0 Pork Steak '.'U·TI'M ll. 7" Perch Fillet ~t~ : 42' Cooked Ham ~i: : 6" ".0 • • IL MINUtl SIl'. U . 'I.U ••• 1110 'ARM .WHOLE HOG .IEGUlAR ,HOI 01 S.GI .'1oI0UR'SClOVERBlOOIol .SElF lASTING DU8UQUE FUllV COOKE D Sausage I,~~ ' 14' Grade A Turkeys lb. 4'c Canned Picnic 10MATO HARVES TDAY U.S. NO. 1 QUALITY DelMonte Potato Catsup .k.1.lb . 40' Chips MAXWEll HOUSE ·REGUlAR OR ElECnA PERK 41 Coffee :~: . $)24 9.o, 4~"~ 26bOl.0.•• iI . IMXWHl HOUSE ElEC1I" PEiK bog U '0 $1'3 Coffee '·Ib<0. . , fREElE DRIED COfFEE . 1:0. $1" t~. ,;~Bndy 8 Cookies Instant Maxim I" IIESH smCTED QUAUTY , VISTA 'AK·FUDGE O_LEMON CUMESAN DWICH , PS""aKlrIHaOusLE.0" eSES.AloIoEslEE IDs '''!IfDRIED ". •, .33 c Golden ~ Cookies ' ~~~ ' 47C ~ 7~;.' · 43C Instant Sanka I·' a•••••• t •. 12o I '=-=rE;::' P::;:ER:::~IDG:::E:-:-f.:::I":-. :7:.11:::V.:-:-RI=W:::ES--- I.OY lEE fiRESI DE·IoIINIA1URE ORREGUlAR THESE ARE JUST TWO I i~;iers ~ :: : 34c ~ Layer Cakes ':;::. 12' Apricot Nectar Marshmallows !.;:. ,c OF OUR EVERYDAY LOW ci DISCOUNT PRICED EXIRA SAVIIICS lIMe ~iWt ~, • PIESTO 1oI0N.RCH .UNSWEI1INIO . BAKERS 21 c 10'h.Ol 45' C PRODUCE ITIMSI ne 1C~; djfli;I;~ES :~ : _ 1U/ plfeMse If ~y I 1fTs. Real Whip t i lt Grapefruit Juice 4~D:" 3'c (Chocolate Chips I~:: . 41 P.

REGU lAR I ll. AN rI ·'USlIIAN7 UNSCENTED ·,,·820 btl. ' ~ I lall Jar .ubbers 1::', II c 22····4"0 1 Arrld Extra Dry 6,::' "C

Prke. Are Discounted Except on Fo ir·Traded and Go.ern ..ent Controlled It... , . I 600 N. DODGE and Save Up To 15\ And M~rlll . , _ _W81kIJ Food Bill WARDWAY PLAZA