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Remodeling of Women'. Gym proposed

VI officials discuss women's use of Field House By CHRISTINE BRIM

Staff Writer

Dewey B. Stult, Dean of the Liberal Arts College, met with faculty members of both women's and men's Physical Education {P .EJ departments to discuss future use of the Field House and the Women's Gymnasium.

In attendance at the meeting Tuesday were Louis E. Alley, department head of men's P. E., Don Casady, professor of men's P.E., Margaret Fox, professor of women's P.E. , and Bonnie Slatton and Kathleen Miller, both assistant professors of women's P.E.

"The purpose of the meeting was to

prepare a slatement In supporl of remodeling the Field House and the Women's Gymnasium," said Stuil.

The university's 1974-75 budget request to the Board of Regents includes $600,000 for renovation of the Field House, and $75,000 for Women's Gymnasium repairs.

"We want to determine how we can make the present facilities more useful to men and women," Stuit said. "There is a feeling among women faculty that, in the past, male students using the Field House have acted as if the facility were theirs, as if the women were intruders."

Slatton said most of the discussion centered on the possibility of making all activities, except team sports, co­educa tiona 1.

. Also discussed were plans to expand women's dressing rooms in the Field House, and to build men's dressir4! rooms in the Women's Gymnasium.

The two laclllties WOIIld be renamed the West Side Gymnasium and the East Side Gymnasium some tIme In the future, Stult said.

"In some ways," Slatton added, "the women's P.E. department is being forced into a Quick merger. They seem to think this is the best way of using existing space; that any opening up of existing facilities to both P .E. departments constitutes TlUe IX implementation. "

Title IX of the federal Education Amendments of 1972 prohibits discrimination in the use of facilities and in

••

athletics. "We've been saying all along that the

women's gym Is terribly antiquated, and a new facility sbould be built," Slatton emphasized.

Another problem discussed at the meeting was the redistribution of office and equipment resources for P.E. graduate student research.

"At the graduate level we should talk about resources regardless of sex," Stuit said. "I don't see why there couldn't be women's research projects going on in the Field House or men's in the Women's Gymnasium."

Subcommittees were established to pr~pare reports for a follow-up meeting to be held June 25. Casady and Miller are on

Thursday, June 20, 1974

Iowa City, Iowa 52240

Vol. 107, No. 14

~'

Nixon returns from Middle East journey;

will now focus on Europe, Russian affairs WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres­

Ident Nixon returned from a 10-day Middle East mission Wednesday after declaring he will now turn his attention to Europe and the Soviet Union.

Nixon's daughters, Tricia and Julie, and son-in-law David Eis-

1

enhower greeted him at An­drews Air Force Base. He then new by helicopter to the White House.

He planned to be there only 24

j hours, then to fly to Key Bis­cayne, Fla., to relax and pre­pare for next week 's trip to Brussels and Moscow.

Nixon 's chief of staff, Alexan­der M. Haig. said the President got agreement from leaders of the rive Middle East nations he visited to make concerted ef­forts '{or negotiated solution of the troubles in that region.

Haig said Nixon returned en­couraged by his personal diplo­macy.

He said there were optimistic results and that the President returned "encouraged by the trip."

consensus, at least at the moment, to do that - willing­ness and desire to make the ef­fort to find peaceful sol utions through negotiations, " Haig said. "We have demonstrated the intent to be as helpful as we can."

Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon probably will leave from Florida on Tuesday for the NATO summit meeting in Brussels that starts June 26 and then for Moscow summit talks starting June 27.

Haig said the President's Eu­ropean trip would last 10 days.

"We achieved all of the ob­jectives we set forth, " said Haig, who is Nixon 's NO. 1 White House aide. And he cited the objectives as follows :

-S trengthening new relations !with the Arab states.

- Demonstration of "willing­ness to assist in the search for a long-term solution" to past divisions.

- Establishment of a new relationship and to assure all parties that this change would not be made at the expense of longstanding relationships.

that the United States was planning to provide a nuclear reactor for peaceful energy uses for Egypt.

"The matter has been . ex­plained to their (Israel's) lead­ers and we have reason to be­lieve they have accepted it," Haig said.

On the last lap of his tour , Nixon stopped overnight at Lajes Air Force Base on the Portuguese island chain of the Azores and reaffirmed support of Portugal's new government.

As his jetliner left the Azores on the six-hour flight to WaSh­ington, Nixon said, "The chal­lenges of peace are not isolated to any single area of the world.

"A truly effective structure of peace must embrace every area of the world, convincing every nation that its dreams can only be realized in peace and not in war," Nixon said in a lengthy statement.

He told Portugal's new presi­dent, Antonio Spinola, during their gO-minute conference

some details of his Middle East mission and "our irreversible commitment to continuing an active, constructive role there."

Then he spoke of his trip to Europe and the Soviet Union beginning next week, saying "we will refocus our attention on two other crucial areas of the world."

In Brussels he will meet with NATO heads of state, and in Moscow he will hold summit talks with Soviet leaders.

NATO loyalties reaffirmed 01TAWA (AP) - The foreign ministers of the

Atlantic alliance ended a long and sometimes bitter debate by approving on Wednesday a dec­laration reaffirming their loyalty to Lie 25-year­old NATO charter.

The "Declaration of Atlantic Relationship" which was approved by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization commits the 15 member nations to maintain "close consultation, coop­eration and mutual trust. II

ceremony, Kissinger said the declaration allows a member na tion to act unilaterally in an emergency situation. He said, however ; "To the extent that emergencies are foreseeable .,. any action will be done in full consulation."

Kissinger said such emergencies would be extremely rare and would be acted on by the United States only when its action obviously would be accepted as justifiable by the rest of the alliance.

the undergraduate subcommittee; Fox and Chalmers (Bump) Elliott, director of Athletics, are on the graduate sub­committee. .

According to Stuit, "No one should assume the programs should be identical. We know intercollegiate sports for men are financed by gate receipts. That has to be taken into consideration. II

The latest HEW guidelines on women'. sports, released Tuesday, ~equire schools and colleges to survey student interest in sports and to actively make known the availability of sports activities previously

• denied women. "The responsibility of making recom­

mendations rests with the staff, not the students," Stult said.

"I don't think women', sports can be Regarding Title IX implementation, self-supporting," he added. Stuit said,"1 don't think any outside

The possibility of co~ucational P.E. · . agency should tell us how to manage our classes caused some difference of opinions programs on campus. I'm talking about at the meeting. HEW."

'No one had asked the students if they "The internal organization of the ad-wanted everything coeducational," Slatton ministration should not be interfered with said. by HEW," he said.

'They loved me!' Flying home from an over­night stop in the Azores, Haig assessed the Nixon diplomatic effort for reporters traveling aboard the presidential jet.

"There is manifestation in each of the capitals that there is

These aims were best served, Haig said, by preSidential-level meetings.

Haig was asked why Israel was not informed in advance

The document is a watereddown version of the the new Atlantic charter proposed by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger in April 1973. It reflects the change of times since NATO was formed following World War II and a corresponding shift in the relationship between the United States and its European allies .

In a news conference after the Signing

The 15 ministers signed the document in the large main hall of the Ottawa Conference Center at a horseshoe-shaped table. NATO Secretary­General Joseph M.A.H. Luns was flanked by Belgian Foreign Minister R. Van Elslande and Kissinger, whose countries represented opposite ends of the alphabetical seatinl! arrangement.

President Nixoo gives III OK to members of East. According to a WhIte HOUle aide the the White House staff WedDelday after the Chief President retumed from tile trip eace.rqed by Executive retumed from a visit to tile Middle bls personal diplomacy.

St. Clair: conclusion 'not absolute'

Rodino~ Watergate tape gap caused by hand operation •

WASHINGTON (AP) - Chairman Peter W. Rodino Jr., said a demonstration for the House Judiciary Commitlee Wednesday showed that the 18-minute buzz on a Watergate tape "can't possibly" have been caused by anything but hAnd operation .

been produced by a faulty tape recorder rather than hand operation, but the . President's lawyer, James D. SI. Clair, said the conclusion could not be that ab­solute:

that former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew had resigned - "now we can fire Cox."

members indicated the {acts did not make it clear whether the firing could be con' sidered part of the cover-up.

Judiciary Committee's impeachment inquiry. .

Buchanan said the news media should find and expose the "nameless, faceless character assasins." A Republican committee member

standing nearby confirmed that the committee had the affidavit.

President Nixon's lawyer, James D. st.

The New Jersey Democrat said a staff aide made the demonstration on a Uher 5000 tape recorder. It was the sa!lle kind that produced the gap and buzz on the tape of a June 20, 1972, conversation between President Nixon and his former chief of slafr, H. R. Haldeman.

Special impeachment counsel John Doar said the committee does not have an FBI report on who might have erased the tape and said there is no assurance that report will be completed and delivered before the impeachment inquiry concludes.

The conversation came shortly after Agnew resigned Oct. 10, the member said ; Cox was fired Oct. 20.

After evidence was presented on Cox's firing, the impeachment inquiry turned to the Watergate tape containing an 18-minute buzz. A Uher 5000 recorder was set up for a demonstration but chairman Peter W. Rodino Jr., D-N.J., said there would be no re-enactment of how President Nixon's secretary, Rose Mary Woods, has said she might have accidentally erased some of the tape.

Rep. George E. Danielson, D-Calif., said "I'm more convinced that ever that it was an aggravated continuation of the cover­up."

But most members who would comment said the staff gave them a summary of publicly known facts about the firing and said each congressman would have to make his own judgment.

The firing was listed under the Watergate cover-up category among the inquiry's original 55 allegations against the President to be investigated.

Members said the staff also presented facts on the two of the nine Watergate tapes that turned out to be missing but little beyond the facts already publicly known.

Clair, said the fact that there have been no leaks of secret evidence supporting the President's innocence should show that information is selectively leaked to hurt the President.

St. Clair said he believes Chairman Rodino "is doing his best to stop it."

"He showed u how you can 't possibly except by manual operation produce this sound, this buzz." Rndino to ld newsmen .

A report hy ; I .' li t experts also

After the morning session, two members said the panel has an affidavit with evidence that President Nixon deCided to fire Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox about 10 days before he actually did .

Cox had subpoenaed nine Watergate tapes and Nixon' said he fired him for refusing to accept the President's offer to turn over summaries instead.

In other Watergate-related develop­ments:

concludl'd that lilt vua could not have

A Democrat who 'declined to be named said the affidavit from former Atty. Gen. Eiliot Richardson quoted Nixon sayirtg After the Cox presentation. most

The Cox firing led directly to filing of eight impeachment resolutions in the House the following week and to the

At the White House, preSidential speech writer Patrick Buchanan charged that leaks from the committee were "taking on the character of a systematic campaign to tear down the reputation of the President, the secretary of state, the President's men and some individuals under indictment."

-Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., said he is "disturbed and in a sense depressed, by the delay and procrastination" in the impeachment inquiry and leaks from the committee.

Caught GILLETTE. Wyo. (AP) - Pollce said they

have arrested two brother, charged in a quadruple shotgun murder. who escaped from Rock Rapids. Iowa, early Wednesday.

Gillette Police Sgt. Jeer McDaniel said Allen Fryer, 30, and his brother. James, 21. offered no resistance when taken into custody.

McDaniel said Ill' and his partner were parked on the west edge of Gillette when they saw a vehicle that had been reported stolen in Newcastle, Wyo.

McDaniel saId he radioed for assistance and lInits of the Wyoming Highway Patrol and the Gillette pollee assisted In the arrest.

The car was stopped, McDaniel said and the Fryers were arrested. He said neither was ar­meet.

The pair were held in the Campbell County Jail here, and McDaniel said authorities from Rock

Rapids have been informed. Gillette is about 60 miles west of the South

Dakota border.

Tornado ANKENY, Iowa {AP)-Gov. Robert Ray

toured this tornado-ravaged community Wed­nesday to inspect the havoc wrought by Tuesday night's violent weather and promptly declared threP. Iowa counties disaster areas.

He said he also would ask President Nixon to declare Polk, Warren and Story counties to be federal disaster areas.

When the tomadlc winds abated and the rain ended, two Ankeny residents were dead and businesses and an estlma~d 100 homes were heavlly damaged in the city of 10.000 people.

Ray Issued a proclamation noting that the tor­nadoes which hit Ankeny, northern Des MOines and surrounding rural areas caused "extensive damage to businesses, residences and farm­steads."

The proclamation also noted that "hIgh winds and hall caused extensive damage to urban and rural areas In Story and Warren counties."

The governor called upon "the citizens and agencies of local and state government to render good and sufficient aid to assist these stricken areas in their time of need."

The governor personally inspected the damage in Ankeny by both ground and aerial re­connaisance to see {or himself what was left of the home where two persons were killed.

Suit A second suit has been flied by an Inmate in the

Johnson County jall against Johnson County Sherifr Gary Hughes.

Jerrold Sies asks '100,253 in damages from Hughes, County Attorney Carl Goetz and an alJegp.d police infonner, Steven Warren, of West Branch. Sies' suit claims the defendants caulled charges to be brought against him for bringing marijuana into the jail.

The charges were dropped after Sies passed a lle-detector test (taken at his own expellle I.

Monday, Sies flied a suit uklng for a writ of habeas corpus and release from jail because he is In fear that the sheriff will "continue to hara. and entrap him" by planting marijuana on him.

Vets WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate

unanimously passed a bill Wednesday to In­crease education benefits for Vietnam era veterans by 18.2 per cent, gl ve them up to J720 a year In tuition coats and provide $2,000 per yejlr (nloans.

The measure will hav'! to be reconciled with a 'House-passed measure which provides a 13.6 per cent cost~f·living Increase but not the tuition grants and loans.

The cost of the Senate bill for the fiscal year starting July 1 is estimated a ,1.9 billion com­pared to ~1.4 million of the House bUl. '

Mideast By'l1le .woda&ed Preu

Israeli planes bombed IUlpected Arab prrilla encampments in IOUthem Lebanon on Wednesday for the thlnl time Iince Prn1de9l Nixon ended h1I MIddle EaIt peac:e"JnlNlon.

"The scorchl!d~arth war lion, with PreIIdent

Nixon's blessing," declared the leftllt newspaper Al Liwa in Beirut. AI Llwa and other Arab lertist papers said Nixon, durinJ weekend talks in Jerusalem, had given Israel "the pteft light to attack Lebanon. "

Cloudfl 90s

"Well Zeb, looklllke thili. it. We lot no food. We got no water. We got no mules."

"Yup." "300 miles {rom the nearest Stuckey station,

nary a drop o{ life in sight. We'll be lucky If they find our bones." .

"Yup." "Tell you the truth, I didn't think It was

poulble-hlghs in the 90'. like thla, that wind from the 10Utheut. Do It aeem natural to you7"

"Yup." "You flture It'll keep on thla way'" "Yup."

I I

T I .

Page 2-The Dally Iowan-Iowa City. lowa-Tburs., June 20, 1974

Self-Esteem A weekend workshop on Self-Esteem will be

held on June 22 and 23, beginning Saturday 9 a.m. at Wesley House.

TIie workshop is sponsored by Action Studies program. For further details call351-5092 or 351-5319.

Recycle

Iowa City sanitation workers will collect newsprint for recycling this Saturday, in the area of the city east of 7th Ave. and north of Lower Muscatine Road.

Paper must be bundled with string or placed in paper bags, and placed before 8 a.m. at curbside of the city street, regardless of whether garbage is picked up in an alley or at the street.

The following pickup will be Saturday, July 6, in the area west of the Iowa River. On Saturday, July 13, the pickup area will be north of Burlington St., west of 7th Ave., and east of the river . Saturday,July 20 is the next pickup date for the area south of Burlington St., west of Lower Muscatine Road, and east of the river.

Workshop

A series of workshops is available for students who would be interested in learning about the resources of the UI libraries and research procedures. Topics include the carq catalog, indexing and abstracting sources, reference materials, government documents, and how to compile a bibliography. I

Classes will be limited to around ten students to allow for individual e.xperimentation and exploration of resources in the student's own field. Workshops will meet afternoons or evenings beginning June 24th.

If you are interested please call Ann Matthews in the Orientation office at 353-3743.

Rugby

The University of Iowa Rugby Club will practice on the field behind the Recreation Building at .6:30 p.m. today.

Anyone interested in playing rugby is invited to attend. All staff personnel as well as graduate and undergraduate students ~re welcome to play.

YWLL The Young Workers Liberation League

(YWLL) will meet in the Miller Room of the Union tonight at 5: 15 p.m. Any interested person is invited to attend.

Exhibition

The Ward Collection of Mesquakie Indian Photographs will be on exhibit at the Centennial Building of the State Historial Society of Iowa, located at 402 Iowa Avenue, Iowa City, beginning Monday, June 24, 1974.

The Exhibit photographs show the Mesquakie tribe and Settlement in Tama County, Iowa as they appeared at the turn of the twentieth cen­tury. The photographs were collected by Duren Ward, an Iowa City minister and University of Iowa instructor, on behalf of the Historical Society during a visit to the Mesquakie Set­tlement in 1905.

The Exhibit is open to the public betwel!n 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. There is no admission charge.

Wrestling The Divsion of Recreational Services will lie

condUcting a Summer Youth Wrestling Clinic for children-grades Hi. The clinic will be a two week session- July 8-12 and July 15-19.

Two time periods are being offered-9-10 a.m. and 1-2 p.m., Mon.-Fri. each week. The fee for registration is $15.00 per child for the two week session.

The Director of the Clinic is Gary Kur­delmeier, Head Wrestling Coach at the University of Iowa. The coaching staff will in­clude some of the top wrestling names in the country. An added attraction on the final day will be a tournament with ribbons given.

Registration for the clinic will be held in Room . 113, Field House-Mon.-Fri. from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. beginning June 26. If you have any further questions, please caU 353-3494.

Tennis-golf

Recreational Services will also be offering group .and private tennis and golf lessons Cor youth and adults during the months oC July.

Sign-up for the July session will be held as follows: June 24 7:30 a.m.-2 p.m. in the Field House Concourse and 2 p.m.-5 p.m. in Room 113 of the Field House, June 25-28 B a.m.-5 p.m. In Room 113 Field House.

For further Information call 353-3494.

Board agrees to invite officials to. inspect flooded county areas

Choose your wedding ring

By SCOTT WRIGHT Sta ff Writer

The Johnson County Board of Supervisors ag'reed Wednesday to write a letter to Governor Robert Ray, Iowa's congreSSional delegation and other state politiCians inviting them to inspect farmlands in Johnson County which have flooded as a resul t of the U.S. Government's operation of the Coralville Dam.

Farmland flooding is not a new problem in Johnson County.

When the dam was built in 1958 it was supposed to have reduced the chances of flooding of farmland in the county but at least according to one citizen it has not.

Local businessman and farmer Robert F. Vogel, in a June ]7 letter which precipitated the supervisors' action, said conditions have worsened as a result of the government's project.

"Prior to the operation of the Coralville Dam we were flooded three times in 75 years, which is on record," Vogel said in his

letter. "Since the operation of said

dam," Vogel's letter continued, "We have been flooded just about every year and It has beel!' approximately 13 or 14 years since ... we have been able to put In a full crop and receive a full harvest."

Vogel, an independent can­didate for Supervisor Robert J . Burns' seat on the board, .owns two farms in the county, both of which have been affected by the flooding.

While Burns was absent Wednesday, Supervisors Richard Bartel and Loreda Cilek both were sympathetic with Vogel and others who have had similar problems with flooding.

The main reason the dam actually worsens flood con­ditions in the county, Vogel said Wednesday, is that it is too small.

One catch-22, which adverse­ly affects farmers with flooded land, is that taxes are stm assessed on flooded property.

Because flooded land is not devalued by the county for tax purposes, farmers must pay a

disproportionate tax on less productive land .

The Supervisors agreed that the federal government should reimburse farmers for their losses.

Vogel mentioned that the U.S. Agricultural Stabilization Committee is planning to make grants available to farmers whose lands have been flooded.

But he pointed out that the $30 and $40 per acre thai farmers will be reimbursed would compensate only for taxes on the land. not the loss of crop revenues to the farmer.

Copies of the letter from the board were sent to U.S. Sen. Dick Clark, D-Iowa; U.S. Rep. Edward Mezvinsky, D-Iowa ; U.S. Rep. John Culver, D-Iowa ; Governor Robert Ray ; State Rep. David Stanley, R­Muscatine; Jim Leach, Republican candidate for Mezvinsky's House seat; and State Sen. James Schaben, D­Dunlap, who is also the Democratic gubernatorial candidate.

Vogel said he has written to Mezvinsky in the past, but has not received a reply.

In other business Itle supervisors formally approved a letter to the Johnson County Regional Planning Commission requesting a "non-metropolitan land use study" for the county.

According to Bartel, the purpose of the plan would be to develop a more coherent set of policies regarding areas such as zoning laws and restrictions, road primorities, and sewage regulations.

The board also approved a "planned use report" for the . county 's federal revenue sharing for the upcoming fiscal year .

The Supervisors anticipate tha t Johnson County will receive $590.168 for the revenue sharing period beginning July 1. Genera I headings for the county's use of the funds are as follows:

Public safety, $25,000; public transportation (roads) , $100,000; health, $50,000; social services for aged or poor, $125,000; financial ad­mihistration, $40,168; multi­purpose and general govern­ment , $150,000; capital im­provement,s (annual limit under revenue sharing), $100,000.

!iii lmtl.tM . The Wedding Ring House of IQwa CltV.

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AFSCME raps amended fee The Daily Iowan erroneously

reported Tuesday that Johnson County purchased the Close Mansion, at the corner of South Gilbert and Bowery Streets, for approximately $45,000. Actually, that building was bought by the county in April 1941, for $4,800.

HOSHEKS MEN~S DEPT. The University of Iowa

Employees Union, AFSCME Local 12 termed the amended proposal for parking fee in­creases offered by the ad­ministration "far too little."

Those increases would raise 12-month parking rates at the Hancher commuter lot from $15 to $20. Nine month rates at the Hancher lot would be raised from $10 to $15.

Originally t1tose rates were to be raised to $24 and $18 respectively.

AFSCME spokesmen reiterated their opposition to any increase.

"The fees for reserved lots should not be raised at all, and parking in the peripheral lots should be free," an AFSCME release stated. "So as to en­courage people to use those lots and allow the university to move toward a pedestrian campus. "

Mary Jo Small, vice president. for University administration,

PL.tJA~E

said she doubted fees would ever completely be lifted from commuter lots. She said in the past the commuter lots have been operated at a loss and the University needs the addltional revenue to take the lots out of the red and to 'provide ad­ditional revenue for more commuter lots .

AFSCME spokesmen said they plan to continue their protest of the proposed rate increase at the Board of Regents meeting in Des Moines next week.

AFSCME's Les Chisholm said the University's parking com mittee, esta blished to advise administrators on questions such as parking, has never endorsed any increase proposal.

"In fact, " Chisholm said, "A poll of the committee shows that six of the eight members do not accept the need for the increase requested by John Dooley (director of Security and Transportation). "

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The Daily Iowan-Iowa City. lowa- Thurs .. June 20, 197~-Pag(' :1

Right to Life, Birthright rejeet abortion •

Local groups defend unborn Texas Instruments TI-1500: the new pocket calculator that's bound to improve your percentages. By LINDA SCHUPPENER

Staff Writer Last in a series

Two groups, Right to Life and Birthright, have come into existence in response to the abortion issue. Their objections to abortion have impelled them to community action.

The Iowa City. Right to Life group is affiliated with the national group and is a political and education action organization. Their main goal, according to Jean Barloon, a spokeswoman Cor the local group, is to "protect human life from the moment of conception to ,the moment of natural death. "

They are unalterably opposed to both abortion and euthanasia which they see as the logical end of laws permitting abortion.

Abortion and the Increasing incidents of euthanasia are seen by the group as setting precedents which are dangerous to clvlllzed society, precedents which engender a contem pt for all life.

They believe that life starts at thl! moment of conception. It may be genetically perfect, or it may be retarded or deformed, but whichever it is, Barloon

asserts, "We can't make a judgment as to the value of human life."

Although the Right to Life group does not, as a group, take any position on issues such as capital punishment or the United States' ratification of the Genocide Convention, Barloon is personally opposed to any destruction of human life.

Barloon points out that the Nazi gas chambers were originally set up to rid German society of people considered medically undesirable-the mentally ill, the retarded, the handicapped, and the old-and then were used on Jews and political undesirables.

The political action of the group encompasses lobbying in support of a Constitutional amendment. to prohibit abor­tion, and campaigning for candidates who support that amendment.

Their educational efforts include sending material to school libraries, speaking to interested groups, and setting up informational displays.

"At this point," Barloon sjlid, "we are limited to political and educational activities, but we support Birthright for their

services, and I personally would like to see us expand our goals after the Constitutional amendment is passed."

The Right to Life group also is distressed by experimentation on aborted fetuses, Barloon said, seeing it as one more exam pie of contempt for human life.

"Society has a responsibility to protec t the helpless , otherwise it sets precedents

which are dangerous to all people," Barloon stressed.

Birthright Is an emergency pregnancy service which, ac· cording to Lorle Woodhouse, a spokeswoman, "offers _ a positive alternative to abortion. We believe in the right of every woman to give birth to her child in dignity, and the right of every child to be born."

Started in October 1968 by Louise Summerhill In Canada,

Birthright is an international personal service organization, not a legislative pressure group, Woodhouse said. As a group the members engage in no political activity, although they are free to do so as individuals if they wish . They are careful to disassociate themselves from the Right to Life Groups.

Birthright sees its -role as augmenting the existing agencies, and believes the right to life is paramount. "We believe," Woodhouse said, "that true freedom comes when the rights of all beings are protected. "

By providing a variety of services to the woman with an unwanted or unplanned pregnancy, Birthright hopes to eliminate the need or desire for an abortion. Women may get assistance by calling the ad­vertised Birthright crisis .line number.

Staffed by volunteers, Bir­thright members will go beyond merely referring women to the peoper community agencies. "Often a woman will call us thinking her only need Is for support, but then IInds she needs other things," Woodhouse said.

New Iowa boat registration law registers mixed reactions locally

By ROD MAC JOHNSON Staff Writer

Iowa 's new boat registration law is meeting mixed reactions from Iowa City groups.

sailing groups around the state "to explore the possibility of lobbying the next session of the Iowa House on the issue." .

Patton gave as the main objection to the law the requirement that registration papers be carried on board vessel at all times. He said this will primarily affect sma 11 crafts because of thei r limited storage facilities and "one would end up having wet papers ...

is also divided. Minette Doderer, D-Iowa City, described the new law as "good procedural legislation to which changes may be made from time to time to suit con­ditions. "

The law. which goes into effect July 1. requires all owners of sailboats. canoes, rowboats . inflatable crafts and all motor boats to be registered with the county recorder of the county in which the owner resides.

Previously. state law had required only registration of motor boats.

Johnson County Recorder John Oneill said he expected a large increase in the number uf registrations. He cautioned boat owners to register early because of an ex· pected late rush.

Oneill said the owners registp.ring for thE first time in his office appear to be accep­ting the law with little complaint.

Wayne Patton of the 200-r'nember Univp.rsity of Iowa Sailing Club said the club will be discussing the issue with other

Arnold Small of the Hawkeye Sailing Club said there Is "basically nu op· position" by the club to the new law, He ob· served that some sections would be dif· ficult to enforce, particularly the section requiring numerals to be displayed on the bow of boats of which sailboats have none,

The Hawkeye Sailing Club . founded in 1960. has a membership of 64 families .

The manager of Lake Macbride Boat Dock, Rick Chase, said the new law would have no major effect on boat rentals in the area. He said the new law would ultimately mean safer crafts on Lake Macbride.

State legislators' reaction to the new'law .

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Rep. Arthur Small, D-Iowa City, who said he voted against the bill , described the act as "a piece of bureaucratic nonsense to which people are being subjected. "

The law, which was approved by the Iowa House on April 8 this year, Is wide-ranging and critics say some vessels should not be subjected to registration at all. They claim that the Inclusion of in­flatable craft makes the law appear ridiculous.

Last Saturday. the (owa Conservation Commission also urged owners to register their vessels before July I to avoid a last minute rush.

The registration fef! for the period en­ding April 30, 1975 will be : sailboats and motor-boats, $4; rowboats, canoes and all other non-sail and non-powered vessels. $2.

She mentioned transportation to the doctor, support during labor, delivery, and afterwards, a place to live, financial assistance, or help in finding a job.

"Married or single, we try to help every woman, particularly those with a distress pregnancy, with whatever she needs short of abortion," Woodhouse saaid. Often that is only the need for a friend, but Birthright win provide maternity clothing and if the woman intends to keep her child, articles for the baby.

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~--------------~

A Mid-East Threshold Thp. announcement by President Nixon of the

U.S. 's intention to provide nuclear technology to both Egypt and Israel pr9vides little guarantee for peace · in the Middle East in spite of the President 's assurances that safeguards will be taken to prevent this technology fr.()m being used for the development of nuclear weapons .

If the President is wrong ,andthere is a strong possibility that he may be , the addition of poten­tial nuclear capabilities may vitally undercut any fragile foundations of peace worked out in the last year .

facility from other nuclear nations , both coun­tries will have the potential of nuclear arms production .

Therefore , while the nuclear technology we havp. agreed to send to the Middle East may not be used directly to produce weapons , this aid provides the necessary and most technically ad­vanced ,s~eps in the process of nuclear arms.

Anothp.r fact which further compHcatp.s the President's assurances is the assumption which has existed since before 1968 that Israel may already possess the capabilities for producing nuclear weapons. It is an established fact that through French aid the Israeli havp. acquired a 24 megawatt reactor located in the desert set­tlement at Dimona. The reactor is the hp.avy water type , effective in producing high quality plutonium (low in P-240).

, ,

Interpretations

Mr. Nixon 's statement is most likely based on the facts concerning the type of nuclear technology which the U.S. is expectp.d to provide to thp. two nations . The' U.S. system of nuclear enp.rgy production utilizes the more p.conomical light -water type of reactor . This differs significantly from other systp.ms in that , while it produces large amounts of the necessary element for a nuclear device , plutonium , that nuclea r by-product from the light-water reactor has an extremely high contp.nt of the plutonium 240 isotope, an p. iement which decreases the plutonium 's effectivp.ness in producing a nuclear explosi on .

President Nixon's grandstand gifts of nuclear technology to thp. two nations did have their reasons , a grand gesture of future prom ises of warm relations between the U.S . and Egypt as well as a pacifier for the Israeli who have had good reason to doubt the extent of continued U.S. relations . But the implications of the gift are far more severe than we were led to believp.. Regar­dless of what the President stated, the gift of nuclear technology has opened the door to nuclear weapons for both nations. Without direc­tly supplying nuclear weapons , the U.S. has cer­tainly provided the tecl\nical potential.

Questions on Chicano Killings in Boulder Howe vp. r , the light water process calls for a

gas diffusion method of slightly enrichp.ning the U-235 content in the uranium fuel for the reactor . This is also the first and most difficult step in the production of a nuclear device . Simply by ob­taining a less tp.chnically complex reprocessing

14 1 Michael McCann

DENVER (LNS)-Six ChIcano ac­tivists were killed in two separate in­cidents when bombs exploded ill their cars May 2i and May 29 in Bould"r. Colorado. Leaders of the Denver Chicano movement are demanding a full investigation into the deaths. At a May 31 press conference at the Denver headquartl?rs of the Crusade for Justice. spokesman Corky Gonzales ex­plained:

tor at Colorado Umverslty. Antoner VIC­tim. Antonio Alcantar. was seriousl\' wounded. One of his legs was am­putated. Relatives were not notified of ' the deaths.

The Colorado police theory that that six Chicano activists killed in two separate explosions resulted from the premature explosion of bombs built by the activists. leaves many questions unanswered.

movement casts further doubt 011 the theory that thl' bombs were being assembled

Leaders of UMAS at the Univl'rsity of Colorado ill both Bouldl'r and Denver. the Chicano Law Studl'nts. the UMAS chapter at Metropolitan State College. and the Farm Labor Task Force in Bouldl'r hl'ld a press conference to con· demn the bombings.

A woman looks into the cookie jar and at her four kids with a total of $3,00 in her hand. She is recovering from a broken collar bone and a missing husband. It appears he has crossed state lines and cannot be held for child support. She knows she needs help but, feeling like a failure, she is reluctant to have to ask." .

A bright, young, college student from Bangladesh or Muscatine, Iowa finds himself eati ng peanut butter six days out of seven. On the seventh day he eats dry noodles for variety, although both noodles and rice have become foods for the rich . He breaks out in hives and after taking $500.00 worth of tests, he learns his intestines are glued shut.

and financial assistance for which he­she is eligible.

SSPC is a community organization working to assist the individual in in­creasing his capacity for self-help. Presently we are gathering a wide variety of resource materials which will be available to the individual. Specifically, we orrer counseling on the following social service programs! Food Stamps, Aid to Families with Dependent Children (ADC), Sup­plemental Security Income (SSI), Unemployment Compensation, Medicare and Medicaid. We will make referrals in cases which we do not handle di~ectly .

services for which you are eligible. It is your legal right. You can appeal decisions you think are unfair or question those you do not understand. The laws by which social services are delega ted change constantly (ap­proximately every 3 mos. for the Food Stamp Program, alone). Many times the caseworker is not familiar with all the rellula tions and will make mistakes in figuring out your eligibility.

"We have reason to suspect con­spiracy in thl?se deaths .... The odds of six people being killed and olle critically injured in two separate in­stances. within 48 hours. in the same city . are astronomical."

Both explosions occurred in parked cars. The police are claiming the deaths were a result of the premature explosion of bombs that were being assembled by the activists. But many within the community believe there is evidence that the bombings were a planned attack similar to oth"rs direc­ted at the Colorado Chicano movement in the last few years.

For example, referrillg to the first ex­plosion . Bouldl'r Deputy Chief of Police Friesen told the Denver Post that the bomb had been in the passenger section of the car (implying that it was being worked on at the time) rather than un­der the hood (which could indicate a murder attempt) because of the direc­tion in which the parts were scattered.

\'The floor went south, the seats west, and the car doors east and west." Friesden said.

Had the bomb been on the front seat. however the seat would havl? exploded in the same direction as the floor board. The fact that they exploded in the op­positl? direction supports the view that the bomb may have been hidden bet· ween the seat and the floor board ,

They saId the police explanations Cor the bombings "not only relieve the police of the need to investigate the fae· ts that lend to d"flate their theon·. but also gll'I' th"m the opportunity io ac­cuse. tn'. and COIll'ICt ollr dead brothers and sisters who can no longer defend themselves

"AdditlOnall~ the police seem to be using hvstl'rla creat"d b\' their theon' to obtai;1 scores of sea rch'warrants Ihal are being used to harass and intimIdate people ..

Nightmares: Purely fantasy ? NO! This is the reality of our tech nologica lly advanced , com­puterized Social We)(are System.

The Social Service Protection Center is open from 9 a.m.-S p.m. Monday thru Friday and until 8 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday to help assist consumers and future consumers of sodial services here in Johnson County. We are committed to the concept that everyone who is in need of welfare money and services has the legal and political right to apply {or these services and to receive those services

If you have complaints that you want to check out, feel a particular program is unfair and you want to work on changing it or if you need a liason in order to secure benefits ; we are available to you. There is no reason to feel ashamed to find out and receive

For example, people living in sub­sidized housing, had their subsidies included as income when applying for Food · Stamps. This law was just recently changed. Students-you do not have to be an Iowa resident nor a O.s. citizen to be eligible for food stamps. Did you know it makes no difference if your parents claim you as a dependent for income tax purposes? You are not required to reveal this information if you do not want to.

If you have any questions, feel you are not getting services for which you are eligible, or are having problems in obtaining an appeal, or fill ing out impossible forms then drop in to 104 E. Jefferson (basement Center East). We offer free and confidential assistance from trained volunteers. The Center is sponsored by ISPIRG.

Among the victims were : Reyes Martinez. a lawyer for the Colorado Rural Legal Services. Neva Romero, a member of the United Mexican American Students !UMAS) who led a community effort to "stablish a bilingual-bicultural program in the public schools. Florencio Granado, former president of UMAS at Colorado Univl?rsity and La Raza Unida Party candidate for the Colorado Univl'rsity Board of Regents. Granado was also a well-known activist in the campaign to recall the election of Eugene DiManna as part of an effort to win Chicano con­trol oVl?r the Chicano community. Herbiberto Teran, a social worker for the fed"rally-funded Pinto Project. a job program for former prisoners. Una Jaakola, a student at Colorado University. Francisco Dougherty , a Vietnam veteran studymg to be a doc-

Moreover. the two explosions took place in public. well-traveled areas of Bouldl'r. The first car to ~xplode was parked under a streetlight in Chatauqua Park only iO yards from a residential area .

The second car was parked in the lot of Burger King Restaurant on a busy street near a liquor store. It is highly unlikely that the occupants of these cars would be attempting to assemble bombs in these places.

There is tI hIstory of police harassment of the Denver Chicano commUlllty. and particularly directed towards the Crusade for Justice In the last 16 months. over 100 Crusade memo bers. La Raza Vnida activists and sup· portl'rs have been arrested or taken to court. yet only one has been convicled.

In Bouldl'r. a judge has also clamped a suppression order on all evidence un· covered when FBI agents used "no knock " search warrants to enter the homes of three Denver ChIcano families BACKFIRE POLICY

Backfire is an open-ended column written by our readers. Backfire column should be typed and signed. The length should be 250 to 400 words. The Daily Iowan reserves the right to IborteD and edit copy.

Transcriptions ffo@1o rr(!dJ~~&i

Not the proletariat, not the bourgeoisie, but the army instigated and acted as prime mover of the "revolution" of April 25 in Portugal. Not the struggle to overthrow the capitalist system but the attempt to prevent it, not the endeavor to liberate the colonies but the drive to prevent their liberation stood behind the "revolution" of April 25.

After eight centuries of monarchism, on October 4, 1910, Portugal became a republtc, and after sixteen years of republicanism, on May 28, 1926, she returned to monarchism in the form of Salazarism, Ihe system associated with Antonio Salazar who was dictator of Portugal from 1928 through 1968. Now, after a half century of Salazarism, Portugal has returned to republicanism.

No larger than Indiana, and until recently the "forgotten" land in Europe, It is the last of the colonial empires and one of the most "back­ward" countries in Europe. A land whose chief industry is cloth. A nation with one third of its 9 million inhabitants living on the land, with a per capital income of $750. Portugal is certainly an enigma. Salazarism, however, is even more enigmatic.

Led by a reactionary parading as a liberal, on April 25 the "Armed Forces Movement" over­threw the Salazarist right·wing dictatorship. 'On April 25 what occurred was not a revolution, but a military coup d'etat; not a Iiberal-bourgeoil revolution but a palace revolt.

In overthrowing Salazarilm, the Western news media, the Portuguese Communist Party, and most everyone affirm that the Junta over­threw fascism. Yet SalazariBm was not faSCism·, nor was his rule fascist rule, but, on the contrary, rule by a monarchical inclined dictator and hil satl'aps.

Sall,tar came to power as a result of the military coup d'etat of May 28, 1926. He upheld motherhood and the family, patriotism and the corporate state. He opposed internationalism and communism, syndicalism and socialism, class warfare and class struggle, democracy and parliamentarianism.

Salazar saw the state as the agent which guaranteed private property and the right to it. He believed that capitai and labor shoul(t'exlsHn an "amicable relatlol18l1ip." He guarded the "sacred nature or religious belief." He prohib­ited the formation of all political parties save his own on the ground that such parties were a danger to the nation because the Portuguese behaved "irrationally" when operating them.

Salazar suppressed human rights and civil liberties, and promoted the creation and operation o( the omnipotent and, according to some, omniscient political police, He sponsored national (Le" state) trade unions that were guided (or at least it was hoped) by the wisdom of his cronies, and he grouped the capitalists into guilds in order to have them work in harmony with the nation, and in order to subordinate their interest, to that of the state. He favored collaboration between the worker and the capitalist, and he placed the "nation" over the "people" and the party below the nation.

The state was to coordinate and reconcile conflicting interest, and it was to be a corporate federation between workers, capltalists and the intelllgentsia. For Salazar, private enterprise was to be promoted over state enterprise, the family over the individual, the head of the family (i.e., the man) over the family (i.e., woman and children), and only the head o( the family could vote (hence universal suffrage was abrogated).

Salaur lnatitutesl censorship in the interest Of

Merra Young Social Service Protection Cen&er ..

In addition. no evidence has been put forth by the authorities to link any of the Chicano activist victims of the ex­plosion to any such activity. And the presence of two people in the cars who were not even active in the Chicano

At a gathl'rmg on Ma~' :11 . the mothor of one of those killed In the bombings urged other ChIcanos " 10 sland lall and straight and good" to prolecl p€(lple like her son "~ho must pro( ecl us."

Vrglllg Chicanos to support Ihelr ac· tivists she said "Let 's keep on fighting and struggling."

Whither Portugal?

"preventing the infiltration of Marxist ideas." In a word, Salazar and Salazarism opposed democracy and equality, but not capitalism. In the words of historian Trevor-Roper, Salazar was "merely a monarch : illiberal, paternal, religious, "

Though containing most of the fascist ideas, Salazarism was not a fascist system because it lacked the most essential ingredient : the rule of the petty bourgeoisie. Those who ruled under the Salazarist regime were not the petty bourgeois supported by the capitalists, but the landowners, the capitalists, the church, the military police, the bureaucracy, and the oligarchy. Those who stood in opposition were the peasants, the op­position parties, the petty bourgeois, part of the intelligentsia , and the rural and urban proletariat.

Thus Salazarist Portugal, cQntrary to "enlightened opinion" (I.e., the Western news media) and especially the view o( the American, Soviet and Portuguese communists, was not fascist. Yet the Portuguese Communist Party declares its task to be the battle against the restoration of fascism! Alvaro Cunhal, Secretary General of the Communist Party, on May 17 stated that the principal task was to make the "new 1I11iance of the working class and ( !) Qf the armed forces irreversible and with this alliance to "crush the last of lascism and create a free, democratic society."

The Socialists, in the worda o( their leader Mario Soares, stated, "one thing we don't want I. the dictatorship of the proletariat." They favor the continuation o( bou'1eoil democracy. The Portuguese Communilt Party il not calling for revolution but its prevention. The Communist Partv, innuenced by MoIcow, favors the

preservation of the status quo over its revolutionary transformation. In short, they favor the rule of the bourgeoisie and the main­tenance of private property.

Unless the Portuguese proletariat throws of( the conservative leadership of the Communist bureaucracy or forces it to become revolutionary, and then dissociates itself from the socialists (who are in fact liberals), the Maoists , and Trotskyists, the rule oC the proletariat ,will not materialize.

We see every sign, however, that the revolution will continue ; the bourgeois democratic revolution has yet to be completed, and the land problem has not been solved. In time it will be overcome and be consummated in the Leninist, as opposed to the Trotskyist, per­spective by the dictatorship of the proletariat.

As yet, the counterrevolutionary right wing has not shown its reactionary face , but it will. And the attempted counterrevolution cannot but give rise to the continuation of the revolution. The suppression of the counterrevolution will lead to the establishment oC the dictatorship of the proletariat.

On June 6, writing in the Chrlstlan Science Monitor, Charles W. Yost, an outstandign bourgeois political scientist and politician, af· firmed that what occurred on April 25 was a "startling revolution," This is, of course, sub­,lime nonsense, The "startling revolution" I, not behind but In front of Portugal. The proletariat will announCe It with the amashing of the bourgeois-capitalJst state, and with the crowning of the dictatorship of the proletariat, and the overthrow of capitalism. God grant that the Portuguese working class will fulfill Its hiatoric milslon. •

Ttlurtday. June 20, 1974 Vol. 101 No. 14

EDITOR .. ", .. ,. , .. ,., ...•.............. , .. ,Jim Fleming NIGHT MANAGER ...... ... .............. . ...... Bob Foley NEWS EDITOR .............. _ ............ Chuck Hawkins ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR ............ ,Maureen Connors EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR ............. William Flannery FEATURE EDITOR ................... . ........ Bob Jones ASSISTANT FEATURE EDITOR .. . ..... , ... :. Beth Simon SPORTS EDITOR .....................•..... Brian Schmitz ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR ................ Tom Quinlan SURVIVAL SERVICES EDITOR . , .. , ..... , ... Mark Meyer ~OPY EDITOR . .. ............... , .. _ ... , .. Fred Misurel\tl PHOTO EDITOR ... , .... ,., ...... , . .... "., .. Steve Carson DESIGN DIRECTOR ." .... , .. , ...... " . . , Karen Anderson ART DIRECTORS .... " ..... Dave Rubenstein. John Barhlte

Will Norton, Publisher Jerry Bett, Alit. PIIblilher-Advertllini Director

DenIs CroUy, Retail Advertlllni Mlnager Willi 1m Clsey, Circulation Ma.ller

DIck Wilson, Production Superlnltndent

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Please dial 353-63l3 If you do not receive your piper by7:. a,m, Every effort will be made to correct the error by the next issue. Circulation office hours are 8 a,m. to 5 p.m, .. .day through Friday.

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HOT ;1 FLASHES

Editor's note: HOT FLASHES I. eomposed of news ell.,. from many sources. We Invite readers of The Dally Iowan to cuD their own, slip them Into envelopes, aDd mail them to HOT FLASHES. The Daily Iowan, 111 Communications Cen­ter. Identify your IIOUrce and, If your clips are used, we'll Identify you. We're nice thllt way.

"Hoho the Clown." who for ien years delighted kids by pulling rabbits called Honesty. Safety. and Courtesy out of a hat. died recently of a self·inflicted gunshot wound. "Hoho"-who appeared on the Miami television "Skipper Chuck" show-had been hospitalized after shooting his wife Jan and then turning the gun on himself. , His wife is reported in good condition with a gunshot wound

in the head. (Miami Wire Service)

A.recent poll found that 58 per cent of Rumanians feel that Radio Free Europe (RFE) should broadcast more news about developments in Rumania.

(RFE Bulletin)

An 1885 Texas statute called the "paramour law" ftI suc· cessfully used in a motion for a retrial in a Houston murder char{!e this week.

The law permits a husband to kill his wife's lover if he cat· ~hp.s them committing adultery. James Dillard Shaw won the right to a retrial when it became known that his jurors had not been told of the law.

Shaw had testified that he knew Eugene Hintz was with his wife when Shaw drove past his apartment and saw the lights go out. "There would be only one reason for the lights to be out. and that is that they would be in bed." Shaw testified.

Police found Hintz's body in the kitchen. clad only in shorts. The law has since been repealed.

(University of Texas Dadly Universe I

Ethel Strainchamps. writing in The Village Voice. quotes an "unconscious pun" or "Freudian frolic" by book reviewer Mary Ellman. Ellman wrote: "In the name of universal heterosexuality. Ms. Deeter would prevent Jane Doe from enjoying free adult time. But this is a mean mistake. a sen· seless fi~ger in the dike."

(Village Voice)

A seminar in "Principles of Effective Supervision" has been scheduled this month at the Watergate Hotel in Washington. D.C. The seminar is designed to help 1st and 2nd level supervisors deal with day to day supervisory programs.

(Business Training)

Vicki Hearst. sister of suspected SLA fugitive Patricia Hearst. said in a public address to Patricia that "You 'vestill gol a long time and I just hope you don 't decide to throw your life awav on a war that doesn 't exist." Vicki is seventeen years old .

(San Francisco Chronicle)

Senator William Scott I Rep. Va . I described as "unwarran· ted criticism" a magazine article in which he was described as the "dumbest" member of Congress. "Obviously it was not true. It was all entirely false or ali twisted ... Scott said at a news conference.

The article-which ran in New Times. a biweekly magazine published by the New Times Communications Corp.-was written by Nina Totenberg. who said she queried 200 congressmen. journalists. and lobbyists. "Every single person interviewed by New Times immediately named Republican Scott as the number one choice for dumbest of the dumb." the article said.

Scott is conSidering filing a IJbel suit. (San Francisco Chronicle)

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The Daily Iowan-Iowa City. Iowa-Thurs .• June 20. 1974-Page 5

Grimes crucial in Johnson's ilDpeachment

Iowan cast critical vote • 1868 In By JIM EWINGER

Staff Writer

Slightly over 100 years ago im· peachment was a burning issue in American politics, and Republican Sen. James W. Grimes of Burlington played an important part in the national drama.

President Andrew Johnson was impeached by the House of Representatives in 1868. The official reason was his violation of the Tenure of Office act, passed by a hostile Congress in 1867.

Johnson dismissed his Secretary of War. Edwin M. Stanton, and ap­pointed Ulysses S. Grant to replace him. Grant, a Stanton sympathizer, returned the office to Stanton five months after he took the office.

But Johnson dismissed Stanton again. precipi~atirig the impeachment

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vote in the House. The vote in the House was 127 to 47

to impeach Johnson. The trial in the Senate was

presided over by Salmon P . Chase, chief justice of the Supreme Court, who wanted to be president with an intenSity described by Abraham Lincoln as "insanity."

Historians agree that tbe vote of Sen. G. Ross of Kansas was the most crucial in tbe eventual defeat by one vote of the Impeachment resolution In the Senate. but Grimes of Iowa also played a large part In the eventual defeat.

Grimes is recognized as the father of the Republican party in Iowa.

Historian Leand L. Sage writes that on the question of impeaching President Johnson for "high crimes and misdemeanors the Iowa House delegation was unanimously for conviction."

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The vote by House members from Iowa was not surprising as Iowa was a strong "radical Republican" state. The "radical Republicans" were leaders of the impeachment drive.

Although Johnson was elected Vice President in 1864 as the running mate of Republican Abraham Lincoln, he was considered by Republican party regulars as a "turncoat Democrat."

"Grimes deserves special credit. regardless of a yea or nay vote," Sage said. "because he rose from a sick­bed. a victim of paralysis. to be brought on a stretcher to the chamber to record his vote."

Grimes, one of the seven Republican senators who voted "not guilty," used one of the same arguments against impeachment employed by President Nixon today.

According to Sage, Grimes felt that "if one president, granted, that he was the unpopular Andrew Joh!1son,

could be put at the mercy of a hostile legislature, the same thing could happen to any president who dared to cross Congress, and the office would soon be destroyed."

Unfortunately for Grimes, his vote signalled the end of his political career . l!"e was viewed as a traitor by the "radical Republicans" in Iowa.

Because of his failing health and the hostility of his constituents he retired in 1869.

Grimes did not fully regain the respect and affection of his fellow Iowans until his death.

Iowa City, in 1868 as today, was Ii Democratic stronghold. Polili,cal sentiment in the city was against the impeachment of President Johnson.

One of the local newspapers of the time, the "State Press," (a reputed Democratic organ. later to change its name to the "Democratic . State

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The population of Iowa City in the 1860's was made up in large parts of first generation immigrants from Ireland, Germany and Bohemia. Concentrated mainly in the third ward, the immigrants were staunch Democrats.

In the election of 1868 local Democrats swept all but two positions on the city ballot. Iowa City also went heavily Democratic in the state and national ballotting.

Information gathered by two graduate students at the Iowa State Historical Society, Tim Hyde and Walt Kopsa, indicates the success of the Democratic party with the im­migrants in iowa City was based on two national issues: Democratic opposition to Black suffrage and the establishment of prohibition.

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Page &-The Daily Iowan-Iowa City. Iowa-Thurs., June 20, 1914

'It's a matter of fooling the brain'

Magician designs tricks as drama By STEVE HOLLAND

Staff Wrl~er

Jeff Tegler likes to do magic tricks in places where people don't expect magic to be found. He says that unmagical surroundings enhance the tricks for the audience and makes them appreciate what he is doing more.

On one particular Saturday in June, Tegler's magic is done in a bedroom at a card table. The light of a rainy afternoon clouds into the room as Tegler, who admits to a belief in ex­trasensory perception, reaches for his case of props.

Coats and tails have gone out of style for magicians, says Tegler. He appropriately dressed himself in fading blue jeans and a pink shirt.

Everything appears to be real. At least the dog on the floor responds with a wet lick Oll the hand when petted. Tegler picks up a Bicycle pack of cards and answers the age-old question which has been asked of all magicians since the time of Merlin the Wizard: "How do you do it?"

"You can ask me how I do my tricks, but I won't tell," he says. He shuffled the cards and laid them on the table. "qf course, you can examine everything."

A quick look a~ the deck turns up no hint of phoniness. Then Tegler starts Into one of his polished gambling ~ricks. Card tricks are his favorite stunts, but they are also his most dU­flcul"

"I saw a guy in Ft. Des Moines do this, " Tegler com­ments. "He started by doing this four ~ces trick. This guy, who had only one arm, would swing out and cut the deck like this."

Tegler lifts his arm to the level of his head and, as if playing div~ bomber with it, slices his right hand into the deck. Yep, the ace of clubs. He does the arm-swooping bit twice more and each time finds an ace. All the trick needs in order to be completed perfectly is to find the ace of diamonds.

Once a~ain the bearded 23-year-Qld lets his hand lift off into the air and kamikazies into his target. A muttered "Oops" from his mouth as he ap­parently turns up the wrong card this time. A nine of hearts. Maybe the poor guy will get it

right next time. But wait!-Tegler isn't done

yet. "Do you know what] think?"

he asks . "I think that this card is an indicator." With that he begins counting off a card for each letter: "N-i-n-e-o-f-h-e-a-r­t-s," he spells, and the finger stops. He flips a card: boffo! ­the ace of diamonds.

He does a few more tricks for this one-man audience. Diamonds become spades; queens turn into jacks; and the two of clubs becomes everything except what it is supposed to be.

A foolish-feeling writer is dying to ask again how his tricks are done. "Maybe ['II tell you a little about how magic

works," Tegler comments . "The hand Isn't quicker than

the eye. It's a matter of fooling the brain rather than fooling tht eye. The eye sees everything and the brain chooses to Ignore certain things. If you do the trick correctly, the brain will watch all of the relevant facts and Ignore all of the

Irrelevan" " Audiences of adults appeal

more than children to Tegler because the older person is easier to trick .

"It Is much easier to fool a more intelligent person . A drunk and a child are very hard to do magic for. The more a person concentrates the more

Nothing up his sleeve

he misses relevant things." says Tegler. He finds that children are harder to keep attentive.

He does another trick ... " People concentrate in

spurts," he adds, continuing his lesson in magic . "You con­centrate, let up and concentrate again . The magician does things on the off-beat."

Magic is a product of misdirection, he feels . He talks about Le Temps, an 18th century theory written by Robert Houdin. The famous escape artist Houdini adapted his stage name from this French magician. "Le Temps-it means 'the time.' What Houdin said is that there is a time in any properly conceived trick that you can do a secret act openly and undetected."

"Every trick is designed as a drama," Tegler says. " It is designed to make an audience let up all at one time. This is the way that I design my tricks,"

Tegler was six years old when he saw his £irst magician. A hypnotist used to attend parties Tegler's parents gave. The wand of magic waved inside of him and Tegler began to buy books on the subject. Even­tually he joined the Inter­national Brotherhood of Magicians and, while in eighth grade, attended a magicians' convention held in Des Moines. He also learned from a Des Moines man who did magic in his spare time.

Tegler lived in Des Moines until he enrolled at UI where he earned a degree in zoology. This

fall he plans to enroll in the U\ Law School.

\I was at the magicians' convention during his eighth­grade year that he sa w some of the world's most famous abracadabra men, and he became obsessed with magic. One of the most famous was Dave Vernon, whom Tegler feels is a magician's magician.

"He is so superb that even magicians can't follow what he is doing, " says Tegler. "You get the feeling from watching him that everything he does takes place right in his hand ."

Vernon now performs at the Magic Castle, an exclusive nightclub in Hollywood . A person must be able to prove that he is a magician to enter this magic house. A bookcase covers the entrance and opens to the words- what else?­"open-says-a-me. "

Tegler is not exactly crazy about Hollywood. He mentions tha t he has never been to the Magic Castle, but someday he would like to go there just to catch Vernon one more time. "He's in his 80's now and I'd like (0 see him before he dies," he adds .

Right now the magician is happy with his life in Iowa City. He performs his magic when and where he wants-at parties, for friends or just by himself. There isn 't much chance for a magician to find steady em­ployment in a community the size of Iowa City, says Tegler. But then , he. gels by.

"I'm living," he smiles. Poof!

Authors discuss plant communication THE SECRET LIFE OF A majority of the researchers Eastern poets bemoaning the Finally, this book may be a com- which implied that bugs are very

bright, perhaps bright enough and numerous enough to do us in. The writers assume that the only way to get and keep their public 's attention is to reinforce their sense of being the center of the world.

PLANTS by Peter Tompkins concluded from their experiments vanishing Indian as Nature's child. we mentary on a creature that is fun-and Christopher Bird. that the plant world is benevolent, may be entering a period of sen- damentally exploitive regardless of (Harper & Row, $8.95) that it is geared to man as the subject timental nostalgia for another realm attempts at ecological sensitivity.

Some scholars would have us most served in the ecological we have diminished, if not destroyed. Apart from what researchers and believe that the writing of history tells superstructure, and that it Is capable Not only do the conclusions of these their public may want to believe about us as much about the assumptions and of re-humanizing us by stimulating an researchers in plant sentience support the intentionality of the plant world , values oflhe historian as it does about awareness of our emotional selves. belief in the benevolence of the The Secret Life is fihed with vastly the subject of his investigation. It For example, one researcher in natural world, they suggest that intriguing data on the complexity of

But it is a temptation that would better be resisted in the realm of scientific research. The Secret Life would benefit from the tone of more skeptical scientists like the Navy's Eldon Byrd who notes the phenomenon of plant response to unknown stimUli, but retains a healthy open-endedness as to the lSource of stimulus and explanation of the response. Too many researchers from parapsychological backgrounds predisposed to ESP explanations have shaped the provocative and profoundly marvelous data of The Secret Life.

occurred to me reading The Secret plant communication asserts that plants are predisposed to the welfare plants' response to various stimuli, Life of Plants that] may be learning plants are capable of perceiving of human beings. Perhaps this physical or (more controversial) as much about what men in the latter human intentions more truthful than assumption supports a rationale for mental. Even the fact thal alfalfa third of the twentieth century want to verbal expressions of intent. The training plants as Russians have plants can extend roots forty feel to believe about their environment as I researcher then concludes that if we trained cats to pilot air-to-air find water is fairly impressive, and am about the possible consciousness can tune in to our plant brothers, we missiles. A world that serve us should that is an infinitesimal component of of the plant world. may go to the next step past Body be able to destroy our enemies. What the power of vegetal life to restore and

The Secret Life discusses evidence Language in the fight to break out of The Day of the Dolphin conveys about support itself. provided by research of com- our self-made deceptions. Plants may our relation to animals may be im- My argument with the book is that it munication between human beings be able to save us from ourselves. plied about our view of plants in The presents the complexity of stimulus-and plants. Response to stimuli Secret Life. response behavior as the result of a provided by reseachers ' thought lmaginat1ve speculation about the We are untiring in our detere decision-making process among processes was noted as visible to the convalescent power of the plant world mination to find something that will considered alternatives . Perhaps naked eye or apparent through the use strikes a familiar chord in a culture respond to, sympathize with and, there is an irresistable urge to of equipment sensitive to electrical that has traditional faith in Nature. essentially, love us. Failing in the dramatize at work here similar to the - Jeanne Allpn impulses generated by plan..;t_S. ___ .. N_o_t_un_I_lk_~~o_ur_n.:.ln_e_te.:.e.:.n_th_c..:.e_nt..:.u..;ry~_h_um_an_r_e_al ... m..;,_w_e_tu_r_n_e_l_se_w_h_e_re_. __ n_ar_r_a_ti_on_o_f_Th_e_I_le_I_ls_tr_om_C_h_r_on_i_cl_e ____________ _

By MARK MEYER

Bone to pick

Last semester you printed a letter by two guys who were lured Into a supermarket by advertising of foods that were not on the shelves.

I seem to have been misled lllto The Belt Steak House by a sign In Its window advertising "Chicken 3 pcs. '1.05." 1 went in aDd ordered what I thought was a barlain.1 wal IUrprlled when I went to tbe cash register and wa. alked to pay '1.95. I referred to the window sip but the mlln said It .a. "b~e" lind pointed to a list of price. overhead.

The meal WIIS satisfy lag but the UDexpected price wal hllrd

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to digest. Whllt's the story?-M.A.

As our mentor. Mr. Holmes. was wonUo say, "Alimentary, my dear Watson."

We sent our Son of Eire, Jim Delaney. to investigate your complaint. After all. wHo would take a pecuniary matter more seriously than an Irishman? We talked to the manager of The Best Steak House, Bill

Mihalopoulous. and we are completely satisfied that you were not lu red into the restaurant by deliberately misleading advertising. The explanation is that the outside sign is the kind that has "stick lett~rs" that came unstuck . When two numerals fell off it caused the sign to read "3 pes. $1.05" rather than "3 pes. $1.89" .

Mr. Mihalopoulous explained that he did not know how long the numerals had been off the sign, but that he had im­mediately corrected the sign with a magic marker when the error was brought to his att~ntion. Apparently it is about to go due to a new ordinance forbidding window signs, so this should be the last of the sticky situations it causes.

Jim reports that Mr. Mihalopoulous is a very personable and friendly person who wish~s to get along with eVl.lryone. and consequently, the Delaney-Mihalopoulous I!I1counter en­ded with rapprochem~nt over a beer.

Yearbook and photos

Last fall I arranged to have a photograph portrait liken for the 1974 Senior Yearbook. 111180 took advantage of the offer of the photographers, Delmll Studios of Z25 Park Avenue South

The lady you have been reading and hearing about on the radio.

MADAME PATSY & will reAd your .nlir. Iii. without alklng Iny qUlllionl, gives .d­vic. on .11 all.lrs of III. such IS love, courtship, marrlag., I.w suill, .nd business speculation . T.lls you who and when you will mlrry . She n.ver lalls to reunlt. the sep;lrat.d, cause speedy .nd h.ppy marriages, overcome. enemles.nd bad iuck 01.11 kind •.

T.lIs Your Lucky DaYI And HumNrs Don't be discour.ged if oth.rs h.v.lllI.d to htlp you.

Private And Conlidenll.1 Rtldlngl D.lly-Ev.ryon. II W.lcome HOURS: Ev.rydayand Sund.y " .m.·IO p,m.

Look lor n.m. on h.nd sign In front of h.r hom • . You c.n'l miss I!. OOn'llet .,.W miles stend In your wlY 01 h.pplness.

62411t Av • . , Cor.lville, 'OWI Phon. : 351-9541

In New York City, and ordered a color portrait for myself at a special low price. To dllte I hllve received neither the Year­book or the portrait. CIID you help me out?-W.F.

Your problem was easily resolved. We called the Student Association, and we can report that your yearbook and your photo will not arrive until next September. At that time Delma Studios will ship both to you at the address you provided when you ordered the items.

'Free Voices"

Last week we referred to the "Free Voices" newsletter in one of our columns. "Free Voices" bills Itself as a community newspaper IIf alternatives. In the June 6 issue, for instance, there were articles on day care in low II City, prison reform, consumer protection, chlorinated water I no Its not a com­munist plot; rather. It may destroy vitamin E and, according tu some researchers, thereby Increase the Incidence of heart disease I. a couple poems, and boycott InformlitIoa.

We are alwllYs ready to indorse this type of activity. "Free Voices" has been funded by an Action Studies grant and donations. The grant has run out until next fall when they hope to get another (or their course "Putting out a Com­munity Paper". Consequently. they are soliciting donations to keep them in operation during the summer. "Free Voices" will mall each Issue to you In return for a donation of any amount. Send donations, and offers to participate In the newspaper, to "Free Volcts", care of Center for Peace and Justice, Box 1* lowil CIt~ .

Glenn Yarbrough and

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The Daily Iowan-Iowa City, Iowa-Thurs., June 211, 1974-P8ge 7

Be's a creature feature biggie GEMINI Japan's Godzilla ' has come a long way BEAUTY SALON

St.rling for Men and Women

TOKYO (AP) - Godzilla, Ja­pan's super monster, once a villain but now a hero, Is 20 years old. He Is still going strong after starring In 13 mov­Ies that have brought his mak­er ,130 million in foreign ex­change.

monsters that defy the imagi­nation. He boasts a record of 13 victories, one defeat and one draw in 13 movies. The draw was to King Kong, the super 1933 American giant, whose one movie revival was approved by his American creators, RKO.

revived in his next appearance, a friend of man and creatures fighting evil.

Godzilla was born in tI'Ie western Pacific near the pearl farms off Shima peninsula, Western Japan, in 1954. He was aroused from his slumber at the bottom of the Pacific due to nuclear reaction and radio­active fallout caused by an American hydrogen bomb test at the Bikini atolls.

Tokyo, Osaka and other major cities asunder with his pon­dero\IB feet and then applying the coup de grace with his thrashing tail. His frightening appearance caught on even in

The man-made monster, look­Ing somewhat like a dinosaur, sparked a Japanese monster and scI-li boom that included movies, toys and books. He also haS a legion of fans every­where.

Godzilla, a cross between a gorilla and a "kujira," the Japanese word for whale. has battled' a frightening galaxy of

Today

tv John bOWie

i :OO HEY, ROCKY- WATCH ME PULLA WALTON OUT OF M" HAT!. Tonight's Nicky's World- a 1974 Made-for-T.V. movie that could tum itself into a fall series- may seem the usual dull , self·righteous, and saccharine "family drama" that shows up regularly now since The Waltons' success, but don 't let that fool you ; actually (\ike most things these days) it's a poisonous and brilliant satire. Ha, on 2.

1 Friday

7:30 MUSIC SPECIAL. For this evening, a fine half-hour of Gladys Knight and the Pips, filmed on location in the group's home town, Atlanta Georgia. On 7. PRIMAL MAN . After a tragic plane crash early this year that killed many of the performers and members of the crew, thiS series continues tonight with The Struggle Cor Survival , which includes dramatized scenes of Nean­derthal man and newsreel footage of the Apollo 13 mission. For drama , for documentary,

.

Godzllla's only defeat was to Mothra II. The super monster destroys Mothra I in a thunder­ous battle but forgets that Mothra has left a larva which comes to life and eventually snares Godzllla with its sticky thread used to spin -its cocoon. That setback. however, marks a turning point and Godzilla is

Producer Tomoyukl Tanaka says Godzilla was originally a monstrous muted octopus. But Japan's ace special effects man, Eij! Tsuburaya, who died four years ago, had other ideas. He finally came up with a God­

for entertainment: this is the zilla that looked like a dinoBl:'ur best there is. On 9. . that walked around on Its hind

10 :30 IT'S NO SIN TO BE legs, spe!,ed thermal fire and POE BUT IT MAY AS WELL growled like ~ jungle beast. Al·

, . though Godzilla was no larger BE. 1935 s The Ra~en stars than ordinary man, Tsuburaya, (read : explOIts! . Bons Karloff best known for his special min­and Bela Lugosl 10 the tale of a iaturized version of the surprise mad plastic surgeon waiting out attack on Pearl Harbor, pre­the off-season at Miami Beach. sented him as a prehistoric With Clark Gable, Trevor monster that stood about 165 Howard, Kim Darby , Lyle feet tall and weighed 20,000 Waggoner, Dennis Hopper , tons. Dolores Costello, and a nice Godzilla became an overnight cameo by Phillip Roth, on 9. sensation in his debut, kicking

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the United States, where movie and later television audiences watched his adventures, and sometimes chuckled at his ex­ploits.

menagerie of horrifying crea­tures that resembled ankylo­s a u r us, ticeratops, ptero­dactylus, trachodon, stego­saurus and an often mixed fig­ment of prehistoric imagina­tion.

On Godzilla's heels came a

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nie horrifying collection be­came the ultimate in science­fiction flicks with the latest verging on the ridiculous. But Godzilla has been viewed by 35 million people, and Is even list­ed in Japanese encyclopedias. His producers decline to dis­close his domestic earnings.

Godzilla was originally made of rubber, then of vulcanized foam rubber. Haruo Nakajima,' now 48, was the first man to wear the Godzilla outfit. He had to wear a gas mask and could temain inside the cwn­bersome garb for only 15 min­utes. While he wore the outfit he had at times to pull off a pro wrestling trick, a karate chop, a jujitsu trick or a judo throw.

Models of Godzilla and other monsters are featured in chil­dren's playgrounds, as plastic monster kits, sugar coated chocolates, comic books and dolls.

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Page 8-The Dally Iowan-Iowa City, Iowa-Thurs., June 20, 1974 \

Motorcycle philosoplJer finds 'self' on the open road ZEN AND THE ART OF MOTORCYCLE MAINTE ­NANCE by Robert Plrslg. (Morrow Publishers, $7.95)

U's impossible to out-hip this title, so let me play it straight: this book is not really about Zen, it is not about motorcycle maintenance. No, it is about a

, come the dualistic, subject­object split which, according to Pirsig, has plagued Western culture since Plato rejected personal exceUence in favor of ideal Truth and Aristotle removed value further from self by emphasizing objective ob­servation.

man trying to hold himself Results: upper case-lower together and writing about the case truth, I-thou, objective­cultural traditions of East and subjective approaches to West to accomplish a personal knowledge , Ideal-real, psychic fusion . romanticism and classicism in

Thus the title . Thus the art, mind-body, man versus journey motif in which Pirsig nature : the whole series of and his son motorcycle from · Minnesota through the ---------Badlands to the Pacific coast.

Thus the drawing together of religion and mechanics in a philosophic attempt to over-

The boo,ks reviewed in today's DI are available at Iowa Book and Supply Co.

Family celebrates

National Fink Day

FINK, Tex. (AP) - A smattering of proud Finks, inspired by their 87-year-old poP.t laureate, gathered Wednesday for a celebration to tell the world that Fink is more than just an­other pretty name.

Thursday is National Fink Day, the zenith of National Fink Week, and although only a few can claim to be legitimate Finks, a couple thousand outsiders are expected for free bar­becue and down-home festivities.

By Wednesday, besides the three local Finks, you could meet Louis Fink of Beatrice. Neb., Don Fink of Eldridge, Iowa , and Wilbur Fink of Columbus, Ohio.

But the soul and spirit, Finkness itself, is captured in Oscar L. Fink, the resident poet laureate of the town of nine per­sons.

"I don 't write 'em down, I jus~ tell 'em, " he laughed over the phone when his wife told him, "There's a man from Dal­las who wondered if you'd read a poem of Finktown. ';

Mr . Fink is nearly deaf. but that doesn't stop him any more than it did Beethoven.

"Come go with me to Fink, Texas ". and see them rai~ that flag out there ". high in the air ". brave as a bear. " were excerpts from his poP.m in honor of Fink Day 1974.

Precise verbatim transcripts are difficult because he changes the verses from time to time.

The organizer of Fink Day for the past 10 years is Patricia Albright, who is also mayor by succession and default. .

Her husband. Willard Albright, bought the general store. which entitled him to be mayor. He shunned high political ambition and turned over municipal duties to his wife.

Last year 2,200 persons showed up for a free barbecue din­ner. An added enticement this year is the Fink Folk Festival, which includes a quilting bee and exhibits of buttons and bar­bed wire.

fhurch oC Reason is not ability put Inability. Then you 're \!onsldered teachable. A truly able person is always a threat."

of their potential insanity, the philosophic and emotional strands of the narrative con­verge, giving the book a force that goes beyond rhetoric into

thesis-anti thesis words' used In the dialectic of the University (Pirsig calls it, con­temptuously, the Church of Reason) in order to discuss ourselves, our culture, and our history-with a secret agreement, according to Pirsig, that there is no synthesis to them, because if we ever did bring them together, we as individuals would feel ourselves go whole, and the University as an insitution might crumble:

This is not a young man's felt knowledge. The author calls book; it is revolulionary, but in that knowledge Care. thought, not rhetoric ; and it 's But Pirsig touches so many thesis is not one which will be important motifs in his book dismissed easily. Robert Pirsig that the claim of newness for his is serious in his thinking, synthesis is really rather hedgy.

"The Church oC Reason, like all institutions of the System, is based not on individual strength but upon individual weakness. What's reaUy demanded in the

thorough , especially con- ' sidering the audience he and his publisher have aimed for, and powerful in dramatizing the personal crisis his perceptions have caused him .

In American cultural ideals he foUows Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, Kerouac and Gin­sberg, and his book is an ac­count of spiritual witnessing on this continent that goes back at least to William Bradford's or Plymouth Plantation , con-

When he and his son Chris stop on a cliff overlooking the Pacific and conCront the abyss

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If you 're interested, mail the coupon-and we'll forward some interesting reading . There's a session starting July 8.

We're not going to try to tell you everything about this career here. We will tell you that becoming a Lawyer's Assistant involves about three months of intensive training in Phila­delphia-and that to qual ify you'll need a Bachelor's Degree and a good college record. If you 're interested in a career with a good starting salary and not just a job-The Institute for Paralegal Training may be your

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tinuing through Thoreau, the Beats and the current non­fiction novel form .

lls journey to the West echoes Whitman 's "Passage to India," and its fusion of nature and technology is also very Whit­manesque. Pirsig rejects the val ues tha t make the tragedy oC Jay Gatsby and reaffirms grace and reverence for life-again , Care- which come directly from Hemingway, particularly in such a story as "Fathers and Sons."

Finally, it is a quest narrative harking back 4000 years <through Huckleberry Finn ,

Don Quixote and the Ody8S~Y) to the Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh, where the journey of the mind is as Important to the narrative as the Journey oC the body.

But while the Corm and Intent are old ,the fusion of elements is so total, so interesting, so- ah yes, that word again- relevant , that it is still salutary to read . In the last chapter, when Pirsig and Chris take off their helmets as they ride into San Francisco, they finally begin to feel their journey. It is an illuminating moment :

"The real cycle you're

the groom, the attendants, anybody in

working on is a cycle called yourself. The machine that appears to be 'out there' and the person that appears to be 'in here' are not two separate thl ngs . They grow toward Quality or Call away from Quality together."

Quality is Care, openess, a fronting of experience, being there; it unites mind and body, body and machine, and enables one (]ike this Don Quixote, numb from the passing of another Dulcinea) to love life and self again, even as he learns to feel the pain .

- Fred M iS lI rella

the wedding party. We have a fine selection

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Phone 337-2375

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AP Wirephoto

Up, Up and Astray Star Italian forward Gigi Riva gets shot over

Argentina 's Roberto Perfumo in Wednesday night's World Soccer Cup Championships in Stuttgart, Germany, his attempt missed the Argentine goal. The game ended in a J-I draw.

Whitworth ready

Ladies PGA opens today - SUTl'ON, Mass. (AP) - Kathy Whitworth, the top money winner in women's goll histor~, returns to one of her favorite courses and faces stiff competition in the $50,000 LPGA Cham­pionship starting Thursday at Pleasant Valley Country Club.

She led the touring pros with $85,209 in 1973. Miss Whitworth won the LPGA title here in

1967 and lost in a playoff to Sandra Post in 1970, Mary Mills is back to defend the championship

she won here a year ago, but also expects plenty of trouble in repeating.

"I love this place, but anyone of 20 or 25 girls can win ," Miss Whitworth said Wednesday during a pro-amateur event preceding the of­ficial start of the n-hole tournament.

The chief contenders appear to be Jo Ann Prentice, local favorite Janie Blalock, Jo Anne Carner, Carol Mann, Sandra Haynie, Miss Whitworth and Judy Rankin . Other favorites include Sandra Palmer and young Laura Baugh.

"The days of a single golfer dominating the field on our tour are over," the taU Texan said.

Despite a mild slump this year, Miss Whit­worth has won more than $34,000, boosting her earnings to $525,000 during her brilliant career .

Miss Prentice and Miss Blalock are running 1-2 on the official money list this year. Miss Prentice has won $55,522, -Miss Blalock $51,536.

A field of 88 is entered to chalJenge a par 72 on the 6,l30-yard course .

u.s. Open titlist Irwin heads select field of 99 in Firestone

AKRON, Ohio CAP) - The King and the Kids - along with U.S. Open champion Hale Irwin - head the selecl, invitational field of 99 set for the $170,000 American Golf Classic.

Arnold Palmer, long known to his fellow pros as the King, and lhe kiddie cops oftiUe-hungry, impatient young men who have dominated the tour this year are the key figures in the 72-hole

test that begins Thursday on the 7,180-yard, par 70 Firestone Country Club course.

Irwin lends additional spice to the elite Held but is almost certain to have a letdown.

If he does, such young stars as Jerry Heard , Forrest Fezler, Ben Crenshaw, Tom Watson, John Mahaffey, Eddie Pearce, Lanny Wadkins, Tom Kite and Allen Miller are ready to step in.

Although Palmer is in a deep slump - he's won only once in three years - the 44-year-old giant remains the most popular performer the game has ever known. His presence in the field ali but assures a successful tournament.

Among the big names missing for one reason or another are Jack Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, Hubert Green and Masters champion Gary Player.

No decision on NBA job NEW YORK (AP) - The Na­

tional Ba ketball Association 's Board of Governors met for nine hours Wednesday, but failed to choose between Alan Rothenberg and Henry Stein­man for the job of commission­er to succeed the retiring Wal-

ter Kennedy. Kennedy said emphatically

that he told the owners after their lengthy discussions that under no circumstances would he remain as commissioner be­yond June 1,1975, when his five­year contract terminates.

"I made my position very clear to them when it became apparent that they were stale­mated," said Kennedy, who ad­mitted that he was very upset at the board's failure to reach a decision .

'lbe naUy low ... , Iowa CUy, lowW-Tbun" June 20, 181'_J". I' ..

DA'i Y 'OWA" WA"T ADS PER50HAUM

WHO DOES

IT AUTO

SERV ICE

LF·Esteem Workshop will be ARTIST's portraits- Children,I. __ ~~~~1!!! June 22 and 23. Further adults. Charcoal, 55; pastels, $20 .

ils, 351 ·5092; 351-5319. 6-21 Oil from $85. 338-0260. 7·26

E D- llems for consign­sale . Retail gift store open,

wants handcrafted qual . lems 10 match Iheme of

times . Call 338·9202 . 7-3

RESEARCH Consulting : Ques­tionair construction, data coliec­tion, statistical analysis and pres­entation, and computer appl ic ation . Custom programming for IBM and

"a.II •• , •• I011 •• aYIe.

338-6741 203 KirkwOOd Ave. t Servl,e

HP-2000. Special rates lor thesis I __ ~=~=IJ:I=L.""

MOBILE HOMES

~ . • • TMEHTS 13J[ ~ . ,. -~

l:-~ _ 0' ., ., SUBLET large, furnished effic­

ON E bedroom, inexpensive !iv- lency, air. S125 monthly. Summer. ing, $700 or best offer. Call 337- Fall option . 338-2131 . 6-26 7875. 6·24 _________ _

reward for subletting our two· 1961 Homelle 12x6D-Sklrted, lbe,drclom luxury apartment, . fenced yard, utility shed . Asking Swimlllma pool, barbecue SJ,700, possession July 1. 626·2107. II option available. 351·038A

6·25 p.m . 6-26 -----------------10x50 Academy-Two bed-GAY LIBERATION FRONT or LESBtANS ALLIA NCE 338·2411; 338-3811; 337-1617

consulting. Call 351-5253 or 338'()711 for appointment, or write Hirst, Slack Research Consultants, 703 George St.

AUTOS FORE IGN

, carpeted, dark panelling,

~.. ' 19;;~'e::~::~t available :~~ PATTY: Please come pick up <. (Iledlately - 12x4., furnished, Dean's mail (atter 4 p.m.). 112 S. WANTE D- General sewing - skirted. $3,200 or best; our par:-

6-21 Specializing in bridal gowns. t S70 thl 3514051 6 5

· Onu ndtwo becirooms · Furn lshedor unfurnislled · TWOhea tedswlmmlng pools • Pre-scllool • Much, muchmort

1___________ Phol)e 338·0446. 7-23 1972 Datsun 510- AM.FM radio ; _m_e_n_s __ m_o_n_y_. __ -__ ._-WANTED-Space on truck to Los . ir conditioned; steel belted rad - 1911 Belvedere 12x60-Furnished, Angeles for well-packed bOxes of CHIP.PER'S T,!llor Shop, 128V2 E. ial .tires. Excellent body and two bedrooms, washer and dryer, books. $2 to $3 per box. Now thru Washington . Dial 351 -1229. 7·11 engine. Phone 337.3373. 6-24 fenced yard, garden, adiolns play-July. 351·4632 . 6·28 . ground . 338·6631. 7-25

WI NDOW WASHtNG 1969 VW Camper-Pop·top $2800. -----------INTERESTED in prepared child- AI Ehl, dial 644-2329 Before noon 353.4117 ' then '331. 1964 Park Estate 10x55-Furn-Irth? (Lamaze Classes) beglnn- 5269 ' " 6-25 Ished, air, Foresl View. $2,500 or 331-1175

June 24. Call 338·3289. 6-24 WANTED - General sewing - . :>est offer . 338·3476. 7·3 EO apartment-Air , Specializing In bridal gowns . 'ANNO UNCI·NG_ the o. penin" of ' ng two bedroom $185

P,\EGNANT and don t ~ant te Phone 338-0446. 6-6 Volkswagen Repair Service , bedroom and study, comp- . mer sublet-Fall option. 354: be . We su~port your right to . Solon, Iowa. Complete VW rep.alr. 1493. 6.2A choose abor Ion or adopt!o!" . Call STEREO, televlsio.n repairs, Forappointmentcall 644.3661 . 1-8 ____ -;--:--____ _ The Emma GOldman CliniC for 'reasonable, satisfaction guaran- ' Women , 338·3289. 7·26 teed. Call anytime, Malt, 351- .-_________ -, ON E bedroom, furnished- No

pets. $115 without utilities . 351· 6575; 351-3893 . 6-25 PROBLEM ' pregnancy? Call 6896. 6·21

Birthright, 6 p.m .-9 p.m., Monday HAND tailored hemline altera­through Thursday,338·8665. 6-28 tions. Ladies' garments .only.

Phone 338-1741. 7·26 THERE Is not now, never was, __________ _ and never will be another place WE REPAIR all makes of TVs, like Black's Gaslight Village! 7-17 stereos , radios and tape players. HANDCRAFTED ringS--'Sp·ecial . H!!lble & Rocca Electronics, 319 S. ty wedding bands. Call Terry or Gilbert St . Phone 351 ·0250. 7-26 Bobb i, 353-4241. 7-3

10 visits, S2D-Swim, sauna, exer­cise, sun. Trim, tone, relax al Royal Health Centre. 351 -5577 after noon. 1-19

CRISIS CENTER ~ WORK

WANTED 1 ~ ~ff{,

Problems? Want :0 tal;"? Call or FREE estimates for house paint­stop in . 351-0140; 608 S. Dubuque, ing. Good, reasonable, reliable. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. 7·22 Call 679-2523 . 6-20

See your BIG MAN

in the

small cars

LAR GE first floor of duplex, close 8 6 A d II .. to hospital-Huge bedroom with )13 n erson-Exce ent condl- fireplace back yard $165 Phone

tlon, furnished. Must sell, best 5 6218 'ft 5 . . 1 offer. 351-5972 after 5:30; anytime 3 1- a er p.m. 6·2 weekendS. 6-21 TWO bedroom available now until

August 15 . S100 monthly plus m utilities . 338·4471. 6·24

ROOMMAT E TWO bedroom furnished-Quiet, WANTED pleasant. Close in; off street

, parking, air conditioner. Mature h. single or married couple . No pels,

. . no children. Reasonably pmed. SHARE large house With thre~ Available July 15. 338.0488. 7.26 others ; own bedroom ; air condi-tioned; close in. $62.50 ~Ius utilll· =E:-:X=T=R--:A~I:-a-rg-e-, -n7Ic-e7'ly-:-fu-r-n~is;:'hed-, ies . 351 -1582 aller 5 p.m. 6-21 two bedroom apartment . Two

blocks east of campus. S200. J U L Y ·August only- Clean, . quiet 337-9041; 338-8464. 7.17

INTERPERSONAL massage classes now forming-Emphasis on history, theory and technique. 337-9919. 6-21

HELP WANTED

sleeping room. Linens fur.,shed, ______ _

liiiii~;;;~~ parking . 338-9023. 7-26 TWO one·bedroom apartments. Close In, furnished . $135-$160. Phone 351 ·8339. 7 · 1~

Ql RIDE­. . RIDER

KEYPUNCH OPERATOR

DRIVING to Dubuque weekends Temporary , part-t ime: days. and July 3. Gerald Edgar, 338. weekends, and-or even,"g~ . Sal ·

6-25 ary $2.64-3.06 hour depending on ___________ experience. Ind ividual needed to CAR pool- For summer school assl.s! in co~pleting sfecial study. Davenport to Iowa City. 1-359' ~~~dti'~~ ~lIih~~tu~be~;~k~o~;~ 1008. 6·24 Ihe person can work . Contact the

CHILD CARE

BABY sil anyt ime, my home, 657 Hawkeye Court. Dial 354-1627.7-26

LICENSED baby siller--='Any age, weekdays. 607 Hawkeye Court. 354-3180. ..421

Wt LL baby sit and have recrea · tlon activities for children, my home, weekdays . Experienced mother and teacher . 338·2353. 6-20

Personnel Office, City of Iowa City , 354 .1800, X 206 or 207 immediately. Merit. Affirmative Act ion, EEO Employer. F-M. 6-21

PIZZAlflf~ IS Seeking

WAITRESSES AND WAITERS

Full or Part Time, Day and Evening

Apply

1921 Keokuk, Iowa City or

211 1st Ave., Coralville ® GOOD THINGS TO EAT

WEST Side Produce, three miles An Equal Opportunity Employer west of Fountain Falls- Home grown vegetables; rhubarb ; pota - CORALVILLE Drive·ln Theatre ioes, \0 Ibs. $1.59. Open 9:30 a.m. needs part time help for resl of ta 8 p.m. Closed Mondays . 626 season, male and female . Contact

Ken Clow in person at the drive in or phone 337-2213 after 1:30 p.m. An equal opportunity em ployer. 6-24

COOK, part .lime, with cooking

27 models to choose from

JAKE BUSTAD TOYOTA·SUBARU

New hours to serve vou : Mon .·Fri. : 8a .m.-9 p.m.

Sat. : 8 iI_m .-4 p.m.

Hwy.6 Wesl& 10 Ave. Coralville

Phone 351·1501 4 INSTRUCTION

II ,1 L:t t~ experience, al Beverly Manor 10 __________ '"

Convalescent Center . Contact

qualified . Heated rool. Royal at 338·7912. 7-16 I Health Center . 35 -5511 af

6te

lr, .. , ... ."

~ ROOMS QU I ET, furnished aparlmenls, four adults also efficiency apart. ment. No pets. Dial 337-3265.6·20

SUBLET large room, furn ished , R SUblet-Modern, one-.cOok i· 11a. ; second months rent ~";"Il?E:~r<)!l~ apartment . Fall option.

p.m, 338·3345. 9, 521 Ronalds St. 338-2095.

SINGL~ room, no kitChen, refrigerator , $49. $40 deposit. 351 · 9474. 6-20

NICE single with kitchen facilit­ies ; near Towncrest , $55. 644-2576 (local call) , 7·24

7-12

ATTENTION TENANTS Save gas, steps and time with Rental Directory as your rental guide . We'lihelpyoufindaplace tolive.

114 E. College,Suite 10 338·7991

I~-..----.... G I R LS-La rge , co mforta bl e AIR conditioned, newly furnished, rooms two blocks from campus. Iwo bedroom apartment. Garbage Share kitchen and bath. 560 , washer, dryer. Seven double ; $90, single. Phone 351 - m Pentacrest. 5200. 8339. 7-19 -8464. 7·17

NOW renting for summer AVAILAISL~ now : . Apartments school - Rooms'lor men students; and rooms wl,th cook!ng. Summer common kitchen facilities; coin rates. Black s Gaslight Village. laundr'( ; near Law, Medical and 1-25 ~t3~8u41~15.g al125 River . 331-~4~~ WESTWOOD-WESTSt DE

. 94S·101S Oakcresl SUMMER: SpaCIOUS, attractive Luxury efficiencr' one bedroom, single three blocks from campus; two bedroom , hree bedroom $75; 337-9759. 6-7 suites and townhouses. From

S130. Call 338-1058, 6- ~1

HOUSIN G WANTE D

CLOSE in : One bedroom, unfurn. ished, air . No pets . 5145. 338-3260 atter 5 p.m. . 6·28

SWIMMING instruction- WSI Mrs. Jane Wright, Administrator, ft ANTIQUES.

noon . - TH E Des Moines Register Is :l ------.--- . . look ing for carriers in Ihe areas of PROFESSOR wishes to rent inter· FRENCH : Tutonng and aid In W Benton.Carriage Hill-Seville; LOCAL Road Antiques, rural eslir;lQ small ~ouse, duplex or

Get fast results with a

Dally Iowan Classified Ad!

Iranslation of research material. N: Dodge ; and Scotsdale areas . Iowa City- Barn of furniture ; col- eqUivalent, With yard. 337-7062 1";:==========1 Gadann, 351·3105. 7-3 Must be in city entire summer and lectables; lamps ; clocks; etc. 10 before 9:30 a.m., after 11 p.m. lot

Inlo fall. 337-2289. 6-25 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily and week- 3534952, days 6·25 CERTIFIED teacher Performer ends. Phone 351-5256. 7-25 Oilers flule lessons- All ages. EXPERIENCED salesp(!rson in _ HOU SE-SITTERS (availabte 8-1-styles. 351 ·3723. 6·28 backpacking and mounfaineer . TWOb~iI~i!lgS full-~Iass-furnl · 74)-ReSpon~lble couple (no chil. - - ---- Ing Call The Bivouac, 338-7677.i ture.pnmlt.lves-tools·lars-etc. dren ; atten~l,!g Gra~ ~chool) de-

. 620 Bloom Anllques, Wellman, Iowa, sire house Sitting pOSlllon. Will do Iowa City's only

morning

classifieds are in

The Dail, Iowan

___________ - Monday-Saturday,9 a.m.- 5:3C minor repairs and maintenance.

II p.m. 6-26 Excellent references . Inquire of : - Ted Allen , 630 S. Clay St., Denver,

MOTO RCYCLES Colo . 80219 or phone 303-934-5033. Sell It FAST with a 6-24

. . D.1. Classified Ad!

ECIM~ HOUSES 1973 Honda CL350 3,500 miles, e~cc llcnl condit ion , sissy bar. 338 2060 624

MUSICAL . ,:

, I,," FOR I RENT

120 Suzuki Scrambler, S250. Mov- INST RUMENTS / ',I Inq, musl sell. :lSI 5982 ; 3534396 1

. i~64 XLCH Extended, disc Iront . . . •

THREE-bedroom house with gar­age near Wardway, immediate occupancy. $200 per month . Cal l for appointment, 351-7696; 351 -8071 or 351 -48t3.

'

(Ron) . 625 • ,

. l000cc. 1972 500 Honda Exlended' . . , bars, olher extras. 353 2307 alter 8 FENDER- Rhodes electriC bass ==========::.

LOST AND

FOUND. I p.m. 62t piano, besl offer . Dial 626-6446. ET m E

-. , 6-21 L . 1911 Honda CLl7 3,100 miles , -----~---__:c-

~EWARD Green wallet lost VIC excellenl condition . 5550. 351 0521 . DAILY IOWAN mlty Burqe. Imporlant keys . 337 621 n05 allcr 5 p m. 624 ~

-- HONOAS- New- tmmediale de MISCELLAN CLASSIFIED ADS

S & E CUSTOM CABINETS

P.O. Box 6139 10J nd Avenue Cor~ l v ill e, Iowa

331-3634 'h block south of Randall's

Custom vacuum forming pl e~l-g l as

Full sheets or cut to size Milled

uniBankl & TRUST Coralville,lown I

Welcome to the 12 Hour Bank

Our Motor Bonk IS Open from 8 0 .01 . to 8 p.m.

Kennedy has served as the PETS league 's second commissioner ~

livery- CB750 now $1,869. CB450 A.Z now 51 ,375. CL360 now $1.059.

. MT250 now $899. MTl25 now S669. BRING FAST RESULTS , o,d Saturdays from B 0 .01 . to I p.m.

........ 11 .~~ .,.ncllft" ~~~,, :

1\ m rrlcu Lugue Ea I

\\I L !,ct. Iioslun 36 27 571 HMltlrnore 32 30 .516 Clevela nd 32 30 518 Delrolt 32 30 516 New York 33 S3 500 Milwaukee 29 30 492

"'elt OakllRd 34 30 531 Texas 33 31 5 tl Kansas Cily 31 30 508 Chicago 28 30 483 California 28 37 431 Mlnnelola 25 35 417

_ e,hndn'. nlmel Chic_IO 15. Cleveland 4 N lIal tlmore I, Mlnnesotl 5 N

OD

3' ~ 3' , 3' , 4' , 5

P. 3 8', 1

Kan ... Clly I, Mllwauk", o.ee, N hmoll at TUIS, N 1I00ton It Olkllnd, N New York II Callfornll , N

Thrllll,'1 Olm .. ChlUIO II Mlnnesotl , N Baltimore at Mlhl'lukee , N C.I\lornll 1\ TeuI, N • K ..... Clly It Oakl.nd, N Onl, ,Ime. 1C"~clulecl

Natlon.1 LUlU! Eut

\\I L Pet. GB Philaphlo H 30 531 Monlrral 30 28 .511 Sl l.ou Is 32 30 516 Piltsburgh 28 34 433

hlcago 25 35 .411 New York 24 39 381 9' ,

Los Angele~

Atlanta Ci nci nnati II ouston San Fr.n San Diego

\\Ie.t H 22 667 38 21 535 5',

36 21 .51t 61,

33 33 . 500 II 32 36 411 13 29 42 408 17',

WeduIdIY'. Gimes Monlreal 4, Cincinnati l S.n Olelo I, Chic. go 0 AlI.nll 5, New York 0 LOl Ancete •• t I'lIl1burgh. N Phlladelphll5, Hou Ion. N San Francisco 5, St. Louis 4 N

·hlr.llly" G.mel P IUlbur,h .1 Chlc_IO New York II Phll.delphla , N OnIY,lmel.cheduled

since Sept. I, 1963. His prede­cessor was Maurice Podoloff.

'. XUO or CT10 now S399 . No extra THOR ENS TO 160 lurnlable, iust • . , . charQes . Slark 's Sport ShoP, ovcrhlluled. $185 . Mark , 337 3842. FOR YOU TODAY l

PROFESS IONAL d gr - Pralne du Chien, WlsG . Phone 608 626 -;:;=::==== = ____ ..:.:=== 09 oomlng 326 2331 7 ·20 r Puppies, kittens, Iropical fi ~h, pel ___ . ______ _ Kennedy said that he did not

know how many votes had been taken by the board, or the result of the balloting , Kennedy revealed that he was in attend­ance at the outset of the meet­ing , but then , at his own re­quest, left the meeting room and did not return until after the group had met for 81h hours, except for three brief occ.asions.

supplies. Brenneman SCed Siore, 1500 1st Avenue Soulh. 3388501.

621

~ TYPING

MOVI NG ~illc Three families

:. '..

BICYCLES Thursday, 9 a.m. 9 p.m. Appli ances, household, bilby, miscell ancous. Cc1sh preferred . 6 20 ---GI R L'$lhree speed Raleigh bicy cle, $50. EpiphOne guitar, case.

• SE RVICES A .20·s Hilwkl'ye Dr ive. Wednesday .

. '50. 351 3026. 625 10 speed bicycle for sale, $47 .SO. "'. ---

GENERAL typing- Notary pub Cali 3384908. 6·25: WHEN better drinks are buill -lie. Mary V. Burns, 416 Iowa State - Magoo's wilt make them 7-22 Bank Bldg. 331-2656. 7·26 . ,

He said that each lime he asked them to give him a state· ment, which he could relay to l AMELON Typing Service- IBM AUTOS ~_.\ HEATHKIT AR·1500, $400, ESS the press. They said , according e

80le7cstrlc, carbon ribbOn. Dial 338- DOMESTIC ~ . 1. Amt 3, "Rock Monitors," $750,

7·26 - -.- - -' 'T two monlhs Old . See al 726 N. Van to Kennedy, "We are still talk- ·. .(~ I ' Buren, 57 p.m. ing" TYP IN G theses, short papers, ~\~. . .~.

. , etc ., fifteen years experience. ' -.' KEL TY lIackpack and frame r But It was learned that the 35- Dial 337·3843. 7·15 1972 air conditioned Olds Cutlass Snowllon goosedown bag ; guitar

year-old Rothenberg was close . I BM Selectric- Carbon ribbon, Supreme convertible with AM FM and case. Phone 331 ·30A8 . 6·21

to being elected, Reportedly, Iheslse~perlence . Formerunl~efi :!e~ob~!~fy iel~~~:h~te J~i GARRARD component stereo; Rothenberg, a Loa Angeles Slty secrelary. 338-8996. - wesl Branch, f~3.2371 ·. oa 626 fillV rock records ; Bouc molor­attorney, had received 13 votes, MS. Jerry Nyall IB M Typll19 Ser- __ cycle helmet. 338-1255. 6·21 one shy of the 14 necessary from vice. Dial 338·1330. 7·10 1963 Chevli Van- Clean, runs well . . the IB-member board to get the PERSONAL Typll'lg Service _ $65O·nego lable. 33' ·~.S. 6·21 ~' •.• DUPLEX,~ ... prestigious job of com- 'Loca ted Hawkeye Court . Dia l J EEP Van, 4 cylinder. Many IlflJDllt ,IfLCllMt missioner. 354-1735, 7·22 .xtras, Cheap I 3515982; 353-4396

,II It (Ron) . 6·25 However he could not get the BY Ms. Jerry Ny.l l, 5"" Klmbll . TWO bedroom futnlshed - Alr

dec"i 'th d th Road- Electric IBM, 4Sc·S5c per 1972 Ford Torlno-Pow.r st"r, garage, bus . 61A 4th Avenue IB ve 14 Yote, an e page. Office hours, ••. m, ·5 p.m. lng, clean, very good condition Cora lvil le. From 5150. 354.291 2

board decided to adjourn until 7-2~ 338-5338. , 6-2; 351 ,571. . 7-Thursday.

MAINTENANCE MECHANIC Minimum five years experience In electr ical and mechanica l f ield. Must be self-starter . Wage 15 negotiable,

VEGA INDUSTRIES Mt. Pleasant, Iowa 1·385·3190

An employer ------ .-Magoo'sl ,t206 N. Linn I

with fr iendly In!~.~. ~~ol,!~.r~ATE IAI I Fr" Munchlts.nd Comfort.ble Booths I

~ block lOuth of Plu. Pl lact

''THE lEST DAMNED DIINKS IN TOWN" .--------•.

Page I6-The Dally Iowan-Iowa City, Iowa- Thurs. , June 20, 1974

Collegiates take third straight By TOM QUINLAN Alit. Sports EcIltor

Bill Heckroth coaches a Babe Ruth League team in Iowa City and pitches for the Iowa City Collegiates . Although there may be a lew moms and dads who question his managerial talents with his little leaguers sporting a 0-3 record, no one on the Iowa diamond Tuesday night could question his feats on the mound.

to preserve a 6-4 win over Williamsburg.

The hard-throwing righthander faced only 11 hatters In his Ihort Itlnt and dldn" a 1I0w a hit as the Colleglates pUlhed their record to 11-4.

Williamsburg jumped on the Marshalltown native lor three singles and a double in the fourth inning. With the Iowa City team leading 6-4 and runners on second and third, Heckroth came on for his late inning heroics.

WlIIlamsburg came out winging In the first and jumped

'on Cordt for the flrlt run on two .,Ingles and an error. Cordt IWOWed one more hit, a double, before being relieved in the fourth.

The steady bats of Donn Hulick and Jon Brase went to work in the bottom of the lirst for the firsl Collegiate run.

Heckroth pitched 3 and one­third scoreless innin~s of relief

"That was just a sensational relief job," said Coach Doug Kelley. "Anytime you lace only 11 batters in three innings, you've done a great job."

Craig Cordt started the game for the Coliegiates but

The former Iowa pitcher bore down and got the next batter to ground out and end the threat. Heckroth preserved the win for Cordt, 3-0, as he struck out two and walked one in the final three innings.

Hulick greeted pitcher John 'rierman with a §harp single andBrasefoliowed with a double to score Hulick. The next three

down • In

All golf fans planning on seeing the world's greatest golfers and various sports personalities and entertainment celebrities at next Monday's Amana VIP tournament, have just a few days left to buy advance tickets.

Tickers purchased prior to tournament day will be $5. Tickets at the gate at Fink­bine Monday will cost $6. Advance tickets can be bought at the area golf clubs and pro shops, or ordered by sending a check payable to the VI Atheltic Department, to the Iowa Athletic Department Field House, University of Iowa , Iowa City, Iowa, 52240.

Benefiting from the ticket revenues again will be the "I" Club Scholarship Fund.

Starting times for this year's event begin at 8 a.m. The teams, each made up of a pro and Amana retailer amateurs, some with Amana celebrity guests, will tee off from No. 1 and No. 10 at ten-minute intervals.

Instead of breaking for lunch after nine, the teams will play 18 holes straight through. The second half of the field will begin from the same tees after all the golfers in the first half have made their nine-hole turn, around 11:50 a.m.

Three former VIP champs are in the

1Imooo tickets

field . Tommy Jacobs. Bert Yancey and last year 's winner , DeWitt Weaver. Yancey fired a 63 to capture the event in 1971, a record not oniy in the tourney but at Finkbine. Weaver, proclaimed as one of the game's longest hitters, had a 64 in his victory last year.

Three other men in the tourney's largest field ever, have been honored as PGA "Player of the Year." Two pros won the award twice. Arnold Palmer in 1960. and 1962 and Julius Boros in 1952 and 1963. Orville Moody, in the year he captured the U.S. Open, war. honored in 1969.

Dan Truckenmiller , Clinton's own version of Evel Knievel , made his motorcycle jump over 10 trucks last Saturday at the Cordova Racing Cham­pionships In Cordova, Ill.

Truckenmiller went 134 feet-eight feet shy of Knievel 's record- but couldn't count his attempt because he dumped his bike on the landing.

He escaped serious injury. However, Sunday he did have an x-ray taken on his sore left leg. TruckenmiIler will keep on truckin ' though,

June 30 he 'll take another crack at Evel's

Corduroy Suit Sale

The go-everywhere suit.

Here is the Classic Cord Suit

with a choice of side or

center vents and vested too,

These are excellent values

at $75.00 to $80.00. Now

far a limited time, just

coat, vest & pant<

front!

. record in Omaha. We'll be in Clinton this weekend to talk to him about his new career.

Radio commercials in Clinton built up Truckenmiller 's attempt with all the vigor of an urchestra 's drum roll . The part of the broadcast tJ:1at was the most interesting was the closing.

"Will he make it or will he? ... pray for Don Truckemiller."

Many had good reason to look towards the heavens. It was the first time Truckenmiller h d ever attempted the jump!

Iowa baseball Coach Duane Banks was pleased to hear that Dave Marshall , all · Big Ten third baseman for the Hawkeyes, had signed with the Pittsburgh Pirates as a free agent. .

But Banks couldn 't express the same sentiments after he learned that two of his top high school recruits, Tom Toman and Harris Price, inked pro contracts.

"That really hurts our recruiting hopes," said Banks, "with those two kids we would have had just a super season next year. But they got their money and if that's what they want , then you can't disagree with them."

BREMERS 2 Great Stores \ 1IIIIII,'j Th,

2 Great locations ~y01~ ;is:, .... " Clothing is tpdoy 's W! buy" Pn" lndf.

Collegiate batters failed to score Brase.

Ten Collegiate batters came to the plate in the second InnIng when the Iowa City squad scored three runs. Catcher Bob Schardt lined a double to center and advanced to third on a passed ball . Jim Sieffert walked and Tom Burch flied deep to bring in Schardt. .

The speedy ,Sleffert stole second and Hulick and Brase delivered back-to·back singles to sco re Sie(lert . Steve Schamberger walked to load the bases with two oul. Willie Mims then watched four pitches go astray as the Williamsburg hurler walked in the third run. Bob Rasley grounded out to end the inning with the Collegiates leading 4-1.

An error, two singles by Nelson and SieKert along with a sacrifice fly by Hulick scored the final two Collegiate runs.

Hulick ended the evening with two hits, two RBIs and scored two runs himself. The field day at the plate boosted his batting average above .280 . Hulick in the past few weeks has doubled his average.

" I'm really pleased with Donn (Hulick)," said Kelly. "He started out slow, but he has really come along. He played an excellent game and is a tough hi tter under pressure."

Jon Brase continued to bat above the .500 pace with two hits and played a slandout game at second base.

"We're making just a few little errors , but we are really starting to shape up," said Kelley. " If we get a few more players to come around like Hulick and Brase have, we are going to be a tough team to beat."

Just about the time I was beginning to think there was no woman in the world like you,

you came along, Happy anniversary, darling,

to the wife who was well worth waiting for.

Diamonds make a gift of love.

insberg's °ewelers TWO FINE STORES

IOWA CITY CEDAR RAPIDS The next home ~ame is

Sunday , June 23 as the Collegiates host the Quad Cities in a doubleheader.

The Mall Shopping Center

This is our largest annual store-wide sale. These are only a few of the tremendous savings you will find~

.PIANOS. M W u rllher spinets,

demon strator, excellenl value $795.00

M Yamaha console, Mediter-ranean Spanish 300,00

C W u rlltzer spinet, Ear lv American 895,00

C Yamaha grand plano, American Walnut

SAVE 550,00 C Yamaha Professional ,

upright SAVE 345,00

.ORGANS. Optlgan organ with

rhythm $179,00 Wurllh.r spln.1 wllh

automatic chords and rhythm 499.00

M Wurlltzer spln.t with Orb it II synthesizer

SAVE 500.00 Wurlltzer spinet with

pre·sets, sustain, and rhythm SAVE 400.00

M Yamaha console, 32-note pedal board, rhythm pre·sets

SAVE 1,000,00

• TAPE RECORDERS. Sony C F·2oo AM-FM Casselle Recorder, Close· Out Special ' $ 69.95

M Sony TC-160 Professional Cassette Deck $149,95

M Assorted Used Sony, Craig, Panasonlc cassettes & reel · $34,95· to.r ee l recorders, your choice $39,95

• ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT. Enioy the fl exibility of Individual components without tile extra cost.

M Packag' IlnclUClts: Superscope A-22S Amplif ier' $ 79.9S Garrard X-IO Turntable 5'.95 l ·Perfex II two-way Speakers lIIHi

Specl.1 $179,95

• QUADRAPHONIC SPECIAL. If you ' ve been thinking about converting to Quad, but thought you couldn' t afford II.

M Packagt II Include.: Superscope QA-420 Quad A!!III"fler Garrard SLX·3 Automatic Turntable 4-Perfex Iltwo·way Speakers

$1".ts 119.95

all Special $3",95

• FOLK and CLASSIC GUITARS.

Hondo Concert Size Classic Conn ', C lasslc~reat for

young beg inner Martin 0 ·18 Jumbo Stee l

String with case Picador Folk Guitar F,m. Folk Guitar

SPECIAL PURCHASE Garcia Classic- Known for

fine craftsmanship Yamaha G·40 Classic Conn Jumbo Steel String

wllh case

REG. NOW

$54.95 $ 39.95

$75.00 59.95 Save 140,00

$ 109.50 84.00 $U9.50 79.50

115,00 59.50

$t99,SO 149.50

ALL 12·STRING GUITARS ';hoose from Marti n, Yamaha, OVltion,

Sa kurl , Sigma and more

20% off

,

• ELECTRIC GUITARS AND AMPS' N.tlonal Eleclrlc Guitar,

Includes hard shell case, Reg. $169.90 Kay Electric Bass

$119,95 $ 19.95

C Kuslom Sldfwlncltt' Gui tar Amplifier SAVE SlDO,DO

$125.DO C Fend.r Syper Reverb SA ve

MUSICAL GRAB BAG Inc luding guitar str ings, books, reed s, drum sticks, and much much more

All 50% off

Two Stor •• to Serv. You STORE HOURS

W •• t'. ,1 Tile Mall W"kd,y. 10 :00-' :00 Saturday ' :10-5:00 SundiY 12 :00·5:00

W •• t' •• t Coral v III, Monday , :.':00 Tues .... rl. ' :10-5:10 Saturday ' ;00-5 :00

.. OR THISSALI ONLY SUnday 12 :00-5 :00

DRUM SETS N.wA UstG

ChOOse from Rogers, Ludwig, Apollo & others

20% off

~IMusicCo. 1212 11th $t (301·2000)

5thSt.

M-MIII Store C-Cor.lvIlI.

musIc company 1212 5th St., Coralville / Ph. 351-2000 The Sycamore Mall Ph. 351-9111

T

t Econo

the main Universi leaders a may be move to i

Student Cagan sa and Sen Rogers wi of Rege posing fu

At th Thursday Moines t pee ted t tuition In academic

A $SO tu of·state s the fall , regents I com prom legislatur requested for $16.4 plementa legisiatu non· reside legislators for all 5t

Last J proved a fo·r n dergradua of·slate g regents "mandate,

In Dec room and approved

"There tuition In living In times , .. another I stUdents to Won't kno nexl '50."

She cil creases shelter ~n

a I o~ "~ SAN Ford , caused nation

" 181

Water esteem self-hat

In hit the U.I lIrKed } nation,

Refer tht MIc Arabs I

lov"et "But

to _I'