peacekee ing role forecast - the daily...

4
Demonstrate in NYC- Women Marc for By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chanting slogans of liberation, women clivi ts across the country demanded equal rights Wednesday with a series 01 demonstrat ions. .. Equal pay for equal job ," shlluted lI'archers as they paraded down ell' York's Fiflh Avenue, lined with specta- wrs, Polic. on the sc.1M .stim.ttd ther. Wlrt mort th.n 20,010 m.rch.rs .nd 21.000 persons lining Fifth Av.nu. IS the p.lreclt moved the 17 blockl from 59th Slr"t 10 r.lly silo In Bry.nt P.rk, I t behind the main branch of the Public Library. Leaders of th. d.monstretion Slid there wert 50,000 m.rch.rs arMI 30.000 spectalon, The demonstration was timed to coin- cide with the 50th anniversary of adop- tion of the 19;h amendment giving worn- eo the right to vote. , The sponsor called the demonstrahon I' "Strike for Equality," and urged wom- en to tay home from work and to stop performing menial household chores. About 1,000 wom.n m.rchtd down Conn.cticut Av.nue In Wllhlnglon be- hind I bann.r reading, "w. demand equality." Two dozen women picketed the New York Stock Exchange, chanting slogans like, "Out of the house, into the world." And Philadelphia libera(lo\lists, stag- Sexism? ing an exhibIt in Rittenhouse Square, draped a dummy with chains, hung cosme lit'S from it and put up a sign baring the produ:ts "exploit women." Major goals of th. demonstr.tion wert equal job opportunities and pay, fr" .bortion .nd 24-hour child clr. c.nt.rs. Rallie, marchers and other public demonstrations were centered in the large cities, Els wh ret women were urged to demonstrate in their own way- staying off the job, joining product boy- cotts, discarding bras and cosmetics and ignoring menial hou ehold chores in a:- cordance with the demonstrat ion slo- gan, "Don't Iron while the is hoI." Most larg. companies reported lilt" absenteeism due to the strlk._ The New York Commerce .nd Indultry Auoci.- tion s.id a spot check of 30 firms showed only • f.w women h.d "ktd for .nd had betn given the day off, President Nixon issued a proclamation marking women's suffrage and urging Americans to recognize that women sure- ly have a still wider role to play in the politlcal, economl: and social life of the country." Several politician, including New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and Mayors James Tate of Philadelphia, Lee Alexander of Syracu e, . Y., and Peter Pamet. Cole, a supporter of the wo- men's liber.tion mov.m.nt, gets • d.- flnit. rllpon" from I largely male audience in Providence, R.I, The ludi.nc. formed IS she mid. .t.t.· ment. in support 01 the movem.nt during a women's liberation demon. stration her. W.dnesd.y. - AP Wirephoto I I City ' OfficiQls, Editors Discuss Police Arms "Misimpressions " conveyed by the lo- cal newspapers over the recent acquisi- tion of new weapons- by the Iowa City Police Department were the topic of dIscussion at a luncheon meeting Wed- nesday afternoon. At the meeting were Iwo members of the Iowa City Chamber of Commerce's Committee on Social Concerns, City Manager Frank Smiley, Iowa City Police Chief Patrick J. I McCarney, Daily Iowan Editor Leona , Durham and Press-Citizen Managing Editor William Eginton. The Social Concerns Committee, in- lcoded as a step toward establishing irust between bu sinessme n, students and " administrators, has thus far excluded the press from its meetings. Its mem- bers have discussed the weapons issue at three recent meetings, the last one I , held Tue day afternoon. to committee chairman F.J. Newman, concern was expressed at Tuesday's meeting by St;Jiley and Cham- ber 01 Commerce PreSIdent Ben Sum· '/ merwill over recent newspaper reports Dn the new pollce weapons . Newman said the focal point of the I ; discussion at the meeting was the " mis- Impression" that the new weapons were acquired to cope with student disorders at the University of Iowa this fall. The weapons in question include sawed-off ,hotguns and tear gas grenades_ Smiley pointed out that McCarney, on the contrary, was being moderate in hi s acquisition of new weapons and said that he was, in fact , "doi ng much less than he is being urged to do." He noted as an example that the police bad pur· chased no bullet-proof vests and no high- POwered rifles . Smiley and McCarney emphasized that the weapons purchases made eariier lhis summer were only to replace old 'I eqUipment and to upgrade the clipabili- \ ties of the department in areas in which Ihey had fallen behind . McCarney said the purchases - four I \ shotguns , three wa lkie-ta lkies and two dozen tear gas grenades - were made from government grant funds originally allotted for the purchase of films deal- ing with drug abuse. He said the department purchased four such fi lms but, as the deadline for using the funds approacbed , he realized there was not time to order and view more films so he requested and received per- mission to purcha , e the equipment in order to avoid turning the unused funds back. The purchases, Smiley said, In terms 01 the impression left by them were particularly poorly timed. "It left a completely different than we would like to leave," he said. The poor timing , he said, was a con- sequence of the news 01 the weapons purchases following On the heels of testimony given by police officia Is on Aug. 6 at the hearing to determine the status of a temporary injunction. The in- junction was issued on behalf of the city of Iowa City on May 6 to curb obstruc- tion , disruption , destruction of property and incitement to disorder relating to the demonstrations that brought the uni· versity to a near standstill in early May. At that hearing McCarney testified that oral reports from informants of the Iowa Bureau of 'triminal Investigation (BCI) had led him to believe that, as a result of activities on the· pari 01 dissi- dents , "the University of Iowa will be closed aIter the second week after It opens" in the lall. Robert Engel, a committee member and administrative assistant to universi- ty Pres . Willard Boyd, said that as a result of that testimony and of the, re- ports of the purchases , the university had received a number of caOs from parents concerned about the safety 01 their children on the campus this fall and that dormitory counselors were belng questioned by concerned students, At Wednesday'oS meeting McCarney said he dld not believe he university would be shut down . He said one paid Informant and one unpaid informant are working on the campus and that he thinks it wiU be an "entirely different ballgame In the fall than in lhe spring" and that the campus would not be a particularly troublesome area. Flaherty of Pittsburgh - declared Wedr¥!sday Women's Rights Day . Sev"al observances _r. held t. honor Susan 8. Anthony, an 'Irly suf· frage "lder . At her birthplace, Ada'TIS, Ma _, the post office i sued a commemorative stamp. Lucy Wilo;on Benson, in a for flfSt-day ceremonIes , warned the women that "history has too many ex- amples of over brash movements who, through their own efforts, have snatched defeat from the jaws of victory." There were critics of the demonstra- tions. Sen. Jennings Randolph ([)'W Va .) said in a Senate speech the leader of the liberation movement were a .. mall band of bra·l s bubblehead ." There were a few bra dumpin!(.S with some liberation groups setting up Ira h can for item feminists con ider ym- bolic of the sexine s forced on them . Female secretaries In the Pentagon's information office tossed bra , • girdle and some lacy pink panties inlo a waste baskel, then topped tbe collection off with a rolling pin. NOWI _._------ it the Unjljersitv of 10tl'Q Esta'ilisheel In 1868 Iowa City, Iowa 52240 Women demonllrators m.rch down New Yoric City'. Fifth Avenue lMar 52nd Itrwt WtdnesdlY in support of • nationwift "Strite. for Equ.lity." ",. march, followtd by mISS ratty .t Bry.nt P.rk. WII spon_td by the N.tlonal Orglnlzatlon of Women (NOWI, - AP Wirephoto oman allli the People of Iowa City Thurl., August 27, 1970 Peacekee ing Role Forecast * * * * * * * * * 2nd Round of. Talks Begin For UeS., Soviets I n Middle East UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. IA'I - Gun- nar V. Jarring, the U N. sp(!clal envoy, began a second round of Middle Ea t peace talks Wednesday despite the ab- sence of the 1 rae Ii delegate . He called in Jordanian Ambas ador Abdul Hamid Sharar and Egyptian Ambassador Mohammed Hassan El Zay- yal for separate consultations in his 38th floor office . Jlrrlng and Iayyat t.lk.d for 55 min· utes - the long .. t m .. tI"g It fir In the consult.tions that opened at U.N. h"d . quart.rs TU.lday. The Jordani.n 1mb,,· IIdor spent about 30 minutes with Jar- ring. A U.N. SpOkesman declared that the absence of an Israeli representative doe not affect the di cus ions - the first major effort to reach a Middle Ea L settlement in more than 20 years . Thcre have been reports that Jarring was taken by surprise by the decision of Israeli Ambassador Yosef Tekoah to re- turn Tuesday night to Jeru alem for con- sultations. The U.N . spokesman indicated this may have been the case, but added: "There are other things to do and con- tacts to maintain." He did not elaborate . It was aPPlrent th.t Jarring was d.- termlned to keep up the momentum of th. talks as best h. could. In Tel Aviv, Tekoah told reporters Laird Suggests Wider Air Attacks In Indochina War WASHINGTON IA'I - Secretary of De- fense Melvin R. Laird suggested Wed- nesday the broadest use yet of U.S. air power in Cambodia and disclosed a Soviet missile development which could sizably swell thair inventory of nuclear warheads. Laird's comments on air power in Cambodia - in the face of congress- ional concern over U.S, involvement there - were based on protecting American forces over the border In Vietnam. The secretary declined to get into the "semantics," as he said, of what may limit U.S. air power in Cambodia. What restrictions do exist are a mili- tary secret, he said. "The use of air power to interdict, or stop, or whatever terms you may ' use , material and personnel, is a good use of military power in that area with a minimum loss of American llves," Laird told a news conference. ''I'm interested In keeping casualties in Vietnam down. If we can destroy troops and material in Cambodia with minimum casua l ties, I am for it and I will authorize it," he said. Laird reminded newsmen that in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in May he said U.S. air power would not be restricted as were the U.S. ground forces during the Cambodian incursion. In the Soviet missile test, Laird said that for the first time the Soviets test- ed an 8811 missile with a multiple re- entry vehicle. There are about 700 of these missiles now deployed , and a fitting for multiple warheads would mean perhaps 2, 100 warheads, that he would review with Abba EbalJ. the Israeli foreign r. the aims of the talks with Jarring and "what r ra I at'cep from these talk .... Eban i 1 rael's chicf delegate to the talk' and Tekoah is his deputy. Tekoah .3W Jarring twice here Tue,- day and the calls by the Arab ambassa- dors made the score el'en. Diplomats expect that the talks will be long and difficult. and raised to the Steamlinecl The Main Library will be without air conditioning today and Friday and with- , out hoI water for approximately one week beginning today, accord 109 to William Roselle, as i tant director of Ihe Library . Roselle said Ihe inconvenience is due to a steam connection bcing constructed in the new library addition. Prexy Prediction: More Disruption NEW YORK IA'I - The consen us o[ a campus unrest will continue during the fall and winter months , with their in- tensity depending on the political and social climate at home and U. S. in- volvement abroad, the September La- dies Home Journal reports. Ten college heads around the nation responded to the question of whether schools will "cool down" in the coming months or if agitation would disturb campuses and upset traditional c'Iasses. The replies included: The Rev. Dr. Theoddre M. Heshurgh, Univer ity of Notre Dame: "The univer- sities and colleges ... reflect the world around them ... there will be no peace on campus unless there is a reasonable amount 01 peace in the world around the campus" Dr. Charles J. Hitch, University of CaUiornia at Berkeley : '-1 think we ean expect no lessening of involvement. .. r think political involvement Is a good thing, but [ also think that we will have to be especially careful through No- vember and beyond to protect the cam- puses [rom partisan influence. " Oil Company Charged $7 Million for Pollution NEW ORLEANS I,., - A million dollars in fines were imposed on Chevron Oil Co. in U. S. District Court here Wednesday in a case stemming from massive oil pollution of the Gut{ of Mexico. Chevron pleaded no .conlest to 500 01 Ihe 900 counts in the case - the first of its kind ever filed under the Outer Continental Shell Lands Act of 1953. Judge Alvin B. Rubin imposed a line 01 $2,000 on each of the first 500 counts in the case after Ally. Richard M. Olsen dropped the other 400 counts . Chevron was charged with failing to in- stall and maintain storm chokes or simi- lar safety shutoff devices on 90 olfshore oil wells in the Gulf southeast of New Or- leans, level of foreign ministers alter the U. N. General Assembly con"cnes Sept. l5. In the Middle Ellt. Def.nlt Minister MOihe DaYln tour.d 1" .. 11 .rmy posi- tions on the Sutz C,nal, I government spokesman said_ Lt. Gen. Haim aar-L.v, chief 01 staff, visited frontline positions in the Jordan V,lley, Dayan was told of so-called mainten- ance work undertaken along the water- way ince the cee e-fire of Aug. 7. A Icnc atmosph r gripped Amman following gunfire between Paleslinian guerrillas and Jordanian security men in which one commando was reported killed and three civilians wounded. Shortly after fighting died down , car- loads of armed guerrillas moved into the Jordanian capital in defiance 01 a two-month-old government ban . The ban was instituted following pitched battles in the city between King Hussein's troops and guerrillas in June . A st.tement iuued by thl left-wing Popular Democratic Front charged that the shooting will In attempt to sabot.g. Thursday's schedul.d m.eting in Am- man of the P,lestin. Nltlonll Council, The council is a grouping of all the various p.ltftinian gutrrilll organiz.- lions. Stringent security precautions have been taken by the commandos at the Wahdat refugee camp where the meet- ing is being held. The meeting is expected to endorse the guerrillas' rejection of a peaceful settlement of the Middle East problem. In Cairo, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser met Palestinian guerrilla chief Yasir Arafat for the second time in 24 hours, amid IgnS that the Pales- tinians are maintaining their OPPOSition to Egypt's acceptance 01 the Mideast cea efire. - Nixon Briefing SAN CLEMENTE , Calif. IA'I - The Nhon adminisl ration is building strategy for the Middle East around a possibility that the United States - and Soviet Union - may be enmeshed there inderinilely in hn-the·scene peacekeeping roles . This stood out among Informa- lion from a foreign policy briefing the Western White House provided Monday for 48 newspaper and broadcast exec- utives from 13 Western states. Direct quotation and the identification of the information's 'ources were forbidden and publication was withhllid until Wedncsday night. Officials with expert credentials say they are assuming both this country and the Soviet Union will be Involved In the Mid-east for the foreseeable future and that both will have to agree to any set- tlement terms . And they say it still is an open ques· tion whether the two powers would be- come involved in practical details of peacekeeping activities. The United States never has preclud- ed such an assignment and apparently does not intend to now. Futhermore, ad- ministration spokesmen say they aren't talking of mere recourse to the U.N. Security Council - which they regard as loaded against Israel. Rather, they have in mind a physical presence of the rna- lor power, perhaps as an observer force, under a United Nations umbrella . The briefing was the third in a serIes of five that will cover all regions of the country, and in large measure it was repetitive of one earlier in the month at New Orleans for the South. Senate Refuses to Ban Vietnam Defoliant Use WASHI GTON f8I - The Senate re- fused Wednesday to ban plant killers in the Vietnam war or to place restrictions on a $200 mUlion contingency fund for the costly C5 transport. Iowa's two U. S. Senators split their votes Wednesday as the Senate rejected the amendment on plant killers. Repub- lican Jack Miller voted with the majority in opposing the proposal. Democrat Har- old Hughes voted in favor of the ban. The Senate then turned to formal de- bate on the so called '; Amendment to End the War," a measure designed to force President Nixon to withdraw aU military personnel from Indochina by the end of next year. A roU call vote of 62 to 22 defeated an amendment by Sen. Gaylord elsan (D- Wis .) banning the use of herbicides as jungle defoliants or crop killers in South Vietnam . Nelson told the Senate that one defol- iant, 2,4, 5T, has been blamed [or birth defects in laboratory rats, mice and chickens and may have similar elfeots on humans. . Sens. William Proxmire (D-Wis) and Richard -S. Schweiker (R-Pa.) proposed their C5. amendment to help control a pro- gram that they said has already incurred cost overruns of more than $2 billion . Schweiker said the $200 million con- tingency fund, which Lockheed Aircraft Co., says it is owed l\I1d needs to com- plete 42 of the planes, Is just the tip of the iceburg of further demand for hun- dreds of millions of dollars, The conditions in the amendment would bave included release 01 the money on certification of the U. S, comptroUer general that it was actually needed . Opponents contended no restrictions should be placed on spending for a wea- pons system they said is vitally needed for national security. The amendment was defeated 48 to so. Meanwhile, a rewritten and end-the- war amendment was presented by Sens. George McGovern ([)'S.D.) and Mark Hatfield (R·Ore,) The rewrite job, one 01 several meta- morphoses the amendment has passed througb, appears to be the one that will be voted on at 10 a. m. next Tuesday. In es ence, it mandates complete U S. military withdrawal from Indochina by the end of 1971, but includes a 6O-day emergency escape clause which the Pres- ident could invoke at his Qwn discretion to protect remaining troops.

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Page 1: Peacekee ing Role Forecast - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/Di1970-08-27.pdfPresident Nixon issued a proclamation marking women's suffrage and urging ... Pamet. Cole,

~20,OOO Demonstrate in NYC-

Women Marc for Equ~lity By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Chanting slogans of liberation, women • clivi ts across the country demanded equal rights Wednesday with a series 01 demonstrat ions.

.. Equal pay for equal job ," shlluted lI'archers as they paraded down ell' York's Fiflh Avenue, lined with specta­wrs,

Polic. on the sc.1M .stim.ttd ther. Wlrt mort th.n 20,010 m.rch.rs .nd 21.000 persons lining Fifth Av.nu. IS the p.lreclt moved the 17 blockl from 59th Slr"t 10 • r.lly silo In Bry.nt P.rk,

I t behind the main branch of the Public Library. Leaders of th. d.monstretion Slid there wert 50,000 m.rch.rs arMI 30.000 spectalon,

The demonstration was timed to coin­cide with the 50th anniversary of adop­tion of the 19;h amendment giving worn­eo the right to vote.

, The sponsor called the demonstrahon I' • "Strike for Equality," and urged wom­

en to tay home from work and to stop performing menial household chores.

About 1,000 wom.n m.rchtd down Conn.cticut Av.nue In Wllhlnglon be­hind I bann.r reading, "w. demand equality."

Two dozen women picketed the New York Stock Exchange, chanting slogans like, "Out of the house, into the world."

And Philadelphia libera(lo\lists, stag-

Sexism?

ing an exhibIt in Rittenhouse Square, draped a dr~maker's dummy with chains, hung cosme lit'S from it and put up a sign baring the produ:ts "exploit women."

Major goals of th. demonstr.tion wert equal job opportunities and pay, fr" .bortion .nd 24-hour child clr. c.nt.rs.

Rallie, marchers and other public demonstrations were centered in the large cities, Els wh ret women were urged to demonstrate in their own way­staying off the job, joining product boy­cotts, discarding bras and cosmetics and ignoring menial hou ehold chores in a:­cordance with the demonstrat ion slo­gan, "Don't Iron while the ~trike is hoI."

Most larg. companies reported lilt" absenteeism due to the strlk._ The New York Commerce .nd Indultry Auoci.­tion s.id a spot check of 30 firms showed only • f.w women h.d "ktd for .nd had betn given the day off,

President Nixon issued a proclamation marking women's suffrage and urging Americans to recognize that women sure­ly have a still wider role to play in the politlcal, economl: and social life of the country."

Several politician, including New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and Mayors James Tate of Philadelphia, Lee Alexander of Syracu e, . Y., and Peter

Pamet. Cole, a supporter of the wo­men's liber.tion mov.m.nt, gets • d.­flnit. rllpon" from I largely male audience in Providence, R.I, The ludi.nc. formed IS she mid. .t.t.· ment. in support 01 the movem.nt during a women's liberation demon. stration her. W.dnesd.y.

- AP Wirephoto

I I City 'OfficiQls, Editors Discuss Police Arms

"Misimpressions" conveyed by the lo­cal newspapers over the recent acquisi­tion of new weapons- by the Iowa City Police Department were the topic of dIscussion at a luncheon meeting Wed­nesday afternoon. At the meeting were Iwo members of the Iowa City Chamber of Commerce's Committee on Social Concerns, City Manager Frank Smiley, Iowa City Police Chief Patrick J. I

McCarney, Daily Iowan Editor Leona , Durham and Press-Citizen Managing • Editor William Eginton.

The Social Concerns Committee, in­lcoded as a step toward establishing irust between businessmen, students and

" administrators, has thus far excluded the press from its meetings. Its mem­bers have discussed the weapons issue at three recent meetings, the last one

I , held Tue day afternoon. Acco~ding to committee chairman F.J.

Newman, concern was expressed at • Tuesday's meeting by St;Jiley and Cham­

ber 01 Commerce PreSIdent Ben Sum· '/ merwill over recent newspaper reports

Dn the new pollce weapons. Newman said the focal point of the

I ; discussion at the meeting was the "mis­Impression" that the new weapons were acquired to cope with student disorders at the University of Iowa this fall. The weapons in question include sawed-off ,hotguns and tear gas grenades_

Smiley pointed out that McCarney, on the contrary, was being moderate in

,~ his acquisition of new weapons and said that he was, in fact, "doing much less than he is being urged to do." He noted as an example that the police bad pur·

• chased no bullet-proof vests and no high­POwered rifles.

Smiley and McCarney emphasized that the weapons purchases made eariier lhis summer were only to replace old

'I eqUipment and to upgrade the clipabili-\ ties of the department in areas in which

Ihey had fallen behind. McCarney said the purchases - four

I \ shotguns, three walkie-talkies and two dozen tear gas grenades - were made from government grant funds originally

allotted for the purchase of films deal­ing with drug abuse.

He said the department purchased four such fi lms but, as the deadline for using the funds approacbed, he realized there was not time to order and view more films so he requested and received per­mission to purcha, e the equipment in order to avoid turning the unused funds back.

The purchases, Smiley said, In terms 01 the impression left by them were particularly poorly timed. "It left a completely different Impres~ion than we would like to leave," he said.

The poor timing, he said, was a con­sequence of the news 01 the weapons purchases following On the heels of testimony given by police officia Is on Aug. 6 at the hearing to determine the status of a temporary injunction. The in­junction was issued on behalf of the city of Iowa City on May 6 to curb obstruc­tion , disruption, destruction of property and incitement to disorder relating to the demonstrations that brought the uni· versity to a near standstill in early May.

At that hearing McCarney testified that oral reports from informants of the Iowa Bureau of 'triminal Investigation (BCI) had led him to believe that, as a result of activities on the· pari 01 dissi­dents, "the University of Iowa will be closed aIter the second week after It opens" in the lall.

Robert Engel, a committee member and administrative assistant to universi­ty Pres. Willard Boyd, said that as a result of that testimony and of the, re­ports of the purchases, the university had received a number of caOs from parents concerned about the safety 01 their children on the campus this fall and that dormitory counselors were belng questioned by concerned students,

At Wednesday'oS meeting McCarney said he dld not believe he university would be shut down. He said one paid Informant and one unpaid informant are working on the campus and that he thinks it wiU be an "entirely different ballgame In the fall than in lhe spring" and that the campus would not be a particularly troublesome area.

Flaherty of Pittsburgh - declared Wedr¥!sday Women's Rights Day .

Sev"al observances _r. held t. honor Susan 8 . Anthony, an 'Irly suf· frage "lder .

At her birthplace, Ada'TIS, Ma _, the post office i sued a commemorative stamp. Lucy Wilo;on Benson, in a spee~h for flfSt-day ceremonIes, warned the women that "history has too many ex­amples of over brash movements who, through their own efforts, have snatched defeat from the jaws of victory."

There were critics of the demonstra­tions.

Sen. Jennings Randolph ([)'W Va.) said in a Senate speech the leader of the liberation movement were a .. mall band of bra·l s bubblehead ."

There were a few bra dumpin!(.S with some liberation groups setting up Ira h can for item feminists con ider ym­bolic of the sexine s forced on them. Female secretaries In the Pentagon's information office tossed bra , • girdle and some lacy pink panties inlo a waste baskel, then topped tbe collection off with a rolling pin.

NOWI --~----~--_._------

it Servin~ the Unjljersitv of 10tl'Q

Esta'ilisheel In 1868 Iowa City, Iowa 52240

Women demonllrators m.rch down New Yoric City'. Fifth Avenue lMar 52nd Itrwt WtdnesdlY in support of • nationwift "Strite. for Equ.lity." ",. march, followtd by • mISS ratty .t Bry.nt P.rk. WII spon_td by the N.tlonal Orglnlzatlon of Women (NOWI, - AP Wirephoto

oman allli the People of Iowa City

Thurl., August 27, 1970

Peacekee ing Role Forecast * * * * * * * * *

2nd Round of. Midea~t Talks Begin For UeS., Soviets I n Middle East

UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. IA'I - Gun­nar V. Jarring, the U N. sp(!clal envoy, began a second round of Middle Ea t peace talks Wednesday despite the ab­sence of the 1 rae Ii delegate.

He called in Jordanian Ambas ador Abdul Hamid Sharar and Egyptian Ambassador Mohammed Hassan El Zay­yal for separate consultations in his 38th floor office.

Jlrrlng and Iayyat t.lk.d for 55 min· utes - the long .. t m .. tI"g It fir In the consult.tions that opened at U.N. h"d. quart.rs TU.lday. The Jordani.n 1mb,,· IIdor spent about 30 minutes with Jar­ring.

A U.N. SpOkesman declared that the absence of an Israeli representative doe not affect the di cus ions - the first major effort to reach a Middle Ea L pea~e settlement in more than 20 years .

Thcre have been reports that Jarring was taken by surprise by the decision of Israeli Ambassador Yosef Tekoah to re­turn Tuesday night to Jeru alem for con­sultations.

The U.N. spokesman indicated this may have been the case, but added: "There are other things to do and con­tacts to maintain." He did not elaborate.

It was aPPlrent th.t Jarring was d.­termlned to keep up the momentum of th. talks as best h. could.

In Tel Aviv, Tekoah told reporters

Laird Suggests Wider Air Attacks In Indochina War WASHINGTON IA'I - Secretary of De­

fense Melvin R. Laird suggested Wed­nesday the broadest use yet of U.S. air power in Cambodia and disclosed a Soviet missile development which could sizably swell thair inventory of nuclear warheads.

Laird's comments on air power in Cambodia - in the face of congress­ional concern over U.S, involvement there - were based on protecting American forces over the border In Vietnam.

The secretary declined to get into the "semantics," as he said, of what may limit U.S. air power in Cambodia. What restrictions do exist are a mili­tary secret, he said.

"The use of air power to interdict, or stop, or whatever terms you may 'use , material and personnel, is a good use of military power in that area with a minimum loss of American llves," Laird told a news conference.

''I'm interested In keeping casualties in Vietnam down. If we can destroy troops and material in Cambodia with minimum casualties, I am for it and I will authorize it," he said.

Laird reminded newsmen that in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in May he said U.S. air power would not be restricted as were the U.S. ground forces during the Cambodian incursion.

In the Soviet missile test, Laird said that for the first time the Soviets test­ed an 8811 missile with a multiple re­entry vehicle. There are about 700 of these missiles now deployed, and a fitting for multiple warheads would mean perhaps 2,100 warheads,

that he would review with Abba EbalJ. the Israeli foreign minl~t r. the aims of the talks with Jarring and "what r ra I at'cep from these talk ....

Eban i 1 rael's chicf delegate to the talk' and Tekoah is his deputy.

Tekoah .3W Jarring twice here Tue,­day and the calls by the Arab ambassa­dors Wednesda~ made the score el'en.

Diplomats expect that the talks will be long and difficult. and raised to the

Steamlinecl The Main Library will be without air

conditioning today and Friday and with- , out hoI water for approximately one week beginning today, accord 109 to William Roselle, as i tant director of Ihe Library.

Roselle said Ihe inconvenience is due to a steam connection bcing constructed in the new library addition.

Prexy Prediction: More Disruption

NEW YORK IA'I - The consen us o[ a campus unrest will continue during the fall and winter months, with their in­tensity depending on the political and social climate at home and U.S. in­volvement abroad, the September La­dies Home Journal reports.

Ten college heads around the nation responded to the question of whether schools will "cool down" in the coming months or if agitation would disturb campuses and upset traditional c'Iasses.

The replies included: The Rev. Dr. Theoddre M. Heshurgh,

Univer ity of Notre Dame: "The univer­sities and colleges ... reflect the world around them ... there will be no peace on campus unless there is a reasonable amount 01 peace in the world around the campus"

Dr. Charles J. Hitch, University of CaUiornia at Berkeley: '-1 think we ean expect no lessening of involvement. .. r think political involvement Is a good thing, but [ also think that we will have to be especially careful through No­vember and beyond to protect the cam­puses [rom partisan influence. "

Oil Company Charged $7 Million for Pollution

NEW ORLEANS I,., - A million dollars in fines were imposed on Chevron Oil Co. in U. S. District Court here Wednesday in a case stemming from massive oil pollution of the Gut{ of Mexico.

Chevron pleaded no .conlest to 500 01 Ihe 900 counts in the case - the first of its kind ever filed under the Outer Continental Shell Lands Act of 1953.

Judge Alvin B. Rubin imposed a line 01 $2,000 on each of the first 500 counts in the case after ~st. Ally. Richard M. Olsen dropped the other 400 counts.

Chevron was charged with failing to in­stall and maintain storm chokes or simi­lar safety shutoff devices on 90 olfshore oil wells in the Gulf southeast of New Or­leans,

level of foreign ministers alter the U.N. General Assembly con"cnes Sept. l5.

In the Middle Ellt. Def.nlt Minister MOihe DaYln tour.d 1" .. 11 .rmy posi­tions on the Sutz C,nal, I government spokesman said_ Lt. Gen. Haim aar-L.v, chief 01 staff, visited frontline positions in the Jordan V,lley,

Dayan was told of so-called mainten­ance work undertaken along the water­way ince the cee e-fire of Aug. 7.

A Icnc atmosph r gripped Amman following gunfire between Paleslinian guerrillas and Jordanian security men in which one commando was reported killed and three civilians wounded.

Shortly after fighting died down, car­loads of armed guerrillas moved into the Jordanian capital in defiance 01 a two-month-old government ban. The ban was instituted following pitched battles in the city between King Hussein's troops and guerrillas in June.

A st.tement iuued by thl left-wing Popular Democratic Front charged that the shooting will In attempt to sabot.g. Thursday's schedul.d m.eting in Am­man of the P,lestin. Nltlonll Council, The council is a grouping of all the various p.ltftinian gutrrilll organiz.­lions.

Stringent security precautions have been taken by the commandos at the Wahdat refugee camp where the meet­ing is being held.

The meeting is expected to endorse the guerrillas' rejection of a peaceful settlement of the Middle East problem.

In Cairo, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser met Palestinian guerrilla chief Yasir Arafat for the second time in 24 hours, amid IgnS that the Pales­tinians are maintaining their OPPOSition to Egypt's acceptance 01 the Mideast cea efire.

- Nixon Briefing SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. IA'I - The

Nhon adminisl ration is building strategy for the Middle East around a possibility that the United States - and Soviet Union - may be enmeshed there inderinilely in hn-the·scene peacekeeping roles.

This stood out among in~ide Informa­lion from a foreign policy briefing the Western White House provided Monday for 48 newspaper and broadcast exec­utives from 13 Western states. Direct quotation and the identification of the information's 'ources were forbidden and publication was withhllid until Wedncsday night.

Officials with expert credentials say they are assuming both this country and the Soviet Union will be Involved In the Mid-east for the foreseeable future and that both will have to agree to any set­tlement terms.

And they say it still is an open ques· tion whether the two powers would be­come involved in practical details of peacekeeping activities.

The United States never has preclud­ed such an assignment and apparently does not intend to now. Futhermore, ad­ministration spokesmen say they aren't talking of mere recourse to the U.N. Security Council - which they regard as loaded against Israel. Rather, they have in mind a physical presence of the rna­lor power, perhaps as an observer force, under a United Nations umbrella .

The briefing was the third in a serIes of five that will cover all regions of the country, and in large measure it was repetitive of one earlier in the month at New Orleans for the South.

Senate Refuses to Ban Vietnam Defoliant Use

WASHI GTON f8I - The Senate re­fused Wednesday to ban plant killers in the Vietnam war or to place restrictions on a $200 mUlion contingency fund for the costly C5 transport.

Iowa's two U. S. Senators split their votes Wednesday as the Senate rejected the amendment on plant killers. Repub­lican Jack Miller voted with the majority in opposing the proposal. Democrat Har­old Hughes voted in favor of the ban.

The Senate then turned to formal de­bate on the so • called '; Amendment to End the War," a measure designed to force President Nixon to withdraw aU military personnel from Indochina by the end of next year.

A roU call vote of 62 to 22 defeated an amendment by Sen. Gaylord elsan (D­Wis .) banning the use of herbicides as jungle defoliants or crop killers in South Vietnam.

Nelson told the Senate that one defol­iant, 2,4, 5T, has been blamed [or birth defects in laboratory rats, mice and chickens and may have similar elfeots on humans. .

Sens. William Proxmire (D-Wis) and Richard -S. Schweiker (R-Pa.) proposed their C5. amendment to help control a pro-

gram that they said has already incurred cost overruns of more than $2 billion.

Schweiker said the $200 million con­tingency fund, which Lockheed Aircraft Co., says it is owed l\I1d needs to com­plete 42 of the planes, Is just the tip of the iceburg of further demand for hun­dreds of millions of dollars,

The conditions in the amendment would bave included release 01 the money on certification of the U. S, comptroUer general that it was actually needed.

Opponents contended no restrictions should be placed on spending for a wea­pons system they said is vitally needed for national security.

The amendment was defeated 48 to so. Meanwhile, a rewritten and end-the­

war amendment was presented by Sens. George McGovern ([)'S.D.) and Mark Hatfield (R·Ore,)

The rewrite job, one 01 several meta­morphoses the amendment has passed througb, appears to be the one that will • be voted on at 10 a. m. next Tuesday.

In es ence, it mandates complete U S. military withdrawal from Indochina by the end of 1971, but includes a 6O-day emergency escape clause which the Pres­ident could invoke at his Qwn discretion to protect remaining troops.

Page 2: Peacekee ing Role Forecast - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/Di1970-08-27.pdfPresident Nixon issued a proclamation marking women's suffrage and urging ... Pamet. Cole,

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1h.1)O.n~ ~1o~ , . II

OPI'NIONS PAGE 2 THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, ml IOWA CITY, IOWA

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Trouble in the fall? Clarification: please-Along with Pre s . Citizen Managing Editor Bill Egtnlon, I had lunch )e I r·

day with low8 City Police Chief Patrick M arn~y; Iowa Cit) City Manager

Frank Smiley; Jack J',ewman, chairman of the Chamber of Comrn rce' Com·

mittel' on ocial Concern; and Robert Engel, .dminitrati\'e a~ btant to ,Univer. slty of Iowa Pres. Willard Boyd and committee member.

Eginton and I were tbere at the invitation of miley, who wanted to di~cuss with us the "misimpressioru" left in the minds of mnny oitizcns and st\1d nts

about what is e:.pected on campu. this faU and about the ~cent pw;chilllc of weapons by the city police department.

eli's coverage of th I purcbase, along with COl era e of t timony gil'en at a hearing held to determine tIle status of the lemporary mjunction ohtained by the

city la.t ~Iay during the demon trations that clime in the wak of the in"a ion of

Cambodia and the Kent State Ma.~acre, has apparently crpated a ood deal of

concern in the mind of many Iowa Citians and the parent of many tudcnts at

the university. There was no que.tion of the accuracy of the ('Overage; it II:IS

only that it was believed that the coverage failed to convey a total pictur .

AI the .\ugust6 hearing, official were IIttempting to have th!' injunction made

permanent. To ju tify th t reque '110wa State High~ y Patrol C pt. Lyle Dick.

imon predictcd more di ordt'r in IO\\la City this fall, sa) ing, "There's no que.tion in my mind thrrc'lI be 'omething going again."

~lcCarney t~tified that oral rl'ports from informants from the 10113 Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI) had led him to believe that as II result of activitics on the part of di. idpnts, "the University of 1011 a will be c1o.cd after the second week after it opens" in the fall.

Police Detl'ctive Ronald .Evans te tilied that he had heard rumors that the fnll di~turbances will be "50 timE'S 1I'0r.e" then those that O<'('urrrd in the spring; and that tho e rumors, along with information he had gatherl'd from th Bcr, had cau ed him to arrive at a COlldll~ion similar to that arrived at by /\1cCarn!'y.

But at the \V('dne day luncheon ~lcCamey nid he did not eXI' ct the unil'cr· sity to be closed in the fall. Ill' aid there afe two informants - one paid, one unpaid - working on campu8 and that he thin~s llwiU be an "cntirely different ball game in the fall than in the ~prlng.n

And ~fcCamey assured 1I that the purchase of the new eqllipment WR~ not accomplished because of any expected disorders. He emphaized that th!' pur· cha es were made only 10 replace old equipment and to upgrade the capabilities of the forcE' in those areas in which thpy had fallen hehind. We \lcre urgrd to take whatevcr action Wl' nsidered appropriate in light of the informatioll given us to allay fears that Iowa City is turning into an armed camp.

Okay - but thrre are a eouple of prohlems, a eouplr of qllestiom. If offkial do not anticipate trouble this fall, why are they asking that tJU' injunction he made permanent? If ~I c .arney dol'S not cl;ped the univ!'rsity to bE' closed dO\lll this fall , why did he te tHy to the contrary io an effort to .ecure a pcrula· nent injunction?

It there is no came for concern, if we IHe in good cansden e to rea tire ttl'

dents and parents of sltldents at the univt'rsity, why the injllll(,tion? And H there is really nped for the injunction, is it fair to offer assuranl'CS to par nt and students that no trouble is e:''Pected?

Tear gas is ohviously d~signed for crowd control; it is rarply u~cd to appr<-hrnd burglars. So either the pollee need teat gas becamE' tJley c.\peet tmllbll'vune crowds or tJley do not need tear gas because thpy do not e:-1> ct trollblesolll crowds.

r dOlit prelend to know whether there will or will not be trou hlc. The an'" cr depends upon far too man variables.

But I am sure tJle ituation is in urgent need of larification. and small tl'tr'R' tete~ with tJl(' press ('annot proVide lhat clarification, To attempl chtriIication in that manner is only to further obscure the jUl'.

nd I all1 SUTe a public statement about the situation would do much to nile· viate the confusion in people's minds. A statement by Smiley and ~rcCarney in which they flatly disclis 'ed what they anticipate would be more effective than tt) ing to play in two ball park> at the nme time (to lise on of ~lcC[\rney's own metaphors) .

They cannot assure people on one hand and frighten them on the other. They cannot ha\'e tJlings both way .

The Muckraker

Tbe League or Women Voter. bas nllmed this "The Year of the Voter" but It already cern as If this will be the year o( the big lie.

"he White House regularly BCCUlles Congres of "big spending" and under· core the point by veto ot ele=ted ap­

propriation authorization . Congrtss regutarly accu es the While House of "benign neglect" for e nllol domeslic problem and under cor s 11& point by overriding the President's veto. •

When 0 n e con IdeN! how federal budgets are authonzed, these klrmlshes become as f8ntasUc and in ubstantlal as Jou Ls Cought bcLw en gho ttldera on clouds. I

A (ederal agency, In hopes of achlev· Ing a 130 per cent In=rea e over 18 t year , reque 8 330 per cent inc rea e. The White Hou e. In an orgy of selr.rlght. cou nes, cuts the request to 230 per cent, and pa c the budget along to Con res . Congres , not to be outdone, authorizes the ISO pet cent Inc rea e the I federal agency aImed (or in the first place.

Thi. ennu.1 rite oHtr. .v.ryont • chance to IHm tightfisted with the pub. lic dollar while expendiluras incre •••.

And so, the Pre ident vetos the Educa· tion Bill because it authorizes ~5 mil· lion mOre t han the Prcsid~nt requested. It is "Inflationary." 11 15 " big spending." Meanwhile, the President overlooks the fact that the Increa e for education is $300 million LESS than the President planned to spend to bail out. the Penn· Central railroad after it collapsed into I bankruptcy.

To • Republlc.n Presldtnl, • ms mil· lion .pproprl.llon to b.iI oul Iht "Rt· publlan Railro.d" is not inll.lion.ry big Ipending even in .n ,Itclion y .. r.

Congress, on the other hand, overrides the PreSident's veto, and points out that the President ne d not relea e funds even after Congress has authorized them. Yes, it is true, says Congress, that we have increased the President 's requc ts by several hundred millions In sclc:ted areas, but our net decrease 01 his requests is $572 million and OUr de· crease of agency requests Is over $6 .3 billion.

Since, in the absence of planning and prIorities, the budget is 8 fantasy , any· way, their strategy is like 8 king u to choose between the Tweedledum and the Tweedledce versions of reality.

Th. unforlun.lt parl aboul thil prop· .glnd. war II th.t tht "selpeg •• I" slralegy m.k.. it impassible to d .. 1 with Issues In In optn .nd hon .. 1 w.y. In Iht absenc. 01 .uch stralghlforward· ntss, the .tector.lt h.1 no r .. 1 cholet, .nd the et.ction Ih.U becom •• I f.nl· 'Iy.

The winner of this propaganda war is llkely to be the President. The more people talk about spending, the less they will talk about the way funds are being pent. The more people talk about Congress, the les they will talk about the President. The more flap about in· flationary pending for domestic pro­grams, the less agitatIon about massive inflation caused by the war In Vietnam.

The "scapegoat" strategy is an at· lempt by the administration to fight out the next election over is ues which lavor the President by goading the op­position into reacting to marginal Is· sues.

The m.in Inut, p.rticularly where .pending Clnd inflation Ir' conctrned, II the war, In the 1111 ,i. yun, OIIr governm.nt has spent more Ihan Sl1S billion an Soulheast Alia. Thi. figure dotl nol Includ •• conomic aid progr.ms to Indochina, CIA expenditures In the area, the COlt of reducing IIDCkpilti of .Ir.ltgic mlttri.ls, or the lou of pro· duclivlty c.used by the diverllon .f doll.rs for deltnse.

In 1969 alone, the cost or the war was $50 per month (oJ every family in the nation. The cost of killing one Viet Cong is $500.000. This would support 3,400 stUdents in school or build 50 housing umts. ThP cost of one heavy B·52 raid is $40 mlUion . This could pur· chase three 400·bed hospitals, or 27 elementary schools, or 4,000 housing units.

It 1s absurd in Ihis conteltt to con· sider the \'eto o( a $435 million appr()­priation for education or the overriding o( the veto as anything more than pollt. ical flak.

-Jim Sutton

--------------------------------------------------------------------'COME HOME, DUll FATHER··COME HOM!!'

Call Operation Successlul-

Allies Abandon " Spi Kham Due On

AlOO ,,,, - American lind cal Division had moved into copters and moved to other. Iy arrived Cambodian patl· South Vietnamese for c e s the Kham Due base, a oneo l undlaclosed areas in northern I troopers in the latest lighting abandoned Wedr1l! day their time U.S. Special Forces camp South Vietnam's Quang Tin there Wednesday, and tht base ncare t lo Lao , claiming abandoned under a heavy 1968 ProVidence. heavy mortar barrage killed U they had ucce sfully disrupled enemy attack, on July 12. In Saigon: hellvy ecurity of the paratroopers and wOUJlcl. a new , orlh Vietnamese build· Atlhat time. their announced precautions were being taken ed 79. up along the northern frontier. mi. sion waa to cut off North f~r the ~rrlval Thursday of Aller the helling, however,

Announcing ll\/! withdrawal Vietnamese upplles moving Vice Pre ~dent Spiro T: Agnew I the Prek Tameak area waa ft· from Kham Due, 13 miles ellst lnto South Vietnam (rom Laos. on the third leg of hIS Asian ported quiet. of the La~tlan frontier, U.S. It was also reported that the I tour. --~-officers aid the troops had South Vietname e might u e Newtrntn wtr. b. r r t d N Ve t S d lIC..'C?mpllshed their mls Ion the base as a Jumping of( pot Ir.m m.rtn, hla lending .t • Ie 5 en durmg nearly a ven·week for forays into Laos. .... .",..rt, .ntI his lirtt flub. • campaign. Bill no sueh Incursion. wtr' lie a".tr.nel WIS sehtdultd T . D I

Tht allies wtre su~cessful .ver .nnounced .llhovgh tilt t. t.k. plltl II 1M hetvlly Op e egate " I" efftctlvtl,. dlar\lphn, In' Communllt P.thel L. • ",.nItd.nd b.rbed wlrt ,n. 'my Itt l,ttCl I .peralio"1 end ch.rged Ihlt Seuth \lletn.. elrcl" prltkllnlill p.tttt. k In deslreylng tntmy luppty . B t P · depots prior to Ihe onltl.f m.N trotp', IlrllftH ,nit For th~ third slralght day, ac 0 arls ..._ " ... _ L." by U.S. helie"'" North VIetnamese and Viet .nw """'lIOn I .... n, ,nwy . h .. Id. "Num.rou. ammunl. launched I m'lor .,....II.n Cong umt~ kept up t elr ~s· lion and olher supply ClIChe, .. rlier this monlh. Allied saul~. agaInst the Mekong Rlv, PARIS IIfl - North Vietnam

sent its chief delegate back WI found " spoke. men ""ltd ii, er village of Prek Tameak, ~: esli~8ted 2,000 South Officials said the .Illed nine miles northeast of Phnom

to Paris Wednesday to end his ,

Vietname. e troop! and up to troop were eVllcuated from Penh. 500 men from Ihe U.S. Ameri· Kham Due by pl8n~5 and h II· En@my gunners Shelled new·

Creale Special Police Force T 0 Protect Foreign Officials

18 and one·hllif month boycott 01 the dead· locked Vletnam~R peace talks.

And although he indIcated no new peace proposals, Ambassa· dor Xuan Thuy said he would c~ns ider resuming secret ulb with the Americans now thai Washington has named a full· IJedged chief delegate. , Asked whether he would me"

pri vately with newly appointed From 01 NeWS SERVtC!S House from enemies, domeatic to the Executive Protective U.S. Ambassador Davtd K. E. WASH1NG1'ON - A brand and foreign. Service. Bruce, Thuy said, "If Mr. Bruce

new police force has made its Th. fore., wilt.. ,""NflI It w.. lUll • colncldtnce, asks for It, we will examine the appearance In Washington, D.C. s'ren,th h .. n't bean ....... Ied, 1M "W, thll tIM Inno\lnCI' question." The new forct is called the Ex· W.I cruted beC.\lN tIM mftIt w.. 1ft •• the dlY be. Thuy began boycotting the ecutive Protective Service, and W.shlngton clly ,..1Ic:e ,.W ..... tltm,nstr.lI.nl by woo sessions last December when is a direct outgrowth of the 'hll Ih.,. cllcln't hlv, the . "",,'a rl,hlt It.d..... President Nixon let Amba.aador Secret Service. lim. or "" m.nplwer II The policewomen will assIst Henry Cabot Lodge resign with·

The force 's primary nit sion properly guard the IIlp"1I'I111 In InterviewIng Juveniles and out Immediately naming a IU ~, Is to protect Ihe muititude of or thlt minions 'r.m ,..1111", female.. Their starting salary cessor. foreign embas les and missioM .Hack. wlll be M,SOO per year, the lnstead. WlI!fllngton had Phil· In Washington. The service was Plans for the force were I,ame as that .for men. Ip C. Habib, a Lodge assl!lIn~ created in response to nervous I speeded up after the firebomb- All members o( the Executive sit In as acting delegation chief. , demands for protection express· ing or four Latin AmerIcan em· Protective Service wear the The North Vletname~e charged , ed by over 50 of the tOO foreign bassles during the June con· If r th WhIt H Nixon with downllTadlng the

un orm 0 e e ouse conference and Thuy at.yed missions. ference of the Organization of Pollee They patrol In "unmark· f th kl II

A . St I h ld I W h i ' away rom e wee y mee np Eventually the Executive Pro· merlcan a ea, e n as· edIt blue cars, each of which In Ihe old Hotel ~aJesUc, tectlve Service will number ington. hIS seven red lights on the roof. though he remained in Parla un. about 850 people, including the Tuesday 8 Secret Service I Each olfleer wears gold braid til last May t t. 250 men who are directly re ·1 spokesman ann 0 u nee d that on the rillht shoulder of the Hanoi delegation sources Mid ponslble for guarding the Whitc seven women had been named uniform. Thuy would resume hIs eal, but

- -- - \ / wouldn't say when. Thuy Wll

Nat-Ive Alaska ns Ask Land :tk~u;::~~~: :~t~~::IO~;~ he repliod, "You will .know l0-

To Preserve T r~ditional Life' ~;:~:,~:~·::i£~: 'I' said whell he ~rrlved here Aug. ~

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (LNS) I can life on equal terms I( Ihat l ure has been diSintegrating for 3 that the President had given' - In 1867 Aiaska b came the is his wish, or the opportunity 100 years." hIm "broad latitude" In nego. property of the United Statcs. to continue the traditional way That's not Ihe way thl na· listing a sertlemenl. In what was described as of life while enjoying the full lives see It . One villager put Bruce stilycd away from last "Seward's Folly" the U.S. paid benefits of modern science, if it clearly last week; week 's meeting, apparently be- , Russia $7.2 million for the (cr· that Is his wish ." "The native people have nev· cause of the absen:e 01 Thuy, rltory. The nalive Alaskans - The native aSlloclations are er had money. But they have but a spokesman for the U.S. Aleuts, Indians, and Eskimos demanding a settlement of 40 always had land and have got· delegation said the diplomat - received nothing. millIon acres, 10 per cent of ten by with IItlie money. . . . planned to attend Thursday'.

Now, after years or bitter the slate. If we 10 e the land we will lose session. • struggle, the U.S. has offered Now that Alaska has been OUr people. Thuy said he had consulled reparations to the surVIving discovered by the 011 industry OUr culture is tied to- the with his government and hall natives. The Senate has pro· - with the major 011 gia."ts land. If the land l~ taken f:om also conferred with officials in posed that $1 billion In cash buying up large portions of the us our c~iture Will be kll!ed Peking and Moscow during bi.! and the title to 10 million acres native 's traditional land ior and we wtll be forced to live three and one· half month a~ of land be given as a "gener. corPorate profits - the gOY' like all others, dependent on a sence from Paris. ous," "far·slghted" - and ernment is reluctant to give I final - settlcment. up that much land . Beyond H k R .. C t P t I

The nallve organizations that, the government is un· aye eSlgns aun y OS don 't want the money. Instead wllUng to acknowledge the con· they are demanding more land . tlnuance o( "the traditional Assistant County Atty. John County Atty. Robert W. Jan· I

Emil Notti. president of the way of life" as a legitimate \Y. Hayek announc~d Wednes. seQ "for the privilege o( work· , Alaskan Federation of Natives goal for the native groups. , ing with you in the county .1. described their position : I Ramsey Clark is the prinei· day thllt he will resign Sept. 1 tomey's office for the iast 311

"To put it bluntly, we want pal lawyer for the Alaskan nil. "to avoid any question o( in· years." 10 manage our money and our lives. His view Is that Ihe offer compatibility" between his Hayek's resignatIon Jeft J.lI­lives, and we must question is generous and he goes on to I work H!.or the city and for the sen without any asslst8nu. Hll the fairness of any settlement say that, " It 13 impossible In county. other assistant, J. W. Doole1, which does not enable us to do this world today to maintain Hayek recently was appoint· resigned Aug. 18. so . ... OUT goal is not merely an Isolated culture." ed A8 urban renewal attorney Jansen must now find II-dollars and cents. but to give That view Is shared by the for Iowa City. slstants willing to work until . • each nalive the opportunity to Interior Committee. whose spe· Hayek, in his lette. of reslg· he leaves office at the end ~ join the mainstream or Ameri· cial counsel says, "theIr cult· nation, expressed thanks to the year .

Groups Blame Each Other- I ~

Violence at Madison: Why? MADISON, Wis . rA'! - Some the uni versity estimates Is M "This wU not necessarily the POLICE PRESINCI ,.

public officials and Univer· million worth of damage. work of a student. The Weather. The presence o( police and slly o( Wisconsin administrators I DIVIDID O',NIONS man faction o( Students for a National Guard troops have fre· blame a small minority o( Opinton is s~ar ply divided on Democratic Society have squads quenlly triggered student pro-

, why all this violence hiS come that Iravel around creating un· tests calling, to lillie avail, for radicals whlle other observers to a university with an Interna. resl." removal of "outside" lawen· say heavy use of police and an tional reputation for academic LOCAL ISSUE (orCemcnt personnei during tur· innexible administratlon are reo excellence. The Math Research Center moil. sponsible for the continuing At ell laid much blame (or LQng has been a target of antI· Some ~ritics of the campus trouble on the 34,CJOO.student the trouble on the willi ngnees of war demonstrations. protests, Including several legis-campus. the university to call in city po- Demands (or Immediate with· lators, noted after (he 1967 and

lice 10 put down demonatrltor'. drawal of U.S. mllitary forces 1968 demonstrations that. rna· The violence slretches (0 Atwell and some other observ. from South Vlelnam provoked jorlty of studenl& arrested by

clashes between city poll~e and ers have contended Instances of most of the early studenl pro· pollee were not Wlaconsln resi· • antiwar ~tudenls In 1967. Three b h d h I overreaction by policemen ere. tests, ut campus issues ave ent! - many of t em nat ves limes ince February 1969, Na· i I Itt d tit f E t t ate more trouble !>teause they ncreas nil Y sen s u en s n 0 0 astern 8 a es. Ilonal Guardsmen have faced h off with stUdents. Recently in. stir up added hostilities among t e streets. The legisiators and tile re-

f bo bl h students. , Several violent prolests were gents succeeded in Impoalng , lermillent Ire m ng ave Gov. Warren P. Knowles, who sparked by demonstrations limits on out~f.state undergrad. · • plagued campus authorllies. summoned the National Gu.rd against on·~ampus recruitment uales who at one lime made up

As he deparled Friday to twice to quell campus protests by firms invoived in the war ef· nearly a third o( the 22,000 l1li. I head a college In California, and once when welfare mothers forI. dergraduate class. , VIce Chancellor Robert Atwell and students went to the Capilol In February, black sludents With the restrictions, tlte un!- , , said " there will be blood~hed" here to protest public .id cuts and while sympathizers boycot· versity eventually will lower it! on the campus if altitudes don't differs sharply with Atwell . ' ted classes in support of de· nonresident undergraduate ttl'

change. He says he is convinced the mands for establishment o( a rollment to 15 per cent. This [all And bloodshed there was - apparent bombinl of the math black studies department and lhe limit is 25 per cent. I ~

three days later. The massive cenler is part oC a nationwide admission to larger numbers o( The reduction is already be-explOSion that ripped through conspiracy of radicals bent on disadvantaged blacks. lieved to have had an impICl. the Army Mathematics Rt· destroying Amerlc.n aocllty. They tried to close the school Recently, Wisconsin resIdent.! I search Center bllllding Monday Chancellor H. Edwin Younl, but the administration refused. have made up more than MI per I

killed one l1'aduale student, in· urveylng the shattered .IBto- A black studies department has :ent of those arrested Ia CIIII- • jured three others and left wbat ry research center, comm.nted, linc. been eatablished however . pus f1areups.

su Me '" _ Vlct AgneW It

sbek on United 51 its mutual his aUo ment.

AU,S. l3-yt.r~ld made no I

tItY 8S3ls sions wil~ is known mort mod

"I woui< io bave Agnew ~hile Korea have anY·"

10 Irlbuting

The of the tation and the sociation using InhJbit edge. greater prevent school

Page 3: Peacekee ing Role Forecast - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/Di1970-08-27.pdfPresident Nixon issued a proclamation marking women's suffrage and urging ... Pamet. Cole,

Vietnam b8ci

end his • boycoUrA

Vletnamex

had Phll· assistant, Ion chief. chargtd •

",ntWAlllna the stayed

meetlng! .-Majesllc,

In Parla un-

had consulted and hMi

of Ii cia Is in during hiJ month .~

I ,

find ... work until • •

at the end &I

the campus several JeRl5-

t ,

the 1967 and that a ma·

arrelted by 1W1.""n.lin re!~

them natives • ,

and tile re-In Imposing ,

under grad· ' • Ume made up the 22,000 un- I ,

the unJ. I 1

it!

raJ I

Spiro, Chiqng Talk ! On Asian Defense

SU 100N LAKE, Formosa But the U.S. spoke man de-VIce President Spiro T. c1ined to say if they discussed

Agnew assured Chiang Kai-j possible a istance by Formo a

sbek on Wednesday that the to Premier Lon ol's Cambod·

IFarm Prices Drop, Price Index Down-

United Stales will stand by I ian regime. i~ mutual s,ecurit~ treaty with The allonalist Chinese are hI! Nallonall!t ChUlese govern- I said to be intere ted in helping men!. Cambodia, but there ha been

A U.S. spokesman s8ld the no indication (rom Phnom 83-year-old Chinese pre Ident Penh Ihat F'ormo. a's aid would made no new reque t for mill- I be wclcome. !try assistance during two ses- Officials saId Agnew and sions with Agnew, although It Chiang also reviewed the world is known 'Formo a would Ilkc situation and discu. ed U.S. more modern jet fighters. I economic conditions.

"I would guess he would like Agnew met earlier with Vice to have anylhing he can get." President C. K. Y cn and dis­Agnew commented to news en [I CUS ed moves in the U.S. Con­\\hile enroute here from South gress to limit texUle im port , Korea elrlier in the day. " I a subject viewed Wittl concern bave never seen him refuse on Formosa. any ." Officials said both agreed it

Officials laid Agnew and I was premlture to reach con· Chiang agreed that the "con- clusions on the issue since the tlnued freedom and neutrality 1 legislation ha not yet pa. ed of Cambodia" are Impottant the Hou e and slm faces hear­for Southeast , A 18n 8tabllIty., ings in the ~nate.

Agnew flew to Sun Moon

Going Up

* * *

A geodesic .me takll ""pI 'n Itt. Rlv.r City Fr" Trlde ZOnt •• n .tt.mpt .t a "lrNk" community sitnted in "'­

building th.t form.rly hou.od Ihe U·M.rI!·1t .tort. - Photo by Jln Wllllami

* * * -* * * NTS B d Lake, a mountain resort, by

oar ' helicopter after a flight from Free Trade Zone-• South Korea where he wound

School Buses ' ~:e~~~h~:: ~~~a~:r:,ith Pre - F k-En route 10 ~'~rmosa , he told I re a s

reporters there IS a po slbUity Incorporate Ofte U f all U.S. troops will be with· n nsa e drawn from South Korca wllh­in five year, depending on th Take ome freak., glv~ Ihem I That' what's happ<>nlng, or lit hou~e at least a 1JI",k store. a

WASHINGTON IA'\ - The progress of a modernlUllion an empl tore building 8nd least planned. at 12t B. Colle!: , record . hop, clothing store for atlonal Transportation Salety program for Ihe Kor an armed Isnmc melal pipe. and w8lch l"here the River City Free Trade both ml'n and women, and a

Board said Wedne day inade- forces. tht'm build 1\ community. Zone - an attempt at a freak "survival shop with sleeping quate constructiOn 01 most community - is n. 109 out of bags and other Ihlngs freaks school buses unneces arily en· Pa I·ne to Fltx N urn ber the dust of the old U-Mark·1t need to surviyc." dangers children 's lives. store. -Mark-It diil not r new Thp buildmg will alsn feature

The board said the use of too • ils I a~e on the building. movlca. peetr reading, and, in few rivets, bolts, screW3 and Of A II L h Clifton Middleton , one of lin In- the basement, !il'e bands. "'elds causes school ilus bodies pO 0 au nc es d terminable number of people The River City Free Trade to disintegrate in crashes, con· I who Is working on the project , Zone is an auempt to work with-Irlbutlng to Injuries and deaths. WASHINGTON IA'I _ The de- J de~igncd to be used on Apollo point d to the frame of a geodes- in the ystem to build a new sys-

The safety invesdgalion unit cislon on how many morc t6, 17. and 18. which have ic dome which he said h and tern, said Will Page, another of ,Ihe Department oC Transpor- limes America goes to the I moon landers modlfiM to IC- about 14 friends made out of worker on the project. ta\Jon urged. bus manufa~turers moon _ with equipment al- commodate It. pieces of mctal pipes. Thr c freaks will run for City an~ the Nall~nal £ducall~n As- ready paid for and delivered Tile Apollo 15 mi.. Ion wa "We're going to build eight or I Council in 1971 to try to accom-~latlon to . adopt a policy oC _ is being made this week by to have b en Imllar to pre. nine or thes thing., connect pli. h change within existing USI~~ fastening . ~elhods which the outgoIng administrator of vlous ones _ with the IIstro- them, and put tores in them," I structure , he add d, inhIbit the ~alSlng of sharp the nation's space agency. nauls allowed to walk the sur- he Baid. Middleton said thaI River City edge! and which provide tJll1ch I co for two periods of four Middlcton saId the metal [Free Trade Zon • which Is an

WA HlNGTON - A shlrp Dr. Joel PopkiII, a .. istlllt SUPI'OttTl NIXON decline In farm prices this commjsaiol\eJ' 01 the Burelu of The eulnl of wholesale prices month caused the first drop tabor Statistics, $lid lower so far 11m year haa beeD cited In the lIovernment'. Whole.lle wholesale food prices are likely moat frequently by Nixon ad­Price Index in two years, bol- to be reflected quickly In retail ministration economists to sup­sterlng While House contentions grocery coel8, rI.lslng hopes port their statement. that lnl1a. thllt inflallon I ea iag. that con UJnera may lOOn ICe lion II taperinll off.

The Labat Dtpartmellt Slid IJ\ som~ taperinll off ill t~ nl- The flve-tenLhl of one per cent a preliminary I'tport Wednesday lion s ... 'Om Inflation 1ft 20 decline brought the Wholesale thaI the drop of flve·tenths years. PrIce Index Clown to 117.1, of one per cent in the index wa Food prim - tocerles and me.nlng It cost t117.10 on the the first downturn since August r laurlJlt meals - make up 23 average thl.s month lor every 1968, and. the grelte t In nearly per cent of the weight 01 the fed- $100 worth of foodstuffs, .nimal four year . er81 Coll8umer Price Index feeds and industrial raw mate.

A lat r report based on more mea urlng typicil living costs. rIals in the 1857·59 period vb complete figure could alter the However, .popkin cautioned which the index is based. preliminary finding. thhat floodbecPTlces Ican tfhluctuate The wholesale hidex Is 3.3 per

~ arp 'I aUSt 0 wea er con-INDUSTRIAL. RISE I dilions temporary shortages cent above a year ago, well be-

Th big decline of •. S per cent and other factors. low 11169'8 U per cent jump. In price of farm producta - Wholesale price bikes of In. TIle I.telt report on coilJumer particularly cattle, hop, vel&- dustrial raw materials tend to prices, fot July, put tHem 5.9 tables and egll. ,- .outweighed become more permanently buill per cent above Uvinll colis a an average Price fiSt 01 two- into the nation'. price structure )ur earlier, a sl\gIIt easing tenths of one per cent lor I but Popkin said the two-tenth~ [rom the annual rate or increase broad . range 01 industrial raw rise In AUgu!t was In 11M with 01 6 per cent or more that had materIals. increases the previous several prevailed for the previous 18

Price also decUned for proc- months and "that I, a J(llMwbat months. e~ d meals and poultry, the re- belt r picture than we had .-lIiiiiiiiiii_iaiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii port said. around the turn of the year."

LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEEK OcIrlIMX 'tn hlI, ytu boume .... Jrlm 111m JII""" '" wMlt " lit, OcIrlntx i. a tiny I.bl.t iIMI ... ny IWlllawe4. Ctnt.1IIa '" ","",,-MIl druga. N, .t.rvl",. N, .,.cill turcl... Cat rkt tf tllC'" f.t .nd ItVt longlr. OdrintJl hi. bten uild successfully lIy tflou· finds III ovtr the country for '''tr 10 y,.rt, OcIrintx etlts $3.15 , .nd the l,rgt .eontmy Ill. $5.2$. YMI must Ie .. ugly f.t .r YOllr monty will be refundod by y.ur druggist. N. qutltIeM .aked.

DIAPER SERVICE

(5 Del. ~ Wttlcl - $12 P!R MONTH -

It,... ,ickti, , d,liv.ry twice a w"k. Ev.rythlng Is fur· """HI DI.perl, cont.in.ra, ..... r.nls_

NEW PROCESS Sold with !hll gu.r.ftt" lIy : Phon. 337.'", MAY'S DRUG STOUt . IOWA CITY - MAIL ORDEltS IIILL.ED _______ ........

I llDl1I WANTID

W Ad R -------- -------ant at.. RIUE - T. Wullln.lon, fl .C. area IABYSITTING ,..nl.d - PIUII! . IhI' tfUnd. S~S701. tvanlrt •• , Gro.~ 'rU 0742. ..It

OM D.y .......... 1Sc I W.rd &83-1714. ..at D~P"ND'- --.:.:... .. "ILl CHILD cora In my Tw. Dey, lie a W,nt Oint . 'dral leU viII.. 'or <hU-AUTOS-DOMISfIC dttrl .,~, U. Fenced y.rd R.[­

CHILD CARl

greater efficiency of joints to ~r . Thomas O. Paine, who C hours each. The stay-time lor frameworks cost about $75 to Incorporated firm, holds a one prevent the disintegration of resignation takes ffeel pI. th '" to 66 build. year lease on the huild,n" space. Th,... Day • .•. ,. 20e I Wort! school bus bod'les " 15. Is weighing whether there c rovcr mission IS up " . F D _... 1961 ~'ORD Galaxl. Adlblllau ,

. will be: hours. with the vehicl able to "We're ct on gettlnR p<'ople He added that the communit~', iv. Iyl . ....... 23e I wo.... ~3ftrN. Iwlnl. .210 or Ol~[O

t< ned. Eul Ide , 311~(lt4. 8-5 HU1lJI'I'\' DUMPTY Nunel)' S~ of'... • ''''I<hool pro,r.m for d*1 Urt t1l1ldrM H tUlllptlllh'. ralel. US S. Capitol Slreel. Dial 3~T.3&l2. • liAR

The NEA's bus spe~ifications. traverse 10 miles on each of who don't want to work within if it is sllccessful in "gelting it Ten C.y. ........ 2tc. Wort! w~~~ chhavel boabeend adodPtedd

l btY cu:r~~tlymo~~e~~~~o flights, . a Ihree succ ssil'e b II tt cry lhe mastedr culture," Middleton together," will be able to movc. Ont Month .. . . ... SSe I Word

m~" s 00 r s an rec • charges. announce "anywherc" after that time. I' Minimum Ad '0 W,rds Iy Influence manufacturer's • Four more flights to the In current planning, the !irsl "We're going to build. an cco- Volunlccr labor, both mental specifications, "stress the nee- moonj using th launch vo- Sky lab - using a Saturn 5 nomIc ubculture ba.cd on ... Iand phy.ical, is n ded imme- \ PHONE 337-4191 essity of obtaining low produc· hlcles of lhe discardcd pair for launch vehicle with an empty cheap thrills." diately, h said.

It,. T·SIRO .Olll;-,. Rody ;';d. ~!~ U.400. Cal art.r • p.m

3 ..... 1. 1~6

1819 00001 uJ\1!r st.. 1,111 ~rlc •• ... 200. Mutt atIl. 12700. 1$1.15.14, D.,

WILL ~bylll m, bOIll. full or parI 11m.. 3~1 ·237D. 803 - .. - .----IXI'IIlIENCIO babYllltin. - P'UII Ume, my home. RcJerenu. 'I ra

nl.hoo. H.wkeye Court. 331·7064 "II tion costs and avoIding Unnec- one addltlonal Skylab In 1973; third stage fittcd out as a River City Free Trade Zone Speaking of the freak com- AUTOS.FOIIEIGN·SPORTS essary luxury in the design of and, possibly, a space tation small laborltory - is sched- will provide "an economic ba,e munity, 1tddlcton .aid. "Thi is JAGUAR JCK!l 42 I MIl. Low --A-P-'-It-O-V-.-D-ItO-O-M-S--buses," the board said. In the 1976 bicentennial year. ulcd for latc t972. Three crews for freaks," he claimed. all a dream we're walking back inll... mini condlllon. AM·FM, -----------LOST AND FOUND Mlch.Un le. no .. lop. '.,415. Bur' WO"~"

The board 's recommendations Plltne's verdict Is expected of thr men each arc to be When complcted - sometime to, We started this in '64 or '65 IInllon. Iowa. $1"'51·o,n. ft.%JI .... ,," Unl,.nllv approvod were based mainly on !nvestlga· early next week. No succc or launched to thc earth'orbit la- Ibefore . the unlver tty oJlPn but wc're just now rcalizing how !'OUND Wrl.1 ... I<h. Inqulr, .1 IfltIl vw _ n~ ... pllnl, rocontly 51~:'u In,. kll~htb prlvUt.U. I~~I'. lions 01 fatal schoolbus accl- for his f(2,500-a-year po t hBlJ lion, for stays up tp 58 days September 14, Middleton qald - much work it takes to make a Aoro Ittnlal. a '111. ..27 ".' .• r~ft:~;t;In:U.1 1&0 I~~l~ A P PRO V E D doubl. -;;;;:;;i.hod dents at Decatur, Ala., in 1168. be n announced . each. the Trade Zone is eXp<'cted to dream 0," rooms. ndot,radual. men. ~n. Similar acciden~ at Waterloo, By cancellIng two moon shot~ TYPtNO SERVI~ES _ I ~~ol:o hmll ..... :b~·I!»~~~a~~t blo<k to c.rnpus Sho" 01'1. 113Hlr:i Neb., .and Atlanta, Ga., also _ the funds-shy space agency I ELECTRIC Shorl pIp .. >. l.,tII 1 8932. - __ "I FALL RATES - It.nl now for 'all.

I I, .., .. vlc. lSI.2l36 10 14RC 8371161 alttr 5 P M 8-29 In, prlvl •• e.. DliCoun!. al.ck·. were Cited In support of the con· would save about 1180 million Waden a Promoters Plan p.pe ... rormer • crelar) . Fut II~I vw R!lS. N.w en,ln •. &400. COtt· ... 1 01.0 rllOm!, WIUI cook·

c US on. _ probably Apollo! J5 and 19 - --~ - GOIII,hL VUI.,l" 8-3 The findings. were limited to operational costs. which In. I E~~';;r~~ .';'m.~ort .. ."~~:~y: I:~~ CYCUS

IIOOMI FOR IIINT school buses With body II'!tached elude preparation. launching, I 0 DC . I ..,nlce. '·IAR tmoakaestruupCkabouCh3tSSgolS'pcThr Icsenttypeol tracking and rec.overy. . ne- ay ountry Festlva {ARY v. aURNS typlnl. mlm.! MUST ELV llfill CL 3:10 HOnO' oo,r.phln,", NOllry public 415 ":10. .".3M4 att r ,p.m. 80211 1 MIN'S ()OUlIW:S .ltd .Inll .. do D·

the 30,000 school bu es m8nufa~. There Is conJect~re Palnc I Iowa Stll. 1I.nk aullaln. 3n'll~i 1~380~4~OA 90. Whllo. -'200. ~~ lown. O.rlln,·llendcr, 351.33'~10.3 tured annually by ten firms will order the tWlce·delayed -

. flight of Apollo 14 to Fra Mau. WADENA IA'I -The Chicago- and that tickets woula be sold and sanitation precauhons were !:~~~d~I~; •• ~";;'!i,le~cJ~~:~·no~~":I~ - M~:.~ -:- ~:~~rm~:m!: 'Q'~I·:~ ~! ro postponed another two ba cd firm that produced the only locally. takcn. 64lt "'IIA.R aervk. Cor III makt . ,'h Motor. Irl,u.lor. Studenl ot pro/m'onal

F b W• W d kf is I I "Thl I I I I h - It I 100 IMn. SSI·I312, henlng.. g·26 au us Ins months past the currcnt Jan. /I ena rOC ost try ng. to . S .s str ct 'I a ocal ' Sue a prop<'rly planned. well· t.E()~A AMILON Typhll mlc. - c~c1 Clinic. 121!: renll. lSI·S .. , 31, 1971 launch date and then I sct up unothcr mu~lc fes\lva\ tiling," said Berkos. policed festlval is what Sound ~r:::~ ~A~c~~~bon rlbbo~'II~C I ~y~Lf3A~?9~~~.~r rtnL - ~~2'3 to fly the Apollo 16 mission re- at the !ame farm alte, the Du· Jo'ayctte County Atty. Waller Storm officials said Wednesday I Mo.ILI HOMII u Al'PROVI:D In.11 rooml lor

P I' r Rae numbered as Apollo 15 early buque T~legr8ph.HerBld said in L. Saur, who along With other !they were propoing. t - MU"CAL INSfAUMEN1~ men. ero ... Irul lrom campus, r ma y ~ In 1072. a copyrIghted story Wednesday. counly and state officials Irom Claims ugalllst the firm In- _ U ,~R~~~r~P.n Ih~:~.~:.r."yo -; r~{:i:t~~O~tdE.w~~~'b~~~ ~~;~~ That would give ~he sp3C~ The newspaper slIld repre- GOv

J. Robert RdaAYt·tLl.GGov ·RRIOhg- CI.lluddeba $ht,04t,550 damage suit CI,ASSICAL1GUITAR

I Sb- ha"dctll\. f~;.~/~~~:~ old~n~"-4~~~~r htl~;t 37· I. 8-15

I A k slatlon One manned launch sentatlvcs of Sound torm En- er epsen an y. ~n. c· I e 'I testate and Fayette .d In pa n. Ava la Ie 'rom lEI. - AtR CONDITIO 'iiit btatiiiruUr',;;;:

n r ansas ' . d T d 'd W d C t $105000 ' t I ' .on Amol, clll lral ,ulllMst . ... 7. lOtIo SKYLINE 1014811 . 'urnl.h~d nt.htd rooDU. t 0 •• t~ talllpus. Instead of tile planned two, In terpl'i!e Inc. were In Wadena ar urner on own,. S81 c· ouny, . In ax c alms, a 16ft. IIH carpeled, Itr rnndlltMfd Inn .. ' ~ ..... Or 337-45011. ,·lIUn 1971 and allow additional time Wednesday trying to arrange nesday he was dubiOUS about 20.000 ~ortg~gc on the (arm .2.800 or lJ<,.1 Ol/tr. m ~h. ... _---:-____ - -----

By TH. AlI~ATED PRatS (or delivery of the lunar rover for a one-day affair in Septem- the prospects lor approval of and poSSible fmes for contempt . HOUSE FOR IIENT APAItTMENT FOR SALI Two Democrats, former Gov. vehicle now being tested by its ber billed as "strictly country tlh~ w:estcrn. fest. 01 court aUer a show-cause

Orval E. Faubus in Arkansas manufacturer. The rover was and westem .. With tbelr reputation for ful- he&rtng schedUled In October. "~:,.~';i:rkr- M:;~M::.dr~'11 ~}. ---~~~~~---d Tul 0 Id II

. . . filling promises it would be ex- Myel'l. MI. Vornon. 8150l16li1. "28 Hll' WANflD an . sa attorney av Ha . Sound Storm Pr()~lIdent WI11- ccedingly difficult to conduct ----------in Oklahoma, lar outdistanced Jury GOlves lam Schc:cck Jr. slud he would negotiations" for a permit , Saur Correction 1I~~~::~E~lf~plr~kPp.~::~~dt:I~~~ party rivllls in Tue8day's pri- confer WIth other backers and said B.rb.ra L.ou ise L.und, Who WHO DOES IT? Ion HOUM Motel. 100Alln maries but lace runoffs before contact county officials by Th'e Wadena rock fest. "vhl'ch w.s chlrged Mond.y with I - d .,

N V d ' WANTED - .wlnl, .peel.lldn. WA NTED - Me Jt", Itcruary Ind

challengin!! incumbent GOP 0 er i ct Thursday, went through several lellal tan. mail theft, is a cI.rk at 'he 3J~044,,&~ddlnl lown •. (ormal~u'l~ pr~~~~P~~. :'~~II~~k.lnl~I"A\~ govel'n()rs Nov. ~. ' I "U we can at lea~t sit dllwn ales before it was allowed to"O low. City Post Office. not a D.Uy 10" 10 "J

H II Id <Jet .tiff fi"ht "... CLASSICAL GUITARIST ,Ivltl, In. - - --a cou ,. 8 " I:t and discuss lbe matt<!r wl·th 10- on sparked W8ve. of criticism m.1I carrier .1 The Daily .Irucllon In be,lnnln, or Id 1I0ARD cre .. IIItlltllftl lor ,.11 n from Bryce Baggett. Faubus Is To McLucas cal authorities, we'll 1111 be and vows from ;tate officials Ibw.n Incorrectly reported H~~::1. lechnlque. Nelton ""l:, Ic~~a r~':J,oi~a':I:22 H~'II~lIg~°n'la~ I heavy favorite in his nmoff. ! much better off," Schereck not to let such festivals go on Wednesday. -- --- -- John Lou,bran, 3S30~SI3. e.1~

R bl' f'A WI th ELECTRIC HAVER rep.'r - 24 -----~--~--epu Ican .uvv. n rop NEW IiAVEN, Conn. IA'! _ ald. ln Iowa again. - -- - hollr .. rvlce. M.) .. •• IIlrber Rn<;kef~lIer eaSily ~on reM~i. A Supcrlor Court jury trying 'TO COVU DeBTS' I CALL. WADENA 'ORGY' Th D ., hop. _ IIH MIS~. POIt SAL. nahon In Arkans.s In trouncmg Lonnie McLucas in connection Sound Storm attorney MI· Authorilies including Iowa e a. V Iowan H~~~ •. T~~!!::~n~·~hl~~~r~l~~~~ HOLLYWOOD Bod - Doubl •. $25 thr8 eel opponents. ,cov. Dewer with the shooting death of a leI. ehael Berkos laid the country- Highway Patrol Chief Howard 'ubll,had by Sluden, Publica- I m·m7. ..u 3SI·83S3. 8·29

art ett had no primary OPPOSI t I I t Iioni. I~t ., CommUftlClllonl c.1I- Piiliitrvu, elOtk.. ,III' ware -. . - low Black Panther retired wes ern est val was belnll Miller and Bureau 0 Criminal Itf. 10"'. tilt, lo .. a J2240 dIlly'.' rLlJNKJNG MA1'JI, Or bl!lc 81a· • J ' 8 II 52i1 h°Ann 10nthOkl:\Rh~pmbal" g r Wednesday Iflemoon alter 412 planned "to cover our outstand· Investigation director Robert ~~~~ ~odn~~~I, d~:!I~~i:~ I,~~!', ~::t -'llI_'CS_? _C_aU_J._n_et_, _:138_.'_306_. e.U GI'I:ir~~I~.:'e":· ·M.on"d

h1; _ Fr'day~Ulh 1

K 'I h Me~JI e u

f A,clank ovhemdo , hours of deliberation without ing debts and payoff our credi· Blair described Wadcna 115 an I.'Y" I Enl" ... III ',tctllll ti"" mil LIGHT Ilaulln, - sludonl til... "4 el I er 0 . as"o a a . d' t W d 't t t f'l f f d . ar. Ih.,., ., 1<I.t Ow. City Call 1137·3;;90 or 337-8371 ev.nln", - =--:-~-~:-:------t h ' I ' b tI reachmg aver ICt. ors. e on wan 0 I e or orgy 0 rugs, proml~cuous sex, under th. ...., If Con,r... of '·22 M~T SELL: Ampts 2151 "Top nl

oug er lime, narrow y ea ng FOr the second straight day. bankruptcy." filth and child neglcct. I Mlrch 2, 1179.__ ARTIST PORTRAITS _ chlldtfn. co~~r ~~:;~'!I~~tk':!:~:~I.tJ=~~ back Rep. Hnward Pollock, whO scores of young suppnrters or Officials of the company said The law enforcement commit- 1'Ioe n.uy 10Win It wrlll"n .nd adults. P,,"cll, <hartoal. $5. "'.Iois I phones, . '.ntl.. \0:Ah sh.pe. MOO I gave up his House seat to .m.ake McLucas massed at two side ex- after the Wadena rockIest they tees of the Iowa Senale and I :/ryleg, ~'wa~u~el~~og! ~a~~e!!~~ve{" $20. OU, AS up. ~260. _ "Il~ ~.~wi r.:..4f

IIUI 'r. 3380S282 ... ~ the race. Fomlcr Gov. Wilham its i~ hopes o( seeIng him driven had lost money on the affair House of Represeptalives met the .dltorlal <oYumn 01 lIIe p.pu SCHAFrS XEROX Copy. Letlett laX I Eagan easily defeated two oppo- back to jail. which drew some 30,000 young Jointly Aug. 13 to review au. are lho • o[ Ih. wrll.... In~~~IP8~clall'I •. 20t Dey "I~W:; 'Ifttry .. Ie nen.ls for the Democratic nom i- PolI :c, however, whisked him rock fans to a farm site near thorilies' experience at Wadena tho An"I.,.d , .... I "nIlU,d - 0:-

t to Ihe exclusive u.e for .. "ubllc.. CASH FOR your cor or ,It.up At klfttf ... ~ ...... 1

na Ion., . out the front door of the large here the weekend of July 31- as a first step toward devclop- lion III 10UI II "til .. all AP n.... truck. Curry'. A.ulo. 103 7111 Sl' l I~ Alaska s I1emocrallc sen.· marble building while about 300 Aug. 2. Ing new policies and perhaps Ind dlspllI:he.. CouIVlU •. 33f-474a. 1-4AR. Witt 1t.1Ith

tworladl III1OKmlndatifon, edstate Rsep. onlookers were .tanding else- Berkos SAid the festival would new legislation coverIng such 10!~b~'~~":I~ :::";~a~1Idt~t.~",,~ D'p':J:. ~~~~a.lrY~'j·r:. ~~bu~~? 1 A"",tt 2t * » en e ay e eat state en. where. he held "only if We can get a affairs. , "ll monlhs. $5.SO: Ihr .. months, S3 phone 837·166f. f.4M 1 ••• 111 .•• \I.""

J~ Josephson In a race In The jury of 10 w~iles and two permit from Fayette County of· Ally. Gen. Richard Turner, ~~ "::n~~5C~~~"'ih~~~ pt~o~~~~ WANTED which .both .centered.Dn Stevens, blacks was handed the case liclals. Plans will not be final- who announced at the meeting S3.SO. _________ _ allackmg him for NIXon admm- shortly before lunchtime after !zed untillhat time." he had secured the cancellation Dill 337-41'1 Crbm noon In mid· WANTID - Small, .hallow·wen Istration policies.. hearing a 9O-minute charge by The corporate officials said lof a proposed mulliday rockfest ~~~;C:~::I~orlln n~~: I~~y .~: .. :': IO~I'Cc':~~n.pr~.~n.tr:.'P ·S::II·I\~~ . Oklahoma's prl,mary. involved Judge Harold .M. Mulvey. law enforcement ag e n c i e s near Knoxville during lhe Labor Edltorlll otllf •• are In the COlllmun Wellman; &46-2344. 10, I lealloas C.nl.r. Ive 01 the state s SIX congres· Mea n W h I I e. demOnstra- would be given complete free- Day weekend, promised to

sional districts. l~lerest cen- lion leaders obtained a police dom to roam the site, a farm move against any muillday y.,::~al p!~~I~/l3~u .~ ,n~.!*riel:? tered on Democrallc Rep. Carl permit to conduct a vigil b 0 ugh t for $47,500 (rom rock fest expected to lure large fort will b. made 10 eorreel the er·

eed ror wllh Ihe nexl Issue. ClrculaUon

Albert, not because he fa through the nJght on the New Clarence Schmitt in July by the numbers of people in the future. ofllco hou .. are 8:30 10 II • . m. Mon. stiff opposition but becauae he's Haven Green across the atreet Wadena Development Co. as But Turner, BlaIr, Ml11er and day IIIrou,b Friday. in line to succeeed House Spelk· rrom the courthouse. During a site for the rockIest. other state offlc\als said they er John W. McCormack, who is day time rally, speakers indud- 'A LOCAL THING' would not object to I festival of retiring It the end 0/ Ihls year. ed attorney William M. Kunst- Schereck said the promoters 12 hours or less for which prop-

TN !e .. , Soard 01 S(udlnl Pub­Ut.Uons. Inc.: Carol Ehrlich. G: John C.ln. Ai; ROD Zobol". A2. Sherr,\' Martin on. A8, Joe )\.lIy A3; William J. Zima. School 01 JOl1rnall..,,; William Albrecbl, D.· parlmonl or Efanomlf., ChaIrman; George W. PoreU, ehool 01 Re-1l,lon; and David SclJoonballDl, D.

w.nted: IXICUTIVI DIItICTOIt .. , '.y c.ro Cantil" .. , Culillrally DI • .-•• nl ••••• n. Nltnllll, Ia­,., .. ~. MA III Child D ....... ", ... 1, ,,.cl.1 lIIucatl.... 1tcl,I W"'k. 11e1li'1II1al,... C ... _,· I", .r rel.'a. hol,l", ,... ..... .I.n,. Allmlnl .... IlYO •• ,.rl. otICo ,r."n". Ctnt.eI: fl.,. _IMI Ch.I''''.... 12. SIll ... 1.1 ., Co"ar Itlpld.. I .... a.

Alaska voters apparently ap- ler and John Forines, a defend- expect 2,000 to 3,000 people for er aulhorl18tion was obtained proved lowering the voling age ani in the Chicago 7 conspiracy the one-day festival - if county in advance and {or which ad­from 1t 10 11, trIal. officiala allow it 10 be .talled - equate aaIety, law enforcement partolaol 0' HIlIOf)'. "-_________ _

.,000 DOWN will buY 4-room Ip.rt. lIIen! III SUIllt!l1I Aparlmenlt. Lar·

. .. IIUllY. 137·2341. 1.15

APARTMINTS FOR RENT

WANTED - Two mal. roomll\at .. lOr totlr room apartment. Clo ••

In. 617.2'74, W. I Llberly. 8·29

AVA1LAIILil now. On. and Iwo bedroom apartment. Allo 3 roam

Ip,l1mlht, turnl hed. Blad,'. G .. · Il,HI Vllliit. 422 Brown. 10." - . --NOW IIENTlNG - on. 'lid 1"'0 bed· room furnl,hod or un!urnlahed Ip.rtmenlt. 351·7151 Or 3"V~I.

8-11

WINDOW WONDERLAND F.ur ,'Chi,. .. In'' .. 1 wllh 0 "'.ullful yl.... of L.k. Mit· .. ,.... WhY n., Ifka Id~I"'· a,. 0' • yur rOUftd v ... llon In 'hi' ,hormln, Ibrll b.droom brlCIt l\eIIIo wllh ... I.rn 10w.'1 fln.SI 1.-. rl,hl " ,fu, blck "oI'. tv. blth.. ,,"II 10 ... 11 (1,.,.1, Itw.r , ... , Ilnl.h.d In blrt~ tun dKk, "II.. Lol 100 It _ . C.II arln.y. 343-"17 cad., lI.plds. 1It:1(1L "VERI llaa"o .. Ct... ..plds ,doOm

STUDENT

APARTMENTS Appre¥eII hous'", .ntI over

21 . I"'r Pool, Meek bar. "1 .......... rvlce " univer-sity, ........... pirkl,., .. ctMlfIIIIM.

MODR. SUIT. OPEN

THE MAY FLOWER

APARTMENTS 1111 N, Dubuque It.

Page 4: Peacekee ing Role Forecast - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/Di1970-08-27.pdfPresident Nixon issued a proclamation marking women's suffrage and urging ... Pamet. Cole,

~'!I' 4-THI DAILY IOWAN- low. CIty, II.-Thurt .. AUfUIt 27, 1m

'Return. t.o Normalcy' Is: Key I For Iowa Pootball For.tunes'

Majors' Scoreboard

t ~ .\

'New York's Agee Still Hurt B.ut Insists He Will Play

NEW YORK fA'! - Every I header again'! Cincinnati and er, risking serious injury in the arne Tommie Agee bends his again Tuesda} night again t At· lake thal was supposed to be the

The dissension problem was Iyears; an experienced second, lof the offense is a steel wall of left leg, h~ hears a distracling lanla. Bu' if Tommie plays al Shea Stadium outfield. He had cured this spring when thou. ary.. experience with tackles Jim NATION AL LEAGUE click in hili knee. It is not the all Wednp.~C:ay night, it will be four hits in thaI game and then

.Ilt "The University of Iowa foot. sands of Hawkeye fans massed As it stacks up now with Miller and John Muller , guard W L Ptl. GI most comforling sound in the . ba:k in center field . sat out Ihe nightcap except for

ball team is a darkhorse in the behind Nagel, and are now practice beginning on Friday, Geff Mickelson and Lor i n ~~~b~;i~ ~ ~ ~~.;- world for Ihe New York Met's' "1 don't like right field ," said a pinch·hilting appearance.

8y ED CLA RK , Dl ily Iowan Reporter

Big 10" is a familiar line to xChlcago 16 fi3 .512 4', center fielder . Agee. "['m going to the mana· On Monday, the knee was X· Hawkeye football fans . But k~e~Yl ~wa~in~ the s~ar~ of from end to end are Layne Lynch and center AI Cassady. ~,lol· lnl~Lourd.~alrl~lI' ~;g ::~;:g The diagnosis is a possible ger and ask to go back to cen. ray~ by Dr. Pet~r,Lamotle, the Hawkeye head coach Ray Nagel w a . 00 s 0 e an a un ant I McDowell, a two year veteran Ray Manning and K err)' ru , W .. ~ 73 .430 15 torn cartilage _ bad enough 10 ter. Mets club phy IClan. Dr. La·

th" wmmng season. '. tt ted th bab" says IS year IS a "return to " at right end: Charles Podolak, Reardon are what Nagel calls Cincinnati :: 4~ ~~t9 ? limit his mobility, but not bad I'm gonna play hard and what.. mo e re!X>r e pro I'C

normalcy." ThiS year s football squad a 2J6.pound senior with ex. "outstanding and the finest xLos Ang.I.. II 55 M3 II', enough to \keep him out o[ the ever happens, happens. I can't lear, ~ddl~g . thai Agee could No more does NageL have the fwehaotumreSar'l1e lebettlenrgmepnU' smhedanYfoOrf perience as a reserve ; and Bill ends in the conference." ~~a~a:.~anc .. co 64 ~ :~ l: lineup. Shortstop Bud Harrelson play scared. If J have to go half. play Wi th II Just as Harrelsoa

weight of dissension within the Houston 58 70 .4~ 25" , played an entire season with the way, I'd rather be out had two years ago. athletic department han gi n g their positions by hustling soph· Windauer and Jerry Nelson, When Nagel looks forward to ,s:~N~~~fo ,am •• ~!t I~c1u~ . 341, same injury two years ago be. Ihere." . Dr. ~motte told Agee lhere over his head, - nor does he omores. That also takes care of both juniors and returning let· the three non-eonference games Wldooiday', ••• ult. fore submitting to surgery A h rt h' kn S t d IS nothing that can be done to have to cope with inexperienc. the inexperience and depth termen. At linebackers on Ihe starting the season he sees two , an Fund .. o I, t. Louis 7 . : gee u IS ee a ur ay I help the knee right now Clneln".11 6. Phlladelphla 5 Minager Gil Hodges trymg to sliding into Cincinnati 's rock· . ed players, - nor does he have I problems which have plagued preseason depth charI are Dave very tough contests. Lasl year 1I0u&ton 5. Monlr •• 1 4 k '" to worry about a depth problem. lowa football teams the past Clement and Dan McDonald, Oregon State crushed the Hawk. Allania at New York. N rna e hfe easier for Agee , \ hard Johnny Bench at home

I' ~~I~~~~~t I~o~a~n~f~:~, ~ ~Iayed him in right field in the plate. He played the firsl game After this It may seem that Ray ten years. both seniors with Iwo years ex· eyes (2·)4 in the opener at ',obabl. "11th... first ga'T'e of ~unday's double. of Sunday's soggy doublehead. Maiors: ISU

Won't Win Big 8 Title

Nagel has little to worry about. In the past the Hawkeye ' per.ience ; then sophomore Karl I f.owa City. This. year the Hawks H(7II.I\on. Dierker (11·111 at Mon· h h

Ireal. MeG Inn IHI or W.,ner W at e does have to worry main problem has centered Homkes, who heat out Dave Invade Corvahs, Oregon, af er 13-41, N about is Oregon State. Southern around the defense, especially Brooks for his job during spring the Beavers will have played a y~~~ntr.A,~J:e,,!o fT~:tI51 al New Ghosts of Ka pp, Eller California, Arizona , Wisconsin. the secondary. T his year's drills. The secondary features game a week earlier with high· ClndnnatJ. MeGlolilUn 111-71 at Purdue, Michigan State, Min· team features five veterans, Don Osby, Craig Clemons and \IY rated UCLA. Ph~l~dtg~~: glb J:~~~51(3.~~I. s~n ne~t~, Indiana, Michigan and two highly. rate~ roo~ies and Rich Sol?mon ,'~ll juniors with The following week the Hawks Frchf~~oi P;~:"JI7'l7~1 a\ San Haunt V.·kl·ng Hopes AMES ,fA'I-IowaStateFool· IlhnOis. for the hrst lime In three one year s eX~r1e~ce ; and Tom return home to play Southern olg~r;. ~.~~ ~~d~~d. ball Coach Johnny Majo~ saId

Hayes, a senior With two years California which Na"el says are Wednesday his Cyclones p~

NOW ENDS WED.

experience " AMIIIICAN LIAGUI . "always tou~her earlier Ihan Ellt 8 y PAT THOMPSON the Kjinsas City Chiefs drew bably won 't be battling for the The strength in the defensive later in Ihe season." The Trl)- Baillmnre :: .; '::8 GB Auoci.ted Prll' Sports Writ.r closer. Big 8 championship this sea·

reserve cehnters around Brooks, jans also start playing a week ~:~Olrork ~ ~ :lli W. MINNEAPOLIS· ST . PAUL "They know where 1 stand," son but he said he now has some Jerry Jo nson, Ray Cavole, earlier lhan Iowa, and will have Boston 64 61 .512 IT - Critics of Joe Kapp, the gut. general manager Jim Finks athletes "who will get us in thaI

HIGHEST RATING!

Tom Cabalka, Bill Rose, Mike the advantage of six exIra ~:~~l~~ron ~ r, ::H ~~ ty holdout quarterback and said. "I have no definite plans, direction."

I DiJlner and Wendell Bell. week of practice in prepara· Wt"w L ,ct. GB team leader of the Minnesota at this time, to talk to them. 1 Majors, entering his third sea· As usual the Hawks have an tion for the Rose Bowl, which Mlnn .... la 74 51 .592 VlkJngs, claim he has launched haven 't talked to Joe since last son at Iowa State made the

explosive offense which will be amounts to an extra spring g:~[:;;dla ~ ~ :lli ~:~ I another of his now famous lao April." remark during the' annual Cy.

LlZA RATES OSCAR IN TOP DRAMA" -r.RiL - VAIL Y NEWS

~

~ ~ ~,

~ ~ AN ana PR.MINoeR ""I..M

iij ..... k.howanl 1'IIIIrt ..... i-t- .. y......, frllllIiIIi_DIl .IIItlllllllll' ..... GId dniI time . ::;;;.; _ _ ....

FEATURE AT - 1:30 . 3;31 ·5:24 . ] ;30 • 9: 36

STARTS WEEKDAYS

7:20 & 9:35 TONITE

.-..;:==~-Watch the landlord get his.

BEAU BRIDGES

LEE GRANT

DtANA SANDS

PEARL BAILEY

"THE STARTS

TONITE

Iii ~ PAOOUCIION COMPAHY ........

WEEKDAYS

7:30 & 9:45

SIDNEY PDITIER MARTIN LANDAU • A WALTER MtRISCH PlmUCTION

honed to a [me, sharp edge by practice seSsion. Kan ... City 4. 'It ...... meduck passes with his contract I Kapp played out his option clone press day at Clyde WH· Mllwauk.. 47 81 .367 28', d the Septemher 19th opener with In the Big Ten, Nagel figures ChicaNO 48 83 ~66 29 emands. with the Vikings last season Iiams Field here.

W.dntlday'. ae,ulIs I h hid th . k' bo ISU' S J riD' Oregon State. Behind rookie that the toughest learn the Chlcaf," 3. WashlnJ(lon \ It 's been more than a month w en e e em, JO mg a ul sports n Orlnat on I· quarterback Roy Bash. whom Hawks will face is Michigan, at ~~~tl'm~~~;; ~~~1:~~~ , \S inCe the Viking's opened their his wobbly passes and reckless rector Harry Burrell said Ihe Nagel says has, "A fine arm, Ann Arbor. However, Nagel MJnnesola 7. Boston 0 National football League train· \ running, to their first NFL turnout of 92 players represent·

\ CIUrornl1 8. DetroIt S • • h . h' H i f d th " b' t f II t I

I releases the ball quickly, ha went on to say that five other New York 3. Kan as City 0 mg camp, and shU the 32·year· c amplOns Ip. e s a ree e e Igges a umou good atturacy and runs with teams besides his own have a 80 10n. ":~~I;l ~llt:~~"at Minn. old Kapp has not shown up agent to sign with any NFL we've ever had." Included Wer(

MPo.ltychr"\., ar~ btailkbacDk LevI i grooh d shot aoth.theSIBlig Te~ ht.itle. ~'t.iii;.:::~ •. "0~~a\l til \41 at w~i1~ seeking a live·year \1 .~ C\UEbl'l b' . I d r '!1\ ,~et~m\ng \~dttenne1\ "l t ,'. lee, wmg ac e n n s e~e are 10 a e, 11c I~an CI • .-land. Chanco tHI. million contract. er, rulSlnll ea er 0 majors Sal a major as,

Creen, w~om Na~el ,said had an I Sta~e , Purdue, Minnesota and m~".~I~,?~t1!~u?}~Sln5111 II Balli· So the question of whether I Mlnnesota'~ defensive . front !acing. the ~O Cyclones is build

I "outsta~dlng ~pnng '. and full· Indiana . Ol1ly ,.me. chcduled. I Kapp, and also defensive end f?ur, hasn t played out hiS 0»- mg a .'conslstent offense. back Tim Sulhvan: Nagel could After President Pra n k II n • Carl Eller, will play this year lion and Is being fined $ZOO a "We didn't have an offens( be ac~used of ha~mg a stacktd Roosevelt Issued his call for I Nicklaus Favored continues to haunt the Vikings. day until he reports . The fine , last year that could take \h! deck In reserve With Steve Pen· normalcy during the depre ion G If' . h . . . . . Including $100 for not showing load off our ,defense," Majon

I ny the Hawk 's leading rusher th l' d . II In 0 s RIC est Vlkmgs offiCials are confident up Aug. 16, has reached $1,900. said. "That pretty well SUI1ll

la~t year Frank Hotm'es and e "adlo~hsu~e keconho~~ca ~ their two prized holdouts even· His contract demands have not up our season." Da' ve "Th' e Rave" Harrl's a , upwl ar 't e I aw s s IOU nob t I CLIJ<'TON. N.J ., IA'! - Jack tually will agree to terms. The be dl I d La I f' . h , on y re urn 0 norma cy, U . d d d d' h d I ' th en sc ose . sl year the Cyc ones lOIS sophomore who Bveral(ed 7.9 may swi ng upward quickly to. N~~hk lah~s~ rest~ an re~ y an coact eKs an dPEaYllcrs SitahYth cy Meanwhile, the Vikings pin ed with 3 • 7 record and wert yards a carry as a fre hman d f th B' T WI' IS Imposing game In gear, wan app an er w em, their hopes on veteran quarler· seventh in the Big Eight.

I

I

Protecting the movIng . Is ~~~ s ~eco-;:y ~ I P be ~~ cn I·a.;·ed as Ihe man to beat as but also feel Ihey can win with· back Gary Cuozzo who passed Majors said he was please< par I I an a se w r . ne of :he slrmgesl fields of the out them. for two touchdOwn's last Satur. h wilh the progress of t is year':

BIG TEN INN S 13 S. Riv.r$id.

TAP·BEIR·SPECIAL

BUD-and.SCHLITZ LARGE 12 OJ:. glass 25c

PITCHER OF 8EER $1.00

- Plenty of Free P(lrkin!!, -

year a~semblcd for pro golf's rio But the situation remained at day and had four passes inter· team. "I don't think they h8~1 chest event, the $300,000 Dow an impasse Wednesday as the cepted in a Jot • 7 preseason vic· lost their desire to win ," h< Jcnes Open. Sept. 20 season opener against tory over Houston. ' ' said .

Both the Iota I money and the I -- . firs place prize - $60,000 - arc 'he largest the game has ever M t offered and have aUrac ed the ee \\,crld 's greatest shotmakers to t.~ Upper Montclair C u,'ry

Club coul'~e for the inall~ura hi" CI'en .

Nicklaus. always a threat, is

the Hawkeyes I having one of his better years

''''~~~~~!!,,~~~~IJ!I!!'''-II!IJI!!I!I-ItI!!I!'IlII!~ and is coming of( a week's resl

• Mr. ROBERTS, NOW UNDER

NEW MANAGEMENT*· Welcomes Students ·and F~culty

To The University and to Iowa City

STUDENT SPECIAL EVERY THURSDAY 'NIGHT SWISS STEAK DINNER

$ tax included

DAVE HARRIS

A strong, broken field runner will keep the secondary on its toes and can break any game wide open.

The University of Iowa football team increases its options in this department with the addition of Dave "The Rave" Harri.s, a sophomore tailback playing be· hind speedy Levi Mitchell.

Harris gained 199 yards rushing on the freshman team and scored two touch· downs, including a 62·yard run.

Hawkeye coach Ray Nagel says of Harris, "He is slippery runner - one who seems to have every move in the book. He Is on the same order as Levi Mitchell, although he's not quite as heavy. Their speed is comparable, and they both use their blockers well. It should be just a matter of time before Harris becomes a first·rate back.

Harris was all·state in football in his senior year at Wilbur Wright High School in Day too, Ohio, where he scored 40 points in one game and gained 1600 yards rushing.

BtLL ROSE

Sophomore defensive end Bill Rose will provide the Iowa {OOlba\\ leam ex.· cellent depth at his position this fall.

Rose is currently listed on the pre­season depth chart as the number two right defensive end behind lWl)-year letterman Layne McDowell.

Defensive coach Dick Tamburo says Rose Is ,I A tough competitor, and after he gets some game experience should become a very valuable member of our defensive line. He will help give us the kind of depth on defense which we've lacked before." .

Rose was a three·year letterman in football at his home town high school in Bayonne, N.J . He earned all-city, aJl-conference, and all·state honors in 1968 as his team won the Hudson Coun· ty conference championship.

COLOR by DeLuxe' , (plus choice of three other meats)

with choice of drink ~~~~~~~~~~~I 1£ii!f29 ,

- NOW ­Ends Wi d.

OPENS 1 p.m.

STARTS 1 :45

3· SHOWS DAILY FEAT. TIMES

AT 1 :45 5:05 1:25

Admis.ion Prici

For This Engag. ment

ALL SEATS

$2.00

o wodleigh·molltice, fRl ltd prooucllOO .tiD

technicobr® from YoQrner bros.

NOW . . . Ends WED. \

Steve McQueen 'The Reivers"

G.P. P.........,'l __ • I

l FEATURE AT -

1:41 ·3 ;39 · 5;37 · 7:35·9:33

• STUDENT SUNDAY NIGHT SPECIAL • $200 3 Meats Plus Fried Shrimp

d,llIk alld tax Incl.'"

SUNDAYS 11:00 a .m. to 8 p.m. - ALL DAY

PLEASE BRING YOUR STUDENT 1.0. CARD

ALL YOU CAN EAT Try Our Other Lunch and Dinners Too

• Now managed by Paul Sieg,i.t,

former chef of the famous

Golden Buffet in Winterset, Iowa

Mr. ROBERTS SMORGAST ABLE OPEN MON .• SAT. 11 I .m. · 2;30 p.m. , 4:38 p,m . • • p.m.

120 E. BURLINGTON

Welcome S SrUOEN\ FUN

Shakers Features

GALA GAIETY ~~~~

A BALL FOR ALL

Tim Steffa· Folk Singer

Thursday Nite Aug. 27 - 8·12 p.m.

Also On Tap:

Pitcher of Beer

$1 00 Domestic Light or Dark

Olde Tyme Movies Friday Nile

' :30 p.m. hi 1:30 • . m.

Saturday Nit. 7:38 p.m. Ie 12:30 p.m,

SHAKEY'S pInG .. parlor

& Y' public house

351·3885 I

West of Ward,way Qn Hwy. 1 West

I .\

SeRa Singl Missl ed to begin single \i~e to

I rockets, , striking a

But a 10 write ing the strike·first il became

ments t R·Ma~s.)

~ ) Al1'!erican At Ihe I

I S'ennis (D.! , Services C

• his fhl am than requil Work on a missile.

, 11 was th adopted on

Brooke sa the Mullipl

• ; Re-entry Vt arms contro SUcceed.

lr such ta . limit on sue , I ~id , the l

Wilh no sui! missiles wil

Brooke's

r offered on limitation t required th MIRV miss stroy Sovie curacy and Soviet rni3s