Anda di halaman 1dari 12

Boyd defends UI quality, stature

By MARK MITTELSTADT

A.. t. New. Editor


UI President Willard Boyd Thunday
defended the quality of education at the
university and its national standings
among other major colleges and
universities.
In his annual faU speech to the faculty
at the Pharmacy Auditorium, he cited
several honors and achievements to
assure the faculty of "the relative quality
of the University of Iowa in a general
sense.'
Boyd said his comments on the issue
were in response to several inqulries
from state legislatqrs and others who had
reacted to a survey published this spring
in Change magazine.
Re-printed in area newspapers, the
survey ranked colleges and universities
across the country in several academic
areas. The UJ was not listed in the
I

top 24 institutions' nationwide in numbers


rankings.
Boyd told this reporter after the speech of faculty receiving awards.
He also cited the Ul's Health Center as
the survey "aidn't really mean
anything" as "quality defies precise the nation's largest university-affiliated
measuremenl." He said academic areas health center, averaging 3,500 patients
daily with instruction of 5,358 students
are too nebulous to be ranked.
Among the items Boyd cited to the daily.
~d told faculty members, however,
faculty included:
-Ratings of advanced instruction and that certain areas in the UJ needed imscholarship by the American Council on provement.
Education which placed the Ul in the top
One specific area he cited was time
30 out of several hundred universities
aUotted to faculty members to carry out
across the country.
individual "research, coune develop-A high number, 46, of faculty ment, additional study and preparation
members on advisory panels of federal in new andoOr different fields of value to
departments and agencies. The Ul the UI."
ranked 15th" of 50 institutions surveyed, He pointed out that this free time
despite the UI being "a smaUer enables faculty members to improve
university than a majority of the in- individually and to achieve inatitutlonal
educational objectives.
stitutions surveyed."
He said "Every effort must be made to
-Four GU8llenheim FeUowships at the
UI this year. placing the UI among the mtrease the number of developmental

assignments. "
"In ad,jjtion, it will be necessary to
reallocate time and funds at departmental, collegiate and university
levels," Boyd said. He said this
reallocation would be primarily In
"faculty loads during specific periods of
time" to allow instructors moR time for
the developmental assignments.
With this, Boyd announced a
"University House" to "serve al a
broker for people with ideas who want to
collaborate with colleagues outside their
departments and coUeges who h~ve
similar interests." The body is to be
composed of representatives of the
Research Council, the Counell on
Teaching and the collegiate deans to
allow for "peer evaluation, consultation
and review" of new disciplinary and
interdisciplinary propoeals.
Boyd said the implementation of the

"Univenlty fIouM" concept will require


further time and study thiJ year, and
should be operational next ICbooI year.
Boyd also said the UI 11 attempting to
make programl more accessible to both
traditloaal and non-traditlonal students.
"1bia will necessitate exteod\nJ our
programs to more varied students at
more diverse times and places," he said.
"To aclUeve this doea not require us to
undertake more programs but rather to
make our preeent ones more available."
He hinted at increased emphasis on the
ur's Extension Division and Saturday
and Evening ClIII Program due to
poItive results in put years_
He said he 11 concerned that many
unsuccessful applicants do. not look at
other areas related to the health colleges
for their training, such as physics,
chemlltry and other bulc sciences.

THE

" Iowa's
alternative
newspaper"

lQ'

Friday, August 30, 1975

Photo by David Kamerer

Willard Boyd

Housing woes elsewhere

In the Big 10, they camp out


'By KRIS JENSEN
and
MAfU(COHEN
Staff Writers
UI students are not alone with housing
woes this fall .
Editors from Big Ten newspapers
report students at their schools are also
faced with inflated rents. swelled dormitories and shortages of off-campus
housing.
"We're up a shit creek here, " an editor
from the Purdue Exponent noted before
telling of LaFayette. Indiana's housing
problems.
Purdue University admitted more than
800 students over donnitory capacity. the
editor said. Presently, their students are
housed in the Purdue union but the administration has said in three weeks they
wUl have to leave for crowds coming to
the Notre Dame football game.

-Off-campus students are now camping


out rather than paying inflated apartment costs. she said.
Purdue is now putting undergraduate
students In housing previously reserved
for married students. and is ceasing to
take housing applications from married
students, according to the editor.
.University of Michigan students are
doubling up in donnitories to meet
on-campus housing demands there. A
MIchigan Daily editor said the university
has converted single rooms to doubles
and doubles to triples to meet the
problems.
In Ann Arbor. off-campus housing rents have become inflated and the supply
dried up In March, according to the
editor.
A cheap looking" efficiency currently
runs from ,120 to '1~ A month in Ann Ar
II

bor.
The editor said that a referendum last
spring to begin rent cootrol In the city
falled . Last week. the mayor appointed a
special committee to studv rent.
At the University of Indiana in
Bloomington. officials have been forced
to purchase 500 extra cots from Indiana
State to house the 927 overC,low studenLs
requestinll donnltorv IlDlce.
Officials expect the 927 figure to increase even more and said some students
in "temporary" lounges may remain
there a\1 year.
Dormitory overflow problems also
exist at the University of Illinois and
University of WiBconsin. Both schools
also have a shortage of off-campus
housing available to low-income studen-

ts.

A staff member with TIle Luten' at

Ohio State said a housing boom in the


past three years has eliminated off-campus housing problems formerly experienced there. Two years ago. however. the
\Dliversity was doubling up donnltory
residents.
"A couple of years ago landlords could
ask any price and get It, but now prices
have become more reasonable with Increased building. the staff member
noted.
About 60 per cent of the students at the
University of Minnesota commute so
there is no housing shortage there, according to a Mlaneaota DIIlly editor.
The editor added that housing is expensive for the :MJ per cent of the student
body who choose to live near the Minneapolis campus. "If you want to live
close to the university. you have to pay ...
he said.

II

Group disputes electric hill hike


Married housing tight;
market stagnating
offered by the Iowa L8nd Corporation
and were availabie only to a married
couple. Numerous single students had
KRISJENSEN
called Iowa Land about the homes,
Stair Writers
Nelson said.
Marriage, in the eyes of many, is
A random phone survey by the OJ of
merely a one-word term for having an
the local apartment complexes seemed
albatross around the neck.
In the case of the fight for decent, low- to indicate no particular prejudice
against married couples. But many of the
cost housing in Iowa City, it appears that
married couples contacted do claim to be
this wisdom is true.
generally "shut out" when seeking
"Married student housing is tight,"
admits William Shanhouse, vice rooms in multi-family dwellings rather
president for Administrative Services. than complexes.
As a perspective on Shanhouse's comThe PAT rental bulletin confirms that
ment, it should be noted he considers the
a room or rooms in a house is the only
current situation in the dorms "not a
housing possibility left in Iilwa City.
crisis" and insists there is sufficient
For married students seeking low-cost
single housing available In the city.
housing , the UI maintains 750 married
Lewis Jones, G, director of the
student housing units. According to
Protective Association for Tenants
Shanhouse, the waiting list is 35 students
(PAT) told The DaDy Iowan that two
long.
bedroom apartments - those rentals
O-ver the summer, 12 WW II surplus
which are essential to married students
quonset
huts, used for married student
with children - are the fastest rentals to
housing, located in Templin Park on N.
be snapped up each day. "They're
Riverside Drive, were torn down by the
usually gone wilhin half an hour ," Jones
university.
said.
Shanhouse explained the units had
In this, the second year of a serious offcampus housing crunch, Shanhouse originally been erected only to house
married GI's returning from the war.
continues to advise married students who
They were slated for demolition in the
have not secured housing to leave their
early fifties, he added.
families home until proper living
arrangements can be secured in Iowa . The UI, however, continued to mainCity.
~ tain the units for its married student
population. Never intended for perJones had few suggestions for married
manent use, the buildings eventually
students seeking housing. He does advise
deteriorated and were condemned.
them to look for housing in the outlying
Shanhouse said the ur merely "ran out
districts.
of
time" to staU the demolition of the
The little housing that is acceptable to
units. "We were fortunate there were no
married students and is still available,
can only be found in such areas as Hllls serious accidents there," he commented.
Both Shanhouse and Jones admit, that,
and West Liberty, Jones' said, .
like
a spouse, a pet Is also a hindrance in
. He had no advice for students who had
the fight to secure housing In Iowa City.
nlether the transportation nor financial
The overall housing picture here can be
means to commute to the UI.
The current PAT rental bulletin, described in one word : stagnant.
Nelson reported the pattern at PAT of
pubUshed each Wednesday, listed only
two rentals suitable 'or a married couple. receiving one to three new rentals per
day and a number of students with
There were 30 IIIt1D'S Oil the bulletin.
According to Linda Nelaon, a PAT housing still, seeking roommates was
ltaffperlOll, both Ustinlll were homes continuing. .
By MARK COHEN
and

By LORI NEWTON
Staff Writer
Citizens United for Responsible
Energy (CURE) filed a petition of intervention with the Iowa State Commerce Commission last week stating that
tlfe Iowa Electric Light and Power
Company (IE) is spending money in
"wasteful manners," resulting in
"unreasonable use of its present income."
Dan Welch, a CURE member from
Cedar Rapids, said he was motivated to
do a study on the IE rate structure after
he was the only person to a ttend a public
hearing on IE's latest rate increases last
April.
These increases will not affect Iowa
City and Coralville areas, but will affect
some 400 other Iowa communities served
by IE including Cedar Rapids, Mt.
Vernon, Marion , Fairfield, Ames and
"north of there," according to J .P.
McPortlend, advertising director of IE.
"I felt no one else would do the job,"
Welch said, "so I decided to do something
about it myself."
Welch 's study
showed
that
homeowners use 39 per cent of the
electricity produced, but end up paying
44 per cent of the bill. Heavy industry in
Cedar RapIds, however, uses 29 per cent
of the electricity but pays only 21 per cent

of the total cost of production.


McPortlend refused to make any
comment on Welch's study, and noted
that no other employees 01 IE would
make any comment.
Welch said that when he confronted
employees of IE about the study all he
received were "no comments."
"There is a lot of silence in IE," he
said. "I think they're afraid to talk to
me!'

The ~tition also stated that the


proposed IE rale increases do not
promote the efficient, wise and conservative use of our nation's resoUl'ces.
Welch said the rate schedule is also
unfair to smaU businesses because they
too pay a larger part of the total
production cost of electricity than what
they use.
Welch noted that these unfair costs also
affect farms served by IE. McPortlend
said that no one there has seen the
petition that was filed.
"We heard about it through the news
media," he said. "To the best of my
knowledge, no one here' has seen the
petition. "
McPortlehd saUi IE will file a petition
and an appropriate response whenever
the Iowa Commerce Commission
requires it.

"Until then," he said, "There is


nothing else to say. The petition is a legal
document and will be responded to in an
appropriate manner."
Pat Korsendorler, a spoke8person for
CURE from Cedar Rapids, said that
expert testimony is needed in order to
have the rate restructured, and that
groups and individuals are now working
in the area to form a coalition to bring iJi
an expert.
"In california," she said, "an expert in
the field testified, and their rates were
restructured. "
Korsendorler said there has been talk
of proposing a checkoOff system on utllity
bills. Under this system a c\lStomer
would have the option of paying an extra
dollar which would go into a consumer
group_Such a system is already in effect
in Massachusetts and Vermont, she said.
"Hopefully," she said, "these funds
would help \IS bring in an exper.UD-the
field to testify."
Korsendorfer said it would be nice to
get funds from consumer advocacy, but
she ' feels the this is imposible and the
checkoOff system would be the best
alternative.
"If an expert is brought In," Korsendorfer said, "The IE proposed rate
increase may be denied and their rate
schedule revised."

~.

Photo by Lawrence Frank

Old homestead's not the same


By VALERIE SULLIVAN
Staff Writer
She's "just' about as old as this farm
here," and U Jessie ("Ardith in school")
Henderson is telling the truth , that's
pretty old. The 160 acre Henderson farm
near West Branch, Iowa, is one of 3,065
Iowa farms which has qualified - at
least in part - for "Century Farm"
recognition during the bicentennial year.
The program, administered by the
Iowa Department of Agriculture and the
Iowa Farm Bureau, offers certificates of
recognition to Iowa farmers whose
families have owned at least 80 acres of
farmland for 100 years or more.
For the Henderson's, 80 acres - "the
first 8O ... just over the hiD" - qualify,
because It was purchased in 1853 from a
Civil War veteran by Jesaie's great
grandparents.
The land the Henderson's are living on
now - "the 80 acres of the south half of

the northwest" - do not qualify, becaUIe


they weren't purchased by Jesaie'.
grandparents until 1894. The home Jessie
and Uoyd Henderson are living in now a large two-fllory wbite frame - is OII1y
80 years old.
The house once gracing the north 80 "built onto and onto" until its original
two rooms were 13 - is gone now, tom
'down in the 19408 when the Henderson'.
son returned from WW II to build a home
next to theirs. The barn, bullt in 1872, il
gone also; its beams and lumber are now
supporting a blacksmith shop in West
Branch.
But Jessie Henderson remembers both
her grandparents' home and a way of life
that is today presumably being
celebrated by the bicentennial.
"There was hardly a day that went
past when I wasn't down there," claims
Jessie. "I still dream about where my
grandmother kept her things in that old

house."

For Jessie, born and raised In the


house she is Hving in today, the change
from her girlhood to her present age of 76
has been "terrifIC."
"I hardly know what machines go past
on the road today," she said. "And I used
to pride myself 011 knowing how all of the
machines on a farm run."
Tbat change, claims Jessie, haa
brought with it more than machinery.
"People then didn't fUll about near as
much. They produced what they wanted
to use and IOld what little they had above
and beyond to buy wbat they needed."
Diversified farminl, - when "people
grew hay and grain and killed muttons,
hogs and steen to eat" - is all but gooe
now, and with It, says Jeale, suffiency
and the aU important sociability that
comes with small farm life.
"It'. hard to put into words," said
Jesale. "But somehow the small neigh-

borhood went out and the big neighborhood came in ."


That cbange - a change Jessie blames
in part on higher taxes and consolidation
of the rural schools - has not left the
Henderaons untouched. In 1920, "when
hogs were down to 4 cents a pound," the
Hendersons converted {rom diversified
Continued on page three
\.

. Weather
The sprinkles should end today with
a high in the 80s, low tonight in the 60s.
Alu, the long weekend looks wet and
warm, with daily rain and temperatures into the 80s lumbering
through our labors.

Paae 2-Tbe Daily Iowa_Iowa Cit)', 10w_Frl., Aug. 30, 1975

D~ily

Digest

Coal mines shut down


CHARLESTON, W.Va. (API-Muchofthenatlon'ssoftcoal
industry was shut down Thursday as wildcat strikes spread in
a miners' rebeUJon against the companies. federal courts and
their own union.
About two-thirds of the nation's 125,000 bituminous coal
miners who are members of the United Mine Workers Wlion
were idled by picketing in the South, the Midwest and the Appalachians.
UMW officials continued their rounds of meetings in the
coalfields, seekinS a solution to the various disputes.
At the same time the union, unable to control its scattered
and individualistic members, remind miners that fines imposed on the Wlion by federal judges would eventually come
out of their own pockets, "out of the dues of the miners."
A federal judge on Wednesday threatened the union with a
$500,000 fine and harshly criticized the union for failure to control its members.
. Federal court hearings on restraining orders continued here
and more were scheduled in Ohio. Other judges have acted in
Indiana and Illinois. A judge in Tuscaloosa, Ala., scheduled a
hearing for next Tuesday.
And in Pittsburgh, three major steel firms, which use soft
coal to make coke that is essential In the production of steel,
threatened legal action on Thursday to halt the strike which
has idled an estimated 8,000 men in western Pennsylvania.
U.S. Steel board chairman E.B. Speer called the perfonnance of the United Mine Workers union in the nearly threeweek-old strike "a national disgrace."

U.S. loses oil control


CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - President Carlos Andres
Perez signs a bill Friday nationalizing the giant Venezuelan oil
industry and ending 60 years of U.S. dominance.
The bill sets Jan. I, 1976, for taking over the industry, which
produces an average of 2.5 million barrels daily.
However, Milton Lipton, an oil consultant with W. J. Levy
Inc. in New York, said the Venezulean move wiil have "almost
no impact" on prices here.
He said the length of time the price of Venezuelan crude remains the same will depend partly on future political factors.
And John Litchblau of the Petroleum Industry Research
Foundation said: "I don't think it wiil have anyimmediateimpact on price nor impact on supplies. It's not a hostile act. It's
been agreed upon."
.
The Venezuelan presidential palace said Friday's signing
ceremony will be attended by "representatives of the various
governmet offices, the diplomatic corps and numerous special
guests."
Perez has 10 days after signing the bill to name members to a
special commission which will oversee the industry until Dec.
31, when a new state oil company, Petroleos de Venezuela Petroven - takes over from the 21 firms now operating.
The commission will have nine members, five chosen by
Perez, two selected from a list presented by Congress and two
from a list presented by the Confederation of Venezuelan
Workers-CTV.
The communique said that immediately after the law is
published in the official gazette, the president will issue a decree fonning Petroven.
Then the government will have 45 days to make fonnal compensation offers to the 21 oil companies, which will have 15
days to reply.
The bill provides that compensation must not exceed the net
book value of the companies' assets:

Mail rates to rise again


WASHINGTON (AP) - The Postal Rate Commission, overruling the recommendation of its administrative law judge,
opened the way Thursday for an increase in the cost of mailing
a letter from 10 cents to 13 cents.
The postal Service is expected to raise the rate at a meeting
of its board of governors Sept. 4.
The higher rate could take effect 90 days after the Postal Service acts, making possible a Ikent rate for the Christmas
mailing season.
The Postal Service already is printing Christmas stamps and
for the first time they have no denomination. The stamps will
be valid for the first-class postage rate in effect when they are
issued.
Postmaster General Benjamin F. Baiiar, in a statement,
declined comment on the commission's action. But he said he
was "pleased that the process of this rate case is finally over
after nearly two years of discussion and deliberation."
The commission approved a pennanent rate schedule similar to the temporary one in effect since March 1974.
It rejected the recommendations of its administrative law
judge, Seymour Wenner, who said last May, "the Postal Service has become a tax-collecting agency, collecting money from
first-class mailers to distribute to other favored classes of
mail."

Wenner proposed lowering first-class rates to 8.5 cents and


increasing sharply the rates for parcels, magazines, newspapers and book-club and record-club mailings.

Now a Bose Direct/Reflecting


bookshelf speaker and its
under $100.
II you thought it couldn't be done, you don't know BOSE.
Because the new BOSE MODEL 301 speaker is Just that. A
bookshelf speaker that provides reflected and direct sound
performance in the tradition of the internationally-famous
BOSE 901. and 501 speakers.
It provides such astounding performance for its size that,
frankly, it's hard to believe that this speaker costs under $100.
But it does. And, It's easy to place and can be adapted to all
room environments.

Second Council eandidate

Perret seeks city seat


By MARIA LAWLOR
Staff Writer
David Perret, 25, Tuesday
became the second person to announce he will nUl for a seat on
the City Council in the November elections. Perret, a fonner
UI student, is the first candidate
to seek a district council seat.
Carol deProsse, currently
serving on the collnCiI, announced Wednesday that she will
seek re-election, running for an
at-large seat on the council.
Perret, a life-long Iowa City
resident, will nUl for the seat
representing Council District A,
one of three council districts
created under the new horne
rule charter which goes into effect Jan. 1, 1976.
District A includes those
precincts west of the Iowa River
(1,2,3,8, and 9) and precincts 10,
13, and 14 on the east side of the
river.
In the election the cOWlcil will
be expanded from five at large
members to seven persons, also
to be elected at large. Three of
the seven members, however,
must be nominated from the
three districts.
.
If severa) candidates file
nomination papers in each one
of the districts, a primary election will be held Oct. 21 and
the two candidates receiving
the largest number of votes will
be on the November ballot.
In announcing his candidacy,
Perret said he wants to run for a

has been heightened by the


demolition of low rent units

Photo by Lawrence Frank

David Perret
district seat rather than an
at-large seat because he feels
within one district he can sample public opinion by October,
while a city wide attempt would
befutiIe.
Perret said he intends to run a
campaign based primarily on
volunteer help and does
wish to spend more than S200 in
the campaign. He said his "big
thrust" would be on door to door
contact with voters.
"I am concerned about certain trends and lack of action in
the city's development, which
are beginning to disrupt our

not

Gov't asks Midwest aid


in refugee resettlement
KANSAS CITY (AP) - Federal officials charged with resettling 130,000 refugees from
Indochina , and hoping to speed
up the process, talked Thursday
with those they are looking to
for help in Iowa, Nebraska,
Kansas and Missouri.
Iowa's employment security
commissioner called it a process of selling one another. Two
points which brought repeated
exchanges of insistence and assurance were that the refugees
not displace American workers
and that they not wind up on
welfare.
"We don't like welfare in
Iowa, we don 't like welfare in
the Midwest," said Colleen
Shearer, who also is Iowa's
coordinator for resettlement.
"Medical assistance should be
available, yes. But these people
do not have to be on weLfare."
Ana Riojas, refugee coordinator
for the Department of Health
Education and Welfare in the
four-state region, agreed with
both prem ises and said:
"These are dedicated people,
industrious and willing to work
and they 've got the guts and the
moxie to do it. And the younger
ones want to go to school at
night. They have much to offer

HOME

Wesley House

FOR YOU

120 N. Dubuque

A church home at
Bible teaching
church-Iowa
City Bible Fellowship

9:45 a.m, 6:00 p.m.


Sundays
312 E_ College

Ca1holic Sadent Center

331-7347

MEN'S LUXURY
KNIT SHIRTS

Regularly $9-10
Great fit, smooth dress
shirts in a rainbow of
prints and solids.
Machine wash polyester
and cotton . Half sleeves

Y2 PRICE

$8

Regularly $16
Fashion - classic in
Fall patterns. Wards
popular belt-loop model
flares in stay-neat
doubleknit polyester.
Machine-wash no iron
needed. 32-40.

~ome

WARDWAYPLAZA
Junction Highways 1,6 & 218

&Get Acquainted

(FREE SUPP-ER)

Looking for value?


Find it here.

Use 01 Clossifiedsllllll!1

Texas Instruments

(Center East)

Solllay, Aug. 31
Pipes & 10c papers

right after the


11 ;00 Mass

DANCE

powered
chairman
assistant
linguistics,

, SR-11

Iowan

Scientific

$39

Stricklin,

tractual

95

Be more in touch with


yourself

(or

Men, Women
Boys & Girls

which has

Staff of
ualified &
Professional
Instructors

nessee for

years.
Once the

TI1200

.168

without Datterles

Also In Stock
SA-51 SA-50
SA-16
Check Iowa Book for the full
line of Texas Instrument Calculators

....BDSE"

sound

Y2 PRICE SALE

USE WARDS
CHARG-ALL
CREDIT

Sunday, Aug. 131


5:30

a warm, conservative

attha

Ends Sunday

and

SUPPER

Free Pancake
Breakfast

3 DAYS ONLY

OPEN HOUSE

to our society. We cannot lose."


Richard Friedman, HEW's
regional director at Chicago,
said many of the refugees are
taking jobs that daily go degging in newspaper want-ads.

Come in this week and ask to hear a demonstration of the new


BOSE MODEL 301 Direct!
Reflecting. bookshelf
speaker system. You really
won't believe it ... until you
hear it.

woodburn

living standards to dimin-ish the


appeal that we find in Iowa
City," Perret said in a prepared
statement.
Perret, making his first bid
for public office, added that
"housing, public transportation, the future of and public
trust in urban renewal, citizen
input into decision-making and
governmental accountability
are the issues in this campaign.
"Never before has the
housing shortage in Iowa City
been as critical as it is at this
moment," Perret said. "The abnormally tight housing market

near the downtown area and the


slower construction of
replacements at high rent. "
Perret said the city should
place increased emphasiS on
public transportation, instead of
on street-widenings and arterial
street schemes.
"U rban renewal has been
stagnating since I've been in
grade school," Perret said.
"Public confidence in the urban
renewal developer is not high;
questions about its DpeMess,
financial soundness, motives
and ideas about renewal are in
many peoples minds as well as
in my own."
Perret said he would encourage organization of neighborhood groups, such as the
Melrose Street Association, to
continue a\l efforts to gain
responsiveness in city government and to have an impact on
city decision-making.
Perret was an out-of-state
organizer in the 1972 McGovern
presidential campaign and a
local coordinator for Senator
John Cuiver. He was a delegate
to the December 1974, National
Conference on Democratic Party Organization and Policy held
in Kansas City and currently
serves on the Congressional
District and State ACfinnative
Action Committee and the Johnson County Democratic Central
Committee.
.

For further Information call '


Mary lea Leitch School of Dance
Phone 338-3149 or' 351-2483
Age 3- adult, Beginning, Intermedlat'
and AclYanced cfasses In eff fields.

Across from the Old Capitol


Open 8-,8 Mon. 8- 6 Tue - Sat.,.

Gi
P}
SIZ
gif
Gi~

Blc

+i-,..~.

'I1Ie Dally Iowan-Iowa City, 1_ _ FrI" AlII. 30, II'I!>-'I'.

Century farms
Continued from pale one
-Pipes
-Cigars
-Pouches
-Lighters
_Tobaccos
_Imported Cigarettes
-Smoking Accessories

to dairy farming, which, claims Jessie,

assured them of a more steady Income


than most people had.
Age has since put the Henderson farm
in the hands of a tenant farmer with
whom the Henderson's share half of the
profits. Meanwhile, Jessie said their son
has moved to Calilornia because "160
acres can't keep two families."
Jessie Henderson still cans Iomatoes, tomato relish and pickles line
the cupboards of a storeroom off the
kitchen - and both Hendersons
"practically live" ore the garden they
keep out back. Neither Henderson has
complaints today, nor do they rebel
against the progress that has come to the
small farm In Iowa.
"We have no gripe as far as our own
,life is concerned," said Jessie. '.'We buy
what we want and we keep up with the

13 S. DUBUQUE

01 CLASSIFIEOS 353-6201

Urnes." ,

dress
rainbow of
Solids.
polYester
Half sleeves

, But Jessie is not sure she would advise


anyone to invest in small farm living
now. Attoday's prices, she said, anyone
with money in their pockets "might
make just as much salling it down."
And Jessie also isn't sure the progress
that has come to Iowa In her 76 years has
been all for the good.
"People lived just as happily - I would
say happier than they do today,
with the mad life they're living, keeping
up with the Jones~ ."

23 Hour Sale Continues


Photo by Art Land

Friday 11 5:30
Saturday 1 o 4:30

Vintage growth
Jessie Henderson shows off this year's corn crop to her

husband Lloyd, on their more than lGO-year-oid famILy farm


In West Branch.

SONY 6036A

Reduces st"dent housing


I

orig.
230

NOW

'179

'Snob zoning' underway here


By a Staff Writer
assic in
s. Wards
mOdel
sta y-neat
polyester.
no iron

A coalition of Iowa City


residents and officials is
organizing a major "snob
zoning" campaign in the downtown area.
At a Thursday meeting of the
Iowa City Planning and Zoning
Commission, a group of citizens
spoke in favor of are-zoning
which would drastically reduce
the future availability of
student hOUSing in Iowa City.
The proposal seeks to re-zone
an area from (RJ) "residential
and apartment complexes" to
(RJA ) which would pennit only
"single family occupancy." The
areas under consideration are
those bordered by Linn, Dodge,
Davenport and Ronalds Streets
plus the areas bordered by
Gilbert, Van Buren, Market and
Bloomington Streets - all areas
which are close to the university.
Legislation in other states
against such anti-apartment.
anti low income zoning have
been popularly dubbed an
ti-snob laws.
Accord ing to Dr. Robert
Ogeson, Chairman of the Planning and Zoning Commission,
the re-zoning would reduce the
number of housing units
available in the area from 63
units per acre to 14 units per
acre.
Ogeson said that the re-zoning
effort was Originated by the
Planning and Zoni~ Com-

mission itself, which -he said


. consists of "just a group of
citizens - none of us paid.
We're not city staff."
Ogeson said that the re-zoning
would not "necessarily" have
an adverse effect on the student
housing situation in the city,
claiming that "there are other
areas closer to, downtown than
this area which could be
developed for student housing."
Robert Jones, an Iowa City
property-owner and fonner
resident of the area under corisideration, opposes the Plan
ning and Zoning Commission's
proposal.
"I speak for local people as
well as out of state people in
terested in buying property in
these areas to help reduce the
housing shortage in Iowa City,
Jones said.
Jones said he took "45 people
and 60 days, went day to day
door to door, and did my own
survey of the areas in Iowa City
that have been proposed for
RJA zoning."
"We made no phone calls, did
no picketing, but we wrote letters and sent out petitions.
However, if the fonner is
necessary, we will take those
actions."
"There is more than just sunshine and flowers at stake
here.," Jones said.
Jones did not release the
results of his survey, but
promised to do so at a future

meetmg.
Dr. George McCormack, an
Associate Professor in Geology
at the UI, and a resident of 230
E. Fairchild St., strongly supported the re-zoning.
"Do we want the city
developers to have the land so
they can do to it what they damn
well please, or do we want
people living there who will
maintain the property. If the
re-zoning isn't passed I'll leave
town, just like everyone else."
Jean Cater. of 314 Brown and
the wife of VI Associate
Professor of Chemistry David
Cater, also supported the
re-zoning. "I'm overwhelmed
by the opposition," she said,
"and especially with the Jones
survey, and the number of
people that were involved in it."
"All the money my husband
and I have is in our house and
our children, and we want to see
them grow up there," she said.
"00 we have to sit back and let
ourselves be ravished too? "
Jonathan Penner of 225 E.
Fairchild , a UI Ph. D. student,
spoke out against the re-zoning
proposal.
" It only makes Sense to put individuals who are in the university near the area . If you
prevent people from coming in
to the neighborhood, which is
what RJA zoning will do, the
hOUSing shortage for the university will only increase. The
present zonipg may not improve
the shortage, but RJA would

Typesetting for the VI goes to DI


In its first meeting of the
1975-76 school year Thursday
night, the Board of Student
Publications, Inc. (SPI) empowered newly-elected SPI
chairman Larry Martin, VI
assistant
professor
of
linguistics, and Tbe Daily
Iowan
pu blisher
Michael
Stricklin, G, to finalize a contractual agreement with the UI
Printing Service for the or to
set type for the printing service.
SPI is the governing board of
trustees for the or, and this
item was part of a longrange
plan for technical facilities of
the DI to assume typesetting
duties of university-related
publications such as the HerdOOok (or student directory)
which has been printed In Tennessee for the past several
years.
Once the printing service

Give a
pintsized
gift.

Women in
Management?
Why not?
And why not youl

For over 100 years Army ROTC has


been producing male leaders.
Not only for the military. but leaderS
In the civilian community .

From their ranks will come the

women leaders Of the future.

Blood.

+=.
........... _ _ _ flH . . . . . . . . . .

discuss an item on Stricklin's


contract concerning his tenure
as publisher, contractually ending in July 11176; and proposals
.that SPI give public notice (i.e.,
at least an advertisement in the
DI) for every meeting and that
the board extend notification of
SPI student vacancies to the
UI Collegiate Associations
Council - and not just . to
Student Senate were passed.

ROTC Is now open to women.

Give
n.-... .... er..

contract is made, the board


would be able to give the SPI
chainnan and the DI publisher
the authority to follow through
with the purchase of what
Stricklin called "a sophisticated
photo-type machine."
In other SPI board action:
Gary Gussin, UI assoc.
professor of zoology, was elected vice-chainnan for the year:
a committee was set up to

Why Not Be One of Those leaders?

Contact Russ Farrow


at the Field House, Room 9, or
cI1I3S33109 for more Information.

only make it worse. "


"I can see that it Is very
natural to want to keep a neighborhood as it is - but to use
zoning as a tool to preserve this
is a misuse, " he said. "I hope
the council will not pass the
proposal. "
Max Jocum, former Iowa City
Council member from 1962-66
lives in South America but owns
property in the area under consideration. "I can't figure out
why they don't zone property so
that people can have a choice,"
he said. "Why not let progress
take its place here."
"You may ali think South
America is a jungle but we
could show you how to zone so It
will work for the people. Wake
up and look around . . . but if you
ask me, I think the freedom in
Iowa City is pretty well gone."
The OO-minute meeting ended
with Jones requesting the commission's "careful study and
consideration" of his survey
and statements.

"I'm not representing a bunch of vultures who want to steal


property," he said. "We don't
have horns, we don 't blow fire.
We just want to help reduce the
housing shortage - and that's
no sin."
City Councilwoman Penny
Davidsen, contacted after the
meeting, said she thought the
council " would be very wary of
eliminating that potential of
housing stock In view of the
current housing situation and
Ogeson said the Planning ll!Id
trouble
having."will meet
Zoning we're
Commission
again Sept. 11, at which time
they would consider whether or
not to make a formal recommendation for the re-zoning to
the Ci ty Council.

I doz_ roses reg. $15


CASH & CARRY $2.98

3389505

409 Kirkwood

Quality Sound through Qualit" Equipment

~==============::::============;;::~
walk tbe earth ...
see tbe land

the moccasln- It fits.


it's handcrafted
.handstitched -

Iowa City's largest selection of

hanging baskets & green plants


Save 10% Cash & Carry on plants
& cut flowers

t,e~eJt florist
GrttnllOIiM
410 Kirkwood

89 O.ily 86 Sat. 9S Sun.

double-soled
made of wa.xed cowhide
men's 8/. women's sizes

Page 4-1be Daily Iowan-Iowa City, lowa-FrI,, Aug.

3~,

1975

Interpretations

D'Oily Iowan

Kent State: A time to remember; a time to mown


By CONNIE STEWART
Editorial Page Editor
Kent State. The memory evokes tears. sadness, outrage.
hatred. There are those who ask that it be forgotten. and those
who demand it be remembered.
The tumult. the shock and the fear that was sweeping the
country in May 1970 seems distant now; the dissident voices
silent. Those who are undergrads were barely in their teens
when four students died at Kent, and when, 11 days later, two
more fell at Jackson State. The disbelief that enveloped the Left.
the students and the rational world must be incomptehensible to
those who cannot -or will not - remember.
The campuses across the country were flaming with indignation at the Cambodian invasion. Kent State students had
been demonstrating steadily for four days. Ohio Gov. James A.
Rhodes. fearful of "order" - and perhaps of his law-and-order
reputation - called on the National Guard to "quiet" his campus.
National Guardsmen - many of whom had joined to escape
the draft and Vietnam; most of whom had primarily played war
games on weekends - were much like the demonstrators them
selves. They were young, inexperienced. alarmed at the mood of
the country. But with loaded weapons, and with orders that only
God. the officers and Rhodes were aware of. they arrived to
keep the peace or protect the establishment - depending on
each person's biases.
Sunday. the day before the shootings, relations between the
guardsmen and the students seemed calm enough. almost friendJy. But Monday about 1,000 students held a rally on the Com
mons. The guardsmen decreed that more than three students
talking on campus would be considered a conspiracy, and the
situation became more tense.
After the rally about 600 students mC;lVed away, followed by
about 100 guardsmen. The st4dents began to encirle the 1roops
after the guardsmen ran out of tear gas, said Adj . Gen. Sylvester
Del Corso. commander. Bricks and rocks. some the size of
baseballs, were hurled at them.
Then Del Corso said a sniper fired on them - though no such
sniper ever was found , and its existence was hotly disputed. The
guardsmen then defended themselves, said Brig. Gen. Robert
Canterbury. another guard commander on the scene. Neither he
nor anyone else admitted giving an order to fire.
But Gene Williams. a reporter on the scene for the student
paper. said the troops turned "in unison, as if responding to a
command" and fired into the crowd.
"I saw no snipers nor did I hear any shots until the line of
troops turned in unison and opened fire. " he saId.
When the firing stopped, Jeffrey Miller, 20 ; Allison Krause,

19 ; Sandy Scheuer. 20; and William Schroeder, 19, lay dead.


Nine students were wounded.
President Nixon said: "This reminds us all once again that
when dissent turns to violence it invites tragedy."
Many reactionaries in the nation said the "Commies" got
what was coming to them.
But Scheuer was on her way to a speech therapy class. Krause
also was heading for class, but had simply stopped to watch.
Another victim was at the edge of the parking lot, watching.
Friends of the dead said none were "hard core revolutionaries."
But where the stUdents were going or what they were dOing
was suddenly unimportant - for they were dead. They had
become symbols, martyrs, of dissention against the war and the
system.
What followed was almost like a spontaneous upheaval. Over
100 demonstrations a day for the next four days broke out on
American campuses ; at least 350 institutions went on strike;
over 500 shut down completely for a time.
Arguments over who was to blame, whether the guardsmen
had been fired upon, why they were sent there at all. or why they
were there with loaded weapons dominated the country.
In August of that year, Nixon's Presidential Commission on
Campus Unrest termed the shootings" inexcusable." But a month later a special Ohio grand jury exonerated the guardsmen and indicted 25 students and faculty members for violation of
riot laws. Three were convicted, one acquitted ; charges against
,the rest were dropped.
A few months later a federal judge ruled that the grand jury
had exceeded its authority, and ordered its report destroyed.
Hope for justice surfaced in 1971, when the Justice Department investigated the incident at the direction of Atty. Gen.
John Mitchell. But it ruled that no further federal action was
required.
Again, in 1973, a new probe was instigated by AUy. Gen. Elliot
Richardson. Eight guardsmen were indicted. But a judge
dismissed the charges, ruling the government had failed to
prove its case.
So in a last effort to fix blame and extract an admission of guilt
from the ofricers and politicians involved, the parents of the
dead students, with the nine wounded, brought a civil damage
suit for $46 million against Rhodes, former Kent State
President Robert I. White, Del Corso, CanterbUl'f, and 25
current and former guardsmen.
The plaintiffs argued that the shootings were unprovoked and
unwarranted; the defendants that they were carrying out their
duty.
The jury - nine members, at least - chose to believe the
defendants. So once again, justice escaped the memories of the

1'WG Kent

Tbandayat
demoDstrati<

Si,
ALEXAND

Photo by LawrenceFranl

A National Guardsman after the burning of the Bank of America in Sanla Barbara, Calif., in 1970.
slain students. The plaintiffs have vowed to appeal - but success must be viewed with skepticism if the past is any guide.
Kent State. It's been called murder, self defense, chaos, a
lesson for our time. UI's President Willard Boyd asks that it
remind us restraint and understanding must be elCercised in
such situations. The President of the VI Veterans Association,
Richard Osborne, says it's a "horrible learning experience,"
though he hates to think of it as such. The dean of the Law
School, Lawrence E. Blades, says he'd "just as soon forget
about it."
If the Ohio jury is an indication, the prevalent view is that of

Voter

registr~ti?n

The Iowa General Assembly during its last


session enacted legislation pertaining to voter
registration procedures. The state lawmakers
had contended that the new regulations would
enable voter registration - an often inefficient
process - to become a more expedient one .
The General Assem bly, notorious for its fair
share of inefficient processes, managed to make
voter registration an even more complex
procedure. With that distinct style legislators
definitely can call their own. they took a
relatively simple process and made it impossible
for even the brightest of county auditors to comprehend .
A new section of the voter registration bill concerns registration by mail. Though the bill was
considered by some to be a brilliant innovation.
the legislators tacked on a word that made it
rather worthless. The original intent was to have
citizens register by postcard through the maila real convenience for people working 8 to 5. But
the lawmakers decided to require an affidavit.

Transcriptions
~o~v ~w@rru
-Friday, August 30, 1975, Vol. lOS, No. 44EDITOR ........ '................................... Dianne Coughlin
NEWS EDITOR ........................................ Krista Clark
ASSOC . NEWS EDITOR ................................. Kim Rogal
ASST. NEWS EDITORS ............ Mark Mittelstadt, Randy Knoper
LAYOUT EDITOR .................. . .................... Tim Sacco
EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR ..................... ... ConnieSlewart
ASST . EDITORIAL EDITOR ........................ Rhonda Dickey
FEATURES EDITOR ....................... . .......... Bob Jones
ASST. FEATURES EDITOR ...... . ... , .. . ....... .... ... Joan Tllone
SPORTS EDITOR ............... . .................... Bill McAuliffe
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR ............................... Tom Quinlan
CONTRIBUTING EDITOR ..... : ... . ... , . ................ Rob Logan
RIVER CITY COMPANION EDITOR .............. . Phil Bosakowski
PHOTO EDITORS ...... . ............. Lawrence Frank , Dam Franco
ART DIRECTOR ............... \ ...................... John Barhile
"khatl Slrlrklin . Publish,r
Jerry Beat. AUI . Publ..lltr,
Colftn .. rGft. Rel.1I Adverllaln, "an'ler
William CaHY . Circul.llon Mana,er
Dic_ Wilson . Production Superlntendenl
Publl.hed by Sludeni Public.tlonl. Inc .. 11\ CommuniC.tiOnl C.n
I.r. 'ow. City . 'ow. 'Utz dally ' ra~pl Saturd.y . Sund.ya. 1.,.1
IIolld.ya. and d.y. 0' unlv,rslty v.utlon. Suond rlall poll'I' p.id
11", potl oflier .1 low. Cily under III, Acl 01 Con,r,.. olNlrc" 2.
117..
.
Subtcrlptlonlf r.t.t: .Iow. CIl), .nd Coralville S monlha ...... .
m"'lhl
I prinlln, y r ." ... . M.IIIUblcrlptlonl , mOllI"a
lUI.' monlhl.14 .... I prlnlln'),'1r 122 ....
Th, DaUy low.n II an Independent newlp.ptr wrlUm and edlln
by .tud.ntl at lilt University allow . Th. A_lated Pre.. It tnIItled 10 lilt .It'lualv, 11M lor rtpublkaUOII 01 all local .. w.lla. all
AP
and 'Iapatcllta.
PltaM dial.,... If ,au do nol reetl.. ,our paptr II, 7:. ' .m.
Every effort wmllt made I. correcl Ille .rror lIy tIM Dul"'..e. CI...
eulatlall offict IIours are a.m. to 5 , .m.
'rl'a, .
Til. oplllloll pmatd on ~II pa.e .re'lllt .pl..... If tilI.ned
a.lllen, alii ma, 110\ IIftftIIIrll, tiP"" lhe op181011 of Til. Dall,

'''.It '.

.tw.

M.'i, 111,.1,11

,10WIft .

Blades. 1970 was long ago: May Day, Cambodia. and even dying
in Vietnam have been buried issues for years. Kent State and
Jackson State are ghastly memories. unparalleled in our time.
And most Americans would rather forget, for by so doing. they
can forget that such events could happen again.
But if they are to be prevented in the future , they must be
preserved in our memories - much like. as Osborne said, COIIcentrations camps are "maintained in the idea of 'Iest we
forget. '"
An awareness of the potential for violence must survive. so
that it can be avoided. Lest we forget. we must remember.

tian Presiden
he is ready to
agreement w
"On our Pl
all," Sadat
Henry A. Kis
visit to Egypl
of a draft al
withdrawal 1:
Sinai Desert.
Sadat said
that the acco
Monday,
Sadat's opt'

DOONE

made easy

making it necessary for the working citizen to


pound the pavem ent searching for a notary .
In addition . the postcard s are not a llowed to be
dropped off at the co urthouse: they must be sent
through the mail. We all know postage costs. and
the law require' ,h e cards to be mailed . In effect.
the person registerin g ,by mail is paying eight
cents for the privilege to vote . an odd sort of poll
tax that. if considered as such, supposedl y would
be illegal.
The legislators also made no provision for temporary 11)0bile registrars during an offyear election . This severely limits the number of people
empowered to register potenti al voters .
With the ' excessive amou nt of restrictions
placed on voter registration during a non-partisan election , it is no wonder that voter turnout
is so low . In the future . before bemoaning a 40
per cent turnout. we ought to think twice before
calling it simple apathy .
DEBRA CAGAN

Ample opportunityand here at the ole VI


One advantage (there is one ?) of growing up in
the great American Megalopolis of the East
Coast is that, by an early age, one ought to
become fairly proficient in the art of People
Watching - barring, of course, unnatural circumstances such as being sheltered in an oven
for 18 years while one's parents wait to hustle
you off to college.
Abnormalities aside, one should become quite
an elCpert of the above art. "Ha, ha," you
skeptically laugh. " If People Watching is an art
form , then I'm a mule! " Well , this certainly
won't be the first time I'll be accused of writing
like an ass, for a bunch of asses.
But kid yourself not, People Watching requires
the same sharp eyes and ears and quick and
imaginative mind most highbrow artisans are
alleged to possess.
Iowa City in general , and the university in
particular, offer few, if any, challenging .and
interesting aspects to People Watchers . The
bars, concerts and sporling events might very
well offer some prime, virgin territory to be
explored. However, at such places and events
one is rarely in the proper frame of sobriety
(whether it be drunk with drink or excitement or
both) which is conducive to productive People
Watching.
Elimination of these activities leaves only two
opportunities for some hard-<:ore People Wat
ching: Moving-in days at the dorms and
Registration.
Though last weekend's moving-in days
represented only the second time I had witnessed
such an event, a nifty feint administered to the.
Parietal Rule Ogre last spring allowed me, for
the first time, to witness this Bazaar of Human

Behavior as -II detached observer.


Of particular interest were the old friends and
drinking partners renewing old acquaintances
and inquiring as to the whereabouts of other old
friends and drinking partners, and of course, the
ever-present parents . It is not necessary to go
into the gushy details of these days. Suffice to say
it seemed to be an exact replica of the opening
day of an eight-week summer camp - only two
months later.
Ahh , but registration is the dilettante's delight
for People Watching and Listening. The people,
their actions and conversations, all blend
together so harmoniously as to provide an infallible guide to student stereotypes.
An example: The student, invariably short and
skinny wearing horn-rimmed coke bottles, who
arrives at the Field House four hours ahead of
schedule because he absolutely can't be late . He
knows that everybody, simply everybody, is
going to sign up for the advanced seminar in
nuclear physics, and he'd just die if it closed on
him.
He, as you might guess, is an oddity. After all,
just because this is an institution of higher
learning, doesn 't mean you have to study .
Surely, the most amusing episodes are provided
by those students who are able to take moderate
courseloads, yet manage to never attend classes
or crack a book. A few examples:
Overheard in front of the Spanish table, where
two reluctant fresh persons were debating their
fate : "Are you positively cert'ain your f~iend
knows what he's talking about when he told you
the regents were going to finally chuck the
languag.; requirement this year?"
Overheard at least a couple hundred times at

the Rhetoric table : "Oh, don't bother me with


those details like the instructor's name and
buying books. I'm gonna pass out of this bullshit
course."
Overheard at almost every table where a core
course is available :
"They better offer lecture notes for this
course, 'cause I sure as hell ain 't gettin' up at
eight in the morning three days a week."
Overheard at the French table: "Are you
absolutely positive, [ mean positively sure, that
the regents aren't going to enter the 20th century
and drop the language requirement 7"
Overheard all over: 'Y'know , if there're some
good lookin' guys-gals (choose one) in this class,
I might actually show up more than once."
Overheard at the psych table : "Whaddaya
mean, why am I taking honors psych? Don'tcha
know that all they talk about in there is sex? "
Overheard at the Russian table : "Wrong, pal,
you're stupid for taking Spanish. Don'tcha know
that since nobody ever signs up for this, they 'll
never flunk ya? Th!ly're afraid to lose ya. (Note
to my past and present instructors In this same
department : If I had one hour of credit for every
time I've been handed that line by a wellmeaning elder statesman student, I'd be halfway
through my masters by now.)
Overheard at the P.E. tables : "Of course I
wanna take all four P.E. courses. I'm gonna pass
out of 'em all y'know."
These famous last words could go on and on,
but unfortunately (fortunately?) Ihis page
doesn't. If you 'd like to see wha't happens to those
who utter the above prophecies, hang around the
drop-add desk for the next few weeks.
It rna kes grea t People Wa tch Ing !

,
,

De naUy 1___ 1__ City. I_ _Fri., Alii. le.

City reconsidering
housing priorities
By MARIA LAWLOR
Starr Wrltl!r

City and Ul officials may join


together to form an ad hoc
committee to present data
reflecting the current housing
situation at the Board of
Regents meeting Sept. 9.
During a discussion of the
city's housing crisis at an informal City Council meeting
Thursday, council members
also looked into th~ feasibility of
changing the city's present
housing priority rating policya policy which does not favor
students for low-rent. subsidized housing.
The city policy has been to
give low-income families, the
elderly, and handicapped
persons priority for low-rent,
federally subsidized housing.
Several council members
suggested that this policy be
amended to include low-income
students.
After some discussion,
council members said they felt
the university might also look
into changing its parietal rulewhich requires freshmen and
sophomores under 21 to live in
UI dormitories or other
university-approved housing.
Thus university housing would
be accessible to low-income
students, council members
said.
The council also suggested
that the university study the
possibility of building more
housing which is compatible
with the type of housi ng
students are looking for today.
They suggested building
housing units in which students
could cook their own meals.
Noting the rising number of
students who sign up (or
university dormitory housing
and then vacate it before the
end of the school term, Councilwoman Penny Davidsen said
the housing crisis was not due to
the availability of housing, but
to high costs and the lack of the
kind of housing that students
are looking for.
Monday UI Vice-President
William Shanhouse told council
members that Ul dormitories

Silent night
Two Kent State Unlvenlty student. bold vigil before dan
Tbanday at Blanket Hill, the site of tbe 1970 May Day IIItIwar
demonatratiOlll IlIId 1bootln&I, after I jury verdJct Wednelday

cI~

guanllmea IDd otben of liability for tbe tragic IJlcldeat.


Students at the Unlvenlty called the decl.1oII I ''travesty of
jUltlce."

Sinai pact ready to sign


ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (AP) - Egyp
tian President Anwar Sadat said Thursday
he is ready to initial a Sinai disengagement
agreement with Israel.
"On our part there is no hesitation at
all," Sadat said as Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger paid a fourth shuttle
visit to Egypt, bringing the latest revision
o( a draft agreement calling for Israeli
withdrawal 12 to 30 miles eastward in the
Sinai Desert.
Sadat said there is "a great possibility"
that the accord will be initialed Sunday or
Monday .
Sadat's OPtimism was matched in Israel

where reporters were told the pact could


be effectively wrapped up by the time
Kissinger returns to Jerusalem.
Before Kissinger left Israel for Egypt on
Thursday, Israeli planes raided su'spected
Arab guerrilla targets in southern
Lebanon. Witnesses said a woman and a
girl were wounded, and unofficial Palestinian sources said three persons were
killed.
In Beirut, the Palestine Liberation
Organization formed a commission to plan
ways to sabotage any Egyptian-Israeli
disengagement pact, which it called a
"dangerous American plot."

OOONESBURY

The PLO regards Sadat's willingness to


recover Egyptian territory from Israel bitby-bit as a sellout of the PanArab goal of
restoring rights of Palestinians and
regaining all occupied territory, including
that in Syria and Jordan.
Kisssinger has cautioned that Congress
holds a "veto" power over any pact
because it would have to approve
stationing American technicians at surveillance posts between Egyptian and
Israeli forces .
The U.S. government will submit both
appropriation and authorization bills to
Conj!ress early next month.

by Garry Trudeau

lIMSTf.,y!

were over-crowded at the


beginning of the 1974 fall
semester, but by the middle of
the year the VI had 500 vacant
beds.
At Thursday's meeting City
Manager Neal Berlin said the
city staff will approach the
university about undertakmg a
joint project to study the
houslng situation and possibly
forming some long-term
planning next week when the
two staffs meet.
Several council mem bers
expressed interest in trying to
find out Crom UI officials what
initiatives they have taken to
meet the present housing
shortage.
Shanhouse also told the
council Monday that for the
university to build more student
housing at this time "would be
virtually impossible."
He said state law requires
that such university housing be
self-sustaining and must have
approval by a majority of the
State Legislature, the governor
and the Board of Regents. He
also said with all the people
involved in getting consent for
such construction, he could not

'.'-_...._. . .

IAI No .. lIlng on your PilI


....... ry

Agudasachim
Synagogue
mE. Wamilpi
Clwof
JIIII$II ,

Wauilpi

SAY IT WITH A 01
PERSONAL CLASSIFIED!

7 pm, Thursday
PrInceton Room. Union
EVERYONE WELCOME

M;~~ hi.
d"~'1t
, ...., CriIIIe

A'",,,, ",,,

MULTI-MILLION

Ou, 48 Vl.r old compooy I.


looking fOf I qUlfilltd mon on
In .xclus ive be.ls to dlstribut. I
nollon.lly _lid ProdUCI.

11l1li
at

Keep America BeautifUl

DOLLAR COMPANY

II Id, "."., ,,,,,,,


Authentic Chinese Cooking
with a Complete American Menu

(BI Exclu.l", Iron Inlgntd


(el Immldl," Incoml
No crldi! problem.

(01

H~

Income pOllnti.1

-POLYNESIAN DRINKS
.GOURMET DINNERS
-STEAKSANDLOBSTER

$3.500.00 Ptr month for


ri..,t min
lEI Anvago con..dorld

(FI Comp.ny .xpansion IVliI,bI,

IGI Con be ""Ild on I pIII llmo

OPEN SUNDAY

For take-out order


phone 3383761

bo.l.

IHI Complnv _urld outllll


III Ave,. In.... stm.nt tor tr,ln
Ing ouppllo. and <""",lot.
,n",ntory '" 56.100.00

Dance,
enjoy music
and

If vou Ir. "nett nd hM


trong desire to be ""."'Played;
call or writ. giving n.me, IddresJ.

refreshing drinks

Ind phone to

ZEPHYR MFG .

co.

in our

HUNG FAR
LOUNGE

P.O. Box 4708 GS


Sprintfiold. MO fl68O(

Phon. 417 881-8003

UnitedF,-eight Sales

Back to School

sts. and

Stereo Specials

In effect.
ing eight
rt of poll
Iy would

AM- FM Stereo ......................................................$69 811

3- Way air suspension speakers ................. $59811 pair

$99811
Cassette recorder ............................................16500
Nikko receiver ................................................. $199811
Hitachi quad/ duet system, ...................... $189811
Hitachi ............................................ SPECIAL $179811
Turntables: ............................................ from
$4500
8- Track

Iowa
Book &
.
Supply is Still Our
University's Most
.Complete Bookstore
Open 9-9 Mon.
9-5 Tues.-Sat.

.. Largest Selection of
Textbooks on Campus
(Both New & Used)

*
*

Fast Service
Three times our normal staff
t~ serve you more efficiently

One Stop Shopping


Required & Recommended Books
Spirals & Notebooks Desk Lamps
Calculators Art &
Engine~ring Supplies

player- recorder ...............................

Famous Name Sewing Machines


Stretch stitch: monograms,
darns, mends, zig-zag, metal
construction
Reg. -258 NOW $129811
Stretch stitch with
built-in buttonholer & 19
decorative stitches
Reg. -399 NOW $169811

Stretch stitch with built-in


buttonholer and blind
hemmer
Reg. -329 NOW $14985
Also a limited number
of zig-zag machines

ONLY

.79811

ALSO: Furniture Bargains


Sofa and
chair-sets
Love seats
Recliners

from

$149811

4- piece bedroom sets

from

.11000

Mattress and
box spring sets

from

$99811

Complete twin sleep


ensembles

$129811

.798

UnitedFPeight sales
See section 01 lie Aug. 26 Dally
I..an for 'ull-'II,.

1"* Hwy. 6 W., Coralville


Open MF 99, sat. 9-6, Sun. Noon.5
bgUe
. . . .IIICMI

Selichot Services

see where such projects would


get ofC the ground.
He said the inflated costs of
conStruction materials and the
projected decrease In future
college populations were
to
possible
deterrents
developers constructing more
university housing.
.~
'>.,J

It7~PI.e

'Cheap politics'

Steve's Typewriter Co.

Salary InCreaSes delayed

Stalemate

Pbotoby Dom Frm o

Man aDd macblDe reach equlUbrium In tbe bowels of tbe


EngllsbPbllosopby building.

Postscripts
Correction
Leo na Durha m. L2. says she was incorreclly quoted In a
story Thursday on the verdict in the Kent State civil suit
Durham says s he did not mean thaI the t970 killlngs-ol lour
Kent State students took the im petus out 01 the Lelt. but rather
out 01 the stu dent movement.

Holiday Monday

By MICp.u:L ADAMS
Staff Writer
A decision by the Johnson
County Board of Supervisors to
delay the approval of salary in
creases for the sheriff's
deputies may affect the quality
of law enforcement in Johnson
County, Sheritf Gary Hughes
said Thursday.
"It will ultimately hurt the
citizen," he said following the
meeting. " If they are going to
stop giving people raises. we're
going to lose a lot of highly
trained and skilled personnel.
"They will naturally leave to
better paying positions in law
enlorcement in other parts of
the country ." he added.
"Citizens demand and should
expect effective law enfor
cement."
Using terms like " wage
freeze " and "future disaster,"
Supervisor Richard Bartel
moved Thursday to delay the
request from th~ sheriff's
department until the board had
the opportunity to consult with
"financial , legal and collective
bargaining " experts and
"discuss a county-wide policy
on salary requests."
Bartel said he is calling for
the " termination" of the
"traditional" board policy of

approving routine salary in- financial crisis," he added.


road department eml'lol'ees
creases. He added that the
"This is not an attack on the and the Johnson County Depart.
board should take "responsible sheriff's office," Bartel said af ment of Social Services.
action " and discuss their ter the meeting, "but we're
At Wednesday's informal
poliCies before "automatically" ~rating at a level that is session. the supervisors denied
approving all requests.
higher than the legislature had a request by the Staff EmHughes said it was the "inten intended for our operating ployees Collective Organization
tion " of the state legislature to budget. "
(SECO) for a $6 union dues
include sheriffs' deputies when
Th e board, he said, had check-off for the employees of
they granted a $1,500 salary in "mismanaged themselves in a the secondary road department.
crease to all elected county of hole. "
That, also. was a "routine"
ficials during the last legislative
Ba rtel also said that any request. said SECO president
session.
salary poliCies established now Alvin Logan.
Most of the 22 requests (or will "dictate" the board's
,............................ .
salary increases from the poSition in collective bargaining :
.
sheriff's department are for negotiations in the future .
less than $100 a month.
Supervisor Robert Bums said
The motion to delay the wage th e board 's decision was . :
hikes was approved " asking for hostile
tmanimously but Chairperson negotiations" when the county's
Lorada Cilek said she "does so represen tatives engage in
reluctantly."
collective bargaining sessions
THE CATHOLIC
Hughes called the move with county employees in the
"cheap politics.
future.
STUDENT CENTER
" Knowing the supervisors,
In September. the Board of
knowing the internal problems Supervisors is entering into
Saturday MIss ; 5;00
SundlY MISses:
of the supervisors, I'm not sur colle c t ive barga i n i ng
9;00 am, 11:00 am, 1;00 pm
prised the request was denied negotiations with the secondary :. ................
. ........... '
and the taxpayers of Johnson
County shouldn't be surprised, "
he said.
lOWA LAND PRESENTS
The "principle reason" for
objecting to the pay raise
request, Bartel said, was the
county faces a $287,896 general
funds deficit for fiscal 1975-76.
"We 're on the verge of a

DAILY MASS
11:30 .M-F

Search for mother


ends after 38 years

Monday is Labor Day. 9 University holiday. University of


lices will be closed. and The Dally Iow a n will not publish .

Today

Doeumentary film

OMAHA, Neb. (A Pl-A


daughter's 3Syear search for
her mother has ended after a
series of events sparked by an
Associated Press story from
Bellevue, Iowa, and the two
women will be reunited in
Omaha next week.
Mrs. James Ziemba smiled
and cried Wednesday after a
long-distance call to her mother
in Louisiana. Travel plans were
made for Mrs . Ziemba's mother
to travel to Omaha. The two
have not seen each other since

housewife said Wednesday after


another call to her only sister,
Mrs. Paul Liebig of Maquoketa,
Iowa.
The AP story reported the
discovery of an iron coffin in a
Mississippi River sandbar. The
story quoted authorities as saving the century-old coffin contained the body of an uniden
tified young woman.
The coffin apparently was
washed from a grave in a cern
etery north of Bellevue, author
ities said.
1937.
The call to Mrs. Mathis
"I'm so excited I don 't know Wednesday revealed that the
what to do." the 44-vear-old search was over.

The Program in Asian StudIes presents Part I of Louis


Malle's documentary Pban tom Ind Ia at 3' 3'0 today in Room 70
01 the Physics Building.

Folk dancing
International Folk Dancing Is held at 7;30 p.rn . every Friday
on the Union terrace In case of rain . danc ing will be at Wesley
House Auditorium. t20 N. Dubuque st.

Yoga film
The Raja Yoga Society will show the film Wh o Is Guru
MaharaJ I? at 7;30 p.m today In the Wesley House Chapel. 120
N Dubuque SI. The 111m is free and open to all.

GLFmeeting
The Gay Liberation Front will meet at 7;30 p.m today at
Wesley House. 120 N. Dubuque St

HERA

III'

me 111!!!1

1!['1!M

i II ! iImJ.

Walk," problem solving group for women Irom HERA.


feminist psycholherapy collective . is held II ;30-1 .30 every
Friday at We.lcy House MUSIC Room . 120 N Dubuque SI.
There IS8 charg~Of$3 SO

Saturda y

Horse show

The Episcopal Church


invites students for

Sugar Boltom Stabtes will hold its fifth annual hunterjum


per show this weekend . Events will begin at 8 30 a.m. Saturday
and at 8 a m. Sunday and Monday . The show is free and lunch
will be available on Ihe grounds.

Supper
&
Gooa TiIIleS

Sunday

Methodist meal
The UDlted Methodist Campus Ministry invites students to
an inlormal Iree meal and gettogether at 5.30 p.m. today al
t20 N. Dubuque St. A dance will lollow at 7;30 p.m. at Hille\.

Geneva Community

Sunday, August 31

Geneva Community wil l meet at 10:30 a.m. today at the Main


Loun ge 01 Wesley House. A communal meal wi ll be served at
noo n. All are welcome . For more Information. call 338- 1179.

5:30 pm

SECO picnic
The Labo r Day piCniC lor members. and their fa milies . 01
SECO {Starr Employees ColleclJve Organization I will be Mon
day . Sept. { at the No. I shelter. Morrison Park in Cora lville .
Rec reatio nal activities will be held from II a m. to 4 p.m..
Bring a covered dish or sa lad and your own table service
SECO is providi ng mea l. beer an d pop. and desert fo r lunch at
12;30.

Wesley House
120 N. Dubuque St.

$1.00 off
,

Any Family Pizza


Eat It Here or Take, It Home
COUPON

$1 Off

any Farn ily Pizza


at

HAPPy DAYS

Plua - 8.... lt~. - In erta.


1515 Mall Drive - m 21'1
Olfer ellpirea Monday ' 115 Lim it 0 NE coupon

lues

MIS

Dan's
Other- House
Monday-Frielay
on ,
KRNA93 F.M.

1022 Gilbert Court


Sales, Rentals, Service
a fine selection of

351 -7929

Royal, Adler, IBM,


Smith-Corona

:...............................

**

:
Can The Past
:
~ Predict The Future? j
:

***

200 years - You can be the judge.

**
:
**
**
**
*:*

*: Enroll in 23:10

: American Military History:


:*
and learn about the
:
:* 200-year development of!
: our nation's armed forces.!

:* Contact Russ Farrow at the :

Field House, Room 9 or call :


: 353-3709 for more information:

: .............................

,~

'I1Ie DaUy lowao-Iowa City, low_Fri., A.g. 30, IIls-Plge 1

Angolan strife continues

Co.
rt Court

s, Service
ction of

, IBM,

WASHINGTON (AP) - An blacks caught in the croa-fire. with centuries-old tribal hostilInformants say that between ities. The situation has been agestimated 10,000 black Angolans, mostly civilians, have 7,000 and 8,000 black noncomba- gravated by another rivalry far
been Itilled over the past year in tants have died in the fighting. removed from Angola.
Angola, with a population of
fighting among three political There have been reports of atgroups for control of the oilrich rocities, including cannibalism. six million , has become the obAt stake is control of the West ject of a Soviet quest Cor inPortuguese colony.
While most international at- African country after it fluence in southern Africa, and
tention has focused on the plight becomes independent three Chinese efCorts to frustrate the
of white refugees , Western months from now. Angola is Soviet designs. Competent
diplomats say the brunt of the blessed with oil, coffee, dia- sources say Moscow has sent
suffering has been borne by monds and iron ore but plagued enough arms to equip the 30 ..

()()().mem ber Popular Movement


for the Liberation of Angola
(MPLAl , and the 10,000 to 15,000 MPLA sympathizers.
China is providing arms to the
National Front for the Liberation of Angola (FNLA ),
whose strength is about half
that of the MPLA. Zaire, which
has a 1,500-mile border with
Angola, also is aiding the National Front.

Labor Day Sale


Storewide sale
Monday, September 1

FDA: Pill users risk heart attack


t
t

dge.

t
t
t

tt
t

t
t

t
t

IstOryt
he
:
t

of~
t

rcesl
~

t
.

t
t

matlont

.......

NEW YORK (AP) - The American College of Obstetrics and


Gynecology and Planned Parenthood agreed Thursday that
more extensive, long-term research is needed on a reported link
between oral contraceptives and heart attacks.
A major manufacturer of "the pill," Ortho Pharmaceuticals
eX Raritan. N.J .. said the new studies "merit consideration," adding that it already has prepared drafts to update patient information materials to reflect the new information.
These were among reactions to the action of the Food and
Drug Administration this week. warning doctors that women
who take birth control pills run a higher risk of heart attack. and
that the danger is greater to women over 40.
The warning was given in the FDA's July-August drug bulletin
mailed to 650,000 doctors. pharmacists. hospital administrators
and other health professionals. It said two recent British studies

"These two reports are at variance with prior studies that


failed to substantiate a cause and effect relationship between
the use of oral contraceptives and this type of heart attack.
Therefore. more extensive longterm research is necessary to
resolve this issue."

Governors urge decontrol


WASHINGTON (AP) - Governors meeting with President
Ford urged on Thursday that natural gas price regulation be
suspended for five years to test the theory that higher prices
would increase gas supplies.
Gov. Robert D. Ray of Iowa. chairman of the National Governors Conference. told reporters that President Ford listened but
made no commitment on the five-year proVision. Ford has been
urging permanent deregulation of natural gas.
Ray also said most of the 16 governors agreed on three other
principles :
-That Congress should adopt legislation reinstating Federal
Power Commission authority, earlier invalidated by a federal
court. to allow diversion of natural gas from markets within
states to interstate markets for up to 180 days.
-That the governors should have greater "input" into federal
energy policymaking .
-And that there should be strong programs to promote
energy conservation and the conversion of some facilities from
scarce fuels tomore plentiful fuels.
The meeting came as the White House and the Federal Energy
Administration issued a new study confirming earlier predic-

$3.99

"strongly suggest that oral contraceptive users are at a greater


risk of developing coronary thrombosis than onusers.'
It has long been established that pill users have an increased
risk of stroke. blood clots lodging in the lung and inflammation
of the veins, called thrombophlebitis. A link to heart attacks had
not been established.
Planned Parenthood, a voluntary health organization long involved in birth control work, and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology agreed in a statement that said in part :

WAYLON JENNINGS

tions of severe natural gas shortages would concentrate " in the


mid-Atlantic states, from southern New York to South Carolina.
and in several other states such as Ohio. West Virginia and Kentucky."
The FEA warned that companies whose gas supplies are curtailed may face shutdowns unless they can buy other fuels. such
as petroleum.

Bureau of Consumer Protection.


The commission estimated
that the average cost of a funeral service and burial is about
$2,000.

6.98 list

$417

5 ,98 list

$3 59

7.98 list

$479

Monday
Sept. 1
ONLY
10am-3pm

21 $0. Dubuque
You Can Charge Your New LP's

Funeral homes exploit


consumers, says Gov't
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Trade Commission accused the funeral industry
Thursday of exploiting consumers through such tactics as
overcharges and body-snatching and proposed rules to end
those practices and cut funeral
costs.
The regulations would outlaw
restrictions on price advertising
and require mortuaries to provide consumers with an itemized list of prices and services.
Funeral homes would be prohibited from picking up corpses
without the family's permission- known as bodysnatching- and would be
required to obtain family
permission before embalming a
body.
"We hope the impact will be
to introduce a good deal more
price information into the marketplace which should stimulate
competition which in turn
should lead to lower prices for
the consumer," said J . Thomas
Rosch, director of the FTC's

_II

Every LP & tape


in our huge sto
on sale
Monday 10am
to 3pm
at 40% off
list price

351-2908

n 1 f_
ChargeJ
'"".AMUltA."
GG
_III
;master

President Ford talks with Gov. Philip Noel of Rhode Island,


Gov. Robert Ray and Gov. Thomas Salmon of Vermont prior to a
White House meeting Thursday. The President met with 16
governors to discuss the impending natural gas sbortage.

..

StayupwitbJerry
and Johnny Carson.
Live from Las V

It no longer
has to decide who
is going to college.
Your future no longer has to be in the
hands of the almighty dollar-your dollars
that is. Because an Air Force ROTC 4-year
scholarship will pick up the bills. Tuition bills
' " textbook and lab bills. Plus, it provides for a
hundred dollar a month allowance for you to
spend as you see fit.
And at graduation, that scholarship really

starts paying off. You receive a commission as


an Air Force officer. Plus a good job to go to.
And a future without lim its . Travel. Promotions. Prestige.
There are 6500 Air Force ROTC college
scholarships in total. Why not see if you've
earned one during the last few years.

Lt. Col. Robert Stein


Fieldhouse, Room 2
Ph. 353-3937

Put it all together in Air Force ROTC._


I

Page &-The Dally Iowa_Iowa City, low_FrI., AI,. 38, It7S

Worship ser.,iees set

City's church schedules


ABUNDANT LIFE WESLEYAN CHURCH - 10 ' .m. (Worship In Conference room . Ho .... rd Johnson MOIor Lodge. H... y I .nd 1-101 .
AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH - ~II S. Governor SI.
Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship lil.m.
AGUDAS ACHIr.! CONGREGATION . 602 E. Wuhinglon SI. Service.
I'\id.y p.m.; S.turd.y. ' :30 ' .m. (Services .t Synago,ue. 122 E .
Market St. )
AHAVA BAPTIST CHURCH - Services 10 : ~5 a .m. and 7 p.m. (Services at Danforth Chapel )
APOSTOLIC PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY - 231. Musc.tine Ave. Sun
day SchooIIOa.m. Worship lIa .m. and 7 p.m.
ASSEMBLY OF GOD - 1330 Keokuk 51. Sunday Schooll :SO a .m. MornIng Worship 10:45 a.m. Evening Worship 7 p.m. Chi Alpha Meetings
Thursday 7 p.m. in the Union Princeton Room .
BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH - 3001 Muscallne Ave . Sunday School
9:45 ' .m. Worship It a.m. and 7 p.m.
CATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER - 104 E. Jefferson SI. Mass 9 and Ii
a.m. and5p.m .
CHURCH OF CHRIST - 1320 Kirkwood Ave. Bible School t .m. Worship 10a .m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday worship 7 p.m .
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY'SAiNTS - 2730 Brad
ford Drive. Priesthood. 8 a.m. Sunday School 9:30 a .m. Sacrament to:45
a.m.
CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - 30 N. Clinton
SI. Worsblp and Church SchooII0 :30a .m.
CORALVILLE EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH - 213 Fifth SI. ,
Coralville. Sunday School and Adult Bible Class 9:30 a.m. Worship 10:45
a.m. and 7 p.m. Youth Meetings 5 p.m. Bible sludy and Prayer Wednesdays7 :30p .m.
CORALVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - 806 13th Ave .
Coralville. Church SchoolS a.m. Worship Band 10: 15 a.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH - 1251 Village Road . BlbleSchooI9 .S0a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m . Family night Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
FAITH UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - t609 Be Forest Ave. Worship
9:30a .m.
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD - Keokuk and Hlgh1and Streets . Sunday
School 9;30 a .m. Worship 10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m. Youth service ' :30 p.m.
Campus Meeting. Union Minnesota Room , Thursday evenings 7 p.m .
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH - 500 N. Clinton SI. Church School 9 a.m.
Worship to :30a.m.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH - 217 Iowa Ave. Church educational activities 9: 15 a.m. Worship 10 :30 a .m. Fellowship 11 :30 a.m .
EPISCOPAL COMMUNITY OF SAINT FRANC! - Worship services
h .m. at Wesley House. 120 N. Dubuque SI.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST - m E . College SI.
Lesson-sermon 10 a.m. Sundays. Wednesday evening service 7:30 p.m.
FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE . - 1035 Wade 51. Sunday
School i :45 a .m. Worship 10:45 a.m. and' p.m . Prayer Meeting Wednesdays 7 p.m.
FIRST MENNONITE CHURCH -405 Myrtle Ave. Worship 9 a.m . and
7:30 p.m. Cbrlstian EducRlion House 10 a .m.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH - 26 E . Market St. Church School
10:30 a.m Worship 10 a.m. Fellowship II a.m. (The Congregation wlil be
moving to the new church building. 2101 Rochester Avee. as of Sept. 14.)
FfRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Dubuque and Jeffferson
Streets Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worship 9:30 and 11 a.m.
FOURSQUARE GOSPEL CHURCH - 821 Walnut 51. Sunday School 10
a.m. Worship Ii B.m. and 7:30 p.m. Bible study Wednesdays 7:30 ~ . m .
FREE METHOUllil' t;lfllHCI! - Muscatine and Third Avenues
Christian Education 9:30 a.m. Worship 10 :30 a.m. Vespers 5:30 p.m.

FRIENUS MEETING -311 N. Linn St . Meeting for worship It a.m.


GENEVA COMMUNITY - Worship services 10 :30 a.m. at Wesley
House . 120 N. Dubuque St.
GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN CHURCH - Dubuque and Market Street.
Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship 8. 9 and 11 a.m. Sundays and 7 p.m. Thursdays .
GOOD NEWS BIBLE CHURCH - Hwy 6 WestSunday School 9; 15a.m.
Worship 10:30a .m.
GRACE MISSIONARY CHURCH - 1854 Muscallne Ave . Sunday
School 9;45 a.m. Worship 11 a .m. and 7 p.m. Prayer Meeting Wednesday
7:30 p.m.
IOWA CITY BIBLE FELLOWSHIP - 31% E. College SI. Sunday School
IO :45a.m . Worshlp9 :45a.m.
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESSES. 2120 H SI. Sunday talk 9:30 a m. Watch
Tower 10 :30 a.m. Ministry School Friday 7:30 p.m Service meeting 8:30
p.m.
LUTHERAN CHURCH OF CHRIST THE KING - West Melrose Ave.
at Mormon Trek Blvd . Church School 9 : 15 a .m. Worsh ip 8: 15 and 10:30
a.m.
LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER - 124 E. Church SI. Meal and
discussion 6 p.m. Informal Worship 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays p.m.
ST. ANDREW UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH - 1300 Melrose
Ave. Church School 9 a.m. Church Services 9 and 11 a .m.
OUR REDEEMER LlITHERAN CHURCH - 2310 E. Court St . Sunday
school 9 :40 a .m. Worship 8:30 and 10:45 a.m.
REGULAR BAPTIST CHURCH - 714 13th Ave . Coralville Sunday
school 9:30 a.m. Worship 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m . Bible study and prayer
service 7 p.m. Wednesdays.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY
SAINTS - Sunday School 9:45 a m. Worship 9:30 a .m. Preaching 10:30
a.m. Services at Union Conference Room .
.
ST. MARK 'S UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - 2675 Washington SI.
Church School 9 a.m. Worship 10 : 15 a.m.
ST . MARY 'S CHURCH - Jefferson and Linn Streets Sunday Masses 6.
7:30. 9, 10: 15 and 11 :30 a m. Monday-Friday Mass 12 : 10 and 5: 10 p.m.
Saturday Mass 5: 10 p.m. Saturday confessions 4-5 p.m. and7 p.m.
ST. PATRICK 'S CHURCH - 228 E. Court 51. Masses : Dally 7 and 8
a.m. Sunday 7. 9. 10 :15 and 11 :30 a.m. Confession 4-5 p.m. and 7 p.m.
Saturday.
ST. PAUL. LUTHERAN CHAPEL - 404 E . Jefferson St. Sunday school
9: 15 a.m . Worship IO:30a .m.
ST. THOMAS MORE CHURCH - 40 N. Riverside Dr. Saturday Vigil
Mass 5: 10 p.m. Dally Mass 9 a.m. and 5: 10 p.m. Sunday Mass 7. 9, 10:30
a.m. and noon. ConfeSSion 4-5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Saturday .
ST. WENCESLAUS CHURCH - 630 E . Davenport 51. Masses : Dally 7
a.m. Sunday 8:30, 8. to a.m. and noon. Confession 3-5 : 15 p.m . Salurday .
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST - 2675 E. Washington SI. Lay acllvilies
9 a.m. Saturday.
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 320 E . College SI. Eucharist 8 a .m.
and~p .m .

TRINITY CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH - E . Courl and Ken wood Drive Sunday School 9: 15 a.m . Worsh.p 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p .m.
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST - Gilbert SI. and Iowa Ave. Religion
Education 10 :30 a.m.-noon . Service 10 a .m. Discussions 11 a .m.
UNIVERSITY BAPITST CHURCH - 1850 West Benton 51. Bible Study
9:45 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH - 912 20th Ave . Coralville. Bible
Schpo19 :30 a .m. Worship 10 :30a .m.
ZrON LUTHERAN CHURCH - 310 N. Johnson St. Church School 9: 15
a,m. Services 8 and 10:30 a.m.

THE
NICKELODEON

fall session
september 2 thru october 27

TH IS WEEKS SPEC

Fri-Sat - Adrian Bock


ROCK N ROll
Next Weeks Specials
Wed - 52 Beer Special
Punch
Thurs - 53 Liquor Special
Punch
Fri &. Sat Dr. Bop

classes n mme, beginning.


ntermedlate & advanced modem.
jazz, body work group, ballet, tap.
exploration & composition & disco
dancng now & then.
Registration at Dance Center
1191f2 E. College (above Lind's Frame-up)
Friday I August 29th 3-Qpm
Tuesday I September 2nd 3-5pm
$20 per session or $2 per class
Please pay a.t registration

HEADSTONE
Ttil H t '( N\' IN

~()Cti&~ClL

Friday & Saturday

Free

29th & 30th


9:30 - 1:30

Band Matinee
featuring

II'. a

Enoch Smoky

Coming:
THE SONS OF CHAMPLIN
Sept. 18th. 19fh &. 20th
Tickets on sale Monday

Todav 3:30-6 p.m.

PLUS 15- HOTDOGS

Next Week

Ian Quail

Rocky calls
for review of
medical care
NEW YORK CAP) - Vice
President Nelson A. Rockefeller
called Thursday for a nationwide review of United States
medical programs, saying the
country no longer had enough
money to make mistakes.
"We learn by our mistakes, It
he told a public hearing investigating alleged abuses In
New York nursing homes.
"We used to have enough
money to afrord it. Now we
don't.
"We've got to re-examine, as
a nation, all these programs."
During day-long gruelling under glaring television lights, the
vice president also swore that to
the best of his recollection he
had never met Bernard Bergman, a nursing home multimillionaire now under indictment
on charges of bilking the government out of more than $1
million in false Medicaid
claims.

dance center

NOW
ENDSWED
" M__

THE MOVIE
EVENT YOU'VE
BEEN WAITING
FOR IS NOW
WAITING FOR YOU.

!.' ::Use DI Classifieds! .

THE

AIRLINER

ACdIrnboI _ _ ..., _
OrThe

SIgWOOdOlon-

_'WI

Who_"' .... _~. " PtIe TO'IIIIIhond

Ari'nMargret Oliver Reed Roger Daltrey 8ioo John

*Open 7 am
Homemade donuts
Lunch Ie ned 11 am-3 pm

*
*
*Hotdogs after 3pm
*Popcorn & Pickle Specials

~ ImT

r\s Tht PirW 'INIrd

&kOapton John EntwisUe Keith Moon Paul Nicholas


Jack Nicholson Robert Powell Pete Townshend
TIna Twner "'" The Who

Homemad oup. & other .pecial.

Fr.. popcorn daily 35, TUII. 3clo.in9


Fr popcorn & pickl.. every Friday 351

208 N. Linn 351-9466


2 blocks east of
Kate Daum

The Red Rose


Old Clothes

11-5, Monday-Saturday
114 E. College

sport

....-s:nI"....., ...."...,.., ............. lM$TIiOIGMC~...,."MDnl.l ......


. . IIUnIiltIll.1MMIMo\Ml1l(DWt..,....TOIII ..~..IOIIIM....,.._IQl""""O .........
..... ~,................ UIIIt'f. ... ,.... .... OwdI .......
- . - ... GtIPOl. ..... AIHfOk . . ClfAN..DHIIf'fIWI,.,.,... .. MllUV.a.uo. . .

_ . -.",. ".":':....,..-.:= 1PG1_fi.....


. _, ..._ _ 01
.....,.uuc.

a lively

"""iii JIIIru_~

SHOWS
1:30-3:30-5:30-1: 15-9: 15

look!

1;;+4:; ,

(3I1~~ ~ !'pNOWSHOWING
6TH \y EEK

MIrS

The threl dollirs bring. you I


The Wllkly People by mill
lYery ..ek for. yelr. And with
II, unIque perspective on lIIe

The terrifyrng
motion picture
from. the terrifying
No.1 be8t selltr.

.wAESCAAN"
NONM.N JEWISON F1im POLL.EROAI...l:'
n:iN t-OJ5EMAN .~D~ .o1N 1lBJ< .NCff5GUNN
~

AWaAHENlLEYIlAAOolMIllOOHAM /W.PH

HAMIS()l. _""",--""AI'()IlE PPlVIN


__t>,W1UJAM
_ A6nlJCXAtII.MEJ\
._ _ _

.".~J ~

~~Knl)\'

............

SHOWS: 1: 30-4 :00-6:30-9: 00

newa: whll'a wreng wIlli "'e


al.lua quo Ind 1I0w 10 rlgllilt.

NOWTHRU

WED.

It', lad.y', Federalist Piper


for tomlmJw', democ cr...
new. reconstructed, I~

Socl.lIst.
tI
~----r~~R
r Weekly People. 914

Induslaal Ava . PaloAho.CA 94303


Enclosed IS cheCk Of money Ofder
IOf O S1(4monlhS) 0 13(1 year).

The
W'dltJ .

Name _ _ _ _ __
Add'ess _ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ _ _ __

C~y

51.,e _ __

Coupliaq

Sensational Wedges With Sole

18.00
Add I fresh, new slant to your sportswear with wedges, With tan

leather uppers and skid resistant soles and heels. Available In tan,
Sizes 5112 to 9-10.

-IGY

~1111 NkolWlI1I.-. .

Ipi=i1h1BiUlCElKlWiId/_uiil1llOW!II.
~&'r~J.::..o:.-I\II"'ou.

Mill Shopping Center at She on Sycamore

rllrocW'c PRlJ(llA GEE ' Scr~byROOAI4AlN.J ard fWnOf(IlNZ-'

MATINEES THRU L.A80R DAY


SHOWS: 2: ..... :.7:....: . .

ow.cted by RAlPH NflSON Prodoced by MARTIN BAUM ElKIAfo'IIl'IIlmr HELIJT ~

MAT IN .. 1HIIUS. .. II $2.10

MATINEES THRU LABOR DAY


:30-9

.11.la.~~~~..................... 1~=A=D=M=IH=I=O=N~:A~D~U~L.~T~INgl~G~H~n~U~T~.';IU=N="=MO==N=':='=~=.======I
I

...

Adventure of
,.clpland
lurvlval.

ABAUM OANTINEPIoclclron

ec.r

Unltlll . . . .

'J1Ie DlUy lown-Iowa City, Iowa-Fri., AD,. :Ie, 1f15-Pa,e

fled/bL~ ~ovtes

FBI holds son '8 car


for clue about Hoffa
DETROIT (AP ) - A federal
prosecutor said Thursday that
investigators have refused to
release a car driven by Jimmy
Hoffa's foster son the day Hoffa
disappeared because it may
hold a clue to what happened to
the Cormer Teamsters union
president.
Robert Ozer, who heads the
U.S. Attorney 's Organized
Crime Strike Force here, said
his office has refused to return
the car to its owner and is
gearing for a court fight over
custody of it.
Sources close to the investigation told The Associated
Press that trained dogs used by
the FBI detected Hoffa's scent
in the car - used by Charles
"Chuckie" O'Brien on J uly 30.
Ozer said an attorney for the
car's owner, Joseph Giacalone,
22, son of reputed Mafia figure
Anthony "Tony Jack" Giaca lone, has filed a motion for reo
turn of the seized auto.
A hearing in federal court has
been scheduled for next
Tuesday, Ozer said.

I NrE R' DOtH


E XPReSS - - - -

BL6

5TOP;; : "

"Obviously, the FBI cannot


simply hold the car without a
legal reason," Ozer told The
AP. " If there were no reason to
hold the car, we would have
given it back. But we've reo
fused .
"We cannot hold onto the car
without a legal basis, without
evidentiary value. We mustshow the court either that
there's a legitimate need for
holding the car, or we must give
it back."
O'Brien has denied repeat
edIy that HoCfa was in the car on
that date.
The car, a 1975 Mercury, was
seized by the FBI on Aug. 9 to
test a stain on the front seat.
The stain turned out to be fish
blood, as O'Brien had maintained.
Ozer said the car remained in
FBI custody "in a safe place."

Peace CIId Nonviolence USA:


AIt.rnatiY.. to Viole. c. in the
A ric.n Experienc.
begins Sept . 3
7:00-8 :40 p.m.
continuing through the semester
university credit optional

The Catholic Student Center-Center East

Welcome To

GENEVA COMMUNIlY
WORSHI P-CELEBRATION
Sunday, August 31 10:30 am
(Communal Meal at Noon)
Mail Lounge, Westey House
120 N. Dubuque St.
Spon sored by Christian Reformed Cam pus Ministry

... ........

The Other Shoe

CAMBUS
It', a free

~.

And very handy too throughout molt of the VI

route

campus. Besides, they are the only buses In Iowa wllb a pretty
face.

""Rff DANCf'"
I~atur l ng

The Rock In Roll

Burtom' visit
causes firay

~,~

lit JerUSurem

u.

JERUSALEM (AP) - Eliza


beth Taylor, in tight bluejeans
and shawl, and Richard Burton,
in safari suit and Jewish skuUcap, inadvertently caused a
near riot by fans at the sacred
Wailing WaU on Thursday.
Then they held a noisy news
conCerence at which the ques
tion on everyone's mind whether they will remarry went unanswered because none
oC the 200 newsmen present was
able to get the query through .
Avital Mossinsohn, a Jerusalem theater ma'nager who
chaired the news conference,
said the couple demanded "no
persona I questions be asked" as
a condition for their meeting
with the media.
Various attempts to phrase
the question indirectly were cut

off by Mossinsohn or dodged by


the two movie stars.
However, Miss Taylor at one
stage remarked: .. I came here
because Mr. Burton was coming
here, we are together , and it
seemed quite natural, since I've
been wanting to get away for so
long, to combine business with
pleasure."
Burton is inspecting locations
for a movie he plans to shoot
here.
Earlier, the couple visited the
Wailing WaU , Judaism's holiest
shrine , and pandemonium ensued as police, attendants, fans
and photographers scuffled and
punched each other around the
actress.
The wall is divided into sections for men and women. But in
disregard oC strict Jewish

tradition , male photographers


burst into the Cemale section.
"I was almost knocked flat on
my face by journalists," Miss
Taylor told the news conference. "I wanted to go there
and have a quiet moment, and it
was not to be. It not only upset
me, but some oC the worshipers.
All of a sudden there was an
avalanche on us of idiots, and J
mean all of us ."
The minibrawl involved police, the movie stars; bodyguards, Wailing WaU attendants, photographers and the
surging throng .
Jewish worshipers broke off
prayers to join the crowd pressing in to try to get a look at Miss
Taylor , who converted to
Judaism in 1959.

Boogie Band
Sunday Night, Aug. 31
7:30-10 :30 p.m .
Hillel House parking lot
(in basement It II rains)
Sponsored by
The Campus Ministr ies

ORN
7p,m.

.~

-+t~
CARDS

ETC

mon, & tues,


sept. l & 2

#f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~

IO!! S. l>ubuq Ul'

With this coupon

Apartment Store
223 E. Washington

51 poster
00~5Q
linit one per person

A coupon special
each day
all week longl

Good only on Monday,


Sept. 1, 1975
Save this couponl

This COUpon enfitIes


you to a $10. ciscount
00 art{ of our 21 kinds
of rockers.

CoIotiaI Hunica1e-1ype
electric lamp
Reg. 544. 519.95
One day special, Tuesday Sept. 2
Only with th~ coupon
10 avallable

Large selecflon of TurQuolse & SIver jewelry


Many Navajo, Hopi & Zuni designs.
, We have carried indian jewelry si1ce 1971.
,This coupon entities you to a 30,. discount
on any item il this category purchased
. on Friday, Sept. 5

We were In Cora~ 4 12 years


Recen1\y we moved nto a much larger
location so we can handle a bigger selecflon
of ltems~ You can row find us at
'223 E. Washilgton
Downtown bwa City

Nemo's has grts, )ewert, unfnlshed fumHure,


waterbeds, many styles of woven baskel$,
hundreds of planters, plant hangers,
stai1ed glass lamps, bedspreads,
turquoise, tapestries and morel

Page It-'I1Ie DaDy Iowa_Iowa CIty, In.-Fri.,

A.,. 30, 1175

Tennis favorites, Schallau


advance at Forest Hills
FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP)-01ris Evert
didn't mUll a strand 01 her pretty blonde hair 81
she crushed a usually formidable opponent, Lesley Hunt of Australia, Thursday in the opening
round of the U.S. Open Tennis Championships.
The 20-year-old Miss Evert joined former
boyfriend Jimmy Connors in leading a sweep of
favorites forward before continuing record
crowds at Ule West Side Tennis Club.
Chris won 6-1 , 6-0 over the tomboyish Aussie ,
who had carried her to 46 hardfought games at
Wimbledon last year and given her a titanic
battle in the quarter-finals of this event afterward.
Connors. like Chris, the lopseed, played spotty
but overpowering tennis in ousting Geoff
Masters of Australia 6-3, 6-3.
Connors was joined in the men 's second round
by Guillermo Vilas of Argentina, No. 2; Manual
Orantes of Spain, No. 3; Bjorn Borg of Sweden,
No. 5; Hie Nastaseof Romania. No. 8; Rod Lav~r
of Australia, No. 9, and Raul Ramirez of Mexico,
No. 11.

All won comfortably in straight sets, not


seriously pressed. Only Laver, the 36-year-old
former world champion, was forced into a
deuced set.
There were two mild upsets, however, in
women's play. Marina Kroschina, a 22-year-old
Ukranian, toppled little Rosemary Casals of San
Francisco, No. 3 ranked among American
women, 6-4, 6-2 and Mona SchaUau of Iowa City,
Iowa, won over Nancy Richey Gunter, a manytimes clay court champion and once No. 1 nationally , 3~ , 6-4, 6-4.
One of the more exciting matches in the men's
competition was staged late in the day on an
outside court. Brian Gottfried of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., rallied after losing a first set tiebreak
for a 6-7, 6-2, 61 victory over tough Alex Metreveli of the Soviet Union.
Seeded ranks in both the men's and women's
divisions remained unbroken through the second
ll-hour day unfolded before a record matinee
crowd of 17,452 and the evening turnout of about

Radiothon for Muscu)ar Dystroph]


Sunday 6 p.m. - Monday 8 p.m.
a.pre.onto. lor National Adverthln, by

Natlonal Educational Advert .. in, Service., Inc.


l'. Lo.lnlton A ..... N .... York. N .Y. 10017

WICKER FURNITURE.
l!)

c(

J:
...J
...J

CINCINNATI ( AP ) - Don
Gullett pitched a fivehitter for
his seventh straight victory and
Darrel Chaney cracked a home
run , helping the Cincinnati Reds
to beat the SI. Louis Cardinals 4oThursday night.
It was the first shutout since
May 31 for Gullett, 113. and his
second victory in three outings
after spending nJne weeks on
the disabled list with a broken
thumb.
Chaney crashed his second
homer of the year, a shot down
the right field line, leading orr
the fifth inning against Mike
Garman, 35. Garman had replaced starter Bob Forsch, wlio
left after four innings because
of torn skin on the middle finger
of his pitchinl( hand.
Cincinnati erupted for three
insurance runs in the seventh.

BALTIMORE (AP ) - Mike


Cuellar pitched a fivehitter
while Ellie Hendricks and Don
Baylor singled home runs to
lead the Baltimore Orioles to a
21 victory over the Chjcago

American League

Natlonal League

2, Sox 1

East
W L Pet. GB
78 52 .600
72 59 .550 61,2
66 65 .504 121h

Boston
Baltimore
New York
60 68 .469 17
Cleveland
S ,
Milw~ukee 57 75 .432 22
51 80 .389 27lk
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) _ DetrOit
West
Garry Maddox ' triple and dou- Oakland
79 53 .598
bles by Mike Schmidt and Kansas City 70 59 .543 71k
66 or .496 131h
Johnny Oates keyed a decisive Texas
64 68 .485 15
threerun sixth inning that gave ~~~!s~ta 63 69 .471 16
the Philadelphia Phillies an 85 California
61 72 .459 18 1h
victory over the San Francisco
Giants Thursday.
Tom HJlgendor, 6-3, checked
Thursday's Res\llts
the Giants on just six hils for 7 1Baltimore 2, Chicago 1
New York 3, Oakland 2
3 innings after they had chased
Only games scheduled
Jim Lonborg with three runs on
five hits in the first. Hilgendorf
also chipped in on offense with a
run-scoring double in the Phils'
Friday'S Games
Chicago at Baltimore, (n)
threerun seventh. Tug McGraw
Oakland at Boston, (n)
pitched the ninth and ga ve up
Minnesota at Cleveland, (n)
Bob~y Murcer's two-run single.
California at Detroit, (n)
WIth San Francisco leading 3Kansas City at New York,
2, Schmidt started Phila - (n )
delphia 's slxth' inning rally
Milwaukee at Texas, (n)

5
Phil 8 GJants

Pittsburgh
Philphia
St. Louis
New York
Chicago
Montreal

East
W L Pet.

74
71
71
69

57
61
61
62
60 73
56 74
West

.565
.538
.538
.527

UJ

1/1

::>

1/1

::>

a::
Former world tennis cbamplon SlaD Smith hal
hi. game slowly fall apart In the put 13
months. The American Will champion at Wimbledon In 1m. ranked No. lin the world In 1973.
but after wilmlnl a tournament In July 19,..
seeD

u.

hasn't been the same. He entered the U.S. Open


unseeded, a comedown In Itself, then l08t In Wednesday's flrat round, 6-4, 6-2, to Onny Parun of
New Zealand. "I'm patient," WIIS Smith's
diagnosis of his present condition.

11' ,
I
1>
~
"0
:0

I-

. Downstroke

:0
J>
"0

VI
c(

>
Z

c(

Clinton at College
Open Monday & Thursday until9 pm

m
:0

m
1/1

31fl

3'h
5

.451 15

.431 171h

Cincinnati 88 44 .667
Los Angeles 70 62 .530 18
S.Francisco 65 67 .492 23
San Diego 60 73 .451 28 1,2
Atlanta
58 75 .436 301,2
Houston
51 84 .378 381,2
Thursday's Results
Philadelphia 8, San Francisco
5

Montreal 10, San Diego 8


Cincinnati 4, SI. Lours 0
New York at Los Angeles, n
Only games scheduled
Frlday's Garnes

Atlanta at Chicago
SI. Louis at Cincannati, (n)
Houston at Pittsburgh, (n)
Montreal at San Diego, (n)
New York at Los Angeles ,
(n )

Philadelphia at San Francisco, (n)

to

31:3 Gen. Psych. GrlSllllm


.....
31:13 Psych. of AdJ . Borkovek
31: 163 Abnormal Psych. Weerts
~ : Il SoclolOllyWllmeth
301 : 12 SocloIOllY ' Mueller
301 : 13 SoclofOllY ' Lawler
6E: IA Economics Albrecht
6E: IB Economics Nordquist
6E : 2 Economics Costantino
17: 117 Human Sexuality Mikelson
'l2M:7 Quanl, Geraghty
'l2S:8 Quant II 8lrch
44 : 1 Human GeOIIraplly Honey
44 :2 Nat. Env. & Man Salisbury
71 : lOS Pharmacology Steel.
71 :120 Drugs Gebhart
n :13 Human PhyslolOllY -Selrle
n:110 NeuroblolOllY & Behavior Hillman
96: 20 H.althCar. Services Scheffel

Notel from previoul Mlntltenlt


$5 lor complete Mt.
To order limply call our office Inytlme or vilit our office It 51t lowl Avenue
(jUlt 5 blockS Hit of tile PtntlcmU. We'll bill you with your first Nt of notes. If
.... notellrlft't III you expected don't Ply lid we'll stop Mlldl", them to you.

Call 351-6154
24 Hours .4 Ba,

1/1

'm"

GB

Unl-prlnt, Inc. Lecture


Notes can help fill In the
blanks in your notetaklng.
They are meant to supplement your own notes. We
provide typed printed notes,
prepared by qualified
graduate students, with the
professors' permission. The
notes can be mailed your
residence a few days after
the last lecture of each week.

4:1 Chemistry' Doyle


4:4 Chemistry Stwalley
4:7 c;,n. Chem. I Davis. CO\IcOUvanls
4:8 Gen. Chem. II . DaviS
4:141 Chem. LabWawzontk
11 :21 Human BloIOllY' Stay. SJolund'
11 :31 Western elv. Henneman
11 :33 Phil. of M.n. Cummins
11 :37 Hlst. of Art Rorex
11:39 Musk Obrecht
16:61 Amer. HlstoryWlthey
17:142 Nutrition Lar.8raUd
19:100Comm. Systems Ascroft
19: 106 Cultur.' FoundItlons MCintyre
29: 1 Physics Joyce
29 :2 Physics McCliment
29:61 Astronomy Van Allen
30: 13 World Politics Murray
31: 1 EI.m. Psych. Rosenbaum

Design your own space-saving wall


unit with plastic modular cubes.
Brown, black, white, yellow, red.

a::

White Sox Thursday night.


Cuellar. 13-10, struck out
three batters, walked two and
was helped by four double plays
en route to his 16th complete
game of the season.
He checked Chicago on sin
gles by Jorge Orta in the fourth
and seventh innings and Bill
Melton's single in the eighth,
then lost a shot at his sixth
shutout of the season when Pat
Kelly tripled and Orta singled
with two outs in the ninth.
The Orioles cut Boston's lead
in the American League East to
61h games.
.

O~ioles

1/1

c(

*The hODle stretch *

Reds 4, Cards 0

"CUBICALS"

Z
l!)

6,000.

against Jim Barr, 11-12, with a


one-out double to left. He came
in on Maddox' triple to left-center , then Maddox scored the go
ahead run on Oates' double
down the rlghHield line. Oates
later scored on Dave Cash 's
grounder.

1>

VI

FOLK CRAFTS
to

!fA few years ago, when I'd just gra.duated from


college, I bought a pretty cheap phonograph.
Of course I knew it was chewing up my records.
but I had no choice really. It was either that
thing - or no music at all. And I just have to
have music in my life.
"Now, with a career pretty well under way.
the situation's reversed. Money isn't such a big
consideration 'any more. and quality is most
important. That's why I shop at TEAM Electronics. They've got a good selection of the
right brands. and they're pretty nice people to
deal with. And you can find the latest equipment there.
''I spent quite a few bucks on my new music
system. But considering the quality I was after,
I feel I got a good value. After years of listening
to that old phonograph, I'd forgotten how beautiful music could sound. "

Want to take a giant step without going off the deep end?
Come check out TEAM's'componen1 music systems. Quality.
yes. And the prices are right . too. Time to upgrade?
Here's how:
Sansui 55 1 Stereo Receiver
(Available separately $259.00)
Dual 1225 Automatic Changer
With Walnut Base WB12 and
Shure M44E Stereo Cartridge.
Dust Cover optional. $12.95
B.I. C. Venturi Formula 4
Loudspeakers (2)
Total if purchased separately
$728.75

TEAM Price

'-$639
J

AM
ELECTRONICS

II

AI

II

A
M

There are over 100 TEAM CENTERS. Here are the addresses of the ones nearby,
The Mall Shopping Center

Iowa Ci~, Iowa

Hrs: M-F 10-9, Sat. 9:30-5:30, Sun. 12-5


Phone 338-3681

NFLPA to vote
on owners' offer
WASHINGTON (API - The membership of the National Football League's Players Association will vote next week on whether
it will accept a contract offer by management and end the
IlfJyear long NFL dispute. the union aMounced Thursday.
Ed Garvey, NFLPA executive director, told a news conference
that the union membership will vote a week from Friday on any
management proposal put on the table by next Monday.
Garvey said the decision to send a management offer to the
membership for a vote was made during a meeting of the player
representatives last Monday in Chicago.
"This dispute has dragged on for well over a year and a half and
the (union executive I board is anxious to have the matter solved."
Garvey said. "Since the owners have been unwilling to come for
ward with a complete proposal. we felt that by setting the first of
September as a deadline for an offer to be submitted to the play

PORT
ers. the owners would be encouraged to bargain with the players'
negotiating committee. The vote will be taken on the 5th of September."
Garvey said the owners representatives, who met with the
union officials in Chicago, "indicated that a full proposal would be
forthcoming prior to or on the 1st of September.
"We explained that it would then be submitted to the players for
a vote and Kermit Alexander (union presidentl suggested that
they give it their'best shot.' "
In New York. Sargent Karch. executive director of the NFL
Management Council which represents the owners in contract
negoti.alions, said no decision has been made yet on whether a new
offer would be submitted to the players by Monday.
"We are making that determination now." he said. adding that
a decision could be made Friday.
The last offer made by the owners came July 23. one which Garvey described was less than a proposal offered Aug. 27. 1974. and
rejected by the union's executive board by 25 to 1.
If no new proposal is made. Garvey said. the players would be
voting on the July 23 offer.

LECTURE NOTES
can make the
difference
Call 351-0154
24 hours a day
We may offer your course

. t t I nco
Uru-. P nn

511 Iowa Ave.

~;;~;;;;===::=::.:;=:;:;=

CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Edittd b)' Wlt.l WENG

ACROSS
I Musical work
8 Jezebel's

I.
20

husband
Bit of medicine
Dishonor
Organism's body
Summit
Complains
Tilt, as a ship
Scruff
What artists

2S
24
25
3%

--clevie
Debt: Abbr.
Rajahs
Word with hood

10
14
15
18
17
18

Poetic Muse
Miss Gardner
WaysideMarble
Degrees of heat:
Abbr.

42
43
45
48

50

57
58

5.

61
62
63
64
65
66

Scholastic org.
Smooth
Scarlett O'Hara
Scottish refusal

Prefix for
puncture
Breakfast fare
Derby entry
Judgment
Ship crane
Stance
Ferber
Halting place
From away off
Ruminant
Thick
DOWN

prefer

or rib
33 Hasten

34
38
37
38
3.

49

I
2
3
"

Vibrate: Abbr.
Biggers's sleuth
Elephant'sear
Catherine the
Great
5 Having a wHl
8 Court's Arthur
7 Gardener, at
times

8 Church comer
9 Lee Marvin's
Cat

10 Participle, at
timll6
II Bright fish
12 Month: Abbr.

ARTISTS . Looking Glass is


SPECIAL EVENTS
accepting art on consignment .
COORDINATOR
Oils, prints. ceramics, water
colors, small sculplure, photog. Major health organization de
raphy , etc. Call 351 5504, 9 a.m. to sires energetiC and versatile
9 p.m.
95 individual to assume the respon
sibility of organizing and coor
ADOPT a grandparent. Volunteer dinating young people's special
one hour weekly to make a new event in Iowa City area.
friend . Time Exchange. 3387518. Excellentopportun ltv for substl
829 tule teacher or person with
xperience in management or
roup organizing. 12 week total
time commitment during the l
fall . Salary compet illve. Send
resume (photo helpful) to Bill
Mogolov, 5741 University Ave.,
Des MOines, Iowa 50311.

..

GET OUT OF THE


DORMS AND INTO
ACTION-AEPi

13

English river
Cry's partner
Fit for: Suffix
Roof parts
Southern shrine
River or wine
Forty--

29 French historian

30 Assessment
amount
31 Part of a poem
32 "-- chance'"
35 Be beholden to
40 Type of humorist
41 Law: Abbr.
13 Withdrew
44 Howl, as a wolf
48 Observed

47 Dull noise
50 Warp's
companion

51 Lanchester
!l2 Gave a hard
time to
~ "With malice
toward--"
54 Poet
55 Author Hunter
56 Upends
57 Acct.
flO Letter

MOTORCYCLES

Building with a soul


DetrIIII-., cit. IU,

MOVING SALE
1011 Diana
Saturday Morning
Furniture,
household Items, etc .

CQIIII III ,.. . . . .

NEIGHBORHOOD
GARAGE SALE
3310 Shamrock
Saturday , 9 a.m.
, 3 p.m.

JAIlS IIIIIIII, IIIDAL I3fIRAC1IIi


_CIS
CIS MI_ - Zl-712

HON DA Gl1000, 52,795. ClOSe outs


CL360, 5949 ; XL250, 5949 ; CBl25, ~~i!!~!!!ii~~
$529. All mOdels on sale. Stark's ~
Sport Shop, Prair ie du Chien,
Wisconsin . Phone 3262478. 9 . 2~ MUSICAL

___iiiiiii!!~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiii.;1

W~NTED : efficient readers fOr


93
blind person . 351 2892.

ROOMS FOR RENT

"

'k..v: .....

==;;;;;.,.

*'*'

Joh~

WINDOW WASHING
AI Ehl. dial 644.2329
9I
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.

' C33 with 6Smm f3.S lens. Takes!:


120 or sheet films . list pr ice over::::
5400; for sale for 5200. Call -r
3536220 & ask for Dom or Larry.

*'
*'
If-

~t~o~s~ t~~~~~:,d ;:r'~11~~~ a~~~~:


Phone 3381747.

INSTRUCTION

....

917 :
93 TYPING Service Experienced. FREE pair of lamps with pur
All kinds. Call 351 8174 after 6 chase of any living room set.
p.m.
923 599.95 for 90 inch sofa . No reason Ifable offer refused . Goddard's *
THESIS experience former uni Furniture, West liberty. E Z *

Th e 01 need s carriers
I- n

* *'

these areas

*Hawkeye Ct.
*SO. Clinton

W H arrI.on

*Downtown I.C.
*MSO.eIQuad
rOM A vee

!*

* Wood.lde Dr.
Oakcreat
N D 0 d Ie
N. John.on
B eno
N. Governor'

* .

Travel Service

arby.

Phone 3511360
for experienced,
profeSSional travel
service to anywhere
in the world.

229 E. Washington, Iowa City


'9 .

iiiiiiiiii!iii~iiiiii"

ST ACY'S

. CYCLE CITY
440 Kirkwood Ave. 354-2110

CHILD CARE

I need ride to and from KirkwOOd


Community College, Cedar Ra .
pids, on all weekdays starting
September 1. Will Share cost.
351 3489.
92

10 speed AMF Roadmaster excel


lent condition, sao. Call Rick, 'UDEll wanted eastward to New
3373101.
9-2
York weekend. John, 353~;
I do baby sitting In my apartment.
weekdays and weekends, north WOUL.D exchange man', bike for 3512875.
829
Dubuque area . 351 .3119.
95 woman's bike. 351 7137, '7 p.m. COMMUTING student needs
WILL baby sit my home, near
93 riders or drivers from southern
Mercy Hospital, Montessori
SAT IT WITH A DI" part state. Call COllect aller 6
School, bus. 3377616.
9A PERSONAL CLAlilFlEDI p.m .. 15152609.
910

RIDE wanted to NYC weeken<l


67. Share driving & expenses.
Michael, 3387781.
93

10 SPEED BICYCLES
Parts & Accessories
Repair Service

21. . . ........... 22 . ................ 23 . ............. 24.


A

full .
108
LOCAL Road Anllques : Hill north
1.80, exit 62, take first road left.
Quality furniture, etc. 10 a.m.
7 p.m ., Tuesday through Saturday
.and by appointment . 351 . 51~~~O

lor your convenience.

MEACHAM

IfIfIfIfIf-

~:~~~~ ;ieb~~~~'js.~. selec~~~~ terms and free delivery.


106 *
CLASSICAL guilar instruction,
MATTRESS and box springs, both Ifbeginning and intermediate. FULLtime typist. Vast experi pieces only S49.95 . Goddard's *
Carol Bagwell, 3379319.
8.29 ence with disertations, shorter Furniture. West Liberty . Free *
*
912 delivery. 627 2915 .
10'6:*
prolects.3389820.
SATURDAY and evening classes .
~
Enioy credit courses on Saturday Ms. Jerry Nyall I BM Typing FOURpiece bedroom set onlv
,..
and evenings al the University of Service , 933 Webster, phone $119. Goddard's Furniture, West *
IfIowa . Open enrollment. Tran . 3541096
911 Llbe~tv . Mondav - Frida~, 9:30 - 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
scripts not necessary. Choose - - - - - - - - - - p.m ., Saturday, 95 p.m., Sunday.
Irom : Amer ican Civ, Anlhro TYPtNGCarbOn ribbon , electric; 15 p.m. All merchandise fully
pology, Art, Business Education , editing ; exper ienced .
Dial guaranteed.
,~
English. Core, French, Geo 338.4647 .
910
graphy, Geology , Engineering,
OLD wOOd furniture . Chairs,
Home Ec .. Journal ism, lin TWELVE years experience tables, chests, dressers. miscella
quislics . Math, Ph ilosophy, Poli theses, manuscripts. Quality neous. 1250 . 12th Avenue, Coral
tical Science , Psychology, Rell work . Jane Snow, 3386472.
99 ville (da ily) .
98
gion , Sociology, Social Work,
MEN'S
21
inch
Gitane.
Gray's
Speech and Dramatic Art , Urban
Anatomy . Faber's Cyclopaedic
'and Reg ional planning, Women 'SJ
Medical Dictionary . Pickett LOg
studies InclUded. Write for bulle BICYCLES
Log slide rule. 3385700, evenings .
tin to C206, East Hall , Iowa City,
93
Iowa 52240, or call 3193536240.
Toll free 1800272-6412 from any MEN'S 3-speed Raleigh . Call
95 STEREO and hl fl components
where In the state of Iowa . 829 351 0601 after 5 p.m .
are available at summer season
BikES bikes . bikes!Onespeed, discount prices at Advanced Au
three.speed , S10 . S35. 351 .8779. dio , 202 Douglass (one block
93 behind McDonald's( In Iowa City .
ANTIQUES
- - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
We're Offering specials on Ken.
RALEIGH 26inch bike. 3speed, wood, JVC, and TechniCS reo
Write ad belOw using _ bI./lk for .aeh word :
mod ified with drop handlebars, c"ivers; speakers by Infinlly,
ANTIQUE SHOW &
racing pedals, 535. Call 338 CerwinVega, HED, Image, SAE,
3. .. .. ..... .... 4.
1. ... .. ......... 2.
0904. 829
JBL; turntables by Philips, Con.
FLEA MARKET
noisser, Technics, JVC, Kenwood,
August 30, 9 a.m.7 p.m.
7. ............. . .
S. ............ .. 6.
10speed Raleigh Super Course Glenburn McDonald and many
August31, 9 a.m.Sp.m.
25 'h inch trame. AllOY crank . other fine components . Call
RECREATION CENTER
9. . ............. 10. . . .. ............ 11 . ............. 12 . .......... .
354.3598. 93
3543104 for appointments or stop
HIGHWAY22
Py after 12 noon daily.
95
Wellman, Iowa
13. ............. 14.. .. . ........... IS . .......... . .. 16. .......... .
RALEIGH 10speed, men's, $60. '-:---------:,.,.,...,,..-:-0
English 3speed, girls' ages
BLOOM Anllques . Dow!1town 10.14, $40. 3389831 aller 7: 30p .m.
17 . ............. 1. .... ... ......... 1' .. ............ 20 . . .. ....... .
Wellman, Iowa Three bUildingS 9.3
RIDERIDER

Since 1952

*'
:
*'*'If~

Here'. a DI cl_ilied ad blank

AIIIWII 10 "IVI.US PUZZLI

INSTRUMENTS
1970 Kawasaki 500 Good
Cedar chest, 20 Inch bl- .
cycle, screen tenl, Knight. condition, must sell, best oHer.
is II better place to live.
MARSHALLSOwallguitar ampll. AVAILABLE Immediately 351 8124. 829
VTVM, drapes, baby items,
Come and check us out.
trer and speaker cabinet. Maestro One bedroom furnished room
furniture, air conditioner,
9.5 also need person to share
BMW 1974 R90.6, 6,500 miles, Phase shifter . 338....597.
339 N. Riverside across
EXCEPTIONAL secretary.recep : . r ug, camera, misc.

Windjammer Fairing . 396.6320,


room, kitchen and bathroom
from Hancher. For furCedar
Rap
ids.
9.10
TOM
GILLISi'll
facilities, utililies paid, close,
ther information , 338.7196.
t ionisl : Must have respect for
FRETTED tNSTRUMINn
f9~3males only. 3380266, evenings.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
creat
i
vity
and
creallve
people

plus relate well with public.


BARGAIN LOVERS
HONDA summer savings lime
Honda GL1000 and all 1975 models
Complete repair & Inlay serHOME! Church home at the Iowa Salary open . Apply Looking
PORCH SALE
at close out prices . CB400F,
vice for banjo, manctotln &
City Bible Fellowship, conser Glass, 351 5504
95
APARTMENTS
vative , Bible teaching , warm
S1.139. CL360, S89S. CBI25, $519.
gulla r . Free pickup &
705 Oaklimd Ave.
fellowship .. a place for those whO WANTED: Two work study stu
Stark's Sport ShOp, Prairie du
delivery.
FOR RENT
Saturday lOth,
desire to grow 312 E. College, dents typing minimum of 40 words
Chien, Wisconsin. Phone 3262~78 .
Route 2, Wlist Branch,
10 a.m.3 p.m.
9:45 a.m., 6 p.m . Sundays.
9.9 per minute for secretarial posl.
~~~..a.1-6A3~1.-~2~.....__~.. i / 3 apar t men t f or rent , air
===="'""______-108 :-:-:
t ions. 15 hours weekly at S2.95.
Couch, chairs , stereos,
NEW and used GibSOn, Fender, conditioned. Call Tom, 3375031.
THE Coral Gift Box Is your hour. Contad Janie Hueston at
hanging lamp, appliances,
Martin, Guild, Ovation, Ibanez,
95
Christian book and gift shop. 3535461.
92
AUTOS
trunK, dishes, sheets.
l,Mrris,
Washburn,
Conrad,
Come In and browse. 804.201h - - - - - - - - - - UNFURNISHED
spare
bedroom
DOMESTIC
car
seat,
and
misc.
child's
:;retsch,
Rlckenbacker
gullars
Avenue, Coralville . 351 0383. 10S FULL time or part time cashler From 10 cents 10 SI
sndwhat goes wllh them at in twobedroom duplex Respon The Best Steak House.
108
Evervthing priced to selll
All power air l ummer season discount priCes. l lble, quiet female or male stu
IN5URE your stereo. TV and
1970 FI re b'rd
I
"
We sell the gOOd stuff at the ~ent . F ive miles out . sao. 679.2653,
other Ihings. A+ companies. rea PE RSON for housework four
93.
sonable rates . Rhoades Insu hours per week near campus. AUDIOPHILE equlptment for 37,000 orig inal miles , $2,100. prOfeSSional musician's store, ,nytlme aller 7 p.m.
912 ~dvanced Audio, 202 Douglass
rance , Unibank Plaza, Coralville . 337 9161.
9~ sale : Thorens,Rabco, Qulntes . 351 3134.
,
, . . (one block behind McDOnald's) . SEPTEMBER 1 sublet eftl
351 .0717 .
107 - - - - - - - - - -sense, Marantz and Magnaplanar
NOW hiring part lime waiters speakers. SeriOus calls aller 5 PICKUp 55. Chevy . 63 ennlne, Call 35-4.3104 for appointments or :I ency , ni cely furn lsheCl, $145 .
93
brakes, fires, paint. No rust . stop by after 12 noon da l ly
' .5 137-5895 aller 6 p.m .
CRISIS Cenler . Call or stop in . 608 wallresses and cooks . Apply In p.m .. 3542183.
95 new
Great condition . 3389312.
' 12 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
S. Dubuqu e; 351 .0140, 11 a.m.2 person, Pizza Hut, 211 1st Avenue, - - - - - - - - - - BAROQUE Lute . Authentic 11
3.m .
919 Coralville.
9.4 COFFEE table, table lamp, clock
radiO, etc. GOOd reasonable. 338 1968 LTD Power steering, air course copy . Best Offer over S550 .
cunditionlng,
etc.
Good
condition,
1-2AS1809.
9.3 MOBILE HOMES
95
PROBLEM pregnancy? Call VOCALIST . guitarist for esta. 3783.
9" .
.
best offer . 338-2690
Birthright, 6 p.m .9 p.m .. Monday olished commercial country .rock
UPRIGHT Cable plano. Excellent
through ThurSday, 3388665. 917 ~roup . Dale Thomas, 16432220. MAGNAVOX compact stereo;
1.972 Gremlin-X : Very goOd condl. playing cond ilion. Easy touch . 'x4, New Moon Excellent condl
829 nso new, now saO. Stereo Shop , liOn, power steer ing, power disc Call 354.2698.
8.29 lion, furnished, air. must be
3389505 .
912
PREGNANT? Need an aborllon?
brakes , factory ai r . SI ,650.
moved, SI ,250 firm . 683-2539 after
::all Emma Goldman Clinic, RESTAURANT help wanted .
92 FENDER Jaguar gullar, best 6 p.m .
95
3372111 .
916 Hours flexible , no experience PAIR large Advents, S170, year 3387664, evenings.
..
offer. 3372501.
92
necessary, neat appearance reo old; Braun turntable with Shure
10xSO
Elcar
Good
condition,
QUALITY resumes . 100 copies, Quired. Apply In person, Hamburg V 15 cartridge, S400 new, 1'12
furnished . 679 2662 before 8: 30
AUTOS
~ . 9S. Fast, one day serv ice. Town InnDairy Queen , 206 1st Avenue, years old. S175. Dan, 3373101. 95
a.m.; after 8 p.m.
99
FOREIGN
Copier, Hwy. 6 West , Coralville. Coralville.
9 11 - - - - - - - - - - PETS
351 3327.
915
UNFINISHED furniture and oc
II
TWO bedroom modular home
PART time hours available : Wal caslonal chairs . Do yourself and MUS
T se
1973 V?'kswagen
Indian Lookout. Central air , Shed,
UN IQUE wedding bands entirely ters.wa l tresses and cooks needed save. Nemo's, 223 E. Washington .
9. 1C B~elle, excellent condillon, 19,000 AKC Siberian Husky, male, five extras . 35\ 1063 al1er 5 p.m .
nandcrafted. Reasonabl e prices. noons, even ings and weekends. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
miles. one owner, snow tires. Call months . 6832616.
9.3 9.11
Terry, collect 16295483 ; Bobbi. Apply in person , Mr . Steak ,
=-----=,---351 1747.
912 Coralville.
829 WATER8ED, frame and pede . 3542020, afler 5p.m . or weekends.
stal, best offer. Call 351 .7779. 9.2
99 FREE gray tiger k i llen . 351
INSURE your car at lower rates . HELP wanled . Two for board
ROOMMATE
.
2978 93
A+ companies, excellent serv ice. crew for sorority . Have gOOd USED vacuum cleaners, reason 1972 ~orsche 914 Good condition, - - - - - - - - - - WANTED
Monthly payments . Rhoades In cook . 338.3780.
9.3 ably priced. Brandy's Vacuum . 40 miles rer gallon. 351 .7530. 94 ASSORTED large fresh water
surance. Unibank Plaza. 3510717 .
351 1453.
98 TOYOTA Corolla 1971 55000 aquarium fiSh for sale. 3389162.
107 HOUSECLEANER wanted Ex
,
,
9.2 MALE to snare one bedroom
Men's
21
inch
Gilane
.
Gray's
miles, S1.100 or best offer.
apartment, 575 plus ulllllles .
perience required; Tuesday,
U STORE ALL
AKC Black Cocker Spaniel pup. )381794
93
thursday afternoons. Salary ne Anatomy. Faber 's Cyclopaedl c 351 2960. 9-3
Storage for fun lture, book s, etc .
pieS. 6452193 or 35-41342 after 5:30
93 medical Dictionary. Pickett
Units 10' x 12' . S25 per month . gotiable. 3373062.
Log Log slide rule . 338 5700,
and weekends.
94 ROOMMATE wanted to spilt $150
Larger units also available. Dial HAPPY Joe's Is now hiring part evenings .
93
'ent. Contact Kr ls Jensen at
time fall and winter help and will
DOG obedience classes beg inning 1536210 or 3386251.
95
3383498.
9.7 be hiring for the following LIQUID Sliver
337
3506, evenings and weekends.
10 strand
Thursday, September 4, 7:30 p.m .
positions : Kitchen help, tills per $4 per strand . Also chokers
at Julia 's Farm Kennels. Two MALE grad to share lwo.bedroom
.
sons, waltresseswalters. $2 per 338-0127, 6 . 7 p.m.
93 VOLKSWAGEN Repair Service. C,KC licensed handlers In charge . Coralville apartment with same.
hour starting wage. Apply bet TEAC 1230 oren reel tape
Solon . 5'h years factory Irained. For more Informal/on dial , 1516170 after August 25
829
WHO DOES IT?
I
ween 15 p.m., Monday through
.
644 3666 or 6443661.
924 JS1 3562.
94
.
'}
Th urs day.
910 dec~, excellen condition, 5275.

ROOMMATE wanted to share


. BIRTHDAY,
3382746 after 5 p.m.
829 JOHN S VolvO & SlIlIb Repa ir . PROFESSIONAL dog groom ing. furnished apartment with two
ANNIVERSARY GIFTS
ADVERTISING COMPANY
REFRIGERATOR ideal for
Fast & Reasonable . All work Puppies, Kittens, tropical fish , pel females near campus 3387709
Artist 's portrait Charcoal, S10; Four persons over 16 to make dorms. Volkswagen hlgh.bacK guaranteed . 1020'h Gilbert Court. supplies. Brenneman Seed Store, 93
.
.
.
pastel, $25, oil. $100 and up. local telephone calls, S2 per hour seats. Bicycle . 337. 2727 before 3_5;;;1;;;.9;;;5;;;79;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9;;..
.17 l5CO 1st Avenue Soulh . 3388501.
351 0525 .
107 guaranleed, plus bonuses. Work 2:30.
9.10
917
full or part time. We also need
""-----------STEREO,televis ion repa irs. Rea fOur persons with good car and EMPIRE 888 VE stereo car. Paris & Service
HOUSE FOR SALE
sonable. Satisfaclion guaranteed liability insurance for local resl trldge and stylus, seldom used, for :JII Foreign Cars
SPOR
TING
GOODS
Call anytime, Mall, 351689695 dential parcel delivery. Earn $30 S25 . Sansul QS. l Quadraphonic Towing Service
.
per day or more. Start work synthesizer, S50 . Call 338 .0904. All Work Guaranteed
BY OWNER Fi ve room bun.
I serv!c.e. repa ir audio equipmp.nt, immediately. See Mrs. Hills at
9.3
DOWNHILL skits 17Scm ski boots galow 22 miles south on 218 . Cash
RACE BROOK
amplifiers . turntables . lape .. 1041 Arthur, Towncrest Plaza -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_ _ _ _
IMPORTS
10'12 M and 8'1. narrow. 'All chup. or terms. Under $10,000. Phone
players . Eric, 3386426.
9 2~ Suite G, Lower Level.
8.29
338-0904.
9-3 3196482756.
911
1947 S. Gilbert 351 -0150
BACK TO SCHOOL?
CHIPPER'S Tailor ShOp, 128'1, E PART time evenings . Rest .
Why not dO some of your
------~
Washington. Dial 351 1229. 921 aurant ; bartender ; game room
shopping at :
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
attendant . Pleasanl View Lodge,
GOODWILL
If*
EDITING, Advice, Instruction or 6262152. for interview appoint.
BUDGET STORE
*
papers, other wr itten mater ial . $! ment .
829
1410 First Avenue
Ifan hour. Evenings, 338 1302. 92'
IfIfWAITER waitress, cooks, pari
Open 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
LIGHT hauling, Tom and
ti!"e . Apply in person, Iowa City
Monday thru Saturday
!:
Davin. 3380891.
9, Pizza Hut , 1921 Keokuk .
9-2 CAMERA : Mamiya professional *
~
..

21
22
25
26
27
28

MISCELLANEOUS
AZ

HELP WANTED

______________________________________________

ADDRESSL-_______________________ PHONI ________________


CIT'Y___________________ " , ____________
TO FIGURE COST
Count IIIe number of worcls
In your ad, IIIen multiply
the number of words by tile
rate below. 8e sure 10 count
IdClress Indor PhOne num
ber. COIl equ.l, I Number
of Word,) x
p.r
Word).

(It.,.

Mill cempieteCI Ad .'./111


...... willi elltell or m_, orcltr to:
THE DAILY tOWAN
MINIMUM AD " WORDS
...... fit Ctmm.lcallonsC",ttr
I..JD.y, ...... . ... 2UC,.,weN
tow, City, 'owa
S o.YI .. ........... .
or Stop 1/1.
I. DIY' ....... ... ... ~,.,.....
All AdS PI,.~. In HVinet
It Dlys ............ fOe ..........
--No Rtfunell.
DeMlIM: II1.m. ftr IItxt ell,

JIc.,.,.....

522.

Page 12-The Dally 10wI_lowa City, low_Fri .. Au,. SO, 1175

Hawkeye swinnning coach

plans rebuilding program


By TOM QUINLAN
Aulstant Spor1I Edltar
Glenn Patton doesn't want to
walt long to bring a winning
team to Iowa - be wantl one

now."
"There's no reason why
swimming can't be competitive
here," said the first-year Cllach.
"We've got excellent facilities
and an excellent school."
Building a solid swimming
team at Iowa will be a tough
chore, considering past performances. The Hawks have
finished In the bottom of the Big
Ten pool four straight years,
and last season's 0-8 record did
not help matters.
Butdon'ttellPatton; he won't
believe a word.
Patton led his teams It Alfred
Tech In New York &0 four
consecutive 'national junior
college titles and was named JC
swimming coach of the year
three times. And his accomplishments don't end with
Alfred Tech.
The 33-year-old Patton served
as the assistant coach for the
U.S. team that won 16 of 22 gold
medals at the 1973 World
University Games in Moscow.
He is a past president of the
National Junior College
Coacbes Association of America
and is the only JC coach to serve
on the board of directors of the
International Swimming Hall of
Fame.
And since becoming the UI
head coach Aug. I., when Bob
Allen resigned with 17 seasons
at the helm , Patton has initiated
a new list of goals.
" I want to try to have a
winning swimming team immediately," he emphasized .
"And that means it's going to
take a lot of hard work.
" I'd like to move us out of last
place in the Big Ten this year
and win at least six of our 11
meets.
"For the second year, I'd like
the program to progress well
enough that we'll be In the top
five in the Big Ten," he said.
"And by the third year, I hope
we'll be battling the top three In
the conreren~e and he on our
way to becoming a national
contender," he said.
Three years is a short time to

bring Iowa out of the conference


cellar and Into the limelight, but
Patton believes his goals are
realistic.
"There are two keys to
realWng these goals," be said,
"The first is recruiting and the
second is to do something with
those recruits."
Recruiting is a program that
Patton does not like to get
behind In . Already he's brought
along two national champs to
bolster the tank squad.
Joining the Hawkeye. this flU
wUl be Paul Eaton, who WI8
selected the top JC swimmer In
the nation thl, year. and Kent
Peanon, a nallonal champ In
the 200 and ~yard freestyle.
Eaton swam for Patton last
season at Alfred Tech, winning
titles in the 50- and l(J().yard
freestyles, the l(J().yard butterfly and a.nchoring national
JC
champion
4oo-yard
freestyle relay team . The
Norwich , N.Y. native set
records In aU four events.
Eaton has three years
eligibility remaining.
Pearson transferred from
DuPage JC In Chicago and is
"an excellent swimmer," according to Patton .
Three other recruits have also
enrolled at Iowa this fall. Twins
Jeff and John Heintzman of
Peoria , Ill., and Norm
Schuckler of Alfred Tech have
joined the program . John
Heintzman swims the butterfly
and distance freestyle events
while brother Jeff specializes in
the breaststroke and individual
medley . Schuckler finished
third in the national JC competition in the distance
freestyle.
And there are some fine
performers at Iowa already.
Diver Jon Buckley returns this
year after qualifying for the
nationals last season_ Also,
distance freestyle specialist
Shannon Wood was a consistent
performer for the Hawks_
"We have a nucleus of
returning veterans which
should provide for excellent
leadership which I will count on
heavily," Patton explained ,
" That's what the program
needs right now," he said,
"some aggressive leadership

College golfers advance


in U.S. Amateur play
RICHMOND, Va. CAP) - AIl- edged William Volyes of
American Curtis Strange wiped Marietta, Ga., 1-Up, with a sevout a one-hole deficit by winning en-foot par putt on the 18th after
five in a row Thursday and blowing a three-hole lead.
Thursday's round cut the field
advanced through the third
round of the U.S. Amateur Golf to 32 players, who will play the
Championships with three other two '18-hole rounds today that
big-name college stars-Andy will reduce the original list of
Bean, Keith Fergus and Bob 200 to the eight quarterfinalists ..
Byman.
Strange, 20, of Virginia
The defeat of Giles, U.S.
Beach , Va., who won the Na- Amateur titleholder in 1972, had
tional Collegiate Athletic Asso- left th is Diamond Anniversary
ciation championship In 1974 as Tournament over the James
a freshman at Wake Forest, River Course of the Country
holed out a 120-foot wedge shot Club of Virginia without a forfor an eagle for one of two con- mer champion . Last year's winsecutive twos he used for a 4- ner, Jerry Pate, turned pro this
and-2 victory over John Jacobs summer, and Bill Campbell of Riverside, Calif.
who won in 1964 - was eliminaThe 22-year-old Bean, a Uni- ted on Tuesday.
Tom Jones, second team Allversity of Florida AU-American
from Lakeland, Fla ., beat Gary American from Oklahoma State
Jacobson of Minnetonka, Minn., and Tulsa. Okla., edged William
3-and-2, and Fergus, an AU- Britton of New York, 2-1, but
American from the University former national junior chamof Houston who lives in that pion Mike BraMan of Salinas,
Texas city, sidelined Pete WaU,
Calif., was beaten by 23-yearenborn of Roanoke, Va., 4-and- old Ronnie Kelley of Richmond,
3.

and enthusiasm."
That process is underway
right now as the Iowa swim
team is practicing at the City
Park pool from 3-5:30 p.m.
daily.
"Swimming is a sport where
you need to exercise year
round," Patton said . "It's
necessary to train very heavily
in tbe early part of the season.
"I like to honestly tell my
swimmers that at the end of the
year, they've worked harder
than anyone else - conditioning
wise."
His conditioning program
paid off at Alfred Tech, where
everyone of bis swimmers
peaked at the nationals and
swam their personal bests.
Palton Is planning a little
enthusiasm for the program on
his own, however _He's Involved
In reconditioning the Field
House swimming area with the
help
of a few friends.
Persons in Iowa City have
donated 80 gaUons of paint for
the much-needed renovation
and the coach has talked his
swimmers into labor on Labor
Day.
"I'm very pleased with the
Willingness the community has
shown in offering their help," he
said. "They've donated paint
and equipment and next week a
few of the mothers have offered
to cook meals for some of the
boys at the Dolphin House."
He's also launched a Swimming Alumni program to aid in
the recruiting. Wally His, an
Olympic gold medalist and Big
Ten and national champ for the
Hawks has offered his support
along with Bowen Stassforth, a
silver-medal winner and also a
Big Ten and NCAA tiUist.
So the work it will take to drag
Iowa swimming out of the deep
end has apparently begun. And
Patton is pulling the hardest.

Wellington
returns
to praetiee

for ~ $99? That's ~ unreal I A super


compact, twoway system that fils anywhere, Including your budget. Natural oak cabinet. Brown
fabric grille ,
JBL

II

Me
I
Ja
101

402 Highland Court

338-7347

de
J'8

We are interested in a few good men


who are turned off by regular fraternities
Photo by Lynn Hopkin.

and institutionalized living. We are

,SwtmmlDg Coecb Glean Pattoa "anti a wlnDer-aow.

~~ii~~;:=:'~'~~~~~-------l
I~

a new generation of Greek life.

3 inch pot
$1.25
Check out our open house and free concert
featuring T~rra Firma Sunday, Aug. 30
at 1

EPISCIA
a gem with leaves of frosty
silver-mint, edged in a frosty
chocolate brown.

p.m.

Free food and beverages.

the , greenery
14 e. benton

351- 6005

JOHN DOE
3112 STEAMBOAT DR.
WESTWIN 0, MISSOURI

3151
19

PAY TOTHE
ORDER OF

DOLLARS

WESTWINDNATIONAL BANI(

WESTWIND , MISSOURI
a:m "U'73

.
31S1

JOHN DOE
1100 COLLEGE ST. """"'317-'1999
IOWAClTY. IOWAm40
P4V TO THE

ORDER OF.

_____.12._ _
S

DOLLARS

I~B Iowa Slate


Bank l'I'rusl Company
10WI CII"
10.1 IIUO

1I1," ll"'U

Isn't the answer obvious?1


There are some very good reasons whv vou should have a checking ac
count In Iowa Cltv. With an Iowa State Bank checking account, you will
have the economV of no merchant check cashing charges. You will allO
have the convenience of no hassles & speed of transaction, An Iowa State
Bank checking account will make vour stav in Iowa City a pleasurable
one. And cIon't forget in a matter of 5 minutes we provide you with a
FAE E Photo 1.0. with your account.
Stop in & meet our "People Serving People,"

I
S Iowa Stat e Bank & Trust Co.

po
tl~

ph

: Which of
these tWQchecks will be
easier to use in lowaCity1

Lamonica
anxious to
play tonight

In

QUES I

4-3.

But the quickest executioner


was Byman, Strange's Wake
Forest teammate from Raleigh,
N.C., who routed Brian Shanks
of Phoenix 8-and~,
Another winner was 23-yearold Stan Price of Pittsburgh,
who on Wednesday beat the
tournament favorite Vinnie
Giles of Richmond, the current. Tailback Rodney Wellington
returned to practice with the
British Amateur tlUist.
Price, who said he "thought Iowa footbaU team Thursday
I'd be driving bome tomorrow," after being Sidelined four days
with bruised ribs, sustained in
Saturday'S scrimmage.
Offensive tackle Rod Walters,
however, remained sidelined
with a strained calf muscle. The
6-ot, 260-pound lineman has been
out three days.
ANAHEIM (AP) - Daryle
As the Hawks went through
Lamonica would like it known their first day of single prache's no slacker.
tices Thursday, Coach ComThe veteran quarterback of mlngs said, "We continued our
the Southern California Sun, streak. We haven't had a bad
who celebrated his 34th birth- workout yet."
day a month ago, has missed
Commings indicated that
three games with a double her- sophomore quarterback Tom
nia and was supposed to be out McLaughlin has been firmly
another four weeks. But he'D establishing himself as the No. 1
probably see action tonlabt quarterback In recent pracwben tbe Sun taka on tbe tices, and added that defensive
Philadelphia Bell in a World tackles Rick Marsh and Warren
Peiffer "continue to improve."
Football League game.
"He wanted to play last He also said Barry Tomasetti,
week," said Sun Coach Tom recently moved from defensive
Fears, "He's been anxiowl to to offensive tackle, "haa been
play but we wanted to walt until doing a whale of a job."
The Hawlteyes will scrimthe doctor gave him a complete
male allain Saturday at 4 p,m.
clean bill of health."

-JIL's
new Decade 16

9n the corner of Clinton & W hlngton

66.JUST ACROSS FROM CAMPUS"

Anda mungkin juga menyukai