4
oil · low · on Serving the University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City < 1"."II,hH I.. II" low. City, low. 52240 - WHo, Au ••• ' 5, 1. '7. •• CO .. t, copy Kills at Least 31 in Caribbea- n- lOrnLET,E STOCKS ' Celia ·· Rakes Texas . " CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex . I.fI - Hurri· cane Celia was dying in the mountains of Mexico Tuesday after moving across Texas and leaving this re:;ort city 01 335,000 crippled - without gas or electri- city and heavily damaged. The hurricane , worst 01 the season, left 31 known dead - 5 in QJba, 14 in Florida and 12 in Texas . The deaths in Florida blamed on undertows and high waters caused by Cella as she whipped tbrough the Caribbean. Off icl.11 .. Id ,. pet' cent tf downtown Corpul Christi Wit dtltnyed er Mdl., d.mll!led, with 70 per cent tf the re.,"n· ti.1 .re •• Ilmlleri., wrecked. The picture WII the 11m. In surroundl .. Ie_. Official tentative estimates of damage in Corpus Christi were $200 million . At least three oil storage tanks bum· ed on the edge 01 the cll and one oW· cial said there was a pos ibility that the town of Ingleside where they blazed may be evacuated. Four were known dead and 8 fifth pre· sumed drowned here . Celi. c.used the five duth, I" Cub. whll. she .'111 WI. onl., • ,'orm. Ch.rles Minson yesterd.y r.lsed 'his copy of the first edition of thlI Los Ang ... s DISASTER AREA Front Page Times, showing it to his jury. Th. jurors w.r. polled to determln. whether they h.d ... n the headlin. .nd wheth.r th.y wert Influ.nced by It. Only OM •• Id h. ",ight be but he .dd.d that h. problbly WDuld not be. - AP Wir.photo Some towns were virtually wiped out by winds. which the Weather Bureau of· ficially stated Tuesday were 160 miles per hour. Buildings were destroyed and show windows popped slivers of glass into the streets like shrapnel. Judge Polls Jurors- Manson Shows Headline Late Tuesday, President Nixon declar- ed thc Christi area a major dlsa ter area and authorized federal funds to help relief measures . The amount 01 money to be made available was not determined at once . LOS ANGELES (A'I - The judge polled Jurors at the Sharon Tate murder trial Tuesday - then sentenced a defense at· torney to three nights In jail - after Charles M. Manson held aloft a banner headline saying: " Manson Guilty, Nixon Declares ." Only one juror said he might be In· fluenced by the headline , but added that he thought not. M.nson '. utlon clme aft.r the ludge hid denied without comm.nt dlfense motion lor a mistrial based on Nixon'. MoneI.y .t.t.m.nt - Ilt.r .mtndtcl - III" MlIn.on WII guilty of multlpll mur· cltrl. Attorney Daye Shinn admitted he had placed the newspaper on a table where Manson could get 10 II. but . aid he saw only the sports beclion and thrught the front page with the headline had been removed . The judge noted that he had ordered in the morning that all papers with Ihe headline be removed He said of Shinn : " His (ailure to obey It disrupted this trial and jeopardi z ed Ihis trial." Only one of the 12 juror and 6 aller· nates quesllonedaid the Incident PCI" haps could influ ence him Juror No . 3 said it might. but he didn't think so. Two said they hadn't seen the headline. All took their oath anew. Coprol.cutor Aaron 5tovilr shouted, "Your Honorl " when he spotted Min· lon's .c'ion. N.wsm.n hurd onl gasp or Disaccreditation Re 'Inaccurate/-Maclean Reports that the American Council on Education for Journalism (ACEJ) has withdrawn its accreditation of two se· quences in the University of Iowa 's School of Journalism curriculum are "gross ly inaccurate," according to Mal· colm MacLean, director of the school. ACEJ has excluded th& news-edltorial and magazine sequences from its listing M accredited sequences , MacLean said in Minneapolis , Minn .. Tuesday , because the school no longer offers those sequenc· es. They were incorporated last year into ODe general journalism program. ACEJ will list only the advertising sequence as accredited . The n.w progr.m has not undergone ""m.I occreditltlon procedur •• , Mac· Llln .. id. " An ACEJ accreditation guideline states that, "A sequence carrying a new name and a new structure cannot be listed un- IiI it has been evaluated." ACEJ is an association of journalism educators that supplies accreditation list· ings of journalism schools at about 60 major American universities. The list· Ings are contained in a pamphlet to be mailed to 20 . 000 parents , schools, and libraries . MacLean said that if the pamphlet goes out in Its present form, "it will give many readers the impression that we no longer provide education in the news· editorial and magazine fields. "Sine. listing of lequenctl in thlI ACEJ Plmphlet is of such grelt import.net Ie IfIoae Sttking accuret. inform.tion .bo:lt IOUrnalilm omiSiion of the .. 1Iq\Itnc .. or omission of an Ixpl.NlIory "ltem.nt amount. to 'de f.do' dl.· iCcr.dlt.lion. "This would not only be unwarranted but would also be highly arbitrary, i .-proper and unethical. If accreditation is il!1 PGr1 ant . then disaccreditation - or the i'l1pres'ion o( disaccreditation - "'usl also be important," MacLean slat· ed. The Davenport Times-Democrat Tues· day quoted ACEJ president Frank Ahl· il'en, Memphis, Tennessee, as saying til at Jse commission had never been invited to the university to evaluate lhe new pr0- gram. JaMes Murphy. MacLean's administra· tive assistant, said that MacLean had in· formally invited the accrediting commis· sion to evaluate the new program but he said that MacLean "didn't know" that a formal request was required. Murphy said that last January Mac- 1f>an received a reminder from ACEJ of. ficials that the accrediting organizalion must invllstigate the new program before it could be approved . In hi' Inlwer to the r.minder, Mur· phy Slid, MacLun told the ACEJ oHici· III th.t h. would a9r" to hlv. only thlI Idvertillng sequence lided as accredit· ed until the MW progr.m could be .valu. • ted. Murphy said that in late April. a member of the ACEJ evaluation com· mission told MacLean that the school should request (ull accreditation after all, on the grounds that tbe general journalism program wasn't new but was a combination of two old sequences. When MacLean wrote informally re- questing accreditation May 4, ACEJ of- ficials did not reply . Murphy said. In a letter dated July 30, MacLean again informall y invited the accrediting commission to " come and visit us ." MacLean has received no reply to last week's letter either. Murphy said. Dewey Stuit, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, called the ACEJ' decision to exclude the two sequences in its ac· credltation listings "technical In nature and in my judgement arbitrary and bureaucratic ." Stuit told the Daily Iowan Tue day that " ACEJ should have noted the na· ture of the change" in the new program. "It was grossly unfair for ACEJ to leave the impression that the only ac· credited sequence is advertising," Stuit said . Lft Th.yer, prOfelse, of lournalilm, lelel the D.lly Iowan Tu.sd.y tha' ACEJ "acted either il"g.lIy or uMthically" in r ..... i.. inform.tion to the pr ... without 'MWerltlg MacLlln's I.tlers. He called the issue a "confrontation between people who want radical innoya- . tion and people wt(o want to do things the same old way." Accreditation commissions serve only to standardize education, not to regulale its quality, Thayer said. from the jury box. A balliH quickly con· fiscated the plpar, .n .. rly edition of TU'ld.y'. Los Angel .. Tim.s. nt Nixon commented londay fha. guilty of eight murders , then la er aid he didn't mean 10 pre· judge lhe case. Superior Court Judge Charles H. Old· er denied without comment a dee nse lOtion for a mistrial dUQ to Ihe r marX. He aid lie had tak n peelal precau · lions to prevent jurors from learning of the comment. and "I'm satisfied there has been no expo ure." Manson th.n orolt, slylng, "I might be able to help 'he court .tralght.n out this ",ess," .nd mad •• mo"on to rtort- 5ent himself. Th. judg., a. h. has don. with similar Plst r.questa, turn.d him down. Linda Kasabian , the sta te 's sta r wit· neFs, then resumed the stand for the seventh day for cross-examination . Nixon, at a law enforcement confer· ence in Denver. told reporters Monday while saying news media sometimes make heroes of criminals: " Here is a man (Manson ) who was guilty, directly or indirectly, of eight murders without reason. " C,lia W.I reported battering herself Grades, Diplomas To Se Available Grades for the 1970 summcr ession may be pk!;ed up ill the rC'Ii trar's of· fice . Room BI Jes up Hall. Aug. 19 and 20 from 8:30 a. m. to 4:30 p.m. Students may have their grades mailed to them if they provide the regl trar's office with a stamped , self·addressed envelope before Aug. 18. Grades will be mailed only to providing the envelope. Diplomas for students graduating at the end 01 Ihe 1970 summer session will be Aug . 7 from 2:30 to 4 p.m. In 121A Schaeffer Ha II. S:udents may pick up grades or diplomas for their spouses by presenting lhe spouse's 10 card . Otherwi e each student must obtain his or her own grades or diploma . Diplomas not picked up by Aug. 7 will be mailed the following week . Israel Won't PullOut Of All Captured Land JERUSALEM (A'I - Prime Minister Golda Meir said Tuesday thaL Israel will not withdraw from the ler· ritory captured in 1967 and her deputy indicated the United States had set limits to Soviet involvement in the Middle East war. Mrs. Meir , in an address to Israel's Knesset - parliament - said Israel accepted an American peace proposal and is willing to negotiate despite doubts about the Arab leaders' sin· cerity. . Deputy Prime Mlni.t.r Yitlil AI"", in deM" fellowl.. Mrs. Meir'. IpllCh, Nld Pre.idtnt Nixon told Is· rllii I.eders th.t the United 5t.tn' hid drawn the 11M on Soviet aul,t. Ince to the Ar.b countri ... {Ie did not say if that meant the United States had formally warned Ule Soviet Union or threatened retaliation. But he did say that if the UniteQ Stales had taken such a stand earlier. it cOllld have prevented the increasing Soviet involvement in the war. The Soviet Union has provided most of Egypt's military hardware and sent it thousands of military advisers. captlnc. tf the pelce pl.n, emph"illd th.t lu .. 1 1M. III intention of withdrew· ing fnm III of the Ar.b I.nd It occupllel in the JUM 1"7 w.r. Israeli troops at that time seized Old Jerusalem, Jordan's west bank , Syria's Golan Heights as weU as Egypt's Sinai Desert. She said there has been no decision yet "on the issue of the map of peace," but she repeateQ Israel's determination not to return to the frontiers of June 4, 1967 - the day before the Middle East war started - which gave' the Arabs "decisive advantages." The plan, proposed by U.S . Secretary of State William P. Rogers , calls for 9tkIay cease·fire and resumption of eC· forts by U.N. meQlator Gunnar V. Jar· ring of Sweden to bring the two sides to negotiations based on the November 1967 U.N. Security Council resolution. The resolution calls for wlthdraw.1 of Is- raeli forces from all soil seized io the 1967 war. T1It I.rftll Clbintt v.tt4 'ritlay .. Kcept the U.S. pe.ce pIen IlrtllCly IC> cepttd by Eg.,pt .nd Jord .... As Jarring resumed consultations in New York with the big powers and rep- resentatives of Israel and the Arab states, Secretary·General U Thant pledged the full resour-ces of the United Nations to help push peace efforts. Partly Cloudy Washington sources said Tuesday that Soviet pilots flying Egyptian MIGs clashed twice with Israeli war· planes in the past 10 days . 11ley said evidence indicated that two of four MIG21 jels downed by Israeli pilots July 30 were flown by Russians ' and possibly all four had Soviet pilots. In the first incident five days earlier, Soviet pilots chased Israeli planes back across the ,.rtly cleully .nd w ... rnor WedM.uy Suez Canal and neither side suffered with ch.tnce of .... wtn ctntlnulng ..... I PIrtly cloudy with IItt.. t.mpet'mw. asses, the sources said. ch.tngo Wedn0t4.y nitht II1II TIIundr( Mrs. Melr, lllllinl", "rill', rtply.. with Iewa In the u ......... H .... T1Iun- the UniMd St .... '" her country', Ie' "I "'y I" .... til, , to .... th In the meum.1M tf Millet TIIHda., .fttr ,weepi", __ Del Rio P .. , 150 miles northw •• t tf here. The Wuther IurHU Nid Its wind. ,were clocked .t " m.p.h. T1It tf Cell. held INr.I .. I. .. Hurrlunt ""1M tf 1"7 which left the rich, hlthl., pepullted "wer Rio Grende V.I .. ., suHeri .. frem Nv.re flood. fer weeki. ""1M', .., winch wer. 135 m.p.h. FLOOD WARNING But Celia 's rainfall of less than inches on the upper watershed of the Rio Grande nowhere approached the 30 inches that fell as Beulah entered Mex· ico. However, nash nood warnings were issued for tributaries of the Rio and the Nueces River, which empties at Corpus Christl. was rising rapidly . City Manager Gay Walker of Port Aransas said three bodies were found there. Cell.', pe.k wind .,..., 01 U' m.p.h. Mend.y Ifltrneon comINred with C.mil· "'. 200 m.p.h. velocity when It hit the MIs.lnlppl c..,t In 1"'. and C.rl.'. ferct tf 175 m.p.h. when It .truck Tex •• Mrlh tf Cerpu. Chrl.tl In 1"1. Corpus Christi Mayor Jack Blackmon, surveying the devastation and calling the city I "shamble!," still could declare , "The people's spirit is remarkably good and optimistic." . Blackmon attributed some of the city's problems to the fact that the Weather Bureau £IrsI' estimated winds of only 90 m.p.h., then 115 m.p.h., and never went as high as the 145 m.p.h. reported Mon. day night and which were found later to have been 160 m.p. h. Jury to Hear Arguments Today in Trail of Ford With all evidence admitted in the case of Stephen Ford, assistant professor of business administration, both the defel\$C and prosecution will present their argu· ments to the jury as the trial moves Into its third day today in Johnson County District Court. Ford is charged with malicious Injury to a building after he allegedly damaged a door of the Recreation Building during the May 1 anti·ROTC demonstration here. A. wilMssel for the defenN le.tlllt4 Tutld.y, Joseph John.ton, Ford' •• tter· MY. .".mpled 10 tst.bllah th.t F.r" h.d .Ire.dy INtsed thrOlJ!lh the door .. the Itecreatlon Building before II w •• d.mlcrld . Johnlton .ouClht to prOVI thlt, h.vl"a '''Ic. enlered the building, Ford r.",.i"ld th.re .nd did not return t. thl d.m.cred door. Patricia Kirkpatrick. A4. Des Moine , participant in thl' . Mav t demonstration. she ob erved Ford being pushed the door by a group of the delT'ol1strators before it was damaged . She said the door was at a 9tkIegree anl!le when she observed Ford being pwhed throullh it. Lt. Kenneth Saylor of Campus Securi· ty had ellrllcr testified that the door was pushed back nat against the building when he examined it for damage after the demonstrators had entered the build· in!! Klrkp.'rick 1.ld .fltr Ford h.d .nfer. ed thlI building .h. Wit pushld thrtugh thlI door her"lf. She IddecI W NW Ford the enti.e time h. w., .t the demontt •• tlon Ind did not ... him "IV. the Recreation Bulldl.. one. 1M h.d .nt.red it. Kirkpatrick said that before he enter· ed the building Ford had had his hands on the upper edge of the door at the same time that other people were also holding on to the door . Mark Harding, G, Grimes, also a part· iCipant In the demonstration , testified, "He (Ford) was holding on to the edge of the door . A lot of people had their hands on the door. I never saw the door pushed beyond 90 degrees ." Ford, testifying in his own behalf, des· cribed the sequence of events leading up to the point at which he was pusheQ through the Recreation Building door . When he arrived at the Recreation Building , Ford said, he was "well back" In the crowd gathered around the door to the building. He said when two ROTC cadets attempted to enter the building the demonstrators "grabbed the door to keep il (rom being closed." "I worked my w.y up fnnt ..... wh.t w •• gol", on," Fen! N"'. "At seme pelnt I lolntel the pet .... with their IMnd. l1li the deer In m., .tttmpt .. help holel it open se I ceulel got In.'' "I was always jostled by people. there were so many packed in. One or two people attempted to wedge themselves in the door to open It. The campus 'se: Hearing Will Temporary Iniunction The question of whether to make permanent a temporary injunction bar- ring student disturbances will be de· cided today at a Johoson County Dis- trict Court hearing. The city obtained the injunction May 7 after a series of disturbances In which students protested American in· yolvement In the Indochina war and the shooting 01 four Kent State Univer· sity students. The injunction banned disrupting, obstructing or interfering with any function , activity or event authorized by the University of low. and prohibit- ed obstructing access to any buUding or rooms in Iowa City or obstructing the normal use of public streets and hiibwaya. curity officers were also pulling on the door . They were pulllng the panic bar." Ford testified that others had their hands on the door all the time he was holding it. He added that the door did not go beyond a 90 degr« angle whlle he had his hands on it. "I was swept Into the building when the door wu at 65 or 70 degree angle," he stated. 1",I.lnl", hi. INrtlclINtlon In the demen.tr.tItn, Fen! IIId he w.. there .n .... 1, moral, .nd pelltlcal g"",nd •. .. It seemed to be a way to draw atten· tlon to the way we felt about the war in Vietnam and the invasion of Cambodia," Ford said. He said he felt no animosity toward ROTC, but considered it "a viable al· ternative to the draft which enables stu· dents to stay In school. " He added, "1 think that tbe existence of programs like ROTC does enable Americans to CIIrry on a war in Vietnam but I do not harbor any ill will toward people in ROTC or ROTC as an institu· tion. " Ford testified that whep he decided to attend the demonstration he had no in- tention of doing any damage to the build· ing or its occupants . - "I had no desire to commit an Wega! act," he said . Court reconvenes at 9 a.m. today, and the case is expected to go to the jury for deliberation by noon. Council Hears T raining Plan For Draft Board A program for the training of draft board members In Johnson County was presenled to the City Council Tuesday nIght by Leonard Klaif, a representative for the Hawkeye Area Draft Information Center (HAOlC). KJaif claimed that members of draft boards are not qualified to serve be· cause the federal government does not provide training for them in selective I service duties. The proposal submitted by Klaif sug· gested that Iowa City take the responsi· bllity for extensive training of the John· son County draft board members. The City Council accepted KlaiI's pro- posal for study lind moved to discuss the resolution al the informal council meet· Ing Monday. The council also heard the complaint of Daniel Lechay, who operates a hot dog push cart at the corner of Clinton and Washington Streets , that Iowa City policemen had "harrassed" him and pre· vented him from selling his merchan· dise on the grounds that he was violating a city ordinaa The council voled to discuss the matter at Monday's session . The council scheduled a public hearing for the University of Iowa development plan for the urban renewal project at 7 p.m. Sept. 1. The next regularly scheduled City Council meeting is at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 18. BULLETIN DETROIT (A'I - Mrs . George Romney took an early lead over conservative State Sen. Robert Huber for the Re· publican U.s. Senate nomination In of four states holding primary elections. Gov. William Milliken, who moved up to the chief executive spot when Romney resigned early last year to join the Nixon administration, took a commanding lead over hla only opponent, Howell magazine publlsber James Turner. let ...... 1Nry,,.1

Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1970-08-05dailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-05.pdf1970/08/05  · left 31 known dead - 5 in QJba, 14 in Florida and 12 in Texas. The deaths

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Page 1: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1970-08-05dailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-05.pdf1970/08/05  · left 31 known dead - 5 in QJba, 14 in Florida and 12 in Texas. The deaths

oil ·low·on Serving the University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City

< 1"."II,hH I.. II" low. City, low. 52240 - WHo, Au ••• ' 5, 1.'7. •• CO .. t, • copy

Kills at Least 31 in Caribbea-n-

lOrnLET,E STOCKS "~'

'Celia ··Rakes Texas . ~ " CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. I.fI - Hurri·

cane Celia was dying in the mountains of Mexico Tuesday after moving across Texas and leaving this re:;ort city 01 335,000 crippled - without gas or electri­city and heavily damaged.

The hurricane, worst 01 the season, left 31 known dead - 5 in QJba, 14 in Florida and 12 in Texas. The deaths in Florida ~ere blamed on undertows and high waters caused by Cella as she whipped tbrough the Caribbean.

Off icl.11 .. Id ,. pet' cent tf downtown Corpul Christi Wit dtltnyed er Mdl., d.mll!led, with 70 per cent tf the re.,"n· ti.1 .re •• Ilmlleri., wrecked. The picture WII the 11m. In surroundl .. Ie_.

Official tentative estimates of damage in Corpus Christi were $200 million.

At least three oil storage tanks bum· ed on the edge 01 the cll and one oW· cial said there was a pos ibility that the town of Ingleside where they blazed may be evacuated.

Four were known dead and 8 fifth pre· sumed drowned here.

Celi. c.used the five duth, I" Cub. whll. she .'111 WI. onl., • ,'orm.

Ch.rles Minson yesterd.y r.lsed 'his copy of the first edition of thlI Los Ang ... s DISASTER AREA

Front Page Times, showing it to his jury. Th. jurors w.r. polled to determln. whether they h.d ... n the headlin. .nd wheth.r th.y wert Influ.nced by It. Only OM •• Id h. ",ight be but he .dd.d that h. problbly WDuld not be. - AP Wir.photo

Some towns were virtually wiped out by winds. which the Weather Bureau of· ficially stated Tuesday were 160 miles per hour. Buildings were destroyed and show windows popped slivers of glass into the streets like shrapnel.

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

Judge Polls Jurors-

Manson Shows Headline Late Tuesday, President Nixon declar­

ed thc C~rpus Christi area a major dlsa ter area and authorized federal funds to help relief measures. The amount 01 money to be made available was not determined at once.

LOS ANGELES (A'I - The judge polled Jurors at the Sharon Tate murder trial Tuesday - then sentenced a defense at· torney to three nights In jail - after Charles M. Manson held aloft a banner headline saying: "Manson Guilty, Nixon Declares."

Only one juror said he might be In· fluenced by the headline, but added that he thought not.

M.nson'. utlon clme aft.r the ludge hid denied without comm.nt • dlfense motion lor a mistrial based on Nixon'. MoneI.y .t.t.m.nt - Ilt.r .mtndtcl -III" MlIn.on WII guilty of multlpll mur· cltrl.

Attorney Daye Shinn admitted he had placed the newspaper on a table where

Manson could get 10 II. but . aid he saw only the sports beclion and thrught the front page with the headline had been removed.

The judge noted that he had ordered in the morning that all papers with Ihe headline be removed He said of Shinn : "His (ailure to obey It disrupted this trial and jeopardized Ihis trial."

Only one of the 12 juror and 6 aller· nates quesllonedaid the Incident PCI" haps could influence him Juror No. 3 said it might. but he didn't think so. Two said they hadn't seen the headline. All took their oath anew.

Coprol.cutor Aaron 5tovilr shouted, "Your Honorl " when he spotted Min· lon's .c'ion. N.wsm.n hurd onl gasp

or Disaccreditation Re 'Inaccurate/-Maclean

Reports that the American Council on Education for Journalism (ACEJ) has withdrawn its accreditation of two se· quences in the University of Iowa 's School of Journalism curriculum are "grossly inaccurate," according to Mal· colm MacLean, director of the school.

ACEJ has excluded th& news-edltorial and magazine sequences from its listing M accredited sequences, MacLean said in Minneapolis, Minn .. Tuesday, because the school no longer offers those sequenc· es. They were incorporated last year into ODe general journalism program. ACEJ will list only the advertising sequence as accredited.

The n.w progr.m has not undergone ""m.I occreditltlon procedur •• , Mac· Llln .. id.

" An ACEJ accreditation guideline states that, "A sequence carrying a new name and a new structure cannot be listed un­IiI it has been evaluated."

ACEJ is an association of journalism educators that supplies accreditation list· ings of journalism schools at about 60 major American universities. The list· Ings are contained in a pamphlet to be mailed to 20.000 parents, schools, and libraries.

MacLean said that if the pamphlet goes out in Its present form, "it will give many readers the impression that we no longer provide education in the news· editorial and magazine fields.

"Sine. listing of lequenctl in thlI ACEJ Plmphlet is of such grelt import.net Ie IfIoae Sttking accuret. inform.tion .bo:lt IOUrnalilm Idu~.tion, omiSiion of the .. 1Iq\Itnc .. or omission of an Ixpl.NlIory "ltem.nt amount. to • 'de f.do' dl.· iCcr.dlt.lion.

"This would not only be unwarranted but would also be highly arbitrary, i.-I· proper and unethical. If accreditation is il!1 PGr1 ant. then disaccreditation - or the i'l1pres'ion o( disaccreditation -"'usl also be important," MacLean slat· ed.

The Davenport Times-Democrat Tues· day quoted ACEJ president Frank Ahl· il'en, Memphis, Tennessee, as saying til at Jse commission had never been invited to the university to evaluate lhe new pr0-gram.

JaMes Murphy. MacLean's administra· tive assistant, said that MacLean had in· formally invited the accrediting commis· sion to evaluate the new program but he said that MacLean "didn't know" that a formal request was required.

Murphy said that last January Mac-1f>an received a reminder from ACEJ of. ficials that the accrediting organizalion must invllstigate the new program before it could be approved.

In hi' Inlwer to the r.minder, Mur· phy Slid, MacLun told the ACEJ oHici· III th.t h. would a9r" to hlv. only thlI Idvertillng sequence lided as accredit· ed until the MW progr.m could be .valu. • ted.

Murphy said that in late April. a member of the ACEJ evaluation com· mission told MacLean that the school should request (ull accreditation after all, on the grounds that tbe general journalism program wasn't new but was a combination of two old sequences.

When MacLean wrote informally re­questing accreditation May 4, ACEJ of­ficials did not reply . Murphy said.

In a letter dated July 30, MacLean again informally invited the accrediting commission to "come and visit us." MacLean has received no reply to last week's letter either. Murphy said.

Dewey Stuit, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, called the ACEJ' decision to exclude the two sequences in its ac· credltation listings "technical In nature and in my judgement arbitrary and bureaucratic. "

Stuit told the Daily Iowan Tue day that "ACEJ should have noted the na· ture of the change" in the new program.

"It was grossly unfair for ACEJ to leave the impression that the only ac· credited sequence is advertising," Stuit said.

Lft Th.yer, prOfelse, of lournalilm, lelel the D.lly Iowan Tu.sd.y tha' ACEJ "acted either il"g.lIy or uMthically" in r ..... i.. inform.tion to the pr ... without 'MWerltlg MacLlln's I.tlers.

He called the issue a "confrontation between people who want radical innoya­

. tion and people wt(o want to do things the same old way."

Accreditation commissions serve only to standardize education, not to regulale its quality, Thayer said.

from the jury box. A balliH quickly con· fiscated the plpar, .n .. rly edition of TU'ld.y'. Los Angel .. Tim.s.

Pre~id nt Nixon commented londay fha. ~lallSOI1 ~a guilty of eight murders, then la er aid he didn't mean 10 pre· • judge lhe case.

Superior Court Judge Charles H. Old· er denied without comment a dee nse lOtion for a mistrial dUQ to Ihe r marX. He aid lie had tak n peelal precau·

lions to prevent jurors from learning of the comment. and "I'm satisfied there has been no expo ure."

Manson th.n orolt, slylng, "I might be able to help 'he court .tralght.n out this ",ess," .nd mad •• mo"on to rtort-5ent himself. Th. judg., a. h. has don. with similar Plst r.questa, turn.d him down.

Linda Kasabian, the state's star wit· neFs, then resumed the stand for the seventh day for cross-examination.

Nixon, at a law enforcement confer· ence in Denver. told reporters Monday while saying news media sometimes make heroes of criminals: "Here is a man (Manson) who was guilty, directly or indirectly, of eight murders without reason."

C,lia W.I reported battering herself

Grades, Diplomas To Se Available

Grades for the 1970 summcr ession may be pk!;ed up ill the rC'Ii trar's of· fice . Room BI Jes up Hall. Aug. 19 and 20 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Students may have their grades mailed to them if they provide the regl trar's office with a stamped, self·addressed envelope before Aug. 18.

Grades will be mailed only to stud~nts providing the envelope.

Diplomas for students graduating at the end 01 Ihe 1970 summer session will be ~vailable Aug. 7 from 2:30 to 4 p.m. In 121A Schaeffer Ha II.

S:udents may pick up grades or diplomas for their spouses by presenting lhe spouse's 10 card. Otherwi e each student must obtain his or her own grades or diploma.

Diplomas not picked up by Aug. 7 will be mailed the following week .

Israel Won't PullOut Of All Captured Land

JERUSALEM (A'I - Prime Minister Golda Meir said Tuesday thaL Israel will not withdraw from the Ara~ ler· ritory captured in 1967 and her deputy indicated the United States had set limits to Soviet involvement in the Middle East war.

Mrs. Meir, in an address to Israel's Knesset - parliament - said Israel accepted an American peace proposal and is willing to negotiate despite doubts about the Arab leaders' sin· cerity. .

Deputy Prime Mlni.t.r Yitlil AI"", in • deM" fellowl.. Mrs. Meir'. IpllCh, Nld Pre.idtnt Nixon told Is· rllii I.eders th.t the United 5t.tn' hid drawn the 11M on Soviet aul,t. Ince to the Ar.b countri ... {Ie did not say if that meant the

United States had formally warned Ule Soviet Union or threatened retaliation. But he did say that if the UniteQ Stales had taken such a stand earlier. it cOllld have prevented the increasing Soviet involvement in the war.

The Soviet Union has provided most of Egypt's military hardware and sent it thousands of military advisers.

captlnc. tf the pelce pl.n, emph"illd th.t lu .. 1 1M. III intention of withdrew· ing fnm III of the Ar.b I.nd It occupllel in the JUM 1"7 w.r .

Israeli troops at that time seized Old Jerusalem, Jordan's west bank, Syria's Golan Heights as weU as Egypt's Sinai Desert.

She said there has been no decision yet "on the issue of the map of peace," but she repeateQ Israel's determination not to return to the frontiers of June 4, 1967 - the day before the Middle East war started - which gave' the Arabs "decisive advantages."

The plan, proposed by U.S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers, calls for • 9tkIay cease·fire and resumption of eC· forts by U.N. meQlator Gunnar V. Jar· ring of Sweden to bring the two sides to negotiations based on the November 1967 U.N. Security Council resolution. The resolution calls for wlthdraw.1 of Is­raeli forces from all soil seized io the 1967 war.

T1It I.rftll Clbintt v.tt4 'ritlay .. Kcept the U.S. pe.ce pIen IlrtllCly IC>

cepttd by Eg.,pt .nd Jord .... As Jarring resumed consultations in

New York with the big powers and rep­resentatives of Israel and the Arab states, Secretary·General U Thant pledged the full resour-ces of the United Nations to help push peace efforts.

Partly Cloudy

Washington sources said Tuesday that Soviet pilots flying Egyptian MIGs clashed twice with Israeli war· planes in the past 10 days . 11ley said evidence indicated that two of four MIG21 jels downed by Israeli pilots July 30 were flown by Russians' and possibly all four had Soviet pilots. In the first incident five days earlier, Soviet pilots chased Israeli planes back across the ,.rtly cleully .nd w ... rnor WedM.uy Suez Canal and neither side suffered with ch.tnce of .... wtn ctntlnulng ..... I P Irtly cloudy with IItt.. t.mpet'mw. asses, the sources said. ch.tngo Wedn0t4.y nitht II1II TIIundr(

Mrs. Melr, lllllinl", "rill', rtply.. with Iewa In the u ......... H .... T1Iun-the UniMd St.... '" her country', Ie' "I "'y I" .... til, ,

to .... th In the meum.1M tf Millet TIIHda., .~ .fttr ,weepi", __ Del Rio P .. , 150 miles northw •• t tf here. The Wuther IurHU Nid Its wind. ,were clocked .t " m.p.h. T1It ~th tf Cell. held INr.I .. I. .. Hurrlunt ""1M tf 1"7 which left the rich, hlthl., pepullted "wer Rio Grende V.I .. ., suHeri .. frem Nv.re flood. fer weeki. ""1M', .., winch wer. 135 m.p.h.

FLOOD WARNING But Celia 's rainfall of less than •

inches on the upper watershed of the Rio Grande nowhere approached the 30 inches that fell as Beulah entered Mex· ico. However, nash nood warnings were issued for tributaries of the Rio Gr~e, and the Nueces River, which empties at Corpus Christl. was rising rapidly.

City Manager Gay Walker of Port

Aransas said three bodies were found there.

Cell.', pe.k wind .,..., 01 U' m.p.h. Mend.y Ifltrneon comINred with C.mil· "'. 200 m.p.h. velocity when It hit the MIs.lnlppl c..,t In 1"'. and C.rl.'. ferct tf 175 m.p.h. when It .truck Tex •• Mrlh tf Cerpu. Chrl.tl In 1"1.

Corpus Christi Mayor Jack Blackmon, surveying the devastation and calling the city I "shamble!," still could declare, "The people's spirit is remarkably good and optimistic." . Blackmon attributed some of the city's

problems to the fact that the Weather Bureau £IrsI' estimated winds of only 90 m.p.h., then 115 m.p.h., and never went as high as the 145 m.p.h. reported Mon. day night and which were found later to have been 160 m.p.h.

Jury to Hear Arguments Today in Trail of Ford

With all evidence admitted in the case of Stephen Ford, assistant professor of business administration, both the defel\$C and prosecution will present their argu· ments to the jury as the trial moves Into its third day today in Johnson County District Court.

Ford is charged with malicious Injury to a building after he allegedly damaged a door of the Recreation Building during the May 1 anti·ROTC demonstration here.

A. wilMssel for the defenN le.tlllt4 Tutld.y, Joseph John.ton, Ford' •• tter· MY. .".mpled 10 tst.bllah th.t F.r" h.d .Ire.dy INtsed thrOlJ!lh the door .. the Itecreatlon Building before II w •• d.mlcrld. Johnlton .ouClht to prOVI thlt, h.vl"a '''Ic. enlered the building, Ford r.",.i"ld th.re .nd did not return t. thl d.m.cred door.

Patricia Kirkpatrick. A4. Des Moine , participant in thl' . Mav t demonstration. te~lifjcd she ob erved Ford being pushed Ihrnu~h the door by a group of the delT'ol1strators before it was damaged.

She said the door was at a 9tkIegree anl!le when she observed Ford being pwhed throullh it.

Lt. Kenneth Saylor of Campus Securi· ty had ellrllcr testified that the door was pushed back nat against the building when he examined it for damage after the demonstrators had entered the build· in!!

Klrkp.'rick 1.ld .fltr Ford h.d .nfer. ed thlI building .h. Wit pushld thrtugh thlI door her"lf. She IddecI W NW Ford the enti.e time h. w., .t the demontt •• tlon Ind did not ... him "IV. the Recreation Bulldl.. one. 1M h.d .nt.red it.

Kirkpatrick said that before he enter· ed the building Ford had had his hands on the upper edge of the door at the same time that other people were also holding on to the door .

Mark Harding, G, Grimes, also a part· iCipant In the demonstration, testified, "He (Ford) was holding on to the edge of the door. A lot of people had their hands on the door. I never saw the door pushed beyond 90 degrees."

Ford, testifying in his own behalf, des· cribed the sequence of events leading up to the point at which he was pusheQ through the Recreation Building door.

When he arrived at the Recreation Building, Ford said, he was "well back" In the crowd gathered around the door to the building. He said when two ROTC cadets attempted to enter the building the demonstrators "grabbed the door to keep il (rom being closed."

"I worked my w.y up fnnt ..... wh.t w •• gol", on," Fen! N"'. "At seme pelnt I lolntel the pet .... with their IMnd. l1li the deer In m., .tttmpt .. help holel it open se I ceulel got In.''

" I was always jostled by people. there were so many packed in. One or two people attempted to wedge themselves in the door to open It. The campus 'se:

Hearing Will Con5id~; Temporary Iniunction

The question of whether to make permanent a temporary injunction bar­ring student disturbances will be de· cided today at a Johoson County Dis­trict Court hearing.

The city obtained the injunction May 7 after a series of disturbances In which students protested American in· yolvement In the Indochina war and the shooting 01 four Kent State Univer· sity students.

The injunction banned disrupting, obstructing or interfering with any function, activity or event authorized by the University of low. and prohibit­ed obstructing access to any buUding or rooms in Iowa City or obstructing the normal use of public streets and hiibwaya.

curity officers were also pulling on the door. They were pulllng the panic bar."

Ford testified that others had their hands on the door all the time he was holding it. He added that the door did not go beyond a 90 degr« angle whlle he had his hands on it.

"I was swept Into the building when the door wu at 65 or 70 degree angle," he stated.

1",I.lnl", hi. INrtlclINtlon In the demen.tr.tItn, Fen! IIId he w.. there .n .... 1, moral, .nd pelltlcal g"",nd •.

.. It seemed to be a way to draw atten· tlon to the way we felt about the war in Vietnam and the invasion of Cambodia," Ford said.

He said he felt no animosity toward ROTC, but considered it "a viable al· ternative to the draft which enables stu· dents to stay In school."

He added, "1 think that tbe existence of programs like ROTC does enable Americans to CIIrry on a war in Vietnam but I do not harbor any ill will toward people in ROTC or ROTC as an institu· tion. "

Ford testified that whep he decided to attend the demonstration he had no in­tention of doing any damage to the build· ing or its occupants. - "I had no desire to commit an Wega! act," he said.

Court reconvenes at 9 a.m. today, and the case is expected to go to the jury for deliberation by noon.

Council Hears T raining Plan For Draft Board

A program for the training of draft board members In Johnson County was presenled to the City Council Tuesday nIght by Leonard Klaif, a representative for the Hawkeye Area Draft Information Center (HAOlC).

KJaif claimed that members of draft boards are not qualified to serve be· cause the federal government does not provide training for them in selective

I service duties. The proposal submitted by Klaif sug·

gested that Iowa City take the responsi· bllity for extensive training of the John· son County draft board members.

The City Council accepted KlaiI's pro­posal for study lind moved to discuss the resolution al the informal council meet· Ing Monday.

The council also heard the complaint of Daniel Lechay, who operates a hot dog push cart at the corner of Clinton and Washington Streets, that Iowa City policemen had "harrassed" him and pre· vented him from selling his merchan· dise on the grounds that he was violating a city ordinaa

The council voled to discuss the matter at Monday's session.

The council scheduled a public hearing for the University of Iowa development plan for the urban renewal project at 7 p.m. Sept. 1.

The next regularly scheduled City Council meeting is at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 18.

BULLETIN DETROIT (A'I - Mrs. George Romney

took an early lead over conservative State Sen. Robert Huber for the Re· publican U.s. Senate nomination In Michlgan~ne of four states holding primary elections.

Gov. William Milliken, who moved up to the chief executive spot when Romney resigned early last year to join the Nixon administration, took a commanding lead over hla only opponent, Howell magazine publlsber James Turner.

let ...... 1Nry,,.1

Page 2: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1970-08-05dailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-05.pdf1970/08/05  · left 31 known dead - 5 in QJba, 14 in Florida and 12 in Texas. The deaths

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me-1)ailg Iowan Tile liberation of blacks and women OPINIONS

PAGE 2 WEDNESDAY, AUG.::.US::..;T~5:!., ..:.;19..:.;70:..-__ ---.:�~0.;.;W~A...:C:..:...'T;...;Y;.:., ..:.;IO::..;W..:..;.;A

'Need to reiect competition and reaffirm respect for human potential'

age of new opportunities which radical women's liberation has struggled to win. Voting studies now renect that the traditional women, middle class and above, tend to vote the same way as their husbands.

STRINGTH ~ WOMiN

these roles by calling them the role 01 black women.

She Ihen adopts the attitude thaI hfr job and her life is to have more childm who can be used in the vanguard of t~ black truggle.

Publisher ................ "ronk Ha.h Allislani Publly.a. ......... . . Mary Kau". Editor . . ......... .. . LIon' DUth.m Ma.aglng Editor ...... .. .... ,. Amy Ch.pm.n NI.s Editor , ., .... ,., ....... ,.. AI Cloud Copy Editor .,.......... Jlhn Camp Edltorl.1 p, •• Editor ...•..... Malvin Moore 5porll Editor ...., . ... ... Jay Ewoldt F,., Arlt Editor ... .. .. Gary IrI'-

_ate N ...... U., .. .. .• L .... II Mly Allee .... Clty-Unl .... .., I.m. . . . ",1I1I1Ie NII, .. n ....... 1.'. Clty.Unl .... lty Editor .. .. . .. Deltbl. IIomlnl A_Iall ....... (dillr . . J"'n Richard. "''''''rt lsln, Director ....••.. • .., Dunsmore Clrculanon MI .... r .... ..... Ja_. Conlin

Insanity leads us The recurring problem of where to dump the nerve as manuFactured by Ule

Army a decade ago is one that deserves considerabl thought and attenti n. The Army maintains the rockets are Virtually harmless, then turns around and pra­claims that urg ncy is a nccessity becau~e the gases may have become danger­oUbly unstable with age.

The Army says it int nds to take every precaution in sbipping the gas. They probably do. But c\ cry precaution known 10 man is no guarantt'e against an ac­cident. And if the gasses are dangerous on land. how fe will the." be ID the ocean? Army Under ccretary Thaddeus n. Beal says that I'I'fn. if an IInderwater accident should occur, damage 10 marine life would Ix- minimal. Thi\ hea)s, i preferable to endangering human lifc.

That's a good point and a difficult one to argue with. Bul tbat pint leads ill­elitably 10 Ihc (luestion, what were the ga~es illl entpd for if nnt tn ('ndHn~('r human life? Tile problem of di.~posing of Ihe gases is on(l which II' LIlust face and deal wilh somehow. But whill' we are doing so, we al Ihl' same timp contin­ue to rescarch \\'ays 10 make el en more cffectil'e gases, some lethal, some only mind-destroying.

t'Ouplr of rntlnth~ ago ational Educational Telt'li\ion (. ET) ran a c1OCll­

mrntary Oil gas r<'ltearch around th world. Th ir t'Ov(lrage \l'a. a littlc 'potty)x>­calise 1I10st oC ehrlllic'al warIan· TPsearch is such a high top seer!'1 da"ifiealiun that cameras, nil kinds and for all reasons, are prohibited in the labs. Only we­dCIl pcrmitt d ET to actually film some of the lab; Ibis bee us Swc<il'1l hc­Iicn's the morr l'"h1ie the knowledgc of .chl'mit~ll agrnts, the Ie, lil-ely Ihey will ever he lIsccl. mcrica docs not have such a polic •.

The problem of disposing of the old chcmical agcnh i~ on(' which rnmt he sohed. ,\11 el'(,11 bigger problem, however, and one which even more urg!'ntly pleads for rt'MJlutiol1, is what to do about the Fact that we mntinul' tn manllfa' ... ture suc·h ahominable agents. To answer that pcrhap we must dL~('ov r what in­~anity ('vcr it'ad us to ('reat them in th!' (jr~t plat>(,. - trot/II Df/rhllllt

By LINDA LA RUE Frt'" the 81.de Schellr

PART II Unle. we realize how thoroughly the

American value of male uperiority and female inferiority has permeated our relationshIps witb each other, we can never appreciate the role it plays in per­petuating racism and keeping black people divided.

Most, but not all. American relation­ships are ba ed on some type of "exclllS­ive competition of the superior, and the exclusive competition of the inferior." This means essentially that the poor, Ihe uneducated, the deprived and the minorities 01 the aforementioned groups, compete among themselves lor the same scarce resources and inferior opportun­ities, while the privileged. middle-cla , educated, and elect white minorities, compete with each other for rather plentilul rcsources and superior oppor­tunilies far prestige and powcr.

Competition among groups Is rare, due to the fact that clements who qualify are almost Invariable absorbed to some el­tent (note the black middle-class) by the group to which they seek entry.

We may well understand that there Is only one equal relationship between man and woman. black and white. In America, and thi equality is ba ed 00 II hether or not you can forrc your way inlo qualHying lor thc same rcsources.

AFFIRMING COMPETITION But instead of attempl ing to modIfy

this competitive definition within the bla :k movement, many black male~ have aCfirmed it as a way of maintaining the closure of male monopolization or scarce benefits and making the "domin­ion of males" impenetrable to black Ie­males. This Is, 01 course, very much the Am rican way of exploitation.

The order of logic whIch makes it pos-

'DID YOU SEE 1T7-S0METHING IN GRAY FLANNEL COMING THIS WAy ... • ~'q'~I:l; .. '''i'.a:r..~ ~

7fii-

Volpe: Pay .Boosts Likely For Air' T raffie Controllers

WASHINGTON ~ - Secre- ' Volpe said the FAA is mak- months in each salary grad lary of Transportation John A. ing beLter use of the skllls o[ before promotion, regardless of Volpe said Tuesday pay boosts experienced controllers by qualification. are in the works for more than mOI'ing them into advanced 1,300 air traffic controllers as control jobs more rapidly than ~c increa;es in ~n~~al ray a result of new policy changes before. WI range rom s II: t Y ess designed to brighten ~areer Heretofore, controllers have than $2,000 to around $3,000. prospects. had to serve mandatory wail- t Starting salaries now range .

In a review of actions taken ing periods of at least 12 1 from $14,192 a year to $16,760 . in the wake of a report last January by a committee ap- B'II E t d C pointed tl) sludy the conlro))er 1 X en s overage career olll1ook, Volpe said : I

"Impressive progress has O·f Jobless Insurance' I been made in recent months in upgrading the nation 's air traffic control system both WASHINGTO I~ _ The Sen­through equipment modernlza- ate passed an~ sent to Presl­tlon and improvement of work- dent Nixon Tuesday a bill el­Ing condil ions.". . . tending unemployment insur-

Obviously beanng In mind ance coverage to 4.7 million ad­I~e controller slowdowns and I ditional workers and providing Sickouts that on several oc· extra benefits when jobless lev-casions have crippled air els are high. transportation, Volpe also an- The bill had becn stalled for nounced the award 01 contracts three months chiefly because of totaling more than $25 million a decision of Ihe Senate-House to the International Business conferees lo delete a Senate Machine Corp., Gaithersburg, provision which would have Md., for computers and allied made a start on exlending cov­~uipment to be installed at erage to farm workers. Federal Aviation Administra- Many of those voting against

political public relations ploy in which members of Congress gel to announce defense con(ract.s.

That unanimous vote approv­ed an amendment requiring that the Pentagon make the I first announcement of its con­tracts - with no advance tipofC to members of Congress or any­one else.

The lopsided rollcall vote was the first Senate action on a $19.2-billion military procure­ment bill which has been belore it for nine days.

!.ion traffic control ccnters and the measure in the Senate were Protecting Falls

Celia's Walee

sible 10 pronounce as did Dr. Robert Staples. in the Jan.-Feb., 1970, edilion of the Black Scholar. that "black women

nnot be free qua women until all blacks allain their liberation," main­tains, whether purposely or not, that black women will be able to separate Iheir femalene s from their blackness and thus they would be able to be free as blacks, if not free as women; or that male freedom ought to come first; or finally, Ihat the freedom of black women and men, and the freedom 01 bla~k pe0-ple as a whole, are not one and the same.

Only with the concept of role Integra­tion can we hope to rise above the petty demarcations of human Ireedom that America is noted lor, and that' are un­fortunately inherent In Dr. Staples' rl!­mark : Role integration is the realization that:

• Ego attachments to particular activ­ities or traits must be abolish cd as a method or determining malehood and fe­malehood; that instead , ego attachments must be distributed to a wider variety of tasks and traits In order to weaken the power of one activity in determining self-worth, and

• The flex ibllity 01 8 people in aIleet­ing role alternation and role integration has been an historically proven asset to the survival of any people - witness lsracl, China and AlgerIa.

Thu the unwitting adoption and the knowing perpetuation of this American value reflects three inler-relatcd situa­tions:

a Black peoplc's growing ense of sec­urity and well-being. and their failure to rccogni7.e Ihe expanse of black prob­lems;

• Black people ' over-identification wUh the dominant group, even though the survival of blacks in America is not as ured. and

• Black peoplc's belief in the myth 01 "matriarchy" and their. subsequent re­jection of role integration as unnatural and unneces ary.

BLACK POWER RHETORIC While the rhetoric 01 black power and

the advocates 1lf cultural nationalism laud black people for their ability to struggle lInd~r 0PPI'!'ssive odds, they simultaneously seek to strip away or In­capacitate thc phenomenon of role inte­gration - I he very means by which blacks were ablc to survive!

They seek tl) rcpla~e it with a weak, Intraclable role separation which would complelcly sap Ihe slrength or the black movement becau I' it would inhibiL the mobilization of both women and men . If was Ihis ability to mobilize black men and black women that guaranteed surv­ival during slavery.

Though mosL white women's lib ad­vocates rail to rcalize the possibility, their subsequent Uberation may spell a strengthening of the status quo values from which they sought liberation. Since more and more women will be participating In the deci ion making proce s. those few women participat­ing in the .. struggle" will be outnum­b red by the more traditional middle class women.

This means that the traditional wom­en will be in a position to take advant-

If white radical thought has called upon the strength of all women to take a position of responsibility Ind power, can blacks .£ford to relegate black women to "home and babies" while white women reinforce the stalus quo?

The cry of black women's liberation Is a cry 1.linst chalnln. a very much needed labor force to • role that onct belonged to Impotent, apolitical whIte women. Blacks speak lovIngly of the vanguard and the Import.nce of wom­en in the struggle, and yet fan to rec­ognIze that women have been assigned a new pl.ce, based on white ascribed characteristics of women, rather than on their Ictual potential. The black movement needs ita women in a posi­tion of struggle, not prone.

The struggle blacks face Is not taking place between knives and forks, It the washboard. or In the diaper pail. Il is taking place on the 1.1)or market, at the polls . In Rovernmenl, In the pro­tection of black communities, In local neighborhood power struggles, in hous­inR and in education.

Can blacks .Cford to be so unobservant of current events u to send their women to fight I non-existent battle In I dish­pan?

FAILURE Of MOVIMINT E\'en now, the black adoption of the

white values of women has begun to Rhow its effects on black women In dis­tinctive ways. The black liberation movement has created a politicized, un­liberated copy of while womanhood. Black women who partiCipated in the stru~l:le have failed 10 recognize, for the most part , Ihe unique contradiction be­tween renunciation of capitallstlc com· petition and acceptance of sexual colon­iali~m.

The failure of the black movement to rc olve and deal with this dilemma has perpetuated the following altitudes in AmerIcan politicized black women:

• The belief In the myth of patriarchy. The black woman has been made to feel ashamed of her strength, and M to re­deem herself she has adopted from whites the belief that superiority and dominance of the male is the most "na: tural" and "normal" relationship. She consequenlly believe~ that black women ought 10 be suppressed In order to attain that "na tural balance ."

o BecRU'le the white ",omlln's rol~ has be!'n held up M an example to all black women. many black women feel inade­quate lind so ardently compele In "Ie· minlnlty" with whi e females for black male.~ ' attention. She further competes with hlack f~males In an attempt to be the "blackest and the most feminine," thereby, the more superior to her fellow black sisters in appealing to black politi­ci7~ men.

She competes also with the apolitical black lemale In an attempt to keep black rna les Irom "regressing" black to fe­males. who she feels have had more "practice" in the traditional role of white woman than has she.

o finally, she emphasizes the tradl­lional roles or women, such 8S house­keeping, children, su pportive roles, and self-maintenance, bUL she politicizes

From UI, Dean SIOYS-

Black women, as the song "Black Pearl" relates, have been put up wbm they belong, but by American standards. I

Is it so inconceivable that the Americm I'alue of respect and human relalionshi Is distorted? It has taken the birth 01 women's liberation to brIng the black movement back lo its senses.

NEW SET OF DEFINITIONS The black woman is demllnding a new

set of female definltlons and a recogni­tion 01 herself as a citIzen, companilJD and confidant, not a matriarchal villain or a step stool baby-maker. Role integra­lion advocates the complementary re. cognillon oC man and woman, noL the competitive recognition oC same.

The recent, unabated controversy over the use 01 bi.rth control in the black commllnlty Is of grave Importance hert. Black people, even the "mosL liberated of mind," are still infused with ascribed inferiority of females and the natural superiority of males.

How many potential revolutionary warriors sland abandoned in orphanages while blacks rhetorize disdain for birth control as a "trick of the man" to haIL the growth of black population? Why are there not more revolutionary couples adopting black children? Could It be that the American conccpt of bastard, which is equivalent to inferior in our sociely, reflects black anglo·saxonism?

Do blacks, like whitcs, discriminate against black babies because they do not represenL "our own personal" Image! Or do blacks, like the most racist of whites, require that a child be of their own blood before they can love that child or feed it? Docs the vanguard, 01 which Dr. Staples so reverently speaks. recognize the existence of the term "ba~tard "~

MORATORIUM ON BIRTHS Someone once suggested that the word

"bastard" be deleted from the values of black people. Would it nol be more reo volutlonary (or blacks to advocale I

five-ycar moratorium on black births until every black baby in an American orphanage was adopted by one or more black parents? Then blAcks could really have a valid reason for continuing to give birth.

Childrcn would mean more than sim» Iy a role for black women to play, or fuel for the Icgendary vanguard.

Indeed, blacks would be able to tap , the potcnllal of the cxisting children and cou ld scn,ibly add more potential 10 the black struggle for libcration. To do this would be to do something no olher ' civilization, modern of course, has ever done. 3lJd blacks would be allowing every black child to hav.e a home alll\ not just a plot In some understaffed children's penal farm.

We can conclude that black women'l liberation and black men 's liberation is what we mean when we speak of the liberation oC black people. I maintain (hat the true liberation of black people depends on their rejection of competi­tion as the only viable relationship be­tween men, and their re-affirmation of respect for general human potential in whatevcr form, miln, child or woman il is conceived.

Good Jobs for PhDs

F.mill«. • .. reh through the 9brl. In their mobile home In Robstown, Tn., Tuesday for "'ng .. b,. belonginlS. M.ny of 1ft. homes in lhe Irt. were ,.ft In .h.mbl .. Iftlr Hurri­ClIIt C.II. "..Md. See r.l.ted story. P ... l.

- AP W'rephoto

Ncarly all of a record number M per cent for the nation." I macy and manufacturing. Other of PhD-earners graduated by I "Only 31 o[ the 337 already jobs were at thc Iowa State Hy· Ihe University o( Iowa this year placed , or nine per cent, are gleni: Lab, U.S. Public Health have found good jobs al a time not in university or college Service, World Health Organiza· when such positions are scarce, leaching and research jobs ," Ilion, Botanical Gardens in Nelf according to Alvin H. Scaff, I Scaff added. "Seven of the e 31 York City, m-my Weapons Com­dean of adval):ed studies in the I are In university administrative I P1and, and National Council or Graduate College. posts: three deans of men, an I Churches 01 Korea. •

Scaff said the 356 PhD earn- u sI!tant dean lor health afrairs Because of the tillht lob ers for the 1969-1970 academic at Iowa. a superintendent 01 market, the Graduate Coli.,. year represented a school rec- s:hools in Iowa, an official In has been limiting .nroll",,", ord. surpassing the mark of 301 'he Towa State Department of in some doctor.t prflllr.mt. et In 1967~. Public Instruction, and a staff Sc.ff ,aid. Bul becau" If tilt

"A review, dt,.l1ment IIy member at the U of [Medical long period involYed in el"" 9".l1menl," he .. 14, "r.. Labs. , I lng I PhD, rflU"s of such y .. lt ttl., .11 ef the J."".ry I "The great contribution of our limits are not likely to IP\lUr .neI ",.y grlldlHltt. hn. """ PhD programs is to education until 1973·75. pl.ced; .nd .11 .f the A"""I and to teaching." I He said, "No dramatic large· e.nelld.tt. with the .Ie.ptitn Scaff said a number of 1969- scale cutback is expected or of " .Irudy ".y. !tund 70 PhD earners took industry desired, since the long-term l' job.," he .. 14. I iobs in f01l'8 . Illinois, Louisiana , I need for PhD-trained persons is "The University 01 Iowa ex- New ~ersey, In~ana and . Min~e- 1 ~ubstanHal , even though the

ocriel)ce runs contrary to cur- ~ota, In such fIelds as OIl, mm- rale of Increase In the numbers rent claims that PhDs are over- j ing , chemicals, aerospace, pharo, being produced must level orr." supplied in the humanities. or I the 19 candidates for the degree V t R tAP d' !n A~gust not yet ~la:e~. 10 are 0 e e urns re en Ing In sCience and engmeenng, rour in psychology and education and Iy THI ASSOCIATED PRESS Lenore Rommey, 61-year~1d ~nly fiv~ in the humlnities and Sen. Stuart Symington easily 'I wil~ 01 the Njxon administra· hIstory. . . defeated four political unknowns lion s secretary of housing and

Scaff said the university's u- .., urban developments, was f" perience in placing the PhDs Tuesday. In Mlssou.rl s De~O- vored to defeat conservative " is beller Ihan that of the nation I c r~lIc prtmary to Win reno.mm- State Sen. Robert Huber In the as a whole. Across the country allon for a fourth term. WIth 8 race Cor the GOP as~ignmenl

stations. not opposed 10 it but were try-One of the IBM contracts for ing to send It back . to confer- MOLDE, Norway (All - Dem- '1

*16,676,81lO, is for complete cnce in an effort to get this pro- onstralors protecting the scenic owa hlgh.capacity, high- peed com- vision restored. I Mardal Waterfall from de-

Car Dispatcher Quits in 1969, 8.7 per cent of the grad- per cent of t~e slate's. 4,246 pre- to oppose Sen. Philip A. Hart uates were not placed at the clnet! reporttng, Symington had (D-Mich .) in November. Hart, , . lime of the U.S. Office of Edu- II per cent of the lotal vote. unopposed in his party, is seek· cation survey. At Iowa il is the On the Republican side, Atty. ing a third term in the U.S. rare case where a job has not Gen. ~hn C. Danforth took. an Senate. puter systems for Ihe Los Ang- ln other action Tuesday, the strllction today ignored a sec- DES MOINES (All - State been accepted for Monday.

!'Ies. Washillgton and Kansas Senate also; l ond police ultimatum to dis- Car Dispatcher frink E. John- Slate Auditor Lloyd Smith City. Mo .. centers, and partial • Approved and sent to the perse. on has resigned under pres- said his office's audit of the systems for Indianapolis, Fort White House an $II-billion bill Police took no action. The sure of • state audit which has car dispatcher's books had Worth and Atlanta. The lower appropriating far more for ur- 100 demonstrators camped in dIsclosed irregularities In his turned up some irregularities. capacity systems currently I ban renewal. water and sewage the path of bulldozers. office's accounts. Smith said there was no ques-used at these places will be treatment and veterans care They are trying 10 hold up I Gov . Robert D. Ray's office tion of a shortage 01 funds, moved 10 centers ~rving I thall President NiJon. ~upt. preparatory construction for a said Tuesday .thal Johnson's but added, "There are a lot of smaller volumes of traffic. • Voted 77 to 0 to elmunate the new power stllion. resignation from tbe Job bad UJlUplliDed activities."

been found by lhe lime of grad- elrly lead over two opponents Michigan Democrats voted in uation. in his bid to meet Symington in a rour-man race to oppose Re-

"The U of I PhDs also go into November. With 7 per cent of publican Gov. William Milliken, university and college teaching the vote counted, Danforth had who stepped up from lieutenant and research positions in IRrger 7,797 votes, Doris Bass, a St. governor wh~n Romney rt­proportion than is true across \ Louis alderman, had 2,787 and si~ned as governor in 1969. the nation - some '1 per celll Dr. Mom. DeWayne Duncan Other states holding primarieS for the U 0( I, compared wttb bad 7.. were Kansas and Idaho .

SAJGON flcials in 51 Illy that II answering for help b fighter-born In esmbodi

Informed pI.nes eac tonS of bo their daily bodia. -o Ag

Page 3: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1970-08-05dailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-05.pdf1970/08/05  · left 31 known dead - 5 in QJba, 14 in Florida and 12 in Texas. The deaths

en m the role 0(

itude thai her I more chiJdrtn anguard 01 the

song "Slaci put up when n slandarda.

the American relationships the birth 0/

the black

. large­expected or

long·term

• 1.

persons is '1" though the the numbers

level olf."

THI DAILY IOWAN-lewl City, lew_WH., Augu.t 5, 1970-PI" 3

Admit Cambodia Air.Raids ; DAILY SAIGON IA'I - American of· "We are responding to any·

Ilcials In Saigon confirmed Tues· I one's request for interdiction day that the U. S. Air Force is missions in the area of Camoo. IIISlm'ing a Cambodian request dia," said one U. S. official. for help by ending up to 50 Associ.ted P r . s s eorre· fighter·bombers on daily raids spond,nt T. Jtff Willilms r. · In Cambodia. portld Mond.y from Kompong

Informed sources said the SpIV th.t u. S. Air Fore. p1.nes each carry about eight Phlntoms h.d betn dropping tons of bombs and rockets on bombs and nlpatm on VII' their dally missions over Cam· Cong .nd Nortft Vietnam ... bodia. forclS who had held Highway

4 sine, Salurd.y I cutin. Iff laUtude of interpretation by Phn.m Ptllh'l ICc ... It c.m· U. S. field commanders. bodia's only . il rtflMry en ., la.. rtptrt, N.rtft Vi.,· the ",,1ft etal'. na_ and Vitt Cong forels Williams reported Tuesday aIill wer. ...perted htlding

IOWAN

opened by Cambodian forces. PhMm P'nh. Cambodian mil. ---- ROOMS fOR RENT CHILD CARE that Highway 4 had been reo SkMl, " milt. northttst .. I I

The U. S. Command ha de· I"ry ,,.ktlmlfl 11M! govorn· Want Ad Rates PRIVATE tOOIll. m.n Cookin,. rt· ;;;:;:-8A8Y IT - MondlY thr<IU,b clared that American attacks in ment r.inftrctmtflh w .... be. frl,,"lor ~ UI S Van Bluell "rlclay liel U £Sperlenctd

OM D lSe W rd . . ... ""it Me~do." Irtl. 151·2452. ... Cambodia are aimed at "enemy illl ..... Ihtre It try 'e r.,.k. I ay ...... ... I 0 !roone or material which could it. Two O.ys ........ lie a Word UNAPPROVED In,l. room for HUMPTY nU)Q'TV - 'UflU)' - &Chol .... Th D 20c W d men. ArrotS Itl't'tt fl'Olll ramp... ort.n a pt.·tchool profr&/ll for threaten U S and -'her free ,... .ys.. .•. .. I or aiffilndillon.\" IIh rook I., fuU· day ra~ cl!Udnn It <o..,poIlU ..

.. '" The commander 01 the ou ted ", ' 0 d I I I world lives in South Vietnam." .. 'v, .ys ... .. 23c a war ~7,"io.'t'· 11 • Wuhln,tol\. I'h .. i; ;;~~'!'i41~IS s. tapllol Stree i.IPl~

'AIIM FOR SALE

fOR sALt: iO arres /20 aoru 01 limber. no bulldln,I). 7 mlle.

from lo.a City. ,ood raid - aloo In arr... modern hom.. 7 mUel from 10 ... 1 City. 337-4437. Wbilln, Ind K.rr Realtors. ..7

WHO DOES IT?

Opposition Swells Against Gas Drop

I But officials indlc.led that the kOlIn glrrlson told corre pond. ' Ttn Days .. .. . .. . 29c a Word AUI CONDITIONED. b .. ullfuUy IUf' EXPERIENCED blbnltUn,. filiI' planes are also striking at Viet enls Tuesday that U. S. Phantom OM Monlft . . . .. sSe I Word nlsh.d rooms. dou lei cimful. plrt·l1me. RtlennC'fl furftUh,d. ARTIST PORTRAITS - chUdru, :IIaoN41 or "'''501. 101 II" Hawk.y. Court. 151 .. 704. "U Iduill. Pencil, charcoll. ta. Pillel •. Cong and North Vietnamese jets bombed and trafed just I Minimum Ad 10 Words -- -- m. OU. '" up. moHO. II-I1AR 1 SUMMER rlln - HoI MOO for ---: __ :---:------1

I roops. ahead of Cambodian troops try· PHONE 337-4191 .ummer, colta, .. , II ... r~ ""I. wlt~ TPYING SllIVICtS SCHAFrs XEROX Cop;v. LeUe ... lax On J N

.... _ cookJn, prlvll., ••. Dileoun .. lUlU', f_ lpeelanlta.!OS Dey BuUd· uno 3, IlIOn'" "'_ ing 10 recapture the Lown. G ... II,ht VUlII.. ..liAR In,. JSl.NI.. 9-lIlrn

lines for r.m.inlng U. S. mil· Time mag81ine corrtlpondent 1--- 1I00MS for tlrlJ Communlb kil. M~.~ap~-ln:.UR~:II;; I :~~I'~. m~'l'5 FOR II.ENT - addlnl machl .... it.ry .etivity in C.",bodi. aft. th.n and loun,.. wuher and 110 .. 1 tat. Bank Bulldln, . sn._ t)'powr1te .. , movl. & IIlde pro-.r 'h, wllftdr,wll

.d A-rl. Robert S. Anson, 25, was report· dryer beiliU... Ph.... N'·3&U. "Ii J.cto.... win, mlchlnel and many WASHINGTON Go

... n_ WANTED ,.lltll\ oIh •• Item •. Aero Renlal. 810 Maid· INI - V. coneret. coffins of nerv, 111$ d t th ed captured by lhe Viet Cong I -- Ei:EcTRIC (.tI I«;;;t. rI-.n Lane. :131-.711 . 8-~

Claude Kirk of Florida said in'o 'h. oelln. can grou~ roopl ,rt - . h' d" I d ROOM ror ,lrlL COlll/llunlt,. kll· .need, r.lso"nable. Jln: S'no~~~ CA H FOR your car 'or pJekup TIl d h '11 k t I On Aug. 10 the Army Is sched. 1 mol" finished June le. IV lie rlvmg a one Mon ay to- WANn:D ""roon 10 Iccompany th.n Ind loun,e WI her and dry· 8472. "lIAR es ay e WI see a cour n. Sk rhUd on airplane DC. lowl Cltv. or (arllllle •. Phone 337.3634 ,.UIC" Iruck Curry'. ulo. 103 7th SI junction if necessary to stop the uled Lo start moving trains car. The Presid nt said there ward be oun!. 1

ft r~ised to 24 the r::!y 3~I~mrtr. Will pay hltT I AIR CO!'WITIONW, beauUIully lur. U:O A AMJ:LO TyplJ1, Service _ Conl.IU •. 33&-4719. 8-4AR

Army from dumping obsolete ryinu the .ncrve gas coffins from would be "air mi. sions to mter· num r 0 orelgn new men · _ nbh •• rllOlIII. d_ to umpu.. r811 EI~trk. CarbOn ribbon. E.· PIAPER Renl,l 1""lce by Ne ... k

• dl t th t f captured in the four.month-old I OR 2 II PON [BLY. ,lfl, with a33-.... or "7-4:;OV. 7·25l1n IMrlen •• d. uwon. HIRC Pr""t .. Laundr)'. 311 S. Dubuque. nerve gas roc els into the At· storage centers at Anni ton, c e movemen 0 enemy C bodl F h do, Inl hoaal ... 3~1- . Iott Phon, 337·9G6e. fl.4AR lantic Ocean some 280 miles of! Ala., and Lexinglon, Ky .. to troops and materiel wherr I find am k' lland war. h our lot edr \\A"'TtO Comal. In ha/'l' furni>b d APARTMENTS FOil liNT rtECTIIIC 17pln, - tdlllni .... WANTED: Aewln" 'IMtI&1lzln, In Cape Kennedy. Sunny Point, N.C. There they it is necessary to protect the were I e and tree re ea e . I apartment. 351-231111. ..21 perl,n .. d, caU 3»-4&47. t-4AR ~&~ddl", lownl. fo",,"II. el~l~

"Any damage to our environ. wm be loaded on a barge, towed I lives and urily of our men in In South Vi tnam. harp n; IAU: ronmmlt. ...nl.d for I E~~~~C F;'mo~or~:r~r.~: t;~ EX'PERIENCED typl.1 _ 1It .. 1J. ment _ even though it produced out to sea and scuttled in 16.000 I &iuth Vietnam. orthem Mekong Delta as gov- ~rl~Wm evUle lPartmrnt. FlU. ..rvlro 331·2.U5. "I~AR Illorl pap.,.. 353-3720. 8-1"'R no direct threat to human life or feeL of watcr. His statcd policy seemed to ernment troops claimed they . . JEnRY N)·oll. Elecl.1e IBM Typln_ HAl\D tollored hom allorlUon -health _ could have the mosl The Army says it is necessar rule out. direct air upport from I killed 44 enemy soldiers in a m:~~~I~.~Nol~·"~:d:;"~·.d~~~~~ , trvl •. Pbon. "..1330. .., ';°IW1. drmel. and IlIlru. ~~~

to d· f th . kl bY Caml)()(lian forces, but was am· day.lon~ baltle 42 miles south· APARTMENT FOR SALE tioned .• 160 monlltty. 33HaIS Of 3111- &:1(1'1:111& CEO IyplJt • tbtlli. Ihotl

serious economic cons e que n· I pose 0 eRas qUlc y e· b' h II' . 70N. 11 1 pap rI. 35J.J72(1. 7·UAR ELECTRIC SHAVU repair - U-" KI k told Ih H f th 'b' I't [I k I~OUS enouR to a ow a Wide west of Saigon. ,11100 DOWN will buy 4·room Ipili. - -- lIour .ervlce. !l.yer·s Barber Shop. ces, r couse cause 0 e POSSI I I Y 0 ea· __ __ __ I ment In ummll ApUlmonto Lar· ONE OR TWO fomll .. , 2 ""afoom. ELECTRIC - ojIort plrers. lum 8-13i\J1

oceanoll'aphy subcommittee. aRe and explosion if It is allow. , IW R.alty, 331-2841. ..IS (urnllh.d. nlU.. ept. or 001 paperl For..,., .oc:rellry. ra t

"" 1ft. oelln.1ong our led to remain stored much long. CerealCompanySnaps I~'''II! _" lel'\lce.:I51·233I. H4AR CYCLES Ill' e .. " bectme eon'.m. er. HOUSE FOR SALE I SU~~~~rn~.h.tu~~r:JY·8!lrJ: E~~:~~~7~PIlt. ThIlII·7.ltti

8-7 "",td bectUl' Mmt' h I n II Asktd how he would des' roy ftr . 1:t.S Rher treet. 33I-Q4$ . " , TRREE b<!droom home In "alr "7-411111. ..& went wrong - if 'he.. mls· ' ho gil, Kirk said I d r.,her At Nut r'l t'l 0 n a I C I a tl m s ~I .. do... ..llh IlIath.d ,"I,e r.ow RE TINe: - on. Ind 1\\0 bed- AUTOS.FOREIGN·SttOILTS I ItA BSA 1.l,lIlonlnl. Elcellenl con· III •• " .... H ,hllr eon'lnll lI. t rl~ of thl las by , Iomlc ~:"mmt~II\U~!h ~ df~.:rt~~ ~;~2 room lurnl,h.d or "nfurnbhed dillon. '115. 333-8301. ~ In • mlnner not pl.nned _ It IxpIOllon." Holl)wood Blvd .. 33HI2(I .. 7 apulmtnu. 3~J.7IBI Ot .,.,UOI. 1970 TRrUMPH ~ cr. "oo.tOII. 1170 HONDA no SL. mOlor.roll. 3 .... Id bt dis. strou' ," h. s.ld. Rep. Alton Lennon (D.N.C.1 WASHINGTON _ The 11-11 1 aU U P.M.. 351-311'. 8-7 RIO •. old. 337·7110 or 337·231~. Isk ..... • bacon-and-egg breakfa t." RIDE WANTED Ei~ /oIWOOD TERRAC!: now lealln' lilCi vw IIUS:-;; ..... n,ln •. 7 tire. ror Hub. ,.8 "Unless and until we in Flori. s~bcommitlee chRir~an. criti· cereal industry snapped back He aid cereal.! provide sub- 1"'0 bedroom lurnl.hod ap,nmenl. mounled E.I .... 337-4407. 80S ' .. HONDA lOS. Low mllea, •. In

d I t I tl ' d th t . In . Tuesday at a erlions t aL Its slantially more calcium, ribo· 80 TON or Philidelphi. IAI'" 3i1J.B031. "II R 1_' V'RU'NN OHI' Vftlkl. ".. ,r .. I lpe .••.•• lVen n, •. Cited tee ArnlY agaIn for nOL I h . ~2 'th Stre.l. CoralvlUe. S3~"'OS' 1 t h "I "1"1 I a are comp e e y sa S Ie 8 haVing the AtomiC Energy Com .,. .."krnd Au,. 7. AI 0 ride from ... nn •• n '"'' a." 8-8

our safety and well bein! is not ., . . products lack nutrition at value, flavin, niacin, thiamin, and PhUld.tphla to Irrl •• In lowl City ON!!: OR TWO r.mal.. 3 b droolll convertlbl.. taOO or be t orter. bein- threatened by the pres. miSSIOn destroy Ihe gas m all telling a Senate subcommittee Iron and substantially les sat. by II,!' 13 Can he.tJl drive .• hm ' furnl h.d. Snllle, iPt, .. r:!r 01 337·1712 ~t .. , , .111 1-1 I'i:n~~~nd~tt~~ I A~. ~'\'33~~~~:

8 undergroun. d nuclear b.l.ast. I a breakfast built around dry ed ,II. Call Loona, 337 191. a.7 Oclo!><'r S3I-3712. W JAGUAR XKE 41 1i6l low mile. 8-8 ence of this gas, I will have no urat . fat. 1 minI <ondillon. AM·FM . Michelin cholce but to seek relief wherev. Army witnesses testified Mon· cereal is as good as, or beller "The e are healtb plu es," I RIDER WANTED TI~ffi~ d~~o~O~~n:~~~~e "~r~~fd'~ X. new 10,. um BurUn.lon. Iowa I 1t68 YAII(IIHA YRJ~. CIII m·I~7e

day that last October the AEC I than, bacon and eggs. h. ald . buqu.. ..2tAR 7'2.0G42 8-, aller I P.M. 8-7 er I can find it," he said. d d ~ WANThD I Id L II --agree to arrange . an. un cr· With live specialists wltne • I "Any hog feeder knows skim ,.Ie •. ItI~~' r II~~ ~~ a;'138~ ' AVAILABLE no .. : lind Z ~droom le:lt"~Y~~ :~~~'M~I~"'I~$ M~~~~fYC!rfo~a~II~~? G~~~~l;;

Kirk urged the subcommiltee ground blast but said It would I es and lengthy statements milk 8nd corn provld I good I •• nla~:~~~~~~,:I~a!I:~I~~~; (~2i .... Ie, lor III mike •. Th. Molor. 10 join him in trying to obtain require 15 months to prepare from the major companies, the combination," declared Dr. DRIVING 10 p.nver.lIoulder. Col .. Brown. '.211.11 ~~:r ~1;.Me.utn •. 'r:i (ydl ClIlII •. W Eo PnlDtil. SSU~:i court orders against the dumn. for It rado LoI~lnJ rrtdlY. Aur 7

r' . Industry de cribed earlier test· L. M. Henderson. head o[ the Drlvln, .ltll,hI Ihrouch - lItton W TWOOD·W .. llld • .coronlt ultra. lng. The A. rmy said It could not 8e· Imony by Ro"Art Choate 8' Unl'verelty or M'mn ota's de. dltlon.d comfort Itelurn Au,. 23 . IUlUry. erreelrndes. I·b.droom. 21 5 Me wh'l 1ft t b t th b d "" 0 0 Ph m·'9l4 aftot 5 P.M. b<!droom .ullr. 2 Mdroom town· AUTO . DOMESTIC

In I I, 'flnl I IU ' cep IS ecause a stu y com· Incomplete, misleading, confulJ' partmcnt of biocheml~try, test. ' hou ... , 3 he<lroom lutl .. Ind I bed· __________ _ Ctmml"" on oc; .. nollrephy mlttee had reported the gas ing meanlngles and danger. ifying for General Mill lnc. APPROVED ROOMS 1 f~~:;:'~~dn~~~m'·.rn~n~~~d ;t70~' CAR 1"_ Optl WI,OIl. M~O; NORTON .nnouncld It will It.rt 1'1 should be destroyed no later OUS' • .." 1911 almbl.. ron .. rUbl., 1150. IVIn hOlrlnll' W.dnesd.y on than August 1970 some 10 . FOR SuMMER and £all double -- bbo°ldh d~OOll ,:!,n';I~~ ,conddll nn IF YOU'RE READY FOIt THE the Army 'l pll n to dump ~1' months distant. Kellogg Co. spoke man, "we est trIp loun,e.337.2831. '.IIRC hou.ln, no .. ranUnr for 14mmer A I C. pO".r. MUll I.U aU, 121 ULTIMATE IN IIG 81KfSl

" I "Quite frankly," declared the 'p S' I rooml. kltch.n prlvtl..... TV. WOM!!:N - unl"rally appro.td I Y Imll·... .... or "'I,e",. Ind faU. K1lchln prlvU.,II. 331· Iidium Pork. 3310421&. ..,

fear that his testimony has H F d MUSIC~'. ,1NSTIIUMENT- 5141. - - - 1-13110 1M2 CHEVY II . I CYU;;der, I~to- THE NORTON 750 IS THE " - j IIU ' Oo"nlo~n_ Inqulre:102 5:30. 1·7 dealt a lIotaggerlno blow to the urts 00 _____ THllF. ·ROOM (urnlalled I,.rlmont. malic <<In''nUbl •. ~51.u2C arter I INCOMPARABLE MACHINE.

improvement of nutritional 11l. DRUM 1.1. m5 or be I oUar. SSI · Dubuquo. 7.211.11 THE NORTON 750 IS FOR WASHTNGTON I Th .450 aHer $:30 P .. II'~ 11162 MF,R(;URY IFordl - IlIck.

eracy." - e I d dill '17" ""7 " •• MiSe FOR SALE ,00 ron on •. •• ..... PEOPLE WHO AP PREC IATE

"Breakrast cereal with milk A~ricutture Ot>partment I~- I LOST AND FOUND • Mornln... mnlnll. .., . cOlltribute Importantly Lo the frrmed Shell 011 Corp. today It I DOt RI.t.:. .Inel. bod. hl,hehllr. 1970 OODGE Supar 8U. Lilt Prlr" 1 THE ULTIMATE IN POWER· nutritional quality of the total , will cancel registration In 30 I'~~~'d "h,:~m~~~~~1 ~~~,~rd (~~: blby tar tit. 3.~104022 8-7 MZOO. ,\IUII .. II. '2701. UJ.l

5ri I RELIABILITY . I tbrcakfast," said Dr. Frederick daYA for the firm's biA·~elling r.rteili. relurn of pt'r onal rnn· CY('LOS 4 IUb. head.n ~"d com· 11\17 DODGr: VI -'slom VIII. ' Ir. PERFORMANCE.

htl ehold peet'clde "No re~t ont.. No que 1I0\], alll.d "7 '!/t71 pl. It .. I'au I 11'1ll. I"'~ up .." J. Stare Harvard nutrition 1 U. " I, . • .... alrlan.. MUlla ... _ Ind COuilr. lap.drr'. pro'. 10hilly rUlt~m· I professor: newspaper column. Strip." . un Ie s the product's la· LOST: 111111. male kilt,... .roy 390·128 .n,I" ••. 856-2113. 8·7 Iztd (or call1pini . Bar,oln. ""'5~) 1 1st and government consultant. bellng I~ changcd. markln . Call 337 .. 4l9 or an. !:tIt:.\T 8ar~III1' \\ nrn only onr. Th d rt t t d fI ~7n ~-7 ' '''0''11 cololl 118h! b,ol'n. m.d Ulfil OLD 118 convertlbl •. faelory SUZUKI

I Cercals, said Stare, testify· e cpa men a: e a cr . '. lum lenilh. ovnlhellr ,,'1,. W .. J.l0, Ilr. po..... Exc.lI.nl rondillon

ing for Kellogg's and the Na. t~e Food and Drug Admlnl~tra· MOBILE HOMES 1<111 •• 11 111m;. 353·2J:iO. U 930. '31 .. 9M belor. UO P.M. ... IUILT TO TAKE ON THE tional Biscuit Co., " provide ap- It~n found that strips. used In Ml:ST StI.L, AmptX 2161 .. ,.o~ of ." TRIU PH 250<c low mllea"' 1 COUNTRY proxl'me(ely the . ame amount k •• ltchens .and food servtn~ areas EXC'ELLENT <ondilion. 1 ht<drnom.1 Ih. Un .... 4 trl<k Iltreo lape rro ,ood <ondillon. Call 151·StOII. ':.. 10 • 30 Cuml.hod. r"pel.d. air. forder. lntclrot,d ·p.lk.r. mlcr", ... ro k 00 TEAR UP THE TRACKI of protein ' and calories as I conlammate food regardle s of .... her. dner. 3$13070. 8.J phon... ~nd. tou,h W.pr eoo ·~ood.R~3..'t~:.1 truc . ,I . RU;;

any nted." n .... poo of bell olfer. 338-S2U .f IfHl.l NEW lOON 10 I 53 alrcon ler G P.M. ,·n .'OR SALE; 1'~9 Ford • 42 p .. ..,n.

Shell has a ked the FDA 10 dlUonln,. h,lI) carpelrd. lUll (ur· ,or bu •. ~-cell."· ron"lllon. G-"A

Campus Notes

"ac. *3000 Call Dubuqu. 58 ... 130 a k W ZENITH 21" t.ble model ...... u , " approve as safe some pesticide .. enin... . s.7 TV. 140 or bul orr.r. 210 E. DI.. W.ber 338-7886. 8-7

I residues on food. .np .... 1 art.r 12:30 pm .. 7

MUST SELL - 8 IIlde. 2 bedroom Shell will be allowed to sell nne furnbh.d for .Iud~. Itrenndl. LOVE .eal. Inllqut d~mr. doublo

I d 1I0nln •. metal .tora.. hed. '1200. bed. eaoy ,halt. kll.h.n I.bl. Ind exist ng stocks of Ihe pesticl e '51.$309. 8.7 chllrs. 537·7410 If I.. •. ..7

II strips - estimated by one gov. 8' • 38' KROPt-. ruatom buill, Il00. COAl PLETt 8mm OUWI; brand n ... ernment source at $30 million ~ 10 7:30 p.m 338·1I3ol3. 11.11 calC •• lable, mltchln, eh. t are ..

ff . 643·~~". H - without label change. 10 l 30 AIOIIIL.E homo - .ood con·

FULLER SOCtETY 1\ The Agricullure Deparlment dillon. '1800. Cprll.llle. m·m •. The Buckminster Fuller So- lold Shell it wants this caution. 86

c' t ' 11 t t 7 .n t NO r .. son.blr ofrcr denl.d. 2 bed Ie y WI mee a :"" p.m. 0- ary tatemcnl added to labeling room. Iurnl'hod. Ilrcnndlllontd. nil:ht in 480 Phillips BaJI. for the strips: "00 not use in ,'.rpel.d. humo) .1$(.7711 afttr 5.

,·6 Reports on the World Design kitchen. restaurant.~ (lr areas

COUo' CLU8 - Cull leI I H8 Burk. Premier. ne'er u .. d. ,225 or bfo"

orr.. 331 ·6834. 8-8

MOVING - mu.1 Mil IMOO BTU lir conditioner, loll bed, are !5tr.

Armchair. lamp. book.h.I .... que.n oi" b.d. mlllC. 3Jt .. ~. 8-8

Science Decade documents will where food is prepared or 19fiO hK.,,1.I1'iE 10 '\ 46' furnl it

• d. ,'art,d.d. altcondllinn.d. "", Nlct bl.dll.,. •••• " B.r with 5\001' n ... $2800 or be.1 urr.r. 338-:;372 and sIldln, door. 331·1J3g Iller 6 be presented. Discussion will ~erved." .·22 pm. Un

follow each report. I 'The strips continuou Iy emit a ",FURNI 'HED 3 b~droom, 19fi.1 PRIMITIVES. clock •. RIII."a.. -• • • vapor or the ny·killing pesticide Am.rlcao f1omet .. I. to • s. "Alkyllquo,'" BehInd 320 . Gil·

GRADUATION CARDS I DDVP. ~-urnlc. and "aler h.ller 3 y.ar, bert. Op"n Mon.· hI. 8-16 Old. 351-4212. 8-14 Official University o( Iowa iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiii __ ~ .-______ -=-.....;;;~_. J UST ARItIV ED

It m?"ic; r,"

SrI inf

Father Herman of Sprue. Is. graduation announcements are land In Alaska , a Russi.n Orth. now on sale at the Alumni 01. 1

tdox monk who died in Alask. I fice in the Union from 8 a.m. (tfttn Runi.n Americ.) Otc. 10 5 p.m. daily . There is no 13, 1137, is shown in a rec.nt minimum or limil on the nurn· p.intlng to be used in his Cln. ber which may be purchased. • •

DIAPER SERVICE

U Doz. per Wttk ) - $12 PER MONTH -

FrH pickup & dellv.ry twict • wttk. E v.rythinll I, fur· nlshed: Oi.,.rs, con,.inert, dtodor.n's.

WIND DAMAGE SALE! I

SAVE HUNDREDS

/o\A RANTZ MODEL 32 I'OWEII AMP

/o\ARANTZ MODIL 13 AM I FM TUNIIt

All Untl. Carry Ihe tlmarklbll Martnll

J Vllr Wa ... nly on ,.rtl and Llb. r. onilltion In Kodiilk Thursday.

H. will be made a slln' In 'he Amlric.n Orthodox Church Ind is boli.ved '0 b. 'h' first min to bt c,nonized In 1ft • western hemisphere.

- AP Wirephoto

f/ "nnedy Has T~b~'h~~!/~u!.?~u?I~' I

I . P · lion.. In<.. Communl .. llonl C.n·

Y I n 9 r I e st Itr, IOWl Cltv. low. 52'40 dilly IX·

I"" Monday., holld.y.. I'gll holl· d.y. and Ihl d.ys oftor 1. , .1 ho ll·

• dIY'. Ent.red as second clalS mat· I EW YORK ~ _ The Rev. , lor at Ih' POlt olli .. II low. City

under 'h. Ad of Conll r, .. of Jn~ eph fox. who says he Is Mmh" 1S1.. I

POPULATION GROWTH Zero Population Growth will

meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Jowa City Recreation Center . I The public is invited. I

NEW PROCESS p,,- 337-9'"

HERKY SPORTING GOODS

A Divisiorl Of H erky Atltlctic Sales 415 10th Av • . , Coralvilll 351·3473

Kennedy Ai rport's "answer to I The D.lly [owan I, wrillen Ind edited by ,Iudenls oC The Unlvor· the Flying Nun." recalls that oily or lowo. Opinion. _.pre sed In 1 st thl edllorl.1 columno of tho paper the sight of planes as a teen· are Iho •• of the wrllers. I ager gave him the urge to fly. I Th. AIIO<II';;-';'" II entitled I

to Ihe .. c1uslve use lor republica· SA RY "I was brought up in Rose· , lion III IntAI IS well II all AI' no... ANN I V E R Ind dl,pllrh.s.

luburlpllon R.I .. : By clrrler In SALE landing approach to Ihe old Iowa City. $IU per yur In Idvlnce; . t. monthl. S.I ;0; lhree monlhl. SS.

WE HAVE SEVERAL SLIGHT· l Y DAMAGED HOMESI

EXAMPLE: 12 x 60 COMMODORE

WAS $6950 NOW $5600

FREE DELIVERY AND SET

UP ANYWHERE IN 10WAI

BIG SAVINGS - NOW

MONTHLY PAYMENTS.

VALLEY HOMES 4555 ls' Av • . S.E. CEDAR RAPIDS

THE

STEREO SHOP

1111 ILLII N.W. 365.1324 CIDAII IIAPIDI

• KING TROMBONE WITH f. ATTACHMENT.

FINE CONDITION.

$150 OR BEST OFFEIt

• YORK E·FLAT TUBA

• KING SOUSAPHONE

BEST OmRS

CALL 331'()251

Ita OLD MOBIL! c.n .. rUble. S600 or beSl offer. CIII bolor. 3;34) ,

337-8771 8-3 CORVETTE '17 con~.rtlbl •. RltdlOp,

U7·300 liP AIII·F I. 4 .peed. po I· trlcUon. C~ afler • p.m. 3lJ.1133.

Utfn

HELP WANTED I ---COOK ... nled lor fraternity. Phon. 338-1131. 8-7 1

LARCE ta.lern Uf. In.urantO oompany d",lr .. (ull tim. repro·

.tntaUvt. In . Ihis .rt.. Startln • •• Iary op.n. Write 10l MI. 10"" , Cit)'. 8·1

}-ULL-T1ME secr.tArY Spanlih·pon. u.u.. Dtplrlment. Kn<IWledl.

0' Spanish desirou.. but not Df'C· •• ary. 3~5G7 . ..7 BOARD crow membe;--lor-(~I I

neltl Tau Delli. 322 N. CUlIlo" -a.rn5 Irom 8ur,. Rill . Con~et John 1.0u,bran. 35J.~13. ..1& WANTED: Ilud,nl lor eomplnlon I

lor .Iderly ,.ntleman. ome ,mall duUe - bOlrd, room. 'ood sallry. Work Ivallible now. al.., I(hool year. 337-4242. ' .. lin

University ef lowl Tubtrculelil Unit Oakd.lt Hnpltll

H.. .,.nlnlll .... RlllistlrH NurMs, 3 p.m. '0 11 p.m •• nd 11 p.m. 10 7 I m. .hHh -full or p.rt '11M. ElIc.lI.nt sal.ry .nd fringe beneflh. -Call Mr.. Hope, Dlrectw ef Nurtlnt 353 ..... '.

An EquII Opportunity Empltytr

HELP WANTED

H.I, wllIted, ,.rt.tI"". ~pply It SMkly'. PIIII PlrI ... 1ftif' 4 P.M .... pheno

351·3115.

fROM 50e( TO 5OO(c SUZUKI IS THE BEST BIKE

BUY AN YWH EREI

THE MOTORCYCLE

CLINIC WHERE WE SElL AND

SERVICE THE COMPLETE LINE OF NORTON AND SUZUKI MOTORCYCLES .

WHERE WI OFFER OUR CUSTOMERS ALL PO'SSIBlE· ~ SAVINGS WITH THE BEST TRADE. IN ALLOWANCES POSSIBLE.

WHERE A FRIEND CUSTOMER

EVERYONE FIRST -SECOND

IS A

AND NEVER A "SUCKER."

SEE JOHN 011 DAV~ AT

THE MOTORCYCLE CLINIC

222 E. PRENTISS 351·5900

• FINANCING AVAILABLE

• EXCLUSIVE NORTON

AND SUZUKI DEALERS IN IOWA CITY

dale. Queeds. right on the -- I Cu rl iss· Wright Field ," said All mall ,ubscrlPtlonSt $12 per year;

Ix monlh&, '6.50; hree months,

Fa:her Fox, the Roman Cath· 13.50. I 25 50% olic chaplain as the interna-

I Dial 337""1 from noon 10 mid-

• I1J,hl to report news Items .nd In· '- 0 OFF DAILY IOWAN WANT ADS hOl lal airport's Our Lady of nouncemenls In The Dilly lowln.

Editorial office. are In lbe COJDm uo, th~ Skies Chapel. He recently. ICltions Cenler. ON ALL ITEMS IN rft'eived his commercial pilot's ' 0101 337""1 If you do nOI tecelv. THE lice nse.

.. I ahl ays wanted to fly and When I was assigned here three years ago I decided I would

your plp"r by 7:30 •. m. E.ery e£. ' ort wtl! be made to correct th~ cr· STORE ror I.lth the nexl Issue. Clrculallon omce hou" ore B:30 10 Jl I.m. ~on· Eliclulli- GUlIs & Amme day Ihrough Frld.y. 1 ...

Trulte", Board Of\ Studenl Pub· 5th To 15th IIclllons. 111C.: Caro Ehrtlrit, 0; John Cain, A3; Ron Zob.l. 1.2; ..

ne'w be any closer to aviation Sh"rr~ Marllnson, 113; Jo. Kelly. I 113; William J . Zlma, School 01 A 9 t

tho I a: 1 now, " says the 48- Journall'm: William Albrecht, De· U US . p.rtm ("l nt o( Ecdno mlcs, Chalrmln;

yea,-old pllesl who has logged George W. )·oroll. SchOOl of Re·1 FAMOUS NAME BRANDS more Ihan 400 hours. Iliglon; and David choenblum, De- I .......................... ~ parlmen l ot HUlory.

Work For Others Why Not let Them .Work For You?

Page 4: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1970-08-05dailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-05.pdf1970/08/05  · left 31 known dead - 5 in QJba, 14 in Florida and 12 in Texas. The deaths

,

St,

-

,.,.~ ,.. PCUIS

.lICK LEMMOI IIIDY lB. • lB. ... STOIY

THE OUHJf·mWlERS ." Ol(lllll.h

FEATURE AT 1:48·3:«·5:40·7 :41· 9:42

2nd WEEK

"THE HEROINE SPENDS AS MUCH TIME STARK NAKED

AS ANY PERFORMER SINCE 'FLIPPER'"

./ '. . v ~titch RATED ® ,

--., ANNE Gam (,...--, c." ....

~......, .... FEATUURE AT 1:41· 3:42·5:36·7:35·9:34

ENDS TONIGHT "A BOY CALLED CHARLIE BROWN"

STARTS

THURSDAY THEIR DREAM WAS TO GO TO COLLEGEI

~yolI1g ad feel everything more deep/y_ ad thEre's so rruc:h to feel deePY about.

the strawberry. statement . _0W0f."""'1>Nl!'~ !lOA lOA 0 ~C>.C)t ~_

JURY PRIZE

WINNER CANNES

FILM FESTIVAL 1970

FEAT. TIMES 1 :38·3:38·5:38·7:38·9:31

STARTS

THURSDAY

ENDS TONITE "ONE MORE TIME"

L ... nualllEST _ ..... TIE aI., .. ne

dim BRawn I.EE VIR CLEEF

IN I~"I!M'! i l PATRICK o'nEAL

T£CIfoIC().OO"

MUST END TONtTE

WEEKDAYS

7:30 & 9:45

"BEYOND THE VAllEY OF THE DOllS"

STARTS

THURSDAY

WEEKDAYS I 7:15 & 9:30 '

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (A'! - marked by the unused No. 12 Last year it was delayed by a had him play about one quar· Wanted: Quarterback, H a I r 1 green mesh jersey and bright dispute with Commissioner Pete ter Saturday night" when the length no problem. But mu t an· while shoes. Rozelle. Jets open their exhibition sea· swer to name Joe Namath. Con· 1eanwhile. high atop Tower C This year it has been com· son again t Buflalo at Birming· tact Weeb Ewbank, coach, New in the dormitory that house the pounded by the players' strike. ham, Ala. Yor~ Jets.. . . Jets, the phone. calls go out in That, however. now is over a~d But he also points out that the

It S possible that want ad WIll endless processiOn. ew York, most of the Jets are either In veterans have been reporting be appearing .in your local pa. ~ too, ~iami or wherever he camp or en route. without an order having been is. ·per soon-for nght now Namath, mIght be. But Namath canDOt be reach· sued. "There's no deadline," at least to the Jets, is less a But there i no Joe Namath. cd Neither has he reached any says Ewbank. first· tring quarterback than a Where is he? [s Ewbank an· one with the Jets. missing per on. gry? WhaL's. Na~;th up to? It is a mystery without a clue. III F I

The players strike has ended" Has he cut hiS haIr. Ewbank, publicly at least, ness at a and most of the Jet veterans All those questions are kicked I maintains an even dis po ilion • have started workouts at the around in a scene reminiscent when pc tered about Namath's T H k Jets' Hofstra University train· of la t year, as coaches, play· whereabouts. He acknowledges 0 aw eye ling base. But In the dressing ers. media people await his ar. , having tried to reach him and room·Namath's a b sen c e is I rival. admits "I would like to have

Maior League Baseball Scoreboard

NATIONAL LIAGUI AMElue"N LI"OUI

Pltt.lburgh ew York

ChlcaJlo PhDadelptlJa 51. Loul Montr •• 1

I .. t (1St W L ,.,. 01 W L sa ~i .548 Balthnore 61 39 57 49 .538 I ... York 51 48 ~ 52 .514 3'. .Delrolt 57 41 49 58 .487 8'. Booton • ~ 51 49 58 .458 9', CI.vtl.nd 52 55 f1 81 .435 12 .WI hln,too 48 58

'ct. ,. .632 -.343 1t,

:m J" .488 1$Ii .Wlt

W L ,ct. ell ,Mlnne,ota 85 f7 .831_ Will I Wilt

xClntlnnl1i 14 35 .679 - xCallCornl. 60 48 JM 7 xLos An,el.. 60 45 .571 12 xOAkland 59 47 557 I AUanla 52 56 .481 211, xMllwaukee 40 88 .370 II

.San Franel ... o 50 55 .476 22 I XKIIl'" City 39 111 .38111 Itouston 47 61 .435 26', xChlcl~o 38 71 .34910

.Sln 01.,0 43 85 .398 50'. x-NlIht gamo not Inelud d. , .-lIIlaht ,ame . nol Included. T.e.dly" b.ults

Tueldly'. Ite .ultl I BllUmore 5. Boston 2 New York 4. Chlcl,O 0 Cleveland 6. New York I

L LouJa 3, Phlladolphll I Mllwlukro It Mlnnnotl, N Pltlaburgh 4. Montrell 2 Ken ... City al Chlcuo. Alilnla 6, HOUlton I WI.hlmllon II Delrolt . N San FrancIsco at Los An~.le ,N Clllr.".nlo at Oakland, 2, N Clnelnnlti II Sin Dle,o, III P,oblble Plleh"s

'rob.blo 'Itche,. 0 kl d 0 b (11101 t K Chlclao. Pappu t64) Ind Gur. I an. a son . I ... 10.11 It Montro.1. Ny. 13-2) Ind .. , City. Ougo (6-91, N Renko (6-7), 2, lwl.nl,hl CIIiCornll. Bradley (1·2) It Min.

PhUldelpnla. Wb. (fl.I) It Pill .. 0.011. Kill (1Q.7I, N burch, Wilker (1-3), N Milwaukee, Brabender (5-131 at

New York. Genlry 17·6' at St. Chlel,o. MI,Ulon (0.2), N Loull, Corlton (6-14), N WI.hlngton. Shellenb.ek la-II al

AUlnll. StaDe 17-81 at 1.0' Detroll. LaUch (11-121, N Angeles, Fosler (6·9" N I S Houston Wilson (4.3) at SIn New York. tottlemyre 1\('·1) at Dlc,o. Wu'.on 1041. N Cleveland, McDowell (la-SI, N

ClnclnnaU. McGlothlin !I 1·5) tt Boston. Siebert (l1·S) at IIIIU· San Fl'lnelico. Reber,.r 13-4'. N mor •• Palmer (14-71. N ---'NFL R k· M 0 Coach's Wife .

00 les ove ver Gilma l.:cCuskey, wile of Milwaukee's Krausse Iowa Wrestling Coach Dave Mc·

A V t C t Cam Cuskey. passed away Monday H · f 20 W·· s e s orne 0 . p nig~t at University ~ospital fol· oping or Ins lowmg a lengthy Illness. She

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS veleran who played out his op- I and th~ retirement of nine·year was 63 . , MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL tories this season. Most Nat ion a I Football ' i~n. last year by leading .the , veteran. defen Ive tackle Ron . Born J~ne II, 1907, sh.e mar· (A'! - Lew Krausse hopes .to "I don't know about this

League veterans were busy VIkings to the NFL champlon- Kostelmk . ned DaVId McCuskey In 1932 become the first 20-game wm' year," Bristol said, "but be's showing the rookies who's bo s ship reportedly wants a four- Virtually the entire Green and the couple has been resi· ner in the history of the Mil· certainly capable of it in the at the training camps Tuesday )Iear, million-dollar contract Bay Packers squad was on hand l dents of Iowa City since 1952. waukee Brewers, a two-year· future. He's won seven of bl! but two of the game's stars, plus a $250.000 bonus. by late Tuesday. including a Sh~ was a member of the GlorIa old team fighting for fourth last eight games." quarterbacks Joe Namath and Minnesota General Manager ::ouple of urprising light· Del Lut~eran Church where ~he place in the American League With 54 games to go, Bristol Joe Kapp, were among the Jim Finks won't say how much weights. Defensive back Willie was active In numerous service West Division. might start Krausse at least missing. . Kapp is demanding nor how Wood checked in at 192 poundS, ' groups. Krausse hurled his 11th vic· 12 more times .

The influ:. of veterans for much the club is offering but 15 less than a year ago, and Mrs. McCuskey Is urvived by tory , against II losses, Monday The Brewers' ace has hurled t~eir first full day of workouts says an o[fer has been made running back Donnie Anderson, her husband, two sons, Jon of nighl-4-2 over the .Minnesota sile complete games. He has since the end Monday o[ the and rejected. 20 pounds under the 230 of a Mason City and David L., of Ex· Twins in the second game of struck out 94 batters-includ. players' strike took its toll of Meanwhile workouts moved I year ago. Also expected is corn· celsior, Minn.: three brothers, a doubleheader. ing American League homer youngsters . along at an accelerated pace for I erback Herb Ad.derly, who said two sisters and five grandchil· No other Brewer pitcher has leader Harmon Killebrew twice

8y I

C Mter de

half. a ju FI.rd, ass ,dministr­jury to a I

ford, II eourt, wa. ing a doo Building d onslration.

The 12·r ",tire I y of lIIiy" -rivtll .t cordint to lurors.

The ver U. Kenne pu Secu

"We di to the ba bave a s slale's evl

1 , The clubs began releasing the 26 NFL teams. 20 of which last year he might not return. dren. more than seven victories. Monday night. ' rookies who had hoped the dis· will be in action Saturday night. The Chicago Bears went Services will be held Thurs. ''If I can get enough starts," Among the losses are 8 1.0 I

pute would give them a better John Sandusky, Baltimore's through a triple· ession workout day at 2 p.m. at Gloria Dei Lu. said the 27·yea~-old- right· reversal to the Calilornla shot at a spot on the rosters. defensi~e .line c.o~ch, expressed and Coach Jim Dooley said the theran Church with Rev. ~y ~ander, "I just might make I Angels, a 3·2 setback by the A But a couple of backup quar· the majority opInion around the three·a-day sessions would con· Wingate officiating. Burial Will Ie" New York Yankees and 8 2-1 terbacks are stili eyeing the No. league when he commented: tinue through Thursday. I be at 10 a.m. Friday at Lake Manager Dave Bristol is still defeat to the Kansas City 1 jobs on their teams - AI "We're certainly limited . in The San Diego Chargers and Mills. a little cautious about 20 vic- Royals. Woodall of the New York .Jets what we :can do .In the first Cincinnati Bengals conducted a ' - -- -- --and G~,?, Cuozzo of the Mrnne· game. We II be c~ught up men· trade with veteran San Diego sota Vlk!ngs.. . tal~y but we won.t kno~ for a safety Ken Graham going to the

The situation Involvmg Kapp I while about phYSically. Bengals in return for a 1971 - whose whereabouts are also The Coils announced the plac· draft choice. a mystery - is serious. The ing of four rookies tin waivers

ADULTS 1.50

CHILD UNDER

12 Fltll

They make their ownlawl

at "The Cheyenne Social Club"

1161'G1W. COIUI. PlClUltS PmOOl

J,&,/'\ES STEWART HEMRY

OPIN 1:00

$T"RT

A T DUSK

.. n .. " 1_ mIU.E11 _ .... ,,«II" CENt nUT nlCo"" _, WUS l£[ IAllm ~~ .. ,' .... n.ttclWll"' .... HN ... ~

- AND -

4th Place For Crampton lin PGA $$

NEW YORK IAl - Bruce Crampton's $50,000 victory ill ! I he Westchester Classic last I week-end sent him rocketing into fourth place in the year's

I money winnings on , the pro golf lour.

I The weekly figures, released

Tuesday by the PGA Tourna· ment Players Division, showed Crampton in contention in bolh the money and point races, still led by Lee Trevino.

Trevino, who overslept and failed to report to the tee on I Lime at Westchester, leads the

, money winning list with mO,976. followed by Jack Ni:k· laus. $116.260 ; Dick Lotz, $108.913, and C ram p ton , $107,775. I Bock ladleD Claudia CUdlDa1e

A IIDe PaIr The point standings, based on Everybody's A-Little Rusty The First Day -

tournament finishes, have Trev· ino ahead with 1,115.6 points wilh Bob Lunn next at 1,047.9 and Crampton third at 1,031.5.

A Cinema Cent6r Films· National General PrOducllon 11-

Every Wednesday Night Is

FAMILY NIGHT!

In Store Purchase Only Family Sill Pina

Thursday Nights ...

Collegiate Night! PITCHER BEER Domtatic Light

JOIN OUR "SING-ALONG"

TIM STEFFA • Thurs., Aug. 6

or D.rk

' :30· 1:30 Fri. 7:30. '2:30 Sat.

• NOW SHOWING: Olde' T yme Movies SUN, • THURS, 8 p,m, to mid"ite

~SBllm~~8~~s~ Hwy 1 West

-Near Wardway

351·3885 ... o 1H6 SHAlCE'I'S tile.

Baltimore halfback Terry Col. is shown fUlI')bling I handoff from veteran quarterback, John Unitas, u the Colts went through th.ir lirst full day of practice Tuesday. It is quite evident that the pros los. some timing during tM off seuon. Mo,t of the yeterans had reported to camp by Tunday'. drill.. - AP Wirephoto

AUG US" - SPtcIALS -

Mi.lltl' I ~ pk. - .t ~.OCI CASH

Harp laqer ;a ~u al\ H 1\t.

l owtnbrclu. \-1 t l 1'\t. II. t f\ lltc.k

, £ , Buc.~ hOT'"

"pte. - • . 79 CARRV

401 SOlJ.t~ Gltbe'{ - ft£GUlAR. l>R1CES-

( .... hI9"&f lold)

:Bu.a., Sc.nhh, HaVl\m'~ ~ ph. ... • , . .t~

Olcl. Nt lo, Ola TaVlN\. Mil.Bul

" t'k~. • ,qO

J)lOH\'Sl.l~' ;rJ7 - SPECIAL -

lht'-'lr~~. s~().,.t.. G"~i'l\ 'Btl~

t4.b1 .ptY' cue

{llU5: Chips, Nub. Socia fOR WHAT ALES YOu. ...

WE'R£ O~E N - t:~·.: ~~ :r-t .... Mol'\.-'.,.'. ., Sa\. .

J

WASHI including Wednesda bile man and insta devices a

They 81 lac turing at their antipolluti developed the aUege

Defends Motors C Corp., A Automobil

Tht15 ulclng the IheiI' com ylol.,.

In sup assume the case, would sh least two sential In by auto e

Plalntif lIlinols, A Kansas, sola, Mi mont and

The act lacturers, eliminate Into the facture a devices.

It said

21 18-

Texas sented pe asking th under the

Both ba year-old v final ruli tionally Jan . 1.

Mitchell July 16 'complian ling Aug.

A com stales hay the age COUrt test five SOu are awai and two states did

'!'he Ju stales ha I8'Year-01

Connectl Waii, Illino land, M ta, Monla

, sey, New lJ8ylvanla Iinia. '

-- - ~ -~ - ~ . -- -. - - - - ~~-~ - ~- - - -=-==--=-~ -. -~~ -- ~ -=-=-~~~~ ... -~~--- ~~'-- ~ -