4
KARL HOINKES Clear and Warmer t lelJ' to pertly cloudy Wednesday. A \ittllt warmer Wednesday. Higha Wednel. "y uPfler 80s to lower 90s. Pe rtly ,loudly Wednesday night a nd Thursdl Y. o-.nce of thundenhowen northwe" WedntadlY night Ind north ThursdlY. j ' 1I,."Ulh ... 1. 1161 .,. Peacemaker? I oil oman Ser ing the University of Iowa and the People a/Iowa City I.w. City, I.w. 52240 - W .... , Au.uI' 26, 1970 10 C.llt •• c.py Hit' 0ppressive T radi ti ons- U.S. Women Strike Newsmen lurround Isrl.I', chi.f delegltl to the United Nations, Yostf Tekolh, TuesdlY II he Irrives at UN h.adquarters In New York City. Tekoah WII to ",..t with go·between Gunnar V. Jlrrill9 .n the U. S. pe.c. pl.n for the Middle Ea". Repnsentativ., of JDrdan Ind the United Arlb R.public w.re liso tD meet with Jlrring. - AI> Wirephoto By THE A SSOCIATED PRESS Marching to rallies, smashing coffee cups, dumping bras and cosmellcs In trash cans and in some cases perhaps plopping the baby on the husband 's 0[' lice de k. women from coast 10 coast will demonstrate for Uberation today. Billed as "Women's Sirike for Equal- ity." the nationwide demon tration will coincld with the SOth annil'ersary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, which ga\'e women tbe right to I'ote. Leader of the National Women's Strtke CGali'ion is author Betty Friedan who has been contending [or years thai wom- en have " not come a long way, baby" since Ihat historic day on Aug. 26, 1920. As the women of many cltl., mlde their final pllns for prDtelt, in mDlt CII .. stDpplng ShDrt of actuilly striking. polltielenl .w.r. Df th. wom.n'l V4IIt c.me tD their support. Gov elsan A. Rockefeller of New nounce plans to introduce new rederal legislation. H. said It would emltocty the Isplre' tlDnl upraned by the strik., Including repeal Df laws Iglinst abortion, 24.hour child clre c.nters, Ind .qull opportun· Ity in jobs .nd eduellion. Women marching doWll New York's Fifth Avenue today for an evening rally at Bryant Park on Street mayor may not abide by a city ruling that they can have only one lane of the avenue. Angered at the city's reFusal to block off the entire ave]lue to traChc during Ihe march , 11ss Friedan said that suf- fragette had the whole avenue when they marched to celebrate tbe right to vote SO years ago. and "we can have it again." In Atlenta, GI ., wh.r. Inoth.r rilly Is pllnned,' a spok.lman Slid m.mbers of the Nati.nll Or91nllltl.n for Wom- en ( NOW) wDuld be "trylll9 to uplli" whit our golls Ir •. " TIlt Floridl wo mtn .Ist will be Isle" tt bring articles Iymbollzl", opprtllltn, such el products advertized In wlys they ( onll'" Insulting, Ind to" them in the cl n. At San Jose, one or several California cities planning rallies, wQmen members of NOW will elect a male "Playmate of the lonth ," thus showing their oft-ex- pressed contempt for the sex symbols glorified in Playboy Magazine. Women in Kansas City, 10 ., plannmg to rally at midday on the steps of City HAil , canvassed working women and shoppers with a leaflet which asked ' " Have you ever been pa id les at a job for which a man would be paid more? " Quiet Strike Day Expected in City NaUonal Women 's Strike Day is expect. ed to be quiet in Iowa City. Guarded Opt i mism Marks York proclaimed Wednesday "Women's Rights Day" and declared "It Is In the best interest of our whole society that the for equality and justice for women continue lind ultimately prevail " Sen . Charles Goodell tR·N.Y.) who like Rockefeller i running for held a news conCerence wilh ' MI Fried- an and other women's liberation leaders at his office In New York City to an- Que t!onnaires on women's rights also are being sent to candidates for gover- nor of Georgia. In Miami, Fla., NOW members will smash their cofCee cups and throw the pieces in a trash can "to dramatize our desire to break away from the tradition· al role allot! d to women in politics ... to give lea rather than take part In de- cision-making." '!be Iowa City Women's Liberation Front (WLF) has decided not to par· ticipate in strike activities because of whal Its members describe as "the bourgeois nature of an activity in which poor women cannot participate." Opening 01 T' alks UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. fA'! - In an air of guarded optimism, , from Israel and two Arab countries began separate discussions Tuesday with U.N. envoy Gunnar V. Jarring aimed at bringing peace to the Middle East. A 22·y.ar enmity marked by three wlra made the tlSk a fDrmid.bl. one, but IS the thrH del'glt.s opened th,lr tllks und.r the U.S. celst·flr. pl ln, I " thty .xpressed h Dpe that peaee is POl' lible. I Israeli Ambassador Yoser Tekoah was the first to go to Jarring's office , on the 38th noor o( the U.N. building overlooking New York City's East Riv- er. He met with Jarring for 45 minules and was followed by Jordanian Am- bassador Abdel Hamid Sharaf, who re- I ' malned 25 minutes. Then Egyptian Am. bassador Mohammad Hassen EI- Zay- yat, and Jarring talked for 35 minules. There , with Jarring seated in a large leather chair and the ambassador op- posite him on a pale green divan, the I first steps were taken to overcome the I anger that exploded alter the six-day war in 1967 . . The talks were the second stage of the U. S.·sponsored peace move that achiev· ed a 9().day cease-fire Aug. 7 between Israel, Jordan and Egypt. The military I I standdown will end Nov. 5 unless extend- ed. Fe .w Southern Schools Have Class Delays By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Several more Soulhern schools were desegregated without incident Tuesday, , but a (ew other openings were de l ayed because of racial tension and related Black pupils boycotted ele- mentary schools in a South Carolina tity. In Washington, the Supreme Court set the stage for a major test on busing to achieve school desegregation it denied petitions from four Southern echool districts that it delay desegrega· Hon orders until there is a ruling on *t he issue. The petitions were from Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, N.C., Winston Salem and F'orsyt h Cou nty, N.C., and B roward and Dade Co u nties in Florida. Charlotte· Mecklenburg case involves school desegregation plan by a federal judge and may be lhe major test on busing. Chief Justice Warren g. B urger 's de- cision denied the petitions without ela- boration. Opening of desegregated schools in the l'<Iu h community of Sparta was until two weeks from n ext Moof racial tension. Florida State Cabinet at Talla- adopted Gov. Cla u de K ir k's reso- au thor i zing sc h ool ope ni ng del ays, Education Commission er Fl oyd said the move mea ns n othing cau e prob l ems. pupils boycotted el eme n tary at Easley , S.C. , but d esegrega· several systems in Al abama and went wit hout diffic u lty . an emergency meeting of the County School B oard in Spart a, Tuesd ay, W ill iam M. Andrews sa id del ay was o rd ered beca u se of at t he request of resi den ts. The three delcgates taiked freely with newsmen after their prelimlllary talks with Jarring. Jlrring would only Sly, "We have be· gun. So Wt contlnu •. " The basis for the negotiations is the resolution adopted unanimously by the U. N. Security Council Nov . 22, 1967. It created the po t or specia I representa- tive held by Jarring, a Swedish diplomat , and calls for the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Arab territory won in the June IJJ67 war and recognition of the right of Israel to exist within IcgaJy established boundaries. Tekoah told reporters, "If the Arab governments prove deSIrous of attaining genuine peace with [srael, we are confl· dent that this will be possible." But he said prospects would be better "were It not for news about continuous violations of the cease·fire by Egypt." Zayyat told newsmen the first viola· tions of the cease-fire were by Israel, but that Egypt did not publicize them Sharaf said that Jordan demands total withdrawal of Israel from all occupied Arab territory and a solution to the Pal- estine refugee problem. The meeting with Jarring was "fruitful," he said, and Jordan would present latcr its concrete position. San Que ntin" Pr ison ers Strike for Bl ack W arde n SAN QUENTIN, CaUr. fA'! - About 800 prisoners demanding appointment 01 a black warden at San Quentin Prison were driven back to thetr cells \)y guards us· Ing tea r gas Tuesday after inmates stag- ed a sit·down st rike and set fire to nine counseling offices. I There were no reported injuries. Officials said papers and furniture were burned but the building itself was not damaged. The outbreak occurred in the exer- cise yard the day after the prison was for the first time in its lIB-year history for court proceedings . About 200 civilians protested outside the main gate- Monday while the court was In session. They claimed the program would deny convicts fair trials. Prison officials said Tuesday 's inci - dent and Monday's court proceedings ap- parently were not related, except that one demand of the convict demonstrators was that they be tried before a ju ry of their peers - presuma bly other prison- ers - if other trials are heW there.. ' The demonstration began when the prisoners, milling about in the yard, rt .. fused to go to their regular job assign- ments In protest of the refusal of offi· cials to respond to a list of 15 demands . About 100 black prisoners appeared at the prison's yard orfice Monday and de- manded the employment of a black war- den , two black associate wardens and a Mexican·American associate warden. White and Mexican·Amerlcan prisoners joined blacks in the sit-down strike. Offi· cials said 28 per cent of the prison's 3,600 Inmates are Negro. 23 per cenl Mexican· American and 49 per cent white. Fa rm St ri ke Ups California Prices SALINAS, Calif. (All - Supermarket cash registers on the West Coast began to reflect the effects of a farm laborers' st rike Tuesday in the Salinas and Santa Maria valleys where . half the nation's lettuce , strawberries, artichokes and broccoli are produced. The price of a head of lettuce doubled in one day in San Francisco and in some stores was seIJing for 40 cents, as Cesar Chavez' AFUIO United Parm Workers Organizing Committee extended picket- Ing to 100 farms in an effort to win union recognition. "The growers have decided to stand and fight ," said a grower spokesman. "It wiU have to end sometime - people have to eat." McLucas Jury Deliberates As Hundreds Rally for Him NEW HAVEN , Conn. fA'! - Black Panther Lonnie McLucas is charged in a crime that "came out of the sadistiC, demented mind " of someone else, McLucas' lawyer lold a Superior Court jury Tuesday. Pleading for acquittal of the 24-year· ol d McLucas , attorney Theodore 1. Koskoff attributed the torture, abduction and sh ooting of Alex Rackley 15 months ago to George Sams Jr ., who has p lead. ed guilty to second-degree murder in the case. While the jury prepared to decide McLu cas 's fate , between 500 and 1,000 persons , most of them white, rallied across the st reet in his support. J ohn Froines , one o( the Chicago Se- ven consp i racy defendants, told the ga th ering, "I d on't see myseU as a sup- porter of the Panthers. I see myself as 'a comr ade In their struggle." The d efe n se argument before the jury the state's hour.long prese nta- tion on the 24th day of the trial. In Il, State's Attorney Arnold Markle called lor McLucas' conviction on all fo ur charges stemming from what he called .. an outright brutal , crass murder." McLucas was the first of eight Panth· ers facing charges in Ihe Rackley slay- ing to c.ome to trial. He was charged with kIdnaping resulting In death, con· spiracy to kidnap and to murder an d binding. The charge 0( ' kidnaping resulting in death is a capital offense , but the slate said it would not seek the death penalty. The maximum penalty for conspiracy to kidnap is 30 years; co nsp iracy to mu rder, 15 years, and binding, 20 years. Sams, one of three defendants who pleaded guilty , testified that McLucas assisled in Rack ley's tortur e at Pa nth er headquarters h ere and in his subsequ ent removal to a rural spot about 20 miles away, wh ere he was shot. No other groups have announced plans for the day . Se nate Turns Down Bid Fo r All-Volunteer Ar my Women in lower economic classes, WLF members said, are eXCluded from participating in the strike because they cannot financially afford to take time olr from their work. Iowa City WLF members noted thai Ihelr political philosophy differs signifi conlly from what they termed "the mod erate reformism" of the National Organ Ization of Women (NOW) that is organ izing much of the strike. WASHINGTON fA'! - The S nate, told that an all-volunteer Army Is an idea whose lime had not yet come, reject d Tuesday a bid to implement it as the first step toward ending the draft. Rejection came on a 52- 35 defeat of an amendment sponsored by Sens . Barry Goldwater (R·Arlz.! and Mark Hatfield (R·Ore). The plan was support- ed and opposed by highly unusual blocs of liberal and conservattve senators. Th(' amendment to a tnllitary procure· ment bill had been by the While Hou e and althoullh President Nixon said he still has as his goal the forging of a volunteer force at thl' appropriate time . Hatfi eld said the action probably means at least a two-year extension o( the draft law, now scheduled to expire June 30, 1971. The continuing war in Ind nchlna, doubts about the feasibility of raising enough volunteers. and ,(ears a force of volunteer professional might become a politically dangerous element all were factors in the outcome. Sen. John Stennis (O-Mlss 1 likened the propo al to "an illegitimate child, just wandering around the chamber, with no one willing to claim fatherhood - mUch less motherhood." " When this war stops ... T hope we can do something about it," said Stennis a he promised the Senate Armed Ser· vices Committee which he heads will hold hearings on the report of the Gates Commissio n which recommended an ali· volunteer lorce. The Hatfield-Goldwater plan would have provided pay increases or up to SO per cent for first-term enlistees and harply boosted pay scales In most other enlisted and officer categories. Both Goldwater and HaWeld said they viewed their plan as a lest to see wheth· er enough men could be recruited and persuaded to stay on duty to allow the Selective Service Act to expire next June . The While House had declared and Stennis emphasized that money was a major drawback . Stennis estimated the Trial Vigil cost at $4.3 billion a year. Presidential aides said the budget just could not stand th impact. Sen_ Jack (R. Iowa 1 voted with the nate majority Jo reject the amend· ment. S n. Harold Hugh s (D·lowal did not vote but was "paired " in favor of the amendment. "Pairing" is used to de- note a lawmaker's position on a measure when hE' is ab ' nt for the vote. Vote-at-18 Hearing Scheduled Oct. 19 WASHINGTON IA'I - Chief Justice Warren E. Burger aid Tuesday the Suo preme Court will hear arguments on the lS·vear-{)ld vote case on Oct. 19. Burger aid hI' had conferred with all other justices of the high court, which curr ntly is in summer recess, and had set the ca e for hearing. The Ju lice Department has been pressing for an early court determina- tion on the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act of 1970 which grants the vote to lS-yeaNlds, outlaws literacy tests and sets a new 3O-day residency require- ment for voting in presidential elections. The states of Te1C8s and Oregon filed suits against the government, challenging the acl. And the Justice Department has lIIed suits against Idaho and Ariwna to force them to conform' to the law. Although the government had sought an early ruling, the 18- year provision does not go into effect until Jan. 1, and would not affect this fall's election . President Nixon said, when he signed the bill June 22, that he had doubts about its constitutionality and wanted a speedy court test. The government also eeks special orders requiring states with literacy tests to regi ster otherwise eligible illit- erates for voting in general elections , should the court uphold the new law's ban on literacy tests. Daily Iowan Editor Leona Durham in formed woman members of her taf Tuesda}' that they would suffer no penalties if they decided to take the day off to work in women' s liberation activitif . Durham said she did not know whether any slaff members would take the day off, but she that they would not sinCe there apparently are no strike acllvities planned in the city. Durham said she had decided to work today since she does not personally sup- port the policies of NOW and because, "I think it's more important to drssemlnate information about the strike and Its cau es." Police Probing Ma di s on Bomb MADISON, Wis. (.fI - Police question ed and released a number of younl persons Tue day as bomb experts sifte( through rubble for clues into an explos ion which ripped through the Arm) Mathematics Research Center on th( University of Wisconsin campus Mon day . As the investigation progressed, a stu· dent leader predicted the school would be confronted with "the phenomenon of bombs" as a means of social protest. The bla t, which authorities said pack- ed " unbeli evable power," ripped through the research ce nter in the predaWll hours, killing a graduate student , Robert Fassnacht, 33, and injuring three other per sons. The FBI and Military Intelligence joined local authorities in the probe , which police officials said had turned up few early clues. Capt. Stanley Davenport of !be Madl· son police department said the blast . appeared to be the work of subversives using an explosives·laden Iruclc. DemonstratDrs hold I rally on the N.w Hlv.n Green TuesdlY In New H,ven, CDnn., fD r L.Mie McLucas, I Bilek Plnther being tried • ttw hundred feet .WIY on ch.rgea of Icidn.pi", end conspiracy, -: AP Wirtphot.

Warmer oil oman - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-26.pdfIsraeli Ambassador Yoser Tekoah was the first to go to Jarring's office , on the 38th noor o( the

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Page 1: Warmer oil oman - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-26.pdfIsraeli Ambassador Yoser Tekoah was the first to go to Jarring's office , on the 38th noor o( the

KARL HOINKES

Clear and Warmer t lelJ' to pertly cloudy Wednesday. A

\ittllt warmer Wednesday. Higha Wednel. "y uPfler 80s to lower 90s. Pertly ,loudly Wednesday night and Thursdl Y. o-.nce of thundenhowen northwe" WedntadlY night Ind north ThursdlY.

j ' 1I,."Ulh ... 1. 1161 .,.

Peacemaker?

I

oil oman Ser ing the University of Iowa and the People a/Iowa City

I.w. City, I.w. 52240 - W .... , Au.uI' 26, 1970 10 C.llt •• c.py

Hit' 0ppressive T raditions-

U.S. Women Strike

Newsmen lurround Isrl.I', chi.f delegltl to the United Nations, Yostf Tekolh, TuesdlY II he Irrives at UN h.adquarters In New York City. Tekoah WII to ",..t with go·between Gunnar V. Jlrrill9 .n the U. S. pe.c. pl.n for the Middle Ea". Repnsentativ., of JDrdan Ind the United Arlb R.public w.re liso tD meet with Jlrring. - AI> Wirephoto

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Marching to rallies, smashing coffee

cups, dumping bras and cosmellcs In trash cans and in some cases perhaps plopping the baby on the husband's 0[' lice de k. women from coast 10 coast will demonstrate for Uberation today.

Billed as "Women's Sirike for Equal­ity." the nationwide demon tration will coincld with the SOth annil'ersary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, which ga\'e women tbe right to I'ote.

Leader of the National Women's Strtke CGali'ion is author Betty Friedan who has been contending [or years thai wom­en have "not come a long way, baby" since Ihat historic day on Aug. 26, 1920.

As the women of many cltl., mlde their final pllns for prDtelt, in mDlt CII .. stDpplng ShDrt of actuilly striking. polltielenl .w.r. Df th. wom.n'l V4IIt

c.me tD their support. Gov elsan A. Rockefeller of New

nounce plans to introduce new rederal legislation.

H. said It would emltocty the Isplre' tlDnl upraned by the strik., Including repeal Df laws Iglinst abortion, 24.hour child clre c.nters, Ind .qull opportun· Ity in jobs .nd eduellion.

Women marching doWll New York's Fifth Avenue today for an evening rally at Bryant Park on ~d Street mayor may not abide by a city ruling that they can have only one lane of the avenue.

Angered at the city's reFusal to block off the entire ave]lue to traChc during Ihe march, 11ss Friedan said that suf­fragette had the whole avenue when they marched to celebrate tbe right to vote SO years ago. and "we can have it again."

In Atlenta, GI ., wh.r. Inoth.r rilly Is pllnned,' a spok.lman Slid m.mbers of the Nati.nll Or91nllltl.n for Wom­en (NOW) wDuld be "trylll9 to uplli" whit our golls Ir •. "

TIlt Floridl womtn .Ist will be Isle" tt bring articles Iymbollzl", opprtllltn, such el products advertized In wlys they ( onll'" Insulting, Ind to" them in the cln.

At San Jose, one or several California cities planning rallies, wQmen members of NOW will elect a male "Playmate of the lonth," thus showing their oft-ex­pressed contempt for the sex symbols glorified in Playboy Magazine.

Women in Kansas City, 10., plannmg to rally at midday on the steps of City HAil, canvassed working women and shoppers with a leaflet which asked ' "Have you ever been paid les at a job for which a man would be paid more?"

Quiet Strike Day Expected in City

NaUonal Women's Strike Day is expect. ed to be quiet in Iowa City.

Guarded Optimism Marks York proclaimed Wednesday "Women's Rights Day" and declared "It Is In the best interest of our whole society that the cru~ade for equality and justice for women continue lind ultimately prevail "

Sen. Charles Goodell tR·N.Y.) who like Rockefeller i running for re-ele~tlon, held a news conCerence wilh' MI Fried­an and other women's liberation leaders at his office In New York City to an-

Que t!onnaires on women's rights also are being sent to candidates for gover­nor of Georgia.

In Miami, Fla., NOW members will smash their cofCee cups and throw the pieces in a trash can "to dramatize our desire to break away from the tradition· al role allot! d to women in politics ... to give lea rather than take part In de­cision-making."

'!be Iowa City Women's Liberation Front (WLF) has decided not to par· ticipate in strike activities because of whal Its members describe as "the bourgeois nature of an activity in which poor women cannot participate."

Opening 01 Midea~t T'alks UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. fA'! - In an

air of guarded optimism, d~legates , from Israel and two Arab countries

began separate discussions Tuesday with U.N. envoy Gunnar V. Jarring aimed at bringing peace to the Middle East. A 22·y.ar enmity marked by three

wlra made the tlSk a fDrmid.bl. one, but IS the thrH del'glt.s opened th,lr tllks und.r the U.S. celst·flr. plln,

I " thty .xpressed hDpe that peaee is POl' lible.

I

Israeli Ambassador Yoser Tekoah was the first to go to Jarring's office

, on the 38th noor o( the U.N. building overlooking New York City's East Riv-er. He met with Jarring for 45 minules and was followed by Jordanian Am­bassador Abdel Hamid Sharaf, who re-

I ' malned 25 minutes. Then Egyptian Am. bassador Mohammad Hassen EI- Zay­yat, and Jarring talked for 35 minules.

There, with Jarring seated in a large • leather chair and the ambassador op-

posite him on a pale green divan, the I first steps were taken to overcome the

I anger that exploded alter the six-day war in 1967. .

• The talks were the second stage of the U. S.·sponsored peace move that achiev· ed a 9().day cease-fire Aug. 7 between Israel, Jordan and Egypt. The military

I I standdown will end Nov. 5 unless extend­ed.

Fe.w Southern Schools Have • • Class Delays

• By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Several more Soulhern schools were

desegregated without incident Tuesday, , but a (ew other openings were delayed • because of racial tension and related

~rnblems . Black pupils boycotted ele­mentary schools in a South Carolina tity.

• In Washington, the Supreme Court set the stage for a major test on busing to achieve school desegregation wh~n it denied petitions from four Southern echool districts that it delay desegrega·

• Hon orders until there is a ruling on *the issue.

The petitions were from Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, N.C., Winston Salem and F'orsyth County, N.C., and Broward and Dade Counties in Florida.

Charlotte· Mecklenburg case involves school desegregation plan

by a federal judge and may be • lhe major test on busing.

Chief Justice Warren g. Burger's de­cision denied the petitions without ela­boration.

• Opening of desegregated schools in the l'<Iu h Geo~gia community of Sparta was

until two weeks from next Mon· of racial tension.

Florida State Cabinet at Talla­adopted Gov. Claude Kirk's reso-

authorizing school opening delays, Education Commissioner Floyd

said the move means nothing cau e problems.

pupils boycotted elementary at Easley, S.C. , but desegrega·

several systems in Alabama and .wlll"~IIH went without difficulty.

an emergency meeting of the lHalnc~ck County School Board in Sparta,

Tuesday, William M. Andrews said delay was ordered because of

at the request of residents.

The three delcgates taiked freely with newsmen after their prelimlllary talks with Jarring.

Jlrring would only Sly, "We have be· gun. So Wt contlnu •. "

The basis for the negotiations is the resolution adopted unanimously by the U. N. Security Council Nov. 22, 1967. It created the po t or specia I representa­tive held by Jarring, a Swedish diplomat , and calls for the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Arab territory won in the June IJJ67 war and recognition of the right of Israel to exist within IcgaJy established boundaries.

Tekoah told reporters, "If the Arab

governments prove deSIrous of attaining genuine peace with [srael, we are confl· dent that this will be possible."

But he said prospects would be better "were It not for news about continuous violations of the cease·fire by Egypt."

Zayyat told newsmen the first viola· tions of the cease-fire were by Israel, but that Egypt did not publicize them

Sharaf said that Jordan demands total withdrawal of Israel from all occupied Arab territory and a solution to the Pal­estine refugee problem. The meeting with Jarring was "fruitful," he said, and Jordan would present latcr its concrete position.

San Quentin" Prisoners Strike for Black Warden

SAN QUENTIN, CaUr. fA'! - About 800 prisoners demanding appointment 01 a black warden at San Quentin Prison were driven back to thetr cells \)y guards us· Ing tea r gas Tuesday after inmates stag­ed a sit·down strike and set fire to nine counseling offices. I

There were no reported injuries. Officials said papers and furniture

were burned but the building itself was not damaged.

The outbreak occurred in the exer­cise yard the day after the prison was use~ for the first time in its lIB-year history for court proceedings. About 200 civilians protested outside the main gate­Monday while the court was In session. They claimed the program would deny convicts fair trials.

Prison officials said Tuesday's inci­dent and Monday's court proceedings ap­parently were not related, except that one demand of the convict demonstrators was that they be tried before a ju ry of their peers - presumably other prison­ers - if other trials are heW there.. '

The demonstration began when the prisoners, milling about in the yard, rt .. fused to go to their regular job assign­ments In protest of the refusal of offi· cials to respond to a list of 15 demands.

About 100 black prisoners appeared at the prison's yard orfice Monday and de-

manded the employment of a black war­den, two black associate wardens and a Mexican·American associate warden.

White and Mexican·Amerlcan prisoners joined blacks in the sit-down strike. Offi· cials said 28 per cent of the prison's 3,600 Inmates are Negro. 23 per cenl Mexican· American and 49 per cent white.

Fa rm Stri ke Ups California Prices

SALINAS, Calif. (All - Supermarket cash registers on the West Coast began to reflect the effects of a farm laborers' strike Tuesday in the Salinas and Santa Maria valleys where .half the nation's lettuce, strawberries, artichokes and broccoli are produced.

The price of a head of lettuce doubled in one day in San Francisco and in some stores was seIJing for 40 cents, as Cesar Chavez' AFUIO United Parm Workers Organizing Committee extended picket­Ing to 100 farms in an effort to win union recognition.

"The growers have decided to stand and fight ," said a grower spokesman. "It wiU have to end sometime - people have to eat."

McLucas Jury Deliberates As Hundreds Rally for Him

NEW HAVEN, Conn. fA'! - Black Panther Lonnie McLucas is charged in a crime that "came out of the sadistiC, demented mind " of someone else, McLucas' lawyer lold a Superior Court jury Tuesday.

Pleading for acquittal of the 24-year· old McLucas, attorney Theodore 1. Koskoff attributed the torture, abduction and shooting of Alex Rackley 15 months ago to George Sams Jr., who has plead. ed guilty to second-degree murder in the case.

While the jury prepared to decide McLucas 's fate , between 500 and 1,000 persons, most of them white, rallied across the street in his support.

John Froines, one o( the Chicago Se­ven conspiracy defendants, told the gathering, " I don't see myseU as a sup­porter of the Panthers. I see myself as 'a comrade In their struggle."

The defense argument before the jury fo~o"ed the state's hour.long presenta-

tion on the 24th day of the trial. In Il, State's Attorney Arnold Markle called lor McLucas' conviction on all four charges stemming from what he called .. an outright brutal, crass murder."

McLucas was the first of eight Panth· ers facing charges in Ihe Rackley slay­ing to c.ome to trial. He was charged with kIdnaping resulting In death, con· spiracy to kidnap and to murder and binding.

The charge 0( ' kidnaping resulting in death is a capital offense, but the slate said it would not seek the death penalty. The maximum penalty for conspiracy to kidnap is 30 years; conspiracy to murder, 15 years, and binding, 20 years.

Sams, one of three defendants who pleaded guilty, testified that McLucas assisled in Rackley's torture at Panther headquarters here and in his subsequent removal to a rural spot about 20 miles away, where he was shot.

No other groups have announced plans for the day.

Senate Turns Down Bid For All-Volunteer Army

Women in lower economic classes, WLF members said, are eXCluded from participating in the strike because they cannot financially afford to take time olr from their work.

Iowa City WLF members noted thai Ihelr political philosophy differs signifi conlly from what they termed "the mod erate reformism" of the National Organ Ization of Women (NOW) that is organ izing much of the strike.

WASHINGTON fA'! - The S nate, told that an all-volunteer Army Is an idea whose lime had not yet come, reject d Tuesday a bid to implement it as the first step toward ending the draft.

Rejection came on a 52- 35 defeat of an amendment sponsored by Sens. Barry Goldwater (R·Arlz.! and Mark Hatfield (R·Ore). The plan was support­ed and opposed by highly unusual blocs of liberal and conservattve senators.

Th(' amendment to a tnllitary procure· ment bill had been di~wned by the While Hou e and Penta~on althoullh President Nixon said he still has as his goal the forging of a volunteer force at thl' appropriate time.

Hatfi eld said the action probably means at least a two-year extension o( the draft law, now scheduled to expire June 30, 1971.

The continuing war in Indnchlna, doubts about the fi~cal feasibility of raising enough volunteers. and ,(ears a force of volunteer professional might become a politically dangerous element all were factors in the outcome.

Sen. John Stennis (O-Mlss 1 likened the propo al to "an illegitimate child, just wandering around the chamber, with no one willing to claim fatherhood - mUch less motherhood."

"When this war stops ... T hope we can do something about it," said Stennis a he promised the Senate Armed Ser· vices Committee which he heads will hold hearings on the report of the Gates Commission which recommended an ali· volunteer lorce.

The Hatfield-Goldwater plan would have provided pay increases or up to SO per cent for first-term enlistees and harply boosted pay scales In most other

enlisted and officer categories. Both Goldwater and HaWeld said they

viewed their plan as a lest to see wheth· er enough men could be recruited and persuaded to stay on duty to allow the Selective Service Act to expire next June.

The While House had declared and Stennis emphasized that money was a major drawback. Stennis estimated the

Trial Vigil

cost at $4.3 billion a year. Presidential aides said the budget just

could not stand th impact. Sen_ Jack ~1tIler (R. Iowa 1 voted with

the nate majority Jo reject the amend· ment.

S n. Harold Hugh s (D·lowal did not vote but was "paired" in favor of the amendment. "Pairing" is used to de­note a lawmaker's position on a measure when hE' is ab ' nt for the vote.

Vote-at-18 Hearing Scheduled Oct. 19

WASHINGTON IA'I - Chief Justice Warren E. Burger aid Tuesday the Suo preme Court will hear arguments on the lS·vear-{)ld vote case on Oct. 19.

Burger aid hI' had conferred with all other justices of the high court, which curr ntly is in summer recess, and had set the ca e for hearing.

The Ju lice Department has been pressing for an early court determina­tion on the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act of 1970 which grants the vote to lS-yeaNlds, outlaws literacy tests and sets a new 3O-day residency require­ment for voting in presidential elections.

The states of Te1C8s and Oregon filed suits against the government, challenging the acl. And the Justice Department has lIIed suits against Idaho and Ariwna to force them to conform' to the law.

Although the government had sought an early ruling, the 18- year provision does not go into effect until Jan. 1, and would not affect this fall's election .

President Nixon said, when he signed the bill June 22, that he had doubts about its constitutionality and wanted a speedy court test.

The government also eeks special orders requiring states with literacy tests to register otherwise eligible illit­erates for voting in general elections, should the court uphold the new law's ban on literacy tests.

Daily Iowan Editor Leona Durham in formed woman members of her taf Tuesda}' that they would suffer no penalties if they decided to take the day off to work in women' s liberation activitif .

Durham said she did not know whether any slaff members would take the day off, but she ~lX'culated that they would not sinCe there apparently are no strike acllvities planned in the city.

Durham said she had decided to work today since she does not personally sup­port the policies of NOW and because, "I think it's more important to drssemlnate information about the strike and Its cau es."

Police Probing Madison Bomb

MADISON, Wis. (.fI - Police question ed and released a number of younl persons Tue day as bomb experts sifte( through rubble for clues into an explos ion which ripped through the Arm) Mathematics Research Center on th( University of Wisconsin campus Mon day.

As the investigation progressed, a stu· dent leader predicted the school would be confronted with "the increasin~ phenomenon of bombs" as a means of social protest.

The bla t, which authorities said pack­ed "unbelievable power," ripped through the research center in the predaWll hours, killing a graduate student, Robert Fassnacht, 33, and injuring three other persons.

The FBI and Military Intelligence joined local authorities in the probe, which police officials said had turned up few early clues.

Capt. Stanley Davenport of !be Madl· son police department said the blast

. appeared to be the work of subversives using an explosives·laden Iruclc.

DemonstratDrs hold I rally on the N.w Hlv.n Green TuesdlY In New H,ven, CDnn., fDr L.Mie McLucas, I Bilek Plnther being tried • ttw hundred feet .WIY on ch.rgea of Icidn.pi", end conspiracy, -: AP Wirtphot.

Page 2: Warmer oil oman - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-26.pdfIsraeli Ambassador Yoser Tekoah was the first to go to Jarring's office , on the 38th noor o( the

-'Th~ 'Daily lowon

OPINIONS PAGE 2 WEDNESDAY AUGUST 2', me IOWA CITY, IOWA

'u,,".hor . .. ................ "fink H .. h " "lst.nl 'u,,". ho, ............ M.,y Klu,,1 Idltor ............... L .. "" Durh.m M.n.glng Idnor .... . . .•....•. "my Chl ,m.n Now. Editor .......... ...... ..... A' CI_ copy Ednor .... .. .. ..... Jolin Clm, Idllorlll , ... Idl .. , ...... .... Mal.ln M .. ,o Spa". Ednor .... .......... ... Joy Iw.l", Fino Arh .dl .. , .... ... ....... '.ry IrllMn

A .... I ... N.w. ""w ...... Lo_II M., " ... 1.1. Clly·Unl.orllty Itillo.

K,lslOlio ""trsan " .... 1.'. Clfy·Unl .... lly Idl'ar

.. Dobblo itomlne " .... 1 ... ',e'" .tll .. , ..... John '"ch .... "tI .. n lll", DlrMtef ... ...... Roy Dunsm . .. Clreu l" .... Ma ...... ' J._ Conlin

The university must also meet the needs of women

Today is aliona} Women's Strike Day. The goals of the strike are job equal­ity, free day-care centers and free lbortions. The method - temporarily refu • ing to participate in the male-powered structure of ociety - is a pril'ilege opcn only to those middle Ind upper class women who can afford to lose time from their work.

Participation in the trike, as with participation in mo t actil'itie in this coun­try, is restricted by economic c1a~s. This elitist ol'ertone explain II hy some radi­cal fcminists have refu ed to participate and why most women in lo\\'a Cit~' pro­bably cUIl't participate.

Their lack of participation honld not be taken to mean that lowa ity and the University of Iowa Ire free to ignore the problem of womtll and the ub­ordinate role we are forced to play in this ociety. Thr legitimat!" t'Omplaints of women here will have to b dealt with by the niversity. the largt t single em­

ployer In tht ci ty.

The Univer fly of Iowa In 1858 WII the nrst tate university to admit women. Now. 112 years later. the univer~ity till keeps epaIlte job [il,. for men and wo­men, a ~igns different Utlt'~ and different Fay ~ca11'5 to men and \\ nnl('n cluing some of the ame job. Ind. It its central employment offict, a.<.ks men what skills they have and wonlen how well they can type.

The uiliver ity employs no women in top admini trative po itions and only II

to~en fell' on its racultie , mo~t of those in 1I11uing, home I"t'Onomic , and other "women's fields ."

HolY the univer ity will be brought around to fac.'f' the problem of sexism and deallng with It realistically Is tm an open que non. So Far the univeT'ity has turned a deaf ear to the complaints of women. But as the movrmellt grow -and it may soon ~ the largest organized movement in thi~ country - it I ill Find

ways to force the unJvtr ity to recognize women. to acknowl dge their t tus Ind to rev r e the trend towards further di~erimination against women .

It would be easier if the university would take I ptl!k at the 20th ctntury. It would be easier iI it would rwize that nothing can stop an Idea Ulat has reach·

ed its appOinted time in history.

It would save us 111 a lot of trouble and grief. - Lrolla Durham - Jan WiltinrtLt

- Dehbie Romine - Amy Chal1man - Diane H ypC$ - K,.;,f Petersen

Bias, establishment style 'r Sf Elllllr's ..... : "" ,.1I.wI,. I'ftIIrI

WII pr'IN,ed fer tIM c.....,.nc. ef Academic .nd 'rtfH,ieII.1 Women, N.w York Univtr.ity L.w School, Ap­ril 11 , 1970. Tht 'tilt WII rtprintttl trem Off Our a.des, • wemen's lIb1r. .ti ... newsINptr In W'sh""Ion, D.C. Tht .I .. ltllet cltH .N ""m untf· fiel.1 ItureH.

* * * NEWSROOM liAS: ISTAILISHMINT ITYLI

"Sed m" In the newspaper industry noL only lets IS.lnsl women journalists but pervades the news coverage o{ AmerlCln newspapers.

While more than half of the newspaper reading public Is female, most of the news is assigned. written. and edited by men. On the three Washington (D.C.) Clallies. women rarely are pro­moted to editor. lew ever make the na· tlonal or foreign staffs. One out of six reporters In the last three years was a woman; at the Washington Star it WRS one out of four.

AUen H. Neuharth. president oC the New York Sllte Publishers Assoclallon and former vice president of the Gan· nett news chain dismisses sel dlscrlm· Inatlon In the newsroom IS III in a woman's mind.

"The psycholoiical climate has never ~n better than it Is todlY [or compe­tent and ambitious women in communi· cations to move to top jobs formerly reserved for men ," he says . He dops , howel'er, admil Ihat women may have to "pu. h and hove and maybe even scratch and c!l,w I bit to get there."

A imple kirt count in the newsroom and a sludy of media promotional and

Working women: myths, vs. reality MYTH: Welfare women don·t want tn

work. They just want to lie around and ollcct checks. FACT: Mo t women on welfare can­

not find jobs which pay enough to keep them alive. One yO\l ng mother working at the Newark General Electric piant aid that out of her $64 a week take­

home. pay. $32 went loward payment for her children's day care center lind lrans­portatlon to and [rom the center.

Fortunately. this woman is living with her husband and their combined alaries make ends meet. If lhis were not the ca,c, the woman 's $32 9 week income t after her day care ex pen es) would leave her no alternative but welfare

MYTH: Women work only for "pin money."

FACT: The 40 per cent of working women who are single, widowed, separ­ated. or divor::ed must work to support themselves. or the 16 million married women who work. one· ixth have hu -bands earning less than $3,000 and one­fifth have husbands earninll between $3,000 and $5.000 a year. Three-nrth~ of all [ami lies In which

wives work would have incomc of Ipss thon $7.000 a year without lhe wives' earnings.

MYTH: It doesn't pay to train or pro

mole women becau e they will marry and lepve and the inveslment will be wasted.

FACT; Ixty per cent of all women In the labor force are married. 20 per cent are widowed. separated. or divorced, and the remaining 28 per cent are single women. mainly young. Womcn comprise ovcr 37 per cent of the lahor force. and many continue working during child· bcarin~ years.

One·third ot all mothers work. Includ· ing 23 per cenl of white mothers with hu bands and children under 6 years of age (38 per cent for non-white women), and 43 per cent with children ailed 6 to 17. Married women with hU5bands and children have an average work life ex· pectalion. at age 35, of 24 years.

While it is true thaL women &ometimcs leave job [or pregnancy and child·rear· ing. a 20-year-old man in 1961 could ex· pect to make about scven job changes in his working liCe. A Departmcnt o{ La· bor study shows lhat in the survey year, 11 per cent of the men - but only B.6 per :ent of the women - changed jobs once or more.

MYTH: Women are bad hiring risks. They are oftcn out because of illness.

FACT: A 1968 Public Health urvey shows that men, on the average. lost 5.4 days during the survey year because of

illness or Injury, while women lost 5.3 days.

WtiY 00 THE MYTHS 'IRSIST? 11 .11 the stereotypes ,bout working

women are lie., why do they perslJt? Who benefits from these notions and practices? Who e Interests do they erve? 11 It our men who benefit by

keeplnl women "in lheir pllce," or is it someone else?

II abo. PlY. bl.ck "orken lUI per hour for the same work he pay' whiles ROO. who benefits? The white workers may earn more thin the black worker •. but ,1.60 an hour is still poverty wlGes.

The boss II the sole beneficiary 01 rac­Ism.

Black workera cln be used as a threat against white workers who ask for high­er wages. Only throllgll unity between the black Ind white workers on lhe basis of full equalJty can workers really wIn victories allllinst management.

Exactly the same logic: holds tnle In the ea e oC discrimination against wom­en. As long as men do not join with women In the fight for equII wages ,nd other benefits. mln.gement will conlin· ue to have a reservoir of cheap labor which can be used to drive down the _wages of all workers.

"'.,rintttl trtm U, fI",m UMtr, Mly /June 1"1, New Ytrk, N.Y.

hiring policies Indicates thlt the Iuturt j

for good women reporters still lies with I

the women's page and not It wilD­men desks or In the managing editor', office.

Jean Cole of the Boston Record Amer· ican is an example o( a competent W0-man reporter being kicked upstain IG the oblivion of the women's page.

Cole's stories on Massachusetts nun. ing homes in the 1950's led to tlgbtened • nur ing bome regulations. She " named newspaper woman of the yeJr by the New England Women's Prm Assoclallon, she was given both Ihe , Rudolph Elle Award by the Boston Press Club and the AMVETS Public Service Award. In 1961 she bared Ihe Amasa Howe award for the best news I

story of the year. Instead of being promoted to a tr.

dit ionally male news assignment or I

manasement posit ion, Cole was recent. Iy named women's editor.

LiUian CalhOUn, a black woman eo~ urnnis! writing for the Chicago Journal­ism Review. once wryly commented on • a promotional picture of the New Vork I •

Times newsroom by Iloting thlt Uiere were "white men, two, or three bllCk men, and no women."

"Help wanted" advertising for journ­alists continues to reneet the male orienlation ot the media. T)le April U edition of Editor and Publisher, (or fl· ample. carried the following: "l1IIny advantages offered a young newspaper man \Yith proven abilities," "managing editor . . . good opportunity fo, ag­gressive c¥perienced young newsman," , and "line opporlunity {or well·trained I

young man." Open any Washington paper Lo help

wanted : editorial - and most writini jobs of any kind - are listed under ,I

"help wanted : men." I In direct violation of the 1964 Civil

Right Act. women candidate. for edi· torial jobs are usually told, "Send your resume. but it won't do any good be· cause they want only men." t

Employment agencies are used ~ screen women out of medl' editorial , Jobs . In viola.tion of the law, employers • tell agencies to ignore women .ppli. cants because women "can't do hard editorial work and won ·t devote lone hours to the job." (A complaint chara· in~ a Washington agency wllh non-rt­ferral was filed with the Equal Oppor· tunity Commission thIs monlh). MI OIA &DITORlAL POSITIONS

MAl-IE F~IMLI A 9 ABC-TV New. 75 I CBS-TV News 108 8 1 Nat'l Educ . TV 25 1f ' New York Post 98 21 'A New York Daily News 361 39 S New York Times m ~ As oehlte~ Press

(NY Bureau) United Press Inler.

nat'l (NY Bureau) UPI (TV news) U.S. News &

World Report Life MaQazine Life Magazine

researchers Pulitzer Prize jurors

45

72 30

93 147

15 43

7 SEOUL President

1 Jented 2 Agnew

I ping list 13 ~'Y but 33 pledge on

III U.S. :II 0

Women~Men: fact sheet on the earnings gap Elliter', nell : Th. fe".wl", filet sheet WII IlIuN lIy the U.S. DtINrtment

• f L.bor, W.gt .nd L.ber Stlndertl. Adml.I,Ir,IIeII, W.mtn', lur .. u.

II~CT SHIIT ON THE IARNINGS GAP A comparison of the median waie or salary Incomes of women and men who work

full time year round reveals not only that those of women are considerably less lhan those of men but also that the gap hiS widened In recent years. In 1955. [or eXjlmple. women's median wage or salary income o{ n .719 was 64 per cent of the $4,252 re­ceived by men. In 1968 women'. medil n' earnlnp of $4,m were only 58 per cent of the $7,664 received by men.

W.gt or s.l.ry Inetm. If IIull·Tlme Ytlr·Rtund Wtrk.ra·

Vllr

1955 ....................... .... .. 1956 .......... ... ...... . ........ . 1957 ............. .. ............. . 1958 ..... .. . .. ....... ..... ...... . 1959 ... ...... ... ... ........... .. 1960 .................. .• . ...... 1961 ........................ .. 1962 .......... .............. .. 1963 ........................ . 19&1 ........ . ..... ...... . .... . 1965 ........ .... .............. . 1966 ....... ....... , .......... . . 1967" 1968"

lIy Sex, 1955·" MttI"n W.,. ... "'.ry '-

W.me" MItt $2,719 $4.232 2.827 4,466 3,008 4.713 3,102 . ,92'1 3.193 5,209 3,293 5.417 3.351 5,644 8.446 5.794 3,561 5,978 8.810 utS 3.123 e,m 3.173 , 1.848 4.150 7,182 4,457 7.864

W • .".,,'. """I,n WI"

er .. Itry Inc.m. II

IItre.n' .f ",tn'.

• Worked 35 hours or more a week for 50 to 52 weeks.

63.9 63.3 63 .8 63.0 ef.3 60.8 59 .4 59.5 59 .6 59.6 60 .0 58.0 57.8 58.2

•• Data for 1967 and 10IIII Ire not strictly comparlble with prior yelrs, lince

earnings 01 self-employed are Included.

huret: U.S. Department of Commerce. Burelu of the Census: CVrrent Populi. tion Reports. P -60.

This gap in earnings vlrles by mljor occupation group. It Is Ilrgest for slles work· ers (women earn only 40 per cent of whit men tim) Ind millest for profee ioll.1 Jnd technical workers (women earn 81 per cent of whll men elrn).

Mtdlln W ... " ""ry I~"" tf fllIlI.TI"" V •• ,·RM,", W"\c,,., Ity It .... ItIectM Mil" OccvtN.Ieft GrtI/II, I,..

Professional and technlCiI workers .............. ....... .. •• 1

Nonfarm manlier., offlc\ala, and proprietofl ............. I ,.

Clerical Worker. ................ 4,711 Sales Workers ................... 3,461 Operatives .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . S,191 Service workers (eleept

'j)rivlte houaIhold) .. ....... . 1,.

'111.151

10,:140 7,361 ' ,54' II 'lSI

.. ..

w."",,', tMtIII" w ... .,. "'try Inctme It

.......... tf "",,',

1$.1

IM.S 15.1 40.5 59.2

IS.O

Sourc.: U.S. Department of Commerce. Bureau of the Census: Current Popula­tion Reports, P·SO. No. 66 .

Another measure of the Ilap in the ejlrnings of women ~nd men full-time year·round workel's is a distribution of these workers by earnings intervals. For example, 20 per cent of the women but only eight per cent of the men earned le8s than $3.000 . More· over. 60 per eont o{ the women but only 20 per cent of the (TIcn earned less Ihan $5.000. At the upper end of the scale, only three per cent of the women but 28 per cent of the men had earnings o( $10,000 or more.

Earnings of Full·Tim. Year·~ound Work.rs, by Sex, 1'"

Earnings Total .... ........... . ........................... , ..

Less lhan $3.000 ............................................... . $3.000 to $4.999 .. " .. .. ... •.................... , ....... . ....... . $5.000 to $6,999 .................... , ............................ . 7,000 to $9.999 . , ............................................ .

$10.000 to $14.999 ........................................... . .. $15.000 and over ............. , ...................... , ....... , .

Women 100.0 20.0 40.0 26 .0 10.9 2.5 .4

Men 100.0

7.5 12.6 21.3 30.9 )9 .5 8.2

Sour,,: U.S. Deoartment or Commerce. Bureau of the Census: Current Popula. tion Reports. P-60, No. 66.

The prcvious figurc.~ do not necessarily indicAte thAt womrn are rrc('ivin l( unrnual pay for equal work. For the most part, they renee! the facllhat womrn are more like­ly than men to be employed in low-skilled. low. paying job . For example:

• Tn institutions 0/ higher education, women are much less likcly than men to be Issoclate or full professors.

• Tn the technical field , women are usually in the lowest category of draftsman or engineering technician.

• Among managers and proprietors. women frequenll operate a small retail es­tablishment, while the men mlY manage a manufacturing plant or a wholesale outlet.

• In the clerical field. women are usually the class B and men the higher paid class A accounting clerk . Among tabulating machine operators, also, women are con­centrated at the lower level.

• In cotton textile manufacturing, women are usually the battery hands. spinners. and yarn winders (the lowest paying jobs). while men Rre loom fixers . maintenance machinIsts, and card grinders.

Nevertheless. within some of these detailed occupations. men usually are better paid. For ex~mple, in Institutions of higher education in 1965-66. women full profes$()rs had a median alary of only $11 ,649 as compared with $12.768 (or men. Comparable difr .. ences were found at the other three levels as shown in the following table.

MtcII.n Annu.1 s.l.,IH of Tuching St,ff in Collegll .nd Univtrallill, by Sex, 1965-66

MtcII." .nnull Hum"'r .. I.ry

Tltchl,. .I,H Wtmen Men WO""n Men Tolal .... .. .......... ........ .. 26,734 118,641 , 7,732 5 9275

Professors ... . ...... ............... ... 3J49 32,873 11.649 12,768 Associate professors ...............•.. 5,148 28,892 9.322 10.064 Assistant professors .................. ' ,98S 37,232 7.870 ' ,446 lnstnlctors .. .. .. .. . .. .... .... .. .. . 11,454 19,M4 6,454 6.864

Source: National Educalion Association : "Salaries in Hli her Education, 186.).

66, " Research Report l-'R 2, February ID66. (Copyright 1966, National Education I

Association.)

Median salaries of women scientists in 1968 were from $1 .700 to $4 ,500 a year less than those of all scientists In their respective fields. The greatest lIap wal in the field , of chemistry. where the median annual salary of women was $9.000 8, compared with ' $13,500 for all chemists. Additional details are given in the following table.

l

MttII,,, ..... u.1 •• 1,,11 •• f 'ull·Tlm. Employed Clvlll,n Scltntl,t., Ity Fitlcl, 1'61 , •

II I.ld All fields ........... ..... .... , .......... ..

Chemistry .... ' ..... .... .................... .. . Earth and marine sclenees ................... , . Atmospheric and space sciences .. ... .•... : . . . : . Physics .... , ................................. . .. Mathematics ............... ................ ... .. Computer Science$ .. ................... ..... . .. Agricultural sciences . .. , ... .................. . Biological sciences ... ... .... .... ... ... ....... .. Psychology ................. , ..... .. . , ........ . . Statistics ..................... . ... .. ... , ..... .. . Economics ...................................... . SociolollY ............................ .. .... . Anthropology " ... .. .... ... .. ...... . ......... ~. Political science ............................... . Linguistics ............... ... .. ............ , .. .

Medi,n .nnu.1 .. I.ry Tetll

$13,200 J3,600 12,900 13,400 14.000 13,000 J4,100 11.000 13,000 13,200 14,900 15.000 12.000 12.700 12,000 11.500

w.mtI1 $10.\*1

9,00II1 • 8.500 I

11 .~ 10,~

8.400 : ; 11.~

' .lMl 11.5m •• 12,00II

12.1m I IO.1m 1 Lim , , t.," ",00

• Median not computed for I"OUps with fewer than 25 registrants reportlnl silary. ,

Hurc.: National Science Foundation: "National Registcr of ScienLific and Tech­nicil Personne1." 1968.

The jobs and salaries expected to be offered by 206 companies to June 1970 college iTlduales were reported In a survey conducted in November 1969. There was a sub- I •

stantitl pread in the offen to be made to men and women with the same coUe2e rna· jors IS Indic. ted in the followln, tlble.

IIPte*' hl.ri .. ,., Ju", 1970 ColI,ge Gr.duat .. , lIy Stl IIId Seltcted 111,111

Av.r'lIl m,nlhty •• I.ry

".Id Wo",tn Met! Accountlnl .. . . ... ............... ................ . . .. Chemistry ....... ... .. . .. ......................... . Economic. , finlnca ............. . ...... . ........... '. Engineering ..................... , .... ....... ........ ,

$746 $&1S I ~ 765 ~ I 700 711 844 rn I

Liberal art$ .......... ....... .. . . ................... . Mathematics. .tRUsties ........... .. ..... . .. . \ ...... .

631 II , 748 rn I ,

""ret: Endicott. Frink S .. Or.: "Trends in Employment of College and Univer­sity Graduale,In Businet. JIId Indu, try ." Northwe~tcrn University. 1970.

Surveys or average nmlnll for major office occup~Uons made by the BUIlIU el i , Labor ~tistics showed thlt 1/1 the period from July 1968 to June 1969 men's avera, weekly eamlnp were .ubatanUaUy higher than those of women among class A and class B .ccountlnj clerks Ind payroll .clerks. For example. the weekly salary differ' enUal between till .aminp of women and men class A accounting clerks ran sed rrom j ,

~.OO to $46,60 in till • importanL c •• lers of business and Indwtry lurveyed naulari1·

City I Char

Bubar G2 Brown tharp of low, City

The chi PlI1-Ume that fede ob~rved lice lette Thursday other lettl ~SSion .

Iowa Ci J. Coen InveaU,at local PO.t pl_ints th being reci lOme 01 been recc

Page 3: Warmer oil oman - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-26.pdfIsraeli Ambassador Yoser Tekoah was the first to go to Jarring's office , on the 38th noor o( the

45

72 30

D3

15 43

Students Research Issues, 'Phnom Penh Affacked-

Maintain Cam Services Red Drive Stopped Five studentJ Involved in' H~US'NG STUDY I atten'ion toward su~vislOn of

'!\Idenl government dug into AccordJng to Dan;e~. one of the new Student Dtvelopment PHNOM PENH. Cambodia I to the South Vietnamese defend- wounded in the action·three dtffereot areas of studcnt ac. / the .a~livities the group is in- Center acti~llie~., - Battle-battered Cambodian en. mllea northwest of O'RelUy. tivities this summer on the vesllgahng IS u. ban rcnewal, Dantes saId, We have beton troop dUI Into defensive South VI"",,,,,,, illfMtry' Elsewhere in South Vietnam, University campus especially as it relates to the tudying the different job po illons Tue day at Prek TI. mtft .. I .. cllahlll witll I NertII there was little 11'0und aclion.

, . . hou5ing injunchon again~1 uni- slructures for student affairs mea\( in anticipation. of another , VlefnlmtN u"lt ,~ two but an enemy shellln!! of • ham-F orm~r student body offl' versity students. people. and "'Itching carcfully • 'orlh Vietnamese Ind Viet milts HlltlMlft If tM fir. · let nea r the Cambodian border

rers, Phil Dantes. G. Waterloo. Other areas studJed by til the. pace allocation within the Cong attempt to dTl\'e through IN... They rtplt1lll kllll", took one of Ihe heaviest civilian JlI!l Sutton, G, Iowa City, Ind five students include the fCal- union," Phnom Penh's outer defen e "VIII _my .. WI," .... Niel casualty tolls of recent months.

J: its.: and Lyn Schlitt. G. Akr?n . t m lor all univer~lIy cour e. He also tated that th fh'e I The government alao sent thr .. "It" wwflClft. aid five mortar rounds were IlI!l Dougberty, G: Cedar RaP" /lbility of an cntire pass-fail sys- OF~tCE WORK ring. their OWl! Clf4/.ItIt, Wlrt A lovernment spokesman

Ohio, Ire do,"~ research which and elimmation of expense I sludrnu w~re "watching over" r inforeemenls to the Mekona The U.S. Command laid a re- !ired TuesdlY morning into the

for jOW'll­the milt

April 11 , for tl'

"many newspaper "managing

fop 8~' newsman," well· trained

h plrtl~lly fl~anced through for non-academic enlcrpn,es I the Aetivilie Center for the Rh'er village, nine miles north connaissance palrol of the 10lat teemin; market place of Ba Vle unlversJly s Work-5tudy and non.academic salaried po_ summer. taklOl! phone calls of here, the scene early Tues- Airborne Divi ion cla3hed brief- Chuch, 115 miles southwest of program. I silion at Ihe unlvcrsity. Dnn- ' and doing general office work. day of the heaviest flghllng of ly with an enemy force of un· Saigon, kilJlnllO Vietnamese d-

Larry Wood, present student tes claimed publication such "When we .IlrtetI -"1"9 t~e war so close to the Cambo. l known size, American casu. 1- vilians and one militiaman and tody vice-president and corre- as The Spectator are non-es· we louncl th,t 110 1If .... r.: dian cllpital. tie were one kill~d and flvr wounding 42 c\viUans. IflOI1d inl: student, N?rth Libe~' sential to the sLUdents, tiO"S h.d btett m •• fer the I" tke bitt", fIImumbertci .y, ~so Is r~searchlng, but IS "W. hiIVe attempted to "eW Henl lotIc / U"I.,enlty "v.rnmtnt Nlellert, a"Jllllrt, lOt mcluded In the 1V0.rk-5tudy kHp, dr.ft counseling urv- dlredory) ... fer m .... If tIM ed by Clmbellt .. " ..... huth ~grarn. He is salaried only iet open at Ih. A~liviti.s lee Itt I11III Vletn .. m,.. river ~~",I1 . /rom the Student Senate budget Cen'er for Itud,nts, espocl- tvre ~I .... r, WI !'MtL DANT!S elr.ve b.ck , .IV", ,!tICk lor hJs research. .lIy slnc. the Hawkey. Area ~d te fl'st .. t th~ thl",. b .-~ I P I D .

Dr .. 1t Informatio" C,"ter In order." O.nte. Nld. 'I .n "tlml, .. flur It , \It t t TIlt five atudentt worle 15 Dantes explained that the re- Pen' togo E I· .lIOmy b.ltlll"" , ause n e rOI

If mtrt houn I ",k. in 11M (HAOle ) hu be.., uked 10 earch work done thi summer n X p a Ins Land-b. ~d .rtillery Ind I Adivltl .. Cent.r ."d ill out- mov.... stated Danles. ex· Id t 'bl 1.- {' I h d fllll.t r.bom .... r. .lln c.me to CH ICAGO I'" - Twenty or 4G Each entry had to wait out .

Ide ch Th W k pl.i"i"g another I~'ivity on cou no POSSI y .... In - e 'I .... , nN.r . • .r · which individuII$ of the by fail, and that it \\'oold pro!>- C b d _ PI lh aid or the defendefl, .nd cm in the 1970 Clean Air Car (O\lr-hour coolini off period be-StvcIy pregr .. m requirea 15 ably be contmued by other stu I am 0 I a u,s, r cOl1081 . -nce plt1nl! I ~.ee stopped In Detroit on fore It could be tested. The t t-,.ylll houri 'f werle from.. group h"vI spent tim". dents then. a n S wrpl over lhe battle arel to Tuesday lor Ie Is of how little Inll took an hour lor each car. ltudent c1uri", I"y .c •• ",ic The group has also focu cd "We h ve th general con- pot Norlh Vletname e and Viet they pollute the envlnlOment in Several cars continued to be Mlljtft, ccpts o~ what we ~Int to do, WASHINGTON 1.4' _ Ju. t how I Henkin: I dtn', k,..w, Any. ConI! po II In"" NCI Am~rlc.n comparison with ~tandard auto- plagued by mechanical troubles, Dantes. Sutton. Dougherty, a~d \~ rc hcadini In a decent , fir will thl country 110 tn Cam. ,n, (tultl bt. bomoor II' r. n In .ctlon. mobiles. . Bnd Ome were reported still in

and Schlitt are salaried (rom dlrecllon, but the rcsearch pro- bodla', de fen. e? I thert' _ \ Until Prek Tlmeak WI. r - The seTles nf te t in the ma. Ma achusetts. the Work-Study program and j Cli ar actu lIy ju~t begln- fi U 'II t Itt Q, How I lhat dccld d? I rapturtd earlier Mond.y, oUl- torcar manufacturinll capital , liso from the senate budget. I \ nmg." he aid. o~~nw~lItr~~~~a~~di:'~ ~~ Henkin : I don't know how c r IIld. 1l0vernll1ent control of II re made a the Callfornla- Time and .~ed are not (ac·

The Student Senate allocated . Concerning the proaram that Nol overnmcnt? G n. Abram (the U. S. com- the ea t bank 01 th M kong bound field 01 ellr rollell we t tors in deter~lOlng the wlnntra ,1 ,1m for research purposes of ' paying for much of thc mand r In Vll'tn m) d cldcl Rlv r had !)fen 0 erlou I), (rom Toronto, Ont" to Ann Ar- They. will be J~d cd on .how III Ihese Itudents over the sum- work, William J. Bu haw, a· Vice Pre.ld nt Spiro T. A · Ithat. dtnl~~ th"t orlh Vlrtnllm bor. Mlch,. the end of the ce- tie air and noise pol~utlOn ~el Illtr, and actually pays 23 per sistant director of the Work- nrw told 'nCWRm n I . t lIt'tk· and Viet Cona w~re within rock- ond I I! or the race. prnduc, a calculation. whlcl :tnt of their individual salar,/' Study program IBid. "The pro- nd, "we're oinK to do (Ivery· onQ~i~~~~~~eAl~;YII~:~·P~~~" et and rllllery rllnlle ot tile Two of the 42 cars that began will not be completed ull!1l .nel ies. with Work-Study paying 'am helps a student by up- thlna we clln to help the IAn Nol II It? "capillll, the race Monday In C.mbrld~e, Ihe rllCe enda SUllday In filS 'he rest, accordinll to Danles. plemenlinll his resources for ol'ernment" b CAU II "t hom • Officer ,.id "'e 'ntmy Mass .• have dropped out. adenl, .

"For 15 hours and more a educational fecs, liuch liS tui· whole matter of Cambodl. I re· 1 Henkin : I'm .yin. I'm not ffrCts wert r'II'II"I", ft, I The first car to reich Detroit NAPCA WIll. award a $5.00l

Clean Air Autos

,eek, we're pretty cheap lab. , tlon. and also acts as • motl- I.t d til Ihe curlly oC our ,dl eu In; anything like that. 1"'I~.r Itt,mpt to ,m_lh til, wal on( burnl"_ diesel fuel and prize t.o the wl~ncr 0/ each o~ )r,'; Dantes claimed. valion,,1 force in the tudent's troops In Vietnam." Q. I Ih ucc~. 01 VlrlnRml. C.m~l.n tI 'en", M "',y el1\ere<\ by tud nls al the Ul1i_ \lhe r I v e ellllme ~ategnrie5.

l Tho sune•tio" f.r the $1,. academic work," At Intth.r pel nt, ',now I ~lItiQn linked 10 lAn No!? frHfy prt4llct" I~. ctunttr. versity of Camornia In Los An- 5tel\~. turbine, electriC, electric

100 .lIte.ti", for r .... r'h Student ar admitted to the ... Id "WI h .. v, n, c.mmltmenl Henk!,,/ You Ihoulel •• k .. ttuk wluld "ml ... gel,. , thl' race Information cen. hybTld, and modified Internal ~ WII "'Me by Sutt,". Ol"ttl. prOl:ram through app~icalion, to C.mbodi •• " but this tountry ,omeon. else, The up ur e of 1IIIIlllni neM ter in Chicllio said , cQmbu:Uon .

• ntI a..,."t "'dy pr.sldtnt Ind Bu hlw stat d thiS ' year view, Iv.nts there ., th.y .f- Phnom Penh over hadowed the Th exhlu t emlulon te&ts ... ---------..

7

Rebert (10 ) a,n.r. Sutton additional federal funds will fed condition. In South Viet. Q Then is it Ihe r)l ilitary view war in South Vietnam where wert' condlletl'd at five loc.tlon. Dr. A. P. Fankhauser IIMI I.n.r t ... ther a.lteted make po ibl a bigger pro· "Am. that VietnamizaUon can't sue· North Vlotnamese units bpt up in th Detroit .rPII. "I up by lilt alucltnt r .... 'rch.n. end Illram than la t ycar, He added The vice prpsldent'8 8tatc. ceed w~thout Lon Nol? pre. ure on allied artillery Ford Motor Co.. Cltner.1 M()oo lener '''IItinttcl Sutton I' Ihat Ihe pro\lram would be ments, the anl10uncement 0/ II Hcnklll.: [ would . ay if the bases in the northwestern moun- tor, Chry ter Cor p.. Ethyl lllleHici.1 dlrect.r of tht r,. 10m what wi~e open throllgh $40-mlilion assistance psct for Comnlu~lst~ take over ~11 of t8~;~~ Base O·Reilly. on" o( a ~rg~ b:~t~~~ ~:~~~~\~lro:,O; M.rch project.. JIM SUTTON October of thiS year, _I Cambodia, and the us or u. s. lcambod, la It would present ,In,

d th t t u S f s dozen mountllintop forw.rd division of the Department of air power agaln~t Communist crra~e rca so. oree ba es that form a protective Health, Education .nd Welfar •.

A H -t K S forces in that country rRI~ed the In Vietnam. screen for the populous c08stsl NAPC,., will Ie t th~ wlMlnl gn e w '. sore ann a 9 question of a U. S. commitment. 1 Q. Would enemy troop., be at· lowlands, was hit by ~, rOllnds car tor two month •• fler the • If any, at Tuesday' Defen~o De- 'acked '" Cambodia wherever of morlar rlre Tuesday. Reports race In hopei of IIndinl 8.n al-

partment briefinll for new mcn, d teel d! from the ar~a laid the shelling ternative tn Ihe pre rnt 8mI'll' Ov'r It Y ... ra _",rll"c,

A R - D d A' Thi~ Is how it went with the I H.nkln: I w.nt t. .v.ld causl'd no dam/lge or ca ualti, producinll cars •... _____ ~~~~--~~~~~~ S eg 1 m e em. an s r m s . Pentagon's chief spokesman. words Ilk. wher,vlr and wh."· -Daniel Henkin, a tstanl ecr· ,v.r.

SEOUL tary of defense ror public .f· Q. If two-thirds or Cllmhodl. tAl - South Korean I rei and listen to Park's VicwS i wury .1 Amerlcln .pending fairs ' I. und r Communill control

President Chung Hee Park pre- but without authority to commit In Alii, !tnted Vice President Spiro T. the administration to any speclf- Ainew also Is ex~ted to re- Q. Ar. w. commltt.d t. the now, what I the mllitary r ad·

l'lIur CMropra(:tor

'l' t , Ivrlln,t.n

by appointm.nt only

I a

13 33

Agnew with an expensive shop- ie arms- program, 1 celve another reque t for in. survival of Lo" Nol? Inll of the threat? • ping Ust of military needs Tues- U.S. mllilary aid to Kor.. creased arms lrid when he Henkin: I talk Abou! whAt II I Henkin : I don 't ha~e II precise

day but faUed to wIn a detailed il currlntly $140 million • meets Wedne day with Nation. can talk about. The Importance eVllluation, I'll try to lIel that

III o

pledge on a promised incrca e yelr. Ind Iny new program alist Chinese Pre Ident Chia:1g of the i~le:dictiol1 operatinns in lor you. ~- I' In U.S. arms aid , w.uld rlquir •• pproval from I Kal-shek at his mountain re- Ca~bodla IS t,o reduce U, S. nd Q, Wh n are en my oldlera I TV JII I N! .... ItVIC IS __ -.:!"LD CARE

A scheduled two-hour meeting , U.S. ConDress i"creasingly treat at Sun Moon Lake. allied casualties In Vietnllm, /lol a Ihr lit? Want Ad Rates EU:C'I'1IIC - 110rt PIP"" lerm DEPENoA8L;7.;n.-0 .... -I-.... '-Oln-m-'1 between the two le.ders stretch- Q. Are we comrnllted 10 the , H.nlelnl W.II. tl..y ~Aul'" '-_ .. ·rc· .. · Varmlr H"rollry. r.at ham., r4 .. 1 a<llyIU.. rar rhU· " "...... On. 0." 15~ • Word ..,r. co. ..IAR dr." .,ts 1·5. I'enr~d ~.rd. R,I . .... to I',. hours before bren"lng Woodstock: Fad FI'lck defense o{ any rellirne in Cam. I d h S I ' ,,, ,, ,,,,. -- ~ ,rane • . . Id .Id •. 351-40114. ',5 ... ... • bod' ? com nil own 141 Ir"t, ,r Tw. Day. , . .... .. llc • Word MARY V. BURNS - Iypln" ",1m· Up at midafternoon. They re- la . down 17th or 11th, W.·d .1. Th D 20e W d .o,uphln,. Notary publl£r, .U RUMPTY DUMPTY Nursery School umed dl'scussl'ons over dinner Iicnkin ' The Department or rH .ya ".. ... • Dr I lowl SI.le B.nk lulldln., 3,J/"~~1. nlt'ro' pr.·achool pro_r.m ror

: tack any of those pla~e" Flv. D.YI .".,' " Uc • word _ "19 dlY clr. children at romp.lIthe Tuesday nlsht and then agreed F R k E h Defen e mten! Is to conduct op- rl 0 29, • Word 1::I.tCTRIC. rul Irrunt. ..p.rt. rat,.. '11 s. Clpltol Slroet. 01.1 to meet again at breakfast or ac nt US· lasts erations there In hopes thev will h k 0" May'th .. .... .. ' 5J W d en '4, rt~.n"a"I •. ~I"' 'nn1l11~a .. 3103M2, 'liAR \VednCliday. Impede the flow 01 men and ma- Rus Wee Set n. MIOIInlmum" 'A"d" I', WC.~s or MY!. to JMI W~~!; r~:. 113~1~~79hom. rull ~~

t . I . t V' t th t I .... UPN JlMtLON b,ln, 'rvk. ~ -All .ffielal Kernn spoke,, ' tChrrle3atiton °our1eronr:mes. a po e a For New Studll'llntll: PHONE 337-4191 IBI!( Ellolrl •. CaiO<l. ribbon. Ex· EXPERlP!NCtD b.byslltlnr - full "WOODSTOCK ') HOME t brOken string of numbers, much, .. • perl.noed. 338073. 1-11~C I Um., my homo, ~efH."r .. (ur·

m,n •• crlbtd til, , t "'.- MOVt. FOR ItOCK FANS lIS lhe old or films used plot, Q Is there a wtdenin" o( the fl.ECTRIC ~pl~. _ ,dllln,- ••• ~I.heol. Na",~fY' Court. aSH064. Iph.r. II aeritu •• whilt ,ther There Is a branch of movie What limits the effectiveness 01 U S po It' ? • Some ';00 persons wlU arl'lve perl.noed; -'rill 31 ... 147, ' .. An 9-11 K Id It .. S lOr) . Ul iOWij t.hy nexl wecJ(cnCl .0 mill -.urCOI II WI. musicals devoted to the popular "Woodstock" as a film Is thaI He"kln ' WI~,n l"g of thl I "PP.OVID "OouS .. lIIIwh.t Itn .. , , .. pe m.roCluccd to sorortlY and AUTOS DOMISTIC ...... ,... fashion of the moment. Possibly I it choo&e the leeond approach U. s. po5illDn' I wouldn't chu. • ------------

A"'ew himself said the talks you've seen some of the early and becomes a film for rock act.rlx. It a, sucl.. W. are I". lIilLtfUlLY me (IU. mil a IOnn,1I LOST AN~ FOUPilD ••• 'I' 0 A po r 1\ 0 V I: Q dnu~l. Ipmllh.d ... .. "AU n II CC PC" I Ina p I.,":, ·1111 10111"r' IIntIY n"4' rooml, Upder,radual. m.n. One wen! "very well." Asked about ones, often set in radio studios fans ollly, l.rt5ted I" reducing calualtl.s. • l\ "I II I • •• rOUNO _ IVrlll .... I.h. Inqulrt ,I "or~. '1,4110. CII .It.r 1M" blook I. <lmpu>, hO .. I .... 138·I58P, the Jenath of the discussions, a where ~II the name stars or the As &u~h the audience', enjo),- the continued success of Viet- 2 on Jne Unl~el ~I'Y u! !Owa Aero 11,"'.1. 3!IH711, 1-27 3U·~n, _ 10-1 10·3 -kuman said : "This doesn't day would perform whilo a ment of the film wiJI depend on " .. ",i.,tlo" and reduction of C\lIIIPUb, S t 11~..eOO~£ ,~p~lr •• ~:..LII!. "rl~~' 1 '4LL "AT~ - R.nt now ,.;;:r;u. " ..... • . U' Ilna" ac I'VI' 'C8 lor sor MU "4~ IN" T~UMiNT~ 1 .... w . ."Ult HI. "IN. ..H3! ... ,' Cftlha" .1'0 rooml. ,,1\1' rQok· \leCe~.rlly mean they arcn'~ scanty plolllne unraveled .• If their preference for cert.in our fore .. with II f.w cllual. J).I. L LI· _I 13 In, prlvtle ... , Olleoun!. BI~ck 'l NI.ry

W,,",,, '10,~

9,00J 1 ,

' ,500 I 11.~ 10.1lO 1.400 . ; lUoo

.. ~ 11.500 I 12,~ • 12.0011 IO.MII 11.0011 9,'IIJII ' I

1.100

,etting along," the popular fashion demanded acts, For m)'self, I enjoyed ti .. as possible. Orllll!8 Will begm Inc 1I10111lnll etA SICAI,. O"UITAR! '_ h.nder.fl. I G~III.M Villi;.. 1-3 it. vehicles were produced to Richie Haven, Joan Ban and Q. How d""s close air 'upport 01 Sept. z ana Will contlDue ,d In plln, A •• llabl. 'rOlll Nel· AUTOS·~"ION.S"O.T5 P ... k Is understood to be seek- "'- • U1!ounn 8' .• ern' .Im Amol, cl ... lc.1 ,ullar'sl, l37. ·OOMS ..... • .... T

ln, • pledle of some $3 billion accommodale what was consid· Arlo Guthrie and found Ten for Cambodia help Vietnamlza- .... PL. . i'l "IllY 26111 10-'11,.2 VW _ new p.lnl, .... nlly " rv" ,,~,.. lIVer Ih, next live years as the ered a super-attraction. like a Year After, the Who, and Jiml tion? even~ are ~cllcauled lor lile CY L S J oarhaul,di . Ie. - bul 1110 ",am MEN' DOUBLES .nd Iln,loa dnwn

. f haunted hou e musical for KIlY Hendrix Interminable, irritatin" Henkl'n', W·hat I know I'S that ev nlDg 01 :>CPL. 1 through SePL' C I $450.~I. eYlnl",". III-III. t'OWn. O.rllns·B.nder. 331,33~~. . price or dropping his objection ., 4 103 _________ and ba81cally dull. Performers \\'e attack forces I'n Cambodl'a ot !tU~1l \~eek. 1868 flONOA SIlO Whit 0:/00 C II SAAS " - r·d, ."""", Wlrr."I~, . to the U,S, plan to withdraw 1'hl year s ru hees compo 3".2.~. . e... tA(n ' .000 mU... '2.UO. US,HtH. 3~1 · MALE - eplember I. Prlvlt. en. 1l.1m Of the 63.000 American 01 Film R.view of the ilk of the last three dom i- by air. If these attacks lire not ,- _ "" "" _ B'~2. '"' I Iran~. newor home. Qul.l. Re· 1_ t t· d h - __________ nate the film , pursued these force would po c ed 01 Ireshmen and tranbler MOTORCYCLE ,alos Ind S.rvloo - IN' VW BUS. Ne .. eo,In., 1400 frl,erator . Siudenl or profe15la"al "Wp~ S a lone ere. sludents will be entel'lulned ul"kl Nartnn dfller. GUlflnt.. iSH1GI aIter 3 P.M. ..29 men. 351·1322, eveoJn,s 9·28

Although Agnew ."nounceci Ky er's orchestra or a romance It would not be a. ,lImul.Una a threat to our forces in Viet-' service ror III m.k ... Th. Motor· I -h by 36 social IraLernily and &or- cycl. Clinic. 222 E, Prenll" ~~I'~~' DOUBLE ROOMS for reni - Men.

In • s,..~h h.re Monda,. tII.t that would allow time for a visually but the quality of t e nam. . . I-S 01.1 S3H5II, r .M. 9·25 lilt United 51.1" would pre. do~en numbers by the Glenn music might be better - ero - Q. Is any orth Vletnames omy chaPter.s dunn~ the b~sy -I MOIILI HOMIS UNAl'PIIOVEO Ingl. rooms lor vltlt 'IIW .Id to help mtclem- Miller orchestra, by Stills and Nuh for soldier in Cambodia a threat? week bcgmnJnI: Willi a senes WHO DOES IT? men. Aeroil ,Ireel rrom .ampUl.

For those who thl'nk show ex~mplo . are discordant ;nd un- tTenk'ft : I dldn ·t say that. 10f vi its to fra.ernily or sor· UN~'uaNI HED thre. b.droom - .Ircondltloned with cookln, f, cil. I" "" 6OO.004.m.n Koreln n u, CLASSICAL GUITAlUST ,Ivl", In 5 1M3 Am.rl~.n llomecr~'I. 10 x 11101. '50. II &. Wuhlnslon. Phone Ir"," fOrCI., he Slid Ittfer. business began with Bill Haley able to get logether throual't Q. What North \riotnamc e orHy. open ho~ es. RUlihccs are Iruduotn hl'l bertnN~lln' or, Id ' l l~ru ~~~~: •• 1l"~~I . .'m~r h'~;; I sa"'I~1. U-15 hi' .rriv.1 h. did "et '1(--' and the Comet., the Rock Age much of their performance of soldiers then would po c a reqUired to Visit each fratern- vince ec n que, ,"on "mo.. - -- AlII CONDITIONED, beauUfully (ur· ...... diE " h ·t '1 h aJ7·2Ail. 10-6 lHO SKYLINE 10 •• 6', - l"uml!hM. nl~h.d rOom. do •• to umrus hi, vl'it t. product • specific has produced all manner of in· "Ju y B ue- yes, yet t e re- threat? I y or sororl.y open ous on ELECTRlCSflA VER -;'ep.lr -:":4 carpd'd, air co~~ll1o~.d, Innox. 33I-H •• or ~3H:i09. U-i 1I~ IItw .id provr•m, Othlr Am. aile v~riety flicks. like "Rock cording is almost flawless. Still. campu before Indica'lnl: their hnur ... vlre, 1I.~.r'o lIarbor IJ,IOO or be~j orr ... ",,1$11. '·S , _~_~~ ______ _ .rie." offici. I ... ltI "0 decl. Around The Clock," "Don 't rock buffs will no doubl revel rh D ./ I preferences, hop. _ 10! 1.,1 10.50 • CII",."I.nll), I ... l.~ , APARTMENT FOR SAL.

rellOlrtinr 11111')'. . f d hA ' e 0' V owan , II'NO T·n.oIlf.O· It' />lUll HII ~)' ,.Io!llb.r I. No 'len WIIIld '" m,d. until. Knock the Rock," ctc." and In per ormances an \1'0 Im- - - n n , .,em a 'UI on. . 11.8Ieo, Bllt QUer. " 7-173%. . ·29

I I t t ' d b th 0.... dr. e • • nd mitIs. Phon. ,IIMMI OOWN ~III buy ' r~m Ipl rt. ltud,. Is m.d. of Kortl's do. specia altraclions like Elvis mense Y en er allle y e P'ubl j,h.d by $lull.nt "ub!!.I- 338·lm. ..26 ",."1 In u';;m" 4Pa;lm;nb. \Ar. tAiled "'"'., Presley and the Boatles have film, . ,!~~n:.W~n~·lty~·~:~nJ~:;~.~S.II~·=; , FLUNK ING MATH? Or blilC m. "eL' WANTED OW lIull,y. 337·21.1. '.15 f

"'ery

""" $132 ' 806 ' I

718 m .. m'

ege and Unlver·

Agnew came herA at PreSI'- had vehicles produced to dis- For those who hoped to under- copl Mo~d.ys. holld.ys. 1.,11 holl· lIslle.' C.II Janel, S38-t30&. 1-26 -----------" ot.yo Ind Ihe diY' III" 1.,,1 h.ll· - - - --~- I HOU8EuDEPINO U1OI,.P t d I dent Nixon 's request to pledge play their talents. stand the sub-culture for whom •• ys. Inllnd IS 'I.ond cia .. mil. LIGHT h.ulln, - stud.", ral. ..... nL wan e or APARTMiNT5 FOR RENT B t ' th I t f lh h f r I h· .. h hi'" aI flit POll office 01 1010'1 Clly Coli ,n·nto or 331-1311 .venln,; ... ee~.nO., AfPIY In peroon. C1.y.

~ntinuing U,S. SUpport for Ko- u III e as ew years ere suc es Iva s are lit', 0 Y under 'lit Act If Cln,.... If k I-:i Ion 110"" Mo ~ _ _ I~"rn HOUSE !.parlmenl _ 10 m'n~I •• has been a welcome change in days, "Woodstock" is a disap- IoIllch 2. 117', Drun --- ~ -I WANTED - MedIcal "cretlry Ind eomm"! •. 11l1li up. Prer.r r.mlly.

C• M 'I Wk ' .. . u. C I I m n , n 0 0 I opm ''' ' IduiU. P.ncll. chauo.l, fl . PI.lell. practice. ~o hopr "'Uk. lIox 347, - - - -pop musi' n fl'lms I s ope t 't po'n! e t Do .( g t '1 h . g -. DaUy lo"'.n I' wrillen .nd ART! T I'OI\TRAITS - ~hlldren, book .. " r. Phy.Jclln In PrlVlI. \ m,TU\, .. ~w Ity 01 or er goes back to "A Hard Day 's for insights into Wadena ; In- ~~~t.g( ~~",!~U~~7~o~: ;:Opere~~'I~ '20.011, ... up. 338-02l1li, I-UAII Dolly lowln, e·2 NOW IIENTlNq - one .nd Iwo bed·

Ni hI " d ' h ' I I .1 D • - -- - ro"m (urnloned or un(urnlshed Charged for Theft g, a pseu o-cmema verite sig ts are parUcu ar y lacking Ih. edllorl.1 co umn. ot Ih. piper rivers S HAF' XEIIOX COgy. 1.clltn, In IIOAIID crt ... memben for 1.11 at .p.rtmenu. ~1·1J61 or 3311-9201.

day In the life of the BeaUes. in the documentary sections of are 111o •• 01 the wrll'r" • I (I7fml, Ip •• I.IIstJ. 2$ O.y Bull~. Delli TlU Doll., 3aJ N, Clin ton - I H1 Th. A,_I."d Pro .. la enllUed lng. 331·M['. "lllf~ Icr... rrom lIu rc- 11111. Coni ...

That film l1a& led to a documen· the film, many of which you 10 tho exclusl.e use (or republic.. CA - - - - - Jobn LOII,bran. 353-"11. 1-11 ,!'Bfbara Louise Lund. 22, of tary approach to rock and such may have already seen on tele- lIon all IOCII as "'tU II III AP ne .. , tru~" v~~rrJ.:u'i.uf:~ I:; 7':1.Ck~r. 1 MISC .... • .... LI I w rown SI. was arrested on a interesting films as "Don't Look vision. Mo~t of the dialoaue ts .nd dlspltche.. CoralYjlle. 331-47.9 . , t-4AJ1 _____ ._'""_"_"_ .. __ _

chare! of maillheft Monday in Back," lhe film about a tour by self-congrlliulatory, in the na- Sub,.,lp"on ... 1 .. , By carTIer III DIAI'r;JI- IIlnlll S.~O- by - Ne"' l P81MrrrVES .Iookl 31.uwlr. _ 10 C·t low. Cily. ,10 fOer ~ .. In .dvance; PrllO.iI Laundrv 313 • Dubuqu' .• WI I y, Dylan ,' "Cash I.," rolloWI'ng ture 01'. "Gee, I can't aet over I tb" t 'b 53 J'~' •. "AU.~L1 qu .. ". lJ~hln s~ loqth

Tb • •• mon s.....; e man. s. , Phone 3.'l7·1IIIQ. il-4A1I Gllberl, Open Mondl~ . Frld.y, f

e charge against Lund, a Jotmny Cash on tour; and the how wonderful we ;lre." The In- ~~ m~!ln~,~sc,~M,~n$ih~~~ p~:..~~~: . WANTED ' / .... Plrt-timemail carrier, states recent fi Let It Be" by the terview scenes give you the Im- 13.50. MUSTS£LL, 0\;;;;-2111 "T-;;' ", that federal postal inspectors Beatles. Replacing those really pression that most of the people Dill 331-41.1 {rom noon to mid· WANTEO _ Small .h.llo ..... cl! the Lin .... . tr~e. ,er,D I,,,, ... observed her placillg a post of- offensive variety films hive there are smug, self-sallsfl .... , ~J,hl to reporl n .... Items .nd In· eleetrle pronU7epUll1P .• uJlabl. corder. lol.,r.le .P ....... , IIIl er .. \ II "" ~ounc.menlS In TIl. D.1Iy 10wJn, ror ~bln. n, .. on.bl.. a"l I', I pho~ef, st.ndl, laulh ,hi". flOG

ce letter in her pocktt la$t been "Monterey Pop" and and inarticulate. When yOtl f.cUtOrill ofllet. er. In the Commun- Wellmw 611"~ "$ ne .. , S300 o( best off ... ~~z Ir, Thursday and that she also had " Woodstoc~," leave the theatre you remain as eauons Cenl.r. , . • ler 5 P.M. 1-,. othe~ leiter. illegally in her pos- There are two direction! a much outside of the culture is ,0~~'lp!~~I'~y It,;;:'u .d:, .n~\,:~;.I:r. Wlnttcl: session, film like "Woodsl()~k" can take. you were when you entered, fort .. 11\ be ",.d~ 10 correcl the .,. ·2S.000 IXICUTIVI DlneTOII fir D.y

I C be d for 1.lth the nul 1"!lJ. Clrculallon C C" f c: II II OWl ity Postmlster. WlIliam It can a ocumentary about And It's too bad. "Woodstock" olllee hours ar~ ~;30 10 II 1.111. Mon. 1raffic .,. In" or U ~ra Y J. Coen IIld postal inspectors three days at a rook festival, could have I._-n a rl'lm of sloml. d.y I~rou,h 'rld.y. d h ~ DIII".anla,.d .n .. Io\In,.lIy .... """ .'. eal s a year. Ilrd~_ . MIL In Child " •• llop-InvtlU,ated Lund after the hiihliihted by major perform. ficance to everyone. l~te.d , Tru.l.ea, Board 01 Student Pub m.nt. Speel.1 ...... 11 .... 'Mt.1 t.._ I d . lIe.lIons, Inc.; C,rol Ehrlich, G; IOC. po,t office received eam- allces an smppets of minor it's little more than a very long John Caln. 43; 1\0" Zobel, M; Work, .. 1111111111.'.... ''''n"l.

Oxford JSumlt\lrt IMp I

Bod'. d,. ... rs. cribs. reckl"" \ ch.ITS. end t.blt., ... V"',.".

com""'s. other fv""itvre, 3 block, •• ,f III WII_ Street plaints th.t rome mall WIR not ones ; or It can be a showcase home movie for rock (an!, and ~~7rr\v11~:~lnr.n,z~~;, J~ho~'~1 ",~,"\ /.D. I", ., ,.1.,._ ,,,I,,,.. ,,".f ...

being received. Coe" added thpt for pop performer. of the not mueh more relevant than Journillsm; William Albreohl, De· ~ WI :~:' ,r:~7:~:t'~~~IC,,'Jl':::: f th I.. h t , II f h h ed partmonl of Ee""o,,,tca. Chllr",anl "~. OxfenI, low.

STUDENT

APARTMENTS

A"rlvtd Mu.ing and over 21. Inclttr Pool, trI .. ~k bar. privet. but .. rvlet to univer· ,Ity. tH-Itrtet IIIl'\(i"" .Ir· centll" ......

MODIL SUnE O'EN

lHE MAY fl.OWER

APARTMENTS

'"' N, ~ It, lOme 0 e m ... in. mail as momen , uSing rcpor nj 0 t e Kay Kyser In the .unt house. O.M,. W. Far.lI, School 01 Re. U""I·'I""~.b.I"" ""' "'''''''' sonnll Ch.lrm.n. 12M Itll at, ........ 621-4329 ' been recovered. scene as I reUef from an un- 1'1 II..,. II... 1I,lon; Ind DI.ld ScbotnblUlD, Dt, 1.1,. ,e", 1.,1... I.W.. I . parlmenl at Hlalory. '--__________ , L.-_________ --J ..... _________ ..J

Page 4: Warmer oil oman - The Daily Iowandailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-26.pdfIsraeli Ambassador Yoser Tekoah was the first to go to Jarring's office , on the 38th noor o( the

' ... · 4-THI DAILY IOWAN-low. City, 1 •• -WteI" Au .. " 21, 197D

----~E~ndsTo~nile :~ Bradshaw: 11m Pittsburgh's, "THE MOONSHINE"

WAR" Alan Ald.

HIGHEST RATING I

UZA RATES OSCAR IN TOP DRAMA'.' - DA ILY NEWS

AN OTTO PREMINGER FILM -ila minnelli ken howard robert moore james coco kay thompson fred williamson Pete seeger ." old devil time ;;;;: UIttI ........ ..... . ,... ...... .. .......... IiIdIoictlor· IItIit Uo"". .ttI ...... ....

_" .. _ 'GP'

FEATURE AT - 1'30 • 3:31 . 5:24 • 7:30 . 9:36

ENDS TONITE "TOO LATE THE HERO"

STARTS

THURSDAY

Watch the landlord

get his.

THE MIRISDl PRODUCTION COMPANY

oms A NORMAN JEWISON· HAL ASHBY

PRODUCTION

JWr,nl BEAU BRIDGES LEE RANT DIANA SANDS nc AR L SAl LEY II" ",..., • ~, .. r£,'Y toy 8a>Od"", no"" by

Iftd rCtl '~ "If' AL KOOPER tllLl GUNN KRISTIN HUN1ER PIOducod by OorlC'ed by

NORMAN JEWISON HAt ASHBY COLOR by DeL1JX6' Unrtld ArfIftI ~C3J 10II1G'1rI41 JoIOIIOH lIK: ,u.r IOUHDTP4(' - AvAu ltU ON 1Ik1T£O Ntl l511 .[COII~J

ENDS TONITE "CHISUM"

STARTS

THURSDAY

The last time Virgil Tibbs had a day like this was

"In The Heat Of The Night"

WEEKDAYS

7:30 & 9:45

lItE I.l1lllSCll P!OlJC1KlN aM'NIY .......

SIDNEY PUITIER MARTIN LANDAU • A WALT~R MIRISCH PRODUCTION

THEYCIW ME MISTER rlBBsi .......... BARBARA McNAIR., ANTHONY ZERBE ~~ AlN/ R IUlMAN nJM'~H MBa s..,,, AlN/ R l11JSl MAN

_ ........ _..-.. .DiHSAl.l ..... ·(k JMS £ ...... I'Iof.<a- WAllERMRSOi

........ " H(R8ERI HiRSCHIIAH II<1aoj ~ 00IUJtj IXlJGAS COLOR " Dol . .. • ~ t ...... ,.rc.l\III XIII If"" lDIU o\fMAIIl_ "-,,,,lISTS .COIIl I lJIutId Art-.

Ends Tonite " NAKED UNDER

LEATHER" Alain Delon

Steve McQueen plays Boon in'The Reivers"

IGfl All ASII ADMITTED Po""'11 Gil .. "" So",,,,. • IN COLOR

F ATURE :' - 1:41 ·3:39·5:37·7:35·9:33

Leader; Not so says ,Hanratty LATROBE, Pa. fA'! - Rookie shake this idea of losing. Why Bradshaw lIent three for 10

Terry Bradshaw concedes he that line blew out holes that for 56 yards. is presently the No. 1 quarter· were unbelievable. They did a I In two preseason games and back for the Pitts~urgh Steel· fabulous job." the szrimmage, Bradshaw ers. Terry Hanratty concedes The Steelers won 20·13 and the hasn't thrown a touchdown the fact too, but his actions victory stamped Bradsha lY as pa s, has completed 40 per cent show he doesn't want to believe ,he starting quarterback. of his passes, yet already is the it. Bul Hanratly, ".rting his acknowledged starting quarter·

"They look to me as their second year wilh Pittsburgh, I back Friday night f a national· leader," said Bradshaw. pro proved in the Steeler inlra· Iy telel'ised contest against the I football 's top draft choice. ") ,qu~d mimm.go I"t wHk New York Giants. think they already believe in that he's not buckling under Coach Chuck Noll apparently me. And I think they believe in the "Bradshaw pressure." doesn't want to turn away from themselves. The Notre Dame graduate hi t Bradshaw for it was the 21-

") told them the offense I on five of seven passes for 136 year·old Louisiana Tech gradu· during the Minnesota game that yards and fired two touchdown ate Ilho led tbe Sieelers Lo their they're the be l. We've got La passes. I £irst victory In 15 games.

Bradshaw, the Coach's Choice -Terry Br.dshaw, the Pittsburgh Steel.rs. top drift choic., has conced.d Ihll h. ', presenlly the club'. No. 1 quarterback. So does Terry Hanratty, who's Ihe No. 2 man. Hanratty, however, " performing w.1I and will probllbly give Bradshaw I run for Ihe sllrting role . COlch Chuck Noll, I.ft, hiS nctmin.led Bradshaw, righl. 10 slart Friday nighl 'gainsl Ih, N.w York Gillnt •.

- AP Wirephot.

Meet the Hawkeyes

JEFF ELGIN

t ! I t

CHARLEY CROSS

Jeff Elgin will add much desired depth to the Hawkeye's defens ive backfield this fali.

Strength in reserve is one key to suc· cess in football . Ray Nagel will have this quality this year wi th several strong sophomores.

The lSS·pound Elgin played quarter· back at Valley High School, Des Muines, was moved to ta ilback on the freshman team last year where he gained 244 yards on 37 carries for a 6.6 average , then was changed to a defensive back during spring training.

Charles Cross, a Dubuque native, is one of these. Listed behind Rizh Solomon as free safety on the preseason depth chart, Cross played defense on the fresh· man team last year, as well as catching lour passes for 157 yards and one touchdown, and returning fou r punts for 49 yards.

A versalile athlete in high school earn· ing 13 letters, Elgin was a first·team all· state baseball choice, a second·team all· stale football selection, as well as wrestling and being a hurd ler and sprinter in track.

"Cros has everything it takes to be· come a good safety." says defenSive backfield coach Wayne Fontes. "He has excellent speed . good hands, and a knack for ' smelling out the play and be· ing in the right place at the right time," ~'ontes added.

Chiefs' Dawson Will Miss Atlanta Clash KANSAS CITY Ill'! - "Me "There's no way I'll be able ,here was no change in Daw·

play?" asked Len Dawson, Kan· 10 play," Dawson said and Tues· son 's condition. sas Ci ty Chiefs' veteran quar· day it looked for real. The injury was described as a terback, as he hobbled around He did not practice witS the I sprain in the forward arch area on crut:hes. team and the Chief's office Said of hiS left foot. The fool was iiiiiiiiii ______ - -- - - ----- swollen, the skin light and dis·

Can bab".es cnlored ~M be bom ,,;:,,; H,,' SL<om w,,,', ~

~~~ 'E addided 1 ~:'. I to druas?

STARTS 1:45

3 • SHOWS (Item of druB abuse on the un· bom ~re discussed on pilge 4 of

CAlLY the Federill source book: ""n· FEAT. swers lolhe mott frequenlly.asked TIMES queslion! .about drug ~bu~."

AT Wrile for your free copy. Send

1:45 5:05 1:25

Adm iSi ion Price

. For This Engagement " ALL

SEATS :r $2.00 ~

o ~Ieigh·mourice. IR1 ltd produclion ei

tecMicolor [rom v.orner bros.

in the coupon below.

- . ---. . -. -. -. . • 0""Ab ••• Qui,lio", .nd An.w... • • N.,;on.1 CI •• ,I_Aho ... /0' 0"'1 • • Abu .. In/o'IN,II>. • _ 10.' .... W .. hinllon, D.C. lOIIJ •

- . • N.""': _______ •

- . • Addr ... : _____ _

• • Cily: ______ _

• • 51. le: ______ .;.

• Zip: •

- -- - • • • • - • • • • - - 0 If" m~ NW"'ttI", (0fI"""'''' .... ttle ",1tItc toof

runk • rlyers.

Get Ihem off the rood­before they gel you off the rood

By JAY EWOLDT sport. Editor

With the start of football practice only two days away, sportswriters are

, busily [ormulatlng predictions for the upcoming season.

A Daily Iowan series on the pros· pects of each Big 10 learn will be pub· lished in the near future, but Playboy Magazine sports edilor Anson Mount has already come out with his annual "Pigskin Preview."

f w.s happy to HI ",.1 Mounl was the firsl n.tion.1 footb,.11 forec.,tlr to pick the low. H.wbyes above sixth pllee. Iowa w.s u,ttel fourth in the eonferenCt by Ih, " Pigskin Previ.w" and Mount's dtscriptlon of tho low, squad WI5 10 fitting I decided 10 pt'inl it in contexl:

"The sleeper team in the Big 10 could be Iowa. After last season's de­bilitating racial conflict and this year's dissent among the coaching staff, tempers seem to be cooling ; squad morale seems to have gone from an all· time low to a new high and one senses a determination to put all that high· grade beef together and prove that the Hawkeyes can once again be a great team.

"One thing about coach Ray Nagel: He's a gutsy guy. Former athletic di· rector Forest Evashevski , who made a career out of bei~g an authoritarian tough guy, made the fatal mistake 01 hiring a head coach who was even tougher.

"N.g.1 is no .no·, patsy. WI haY •• feeling he will lusllfy til. fi.rci loy.l. ti.s of tile players .nd tho Hawk.y. fans, which savetl his lob l.sl spt'ing when the Iowa f.tulty atiliotic board mad. a clumsy .ffort to fire him.

"The psychological implications in this situation are numerous and if a few of the pieces fall into place, the Hawkeyes could pull a couple of big upsets and throw the conference championship race into turmoil . The Hawkeyes certainly have the horses : Defensive back Craig Clemons and tail· back Levi "Mitchell are on the thresh· hold of greatness and new quarterback

• Roy Bash could be a real surprise." • • •

HAPPINESS is a two-week vacation during the DI's layoff between the end of summer school and the start of fall registration - even II business· pleasure trip just 10 Chicago.

MISERY is being the last of the die· hard White Sox fans and seeing your team drop another doubleheader to

'Pigskin . Preview'

the California Angels before a pathetic Sunday Banner Day crowd of only to,· 000.

HAPPINESS is being granted a lock. Ir room inlervl.w wilh Whit, Sox uteher Duane Josephson. I follow low.n .nd • graduale of the St,l. Col­"'" of 10WI (now UN I ).

Luck may be a better word for gel· ting a locker room interview wilh any Sox player after a loss these days, since reporters have been so hard on the Sox this season that Manager Don Guaeridge has barred them from the clubhouse.

That's one advan tage of being from ou t 01 town - the team hasn't had I chance to hate your ' guts yet for mak· ing any critical remarks about them, and the White Sox are particularly sus­ceptible to and biller toward criticism.

The tw.nly-eight yalr.old Joseph"n, his !lIonel h'ir ,Ire.dy bilding in only his fourth full year wi.h Ihe Sox, has btIn pl'gIIteI by Injuries the pasl two se'Sln, but I, currenlly leading the tllm with • .324 batting average.

Josephson said he has fully recovered from a blood clot which stopped circu· lation in his arms a year ago. That ill· ness threatened to end his career but Josey recovered and reported . to spring ball a healthy man.

The bad luck continued as he was reo Injured early this summer and is just now getting back into the swing 01 Ihings. So keep the f&lth , die·hard So~ fans ; a healthy Josephson may be the best cure yet for the sagging Sox.

• • • A Hawkeye football fan from Alexan· dria, Va., observed former·Hawkeye Paul Laaveg In the Redskins' exhibition opener with Cincinnati recently and reo marked that Laaveg looked pretty good. He sent along a clipping from the Wash· ington Star on the Redskins' offensive line which gave the following commen· dation of Laaveg:

"There could be more assistance this go-round with rookie Paul Laaveg look· ing particularly good. Laaveg was in action in the middle two quarters against the Bengals, when the Redskins had some of their best drives, only to suffer a shoulder bruise on perhaps his best play. He sprang Larry Brown loose with a trap block for a nine·yeard gain on the play, which boomerranged into 8

Bengal touchdown with Lamar Parrish's 55-yard lumble recover run .

"He (Laaveg) shows good coaching and training, Austin said." wi. : ~ is about as good a referenc~ as any to Iowa coach Ray Nagel's abilities.

Syracuse .BI,!cks Mar. Plci), If Accept CO'de of Ethics

SYRACUSE, N.Y. Ill'! - John "categorically denies the gen· It was because ' of the boycott

, I

• I

I ,

E. Corbally Jr., chancellor of eral alleg~tion of discrimina· that Schwartzwalder told seven 1 I

Syracuse University, said Tues· tory practices and the specific of the 10 they would not be al· day black football players who allegation claimed to support lowed to play this fall. had been told they would not that general charge. " Among the commitments that J play this fall would be allow· Last April, the 10 black memo each of the suspended black "t ed to rejoin the team if they ac· bers of the football squad boy· players have been asked to af· cepted the general terms of the cotted spring practice because firm was: . university's code of ethics. they said head coach Ben "I agree that all complaints

In a letter , to the local Scbwarlzwalder reneged on a or grievances will be taken up Human R i ~ h t S CommiSSi?n' l promise to hire a .black assist· I initially with Coach Schwartz· Corbally sood the university ant coach by that lime. walter or with his assistant --- --.-. coach. If this discussion does

17 G . W· T S not resolve the, grievan~ I shall - arne Inner om eaver discuss it with the director of . • athletics.

Adm-Its ~e's I-n M-Ild Slump " If stU! dissatlsfied with the results, J will discuss the pro-blem with the chairman of Ihe . ,

NEW YORK fA'! - Tom Seav· er, tbe Golden Boy and stopper of the New York Mets, admits he's in a mild slump.

"I can snap out. of it," said the 25-year-old, $IIO,iJOO-a·year pitching star Tuesday.

However, it's oot all that athletic governing board." gloomy. The hard.throwing There was no immediate com·

ment from the black players. ace has a 17·9 won·lost record The black players involved , , a 2.61 earned run average and were AI Newton, the Orange's a league-leading 239 strikeouts. leading ground gainer over the And his arm is sound. past two years; Duane Walker,

"My arm's fine," he said. a defensive back; Dana Harrel, , , "But my control hasn't been safety ; Bucky McGill, John !.0-very good. ) just haven 't been I bon, John Godbolt and DIck hitting the spots at all ." Bulls.

Manager Gil Hodges doesn't think it's a slump but just too much work brought on by the club's pitching problems and the team's schedule.

Seaver, 25-7 last year when he won the Cy Young Award as the outstanding pitcher in the National League, prelers to work after four days rest. Hodges likes to have him on that schedule 100.

Maior League Baseball Scoreboard , I

r merwill 01.

on the ne Newman

I \ discussion Impression

But. the way the Mets ' pro­gram work~d out , the right· hander had a chance to work with either Ihree days or five days in his last two starts.

Both Seaver and Hodges fel t that five days was too much.

... ... I/UC ... N LI .... UI Nllion.' L .....

8olllmore ew York

Detroit xBoston Cleveland Washln.ton

••• 1 1111 W L I'd. G. W L I'ct. .. 8J 45 .643 ><PIttsburgh 70 57 .551 -70 57 .551 II' , New York 66 60 .m ,1\, 66 58 .MO 13 xChlcago 66 6l .511 Iq 53 60 .512 J6 'h xSI. Louts 60 66 .478't, 61 65 .484 20 PhUadelphl1 58 69 .457 12 60 88 .• 76 21 xMontreal 53 11 .117 14', W." W." W L I'cl . • 1 W L '(1 . ..

xMl nnesola 73 60 .593 - Cinelllnitl 84 46 .64' -CIllC"rnll 70 58 .556 4.... xl.Al1 An •• les 70 55 .560 Il'\ • O ..... nd 88 59 .534 7 xSln FranclKO 63 a .1\04 II'" Kan ... CII)I 48 78 .388 26 I Allanta 84 63 .1\04 I.', I f MllwlUk.. 47 60 .370 28 xHouston 57 70 .444 2t Chlc.,o 47 13 .311 21.... xS.n Diogo II 79 .371 3t1t l-NI,ht I.mes not InclUded. x- Night ,am.. nol Include'"

T ... dly'. a .. ulI. TUlldIY" .... 111

acquired t at the Uni weapons i Jhotguns a

Smiley Jl the contr .. his acquisi. that he we than he is a an exal

O I A P E R New York 2. KanAI City 1 AIl.nl. 7, Now York I Bosion .1 MlnnelOIa! N Clnelnnlll 2. Phll,delphll I, (U Chlcl,o " W .. hln. on 3 Innln,s) S E R V ICE MUwlukee 4, Cleyel.nd Z Houston II Montre'l l N

• chased no ,t POwered ri

B.lllmore 5 Olkllnd I Chicago at Los An,e ea. N (51 Dol. -r WeekI C.lllornil i. netrolt 4 (second Plttlbur,h.t S.n Diego, N ... ,.me nl,h l) St. Louis tl Sin FrancllCo, II

_ $12 PER MONTH _ I' ..... bl. I'lklle" 'robabll Plklle .. New York. B.hnlen Ol·.) .t Houllon. Wilson 111-5) II MOIl' 1

F,... pickup & delivory twice Kana .. City, Bunker (1).7), N [real, Renko (U). N 't • WHk, Everythin.. i, fur. Bolton, Culp 113·11) II MlnnelOo Atllnll, Reed 111-5) .t Ne. Yarl,

• IIL,Blyleven 17·'). N Koosmln IU), N nilhtd: Dilpen, contlilltl'l, wllhln,lon. Cax (7-1) al Chlca,o. Clnclnn.U, Merrllt liMO) II deod J.nelkl (8-14) Phllld.lphla. Bunnln, (11).)2), N

or.ntl. call/ornll. Wrl,ht (17-8) II De· Chl~IO. Hditzman (11-1) II ' NEW PROCESS trott, MeLlin 13-4). N An,el •• , Olte.n 113-11), N Mllw.uk .. , Downln, 14-\0) al PIII,bur,h, Vule 18-11) I' Pheno 337 "" Cltyellnd, Harlin (11-2), N Dle,o. Robert. (S.lll, N

1"-______ • ____ , 1 O ..... nd, Dobaori (IS-II) at hlil· 81. Loull, Brtle. 1S-4) , _ mora, Palm ... (17-7), N FrancllCo, It,ber,lr (S-5)

Smiley a Ihe weapc Ihis umm eqUipment lies of the !hey had f;

McCarne shotguns, dozen teal" from govel