November 29, 1967 Daily Iowan

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""~~I Command Headquarters In He will also receive the Medal, earned during his in Vietnam. than 100 cadets will reo at the ceremony. ing officel' for the cere· will be Cadet Col. Harold B4, Des Moines, deputy corps commander. Capt. David R. Mason, Lime Springs, will receive top cadet award, the Legion Cross for Achievement. one of 14 awards given an· by the Legion of Valor of ited , States for scholastic lence and leadership. Luckenbill , A4, Glen El· Ill., president of Guidon Sothe Army ROTC women's will receive a certifi· of appreciation from the City Veterans Administra· Hospital for the society's vol· work there during the year.

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Fasters, Campers

Begin Long Vigil To Protest Dow

Times Fined

leaders For Rights 01 fighting controls on stu· rights of expresSIOn, reli· the press and college pa. courts ," he added, "are a receptive posiLion" to such suits. Should Have Privacy said students should be tted to live off campus if wanted to and that their to privacy shouldn't be viI)by house mothers or col· officials inspecting the i r

TENTING TONIGHTI - Preparlnll to .It out I nlne.day fut, the.. Intlwlr demon· stratora, who declined to identify themaelves, warm their hands .t • lantern In.lde a tint pitched at thl Girls Athletic FI.ld lOuth of the Union , M.mbara of Studtntt for a Democratic Society Irlct.d two t.nt. Tu ..... y nlllht I' part 01 a camp·ln to prot.st the planned appearance here of recrult.r. for Dow Chemicil Co, - Photo by Jon Jlcobaon

emphasized tha t female don 't receive e qua I of laws because they discriminated against by be· subjected to restrictive dor· hours. decisions tend \0 a(can aflect the practices colleges . . . and women have to be given the same as male students if they their demands to courl," said. conference was planned NSA Congress this sum· and was designed , according NSA Pres. Edward Schwarlz, provide a time and a place those who wish to discuss and n concerted, nationally coaction." Workshop Sessions Held 'II conference workshop sesincluded discussions of taclics. women's holt r s visitation poliCies, tudent financia l autonomy and of sludent govern· student legal rights, mass educational reform and participation in educa· policy, antiwar activities, judicial autonomy. d d r es sin g the conferalong with Lucas aod were Roberl Van Waes, secretary of the Amerof University (AAUP ) and Mike l'~'B~;;k~l~o:~ne of the leaders in Ie , Calif., free speech

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Interest Is Beginnin9 said the delegates' inter· in educational reform was beginning of an important movement on the part 5'Ullelll.:s. "

disagreed on I h e faeany reform movement. Van said that students we r e away the opportuoity to a meaningful role in a eol· governmcnt if they igoor· faculty. disagreed in part. , "Students and faculty deeply different interests" separate them. The conference, as a who Ie, to do litUe to resolve the surrounding stu den t . The delegates were d~ into two groups - one of felt the conference over· Iml)ha;siz~ld tactics of achieving power and the other fell it bad over·empbaslt· educational goals and objecinvlJ l ve~ment that m~mhpr. should have in

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Body Pres. John Pel· represented the UBi· at the conference, said was a good el' and added , "The coo- ' clearly showed the dyof the national sludellt movement." sa id the University stool above many schools in at- ' students to participate iJ I>nl"l'v··m.,lcln,g decisions,

Senate Urges UI Not To Punish War Protesters By BETSY BeCKER The Student Senate reaflirmcd Tuesday night an earlier resolution recommending that the University take no acllon against the 86 students arrested in the Nov. 1 antiwar demonsiration directed against Marine Corps recruiters at the Union. The Senate, meeting in the Union, also voted that Campus Security officiats should not be deputized or allowed to carry arms. The r solution concern in!! the demon· strators directed that the senate's officers and a few senators should meet with Pres. Howard R. Bowen and M. L. HuH, dean of students, to protest the fact that the senate 's former recommendation, pas ed Nov. 7. was ignored. Some of the demo onstrators were placed on social probation by Huit's office Monday. The resolution, which received only one negative vote, also said that the senate would contemplate further action if the meeting should prove fruitless. Some sen· ators abstained from voting because they are members of the Committee on Student Conduct and may be concerned with demonstra tors' cases in that capacity, Committee Says No The resolution to recommend not to deputize security officers was brought out of committee at the meeting. It was in· troduced several weeks ago by Sen. Bill Scotl. Sen. Gary Goldstein, the committee chairman, said the committee rccom· mendrd that the bill not be passed and that the senate ask that the Campus Se· curity oflicers be deputized and carry arms. Sen. Tim Hyde, also a ccmmittee memo her. ~aid he did not think the Campus Securi y officers should carry arms and Ihat since the committee had met he had decided that h~ was against depulization . Student Body Pres. John T. Pelton ubmi ted a four-part amendment to the

resolution which Scott accepted. The senate accepted Pelton's recom· mcndations that Campus Security police nol be permanently deputized and that they not carry side ar ms. They rejected hi· recommendation that the campus policl' be deputized in " time of crisis or potential c[lsis." They did not vole on the fourth part of the amendment becau e it concerned keeping the officers under Uni· vl!rsity control if they were deputized and wa~ not considered pertinent to the resolution as passed. Pelton S.eks Permlulon Pellon said he would request that Bowen allow him to aHend the Board of Regents meeting Dec. 14·16 to represent the students. Pelton said he would appeal to the head of the board if Bowen refused him permission. · The following were appointed to fill Town Men vacancies on the senate: Charles L. Diegel. B4, Nora Springs: Paul A. Eisner, B2, Highland Park, III. , and David P. Hellwege. B3, Boone. Betsy Becker, A3, LeMars, was recommended for a vacancy on the Board of Trustees of Stude ,t Publications, Inc. The board's approval is necessary to finali ze her appointment.

By ROY PETTY Nearly a doz n antiwar prolE' ~er' be an Ilvin!( In tent on the alhlf'lic f~ld SQuill of the Union Tue _day ni"ht to ob rn a day-and·nifh \'illil unlil Dow Ch mical Co., makers 01 napalm, leave. Ihe cam· pus on Dec 5., Nearly all of the campers have appar· ently vone wit~out food since fonday mornln", University officials allowed the tents to br ~t un near the l'nion sfll'r an apreemen: wa r ached between the dminis· tra'ion nd le<lders of the Studenls for a Democrati~ Soci t~ 'SD I, 10 which SOS proml d '0 aectpt c"r:oin condit inn con· Cfrninll the prote t. Bruce rlnrk. AI, Dl' :\Iolnp, unofficial II' der of tht' fa 't.aid Tup.sda~· that Ihe m1jor part of :he a r!'empnt wa 0 prom. ise that SDS would flot sponsor an obstruNlon or any form of d~n erou or iJ· te~at prot.... ' 8!!ain t Dow Chemical" twodlY recruit:n!! efforts .fonda), Ilnd Tue . day. IndiViduals Could Ad Clark uddl'(\ Ih t th~ pac! did not neCC8sarily mean thaI individual student could nn ' or'onizf" a hlockncte 0' Ihc recrul'in" arpa, II wa donI' for the Nov. t demon· ~tration al1ain_t .Iarine Corp recruiter. Hp said the UniverSity alministralors stipulated only SO since that wa the body officlally a kin for permluion to camp oul. Th s ttin" up of the tents wa. delayed until after 5 p.m. beesu e SOS had aMreed to wail until Ihe Highlanders had com pi t d po Ing for pi tures on th field The Highlander did not show up. but the fa ters waited until nightfall before pilching two tent composed of nylon par· a('hutc draped over pyramid of wood· en beams. much like IndlDn tepees. By 9 p.m. the faster~ hod moved into the tent and were circled around hot charcoal braziers because th(' tempera·

Facu Ity Cou neil, Bowen Discuss Dorm Problems By MARY CLARK The Faculty Council met with PreSident Howard R, Bowen 10 special ses ion TuCl!' day to discu s the University" hOll,ing ~itualion The mCfting, which was called lly Bow!'n, wa clo d to th pre , The Daily Iowan received information after the meeLing from Clar nce Andrews, associate profes. or of English and ~('cre· tary of the council. Andrews .ald the council had discus.,ed th~ univer 'ity's imm(.'diute concern about th' plan to exchange women's for men's dormitories. Two women's dormitoric , Kate Daum auu Carrie Stanley, arc scheduled to be· come men's dorm next fall, and the men's residences Reinow Halls I and 11 will become women's dorms, Some students have expressed opposi· lion to thi change. 0 definite decision~ came out of the me ling, Andrews said, Bowen is sched· uled to meet with student leaders s 0 0 n to find out their views on the hou inR sit· uJtion. Andrew aid Bowen pre ented t ntalive long.range hou'ing plan to the coun. ell in order to g t some (acuity sen,iment on proposed plans He said the council dIScus' d uch questions as whether more housing , hould be built and if it . hould , where it migbt be located.

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ture wa belo" freeling. One of thl' campers cradled a 'mall do in h arms On .. ot the camJ>i'r a< Fred Barn It, 213 S. CapLol t., \\ho lurned in hi draft ('ard to federal official m Cedar Rapids nn 1\ov. 16 with Ed Hoffm n., University 01 Norlhern Iowa Englbh instructor. Bar· nett i a technician 81 niver ily Has· pi als, l.A. Stop Postponed In L.o Angele, meanwhile Dow po t· JlOlll'<l until nexi Monday further Job r • crUltmt'nt on the campu of th(' l1niv~r· .;t> 01 California following d mon tra· lion there and III other univenJtie , the .\ ocialed Pres reported. :'.Iranwhil • VCLA ~ud n! arr ng d to \ IIle loday in 8 rt'! r~ndtlm to expre In ir opinions on the fulur tatw of the rr.mpus job placement cl'nter, "h r e rpcruitment inten'lews ha\' be«'n conduc~ed.

Dow attributed d >Inr of further inter· at VCLA tn cllange of eheriule a: o.her chool . not 10 siud nt antiwar II 1I1t'·t . In a r~ll' .lon'tllY, 5511 UCLA tudrnts d 'mo1str ted all i I ueh r mpus pro· 1",ls '" hll 1I1'l1e<1 lit now Chemica\. Th r ad"'ini trn' on's p" ItiOI1 ha. he en t~a' th ' job r( erul 'm n: program VI. 5 ll'qUl' ·ted by the ·tudent body. VIf'WS

Greeks Disagree; Mediators Seek Peace Solutions ATHEN '''' - An urgent Gr!'ek Cabinet m ling on the Cypnl crisl. failed Tu s· rlay night to prodllce allr eml'nl to 1'Ilrki. ~ d mand • W('~tern alliance mediators ilJ1medilltely ecidpll to make n('w vi. its to Ankara. Turkey, and \0 Cyprus to deal with poinl of difference. For!1iRfI 1JnI,t~r Pan3yioli' Piplnells emerged from the Ath n talk on Turk· Ifs demand and Mid , "Theft' has bt!@n nu approval yet." Thi, came aflt1" a lonll da} and nillht r.1 con ultatJons from which the gnvern· ment arlit'r had promist'd a d cl ion on way or the nther, as a spokesman pu it. for pear or po. sible war. The forl'ign mini~ler told n ew~men. " ~o .~rccml·nt ha bren reached wit h th,' Turk ." He aid he . aw the siluatlon ;-, "dpllcate and dan~erous" I Wh n asked if he thoulht war with Turk· I'Y was possible, PipiDl'lis apPE'9red th(\u~hlful and r plied : "Yes, it i pos. sibte It is Ie,s of a possibility now." lie conferred with White Hou'iC envoy Cyrus R. Vanc!'. \\ho thert>upon mad e plnn~ lo ny to Nico ia, th~ Cypriol capi· tal , to talk "ith President ArchbLhop !akarios about some of th(' d('lails in· volve'! in the main di~pute, the evacua· t 1I1Il of Greek Iroops Pipinelis also me again with 1anlio B'·I),lo. ccretarY-Reneral of the Nor t h Atlantic Treaty Orsanization r ATOI. Grcl'Ce and Turkey are 1\ TO members. A, a con equ net of th3t conf rence. Br • io dl'Cided to ny back to .'Inkara. While the Gr k Cabin t wa meeting ('orlier in the day, more than 0 dozen Turkih war hip maneuvered off the north coast of Cyprus for two hOllr', then re:urnl>d to their ba e . A Turki II source 'aid it was a routiOt' naval e~e"ci e, but il was widely regarded a anoth r how of force to inrrea. e pressure on the Greeks,

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Reclassified Protester Questions Board Action By SALLY HOLM A University stud nt rcclas ilicd I·A by his draft board earlier this month laid Tuesday that he belleved hi participation in the ov I demonstrations against Mo· rine r crult rs at the University might have mflucnccd hi rerla Ification. Karl D. GI ave, AS, luscaline, said hI' helleved his reda. ifitlltion on No\· . l~lh wns a "very weird coin~idcnce." He added, however. that hp doubh'll the draft board would admit any diffCN!nt1al trent· m nt of !<tudent Involved in the protest. fembers of th student's draft board in Mil eatine Tuesday denied Gleaves' as· sumptlon. Gleaves WQ5 not one of 107 protesters arr led Nov. I on disturbing the peace charges. He was. hOWE-vcr. singled out as the protester State ~n Thomas Riley I R· Cedar Rapids ) tru'(\ to tag wilh a citizen's arrest on the charge that he was disturb· ing the peace. Riley, who himsell was charged with disturbing the peac after a citizen's arre t by Jerrold Seis, A4, Valley Stream, N.Y., never pr . ed ~harges against Gleave. Comment Illegal Harold K Pet rs, chairman of th Mus· catine Counly Selective ~rvice Board, said that comment by draU board memo bers on any pecific case was illegal He told The Daily Iowan, howevpr. that student involvement in the ovember demo onstrations was not discu f'd at the No· vember r!'Classification meeting. Gleaves, who held a 2-S cla~ficlltlon

before hiJ reda. mcatlon to bnmedlat. draft eligHlillty, 5l id hI' we three credit a hour short of academic landing ('nior, although lhis '1'0. hi fourth year • a t: niv n;ify sluMnt St''''dive S rvier T('g\llation~ Rlale that an insufficient number of credit hour. il ollcn a major factor in drl rmlning stu· dent rtela ifiratlons. !>Ir . Milton A. "('Fadden. fuseatine droft hoard clerk, SIlid Tue~ay that hl' 1"8. ""lIrt' the lark of credits was the reason for the stud nt's (Gll'avcs') reo c1as~iflcation . " EmphasizIOg thath!'"a not a . pokes. man for the hoard, Mrs . McFadden said that to her knowlc:dge "no prejudice or p. rllnlily" would be .. hown any University student from Muscatine Invotved in the demon. tration . Plan l To Ap.,.al Richard A. Trumpe, associate dean of studenl affairs, said that the niversity had nol notified lin ' sludE-nt protesters' draft hollrd of their arrests or participa· tion in the d monstrations and did not in· t nd to do so Gleave said he int('nded 10 appeal his r('clas. i{iealion wilhin the next few weeks on the grounds Lhat he wa II student and had hoped 10 be graduated before being drafted He did not say what he would do If \Ii appeal is denied, If a potenlial draltee wishes to appeal his classification he must do so within 30 days of nolificallon of a change in dran status. according to Selective Service reg· ulatlon .

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Legislative Group Postpones Action

On Speakersl Fees

DES MOl ES 1.4'1 - Thl' Iowa Legi la· live Interim Committee Tuesday put off finaJ ac'ion on wh~1 h-r to cond'",n 'Jay' ment from "state funds or any funds which are collectt'd by 'ho state" to peak· er who are tate official or political candidates. A resolution propo'ing the condemnation was presented to the committee af· ter .S. Sen. Bourke Hickenlooper 'RIowa l a.ccepted a $1.000 honorarium for speaking at Iowa S: ate University Aller disC\lSSion of the measure brou ht out that many legislators speak and ac· cept fees , the committee poslponed a decbion on whether to oppose such prac· litical of(ice." The resolution. offered by StalA? Sen. Lee Gaudin r ID-Des Moine~l condemn Jlayment of uch fees to "any elected or

News In Brief AL ~O IN THE NEWS LAST NIGHT: UNITED NAT IONS - China lost ground Ii bUy when the .N. General A sembly brushed aside for thp 18th year bids to seat the Pekin,' re~ime and expel Nahna 1j.[ China . The vote was 45 in favor of seatinlf the Chinese Communists and 5, uains with 17 abstaining. SAIGON - Communi t troops firing rockets from bazookas overran part of a South Vietnamese dUrict headquarters compound near the Cambod ian border and atttacked a nearby U.S. Special Forces ca mp. U.S 1st Infanlry Division Lroops " rc rushed to the area 85 miles northeast of Saigon. DES MOINES - State Republican chair. man Robert D. Ray accused Gov. Harold liughes of stepping into legislative country by a kinr Iowans not to seek an income tax rebate made avnilable to them by error . Ray said the governor was decidIO ~ "arbitrarily" how Iowa 's new tax law should be applied. By Th. Associaltd P,....

HIS METHOD OF PROTEST - PaUlr-l-by at the Union Wlrtty ey. Dnld Grant, O. $t, Loul., who .p....red d.tliOd I I H.th Tuesday. H••lld It wa. hi. way of prottltlng Itte .chacluled presence on campu. of ...:rult... for Dow Chemicil Co. - Photo by Jon JlcoblOn

lI;,point~d o!ficial of 'h' State of Iowa Or <lnyo 'C who is al that time seeking paWUac office." 'Th" m~asure would also oppose giv· in~ u"h rr'oney to pen;on~ who advocate II cause "when uch payment can only b con trued by its ,ize to be financial sU(l"Ort for su~h cau f " Gaudincer . aid a $1.000 lecture fee of· f-rl'd 10 hlack powl'r advocate Stokely Carmichatl by Iowa State Universily some mo~th~ allO coul1 be viewed only as a conlribu ion to his cau"C. Gerry Ra'lkm. legislat ive fiseal direct· o. ai~ such lec'ure paym nls come Irom tu'il'n' fees which an' mandatory. Sen Joe Flal! (R·Winter,etl said, " I rrbol when 1 think thaI somebody at Iowa State who controls f('l.'s would allocate tl1(' fe~, to brIDe: snmeOOdy like Csr· "'Ichael to Iowa Stale."

McNamara Shift Seen As Hawk Win POSTHUMOUS MEDAL PRESENTED - eel. Cyrus R, Shoc· key, (left) profeiaor and head of mllltiry ICI_e, pro...,1s med· II. to the .,.ronts of .n Iowa _Idler killed In VI.tnlm. Mr. Ind Mrs. HUllfh Ftttktther of J...,p received the Bronle Star Maclal for Valor .nd I VlatnorMM Military .rtt MecI4II on behalf of their IOn, $poc. 4 Gerald Ftttk........ who wa. killed Feb. 21 on I 1C0utillSf million. Tho pmontatlon INk pllICe a. port of the

Army ROTC IWlnk ceremony Tunday night It the Field HOI/. for which C.cIot Col, Hlrold W. Haml gel (rlllht l, B4, Dol Moinel, WI. the rovlewlllSf oHlce. , He II the ROTC deputy coI'pI comllWlnder. Tho Ftttkathers recelvacl the medlls from Shockey btcauM he WI' the Maro.t Army repro.... tatln to the flmlly In lowi. - Photo by Jon JlICoIIaon

An AP New. A•• lvsl, By JACK BELL WASHINGTO -Robert S. Mc'iamara's impending departure from the Defense Department is likely to bring a hardening of the Vietnamese war effort, informed congressional sources said Tuesday. Although job fatigue played a part Ia McNamara's expected transfer to the World Bank after nearly seven yeraa ill tbe Cabinet. the clear indications are that the ha wks among President Johnson', advisers have won oul

An official familiar with the situation s1i1 that in recent mon'h Johnson has been leaning more heavily on Walt W. Ros tow than on McNamara or any other adviser for Vietnamese policy recommen· dations. Rostow, who is Johnson's special as· sistant for nalional security matters, is generally regarded as a hawk on the war. McNamara bas advocated restraint, questioning the increasing com:nitment of troops and their deployment. He has ar· gued that expanded bombing of North Viet. nam will not win the war.


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Students ;j,o ,.-ish to burn doll_ 'lell r Crom R'1bIT E_ H __ml n, lIId paper maebe aeleloDS iD G. te.'Tick •. ' Y-. 10 the cound )Io..e than 150 persons attendp~a~ainslf>o,. CMmicalCo. Heyman~ als' a eel perm' ion ed "Blakesda y" celebra10nd!ly will not be allowed \0 d? 10 ha'e a ~jon oC _Iad-. n fl o Tuesday in tbe faculty so, Ci~)' lana .er Fra.nlt R. Smi· S'ret:1 bel"'~n th uo,lvers.I:Y lounge oC Ih Enlllish-Philosophy urn A ".... D_ ley saId Tuesday parltin ramp and Ihe l fT/on pa'l Building By GAIL DRAUDEN Randy <II er. 4. """ar ""P- The burning would be in vio- door reserved for the protesters .. . " , Death carne to Soapbox Sound- ids, said thal the niled Slates lation of a dly fire ordinance ~t '~n 1I :3iJ a.m and 1:30 pm . Btak a)'. whicb look the off Tuesday. is not derending democracy in prohibiting the lil!btinL' of fires on Monday. J rOrm of a happe~g bere, Is It was dressed in a b row II Vietnam. He said tbal regimes public property. Smiley ilIid He Smiley ill th council erant celebrated by adn:uJ'ers or the cow led robe and I:lIrried • . upported by the United Slates said \be student would bave to tht! students a parade ~mlt_ but lSt.h e:mlury English poet and scythe to wbkb was attacbed III ID V,lelnam ha.vt! not been demo- ask the University for penni ion 'hi did not include thl' b!ockm; p8Jllter. William Blake_ Tuesday American Oag_ crallC and ba~e not bad the JIIP- to u University property for \hi. of lhe public treet . BlocItin" th 'U hi ZHlIh blr;llda),. When David W. Grant, G., t. port of UJe VIetnamese people. parI of \be demon. ration . would yiol !e anolMr ci) POl'lry readings by various Loub, spoke, be pulled lbe eowl R1chard Dickens. E4, low Tilt protest was outlined in a ordinanC'4'. he $4ld EniJ professors and Writers down over hi fact, apparently City. said that Ho Chi linh of Workshop poets began at 1 p.m. to emphasi%.e bis appearance u orth Vietnam had unjustly eeiJand continunl Ihroul:hout I h e bsJsaib100~ death . In a low voice he aid that I'd conlrol of the coalitioo goverD- ' I afleJ'llllOn. noirlz.s1 nI he would wear the apparel as a menl he heads. . . . An interpretlvt! dan c t! or ebiqsH 1sb!lO the sign of mourning un Iii Dow ~e . last speaker, G~a%l AI· Everett G. Fr t, G, 0 r tit tn eo to lat[ 10 remov part of Blake' "Th \enlal Traveler," but Cbemlc.l Co. tops recruiting GallaD!, G, ~aghdad. BId I h ~ t Coventry, Conn.. who wu ar- the ftne at the rale of SS a day a poem concerning the phases loow bi1Jaib bere. He said he wanted to re- students dOlI t understand the .1.5-1 r~1ed In . the NOV .• 1 demonstr. Th only demon tralor eurrenl- man Ol'" throu h in hi life, wa a bealss in- mind sociely tbat "you are per- sues He . said tbat the. U.S. u. tlon against iarlOe recruitini 1 Iy in jail 1 Leroy Fori ,G, rformed by Sally Garfield and -mo!) OOsJ8 petrating death, war and des- not a,tIting for the VIetnamese 00 campus, was rele ed from I' low. City Aaron King G Am people, but rather for benefits (or Ihe county jail Tuesday_ _. , • bas 1 :l9<I \rUction H Frost began serving time in elil JSbom Dow rtcl'lliters are scheduled large .S. corporation. jail Nov. 1t and wa rele sed arerlJ baa to be on campus Monday and ----------------------------------~ CHICKENS SENSITIVE ler be 01 $20 to Police Judg sd Jliw Tuesday.. . College Relations Director TOKYO 1.11 - Kosaku Kilamo- 1arion Neely. I .esllbut slti FollOWing blS pronouncement. to, who ays be own 52,000 ee[y fined over 80 demon- I c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008 lliw !sOOno!) Grant stepped down. . -sn ed! 101 Rober:t ~/lrro.w. A3, Milw811- "very sensitive" chicken., h. s strators each $50 plus $4 court Please send me a free Sheraton Student 1.0. Card: I' -ilsqmoo sdT ~ee, 6lI1d, J think be was show- complaIned to the government costs on Nov. 17. Some ch e -j,emA 9d! II1g very poor taste. ~~ are "at that a nearby power lIaUon is • Name: , so loud his chickens can·t .Jeep -oW srlJ war to protect peoples nlhl!. lI;noilsVi Barrow tben defined the war or eat and nearly 2.000 of them a police action, while Terry have died. Kitamoto says the ': ,I TooMy, 405 Cornell Ave., and boiler sound like lh "shatteror gla .. and has other in tbe cro..'d. que5tioned inc of to the tertn "w r," and America's caused his flock \0 lay 50 per cent -0826 right to be a world policeman. less eggs. -iOO M Is The Bealily of Being YOIll'KIt -Isil blsd lasq ai Get one, Rooms are now up to 20% off with a .anoasM Sheraton Student 1.0. How much depends on n02orlo{. for girl" who like looking like gi,l.t '

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PAIl' 4-THE DAILY IOWAN-low. City, 1••- WecI., Nev. 29, 1967

Nagel Announces Football Awards

Carlos Or· I

Beban Wins Heisman NEW YORK IA'I - Gary Beban, UCLA's record'setting quarter' back, Tuesday won the Heisman Trophy. annually awarded to the outstanding player in colJege football . Beban polled 369 first·place ballots and 1,968 total points to beat out O.J. Simpson, Southern Cal1Cornla's dynamic running back. Beban will receive the 33rd Heisman Trophy Dec. 7. Simpson finished with 261 firstplace votes and 1,722 total poinllJ. Simpson. a junior, was the na· lion's leading rusher. Leroy Keyes of Purdue, who

Carlos Ortiz Chosen As Year1s Top Boxer NEW YORK !AI -

- Simpson Places 2nd-

A master boxer and a strong

tiz, the world lightweight cham· puncher, Ortiz trounced Pana· pion and one of the great little fighters of this era, was named Tuesday as Fighter of the Year by the Boxing Writers Associa· tion. He wlll receive the Edward J . Neil Memorial Award. The 31·ycar·old Puerto Rican· born New Yorker, a two-time holder of the 13S·pound division crown, and a former junior weI· terweight champion, has defend· ed successfully the lightweight title five limes in the last two years.

led the nation in scoring, finish· I Johnson of Tennessee, Granville l one could be of more value to a ed third with 278 first-place votes Liggins of Oklahoma, 0 ewe y team than Beban is to ours," and 1,366 points. Warren of Tennessee. Wayne said his coach. Tommy Prothro. BtlNn Surpt'IMd Meylan of Nebraska , Terry Han· Mllntalns Poisl " l have mixed emotions over' ratty of Notre Dame, Dennis Ho" He can be a loser for 56 min· winning," uid Beban in • tele- man of Alabama, Paul Toscano utes but keep you poi ed for phone interview. ''I'm aurprls- of Wyoming, Ted Hendricks of the big play lhat will make you ed at the choice because there Miami of Florida and C h r i s a winner." were three Cine candidaleli. Of GlJbert of Texas. A scrambler, Beban relies on A tolal of 1 033 ballots w ere course, I'm very grateful." his ability to run almost as much Beban. Simpson and Keyes ca t by a n~tionwlde panel of as his passing. "I've always ad· dominated the balloting, wit h sports writers sportscasters and mired scrambling quarterbacks fourth place going to fullback telecasters. ' like Fran Tarkenton," he says. Larry Csonka of Syracuse, who Sets 10 Recordl "I think they are the wave of the had 136 points. Next came Kim Hammond of Last season, a6 a junior, Be- future in footbaU ." Selected by the Nalional FootFlorida State, followed by Bob ban was fourth in the Heilman balloting behind Florida's Steve ball Foundation as one of its Spurrier, Bob Griese Of Purdue scholar-Athletes, Beban is an outstanding student as well as a and Notre Dame's Nick Eddy. fine athlete. He is a B student, He earned the trophy this year majoring in history. with a spectacular selson in All his teammates respect BeWhich he gained 1,586 yards in toLaI offense and accounted (or ban's play calling ability. "He is our man in the clutch." 19 touchdowns passing and rush· ing. He finiabed his career with said UCLA A t hie tic Director J.D. Morgan, "and to the play· lO UCLA offensive reCOrds. . The B r u Ins had struggled ers in the huddle, he is God." G.ins 5,000 Yards through three straight losing seasons before Beban arrived In "There's something about t b I 1965. In three yeats he has pilot- way he manages things out ed UCLA to 23 victories. (i v e there," says fullback Rick Purlosses and three lies. UCLA was dy, "that gives everyone confi· 7·2·1 this season. dence. You just know whatev.r "It is inconceivable tbat any- he calls Is right."

ma's flashy Ismael Laguna in 15 rounds at New York's She a Stadium Aug. l6. Earlier in the year he stopped Sugar Ramos in the fourlh round. Ortiz first won the lightweight tiUe from Joe Brown at Las Ve· gas, April 21, 1962. He lost it to Laguna in Panama City on a 15JOHN HENDRICKS SILAS McKINNIE round decision on AprU 10, 1965, H.wk Thoro",hbred lowa'i MOlt V.lu.bl. and won it back the same way ;even months later at San Juan, Iowa Coach Ray Nagel an· straight year as he gained 588 Puerto RicO. nounced Tuesday the winners of yards in 166 carries for a 3.5 three award. annually given to average . MEXICO CITY !AI - A flurry outstanding members of the A senior from Inkster, Mich., of trades spiced up the baseball Hawkeye football team. I McKinnie was albo named UP!'s meetings Tuesday night with back of the v'eek after he gained three swaps being announced The announcemcnt was made 150 yards in 25 carries against I wIthin minutes of each other. at the annual Davenport "I" Club Indiana. He was also the Hawk In the biggest deal, Los Ange· and Quarterback Club dinner for co·captain this year . les filled its gap at shortstop by the Iowa squad. Defensive back Tony Williams acquiring Zoilo Versa lies from Silas McKinnie was named the received the Forest Evashevski the Minnesota Twins. Right.hand. Hawks' most valuable player by Award, which is given to the let· er Jim "Mudcat" Grant also virtue of his team.leadlng rush· term an with the highest grade moved to L.A. in the trade with ing statistics. McKinnie topped all point average. tbe Twins getting catcher John Hawk rushers for the third I WlIIiams. a senior from Daven. Roseboro and relief pitchers Ron port, led Iowa in kickoff returns, Perraooski and Bob Miller. * •.* . ,. ." • was second In punt returns and Pittsburgh and Detroit swapped .. MAIL EARL. Y WITII interceptIOns and ranked third a pair of right·handers with Den· among Hawkeye tacklers. nis Rlbant moving to the Tigers : : I Williams, who ha bettcr than and Dave Wickersham going to lhe Pirates. : : a "B" average in his pre·dent.al Cleveland picked up veteran work, was Iowa 's captain this knuckleball pitcber Eddie Fisher ZOlLO VERSALLES year. (rom Baltimore in exchange for Veteran deCenslve right guard left-hander John O'Donoghue. The John Hendricks won the Iowa JndiEns also acquired minor Orioles and sent shortstop Gordon : : AW~l'd. given to tbe player who leallue pitchrr Bob Scott and out. Lund to the BaUmore organiza· Cieldcr John Scruggs from tho tion. , contributed thc most to the tcam. '" '" IA senior trom Boone, Hendricks : • USI ZIP COOl : ranked second In tackles with 106 Maybe you know nothing about sklina. Maybe you solos and assists. know everything about skiing. Either way, or anywhere : AND US E : Hawkeye coaches describe Hen· in between, our Head Ski shop is your helpful ski shop. dricks as a "thuroughbred." He See us first for skis, poles, other equipment, apparel, : : was a stalwart member of Iowa 's accessories, even advice. And for ski service .•. as good • I· defense (or two years after start· : : ing 10 Hawk games his sophoas you'd expect under Head's name and ours. Just the j '" .8 Li Q i '" mOI'e year at olfenslve tackle. finest. •'" - . . , ' _ •....t ·'""' Hendnc. ks has better than a NEW YORK (A'! - Halfbacks IInto a successful professional ca· :-: "B" averagl' in pre·med. was • flcht Tuberculosis, on the Big 10's Bcond AII·Aca- Carl Garrett of New Mexico High· reel'. Visit Our Complete NEW Store I Emph1ltma.1Id AN Pollution demic Team in 1966. and was lands and Don Hass of Montana ••• I *********.**********= nominated for the team again this State and end DeWayne Nix of I MIAMI , Fl •. (A'I - Any day now. 29th and BRADY - DAVENPORT I year. Jorge Velasquez will ride his Weekd.y. - Noon to 8:30 p.m. Sun. - 1 '05 Sal. - 10 5 Texas A&~ bave been namcd ~o 400th horse of the year into the Ihe 1967 Lltlle CoUege AII·Amen· winner's circle at Tropical Park - UNICEF can football team for the second amid plaudits of tbe crowd for a Gr.Mlnll C.rdl straight year. feat accompliShed by only two Engagemlnt Callndars ~ . The three are the only repeat. jockeys in American hisoory. Bookl and Gam., Now On Sale At: crs on the squad selected Tues· •• following a national survey of YONKERS, N.Y. (.fI - Re· The Whipple House day coaches and newsmen. tirement of Romeo Hanover, one 529 S. Gilbert Hass is a senior, but Garrett of the country', outstanding pac(Now Unlll Chrlahn ..) HOYrI: , to S and Nix are juniors and have a er., was announced Tuesday. end Mon., Thurs., evenings The 4-year·old worked two fast chance to equal the record of .nd In the low. City POST OFFICE LOaay of the Colle lie of miles last Saturday ni~ht in prep· Eddie Lebaron from Nov. 13 to D.c. 1 the Pacific, the only player to aralion for his Saturday's $85,000 Sponsored by the Iowa City make the team three straight Empire Pace. Swelling in the Chapter of the United Nations years. Leba"on was named in I horse's rij:lht front leg was noticed Association 1947, 1948 and 1949 before movin~ Monday mornin".

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LOS ANGELES IA'! - Coach John McKay was really not floored Tuesday when advised that his University of Southern Calilornia Trojans had been named the national collegiate champion football team for 1967 in the final poll conducted by The Associated Press. "But of course I'm very tick· led . 1 was worried," said McKay, a humorous fellow. National championships are treasured matters and this is the second for McKay sinee he took over at Southern Cal In 1960. His 1962 team was unbeaten in 10 regular season games and de· feated Wisconsin in tbe Rose Bowl. It is Rose Bowl time again for McKay and the Trojans this year, whose only setback in 11le7 was a 3·0 defeat by Oregon State in a mud battle at Corvallis. Indiana's Cinderella kids are

coming west to represent the Big 10 in the New Year's Day claaaic at Pasadena. 11 is the first Rose Bowl engagement for the Hoosiers. Tbe finat Associated Preas poll bore out what many bad predicted before the !leason be.andivided in half. It was felt that USC and UCLA would fiiht it out for the Pacific 8 tit I e and possibly the national cbampion· ship. The Top 10, with selson rec· OI'tlS and points on a 10-»7-6·54-3-2-1 basis ; 1. Southern Cal U . ..1 (414) 2. TInnlssll 11 .... 1-1 (436) 3. Oklahoma ...... '.1 (311 ) 4. rndl.na ' .1 (~S) 5. Notrl D.ml 1 1-2 [2431 ,. Wyoming 1 10.' (m) 7. Or.gon Sta.. 7·'·1 (lS4 ) 8_ AI.bama ....... 7-1-1 (152) 8-2 (150) 9. Purdue 10. Penn St.t. ... .

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Cull.d By JOHN HARMON Ant. Sports Editor Bob Anderson's futile field goal attempt from 51 yards with only four seconds left against Illinois Saturday was symbolic of Iowa'l football the past few seasons - short on distance, but long on desire. Asking Anderson for a boot which would have been nine yards longer than his best (and Iowa record ) boOl, was asking too much. . , And asking Iowa's under·manned, injury·prone football team to sland off the likes of Oregon State. Notre Dame, Ohio State or Min· nesota likewise was expecting too much. Although excuses will never change the final tally on a lCoreboard: everyone is entitled to at least one. The Hawkeyes could pick from a handful of alibis if they wanted to pinpoint a reason for their dismal 1-8·1 record this year. I For example, five of the learns Iowa lost to this year have been ranked, at one time or another, in the nation's Top 10. Oregon ,. State, Notre Dame, PW'due, Minnesota and Indiana all have thia I claim to Came. Injuries to an all'eady smaU squad put the Hawks at a phYlical disadvantage to teams such as Ohio State, Purdue, and Notre Dame. (. Terry Huff. Tim Sullivan, Corny Patterson, Barry Crees, 5i McKiD· nie, Rich Stepanek, Jon Meskimen . Duane Grant and Paul Laaveg, all front liners, were slowed during the season by various allmen(s. And tbe list doesn't include the "bumps and bruises" which Iht .' Hawks had their sbare of since the openiag day of practice Sept 1. Probably the worst setback of the year came when Ed Podolak was sidelined for two weeks because of a rib injury, but not because I sophomore Mike Cilek wasn't capable of dOing a commendable job. Ciiek proved he' could do that by setling an Iowa and Big 10 record " for pass completions against Illinois. Podolak's absence caused the Hawks to revamp their offease midway through the season, which Is tough for any team to dO. Illinois bad the same probtem when It lost starting quarterback IIIiJ , I Naponic and was forced to go with Dean Volkman . The IIlini endld with a disappointing 4-6 record. Anotber factor which may have hurt the Hawks this year .. certainly will be to their advantage In 1968 is Ihe number of ~ I f mores in the starting lineup throughout the season - five OD olfelll and four on defense. Despite the fact that Anderson missed that distant Held goal, II! still has a year of record·breaking accomplishments to remember And although the Hawk. finished in the depths of the conferi!llCt "( .gain this year. they can still look back on some very exciting. U not satisfying moments - the 2'-9 defeat of Texas Chrilti8ll, Iiil closing seconds of the Indiana game, the stout defensive elfcrt against Minnesota and the continual second·half comeback atteaJPI. t And there's always next year .

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4hrs LHir Ahaacl Christiansen early last announced he would go Spurrier and several other les, adding, "We've got to to next season. We're out this year." "After Baltimore." 8 not h Ram eald. "San Francisco three meaningless ,ames Atlant., ChIcago and they wanted to ~k at why couldn't they have until the last three games? JUlt don't pack in when money is at stake. regardless who is going for It."

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LOS ANGELES IA'I - In thing of a delayed reactior Los Angeles Rams and Lo geles football writers Ie blasts of criticism Tuesd. Coach Jack Christiansen 0 Sao Francisco 4Ders for pI rookies against the unheateD timore Colts Sunday. Christiansen used a r quarterback, S t eve Spu throughout the National Foe Le8gue game at San Fran which the Colts won 2&-9. I 19r John Brodie, reputedly hlt!hesl paid quarterback it: NFL. sat on the bench. '!'he victory kept Baltimor I!ame in front of t.he Rams II Coastal Division. Columnl.t Blasts 4'.rs Under a banner line that "The Disgrace of San co," columnist Melvin the Los Angeles er quoted Ram coach Allen as saying: "I've never seen anything thts before. Any respectable would have gone all out in circumstances to knock undefeated team. '!'here chance to beat Baltimore rookie." Mal Florence of the Los .aeles TImes quoted an u fied Ram player as obsen,ini "The Coltll looked flat. were ripe for taking. But 4gers blew three good chances in the first San Francisco led at

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.. .

For Starting Jobs

......... I~.... tlDelhLloAl ' on for seDlors . U M"" th thing of a delayed reaction, th e sivt' unil, and then Ourslag ID· pIayed a ......... ......, The teramb I iJ still Ro y ~"Ura and Dave Los Angeles Rams and Los An- quired . trick on the Los AII,eIeI RamI. three JtartJn, bertbJ on Iowa's White. geles football writers leveled ' wbo are nlhtln& BalIImore for bUket.baU t bleb ill Mill r said Tuesday thai the blasts of criticism TuCliday at O.ftnM Pral," the money. Nobody baa poe the urn .. .. 0Pft Hawks had progressed u well Coach Jack Christiansen of the "How the 4ger coach and man· dlJt.nce with rookie quan.. I the MUCID Saturday aplnal Bowl· a he expected. but they were Sa~ Francisco 4gen for playing agement can explain this. to those baw apInJt the RamI, San iDI 0,..., In the FIeld Hoult rou:h in some areas and gOOd in rookies aiainst the unbeaten Bal- players .who k.noc~ed. '~Ir brains Fr.ncllCO. In fact, UMd Brodie LeUel1lleD HUlton Breedlove otben; timore Colts Sunday. out trymg to WID ISO t known. twice qainlt them. He belt and Sam WUliamJ baYe won . Christiansen used a rookie But the San Francisco mischief them once, explalninl why tilly .tanbl. forward jobs, aceordinl " I would like to ~ them pro,' Quarterback S t eve Spurrier, ha e\'en deeper Implications. ::..el'.'~'ow a ,ame behIad the ~HI:.,ke!!...~eb a.lpb Miller. ~'I ~r:~y' ~~ ::::' .~~t ~~ throughout the National Football "Apart from defacing - ......... - .......... .. ~Icond\. -~ __ __ _ _the _ sport _ _"".. __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ tJIt on the court under pme Lesgue game at San Francisco - - . ,.,... tiom " whlcb the COlts won 28-9. Reeu· art opeD. . ' . IDr John Brodie. reputedly the Sop b 0 DIOru Miner aald .Bowling Green IIIbNIFl!hLe.stsaPtaold thQUear~~,!c.k in the J0• Beraman ually had. a fill(' leam ~nd UIed uomcu IDd Dick Jena slyle similar to lowa~. n The victory kept Baltimore one lIeD .... 1Ii11 bal· "They abo have a ruce-Iiud Rame In fron.t of the Rams in the Illu for the No. front 01 W. &-7 and W," 1 ClDler poaitloo added Hue Miller. Coastal DIVision. and 1toII Nor. BowUng Green retul'llJ its .eyen Columnist 811sh 4"rs •• PhlIman, Ch r... top PIayers ( romIast _ n •s " Under a banner line thai rea.d, By THE ASSOCIATE O PRESS 200 panes. In yarda,e. 11'1 N.. Ipa ad Olad learn The lIQUId I, directed by ~e Olsr;race of San FranCIS· Six teams _ lind maybe a sev· braak. 164.1, KaDIII 111.4, 011;. Calabria teem 10 CAUIItIA a new co cb. Bill Fitch. former· co, columnist Melvin Durslaa .of enth _ will finIsh with more than lahoma 132. K.n... Stale lIU. hay. tbe Inlkle track at ,uard . l ly of Coc, but who Ialer coached lhe Los An,eles Herald·Examrn· 100 yards a game passing this Colorado 101.4, Iowa Stata 100.. AlIo In the backcourt picture are North Dakota. er quoted ~ coach George season in Big 8 lootball. for the and Oklahoma State 17.1, oeedlD& A~.e~ as saymg: , f irst lime in the league's 51-year 1119 la the lut lame to IVII'.,. I ve never seen anything like history 100 lhis hefore. Any respectable club . ' . . . would have gone aU out In those It s more than COinCidence that Oklahoma hal the best pua circumstances to knock off an I rUshing defense Is better than complell?n percentale al .552 to undefeated team. There was no ever. ?klahoma Is leadlni lhe Col~rado s .~. C~lorado lost only chance to beat Baltimore with a league In rushing with 218.3 y~rds 8 IDterceptlonl ID I~ lbl'O'lfs. rookie" a game. and barrlni a Imal· besl In tbe leatue· Kanau had Mal ' Florence of Ihe Los An. game rampage against Oklahoma ~he best yardaee average. iain· l!eles Times Quoted an unldenti. Slale. its win~lnll average will 10, 7.47 yard. for .very attampl' lied Ram player as observing: be the lowest lD 22 years. ed pa and 18 16 lor each com· "The Colt. looked flat. They Colorado i ~cond, at 204.3 on plelion. Parlee-Oa vis I. a company where were ripe for taking. But the the ground, With MlSIOuri dropthe Individual and medical science 4ger! blew three good scoring ping under 200 to 197.6 afler beprOlre loaelher; where ehallengea chances In the first hall." ID, held to 142 by Kansas. evolve into solutions fOr the belter' San Francisco led at halftime, Nebraska leads the nation in ment of min ; Ind wbere IdMa and 8-3, total defense at 157.6 yerds a bard work bridee to broadeninl 4ft ... Leek Ahead ,arne with Mi souri lIt'Cond on professional nlponslbLUU •. ChrlsUansen early last week 176.2, a fiiure good enou,h to announced be would go with lead the lea,u aU but six of the SLep forward - and put your tallnt, Spurrier Bod several other rook· last 31 years. Nebraska is No. 4 know1edle Ind amblUon wbere they les, addini, "We've got to look I nationally in rushin, defense at MANHATTAN, Kan . III - The will be rccol1llzed - and rewarded . to next !leason. We're out of it 67.5 and No. 1 in pass defenllt' at National Collegiate Athletic Asso. this year." 90,\ , with Mi ourl 6th and 9th. elation Is Investllalina KIIlI81 "After Baltimore," 8 not her with 73.9 and 101.3 respectively. State UnlvenJty, but deta1la of Ram said. "San Francisco had The defense .is a two-learn the inquiry are vague. It was three meaningless lames IIgalnst story, Oklahoma leads the nation learned Tueaday. will be Interviewing on Atlanta. Chlcllo and Dallas. If in defen!le sialnst teoring at 8,0 The Inveatlgalion is believed to o.cember 6th and 7th lhey wanted to l(lok at rookies, point. a 'lime, with MislOuri be aimed at the 81, • Confer· why couldn't they have walled second at 7.6 and Nebraska tied ence school'. footba.U proll'am. f.r until the last three games? You for lhird at 8.3. "The situation at thl. sta.e I, just don't pack in when big All this has forced an unpre· thlt the NCAA ba.1 atarted a p.... money is at stake, regardless of cedcntC!d aerial harrage, with I limInary inquiry," Clyde JOnel. who is going lor it." three leams throwing more than faculty repr HIItaUve. said.

I

"

~rannbler.

Beban relies on to run almost as much passing. "I've always ad· scrambling quarterbacks Tarkenlon," he &ayS. they are the wave of tbe football. "

t •

B. 8 A. Att k 19 I r ac I . Approoches Ma rk

I

.

,

, ..

.

,

On Top;

Next to

wesl Lo represent the BiC New Year's Day classic It Is the !irst Rose [eD~:agl!ment for the Hoo$-

••

final Associated Press poll what many had prethe !leason be,a~ half. It was felt that UCLA would flabt It the PacJfic 8 t j I I e and the nalional champion·

, •

I

IOWAN 1_ City. Ia.-W..... ..... !t.

Maior League Clubs iru=~.i.":.1~ Raid Draft Grab Bag o Begin Action

firtt of 98 ~1eIt.s are JChed. u1ed for three of the lilt wuur MEXICO CITY til _ Four· veleran infielder Chuck Hiller. sporta teams. teeD major Iequt dubl picked outfielden S. D d Y VaidetplDO The basketball team. opeIII Itl ~Iame schedule a,alnIt Bowl· WI Grem, a DeW' oppooent. Mni Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and follow. wilb a game wtih Southern llli· noll Monday In the FIeld HOUle. The .lYlI1IIIItJet team, BI. II ... , _.. ,~"""""

1uo

alA.

~m_,

U mIDor Ieque pIa)'tl"l ID Andy KolCO and George Spriggs. tile uaual draft arab bq 'fUel. catchers Bill Brayan, Ken Suar· day lor a toW of S5M.000, u and Jim Schaller and pitch·

CJCf

er Joe MoeUu were among tbo

'l1Ie Cblc.... CUbs, N." York picked. Better known name uch Y_HI aad a_lOa A.IU'OI u DicII Radatz, Bo BelinUY, Ed taclI took tbree. 'I'IIoe New York Chatlet and Willie Kirkland "ere

-I" _ _-_I. "- et. ww ... -• .. · -ta IIrI'ftI ud ..ia- -1l«Ied.

In the annual ItIdwett ()pea meet Friday and Saturday ID Chic:aIO. The wr sllers will en~ Minn.. lOta's invitaUonal tounwnent at MinneapollJ Saturday.

.....

TwIBa IIIIIcted two ..cll. Of tilt U minor lea,uers seo..eWId, Loa ~ Iec:ted. :10 went for the m.ooo

Oaklaad,

Ba1tIm«t,

Plttl- priN ta,. Tltere were only three men at the bargain took _ eedl. CIIilonIIa, I Is e .,000 rata. a testimonial to the C\Ikafo WblIe Sox, DeIroIl, PlIO· abUlly of I1IOIl orpnllllions to Swimmera and fencer. will atart adelphia. SIll FrIDdIco and St. dlVtr up tMlr prbe talenl .... ad· later In December and the Irack w¥ It!am does DOt have a meet until LouII puNd. vancin, them to the bl, league February "'~b fa illtl" famlllar DImM " club bffan the draR. :..=::.::::.:..:.:...-_ ___ _ _ -.....:--.:"""=::....::=:::1-==::.::.:...::.::.==-...:....---------WublJlftOll.

burp, CillcIMlIi ud B 0 Ito D fint ·year

III!!!!! ~

Stephens Imported

Loden , Coat Excels In Outdoormanship!

Kans\..s State Investigated

The cold. crisp climate of Europe

inspired III the comforts tepbens Imported LadeD Coat baa to offer. It's just what you need for crossing the river for a cold 7 :30. The aU wool lining will bep you warm evr.n on bitter cold days - and for functional ability try the dttachable hood.

By NCAA

I

PARKE·DAVIS

• ENGINEERS

I

• CHEMISTS

lM1-'", S

13Hawk Team.

Advance, and be recognized

I

DAI~Y

Choose in Davy. camel, olive or neu-

tral.

• PHARMACISTS • BUSINESS MAJORS

v.ry Into,...lnl ...I,nmontt In

Top 10, with season!'te· points on a 10-8+7~S. basis:

.,

9-,

1474) 1-1 (4341 1-, (311 )

, .

, ., (245) '·2 1243)

lQ.2 (222 )

alA Mt tl 'W~a L.J v.l In II ! ba. Thttre W~5 ~n

He

. ' ·2·' (IS4) ...... ' .1.1 (l S1)

• RESEARCH • PRODUCTION

You mlY oblain lurther InformaUon and arrlln for an Interview by conlacllne your Placement Service. ' ARKI, DAVIS & COM' ANY Jos. ph Campau at the Rlvor D.tNlt, Michiga n ..nn An Equal Opportunity Employer

H ~~ SCI M ~ttV lalltJ

1-1 (ISO )

He [)i&n't

Stat. . . .. ' ·2 ( M)

from 51 yards with ani, was symbolic of Iowa's lOls[ance, but long on desire. have been nine yards was asking too much. ~rv·orOI1e football team to

l(ha",

PARKE-DAVIS

Iha.t Ta Dal

I'

I ' .

10% -to 50 %

the final taUy on a &eoreone. The Hawkeyes could to pinpoint a reason for lost to this year have been nation's Top 10. OreGon' • and lndiaoa all have this the Hawks at I ph)'lical Purdue, and Notre Dame. Barry Crees, Si McKin· Granl and Paul Laaveg, by variou8 ailmen\$. and bruises" which \he I ' day of practice Sept. L came when Ed Podolak rib injury, but not because doing a commendable job. an Iowa and Big 10 recGIII "

Matured Oct. 31, 1967 .

orr

He worri.d and

th.ught - ontl thought and worrlod -

And luddonly Held... that If ho hurrlotl Ho could have _ GIGANTIC lOOT SALtl

When you~ Next O-.-t-Ol-Town Investment Matures •••

to revamp their olfenl! for any team to • . starting quarterback ~ Volkman. The llIinl enc*l the Hawks this year bIi is the number of _ " season - five on offetJIII

51 Dltt.rwnt I~ 7 Famou. ,,.anch It..ul.rty 'riced -

.ut$7.99 $35.00 Off " ' Ie

.'e

R.member 11% .. SM'o

Prlc.. Thl. W........

Bring Your Money Home and Invest in a 5% Savings Certificate at Iowa State Bank & Trust Co. (Six Months Automatically Renewable) 1. Insured to $15,000.00 2. Guaranteed Int.est

. ,

nvrn.." t

reasons,

Fund

I

52240

3. Provides Local (.pital 4. Invested Locally

I

Stop In Tomorrowl A GenuiIM LN....r 1." hot With 114. ZWe!' Just One Of Ou,. MIny

Iowa Stale Bank & Trust Company

Stylea - W, DoN .... Monti. The MIkorI

$16.90

v.rslty .f ...

• QUALITY CONTROL • ADMINISTRATION

0II1y (L. . ' K "5K TIll. Weelrend)

MemMr F.D.I.C.


-

l ...'t-~.., ,ft .¥eM ,...W-.al ,yO .wel MAWOI Y"'ACI IMT

2duI::> 9UQD9J 10iDM QDB dD'~ flD,a biD~

UI Researcher Stu Anti-Virus Substan.

behoqml anetfqet2 alelx3 tooJ neboJ IqirlanDmloobtuO nl

ege

b8Iingol81 IUdw '(oaq/'llO:l I II t1v8a~lh q IOIISba /a,1bem boa laublvibnl sill

eqow3 Io sJamib

qam

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ean,1l8d, .ndw :',dJS oj

sn

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,Ill 101 2noUulOl olnf 9vlov, bn. IJItbI .,edw bn. : nlm 10 Jnsm lIninsb801d oj 9:1bhd Ihow b1ell .ltlllUdlenoqm IAllo1u9101q .In.ltj 1110,( luq bOI - b1BW101 q~a '(ed.J 81111'11' noUidma OOa 911~lwon~ . ~b1IW!l' boa - b9.tlItllOl!ll Id IIi'll

.ullo OJ .ad teoO ..,bOJ bs"oqrnl ~ojmro 101 ~n uo'( lanw l&ui I'll [1. odT .08: \' bloa • 101 'levh !teO n~vs muw 1101( 1J'8~ lliw ~DlnJI IDOW ':>aui 101 baa - !'{ab bIro lsffid no .bood !lldJubJli$b stU '(Ii '(lilida lanoi1 -usn 10 svilo ~ ,'('Ian oj slood=>

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amdcpJa ItIolmoa edt lIt fMnlqud

Can researchers come up with Interferon goes into a_ a way to protect man against before antibodies can I>E=!! all viruses? usually within a few h= Il sounds like a pipe dream, infection. It sets up its but some scientists believe tbat mecbanism inside cells_ further study of a protective sub- for viruses that is dir stance in the body caUed inter- antibodies to reach. feron may lead to development Antibodies, however, of a revolutionary way to fight lifetime immunity ags ' viruses. fic virus, while interferStudying tbe substance at the lifetime in the body la_ Medical Center is Dr. Sergio a few days. ~abinovich, a~i~tant professor of Although interferon mternal mediCIne, whose re- Jived said Rabinovich i search is supported by the rowa cal ~ay can be found Thoracic Society, the medical late cells to produce la section of the Iowa TllberculoslJ normal quantities of and Health Association. this might aid man's "Antibodies have long been to viral infections considered man's major natural slow or halt infedilms~ defense against Infectious dis- contracted. eases, but shortly after the Iso- Rabinovich has been ~alion of interferon 10 years ago stimulate production of II was found that the substance on in mice by injecting was death to many viruses," inactive and live viruses.. Rabinovich said recently. . . "Interferon is a protein pro- He I~ ~ow extendmg h . to see If mterferon auq Ja!ld !till 2& ?UCed by human and anun~1 cells be stimulated in 01 rea. ,. 'IIJn" DR. SERGIO RABINOVITCH Jnf~cted by ~ virus .. ':fnlike an ner in rhesus 'Clno 1ao! obs1olo:l Studi •• Ntw Prot.ctive Sublf.nc. C.II.d Int.rferon anh~ody, . which Is IUDlted to a ResearchersmO[lke~'s. ,IWO'IIlI Ul iii I spec!fi, dlSease a~ent, Interferon ent approaches in bill uana)/ .,uJ~ , moblbz~s protection a g a Ins t utilize interferon to :Jqnl:tji~3~:~: ~:J many vIruses. infections, Rabinovich ,. .rnter~eron does .not aUack . a partially successful -~ d,.. 101 8r JUniv.... itY N.ws Servic. The appointment was announ- VU'us dIrectly, but mterferes WIth been to isolate pure cad TIl d th " the reproduction of vJruses. When use in treatment ,R RAPIDS - Guy W. . es ay by e council S a virus Invades a cell and sets Ham erin this' .Ife assistant profenor of cb8ll'man, .Pres. Howard R. Bow- about reproducln, Itsell the ae· in bill P f g-~,.ear~I~II:·~:'~ r 'd isla t d e n , 101Iowmg the group'. meet- I ' ' a ty 0 co c;. ng an ass n ean . th C COll t vity .timulates the ceD to pro- large quantities of the ~njversity in D-:s Moines, ~g on e oe ege campus duce Interferon. the fact that interferon named part-time exec· ef~~ council has 19 voting mem: The cell then exports the Inter- only In the species which. cretary of the . ted bytheSa t t e feron to an unillfected neighbor ' I't . . '1 f newP Iowat bers appoan jlting Counc! or 0 S Board of Regents the S tat e which begins to manufacture I Interferon for man ,hool EducatIon. Board of Public I~strucUon, the p~otect/ve protein. When the produced in human Iowa Association of Private Col- Vlfuses invade this neighboring antibodies which can sliT - I\J .naJ{. POSITIYELY leges and Universities and the cell, the protective protein pre- by certain other ani:ma:l! -11&111 !)UslrllA ,IB/ST END TONITEI Iowa Higher Education Facilities yents the viruses lr~m reproduc- in man . uuaX .tilla,lla Commission. mg and the infection goes no 10 allaJ'b Jud U The coordinating council will further . n uw ~I ,'UIBV!' tLIII , focus its aUention on policy for . Studies of Initial productIon of higher educaUon In Iowa Bowen lDterferon by Rabinovich indicate said. • that It is concentrated in the 01 blveil!ld aI nol ....... Us members represent a II spleen. Found in the blood, inter' '1IlIIoO • lUI. segments of higher education: feron is secreted by other organs .mI1'01q n.dlOCI private coIleges and universities, and is produced by white blood area community colleges and cells. ,unol. sb"':) "."·O-N-E-W-EE-K-I-.... state universities. @5®@(@(~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .blllA .,vllll<

,.,

2RiJMlaMJ •

2T21MJHl •

THE

~,:'~~~~al:;ILENCERS

nl Ifn.",nllu. InltH1.tnl Y""

JOJITHOl YTIJAUO· HOITAf1'2IHIMaA • na 101

UNION BOARD PRESENrs:

Hl"AJUJI • HOIOUaOJICI •

Cinetn1l 16

"The Naked Night"

bll' noUamlo1nl "rIJ,u' nlllJdO ,(1m uoV .':liV'l,z Jn5m90slQ 1UO'( anU,lIJnO:l 'Cd w8Iv',Jni

Dlr":I-.I by

IIIn81111

YHAIIMO~ , llYAO ,I).,IAII ,.vl" .rlt to uoqmo~ rlq ••oL

un.. nOlltblM ,tl.,t.O loll\lIt3 \!linuho<\C\O 1l\u~3 ~1I\

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil. K

L..-.-_ _ _ [

8IVAO-3>tftAQ

;,.

~

TAo"r':1OS'EL

. ROBERT'MUi.UGAN fROM WAllE. . . EN 1:15 P.M.

I

b91utoM

lust French Bread lot - with butter. I

...........95c -..!~~: ........ $2.25 b;~

- IM Servlc• • 'EEl

nwoT-IO·I-.,O IxsM NUOY nsrlW ••• 2s.. ulDM Insrrl129Vnl 2gnivD2 ~a D ni fa.vnl bnD emoH yenoM 1uoY gnh8 -uA 2rffnoM xi2) .0J tau,T ~ >inDS efDf2 Dwol fD etDlitihe) (eldDweneSi ,(IID)itDmot

Ilti...) 'I)OJ IllHvo'l1 .E yIIl" "llwl .•

RMET

IIJAI

, Burlington . 351-3322

DOROTHY KIRSTEN

Nov. 30 end Dec. 1 7 Ind 9 p.m. In lhe nllnol. Room. Ticket, IvaUable at the door! Ind In Ibe Activities Cenler tor ....,.

''41;{3' i) dUUE ANDREWS MAX VON SYDOW RICHARD BARRIS " THE 6I.0R6E ROY HIlL·WAIlER MIRtSCH ~~~I(::BAWAII"

'prano)

Wednesday, Nov. 29-8. p. In thl

Main Lounge of the Iowa Memorial U Tickets $2.00 and fr •• ta students with 1.0.

Tickets are on sale Nov. 20 to Faculty, Staff Students and to General Public on Nov. Available at University BolC Office, South by, Iowa Memorial Union.

..

~ PAIIA'IISKJI'COWIbyDllIllt

~

SHOWS AT 2:00 - 8:00 Adm. $1.25 • $1.50 Child· 75c

CK.'WVAJ

NOW ... ENOS TUES,

"AN ABSORBING FILM. ENTERTAINING AND OCCASIONALLY DISTURBING!,~ - New York TIm"

IME AT S MENT!

"FILMf" -Life M........

00.

"CATCH'ES SOME MOVING ESSENCE OF BEING YOUNG NOW!" - Th. New Yorker

MEMOR· ABLE THAT IT RINGS IN THE MIND FOR A LONG TIME AFTERWARDS !"

UI~ISO

OO.OOO,l r~ of .lUlnl •r fZS1Stnl

presents

'"am.. IIlraml"

Thl. Is a cIrcus dram. In whlcb • mlddle·aged circus owner h .. torsaken his famlly for a passJonate equestrIenne who IJlOWI hers.II to b. . .duced by • yount actor.

lll£ MIRISCH comAAOON PRfSUIS

$1.45 $1.65 $1.75

University of Iowa Cultural Affairs Comm' ........... ',. . . "

.tnD'Dua .r

-N.w York Po.t JCTlON

12U,T ., JlnD. SIDIS Dwol ~nDqmo:»

I

.:.~~

~ ~ER

IfeI'1tI .....) ... ....., - .... "..mel

BOB DYLAN

II

BONT LOOK BACK A Film 8y O. A. Ptnntbiilel

FEATURE AT1 :53 ·3: 46 - 5:39 • 7:32 • 9:25

I

-

RECORDS. DOWNSTAIRS -


~

-

Supervisors Hear Protests To Proposed Budget Raise

Studies

CAMPUS NOTES

I

I

I

ob.iec. !

•• • ·,

,

\

h Furt er Protests

~\VER~ITY O.c-

r IN':'

'"

;f

~..

University Calendar ~I' ,'li1

,

UUNDEO

CON'IRI!NCES Today - 52nd Annual School ronrer~nce on Administration and 1apIrtIaIaIt, of Education , Umon. Thursday.FrldlY - In·Servlce Trainin, Session, Department or Special EdUcation. Union. Thurldly-Saturd.y - Hawkeye Invitational Debate Tourn.ment. Department of Speech and Ora· matic Art. Union. LICTUItIS Today - The Society of the irml XI Lecture: "Pesticides ,nd Human Health." Dr. Keith it Long, Inltitute of Agricultural

eou...

{. J

IS'"

Medicine. 7:30 p.m . Pharmacy Auditorium . E)(HIBITS Now·Dec. 15 - Union Board : Leon B. Walker Prlnl CoUectlon, Union Terrace Lounge. Now·Dec. 15 - University U · brlry Exhibit : Western Books (Rounce and Coffin Club ), SPILCIAL EVENTS Today - U of I Concert Serie Dorothy Kirsten . soprano. 8 p.m .• Union Ma in Lounge. WSUI SPECIAL Today - " The Literature of SeIf.Parody." I recorded address by Richard Poirier. 7 p.m.

University Bulletin Board Unlvar.lt, lulltlln 1 .. ,4 "Ilitol C. . ATIVI CIIA'U CINTIII In mull ....tol •• ~ . t Th. D.lly Iowan Ith. Vnlon will be optn Thu'ldlY· Iffl.a, %III ComrllunIUII..,. C."I.,. I hld.Y. 7.10'SO 1'.111.; S.lurd.y. 9'110 bV noo" Ih. MY 1Ie,0r.,ubllu' I • .m..,0:'IO p.m.; Sunday, 2·10:SO p.m. lion. Thoy mu.t lot tvr..~.n .. I,n.d ""nne 3~3.J118 . by .n odvl.. r .r off Clr of 'h. 0" ____ •• nllllion !wlnl ,Iubllcl.o.. "utll, _1.1 funellen •• rt n" tll,I.. I. for ODD JOII for women are ...11· 1111' IICII.!! .bl. al the "'n.n(lal Ald. Ortlc • . . Hou ... k"pln, Job ..... ..,II.bl. .1 .TUDINT. WHO WI.H to !w coO- '1.21 In hour, .nd b.by.IlUn. Job •• ald.red for .rodu.t1on .1 the Feb. $0 eonl. an hour. I. I DIll Convoc.tlon mutt fU. Ih.lr .ppllc.t1on. for de,ree In Ih. Of· THI fWI~M'NG "OOL In th. nee Of the RICIIl..r. \Jnl •• rally H.II. Women', Gymn.alum ",III he e .... n by 5 p.m. Ote. J. tor racr•• lIonal .wlmmwJ Monday Ihrou,h Frld.y. 4:15 10 5:U p.m. TIll. "'YC;NO"ATNIC HOIP'ITAL I, d•• I. oren to women nudent.., worne.n veloptn, a treatment prol'ram lor .t.f. women I.cully .nd !.eully mal. bomoNxull1 .nd youn, m.n

0'

• •

with homoMxul. pr.occupaUonJ. 'Wlvel. Vounr men who dulre fu.rther in-

-8. p.m.

rorm.llon ,hoUld write for .n .... WIIOHT LI'TINO room In lho potntmenl Ume to 80Jl lla , 600 New- Flold Sou. will be Mond.y· lon Road . low. City. or can 353· Friday, 3:30·5:30 p.m .• Sund.y. 1.5 SCJ«'/. All Inform.lIon wUI !w In .trld p.m. AIIO open on Family NI.hl ~onlldenCi . and Play NI,bl •. COM"UTI. CINTI. HOU ..: Mon· day·FrldlY. 7:30 •. m.. 2 l.m., Stlur. NO.TH OYMWASIUM In th. FI.ld dlY . I • .m.·nlldnl,hl; Sund'YI I:SO SOUN will bt o.,.n MOnd.y·Thuta.. p.m.·! • .m. Compuler room w ndow d.y. [2,10·1:10 p.m.; Frld.y , 10 • .m.· "'Ill be o~n Monday·Frld.y. 8 • .m··1 7:30 p.m.: S.lurd.y. 10 a.m.·$ p.m.; mldnl,bl. D.ta room and nebuU.t Sunday, 1.5 / .m. 11.110 open on r.m · pbono. 353.J580. lIy NI.ht.n PIl)' NI.hu. I'IILD HOUII POOL HOU .. for --men, Mondl)'·..rtdlY. Noon·1 p.m. • nd "LAY NIOHTS at III. "'eld Sou. 5:30-7:'0 1'.m.; S.tu,d.y. 10 . ....·5 will b. Tuesdl Y .nd Friday frOm p.m.' Sunday. I p.m.·S p.m. Allo open 7,110.11:10 p.lII. when no home .. roIly ror 'play NI.hl •• nd F.mUy Nl,hl. conl..1 I. IICh.d"J.d. Op.n 10 .11 , IU , (Slud.nl or Ildf ...d requlr.d.) donll. fltUlly. .1." .nd Ihelr "AUNTS COO"".ATIVI B.by. • pou .... ,llUn, lAa,u.: For m.mbershlp In· 'AMIL Y NIGHT .t Ihe l'Ield Hoult formatlon,.cln Mr .. Ron.ld O.borne, SS7.kSS. ,... mber. dulrln, ,ltle .., will !w W.dn ..doy {rom 1:t5-':IS t.1I Mr• . Peler B.con. 33S·"20. When no hom. va"lly .onlul I. _ __ ..hedulld. O..-n to all Jll.udenll, !a. MAIN LI.IIAIIY HOU .. , Mond.y· cully •• larr. lhelr .pou. . . . nd chll· Frld.y. 1:S0 • .m.·2 • .m.; SalurlllY. dr~n . ChUdren mly com. onty with 1:SO a.m .. ',lIdnl,ht; Sunday. I:SO p.m.· I tll.lr paroou .nd mu.l lu .. whon

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vef Bonn~fo)', prominenl ist movemenl from 1t4S 10 1947. omenolo ieal Ipproach 10 Rimf red Kramer. 67. of rural Solon. French poet. crltk IDd Kbolar. and ~am~ rt'COllnIud IS tM ! baud. and ,. ys on medieval "'a aenl~nced to five years in .P(J ' I will ~ ~re Dec. 6 lo a to ,ive Ill'SI poet 01 the new French poelr)'. Baudell1l'e. Shestov. Val· n Tu6da)' for lhe boli\lll !hOOI' " relchng and a Lecllft. eneration 10 1953 ,,·jlh the pub- ery and ~fer . He h also writ· . . in, of his brother·iD·llw. HaroLd The ~partmen~ of Compara- licaUon of his firSl important len of ByunllO Golhic and Bar. the ludenl AcllVltles Center. live Literalure and French and collection potlll5 "Ou mou~(!oo '. The fee is 52 for mem~rs and W. oner . on Aug. 29. ItalilD are PO!l6Oring Bonnefoy's t eI ell J'1r~l1nobillte de oque art. as "ell as Plero deUa $4 ror non·members. Kramer had been charged ...ith vi il. which will OOud • readFraneesca. Jacquea VilloR, Bal· • • • 0 assault with intent to COmmil j iI]g or his poelry It I p. m . Dec. th b b bl hed thus and Giacom tli ee SPANISH CLUe murd r He had pleaded Inn~nt I in Shambaugh Auditorium. "H en . ~ 1" I~ 58 Bonnefoy vi lied the Um'ersity Span h Club will mee t at 7 3 0 ' On Dec. 7 II 8 p.m . he '1\'1' "AI',· P;~gnl ~?t. est!lr nd "Pi.' in 1964 1.5 a"u t of the Writers . . to Ihe chargl'. I 1~lur. It Sh,mbau.h. -UU-" n.. WI OIl,. . ID • 10 .. tonight al the Langu. HOIIH ~ • .,,~.. .... H has Wor hop. al 115 . Clinlon 51 A program Aboul half w,y through the "Un Di.lolUe de BaudelaLre tree, ec~rte 10 1965 e w~ _ _ _ __ about Chile will be prexnted. I lr(.I. Krlmer indicated th.t he de ltfallarme." On Dec . • • t 4 the 'Prix de la nouvelle v.gue. VOXMAN AT MEETING••• .... 1IIilllO' to plead ,ullly to the p.m Bonnefoy will tab pIrt in Tran.latleft SIlK/a list Himle Voxman . profe 'or and AIR "'RCI DIITmCS Jruer charg of assault .... Ith in· • comparltive Jitenture colle>Btlnnefoy bl .become f.mo director or tht School of fU . ic • Calll. f aMana foorhouse. Air I~nt .to commll mlOslau,hter. Ie· quJum (rom • 10 I p.m . in the hlI lranmU of Shakes· repre nled tIoe L'nh'erslty ,I Ibe Force ditlelic selection officer, cordtn 10 Johnson County Atty. EnIlJi!h·PhUo.apby Bulldin, • pe!,:~ lOto ~ch Ind for b I annual meeting of thl' alional wlU be in Iowa Cit)' lodlY 10 Ro~rt W.. Jam rn. !'istrlct Court IJrffiKJI R~"It"" enllCl.5m of Iiterlture and 111./ AuodItioa of Schoola of Music discuss Air Force d ietetic work. Judge Clllr E. Hamilton Iccepted Bonnefoy .... born in 11123. He He Is the author of 10 .e llaY on I last week in Chica o. A member Anyone interested has been asked the plea ludled malhemlUcs. phllOfOPhy the problem of Iran. I lion and Iht association's Commis ion 10 contact Margaret O. 0 born. Kramer hal been IranJferred and art history II the University the !I.ture or Ih French IOd on CUrricula. Voxman partido as!OCiate professor of home e~ to the lowl Stlte Pen itenUary It o( Parit. English Ian:uaCeII. paled in a panel se Ion O!I trends nomicl. Fort 1adtaon. He was Ictive In tM 5111Teal. Hla criUcitm includ I phrn· in American mu ieal lilt'.

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"::=::~~=====~=~~======~=~=:'j.~=====~=~==~i~::========:_~~=:::~~~~~~~~~ LOST AND fOUND AUTOS. CYCLES !'OR SALE HOI ISES FOR RENT ------------------------TO &ba... f.nn LO T REWARD. Plrketl lid. AUTO INSURANCE. Grinnell Mutual M3..$U1. Rule Ime In Id. blA(k ca • S»Yount men toll In, pro..-am. We .. Advertising Rates IlAt.P; GRAD!!A. Br.lu·:h 1114, J.ne. n·! oel 1101 HI.hl.nd Court. or·

at Room 8 .toniht The IOW8 in Socialist th UnionLea~ue Yale I _ II sponsori nll the talk.

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GREIiK NIWSLITTER The Greek News leller ta(l will m et at 7 tonigh t in the Union Kirkwood Room.

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Thr.. Day. ... .. .. Shl DaYI Ten D.y. ... . ... OM Memh . .... ..

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lk I Word CHILD CARl 22c • Werd BABY ITTER WANTED my bomo 2k I Word evenln, Can .. ch.n,e for room Me I W.r" .nd bo.rd. Dial 331·5707 !wl... n , and 7 Ifn

PRlNTING. TYPING , ptOOf,..dln •• IN1 1011 CITROEN Br(>Wn . w~ll'. WOMEN'S RlftLE CLUB R.dlo~ he.ler hydraulic lu • .,.n. .Ullin., ,.wrllin.. Chrl.UM. let· Minimum ilion ,,00<1 m.ch.nlc.1 toOndlUon. The Women's R\l1e Club will tor. Ul-USO Evul.... J3I.M3I. Ifn Chup. 331-M1n meet It 7 tonighl In the Field FLUNKING JlA TH OR l.lIIlI.., C.II FOR SALE, 1165 SII..... Cou.,e.lior· J.net m·g3()I 12-5 tone body. radio. worranlY. 351 . House. 1899 aile, 5 pm. • • • "UGWUup CO .... I! HOUSE [RONING. Slud.nl boy' ..,d ,Irl . BMW INI· RIIO"-.-';;;: Ex- c-."'U""" ent rondliion ... ... lOll R ~h.lttr 337·2824. 12.5 10,," mUe •• e f/U.OO 337-4711 E.. ~ The Mugwump Coffee House 8TJ:REO HI.FI, and rodlo rtp.lr. C.1l nln~ C W.iUl.mpIOn. lHI wiU open It 9 tonlllht It 707 Mel· 51e.. letto. UH81S. 11..4 1 11641 Mil. l.IGHTNING. 1175.00. 01.1 rOM Ave.. WEODING INVITATIONS ~prlnl. ~:IO%'I !ner 1;00 , .m _...!!.:.%II MOilLE HOMIS •• III • . Dirk Ho..... Pri tt. h, S. C.pl· IN2 PEUGEOT 404porly FnI!n.h 101. 11.10 dan. IUnroor. Ex •• llonl condlUon ~§l§W SKI CLUB R•• on.ble . 33a-t052 or 3$1-3%'11 I'" EXPERIENCED TYPIST: You name == !~ ::o EtA:AR JO'~51' Iir condlUo~ d. Ski Club dtposl~ for the Irip SPANI H TVTORING. 1'1.11. . ..,.ek· VOl.K WAGENS - IHl unrOOf. and 111~":"1I 1)1", II. 01.1 J37-4~1'::l"1 ______ I now ~.""'t. tiii-ltd. em.. l3&to Gllena. Ill .• Ire due todlY at I.r.~n unJh~n'!11asnt~;~· AI 0 I\~?,~ ItGO Hd.n 331-3124 oller s,sO ~~. TlRM PAPJ:R book r.port, thuu. ... ...... U HEl" ;.;177'iI":;.",:":,===-=-==:-",="",,,,,,-:~ ditto•• • 1•. b,.... rI.n.ed ~.II :tII"""'" IHO AMERICAN Ne'" , .. ru,· uT" ..rvIc. bv Ne.. I", BUICK ~I ntr... beel · (... II -A" ar• • n.... tarpetln, C.II 331..1148 DtAPEII •• n~ , I I h I I diU 8 .- "WAITR.&' WAN': to tull or f.rt .Il. - ' .0 p.m Pof'na OC "!7..!f~nd'y. SI3 PUbuqua' l IIr~n C.:l'I·~~4~~ d~~; ~ ~~:. Et.r.t-rRIC TYPEWRIT!R - Ih..... tim. ppl 1'1 -rlOn Bamboo nn Ph ___ -_ ....... nln, 11.. ADd l.rm po.,.r.. Colle•• frodu. . 0 Ib '' • , t SALt:; - 10·s33'. J !wd.room. _ .t • • •• ~'I.n~d . 3'1.17·' I .:tAR 131 o. u uQu.. "llh Wuhtr·dJ')'fr ~7·'m Bon ELECTRIC SHAVEII rop.lr. 24·hou" IW VIV. BAHA III. Bl.UE. ,_dlo . ~~... Alre ...·"Ic• . M,)e", lI. r!wr Shop. .:••• lIrnt tandltlon . 10'" mil.... TERM PAPER . TIl.." • df ert.lIon : EImEn NUll8r.: Am 7 am .·3 so R .ble 337:ro117 U, .AlUn.! ,!~p.'I.n••. U oenll "'t r p m . and II pm·7 am . rutl Ind TRAILER HO IE - for .. I. Or rtnl. OIAPiif"'i\£NTAL .. ""Iu by N.w ea.on . . . . P'" il31HM7. In p.rt Um • . WUI t,"ln. C.II Mr H.· Good condillon. Ruoc>n.bl • . Lot 164 Proce.. LonUdry. 'U 8. Pubuqu. . '" PI.YMOUTH WAGON. .,cillO. E;S:-CT'RIC - ' PING _ hort. le-, m.n . low. City Caro Cenler lSI· II 'orell VI.w 333-0025. 12-5 Dorolhy Kiraten , a metropeli· Phon. 1137. _ Phone JOfl EI.loer 1l7'~ or 15:1· .... •• ,n' _ . Ifn liri"48' DETROITER mobU. home., BEWING AND alteroliollJ. E~perl. "75 1f.S lht ' . f. t .. rvlce. E" .... rI.n •• d. • T .. o ~droom . oxlraL Phon. 338tin Operl soprlno who hll ~en eneed. Call 351 .'748 Ikverty Bal. 1111 IG 4 OR. SEDAN. 11210.00. UI' CIII 331-14111 U·UAR Nit l101 called th, greate t si nging actress lolfton. 4.. Bro.. n !244 .fltr 5:110 pm PHONE~"ltr 5 16 P m. IHI Di.tl,lln COIlt ~ ferm " •• 141 IN2 MERCURY METEOR. 1 doo r ACRO rROM CAMP\J E~.~rI' QUlkor Collo,o Proparal.ry APPROVED ROOMS of our time. Is to pre ent , con· F'OLK GUITAR IUlOn.. ,,7.kU radio. A·I (ondltlon ~U 00 . P.u l . S-h .. 1 $L·..Ilnt· b.... br.ad LAUNDERIt'l'TE f..· Monty Aoro Ronlal $t711 12-7 tneod .1. trlc Iypln. ""Ice. & Ort ~ • '..... • • cerl at 8 tonight In the Union TOWNCREST tur •• d()ubl. 100d, n." GIC top 'p.p.1'I a "",.I.lly. Call :l3l-4UO .... afNI ...1" In .11 operallent" MALE KITCHEN . "' .. n.r. dry.r. loadar.. U lb. Wucomala and ••. IN8 IMPAl.A CI •• n. Mu I ..n 351 I nln... Ifn the kltchon IfNI ftrm. Will f .....' . parkln • . • 24 o. Luc... 3~ 1 . Main Loung • . Ir.~ 1037. 12·11 El.ECTRIC TYPING • • arbon ribbon. con,ldor ,.upl., Cotta," fur . 5387 Hn Miss Kirsten will sing htr fav· FRENCH TUTORINC .... 1ao Iran.I.· .ymbol., any Itn.th ••• p rlon.. d. "I,hod plul •• I.ry .nd board. liOn' .nd .dllln • . •'hon. 331·20t2. Phon. UW7M 11-ltAR References. orile arias from her roles in _ __ Lao1 MISC . FOR SALE TYPING .ERVICE _ .......I.nc.d. ElotlHe typewrlltr with ... bon Call TOM SCHAEFER, Head " Madame Butterfly," "Tosca." F'OR RENT - tyP.",.ll...! .ddln, MEN"-":' C.rp<ltl n•. kllehen . porkln r , m. IIln. . TV'. '38.'71 . Aero V ED ROYAl. PORTABl.E typewrll· tlbbon C.U 331-4564. 641 rreuer. wllh.r. dr~or. ..un • . Don· " Manon." "La Boheme" anet R.nlal. 810 M.lden ley S~ ; art.r 5 - ua·gU7 ,rn 1~2 er. will trod. for hot .un. 331- IIARY V. BURNS ' lypln" mlmeo·5 Cl.ASSICAL GUITAR INSTRUCTION. 1048 11-& Inphln •• NoLlry Public. 415 Iowa W .. t Br.nch, l.wI MALE - -KI1'CIlEN--w.-IIer. dry t r. "The Girl of the Golden We t." c an U7-2MI. 12-3 HARPSICIfORD _ B.ldwln a.;;utf. llate s.n Bulldln • . 337·2MC. '-tftlfr, plrkln, 0424 o . LU("II. She will al40 perform selected IDEA ~for .ny occllion. Ar. 351 ·3387 tfn 0.1 EIHlronlo, V... d only' mo . J RRYNYALL - Elec:lrlc IBU: ty~ tI I.' portr.1I .,.n.1I thtreo.1 C.II 8'1·1190. 11-7 III, """Ic • . Phont 3311-1330 2 OOUBtE ROOM . Men C'ookln, works or Handel, Pergoles!. Che>pllltl , 01l:.J5~ up.:.1!,1I-02eo. 12.I~ 11144 TASca mlcroKop" Binocular. EDITORIAL SERVICE: Theon. di; WANTI!D prlvU..... Wilkin, dl.lln. e. 337· pin . Rachmanlnorf. Frank La· ELECTRI SHAVER ... plil. 24-hour .h•• n~~ajrc~~e.... ~~elr!nr~~~U":::: - 71.41. UII Nnallon •• pubUclty. WrtUn. AIIO' N""I«. Moyer'. Barber Shop. • • • dolo'. J37·T707 1:1-2 WANTED ultd th.rmo·f•• m. Forge and Landon Ronald . }1·18 .,00. Ph~no 33H70' ./t..!!:-5~ HORT PAP ERS. Ihe..... .Ieclrle .,n l __________________ ___ thine In ,ood tondltlon. C.lI 33.. ROO~S FOR RENT Iyp.wrll.r. Experienced Phon. 331· Tickets are available at the DIAPER RENTAL ....vl.. by N.w REDUCE SAFE. IImpl•• nd f..1 ,,·llh Proc•• LoundrY. US S. Dubuque. GOllu, l.bl.1 Onlv He .1 LUbin" 4201 1:1-11 WANT TO RDIT HEATED •• ra.. ME I G • ()o_ln •• rerl'l,.n. Union. Studenla may oblain hr· Phon. 137-8.A. 11-1.Un elf ervle.~! _ -ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER. TheH. or b.."menl for worlt",op lor mo· tor. Cloae In. Phon, 338-8211 . Ifn .nd horl p.per.. PI.I 137..u. kel. upon pre entltion of identl· [RONINGS W~Phon. SlI-I5N. RCA AM·FM hort w ••• port.bl. to ... ~cle. UI·M77. 12·5 ROOM FOR GIRL • proved. un • .,. II.D Su.,.rb C.II .. ' ·2839 lV..t Br.nch I2.UAR - DAMR. upon... p.ld pro.ed. C.1I il37~7r. 12-8 flcatlon cards. Non·student price ,:;;:;=~_________";;";,,,,;,,,__-. ~nln. .. ._ ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER _ lb.... WANTED 10 Phoeni X', "r1:rona around De.c·1 . .... "CONDITIONED room SroRT COAT. Sla; .. m onlle .ull. d~rl.tlon. lott... "'orl p • .,. .. IOlh. Releroneta required. 331-4242. SINGLE is $2. Cor mile . A("ro Ilr.fJ" Irom elm· • GUITAR LESSONS • c.... SIO; bl .. r. $IOi .w•• I.... and m.nu*,rlpll. 337... 1:l-22All pUI . ~ .OO. Inquire a t Jlcluon'. m dlum. I.r, •. S3-$8 . boo... Ito 10., -MI l>S Klrslen made musical his· lIenl.1 $I • Compl... cou.... In Chin ••nd Glfl. Jl E. Wa hlJl,lOn. ne.llenl .rondillon '7. 331 .11851 I ILl TIIIC TYPEWRITER. exp.rI. INFANTS WANTED c~ • CI ... leol. p.m .. • p.m. .....!~.I.I'l'. DIal 331-4101. 12·28 lory in 1962 as the lirat Amerl · FOR R£1'IT 10 p.rtl.. p... In rtHorch Iotlnr. ROOM "" HIli . 1111 limon., p.rlorM· 1 CARRy' VOUnl\A8Y on your bIok . Il.ECTRIC TYPEWRITER - Short 1l7·Un . tIn tra In.tructort. unlllvcl.d II, 'acully Ih. Un· can soprano to sing opera In the Phon. '~1 ·1704 mor"'n., •••. p• .,. . . .nd th ...... 331·71'72 Un ROOMS FOR GRAnUATE MEN ••.,lIy o' low.'. Instltul. 0' BILL HILL nln... 1\.:t"" IN'l',;1i'GtOT404 _ 4 "",ed tr.n .. Child •• h.v'., and D.velopm.nt , W.lkln, iii lane. 10 compu •. CaB Soviet Union. She returned In un· Mu.l. 'Iudlo a. 1.1.. SO HONDA GOOD. SIOO.OO. Bra.. mlulon and r.dlo. Phon. 83&-&124. 331."..17 beror. I or .It.r 7.00. tin Th •• .,lIIIV Iwo-monlh .. I'. to precedented 25 curtain calla In her 14\11 .ellih Du"u~ue 'SHue ,Iltln,u l.h !w.wttn ell f f. r • n I Irump.l .lId c. new eondillon. 11-30 MENS ' . doubl. wllb kltcben. 331 ....0(11 .... nllll II IIeln, .Ivdl.d In opening Russian performance. MOOO. 10'.33' Mobile home IMI N. Gilbert. 337-57,.. 83U22S. Un new condition. C. h or tr.d. thll r .... 'ch. I GLP.: ROOM M iss Kirsten has sung with M.n CI_ to U.sooOO. We buy .M ~II .nYlhln. of 'ach In'.nt will lie I....d for luffet Clarlnal. and ... ".r.1 M .... na of no mOre thin value. Call u. 331~7111 Towntrut Law 5<'hool .nd HO'flt'lI - 204 Frank Sinatra. Bing Crosby and Suophonet .nM.1l hour ,.CII. Til. lutlnq M.Le.n 51 ICorn., 0 )lclA.n " Mobil e Hom. Courl "5.1. Co .. 2312 the late Mario Lanta. and on £111'1 C.II aU·IIDS t>'r' and 337. MUAClline Avtnue~ tfn SORORITY NEEDS house bo, •. C.1I I. In no w,y un' ....."' to the tn di,play It Mra. Nu..,n 337·2971. U3 . Dodl" thlld. Moth... wll lot p.ld .,.SO 32114 68 p.m. 1J ·30 several television shows. STUDIO KNITTI NC MACIIIN Ind ..... 'on 'or Ihtl, c_r.tlon In O'BR IEN MUSIC CENTIR MALE HEl.P WANTED 43t KJrk· 1 nOUBLEROOM for m.n. Cookln. cone yarn'. Phone 337·7117. 12-15 ""n,lnl the In •• nt t. the Unl. 12·\5 I••UIU. Pbon. 331-8581. A·I WOOD SHAPE.c-Sltnd- lnd "Ood. ,1.110 ~our. YIr.It,'. 1.11 H.II . lit I. Colleto ROOM FOR MAN ovor I:-I.":l:':'\t~ bl:-..,-:It-. 451 Kirk· In'entl ..... wer. If'" molor. Dial 331·1401 ••• n~ IW MALE HELP WANTZI> Phon. lSl·51S1 wood $1 .:10 hour. 131-7883. October 1 .r. n..... d . '.r mor. from campul Cooklnl. Unen. fur· • nl,h.d Mala .rvleo w •• kly. DI.I In""",.tlon. pi .... cell """17. WANTED UlMEDlATELY - . c7oiint. MUST SILL : U7~H7 Iftor 5,00 p.m. 1I·2g In, cl.rk lor rlplCUy eapondln. Golder .. 1 • mm • .v",r • mm b u .1 n I I .. Experlenc. n .......,.. Clmpllttr P ...."mmln' mo\tl. "ol.ctor . Ha. lew Phone ,43·1(33. _ _ _ II·SO APARTMENTS FOR RENT Th •• I, .nel 1t.... rCh "el.CI, ,ontrol., ,lUI Itop, nv.,.., .tlli. lu,I"U' and In"Ullrl.1 IY'lo",. ,.trl.: r.t'" .pllel"1 ••,., (O'V· SYSTEMS AND .r, .tc. Wa. 0"1" ,1DO n.w, u.. d WEST IDB - LUX\JRY furnlJhed TWO BEDROOM. furnl.hed ,carl. GENERAL DA'I'A I.u Ih.n 11 11m... Wltl I.k ••75 offlcllney. Heo/. .nd w.ler paid. 1 mont. J9Ooo. Call 337.120S even n ••. PROCEDURES SYSTEMS )r best off.r. Tom Ftn.ICh, JeS I . Como 10 H5 0 ....1, Api .•A 7·' p.m. r VRNI HED APART lENT- fo r 1 In~v.lrl.1 In.l"..r w.nl.d fo, Wa.hln,ton 't., Apt. No. 4, Ph. Im_dl... omploym.nt In ","lIIleol Phon. 337 ·71" ".eltd.y. or clll SSI·1»I. lIn I Cloae In. Phone 151044tn. t1.6 U'·Ht1. Thl. wovld m.ke _ .. 'tnt., .,.,'Im. M.A. "'llr.d. 411 I . """,.t 10 .... CIIV on. a fin. Chrlstmll .,"Mnt . 'rt'ICIJ:NcY APARTJlENT for mar• ROOMMATE WANTED 10 "'.re larle .... t will coni''''' .ra.. u.l. willi 2 !wdroom . pl. $SO.OO. monlh. On rled couple. FIlrnllhed. ulllitle " ..... In. knowl... el " .I .It.T. 12·1 sao.OO. U N. V.n Buren. S3I.a4Il4. IZ" 10 ..0 Av• . Call UI.Qt4. .net .th.r ,,~ to ef, •• t.chn~u" . Full chi"" Of "'part_nl Willi Watch Doc RACE CAR SET MALI UNDEIlGRAD ROOMMATE 10 NICE 2 BEDROOM furnl"'ed or un· brN4 "\14." NlponllblUtl.& rlne· rum' hed 1n CoralvtHe, now J't!:nt.. aharo townhou .. furnlsh.d a pori· For S." I Two com .... t. nc. In, from "'1. proc...ln, to .... ( Carl "Doc" S.vtrt".. 1:1-1 ~~fo Park r. lr, Inc. ~t201 or 337· menl. "bone 3~1"'52. t.r ••" lolnod 1.,.1"., .nd tltn' Cir. M,wlc ... O..-rtU""'•• On ttl. NIC ''Tonl.M'' Sh.w moun,.d ." .ft r hobby .... ' • . WESTHAMPTON VILLAGE .part· fer IlIm'n ll'ratlv, adyancemlnt Tho ..t com.. tomplol. wllh S menu. furnlahed or unfurnl"'ed. NICE I BEDROOM rurnJohetl or un· prob.bI. If .cc.plobl. 10 .ppllfurnl , hed In Coralville. now r.nl· can, 4 ..... d controllirs. 2 Ir,",," » .y. • W. Coralville. 337.5297. Un Than ch.ck out an ol{act d . unto O.nt,ou •• I'lry - Llber.1 In, Park t' llIr. Ino. m·82CIt or 337· 'ormer, build In,. .nd loll of Mn,fitl. Infe,m,tl ... FEMALE ROOMMA1'II:-~iii'O'r 81eo. Ilea.. of his Gthon t",m,..' at 1:l-16AR trade, {"dudl", so",. .,eel.1ty .nd Inl ..... I.w call or wrll.: .It.r to ...... ap.rtmenl with I it.m. such •• 'hi '""'ill tilt ." The Aclmlnl.trater ,Irl In Coni vIII.. UI·506II after 6 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED -;'::-;;;:;fur. O'IRIIN MUSIC CENTER whol. 'hlne 1M for nlshed ApI . • 125 00 and up . Inquire P.m. 11-10 Lutheran Modlcal Center .nlv '41.00. C.rol Ann Apt . 51h Ir•• t Ind 12th .... .,ttl fun for Hvlll 100. 26th and Dow.y Avonut S .EDROOM IJNFtIRNISHED. dre..., •. E. ve. Cor.lvlll. lIn .. r.... uof· Pallo. comel.l. kllthen. k""w. Omahl, Nebrallta mmln, pool. rEMALIt GRAD TO ah.t•• p.rtmenl Loundry .cllltiea PheM UI·S1S1 Phono m ·3751 Ph • • ·146-7722 acrou from campus. Re ••on.bl~ . Air condIUon.d. Cou.nlry Club PI.ee 333-~00 12-2 ApI. UI-5J2l

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REQUIRES

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'DECEMBER 4th, 1967

CARRIER

Se. Your Placement OHic. For An Interview Appointment

RIVERSIDE PARK-TEMPLIN PARK AREA

Career Opportunities In:

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HE WILL BE ON CAMPUS

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OSCAR MAYER&CO. a leader in the Meat Packing Industryl

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You have a date with the man from

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Dorothy Kirsten At Un;on Tonight

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DEL TA SIGMA PI Della Slama PI actives will meet at II ton1gbl in the Union MlchJ"an Room. Pledges will meet at 7 p. m . • •• LSD MOVIE IDGria. "LSD _ Ins! ht or fnsaDlly ' win ~ hO"'n al 12:30 p.m. Thursday in the CoDege of Pharmacy auditorium. II it open to the public. ••• SAILING CLUB The Sailing Club will meet It 7 toni",t in the Union minois Room . • •• C Alit FOR E ROTC . The . deldhne for IpplYID' for l liiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii the A!r F?rce ROTC t~e>-year .' comm!! onlOq pro ram II Sal. urday. Interested .tudenta may contact Col. Thurman SPiva, pre>fe or of lero pace ItUdle5. ••• SOCIALIST LEAGUE James Ro\)(orlson. editor of Ihe Sparta cihl. will speak on "P~r· .pecUves for the Ame rican ~fI" l

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city,

French Poet To Give Readings, Lecture /5Year Sentence I \'

'The 1)oUy Iowan

The Johnson Counly Board 01 asked if lbe possibility of private Supervisors heard M!veral development or the park had been lions Tuesday morning to a pre>- explored. posa) 10 amend the 1967 county Harvey Luther. a member of budget. lhe Johnson County ConaervaUoD The meeting was called 10 a1· Commi Ion. said the commission low persons with objections to had heard no objections 10 the proposed Increased expenditures park al any of ill! meetings. in six funds to voice lbeir opin· ions. County Auditor Dolores Rogers said that the increaaes •• would have no effect on taxes but would be made up [rom fund balances and an anticipaled greater volume or fees. MOSCOW (.fI - The .S. Ind Among thoM! objcclln, was Joe British governments are coo id· Zajicek, Roule S. a salvage deal· I ering further protests over the er. Zajicek , who said he repre· drugging of two of their military se~ted Basic Fr~oms, Inc., altaches stationed in Moscow. It said he wan.~ the . screWI was repo.rled Tuesday. clamped down on spendlOg and The chief army . tlacbes of the lax culs as a rellllit. U.S. and British embassie were Zajicek parUcularly objecled to fed drugged wine and lbeir pa. a proposal which would allow Ihe pers were rifled by a gang of Johnson Co u n I y Conservation nve or six men in Kishinev . 700 Commission 10 spend a $24.366 miles southeast of Mo cow Nov . gran I (rom the federal govern· 17. U.S. and Brill h prote Is to ment for developmenl or the new the Soviet Union charged . F. W. Kent Park. The o(flcers were altacked in Zajicek said that there were their holel rooms after they had 38.000 public acres in the county become violently ill from the and Isked what lbe 200 acres of wine , a British Foreign Office Kent Park would add . He also statement Issued in London said .

USC·d onsl ers

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'TMI DAILY IOWlN-l_t

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CONTACT-

MR. JIM CONLIN CIRCULAliON MANAGER AT

337-4191 or stop in at the Daily Iowan Offj~

Yes .. We Choose LAKESIDE Beln& newly married,

we wanted an apartment tJlat would be • real home. We lilted the economical rates and !be "total" living flcUities of Lakeside. We particularly enjoy the beautiful I'e('reaUon center with I'Nimmi.Dc pool, exerciM

I'OIIID, cocktaiIlounp IDd color TV .

W. made our move .•• wby don't you •••

Phone 337-3103 At..... frtm PI'K.... afNI Gambit plant '" HI.hway NI. , In SeuthH.t I_a City


THE 4TH ESTATE

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On The Nature Of Establishments .?

Writing in the Iowa Defender last week. Jim Sutton got his digs in for this column's appraisal. a few weeks back. of the Defender and. in passing. dismissed me as thinking "like a copy editor who works for an establishment paper." Having been a copy editor on various establishment publications. I certainly don't mind Sutton's crack (although I would like to know just exacUy how a copy editor, for an establishment paper or any other kind of paper, thinks) but I've noticed some grumblings around the office as to the indirect charge that The Daily Iowan is Establisbment. What more can we do? People who hold the DI dear to them seem to be asking. We've come out against the war (although usu- I ally for the wrong reasons), we've criticized the administrations in I Washington, Des Moines, the Civic Center and Old Capitol, we've plugged for liberalized abortion laws and recenUy we've gone so far as to urge the legaliziltion of pot. We've even printed dirty words. How much more unestablishmtnt can we get without resorting to looking sloppy or muckraking, like those upstarts the Defender and Middle Earth? The sad fact - which causlS discomfort and prompts grumbling - is semantics. Words fall Into misuse and abus., have their meanings changed before their horri fied eyes, and then f. il to be properly understood. Like the word " liberal," which used 10 mean 10 most ~pl. fllxible, toleranl, open to change, favoring reform and progress, and now ha s f.ll en inlo hard times with the advenl of popularity for the word " radical" (surely no one wants to be called liberal thlle d.ys ), so the word "establishment" has f.llen on h. rd tlmH, h.s become a dirty word. My Webster's defines "establishment" as "a thing established, as a business, etc." Not a very lucid definition, perhaps, but that "etc." could stand for all sorts of things, I suppose: the Communist party as well as the Democratic party; the National Liberation Front as well as the Saigon regime; Students fOr a Democratic Society as well as the Marine Corps. But it would be naive to become fettered by definitions and only a fool could fail to see the differences in the nature of SDS and the Marines, despite the fact that both are "established" organizations with rules, ideals, histories, and in the nature of the DI and the Defender or Middle Earth, despite the fact that all three of them are "established" publications with editorial hierarchies, editorial policies and have been accepted by the U.S. mails. More important than definitions are the .ff.cts those definitions presuppose, to what extent do the terms of establishment affect that which is established. When we speak of the Establishment press, we think in terms of those newspapers which for years ignored criticisms of the appaling saiety record of the automobile and down played news of the hazards of cigaret smoking; those newspapers which ignored poverty until LBJ coined the word, ignored civil rights until freedom riders and sit-iners forced the problem into the national consciousness, and ignored urban blight until the cities exploded; those newspapers which regard polltics as the plaything of the Democratic and Republican parties exclusively; those newspapers whose conception of community action goes litUe further than the Community Chest; in short, those newspapers which are supported by advertisers who must not be oHended, which hope to garnish influence among the decision-makers, which are owned "Jld controlled by men who have large quantities of money to lose and sense the presence of large quantities of money that they would like to acquire. It's no surprise then that the word "est. bllshment," when appll.d 10 the pr.ss, .t I.ast, should have becorrie a dirty word . There is a difference, other of course than the obvious ones of regularity . size, circulation and ad lineage, between the Establishment New York Times and the non-Establishment National Guard· ian, for example, despite the fact that both are established publications with relatively large readership. a considerable amount of in[Juence in regard to Ihat readerShip, and distinguished histories. That diffcrence, of course, lies in the spirit those two pUblicatoins' editors and writcrs bring to their established product and the larger Establishment we all exist and playa part in : society. And it is a spirit of freedom , adventure, curiosity and indignation. perhaps even anger which marks the non-Establishment press. The student newspaper is unique among the news publications of the world. To a large extent it is very Establishment, functioning. as seems inevitable, as an extension of the university by whom and for whom it is published: in part as a platform for members of the University community lusually the more influential members) to air their opinions. beliefs and policies. On the other hand, it has many characteristics oC the non-Establishment press. Il is frequently published by an autonomous board (as is the Dl by the Board of Trustees of StUdent Publications, Inc.> which exercises a minimal amount of control ; it enjoys a relatively progressive-minded readership; it is a non-profit enterprise courting, but not dependent on, advertising; and, due to the fact that its editorship and editorial staff is transient, it can afford to make enemies. Editorially. in fact, the student newspaper Is hardly even " ,,tablished." From year' to ye.r its editorial position m.y fluctu.t. as rapidly and as radlc.Tly as does its staff. Structurally, however, there is no getting around the f.ct that the student newspaper Is established, and firmly, as part of the fabric of Ih. university and the community. It is within that structure, and within the more nebulous superstructure of university influence, that the student newspaper can operate as a non-Establishment iournal: by conducting itself with a spirit of freedom, adventure, curiosity and indignation. perhaps even anger ; and further, by not allowing the limitations already placed upon that spirit by the university to draw any tighter and by pressing gently outward against those limitations until they expand. [ don't intend to pass judgment on the DI (! just work here, after alll as to whether or not it has endowed itself with that spirit; T'd rather let the facts spea k for themselves. But perhaps it somelimes needs to be pointed out that responsibility (another often misused and abused word) is often a virtue but occasionally an excuse. Those members of the DI editorial staff who wrote and endorsed the recent editorial urgi ng the legalization of marijuana, for example, are to be lauded for the responsible approach they adopted in attacking the problem : first runni ng a series of well-researched and well-thought-out articles examining the pros and cons of marijuana use, research, legislation and folklore, and topping that series off wilb an extremely carefully worded plea to morality and common sense. But, on the other hand, it seems only fair to point out that endorsing marijuana at this stage in history is little more courageous than urging that automobiles be made safer, that air pollution be stopped. that the slums be e1eaned up. Playing it s.fe. playing il cloM to the Vllt, charging as much I S the market will bear Is Ihe stuff the Establlshm.nt prell Is made of; going beyond what your audience Is ready to .... r Is what makes a paper non-Establishment.

A WORD OR TWO should be said here about the Spectator, the public relations department's latest assault upon the sensibilities and intelligence of the University's faculty, staff, students and alumni, which appeared as an insert to the Dl recenLly and was mailed to an additional 90,000 eagerly expectant readers. It would be pointless to criticize the Spectator, to point out that it probably isn 't worth the paper it's printed on, because, after all, who ever said that publicity handouts were supposed to be good, were supposed 10 be more than publicity. No one has ever expected honesty or quality from a publicity release. But it does' seem reasonable that the faculty, slaff, students anll alumni of this University should object to the University publishing junk and sending it to them in their own name. And it seems reasonable, too, that the taxpayers and tuition payers who help to support the University should object 'to some portion of their money going to the publication of a worthless array of words.

AND AS FOR JIM SUnON. well : He's still number lwo, and he's going to have to try harder. -Dav. MartO"'''

After The Word.- Literature rOf Disbelief THE ORIG IN OF THE BRUN13TS by Robert Coover. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York. $6.95

novel ) with an unrelenting, one who, by all odds and reason, pounding pace. should have perished. This man Hiram CI.gg, together with is Giovanni Bruno (John Brown. hil wife Emm. .nd four for those who relisb sYmbols ). a friends of the faith from Ran- shy, neurotic, inarticulate and dolph Junction, were sum- unlettered man of 33 (more symmoned by the Spirit and Mrs. bolism 1 who writes bad verse CI ... Collinl, widow of the ba- for his mother turned suddenly loved Nalareno preach.r Ely and haphazardly into a visionary Collins, to West Condon on the and prophet. "Are you the One wMkend of the . ighteenth .nd to come?" Eleanor Norton, the nin. le.nth of April, there to communer with spirits and aw.it the End of the World. voices of the higher aspects asks What did h. really .xpect? him during the early stages of T", Final Judgment, perhaps. his convalescence. and Bruno. Something, certainly, of im- speechless, his hair grown wild port.nce. What he did not Ill· and long, bis face saintlike in pect was to find himself stand- emaciation. his lips stern and 1ming on the nIght of Saturday mobile in confusion, nods. That the elght.enth - th. Night•• s much is settled. GATHE RED AROUND Bruno is it tumed out, of the Sacrlfic_ in • ditch . Iongside the old an odd congregation: Mrs. Norroad to Deepwater Number ton, the spiritualist, and her Nine Coalmine, watching a meck, all suffering veterinarian young girl die. H. had been I husband; Mrs. Collins, the widow prepared. .s only a man of of the miner-preacber who, begreat but simple faith can be fore he died in the mine disaster, prepared, for profound and ler· I scrawled a cryptic message

IN THE BEGIN NING, as we all so well know, there was the word. But just what that word , was has, throughout history and probably way before - way back into the musty roots of mankind. confounded man. And men's disparate j~terpretations, to which bave been loosely granted the label "religion" (defined by Mr. Webster as "belief in God or gods to be worshipped, usually expressed in conduct and ritual" >, have been bandied about throughout man's history and prehistory as justification for both "live and let live" and "kill and let kill.' , And for every interpretation there is a literature. What the word was, who (or Who ) said it and how (sometimes even why) has been recorded by disciples or friends of Ihe faith of practically every faith ever to raise its irresistible head in the hearts and min·s of men . And as new faiths emerge the literature follows hard on the sacred heels of belief. Or disbelief. So, to the legitimate tradition of the Old Testament, the New Testament. the Koran and the hundreds of others, the names of which elude me at the moment , has been added the bastard breed : the literature of disbelief, the recording of religions which I I ' ~ do not in fact exist but which . .. . . lh t ' r r' Id rltylng .v.nts, but he had not I whIch survIved hIm ; Ralph Hlmeglv~n e ~a ure a re Iglon, cou b"n prepared for that. baugh the high-strung lawyer eaSIly eXIst tomorrow and for ' . . With that sledgeha.m.~er blow whose math.emahcal calculatIOns that matler might just as ' welT ex'st toda ' I to the reader's senSIbility "The have led hun to acceptance of ~ere ;:~ numerous examples Origin of ~he Brunists" begins. Ithe Destroyer; Ben. Wesznik. the of this ty f liter r enre the The poundmg keeps on through- mIld-mannered mIn e r turned one comi~ ~ost r:a~i1; to ~ind out t~e . prologue, esla~lishing farmer . turned disciple turned In this time and place being Kurt what IS what, and ~ho IS ":ho. s~n.gwrlt~r; Marcella Bruno, the the movement Itself begms, vISIonary S trembling, serene. Von gu " "C t' s Cra dl e," but Then '. . ale an d vtrgma. . . I SIS .t . therene has s nevera been a fictional bac k at th e begm~mg, on th ~ day passion er, a creation of a religion as brilliant of the disaster which starts It all. whole. bevy of recent Widows and, as "The Origin of the Brunists." West Condon is a small coal- ho.vermg about the periphery, mining town, its dwindling exist- MIller, the jaded. bemused, reNO R, FOR THAT matter. has ence centered around the one re- pelled and Caseinated newsman ~ere been a novel of an~ genre maining mine which , on this fate- who car.not resist, regardless the In recent years as brilliant as ful day _ the eighth of January price, a good story. Robert Coover's first effort. "The Origin of the Brunlsts," - chooses to blow up: the most A,ll of these people, as well as published last year with a mini- dramatic surely, but only the thclr nu-nerous e~emies ond a1mum of fanfare, aroUsed the in- first of a series of eruptions hes and the indifferent towns· terest of a few critics. won a which are to shatl.er the peace peopl~ of West. ~ondon, .co~e major literary award, the Wil- and harmony of West Condon and starthn,gly and vlVldly to ~Ife .l D liam Faulkner Foundation prize, hasten the encroachment of the Co~ver s deft hands. Their hl~­ but attracled sparse readership oute~ w~rld, East C.ondon as I torles are unraveled as ~helr and quickly dropped out of view, Justm M.iller, the cY~lcal news- presents are hurtled achmgly probably the most underrated pa~r editor who shakIly and un- ~rough futures mto pasts, leavn vel of the year wlllmgly serves as the novel's mg their sore spots naked to the °The novel's lack of popularity her 0 , . characteristically has salt in the West Condon air. can be explained no doubt by the dubbed It. I All of a sudden, despite the Writing itself and its subject. COOVER PAINTS THE ~el'ene. concerted efforts of a host of "The Origin of the Brunists" is m.olding. worl~ of Wesl C~nrlon di~believers. the Brunists, al as dense s novel as Faulkner With dispa SSionate rea 1 Ism. Mlllcr dubs the sect, become a ever wrote told in a cyclical nar- . "Clouds ha ve masscd . doming force to be reckoned with in the rative which offers the reader in the small world o[ West Con- life o[ Wcst Condon . And the host iitUe opportunity to slip into its don . The patche.s of old. snow. of disbelievers come forth to do pUlsating vibrant rhythm. It is crusted black WIth soot m full batue. as well, 's fronta l assaull on re: daylight, now appear to whiten There is Abner Baxter, the lIgion (Christianity, specifically ), as the sky dulls toward evemng. fiery, red-haired successor to Ely bristling with spikes which take The temperature d.escends. ~lag Collins' pulpit; Vince BonaH, the deft ambush snipes at most of smoke .sours the air. Only eight "natural man" wbo knows that the other concepts and myths days smce the new ycar began, things would be all right in his Western man holds near and dear but the vague hope its advent lurned - upside - down world if as the main attack rolls along. traditionally engenders has ai- the Brunists would only disap. The novel is told in the (orm ready gone stale. It IS true, there pear: Ted Cavanaugh, the bankof a history of the origins of a are bir~hs, deaths, injuries, ru- el' and West Condon's leading citsmall Christian - oriented cult in mors, Jokes, matmgs, and con- izen who knows that the End of the coal region of Pennsylvania, f1icLs as usual , but ~ wearisome the World can't be in the best the leaders of which have fore· monotony seems to mform even interests of the town he's worked cast the End of the World. It the best and worst of them ." so hard to build up ; the Black Into the midst of this serenity Hand and his sidekick the Black begins with a bang, catapulting the reader into the midst of what Iand living death comes abruptly Peter. who kill cats, scrawl mesappears to be madness in a pro- that which the town has long sages and leave an assortment of logue set on the eve of the Arma- feared , the end 01 its own pecu- packages, some of which smell geddon which provides a teaser I liar world in the form of the clos- bad: and. as Eleanor Norton puts into the substance of the novel ing of the mine heralded by the it. "the forces of darkness" who. and sets the tone to the dizzying catastrophic dis a s tel' which as it turns out are personified prose which leaps along toward claims the lives of 97 miners and by none other than Justin Miller , the end (of the world and the "miraculously" spares the life of the enigmatic editor, himself.

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ROBERT COOVER

La Nuit Blanche "YOU BETRAY ME, SAM, I'LL TALK TO YOU LATER." "ONE MORE BLOCK1" IT'S YOUR HOME!"

I The Golden Dome Gets higher and higher. Bigger and bigger, As I approach it. Golden Dome, You never scare me; You know that death Accomplishes nothing. Oh Golden Dome, You let me sit To scare The nocturnal birds. Do you hear them cry, Golden Dome? They are scared; They flyaway from YOUI The slars are red; The moons are yellow' Oh Golden Dome; II When I look through The dark. I see Nothing but black.

When I look against The light I ICe the mist. III

Oh trees, Don't think That you alone Produce oxygen. I, too, even in bed With my dreams, Contribute some To the world.

IV 1 admire you Very much, Oh Big Glass! But what·s the use ][ you contain Nothing? V

I I

IIII

mov. d h. could not tell, If ,h, did at all: th.;r clltlvtrg.nce se.med governed by some lew Irrelevant to willed motion. From his height he could '" the smooth curv. of her brow, the clasp in her loose brown hair_ H. sought for Imegts there, bul convulsions of plln shr.nk his vision. He.1 m.1 "The Origin 01 the Brunists" 11 not without fault. Always Coover's hand is sure (whether pro,," t ing through the technical intricacies of a mine or the back~hop of a newspaper or the human in· tricacies of the minds and souls of his endless cast of choraclCl'!, he writes with an alarming au· thority ) but there are times when he seems to have been caught up in his own frantic motion. goes on too long with minor characlers whose addition fail 10 odd to the crystalline arithmetic « the puzzle he creates. Then, too. Borne of the stylistic aberratiOll!, while alwavs hl·illianl. arc lack· Ing in sufficicnt strllctural end thematic justification. And simf larly. Coover is oft en overco~ with his own wit. allowing it to • intrude, for no sake othrr lIian its. own, often to too intimate a I pomt. BUT THESE FLAWS ar~ minor I I There is no douht that "The Or, gin of the Brunists" is a mm' novel (rendered greater. perhaps by its flaws ) and that Coover is a brilliant novelist, well on his ~ way into the front ranks of Amer· ican literatUl'e. The word "promising," so one! bandied about in regard to H!'II t novels, seems superfluous iI ~ terms of Coover. The promise h. already been fulfilled. Coover's vision of the world is a provocative one. rife with sur· t reali stic touches and prcmonitiOlll of doom . But it is also permeated with the courage and ho~ necessary not only to endure but as Faulkner put it so weU, ~ I ~ prevail. -Dave MarvollMt

Coover's lPlunge Into The Mind'

How can you Arrest me, If you don't See me. Oh authority? Sir! Your Honor!

VI You rIde The white horse OCthe world To catch me; Oh my friend, You are wrong! VII 1 ride The white horse Of the world To see the waves Foam on the sandy shores

But it makes me Vomit like hell . VIII A man walks Watching at me. When r look at him, He uses his umbrella ]n the moonlight And whistles. ])(

Afler riding Many miles On the back o( the White horse of the world, I can sit Outside under the Temperature of 54;

Of course, It has to be ~'ro m

Along with the endless array of people and the things they do are the things which happen to them and the thoughts which careen through tbeir minds. Coover writes like a whirlwind, his eye always focused on the tense calm in the center, his concentric gusls whipping the leaves off the trees which cirele the clearing of action . Here he is as the world of Deepwater Number Nine Mine collapses: Ther. was light and post drill leaped smash.d the turned over wllele goddamn Car kicking felt it In his ears, gr.bbed his bucket, and tumed from the f. c., but t hen the second Here is Coover in the dreams of Justin Miller: She ca me to him on the arid plain. a motion of dull while. defined by her shadows, by her shifting tunic folds, by the dark point of her head. How she •

36.

- u Sam Otur

The man says he's a writer, yet he won't talk about writing. "It's not something you talk about except in overworked cliches," he says. Strange statement from a visiting lecturer In the University's Writers Workshop. All right. What would he like to talk about. Religion. A central theme in his writing. Well , it's lost its place in America. "reached the end of a tradition," he says. Pantheism Isn't the answer, neither is renovating Christianity. Take "The Origin of the Bru· nists," his first and only novel, published in 1966. Briefly, the book traces the development of a new religious cult in a small Pennsylvania mining town. The lone survivor of a mine disaster which claimed 97 townsmen. convinced he has been miraculously spared to pronounce the coming of the end of the world , gathers around him a following complete with symbolic white birds and flowi ng tunics. They are the Brunists - a zealous group of individuals with a cause and The Answer. One critIc has called it "an astonishing new vision of the American religiuus expel'ience." Another "nothing less than an attack on Christianity. " An attack, yes. Christianity, after all, is dead in contemporary AmerIca. says the writer. Cliche. CHche. Sex. An added attraction . Blatant and usually grotesque In his writing. Skim through one of his favorite short stories, "The

Marker," or pick up "The Brunists." Every fifth word assaults the complacency of the decent "Christian ethic," But lhen, so what, Christianity Is dead, isn't it? Cliche. Cliche. Realism he calls It. Sex is a real , natural setting for the "plunge into the mind" he works tow2rd in his writing. The hero oC "The Marker" finds himself plunged into the three·weeks' dead , decomposing body of his wife who was very much alive a moment ago when ... So a little about the writer's writing begins to seep out, trickle by triel-Ie. Maybe even a cliche now and then is better than nothing. That "plunge into the mind" business. It's a foot in the door. And more. It 's really the general idea, however simplified, beh ind his writing, the writer says. So Robert Coover. novelist, emerges finally from behind that frustratingiy hesitant screen oC cliche-phobia to talk a lillIe about his business of breadwlnoing. The deeply-e1efled chin begins to wag more Ireely. Religion isn·t the only lhing lhat has reachcd the end of a tradition . So has language. We are on the edge of II new metaphysical age. And therefore, a new kind of expression has become necessary, Coover explains. His answer is what he terml "visionary fantasy kept within the confin s of the structure of som e. thing real." And he reaches fa r to grasp th at fantasy . . . reaches oflen beyond the merely grotesque to the nauseating. Or

so seems the plight of tbe hero in "The Marker." Yet that is all part of the plan. Coover works at "staggering the imagination" and un f 0 I din g "minds folded into patterns" with a zeal the Brunists could have identified with. But it hasn't always been so. Coover admi ts he had a lot 01 trouble getling settled into a mode of writing that seemed appropri· ate. He explains that he was hung up on putting people in social sit· uation s, on trying to play the old novelist's role of visualizing on paper for the reader. ,I , No more. With "The Brunists," which he says he wrote in 30 exhausting days, he made a breakthrough. not only to his own satisCaction I but to tha t of publishers as wcU. He began publishing. What next? Coover's next imag- • ination-staggerer centers on a "guy who plays baseball with dice on his kitchen table." It's a furlher development of his surreAl· Ism in a rea I setting idea. '''\'be ' Universai Baseball Association. J . Henry Waugh, Proprietor." will be a combination of the "wild, fantastic. and allegorical and !he real world." 'I Baseball on the kitchen table, that's mind unfolding all righl. So in the end Iowa-born Coover does exactly what he intended no! to do. "Writing is a discovery," he says, "a real trip-laking eX' per ience." Down, down , down. into the mind. Cliche. Cliche. Who says wrK· Ing has to be talked about. -SAL LY IfC)UI

t

EaUIl>liSbed In 11168

Indu Eyes A "major industrial ine; Iowa City as the which would employ persons, Chamber of Commerce Kafer told the City that Ihe firm, which was interested in n",.r"" Inl City area In 1968. Kafer spoke at a m.,pliln . ber of Commerce and He suggested the PO!lsit,H floati ng $2 million In

Pelton Req Personal With Regen Student Body Pres. John written to Stanley Redeker Ihe Slate Board of Regents, he be allowed to appe8r at is Dec. 14-15 meeting Pelton said Wednesday ard R. Bowen said he wa Pellon's appearing before but that he would take a to the Regenls' meeting. Pelton said Bowen osked wilh him Wednesday to housJng regulations. Pelton Bowen {or his support in his beCore the board. The relationships of a un students are scheduled to be the December meeting. Pelton said he wanted to the board as a representati dent body because of the cern given to the student relationships. He tha t if he appeared f(ap in communication and students could be nnonlll',m He said he thought understandin ~ could tween students and the a per onal relationsh ip a thought of students as indi than as members of an It would be healthy for students' opinion on the sity-student relations, Pelton Bowen presents the is ues with his ideas. Pelton said board should hear the sides. Bowen said he would not wha t he termed a private

Citizens G To Protest Members of the Citizens' A"sinst thE' War in Vietnam

possible methods of protcstmg ing of Dow Chemical Co. at the University Dec 4-5 at Wednesday night. One of the plans passed by t ~nd in ~ members was tho> letter to the University offici lhe denil. or l, ni ~., ty futu re for recruilment n".nno,•• such as lhe militlrY. lienee A"ency and Dow. Th o proup members also p i~ket tlte tTniQ~ while the were interviewing. James ta nt professor of reli"ion a'or of tho rtroun said perhaps this plan might be than student picke.ing. The next meeting of the scheduled for Dec. 13. The determined later.

Huit Despite a wall of secrecy by the administration, The ha~ learned that students Nov. 1 antiwar demonstration ion are being placed on tion. Students ha ve been meeting Huit, dean of stUdents. in or 12, throughout the week. ncsday night, more than hal f students, who were part of a 1118 persons arrested Nov. 1 with disturbing the peace, Huit and been placed on of the 86 students invni1/,otI been convicted of the charge Court. At a meeting late Wednesday in Huit's office, the dean and students engaged in heated Over an hour before Huit dents that they were being duct probation for their J obstruction of the V'lion mediately." The probation is til J une 1. Huit's decision may rd to the student-faculty Student Conduct, the dean students. Huit opened the meeting by a question posed by one of the ro to whether or not the nature tent of the punishment to be had already been decided. Hult said that the .Islen


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