iniuriction testimony: more protests falldailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/di/1970/di1970-08-07.pdf ·...

4
, R to ClSlurt · Seltzer Tablets 1.16 VER Earrings Iniuriction Tes timony: More Protests Fall ate and local law enforcement of· fKt, ds testified over objections [rom de- len. attorneys Thursday in a district toUrt injunction hearing that informa· tion they have leads them to believe that di turbances even more severe than those in May will hit the University ollowa thi fall . "There's no que tion in my mind there'l1 be something going again ,' said Iowa State Highway Patrol Capt . Dickinson in predicting more Iowa City disorder in the [all . The testimony came out in tIM second of • h •• rill9 on the status of " tem· porary injunction illued on beh"lf of the city of low. City on M.y , to curb ob· struction, disruption, d"tnlctlon of pr0- perty .n4 Incitement to dilorder relat· ing to the demonstrations that pnctlcal. , Iy shul down the univerllty In earlv Judge Harold D Vietor presided over the hearing and will determine whether l the injunction Is to be modified. abolish· ed or made permanent, as City Atty . Partly Cloudy Highs Friday 90s west to 80s UII . Pa rtl y cloudy with lillie lemperatur. chlnge Friday night with ch.nc. of shoWirs conlinuing 'ISt hllf. Lows '" ill the 70s to 60s .. st . Jay Honohan i a king . Dickin on, who was in charge of near· Iy 100 patrolmen and city police '4ho were ca lied up to deal with the May dis· orders , also said the group that demon· strated in the pring was " bent on going against the system" and \liould continue to "find something to fight in the estab- lishment." Kingsley Clarke Jr. .nd Kelly Smith of H.wlcoyt Area Lf9al Services stepped in ThursdilY at the request of th_ HilwIc· eye Area low. Civil Liberti., Union to reprtsenl the 22 n.med d.fendilnll on the injuncti.... , three of whom - Deborah Iilyer. A3 . lowil City, Roland Iowa City. ,nd Sam 510 ... G. Grime. - w.re pr.sent II the helring. During Clarke'S cro. -examinatlon, Dickinson aill the demonstrators were prImarily youthful, "between 18 and 20," and , to his knowledge , unarmed Also on the stand for the city were Iowa City Police Chief Patrick McCar· ney : detective Ronald Evans: and police officers Robert Vevera, William Cook and Donald Hogan. McCarn.y elicited looks of surprise fram the defendants Ind the half.t.n John"n County Courtroom lpect"ton wh.n he t'stlfied that orlll '.porn from Informants of the low. Bur •• u Df Criminal Invtlligltion ( BCI) have led him 10 believe that bec.u5t of diuidenh the "University of low. will be closed .fI.r the ncond w"k IfI.r it opens" in the fall. McCarney defined dL idents as " pro- fes ional troublemakers." EI'ens said information he has gather· ed from the Bel and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, along with rumors that fhe fall disturbances will be "SO times worse" than tho e in the spring, have led him to a similar conclusion . EVins II" testifttd th.t "Loon, Dur· him Will there" It the burning Df I st.ck of Oally Iowan newspapers on the unlvtrsity "tntacrt" M.y IS in prot.lt of the flrll1V of Durh.m III editor of tIM DI on May 14. Durham is the presently the DI editor . 'early all the law officers questioned t tified that the number 01 May demon· Ira tors ran as high as 5,000. E".ns also testified that the ICI 11M informantl within twe Df the ""anill ' lions restrained by the Inlundi .... - Stu. denls for a D.mocr.tlc Society end the Conspirlcy. It was during the testimony of Hogan Smith thai raised his objection to the plaintif's evidence, saying It was 'con· piritorial and suppressive in nature," that it "implies guiJl by innuendo to tM persons named on the plaintif's inJunc- tion without due process and with com· ptete disregard for constitutional rights," and further It creates a "chUllng effect on Iree speech" by "tainting normally free acts" by aSSOCiating them with "patently illegal acts ." VIetor indicated he would take the ob- Jection into consideration and allowed the testimony to continue. In further testimony by the city' 8 wit. n es, Richard Gibson, university direc- tor of facilitie and planning, said that only one of the alm t dail rallies held between May 5 and May 9 had any sort authorization Howard J. Ehrlich, professor of socio- logy , said in testimony lor the that there will probably be more of these "illegal" rallie in the faU. "To the be I of my knowledge there is no organized plot to close down the uni· versity." Ehrlich aid. But he emphasiz- ed that if more than rallies do occur In the Call. it will be largely because the city and it police have overreacted 10 and the university has "completely Ignored" the demands that students put forth in the spring. Ehrlich, who specializes In the field of collective behavior, said that the demo onstrations began as a result of the U. S. invuJon of Cambodia and the student shootings, especially at Kent State. But he saId the incorporation in the students Ust o[ demands of demand for justice In the Iowa City police department Indl· cated that tbe local authoritles had made themselves a target for student unrest SchomNri. Bay.r and Sloss all took the Itand to "stffy thlt they hMl no plans " furth.r partlcipa" in Illegal ,ctl..,itl ... During the testimony Vietor on a number 01 occ a sions asked whether charges has been brought against those who allegedly participated in unlawful rallies or paraded without permits. The response was nearly always negative. Vietor indicated at the close 01 testi· mony that his decision may hinge on that consideration because he questioned whether the district court should enforce rules tbat the univenity and the city wefe not enforcing. Final testimony, if any, will conclude the hearing beginning at • a.m. today. Vietor told the attorneys that written arguments and briefs on the case were due Aug. 27, and a decision would be banded down before the beginning of the university', fall semester. •• tabU,h.. I,. 1161 Iowa City, _.w .. - 'rl.ay, August " I.'. ,. e ..... copy Focelifting Workmen repair Ind restore loints between n.ti"e stona ... part of a complete f.eelifting for Old CapitDI. The complete job will Include Slndblasling the exterior. redoing III loinls, repairing the bullt·ifl gutt.rs end eaves. repair of tIM .. st and Wilt .ntrlnce steps, Ind I silicont wlterproofing of the Ixterior. Th. work is be· ing done by m.n from th. unlvtrslty Ind from I Cedar IhDld. building firm. - Pholo by Dllna Hype•. Needs Nixon Signature- ' Congress OKs Postal Bill WASHINGTON 1.4'1- Creation of an in· dependent new u.s. Postal Service de· signed to end political and mechanicai . troubles of the mails passed Congress Thursday and we nt to President Nixon. The bili turning the $7·billlon Post Of· nce system over to the new corporate· like federal agency - and boosting mail· 1 men 's pay 8 per cent - passed the Ilouse 339 to 29 . Backers called it monumental reform and House Republican Leader Gerald R. , Ford said it may go down as "one of tht finest achievements" of the 91st Con· gress. But Rep . Wayne Hays (D·Ohio ) said backers will eat their words one day . Rep. H. R. Gross (R·lowa ) predicted "the wrath of American taxpayers 'will rise and. make future Congresses put the pi eces back together ." The most sweeping reform In the post· al system's 81 ·year hi story , the bill is to take control of the mails from S35 con· ,gressmen and a politic a l1y appointed postmaster genera l and turn them over , Vacation ' Hours For University The Main Library will be open starl· ing today through Sept . 13 from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m . Saturdays; 1:30 p.m. to 10 p. m. Sundays, and from ' 7:30 , a.m. to 10 p .m., Mondays through Fri· days . The library will be closed Sep t. 6-7 du ring the Labor Day weekend . Starling Monday and extending through Sept. 4, lhe Union's general bdilding will be open from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily , and the State Room from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m., Mondays through Fridays . The Recreation Area and bus· ines s offices will operate Crom 8 a.m. to 4: 30 p. m. Mondays through Fridays . The Iowa House will be open continuo ously throughout the period, including Labor Day, when the rest of the build- ing will be closed. The Museum of Art will keep the same schedu le during the interim per . iod-I p.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m ., Saturdays,. and 2 p. m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday •• to independent, profe ional manage· ment. It also provides for modernization, au· thorizing the new ervice to sell up to $10 billion in bonds, to end tieups like the massive postal breakdown in Chi cago five years ago. The new system has a year to go into operation but can go to work on a rate increase immediately and is likely to boost the 6-cent letter tamp to 8 cents by next spring or summer. The administration wanted to wipe out postal deficits up to $2 billion a year and put the mails on a setr·paying basis, but the bill provides for 10 per cent sub- sidies from Congress - almost $800 million a year through 1979 . The subsidies, largely to assure rural areas the same service as cities even though they cannot pay their own way, would then be pha sed down to 5 per cent by 1984 when a decision wUl be made on whether to discontinue them. The new postal service will be under an l1·man board 01 governors and day· to-day management under a permanent postmaster general. Mail rates - which except (or the sub. sidy are to cover all operatlng costs - will be et by an independent five· man Postal Rate Commission. The commission must hold publlc hear· ings , its rate increases can be chal. lenged in the courts, and they can be overriden by the cost-<:onscious postal governors only by majority vote. UI/s Second Afro-American Institute To Study The Harlem Renaissance More than 125 educators from all sec· tions o[ the country will gather at the University Sunday lor the start of tbe second annual Institute for Afro-Ameri- can Studies. The Institute which begins Monday will last through Aug. 21. One of the few programs of Its type , the Institute br ings together college teachers who will conduct at least one Afro·American course during the 1971).71 academic year and offers them the op- portunity to gain Curther understanding of the culture of black America. Organized by professor Robert Corri· gan executi ve secretary of the U. of 1. Afro·American Studies Program, tbe lwo-week meeting features noted lectur· ers from various colleges and univer· sities speaking on subjects connected to the theme , " The Harlem Renaissance ." The I nstitute 's keynote address will . be delivered Sunday night by Ara B on· temps of Yale University , who partici' pated in the " Rena issa nce " during the 1920's. A novelist, some of hi s best known books include, "Story of the Negro, " "100 Years of Negro Freedom," and "American Negro Poetry." Other speakers and their topics are t. J. Saunders Reddillg of Cornell Univer- sity, "The Harlem Renaissance;" Sara Web ter Fabio, of the Black Studies Program, U. of Calif.. Berkeley, " Black Poetry; II Sister Mary Conroy , Dept. of English , Youngstown U., "Poetry of Claude McKay ;" and Raymond Smith of the American Studies Program, Yale U., "The Poetry of Langston Hughes. II Other lecturers include Jean Yellin of English Dept., Pace College, N.Y ., " Research Sources for the Harlem Renais ance ;" Da vid Driskell, chairman of the art dept , Fisk U., Nashville Tenn ., and Dorothy Porter . librarian at Howard U., WaShington , D. C. U. or I. lecturers include Charles Davis, professor of English, Jeanette Carter , professor of anthropoiogy, and Aaron Douglas, who returned to the university 's art department from Fisk University. No Publication The Daily Iowan will not publish from Friday, August 7 to Tuesday, August 25. Legislator. Student ' Talks Planned for Iowa Colleges DES MOINE IA'I - A group of eight legislators is prepanng to head Cor [owa's college campuses to find out what students think and what's bother· mg them. Tbe four. enators and four state repre· sentatlves are members of a special legislative committee named Thursday to try to bridge the gap between persons on the and those In the legisla· tlve chambers "It Is "s.ntial for .ff.ctivi communi· cltion 10 exist b.tween stat. gov.rnment and oHiclels Ind college students In ordtr to Insure knowledge.blt action by both legislat on and slud'n ls ." said Speaker of the House William H. Harbor (R.Henderson ). Harbor and Lt. Gov . Roger W. Jepsen. pre ident o[ the Senate, announced the naming o[ the committee at 8 news con· ference Thursday. Jepsen said the committee will try "to stimutate greater Intere t, involve· ment and understanding of our sys· tem of government by bringing stu· dents and legislators together in pro· ductive dialogue ," To thaI end. Jtpsen Slid, the com· mittel will begin prtparill9 for a "It. govtrnment workshop which will bring studenll from all the sl.te·, cDlIl9es and univtrsitles together for such I seulon. Equally Important, Jep en said, will be the legislators' contact with students and other members or the academic community in an attempt to under- stand areas oC mutual concern to stu· dents and lawmakers - academic freedom and campus unrest, for ex· ample . "The committee will try to open up Witness Says Seaie Ordered Panther Murder NEW HAVEN, Conn. IA'I - Alex Rack· ley was shot to death 14 months ago on orders from Black Panther national leaders including chairman Bobby G. Seale, according to the man who said he gave the final execution order. George Sams Jr ., 24, who has pleaded g uilty to second-degree murder in con· nection with the death of Rackley , a New York City Panther . took the stand for the prosecution Thursday in the 14th da y of the kidnaping tri al of Lonnie Mc· Lucas. Sams, of Detroit, faces a life se ntence for his guilty plea. He said members of the Panther centrai committee based in Oakland. Calif. , believed that Rackley had informed on 2] fellow party mem- bers in connection with an alleged bomb· ing plot in January llI69 in New York City. Rackley was tortured with scalding water at Panther headquarters In New Haven in May 1969 until he told what he knew, Sams added . Sams was allowed to testify despite objections by the defense that he was once "a dangerou s mental defeclive ." Sams repeated testimony he had given during a pretrial hearing in March that w hil e Seale was here May 19 to speak at Yale University be went to see Rackley . With Sams and four others present in the room where Rackley was being held , Sams said, Seale told them : " What do you do with a pig? A pig is a pig . You kill • pig. Do away with bim .• ," .... channel of communication with all people concerned with higher educa· tion in Iowa," Jep en aid . "We're concerned with getting students to com· munlcate , to open the door ." Jtpsen end Hlrbor both said th.y hoped commillH members would g.t .round to Campusts acrOIl the state to talk with concerned IndividuII. "nd groups In an attempt to understand their problems. The olficia Is described the special commltlet' a " le8islative liaison , Ii ten· ing post and clearing house ... whIch will encourage Cree elCchange of ideas. and ugge lions Lo the end that Iowa will contlnue to provide the best educa· tional opportunities in the nation ." They said the committee would also consult with the State Board of Regents, the governing body for Iowa's three tax· supported universities. about possible new legislation which might help the uni· versities deal with their problems, in· cluding campus unrest. Senator on the committee are Repub- licans Arthur Neu of Carroll, chairman; S. J. Brownless of Emmet burg; Edward E. Nicholson of Davenport; and Demo- cral Eugene M. Hill of Newlon. tate repre entatives on the committee are Republican Harold O. Fischer of Wellsburg. Dale L. Tieden oE Elkader and Chari s H. Pelton of Clinton, and Democrat Vernon N. Bennett of Des Moines. Whew! Pentagon Says No Dralt Above No. 19 5 WASHINGTON 1 .\'1 - For some 850, 000 men, the "agony of suspense" ended Thursday with an an· nouncemenl that lottery number t95 will probably be the highest reached In 1970. That announcement told men who drew higher numbers in the lollery of last Dec . 1 that they are probably safe from the draft - not oniy this year but perhaps [or tbe rest of their lives - unless some unpredictable emergency forces a massive increase in military manpower n eeds. Men with numbers lower than 195 probably will be tapped to fill Penta. gon calls for an additional 39, 000 men in the closing months of this year. Iowa Selective Service Director Glenn R. Bowles said the 195 ceiling was possible because of the "decreas· ing size 01 monthly draft calls, reo duc tion in occupational def erments and the number of college graduates entering into Ctass I·A manpower pool ," which has made a large num· Peace ber or men with lower lottery num· bers available for induction. Until this year, men were drafted on an oldest-first basis and were ex· posed to the draft for seven years from age 19 to 26. Congress approved the change , and ixon officially ordered it last Nov. 26. The new drafl lottery - the first one since World War II - took place last Dec. 1, assigning numbers from 1 to 366 to all men then between the ages of 19 and 26. Those men became the draft pool of 1970. 11 was estimated some SOIl,OOO of them would be l ·A or available for service at the start of the year, to be joined by another 350,000 - mostly co llege students - becoming I·A duro ing the year . A brand new group of men, those who turned 19 during 1970, will face lhe draft in 1971. They were given lottery numbers 01 their own In a ep· arate d rawing held last July 1. A fortst of hands glvill9 tIM plae. sign grtlfs tIM introduction Df a prate" sinV' tr Thursd"y It N.w York'. She. Slad· lum III an "tlmlltd 20.000 people tumed out .... tho afto..-n se"ion of • 12·hour peKl-rock feltl..,,,1 It tho Itadlvm, - AP Wirephoto

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Page 1: Iniuriction Testimony: More Protests Falldailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-07.pdf · 07-08-1970  · University Sunday lor the start of tbe second annual Institute for Afro-Ameri

,

R

to ClSlurt

·Seltzer Tablets 1.16

VER

Earrings

Iniuriction Testimony: More Protests • Fall

ate and local law enforcement of· fKt,ds testified over objections [rom de-

• len. attorneys Thursday in a district toUrt injunction hearing that informa· tion they have leads them to believe that di turbances even more severe than those in May will hit the University ollowa thi fall .

"There's no que tion in my mind there'l1 be something going again,' said Iowa State Highway Patrol Capt. ~yle Dickinson in predicting more Iowa City disorder in the [all .

The testimony came out in tIM second ~ay of • h •• rill9 on the status of " tem· porary injunction illued on beh"lf of the city of low. City on M.y , to curb ob· struction, disruption, d"tnlctlon of pr0-

perty .n4 Incitement to dilorder relat· ing to the demonstrations that pnctlcal.

, Iy shul down the univerllty In earlv ~y.

Judge Harold D Vietor presided over • the hearing and will determine whether l the injunction Is to be modified. abolish·

ed or made permanent, as City Atty.

Partly Cloudy Highs Friday 90s west to 80s UII .

• Partly cloudy with lillie lemperatur. chlnge Friday night with ch.nc. of shoWirs conlinuing 'ISt hllf. Lows '" ill the 70s to 60s .. st .

Jay Honohan i a king. Dickin on, who was in charge of near·

Iy 100 patrolmen and city police '4ho were ca lied up to deal with the May dis· orders, also said the group that demon· strated in the pring was "bent on going against the system" and \liould continue to "find something to fight in the estab­lishment."

Kingsley Clarke Jr. .nd Kelly Smith of H.wlcoyt Area Lf9al Services stepped in ThursdilY at the request of th_ HilwIc· eye Area low. Civil Liberti., Union to reprtsenl the 22 n.med d.fendilnll on the injuncti .... , three of whom - Deborah Iilyer. A3. lowil City, Roland Schemb~ri. Iowa City. ,nd Sam 510 ... G. Grime. -w.re pr.sent II the helring.

During Clarke'S cro. -examinatlon, Dickinson aill the demonstrators were prImarily youthful, "between 18 and 20," and , to his knowledge, unarmed

Also on the stand for the city were Iowa City Police Chief Patrick McCar· ney : p~lice detective Ronald Evans: and police officers Robert Vevera, William

Cook and Donald Hogan. McCarn.y elicited looks of surprise

fram the defendants Ind the half.t.n John"n County Courtroom lpect"ton wh.n he t'stlfied that orlll '.porn from Informants of the low. Bur •• u Df Criminal Invtlligltion (BCI) have led him 10 believe that bec.u5t of diuidenh the "University of low. will be closed .fI.r the ncond w"k IfI.r it opens" in the fall.

McCarney defined dL idents as "pro­fes ional troublemakers."

EI'ens said information he has gather· ed from the Bel and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, along with rumors that fhe fall disturbances will be "SO times worse" than tho e in the spring, have led him to a similar conclusion.

EVins II" testifttd th.t "Loon, Dur· him Will there" It the burning Df I

st.ck of Oally Iowan newspapers on the unlvtrsity "tntacrt" M.y IS in prot.lt of the flrll1V of Durh.m III editor of tIM DI on May 14.

Durham is the presently the DI editor. 'early all the law officers questioned

t tified that the number 01 May demon· Ira tors ran as high as 5,000.

E".ns also testified that the ICI 11M informantl within twe Df the ""anill' lions restrained by the Inlundi .... - Stu. denls for a D.mocr.tlc Society end the Conspirlcy.

It was during the testimony of Hogan Smith thai raised his objection to the plaintif's evidence, saying It was 'con· piritorial and suppressive in nature,"

that it "implies guiJl by innuendo to tM persons named on the plaintif's inJunc­tion without due process and with com· ptete disregard for constitutional rights," and further It creates a "chUllng effect on Iree speech" by "tainting normally free acts" by aSSOCiating them with "patently illegal acts."

VIetor indicated he would take the ob­Jection into consideration and allowed the testimony to continue.

I n further testimony by the city' 8 wit.

n es, Richard Gibson, university direc­tor of facilitie and planning, said that only one of the alm t dail rallies held between May 5 and May 9 had any sort authorization

Howard J . Ehrlich, professor of socio­logy, said in testimony lor the deven.~ that there will probably be more of these "illegal" rallie in the faU.

"To the be I of my knowledge there is no organized plot to close down the uni· versity." Ehrlich aid. But he emphasiz­ed that if more than rallies do occur In the Call. it will be largely because the city and it police have overreacted 10 ~monstratlons and the university has "completely Ignored" the demands that students put forth in the spring.

Ehrlich, who specializes In the field of collective behavior, said that the demo onstrations began as a result of the U.S. invuJon of Cambodia and the student shootings, especially at Kent State. But he saId the incorporation in the students Ust o[ demands of • demand for justice

In the Iowa City police department Indl· cated that tbe local authoritles had made themselves a target for student unrest

SchomNri. Bay.r and Sloss all took the Itand to "stffy thlt they hMl no plans " furth.r partlcipa" in Illegal ,ctl..,itl ...

During the testimony Vietor on a number 01 occasions asked whether charges has been brought against those who allegedly participated in unlawful rallies or paraded without permits. The response was nearly always negative.

Vietor indicated at the close 01 testi· mony that his decision may hinge on that consideration because he questioned whether the district court should enforce rules tbat the univenity and the city wefe not enforcing.

Final testimony, if any, will conclude the hearing beginning at • a.m. today. Vietor told the attorneys that written arguments and briefs on the case were due Aug. 27, and a decision would be banded down before the beginning of the university', fall semester.

•• tabU,h.. I,. 1161 Iowa City, _.w .. S2~ - 'rl.ay, August " I.'. ,. e ..... copy

Focelifting

Workmen repair Ind restore loints between n.ti"e stona ... part of a complete f.eelifting for Old CapitDI. The complete job will Include Slndblasling the exterior. redoing III loinls, repairing the bullt·ifl gutt.rs end eaves. repair of tIM .. st and Wilt .ntrlnce steps, Ind I silicont wlterproofing of the Ixterior. Th. work is be· ing done by m.n from th. unlvtrslty Ind from I Cedar IhDld. building firm.

- Pholo by Dllna Hype •.

Needs Nixon Signature-

'Congress OKs Postal Bill WASHINGTON 1.4'1- Creation of an in·

dependent new u.s. Postal Service de· signed to end political and mechanicai

. troubles of the mails passed Congress Thursday and went to President Nixon.

The bili turning the $7·billlon Post Of· nce system over to the new corporate· like federal agency - and boosting mail·

1 men's pay 8 per cent - passed the Ilouse 339 to 29.

Backers called it monumental reform and House Republican Leader Gerald R.

, Ford said it may go down as "one of tht finest achievements" of the 91st Con· gress.

But Rep. Wayne Hays (D·Ohio) said backers will eat their words one day. Rep. H. R. Gross (R·lowa) predicted "the wrath of American taxpayers 'will rise and. make future Congresses put the pieces back together."

The most sweeping reform In the post· al system's 81·year history, the bill is to take control of the mails from S35 con·

,gressmen and a politic a l1y appointed postmaster general and turn them over

,Vacation' Hours For University

The Main Library will be open starl· ing today through Sept. 13 from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays; 1:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays, and from ' 7:30

, a.m. to 10 p.m., Mondays through Fri· days. The library will be closed Sept. 6-7 during the Labor Day weekend.

Starling Monday and extending through Sept. 4, lhe Union's general bdilding will be open from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, and the State Room from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m., Mondays through Fridays. The Recreation Area and bus· iness offices will operate Crom 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. The Iowa House will be open continuo ously throughout the period, including Labor Day, when the rest of the build­ing will be closed.

The Museum of Art will keep the same schedule during the interim per. iod-I p.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturdays,. and 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday ••

to independent, profe ional manage· ment.

It also provides for modernization, au· thorizing the new ervice to sell up to $10 billion in bonds, to end tieups like the massive postal breakdown in Chi cago five years ago.

The new system has a year to go into operation but can go to work on a rate increase immediately and is likely to boost the 6-cent letter tamp to 8 cents by next spring or summer.

The administration wanted to wipe out postal deficits up to $2 billion a year and put the mails on a setr·paying basis, but the bill provides for 10 per cent sub­sidies from Congress - almost $800 million a year through 1979.

The subsidies, largely to assure rural areas the same service as cities even

though they cannot pay their own way, would then be phased down to 5 per cent by 1984 when a decision wUl be made on whether to discontinue them.

The new postal service will be under an l1·man board 01 governors and day· to-day management under a permanent postmaster general.

Mail rates - which except (or the sub. sidy are to cover all operatlng costs -will be et by an independent five· man Postal Rate Commission.

The commission must hold publlc hear· ings, its rate increases can be chal. lenged in the courts, and they can be overriden by the cost-<:onscious postal governors only by majority vote.

UI/s Second Afro-American Institute To Study The Harlem Renaissance More than 125 educators from all sec·

tions o[ the country will gather at the University Sunday lor the start of tbe second annual Institute for Afro-Ameri­can Studies. The Institute which begins Monday will last through Aug. 21.

One of the few programs of Its type, the Institute brings together college teachers who will conduct at least one Afro·American course during the 1971).71 academic year and offers them the op­portunity to gain Curther understanding of the culture of black America.

Organized by professor Robert Corri· gan executi ve secretary of the U. of 1. Afro·American Studies Program, tbe lwo-week meeting features noted lectur· ers from various colleges and univer· sities speaking on subjects connected to the theme, "The Harlem Renaissance."

The I nstitute's keynote address will . be delivered Sunday night by Ara Bon·

temps of Yale University , who partici' pated in the "Renaissance" during the 1920's. A novelist, some of his best known books include, "Story of the Negro," "100 Years of Negro Freedom," and "American Negro Poetry."

Other speakers and their topics are t. J. Saunders Reddillg of Cornell Univer-

sity, "The Harlem Renaissance;" Sara Web ter Fabio, of the Black Studies Program, U. of Calif.. Berkeley, "Black Poetry; II Sister Mary Conroy, Dept. of English, Youngstown U., "Poetry of Claude McKay;" and Raymond Smith of the American Studies Program, Yale U., "The Poetry of Langston Hughes. II

Other lecturers include Jean Yellin of English Dept., Pace College, N.Y., "Research Sources for the Harlem Renais ance ;" David Driskell, chairman of the art dept, Fisk U., Nashville Tenn., and Dorothy Porter. librarian at Howard U., WaShington, D.C.

U. or I. lecturers include Charles Davis, professor of English, Jeanette Carter, professor of anthropoiogy, and Aaron Douglas, who ~as returned to the university's art department from Fisk University.

No Publication The Daily Iowan will not publish from

Friday, August 7 to Tuesday, August 25.

Legislator. Student ' Talks Planned for Iowa Colleges DES MOINE IA'I - A group of eight

~tate legislators is prepanng to head Cor [owa's college campuses to find out what students think and what's bother· mg them.

Tbe four. enators and four state repre· sentatlves are members of a special legislative committee named Thursday to try to bridge the gap between persons on the ~ampus and those In the legisla· tlve chambers

"It Is "s.ntial for .ff.ctivi communi· cltion 10 exist b.tween stat. gov.rnment and oHiclels Ind college students In ordtr to Insure knowledge.blt action by both legislaton and slud'nls." said Speaker of the House William H. Harbor (R.Henderson ).

Harbor and Lt. Gov. Roger W. Jepsen. pre ident o[ the Senate, announced the naming o[ the committee at 8 news con· ference Thursday.

Jepsen said the committee will try "to stimutate greater Intere t, involve· ment and understanding of our sys· tem of government by bringing stu· dents and legislators together in pro· ductive dialogue,"

To thaI end. Jtpsen Slid, the com· mittel will begin prtparill9 for a "It. govtrnment workshop which will bring studenll from all the sl.te·, cDlIl9es and univtrsitles together for such I

seulon. Equally Important, Jep en said, will

be the legislators' contact with students and other members or the academic community in an attempt to under­stand areas oC mutual concern to stu· dents and lawmakers - academic freedom and campus unrest, for ex· ample.

"The committee will try to open up

Witness Says Seaie Ordered Panther Murder

NEW HAVEN, Conn. IA'I - Alex Rack· ley was shot to death 14 months ago on orders from Black Panther national leaders including chairman Bobby G. Seale, according to the man who said he gave the final execution order.

George Sams Jr., 24, who has pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in con· nection with the death of Rackley, a New York City Panther. took the stand for the prosecution Thursday in the 14th day of the kidnaping trial of Lonnie Mc· Lucas.

Sams, of Detroit, faces a life sentence for his guilty plea. He said members of the Panther centrai committee based in Oakland. Calif. , believed that Rackley had informed on 2] fellow party mem­bers in connection with an alleged bomb· ing plot in January llI69 in New York City.

Rackley was tortured with scalding water at Panther headquarters In New Haven in May 1969 until he told what he knew, Sams added.

Sams was allowed to testify despite objections by the defense that he was once "a dangerous mental defeclive."

Sams repeated testimony he had given during a pretrial hearing in March that while Seale was here May 19 to speak at Yale University be went to see Rackley.

With Sams and four others present in the room where Rackley was being held, Sams said, Seale told them: "What do you do with a pig? A pig is a pig. You kill • pig. Do away with bim .• ," ....

channel of communication with all people concerned with higher educa· tion in Iowa," Jep en aid . "We're concerned with getting students to com· munlcate, to open the door ."

Jtpsen end Hlrbor both said th.y hoped commillH members would g.t .round to Campusts acrOIl the state to talk with concerned IndividuII. "nd groups In an attempt to understand their problems.

The olficia Is described the special commltlet' a "le8islative liaison, Ii ten· ing post and clearing house ... whIch will encourage Cree elCchange of ideas. and ugge lions Lo the end that Iowa will contlnue to provide the best educa· tional opportunities in the nation."

They said the committee would also consult with the State Board of Regents, the governing body for Iowa's three tax· supported universities. about possible new legislation which might help the uni· versities deal with their problems, in· cluding campus unrest.

Senator on the committee are Repub­licans Arthur Neu of Carroll, chairman; S. J. Brownless of Emmet burg; Edward E. Nicholson of Davenport; and Demo­cral Eugene M. Hill of Newlon.

tate repre entatives on the committee are Republican Harold O. Fischer of Wellsburg. Dale L. Tieden oE Elkader and Chari s H. Pelton of Clinton, and Democrat Vernon N. Bennett of Des Moines.

Whew! Pentagon Says No Dralt Above No. 19 5

WASHINGTON 1.\'1 - For some 850, 000 draft~ligible men, the "agony of suspense" ended Thursday with an an· nouncemenl that lottery number t95 will probably be the highest reached In 1970.

That announcement told men who drew higher numbers in the lollery of last Dec. 1 that they are probably safe from the draft - not oniy this year but perhaps [or tbe rest of their lives - unless some unpredictable emergency forces a massive increase in military manpower needs.

Men with numbers lower than 195 probably will be tapped to fill Penta. gon calls for an additional 39,000 men in the closing months of this year.

Iowa Selective Service Director Glenn R. Bowles said the 195 ceiling was possible because of the "decreas· ing size 01 monthly draft calls, reo duction in occupational deferments and the number of college graduates entering into Ctass I·A manpower pool," which has made a large num·

Peace

ber or men with lower lottery num· bers available for induction.

Until this year, men were drafted on an oldest-first basis and were ex· posed to the draft for seven years from age 19 to 26.

Congress approved the change, and ixon officially ordered it last Nov.

26. The new drafl lottery - the first one since World War II - took place last Dec. 1, assigning numbers from 1 to 366 to all men then between the ages of 19 and 26.

Those men became the draft pool of 1970.

11 was estimated some SOIl,OOO of them would be l·A or available for service at the start of the year, to be joined by another 350,000 - mostly college students - becoming I·A duro ing the year.

A brand new group of men, those who turned 19 during 1970, will face lhe draft in 1971. They were given lottery numbers 01 their own In a ep· arate drawing held last July 1.

A fortst of hands glvill9 tIM plae. sign grtlfs tIM introduction Df a prate" sinV' tr Thursd"y It N.w York'. She. Slad· lum III an "tlmlltd 20.000 people tumed out .... tho afto..-n se"ion of • 12·hour peKl-rock feltl..,,,1 It tho Itadlvm, - AP Wirephoto

Page 2: Iniuriction Testimony: More Protests Falldailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-07.pdf · 07-08-1970  · University Sunday lor the start of tbe second annual Institute for Afro-Ameri

-

Soledad in Spanish: 'solitude' 'me- 'Dally Iowan

OPINIONS ;ROM LIBERATION News Servici Soledad, n.: Solitude, loniineBs .... a

lonely place, a desert. -Valasquer. Spanish English Diction­ary

If we can reach each other t!/Youg" all this: fences, fear. concrete, steel barbed wire, gum - then history will commend us for a great victory ICon.

-George Jackson, a Soledlld Brotller SALINAS, Calif. - The Soledad

Brothers-George Jackson, Fleeta Drumgo, and John Clutchette - three black men on Irial for murdering a guard at California's Soledad State Prison - found themselves out on a tier in front of their cells along with "Snuffy" Smith, a white inmate facing prosecution for an earlier attempt to wrest keys from a guard In order to attack the three.

They were surprised, because there is an ironclad rule at Soledad that no more than three prisoners can be out on a tier at a time. Guards lurked in the corners as whIte Inmates called out "Get that n'gg r!"

George and Snuffy approached one another, reached out. .. and shook hands.

Exactly the thing thal all the hell In Soledad is designed to prevent -one human gesture between men whom the authorities have decided before­hand shall hate one another.

lnuffy and fOUT others - three whites and one Chicano - are facing charges of assault or a guard to get his keys. The pri on-keepers said the five were Nazi and wanted to murder George, Fleeta and John for killing the guard in January. or maybe ju t for being bLack and Marxist. Given the Intense race hatred that the guards stir up among the blacks. browns and whites imprisoned at Soledad, Lhe story had a certain plausibllily.

Bul George Jackson lold hIs lawyers It wasn't true and ask d them to help defend his rive would - be assassins." When the group appeared In court on July 1 to stand trial, two of the Sole­dad Brothers' lawyers and over fifty supporters from the defense commit­tee appeared with them.

"I came up here nights with a piece of bread in my back pocket," !aid one man who was among the fir t to arrive. "I worked all nIght and lefl al day­break."

(A few weeks before, these same Jaw­yers had forced Judge Anthony Brazil to admit that Monterey County couldn't give the Soledad three a fair trLal and to grant a change o( venue to San Fran­cisco.)

Judge Brazil paled, quickly granted a continuance of the case for four weeks, and ned the courtroom slamming the door to his chambers behind him. The court reporter refu!ed to perform with­out his judge, and a lawyer's hal[-com­pleted sentence dangled in the air.

But the most important point had already been made. The four prLsoners (one of the wblte prisoners had been ruled insane and sent to Vacaville for treatment) walked Into a crowded courtroom pa t a line of friendly face . A young black woman with a bu~hy na­tural walked up to one and shook his hand. "I'm Penny Jackson. George's sister," he said_ The prisoner smiled l'roadly. offered his prison-pale hand, and said "Right on!"

O-wing, the maximum security ward of Soledad, Is the worst part or I prison. described by its Inmates as another Dachau Locked Into tiny, cold cells with only bars on one side and In open window lelting in fog and cold air on the other, the prisoners shiver at nlghl and roa I during the day. Guards pass by the cells, spilting in at black pri on­erSt cursing them, race-baiting. They encourage whiLe and Chicano prisoners to do the same. "Twenty-four hours a day, in hilts, the lou lest of taunts from the language of racist Amerlka," George Jackson calls it.

Inmates report numerous incidents oC black prisoners being set upon by whites with hand· made knives, or just beaten up by a sang of other prisoners. Some­times this Is a way to get rid of bolh. More orten, the whites go free . The cursing from behind cell doors continues all day, every day. a constant drone which every once In a while cau e a black man to break down, screaming or la. hing oul at his persecutors. Then the pri~on guards have won.

Once a man is locked up in jall, it Is u ually pretty easy for experienced guards to see Ihat he stays there. Race­baiting, pitting. shoving finally induce the prisoncr to react. Once he does, once he la hes out at the guard. they have him for life. A man who misbehaves in prison isn't eUgible for parole. A man who has a sentence \lith a maximum of life faces the gas chamber if he reacts.

"A few days after my arrival ." one prisoner told the Soledad Brothers' law­yers, "an inmate by the name of C.C. was deliberately put in an exerei e group with seven non-black inmates and he was deliberately and wantonly set upon and stabbed to death by three of those seven inmates while prison offici­als stood by Indifferently and watched.

"Three other black inmates and my­sel£ were forced to stand helplessly at our doors. locked in our cells, and watch it, houting at the guards to break it up. but they stood by with tear gas guns And watched until C.C. fell Into a puddle o( his own blood. Then they shot tear gas.

"They didn't even take the knives from them," the prisoner continued, "Later they went to court and lied ror the Inmates who murdered C.C. by say­ing thal he attacked them with an ink pen and they overpowered him and took the pen away and killed him with it."

When black pri oners prote t their (reatm nt al the hands of the guards, they are almost always put in isolation In the "strip celis." Almost all the men of "maximum eeurity" O-wing have pent lime in one of these six-by-eighl­

root metal cages. The front wali or each cage is steel bars covered with mesh_

A solid wall along the corridor kecps light out from that side: the tiny win­dows in each cell wcre covered with a metal flap that Is always closed, kecping the prisoners in near-total darkness.

There is no furniture in the cells. and most have only a h(lle in the floor for a toilet. Toilet racilitic in the trip cells can only be nu~h d from the outside by a guard. They are usually left un flushed for prolonged periods of Hmc. The cages are almost nel'er cleaned unless a medi­cal In pe=tion force it.

The naked pri~oncr6 krpt In theRe cages are glvcn no watcr to wash with, parsely I'alloned toilet paper, no soap

or faeiblles to wash or brush their teeth. Body filth piles up. There is no heat in the cages.

Twenty-nine days Is the average atay In a strip cell. Twenty-nine days without light, clothes, a blanket, or cleaning fac­ilities. That's for talking back to a guard or les At his own discrellon the lowest­level guard can send a man to the strip cell for up to 60 days .

In the middle of January 1970, a group of seven black and eight white prisoners from Soledad's O-wing - after months of vicious attempls by the guards to stir up hatred between whites, blacks and Chicanos - were released for the first time into a prison "exerd e yard." Then. as white prisoners watched with approval, and other blacks looked on helplessly from their cells, the white tower-guard overlooking the prison yard aimed hls gun and fired at tbe ground. Three black men died.

Three days later. the coroner's Jury ruled the deaths were "justifiable homi­cide." The guard and the while prison­ers agreed there had been a gang fight between white and black pri oners and the guard f.hot to break it up.

On the fourth day a white guard was found dead in Y-wing.

The prison officials picked George Jack. on, l"lccta Drumgo, and John Clutchett for the gas chamber. Some outside supporters think these three brothers murdered the prison guard to deal justice in a system that refu ed to do so. Some people think these three brothers didn't do it at all, but were chosen as scapegoats because the prison had reason for wanting to gel rid or them. •

In either case the law is out to get them. For month their lawyers were rerused the right to question prison rs or In pect the lte of the killing. Meanwhile, Y­wing has been structurally altered be­yond recognition, and key wllnes es have been cattered to rar-flung prisons throughout California.

PAGI2 FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1f7D IOWA CITY, IOWA

'v~lIlhe, ... .............. "11Ik Huh "'"1111'" ,"" ..... , . . . ... .. .. . Me,., Klu,"" ._111' .. _.. .. .. .. .. ... L .. ". Dv,lIam MI""I", I_Iter • .. ....... .. . A",., Chi,..,," ".WI U'I" . , .... .. .. , .... ...... ", (leu" C~ I~to' .... .... .. ... I,M Clm, .. ,",101 ,." • .,.., .. .. .. ... . MIIyl" Mel .. .""" "'I" .. .. . .. .. .... J.~ 1 •• '111 PI"t ""It IIIlto, ................ e.,., Inlten

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Cause and effect COMMENn ON THI DISTU •• ANCE CURIANCE INJUNCTION HEARINGS: I recognize that ~ effect.. of such farcical goings-on are of great and imme­

diate consequence to stiJdenlJ and others involved, but I ran't help chuckling a bit at the Ight of a ociety trying a de perately to divcrt attention from the problem It generates to the effe<.is those problems create.

Prote&tJ are jmt that: EFFECl'S which have been prompted by causes. Good old T dentist Mr. Wizard told me about cause and effect years ago.

What do au folk who hold the power expect would happen if the injunctiOll were made pernlanent? The students would all crawl back 10 their dorm rooms and read ational Review? The blacks and indian would decide freedom isn't that gr~al, anyway? The women would return to their kitchens and coo content­Iy while men take care o{ the importam thing'? The ChIcanos would decide they don't need jobs and food after all? The poor whites would decide they don't de­erve an equal share of what they produce?

omehow I doubt that you really believe tho e things and that's what mak it . 0 funny sad to watch you trying to take the people's convictions and unIty and needs and legislate them away.

With the injunction you can jail individuals but all the laws in the world can't stop th government. - Debbie Romine

A New Breed of 'American Veteran silent ghO$ts - phantoms he wlshel III Ignore but cannot. No small wonder.

The more mature Ihe G.1. become. bt this situation, ttle more he realizes !ttlt ' the prime cause for what he sees is lhe atmosphere of war; the waste, de8'~ lion and fear created by mll1tary action and organizations which have poisoned his "trip abroad" In "service" to hh country .

'WnL. HI THIRE. IIG MOUTH •• ,!'

And this Is the pro. cution of men with a very definite political Identity. Take George Jackson, [or example - a magnetic. tender man who knew how to reach out to five non-black Inmates whom he had been told tried to kill him, and forged a comradeship and aware­n~$S of who the real enemy Is. He des­t'ribes himself as .. a dirty, a real dirty red."

One of th more subtle but potent fore­I!A for peace Ls the changed altitude to­wards war of mOTe thlll a million veter­ans who have returned from fighting In Vietnam. No more Is the cry heard level­ed at anll-war demonstrallons of "chIck­en" and "coward" for, more than not, the demonstrator has seen the war first hand wblle the counter-prote tor Is sun wallowing In the heroics of the American myth about the gloriousness of waf.

Traditionally, returning IOldiers have been greeted by hero-welcoming cere­monies. Today's G. I,'. are merely re­turned and dumped back Into the fetding pot from which they were abruptly pull­ed several dozen months ago - Indeed the G. 1.'8 themselves desire no such homecomIng. Unlike their World War I (The War To End All WafS ) and World War Il ITo Make The World Safe For Democracy) counterparts loday'. veter­ans do not wish to hear anything more about this war nor does he want to talk about it - unless he dep10nslrates again t it.

This distrust and abhorrence of war has b orne more pronounced by rat 1ft this war than any other - all1tbugh lhut Is a long American history of detiaDCt to war and the draft - especially 8S the G.r. realizes that this connicl Is political and not military In nature and could have been avoided-.

,

Guerrilla Infighting! Flares in Mideast By THE ASSOCIATED PRiSS Guerrilla source said the lat -

Another bloody clash erupted est outbl'eak flared at dawn between guerrilla groups In Jar- I Th~rsday be~w~n Arab Pales­dan Thursday. with one com- tllltan OrganizatIOn (APO) com­mando killed and seven wound- I mandos and members of the edt as disputes raged on in (he ' ropular Front for the Libera- 1

Arab world over Egypt's ac- lion of Palestine (PLF'P). The cep' ance of the U.S. Middle APO supports Egypt's Pre. ident East peace plan. Gamal Abdel Nasser and his ap-

The clash. third In three days, proval 01 the U.S. plan .. The prompted an emergency meet- PLFP has bitterly opposed It. inl{ nC Ihe over-all command of Israeli planes crossed two tbe Palestinian guerrillas in an fronts Thursday, hitting Jorda­effort to stop the fighting before nian army targets and striking it get.s ouL of control. at Egyptian military objectives

After the meeting a spokes- I along the l03-mile Suez Canal , man said the committee decld- the Tel Aviv miUtary command ed to set up an Inquiry group announced . ~e Jordan str!ke that wlll report back in four I was in reprISal [or Jordaman days. . army mortar attacks on Israeli

The fi~htlng broke out 85 IS- I positions near EI Hamma, four rael and the Arab states were mUes southeast of the Sea of rep r' ed at odds as to the level G~lIIee, the Israeli spokesman upon which the peace negotia- saId. Hans ~hould be held. G K' b II

The U.S. plan calls for a II().. 80rg8 1m a dav c~a~e-fire and Indirect Is- ' W' , P' raeU-Arab negotiations under Ins In rlmary U . au pices. I rael.Egypt I George Kimball III, lormerly and Jordan have accepted the I of Iowa City, won the Democra­plan. Iraq, Syria and Algeria lic primary for sheriff in John­oppose II. The Palestinian guer- son County, Kansas. The prLn­rillas have been split on the pro- cipsl cily in Johnson County Is posals from the start, with the Lawrence, where two students main groups vowing Lo scutlle were killed recently In campus any peace elforts. disturbances.

Secretary-General U Thant Kimball, a leader in the Law-has received a go-ahead from rence Liberation Front, ran un­the Big Four to revive the indi- opposed on a Yippie platform. rcd Arab-Israeli negotiations Kimball allended the Univer­under the guidance of his spe- sity of Iowa during the rail sem­cial Middle East representative, ester, 1968, and was a member Gunnar V. Jarring. of the Writers' Workshop.

Try Certs

HI didn't ,tart out In prlMn thl' wly. Gtorge WI. Irre,ted whtn he WII 11 y .. r. old for .tcond degrtt burgllry (no WI.pon., no IUIUlt), .nd lIot lin­Itne.d to on. y •• r 10 11ft when he "cop­ptld I pi .. " wllhoul con,ulllnil a IlwYlr. And ten year. hive pallid.

"This Is the lOth y Dr or thIs - actual­ly the 28th. but I was too numh to feel the first 18," he says in anger. Jackson studies, works and writes 21 hours a day in his cell. "TIme seems to be rushing away from mc. In prison men generally sense a 'Iowdown and narrowing in of time llnd space. This 10 years (espe~ially the last few months) has gone from me. lt seems like 10 days. It's been like try­ing to hold walcr in your hands, or qUicksilver in your fingcrs .'

Ten :ears in pl'ison have by force given birth to (I vcry full political under­standing. At this point George Jackson identifies with women's liberation, the truggle 8l!ainst militari~m and fascism,

Vietnamese and the Palestinian Arabs. As the trial of the Soledad Bl'olhers

awaits a courtroom in an Franci co, the three derendants have no illusions liIal their case - not just lheir Immedi­ate case, but their ullimate cause - can be 1I'0n without a life-and-death struggle.

Most 01 the fighting ill dolle withou~ heroics - grim, lonely groups of men, many of them without a right to vote, drink or sign contracts, . caught and t rapped In the strange, hot, restering jun­gle, fighting and suflering casualties from another group Like themselves -only they are at home In their own land, and to Americans, scarely IdentiJiable as friends or foe.

In the midst of this eon fusion , there is always the ever present American dead and wounded, the scattered re­mains of the ·'foe. tI Further the terrible suffering inflicted on Civilians by our weapons fills the veteran's mind with

The Wall SI. Journal, Feb. 24., In re­viewing (he attitudes of returning veter· ans In "Middle America," tells how men coming back from war have alway! ' needed to feel their sacrifices were jus!· ified. But the unpopularity 01 this war makes that attitude impossible, com­ments the WSJ.

The veteran thus is compelled to make his own mora I judgments - someLhin« unpre~edented in American history and thereby is laid the foundation for the second American Revolution in 1976 -the rising up of middle America to Join with the revolution already begun - by blacks when they boarded slave ships 400 years ago, by Chicano's and IndiaN baUling lor their land and fighting W preserve their culture in the face 01 tis­ing American imperialism, by poor whites who are stretching their arms and faces upwards in a demand for dignity and by women who have engaged the enemy long before and who, unfortunale· Iy, will batlle long after this time.

-Bert M.riln

ILaw Enforcement Council Dumps Juvenile Training The absence of five members ' not well enough organized to the program haven't changtd

of the Johnson County Law En- be Implemented this year. since the council first proposed forcement Advisory Council and "The commission has known (the program)," he added. a last minute communications from the starl the cost 01 the The program wa first pl't' breakdown caused the council to program Is one eighth or the sellted to the council by Tony

.. . . I Tral'isono. past directQr' of tilt vote down the CItizenship Tram- cost to the taxpayers of IIlshtu- Eldora training s~hool. ing Program for juvenile delln- tionalization of 8.n adjudged de- l I N b 1969 th ~

. . d do II 'd n ovem er. e cou.-qUl'nls oflgmaJly sponsore by Ilnquent al El ra, Hay ~ S31 • ell ent Hayes and former Ihe t''luncil, according to coun- "Six delinquents from Iowa Hawkeye foolball star Mike cil chairman James Hayes. City were sent to Eldora In 1969 1 Cilek to Boston. to study the •

Hayes explained that the and two so tar In 1970. The coun- p:ogram. Based on Hayes and

In • "tnt remini".nt of a c.rtain genre of horror films, Frlnkfurt Zoo Inspector Htrbtrt Nlubeu.Mr ... ms un.w.re of hi. Imptlncllng fat,. Actu.lly, the gorili. is behind the thick 111111 of t ... 100' , ntW barl ... Iptl houll. Zoo official. My the tll.1I hi. clrtaln Mv.nt .... , Including the protection of goril-la. - which they cIt.crlbt a. mlld-m_rtd vtgltarl.nl -frem hum.n ,i.ihIrJ and their eli....... -AP Wirephoto

J h Co t C . . cil didn'l take into a=count the Cllek's favorahle recommenda-hOd nson A ~n: drom~lssl~ number of adjudged delinqllen t~ lions concerning the program, ~t ~tn ug. leat Int~ °ISU sent to other institutions like the council has been working to '

mcl. I sCoprop?s~ Of f~ Iowa Boys' lown or the .Boys· Ranch implement the program in Iowa rime mmlSSlon or Ina ap- F Dod "H dd d City prova!. at ort get ayes a e.· . If d b th I "The Citl:enshlp Training The program \VIII be re- ub- I

C · a~rove. I y thee owa Program had to receive the ap- miUed to the law enforcemenl \ n":te II omfmls~hon,. .~m- proval of the Regional Planning council in January. 1971 if II is . men a onldoh~ ebJuvenCI e Pl'do- Commission to be put Into er- not apPl'oved by Sept. I, 1970. gram wou ave een orwar - . ed to Washington, D.C. The fed- fect .and It was approved by eral government would have DennL'! ~ra~, director . of the supplied the $30 ,000 necessary com~lsslon , HaYeli . ~ald, res-for funding the program. pondlnl! to the co~ncl~ S al1ega-

Kennedy, Shriver Case Continued

d · d tion of poor org8nJzallon. The program was estgne to

Pcovide rehabilitation services Hayes said that the Johnson BARNSTABLE, IIlass. IA\ - • for adjudged dellnqu~nts In County Law . Enforcer:nent Ad- Marijuana possession charge! their local community rather visory CommISSion sllil has a against 16 - year - old Kennedy than institutionalizing them in chance to implement the pro- cousins, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. state-maintained facilities, as Is gram if approval I granted by and R. Sargent Shriver III , were done under the i:urrcnt pro- the commission before ~pt. l. continued until September IP71 I

gram. The council Is .ttemptmg to Thursday by a judge who said

H t 'b ted th i chedult I meeting before Sept. he then would d.ismlss the cast ayes at rr u e eommun - I for this purpose hIt bl

cations breakdown to two fae- ' . if the yout s keep out 0 rou e. tors. He said that the countll "I antiCipate no diffic~lty in The judge's action meant I •

felt that the $30,000 cost of the passing the ~rogram WIth aJl ~ere was .no ruling of guilt ~ program was too high in rela- eleven counCil members pre- mnocence III the. cases. He ~Id I tion to the number of persons sent. I think the vote will be the charges agamst the cousillS (0 be treated (:Ie to 10(1) under favoribJe at that time," Hayes would be dismissed September J\ the program, and thlt the coun- laid. 16, 1971, "unless they have dlIfl-cil felt that the proJl'IDI wu "Tbt CODCepU and statistics of culty of some kind."

, ,

wi

Page 3: Iniuriction Testimony: More Protests Falldailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-07.pdf · 07-08-1970  · University Sunday lor the start of tbe second annual Institute for Afro-Ameri

HEARINGS: and U:nm.

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tJ¢ffl"M I NOWI ENDS WED.

THEIR DREAM WAS

JURY PRIZE

WINNER CANNES FILM FESTIVAL

1970

FEATURES AT

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WEEKDAYS 7:30 & 9:45

SAT. & SUN. AT 1:50

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WEEKDAYS 7:15 & 9:30

SAT. & SUN. AT 1140 3:50·5:45·7:45·9:45

MATINEES DAILY

~PEN AT 1:15

FEATURE AT 1:48

3:44·5:40·7:41 ·9:42 • i;_

mPdit NOW - 2nd WEEK

FE .TURE AT

1:41· 3:42· $;36·7;35·9;34

Tl··£ D_ L'" le',,! :'H-!o'.'l. Ci:T, IJwc-r- rl., Au:p'l I, :i. "-r 1J. l

IU.S. Planes Press AdUlhl .~;~j~d~tnU~ , War in Indochina

ENDS SATUIIDAY

DAILY

IOWAN "'1DUl1'I.s fIlSOIIS

IN'\ES STewART HENRY P-ONDA

'THE CHEYENNE SOCIALCWB

- AND-

ROCK JI DSON and

CLA DIA CAH.DINALE make

'll. FINE PAIR"

SA/GO I", - U.S. war· I plane pre. ed a week· long aen· al orfenslve Thur day againsl I Communi t bases and supply line in Cambodia. Laos and along Soulh Vietnam's weslern border.

.nd JIHM, .. HI tMt-. w.. lie

.viNnet the _my hid ,.. "t.bli.htd .ny lit" ump. In the FI.hhMk regl.,. w*'-r. LOST AND POUND WANTID CHILD CAlli

hi. lercet .per.,". I Want Ad Rates WtLL IT LO T - .... all black clulch purN fEIlAU; Junior EducaloD ,Iud.nl &AllYS - 1oI.nl\.'y thr<IU,b Monda, nl.hI. P.nllc~,\' C.n· dedr.. apa rtm.nt. or wUl lhan ".Iday, a,.. L5 Expertlnoed. In ai,on. new ca ualty fig· OM D.y . ...... lse. W.rd lalru JD tard. tonlltt 11__ II.· ""e. Eu), .aWn. alAlln ... !:unlc:t Telr MUO .... ar ... 3IJ.ZU2. U

I ed b Io. U S Co I ... rd • quo Uon ... kid. ~1-815' . "r.nch, P."rso •. 10 .. ·•. &07

Th bj I' h nd IJ"'ed 78 A . k'lled Th~ D • .,. 20c W. d - A ... ~D person I. ' «OIIIP'" off ... I p ...... hool prof.am for UTes re eas y tll'C " m· TM D.y, ..... lk • Word .. , \V ....... - - I HUMPTY DUMPTY Nuraery Sebool

eo ec IVes are to amper rna" merlC81\! I ,- • r LO. T. whit. m.l. kltl.n. Iny child on alrpl'ne D.C.· lo", Cit, day can chUd ... n It comp4I1th" Communi t supply and rein- In combat la~1 ~eek _ lhe fif/h Fiv, D.y. ....•. 23c. word mlrklnp. Call U7-4U' or w· flrl1 Ipl~Dlbe., Will pa bill· ral. . III S. Clpllol 8tnol. Dial

T D 2t W·.... UU. ..7 la:.t • 25~. _ _ ~7 UHIU, H1AR (nrccmcnt moyements along the . I ralght week batlle deaths .,. 'Y' ...... .. e. ""' II 0 8. 2 IIUPONSI1ILI IIrla with \ • Ho Chi Minh trial of eA tern were below 80. an. Month sse • W.rd ---:T---P-:Y~IN-C~ SIRVICIS d., ".ft~OUol"" !!,I.UIo_. _ Iott ~~~~tlt~~~~;Unl.irll~' Lltos. to kecp the Communi. S Minimum Ad 10 Word. _ WANTED Cemal. t •• bare lurnllhed Ka .. key. Court. 331-4704. . .14 n(( ,trlde In the north wh~r A check or u.s. Command fig· I MARY " BUR S _ IYlIln,. 1111111. aplrtment. ~23tO.__ _ "21 (hey ma\, be preparing an or· ure showed a marked decrease PHON E 337-4191 .o .... phln'. olary publ!~ 415 WANTED: porson 10 baird two tata --~W~H~O:-:DO~-=ES:-:IT::?:--lowl lalo B.nk Bulldln. Io17.Z~"I. .,. 1-. al nlson.bla price . I3f. fenslye. and to keep them oul - more than half - of U.S. 1_ _ • ZIf1. H ----... ------of ba.cs O\'errun in Cambodia combat death compared to I ELECTRIC, I ... l l a~ural •. uperl· LIGHT "aulln, - .Iud.nl ral ... b h III I I h h 100 .need, ..... on •• I •. Jan" n ... , 3J1. I Call 337-3~eo or U,",,71 ... o1n". y tea es ast spr ng. t e IIml' seven·monl per tn &472 ' ·1 tAli ROOMS . FOR RENT 9'22

AIr Forct .nd Merlnt n,ht· .r·bombtra strvck .t ter .. " In L... .nd C.mbMl. whl'­B·52 5tr.t.lertr •• H. r.lnteI 1,200 tOllt of .repl .. lv.. ''-'9 \ South Vltln.m'. be,..., with

1969, I APPROVED ROOMS I LEO A "'oIILOS Typln. ~ ... Ir. - AR- T PORTlIAITS -hlldr.n UUI tltdrl ('orbOn ribbon I.· 1r.A "'TIT LL Y lutnl hed doubl...· -"

.. with kllch.n for enlor ",ale Iduill. '.ntU •• ""coII. '.11.1., roR UMMER and fotl \loubl. ~rl.nc"d 33f.I071 IIRC , •• auI'- ".denl. U7 .• 7111. 1310 1211 OU. au up. 33f.OHO. "liAR

ron"". kll.hen prllllo,u. or V. ILtCTRIC 1)~lnl .dIUn,. ex 413. 107 ('HAr" XtllOX Copy. lAllIl'I. I.x loun ••. • J7·:!t3l. ' ·ISRC ~rt.nc'd; .IU 33104147. t.4AJI - form>. ap.dllllla. 101 D.y luUd. -I UNA PPIIOVI;D In,l. roolllJ Cor I ••• "1' .. 1111 I:U;Cl1UC - ahort P'PO", lum "'en. Atro.. Irut Irom .ampu.. n......... . n

p'por 'olm r ...... l.ry. r I llreo.dlUoned wllh eooklll, I. cU· CA H FOil -Our Cit or plrkup .. rvlc •. IlI·WI. ..IIAII Ill ••. 110. II t . Wuhln,toft. Phon, trud. CufTY', Aulo. 103 'th &1 .

137-1041. .. I Cor.h111 •. ~71' t.4AR HOUSE FOR SALE

'l'HlIEE l>edronm ho",. In ""Ir

I L.a •• nd C.mbocll • •

~ II. , .......................... 1.... Allied swpcp have been

At this tllM I.st y"r, AlMrie.n c.mblt duth. _,.. 7,esS. A. ., Aug. 1 this ywr, the dtoth, ,.t.1 3,233, • rt· ntctl.,. .f U.S. tflert. t •• hift the m'itH' bvrftn .f tt.. Vi.I· n.m w.r I. Seuth VI.tn.m· '" fore .. ,

~ .. do"" with Inl,·h.d ,Iug •. 8.'om.nl wllh den I lourlh b.d · room A .um. 5 I , 4r~ lo.n . 1212 HolllWood Blvd . 338·$120 &07

JtRRY )'all. tlt<lrlr 111M T)<ph'l .tvlee. Phon. 1:lf.133(1. .. "'R CONDITIONED. btlullluUy lur· nr ... p!!11 lI.nl.1 .met hy ow

nl h.d room.. rio 10 camru Pruc. ".undry. 113 5. Dubuque. &XPIlRIENCEO l,plal ·· Ih. II. >hot! U8.144t or 3'7·4~. "I lin Phon. 337 ·~. HAR

p.p ..... 35'·3720. , ·l tAR LATE $HOW SAT. ONLY !launched In the norlhern reAch· c nt Sou'h Vlcln~m to try to Although South Vlelnamese

PN!M(IIJHI PK:1URES pr onl' - "reven! Ihe North Vletname e combat dcalhs dropped la . t

ELI WALLACH from ma sin~ (or A drive . but I \leek to 260, :ompared to 325 1ft Wtle contact has been reported . the prevlOu~ week, it marked BOSTO!'! Or rhlladtlrhll Le ... \vANnD m.l~ In "'"re Ipitlnll.

AI'ARTMINTS 'OR ReNT RIDE WANTED

IUMAlEJI tllea renl now lor ulllm.r, tOIIl .... aloo r. ·m with

,·ookl". prl.II ..... DI..,oun .. IIltck't C.alI,hl VW',I. ..liAR 1100101. lor .Itla. Commul\lly kll.

.hen and lounl', wa h.r tnd dt)<.r ItrlllU... Phon. 3S703U1.

.. If Un I the 63rd consecuth'e w-ek !lOY· w .. ktnd Au,. 7. AI", rid. C"'m I hou.. .., 45].11472 ~

liCE HIGH Th II ' d nd rt < "hllldt'lphil 10 Irm~ In 10WI CII) -e a Ie . comma . re~ . ernment battle dealhs have ex- OY Au,. t2 r.n h.lp drt •••• h.rr HOU P; I apollm.nl - 10 mlnul.

eI! no malar ground aClion d d ... ___ f th II d J.a. cail lAona, ~17-41'1 ' ·7 <ommul • . • ISO UP. Pr.r., IIJ11lh . IlOOM lor .1r1J. ommunlly kit . Th sd . h . So h VI cee e u"",,, 0 e n e I .U7UI ~ 1·21 .hon .nd lounll Wub •• and d.y.

T£QlNIC(lOR'A PARAMOU~ PlCTURf ur ay Cit er In ut et· Slates I"£MAl.E roommal. wlnlld lor I or fltlllll\ PMn. 131.5134. , .14I1n nam or Cambodia. Thcy I . RIDER WANTED h.~rM'" sa .. Ula Ip.rlm.nl, 'all.

COMING SUNDAY claimed 52 encmy were killed in The allied command~ report. 3$1·1313. AI~,~~r;~~~E~t b"~;lItl.~~~~:: ONCE UPON A TIME . tt d f' ht' d thllt 1271 North Vietnamese WA"iTtD 1"0 rid.,. 10 I.ot "'n· DOWNTQW n ... ly r.model.d an4 Ufot«4 Dr S.!7..aot, n~lI" ca ere Ig mg. . I I lei. 11 ... ln. Au,. 17 8156-3381 Curnl hid anI bedt1)oml. .I«andl

WANTED: .. win,. .PI~lall'lfII In ... ddlfll I ... nl, lormllA .• Ir U8. H... '·UAR

EXPERll:NCtD 1.7J>11t ~ I;;;;;' IhQrl p.p.r J~3·37IO . 1-14.\8.

KA D tall~rtd hem a11.raUona -tOi l., dru ... Ind "'lrll . Phana

I 1711 UAR IU(.'1'IIIC HAVEII I.p.lr - U.

hour "rvl ••. )1')11" Barber hop. I·IIAR

CYCLES IN THE WEST and Viet Cong oldiers were 1-, Uon.d .• 180 monlllly. 337·4~U or n&. I

AND I Lt. Gen. Mlchul S. D.via. killed last week. a drop of 637

1

DRIVINC 10 Donvfr·80,dder. Coif>- 7011. "'1 MISC. POR SALI ' IIRmots'l'ONPl I7lkc smmbltr. on, who comm.nded U.S . (rom Ihe previo"s week rado. Lnvln, FrldlY, AII~. 7. ONE on TWO le",.I .. I bedtMm 0 aua. or btll olCfr. RIVlrlld.

CHE .." . Orlvln, alt.I,hl Ihrou,h .I.con. ,. 14104201 eVlnln. . .7 troops in C.mbodi. In M.y dillon.d romlorl R.lurn \u,. 23. . rurn"htC!. savUI., IIPI. or 0,'1 . nos, d"kJ. kllch.n IIbl I chll ro. _ • iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiii_iiiiiii ____ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_ .... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOo_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ' 1M I.t • ., fitu,... rlind Ph. 351-39 Ultr S p ,M. 331·3712. " Ilwn mo ... r. lilt Mu al n •. m· IM1 MINI MOtel! . ('III IIt.r 1.30 ." 'OW RtNTtNO 0 - and Iwo ... . au .. , r .M Qultk III, UU8JO 8·7 U.S . cllu.ltl •• In the w.r t. ,- ""~

CORALVILLE - IOWA CITY

CAR SERVICE. HIWAY 6 WEST. DINING ROOM

OPEN DAILY from 7:00 a.m to Midnight

A dlff.r.nt .ummertim. tr.at

"ROOT BEER COOLERS" Also comes in grape, Itmon,

orange and cola flavor ••

• W. al.o have

'M'" lutnl.lt.d or 1I11111,nllhfd I DOUB!.!. "'"I bId . hl,hchllrJ . lild 8 A Llahl,nlnr. t:.I·.lItnt con· 43.212 killed • n d 2I5,4U APARTMENT FOR SALE ,pIWnenl •. HI·11I1 or '31-1201. HI b.b1 rat aUI, 33I-40u. 1-, dillon. 1713 331- 04 88

wovncltd. Stuth VI,tn.m." CVrLON& 4 lubt hfldt ... and foft\ tt70 HO NDA 1$0 L, molorreo • J I ... ts .t.nd .t 111,504 kitted ,1000 now ",III bUl 4-room aPlrl·, It!.MWOOD TERRACE now loa In. pl,l .. hlu.t I¥lltm If" up mo .. old. 337-7110 o. U7-I8 Ia. Ilk

m.nl In' ummll Ap.rlmenls. l .. r· 1"0 btdroom fUlnl.hed aparlm.nl. '"ltl.n I. MUIl,n" anQ COU'lr '1 /or HUb. U .nd 235,2st weuncletl . Th •• 1· ." ROllI) . UHUI '.15 5-2 81h lrell. Coralvlll •• U106eo~ aeo..u .".In •. 13t-2113. .., 11 -" _.. I i 661 ..... 131·11031 IoIIAI< ' III HONOA eo . Low mil ..... In ... c.mm.nu. c. m "", I MUaT ·E1.L: Amp •• 2111 '''taD DC "til .h,po. UlaUl 1".ln, •.

• ntmy •• IIU.ra kill". fARM fOR SALE • ONE OR TWO flmalal, 2 bedrOOIlt Ih. Lin .. 4 Inck .ler a I.pi .t· &.8 IUrlllth.d S .. lUt. sapl.mbtr 01 cord.r. Int.,nl.d tpUk"a. IIIltr ..

OclGher 338·3712. U phone •.• Iand •. lou,h h,Dt' . eoo "70 RED kAWA AKl Mlk~. lIaeel. In CambodJa. the govern., J'iii!sXi);-:-M) err.. I:!O Icr., THREE room furnl hid ,plrtmont, now. 13~ 01 blAI ollfr. 338-5282 al· 1.111 con dillon. 1 " .0. old 337·2076.

ment '$ military spoke man reo Ir:~ 'l~~,,:r ttr; ~~glnr~~is ~ m~J.~ m, downlo\\-n. Inquire 3(12 S. I)u. I.r ~ r. . 1-19 8a ported a battle continued at 132 Irr ... mOdotn homr. 7 mll< buqu.. HZAR BloW ZEN ITH U" I.bl. model 111M YAMAHA YRrlSO. Call 1$1.127. Skoun. 40 miles northeasl oC t roln l o~" ('lty. 337~37 WhltlnK AVAJL.ABl.E no.: I Illd 1 bedroom .D~rl"Jl 0: r::~ o:::n~ 210 . Di."i all.r 5 PM. &07

PI P h I

·nd Kort n.al\o... &07 al,arll".nl: 11M 3 to<!lll apI., lur. )lOTORr.rCLE 51.1 ••• nd orvl .. -

I 100m en . . . I nl,h.d 81.rt ', Ga n,hl Villi.,. 421 GOLT CLUB lull I INa llu.lte f s'li ! Norlon duler. Ounl"lo.

HOUSE FOR RENT 8ro\\>n . LZlAR Pr.ntltr. n ••• r u~d . • 215 or b .. l ... . ... 10' .... ml~'. Th. MOlor. The pokesman. Maj . Am WII:IITWOODoW .... ld •. CQronet ultrl. omr. m~3.( &" I ,·yr .• Cllnlo. U! E Pr.ntl,. S51 ·31100

Rong. saJd the vilal crossroads TWO bfodlo,!m hom. ""h .ar.~. . luxury, ell.clencl.,. l·b~tIOm t· MOYINC - m;lt .. 11. '1.000 81'\1 .... ;.;;;;;iiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii __ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu t . h Id f I k b A.,II.ble ~Ipl I S3B-~IIO~ nr ~ll · bfoll,oom ultc ' 2 bedroom lo"n- .Ir condIUon.r. lola bed. dt .... r . •

I Oil n, e or near y a wee y "'4 .lIItn houlOb .1 bedroom ullu ,nd S bed .I·mohall·. limp,. bOoklfttlVf • que." orth Viet name e and Viet I rOOm I.",nhouoe •. ~·ur"Wt.d Ind u", Ilt b_d , mlo •. 3.11~2114 . H

C t t·ll .· d ' AUTOS·fOREIGN·SPORTS furnlsh.d trom "13. call 338-1038. ong mopS. 5 I remalne In 1-2, N1C'1:: M.dllcrronfln 8te wllh loola enemy hands despite Cambo- Inn TRI MPH !lOll c, 18(10.Il0(l \\lOME' unlv'l Ily '!lPIO\ld P ~nd aUdln, door. 311-433. alle~l~ I dian efforts to oust them . f.1I a P.M. 33l-3t13 H huu.lnK Mw r.nUn, lor lumlller If YOU'RI RIADY FOR THE

Alld /Ilf. kllchen p.lvIll,n 131. PRIMITIVb, clOCks, ,II ... ,. Rnng declined 10 commenl on 19112 KAHMANN CoHIll Volklwll'on SI4R. B-13lfn "" II.yllqu~" B.hlnd 520 S. CU· I ULTIMATE IN BIG BIKESI

corrcsp1ndent's eyewltne s re. .nn'tlllhl, 300 or be.1 on .'r berl. Open Alan.· Fri. He a.17 91ft2 ~Il .. a II .M R·7 TIiTlI::E·ROOM furnl,hld aplrtmenl. -- -- THE NORTON 750 15 THE port> Wedne da v that US \"ar 12~ Dvw"lo"'n . lnquh. 30l

o , • . T • Itt .• VIV ars New 'n,I" •. 1400 Dubuque . 1 IAR Jun AItIlIVID planes - I\hieh WaJhlnRton In· 331 •• 761 after 5 r .M 1-28 INCOMPARAILE MACHINE.

______ ~~~~--: ____ ----- MAIIANTl MOD'L n

NORTON

rljds In Cambodia - new In dl· AUTOS,DOMESTIC MAUNT% MODIL 31 I sists are "ylnll only lnterdl~tion HELP WANTED I'UAMI' fHi NORTON 750 15 FOR

t (bod' I ,own AM" '!OPLE WHO APPIlECIATE DELIVERY SERVICE 351.1790 , rec support 0 Cam Ian CAns IliftS Opel "".on. U~.o; - MAUNU MOOIL 23

~iiiiiiiiii:ii::i~;:~iiiiiii~iiiiiii=iiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~t~roo~p~s ~n~C8~r~k~o~u~n~. -iiii.-_.-. 19f11 n.mbl .. fon,prUbl •• "~n . IIE ... TlNCo·Alr Condltlonln. Sorvlce AM I FM TUNU 'HE ULTIMATE IN POWER· bolh .ood runnln. rondltlon _ lin . ~.rn ov •• '12.000 ~.r yoar RELIABILITY .

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Do You Want to Keep Up on Events at Iowa?

A Subscription to The Daily Iowan will

Keep You in Touch 5 Days a Week.

Subscription Rates Outside Iowa City 1 year ............ $12.00

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Special with this Coupon

Pease keep me in touch with Iowa for tht ntxt , ... months. Enclosed is $ .... , .... Name ............ t •••• t • ••• t ••••••••••• t •••••••••

Address ....................•...................... City ......... , .. , . , .. Stott ...... , ....... Zip ... , .. . Moll to: THE DAILY IOWAN

201 COMMUNICATIONS CINTER IOWA CITY, IOWA 52240

body dlma"d Itlt\II .-ord .... tIII . plu. 0.11.01$. Cltan Cam I ml" I"' ~~m~:~.I.I~I.'a~~~'~lt A • r. po~cr. Mu I •• 11 all. 12~ "lIl1nR 10 rno," 10 n •• Moine ~k n ,.. P~R O' RMANC"

lodlum Pork. a.'I8-428f. 1.7 pfrl.nrcd mrn only .pply. Yr.r. 3 YIt, Warr.nty .n I . F •• _ Around work lor over 30 )'raro. 'arta .nd Ub.r.

11161 (,H~ 11. e ovllndt<. 'UI'" , 01,. compl,l. del,1I In 11<01 1.1· TH! millc ton,crllbll. 331-3.124 Ill .. Ilr. Cllrk·P.leroon Compan y, Ine. SUZUKI

5'10 8·7 2318 Unly" Ily ..... nll.. n , STEREO Molneo. I ...... . r.o~, I. 1\.7 I

186% MERCURV It'ordt • Ilick. ('00t( ... "Ied I.r fralornlly. Phon. IHOP lOod ronalllon. tin. 3l7~44R A~8· IIAg . ' ·7

Mornln.. .y.nln~.. 8·7 1211 aLLI. N.W. 365.1.24 I LAnGE Eaaltrn IIf. In uranee ~IOAII .. ,.IlS • 1110 DODGE uper 8rt LI,I prlcr , eompany d. Ir .. lull 11m. "pIe·

$4200. MUll Nil. '2700. 351 · 1~~4 ,.nUII ... 'In Ihlt Attl Slarlln, '-:==:::===:::::::;::=~ 8.21

•• IArY open. Writ. ao. 3&9, 10.... -

1H7 DODGE V8 cu.lom "n. Air. City . 8·7 MOIILl HOMES l.p.·dpck, prol., lonali, ru 10m- fULL· TIME ercl~ry Sp.nllh·Port.

lzed tor r.mplng. 8.rl.ln. 3J1.8;;9J u'u.... Dtplrln,onl Knowl.d •• 19111 OLYMPIA 10 • M. alrcondl· 11001trt. pot1'h plu, utlilly .h d Jo7 01 plnl,h de.lrou.. bul not n.c· -

1

11111$ OLD .. c"nvrrUbl.. C.Clory .Ir. pO 1'",. Exccll.nl ('undillon.

'850. 351-4864 bcCore 3:30 P.M a.s ,~ TJlIUMPH U~C low mlln,o .

lood condlUon. C.U 3.11·5900. .7 rOR SA!.&: 1959 "ord - .2 pu rn·

lOr bus . • ;, •• Uonl eon dillon. Cene W.ber 338·7Q86. 1\.7 CORVETTE ' fJ7 conv.rtlblo. H.rdlop.

327·300 .HP. A!H'M, 4 .p~.d. po,l· lracUon. CIII IIlor S p,m. 1131 1133.

Utln

Wh.n you buy th.t used Clr

yov're natur.lly going to fill fishing or golfing. R,mem' btr H.rky's In Corelvili. hit I.p qua lit., 'porting good •.

PERSONAL

DEAR JAN. I WIIII 't be .bl. ,. In", you thl. .ft.tnoon. I'm going to H.rky Spllrtlng Good. Big Anniv.r •• ry 5.1, th.t', .,. now In COrllvllt..

Lov. DIan

MUSICAL INSTRUfAENT~ I F- -=-==--=-====..I

• KING TROMBONE WITH F· ATTACHMENT.

'INE CONDITION.

$150 OR BEST Olllln

• YORK E·FLAT TUIA

• KING SOUSAPHONE

lEST OFFERS

CALL 331.0251

.o.lry. 253-4561. 1-7 ~1B-973I. 8-7 aOARD crlw members [or fall It EXC'EI.U;NT condillon. 2 bed-;:;;;

Dalll "au Dfll •• 122 N. Cllnlon - 10 x 50 (ur""h.d . ...... I.d. I lr: lero . Itom Burlf H.II . conl,c' I "Uhtr' dryor. 101-4070. 1-3 John Lou,hun. 353033 13. 1·13 _ __

-- - - 19115 ~I,)W MOor; 10 s 35 - l.lrcon· dIUo,!~~@. CuUy calpetod, .un Cur·

nice. NIIlIII. Cill Dubuqui 8A8-4li1O $100 • '"' MONTHLY. .11.. l e.enln,l. 8-7 .m.1I I.b.r.to,y • br .... I1 ... ,I.ck MU T ELC-=-8-;'lde, 2 bedroom lor u •. Supply ."ulpm,nt, bre.d· , one furnlJhed for aludv. "reondl· a", and 1".lruclions. IIl1nol. II.. lIonlnl, mllal Itora •• • hld. '1100. Harch Farm. 0.,1. ICI.7 . •• r' 1 331'SS8~ . 1.7

rln,'on, III lnola "'\0. ' " • H' KAOPT. CUllom buill , NOD. S 10 7:30 p.m. 338~. 8.11

- - . - 1160 SKYUNE 10 " 4&' ,-=-furnbb. • d. carpeltd, t1rconiIJUoned, ,,,.

MAN WANTED

for d.t.1I oHlce w.rk .

Loc.1 firm.

Writ.: Th. Dally low.n.

BOK 346,

University of low. Tubercul.,ls Unit Oakd.l. Hospit.1

H.. openings for R"i.terld Nurs .. , 3 p.m. ,. 11 p.m. and 11 p.m. '0 7 '.m. shifts -full .r plrt time. IlIc.lllnt Jlliry and frlng. btntfill. -C.II Mrs. Hope, DIrect..- of Nursing 353 ..... '.

An Equ.1 Oppllrtunity Empl.y.r

HELP WANTED

H.lp w.ntod, plr1·tlm •• Apply .t Sh.k.y'. Pin. P.rlor .fttr 4 P.M, or phtnt

351·3115.

nu . • 2800 or besl orrlr. 338-5512. 1-12

'rURNISJf1:D 3 bedJ'OOm. 1M3 Amlrlcan Hom.cr .. I, 10 x 511.

rurnlee Ind Wllir hiller I yeora old. 351-4212. &.14

WIND DAMAGE SALEI

SAVE HUNDREDS WE HAVE SEVERAL SLIGHT· L Y DAMAGED HOMES I

EXAMI'LE: 12 x 60 COMMODORE

WAS $6950 NOW $5600

FRU DELIVERY AND SET

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Page 4: Iniuriction Testimony: More Protests Falldailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1970/di1970-08-07.pdf · 07-08-1970  · University Sunday lor the start of tbe second annual Institute for Afro-Ameri

'''' 4-THI OAILY IOWAN- I.w. City, lew_II"'., AIlfUIt '1, 1m

Namath Has Personal Problems- ..

Jet President After Namath , NEW YORK fA'! -"I'm not was to amath although he was Iselin's speech, while not 10 hllYt undtnt.nding. Prob· I probl.ms."

talking to anyone," Joe Na. I not ' mentioned by name. Iselin mentioning Namath by name" lems ovtrwhelm • min Ind Iselin watched the morning math, the AWOL New York Jets made the comment to the play- touched aU bases-the quarter· yDU hlv, t. try to "Iv. workout, talked with general quarterback, said late Thursday ers at the Jets' Hempstead. back's absence from camp be- Ihtm, manager-coach Weeb Ewbank as he wheeled away from his N.Y" training camp. I cause of "problems which are "We stand ready to help if about the amath ituation, plush East Side apartment in a Namath showed up at his new ' dwarfing my mental state" and we can, That's what we're here lunched with the players, gave chauffeur-driven limousine. pad about 5:30 p.m. Accompa- the public criticism of amath lor. Don't be too quick to con- his speech and left. He refused

Broedway Jot, accompani· nied by a striking girl with long by linebacker AI Atkinson. demn - give a man a chance. I to divulge the time or place ed by Mlk. Bite, his lawy.r, blonde hair, Namath, wearing lselln, nattily attired in yellow If you 'll all bear with us. I'm for the rendezvous but he did Ind Inolher man, was IP· blue jeans, white shoes and a pants and green golf shirt, stood sure all the problems wHl be admit he was disturbed by per. ntly head.d for a stcrtt goll shirt, skipped and danced ' up during the lunch hour meal resolved. events of the last 24 hours , rtndtvous with Phil Iselin, along Madison Avenue before to address' the players and said The major problem to reo "You like to feel that team presid. nl of the Jtll, who had rounding the corner to his he would like to "touch for a ' solve is Namath. The AWOL morale is high," said 1 elin, .arli.r told the other m. m· apartment building. moment on a little current prob- quarterback phoned the Jets' "So naturally, you are disturb-bert of hi. ' .. m: " Don" be H. spent abDUt an hour In lem." training quarters late Wednes· ed to ee the team is not all too quick to cond.mn - give Iht Ip.rtm.n' and Bil. lurn· He then proceeded to say: I day night through his attorney, pulling together." a m.n a ch.ne.... ed away III inqulrlts II the I "You never cln be too James Walsh, and asked for That became evid.nt Wed· Iselin's reference obviously I door. quick to condemn, You have a meeting with Iselin " to try ",sday wh.n Namath filled

and sit down and get this to show up for practict for straightened out." the third day and Atkinson

"I'v. got a lot 01 prob. announced his relir.ment be-le"ls," N.math poinled oul, caus. "of guys likt ,h., "Football used to be No. 1 auart.rback N.math who with me but at ~is sla~ it is don't give a damn about any-not my maIn conctrn. I hOf1- "ody 'tl" '" tst ly oJon't kf10W what I a'" E"'b~n ". h~wp"cr. said hI' going 10 do. I a'" wor"iM 'o ctid not rel'l 'ha' NA"',,'h 's ab­oet my o' obl--s 'o"'~d. o,,-ce ",. A l ki'l~l)n '~ blast had Some 0/ ." • ." a-, buollle,. lur,nd the plavprs' IIlIenlion proble."s, a lot are oer~nn.1 fr()- their daU" r~uline.

No Cage Meraer For at Least 1 Year

CHICAGO IA'! - Natbnal Committee in both houses and Basketball Association owners other Congressmen up for reo were told Thursday by com- elec ion." missioner Walter Kennedy that Kennedy said the format 01 proposed merger with the riv- the bill to be drafted has been al American Baske' ball Asso· " r' ughed cu'" but i not yet ciation may be at least a year in shape for presentation to away becau e of the election the proper congressional sour-year canf -onting Congress. ces.

The p"oposed merger of the The N8A Players AnDcia·

So That's Where Broadway Joe Has Been Jot Namath, slar quarterback of the New York Jell, Is shown walking down a New York City street with a unid.ntified young lady, Nlmalh hIS caus.d a dir .mong his teammalts btc.u .. of his fallur. to show up for practic. the last thre. d.ys, - AP Wirephoto

Archer Fires 67, Jacobs Blows Up

Weeb Weeps For phone To Ring two pro leagu. es, which have tion has II suit IIgainsl the AKRON 011 '10 I" _ B' h I i 965 h I I ' f t k . t

/H Ig i eran W 0 list won n 1 , 0 e, OStng our s ro es In ~, been engaged In a costly talent merger being held in abey. G " A h t k tI r t wal six.under.par when h' holes.

Both phones ar. oH the hook, bul New York Jels htad coach Wttb Ewbank fttmS ready for the phont to ring wllh slar quarterback Joe Namalh on the olh.r .nd, Th. phones wert 011 the hook because Ewbank did nol w.nl to b. interrupl.d II h. discuss.d the Namalh ClSt.

- AP Wir.pholo

war, h1\s been held In abeyance Ince unlil congrel$io,ull acl. I e rge r~ er 00 le Irs-round lead tn the $150 000 Amer w.nt 10 Ih' treacherous, 625· A big group headed by hosl

under a New York court order I ion, . G II CI . ' Th d - yard 16th and WIS shooting pro Bobby Nichols fOllowed a pending possible en~hling leg· "r would assume the merger Ichall T 0 Jas 'lbc bid urI ay ...., w ell ommv aco s or a for the cour .. record of 64. 69. Others included Australial islalion by Congress, such as I'S a year away wl'th the pos- , 'd I d' d 'th ' crur<e recor exp 0 C WI a "I hit a good drive and a fo. ur Bruce Crampton, Bob Goalby permitted the nier~er of Ihr slbl'II',y that it ml'ght · develop . I b ' ht 16 trip e ogey CI" on iron to lay up in iront of the John Miller, teve Reid, Phi National and American Foot- for · the 1971-72 season " sal'd A h h d " th . d ' rc er a a ree un er par nl'rtd . Then I lateraled a wedge Rodgers, Lou Graham and Tom ball Leagues. Kennedy , who added that NBA - - 1" dead right ," he said. He was on my Aaron.

Kenn.dy, who described owners sti ll must formally ap- the gravel approach to a bridge, Defending champion Ra) himself as Iht "quarterback" prove the merger of the 17- , chipped over the green into Floyd had a 70 . Gary Playel

Ag Mi

SEOUL Agnew , U.S. ml transfer 85 be four·nation

But denl

Sou ,Ope j Afte

cess was

In school complete nelals routine."

There cldents South

Colts Curry, Curtis Still Good Friends'

in sletring Ih. issue to Con· club NBA and the 11·team deep rough. failed to get it out' l took a 72. Jack Nicklaus had I

gress, told the owners al Ih, ABA. was on In six and two-pulled. 73 and U.S. Open chi!l1piOI annUli summer meeting: The owners voted to seek Jacobs also bogeyed the next Tony Ja:klin was at 74 . f " I do not contemplate that congressional acdon, but some I Arnold Palmer &'1d Masler.

we will be able to get legi la- sentiment still is reported champion Billy Casper are no

Ilion acted upon during this against the merger. Maiors' competing. session 01 Congress. This is an In. morning senion, the S~oreboard' Jacobs shrugged off the fa election year which means a owners changed the lormat ... eight that blew him out 01 lhl

B GORDON BEARD between us ," Curtl's s a I' d. Bowl, Everything else Is mi- short term, possibly. for sev- of tht NBA AII·Star gam. • • lead. y eral members 01 the. Judiciary which will be played Jan. ~ "III don't get them today, 1"

Anoclat,d Preu Sports Wriltr "Nothing could be further from nor ." 12 in San Diego. With tht ad. .-:, get them tomorrow," he said. WESTMfNSTER, Md. - Bill the truth . You don 't build a "We can win Ihe Super Bowl K D dillon 01 three n.w mtmbers, ' Archer, the tallest player 01

Curry, the player represent· f~i~nds~i~hover ~' tthree-year r-this year," Curry contended . app rops CI.veland, Portland and Buf· the tour at six-foot·six, hasn ' alive of the Baltimore Colts , 1"10 an en sp lover a po ICY I lalo, the III.star squad r.p. won since he took the Master.

t' h' b k t matter" "All we need is a little help was res tng on IS un a . resent.tion will consist of in 1969. traJning camp after a strenuous " Mike is one of the greatest [rom some of our younger play- Pact Offer 14 in.tead of 12 player. from AMERICAN LIAGUI "Tbis is the best round level practice. players in the NFL," Curry ers and we'll be better than both the Eastern and the I"~ L Pc,. GB · shot here," Archer said. He bog

In walked roommate Mike I said" "and he w?rks hard, He when we won the NI"L cham- Western Conf.rences, I ~~:II~g;~r. . H:~ :g~~ 9 eyed the third when an iron sho

~~;~il~ ~~~/~l~trf:~t~~l~r:y Vth~ ~~~~tc;;i~to~in~~Sa~~e~~~\e~ pion h~p in 19~. " , I From Vikings m~; ~o~~~~~nf:::;eona~I.~!:~ I TOMMY JACOBS ~ife;~:::k ~ ii :~~ :i~ ~~\h:v:n~;:~~~to~u~~:n~i~~ National Football League Play- spects mine. CurtIs, . B~ltImore s No. 1 and each of the 17 clubs must Triple Bogey on • xWI.Illn,ton w .. ~9 5$ .454 19 Archer bogeyed the tOth fron ers Association and report to I "As roommates (or the past dralt chOIce In 1965, was an AU- GLENBROOK, Nev. IA'! _ The have at least one representa- w L ,ct. Gil a trap but got the stroke bacl

bef ttl t lhree years" Curry said 'we NFL h ' . 1968 t t 'd 67 on the tough, ?,180-yard, par xMlnnesoll 611 38 .635 with a IS-foot putt on the l2tl camp ore a se emen was , , C OIce In a OU 51 ;! Minnesota Vikings are out 01 live. 70 Firestone Country Club xOakland 61 47 ,565 7

reached. I have disagreed before without it linebacker but was witched to Joe Kapp's lootball future. the The first eight players on course while Jacobs and 41- ~g~\~::~11 !l ~I :~: 2~ hole. "I don't like you," Curtis becomi~g a nation~l isslle'"This middle linebacker mid wa y attorney lor the 1969 Vikings the all-star squad 01 each con- year-old Paul Harney shared se- ~~f.'~:~k;!IY ~~ ~~ 3U i:,. He put his drive behind a tret

called out, and then broke into shouldn t be any dllferent. through last season, Curry, a star said Thursday. ference will be selec.led by b~l- con~ at 68. x- Night ,ame not Included on the 13th and bogeyed the holt a wide grin. I" "rha,t's right," Cur~is sai~ , t . d f The altorney John Elliolt lot of a news media commlt- Jacobs, a 35.year.old vel, DeltOltT~,U~:!Y'~o~:'r~t:,t ,arne; but again bounced back when hI

we disagree on politiCS relt cen er, was acquire rom C k 'd h h 'd d d It· h f In 17 cTes 2nd game, N look a two iron within a foot 0 "There are no hard feelings I . . ' -G B ' 1967 I 00 ,sa) e a turne own, ee In eac 0 e I I . Cleveland 4, allUmore 0, 1st th 15lh B' G t k tht

P __ ... ______ ... glon, a lot of things. But one reen ay In. on behalf of the 32 year-old I The other six will be selected game; 2nd .ame. N e , Ig eorge 00

, t~ing we agree on is the Super quarterback, an ultimatUfl"l that by coaches of each divi ion. Pale Hose ~~~~~~o o~, \~~~~~~~~1 lead along with a nine·foot put

Dr. A. P. Fankhauser l' our Gil iropraetor

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Phon. 338·8507

- - A t U 5 th V"" . ed W d d Oakland at Kans .. ClIy, N on 17. rna eu r .. e I,mgs ISSU e nes ay. Stop Brewers CaUfornla at Minnesota, N D I APE R The. Vikings told Kapp to ac- Giant Power Mjl~.u:;:bl~!:k~~'.:dtrs(l .81 and The Dal·'V Iowan

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I cept lheir orrer on a new con- With Janeski Krausse (I!.ll l It Kansas City,

Go f Meet tract .and r,eport to training Tops Cincinnati ~~ht'::I~,~jg~t71 and Aloreh .. d 12·5) PUbll'hed by s,udtn' Publk.· d I I Oak! d FI '7)' MI flO.", Inc., C:ommunlC1Uon. Ctt'I· camp Imrne late y or ook else- 0 . B h CHICAGO 1.1'\ -The Chicago aD . · nge.. (~ a. nn· tar, low. Cit", lowo 52240 dilly .. , te e •• ota, Perr~ \16-9), N ' . ... 1

E • C I where lor a job. esp' nc White Sox scored four unearned Callfomla. Bradley (1·2) .t Chi· cop, Mondav·, holld.ys, Itpl .... ntrles ose "Th V'k' f h . f' l'llh " cago, Johnson (0-2), N day. and 'ht dlYs .n.r 10011 ... 11 e lings are out 0 t e runs In a Ive-run I inning , Baltimore. Phoebus (S.5) at Cleve. d.y •. Enl.red as .. eond el ...... ,

pI'clure nf)w" Cook sal'd from SAN FRANCISCO tR'\ - Home to gl've Jerry Janeskl' the sup- land, Chance (6·5), N ' t.r II 'h. po,t offlet 01 low. e\l\ , s b W'llt' M Cove" and ' Boston, Koonce (0·3) .t Wash· undor 'h. Ael of Con,,,,, 01

NEW YORK IN! _ A total his home here . But he ~aid "no run y I e c, porl he needed for a 7-3 VIC· lntton, Hanna" (6-4), N Mlrch 2, 1879,

of 1889 players have 1 d I comment" when asked if ne- Frank. Johns?n powered the S?n tory over the Milwaukee Brew- McC'~~~lck cr:~).(l~3 1 al New Yurk, The Dally Iowan I. wriLlen Inc

, •

Ovtr 50 Yurs Experitnce NEW PROCESS Phone 337·'666

, en ere I gotiations had started with any , FranCISco Giants .to .a 9 : 3 YIC- ers Thursday . The triumph NATlON~~.tLU.GU E I :8~egf ~~w!luge7~0~: :xhpe,.~':~·I: the 70th U,S, Amateur Golf other pro football teams tory over the CIncmnatl Reds broke a personal seven-game w L ' e'. GB the editorIal co~umns 01 the Plpel , Championship at Portland, Ore., Kapp, who led the Vikings lo Thursda~. losing streak for Janeski. ~~~~b~~~~ ~:: :~~ ii, are those of the Writers. ,) ,

~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiliiiiiii;iiiiiiiiii;~ Sept 2-5 the ational Football Leam'e The Giants exploded for seven Bill Mellon hit his 20th h'lme "Chicago 56 53 .514 4'. Tht Auocla'td Pros. I. enllUe. The U S Golf Association an- title last season became a free run or e secon run In e xSt. Louis 49 59 .454 11 lion all local", weU "' aU AP 11<_' . , I "u run~ 'In lhe fl'rst 'Innl'ng w'lth f th d . th xPhUadelphJa 49 56 ,458 10 ,,", to the .xcl ust .. use for repubU"

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, "th 1ft' agenl May I.' He reportedly McCovey smashing a three - run 1 Chicago third after Syd I xMonlre.1 w .. ~8 62 .• 36 13 and dl palrh.5. nouncmg e c ose 0 en nes . asked the Vikings for $1.25 mil- home~ and ,Johnson als,o a~- O'Brien.'s triple and Luis Apari- , Clnclnnall ~ 3,L 'el. Gil ro~~b~I~~'I$IO ~:~·~~a~Ylnca.rd~~~~ Thursday, said all but 10 must Ilion over the five years to sign a Icounling for three runs With hiS cio's sacrifice fly had opened xLos An,el.. 61 46 :m \I', .Ix monlhs. $5.50; three month., $3

t . 36 h I I'f . clout. It was McCovey's 28th the assault on loser AI Downing San Francl.co 53.5 .491 20 All mall sub,crlptlon.! $12 per y .. r compe e In - a e qua 1 ymg ,new contract. . . . ><AUanll 52 57 .477 21 ,., sfx months, $6 56; lhre. month. trials Aug. 17-18. The 140 survi- Cook declined to confirm the fo~r - bagger of the year and the Ted Kubiak dou~led to a run ~tO~S~I~gO :g :~ :;:~ ~" 1$3,50. _ _ vors and the 10 exempt players reported- contract demands and third for Johnson.. for the Brewers In the fourth . x-Night game not Included. DI.I 337-4191 from noon 10 mid make up the starting field at the also refused to say where Kapp Johnson tripled m a run In the But the Wh.ite Sox opened t~eir San FJa~~r:::y~. c~~~r~~atl a ~~~~c~~C;~r.°rlln n~7,: I~~'y a~: .. :~

I Co t CI b h be th t k fourth and then scored on Hal live-run clIncher in the fIfth PIUsburgh 4, Philadelphia O. lot Editorial office. ar. In the Commun Waver ey un ry u. as en . e pas wee . Lanier's single to give the when O'Brien was sale on a game.; 2nd game, N , leatlons Cenler.

The exempt list includes The Vikings reportedly of- . . - Chicago .t Monlr .. I, N --. Giants two more runs in the passed ball aller striking out. A New York at SL Louis, N Dill 337-4191 It you do hOI rteel\l champions 01 the past five I fered Kapp $100,000 a year ,lor I th lk d' I b C I May AUanta It LOI An.oles, N your paper by 7:30 ' .m. Every .r years and the top ten scorers three years. The of er was turn· The Reds got a pair of fillh.in- Duane Josephson Ken Berry 'roblblt Plleho" I ror with the next I ue . Clrcul.U .. f our . wa an smg es y ar os 'I Hauston at San Diego N lort will be made to correct the tr

I th 1969 t t ed down several weeks ago ' , Chicago, Jenkins (13-l2) at Phll· olllce hOUri are 8:30 to 11 a.m. Mo .. n e ournamen . . ning runs on a triple by Johnny and Bobby Knoop plus a throw- adelphia, Jack .. n (HO), N day tbrOullh Friday.

- Bench, which scored Bobby To- ing error on Dave May complet· Plcr:bur"h~r~oo:!c1N{eN (80$) 01 TMlee., Board 01 Studenl Pu~ Ian and Bench's run to home ed the outbur I in which Down· Monlt.al, McGinn (7·7) at 51. IIcations. Inc.: Carol Ehrlich, G

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