l t>ji>c:on relates hopes for china...

4
!RVICIS I. .ccul'lle l ,ble. Jln. I .. s.; WIIJ nuscrlpl Iypillt neral - Not';; Burns, 416 IC1'lI r. 332636. Ii i' l SALI - ax 10 C oleman) w. cn .. p. 337. Ii rtables' all da !tonho!e!. FlY! W.y ne', Sewlnl Coralvlll, .. Ii KreaUon •. T h, '.ndmades. KI· 10-11, Nlnn bicycle - ;r . " -- BTU air cond!o 18 Old. 3311-7B68. , 7 p.m. Ii St.ve, rl rrl/. iser, war drobe, , 351·6727, 5 to 4 pre-amp and 35].7601. IVI· __ __ , In M essenger I ten - nero - ,10 UP. 337·Il060. '·2ar ,KINS, quality leathers. p otJ. , ville . 2·g week· ... S "Occ - 1.701 ;50. 351·4322. ... ,er Hawk. n;o 1793. 1-1 LOO, mS. Ii10 '5. Besl oller. ,. rock. iood condltlon, Belsy. &3 Jood conditi on. iles. $376. 351· Sf crumbier. Vlry Imel. "85. 351· M NANTED Ire furnished to hospil. IJ. U are furnished I alter 5 p.m. &5 S : 21·50 wilf1 Ir. invited In .xperl. Im.nt pre· of Psychi· 74 .. ""' [1 P.stels. 1211. 10.7.r AI Ehl. Di ll 11·17 ces of TV'., tape playe". !ctf.nlcs. 3071 Ion. 11>1" Isle ,t.Ustles! ICE I R.12) ( II •• "Ith iUR1NCE I i ring - t lit. E # 2 toll I :.ry , l I ON "1,,, ;S l 1.5% r , um , •. ) 8.5% ., ..... ) 9.5% 'III .i .... ) 10% ' " ,I,,".) , tlon ,... .opptr· I " ty, 1241 Spelling Anyone? Motori sh driving west on Iowa Ave., past the English·Phiiosophy Building, seem unaware of the "LC!w Clearnee," whoop$ "Clearance," sign. Somebody up there goofed . -0 1 Photo by John Avery Iftu... aay, aUlul' " 1',1 lo.a city, lo.a 52240 10 cent. · a copy t>Ji>c:on Relates Hopes For China Meeting WASHINGTON tA'I - President Nixon said Wednesday he is ready to discuss wilh Communist Chinese leaders "any point of difference that could affect the peace of the world." At the ame time, Nixon cautioned the American people nol to expect an im· mediate end to the Vietnam war as 8 by· product of hi trip to Peking, sometime before May. At a news conference in hi office, the President hinted that Washington i giv- Ing an extra pu h to its efforts to end the war by negotiation. "I am not pre.. dieting that the negotiations will suc- ceed," he said. But, he added. "We have gone and are going the extra mile ." ixon said the agenda for the Chinese talks, now being worked out, "will deal with the hard problems as well as the easy ones ." He said neither the Ameri· can nor the Chinese have set any condi· lions for the discussions and neither side ha any lJIusions "about the wide differ· ences" between the two countries. way." The President said the administration is prepared to consider the establishment of wage and price control boards but be is opposed to any plan that would include criminal sanctions that would "impose a new bureaucracy." He aid he prefers hi current ap- proach of using presidential powers of per uaslon to try to keep industry and labor negotiators aware of the perils of inflation. ixon said that on the trip to PekIng, for which he has yet to fix a date, he ex· pects to take only "a small working party" that will include Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Henry A. Kissinger. his clo e adviser who helped et up the summit session with the Chi. nese. "This Is a discussion which will I!Ike place with both sides knowing in advance that there are problems , but with both side well prepared," the President said. "This is the secret of any successful summit meeting." He said he and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko had ruled out a side trip by the Pre. ident to Moscow while he is China·bound. Nixon said a summit talk with the Ru ians would be useful only if they would produce a "break· through" on Berlin. on trategic arms limitations or on the Mideast. He said the two countrie are making good progress on Berlin and on control through lower- level negollations and that Midea . t talks are continuIng with a po sibilily " oC ome interim settle· ment." Peking Blasts Rogers and does another." Out of Lunar Orbit "What is important," Nixon went on, "is that we will have opened communica· tion to see where our differences are ir- reconcilable. to see thaI they can be sel· tled peacefully, and to find those areas where the United States, which today Is the most powerful nalion in the world, can find an agreement with the most populous nation in the world," TOKYO (All - Peking has accu ed Sec- retary of State William P. Rogers of "bare·faced lying" in advocating what it called "the preposterous propo ition oC two Chinas" in the United Nation . The secrelary of state also said the Umted States sought to deal in its with " the realities of the world in which w live" while not forlletllng "Ihe legacies o( the pa t," to which the agency respondl'cI : SPACE CENTER, Houston (All - The Apollo 15 astronauts rocketed out of lu· nar orbit and started homeward Wed- nesday, bringing ancient rocks and new photos they gathered in man's greatest exploration of the moon. Astronauts David R. Scott, James B. Irwin and Fred M. Worden fired a pow. erful burst with their main rocket en· gine to break out oC the moon 's gravity and start the 250,000·mile voyage to the splashdown Saturday in the Pacific Ocean. The first word from tbe command ship Endeavour after the rocket burst came from Scott. "Hello, Houston," he said, "Endea· vour 's on the way home." Then he added : "It was II smooth burn." Apollo 15 sped away from the moon at more than 5,100 miles per hour at t he start of a 71·hour coast toward earth. M agistrate Says Elis berg Should Be Tried in Calif. BOSTON - A U.S. magistrate sai d Wednesday that Daniel Ellsberg should be returned to California to face c harges of illegal posseSSion of the Pentagon pap· ers he said he gave to the New York Times. U.s. Magistrate Peter Princl denied I motion filed by Ellsberg's lawyers ask· ing that the government be o rdered to say whether evidence which led to the indi ctment of Ellsberg was obtained by wiretaps or electronic surveillance . The lawyer, who filed the motion July 23, contended that if the government ad· mitted to the use cit' devices, then a hearing shou ld be held to de termine whether charges against the 40·year-old rtseal'ch associated at Massachusetts InsJilule of Technology shou ld be drop · ped. Princi said the "proper for um " for th e motion was in the federal co ur t in Los Angeles where he was indicted. Princi said he would recommend to U.S. Judge W. Arthur Garrity Jr. that Ellsberg be returned to California to fac e the charges . Garrity sch eduled a hearing for Thur s da y. A spokesman for Ell sberg said he had no comment "right now" on Prlncl' s de- cision. A Softening Although he has not endorsed one, Richard ( The President) Nixon is taking a softer stand o3ainst a Wage-Price review board. Meanwhile, 13 GOP s emltors ha "e openly requMt- ,'·a;' s" h a board be tm- p lernen:'3d, See Page 2. An hour before the rocket firing, the spacemen ejected a small satellite, which looks somewhat like a mail box and which will circle the moon for a year and scrutinize it electronically. On Thursday, Worden will make a 30· minute spacewalk to bring mapping film into the cabin of the command ship Endeavour . He will make two trips to retrieve two ha tbox·shaped film cannis· ters from the l7-million array of camero as and instruments in the service mo· dule attached to Endeavour. The film contains what scientists hope will be the most detaiJed charting of the lunar surface ever made, including views never before seen of the moon's hidden backside. The walk will being when Endeavour is about 196.000 miles from earth . Scott and Irwin will remain in the cabin. All three will wear their spacesuits to pro· tect them from the vacuum of space . The spacemen spent the day working quietly, to complete their assignment of charting the surface composition and features of almost 20 per cent of the moon . A television camera left on the moon and controlled remotely by Mission Con· trol was turned on Wednesday , but the signal was lost after 14 minutes. Offi· cials said further u se of the camera was in doubt. During the brief telecast the camera gave a clear picture of the lower state of the lunar module left behind at the Hadley Base landing site. The camera panned around slowly and showed the atomic·powered science station which Scott and Irwin deployed during their 19 hours of surface exploration. Scott and Irwin completed their sur· face exploration of the moon on Mon· day. They g::lthered 275 to 280 pounds of moon samples, including. they be· Iieve , a crystalline chip of the original outer shell which hardened from the molten birth of the moon . They made three surface treks, us· in g an $8·million moon car which car· ried them to a deep canyon, to the foot· hills of a 12,OOO-foot mountam and through crater field which scar their Aunnine Valley landing site. Scott and Irwin covered a tolal of 17 miles. The lunar explorers left behind a $25· million atomic· powered science station which already is giving new data on the moon . Officials said all the instruments are operating as planned, beaming data cleanly to earth from the Hadley Base landing sileo Scientists at the University of Texas McDonald Observatory near Fort Dav· is, Tex., reported they already had bounced a laser Jight beam off a reflec- tor device left on the moon by Scolt and Irwin. Officials said it took on;y four minutes of effort with the laser to get a reflection . ]n addition to reveaUng informfo'lon about the moon, the new lunar Solei. lite is designed to heJp measure the earth's magnetic fields . The Pre ident de cribed Communist China as also potentially the most pow· erful na tion in the world and said there can be no reliable world peace "unless lhere is communication between and ne· gotiations between the e two great super· powers." And yet. Nixon said. the talks are not the kind that would end fighting in Viet· nam. "It is not a di cu ion that is going to lead to instant detente." Th state of the economy vied with the China trip for dominance at the unantic· Ipated news session, which brought about 60 reporters crowding around Nixon's desk in the White House Oval Room. The Presidpnt said , lat,Jg by his prediction that 1971 will prove to be "a good year for the economy" and that 1972 will be ' a very good year." He said "thp economy will continue to move up" and that if he owned stocks he would not sell them " in a panicky About 2 Million To Get Draft Lottery Placements Today WASHINGTON (All - The nearly two million young men turning age 19 this year will get their draft numbers Thursday and so have some idea of what their chances are of the 10Ltery system. Birthdates in brown capsules will be plucked from a plexiglass drum one by one and matched with numbers in yellow capsules taken simultaneously from another drum. Each capsule will be opened immedia- tely and its contents read by two Selec· tive Service workers, first the birth dale by James Edmondson Jr ., then the matching number by David Mueller. Each birthdate as it is picked will be hung on a giant board with numbers 1 through 366 and the numbers will be po led on a gian t calendar. There are 366 numbers t hi year be· cause those turning 19 were born In 1952 , a leap year. Selective Service Director Curtis W. Tarr is not ex pected to be on hand to watch the lottery because he is ill with the flu. He will be replaced by his de- puty , Byron V. Pepitone. 2 Bo und Over to District Court Draft officials streamlined the pro· cess a bit in hopes of reducing the hour" it took {or last year's lottery. They're aiming to do it in 2 1 'l to 3 hour s. It started at 10 a.m. EDT in the Com""erce Der)artment auditorium. Instead of having more than 100 ad· visers parade up to draw the cap ules, there wi'l be onlv six taking turns at dral"ing 20 capsules. And In strad of turning the drums af'er each draw they'll be tur ned three tim s with each change of cap ule pluckers . IOWA CITY, Iowa (A') - Two men charged with possesion of illegal drugs with intent to sell were bound over to Johnson County District Court by Police Jud ge Josep h Thorn ton here Tuesday. Charges against a t hird man, John D. Rawlings , 21, of Iowa City, of resorting to a hou se of ill fame, were dismissed when it was determined lhat Rawlings was in a different room of the apart· ment when dru g sales were made to a state agent. Bound over to District Court were Roger A. Spaulding, 22, and St ephen C. Renk, 20, both oC Iowa Cily . State narcotics agents testified in the preliminary hearing they had purchased 7,5 00 tablets of methamphetamine (speed) from Spaulding for $695. Following the purchase, police search· ed the apartment and confiscated 65 , 000 tablets oC methamphetamine, a qu anti- ty of hashish and a small quantity of a (orm o{ LSD. Beautiful Today should be another great day for all you beautiful 01 fans out there in beautiful UI land , Skies will be clear to partly cloudy, with tempera- tures in the mid 80s. Rain probability is a low 10 per cent. The six: Ja me o L. McCart h y, 21, of Flagstaff, Ariz; Valerie Van Bu re n, 20, of Wa shington, D. C.; Berry S. Fujishin, 21, of Homedale , Idaho ; J. Brewster Bede, 22, of Morlon , Wash.; James Hume, 22, of Richmond, Va.; and Ron· aid W. Maestas, 28, of Carlsbad, N.M. The attack Wednesday by tbe oWclal New China News Agency was the fir t public reaction from Peking to Rogers' announcement Monday thaI U.S. policy favors a U.N. seat Cor Communist China but not the expulsion of the Nationalist Chine e Crom the world body. The dispatch said Rogers "vainly tries to continue to obstruct the restoration to the People's Republic of China or al\ her legitimate rights in the United Nations and insists on being the enemy of the Chinese people." Noting Rogers said the new policy was in accord with President Nixon's desire to normalize relations with Peking in the interests of world peace, the agency de- clared: "This fully lays bare the coun· ter·revolutionary double·dealing tricks of U.S . imperialism which says one thing Cheesecake An Iron Man This is the 0115 week for sport- ing memories. The conclusion of the Jack Dittmer story is on Page 3. A story about Ulls "Iron Men of 1939/1 is on Page 4. At right is the darling of the Iron Men l quarterback Nile Kinnick. IoThi i bare·faced lying . knows clearly that ' the legacies of the Rogers talked about glibly mear the Chiang Kai·shek clique which ha! long been purned by the Chinese people and this was created singlehanded b) liS. imperialism China's Taiwan province and th Taiwan Strait s by armed force uRo er.' so-called 'rralities' of tW( Chinas are hi s sheer fancy . There is one China In the th:t I. , the Peo- ple's Republic of China . U.S. imperial . ism will ne ver :u cc eed in its plot If it in· sisi.s on makin g it elf Ihe enemy of th( Chinese peopl e. ohdurately pushing tll ' two China s' ch erne and describing thi s AS 'rcalilics.' " This little fellow was squirreling around on the Pentacrest when DI photographer John Avery paned by. The squirrel stopped long .nough to ny r " Cheese."

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Page 1: l t>Ji>c:on Relates Hopes For China Meetingdailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1971/di1971-08-05.pdf · 8/5/1971  · Somebody up there goofed. -01 Photo by John Avery Iftu ... aay, aUlul

!RVICIS

I. .ccul'llel I~ ,ble. Jln. ~not.

I .. s.; ~CR!'I'ARY WIIJ nuscrlpl Iypillt

~II

neral - Not';; Burns, 416 IC1'lI r. 337·2636. Ii i'

l SALI

- ax 10 c.b~ ba~a, Coleman )

w. cn .. p. 337. Ii

rtables' all da !tonho!e!. FlY! W.y ne', Sewlnl ~ nue. Coralvlll, ..

Ii KreaUon •. Th,

'.ndmades. KI· 10-11,

Nlnn bicycle - ;r . ~1·0337. " - -BTU air cond!o 18 Old. 3311-7B68. , 7 p.m. Ii

St.ve, rl rrl/. iser, wardrobe, , 351·6727, 5 to

~S

4 pre-amp and 35].7601. IVI·

__ __ 8~ ,

In Messenger I ten

-nero - ,10 UP. • 337·Il060.

'·2ar ,KINS, quality

leathers. potJ. ,ville. 2·g week· ... S

"Occ - 1.701 ;50. 351·4322. ... ,er Hawk. n;o 1793. 1-1

LOO, mS. Ii10 '5. Besl oller. ,. rock. N~

iood condltlon, Belsy. &3

Jood condition. iles. $376. 351·

Sf

crumbier. Vlry Imel. "85. 351·

M

NANTED

Ire furnished to hospil.IJ.

U

are furnished I alter 5 p.m.

&5

S : 21·50 wilf1 Ir. invited In .xperl. Im.nt pre· of Psychi· ~ediclnt.

74

~;~ .. ""' [1 P.stels. 1211.

10.7.r

AI Ehl. Di ll 11·17

ces of TV'., tape playe". !ctf.nlcs. 3071 Ion. ~1·02S&.

11>1"

Isle ,t.Ustles! ~17ar

ICE I R.12)

( II •• "Ith

iUR1NCE 3S'.m~

I iring - t lit.

E # 2 toll I

:.ry

, l

ION "1,,, ;S l ~ITY

1.5% r ,

um , •. )

8.5% ~ ., ..... ) 9.5% 'III .i .... )

10% ' " ,I,,".) ,tlon ,... .opptr·

I "

ty,

1241

Spelling Anyone? Motorish driving west on Iowa Ave., past the English·Phiiosophy Building, seem unaware of the "LC!w Clearnee," whoop$ "Clearance," sign. Somebody up there goofed. -01 Photo by John Avery

Iftu ... aay, aUlul' " 1',1

lo.a city, lo.a 52240

10 cent. · a copy

t>Ji>c:on Relates Hopes For China Meeting

WASHINGTON tA'I - President Nixon said Wednesday he is ready to discuss wilh Communist Chinese leaders "any point of difference that could affect the peace of the world."

At the ame time, Nixon cautioned the American people nol to expect an im· mediate end to the Vietnam war as 8 by· product of hi trip to Peking, sometime before May.

At a news conference in hi office, the President hinted that Washington i giv­Ing an extra pu h to its efforts to end the war by negotiation. "I am not pre.. dieting that the negotiations will suc­ceed," he said. But, he added. "We have gone and are going the extra mile."

ixon said the agenda for the Chinese talks, now being worked out, "will deal with the hard problems as well as the easy ones." He said neither the Ameri· can nor the Chinese have set any condi· lions for the discussions and neither side ha any lJIusions "about the wide differ· ences" between the two countries.

way." The President said the administration

is prepared to consider the establishment of wage and price control boards but be is opposed to any plan that would include criminal sanctions that would "impose a new bureaucracy."

He aid he prefers hi current ap­proach of using presidential powers of per uaslon to try to keep industry and labor negotiators aware of the perils of inflation.

ixon said that on the trip to PekIng, for which he has yet to fix a date, he ex· pects to take only "a small working party" that will include Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Henry A. Kissinger. his clo e adviser who helped et up the summit session with the Chi.

nese.

"This Is a discussion which will I!Ike place with both sides knowing in advance that there are problems, but with both side well prepared," the President said. "This is the secret of any successful summit meeting."

He said he and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko had ruled out a side trip by the Pre. ident to Moscow while he is China·bound. Nixon said a summit talk with the Ru ians would be useful only if they would produce a "break· through" on Berlin. on trategic arms limitations or on the Mideast.

He said the two countrie are making good progress on Berlin and on arm~ control through lower-level negollations and that Midea. t talks are continuIng with a po sibilily " oC ome interim settle· ment."

Peking Blasts Rogers and does another."

Out of Lunar Orbit "What is important," Nixon went on,

"is that we will have opened communica· tion to see where our differences are ir­reconcilable. to see thaI they can be sel· tled peacefully, and to find those areas where the United States, which today Is the most powerful nalion in the world, can find an agreement with the most populous nation in the world,"

TOKYO (All - Peking has accu ed Sec­retary of State William P. Rogers of "bare·faced lying" in advocating what it called "the preposterous propo ition oC two Chinas" in the United Nation .

The secrelary of state also said the Umted States sought to deal in its poli~ with "the realities of the world in which w live" while not forlletllng "Ihe legacies o( the pa t," to which the agency respondl'cI : SPACE CENTER, Houston (All - The

Apollo 15 astronauts rocketed out of lu· nar orbit and started homeward Wed­nesday, bringing ancient rocks and new photos they gathered in man's greatest exploration of the moon.

Astronauts David R. Scott, James B. Irwin and Fred M. Worden fired a pow. erful burst with their main rocket en· gine to break out oC the moon's gravity and start the 250,000·mile voyage to the splashdown Saturday in the Pacific Ocean.

The first word from tbe command ship Endeavour after the rocket burst came from Scott.

"Hello, Houston," he said, "Endea· vour 's on the way home."

Then he added : "It was II smooth burn."

Apollo 15 sped away from the moon at more than 5,100 miles per hour at the start of a 71·hour coast toward earth.

Magistrate Says Elisberg Should Be Tried in Calif.

BOSTON (~ - A U.S. magistrate said Wednesday that Daniel Ellsberg should be returned to California to face charges of illegal posseSSion of the Pentagon pap· ers he said he gave to the New York Times.

U.s. Magistrate Peter Princl denied I motion filed by Ellsberg's lawyers ask· ing that the government be ordered to say whether evidence which led to the indictment of Ellsberg was obtained by wiretaps or electronic surveillance.

The lawyer, who filed the motion July 23, contended that if the government ad· mitted to the use cit' ~uch devices, then a hearing should be held to de termine whether charges against the 40·year-old rtseal'ch associated at Massachusetts InsJilule of Technology should be drop· ped.

Princi said the "proper forum " for the motion was in the federal court in Los Angeles where he was indicted.

Princi said he would recommend to U.S. Judge W. Arthur Garrity Jr. that Ellsberg be returned to California to face the charges. Garrity scheduled a hearing for Thursday.

A spokesman for Ellsberg said he had no comment "right now" on Prlncl's de­cision.

A Softening Although he has not endorsed one, Richard (The President) Nixon is taking a softer stand o3ainst a Wage-Price review board. Meanwhile, 13 GOP semltors ha"e openly requMt­~.' ,'·a;' s" h a board be tm-

plernen:'3d, See Page 2.

An hour before the rocket firing, the spacemen ejected a small satellite, which looks somewhat like a mail box and which will circle the moon for a year and scrutinize it electronically.

On Thursday, Worden will make a 30· minute spacewalk to bring mapping film into the cabin of the command ship Endeavour. He will make two trips to retrieve two hatbox·shaped film cannis· ters from the l7-million array of camero as and instruments in the service mo· dule attached to Endeavour.

The film contains what scientists hope will be the most detaiJed charting of the lunar surface ever made, including views never before seen of the moon's hidden backside.

The walk will being when Endeavour is about 196.000 miles from earth. Scott and Irwin will remain in the cabin. All three will wear their spacesuits to pro· tect them from the vacuum of space.

The spacemen spent the day working quietly, to complete their assignment of charting the surface composition and features of almost 20 per cent of the moon.

A television camera left on the moon and controlled remotely by Mission Con· trol was turned on Wednesday, but the signal was lost after 14 minutes. Offi· cials said further use of the camera was in doubt.

During the brief telecast the camera gave a clear picture of the lower state of the lunar module left behind at the Hadley Base landing site. The camera panned around slowly and showed the atomic·powered science station which Scott and Irwin deployed during their 19 hours of surface exploration.

Scott and Irwin completed their sur· face exploration of the moon on Mon· day. They g::lthered 275 to 280 pounds of moon samples, including. they be· Iieve, a crystalline chip of the original outer shell which hardened from the molten birth of the moon.

They made three surface treks, us· ing an $8·million moon car which car·

ried them to a deep canyon, to the foot· hills of a 12,OOO-foot mountam and through crater field which scar their Aunnine Valley landing site. Scott and Irwin covered a tolal of 17 miles.

The lunar explorers left behind a $25· million atomic· powered science station which already is giving new data on the moon.

Officials said all the instruments are operating as planned, beaming data cleanly to earth from the Hadley Base landing sileo

Scientists at the University of Texas McDonald Observatory near Fort Dav· is, Tex., reported they already had bounced a laser Jight beam off a reflec­tor device left on the moon by Scolt and Irwin. Officials said it took on;y four minutes of effort with the laser to get a reflection.

]n addition to reveaUng informfo'lon about the moon, the new lunar Solei. lite is designed to heJp measure the earth's magnetic fields .

The Pre ident de cribed Communist China as also potentially the most pow· erful na tion in the world and said there can be no reliable world peace "unless lhere is communication between and ne· gotiations between the e two great super· powers."

And yet. Nixon said. the talks are not the kind that would end fighting in Viet· nam. "It is not a di cu ion that is going to lead to instant detente."

Th state of the economy vied with the China trip for dominance at the unantic· Ipated news session, which brought about 60 reporters crowding around Nixon's desk in the White House Oval Room.

The Presidpnt said h~ , lat,Jg by his prediction that 1971 will prove to be "a good year for the economy" and that 1972 will be ' a very good year."

He said "thp economy will continue to move up" and that if he owned stocks he would not sell them " in a panicky

About 2 Million To Get Draft Lottery Placements Today

WASHINGTON (All - The nearly two million young men turning age 19 this year will get their draft numbers Thursday and so have some idea of what their chances are of the 10Ltery system. Birthdates in brown capsules will be plucked from a plexiglass drum one by one and matched with numbers in yellow capsules taken simultaneously from another drum.

Each capsule will be opened immedia­tely and its contents read by two Selec· tive Service workers, first the birth dale by James Edmondson Jr., then the matching number by David Mueller.

Each birthdate as it is picked will be

hung on a giant board with numbers 1 through 366 and the numbers will be po led on a gian t calendar.

There are 366 numbers thi year be· cause those turning 19 were born In 1952, a leap year.

Selective Service Director Curtis W. Tarr is not ex pected to be on hand to watch the lottery because he is ill with the flu. He will be replaced by his de­puty, Byron V. Pepitone.

2 Bound Over to District Court

Draft officials streamlined the pro· cess a bit in hopes of reducing the 31~ hour" it took {or last year's lottery. They're aiming to do it in 21'l to 3 hours. It started at 10 a.m. EDT in the Com""erce Der)artment auditorium.

Instead of having more than 100 ad· visers parade up to draw the cap ules, there wi'l be onlv six taking turns at dral"ing 20 capsules. And Instrad of turning the drums af'er each draw they'll be turned three tim s with each change of cap ule pluckers.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (A') - Two men charged with possesion of illegal drugs with intent to sell were bound over to Johnson County District Court by Police Judge Joseph Thorn ton here Tuesday.

Charges against a third man, John D. Rawlings, 21, of Iowa City, of resorting to a house of ill fame, were dismissed when it was determined lhat Rawlings was in a different room of the apart· ment when drug sales were made to a state agent.

Bound over to District Court were Roger A. Spaulding, 22, and Stephen C. Renk, 20, both oC Iowa Cily.

State narcotics agents testified in the preliminary hearing they had purchased 7,500 tablets of methamphetamine (speed) from Spaulding for $695.

Following the purchase, police search· ed the apartment and confiscated 65,000 tablets oC methamphetamine, a qu anti­ty of hashish and a small quantity of a (orm o{ LSD.

Beautiful Today should be another great

day for all you beautiful 01

fans out there in beautiful UI

land, Skies will be clear to

partly cloudy, with tempera­

tures in the mid 80s. Rain

probability is a low 10 per

cent.

The six: Jameo L. McCarthy, 21, of Flagstaff, Ariz; Valerie Van Buren, 20, of Washington, D.C.; Berry S. Fujishin, 21, of Homedale, Idaho; J. Brewster Bede, 22, of Morlon, Wash.; James Hume, 22, of Richmond, Va.; and Ron· aid W. Maestas, 28, of Carlsbad, N.M.

The attack Wednesday by tbe oWclal New China News Agency was the fir t public reaction from Peking to Rogers' announcement Monday thaI U.S. policy favors a U.N. seat Cor Communist China but not the expulsion of the Nationalist Chine e Crom the world body.

The dispatch said Rogers "vainly tries to continue to obstruct the restoration to the People's Republic of China or al\ her legitimate rights in the United Nations and insists on being the enemy of the Chinese people."

Noting Rogers said the new policy was in accord with President Nixon's desire to normalize relations with Peking in the interests of world peace, the agency de­clared: "This fully lays bare the coun· ter·revolutionary double·dealing tricks of U.S. imperialism which says one thing

Cheesecake

An Iron Man This is the 0115 week for sport­ing memories. The conclusion of the Jack Dittmer story is on Page 3. A story about Ulls "Iron Men of 1939/1 is on Page 4. At right is the darling of the Iron Menl quarterback Nile Kinnick.

IoThi i bare·faced lying. Everybod~ knows clearly that ' the legacies of the pa~t' Rogers talked about glibly mear the Chiang Kai·shek clique which ha! long been purned by the Chinese people and this was created singlehanded b) liS. imperialism throu~h occlJPvin~ China's Taiwan province and th Taiwan Straits by armed force

uRo er. ' so-called 'rralities' of tW( Chinas are his sheer fancy. There is onl~ one China In the \~orld , th:t I. , the Peo­ple's Republic of China . U.S. imperial. ism will never :ucceed in its plot If it in· sisi.s on making it elf Ihe enemy of th( Chinese people. ohdurately pushing tll 'two Chinas' cherne and euphpmisticall~ describing this AS 'rcalilics.' "

This little fellow was squirreling around on the Pentacrest when D I photographer John Avery paned by. The squirrel stopped long .nough to ny r " Cheese."

Page 2: l t>Ji>c:on Relates Hopes For China Meetingdailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1971/di1971-08-05.pdf · 8/5/1971  · Somebody up there goofed. -01 Photo by John Avery Iftu ... aay, aUlul

~;;;'LYlm1;MIN. Viet PrepforAttack · I SAIGON (.fl - Three North Gen. Jack J. Wagstaff, com· have to be a genius Lo see their l ing. !he Americans think I~e Vietnamese divisions were reo mander of U.S. forces In the idea is to come down here w~r .'s over, that the war IS

BURTLANCASTER ROBERT RYAN lfEJ.C0B8 In A MICHAEL WINNER Film

ported Wednesday trying to 3rd Military Region around Sai. tim grinding down. What a laugh build up their forces and supply gon and senior American ad· some e. thaL is. It may be grinding

I depots in eastern Cambodia for ' viser to South Vietnamese "What they've got to do is down on our side. But il's not assaults into the southern half forces in the region. rebuild all of those depots they grinding down on their side." of South Vietnam. "We 're already ready," Wag. I lost In the Cambodian invasion I Thousands of Siagon troops

" It's a race a.gainst time to st?.tf declared in :rn Inte,rview. and when they 've got all those, logged through knee·deep mud see who can bUIld" Up ,and ~ An,d now they r,e trYIng to you'll see some more action." I in the flatlands of eastern Cam· the strongest first, said Maj. gel ht up. 1 don t think you W t ff 'd h t d bodia in reconnaissance In . ags a sal e suspec e "

I I force operations aImed at keep·

P - R there is ome Infiltration Into ing North Vietnamese Infll· r I sane r e ease SoUI.h Vietnam.'s 3rd Mili~ary tr.alors away from the South Regton that Includes SaIgon Vietnamese border.

ISOOn Paper Says :~: s~~r::r~~n!~~:s :;o:~~~:~ NI'xon Softens I

I WIth CambodIa.

STOCKHOLM f-'! - North o[ war released by the Hanoi Such Infiltrators m\J;(ht be Vietnam is to release 183 Amer· government last December in· from the three North Vietnam·

. ican prisoners of war Aug. 12, cluded 339 names, ese divisions the 5th, 75th and the Swedish dally newspaper The fate of American prison· I 9th operating in Cambodia, or

View on Wage, Price Board FEATURE AT 1 :49·3:47·5:45·7:0.9:41 Dagens Nyheter said 'nlUrSday. , ers long has been a pivotal thev mijlht be Indlvldual re-

1___________________ " J( the plans for this utter· point in the Paris peace talks I placemenfs for North Vil'tnRm.

I most secret release operatlon on Vietnam, with the United ese and Viet Cong units already

NOW .... ...., ... ~,.. .... ~ .. - .. - ... __ • are not changed or overthrown , States maintaining that they , in the region. WASHINGTON IA'I - Pres!· Th •• tchl", "The Sound ~~I~ an SAS alrllner will lift off lmust be released before a final I "There are rNlllv two wllrs dent Nixon softened his opposi· Siolen the Fury III," pictured • .,

ENDS WED. ~ I I] III iii i • .• from Vientiane. Laos." \\;th the settlement could be reached, 1!0inll on." said Wallstaff. "One tion to a proposed wage·price WIS on. of two work. by prisoners bound for New York, 1 The latest Communist peace is tht' wllr of the bi~ unit~ ann review board Wednesday, say· Sounel, Fury G. Smith stol. n r.c.ntly 're

~~ aid Oangens Nyheter, Sweden's proposal, made July 1, offered one is the war of the small Ing full·scale hearings before the art buildinll.

billlze t circulation paper, to release the prisoners simul· 1 units. Inside military region 3, Congress could change his ~---------• ~ The report said the first con· taneously with a U,S. pullout we've only l!ot three enemv mind. 2 E h 5 I

• ~ tacts in the ecret operation from Vietnam if the United rpgiments where last year While saying he is stili I tc I-ngs to en

The story of a gambling man and a hustling lady.

RATED ,..,,~~~. C~~OR ~. ILLER

R

FEATURE AT 1 :30·3:32·5:34·7:36· ':38

STARTS

TODAY

2 LUIS BUNUEl HITS BOTH STARRING CATHERINE DENEUVE

- HIT NO. 1 -

FEATURE AT 1:30·4:45·8:10 "R"

- HIT NO.2-

iI SUPERb" -Canby, N.Y. Time.

NOW WEEKDAYS

SHOWING 7:10 & 9:10

HELD OVE::! f OP. A 2nd WEEK

STARTS

TONITE

CH ' LD i5c • ADULT· REG. PRtCES

WEEKDAYS

7:15 & 9:30

KIM DARBY - TONY MUSANTE - IN COLOR

were made at the end of July. States would set a definite date there were seven. Most of tll' against the idea, Nixon told when the U.S. Command in for withdrawal of its forces. I war in militarv region 3 iR with newsmen he is open·minded South Vletr.am cabled SAS, the The secrecy surround in~ the small - and local - type unUs. and would consider a wage· F A B -I d -Scandinavian airline, asking ror opera.lio~ was broken only by I "The second war is the three pric~ board only if hearings ro m rt U I I n 9 a charter plane. negobatJons for the plane, the divisions that thrp.l!ten Militarv convmced him it could be done

"The transport was originally paper said. Region 3, The SM question II without stifling the economy. planned to take place Aug. 6, The aircraft is scheduled to can the ARVN _ army of thp But he said he would use the Two etchings, valued at more made by A.G. Smith for b.ut the de~rture was de!ayed f1.y to New York from Vientiane Renublic of Vietnam _ keep power of his office more vig. than $100 each, have apparent. master of ~ arts thesis. hlI A~g. 12, the .paper s.ald, via Bangkok and Rome, the reo three divisions out, because If orously to insure that future ly been stolen from the art "T h e mISSing are enUlI

A hst of American prISoners port stated. those three divisions come 1ft wage·price settlements are reo b 'Id' d' t C The Sound and the Fury tha't makes a new war. T be. sponsible. UI lng, acc?r 109 0 ampus and "The Sound and the Fu

~-------------------~ J' th ARVN f II Sh rtl bef N' t Security Officer Lt. Kenneth HI" The etching number leve e are u y CII- 0 Y ore Ixon me Sa lor . . pable of keeping them out. with newsmen, 13 Republican y. . thr~e IS a color of. a woma Ho rd Rockin' and Rollin'

OPEN WHEAT Paramount Recording Artl.t. from Californl.

Play at th.

PUB

"Knowing the Communists' senators proposed legislation to The etchings, las~ seen last while n.umber .one IS a. bla thev're never /!oin,g to stop try· establish a wage-price board to Wednesday, were fIrst noticed and white etchmg.

. . combat inflation . missing on Monday, but the ap- Tucker said that the actu

V. P liO N i x on 's chief economic parent theft was not reported size of both is 14 by 10 inch let u u t spokesman Secretary of the until yesterday. Norval Tuck· but both were in simple whi Treasury J~hn B. Connally, reo er: Direct?r of the School of fra~es which measured 25

U d ' B'II sponded by saying the admin· AI t, e~plalned that he delaye~ 33 Inches and weigh 10 to rae I n I istraUon welcomes a "full. reporting to the police ~tIl pounds. • fledged debate " in Congress he could be sur~ the etchmgs The etchings had been han

WASHlNGTON (.fl - A two· over the issue. I had not been mIsplaced. Ing in a hallway that COMec

Thu rsday, Friday and Saturday year draft bill ur.l!ing Presj· A wage·prlce board could be The etchings, which depict the new and the old art bull ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dent Nixon to negotiate a "fl· structured in many ways. II I passages from William FaUlk. ) ings. -= nal date" for total U.S. with· could, as Federal Reserve ' ncr's The Sound and the Fury Campus Security of tiel a

Union Boarel Presents

WOODPECKER CLAN

Friday

8· 11 p.m.

UNION PATIO

FREE DANCE

Thursday Friday

and

drawal from Indochina was Board Chairman Arthur F, and A$ I Lay Dying, are part said they are continuing then passed by the House Wednes· Burns has proposed, have only o( a collection of nine prints investigation but have no lea day and went to the Senate. power to monitor inflationary - - - - --

But antiwar senators said wage and price movements in OK R' ht 0 d' they will not even h,a.ve to COli' the econ0":JY' using the power S Ig S r Inane duct a fullblown filIbuster to of persuasIOn and exposure to block final enactment before hold them down. Or it COUld . as Th pr posed Human Rela· public accommodatioll!. September D [. . t i e 0 I . ,. some emocra IC economl~ s tions ordinance was scheduled Under the original ordinl

It was the House s first vote have proposed. be armed With for its third and final reading in ever (or imposing a congres· en forcement powers lh 1 C· t C .\' t' jlandlOrds who refuse to rent . . ., ' e owa I y ounci s mee 109 . slOns) stand on endmg the war, The versIOn mtroduced by the Tuesday night but Councilman a person because of hiS sex, e.g. although previous proposals 13 GOP sena.tors \~OUI? set up C. L. Brandt 'changed that by who rent to men or women ex h~d lost by even narrower mar· wage and price gUidelmes that propoSing changes to the contra· I du ively, is subject to pros gms. c 0 u I d. be enforced through verslal ordinance. culion. "' _______ iiiiiiiii.. wage,prIce freezes or through Brandt's amendment in erted The council adopted by

D I AP E R ~~vernment procurement pol· exception clauses In the ordin. amendment by a four to on

SERVICE (5 001. per Week)

- $12 PER MONTH -Free pickup & d. ,ivery twice • w .. k. Everyth ing i. fur. ni.hed: Diapers, containerl, deodorants.

NEW PROC ESS Phene 337·''''

Saturday

ICles. . . ance which make a landlord vote. with Councilman J. Pat ~lle saYI~g h~ has an o~n exe~pt from the ordinance if rick White voting again l it. Th

mm ~owar t e wag~,prlce he lives in the rented property amended ordinance was the b~ard Idea, ,he added, ) a\ ' or if there are six or less rent· I given its first and second rea ~tlll not c?nvI~ced we can move ers, and employers exempt if in(!s . ~~ t~~t direction and be effec· • here are four or less employe· The council will give Ih~ Live. es. I amended ordinance its thili - ----.- I Brandt also moved to strike readin/! at its August 17 mee~

THE CRISIS CENTER the word "sex" from the hous. ine. when it may also adopt i

Somebody cores. ing section of the ordinance . While said he voled aRainsl

Every day :I p.m. to 2 a.m.

351 ·0140

Brandt said thaL the changes 'he prnposed amendment be· put the ordinance in "complete ('lIuse h(' was not in favor 01 tHe al/reement with the state code" Mrs, Murphy clauses whlcli as It relates to housing and Brandt had added to the housin~

---.---- - - and employment ections. He

CA.MPUS SPECIA.L!

Reduced cleaning priclS fo r Students and Faculty Onlyl

THURSDAY ONLY tTo Tak. Adv.nt ... If $ptcl.1 Pita ..

Prtslllt I D Card With Ord.r ) ... ,. LADI ES' .1Id MEN'S

-I

I said he was in favor of striking "sex" from the housing sectlOn, however.

l In another amendment WIIlte wanted to propose a Mrs. Mur·

I phv clause in hnu~ing only. lit ~aid . He would have also intro­ducl'd an exception claus, lor

I rharit able institutions such al 'he Mary Coldren Home lor

I aeed women. White said he would introduce

August 5, 6 and 7 Twe Pi. ce

SUITS ONE PIECE OR TWO PIECE

$109 each

or 2 for $1 99 '

the amendment at the next council meeting and ask the council to consider it. He is not Jplimi tic thaI it will be accep" cd . however. "The three II'h~ vol pd for Branrl"s amendl}1en' ~cel1'ed 10 01' m'p" v much in 'A, VOl' of it f.md \\ouJrl very likely

We will pay half price for books on which we have received a course order from your professors confirming its use the follow­ing semester.

Books that your professors will not use the following semester, or have not yet ordered for use, may be sold at a price estab­lished by a National Used Book Whole.aler.

W. cannot buy old edition books, fill·in workbooks, or paper· backs that were IlSs than $2 new.

"

~Jfool ahd S'w& Corner of Clinton & Iowa Ave.

PL. DRESSES TOPCOATS

SWEATERS TROUSERS,

AND

fLorm.lt, Party Dr ..... , FUrl .nd Sutcl" net Incluclt4.

3 for $1 59

PLAIN SKIRTS plus I •• - plt .1I Ilftr.

PROFESSIONAL SHIRT SERVICE

lIolcltd or en Hanger. I. yeu wIth

One Hour Cleaners

10 Seuth Dubuqu. St. - 338· ...... 6 OPEN frem 7 a.m. to 6 pm,

MONDAY thru SATURDAY

, Mall Sheppln, C.nt.r - 35 I ·9850

I not accept minc." he said.

SIf'Ck P .. ;~e>5 Hi'

I S:" .. M(,)M," I."."

NEW YORK t~ - Stock mar· I ket prices fell La their Imlt,1 level In more than six m'llrtlll Wfldne~dav ror the second em· secutive session.

The Dow Jone industrial aV· erage of 30 industrial stock! dropped 5.11 to 844.91 This wa, ils lowest prylnt since Jan. Il when it hit 843.31.

After an early slide I bri~

Ira lJy deve loped in midsession. But the gains were wi ped oul as slock prices tUl11bled 10 their

IIOWS [or the session at the clost'..

Analysts attributed the briel

I rally to bargain huntin~ mull· ing from an oversold conditkl! in selective stocks. They said , investors had overreacted 10 fears about anolher prime·r.~ hike p ro d u c I n g Tuesdly'l sharp decline which conUIllld , Into Wednesday's early lrIdfII.

Page 3: l t>Ji>c:on Relates Hopes For China Meetingdailyiowan.lib.uiowa.edu/DI/1971/di1971-08-05.pdf · 8/5/1971  · Somebody up there goofed. -01 Photo by John Avery Iftu ... aay, aUlul

t Sound ..,. :turtd .bevt, work. by •. .e.nlly 'rem

en • Ing mith for hil 'is thesis. are entitled the Fury I" Ind the Fury g numbered )f a woman, : is a. black

t the actual )y 10 inches simple whi~ lsured 25 by igh 10 La 15

I been hang. hat COt1l\tel! Id art build.

ly officla~ Unuing their IVe no leads. r

lnce :~~~dinl~, I ie to rent ID ~

;::~:;:: I 'pted by a r four to ont nan J. Pat· ainst it. The

was then iecond read·

I give Ih, : its thir! 1St 17 meel· Iso adopt it. Ited aaainst \ ldment be· ( favor of the Ises which the housing ~ctlons . He ' · of striking ing secti6n.

ment WIIlte Mrs. Mur·

19 only. he also intro­clause for

IS such al I Home (or

d introduce , 1 the nexl

d ask the · He is not I be accepl. three wh<l ·

lI11endmenl

nuch in I~.

very flkely ! said. . ,

Hil I • ..,.~ ,I Stock mar· j lAir If)1V~"

,Ix mrynthl r. econd con·

'ustrial aVo 'Ial ~tockS · This \Val

:e Jan. J4

, ,

Ie a br~ nldsesslon. ' wiped out ed to their ,n 81 the

the brief l Ing reSUlt· I condltiOll They saId " eacted to prlme.rale Tuesday" continued , lyt~

./ ,

rHl DAILY IOWAN-I.w. City, lowe-Thul't., Alii. 5,'971 - ..... 1

Ellllor . .. ............ II'IIV MtG'~1

di editorials Naws Idl... ... ............. M. s. Tlull. Naw. Idltor ......... ....... J.lln Lint " .. tur. Idltor . .." ........ 11m HIfII ... 11I .oI'te,lal Idlle' .. .... ...... . O. M. 11.1t. 'porll 111110' .............. Irl.n CII.,man 'holo Idllor ................ Jlltll Av"y ... rt Idllor ....... .. ... .. . . . Mark III.ft,

Organic Gardening by P .ul HIUtr

This is the last column of this series. And there are a few loose ends I want to tie d,wn.

The renewed interest in the organic method of gardening and [arming is not an isolated iacident. It is only an outward sign of a much greater event in our society. That event may be des­cribed as an awakening from a bad dream. The dream began some years ago and was the result of two prime factors . The first is man's unquench­able greed, and second is his resound­Ing naivete. With the increasing ad­vance of technology man began to take upon himself the job of "the grand re­former of the landscape". If he didn't like that hill, he leveled it. 1£ he didn't want a marsh he drained it. He built bls house on established flood plains and then cried in astonishment when he was flooded out. But he corrected that, he built flood control reservoirs. And he's filling these with silt by his continued erosion of the land into the rivers .

A grand example of this is the Coral· Yille Reservoir. Soon to be a huge , {Iat mud plain. And then watch the floods lear through Iowa City. Man also be· gan to manipulate his food and food producing techniques. Pesticides in ag­riculture and additives in food products Ire the glaring examples here.

But the bubble has burst. An incrCl(s­ing number of people are becoming con· cerned about this thing we call our I!I1vironmenl. Food production is an area of special interest. Few of us can stop the damn dam builders but we ~an control what we eat. And some of

tr.nslated by W.ldon E. Heitman ISRAEL'S DEFENDER

WASillNGTON - In connection with American Assistant Secretary of State Joseph Sisco's trip to the Middle East, American propaganda is advertising "a new peace initiative", which they say is aimed at liquidating the Middle East crisis . As the essence of U.S. politics is distorted , so is the situation in the Mid· dle East. Meanwhile this part of the world remains explosive. The reason for this is because Tel Aviv is making arrangements to annex a large part of Arab territory. This is seen in a recent decision of the Israeli ruling party to maintain the Israeli·Arab borders, which hive elxsted since 1967. Only the posi· tIon of the U.S.A., their protector, al, lows the Tel Aviv aggressor to defy the call of the world community to shatter the resolution of the Security Council and the General Assembly, and to wreck any possible settlement in the Middle East. Israel needs weapons and Washington, striving to preserve all means of trade to Israel, takes upon Ibelf the role of defender, thereby cov· erlng up its own aggression.

In an address on July 19, A. Eban, Tsraeli Foreign Minister, stated direct· Iy that Israel's armed forces and its economy depend on "foreign support". Without this, he said, "we would be· come like a heart without a pulse". He, of course, was referring to the U.S. and, for once, did not lie. The U.S., at the present time, is the only (lOwer sup­plying them with arms. American cap­ital investment, various loans, and "philanthropic" Zionist donations per·

these concerned people are joining to· gether so that they can be more ef­fective in their efforts. I talked to the organizers of one such group last week. The group is here in Iowa City and is called "The New Pioneer's Cooperative Society". It is a true cooperative, be· ing so recognized by the State of Iowa. In the Articles of Incorporation I found the following six purposes listed. (1) To provide a viable and low-cost mechan­ism for the consumption of food and related products; (2) to stimulate the local agricultural production of organic foods and provide a market for such foods ; (3) to stimulate the consump­tion and production of organically pro­duced food products; (4) to specifical­ly reject products which injure the nat tural environment, diminish tho nutri­tional value o[ food and fail to utilize high organic standards for food product tion ; (5) to provide educational and ancillary services to the members of the Cooperative and the community; (6) to encoura~e all people to return to the earth, recognize its crucial im· portance to man and animals and re­spect the fact that we are but mere guests of this planet, privilegcd to en­joy its use and responsible for its sur· vival. In my opinion that last point should be lhe prime consideration In everything man does. However, it el· dom seems to be. Anyway. if you want more information about the Cooperative, call 351-3287 or 353·5001.

The University of Iowa is buying and using some recycled paper. That's great. However , I have been told by a reliab\e source thal if the recycled pap-

er had cost ev~n a fraction of a cMt more per ream than new paper they wouldn't have bought it. Another fact to remember: This university produces tons of waste paper per day and doesn't recycle even one scrap of it, and there are apparently no plans to start reo cycling it either.

How about those keep-off·the·grass signs outside of the administration build· ing. Only these signs don't say "Keep Off". They have nice little "in" phrases and attempt to capitalize on the grow· ing public concern about the environ· ment. All this just to keep some grass growing. I have news for you people who thought them up: the environ· mental crisis we now face has nolhing, 1 repeal, nothing to do with keeping the lawn green. Is there that much lack of understanding in this unlver ity's administration?

The elected officials o( Iowa City have their own "understanding" prob· lems. For example, several individuals and organizations asked that the leaves collected by the city each fall be com· posted in one section of the sanitary land·fill . The city's action was to wind­row the lcaves and label them as "com­post". That's nonsense gentlemen, i( you don't know what compost is ask any good gardener. Why didn't you take some of that sewage sludge you're al· ways using as land-fill material and do a proper job or it. The resulling com· post would have been of great value to such groups as Project Green, and to IndiVidual tax paying gardeners who would have gladly hauled it away for you.

lite Communist Porty nctcspaper of t/le people of tlte Soviet Union

mit this small government to prepare for war. If one speaks of the "new initiative" in connection with Sisco's trip, then in practice is displayed the old policy directed toward the, procure· ment of capitalism in the Arab lands, to place them on the wheel of aggres·

. Sian, to force them to accept all con· ditions of the invader, and to have stood before them international monopolies.

Sisco's main problem, wrote "The New York Times (July 28), "is to meet with the Israeli leaders, and to work out a new compromise to the Israeli· Egyptian balance of power". The propa­gandizing of the U.S. and Israel on this thesis of the so·called "balance of pow· er" in the Middle East remains the main point of American policy. They do nol show the other view of the balance of Israeli occupation of Arab territory, the balance of population, military blackmail, and' the extension of Israeli aggression against t he Arabs. From lhe point of view of Washington, this "bal· ance" must always be in favor of the aggressor. Under this cover Tel Aviv receives new weapons o( destruction -"Phantom" and "Skyhawk" jets and other military apparatus. The Assoc­iated Press stated that Israel is waiting for Sisco's answer concerning the de­livery of new arms. Golda Meir insists that this is necessary to "the preser· vation of the balance of power."

Sisco's other problem concerns an agreement on the reopening of the Suez Canal. Washington propaganda makes noise about the reopening of the canal as an "interim arrangement", which hardly solves the main problems of the Middle East. As many observers in

Washington say, they are trying to freeze the key probl~m in the Middle East settlement - the withdrawal or all forces from occupied territory as a main condition for the restoration of peace. Sisco has one way to attain this "interim agreement". Th. N.w Verk Post has affirmed that "Sisco will agree to new shipments of arms only if Israel agrees to reopen lhe Suez Canal" :

The Daily Iowan I'ubllshad by Stude"' I'u'-"ea""",, Inc.,

Communication. C,IIt'r, Iowa City, leOla IH4t daily unpt S.turd.ys, lundaYI. Htlld.ys. L.~.I Molld.ys . d.ys .,.er '.g.' Holld.y •• nd davs of U"lverslty VaCltlon. Enterld It SIC. ond ellS. matttr at till p." elflu " leW. City ullder the Act of COII,re,. ef Marcil t . 1179.

'nnk , . Hllh. 'ublfsnar Roy Dunsmore. "'dvertlsln, DI'ItIl. Jam •• Conlin, Clrculltlon M.n ....

Th. v.lr Towa" ~leh ~nd edlltd by .h,oI.nl. 0 The Unlverllty of Inwi. Opinions exprpSlItd in the editorial colum"1 of tbe paper Bre IhllSe of the wrllers.

Tit, ..... oel.t.d ,,~ enHtled tn Ih. U. rlu.lve use lor republlCIUon III locil .. w.1I as all AP news and dlsp.tchel.

S\lb,crlollon lI.t'~trrler In low. City $15 per year In adv.nce; .Ix months, .. ; thre~ mnnlh •• ~ .50. All m.1I subscrlptlons, S20 lIet ye~r; .Ix montha. 112: three monthl. ".50.

1'1.1 337.04'" fro';;-;;;';;;- to mldnl,ht to fO· port ntw. Items and annOUncelllentf In The Doily low~n . Edltorl.1 offices Ito III tn4 COlli' mun lcatlons Center.

01.1 353-6203 Il you do not recel.. your pop .. r by 7;30 a.m. Every .ffoM will be mid. In corroct the error with the next blue. Clrcuiltlon ollleo hOUfS are 8:30 10 11 • . 111. Monday through Friday.

Trn.t.... Board of Student Publlc.llolIJ, \nc.; WilliAm Zlma. School of .Iourn.llom, Cb.irman; ,Iudy Ament, A3; John Blldwln, A4: Dourlll 1!:bnin~er. Dep.rtment of Speech Bnd nromRtic Arl' Gear,. Forell. Schnol 01 Religion; Greg Kelley. "'2; n.vtd Schoenhaum, Department of Ristory; Ron Zob.l. A.3. :to Officio: Rob.rt T. Hitlon. Office of Public Informillon.

,$ Signs of ~ged Care IDITOR'S NOTE: nil is

• MHnII ltery If • thrtt INrt Rritt III cere r.r the .iek .... If"! If .... t •• _ City .,.. •• TM.y, Mmillistr.· te,. ,Ive their viewl on the ""~mI inv.IYM III MVrsi", heme Mminl • .,.ti ....

him. . A ~edicare uti~iUltion Dean of the CoUege of (edi- l .. ~ainly. the problem is that c?mmlttee In. Ka~as CIty de· cine, pro pective member of a one nurse, assigned from Des ~ldeS the pat~ent s sta,tus , and White House Conference on lhe Moines and the State Depart· If .the ahswer IS no, we re stuck aging : ment of Health Is given a WIth a two month's 10 S. "The trouble with nur ing large area to ' cover. She'!

"Rigbt now we have 17 pat homes is their concept of treat- lucky to make it to each fa­ti~nts on welIare. {)Jr working men!. The simplest thing in the ciUty in her area once a year. quotl Is 10. What welfare pays world, getting a convalescent There are six nurses to cover

Iy ILIZABETH ,.OXLEY us per day per patient does not out or bed, to sit up or to walk. God knOIVS how many nursing D'I I R---- necessarily cover the cost of seems to be the mo t difficult homes, custodial care centers .t y ewell .,... ,.. caring for that patient. We try for the nur ing home person· elc .. across the whole state. '

According to i survey made to clear five to ten dollars a nel. It takes time ; there isn't "Also the e Inspeclors are in 1970 by the Univer ity's day for each patient. The co t the staff. Cutting costs only only nu'rses by experience and Gerontology Institute, Johnson of caring for him, on the aver· makes the services rendered to training. They don't have the County offered 361 licen cd age is '10.60. When we're over the elderly people inferior. background and training needed nursing home beds in private our welfare quota, we have to "President Nixon is very up- to in peet nur Ing homes espec· facilities Ind 114 in the coon- rl~se the cost per day for each ~t about this problem o[ nurs- lally In the areas of ~ care, ty home. Spokesmen It four of prIvate patient to make up the 109 homes. The White House sanitation etc. these facilities said that A 100 difference. No two months conference in November will "PhYSIc~1 therapy lind social· per cent capacily is a rarity. show the sime amount 01\ the deal with all areas, but heavy izalion are areas tbat all nurs-

One private home, the Clau· private patient's bill. emphasis will be placed on the ing homes have to work on ~e~ Nursing !fome at 8ll S. ":With an. this time devoted quality or care in nursing I A~ain . cost l~ the problem. If ~ Chnton, has IDee closed, m~. to JU t keepmg out of the red, home . Facility has lhe equipment for mg 32 fewer beds a~ailable. we have ~o time or money to . "One of the major problems therapy. It doesn't have the taff With the new stale licensing devote to Improvements of the lIS all the red tape a per on has to run It AI 0 a pleasant at­r~gulation! un~er considera' l facility . For, inst:mce, w~ need to go through before he can mo~phere' lIS w~1I as II healthv hon, some nurslllg homes pre. more lherapeuhc equipment get a place to stay. Somebody environment should be provided <tiet that even more facilities such as a whirlpool bath . way on the other ide o[ the "On Id I I d I . .

'11 be ( ed t I I " . . t d 'd h e ea S ow y eve onlnS! WI arc 0 c ose. Some nursmg homes In the coun ry ecl es wether or not acro~s Ihe state Is that 1 I I

For an understanding of the southern counties 01 Iowa have a person Is eligIble for extended d : itt· r . I? ~~ bl ted b 100 d ' a min ~ ra Ion 0 Inspec Ion. \A"

pro ems presen y and for per cent welfare people. I care un er medIcare. The only n rRtion wilh 1\ t am a h the nursing home or enended don't know how they urvive. person who really knows is the '~he Ide W h c ~?~afc care facility. we spoke with a "It would be better if the patient's personal physiCian. :hi~ lncal a~Ulhe rlr\a~~he ~r private nursing. home adminis. nursing homes that do provide As a member of a 1970 task \lIlwaVII a reluc~Rn~~ o~ th:r;a~ trat~r, an associate dean of the e.xcellent care for weJrare pat force studying the problems in of Ihe IItate to d~legate authority medical college (a\so serving bents were paid more so they lowa, I recommended that the to local levels" on a U.S. Senate Committee In. could Improve more. patient 's personal phySician . vestlJ(ating the aged) and the "Another problem comes with alone be responsible for medi· 1 • • • Johnson County Director 01 the two sets of regulations, one care certification. One final source. this time on Public Health. pertaining to homes built be. "1 spoke with one woman who I the federal level. Ralph Nadpr's

Three local administrator$' fore 1957, the other for those finally paid her nur ing home report on the workin~s of nur . views on the efficiency and built after lhat time. A fairly bilt , with what funds she ing hnmes recommends that the economy oC local nursing hom. new facility, Beverly Manor is could, after everal months of I redcral government take over es follow. allowed only two patients to a futile correspondence wilh of· I full respon. ibilitv for establish·

Mrs. J.ane Wright, R.N. , DI. ~oom, whereas an older facil· fices in Mi ouri and Mary· Inll and enforcing nur~lng home rector, Beverly Manor Convale. Ity for the same Ize room is land. I rel!ulations and admlmstration. scent Center, President South- allowed four. The result has "As far as conditions In fowa Before the que.tion of local east lowl Nursing Home A so- been more income for tbe old· go, in lhe southern counties or f .. deral control Is settled. the ciation: er racllity." where our over·slxty-five pop- older person who needs some

"Our facility has 52 beds, (NOTE: Thls and other state ulatlon is highest, there is the kind of care and can't get It with about 75 per cent private regulations written by the State lowest percentage of medical from family or friends, must and 25 per cent welfare resi. Department 01 Health are be· personnel. Some counties do not hav(' faith that he wllJ be In· dents. BOth convalescents lind ing considered by the Iowa even have nursing homes, let formee! about the services and retired persons are admitted; I Senate and House interim fiOC· a Ion e cnough doctors and fprllitics that his communJty not .11 are over silty·five. The ial services committees.) nurses." offers. Iverage stay l~ two years . "The state regulations are ••• Jf fhp local facilities are too Many recuperating from ill. fine and do make for better Mr. Lyle ft'j her, Director o[ crowe!E'd . too eXJ>en~ive or just nesse! have shorter slays, facilities . We like to be ideal· Johnson County PubliC HealUl : not hi ~ id~1I of what home Is. he !Ome are permanent residents. istie and provide the best, but "No, nursing homes are not mi,!hl hear about nnd contact

"An extended care facility , who pays? well controlled and in peeted 10 the Visiting Nurses As ociallon Beverly Manor has around-lhe- "Profit Is coming to be less Iowa . or .J"hnsnn Countv Social Serv· cl~k medical .ttention by I and Ie s a motive for starting ,·It's really not the faull of I tce~. Thev ml~ht arrant~e for regIstered nurse. We could , a nursing hom . the Slate Health Department him to receive one hot meal , one qualify as a medicare extend. "OC cour , if a private pat· that Iowa 's homes are bad in friendl y lelephont' CII)) a day, ed care facility but we don't ient suddenly runs out of mono spots. There just isn't enough and visll s from nurses . hln~le medicare pati~n.t~. We ey, we don't ask him to lea~e. ~oney given the department to At least through these servo

l"I.811 .t afford the POSSlblhty of If we have to start cutting hire the staff necessary for In· ices. complete alienation from

ndtng out that I patient's not costs, we have to cut services." speclion" teaching inservice, socipty wili not be the older con· eljgible for medtcal'l two I • *. environmental control (sanila- valcscent's only remaining months after we've admitted Dr. W. W. Morris, Associate lion I procedures, etc. choice.

Interview with Ex-Athlete iditw'. N ... : L •• t in I IIr. think of the Pentagon Papers?long hair? he handled thJngs too well as

I DITTMER: 1 don't know lhat's DITTMER: J get sick every athletic dlreclor. (Laughs.) Of IIy Jim H.m"lth. I a little over my head. ' Mixed time I see him . th ' .

feelings on it both ways. May. 1 HEMESATH: What do you call course. at s my personal OPIO' be the guy was right but then your haircut? ion, he might feel the same way

HIMESATH: What do you think again maybe he's a' not her DITTMER: CrewcuL (laughs) I about how I run the garage here of Jim Bouton' Ralph ader. I ['ve had a crewcut ince 1 in Elkader. DITTMIR: I've read his first H&MESATH: (Laughs.) Oh , played ball for Elkader High I HEMESATH: The day I first boo~, don't intend to reael the yeah you're a car dealer. School. (Laughs.) . But every- called to set up an interview second one. 1 think ba eball's DlrTMIR ' (Laughs) Nader's hi>?dYh ~ashgot thehrll(ht to wear your wUe said you were In Iowa been pretty good to him and It . , IS air t e way e wants It.

Id h ld k done real well for himself with HEMESATH' Were you ever In City for tbe VIP Tournament. wou seem", e cou t~a ~mo~· I· just rattling off at the mouth. the ervice?' I Did you play? ey some 0 er way "I" ~nOCI\' ] think he's going to cost John DITTMER N I in~ other ball players. l 'm really Q Publl wf I I t f : 0 , was 4-F. Hay DITTMER: (Laughs.) No, no,

. c In a II 0 0 mono Fever and IIsthma . . not too erazy about Mr. ~outon. I ey on some or this car safety I HEMESATH' Wh t d no. I was Just a spectator. ] 2Uess you could put It that stuff, the pollUtion stuff. I don 't think of low~ foot:all? a you HEMESATH: Did you see Stan ftY~ see where this stuff's gonna DITTMER: Definitely on the Musial? H'~ P!SATH: What about Curt , ~o any good. Maybe It'll help I up wing with Lauterbur. DITTMER: 1 talked to Stan "*' . I m some respects, but you'll HEMESATH: How about the lusia!. although 1 don't be­DITTMER: Th .. r~ uain ba~e- I bave lo prove It to me. I Nagel-Evashevski fight? Heve he knew who 1 was. ( ban's be~ ."runy .good to hI';' HEMISATH: What were "Dill- DITTMER: I don 't have too talked with him a little while. IIn~ I don t know oUite what he S mer Days?" I much o[ an opinIon on it ex. Bul he 's about lhe only one r trYIng to prove. Flood.wlS play· DITTMER: Otl, (laughs) the cept to say that It was very ~cally dId follow down there, in~. maybe he was Just goIng town chartered this train and poorly handled. It was pretty warm and there \11' when I was comtJlg down, came to Milwaukee to see me HEMESATH: What's your op- was fl bunch of us fellows and ~~~~~~;~~i~lm . ~ v play. Christ, the first time they inion of Evashevski? the heat \Vas gelling to some ban ft • t'yO~ ~ay !I~. went the game was rained out. I DITTMER: Terrlfic football of them 0 we went and found

?I er you re Ire ,~om t e Ne~dless to say a few of them coach! a shade tree. pros . never got off the train, didn 't HEMESATH: What about as HEMESATH: I think we'U end DI~MER: OnP year of semi· even know they were in Mil- athletic director? it right here, okay?

pro wi h Dyer ville. waukee. DITTAJER· Well. T don't think OITTM~R: Fine. "'EMECATH: How about speak· HEMESATH: What do yOu in~ enfjlfjements! I think of Joe Pepitone and his DtTT~IIt: Not Inymore, T did whell I first 1I0t bllck . It's been ~ome time ince I've been ask· ed. I ort of /lot out of It and it's okay with me. HI~1!5ATH: Auto~aphs? I DITTMI!It: Oh. now lind then II eet II reQuest thronl!h the mail. , Som, collector will send me I --.... ~---....... bubble ~m card or • tJossle and ask me lo slim It. The SCHEDULES nther month at the high school I rp.tlnion. a ~irl I went to school Schedules of. courses for the "'ith asked me for my auto- I 1~71'72 academiC ye~r may be Il1'lIl)h I picked up In the Registrar's Of· HEMisATH: Do the Idds In fice be~Ming today. In addit~on Elkader know you were I big I to during the regular office lucruer? h?urs , lhe schedules may be DITTMIR: Kids' come i.,to tbe picked up 9 a.m. to noon Satur­"Drll'le every now and then day. Students must present IDs. They've seen my baseban !lie: RALL V ture- on th, wall or their par· A rally locusing on draft reo pn'~ l"ld Ihem 1 used to be in peal and draft resistance wilt be the "'II inr le"RIIe.~ so thev come held today at noon on the Penta· in sod want to talk a little bit. crest. At 5 p.m. a peace lottery HI~I!SATH: Do you do any I will be conducted in front of the . M~d*''! , little leal/Ue? Iowa City Post Office. The ac· DITTM''': No. I just run the livities. spon ored by Christians g;lr~cze. Oh. yes. I'm president Affirming Life and the Iowa "r .,,'! "ounlrv club. but my term Peace Action Committee, will I~ up in two months. coincide with the national draft HEMESATH: What do YClU llottery. Jack Dittmer

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~. 4-THI! DAILY IOWAN-low. City, 1 __ T1Iun" AUf, 5, 1m

Wi ndauer I Nelson Out for '71 lOW A CITY, Iowa (.f\ -

eteran defensive linemen be lost to the University of

ootball team for the 1971 , head coach Frank Lau­said Wednesday,

Two v will lowa f season (erbur

He and

Nelson, of Bessemer, Ala., have started for the Hawkeyes the last two years. Their loss leaves Iowa with 31 lettermen returning.

Daily Iowan

CHILD CARE MISC, fiOR SALE baven'

said tackle Bill Wlndauer middle guard Jerry Nelson

I recovered sufficiently corrective surgery to play all.

[rom

Lauterbur said that "we'll ask the Big Ten for a hardship ruUng so that both will get an additional year of eligibility. In tbese Iypes of cases the re­quests are pretty routine." SPORTS

AMERICAN LEAGUE lAST W. L. Pct. G.B. Want Ad Rates DEPENDABLE chilO care In my STEREO MAsterwork Solid SII

5 9 625 1 home . Large, renced play yard. I Garrard [u rn labl •. Twin speaker this f Both underwent surgery last

Windauer for an ankle and Nelson for knee

Lauterbur also announced the signing of Mark Essy or Des Moines Dowling. Essy is a 5-11, 2)3-pound middle guard and also is a weigbtliftlng cham­pion. I

Baltimore , Boston

6 3 . 1 W d Indoor and outdoor activities. Ex· Good condition. $55. 338-3980. ~ 62 45 .579 41/2 One D.y Se. or I ceUent references. Regina I:tIl!h -

spring, I_..:;;;;~;:;;;;::r:::==~=======-:::::::;:=;;;;:;;;;::======;..;;..I Detroit 57 50 .533 9'L arca. 351-'1094. 10·7 KENMORE 3 eyrie washln.!! Ill,. Tl Two 0 Y lk I Word , chine . 11k. new. $125, or oil ••

54 56 .491 14 I S EXPERIENCED CHILD care - my Must se ll. 351·2678. I-injury troubl es,

New York Washington Cleveland

h 0 20c W d hame, lull time, rrfcrences fu r· . - ---~-44 62 415 22 Tree .ys ..... . I Dr Dished. 351·7064. 8-6 CAMPING GEAR - 8 K 10 .ehl-

. tent. 2 sleeping bags. Colema 43 66 .394 24lt Fiv, D.ys ........ 23c • Word RIDEIl WANTED I stove, lantern. New, cheap. 33= Wind auer, from Chicago, and

I Era Sets Hopetu/ recedent for Future

WEST ' i 9515. I-r.n D.y. ....... 29c. Word THREE Nec;hl portables!' all d-

Oakland 68 39 636 I TO RIVERSIDE. California, Augu.t zig zag and buttonho eS. Plv _

I Kan as Cl'ty 52 52 '500 lA' )ne Month . . . . . 5Se. Word 9lh. No expe" •• s, shAre driving . payment. or $550. Wayne's Sewln ronmen . • ~ Denny, 1·364·3525. 8·6 Center. 107 2nd Avenue. Coralvlll~ California 53 58 .477 17 Minimum Ad 10 Words 351-1lm. 8-

P '

Chicago 50 58 .463 18'>! WANTED KALONA KOUNTRY Kreatlons . Th_ M' 462 18'L place with lhe handmades. 1<-

mnesota 49 57. 1/2 PHONE 353-6201 WANTED - Child care and house. I lona , Iowa. ((1,61 Milwaukee 46 61 .430 22 keeper. FuU time. live In or - -, --~

,' Ieep out. Rererences 351.8446. R.6 MAN S S.speed Schwinn bicycle -_ - __ _._ - - lar"e, black, light. 35 ('()J37. a...

NATIONAL LEAGUE -- WmlAN'S 10 speM bicycle. 3~8· 1- --EAST I 2821, evenillis. 8·5 STUDENT SALE - Stove, ,errl

, - --- -- I erator, bofJ , drehsel', wardrobe:-____________ WANTED - 32 cal. brass caslnlls drapes. chairs, plus, 351·6727, 5 te: SI*',I Feature game, losing 27 to 7 to a big and La 8 and carried in for the to 9 Iowa! The Hawks had cov- Pittsburgh till 41 .624 I rYPING SERVICES I lor 32 cal. S. '" W. 33l!·0137. Ifn , 7_ p_.m. ___ 8.:::;

B

This

Y JERRY KOLDA I fast Michigan team. core. Kinnick drop kicked the ered 79 yards in six plays. Chicago 59 50 .541 9 , I NEW D'iNACO PAT 4 pre·amp Inc::: stereo 120. $200, 351·7601. eve _

Year a new coaching The Hawkeyes took an early 7 extra point, slicing the score When Iowa kicked off to Min St. Louis 59 50 .541 9 ELECTRIC - Fa.t. accurale, ex· ning.. Be

I 9 7 M· I ~ Y k 55 53 509 121,2 perleneed. rea.onable. Jane Snow" MOBILE HOMES staff ha s come to the UniverSity to. O. ead on a pass play (rom - mneso a. nesota , the Gophers desperate- "W or . 338·6472. 10·51J' USED VACUUM cleaner. - SIO "p -

. Once before, afler sev- KInntck to Buzz Dean. But a 97 With five and a half minutes Iy tried to pass their way out Phillldelnhia 4" 6) .440 20 - -- --I BRENTWOOD 8 x 42 Hilltop nall .r Guar8ntoed. Phone 337·0060. oC Iowa era! 10

. t' b f Montreal 43 66 394 25 PROFE$SlONAL SECRETARY will Ct. Best arCer. 'Phone 338.2108 11-2'1::" sing seasons, a new yard pass mtercep Ion y a~u- I remaining, Kinnick returned a of defeat , but Nile Kinnick as- . do thcsls or manuscript typ,ng., 8.6 TWFANIES LAMBSKINS 11'·-

I T H d tl f d I f WEST Phone 351-4892 3·31 I - - " qua .,..-roachin R staff came and a phen- ous om armon an a cos y punt rom the 10 to his own 21. ' su re owa 0 victory by inter- -- - ------ - - 1969 BARON 12x60 _ Unfurnlslled, .temw"!'e; candle •. I.alhers. potl-

football season followed . fumble turned the tables on the Once more the square iawed. cepling a pass at midfield J'ust S F'raflrisco 1i7 45 598 MANUSCRIPTS, General - Notary 1 t vo bedroom. Rea~onable. Calli 101 51h2 St.cel, Coraivlile. 2·9 w.ek-omenal . Public. Mary V. Burns, 41 1. lawa 6211-2083. 8-6 da ys, ·6 weekends. I4ii: ootban fan are hoping Iowans. irrepressible ile Kin n i c k before the gun. The score stay- l.os >\ j;(eles 59 51 .536 7 Slile Bank Building. 337·265E. 8-6 - -Iowa f

that Jig 1969 BARCROFT - Less th~-;' $80

htening will trike twice. Another fine Michigan per- sw:mg into action. Kinnick ed Iowa 13, Minnesota 9. H~lI·ton 55 54 .505 lO'h I ___________ per month . 12 x 50 two bedroom. CYCLES

Let us in Iowa C .354 27

1L 1____________ Amana . 8·6 1965 HONDA 50 - Need. wO~k; return to a late fall day rormer that day was quarter- threw a 17 yard slrike to Buzz I Seven Iowans were full tl'me ~ 'I:jnta 57 56 .504 101,2 HOUSES FOR SALE Washer and dryer. 622·3525, Middle I City and take a look at back Forest Evashevski. Dean. On an attempted pass to I perfonners that day, - Nile incinnali 40 73 "" I THREE bedroom. annex. F-u-rn-Ish. Phone 35(.86U3. ...

the sea son that produced fool- BackJield coach Frank Cari- Prasse, interference was ca1l· Kinnick , his sixth strai~ht BY OWNER - 4 bedroom., den. ed , air, sheds. beellent 10caUo~. 1970 KAWASAKI 250cc -. 1,700 b I I

I d

. t M' t ., ~ ., ,",I,,..., ,,, ... P,·.cl,ers Family room, iarxe yard. III $2,000. 338·5521. 8-61 miles. E.cellenl. $550.351-4322. ball's fa

Nove U ous ron Men. den nhilosoohized on the Michi- e agalns Inneso a, gIVIng I ga me without relief. end~ Er. . ., .. t;': Montrose. 338·3777. 8·5 ---- u

mber 18, 1939 was a beau- gan loss this way: "We may lowa the ball on the enemy's win Prasse and Dick Evans ; F':.~Ji~I~~D·w~~~~,ETfo~i2 al~n~~~: 1966 HONDA 300 Super Hawk . • 250 In Iowa City, ideal loot_ I have taken a beating, but we 145-yard stripe. I tackles Mike Enich and Wall V NATlON~L LEAGUE WORK WANTED 10.20 porch . 38 Htlltop. 338·0166. or besl oCfer. 337·3793. Ii tHul dav

ban we fast riel

ather which provided a learned something from it, and Fullback Bill Green raced I Bergstrom; guard Ken Pettit, New York Sadecki 5-3 at EDITING AND linguistic .upervt. LO x 55 PARK E-S-TA- T-E- i9~~: 19~0~~D~~to~e$57~~·B1~5·0f~~~ d. A capacity crowd of when you learn from your de- around hi own right end to the and center Bruno Andruska. 1 Atlanta Kelley 6-3, N slon of paper, lhesls or book bedroom. air conditioning, car· Two heimcts, carrier rack . Nick,

I d · ted I th ( t II d 't I II M' t 38 0 th t I Y I h d' , . tength manuscripts. International petlng. 337·2200 aIter 5 p.m. 35H367. Ii 50.000 fa ns sa. elec ~ a e ea s, you rea y on 0 e. I .lnn.eso a. . n. e nex p a , owa a spent Its resources ; ' San Diego Kirby 10-7 at publish In, experIence. Can work jn 8·5 ----an SInking behInd the Michigan _ Minnesota scores Kinnick Circled right end for the eason and the Minnesota Chicago Dizzaro 2-1 Russian, German, French and 10 x'. VINDALE _ Air c· -- d,.-t.'-on-"d-, 19~7IooSUCZUKII I 12Occ. Good condltlon, sun beg

west sta d f d· t 1- Dutch. MedIcal, technlcil and gen· "" vu - •• a 337-4858, Betsy. a.s

nds, forcing a shadow were usually clo e, and the fact ten yar s - 28 rom pay If. game had taken its toll of play- San Francisco Maricbal 10- eral subjects. BIbliography complla· 1:\':Jrt~p . fully carpeted. 351.19~:6 1870 SUZUKI 1%5cc . good condltlon. across t he turf. that the Michigan-Iowa score Now with 3 minutes to . play, ers. With Nile Kinnick leav- 7 at SL. Louis Cleveland 9-9 gfa~k:.n~51~~~~ln" Contact L. :8 Less than 3.000 miles. ,375. 3.11-

biller taste 01 eight was not, had made the Mlnne- Iowa had a chance to Win the ing early in the Northwestern N' 0945, 337.245'. I-! The ~traighl lingered Iowans.

defeat by Minnesota sot a players even more confi- game. A hush fell over the game because of an iniury, the Los Angeles Singer 5-13 at PETS RIDE WANTED in the mouths of dent the day they played Iowa. crowd, and even the pennants courageous, outmanned but Houston Billingham 5-9. N

The fans' hopes for re- When the third quarter of the atop the stadium hung motion- never outfought Iowans, had to Pittsburgh Kison 2-2 TO WEST Coast - August lOth on.

at f'OR WHATEVER you want to gIve Wlil share expense •. 337·9946. - FU.TY pupple., part Husky. 8·5

vE'l1~e a pneared to be lading Minnesota game got under way, l less... settle for a disappointing 7-7 Montreal Stl'ohmayer 4-3 , shadows that altel'noon j ~I looked llke the Iowans were .Talt Cummins, ~ormer sports tic.

N 643·5852. 8·6 RIDE FOR three lo N.Y. .round with the ~5 years ter of th e gAme began. 1 Kinnick was forced to punt from plds, Iowa, recounted that mo- and in the Big Ten with fOllr M'I k Lo k d 7 7

PUREBRED German Shepherd pups, seven weeks. Shots, wormed, ,30.

503 S. Van Buren, evenings. 8·6

August 21. Roxanne, 337·5505. 8·6 TO WASHINOTON, D.C. area aCter

July 29. WIIi share gas. 338-4813. 8-6

ago. as the fourth quar- In for a long afternoon. Nile I d~rector at WMT 10 Cedar Ra- Although they finished sec- AMERICAN LEAGUE

I h d d h ment this way' "The particu .I wau ee c woo - or ore read Minnesota 9, t e Iowa en zone an t e Go- '. - wins, ~e loss and one tie, they Slaton 7-3 at Oakland Hunter The sc nd Eric Wilson, former phers returned the ball to the lar phase of the. MInnesota had the best season record of 113-10 N

KITTENS . ooe grey, 2 blacks and • motley black will need homes

beglnnln, August 13. Please call now to reserve one . thank you ! 351-4062. 8·6

FOR TWO to Boston area. August Iowa 0, a sports Iowa, re we dldn' we were game."

In Au sidered I J!ame, bu son. Ten ball lay tough sch peets for were ver made up players onlv one

publicity director at I Hawkeye 27. game that made It s,o great any conference school, having I Chicago Wood 12-8 at Cali-calls ... "11 looked like The crushing Minnesota attack was that the 'pla~ whIch won won both of theIr non-confer- , forn.ia Wright 10-10 N t have a chance, as it moved the ball goalward and the game, while ,.t may have ence games, giving them a 6-1- Minnesota Hall 4-5 at Kan-completely out of the four plays found them 4th down been new to Mmnesota, un- 1 record. I C·t D I C t 3-5 N

, with ~ yards t? go on the Ha.wk's f~lded befor~ the capacity sta- For the £lrst time in historY, 1 sa~lev~l~nd a COI:~~n 2-3' at ~st the experts had con- 7. MInnesota s F';anck skIrted dLUm crowd In such a way that the Coach of the Year award Washington Thompson 0-2, N owa not only out of this left end and went In (or a touch- everybody knew what was sup- j and the Heisman Trophy, in- Baltl'more Cuellar 13-4 at ----------

d posed to happen and then sat I AlR CONDITIONED, unapproved, t out of the whole sea- . own. . ' . , .. dicalive of college football 's New York Kline 8-10, N fur ni shed, slngle rooms tor men. 1958 CHEVY 2.door, 6 cylinder. 11

de olate years of foot- The Gophers extra pOint at- I there and watched It happen . most outstanding player, went I Detroit Chance 4-6 at Bos- ~~~ife:.trj:~k~~on~s c~:,rJ~~s·a;3a~t~f. runs. $50. 338·0301. 8·6 behind Towa. With the tempt by Mernik was blocked As the ball was snapped by to a coach and player from t P t 9.8 N 11 East Washington. Phone 337·0041. 1967 GALAXIE - 390 lutom,tlc. edule they faced, pro _ a~d th~ third qua~ter clo ed C~nter Bruno An~ruska to Kin- the same institution, Coach An- ~ e ers '_ _____ 11I-6ar ta~:c~~errtade c~rc~~~n;'r !al;'~,;clr

an improved season With MInnesot.a l~adIng 9 to .0, ~Ick, Fullback BIll Green. act- derson and halfback Kinnick , I R~~l~~.,r~sbe~m~'~d-d~~~heCi::;; ~~ss.!~e .berore noon; 35l-9743, lea;~ Y slim: the team was I a,nd also .dommatJ.ng the stalls- 109 as an ap. paren.t decoy, respectively. ', 10 campus, shopping, grocery stores.

t h g 13 f t d t st ak d d f Id d t Ih . 5d3 Muth ':nnton. .tdl·3148 after 1964 F'ORD Falcon station wagon. of basically the same ICS" aVIn .Irs owns 0 re ~ own Ie WI e 0 e The Hawkeyes ranked among (:30 p.m. 9.16ar Excellent condition. 351·8273 or who, in 1933, had won Iocwa sld3'th H k 'b left. ~Ight haflfbkack

h Dedan

ff cKa~e the nation's t.op ten football : PRIV-AT-E- sin-gle- Car responsIble ~_4._25_69 ~ft_er_5_p.m. 8·6

~ame. . ou , e 8W eyes pOS~1 Iv a:oun" on a a e an 0: tn- , '4811 and to this day the 'Iron male student. KItchen facillttes. 1963 IMPALA 327, while. 1400. Call

6tb or after. 338·6625. 8·6 TO OREGON - August 7·9. Phone

FREE PUPPIES . Border CollIe _ 353·1450. 8-5 Dalmatlon plus. Calt 337·3076 TO CALIFORNIA alter August 6th.

anytime. 8-6 Share expenses. Sue, 351-8620. 8-6

ROOMS FOIt ((ENT AU1.05.DOMESTIC

ROOMMATE WANTED

FEMALE roommate wanted -Two bedroom apa,.tment. 353·3241,

days; 351·1767, evenings. ~6

NEEDED - Three female room· mates, September. Close, rurnlah.

ed, ulUtties. $64. 338-0355. ~t

MATURE male Over 21. Preferably medical or dental, share oQe btl!­

roam furnished apartment. AC, utilities paid, $65 month. Alan Keel· er, 338·5572. Alter 3 p.m., 356·2235.

U

ONE GIRL to share furnished aparlment. Close [0 hospll ....

338·2406. H

TWO GIRLS to share furnished duplex, $60. 351·61178 afler 3 p.m.

11-5

WHO DOES IT?

ARTIST'S Portraits - Children, adults. Charcoai. $5. Pastels. $20.

Oil, $85 up, 338-0260. 11).7ar WINDOW WASHING. AI Ehl. Dtal

644-2489. 1),(7 WE REPAIR all makes ot TV'.,

stereos, radIos and tape players, Helble and Rocca Electronics. 307 East COllrt Street. Phone 351.f)2jO,

11).11, But a n

('ome to

, th ? It d th k f d d b k t Ih M- , "" $45. 337-9786. 8·6 arter 5 p,m., 351~609. 8-6 ew coaching stalf had VIn IS ~ne. . appeare e OIca e ac 0 e. m~es, Man team' or 1939 'is remem- ----- "- --Iowa City , headed by last two vIctOries had laken too Iota 40, and . as char.gmg 1m- bered with respect by former L~~~:;'at~~U!~~he~?;ry:r~ms~in::~ 19~1.~~1Y,M~~IrH e",;'d E'::!'~~~n\~~ri~ FLUNKING math 0;b.~i~-I-ta-U5-tlesl e Anderson a former much out of the players. Thev men closed 111 on hIm , lofted t d' th'h I f I h 3 9582 99 ,ound, body shol. $50. Call day Call Janel. 3311-9306. 9-17.1 . h d d r t d fl ' h lopponen s an m e ears 0 I ~n y. ~5 _eae _. _ 51_. '" __ ~ ~ only 338·0157. ten -- 0 Or. Eddi

Notre Da had left piJ!skin ta tan corn was " rey and up f came ba

me All-American who a e ea e a power u Pur- a pass to t e left. Green had low footb 11 f ATTRACTrvE SINGLE room ror - -Holy Cross to teach due squad in a baseball-like I slipped behind the two Minne- I DB "'ddla A ~ns. b t itrl with private enlrance. 338· LEAVING town, must sell 1957 4·

f I

I r I', e n"erson es sum 3053. 9·lar duor Chevy. 265 V·8 standard. clics La the boys In Lhe score 0 4 to O. sola defenders. : d thO t . . I: 1 Boctv rusted, only 50,000 mUes ' l'e· Stat·e . Alon" '~Ilh h'lm A man to gain All-American Broadcaster Talt Cummins I mh anze d I~t ell am 1111 a rermalhr, ----------- built engIne. Dependable Iranspor· " e ma e a lP c n~e 0 e APARTMENTS FOR RENT I lauon. $50. 683·2783, 8·5 line coach Jim Harri honors in 1940. Mike Enich, had continued, "The nass c:.ltch 1939 "1" ht rom Mi~sissiopl Stat~ broken through the Purdue line was made by Bill Green In the d scar Sinh" ' (II am ml Ihl! II I

. to bl k t t hi h i d d lh t th prou 0 ese e ow~. ave FURNISHED IPftrtment - Walkilljf AUTOS·FOUIUN·SPORTS ckfleld coacll Frank oc wo pun s, W c re- en zone, an a was e I I d d I distance. 338·8833. 8·8 ----------

INSURANCE Homeown ... Mobile Hom. Motorcycle Auto (also SR·· l) Boat.

Llfe·Rates you c.n live wlt~

Cal'ldeo. Now a

sulled In game winning safe- I thing that plunged the dagger nevert ~oac 1e h nor a eve' l ONE PERSON \0 share three room ]970 FIAT 850 Sports Coupe - 11. 1 mpmber of ' aotball's ties. into the Golden Gophers fmm expec ~,coae , a gamer group rurntshed apartment. Close. $67. 000 miles. Superb. $1895. Phone IRVIN PFAB INSURANCE me, Carideo had been On the train home, line coach the North , and everybody just OfGboys'

t ' '71 H k I Free trClnsportatt. II Ailport and 338·4955. 8·6 _35_1-4_2_64._ -- -- _ 8-6 ." Maidln L. 351·7333 HaD of Fa

the ouarte ne's last t

Ji H · b ' . f II f th 0 ge em aw s the Campus APARTMENT f f d I C 1965 AUSTIN Healey Sprite. Re· ~~~~~~~~~~~ rback of Knule Rock- m srrlS, earnIng WIth e out 0 eir seats. They I • or ou r I u ts. lose cen lly overhauled, ·'00. Call 351' 1 =-_ I

. J d ~ f I In, aIr cond itioned. Phone 337- ... wo undefeated squads pride over the nne performanc- just cried! Sports writers Burt ___ ~__ _ Air·condlt one, sou",, ·proo roOftlS 2958. 10·Bar 7406. 8·6 - I

in 1929 an hi . at economical fates - -- 1 d 30. es of s hnemen, was asked, McGrane of the Des Moines -- A DV'ER"ns EMEHT I SUBLET - one bedroom apartment 1969 TRIUMPH SplUlre . Radio, two Shoe Repairing -und Bernie merman's "Why TWO safeties?" He re- Register _ I saw him standing 'I -- - Fre~ TV, ~adio, phone in every room unfurnished . Avallable Sept. lst: tops. Excellent condltlor 351 ·~563 Iowa fo

powerful nhers as J! tlee . Desn had won fi Minnesota

, 353-4717, day.; 338-0814, evenIngs. evenlnxs. 9.30 Minnesota Golden Go- plied, "Weiust wanted to make there, tears were J'u t coursin" FAT Healed swimming paol, patio, wid- 86 - -" . I f I ddl - - - ~ I VW CAMPER 1970 . Low miles, e.· nod RS their nress no- it convincing." Iowa had play- down his cheeks, and Eddie ', tng roo or 0 ell AVAILABLE now _ Two bedroom ceUenl condition. Can be .een III ile the fact that. Iowa ed only fourteen men In the Moore from Waterloo, Leo OVERWEIGHT Putting green furnished duplex. Air conditioned. Iowa City by appOintment. Best 01· wllh garage. 309 7th St.. Coralville. ter. Call 515·472-2459. 8·. ve nut of Ix garnes, Purdue win . I Couts, Johnny O'Donnell from Odrlne. can help you become the Bea utiful dining rOOnl, Cockhl l 1338.5905. 111-4 1964 MICROBUS - New- molor , han come to Iowa The following week, Elmer Davenport - it was a real trtm slim person you want ta be. Lounge overlooking Pool ELMWOOD Terrace _ Two bed. lIres. Best offer. 337-4919 e,,' , . . Odrln .. Is a tiny tabiet and easily in s 86

• Western Boots • Dingo Boots • Moccasins • Sandals

R"GER'S City sure cllnndence HIII\·keves.

of victory. But t"elr Leyden s mIghty Notre Dame, maudhn group because of the I swallowed. Contain. no dangeroll, Always a warm and cordill welcome room rurnished apartment. Air n B· • 1

drug N t vlng N I I I eaDdltioned, no chlldren or pets. was matched by tlle undefeated. united. and seek- tremendous em 0 t ion a I up- else. sGet rrda~C exec! me:n/~I':~ - come as you are . 502 5U. St., Coralville. 351·5714. 338- 11962 VW BUS - 51111roof, good SHOE 5ER'/ICE ~ '2

E . 5005 l0-4ar condition. EngIne recenUy Over·

ing a National championship, surge. "I cried," Tail Cummins longer. Odrlncx has becn used suc· nJoy same tacil lties as Horne's . _ _ _____ hauled. 351·6891. 8·5 d db ' 'ted th I d' 'd " I . d I 'th th eessfully by thousands 811 over th' Molor Lodge in Ocala SUBLEASE two bedl'Oom apartment. I 210 South Clinton

Coach A tram aroll nick. and that he had of ton cal

n ersnn ha um his VISI e owa sta lUm. sa l , crle a ong WI e I coutris ~gr 0'derth12 tars. Odl'il1ex 1 Available Sept. I. 351·88l!2. 8-6 I Next to The nd halfhack Nile Kin- The fantastic kicking of Phi rest of them." I ~~~ s 5.25 . .:~u m~.t ~~: ~c;,~yn"'1;:;' As IOu drive look tor the big yellow - - -- - HELP WAriTED J

I . , root 'ign of Hospl'tal l' ty F'URNISHED apartment - 308 Wh,'few'Y Grocary

reco"nizl'n" the ract Beta Kappa Kinnick time and That was the winning touch- or your money will be refunde,' -. . Sac .." . . . . . , ' by your druggIst. 0 nuesltoM auth Dubuque. Two people only. only l't ~mall number agaIn put the IrISh 10 Ihe hole. down , K10nIck s drop klck at- asked. Accept no substitutes. Soid I .~fIiIti,oIII'ItI~."'. Mll st share bath. $150 per month, NEED ART student to point two ---- ,--- --. I rl S100 deposit. No pels. f()·lar pIctures. 337·9009. 8·6

=: \'

stilled a r ibre nl" \ll'r~. he In- The Hawks gilt a break and re- tempt for the . extra point was ~1!yl 's[hIDSR'UuG""SnTtoeeREbS:I'OWA CITY - - - ~

I bl k d k h..... I WESTWOOD· WestsIde. Luxury el· LEGAL Secretary starling Septem· -. .. - - - -

U~I1"r! ~niri into his covered an Iri h fumble on Ihe oc e, ma 109 t e sCOI'e 13 i MAIL ORDERS J FILLED tlelency I. 2 and 3 bedroom sUites ber I. Good salary, Irlnge. Ex· - . ...::::

~nuad Ihal "I d f 14 t 17 N tn' d I' Th and lawnhouses. June and Septern· perience necessary Send resume to pna', p rom a 0 re arne. yar ine. e - ber avaUablllUes. From $125. Come Tom ~lacMurray, Hawkeye Legal

players 10 beAt leams that were Iron Men capitalized when to Apt. 2·H, 1015 Oakcrest, 4:30 to AId SOCiety, Dey Building. 8-6 7 p.m., weekdays. or call 338.7058'1 ---- - -two and th ree deeD at po~itinn . Kinnick crashed his way into 9·27.r ONE OF THE lop 13 corporations

II th d . k --- - In lhe U.S. will be giving a f .. e.

Theoe cn ura geoll~ CO eqian~ e en zone. Kinmc stepped CORONET - Luxury fur nIshed I , aptitude test to determine you,' "I) the no minute back and drop kl'cked the extra 2 and 3 bcd room suItes. June to ~a l c. potential. IF you quallfy and \"ho would

rnute wer Mer ."

When D won its fir

" tJU Sept. availabilities. F'rom 5100. ' arc hired we wtll pay you $8UO to e labeled lhe " Iron point, which sailed under the e~erg lUY Come to Apt. 8, 1006 Broadway, $1,000 per month durIng our three 4:30 10 7 p.m., weekdays. Or caU year traIning period. P~one 351-4868,

arm of an onrushing Irish line- 338-4682 or 338·7058. 9·27ar 9 a.m. ta 4:30 p.m. 8·6 I r. Anderson's team man for a 7 to 6 Iowa triumph. -- ---- --- - ATTENDANT ror elderly gentleman st two l!ames of the The conquest of Notre Dame pius lome duties. Board. room, APARTMENT good s.lary. BegIn August ]4 , Olve

Sl'a~on, be 41 to 0 an crowds of pectively, stadium,

~ti~~di~~th32 ~~k~~~ ;a~~~or~eo~e~m::c~_fri~~r M~~~ I. S beanfjte f1ut SUITES r~~e:;.nces. Write Bo. 2, ~~.\~ 16,000 and 20,000 res- nesola. Although the Notre c

sparsely covered the Dame win could not be down- for swlng,ng sin ..... Indoor pool, NEWSPAPER h· h did h Sn.ck I.r, I',iv." lUI Sl,vlce to

W IC seate near y gra ed, t e upcoming Minneso- the Univll ilty, Air-conditionIng, three time S that number. One ta game, besides being a fierce Off·lt .. et parkIn,. REPORTER

ked , " In the Indiana rivalry, had crucial conference THE REUPHOLSTERY: TNr hlait.re r'·II1'. t. lid nd ,eel IS IlIGd Ir better tllail MODEL SUITE NOW OPEN fan remar J!ame, ther that [ mov UP and do the baiL"

After the

ewer!' so few people importance for the now famous it was wile. new. ed from eat to seat 1939 cinderella Iron man team. THE FAIRICS: The Irul coilection i. Uis ,na. All il stock lid ready lor your order.

wn the field follOwing What was to happen in the THE WORK MANSHIP: Till kROW it's lood because we lumlltet II lor 5 yurs. fourth period could only be THE CONVEUIENCE: YOII sllop at home IIY day or ewnine without oblilatiow.

se first two games, called a David and Goliath THE DELIVERV: One we. service is yours DR request. the splendi d performances of struggle. On one side there THE SAVINGS: P,rk reupholstery is han tlte cost .11It1l lur~tvre , ,.d we 'll prove It.

en marked the com- were the powerful Gophers THE TERMS: No .Mer dou CORvenient tertns to fil filII budre!. Ihe Iron M ing of the big crowds to Iowa with their 9 to ° lead, and on THE PRICE: litis wnt, ,alk win reupholster yOIII' soIl .r lwo chairs, com~etl lIit_

the other side the tired Iowans lilric, labor I.d aU services .. : In Special V.lu. Flbrics for $99. stadium . The openi n" contests broul!ht with Nile Kinnick and his In WISh" Wur Vinyl for $129. In Itain r'lisllnl Hllculon for $149.

,., III Qui", or V.ly.t for $169 to Ught the Nile Kinnic

skills of personable slingshot passes. FREE MATCHING OTTOMAN OR SCOTCHGARD litt • ., III ... two chair n. k, who went on to In the fourth quarter, the Ip/l/sltry .rdared llis ,"-.Eitlltr lift lSI U5 " ...

win AlI-Con ference, All-Ameri- Iron Men seemed to get a sec­e coveted Heisman ond wind and Iowa finesse nick had buried moved the ball 80 yards in four a with his precision- playes. Kinnick passed twice

can and th award. Kin South Dakot like passing victory over

and the three-point to Dean, one for 18 yards, and [ndiana had come again for ]5. Kinnick was held quarter touchdown to just two yards on a plunge on a fourth

toss from Kinnick 10 end Erwin moving to the Gopher's 45. Prasse.

After defe 13, the Iron

Then he dropped back and fir­ating Wisconsin 19- ed a pass that Captain Erwin Men had a rough Prasse caught. on the Minneso-

DIAL THIS NUMBER TOLL FREE: 800 / 362-1817 General Offices and Factory- 304 - 15tb street, Des Moines

furniture M.nufacturinr

Trade Nam. of a. )'ul'Ulture Indu. trle. Iowa luc,

Now ecceptln, I..... fer lummer .nd ,.11 THI MAY .LOWIR

APARTMENT. 111. N. Oubu~ue St. Phone 33..,7.'

MUSICAL INSTRVMENTS

FOR SALE

KING TROMBONE (F ATTACHMENT)

EXCELLENT CONDITION

$200

CALL 33..0251 AFTER 5 P.M.

Plrt TIme

low. City Corresponclll1t

For

D.venport Times-Democrat

Effective September

For Inform.tion c.1I 351·6640

PERSONAL

MALES B.tween I", of 21,50 wIth

IIxvll problem. Ire Invlttel 10 partlclpall in In III pari. m.nt.1 drull treatment pro­IIr.m In the Dtpt, of Psychl­.try, ColI'II' of Mtdlcint,

CIII 353·5914 "twHn 2 .nd S p,m.

GET HE1P. ..

TO

0.1. ,

WANT ADS 353-6201