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January 18 - The Daily Iowan Historic Newspapers - University of Iowa

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II or trade for new<br />

cheaply.<br />

m Jan 17-22,<br />

10-1 Sat<br />

;ement-Conf. Rm. 2<br />

y ARH.<br />

OU TO<br />

price: 2Q cents<br />

CI t983 Student Publications Inc.<br />

Regents<br />

may help<br />

bousing<br />

facility<br />

By Jane Turnla<br />

Staff Writer<br />

Construction plans for an $817,000<br />

Ronald McDonald House will get the<br />

go-ahead Thursday if the sta te Board<br />

<strong>of</strong> Regents approves a 25-year lease <strong>of</strong><br />

VI land located southwest <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Carver-Hawkeye Sports Arena.<br />

<strong>The</strong> house would provide temporary,<br />

inexpensive accommodations for the<br />

families <strong>of</strong> children receiving treatment<br />

at VI Hospitals and Clinics. It<br />

would be the second such facility in the<br />

state.<br />

Regents Executive Secretary R.<br />

Wayne Richey has recommended that<br />

the board approve the property lease,<br />

noting in a memorandum to the board<br />

"the advantages to the university, <strong>University</strong><br />

Hospitals, and the state <strong>of</strong> having<br />

a facility <strong>of</strong> this kind ...."<br />

Children'S Family Living Foundation<br />

Inc., the organization formed to establish<br />

the facility, considered approximately<br />

16 other sites, both privatelyowned<br />

and university-owned, near the<br />

UI Hospitals before deciding on the<br />

9,ooo-square-foot plot, according to<br />

Clifford Eldredge, deputy director <strong>of</strong><br />

the hospitals and executive vice president<br />

for the organization.<br />

"<strong>The</strong>y (the organization members)<br />

looked at existing facilities within<br />

walking distance <strong>of</strong> the hospital, but<br />

none <strong>of</strong> them <strong>of</strong>fered a sufficient structure,"<br />

Eldredge said Monday.<br />

"THERE'S A SECOND reason -<br />

most <strong>of</strong> the Houses, after they've been<br />

opened, have had to move or expand."<br />

So the foundation decided to request<br />

a lease <strong>of</strong> the UI property and go fullscale<br />

by constructing a ?,700 squarefoot,<br />

l6-bedrOOm facflit9 that cOUld aCcommodate<br />

64 people at once. ,<br />

'rhe foundation will pay for the cost<br />

<strong>of</strong> all construction, under no-lien contracts,<br />

to begin "hopefully, this spring,"<br />

Eldredge said. <strong>The</strong> organization<br />

intends to open the House by the end <strong>of</strong><br />

the year, if possible.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re would be nine ba ths, a living<br />

room, television room, kitchen and dining<br />

areas, playroom, laundry, a foundation<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice, and a two-bedroom<br />

manager's apartment with bath, living<br />

room and kitchen facilities in the<br />

proposed house.<br />

Eldredge said about $220,000 has<br />

been either donated or pledged for the<br />

project so far. In consultation with<br />

managers <strong>of</strong> other Ronald McDonald<br />

Houses in the country, the foundation<br />

was encouraged to build the facility<br />

without worrying about funding.<br />

"ALL THE OTHER Houses said<br />

'Don't worry, the money will come<br />

in,' " Eldredge said. "<strong>The</strong> Houses have<br />

had a lot <strong>of</strong> appeal . A lot <strong>of</strong> it is grassroots<br />

funding. Coordinators in 17 <strong>Iowa</strong><br />

cities are contributing, and we've had<br />

calls from organizations and<br />

businesses indicating they'll supply<br />

plumbing and other items for the<br />

House.<br />

"A lot <strong>of</strong> campus organizations are<br />

contributing - they've collected cans<br />

for us, some are talking about a golf<br />

tournament .... All that's been volunteered<br />

- we haven't asked them for<br />

it. "<br />

Richey's memorandum states 26 percent<br />

<strong>of</strong> the total cost <strong>of</strong> the House is anticipated<br />

to come from McDonald's<br />

Restaurants contributions, 55 percent<br />

from business, industry, foundations<br />

and major indiVidual donations, and 19<br />

percent from community fund-raising.<br />

Approximately '14,000 annually is<br />

expected to be generated from the sixdollar-a-night<br />

suggested (but nol required)<br />

donation from families using<br />

the House. <strong>The</strong> annual operating cost is<br />

estimated at $29,080.<br />

Frozen<br />

formations<br />

Ice along the west bank 01<br />

the <strong>Iowa</strong> River takes on many<br />

forma aa the water rlaea and<br />

falll with the mercury_ Two<br />

oddly-ahaped Icicle. hang<br />

from a fallen trea while leavea<br />

held In lupended animation In<br />

a ah .. t <strong>of</strong> Ice break their way<br />

through with the help <strong>of</strong><br />

Monday'a aunlhlne.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Daily</strong> towan/Mel Hill<br />

By Mary Tabor<br />

Staff Writer<br />

<strong>The</strong> federal government's new<br />

scheme for cracking down on draft<br />

non-registrants has been blasted by Ul<br />

admissions <strong>of</strong>ficials and student activists<br />

as discriminatory and inappropriate.<br />

<strong>The</strong> new rules from Washington,<br />

D.C., require colleges and universities<br />

,to deny financial aid to men <strong>of</strong> legal<br />

draft age who refuse to register.<br />

"I don't think it is the role <strong>of</strong> the university<br />

to be policeman for the Selective<br />

Service, It said John Moore, UI<br />

director <strong>of</strong> admissions and student<br />

financial aid.<br />

U.S. District Attorney Richard Turner<br />

said Monday'he was unaware that<br />

such a law existed, but also said, "It<br />

sounds like a good idea to me.<br />

"If they haven't registered, I don't<br />

see why the government should<br />

guarantee them loans."<br />

Moore said the registration law is on<br />

the books and he doesn't oppose it. He<br />

said what he does resent is the UI and<br />

other institutions being placed in a<br />

position <strong>of</strong> enforcement.<br />

LOCAL MEMBERS <strong>of</strong> the Student<br />

Coalition Against Registration and the<br />

Draft, said the new law may force<br />

many young men to choose between<br />

their convictions and their education.<br />

"It is wreng because the university is<br />

an institution <strong>of</strong> education and higher<br />

learning. It shouldn't have anything to<br />

do with the draft," SCARD member<br />

Jackie Majex:us said.<br />

"It's like punishing a chnct. You<br />

won't go to war. You won't fight for<br />

them. No education," she said.<br />

<strong>The</strong> organization plans to support a<br />

suit filed in Federal District Court,<br />

charging the new law is un ­<br />

constitutional, said SCARD member<br />

Joe Iosbaker.<br />

<strong>The</strong> law, which Majerus calls a<br />

"dirty tactic," is being challenged by<br />

the Minnesota Public Interest<br />

Research Group as discriminatory on<br />

the basis <strong>of</strong> age, sex and wealth.<br />

"<strong>The</strong> people most affected are working<br />

class boys," said Majerus. "It's<br />

grossly unfair."<br />

Moore said he agreed that the law<br />

discriminated against college-bound<br />

males.<br />

But, Turner disagreed saying the law<br />

didn't discriminate on account <strong>of</strong><br />

wealth, "It just denies benefits to those<br />

who don't do what the law requires."<br />

STUDENTS APPLYING for financial<br />

aid beginning July 1 will be required<br />

to state whether they are<br />

See Aid, page 5<br />

Persia oil reserve defense plans revealed<br />

WASHINGTON (UPI) - <strong>The</strong> Pentagon<br />

envisions a "major conflict" between<br />

the United States and the Soviet<br />

Union if Moscow attempts to seize Persian<br />

Gulf oil reserves with conventional<br />

forces. .<br />

A secret 136-page Defense Department<br />

document considers the region so<br />

vital it directs preparations for introducing<br />

U.S. forces into the area<br />

even "should it appear that the<br />

security <strong>of</strong> access to Persian Gulf 011 is<br />

threatened" and there is no outright invasion.<br />

Titled " Fiscal 1984-1988 Defense<br />

Guidance," the chilling document<br />

setting forth policy, strategy, planning<br />

and spending priorities over the next<br />

five years and reflecting Pentagon<br />

This is the second in a series <strong>of</strong><br />

exclusive stories appearing this<br />

week examining a secret Pentagon<br />

document that signals. a<br />

rna/or U.S. policy shllt on<br />

nuclear war with the Soviets.<br />

thinking is accompanied by a<br />

memorandum dated March 22, 1982,<br />

signed by Defense Secretary Caspar<br />

Weinberger.<br />

It was made available to United<br />

Press International by sources<br />

familiar with defense issues.<br />

THE REAGAN administration has<br />

made no secret <strong>of</strong> its i/ltent to defend<br />

Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf<br />

states that are the major suppliers <strong>of</strong><br />

oil to the West and Japan. <strong>The</strong> administration<br />

has been molding a Rapid<br />

Deployment Force shaped specifically<br />

to carry out that objective, and the<br />

document directs its buildup.<br />

Though it is not specified, the document<br />

appears to go beyond the administration's<br />

publicly stated policy by<br />

suggesting U.S. forces , in a crisis,<br />

would enter the gulf without invitation.<br />

"Our principal objectives are to<br />

assure the continued access to Persian<br />

Gulf oil and to prevent tbe Soviets from<br />

acquiring political-military control <strong>of</strong><br />

the oil directly or through proxies," it<br />

said.<br />

. "To achieve these goals, we must<br />

allocate a disproportionately larger investment<br />

to this region, and we must<br />

upgrade our capabilities to project<br />

forces to, and operate them in, the<br />

region," the document said. "We<br />

should also urgently increase and improve<br />

the capabilities <strong>of</strong> friendly indigenous<br />

forces .<br />

"IT IS ESSENTIAL that the Soviet<br />

Union be confronted with the prospect<br />

<strong>of</strong> a major conflict should it seek to<br />

reach oil resources <strong>of</strong> the gulf," it said.<br />

"If the Soviets perceive this to be a<br />

real prospect, we believe it will deter<br />

such Soviet action."<br />

<strong>The</strong> administration has allocated<br />

hundreds <strong>of</strong> millions <strong>of</strong> dollars for construction<br />

<strong>of</strong> base facilities in EJMlt,<br />

Oman, Kenya and Somalia for support<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Rapid Deployment Force. <strong>The</strong><br />

document directed they "be completed<br />

in fiscal 1987."<br />

In addition, sale <strong>of</strong> five Airborne<br />

Warning and Control System -<br />

AWACS - aircraft to Saudi Arabia for<br />

$8.5 billion in late 1981 is part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

U.S. attempt to enhance the fighting<br />

capabilities <strong>of</strong> the pro-Western gulf<br />

states.<br />

Envisioning a scenario in which the<br />

Soviets could exploit local unrest or internal<br />

subversion as an excuse to enter<br />

the region "other than outright invasion,"<br />

the document said;<br />

"Whatever the circumstances, we<br />

should be prepared to introduce<br />

See Military, page 5<br />

Everyone who bas a card<br />

that displays the symbol<br />

shown wi\l be able to use<br />

the automated teller<br />

machines at Old Capitol<br />

Center.<br />

Inside ,<br />

Peach Bowl<br />

.":"'<br />

Coverage <strong>of</strong> <strong>Iowa</strong>'s march on<br />

Atlanta and victory in the Peach<br />

Bowl includes a look at the<br />

hospitality, hucksterism and<br />

Ha wkeye hoopla surrounding the<br />

event .......................... Pages 6, 7<br />

Weather<br />

Our IOnar has left us. How will<br />

the weather staff predict the<br />

temps? Will the metro staff ever<br />

find out what he carried In the<br />

briefcase? And who will keep the<br />

copy edl tors on their toes? Stay<br />

tuned for another excitlna<br />

episode <strong>of</strong> highs jn the teens.<br />

What happened<br />

to ~y 011<br />

If you noticed something strange<br />

about your copy <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> Dally lowlII<br />

Monday morning. you're not Iione.<br />

Becluse new printing equipment<br />

refused to work. the decision waa<br />

made at 4 a.m. Monday to print the<br />

paper In one section, Instead <strong>of</strong> 'woo<br />

That meant page 1B was where<br />

page 5A sHould have been; page 2B<br />

was where 8A should have been;<br />

etc, Today'. paper Is also printed In<br />

a one-uetlon format. By<br />

Wednesday, the pr_ should be<br />

working properly and the DI will<br />

again be two eactlonl.<br />

,<br />

Jury. may decide tenure dispute<br />

By Jane Turnl.<br />

Staff Writer<br />

A court battle over a Ul assistant<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essor's right to tenure may provide<br />

a final word in a case that brings<br />

together many questions about faculty<br />

dispute procedures, about departmental<br />

autonomy versus faculty rule and a<br />

clash between several faculty groups.<br />

Asa Black, an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor in<br />

the Ul Department <strong>of</strong> Anatomy, filed<br />

suit last week alalnst Ul President<br />

Jimes O. Freedman ; John Eckltein,<br />

Dean <strong>of</strong> the UI College <strong>of</strong> Medicine;<br />

Terence Williams, UI Anatomy<br />

Department head; the Ul; the state <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> and the state Board <strong>of</strong> Regents<br />

for actions that "denled (Black) the<br />

opportunity to be granted promotion<br />

and tenure," court records state.<br />

Black has been employed at the<br />

assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor rank in the<br />

anatomy department since July, lW15,<br />

and was initially denied promotion to<br />

associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor with tenure (in<br />

December <strong>of</strong> 1980.<br />

Black appealed the decision, and a<br />

faculty hearing panel reviewed the<br />

case and decided In his favor, but the<br />

decision wu turned down once again<br />

by UI President James O. Freedman in<br />

November.<br />

'<br />

IN THE SUIT, Black charges that his<br />

civtl rights <strong>of</strong> free speech, substantive<br />

and procedural due proceu, equal<br />

protection aDd application <strong>of</strong> the law<br />

and academic freedom were deprived<br />

In the Ul's handling <strong>of</strong> the dispute.<br />

Included are charges against<br />

Eckstein concerning the "fallure to<br />

timely administer a five-year review<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong> Anatomy which<br />

might have corrected administrative<br />

deficiencies in the Department."<br />

Williams is accused <strong>of</strong> "falling to<br />

allow eligible faculty peers to be consulted"<br />

on Black's tenure and promotion<br />

decision, "intimidating, harass­<br />

Inl, and/or inappropriately attempting<br />

to Influence certain faculty peen In<br />

their deliberation ... ," and "communlcatlnl<br />

and causing to be communicated<br />

certain false and harmful<br />

information about" Black.<br />

<strong>The</strong> lult states that Black WlS dealed<br />

access to documents and evidence in<br />

control <strong>of</strong> the defendants, that he was<br />

denied the opportunity to present his<br />

own witnesses and that with his loss <strong>of</strong><br />

the "right to lifetime employment at<br />

the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Iowa</strong> ... has been<br />

placed in an insecure employment<br />

situation. "<br />

THE DEFENDANTS have until<br />

early February to respond to the serving.<br />

"In general , the judiciallystem has<br />

had a hands-<strong>of</strong>f attitude toward<br />

academic cases," said Clara Oleson,<br />

Black'. attorney. "But that', changed,<br />

I think."<br />

Oleson Mid a jury trial II souaht In<br />

See I.k, page 5


·<br />

,<br />

•<br />

",<br />

• ·•<br />

I,<br />

I<br />

I<br />

P-.,e 2 - <strong>The</strong> Dally <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong> - <strong>Iowa</strong> CIty. <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tu8lday. <strong>January</strong> <strong>18</strong>. 1983<br />

~Iy<br />

Waiesa may sue for his job<br />

WARSAW. Poland - LeclI Walesa, former<br />

cbief <strong>of</strong> the outlawed Solidarity uDion,<br />

threatened Monday to sue to get his job back at<br />

the Lenin shipyard in Gdansk. Walesa has<br />

twice been refilled necessary documeIIts by<br />

the military commissar <strong>of</strong> Gdansk to return to<br />

the electrician's job be beId before takiDg unpaid<br />

leave to bead the union.<br />

". am ready to wort," Walesa told reporters<br />

outside the shipyard gate after famlll to get<br />

the working papers. "I will sue them if tbe<br />

answer is not given by nelt Friday."<br />

Plant leaks radioactive water<br />

ATHENS, Ala. - Reactor tecbaic1ans tried<br />

Monday to learn why a COOling system<br />

malfunction at the Browns Ferry Nuclear<br />

Plant dumped 208,000 gallons <strong>of</strong> radioactive<br />

water into the Tennessee River, prompting a<br />

l~hour alert. Browns Ferry spokesman Bob<br />

Boyer said the radioactive water leaked from<br />

a faulty heat exchanger at the Unit 3 reactor.<br />

TV A <strong>of</strong>ficials said the radioactive water was<br />

diluted quickly in the river and the driDkiag<br />

water <strong>of</strong> communities downstream was not<br />

contaminated.<br />

Twelve arrested in coke bust<br />

SAN FRANCISCO - Federal agents seized<br />

more tban 400 pounds <strong>of</strong> cocaine worth up to<br />

$750 million and arrested U men Monday in<br />

the largest drug seizure ever on the West<br />

Coast, a c'ustoms <strong>of</strong>ficial said.<br />

<strong>The</strong> agents saw swimmers with pouches <strong>of</strong><br />

the dMig come ashore 100 yards north <strong>of</strong> a<br />

Colombian freighter under cover <strong>of</strong> darkness<br />

and the thickest fog <strong>of</strong> the year.<br />

California law challenged<br />

WASHINGTON - A lawyer for the state <strong>of</strong><br />

CaliCornia urged the Supreme Court Monday to<br />

uphold California'S moratorium on building<br />

nuclear reactor plants until a federal system<br />

to dump high-level nuclear waste is developed.<br />

A victory for utilities battling the law would<br />

"make nuclear energy as suitable a way to<br />

provide energy as coal or electricity." the<br />

Harvard law pr<strong>of</strong>essor warned, and deprive<br />

states <strong>of</strong> their traditional role <strong>of</strong> deciding their<br />

energy needs.<br />

Court avoids prayer issue<br />

WASHINGTON - <strong>The</strong> Supreme Court<br />

refused Monday to allow school children to<br />

hold religious meetings in classrooms after<br />

hours. <strong>The</strong> court justices let stand a ruling<br />

declaring unconstitutional the Lubbock,<br />

Texas, school system's "equal access" policy,<br />

which gave elementary and high school<br />

student religious groups the same use <strong>of</strong><br />

classrooms as non-religious groups.<br />

Attorney Tom Johnson, who represented the<br />

Lubbock schools in" life ease, said ' the high<br />

court's refusal tor bl!ar the dispute leaves the<br />

school prayer question "definitely still<br />

muddled."<br />

Nader issues post <strong>of</strong>fice study<br />

WASHINGTON - 'l'he U.S. Postal Service<br />

could "self-destruct" in 20 years, consumer<br />

advocate Ralph Nader said Monday. Nader<br />

said unless Congress takes more responsibility<br />

for overseeing the agency and subsidizing its<br />

services. "<strong>The</strong> trend in the U.S. Postal Service<br />

as we see it is toward self-destMiction."<br />

Postal rates have Increased 230 percent<br />

since 1970 wbile services declined, and Nader<br />

estimates Congress will have to spend $2<br />

billion to $3 billion a year over five years to<br />

reverse the trend if the service is to survive.<br />

Quoted ...<br />

Well, now, y'all've had your salad, now<br />

how's about a little dressing?<br />

-Don Elliott Heald. member 01 the Peach<br />

Bowl executive board. Introducing the Peach<br />

Bowl Queen candidates at the bowl banquet.<br />

Postscripts<br />

Events<br />

A tMcII-ln on EI .......tor will be sponsored by<br />

the EI Salvador Solidarity Committee at 11 a.m. In<br />

the Union Kirkwood Room.<br />

Grlduallll9 atudtntI wno are Interealed In<br />

registering with Career Services and Pla


•<br />

ng<br />

job~<br />

Metro<br />

J<br />

<strong>The</strong> Dally <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong> - lowl City, <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tullday, <strong>January</strong> <strong>18</strong>, 1H3 - PIlI I<br />

y lowiln is looking for<br />

dedicated people to fill<br />

on the newspaper. Work­<br />

<strong>Daily</strong> <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong> is an excellent<br />

to gain valuable experience<br />

ing newspaper. In Ihe<br />

alone, 01 slaff members<br />

on 10 such prestigious<br />

and <strong>The</strong> Wall Street Journal,<br />

Times, <strong>The</strong> Miami Herald,<br />

nes Register and <strong>The</strong> Dallas<br />

must be committed to acfairness.<br />

Journalism expreferred,<br />

but not required<br />

sitions. Applications are<br />

Room ", Communications<br />

dline for returning applica- ,<br />

nesday, <strong>January</strong> 26.<br />

available:<br />

Works with metro editor in<br />

planning and assigning<br />

news and feature stories to<br />

reporters. Helps edit stories<br />

and train reporters. Journalism<br />

experience is required.<br />

editor:<br />

Responsible for helping to<br />

select and edit stories from<br />

United Press International.<br />

Must be able to spot news<br />

with a local angle. Journalism<br />

experience required.<br />

reporters:<br />

Work with metro editor<br />

and assistant metro editor<br />

in producing stories about<br />

the university, city, county<br />

and state. Excellent opportunity<br />

for gaining experience<br />

in journalism.<br />

reporters:<br />

Work with sports editor<br />

and two assistants to<br />

produce stories about<br />

Hawkeye sports, UI sports<br />

clubs and <strong>Iowa</strong> City sports<br />

organi zations. Ex cellent<br />

opportunity for gaining experience<br />

in iournalism.<br />

<strong>Daily</strong> kMran<br />

RYOUR<br />

NeE<br />

to 5:00 Sun<br />

~~<br />

~~~~ X I I I I I r\JV<br />

~<br />

r~ ' /""\ I"r".<br />

t:::=<br />

==<br />

DDDD~<br />

DDDD_<br />

DDDD_<br />

DDDD<br />

-<br />

L>< I I I I X<br />

-<br />

-,-<br />

098<br />

-<br />

DO<br />

-<br />

-<br />

I<br />

An Irchltect's drlwlng for the new WON Building to be<br />

constructed It 13 Ind 15 S.Dubuqu. SI. shoWi I gllss­<br />

Ind-Ilumlnum flcld. with I stylish "cornice pediment"<br />

Itop the two·story structure. <strong>The</strong> bUilding, designed by the<br />

DDD<br />

City will investigate<br />

policeman's conduct<br />

By Plul Boyum<br />

Staff Writer<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> City Police Officer Daniel<br />

Dreckman is again the subject <strong>of</strong> an internal<br />

police investigation to determine<br />

whether he mistreated a black<br />

woman while issuing her a ticket last<br />

month.<br />

Maxine M<strong>of</strong>fett, a UI graduate student,<br />

said Dreckman stopped her for<br />

allegedly running a stop sign and<br />

trea ted her in a manner she describes<br />

as "racist."<br />

She said Dreckman did not<br />

physically or verbally abuse her but<br />

"his mannerism was unnecessary."<br />

M<strong>of</strong>fett said she was pulling onto Mormon<br />

Trek Road from the Mark IV<br />

Apartments when Dreckman stopped<br />

her.<br />

She said a speeding vehicle had<br />

passed her and she assumed Dreckman<br />

was pursuing that vehicle.<br />

When Dreckman pulled her over she<br />

asked about the other vehicle. She said<br />

he admitted he saw it but said she was<br />

being stopped because she had run the<br />

stop sign.<br />

"If I was in an updated vehicle coming<br />

out <strong>of</strong> any other place than the<br />

Mark IV Apartments, I feel I wouldn't<br />

have been stopped," M<strong>of</strong>fett said.<br />

"<strong>The</strong> way in which I was approached,<br />

with aU four lights glaring, was completely<br />

unnecessary," she said.<br />

WHEN CONTACTED Monday,<br />

Dreckman said he had no comment on<br />

the incident. Last October, Dreckman<br />

and <strong>of</strong>ficer Catherine Ockenfels were<br />

involved in a complaint filed by a black<br />

VI student, Catha White, who also<br />

alleged harassment.<br />

M<strong>of</strong>fett pleaded innocent in a<br />

preliminary hearing on the ticket. Her<br />

court date is set for Feb. 17.<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> City Police Chief Harvey MUler<br />

said he could not comment on the internal<br />

investigation. He said he had met<br />

twice with M<strong>of</strong>fett and they had discussed<br />

plans for a series <strong>of</strong> workshops<br />

for <strong>Iowa</strong> City police <strong>of</strong>ficers on the subject<br />

<strong>of</strong> race rela tions.<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> Ci ty Civil Rights Specialist<br />

Phyllis Williams also attended those<br />

meetings and said nothing definite is<br />

planned but a third party may be called<br />

in to conduct the workshops which<br />

could be conducted as early as March.<br />

M<strong>of</strong>fett, who also works part time<br />

for the VI Office <strong>of</strong> Affirmative Action,<br />

has conducted race relations<br />

workshop for the Grant Wood Area<br />

Education Agency and has worked with<br />

several area police departments including<br />

those in Tipton, Solon and<br />

Coralville.<br />

"<strong>The</strong> system continues to perpetuate<br />

racism," M<strong>of</strong>fett said. "<strong>The</strong> incident is<br />

a perfect example <strong>of</strong> what happens on a<br />

daily basis. I just hope some sensitivity<br />

is brought about because <strong>of</strong> tbis<br />

matter."<br />

Drug, burglary charges<br />

get local man probation<br />

By Suzanne Johnson<br />

Staff Writer<br />

Bruce C. Waid, 21, arrested during a<br />

drug bust in October, received two<br />

suspended sentences Friday, according<br />

to Johnson County District Court<br />

records.<br />

Wald pleaded guilty Friday to<br />

delivering a controlled substance, and<br />

was given a suspended five-year sentence<br />

and three years' probation.<br />

Waid, <strong>of</strong> 304 Reno St., was arrested<br />

after he sold LSD to an undercover<br />

police <strong>of</strong>ficer.<br />

Waid also received a 10-year suspended<br />

sentence for second·degree<br />

burglary, and he was given three<br />

years' probation.<br />

During the burglary in the first week<br />

<strong>of</strong> June 1982, Waid stole an IBM<br />

typewriter from Seashore Hall, the<br />

complaint states.<br />

• • •<br />

Susan K. Stock, <strong>18</strong>, received a<br />

deferred judgment Friday and will be<br />

on probation for one year, according to<br />

court documents.<br />

Stock was charged with first-degree<br />

robbery Sept. I, 1982, for an incideht<br />

that occurred on Aug. <strong>18</strong>, 1982. Ac·<br />

cording to an affidavit by Detective<br />

WllIlam Kidwell, Stock agreed to have<br />

sexual intercourse with Kiet Pham<br />

PIIu and two <strong>of</strong> his friends at Motel 6,<br />

Coralville, for '100. When the group<br />

reached the motel, the affidavit states,<br />

Courts<br />

Stock stalled un'til accomplices arrived<br />

to rob Phu and his friends at gunpoint.<br />

Stock pleaded guilty to the lesser<br />

charge <strong>of</strong> fourth-(Jegree theft Dec. 15,<br />

1982.<br />

As a condition <strong>of</strong> her probation Stock<br />

is required to live at the Community<br />

Corrections Center, Cedar Rapids, for<br />

six months.<br />

• • •<br />

Two <strong>Iowa</strong> City police <strong>of</strong>ficers are the<br />

subject <strong>of</strong> a a complaint filed Thursday<br />

by John W. Moore, according to<br />

Johnson County Magistrate Court<br />

records.<br />

Moore states in his complaint that<br />

Sgt. Ron Evans and Officer Kevin<br />

PesUgerd were trespassing when they<br />

asked him to leave the Varsity<br />

Cleaners, 910 S. Gilbert, early Thursday<br />

morning.<br />

Police said Monday that the incident<br />

is recorded in the log book. but no<br />

details were given. <strong>The</strong> man may have<br />

been a vagrant, police said. Officers on<br />

patrol routinely check all-night laundromats<br />

for loiterers.<br />

In the complaint, Moore states that<br />

the police <strong>of</strong>ficers "did not possess any<br />

proper warrants to approach" him.<br />

MDA to fund UI researchers<br />

More than .,000 in grant money<br />

from the Muscular Dystrophy Associa·<br />

tion will be awarded to VI researchers<br />

during the first quarter <strong>of</strong> 1983.<br />

Elizabeth Thomson, president <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Eastern <strong>Iowa</strong> MDA, said six UI<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essors will receive a total <strong>of</strong><br />

QI,098 from the national MDA headquarters<br />

In New York.<br />

Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Victor Ionasescu, director<br />

Of the VI Department <strong>of</strong> Pediatrics<br />

neuromuscular clinic, was awarded a<br />

$5,121 grant for research in<br />

biochemical alteration <strong>of</strong> amino acids<br />

in muscular dystrophy patients.<br />

Ionasescu Is trying to develop a<br />

treatment for victims <strong>of</strong> Duchenne<br />

muscular dystrophy - a disease that<br />

strikes one In 3,000 male babies.<br />

Others receiving grants are: Assistant<br />

Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Alice Fulton ,<br />

biochemistry. ,~ ,OOO ; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

Stanley Kater, zoology. ",625; Aulstant<br />

Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Kevin Campbell,<br />

physiology, ..,500; Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

Kurt Beam, physiology, $2,913; and<br />

Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Alexander Sandrl,<br />

anatomy, ~,232 .<br />

~<br />

I I I I IV( -<br />

DODD<br />

1<br />

DDDD<br />

DDDD<br />

DODD<br />

X I I I I X -<br />

~<br />

~<br />

I-<br />

~<br />

DOD<br />

DDD<br />

DDD<br />

10Wi City architectural firm HanMn lind Meyer, will<br />

reprice the one that was destroyed In e fire Dec. 3. Tenlnts<br />

for the new building have not b .. n determined. Richard<br />

'KruM, senior associate with HLM, said the WGN Building<br />

•<br />

Announcement <strong>of</strong> Correction<br />

<strong>The</strong> course "Chinese <strong>The</strong>atre"<br />

(39:149 or 36T:176) is NOT closed.<br />

<strong>The</strong> course "Chinese Calligraphy &<br />

Painting" (39:157) meets on TUESDAY ONLY.<br />

Some students have totd me that they went to register for the<br />

course 'Chinese <strong>The</strong>atre". but were told that the course was<br />

limited to only eight studenl.!! and \hat the course was closed. As<br />

the instructor <strong>of</strong> this course. ( have never recommended such a<br />

limit. nor has any <strong>of</strong>fice notified me that lbere should be such a<br />

limit. Any student with questions about the course should feel<br />

free 10 call me at 353·3712 or 10 pay me a visilat my ornce in Rm.<br />

206 Gilmore Halt.<br />

<strong>The</strong> course "Chinese Calligraphy & hinting" is a I sem. hr.<br />

course and It meets once a week on Tuesday I/Jroughoutthe Spr.<br />

ing semester. <strong>The</strong> Schedule <strong>of</strong> Courses for Spring 1983 (page 50)<br />

also printed a meeting on Thursday. This was not recommended<br />

by me. Only the Tuesday meeting should bave been listed .<br />

(T. not T.Th).<br />

-chene. R51 , Prot.slor or ChioU.<br />

WOMEN'S ~LOTHINQ<br />

1/3 to 1/2 <strong>of</strong>f<br />

• Blazers. Slacks. Sero Shirts<br />

• Sweaters • Skirts<br />

• Alterations not Included<br />

on sale merchandise<br />

...<br />

IBJ<br />

'IF!'<br />

"1 =:<br />

will "respect what's already there but stili do something In<br />

the vernacular <strong>of</strong> modern architecture." He .. Id the<br />

building conforms In proportion and height with the surrounding<br />

buildings .<br />

TEST ~II(~AUTIO.<br />

SP(CIALISTS SINC( lU.<br />

-<br />

319-338-2511<br />

232 St". Dr.<br />

• Cit,. IA. 52240<br />

ENROLL NOW!<br />

CIIIIII Mill II FW.<br />

BECAUSE WE<br />

CARE MORE!<br />

• W~'re open 9 to 6 pm Weekdays<br />

• We're open 6 to 9 pm<br />

Wednesday<br />

• Weare open 9to 12:30 pm<br />

Saturday<br />

• We have front door parking<br />

• We provide free travel counseling<br />

• We provide FREE SSO,OOO<br />

travel insurance<br />

T"av.I.S."vic •• lnc.<br />

354-2424 216 First Ave.<br />

Coralville<br />

Don't be a<br />

heartbreaker<br />

o<br />

JANUARY<br />

Clearance SALE<br />

Announcing one <strong>of</strong> the most important sale events <strong>of</strong> the year. Our<br />

<strong>January</strong> clearance sale <strong>of</strong>fers savings on our. fine seleption <strong>of</strong> suits,<br />

sportcoats, outerwear, sport and dress shirts, slacks and sweaters.<br />

Fashions savings that will please your pocket.<br />

SUIT.<br />

Entire selection <strong>of</strong> Fill and Winter suits Including 100% wools and wool and<br />

polyester blends.<br />

Reg. $100.00 to $360.00<br />

'51J1t to '281J1t<br />

SPORT COATS<br />

Entire selactlon <strong>of</strong> Fall and Winter sportcoats Including all-wool blazers,<br />

tweeds, Harris tweed and ultra-suedes.<br />

Reg. $70.00 to $285.00<br />

'35 00 to '201)10<br />

lLACK.<br />

Select group 01 casual and dreas slacks.<br />

Reg. $25.00 to $165.00<br />

'12 11 10 '52 11<br />

OUTIRWIAR<br />

Entire selection including all·weather coata, woot topcoats and parkas.<br />

Reg. $~. 00 to $260.00<br />

'45° 1 to '<strong>18</strong>8 01<br />

.WIATIRI<br />

Entire selection 01 V-necks, crewnecks and fancy spun.<br />

Reg. $20.0010$125.00<br />

'10" to '100"<br />

PINDILTON WOOL .HIRT<br />

1 group<br />

Reg. $46.00 to $40.00<br />

'22"to '40"<br />

I<br />

DR •••• HIRT<br />

Select group <strong>of</strong> Sero and Enro shirts In stripes and checks.<br />

Reg. "7.00 to $34.00<br />

'13" to '26"<br />

.PORT SHIRT.<br />

Entire selection <strong>of</strong> fall lportshlrts.<br />

Reg. $17.96 to 139.96<br />

Now '13" to '32"<br />

KNIT SHIRT.<br />

Entire .. Iactlon.<br />

Reg. $25.00 to $33.00<br />

st<br />

Now '15 to '26"<br />

Til.<br />

1 group.<br />

Va/UN to $17.60<br />

Now'9"<br />

1<strong>18</strong> S. Clinton<br />

"Across from Old Capitol Center"<br />

Open Mon. and Thura. til 9:00 p.m.<br />

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


..... 4 - <strong>The</strong> Dally <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong> - <strong>Iowa</strong> City, <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tuesday, <strong>January</strong> <strong>18</strong>, 1983<br />

Setting an example<br />

As drivers frequently forget, traffic laws are not designed to<br />

enable uniformed troopers to barass innocent civilians, but are<br />

intended to preserve human lives, limbs and property.<br />

Unfortunately, recent news items concerning two <strong>Iowa</strong> drivers'<br />

difficulties with the law contain little to cbeer proponents <strong>of</strong><br />

highway safety.<br />

One case involved a man wbo received a half-dozen tickets for<br />

traffic violations while his license was suspended. While it may be<br />

impossible to keep everyone with a suspended license from<br />

ignoring the suspension, the fact that this particular gentleman<br />

acquired six additional tickets before anyone checked on the status<br />

<strong>of</strong> his license reveals considerable negligence on the part <strong>of</strong> <strong>Iowa</strong><br />

traffic authorities.<br />

<strong>The</strong> other case involves Carole Harder, Gov. Robert Ray's<br />

appointee to head a drunken-driving task force. <strong>The</strong> laws against<br />

drunken driving exist for the same reasons as our otber traffic<br />

laws - if you've forgotten already, refer above to the part about<br />

lives, limbs, and property.<br />

Harder has not violated the most specific calling <strong>of</strong> her <strong>of</strong>fice by<br />

careening about state roads under the influence <strong>of</strong> controlled<br />

substances. She has, however, compiled an impressive record for<br />

careening about the state under the influence <strong>of</strong> a wanton<br />

disregard for posted speed limits.<br />

Harder has been convicted <strong>of</strong> speeding violations 17 times since<br />

1977; her license may soon be suspended for the second time since<br />

1980. Her record reveals her as an unsuitable member for any task<br />

force having any connection with highway safety.<br />

If Harder lacks the dignity to resign, Gov . Terry Branstad<br />

should replace her. This would not prevent Harder from making a<br />

significant personal contribution to traffic safety in <strong>Iowa</strong>:<br />

conducting her future travel by taxi or bus.<br />

Hoy101Hn<br />

Staff Writer<br />

Registe~, or else<br />

You might notice something new on your financial aid forms this<br />

year. Instead <strong>of</strong> just asking how much money a student has and the<br />

dependence on and wealth <strong>of</strong> one 's parents, financial aid <strong>of</strong>fices<br />

are required to ask if a student has registered for the (fraft.<br />

Starting in June, eligible students must be registered before they<br />

can receive financial assistance, and it is up to the college's<br />

administrative <strong>of</strong>fices to make this determination.<br />

Other than perjuring oneself or registering, there is no way any<br />

m student who is resisting the draft can receive financial support.<br />

Obviously, this discriminates against poorer students. It could also<br />

cause people to incriminate themselves - hence the law might be<br />

in violation. <strong>of</strong> the Fifth Amendment ,<strong>of</strong> the U.S. Constitution.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se two arguments form the thrust <strong>of</strong> a legal suit brought by the<br />

Minnesota Public Interest.,Research Group, a student organization<br />

representing 42,000 college students at several campuses in the<br />

Gopher State, against the new ordinance.<br />

<strong>The</strong> student group wants a federal judge to block the law while<br />

its constitutionality is being decided. So far the judge has reserved<br />

making a decision on the request for an injdnction. In other words,<br />

students filling out financial aid forms stm have to declare if they<br />

have registered for the draft while the case is being tried.<br />

This new law is ludicrous and morally reprehensible. It is not the<br />

role <strong>of</strong> a university to determine a student's draft status. <strong>The</strong><br />

function <strong>of</strong> a university in a democratic lOCiety ia to provide I<br />

forum for ideas - including those which cballen;e the existing<br />

state <strong>of</strong> affairs - not to poUce its students. .<br />

8t ... Horowitz<br />

Staff Writer<br />

EdltDf/Craig aemoul ..<br />

..... edItor/Tlm Severa<br />

Metro ICMor IRochel1e Bozman<br />

Alta & entIrtIIInll*lt edltar/Jeffrey Miller<br />

EdIIorI-' pege edla/liz Bird<br />

Sports edltor/Jay Christensen<br />

Alllltant eporII edllonl<br />

Steve Batterson<br />

Melissa Isaacson<br />

PfIotogrlPhy ed1tor/B11i Paxson<br />

Publlllllr IWllilam Ca .. y<br />

AcMr1IIIno IIIIIII08"/Jlm leonard<br />

CIIIaIfted edl manlll8l'/Maxlne Vln elM<br />

Clrc:ulltlon ~ IKeYl n Rogers<br />

ProdUGllon Illpertntlndent/Olck Wilton<br />

Bible· is inspirational,. not factual<br />

By Roger Milil<br />

RECENTLY, THERE has<br />

been a lot <strong>of</strong> rhetoric in the<br />

media between evolutionists<br />

and creationists on whether<br />

creationism should be taught as a<br />

science In public scbools. To clarify<br />

this, we must ask - can the Bible be<br />

taught as a science? How reliable is<br />

the Bible as a historical text?<br />

Before the Bible was written it was<br />

passed orally from generation to<br />

generation. Not until the 8th century<br />

B.C. were the first five books <strong>of</strong> the Bible,<br />

\be Pentateuch, written down .<br />

<strong>The</strong>se include the books <strong>of</strong> Genesis,<br />

Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and<br />

Deut,ronomy. <strong>Historic</strong>al-critical<br />

scholars believe four different authors<br />

work~ on the Pentateuch. <strong>The</strong>y were<br />

not reaUy authors ; their concern was<br />

to cornpile and edit the oral tradition,<br />

and to write about the nature <strong>of</strong> God<br />

and the social and cultural development<br />

<strong>of</strong> people. <strong>The</strong> authors were not<br />

concerned with· historical narrative.<br />

<strong>The</strong> historical~ritical method, which<br />

is one way to read the Bible, assumes<br />

that the Bible was written by humans<br />

in specific historical situations. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

scholars have been reduced to making<br />

informed guesses based on language<br />

analysis, and on ideas in comparison<br />

with other cultures, as to when, and under<br />

what circumstances the biblical<br />

texts were written and compiled.<br />

Guest<br />

opinion<br />

THE BIBLICAL SCHOLAR BenedJct<br />

Spinoza (1632-1677) concluded that the<br />

Bible should be studied like any other<br />

book. Spinoza felt that before one can<br />

understand the Bible, one should know<br />

biblical Hebrew and learn as much 81<br />

possible about the culture that existed<br />

during the biblical period.<br />

If "history" means "to present factual<br />

and objective information," then<br />

biblical chronology is repetitive and at<br />

times inconsistent. <strong>The</strong>re are t)tYo lists<br />

<strong>of</strong> the generations <strong>of</strong> men from .\dam<br />

to Noah. In the Noah and 'the flood<br />

story there are contradictory dates<br />

concernng the number <strong>of</strong> days it rained<br />

and the kinds <strong>of</strong> animals that were in<br />

the ark.<br />

And there are two different accounts<br />

<strong>of</strong> the creation <strong>of</strong> the world. This leads<br />

the reader to suppose that two different<br />

authors composed the accounts.<br />

In the first acount creation proceeds in<br />

an orderly fashion. On the first day<br />

God created light ; on the second day he<br />

formed the sky, separating the upper<br />

waters from the lower waters; on the<br />

third day the earth and vegetation<br />

were created; on the -fourth day the<br />

sun, moon and stars were created; on<br />

the fifth day the ocean life and sky life.<br />

<strong>The</strong>n on the sixth day, God created<br />

animal life and man and woman.<br />

BUT IN CHAPTER Two <strong>of</strong> Genesis,<br />

the reader is confronted with a lIifferent<br />

account <strong>of</strong> Creation:<br />

"When the Lord God made earth and<br />

heaven, there was neither shrub nor<br />

plant growing wild upon th~ earth; nor<br />

was there any man to till the ground. A<br />

flood used to rise out <strong>of</strong> the earth and<br />

water aU the surface <strong>of</strong> the ground.<br />

<strong>The</strong>n the Lord God forme«{ a man from<br />

the dust <strong>of</strong> the ground and breathed<br />

into his nostrils the breath <strong>of</strong> life. Thus<br />

man became a living creature."<br />

<strong>The</strong>se redundancies have caused<br />

biblical scholars to suggest that Chapter<br />

One and Chapter Two <strong>of</strong> Genesis<br />

were written by different authors,<br />

which leaves the reader to wonder<br />

which account is true. What was God's<br />

motive and priorities, or how did the<br />

authors <strong>of</strong> Genesis perceive God? Such<br />

historical knowledge would help the<br />

reader to understand the origin and<br />

development <strong>of</strong> the authors' ideas and<br />

the relationship the authors had to the<br />

environment tha t brought forth these<br />

ideas.<br />

' THE DIFFICULTY in asking<br />

historical or scientific questions <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Bible is compounded when one con·<br />

siders, for example: Where did Cain's<br />

wife come from, since his clan was the<br />

only one on earth? How could the sea<br />

split, or the earth stop, or a bush burn<br />

without being consumed? <strong>The</strong>se are<br />

miraculous events, but they are not<br />

historical or scientlfic.<br />

Personally, I believe the Bible is<br />

divinely inspired. Even though the Blble<br />

may not provide exact historiCJl<br />

accounts, its integrity lies in the fad<br />

tha t it has inspired generations <strong>of</strong> pe0-<br />

ple and given birth to religions. 'I1Ie Blble<br />

is important to look at for the good<br />

it has done, but not as a scieatific<br />

model.<br />

Mills is a UI undergraduate In the Depart.<br />

ment 01 Broadcasting and Film.<br />

A human side <strong>of</strong> home computers<br />

W<br />

E<br />

WERE marveling at<br />

our home computer ter·<br />

mlnal one day last week<br />

when the green screen<br />

blinked "Chat from TCS221."<br />

Someone, somewhere, wanted to talk.<br />

We'd heard a lot about such people<br />

since installing the machine last year.<br />

And we were wary. To our minds, the<br />

much-touted computer revolution<br />

wasn't worth pursuing if it meant that<br />

Americans would communicate only<br />

through their modems.<br />

Moreover, neither <strong>of</strong> us knew how to<br />

"chat," a common nickname for in·<br />

stantaneous, on-line, two-way communication.<br />

We didn't know what<br />

topics were chatworthy, much less<br />

what functions were needed to begin<br />

our first electronic relationship.<br />

With some prompting from the<br />

screen, we found TCS221 to be Andrew<br />

Schlein, a Manhattan pharmaceutical<br />

analyst who is somewhat <strong>of</strong> a<br />

spokesman for cha tniks. Schlein has<br />

been chatting with hundreds <strong>of</strong> computer<br />

buffs for more than a year. Last<br />

month he threw a Christmas party for<br />

several dozen, some <strong>of</strong> whom he'd<br />

knOWJl only over the wires. He gave us<br />

a taste <strong>of</strong> computer-aided communica·<br />

tion while filling us in about his<br />

favorite hobby.<br />

ACCORDING TO Schlein, his party<br />

was Only one <strong>of</strong> many such gatherings<br />

<strong>of</strong> chatterers who subscribe either to<br />

the ~eader 's Digest Source or the<br />

Ohio;based CompuServe computer<br />

netw9rk. It's natural, he said, for pe0-<br />

ple wJio meet via either network to get<br />

together eventually.<br />

Lik~ us, most Americans probably<br />

don't fully comprehend the "personal"<br />

side <strong>of</strong> the personal computer. Manuals<br />

and promotional literature certainly<br />

give little hint. <strong>The</strong> advantages center<br />

more on storage, programming and the<br />

considerable educational functions <strong>of</strong><br />

the machine. Yet, despite all one hears<br />

about Americans' insatiable interest in<br />

the technology <strong>of</strong> tomorrow, persona I·<br />

com~uter owners who hook up with<br />

user I networks spend a majority <strong>of</strong><br />

their on·line time in age-old pastimes:<br />

meeting strangers, exchanging in·<br />

terests and ideas, flirting and -<br />

imagine it - {ailing in love.<br />

Letters<br />

just<br />

Newcomer's view<br />

To tb. editor:<br />

I am new to <strong>Iowa</strong> City, having left<br />

Berkeley, Calif., only about four<br />

months ago. People in Berkeley said<br />

I'd miss California, but at least housing<br />

would be so much cheaper in <strong>Iowa</strong>.<br />

Maybe, but not in <strong>Iowa</strong> City, and<br />

particularly not if you rent in <strong>Iowa</strong><br />

City. Rents here are, in general, higher<br />

than in much <strong>of</strong> the San Francisco Bay<br />

area. Unfortunately for Inany, wages<br />

seem to be considerably lower In <strong>Iowa</strong><br />

City.<br />

I have heard many reasons for this<br />

situation, but most seem a bit too overgeneralized.<br />

None have included an<br />

observation that my wife and I were<br />

quick to notel Much <strong>of</strong> the available<br />

bouslng Is sulHtandard (at least by my<br />

standards), dirty, in poor repair,<br />

unsafe and, In general, <strong>of</strong> classic<br />

ghetto quality.<br />

'lbere may be many realODl for high<br />

renll, but none I can tblnk <strong>of</strong> for gross<br />

neglect. I truly hope that <strong>Iowa</strong> City , a<br />

Glen &<br />

Shearer<br />

Relationships born from the computer,<br />

however, are apparently unlike<br />

those that users have held in the past.<br />

Freed from the <strong>of</strong>ten·imposing prejudices<br />

we assign to looks and mannerisms,<br />

chatterers open up rapidly to<br />

partners. Blessed with anonymity, individuals<br />

are more confident about<br />

their though t. Charges for on-line time<br />

make users more spontaneous;<br />

friendships blossom at accelerated<br />

rates.<br />

COULD TCSZZI compare chatting<br />

with other types <strong>of</strong> human exchange?<br />

"You open up the way you do with<br />

someone you meet on an airplane,"<br />

Schlein reported in response. "You say<br />

more than normal to Someone you may<br />

never see."<br />

For many, the effect is liberating. In-<br />

~ity that I like very much and bope to<br />

make a long-term borne <strong>of</strong>, will not<br />

indeed turn Into Jeffrey Miller'.<br />

" Midwest ghetto" (01, Dec. 8).<br />

Richard L. Valentine<br />

EnvironmerltalEngineerlng<br />

Self service<br />

To the editor:<br />

This Is in regard to Jolin Holeval'.<br />

letter (DI, Dec.lS) in which he aCC\llel<br />

Westlawn <strong>of</strong> mlsslna the point <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Head Start Olristmas party.<br />

Thank you, Holeva., for poIntilll out<br />

the "real"lntent <strong>of</strong> the party (or rather<br />

teractive television rejuvenated the<br />

lives <strong>of</strong> senior citizens in Reading, Pa.,<br />

recently, allowing many house-bound<br />

residents to revive old friendships ,<br />

discuss local politics and meet new<br />

friends. Elsewhere across the country,<br />

computer chatting has led married<br />

couples to talk regularly with adolescent<br />

whiz kids while grandmothers<br />

befriend bachelors.<br />

Most users, particularly those who<br />

live in big cities, go one step further<br />

and get together. Reports <strong>of</strong> special<br />

rendezvous by users who live hundreds<br />

<strong>of</strong> miles apart are increasing. Meeting<br />

for a drink or dinner was only the first<br />

step for the dozen or so couples whom<br />

the Source and CompuServe say have<br />

met via computer and eventually been<br />

married.<br />

TCS221 admitted that some users<br />

balk at the prospect <strong>of</strong> personal con·<br />

tact. Did he worry that the new<br />

technology would, in time, lead some<br />

users to forsake real people for computer<br />

blips and withdraw from society?<br />

"It's simply not true," he fired back<br />

In cold, green type. "In fact, I'm in<br />

for simply restating It; Westlawn bas<br />

better ihings to do with Its time than<br />

raise money for simple publicity) . Yet<br />

It Is ironic that even though the "real"<br />

intent was not to gain praise for<br />

Hillcrest, that's what happened In the<br />

end.<br />

Remember , we are a part (If<br />

Hll\crest. We are a part <strong>of</strong> the floor<br />

associaUon, and we work with<br />

Hillcrest ollen to raise money (or<br />

various activities . It seems that<br />

Guest<br />

opinions<br />

Guast opinions are article. on<br />

current IllIIes written by DI relderl.<br />

TIll 011" IoWIn welcomel gue.t<br />

Opinlona; lubml"lona shoUld be<br />

I'tped Ind signed. <strong>The</strong> author's<br />

Iddre .. and phone number. which<br />

will not be published, should be<br />

Included. A brief biography mUlt<br />

accompany III aubml .. lonl. <strong>The</strong> DI<br />

reeervet \tie right to edit lor length<br />

and clarity.<br />

!ojU""flt. ,K<br />

touch with a much la rger group than I<br />

was a year ago and a much wider<br />

variety than one would meet In daily<br />

lire, This machine encourages, rather<br />

than discourages, interaction."<br />

INDEED, THE "dehuman lrillC"<br />

nature <strong>of</strong> computtrization may be<br />

overestimated. <strong>The</strong> personal c0mputer,<br />

at least, would seem to have •<br />

greater potential [or the opposite ef·<br />

fect. As John Ficklein, associate director<br />

<strong>of</strong> news and public affairs at the<br />

Corporation for Public Broadcastial,<br />

pointed out in his recent book on ..<br />

communications , ElectrOile<br />

Nightmare, two-way action isa farbel·<br />

ter curse than the one-way channeb Gf<br />

today's television.<br />

For now, the adv nt <strong>of</strong> the penonal<br />

computer means more than a way 10<br />

opUmize our business opportunities.<br />

It's not only going to change the WlY<br />

we communicate, but could make better<br />

communicators <strong>of</strong> us all .<br />

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprl ... , me.<br />

Field Newspaper Syndlclte.<br />

HllIcrest will always claim UI •• 1I'rt<br />

<strong>of</strong> it wh n It need our h Ip and tnOIIeJ,<br />

yet when It i time to reap any pralleal<br />

publicity, WesUawn Is left out 1M<br />

forgotten .<br />

U nothlnl bad been written about 1*<br />

event, we would not be concerned. All<br />

Is, we object to Hillcrest IISiIC 111<br />

partner hip with Westlawn to mate k·<br />

elf look good.<br />

L. M. Pencook<br />

S430 WesUawn<br />

Lett ....<br />

policy<br />

LeIter, 10 Iha edItor mUlt be \YPId<br />

and mUI' be IIgned. Unllgntcl or<br />

untyped lalla" will not be cOflllcltM<br />

lor pubhcatlon Lellera ahould<br />

Include the wrltar', telephone<br />

number. which will not be pubilihed,<br />

and address, whloh will be wllt1ht1d<br />

upon request. lellers ahould lit brill<br />

and Tile Delt, .... " r8HfV8t II\t<br />

right 10 edit lor ~gtn Inc! CIIr1\y.<br />

Supervh<br />

refugee<br />

By Mike Helfern<br />

Staff Writer<br />

A proposal to change <strong>Iowa</strong><br />

Homes Program from a Vietll<br />

ing project to an emergency l<br />

will be put before the Joh<br />

Board <strong>of</strong> Supervisors this rno<br />

Executive Director <strong>of</strong> the'<br />

Program, Ron Henderson, !<br />

recommend the change beeal<br />

namese project " is near its e<br />

Because "the Reagan Admir<br />

re-ordered priorities" towan:<br />

programs and has "put a cap 0<br />

<strong>of</strong> refugees coming into the U~<br />

the housing for Vietnamese \I<br />

be needed.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Vietnamese project in I<br />

up by former Gov. Robert Ra:<br />

Water<br />

By Terry FrancllCO<br />

S peciallo <strong>The</strong> Dally <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> state Fire Marshal's<br />

Casey's General Store in<br />

check for a leak from one<br />

tanks in response to the<br />

oline in the water at<br />

<strong>The</strong> Petroleum Testing<br />

Marion, <strong>Iowa</strong>, has been<br />

test the underground pipe<br />

tanks this week, according<br />

Lear <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Quality.<br />

Moni toring wells will be<br />

the next couple weeks to<br />

gasoline from the tanks,<br />

Traces <strong>of</strong> gasoline were<br />

Aid ------i<br />

registered for the draft.<br />

If the response is no, the<br />

will be if the student is<br />

1960 or already on active<br />

Conscientious objectors do<br />

aid.<br />

Compliance with this<br />

stitutes self-incrimination<br />

Fifth Amendment,<br />

Such man, MPIRG senior<br />

Iosbaker said SCARD is<br />

registrants to lie on the<br />

that the bureaucracy is far<br />

Black-----1<br />

the case, because "in a sense,<br />

embody a sense <strong>of</strong> fairness<br />

munity. In a case like this<br />

work·force case, that's the<br />

needed. Essentially, this is a<br />

employment' dispute."<br />

With Freedman's final<br />

was granled a two-year<br />

Military----j<br />

American forces directly<br />

should it appear that the<br />

to Persian Gulf oil is UIl'"'' LI".<br />

THE GUIDANCE document<br />

ing a "close strategic connectJ~<br />

NATO forces in Greece<br />

the Persian Gulf region •<br />

forces that can be used" in<br />

both, indicating a<br />

Americans could be<br />

southern Europe to fight in<br />

It orders the Air<br />

develop" capability to<br />

tactical fighter squadrons to<br />

build hardened shelters for<br />

based there.<br />

<strong>The</strong> document, a key<br />

administration's strategy<br />

the Soviets, spells out use<br />

forces worldwide to<br />

Soviet aggression and directs<br />

U.S. forces over the next .<br />

Cards Et Cetera<br />

1"'. Du""~" •• JS1-4Nt<br />

0. Towncrest<br />

W OptometriC<br />

Associates<br />

WHAT SHOULD YOU<br />

EXPECT FROM A<br />

COMPLETE EYE AND<br />

VISION EXAM?<br />

DiAl SlGHTUNE<br />

351-44_<br />

REQUEST TAPES<br />

NO. 300 & 200


without being consumed? <strong>The</strong>se are<br />

miraculous events, but they are not<br />

historical or scientific.<br />

Personally, I believe the Bible is<br />

di vinely inspired. Even though the Bible<br />

may not provide exact historical<br />

accounts, its integrity lies in the fact<br />

that it has inspired generations <strong>of</strong> pe0-<br />

ple and given birth to religions. <strong>The</strong> Bible<br />

is important to look at for the good<br />

it has done, but not as a scietltifie<br />

model. .<br />

Mills Is a UI undergraduate In the Deplllment<br />

<strong>of</strong> Broadcasting and Film.<br />

mputers<br />

~;U"'~~~K<br />

IN HEAVY INOOSTRIES,<br />

QJOTt Mt . I<br />

touch with a much larger group than I<br />

was a year ago and a much wider<br />

variety than one would meet in daily<br />

life. This machine encourages, rather<br />

than discourages, interaction."<br />

INDEED, THE "dehumanizing"<br />

nature <strong>of</strong> computerization may be<br />

overestimated. <strong>The</strong> personal compuler,<br />

at least, would seem to haft I<br />

greater potential Cor the opposite !!f.<br />

fect. As John Fickleln, associate director<br />

<strong>of</strong> new and public affairs at the<br />

Corporation for Public BroadcastiaI,<br />

pointed out in his recent book on home<br />

communications , ElectrOllc<br />

Nightmare, two-way action Is a far bet·<br />

ter curse than the one-way channels aI<br />

today's television.<br />

For now, the advent <strong>of</strong> the persoaal<br />

computer means more than a way II<br />

optimize our bu iness opportuniUes.<br />

It's not only going to change the WI,<br />

we communicate, but could make belter<br />

communicators <strong>of</strong> us all.<br />

Copyrlgnt 11<strong>18</strong>3 Field Entllfprl ..., InC.<br />

Field Newspaper Syndicate.<br />

Imlcrest will always claim ua II pert<br />

<strong>of</strong> it whcn it needs our help and 11IOIIe7,<br />

yet when it IS time to reap any praiJeoi<br />

publicity , WesUawn Is left out ...<br />

forgotten.<br />

If nothing bad been written about I»<br />

event, we would not be concerned. Asl<br />

Is, we object to Hillcrest usiDI III<br />

partnership with WesUawn to make Itelf<br />

look good.<br />

L. M. Pencooll<br />

S~30 Weatlawn<br />

Lett ....<br />

policy<br />

Leiters 10 tne edllor mUll be ..<br />

.nd mll.t be signed. Unalgned or<br />

untyped letter, Will not De COI1f~<br />

for publlc.tlon Letter. ,noukI<br />

Include the writer'. t_hone<br />

number, which will nol be publiahtd,<br />

and address, which will be wlthhttd<br />

upon request. Lener. Ihould be brill<br />

and Tilt Dally !OWIn rllMfVtt \lit<br />

ngm to ICIIt for length .nd CIIrIIy.<br />

.<br />

Supervisors to consider changing<br />

refugee home into Ie youth ' house<br />

By Mike H.rt.rn<br />

StaHWrlter<br />

A proposal to change <strong>Iowa</strong> City's Youth<br />

Homes Program from a Vietnamese housing<br />

project to an emergency youth shelter<br />

will be put before the Johnson County<br />

Board <strong>of</strong> Supervisors this morning.<br />

Executive Director <strong>of</strong> the Youth Homes<br />

Program, Ron Henderson, said he will<br />

recommend the change because the Vietnamese<br />

project " Is near its end."<br />

Because "the Reagan Administration has<br />

re-ordered priorities" toward all refugee<br />

programs and has "put a cap on the number<br />

<strong>of</strong> refugees coming into the United States,"<br />

the housing for Vietnamese will no longer<br />

be needed.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Vietnamese project in <strong>Iowa</strong> was set<br />

up by former Gov. Robert Ray, Henderson<br />

said, to accommodate the "boat people" in<br />

1916. Since then, the project has provided<br />

housing for six adolescent refugees at 524<br />

Ronald St. In <strong>Iowa</strong> City.<br />

But the refugees, all <strong>of</strong> whom attend area<br />

high schools, will graduate in June and<br />

there will be no more adolescent refugees<br />

brought in to take their places.<br />

"<strong>The</strong> federal money for the project is<br />

still there, "Henderson said, "but due to<br />

federal decisions on changing quotas, it is<br />

no longer needed."<br />

THE PRIORITY CHANGE by the<br />

Reagan administration, Henderson explained,<br />

was to put the n!!Cds <strong>of</strong> refugee '<br />

families ahead <strong>of</strong> the needs <strong>of</strong> stray in·<br />

dividuals, such as runaway adolescents.<br />

<strong>The</strong> change that Henderson will recommend<br />

to the board will bring local runaway<br />

...<br />

adolescents to the Ronald Street bouse and<br />

would return the hoUse to its original use<br />

as the first emergency youth shelter in<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> City.<br />

Henderson said it is necessary to notify<br />

the supervisors <strong>of</strong> the changes in the<br />

house's use now so, "We won't be stuck<br />

with a large empty house" when the Viet­<br />

{Iamese refugees leave in June.<br />

Youth Homes is a private, non-pr<strong>of</strong>it<br />

organization that relies on federal funds<br />

allocated by the county for 5 percent <strong>of</strong> its<br />

funding. <strong>The</strong> program picks up the rest <strong>of</strong><br />

its budget by housing runaways for payment<br />

from the federal government.<br />

<strong>The</strong> supervisors will also discuss the<br />

county's "spraying program" to kill weeds<br />

in the ditches along county roads during<br />

their informal meeting at 9 a.m. in Room<br />

238 <strong>of</strong> the Federal Buildlng.<br />

Water tested for gas leak in · Hills<br />

By Terry Francisco<br />

Special to <strong>The</strong> <strong>Daily</strong> <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> state Fire Marshal's <strong>of</strong>fice has asked<br />

Casey's General Store in Hills, <strong>Iowa</strong>, to<br />

check for a leak from one <strong>of</strong> its gasoline<br />

tanks in response to the discovery <strong>of</strong> gasoline<br />

in the water at Casey's.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Petroleum Testing Equipment Co. <strong>of</strong><br />

Marion, <strong>Iowa</strong>, has been hired by Casey's to<br />

test the underground pipe <strong>of</strong> its gasoline<br />

tanks this week, according to Merritt Van<br />

Lear <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong> Environmental<br />

Quality.<br />

Moni toring wells will be installed during<br />

the next couple weeks to check for traces <strong>of</strong><br />

gasoline from the tanks, Van Lear said.<br />

Traces <strong>of</strong> gasoline were discovered in the<br />

water supply at Casey's during testing by<br />

the Johnson County Health Department in<br />

late December. <strong>The</strong> Health Department<br />

had been condUcting tests on Casey's water<br />

supply since last July after a crack in the<br />

underground lines had caused gasoline to<br />

appear in the water supply at nearby<br />

Sharon Telephone Co.<br />

SIMILAR TESTING at a nearby<br />

farmhouse in late December discovered<br />

that none <strong>of</strong> the gas had leaked into their<br />

water supply, Van Lear said.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Johnson County Health Department<br />

has been testing Casey's water supply<br />

periodically to determine if undetected gasoline<br />

from the July leak has been surfacing,<br />

Casey's manager Jeanette Byler said.<br />

Byler said the leak last July could have<br />

been caused by a number <strong>of</strong> things, but she<br />

did not become aware <strong>of</strong> it until the gas had<br />

been detected in the water supply at the<br />

telephone company. <strong>The</strong> leak was then<br />

repaired in less than a week, Byler said.<br />

Byler also said the new discovery <strong>of</strong> gas<br />

in Casey's water can be attributed to the<br />

changing water table underground and not<br />

a new leak. She said the testing in the next<br />

couple <strong>of</strong> weeks should determine if there<br />

is a leak.<br />

Until the Johnson County Health Department<br />

determines that there are no gasoline<br />

traces remaining in the telephone company<br />

water, Casey's will be supplying them with<br />

bottled water, Byler said. Casey's will also<br />

be using bottled water when servlng their<br />

customers.<br />

AI·d ------------------------------------------------------<br />

registered for the draft.<br />

If the response is no, the only exemptions<br />

will be if the student is female, born before<br />

1960 or already on active military duty.<br />

Conscientious objectors do not qualify for<br />

aid.<br />

Compliance with this stipulation con·<br />

stitutes self-incrimination and'violates the<br />

Fifth Amendment, according to Gail<br />

Suchman, MPIRG senior attorney.<br />

los baker said SCARD is enco~raging nonregistrants<br />

(a lie aa the farms, "knowing<br />

Inat tne bureaucracy is \ar too s)ow an?! in-<br />

efficient to find everyone."<br />

To guard against such falSifying <strong>of</strong> information,<br />

the law requires that the univerSity<br />

keep letters from the Selective Service on<br />

file to ensure the young men actually<br />

registered. <strong>The</strong>se letters may be subpoenaed<br />

in cases where lying is suspected.<br />

NOT ONLY do university admissions <strong>of</strong>ficials<br />

fear this will drop a heavy load <strong>of</strong><br />

paperwork onto their shoulders , but<br />

another argument advanced by MPIRG<br />

charges that this is an Invasion <strong>of</strong> pri~acy<br />

Continued from page 1<br />

Students and administrators feel they are<br />

being gored by the new regulations, but the<br />

question <strong>of</strong> whether they'll be able to<br />

retaliate is still up in the air.<br />

"We're in a no man's l.and right now,"<br />

Moore said.<br />

He said the latest news from Washington<br />

is that there won't be any directives about<br />

how to implement I.he regulations until May<br />

or June.<br />

MPIRG hopes to at least temporarily<br />

block the action through an injunction filed<br />

against the Selective Service and U.S.<br />

Cen. Conferences and Institutes<br />

Spring 1983 Courses<br />

<strong>The</strong> Dally I~n - <strong>Iowa</strong> City, <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tuesday, <strong>January</strong> <strong>18</strong>.1983 -'.'<br />

~ Learning Adyentures for Adults<br />

Open Enrollment_No Teet--cEU Award.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se special interest classes me.t once each week for five weeks Irom 7 . 9 pm on the day <strong>of</strong> the<br />

wttk scheduled. <strong>The</strong> fee is $25 per closs unless otherwise noted. A brochure is available upon<br />

request . Confirmations and room assignments will be sent upon receipt <strong>of</strong> fee. Registrotation I,<br />

open to any adult.<br />

,<br />

To r.,I.t.r .. n" nom •• soclol Mcurlty numb.r ...... r •••• n.m. <strong>of</strong> cI ••• an" f .. (poyabl. to<br />

tho Unlv.rllty <strong>of</strong> lowo) '0 1m. 210, IMU, low. City. IA 522U. Call C.nter for Confer.nc •• an"<br />

In.tltu ... ("') 353·5515 for more Informotlon.<br />

SISSION ONI<br />

Beginning Mondoy. <strong>January</strong> 31 :<br />

'lfANCIAL NIPAUTION FOI IITIIEMENT<br />

IMPROVI 'OUI .IOGII PUCTICI AND<br />

ANALUIS<br />

THI MUSIC 0' LUDWIG VAN IIETHOVEN<br />

AEROIIC DANCING Fee S15<br />

COUNTI' SWING DANCING Fee SJO per couple<br />

Beginning Tuesday. February 1:<br />

CAIDIOPULMONARY IESUSCITATION (CPII<br />

UVIL I AND II Fee S10.<br />

'PIANO POI IIGINNIIS<br />

COMPUTEI LITIUCf<br />

GIlMAN FOI TlAVIUIS<br />

Beginning Wednesday. Febraury 2:<br />

IUSINESS WRITING<br />

TOPICS If ASTRONOMY<br />

.GINNING BALLROOM DANCING Fee S)'J per couple.<br />

SIIIIONTWO<br />

Beginning Monday. March 7:<br />

KNOW THE TlllnOIf: ETHNIC GROUPS IN<br />

SOUTHIAST IOWA<br />

ITALIAN OPEIA OF THE NINETEENTH CENTUIf<br />

IMPIOVE 'OUI lllDOI<br />

DESIGN FOR LlFESPACE<br />

Beginn ing Tuesday. March 8:<br />

IUNNING<br />

GENEALOG'<br />

AN INTIODUCTION TO H'PMOSIS<br />

Beginni ng Wednesday. March 9:<br />

MEDICAL GENmCS<br />

Special Programs - Write or call for Information.<br />

WOIKSHOPS.<br />

INTIODUCTION TO MODEIN IRAU<br />

COPING WITH CHRONIC LOW-lACK PAIN<br />

IALLIOOM DANCING Fee Sal per couple.<br />

Beginning Friday. March 11.<br />

COMPUTEIS AND PROGUMMING<br />

February 12. GIANTS AND CONTUCTS - PROPOSAL DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTRATION. Fee $:Kl .<br />

March 12 and 13. WEEKEND WIlTING WOIKSHOPS. FICTION AND POETIf WilTING. Fee $35.<br />

April 4. 6. 8. 11 . 13. MATH IEVIEW '01 THE GIE. Fee SJO.<br />

TIIPSI<br />

February 26 and 27. A Weekend in Minnesota. FtQluring attendance at a performance 01 "A Prairie Home Companion".<br />

a broadcast feature <strong>of</strong> NPR. Alternative - "Peer Gynt" at <strong>The</strong> Gulhrie <strong>The</strong>atre.<br />

March 26 and 27. A Weekend In Chicago. A major eKhibii al <strong>The</strong> Art Inslilule <strong>of</strong> Chicago and "Zorba h


,.. - <strong>The</strong> Dally <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong> - <strong>Iowa</strong> CIty, <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tuesday, <strong>January</strong> <strong>18</strong>, 1983<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Iowa</strong> Hawkeyes won it handily ., I<br />

over the Tennessee Volunteers, and the<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> lans tared pretty well , too.<br />

Rochelle BOlman, T. Johnson , Mellsaa<br />

Isaacson and Bill Paxson were In<br />

Atlanta to !ollow the whole entourage.<br />

Here's their behind-the-scenes report:<br />

Peach Bowl<br />

By T. J<strong>of</strong>InlOn<br />

Stan Writer<br />

and Rochelle Bozman<br />

Metro Editor<br />

ATLANTA - A major concern for most<br />

<strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong>s arriving here was the AU-<strong>Iowa</strong> BasIl,<br />

sponsored by the UI Alumni Assosiation. Last<br />

year, an estimated 30,000 <strong>Iowa</strong> sympathisers<br />

made their way through the Century Plaza<br />

Hotel on the edge <strong>of</strong> Beverly HiUs, draining liquor<br />

and beer supplies with a speed that left<br />

normally ultra-cool Los Angeles buzzing for<br />

weeks.<br />

Atlanta was better prepared, largely because<br />

the horror stories <strong>of</strong> the Century had been told<br />

and retold by the <strong>Iowa</strong> organizers <strong>of</strong> the Atlanta<br />

party. <strong>The</strong> Dec. 30 bash, origoially scheduled<br />

for the Peachtree Plaza Hotel, was moved to<br />

the Atlanta Merchandise Mart.<br />

" We don't know how many people to expect,"<br />

said a spokesman for the Peachtree, which was<br />

catering the event. "We're just planning a bit<br />

on the heavier side."<br />

IOWA HAWKEYE FANS needed little encouragement<br />

to begin celebra ting even before<br />

the 15th annual Peach Bowl. Before the doors to<br />

the party opened, police were called to handle<br />

the crowd outside, which was blocking several<br />

lanes <strong>of</strong> Peachtree Street.<br />

Inside, on the second floor <strong>of</strong> the Merchandise<br />

Mart, over a hundred bars were being set<br />

up and stocked. Cashiers were readying long<br />

rolls <strong>of</strong> drink tickets and counting the piles <strong>of</strong><br />

money necessary just to make change.<br />

Once inside, it was easy to forget the party<br />

was taking place 800 miles from <strong>Iowa</strong> . No<br />

Southern accents could be heard, the UI<br />

Marching Band played and <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong>s drank and<br />

milled about.<br />

While the approximately 13,000 UI supporters<br />

packed into the rooms would be considered<br />

small in comparison with the Rose Bowl party,<br />

few noticed and no one seemed to mind. <strong>The</strong><br />

low ceilings and maze-like layout <strong>of</strong> the ~ms<br />

gave the party a feeling <strong>of</strong> endlessness without<br />

providing a good perspective <strong>of</strong> how large the<br />

part really was.<br />

Gov. Robert Ray and other dignitaries passed<br />

through the crowd meeting <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong>s who did not<br />

hesitate to plunk down $2.50 for a highball or<br />

small cup <strong>of</strong> beer.<br />

THE PARTV, SPONSORED by the ill<br />

Alumni Association, could be considered a<br />

success, according to UI <strong>of</strong>ficials. No one was<br />

arrested or injured and most people seemed to<br />

have a good time.<br />

At the same lime, a more dignified and<br />

sedate crowd attended the President's Sail.<br />

Sponsored by the Peach Bowl Committee, the<br />

ball benifltted the Lighthouse for the Blind -<br />

the charity that receives all pr<strong>of</strong>its from the<br />

Peach Bowl.<br />

People who attended the ball paid the same<br />

price for drinks, but dressed more formally and<br />

paid $25 per couple to attend. <strong>The</strong>n-Governorelect<br />

Terry Branstad represented <strong>Iowa</strong> at the<br />

ball.<br />

With the added inducemenl <strong>of</strong> a victory, UI<br />

alumni, students and supporters poured into<br />

Atlanta's downtown hotels New Vear's Eve to<br />

toast the win and the new year. <strong>The</strong> Peachtree,<br />

the Marriott, the Hyatt Regency and the Hilton<br />

all held New Vear's Eve parties, and many fans<br />

found smaller parties tel attend.<br />

Although the Hilton was the beadquarters for<br />

the Tennessee Volunteers, a large party - only<br />

slightly subdued - still filled the lobby. Tennessee<br />

brought 25,000 fans to the bowl, but the<br />

Atlanta Convention Bureau estimated thai only<br />

10,000 <strong>of</strong> those would stay in the city overnight.<br />

-<br />

In the Jubilation following the Hawkey ..' Peach Bowl victory by fanl and the Peach Bowl trophy I. hol.ted In the air while defeated the Tenne ... Volunteer. 28-22 In their 1IC0nd con-<br />

New Year'. Eve, Hayden Fry and the Hawk. are lurrounded the player. give the "number one" .Ign. <strong>The</strong> Hawkeye. <strong>18</strong>Cutlve bowl game .<br />

By Men ... llUcton<br />

Assistant Sports Ed itor<br />

ATLANTA - It's amazing what one victory<br />

did to wipe out a source <strong>of</strong> embarrassment that<br />

had managed to follow around the <strong>Iowa</strong> footba ll<br />

team for a solid year.<br />

Until Dec. 31 , the date <strong>of</strong> the Hawkeyes' 28-22<br />

victory over Tennessee in the Peach Bowl,<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong>'s 1982 Rose Bowl loss always seemed like<br />

just yesterday. Now, that game stands a<br />

lifetime away.<br />

It was an interesting week in Atlanta. <strong>The</strong><br />

Hawkeyes were a relaxed but determined<br />

team. That was not to say, however, that there<br />

weren't some crazy moments.<br />

TIle two teams slipped through a week <strong>of</strong><br />

muddy practices - the Vols at the old Grant<br />

Field on the campus <strong>of</strong> Georgia Tech and the<br />

Hawkeyes at Atlanta's Lovett (priva~) High<br />

School - while Hayden Fry slipped through the<br />

week's press conferences entertaining the<br />

media.<br />

FR Y BEGAN THE week by criticizing both<br />

the TeMessee and Atlanta press for writing<br />

"negative" articles "downplaying <strong>Iowa</strong> and the<br />

Big Ten." He concluded his introductory<br />

remarks with, "I'm known to say what L<br />

believe." By the end <strong>of</strong> the week, there was lit-<br />

" ... We don't want any <strong>of</strong><br />

those ballet-type<br />

movies."<br />

-Hayden Fry<br />

tie doubt about it.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Hawkeyes, meanwhile, were relaxing<br />

around the spacious Marriott Hotel or zipping<br />

over to Space Mountain, a local tourist spot.<br />

What they were not doing, unlike their stay in<br />

Pasadena for the Rose Bowl , was bouncing<br />

from banquet to banquet and tourbus to<br />

tourbus.<br />

Mark Bortz, <strong>Iowa</strong>'s All-Big Ten tackle, was<br />

among the happiest to receive that particular<br />

news. "At the Rose Bowl, we sat on buses<br />

every day and went on tours. Vou name it, we<br />

went there. We must have sat on those buses an<br />

average <strong>of</strong> three and a half hours a day."<br />

Fry had decided early on to restrict his<br />

team's pregame activities to two banquets.<br />

What most people don't know about pregame<br />

banquets is that most players don't enjoy having<br />

to smile at their opponents over their<br />

chicken kiev.<br />

':1 don't really like going to those things,"<br />

Bortz said. "It's kind <strong>of</strong> relaxing I guess, ·but<br />

sometimes it's hard to get yourself psyched up<br />

after that. It's not like you hate the guys on the<br />

other team, but a lot <strong>of</strong> guys like to think the opponents<br />

are Idiots."<br />

BORTZ' DEFENSIVE cohort Bobby Stoops<br />

agreed. "It's hard to relax with members <strong>of</strong> the<br />

other team when, in a few days, you're going to<br />

do everything you cal\ to beat that person. It's<br />

like, who's fooling who?" •<br />

Banquets also have a tendency to drag on,<br />

something head coaches have very little<br />

patience for the week before a big game. "I<br />

remember lhe guy last year at the Rose Bowl<br />

introduced all <strong>of</strong> his neighbors, his relatives,<br />

his flog and everyone else," Fry said.<br />

So it was skip the nonsense and and onto<br />

serious practice for the Hawks. Well, at least<br />

that was their illtent. What they did not know<br />

when they stepped onto the practice field Tuesday,<br />

was that they had an uninvited visitor taking<br />

pictures <strong>of</strong> them through a telephoto lens.<br />

A security guard spotted the intruder and<br />

Fry's 29-year-ld son Randy, a graduate assis·<br />

tant weight coach, chased the man, who had<br />

come across the Chattahoochee River, and<br />

trapped him with his car.<br />

"<strong>The</strong> poor .rascal was scared to death," r"<br />

crowed at his pre conference " .. .It was<br />

really more fun than anything." .<br />

BUT NOT MORE fun than Wednesday. "AI<br />

the seniors, in their annual litlle get-together<br />

following their last col\ege practice, handed<br />

down Whatever they wanted to give to the<br />

lowerclassmen, a tradition at <strong>Iowa</strong> through til<br />

years," Fry explained.<br />

"One guy dedicated his chest to Chuck ~<br />

because Chuck doesn't have one, and one PJ<br />

gave all his aches and paIRS to a fella he'd De<br />

to see have aches and pains<br />

Thursday night, Hayden's plans were simple.<br />

"We'll see a good we tern or a war story," lie<br />

said. "You know, blood and guts, that's fine,<br />

but we don 't any <strong>of</strong> those ballet·type movies.<br />

One year at North Texas State we saw " Walk·<br />

ing Tall" five times and we won all five<br />

games."<br />

Meanwhile, while the Hawkeyes were ~<br />

lucked in althe Marriott early Thursday nigll~<br />

most <strong>of</strong> the Tennessee Volunteers could be seeD<br />

waltzing through th Hilton down the street.<br />

Whether or not that made a difference, sond<br />

hours and a couple whoocys later, the<br />

Hawkeyes were Peach Bowl champions and<br />

Chuck Long was a Peach Bowl h roo<br />

Winos, moonies tum into Hawk· fans for a weekend<br />

By T, JohnlOn<br />

Staff Writer<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Iowa</strong> Marching Band was the fint <strong>of</strong> the<br />

college-crowd to arrive in Atlanta. TIle<br />

Marriott Holel, where the band and football<br />

team were staying, bad, for two cia,., been a<br />

quiet place filled with working press and members<br />

<strong>of</strong> the football team's oHicial party.<br />

<strong>The</strong> arrival <strong>of</strong> the band sipaled the COIIIiD&<br />

<strong>of</strong> monied heathens, and suddenly the darkblazers<br />

and walkie talkies <strong>of</strong> hired cops<br />

protecting the naive inside the hotels and the<br />

blue uniforms <strong>of</strong> Atlanta police outside were<br />

everywhere. TIley checked in regularly with<br />

bartenders and bellmen, chasing out known<br />

bookers and bustlers.<br />

That wu the end <strong>of</strong> relaxed Atlanta. From<br />

then on each hour bfOUlht new and different<br />

tours to the downtown, and more and more<br />

legiUmate and otherwise street vendors to the<br />

areal surrounding the hotels.<br />

Every hustler in town became an <strong>Iowa</strong> fan.<br />

Winos would walk up to you, Il'Ib your band<br />

and spend a couple <strong>of</strong> minutes ta1kinc football<br />

before they put the touch 011 you for lOme cull.<br />

ONE WINO EXPLAINED that It II "part <strong>of</strong><br />

oar job" to know wbat IJ'OUPI are in town. Be<br />

espIained which conventiOlll were the most<br />

IIcrative, and in bJs eyes, Iowlal were very<br />

FJefOUS.<br />

Even the moooies adjusted. TIley replaced<br />

their old standard "you are loved" buttons with<br />

mucb more fashionable "<strong>Iowa</strong> Hawkeres"<br />

numbers, and were rewarded for their forward<br />

thinking.<br />

One told me they had bought 13,000 <strong>of</strong> the tiny<br />

black and gold buttons, and everyone on the<br />

.treet seemed to have one after the first few<br />

moonies arrived.<br />

Tbere was also a thriving market in psuedostolen<br />

goods. <strong>The</strong> huStle, according to one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

many cops patrolling tbe Peachtree Center the<br />

nigbt before the game, is to buy cheap watches<br />

and sell tbem at inflated prices by affecting an<br />

air <strong>of</strong> mystery, as if the merchandise was<br />

stolen. .<br />

"Brand new Seiko, man," was the call <strong>of</strong><br />

many bunching merchants. "Brand new and for<br />

you damn cheap, too," they said, puUing the<br />

merchandise from under coats or the inside <strong>of</strong><br />

their pants.<br />

"We don't even bother with them anymore,"<br />

the cop said. "A lot <strong>of</strong> them even have street·<br />

vendors licenses."<br />

ANOTHER, WHO couldn't have had a<br />

license, frequented the bars <strong>of</strong> the hotels. He<br />

wu dressed in Ralph Lauren from head to toe<br />

and flashing a chunk <strong>of</strong> hashish the size <strong>of</strong> a<br />

blackboard eraser.<br />

Tbe way I gol tbe story from a friend was<br />

that be'd let you smoke a little <strong>of</strong> the hasb and<br />

then start tallting-up the great cocaine he could<br />

get. Tben be'd take the cocaine money, leave<br />

the hash as collateral, and go to make the buy<br />

with a promise that he would be back "in just a<br />

few minutes. "<br />

But he never came back, and the real hash<br />

had been replaced with something that looked<br />

like hash, and the cocaine money was down the<br />

stairs and out into the busy street.<br />

"That's the way it goes," one Marriott<br />

security <strong>of</strong>ficer said after I had described the<br />

great hash hustle to him. "We try to keep them<br />

out Qf the hotel, but they get in. <strong>The</strong>se are bad<br />

times, and in bad times you get a lot <strong>of</strong> freaks<br />

out there trying to take your money."<br />

Vendorl by the doz.n •• pread out aeron<br />

Atlanta when <strong>Iowa</strong> fanl arrived, and trIed<br />

their hand at telling their war ... Some<br />

vendor., luch .. th ... , ware legltlma ..<br />

and had the proper llean .... Othara,<br />

though, were I •• ecrupulou •. Some apent<br />

.. veral mlnut .. talking about "them<br />

Hawll:ey .. " before trying the .. I .. pItch on<br />

un.u.pectlng tanl.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Dally <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong>l<br />

Bill PUIOl1<br />

By T. John.on<br />

Staff Writer<br />

ATLANTA - A couple <strong>of</strong> houn<br />

time - with a growing crowd I<br />

around Atlanta's Fulton County<br />

members <strong>of</strong> the press were high<br />

In the sumptous press bQx.<br />

If the Peach Bowl people had<br />

selves - and they had, provldi~<br />

the press with everything from<br />

to extra sets <strong>of</strong> tickets for the gar<br />

else in Atlanta - even they were<br />

the <strong>Iowa</strong> Pork Producers, who<br />

pregame buffet.<br />

<strong>The</strong> southerners were impreS!<br />

piles <strong>of</strong> just-right, two-inch-thid<br />

which they called "poke," whit<br />

pronounciation <strong>of</strong> "pork." And I<br />

teresting conversations. To<br />

"That was some pretty good<br />

had. "<br />

" Yup. That's a fair piece <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> running back Eddie Phil<br />

quarter <strong>of</strong> the the Peach<br />

By T. Johnton<br />

Staff Writer<br />

ATLANTA - <strong>The</strong> Ilood-ld-b


~"'f\' ' ... ,,. .. ,,,,,,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Oally <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong> - <strong>Iowa</strong> City, <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tuaday, <strong>January</strong> <strong>18</strong>,1983 - Page 7<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> Hawkeyes won It handily<br />

e Tennessee VOlunteers, and the<br />

fans fared pretty well , too.<br />

ie B01man, T. Johnson, Melissa<br />

on and Bill Paxson were In<br />

to follow the whole entourage.<br />

their behlnd-the-scenes report:<br />

Peach Bowl<br />

By T. John.on<br />

Staff Writer<br />

ATLANTA - A couple <strong>of</strong> hours before game<br />

time - with a growing crowd wandering<br />

around Atlanta's Fulton County Stadium -<br />

members <strong>of</strong> the press were high above the field<br />

in the sumptous preSs bQx.<br />

If the Peach Bowl people had outdone themselves<br />

- and they had, providing members <strong>of</strong><br />

the press with everything from nonstop booze<br />

to extra sets <strong>of</strong> tickets for the game or anything<br />

else in Atlanta - even they were outclassed by<br />

the <strong>Iowa</strong> Pork Producers, who supplied the<br />

pregame buffet.<br />

<strong>The</strong> southerners were impressed with the<br />

piles <strong>of</strong> just-right. two-inch-thick <strong>Iowa</strong> Chops,<br />

which they called "poke," which is a mispronounciation<br />

<strong>of</strong> "pork." And led to some interesting<br />

conversations. To wit :<br />

"That was some pretty good poke we just<br />

had."<br />

"Yup. That's a fair piece <strong>of</strong> meat. "<br />

• • •<br />

Down on the field the photographers were<br />

kllling time. <strong>The</strong> center <strong>of</strong> attention was an AP<br />

guy named Joe Scbo. from Atlanta, who was<br />

wearing what appeared to be a very large, ugly<br />

animal on his head. It was a sort <strong>of</strong> coonskin<br />

cap. I suppose. but it wasn't from a racoon ; it<br />

was more like a buffalo skin cap.<br />

Ignoring the photographers completely were<br />

the TV guys. <strong>The</strong>y were stringing cables and<br />

generally acting as if they were above normal<br />

civilities.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y would bump through the print photogs<br />

as if TV had some divine right to go wherever it<br />

damn well pleased them and, during the game,<br />

at least one <strong>of</strong> the network camera men would<br />

pursue the action right out onto the field.<br />

That, <strong>of</strong> course, was somewhat disturbing to<br />

the players. One field security man spent mos~<br />

<strong>of</strong> his day pulling the CBS guys back to the<br />

sidelines.<br />

• • •<br />

Things were tense in the end zone surrounded<br />

by Tennessee fans . <strong>The</strong>y had a vindictive streak<br />

in them to which even their own players were<br />

subject. When a long pass fell out <strong>of</strong> reach <strong>of</strong> a<br />

wide receiver, a "fan" came down from his<br />

seat in the lOth row to throw a program at the<br />

player, who was standing dejectedly at the end<br />

<strong>of</strong> the end zone.<br />

"You shoulda' dived for it," the man<br />

screamed. "It's your goddam job to dive for<br />

those things. Get <strong>of</strong>fa' the field!"<br />

<strong>The</strong> surly crowd and pragmatic security was<br />

best illustrated by their reactions when <strong>Iowa</strong>'s<br />

team managers crawled up into the stands to<br />

retrieve wayward balls. <strong>The</strong> managers were<br />

berated and, in some cases, assaulted by the<br />

crowd.<br />

"In <strong>Iowa</strong> City," one <strong>of</strong> the managers explained,<br />

"they throw the ball around a little and<br />

have some fun , and then they give it back to<br />

you. But here, they're mean. I got beer dumped<br />

on my head . A grown man dumped beer on my<br />

head. I'm jus'( doing my job."<br />

<strong>The</strong> police reaction to this was to inform the<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> managers that any ball that went into the<br />

stands was "legally a souvenier ball. If the<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> managers go into the stands to retrieve it,<br />

we'lI have to arrest them no matter who hits<br />

who."<br />

• • •<br />

<strong>The</strong>re was one security cop who looked so<br />

nervoUli that he was scaring even other cops.<br />

He was wearing a SWAT jump-suit and<br />

baseball cap pulled down tight over his crew<br />

cut. His black, Marine-issue boots were gleaming<br />

and he was carrying a night-stick the size <strong>of</strong><br />

an axe handle.<br />

At the end <strong>of</strong> the game, <strong>Iowa</strong> fans poured onto<br />

the field. and he and his club were ready for<br />

them. That 20 fans rushed by him for every. one<br />

he stopped mattered little. He picked one out at<br />

random and, using two hands. stuck the side <strong>of</strong><br />

the baf.on into the throat <strong>of</strong> the charging fan.<br />

That person was thus marked, and the young<br />

cop with the firey eyes kept that person out at<br />

all cost. When that person gave up and left the<br />

field, he picked another. When the security<br />

detail finally tromped <strong>of</strong>f the field. he was the<br />

last to leave and went into the gate looking<br />

backwards, out at the field, as if expecting one<br />

final rush <strong>of</strong> crazed <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong>s.<br />

Anoc:lated Pr ... photograph.r Joe S.bo<br />

may Nt the f.,hlon for ,Id.lln. garb with<br />

hll fur hat.<br />

Peach BOwl<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>its ar.e<br />

highest ever<br />

By Rqchelle Bozm.n<br />

Metro Editor<br />

ATLANTA - A lot <strong>of</strong> records fell by the<br />

wayside during the 1982 Peach Bowl.<br />

While the football game was the center <strong>of</strong> attraction,<br />

possibly the most important record<br />

took place not on the field, but in the books.<br />

A near-sellout crowd helped raise funds for<br />

the Lighthouse for the Blind, the charity that<br />

receives all pr<strong>of</strong>its from the bowl.<br />

Although the amount <strong>of</strong> funds the chari ty will<br />

receive will not be known until mid-February,<br />

George Crumbley, executive director <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Peach Bowl Committee, said the totals will<br />

definitely shatter old records.<br />

"We do know that it will be the biggest and<br />

best Peach Bowl in terms <strong>of</strong> pay<strong>of</strong>fs for the<br />

teams and pr<strong>of</strong>its to the Lighthouse." Crumbley<br />

said.<br />

<strong>The</strong> biggest Peach Bowl pr<strong>of</strong>it ever turned<br />

over to the charity was last year's $89,000 contribution,<br />

Crumbley said. but he expects this<br />

year's donation to top $100,000 and possibly going<br />

as high as $125,000.<br />

.rascal wa scared to death," Fry<br />

his press conference. " .. .it was .<br />

fun than anything."<br />

MORE fun than Wednesday. "AI<br />

in their annual little get-togetM<br />

last college practice, handed<br />

h~II"v'.r they wanted to give to the<br />

"''''',,,,,,", a tradition at <strong>Iowa</strong> through tile<br />

Fry explained.<br />

dedicated his chest to Chuck lAIII<br />

doesn't have one, and one g-r<br />

his aches and palOS to a fella he'd U.<br />

aches and pain .<br />

mght, Hayden's plans were simple.<br />

a good we tern or a war story," be<br />

know, blood and guts, that's fine,<br />

any <strong>of</strong> those ballet-type movies.<br />

at North Texas tate we saw "Walt·<br />

five times and we won all five<br />

Ie, while the Hawkeyes were beial<br />

at th Marriott early Thursday nigbt,<br />

Tenne see Volunteers could be sees<br />

through the Hilton down the street.<br />

or not that made a difference. some.<br />

a couple whooeys later. the<br />

were Peach Bowl champions and<br />

was a Peach Bowl h roo<br />

eekend<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Daily</strong> <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong>/ Bill Pax~on<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> running back Eddie Phlllipil. brought down In the third Phillips .aw action since Injuring his kn .. agalnt Purdue, and flnllhed the year a. the Hawkl leading rUlhar with 782<br />

quarter <strong>of</strong> the the Peach Bowl. Th. bowl wal the flrlt tlma Phillips rUlhed for 34 yards and a touchdown on 10 carrie, yard. and four touchdown •.<br />

A MAXIMUM OF $440.000 from the Peach<br />

Bowl will go to them. Larry Bruner, assistant<br />

a thletic director, said the costs for the UI will<br />

probably total about $400,000.<br />

Although all bills are' not in yet, the UI anticipates<br />

costs <strong>of</strong> about $249.000 for the team,<br />

$75,000 for the coaches and families and $71,000<br />

for the band.<br />

Last year the pr<strong>of</strong>its from the Rose Bowl<br />

were split among the teams <strong>of</strong> the Big Ten Conference<br />

, but because the non-New YC\Js Day<br />

bowls are less lucrative than other bowls, the<br />

UI will keep all funds left after expenses.<br />

Because the game had a smaller take. there<br />

was also a smaller "o[ficial party" that was<br />

sent to Atlanta.<br />

Pasadena's <strong>of</strong>ficial party included all UI vice<br />

presidents. all members <strong>of</strong> the Board in Control<br />

<strong>of</strong> Athletics and all members <strong>of</strong> the state Board<br />

<strong>of</strong> Regents. in addition to the other <strong>Iowa</strong><br />

representatives such as the governor and the<br />

UI president for a total <strong>of</strong> about 70 people.<br />

This year's party, however, included only the ,<br />

vhe president in charge <strong>of</strong> athletics, the chair .<br />

<strong>of</strong> the board in control <strong>of</strong> athletics and the :<br />

president <strong>of</strong> the regents in addition to the other<br />

dignitaries for a total <strong>of</strong> 14 people.<br />

.<br />

After tne steaks .and . salads carne a little undressing:<br />

. I<br />

By T. JohnlOn<br />

Staff Writer<br />

ATLANTA - <strong>The</strong> good-old-boy network that<br />

puts on the Peach Bowl showed its class at the<br />

Players Awards Banquet the Wednesday before<br />

the game. <strong>The</strong> 1.000 or so In attendance - the<br />

coaches and players <strong>of</strong> both teams, <strong>of</strong>ficials<br />

from the schools, Lions Club dignitaries and<br />

various press and general public - were<br />

treated not only to dinner and a glimpse <strong>of</strong> their<br />

favorite players, but to a display <strong>of</strong> "feminine<br />

pulchritude" in genteel surroundings.<br />

Between the almost-a-ceasar-salad and the<br />

well-done steaks, Don Elliott Heald. a member<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Peach Bowl executive board , leared out<br />

into the capacity crowd and said with unmistakably<br />

sexist zeal, "Well, now, y'all've had<br />

your salad, now how's about a little dreSSing?"<br />

At that cue, the candidates for Peach Bowl<br />

Queen were introduced and marched at tabletop<br />

level in front <strong>of</strong> everyone. Wearing only red<br />

bathing suits, spiked heels and ultra-bright<br />

smiles. they waved and strutted their, Uhf<br />

pulchritude while President Heald drawled on<br />

about their past beauty-queen experience.<br />

NONE EXCEPT THE Lions Clubbers - the<br />

sponsors <strong>of</strong> the game - seemed very interested.<br />

1 was sitting at a table <strong>of</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> Tennessee linemen who, once they got over<br />

the initial shock <strong>of</strong> wha t one called "an underpants<br />

show" during dinner, were more concerned<br />

with getting their tiny water glasses<br />

refilled than watching the twitching and quivering<br />

<strong>of</strong> exposed flesh 50 feet away. .<br />

Later. after the candidates were <strong>of</strong>f getting<br />

dressed and the dinner was a happily fading<br />

memory. the Peach Bowl President got up to<br />

Introduce various dignitaries and "their little<br />

IlIcIles." Virtually all were white-. When the one<br />

black Peach Bowl oHleial seated on the dalz<br />

Was introduced the players sat up and took<br />

_lee.<br />

"Hey." one said. surprised, "a brother.<br />

What's he doing up there?" .<br />

"Musta made some kind <strong>of</strong> mistake," said<br />

another. "He must have bought his tickets by<br />

mail. "<br />

We were not, as 'had been hoped, done with<br />

the Peach Bowl Queen hopefuls. <strong>The</strong> New South<br />

was in for a big night, and befor dessert. the<br />

queens were back. <strong>The</strong>ir evening gowns were <strong>of</strong><br />

a variety manufactured only for beauty<br />

pageants ; no one with an income level <strong>of</strong> more<br />

than $4,000 a year has worn anything like that<br />

since prom night, 1952.<br />

"TIDS IS BETfER than that singer," a<br />

player said. referring to the vocalist who had<br />

been introduced as a "real Georgia girl. "<br />

"She was bad," the player said. "What did<br />

we ever do to her that she treated us this<br />

mean?"<br />

After the evening gown presentation - " My,<br />

isn't it nice to see they look good with their<br />

clothes on, too?" - the singer was reintroduced<br />

and the crowd groaned loudly. She<br />

smiled througb her pain, however. and teamedup<br />

once again with the bar mitzvah trio at the<br />

back <strong>of</strong> the room for a trying rendition <strong>of</strong><br />

"Once In A Lifetime."<br />

"I want to talk to the guy who booked the entertainment,"<br />

another <strong>of</strong> the players said.<br />

"I've got some things I want to communicate to<br />

him."<br />

<strong>The</strong> Peach Bowl Queen was crowned. Keely<br />

Simpson, the former Miss Rosedale County,<br />

cried as she accepted the crown and sash. <strong>The</strong><br />

other five candidates cried, too. <strong>The</strong>y were still<br />

crying when the coaches got tip to "say a few<br />

words" and present the Official Peach Bowl<br />

Watches to their player . Actually. not to all <strong>of</strong><br />

the players were presented their watches<br />

publicly. Only 50 names were on each team's<br />

"watch list. " <strong>The</strong> others got their watches -<br />

presumably with little ceremony and no opportunity<br />

to kiss the queen - .fter the banquet.<br />

P .. ch Bowl Executive Olractor ~rge Crumbley po.. with the<br />

"'leach Iowl qUHn and '* court. <strong>The</strong> bowl roy.lty, drtlHd In<br />

I<br />

INIthlng .ult. and spike h ..... were part <strong>of</strong> the Peach Iowl INInq .... .<br />

entertainment. About 1.000 people .... nded the banquet,


...... - <strong>The</strong> DeIly <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong> - <strong>Iowa</strong> City, <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tuesday, <strong>January</strong> <strong>18</strong>, 1983<br />

Arts and entertainment<br />

Musel:lm shows monastery plan<br />

Iy IuunnelUcllereon<br />

SlIffWriter<br />

Five moat.bs qo one <strong>of</strong> the local<br />

departmeat stores lost us in their com·<br />

puter becaWle <strong>of</strong> a faulty entry. Being<br />

misplaced for almost half a year<br />

breeds a certain amount <strong>of</strong> frustratiOll<br />

and lDDOyance, so it is humbling to<br />

leMII that piau for a whole religious<br />

commUDity can disappear for cen·<br />

turies.<br />

Such is the cale with "<strong>The</strong> Plan <strong>of</strong> St.<br />

GaU," c:urrenUy on display at the UI<br />

Museum <strong>of</strong> Art through the courtesy <strong>of</strong><br />

the Swiss National CouDcil for the Arts<br />

and CUlture and the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

California, wbose press published the<br />

ambitious three·volume work that<br />

gives rise to the elbiblt.<br />

In A.D. 120, an IIIIknown mooIt began<br />

to trace a master plan for the<br />

monastery <strong>of</strong> St. Gall onto parchment.<br />

Ten years later it was completed and<br />

became part <strong>of</strong> the monastery<br />

archives. In A.D. D28, that plan and<br />

other writinp in the library were hid·<br />

den away from Magyar enemies.<br />

%II YEARS LATER another monk,<br />

being frugal and in need <strong>of</strong> something<br />

OIl whicb to write a Life <strong>of</strong> St. Martin <strong>of</strong><br />

Tours, \lied the back <strong>of</strong> the master plan<br />

<strong>of</strong> st. Gall. <strong>The</strong> new book replaced the<br />

old, and the parcbment took its place<br />

on the library shelves. <strong>The</strong>re it<br />

remained for 000 years, until it was dis·<br />

covered by another monk who thought<br />

It was an actual depiction <strong>of</strong> the<br />

monastery.<br />

It wasn't. Although some <strong>of</strong> the<br />

buildings in the drawing were con·<br />

Itructed at various Umes during the<br />

history <strong>of</strong> the monastery, the plan <strong>of</strong><br />

St. Gall was intended more as a grand<br />

design to standardize monastic<br />

architecture throughout Europe during<br />

the era <strong>of</strong> Charlemagne.<br />

Evidence exists that some <strong>of</strong> the plan<br />

<strong>of</strong> St. Gall was implemented during the<br />

ninth through the 15th centuries. Goz·<br />

bert, the abbot in charge, dedicated the<br />

church in A.D. 837, and several <strong>of</strong> the<br />

adjoining buildings were actually built.<br />

But they were destroyed by fire and<br />

Protestant enemies, and not)!ing<br />

remains today <strong>of</strong> the original struc·<br />

tures except a few foundation stones.<br />

Thl. scala model <strong>of</strong> an anclant monutery plan begun by<br />

monk. In A.D. 820 and ml.placed for centurlll, was<br />

produced by mllter model· maker Carl BertI! Lund, under<br />

Art<br />

I<br />

IN THE 19505, the plan came to the<br />

attention <strong>of</strong> two American architects,<br />

Walter Horn and Ernest Born, as they<br />

were studying Northern European vernacular<br />

architecture. <strong>The</strong> two men<br />

reconstructed the drawings after solving<br />

the puzzle <strong>of</strong> architectural scale,<br />

and their colleague, draftsman Garl<br />

Bertil Lund, built the eight wooden<br />

models that are included in the exb,ibit.<br />

<strong>The</strong> largest, a finely-wrought set <strong>of</strong><br />

building models laid out according to<br />

the plan, gives an overview <strong>of</strong> the<br />

monastery as a self-sufficient community.<br />

<strong>The</strong> centrally·located church<br />

and quarters for the monks are sur·<br />

rounded by the buildings devoted to<br />

making the food and drink for the<br />

monastic community.<br />

Garden plots and structures are<br />

designated for lay workers who did the<br />

gardening, cared for the livestock and<br />

performed menial tasks in order to<br />

relieve the monks for religious contemplation<br />

and study. In turn , the<br />

monastery fed and protected everyone<br />

within its confines ..<br />

THOUOH IT WAS a religious com·<br />

munity, the monastery contained its<br />

own kind <strong>of</strong> commercialism, an exchange<br />

that grew up in conjunction<br />

with Charlemagne's consolidation <strong>of</strong><br />

secular power. <strong>The</strong> religious order not<br />

only fed poor visitors and maintained a<br />

hospital but also educated the wealthy<br />

nobles, provided them with motel<br />

the direction <strong>of</strong> archltect/dulgner Ern .. t Born. li<strong>The</strong><br />

Plan <strong>of</strong> St. GaJl" I. on exhibit through February 20 at the<br />

Ul MUHum <strong>of</strong> Art.<br />

rooms and food , and supplied them duro<br />

ing wartime with horses, soldiers and<br />

swords. And it fulfilled all its tasks as a<br />

planned community with everything<br />

from building construction to codified<br />

and regimented daily schedules.<br />

A museum on a college campus<br />

provides an appropriate setting for ex·<br />

hibiting " <strong>The</strong> Plan <strong>of</strong> St. Gall."<br />

Although visually the shOw does not<br />

contain the drama <strong>of</strong> paintings or<br />

sculptures, it nevertheless reopens a<br />

chapter in European history,<br />

graphically displaying a vision <strong>of</strong> the<br />

monastery as an interdependent com- •<br />

munity.<br />

On Sunday, <strong>January</strong> 23 at 2 p.m.,<br />

Walter Horn will lecture at the<br />

museum on his part in the reproduction<br />

<strong>of</strong> "<strong>The</strong> Plan <strong>of</strong> St. Gall." <strong>The</strong> exhibit<br />

will continue through February 20.<br />

'Still <strong>of</strong> Night' recalls Hitchcock<br />

By Crllt Wyrick<br />

Slaff Writer<br />

StUl cif tile NI&Jll\Jas all the makings<br />

<strong>of</strong> a Hitchcock classic. A reclusive psychiatrist<br />

trapped in his own<br />

claustropbobic mental world. A female<br />

who resembles nothing more than a<br />

black widow. An auction as the<br />

back,aoound for intrigue. Murder by<br />

mistakeb identity. Symbolic dreams.<br />

Voyeurism.<br />

It's all here, but somehow it's not all<br />

here. Stili <strong>of</strong> tile Niall! (originally to be<br />

titled Stab) has some terrific moments<br />

<strong>of</strong> 1USpeIISe, but it fails to thrill in the<br />

same way Hitchcock's best classics<br />

managed to do. To put it kindly, StlJl <strong>of</strong><br />

tilt Nipt is Hitchcock on an "<strong>of</strong>f" day.<br />

Give credit to director/screenwriter<br />

Robert Benton (Kramer .VI. Kramer)<br />

for attempting to expand into new<br />

areas, and succeeding fairly well. Roy<br />

Films<br />

Entertainment today<br />

At the Bljou<br />

Director Jean-Pierre Melville baa<br />

been called the Godfather <strong>of</strong> the<br />

French New Wave, and La SamOllJ'lli<br />

helps &bow why. Alain Delon plays a<br />

gangster whose insistence on rigor in<br />

his duty approaches that <strong>of</strong> a samurai<br />

warrior. Unfortunately, he's a few<br />

centuries too late. Melville combines<br />

the formal and tbema tic coocerns <strong>of</strong><br />

Japanese samurai movies, American<br />

film lIOir and French existentialism<br />

into a style all bis own. If you liked<br />

Diva, you'll probably 10 for La<br />

Samoval. 6:45 p.m.<br />

e <strong>The</strong> Mexican juncle. Hot. Infested.<br />

Sticky. A place where only madmen<br />

and losers could live. Madmen and<br />

I<br />

r<br />

K<br />

Stt'll <strong>of</strong> the Nig ht<br />

An MGM/Untled Artists Production. WliMn and<br />

directed by Robert Benton. Rated PG.<br />

Sam Rice ... , ..................................... Roy Scheider<br />

Brooke Reynolds .......................... Meryl Slreep<br />

Showing 8t the Englert.<br />

Scheider once again portrays the<br />

Hitchcock·type character he played so<br />

well in Jaws (and later not so well in<br />

Last Embrace), the man caught in the<br />

middle <strong>of</strong> events over which he has no<br />

control.<br />

As psychiatrist Sam Rice, Scheider<br />

,finds himself digging into the files <strong>of</strong><br />

one <strong>of</strong> his patients who was just mur·<br />

losers like a defrocked priest who runs<br />

a bus tour (Dick Burton). A dark<br />

woman who runs an equally dark hotel<br />

(Ava Gardner). A woman desperate<br />

because she can't find a man (Deborah<br />

Kerr). A woman desperate because she<br />

can't find enough men (Sue Lyon).<br />

<strong>The</strong>y all come together in Tennessee<br />

Williams' NIglit <strong>of</strong> tbe IguD8.<br />

Directed by John Huston. 8:45 p.m.<br />

TeleviSion<br />

For culture vultures, tonight's catch<br />

is the Petroleum Broadcasting<br />

System's presentation <strong>of</strong> Thornton<br />

Wilder's <strong>The</strong> Skin <strong>of</strong> Our Ttttb.<br />

. Broadcast live from San Diego's Globe<br />

dered, and uncovering a terrifying<br />

dream that holds the key to the murtier.<br />

MERYL STREEP, with Barbara<br />

Stanwyck-esque bleached blonde hair,<br />

is Brooke Reynolds, the nervous mis·<br />

tress <strong>of</strong> the dead man. Sam is attrac<br />

ted to Brooke, but he soon doubts<br />

her trustworthiness.<br />

Things start to unravel in a rather<br />

mysterious manner - Brooke is<br />

hopelessly neurotic, and was the last<br />

person seen with the dead man .<br />

Scheider, hopelessly curious, snoops<br />

his way into a number <strong>of</strong> menacing<br />

positions, trying to prove to himself<br />

that the girl he's fallen for isn't (or is)<br />

the killer.<br />

Streep, who is being groomed as the<br />

serious female star <strong>of</strong> the 1980s, is<br />

caressed by the camera (too much )<br />

and given the longest single take in the<br />

<strong>The</strong>a'ter (a first), this adaptation<br />

features Harold Gould and Sada<br />

Thompson as the Antrobuses, a couple<br />

who, with their children, {aces every<br />

hardship in the history <strong>of</strong> man.<br />

Do they triumph? We won't tell ,<br />

other than to say that the play was<br />

written before Hiroshima . Also<br />

starring Blair Brown, Rue<br />

McClanahan and Jeffrey Combs. 8<br />

p.m., IPBN-12.<br />

e For those less concerned with the<br />

fate <strong>of</strong> man, NBC tonight is presenting<br />

an "encore presentation" <strong>of</strong> a "H ill<br />

Street Blues" episode from last year.<br />

In this particular day in the lives <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Hill, Washington and Belker (Taurean<br />

Blacque, Bruce Weitz) bust a mugger<br />

at a porno theater while Esterhaus<br />

film during her emotional revelation.<br />

This is not one <strong>of</strong> her best performances.<br />

<strong>The</strong> climax is a cop-out, a barely<br />

believable ending that casts doubt on<br />

the plotting <strong>of</strong> the rest <strong>of</strong> the film :<br />

Some <strong>of</strong> the previous events can hardly<br />

be explained when the real killer is<br />

revealed. It' s reminiscent <strong>of</strong><br />

Hitchcock's ending to Suspicion, which<br />

was changed by the studio to exonerate<br />

the star, Cary Grant.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are scenes here that remind<br />

one <strong>of</strong> SuspiCion, Spellbound ,<br />

Notorious , and North by Northwest,<br />

but they aren't blatant copies, simply<br />

the things <strong>of</strong> which suspense is made.<br />

And with Roy Scheider managing well<br />

around Streep, Still <strong>of</strong> the Night makes<br />

one wonder how Hitch might have used<br />

Scneider' s talent as a quirky<br />

Everyman.<br />

(Michael Conrad) puts together a<br />

basketball team for a game against the<br />

gangs. Hope Bobby Hill (former UCLA<br />

basketball star Michael Warren) shows<br />

up. 8 p.m., KWWL-7.<br />

.... Hill Street" obviously is be'ng<br />

run tonight in an effort to get some<br />

ratings for the lagging "St.<br />

Elsewhere," where Dr. Samuels<br />

(David Birney) works <strong>of</strong>f romantic<br />

frustration during a long night in the<br />

emergency room and where Chinese<br />

parents work through an ancient ritual<br />

in an effort to save their critically ill<br />

child. One can only hope.NBC's gamble<br />

works : "SI. Elsewhere" isn't as good<br />

as "Hill Street," but it's a far sight<br />

better than just about anything else on<br />

the tube. 9 p.m., KWWL-7.<br />

,<br />

OUT ""~;,;;;;,;'Z~"';; ;;;O/~;TH -CHOCK OUi ~*********************<br />

~ ------------~---,~ • STUDENTS ~<br />

S Prints from your Prints OR I a ~<br />

o I Prints from your Slides g<br />

I<br />

~ Make an Investment-<br />

370 each ~ ~<br />

• Reprints from your negitives 170 each I ~ ~<br />

~ , 110, 126, Reg. 35mm & Disc. 1;1': ~<br />

" Coupon must accompany order, I s ~<br />

~ (Maximum 81ze 3 1 ti1(5) .J g ~<br />

f .. -_ ... ___ ...... ___________ ; ~<br />

~ Coming soon! ~ ~ It's Your Futurel<br />

8 Invento'rylALI 8 ~ 1983-84<br />

I ~ i . ,<br />

.<br />

Financial Aid Information:<br />

I<br />

• . DUBUQUE Mon. 9-6 Tues.-Fri. 9-5:30 <strong>January</strong> 19, 1983, Illinois Rm., IMU 10-11 am<br />

IA . 522.0 Sat. 9-5 ~<br />

10tW Ilno!nO)I3Wo)' HJ.OOI 010Hti wno.LllO )lOJHO' ::;~!1!~OHd IIno S *******************<br />

CONTACT LENS<br />

Replacement.<br />

and Spare.<br />

AS LOW AS<br />

$14.1'<br />

Call for Detail.<br />

1·800-255-2020<br />

EVE CONTACT<br />

P.O. Box 7770<br />

Shawnee ~Isslon,<br />

KS 66207<br />

New Stock -<br />

New Room<br />

New Hours<br />

MURPHY<br />

BROOKFIELD<br />

BOOKS<br />

321 E. Burhngton<br />

338-3077<br />

Open 11-6 Tues·Sat;<br />

1-5 Sun.<br />

QUICK COPIES AT LOW PRICES<br />

IN A CONVENIENT LOCATION,<br />

BELOW HARDEE'S, DOWNTOWN,<br />

LOWIR LEVEl, PlAZA COITRI ONI, IOW4 CiTy JJ4·ntO<br />

MOllld4y·Faid4Y 8·6 4111d Su"ad4Y 10-2<br />

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JOB NOTICE<br />

'Orientation Services needs 14 Student Advisers who will<br />

share responsibility for introducing incoming students to<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Iowa</strong> and assist them in the registration<br />

process. Training sessions will be held throughout the spr.<br />

ing. Programs will take place during the summer and the<br />

academic year. Salary: $1300-1500. Applications are<br />

available at Orientation Services, 5 Calvin Hall, (353-3743),<br />

and the Campus Infonnation Center, IMU.<br />

Quali8catlo_:<br />

,<br />

-28 or more semester hours by May 1983<br />

,.<br />

-One year enrollment on campus by July 1983<br />

-Ability to work effectively with people individually and in<br />

groups<br />

-Minimum GPA 2.25<br />

Applications due: <strong>January</strong> 31, 1983,<br />

in the Orientation <strong>of</strong>fice.<br />

Warmups for<br />

Women from '<br />

FREDPERAY<br />

SPORTSW~<br />

All<br />

25% OFF<br />

at<br />

THE RACQUET MASTER<br />

at the corner <strong>of</strong> Gilbert & Burlington<br />

UNIVERSITY OF IOWA DANCE PROGRAM<br />

AUDITIONS<br />

TALENTED AND GIFTED PROGRAM<br />

FOR YOUNG PEOPLE<br />

Level 1 - no previoul training<br />

MondaYI and Wedn.ldaYI, 4:00-5:00 pm .<br />

For more information and an audition appOintment<br />

call: DANCE OFFICE 353-3891 on Jan. <strong>18</strong> or 19 bet·<br />

ween 8:00-12:00 pm or 1 :00-3:00 pm.<br />

,<br />

Arts and ente<br />

Mora lit<br />

By James Kaufman<br />

Special tc)'<strong>The</strong> DallylOWall<br />

Acceptlible LoIHI by Irwin S<br />

Arbor House. 1982, 303 pp.<br />

It's 3:30 a.m., and Roger 01<br />

receives a truly obscene phone<br />

<strong>The</strong> caller tells him : "You've ~<br />

bad boy and you're going to have<br />

something about it." Before<br />

anonymous call ends, Damon's Ii<br />

threatened .<br />

<strong>The</strong> death threa t hangs like a<br />

cloud over Damon's life thrl<br />

Acceptable Losses, the tatest <strong>of</strong> I<br />

Shaw's many novels, but this sto:<br />

only incidentally an exploration <strong>of</strong><br />

dom evil.<br />

In fact, the telephone call<br />

literary device. Because <strong>of</strong> it,<br />

starts a search through his past<br />

1982<br />

By Richard Panek<br />

Staff Writer<br />

Some leftover questions from<br />

many ways the most puzzling<br />

movies since Edison said •<br />

e Would anyone else love<br />

Annie Meets Poltel'leilt?<br />

e ,"ow many "\ovies will<br />

Allen have to make before he<br />

that his earlier, funny ones<br />

ter?<br />

British<br />

at new<br />

LONDON (UPI) - Sleepy<br />

taste <strong>of</strong> breakfast television<br />

the critics are expected to abhor<br />

to ignore.<br />

<strong>The</strong> lirst program ringed<br />

the Turkish airliner crash in<br />

weather forecast to a oiOreen<br />

Lady" briskly rounding up a<br />

London's Liverpool Street<br />

<strong>The</strong> people in the crowd shed<br />

made half·hearted attempts at<br />

tions <strong>of</strong> the keep-fit queen.<br />

Commuters interviewed<br />

hour had mixed reactions to the<br />

show.<br />

One man said he "totally<br />

the show's casual, chee{y<br />

A youngster on his way to<br />

show because "it told you<br />

brella when you went out."<br />

.. It's far too early," he said ...<br />

in the morning."<br />

<strong>The</strong> British Broadcasting<br />

percent <strong>of</strong> its viewers want<br />

their bac?n and eggs, but au~lienc j<br />

1 Like """". '1'\1<br />

shows<br />

_ 5 Frolic<br />

1. Con man's<br />

14 Algerian<br />

15 Fla. orangeshipping<br />

center<br />

II Hair or dead<br />

follower<br />

17 Folk·tale<br />

heroine<br />

1. Beln&, in<br />

21 One-half<br />

one-half<br />

21 Beetles<br />

2Z Redact<br />

24 Preserve wi<br />

salt<br />

25 Shape by<br />

cutting<br />

2t His and hers<br />

items<br />

2tCrumbled<br />

particles<br />

J2 Religious<br />

images<br />

33 Instrument<br />

YD-YoMa<br />

Jot Misjudge<br />

35 Pavilion<br />

JlMeatple<br />

37 Muse <strong>of</strong><br />

history<br />

38 Stripling<br />

• Tapestry<br />

... Treeparta<br />

41 Forces;<br />

powers<br />

4SGobyagatn<br />

44 Rambles<br />

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Arts and entertainment<br />

By JaIMl Kaufman<br />

Special lei<strong>The</strong> DallY-lOwall -- .<br />

Acceptable LoIMI by Irwin Shaw.<br />

Arbor House, 1982. 303 pp.<br />

It's 3:30 a.m., and Roger Damon<br />

receives a truly obscene phone call.<br />

<strong>The</strong> caller tells him : "You've been a<br />

bad boy and you,'re going to have to do<br />

something about it." Before the<br />

anonymous call ends, Damon's life is<br />

threatened.<br />

<strong>The</strong> death threat hangs like a dark<br />

cloud over Damon 's life through<br />

Acceptable Losses, the latest <strong>of</strong> Irwin<br />

Shaw's many novels, but this story is<br />

only incidentally an exploration <strong>of</strong>. ran·<br />

dom evil.<br />

In fact, the telephone call is a<br />

literary device. Because <strong>of</strong> it, Damon<br />

starts a search through his past in or·<br />

By Richard Panek<br />

StaHWriler<br />

Some leftover questions from 1982, in<br />

many ways the most puzzling year for<br />

moyies since Edison said "Action!" :<br />

- Would anyone else love to see<br />

AnDie Meets Poltergeist?<br />

- How many lIlovies will Woody<br />

Allen have to make before he realizes<br />

that his earlier, funny ones were better?<br />

der to discover why he deserves to die.<br />

To whom bas he been such "a bad<br />

boy"?<br />

At first, paranoia triumphs. Damon<br />

installs a new lock on his apartment<br />

door, he appiies for a pistol permit, his<br />

mood alternates between fear and<br />

anger, and he tries to make a list <strong>of</strong><br />

likely suspects.<br />

Could it be Julia Larch? His affair<br />

with her was brief, but it produced a<br />

child. He sent her $1 ,000 in conscience<br />

money; now he finds out that she's<br />

gone insane.<br />

OR COULD IT BE Machendorf?<br />

Damon, a respected literary agent, had<br />

Films<br />

- What ever happened to the trend<br />

toward gay themes in Hollywood that<br />

Making Love, Personal Best and<br />

Partners were supposed to herald?<br />

- How come <strong>The</strong> Secret <strong>of</strong> NIMH,<br />

which used animation techniques that<br />

dated back to the early 1930s, told a<br />

British TV viewers bristle<br />

at new br~akfast program<br />

LONDON (UPI ) - Sleepy Britons got their first<br />

taste <strong>of</strong> breakfast television Monday, an innovation<br />

the critics are expected to abhor and the public likely<br />

to ignore.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first program rahged from a serious.report on<br />

the Turkish airliner crash in Ankara to a depressing<br />

weather forecast to a ,jGreen Goddess Exercise<br />

Lady" briskly rounding up a crowd <strong>of</strong> commuters at<br />

London's Liverpool Street railroad station.<br />

<strong>The</strong> people in the crowd shed their overcoats and<br />

made half·hearted attempts at imitating the gyra·<br />

tions <strong>of</strong> the keep·fit queen.<br />

Commuters interviewed during the morning rush<br />

hour had mixed reactions to the new earlY'morning<br />

show. _. ..__<br />

One man said he "totally enjoyed it;" especiallr<br />

the show's casual, cheery tone. _<br />

A youngster on his way to school said he liked the<br />

show because "it told you whether to bring an urn·<br />

brella when you went out. "<br />

A BUSINESSMAN SAlD he WOUldn't watch it. '<br />

"It's far too early," he said. "I've got things to do<br />

in the morning."<br />

<strong>The</strong> British Broadcasting Corp. estimates only 5<br />

percent <strong>of</strong> its viewers want to watch television over<br />

their bac~n and eggs, but audience figures will not be<br />

represented Machendorf's first two<br />

"moderately successful" books, but<br />

refused la_represent the third, which<br />

was clearly libelous. When the book<br />

was published, Damon even testified<br />

against Machendorf. <strong>The</strong> writer told<br />

him: "I'll get you for this."<br />

Or maybe it's Gillespie, the writer<br />

whose first book was a near masterpiece,<br />

but whose second effort was<br />

"pure gibberish" - he had gone in·<br />

sane, too - and who also threatened<br />

Damon.<br />

But even though Damon is too fond <strong>of</strong><br />

speaking his mind and is quite the<br />

libertine, he has always had the<br />

courage <strong>of</strong> his convictions, and he's not<br />

such a bad guy. <strong>The</strong> things he does are<br />

things all <strong>of</strong> us do in dreams or In<br />

reality. So why is the moral quality <strong>of</strong><br />

his life getting this scrutiny?<br />

In search <strong>of</strong> the answer, Damon goes<br />

more coherent and compelling story<br />

than did Tron, which used animation<br />

techniques that dated back to 9:25 a.m.<br />

last Thursday?<br />

- Did Author! Allthor! have one?<br />

- Was there any truth to the rumor<br />

that, before his death, Henry Fonda<br />

had signed to star in Star Trek m: 1'lIe<br />

Grapes <strong>of</strong> Wrath <strong>of</strong> Khan, in which the<br />

Joad family is to board the starship<br />

Enterprise to boldly go where no clan<br />

has gone before?<br />

available for about 10 days.<br />

One newspaper columnist didn't even wait until<br />

the show had aired before dismissing the whole idea .<br />

"<strong>The</strong> most fatuous , mind-eroding, nerve-jangling<br />

and. above all, the most completely superfluous and<br />

unwanted innovation television has inflicted on the<br />

people <strong>of</strong> this country so far ," wrote <strong>Daily</strong> Telegraph<br />

columnist Peter Simple - fou r days before<br />

"Breakfast Time" first aired.<br />

<strong>Daily</strong> Mirror columnist Keith Waterhouse said he<br />

expected "fairer pundits" would wait till at least an<br />

hour after the show began "before concluding that<br />

breakfast television is a load <strong>of</strong> old rubbish ."<br />

"Not until tomorrow (Tuesday) at the earliest will<br />

they pronounce that it lacks snap, crackle and pop,<br />

an.'!.E.,0t Ul)tiLWedn~sday wilUhey j!ldge it <strong>The</strong> Big<br />

Yawn and predict <strong>The</strong> Big Switch<strong>of</strong>f," Waterhouse<br />

wrote.<br />

<strong>The</strong> show, a 2'tl hour mixture <strong>of</strong> news, sports,<br />

weather, fun and games starting at 6:30 a.m., got a<br />

two·week start on Britain's commercial television<br />

network's $32 million rival show.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first show opened with congratulations from<br />

veteran early risers - hosts <strong>of</strong> morning shows<br />

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<strong>The</strong> Dally <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong>- - <strong>Iowa</strong> City, <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tueaday, <strong>January</strong> 11, <strong>18</strong>83 _ ,. • .<br />

on shopping sprees (at one point, he snapshot <strong>of</strong> hilDlelf as an Innocent representative maD, bl. pl~ht I.<br />

buys $2,673.40 worth <strong>of</strong> liquor) , drink· young boy who cared mosUy aboat the remarkably similar to that faced by<br />

Ing binges (be gets knocked out tIIying baseball glove he wore and knew IitUe Everyman, . the berO <strong>of</strong> the medieval,<br />

to break up a l!ltr fight), and asks him· about evil. morality play.<br />

self some awfully iiiJstential ques;- - - -, --a. ' st...J.. _.... that In that play, Death tells Ev~:<br />

tlons : . Damon s IIINI ~ " ..-.... IIOOD • "Upon thee thou must take a JoD, joUr"<br />

SiCkness affects his b9clY.JJ.~ has a per· ney there do thine accounting book br­<br />

"WAS HE MERELY a signpcllt on<br />

the road to some supernatural<br />

Auschwitz where a final solution was<br />

being carried out for people whom he<br />

had loved or whose lives had barely<br />

touched his in their separate passages<br />

or was he being punished or the Instru·<br />

ment <strong>of</strong> punishment 7"<br />

As Damon's questions become more<br />

and more complex, his life dissolves.<br />

In between. bouts with a terrifying present,<br />

he travels down memory lane,<br />

visiting the family home and the<br />

cemetery where his parents are<br />

buried, spending hours looking at a<br />

~o~ated ulcer, and .the opera~jqjourney Into tile p.ut<br />

It IS botched. His ~ll to live fa.des as be and deep into liissowcataally »aliaala<br />

~as h~rrendous nightmares IYlOg In the involves comparable moral bookkeep-<br />

IDtenslve care ward.<br />

ing.<br />

Though salvation arrives just as it Does the novel work? Pretty much.<br />

appears Damon will die, Aeeeptable Damon's existential ml!sinP are oc­<br />

Lo.le. is not a medical/mystery casionally those <strong>of</strong> the' metapbyHd<br />

thriller. Instead, the novel is like a major - the DOvel's philOllOPhI~1<br />

morality play: It's really about the rea-ch exceeds_ its · grasp, and the<br />

moral accounting that Damon must protagonist Is at times just too upscale<br />

make. to take. . .<br />

Still, Irwin Shaw Is - and always bas<br />

AND THOUGH IT'S hard to think <strong>of</strong> been - a fine storytellet, and<br />

Roger Damon, a member <strong>of</strong> the Acceptable LOlles demODltrates that<br />

"culturati," Manhattan division, as fact.<br />

want to see a Grease iiI? - fUMY?- was doing when he directed YOUI<br />

• Ditto a Rocky IV, Friday the 13th e Remember when RIcllard Pryor Doctors iD Love?<br />

Part IV, Halloween IV, Amityville was black? ~ ___ e How is it possible that the same<br />

Horror m (or 3-D), Penitentiary 10 or _ Aside from the actors, did any pu tc-who-lcM!lLE.T. could also em-<br />

Death Wish III? adults have anything to do with Cat brace Porky"? ~ . __ .<br />

e After Paint Your Wagon in 1969 People?<br />

e So much for 1982. As for 1983, the<br />

and HonkytoDk MaD in 1982, is it too • Or with MODlipor, Paradise, big event promises to be the May<br />

much to hope that it will be another 13<br />

premiere <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> Reveille <strong>of</strong> die Jedl.<br />

years before Clint Eastwood sings<br />

Which raises the Jirst important question<br />

<strong>of</strong> the new again?<br />

year:<br />

- Remember Pia Zadora?<br />

- Does anyone in America really • Remember when Gene Wilder was<br />

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..... 10 - <strong>The</strong> Dally <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong> - <strong>Iowa</strong> ~I\Y. <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tuesday. <strong>January</strong> <strong>18</strong>. 1983<br />

By Jill HokII\lOfl<br />

StaHWriter<br />

<strong>The</strong> UI sailing club \su't blbernating<br />

over the long winter months. Instead,<br />

members <strong>of</strong> the club can be found<br />

engaged in another form <strong>of</strong> sailing -<br />

ice sailing.<br />

Using ON 60 boats that are 12 feet<br />

long and 2"., feet across at the widest<br />

point, club members travel to !be<br />

north arm <strong>of</strong> Lake MacBride to glide<br />

across the lake in boats that are<br />

similar to "great big ice skates"and.,<br />

have three blades.<br />

<strong>The</strong> one-man boats, made out <strong>of</strong><br />

wood, travel at speeds <strong>of</strong> two and one<br />

half times !be speed <strong>of</strong> !be wind. According<br />

to club member Dean Colton,<br />

some people believe that !be boats can<br />

reach speeds <strong>of</strong> 70 m.p.h. He also said<br />

that until the 1930's, the world speed<br />

record was held by an ice boat.<br />

" BECAUSE YOU are siUing out in<br />

the open and are so low and close to the<br />

ice, you get a sense <strong>of</strong> incredible<br />

speed," Colton said. "U's exciting, lots<br />

<strong>of</strong> adrenalin gets pumping."<br />

<strong>The</strong> UI sailing club owns one ice<br />

boat. <strong>The</strong>re are also five or six<br />

privately owned ice boats by club<br />

members.<br />

Besides the ON 60's, club members<br />

also use skimmers which are smaller<br />

and made out <strong>of</strong> tubular metal. <strong>The</strong><br />

club owns approximately five skimmers.<br />

In order to Ice sail, winds bet ween<br />

five and 25 m.p.h. are needed. "Thirty<br />

m.p.h. winds are really too strong for<br />

the boats we sail because they aren't<br />

made for that," Colton said. <strong>The</strong> ice<br />

hould also be at least four inches<br />

thick. U the Ice is thinner, the boats<br />

Sportsbriefs<br />

Swim, gym classes <strong>of</strong>fered<br />

<strong>The</strong> Division <strong>of</strong> Recreational<br />

Services is <strong>of</strong>fering instruction for<br />

children three through kindergarten in<br />

swimming and gymnastics .<br />

Registration for both classes ends Jan.<br />

25.<br />

<strong>The</strong> registration fee for the fourweek<br />

swimming session is $25 with<br />

classes running every Tuesday and<br />

Thursday beginning Jan 25. Starting<br />

will break throup and come to a sudden<br />

stop.<br />

A RIDE ON an ice boat only lasts<br />

about 15 minutes, said Sue Kinley, comembership<br />

chairman <strong>of</strong> the club.<br />

" Usually the trip is very short, but it is<br />

a wild one," she said.<br />

According to Colton, sailing an ice<br />

boat Is easier than sailing on s<strong>of</strong>t<br />

water. "You go so fast, you develop apparent<br />

wind," he said. "You don't have<br />

to worry about the direction the wind is<br />

coming from as much." Ice sailing is<br />

also exhausting because the sailer<br />

must concentrate on what he is doing<br />

and can't make a mistake such as turning<br />

to sharply.<br />

<strong>The</strong> potential danger in ice sailing is<br />

less than one might expect according<br />

to Colton. "Every year somebody gets<br />

bruised up a bit but nothing serious<br />

(happens) . "<br />

ICE BOAT sailers have to dress q~ite<br />

warmly because the windshield factor<br />

drops rapidly while they are sailing.<br />

According to Kinley, the sailers wear<br />

insulated jump suits to keep themselves<br />

warm. <strong>The</strong> sailers also wear<br />

motorcycle helmets to protect their<br />

heads in case they crash.<br />

Last Sunday, Col ton and several<br />

other club members went ice sailing on<br />

Lake MacBride. <strong>The</strong> wind was blowing<br />

at 10 m.p.h. and Colton liked the conditions.<br />

"Right now there is very good<br />

ice," he said. "It (ice) is smooth and<br />

hard , and the sailing is terrific. "<br />

According to Colton, UI sailers wiU<br />

continue to ice sail as long as there<br />

isn't too much snow. An excess <strong>of</strong><br />

white stuff 00 the lake will slow the<br />

boats do,," and cause them to stop.<br />

time for the classes is 9:30 a.m.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fee is $24 for the six-week<br />

gymnastics session which begins Jan .<br />

24. <strong>The</strong> classes <strong>of</strong>fered are either<br />

Monday and Wednesday or Tuesday<br />

and Thursday at various times.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fee for each addltional family<br />

member is only $<strong>18</strong> for both swimming<br />

and gymnastics. For more information<br />

contact the RecreatiOl\ Office 353 -<br />

3494.<br />

LE<br />

SAM0URAI<br />

Director Jean-Pierre Melville. master<br />

<strong>of</strong> the 50's French gangster film. pits<br />

an enigmatic pr<strong>of</strong>essional killer<br />

(Alain Delon) against a thorough<br />

analytic policeman (Francois Perler).<br />

With his usual disregard tor surface<br />

realism. Melville builds a world <strong>of</strong><br />

fantasy In which the only determinants<br />

are the myths <strong>of</strong> the gangster:<br />

like a samurai, our killer becomes en<br />

honorable memba< <strong>of</strong> a warrior class.<br />

MON 9 TUES 6:45<br />

DAILY HAPPY HOUR 4-7 pm<br />

Tuesday 8 pm-2 am<br />

65¢ DomestiC Beer<br />

$1 All Imported Beer<br />

corner <strong>of</strong><br />

FREE Popcorn!<br />

& <strong>Iowa</strong> e Below Best Steak House<br />

sound stage tonight 8 to 11 p.~.<br />

"Definitely Dot Downstream Music"<br />

Happy Hour: .. to • p.m. (Monday-Saturday)<br />

'Han-pitcher' Cup $1.25, DraWl lOt<br />

FREE Popcorn during Happy Hour<br />

Sandwiches and Pizza available.<br />

,<br />

......... -... ~.<br />

~<br />

Whcelrootl\ ~<br />

-<br />

Newcomers Greene, Spee~ 'just superb'<br />

as Hawks claim second in five team , meet<br />

By Steve Batterson<br />

Assistant Sports Edilor<br />

Two newcomers helped lead the <strong>Iowa</strong> women's<br />

gymnastics team to a second-place finish in a fiveteam<br />

meet at San Francisco State last weekend.<br />

"A.J. (Greene) and Christy (Speer) just did a<br />

superb job," said <strong>Iowa</strong> Coach Diane Chapela.<br />

"<strong>The</strong>y did better than many <strong>of</strong> the girls on the<br />

otller leams who had been working out all year,<br />

especially on the floor exercise."<br />

Greene, a freshman from Milwaukee, suffered a<br />

knee injury during the summer and was cleared to<br />

compete several weeks ago. Greene and Speer, a<br />

walk-on from Marshalltown, were forced into action<br />

after top recruit Yonce Gardner injured a<br />

knee and another freshman, Patrice Fazio,<br />

decided not to return to school second semester.<br />

"WE HAD TO put some routines together during<br />

finals week for them on floor exercise and<br />

TV today<br />

TUESDAY<br />

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r,.:AX' I!OIIII!' .......<br />

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AFTERNOON<br />

'2::00 IHIOJ 1IOVff: 'LJar'. Moon'<br />

MOYIE, ·F .... ol Anno'<br />

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AuetralNtn .... Footbil<br />

2'" IH.ol MOVIE, 'CWI!>Gii'<br />

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uperb'<br />

1l.meet<br />

heir vaults very nicely. On the<br />

wasn't the best. <strong>The</strong>y were giv·<br />

duction!, but it was that way for<br />

ad a few troubles there, but the<br />

it get to them. We'll work extra<br />

week."<br />

did show some progress on the<br />

s didn't hamper <strong>Iowa</strong> nearly as<br />

past. "Our routines are there.<br />

ve any falls and turned in a<br />

anee but I think she was scored<br />

pela said. "Laura had a couple <strong>of</strong><br />

up with an U and Marianne bad<br />

ored an B.2. She is a very com·<br />

a1 and she has a great desire to do<br />

will have some added depth for<br />

dual against Illinois with Holli<br />

j Rogers likely to be back in com·<br />

or. o .., .....<br />

OGRA<br />

DANCERS SINCE<br />

*<br />

people<br />

formance last yearl<br />

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CORE COURSE<br />

n Contemporary Society<br />

3:20 MWF<br />

films - in-class<br />

d tickets to Hancher<br />

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contact 353-3891.<br />

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• 'AEI POPCORN<br />

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LONELY SlNGlUIl Meal respec.<br />

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.:" JAN ENTERPRISES, 80. 1375-1,<br />

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No comment<br />

by NFL <strong>of</strong>fice<br />

on 'fix' charges<br />

NEW YORK (UPI) -<br />

National Football League<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficials viewed for the first time Monday night the<br />

controversial documentary that charges several pro<br />

games in the late 19608 were fixed.<br />

"We have no immediate comment," Joe Brown,<br />

an NFL spokesman, said. "Any comment from this<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice will come after our staff has had a chance to<br />

study some <strong>of</strong> the show's allegations,"<br />

Brown indicated such comment may be expected<br />

"in the next couple <strong>of</strong> days."<br />

<strong>The</strong> documentary, part <strong>of</strong> the "Frontline" series,<br />

was shown on public stations throughout the country<br />

Monday night.<br />

It contained statements from an imprisoned and<br />

self·pr<strong>of</strong>essed former fixer that he arranged the oul·<br />

come <strong>of</strong> four NFL games a year during the 1968, '69<br />

and '70 seasons at the behest <strong>of</strong> organized crime.<br />

THE LEAGUE had been denied its request for a<br />

pre-air viewing <strong>of</strong> the film although members <strong>of</strong> the<br />

media witnessed a screening last week. Officials<br />

saw it for the first time Monday night.<br />

John Piazza, the former game·fixer, said in a<br />

prison interview: "We had the coach and the quar·<br />

terback, who was the <strong>of</strong>fensive captain, and we had<br />

the defensive captain.<br />

"With the quarterback, if he knew the perimeters<br />

<strong>of</strong> the score we wanted to hold, he'd throw a bad pass<br />

or throw it out <strong>of</strong> bounds and only kick a field goal."<br />

WIN A PONY KEG<br />

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<strong>The</strong> <strong>Daily</strong> <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong><br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> City. <strong>Iowa</strong> - Tuesday. <strong>January</strong> <strong>18</strong>, 1983 - Page 12<br />

Hassard<br />

features<br />

youthful<br />

runners<br />

By Steve Alley<br />

StaHWriter<br />

While some track coaches<br />

boast <strong>of</strong> "having the hones,"<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong>'s Jerry Hassard can brag<br />

about some good young colts.<br />

Youth is a major charicteristic<br />

<strong>of</strong> the 1982-83 Hawkeye women's<br />

track team which will open the<br />

season, Jan. 22, in the m Recrealion<br />

Building with the Hawk-Eye<br />

Opener. Only siI upperclassmen<br />

comprise the team. or those,<br />

only two - Mary Knoblauch and<br />

Terri Soldan - are seniors.<br />

Hassan! is In his seventh year<br />

as the Hawkeye mentor. He<br />

hopes to have brought together<br />

the right components to make a<br />

track team that should be compelltive<br />

for championships, or<br />

minimally, to improve on last<br />

season's sixth place at the conference<br />

indoor meet and fifth at<br />

the outdoor meet.<br />

THE FOUNDATION for the<br />

team lies in a group <strong>of</strong> t1istance<br />

runners which won the Big Ten<br />

cross country meet and finished<br />

fifth at <strong>The</strong> Athletics Congress<br />

national meet this past fall . "Our<br />

distance group obviously can be<br />

very strong this year," Hassard<br />

said.<br />

<strong>The</strong> top distance runner is<br />

junior Nan Doak, a rour-event<br />

AIAW All-American as a<br />

sophomore. <strong>The</strong> Hedrick, <strong>Iowa</strong>,<br />

native is one <strong>of</strong> the lop .coUege<br />

distance runners in the country<br />

as evidenced by her 10th-place<br />

finishes at the NCAA and TAC<br />

cross country meets this season.<br />

OTHER STRONG contributors<br />

in the distance events figure to<br />

be sophomdres Anne<br />

Dobrowolski, Jenny Hayden and<br />

Jenny Spangler and juniors Jodi<br />

Hershberger and Penny 0' I<br />

Brien . All are veterans <strong>of</strong><br />

national meet competition.<br />

<strong>The</strong> loss Which will be felt<br />

most by both the distance squad<br />

and the entire team is Kay<br />

Stormo, who graduated after<br />

placing third in the country last<br />

year in the 800 meters.<br />

Some key additions to the<br />

sprint squad ought to be the difference<br />

between this year's <strong>Iowa</strong><br />

team and last year's. "We've added<br />

some quality in the area <strong>of</strong><br />

the sprints," Hassard said.<br />

First, and fastest, is<br />

sophomore Elaine Jones - the<br />

defending Big Ten outdoor champion<br />

in the 100 and :m meters,<br />

who transferred . from Michigan<br />

State. Jones has already set two<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> records with her times at<br />

the intrasquad meet, held Dec. 9<br />

at the Recreation BUilding.<br />

SHE RAN THE 6O-yard dash In<br />

6.7 seconds and the 300 in 35.3.<br />

"Her two marts were very<br />

quick," Hassan! said. Asked if<br />

Jones might be "peaking'" too<br />

early, Hassan! said: "I hope she<br />

isn't. It's so early that I don't<br />

think there's any way she could<br />

be In top shape."<br />

Jones is eligible this year except<br />

for NCAA competition,<br />

because she transferred under<br />

AlA W regulations. Unlike NCAA<br />

rules, the AlAW did not foree an<br />

athlete to sit out a year after<br />

transferring.<br />

Some talented freshmen sprinters<br />

should carry a portion <strong>of</strong> the<br />

load for the Hawks. Vivien<br />

McKenzie, from Detroit, had the<br />

fastest high school time in the<br />

nation for 300 meters last year.<br />

Natalie Spinks and NlcheUe<br />

McGuire were higb school teammates<br />

in Oakland, Calif.<br />

Knoblauch is the Hawkeye<br />

record-bolder in the 400 meters.<br />

See Aun,*" page 11<br />

Women'. track<br />

Indoor lChedule<br />

Jan. 22 - HIWk-Eye Open«. R«:r ..-<br />

tion Building<br />

Jan. 29 - Neb,uka IrMl8ti01!a1, lincotn.IMb.<br />

Feb. 12 - <strong>Iowa</strong> In'IiIIIIIcIMI, Recfeatlon<br />

Building<br />

Feb. 19 -ililnoi. ClUllc. CllamPlign.<br />

lit.<br />

Feb. 21 - HawIIeye Indoor .....,.,<br />

R«:'Mtion BuIlding<br />

MarCIl 3-5 - BIg Ten Champlonlhlp.<br />

Madilon. Wit.<br />

Marc:lll1·12 - NCAA ChtmpionIIIIP.<br />

Pontiac. MIch.<br />

Hats <strong>of</strong>f<br />

Tenne ... junior wide receiver lenny Taylor I. upended<br />

by <strong>Iowa</strong> detenllv. back' K.lth Hunter, left, and Ron<br />

Hawl.y, after a 20-yard pa" trom Alan Cockrell in the<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Daily</strong> <strong><strong>Iowa</strong>n</strong>/Bill Paxson<br />

third quarter which .. t up a Chuck Coleman touchdown.<br />

See related ,totle, and photos In the Peach Bowlsac:tlon,<br />

pag .. 88 and 78.<br />

Duncan says<br />

he is irked·<br />

over cheating,<br />

AMES, <strong>Iowa</strong> (UPI) - Donnie Duncan<br />

said Monday he has few regrets<br />

about his four-year career as <strong>Iowa</strong><br />

State footbaU coach, but said one <strong>of</strong> his<br />

greatest frustrations was witnessing<br />

other schools cheat while recruiting.<br />

Duncan, 42, who announced last<br />

Thursday he was quitting as coach <strong>of</strong><br />

the Cyclones to take a job with a real<br />

estate and investments firm in Dallas,<br />

met with the <strong>Iowa</strong> media for the last<br />

time in an upbeat news conference.<br />

When asked about the ills <strong>of</strong> college<br />

football coaching, Duncan pr<strong>of</strong>essed<br />

his honesty and said recruiting violations<br />

by other schools were the most<br />

frustrating facet <strong>of</strong> his job.<br />

BUT HE REFUSED to cite names <strong>of</strong><br />

players or schools he said he knew<br />

were involved in rule violations, calling<br />

that "the NCAA's job.<br />

"One <strong>of</strong> the things ail coaches encounter<br />

that sometimes aren't what<br />

you'd like are in the area <strong>of</strong><br />

recruiting," Duncan said, "especially<br />

when you're recruiting honestly and<br />

you run up against someone who's not.<br />

"It makes a difference in some<br />

games. When there are some<br />

difference-makers you see on the field<br />

that you know were bought to go to<br />

school (elsewhere), tha t bothers you."<br />

Duncan said be would make- no<br />

changes if he had the chance to coach<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong> State again, but he added, "I<br />

would like to see honest <strong>Iowa</strong> State<br />

players playing against teams that are<br />

made up <strong>of</strong> others hODE;stly recruited."<br />

DUNCAN ALSO was asked if competing<br />

agaillSt <strong>Iowa</strong> on the recruiting<br />

trail was difficult. He explained the<br />

only time he and <strong>Iowa</strong> coaches went<br />

head-ta-head was while recruiting instate<br />

high school athletes.<br />

He noted the number <strong>of</strong> <strong>Iowa</strong> natives<br />

on the Cyclones' roster and said <strong>Iowa</strong><br />

State apparently has done well in<br />

recruiting in its home state.<br />

"I found (<strong>Iowa</strong>) tough, but not impossible,"<br />

he said <strong>of</strong> recruiting battles<br />

with the Hawkeyes.<br />

Duncan qualified his answer in<br />

regard to <strong>Iowa</strong> by saying, "Hayden Fry<br />

and I have had an agreement since I've<br />

been at <strong>Iowa</strong> State that if there's<br />

anything <strong>of</strong> a problem nature, we will<br />

discuss it among ourselves."<br />

He added there was never any need<br />

for such a discussion between the two<br />

coaches.<br />

DUNCAN REPEATED that he felt<br />

no pressure to Quit.<br />

Donnie Duncan<br />

"Had this opportunity not come . ,<br />

I'd be at <strong>Iowa</strong> State next year," i!<br />

sa id. "<strong>The</strong>re are things I won't mis,<br />

but they definitely aren't <strong>of</strong> a defer·<br />

mining nature.<br />

"You don't leave a job that paysOl!!<br />

$150,000 a year (including benefits),"<br />

without another good opportunity, i!<br />

said. Duncan's salary for coacltil&.<br />

football at the university was $54,111,<br />

His resignation becomes <strong>of</strong>ficial Fa.<br />

15.<br />

<strong>The</strong> national letteHf-intent sigDilr<br />

day for incoming freshman is Feb.'<br />

and Duncan said the timing 01 •<br />

resignation concerned him. ButheSlil<br />

that in discussions with Athleli .<br />

Director-designate Max Urick he ..<br />

reas ured that <strong>Iowa</strong> Slate would ..<br />

port his decision.<br />

"I DON'T belJeve there's ever ageaj<br />

time for a coach to leave," he said. '1<br />

took this job on Jan . 17, (1979), so tIIaI<br />

new guy is going to have the same 1'1<br />

(at recruiting) as I did . We recruilel<br />

pretty well that year."<br />

Duncan said he does not plan to be.<br />

volved in the selection process for lit<br />

successor, although he said he will br<br />

happy to talk with a candidate if aslet<br />

He also said he will not be involved II<br />

recruiting or meet with players reID<br />

ing next year unless asked.<br />

<strong>The</strong> search for Duncan's succesaaril<br />

underway with Urick heading a flit<br />

member screening committee.<br />

Donovan out; Roemer might not redshirt<br />

By Mike Condon<br />

Staff Writer<br />

If Glenn Patton's <strong>Iowa</strong> swimming<br />

team is to win a third consecutl ve Big<br />

Ten title, it will have to be done<br />

without the services <strong>of</strong> sophomore<br />

freestyler Drew Donovan, who has<br />

been declared academically ineligible<br />

for this semester.<br />

Donovan's loss has Patton facing a<br />

very difficult decision in regard to his<br />

previous plan to redshirt All-American<br />

Tom Roemer. Roemer had wanted to<br />

use next season as preparation for the<br />

1984 Olympics in Los Angeles, but according<br />

to Patton, that may change.<br />

"Tom wants very much to redshirt<br />

this season but he is a Hawkeye, a loyal<br />

member <strong>of</strong> the team, and if push came<br />

to shove he would return," Patton said.<br />

PATrON SAID he was going to sit<br />

down with Roemer and discuss the<br />

situation later in the week and the decision<br />

would be made in time for the Bettendorf<br />

native to swim some dual<br />

meets to prepare for the Big Ten meet.<br />

Roemer was unavailable for comment<br />

Monday evening.<br />

Donovan was one <strong>of</strong> the keys to<br />

<strong>Iowa</strong>'s cbances this season. He is the<br />

top returning 200 and 50D-yard<br />

freestyler in the Big Ten and the<br />

second fastest returner in the 100<br />

freestyle behind teammate Matt Wood.<br />

"He needed a 1.65 grade point<br />

average to retain his eligibility," Patton<br />

said. "He finished the semester<br />

with a 1.63 cumulative average and be<br />

is not returning to school for this<br />

semester. I plan on contacting Drew to<br />

see what his plans are for next<br />

season ."<br />

FOR THE NORTH Andover, Mass.,<br />

native to regain his eligibility for next<br />

season, he must have completed 51<br />

semester hours prior to the start <strong>of</strong> the<br />

1983-84 academic year with a<br />

cumulative GPA <strong>of</strong> 1.75. At the present<br />

time he has only completed 41 nours<br />

and with him deciding to sit out the<br />

second semester, it would appear that<br />

he would also have to miss the first<br />

semester next season unless he attends<br />

summer school.<br />

"Besides losing Drew in the Individual<br />

events, his loss will also be<br />

felt in the three relays in which he<br />

swam," Patton said. "His leaving has<br />

left us very thin because we didn't<br />

recruit anybody in his or Roemer's e­<br />

vents."<br />

Donovan did not swim the first<br />

semester because <strong>of</strong> an eligibility question<br />

with the NCAA . According to<br />

Patton, a decision has not been handed<br />

down in the case and now that Donovan<br />

has left <strong>Iowa</strong>, a ruling may never come<br />

about. <strong>The</strong> details <strong>of</strong> Donovan's first<br />

semester problems are being withheld<br />

by the <strong>Iowa</strong> Athletic Department until<br />

a ruling is made.<br />

LAST YEAR, Donovan 's sister,<br />

Martha, an AIAW All-American for the<br />

women's squad at <strong>Iowa</strong> , encountered<br />

similar academic problems and did not<br />

return to school in the fall.<br />

Drew Donovan<br />

Illini <strong>of</strong>ficial sees all-white college teams<br />

,<br />

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UPI) -<br />

A new<br />

NCAA rule requiring tougher academic<br />

entrance standards for freshman<br />

student-athletes may lead to all-white<br />

teams, says <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Illinois<br />

Athletic Director Neale Stoner.<br />

Stoner aggressively opposes a NCAA<br />

resolution endorsed in San Diego,<br />

Calif., recently which would require,<br />

by 1986, enrolli!ll freshman athletes at<br />

Division I schools to have certain<br />

minimum scores on entrance tests and<br />

a "e" average in a strong core<br />

curriculum.<br />

It boils down to a black-white issue,<br />

Stoner said.<br />

"I really feel bad that it passed,"<br />

Stoner said. "I'll tell you right now that<br />

if you think that by 1l1li6 the inner cities<br />

III this country Ire going to be prepared<br />

to deal with thole kids in that core<br />

curriculum, and produce those kinds <strong>of</strong><br />

test scores ... well, that's why I've<br />

gone so far as to say we're headed for<br />

all-white tearns."<br />

BUT JOHN NOWAK, a U <strong>of</strong> I<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> law and faculty representative<br />

to the Big Ten, disagreed.<br />

Nowak said the current system exploits<br />

many students, particularly<br />

those from economically-deprived<br />

areas and many black students.<br />

"<strong>The</strong>re are fewer than 50 rookies<br />

who make it in any given year in the<br />

NBA out <strong>of</strong> the hundreds <strong>of</strong> students<br />

wbo play basketball in coUege and the<br />

thousands who play in higb 1Choo1,"<br />

Nowak said.<br />

"When we pass !bole students on<br />

without adequate education and they<br />

wind up not getUng the pot <strong>of</strong> gold at<br />

' the end <strong>of</strong> the rainbow - the NBA -<br />

you lee these terrible storlet <strong>of</strong><br />

student-athletes who complete their<br />

education without the ability to read,<br />

and they can't hold a job."<br />

STONER SAID the university should<br />

be able to train the athlete who isn't<br />

prepared or qualified to attend the Institution.<br />

And many, he said, benefit<br />

from their experiences.<br />

"You can't tell me that James Griffin<br />

(a former basketball player) and<br />

some <strong>of</strong> the young men who have come<br />

through here without the proper skillS,<br />

who may never graduate, didn't find<br />

their experiences enhanced by their attendance<br />

here. I know better," Stoner<br />

said .<br />

Nowak said he sympathizes with the<br />

position athletic directors and coeches<br />

have been placed in.<br />

"'!be athletic dl~rs and many <strong>of</strong><br />

the coachel, paJ\iculJlrly in basketball,<br />

seriously disagree with this propoul.<br />

In a certain sense, they should. In<br />

modern times, universitiel have<br />

placed directors and coaches in a completely<br />

intolerable position," Nowak<br />

said.<br />

"IT'S WIN OR !ole your job. Even if<br />

people at the university ssy it's not<br />

true, If you ask (former athlelic direc·<br />

tor) Cecil Coleman or (former football<br />

coaches) Bob Blackman or Gary<br />

Moeller, you'll let a different<br />

answer."<br />

Stoner questioned oy the new rule<br />

- If it is sucb a good idea - alto does<br />

not apply to Division II and IU IChools.<br />

"I think the (presldenta <strong>of</strong>) black<br />

schools properly staled it, that a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

their athletes will remain home or end<br />

up in Division II and lOme will never<br />

,et out <strong>of</strong> junior collece," Stoner aald,<br />

Nowak said he WII reminded <strong>of</strong> a<br />

comment from former Marquette<br />

ba ketball Coach AI McGuire ..<br />

asked what would happen if !be Jill<br />

leagues kept taking al\ the It<br />

dergraduates. McGuire replied, NCIIII<br />

said, ."'Well , you know, If wone (.'01IIII<br />

to worse, we could always go bad.<br />

playing students.'"<br />

"COACHES AND directors are"<br />

ing, 'Oh my gDlh, If we're ,oi", tolltl<br />

to play real students, we're tellI1-<br />

trouble.' But that's really the wa, II<br />

world ou,ht to be and we know ll"<br />

"This is only a necessary first...,,'<br />

Nowak said. " We still have to Ioat~<br />

the type <strong>of</strong> educational ~<br />

that are <strong>of</strong>fered to marginal at ....<br />

once they're here."<br />

Nowak and Stoner made ~r<br />

ments on a prollram call<br />

"Sportsline" broadcast Saturda1'<br />

Charnpail'l radio tatlon WDWS.<br />

Price: 20 cents<br />

Cl 1983 Student Publications Inc.<br />

Plans fOI<br />

weapon<br />

in spac<br />

di~-.o~;e<br />

WASHINGTON (UPI) -<br />

tagon has directed<br />

"wage war effectively"<br />

space and barred the Signing<br />

treaty banning space-based<br />

which "add a new dimension<br />

military capabilities."<br />

A secret 136-page doclJmeJ)\<br />

that an anti-satelHte (ASAT)<br />

"should achieve" operational<br />

fiscal 1987 and orders the Air<br />

devise concepts about how it<br />

used in a prolonged strategic<br />

This is the third <strong>of</strong><br />

clusive articles appearing<br />

week outlining a major<br />

shift Indicated in a secret<br />

ment obtained by United<br />

International.<br />

<strong>The</strong> directive orders<br />

Department "as a rna<br />

priority ... (to ) accelerate<br />

<strong>of</strong> technology <strong>of</strong>fering tbe<br />

significant military<br />

develop those space systems<br />

been shown to enhance<br />

military ba lance <strong>of</strong> power."<br />

<strong>The</strong> document, titled '<br />

1988 Defense Guidance,"<br />

policy, strategy, spending and<br />

priorities during that tlVe~Veliri<br />

and reflects the thinking<br />

tagon and <strong>of</strong>ficia Is <strong>of</strong><br />

Security Council within<br />

House.<br />

IT IS ACCOMPANIED by a<br />

memyrandum dated March<br />

and signed by Defense<br />

Caspar Weinberger. It<br />

available to United Press<br />

by sources familiar with<br />

issues.<br />

Previous administrations<br />

emphasized the military uses<br />

in the same way as the<br />

guidance document,<br />

mined to exploit the<br />

available to weapons an<br />

engineers, the sources said.<br />

"<strong>The</strong> Department <strong>of</strong><br />

vigorously pursue<br />

systems development to<br />

launch and operation <strong>of</strong> space<br />

both to provide responsive<br />

to project force in and from<br />

needed ," the document said.<br />

It did not spell out by<br />

space-based systems would<br />

force. "<br />

"Space-based systems<br />

capability <strong>of</strong> providing us wi th<br />

instantaneous access to any<br />

the globe and thereby add a<br />

sion to our military capabili<br />

document said.<br />

WITH THE EXCEPTION<br />

ASAT device under develo~'m ej<br />

document appeared lI .. liill,·:II".]1<br />

about types <strong>of</strong> space<br />

should be developed for use<br />

adversary.<br />

A space-based system would'<br />

an orbiting weapon, unlike<br />

now under development - a<br />

that can be launched into<br />

an F-lS fighter. Pentagon<br />

have said the Soviet Union is<br />

the United States in<br />

satellite hunter-killers.<br />

But space-based laser or<br />

beam weapons are thought by<br />

mer chief <strong>of</strong> Air Force<br />

development, Lt. Gen. Kelley<br />

Inside<br />

Index<br />

See Mllltery,<br />

Art./entertalnment ............ 68,<br />

City ............................................... .<br />

Classified .................................... ,<br />

Metro .................................... .<br />

National .................................... .<br />

Sports ................................. ..<br />

State ........................ ; ..... , .. ' ..... 'L .... ~<br />

Vlewpolnts ............ : .. : .. ~ ............. l<br />

We.ther<br />

Cloudy today with a 40<br />

cbance <strong>of</strong> snow and a<br />

mld·20s. Cloudy tonight<br />

percent chance <strong>of</strong> snow<br />

in the lower 20s . C<br />

Thursday with a chance<br />

and a hl,h in the upper

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