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Page 1: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

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'1 Iowa City , Iowa City, eWest,

PriCe: 20 cents • 1M3 Student Publications Inc.

By Emily Nltchl. S!IfIWrller

More than 400 UI tudents gathered Wedn esday on the Pentacrest to prolest U.S. military involvement in Leban on and Grenada . Counter­demonstrators gathered on the step of Old Capitol to prai e Preside nt Reagan 's recent military decisions with placards reading "Reagan De­rends Freedom" and chants of "Better Dead Than Red."

The rally was sponsored by New Wave - an activi t organization on campu s - the Student Coalition ~gainst Registration for the Draft, the General Union of Palestinian Students and the Central American Sollda rity Committee.

Students supporting these groups carried signs reading "Leftist Thugs Unite," "Money for Degrees Not Death" and "Cut Off Reagan's Arms."

Periodically, hecklers from both groups interrupted the speakers.

NEW WAVE MEMBER Bob Hearst opeaecl the rally by demanding the "withd rawal of all troops from Grenada and Lebanon."

Beth McGiver, also from New Wave, charged the United States with the murder of more than 200 Marines In LebanOll. She described the Lebanon ~tuation as "3 civil war intensified by U.S. troops" with the Marines servl ng as an "alternative target for everyone to shoot at."

Mike Price, a pokes man for the Central American Solidarity Commit­tee, expressed feeltngs of "shame for a coontry that sends poor people to op­press other poor peopl e' H ld the reason the Marines are In Lebanon is because "the Marines have nothing else to do with th ir lives." Dler Turan. a visiting VI political

science professor, said the Marines were sent to Lebanon with the assump­tion that the Gemayel government en­joyed popular support and would be able to exercise authority. But since lKIIe of the major cia. hlDg factions In Lebanon recognize th government, Ibe Marines are involved and l'Ulnerable to attack.

TURAN AID THE Lebanon Itua­Hon Will not be sol ved until the ques­tion of Palestinian and Syrian rights Is 3J\lwered. He said the government "cannot pretend that Syria is not a refevant party."

Douglas Midgett, VI anthropology associate professor, drew on personal experience to orrer a brief hi tory of !he Grenada Ituation at the rally. lIidgett has elos Iy watched poUllca! developments in Grenada since return­ing lrom there in 1981. Midgett praised the recenlly

OI'ertl1rown Maurlc 81 hop govern­IIleI1t for its .. aU nllon and uccess in dealing with problelT1!i commonplace" to the Caribbean. He said in areas of ~lth, economl di trlbutlon. educa­Iioo and commerce, the New J wei MO'iement wa "unmatched by other countries' effort ." . In lour and h Ir yea rs, the N w Jewel Movement "incr a. Irem n­tbi5ly" the production nd exports of !he 32 slate farm . BI. hop e tabU hed l lishing hooi and with th h lp of larger fishinl boats from Cuba,

I developed the Ii hlnl Indu try to • point wh re n. h w r {'x ported to Ither Caribbean countn

I FROM THE tJ . point of view, the eniy problem was th ab en~ of elec· tions. Midg tt said many mail carib­

S .. Rally, pege 8

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Tbe 01 weath r sateillte Is ~ming back word of unny sties and wa rm r tem today. After doubl h eklna th readout It wa tru . high will be II.

UI Itudents John Detwiler and Doug McVay, above, burn Marine enUstment pamphlets In protest outside the Federal Bu ilding In Iowa City Wednesday afternoon.

01 photos/Mel HIli

Below,'a protester against U.S. involvement In Gr.nada and Lebanon confronts a group of R.agan support.rs during a rally on the Pentacrest.

PACs lobby for defeat of I y Mark L.onard 5111 Wrller

Two pOlitical action committees hav formed In Iowa City to lobby for th d feat of Ih proposed Fair Rcnt Ordlnan .

In fi nancial discJosur statements filed with the Johnson Counly Audi tor'. Offie , the Greater Iowa City Apart­ment As oclallon Political Committee had ral cd ,,15 by Oct. 10 and the Citizen for Rational Houshlll Polley had a ca h balance of'$I65.2t.

TIle Dilly low. a ha also learned that a 8II rvey to determine Iowa City voter' perception of the fair rent iu ue Is being conducted by the Michillan

Resource Group Inc. A repre enative of the company would not comment on who had hi red the firm, or the results of illl survey.

Norman Bailey, who is pre Ident of the Oreater Iowa Ci ty Apartment Association and Is listed a¥ chairman of both of the committees, would not confirm or deny the Involvement of either committees In the survey.

"Both of the groups are quite concer· ned with the Fair Rent Ordinance and we will be addressing this question bet· w~n now and the election," he said Wednesday.

When asked ie the committees are allainst the proposal, Bailey said, "I think that would be an accurate state-

ment. "

RUSSELL ROSS , a UI political science professor, said the committees could have an effect on Ihe Nov. 8 elec­tion .

"I suspect one of the important things they will do Is to support those candidates that are against the or­dinance," Ross said. "I frankly think, however. that the rent control or­dinance is doomed to 10 down to failure following the showing of the candidates who supported It in the primary."

In the Oct. 18 city primary election, all three at·large candidates who sup­ported the fair rent proposal were defeated.

Bailey would not comment on

more troops into Grenada

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (UPI) -The United States rushed reinforce­menlll to crush pockets of resistance Wednesday on Grenada, where Cuban and loyalist troops holding hostages battled against an Invasion force trying to restore democracy to the Marxist­ruled island.

U.S. helicopters and transport planes flew up to 1,000 more U.S. troops from the famed 8200 Airborne Division and additional supplies to Grenada, bring­ing the total number of U.S. forces on the island to nearly 3,000.

A source close to the Caribbean inva­sion forces said the last point of armed resistance remaining late Wednesday was Fort Frederick, a prison on Rich­mond Hill , about a mile east of the capital, where more than lOO political prisoners were being held hostage.

Defense Secretary Caspar Wein­berger told reporters that at least six Americans were killed, eight were missing and 33 olhers were wounded in fierce combat for control of the Island, l ,900 miles south of Miami.

"We got a lot more resistance than we expected ," Gen. John Vessey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters at a Washington news briefing.

The Caribbean Broadcasting Corp., owned by the Barbados government, said 18 civilians died since Tuesday's invasion by a joint force of V.S. troops and forces from six Caribbean nations.

WEINBERGER SAID 20 Cubans were wounded in the fighting but gave no estimate on the nUlllbe r of Cuban dead .. "They (V.S. command) thought we could go in and just take over, but we didn ' t," said Spec . 4 Larry Wheeler, of Aiken, S.C., working suI,>" port duties in the staging area at Bar­bados, 150 miles east of Grenada.

"The Cubans were really good, really dedicated ... maybe even better than we were."

Weinberger said the U.S.-led inva­sion force was holding about 600 Cuban prisoners, Including a colonel captured wben It overran a major Cuban military installation.

A U.S. military transport flew a group of 69 Americans and two British citizens to Charleston, S.C., in the first evacuation of U.S. citizens from the tiny island.

Two of the evacuees knelt and kissed the ground as they got off the plane .

"I don 't think there is any more beautiful sight than being back in the United States, or perhaps seeing the Rangers arrive to save us," said Jean Joel of Albany, N.Y. "It has re­instilled my faith in the United States and I'm glad to be home - real glad."

A MIAMI HERALD spokesman said correspondent Don Bohning and Washington Post reporter Edward Cody, who arrl.ved In Grenada Monday on the eve of the Invasion, were evacuated to a Navy ship .

Another load of evacuees is expected later in the day from th.e U.S.-owned St. George's University medical school on Grenada.

"Operations are progressing ex­tremely well ," Weinberger told repor­ters. "Army and Marine Corps units are moving against the remaining few objectives against diminishing Cuban resistance.

The defense chief said the principal area of resistance on Grenada was the Richmond Hill prison, about a mile

See Grenada, page 6

I

U.N. informed islahd official sought help

UNITED NATIONS (UP!) -In a surprise statement to the U. N. Securit y Coun c il , Dominican Prime Minister Mary Eugenia Charles said Wednesday that Grenada 's British governor­general had called lor milita ry intervention to restore order on the island.

Governor·General Paul Scoon, the personal representative of Queen Elizabeth'lI on Grenada, a member of the B rHish Com­monwealth , was freed from prison by U.S. troops Wednes­day, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said in Washington.

Weinberger said Seoon was flown by helicopter to the U .S.S. Guam after his residence was secured by U.S. troops.

"We can now reveal what we could not before, that the governor-general in fact reo qu ested th at assis tance be brought to bea r," Charles told the council. "Now that he is safe we can share thiS with you."

Grenada made an emotional appeal to the Security Council Tuesday to strongly condemn the U.S.-led Invasion of the pro­Cuban Caribbean island and said the assaul t had "caused hun­dreds, maybe thousand of lives."

In an emergency meeting of . th ~ Uni ted Nations Security

CounCil, Nicaraguan Deputy Foreign Minister Victor Tinoco denounced the Invasion as a "shameless" prelude to a military assault on Nicaragua .

NICARAGUA a long with Guyana are sponsoring a resolu­tion to condemn the invasion, ca ll for an imm ediate withd ra wal of all foreign troops and ask Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar to monitor implementation and report back to the council withi n 48 bours.

Such a strong resolution was certain to be vetoed by the Un­ited States when it comes 10 a vote la ter in the week.

Charles, who is also chairman of the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, traveled to New York 10 address the second day of the emergency council meeting.

She said the six Ca ribbean countries who contributed t roops to the invasion force felt it was of " the utmost urgency" to act soon after Prime Minister Maurice Bishop and several of his colleagues were kill \!d last week in a military coup.

The Dominican leade r's state­ment helped defuse some coun­tries' criticism that the invasion WaS an unwarranted intervention in the inlernal affairs of a

See U.N., page 6 ,

,

rent ordinance whether the committees would support any of the remaining candidates, but did say, "We have not done anything like that yet. "

When asked about the committee's plans for participation in the election, BaUey said, "When one Is in Ihe middle of a political campaign one does not tell the press what one Is planning to do."

Karen Kubby, sPokeswoman and treasurer for the Iowa City Fair Rent Coalltlon, sald the committees working for the defeat of the ordinance will have an impact In the election.

"TREY HAVE an advantage becaUIC they have money and they can

do big media things ," she' said. " But we'd still like to think it (the or­dinance) will pass."

" If it doesn't pass, we still have some long-range things we'd like to see happen. One of them Is to form an ac­tive tenant's organization, something like a politically active P.A.T. (Protec­tive Association for Tenants) ."

Any funds leftover from the Citi zens for Rational Housing Policy after the election will be contributed to "other political committees opposing rent control." The Greater Iowa City Apartment Association Political Com­mittee wi1l transfer any of its remain­ing funds to the Greater Iowa City Apartment Assoclatl~n .

Page 2: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

Page 2A - The Dally Iowan - Iowa citv, Iowa - Thursday, October 27, 1983

FiUpinos protest U.S. bases MANn.A, Philippines - More than 500

demonstrators marched on the U.S. Embassy Wednesday in Southeast Asia's . first anti· nuclea r protest and demanded the dismantling of America's largest overseas military bases:

"Foreign military bases do not deter aggression, they provoke it," said opposition leader Jose Diokno. Diokno said the five U.S. bases in the Philippines propped up Marcos' IS-year regime and caused "drug abuse and the exploitation of women."

Oil vessel lost near Vietnam PEKING - The Glomar Java Sea, an

American oil exploration vessel, vanished Wednesday in the storm-tossed South China Sea with 74 people aboard and may have been blown into disputed waters off Vietnam, officials said.

A spokesman for China 's National Offshore Oil Corporation said the last communication from the vessel was a distress signal sent at 11 : 10 p.m. local time Tuesday as a tropical storm buffeted the South China Sea. Chinese search vessels were dispatched early Wednesday but "so far we have received no information about the Java Sea 's whereabouts." the spokesman said.

Missile funding is approved WASHINGTON - President Reagan won a

firm go-ahead from the House Wednesday to keep building the nuclear-tipped Pershing-2 missile, scheduled for deployment in West Germany in December.

The House rejected by voice vote an amendment by Rep. Joseph Addabbo. D-N.Y., a perennial Pershing foe, to delete $432.8 million for procurement of additional missiles from a mammoth $247 billion 1984 military funding bill.

Senate kills reactor project WASHINGTON - A spending bill

amendment to kill the multi-billion dollar Clinch River breeder reacter project was killed by the Senate vote Wednesday.

Clinch River. backed by President Reagan. was intended to be the nation's first demonstration breeder reactor . Environmentalists and anti-nuclear groups charged it would produce large amounts of nuclear fuel that could be used to make atomic weapons,

Budget deficit hits new high WASHINGTON - The fiscal 1983 federal

budget deficit reached a record $195.4 billion, Slipping just below the long-predicted $200 billion mark, the government said Wednesday.

The red ink for the Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 fiscal year was far beyond the previous high. 1982's $110,7 billion.

When one is in the middle of a political campaign one does not tell the press what one is planning to do.

- Norman Bailey, president of a political attlon committee for the defeat of the proposed Fair Rent Ordinance, talking about the committee's plans for partiCipation In the council election. See story, page lA.

,---------------------1 Postscripts • : .-------------------~----------, • · , , • · • • , ': ~ , • •

,~ ,

.,

Events "The News Flow Between Oev.'op'ng Countrlll

and the U,S." Is the topic 01 a lecture to be given by Raj Melkote at 12:10 p,m, In Room 204 of the Iowa International Center, 204 Jefferson Building.

Women and Work, Wom.n'. Labor History Series begins today with a film showing 01 "Good Work , Sisterl Women Shipyard Workers 01 World War II : An Oral History" at 12:1 0 p.m. and 7:30 p,m, in the Women's Resource and Action Center, 130 N. Madison.

A Clreer EKploralion Group. sponsored by University Counseling Service, begins today at 3:30 p,m, In Room 101 01 the Union. This program will last live weeks.

"Liberation Theology: Rllpon.e to Inju.tic . ... Is the tille 01 a talk to be given by Lutheran Campus Pastor Ted Fritschelat4 p.m. In the Indiana Room 01 the Union. This is part 01 a weekly series called Peace, Justice and the Churoh,

Students lor Mondlle wlil meet to organize at 5 p,m, In the Union Wheelroom.

Student stnlte PubliC Relation. wlil meet at 5:15 p,m. In the Hawkeye Room at the Un ion.

Le Cercle Franclls. a get-together lor people who enjoy speaking French, will meet Irom 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Vanessa's.

Alpha Phi Omega will meet at 6:30 p.m, In the Lucas Dodge Room of the Union.

The Mollvilion of Leader.hlp Serlts, sponsored by Campus Programs/Student Activities, will meet from 6:30 to 8 p,m, In the Grant Wood Room 01 the Union.

Hawkeye Libertarian. will hold en organizational meeting at 7 p.m. in the Ohio State Room 01 the Union,

The Assocllted lowl Honor. Studtnt. will hold their weekly meeting at 7 p.m, In Shambaugh House Honors Center.

Announcement Earthword., an undergraduate literary

maljazlne, will be accepllng submissions of poetry, prose, photography and artwork until Nov. 30. Submissions should be addressed to the Educational Programmmlnlj Office: attention Jelrl

, Palermo, Currier Hall. Ail undergraduates are ; t encouraged to submit.

. . : i • ';:'

..

USPS 143·360 Tile 0 .. " I_ II pybllshtd by Siudent Publlcatlonl tnc .. 111 Communications Center, Iowa City, Iowa, 52242, dally eKeept Saturdaya, Sundays, legal holiday. Ind university v.c.tlon •. S~ond ct ... postagl p.ld at the pOlt ollice It lowl City under th' Act 01 Congr .. 1 01 MarCh 2, 18711, Subscription rill.: IOwl City and Coretvllil. S 1 2-' semeatir: $24-2 .. m .. 'lrl: $6-.ummer .... Ion only; 530·lull yelr OUI 01 lown: $20·1 lemeller; $40-2 .. mellers: SIG-summer snalon only : $SO-IYII Ylar,

,

Possession charge filed against Yacullo By PatriCia Thorn Stall Writer

Iowa roothall player Michael G. Yacullo was charged by Iowa City police with possession or marijuana, operating a motor vehicle while intox­icated and interference with official acts early Wednesday morning . Johnson County District Court records state.

The senior linebacker'S ca r was stop­ped by police o([icers at Church and Clinton streets at about 2 a. m, for driv­ing at "an extremely high rate or speed." the report states. He allegedly railed a sobriety test at the scene and the offiCers reported he smelled or alcohol, his eyes were watery and bloodshot and his speech was slurred.

Before the sobriety test was ad­ministered. the man who was riding with Yacullo when he was stopped. Richard Joseph Kozak. "approached (Yacullo) while (he) was being given the (sobriety ) tests." the report states. despite being told by officers 10 remain on the sidewalk.

"The third time he approached (Yacullo) and gave him something to put in his mouth to interfere with a breath test that was then requested," the report states.

AFl'ER BEING asked three times by the police officers to remove the ob­jects in his mouth. Yacullo removed two qua rlers,

A "green plant-like substance" was allegedly found in the glove compart­ment of Yacullo's car following his arrest. Tests positively identified the substance as being marijuana, the report states.

Iowa football Coach Hayden Fry said after practice Wednesday afternoon that Yacullo practiced with the team Wednesday and has not been kicked orr the squad.

Yacullo was convicted of assault by a jury following an incident in Iowa City in February 1982, He was sentenced to one year of probation at that time.

A tavern fight in Des Moines In

January 1983 led to Yacullo's arrest on charges of assaulting a police officer. public intoxication. si mple assault, dis­orderly conduct and resisting arrest, according to Des Moines police records.

Yacullo pleaded guilty to the assault charge and received a deferred sen­

-tence. which was latercbanged to a $25 fine. according to Polk County District COurt records.

Kozak. 22. 712 Fifth Ave .• Coralvil~, was charged with public intoxication and interference with official acts. the records sta teo

Courts ALSO IN Jobnson County District

Court Wednesday: A request by Linda Eal.on·s attorney to "strike" the de­mand for a jury she made June 29. 1981. was overruled by Judge Ansel Chapman Wednesday. according to court records.

Clara Oleson. Eaton's attorney. made an oral argument to the court Monday to try the case without a jury.

The trial will begin Jan. 9. 1984, and is scheduled to last three weeks.

Oleson could not be reached to com­ment on why she no longer wanted a jury trial.

Eaton filed a petition against Iowa City Fire Chief Robert Keating. City Manager Neal Berlin and Assistant City Manager Dave Helling. concern­ing "harrassment" that occurred at the fire station following her suc­cessful bid to be allowed to breast-feed her baby while on duty. ·On March 20, 1980. the Iowa Civil

Rights Commission unanimously ruled that Iowa City discriminated against Eaton in denying her request to nurse her son at the fire st<ltion.

EATON WAS AWARDED $26.442 in attorney rees and $2.000 in compen­satory damages for the emotional dis­tress she suffered during the dispute and $145.12 for wages she lost during the two days she was suspended for breast-feeding at work.

Oleson said following the decision Eaton was compelled to resign because the work environment at thl! fire sta­tion became "intolerable."

Chapman's reply to Eaton's motion to "strike" the jury demand states that the fowa Legislature did not specifica ll y provide for or deny a jury trial in the Iowa Constitution concern­ing the Iowa Civil Rights Act.

Chapman's reply states that if a "party" proves unlawful discrimina­tion and actual damages in a civil rights proceeding it is entitled to judgment if those issues "are favorably found by a jury."

Chapman went on to state that the "appropriate equitable relief" provided in this kind of civil rights case i~ decided by the court.

The choice of the trial procedure is made by the court. which takes into consideration that choice's effiCiency. conservation of judicial time and avoidance of multiple trials. Chapman said,

PARENT & PARTNIR DAY University of Iowa College of Law

October 28 & 28, 1883 Friday

8:00 p.m.

9:30 p.m.

Saturday

9:30 B.m.

10:00 B.m.

11:00 B.m.

11:30 a.m.

1:05 p.m.

Law School Musical: Wizard of Laws Macbride Auditorium. Macbride Hall

Post-Musical Reception Triangle Ballroom. Iowa Memorial Union

Coffee Law School Lounge

Mock first-year class In Civil Procedure conducted by Professor Richard Matasar Room 210. Law School

Panel Discussion "Coping with the Law Student in Your Life" Room 210. Law School

Lunch ($1 Donation) Law School Lounge

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Sludents applyin ~Id be required ,undards for adr !dUCation Associa'

The report. titl In Our Schooll Renewal" was r members hope th as a starting polnl plan for Increaslnl il11he state.

One of the el gh report was teach suggests that "ad should be based 01 such as reco (liberal a rts a academic achiel views and reco fields, "

After the stu education prog r study three rela arts. a teachinM professional currl recommends.

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' By Kirk Brown SlaflWrlter

• A nine-member will be assigned

: new dean for th , is expected to be : week . : Nominating hal : were to be retu r : Office Wednesda : Laster , present : Liberal Arts . who • ing of the 1984 1 health problems. : The nominating : the 861 faculty : eligible to serve : ballot instructed : faculty members

of the college: hu : and natural scien : Laster said fa : select a nine-m ; lrom the 18 top

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Page 3: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

pound Sunday

The Dally Iowan - Iowa CIty, Iowa - Thurlday, ~ 27, 1113 - PI" SA

university

Report: R~ise teaching stanCJards IY St.v. Sand. S1III Writer

students applying to education colleges ~Id be required to meet more rigorous Jtandards for admission, an Iowa State SducaUon Association report proposes.

The report, titled " Achieving Excellence In Our School s: Maj or A reas For Rlllewal" was released this week. ISEA Jllembers hope these proposals will serve ass starting point In formulating a master lJIan for increasing the quality of education ill the slate.

One of the eight areas covered in the report was teacher preparation. The report suggests that "admission to any program shoUld be based on multiple consIderations, sucb as recommendations of faculty (liberal arts and education), previous academic achiE'vement, personal Inte'r­views and recommendation in related nelds."

After the student is admitted to the edlk:a tion program, the student should lIudy th ree related components : li beral arts, a teaching level peclalty and a professional curriculum, the ISEA report recommends,

WILLIAM HERMAN, ISEA public rela­tions speclallst, said , "This report , we oope, will stimUlate discus Ion on the issues we feel need to be discussed. II He ad­ded that no deadline to implement the proposals has been t, but stressed that

cooperation on the federal, state a'nd local level Is needed.

"We feel these eight Issues need to be ad­dressed if we are to provide excellence In education," he said.

Susan Mandernach, president 01 the Iowa City Education Association, said, "I think the first thing that we (the ICEA) need to do Is to discuss the goals with our local leaders. Our people need to get their hands on the report ... and find out what things we can implement at the local level."

Mandernach pointed out that the proposal to encourage professional development - teachers continUing to refine their craft after earning a college degree - can be carried out on a local level.

The report favors more professional development, including continuing educa­tion after college, workshops, seminars, training programs, curriculum develop­ment and other activities "beyond the regular working days and/or normal school year."

THE REPORT suggests thar all costs for professional development be "borne by the public. "

The report also proposes "a substantial increase" in teacher salaries.

Rejecting merit pay, the report states, "The traditional sa lary schedule remains the best system proposed or implemented to date for determining specific salaries because its bases are two valid Criteria , professional experience and academic

preparation. " Criteria for evaluating teacher perfor­

mance should deal with teaching techni­ques, classroom management and subject matter expertise, the report slates. It also states that a competency test "is an unac­ceptable alternative," l>e<:ause "the art and science of teaching does not lend Itself to evaluation through a multiple-choice ex­amination. "

The report proposes that issuing tem­porary and permanent teaching cer­tificates should be stopped and "a new structure" for the licensing of teachers and administrators should be established.

The new structure would include three levels of certificates : apprentice, practic­ing and career.

IN THE AREA of instructional environ­ment, rigorous standards should be enfor­ced in disciplinary matters , the report suggests.

The report concludes with a proposal "that every child be granted the right to both an education and a quality education. This right should be Introduced Into Iowa

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law through the Iowa Code or its Constitu- SCM 1st Avenue, Coralvtlle tion." • ____________ ...

Mandernach said she thinks the Iowa City ________________ ...!~~F~o~r~r~es~el'\'~a~t~lo~DS~C~a~U~338-46~~l~O~~ Community School District could serve as r a model to other districts in adopting some ." fl) ." {i of the eport suggestions. a:~~ · · a;

"Iowa City could be a lighthouse district. It. lit. etlf},ftltMO O~ '19 This is a place that we can get better and ~ ~I I ~~ " "'~ then point to and say, 'Hey, this is what you can do.' .. d I' I Price an Qua ity are as Important as (0 or an~ Design,

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' By Kirk Brown SI"I Writer

• A nine-member "ad hoc" committee that : will be a signed th mission of finding a : new dean for the UI College of Liberal Arts : is expected to be selected by the end of next • week. : Nominating ballots {or the committee : were to be returned to the UI Registrar's :Oflice Wednesday, according to Howard : Laster, present dean of the College of : Liberal Arts, who IS rellrlng at the beg inn· : ing of the 1984-85 academic year due to : health problems : The nominating ballot listed the names of : the 861 faculty members In the college : eligible to serve on the committee. The : ballot instructed voter to select three : faculty members from each of the sections : of the college : humantie , physlca I science : and natural sci nce. : Laster said faculty members will then ~ select a nine-member sea rch committee , lrom lhe 18 top vote-getters. ,

He said the final selection of the search committee, which is expected to also in­clude Richard Remington, VI vice presi­dent for academic affairs, should be com­pleted by the end of next week.

Of the 861 facuIty members eligible for the search committee, 104 are from the UI College of Education. Sandra Stockman, an administrative assistant in the Liberal Arts College, said eligibility is defined as "any instructor who works half time or more" and is not a student.

Charles Case, dean of the VI Education College, said there is nothing unusual in having members of the faculty from his college help select the search committee. "Members of our faculty are also coo­sidered members of the liberal arts faculty_

"THE REASON our facul ty is included In this process is because students in educa­tion receive their degrees from the Liberal Arts College."

Although the Education College has the largest number of eligible voters on the nominating ballot, Case said in the past such an arrangement hasn't caused any problems. •

The relationship between the two colleges has always been "amiable," he said.

After the search committee is selected, Laster said Its first chore will be " to come up with a job description." This process "always takes longer than Is expected."

"The committee has to try and decide what special quali ties we at Iowa are look· ing for," he said.

Following the completion of the job description, Laster said a " national search" for a replacement will begin in earnest.

Because the seach will cover such a large area , Laster predicted it could be rather lenghty. "I would love it if we had someone on board by July," Laster said. "But for that to happen we would be extremely lucky."

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Page 4: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

Page.A - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City. Iowa - Thursday. October 27, 1983

Contributions flow from numerous sources for city council candidates ' By Robyn Griggs Staff Writer

As the Nov. 8 Iowa City council election date nears, several of the candidates are redoubling their campaign efforts with financial support froma variety of sources.

Most of the candidates said, however, they are not receiving any support from special interest groups to conduct their campaigns.

" Good heavens, no, I would never do that (acce pt funds from specia I interest groups)," said Di trict A candidate Ernest Zuber, emphasizing all of his funds come from individual contributors.

In contrast, Phillip Nychay, at-large can­didate and vice president of Local 183 of the American Federal , State, County and Municipal Employees Union, is accepting endorsement and financial contributions from the Iowa City Local of the AFL-CIO.

IOWA CITY Federation of Labor Presi­dent Tom Jacobs said the union will be "do­ing the standard stuff - distributing leaflet and mailing to all union members in the Iowa City a rea, as well as phone call­ing to get propl e registered" in support of Nychay.

The deCision to endorse Nychay stems from "his union ties, what he's done for the union, what he's done for labor and his posi­tion on some issues for collective bargain­ing and utilities," Jacobs said.

He added : "This is not just because he's a labor candidate. We had long discussions about his labor ties and his po iUons on the issues and we do think he's the better can­didate. "

Nychay said the most important part of the endorsement is that it is "signaling to the people that they should vote for a can­didate that will at least listen and weigh concerns .... My stand on endorsements is that they are all ink."

He said he wll\ accept money from private groups or individuals, but, " I will not be bought .. . . Therefore, any group or private indi vidual can donate to my cam­paign because I listen to all facets of an issue."

At-large candidate William Ambrisco also said he would consider accepting dona­tions from private interest groups, but said : " I would have to tatk to whoever it is to find out what motivates them . I don't want any strings attached to me."

AMBRISCO IS NOT currently supported by "any particular group," according to his campaign manager Allen Arneson. "There are no pressure groups or anything behind it (Ambrisco's campaign effort) at all; it's just an all-Iowa City group," he aid.

Another ca ndidate for an at-large seat, George Strait, also said he has "a broad, general, across-the-city support."

At-large candidate Jane Jakobsen also said she believes she has received cam-

paign funds from individual sources only. Larry Baker, District C candidate, is

also relying on the support of individuals. "No group supports me," he sa id. " I think the people that support me certainly realize the work I ' ve done wi th neighborhood preservation, but all of my money is from individuals."

BAKER SAID HE would consider ac­cepting endorsements from special in­terest groups. but said, "I do not expect that kind of support."

All of the candidates are relying heavily on personal contact with voters as thei r most important campaign tactic, sup­plemented by newspaper and radio adver­ti ·ements.

Most agreed eam paigning will be heightened as ell'Ction day nears.

Strait said his campaigning efforts will "grow and crescendo day by day," and Jakobsen said the comi ng week will be "a hig emphasis week" for her campaign.

Zuber said his ca mpaigning effort will start this weekend. adding, "It is a little premature to do anything right at this POIOt. "

Ambrisco. however, sa id he and his cam­paign committee are using "the same ap­proach we did since July and are working Just as hard as we ever have."

The candidates will offer their solutions to the city's problems at a candidates forum tOOlght at 7:30 in the Iowa City Public Library.

Children participate in a walkathon to raise fun'ds for Mark IV Center By Dan Hauser StaN Writer

About 35 to 40 Children, ranging from age 4 to 16 took part in a IO-mile walkathon Wednesday from the Mark IV Community Center to City Park and the downtown Iowa City area and then back to Mark IV to raise money for the community center.

The walkathon, which started at 9 a.m. and went until 2:30 p.m., was intended to serve as a fund-raiser for the United Way, an organization that gives financial help to groups such as the Mark IV Community Center.

A tired Deb Weinberg, a social worker with Mark IV who completed the walk, said the center staged the walkathon to H­Ili trate how isolated the center i from downtown facilites.

The center, Weinberg said, sent out spon­sor sh ts to different agencies, such as the Big Brother and Big Sister programs, ask­fng them to sponsor a child-walker for 50 cenls per mile.

She said each child had seven or eight sponsors and all but three completed all 10 miles.

In addition to raising money for the Un-

Nor~hwestern College of Chiropractic

iled Way, the Mark IV group also used the walkathon to demonstrate their need for a community van to commute to the downtown area.

THE GROUP has asked the Iowa CIty Committee on Community Needs to grant them the $15,000 needed to buy the van twice before and Wednesday night they ap­proached the committee a third lime.

William Whitlow, a member on the 11-person committee, said he thought the group h<1d presented thei r request well, but he is not sure how the CCN stands as a whole on the matter.

The Mark IV group approached the CCN once last fall with a request that they be given the money through a federal Com· munity Development Block Grant, Whitlow said. The group approached the commillee again this summer, asking that the money be provided through Jobs Block Grant program.

Whitlow said the CCN can only allot $830,000 this year, although it received re­quests for CDBG funds totalling $1.7 million. He said the committee might be able to provide half of the money needed to buy the van.

As the need for specialized health care continues to grow, Northwestern College can 'help you enter a secure and satisfying career as a Doctor of Chiroprac­tic.

Committed to high standards in education and research, Northwestern College of Chiropractic offers you com­prehensive chiropractic training on a modern campus dis­tinguished for its excellent facilities and dedicated teaching staff.

The committee will try to work with the Ma rk IV residents, Whi t10w sa id, to find alternative funding sources to pay for the van.

Dian Pepetone, director of the Mark IV community center, said Wednesday 's "children's crusade" would "hopefully make it visible to show how far Mark IV is from acU vlties."

SHE SAID 'rHE group currently must have volunteers drive the children or senior citizens to lhei r destinations or rely on the city's buses.

If the group had a van, Pepetone said, they could avoid the half-hour trip to go downtown via bus. She added that it costs $2.40 for three children to travel downtown by bus.

Weinberg said if the community center had a van, It could be used to take children to after-school activities and could be availablE' to the senior cilizens at Mark IV.

The community center acts as a drop-in center for Mark IV residents, Weinberg said, and helps them with counseling in per­sonal problems. "It (the community cen­ter) is an anchor for residents to come and get acquainted with Mark IV," she said.

If you would like to know how Northwestern College of Chiropractic can help you achieve your career goals, com­plete the form below or call the admissions office COLLECT at (612) 888-4777.

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Gager wants to Ariz

Saying It was IlIIily to leave," ltas ieft the Iowa leam and will Slate.

Nelson, a 6-foo Denison , Iowa, 10wa's'l1 games for Arizona State she "is not on thl cording to Iowa

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Because of the

Page 5: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

723 S. Gilbert 351-8337

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Local roundup /r

• I ~Ury still deliberating Alter a day and a half of deliberation , the

Dry hal stili not reached a decision In the ri.llnvolvlng the 13·year-old boy who wa.

t through an Iowa City storm sewer in II. SIeve Schmitz and his mother, Connie hmitz, are suing Iowa City for n55,OOO.

claim the city was negligent in Its (maintenance of th a rea where th

ccident occurred. Following a torr ntial rain on June 29,

Itll, Schmitz slipped and fell into a ~ainage ditch on the ea t side of Rocky Shore Drive. He was then swept 250 feet through the storm sew r. Aft r more than )1 minutes in the s wer, he was rescued at a manhole west of the Siesta Motel on U.S. Highway 6 in Coralville

The trial began on Oct. 18 in Johnson CcNnty District Court. The allorneys

.. finished their closing statements Oct. 25 .

Law students to perform UJ CoJlege of Law students will

transform themselves Into Dorothy, the tin man, the scarecrow and the lion thle Friday at I p.m. In "a very crude adaptation" of L. Frank Baum's musical.

"The Wizard of Laws" will be directed by Law School Dean William Hines and kicks off the parents/partners weekend at the College of Law.

This sixth annual law school production is free and open to the public and will be held at Macbride AlIditorlum, according to Roselyn Strommen, administrative assistant in the UI College of Law.

Also, parents and spouses of law students have been forwarded a case file to study and are invited to participate in a mock law class at 10 a.m. Saturday in Room 210 of the College of Law building.

This is the second year the awards have been presented. They are named for the late Donald Bruce Johnson, who served for 30 years in the UI Department 01 Political Science. The scholarships were established by Johnson's family through the UI Foundation, Stewart said.

Stewart said the two students were selected after examination of their grade point averages and tbeir involvement on campus.

Police plan dance The Iowa City Policemen's Association is

sponsoring a benefit dance on Nov. 4 at the Highlander Inn to raise money for the policemen death benefit fund.

According to Sgt. William Cook, the annual policemen's ball is the only fundraiser sponsored by the policemen'S association and is the major con tributer to the death benefit fund.

Tickets to the dance cost $2 and can be purchased from any policeman or at the

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then read Instruction to the jury concerning their decision-making process before noon. After spending the afte rnoon in the jury

room, the jury was dismi sed for the night , Tuesday with an admonition not to discuss tbe case outsid of th court. The jury retu med to the rourthou. (' at 9 a m. Wednesday, and after another day of deliberation, still had not reached a

"Coping with the Law Student in Your Life" will be the focus 01 the panel discussion at 11 a.m. that morning. The discussion is intended to teach parents and spouses how to put up with law students, Strommen said. Iowa City police station. Tickets will also r------.....:.,...:...,..,,.;----____ --,

be sold at the door. The dance is scheduled

decision. The jury will resume delibf'ration today

at 9 a.m.

Kids run to Massachusetts Fifth and sixth grade tudcnts at Penn

and Kirkwood elementary schools in the Iowa City School District are running to Plymouth, Mass., as part of a wellne program.

The 100 student~ run four time a week during physical educatIOn cia es and then chart their progress on a map. The children sta rted Dc\. 15 and just pulled into Columbus, Ohio. according to thei r instructor Ed Foraker.

With an arrival date of Nov. 24, Foraker said the student. have covered 340 miles of a 1,100 mile journ y. He added that 15 staff members are helping the students by running on their own and have added 165 miles to the students total so far.

"U's really kmd of a motivational device in conjunction with the wellne!;S program gOing on," he said The running IS designed to get the heart 1010 hape, while other parts of the weHness program work on strength, muscular ('ndurance. flexibility and reduction of body fat.

The running i completed on an oval track, and Forak r said the amount of time spent running has Increased from 45 second to almost five minutes for some students.

"We approached this from a wellness 'PP and th('r i. no pre sure on th kids. Everything i pre nled gradually," he satd.

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"Home is where the start is" is the theme of Substance Abuse Prevention Week Oct. 23-30, proclaimed by Gov. Terry Branstad.

According to Carol Clift, the prevention ma nager of the Iowa Department of Substance Abuse, the week will focus on the home, where substance abuse begins. "We will focus on the family and how the family can be Involved in abuse prevention," she said .

Clift said the week is "spearheaded" locally by agencies that receive funds from the department. In Johnson County, United Action fo r Youth and the Mideastern Council on Chemical Abuse are participating in the week.

Jinny Naso, the outreach coordinator for UAY, said the week is "mostly for awareness. The emphasis is tbat the home and family playa great role in reducing substance abuse ri sks."

Naso said UY A will use the week to showcase its ongoing programs for substance abuse prevention.

Students receive scholarships

Two UI students have been named as the recipients of this year's Donald Bruce Johnson Fellowship and Schola rships by the UI Department of Political Science, according to Karen Stewart, an administrative assistant in that department.

Steve Leach, a senior, received a $500 schola rship.aud Jeff Winick was a atded a fellowship that alJows him access to the department's computer.

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Senate to sponsor debate The VI Student Senate is sponsoring a

d~bate for the Iowa City Council candidates Wednesday from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in the Main Lounge of the Union.

"This debate (ocuses around student concerns," said Regina James, chairwoman of the senate's city relations committee. The panelists'· questions will address the Black Hawk Mini-park, the Iowa City noise ordinance and in general how the candidates can help students if they win a seat on the council.

Panelists include Iowa City Councilor Kate Dickson, UI Vice President lor Student Services Phili p Hubbard, Senate President Tom Drew and Iowa City Press Citizen reporter John Campbell.

Absentee ballots available Absentee ballots are now available (or

registered voters who will not be able to vote in person during the Nov. 8 Iowa City Council elections, according to Johnson County Auditor Tom Slockett.

Voters can request the ballots at the Johnson County Courthouse from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Voters who go to the courthouse to request their ballot must also vote at that time.

The elections office will also mail the ballots to people who request them.

Requests should addressed to the Audi tor's Office, Box 1350, Iowa City, Iowa 52244. Each ballot should include tbe voter's name, address, social security number and the name and date of the election. A notary public must witness the yoter's signature before the ballot can be fillQd out

Absentee ballots mus[ reach the Auditor's Office by 8 p.m. on election day.

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Page 6: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

Page 8A - The Dally Iowan - Iowa CIty, Iowa - Thursday, October 27, 1983

Grenada _______ c_on_li_nU_ed_'_ro_m_p_ag_e_'

east of the capita\. Sources close to tbe invasion force said Grenadian troops were holding more than 100 political prisoners hostage at the site.

In Washington, Democratic memo bers of the House moved to Coree President Reagan to seek con· gressional authority under the Vietnam·era war powers act for U.S. troops to be in Grenada.

They said the notification letter Reagan sent to Congress Tuesday evening failed to meet requirements of the 1972 war powers act.

anned forces in Grenada," Zablocki said.

Deputy Prime Minister Bernard Coard, reportedly the power behind the coup, Army Commander Gen. Hudson Austin and other members of Grenada 's Revolutionary Military. Council took refuge in the Soviet Em­ba.ssy, sources in Grenada said.

HOWEVER, BARBADOS radio said Austin was leading soldiers who were putting up fierce resistance in St. George's. The radio said the soldiers had run short of food and supplies and

SENATE DEMOCRATS Wednesday were expected to surrender. unanimously adopted a caucus resolu· In Washington, the Slate Department tion declaring the war powers act had said that 30 Soviet advisers on Grenada been triggered by the invasion of were safe in their quarters and will be Grenada and that Reagan's letter free to leave. The government of st. "does nol fulfill the requirements" of Vincent, 70 miles north of Grenada, that act. , said 160 Grenadians fleeing the fighting

]n the House Rep. Clement Zablocki, in small boats had landed in the D-Wis., chairman of the House Foreign Grenadines chain of islands extending Affairs Committee, introduced legisla· between the two islands. lion to force the withdrawal of U.S. Defense sources said they expected troops from Grenada by Christmas. the Marines and Army troops to com·

Zablocki criticized Reagan for his plete their seizure of the island within "complete disregard of the law" in days and to hand it over to the troops omitting certain information from the and police of six Caribbean countries report he filed with Congress on the in- that joined U.S. forces in the invasion. volvement of U.S. troops in Grenada. The U.S.·led invasion marked the

"To my dismay and regret, the first U.S. mililary intervention in the president has once again failed to Caribbean since the 1965 invasion of respect the law regarding his submis- the Dominican Republic. It was the sion of a report under the War Powers largest U.S. mililary operation since Rl'solution relative to the use of U.S. the Vietnam war.

U N Continued from Page 1 - -------sovereign and independent slate.

AMBASSADOR Egerton Richardson of Jamaica, which contributed troops to the invasion force, said instead of casting doubt on the validity of the U.S.·led force the council should ask, "Who invited Cuban troops to go to Grenada, what proPerly constituted government ?"

He said the Caribbean group con­cluded tilat Bishop's overthrow was un· dertaken "with the connivance of a count ry unfriendly to the organization.

"We are not there to determine what kind of government they should have in Grenada. We are there so that the peo­ple of Grenada can decide for them· sel \ In l'pe and fair elections. Jamaican troops will not stay one mo-

ment longer than necessary to ensure that."

OTHER THAN the United States, Dominica and Jamaica were the first countries to speak in favor of the inter­vention by the 1,900 U.S. troops and 300 soldiers of Antigua, Ba rbados , Dominica, Jamaica, 5t. Lucia and SI. Vincent.

Perez de Cuellar Wednesday warned against escalation of military actions in Grenada that might spread the fighting in the Caribbean region.

[n his strongest appeal yet and without naming the United States or its six Caribbean al1ies, he appealed "to all concerned in the strongest terms to refrain from any actions not in confor· mity with the purposes and principles of the charter of the United Nations. "

Iowa City Council .

Candidates' Forum

Time: Thursday, October 27, 7:30 p.m.

Flace: Meeting Room A,

Iowa City Public Library

Hawkeye Cable Vision will cablecast the forum live on channels 5 and 20. WSUI radio (910 AM) will broadcast a tape of the forum at 7 p.m., Friday, Oct. 28.

Spollsored Ii." Hawkeye Cable Vision , the Johnson COli II 1,1' Leaglle of Women Voters, The Daily Iowan and W Ul/KSUl.FM.

American Cancer Society

JOHN F. MURRAY LECTURE

Charles' Swanson ~~Newspaper Leadership

and Excellence" Monday, October 31-7:30p.m.

301 Lindquist Center Auditorium

Sponsored by the School of Journalism and Mass Communication and the Leslie G.

Moeller Chapter of Kappa Tau Alpha.

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Watc I '\ Lost in the , in Beruit. an : Grenada , is tI I Civil Rights I

t The three' , with conserve I were guilty 0

I record on ch I past been f re : tolerate the c I quorum, so it : It may rerr l congressmen : reconstitute t

,: That is the b

sees the COil

1 Congress intE ! It is clear , enforcing civ . .. . : bls intention : testify again! : function. I The legisla I I arm of Congl

! Linda SchuPI Staff Writer

I

IWhy Why did Prl

, i invade G renal

i Anyone follow I different reas

the truth. Calling Grel

their actions

II Reagan said h Americans Ii \

I responding to Organization I

I Dr. Charles College wherE State Oepartn invasion if thE never even su

! The Chairm I "armed citizel

t' of its neighbo

tive tril rena a sins' Coups a \rnO!

waited only Co its country. "aggressive' ,

Several Stat to prevent S4 surrounding al 30 Soviet techl accommodate shipping sa He Soviet Ambas: milita ry offici

As for the c( new Grenada doctrine, no ~ and no intern. phYSical ehmi: had stronger they have wi tl

Relations WI

the United St~ They will be I will be forgot! global aggre !

Why, then, ' lives in Gr ni SUccesses. BUI

Jimmy Carter that Reagan, 1

to the G renad, disaster.

But, aft r 31 and only piaU! Tom Naber Staff Writer

Page 7: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

trade rolF/on Ad.

1

Columbia

The Dally Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Thursday, October 21, 1983 - Page 1A

Y!~WI!Q!nts EdIlOr /Derek Mlurer Arb I am.rtIlnrnenl editor/John Vollnd

Editorial PIlI' editor/Doug Herold MllIIIIIIII9 edltorlTlm Severa Wire editor/Nanette Secor News edltor/Terell Hunter Sports editor/Steve Batterson Metro editor 1M Ike Heffern AIII"lnl aports editorl/ AIIIttIl'lI metro editorl/ Mike Condon

Tom Buckingham Thomas W. Jargo Mary Tabor Photography editor/David Zalunlk

FrwIancI edllor /Sulln FlsMr Grlphlcs edllor /Sleve Sedam

Publilher /Wlililm Casey

Advwliling mln.,/Jlm Leonard Ctuallied Mil mlll~/Maxine Lester 8utl_ manager/Mary New Clrculltion mlnager /Kevln Rogers Production luperlnten<MnllDick Wilson ~

Watchdog whipped • Lost in the terrible headlines about 219 American soldiers dying

in Beruit, and others in the process of dying in an invasion of Grenada, is the story of the firing of hall the mem~rs of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission.

The three were fired so President Reagan could replace them with conservatives who would be less critical of his policies. They were guilty of cal\ing attention to the administration'S wretched . record on civil rights enforcement. The commission had in the past been free (rom such political control, but Reagan could not

: tolerate the criticism. His action leaves the commission without a I quorum, so it is temporarily out of business. , It may remain that way because civil rights groups and many

congressmen are outraged and have begun an effort to reconstitute the commission as an independent arm of Congress . That is the best possible solution. The administration obviously sees the commission's role as that of cheering section, but Congress intended it to be a watchdog.

It is clear that Reagan does not intend to be more diligent in enforcing civil rights for women and minorities ; just as clear is bis intention to get rid of any witnesses who would be willing to testify against him. That is a perversion of the commission's function .

The legislative branch should reconstitute it as an uidependent arm of Congre .

Linda Schuppener 5taft Writer

Why Grenada? Why did President Reagan risk American lives and prestige to

invade Grenada? The gunfire only begins as the questions arise. Anyone following Tuesday's events could have heard four or five different reasons for the invasion and still have wondered about the truth.

Calling Grenada's new government "leftist thugs" and saying their action had "no place in civilized society," President Reagan said he was protecting the "innocent lives" and the 1,000 Americans living on the i land country. He said he was also responding to "an urgent formal request" for assistance from the Organization of Ea tern Caribbean States.

Dr. Charles Modica, the chancellor of Sl. George's Medical College where the 1,000 American students are, asked why the Stale Department never tried to evacuate the students before the invasion if they were in danger. The State Department, he said, never even suggested that the students leave the country.

The Chairman of the DEC explained that Grenada had 3,000 "armed citizens" compared to 600 or so combined military forces of its neighbors. The DEC's treaty, she said, allowed for " pre-

, when regional security wa ffected by bIity.

Coups almost always are followed by instablity. The president waited only four days to see if the new government could stablize its country . They never had a chance to demonstrate "aggressive" intentions .

Several State Department officals insinuated the invasion was to prevent Soviet and Cuban control of the island and the surrounding area . They pointed to the presence of 600 Cubans and 3l) Soviet technicians building a new 10,000-foot airfield that could accommodate Soviet fighters. They said that 60 percent of U.S. shipping sailed within striking range of Grenada and that the Soviet Amba ador to Grenada is a general , the highest Soviet military official in the Western Hemisphere.

As for the communi t threat, Fidel Castro came out against the new Grenada government the day after the coup, saying, "No doctrine, no principle nor position proclaimed as revolutionary and no internal division can justify savage methods such as the pbysical elimination" of the former Grenada leaders . The Cubans bad stronger relations with Maurice Bishop's government than they have with the n w government.

Relalions with South American neighbors have been poor since the United Slale upported Great Brillan in the Falklands War. They wHl be poorer now, The Korean Airline disaster probably will be forgotten , and the United Slates will be viewed as the new global aggr or .

Why, then, did Pr ident Reagan risk American prestige and lives in Gren da? Pre id nt Reagan has had no foreign policy SUCce ses. But he remembers the thrashing he was able to give Jimmy Carter over the Iranian ho tage ituation. It 's sad to think that Reagan, WOrried about his re-election chances, overreacted to the Grenada Ituation becau h wanted to avoid such a similar disaster.

But, after analyzing Tuesday's excuses, that seems the primary and only piau ibl xplanation . Tom Naber Staft Writer

Pre I

SoIdill" from tn. Caribbean multlnatlona' peac •• kllping force IcMId onto • Untied Itat.. Air Iforc. cralt near Bridgetown, Barbado. Monday.

'~ON', ~ ~S ~ FiPiAAL tMPLOViE, ~R£ VOL) IN FAVa( Of ~ NAi\O~ ~ID.\~ (URV,~ t.WC1IN WfMER KIN6'S &RiHDA~, OR bO ~OJ ~ MCUlARL'I CARE ~S 8t_~ IT IS?" AN9Nfl YEsCRt()'

Efforts of voters under 40 sought M OGULS AT ABC NEWS

somehow overlooked Susan Fitz-Hugh in selecting 40 political

leaders, pollsters and consultants for a recent discussion of America's voter tu rnout problems. As a result, the best and the brightest who participated may have botched their mission entirely.

Former presidents Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford and a virtual Who's Who among Washington-based political puppeteers gathered in the Russell Senate Office Building's Caucus Room to consider America's vapid interest in elections. Sponsored by Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, and set before ABC's came~ the "Syin-

r=1M!!iill1n on VO~ gmmion" ~ good television (the all·star rap

session will be rebroadcast later this season) .

As if to justify the pow-wow, ABC News had released some disheartening poll data. In a late June survey, it found only a third of Americans under 30 vote regularly and fewer than half say they will next year. ABC News dis­covered that if the nation were divided equally between voters and non-voters, the latter group would be peopled

Glen & Shearer almost entirely by those under 40 - a sobering reminder for anyone concer­ned about the nation's future.

It was perhaps inevitable that the celebrity symposium would produce only lackluster results. Discussion cen· tered on proposals for longer polling hours and easier registration (nothing ingenious) and the networks' nervous habit of "projecting" winners before polls close . According to one partici­pant, little or nothing was said about younger Americalll.

THAT'S WHERE someone like Fitz­Hugh might have provided some in­sight. Executive secretary of the State Board of Elections in Virginia, where voter registration ranks near the na­tion's lowest, Fitz-Hugh recently told a new state commission examining voter fatigue that the chief problem is neither logistics nor alienation. In­stead, she said, it 's education.

"Our students learn more about socialism and communism than they

do about democracy," she said in Rich­mond last week. "I think we are miss­ing the boat in this country."

Fitz-Hugh's words sound something like those of a fundamentalist.

But they had some meaning as well. They implied that young Americans learn about democracy only in contrast to communism and without much in­struction in our system's inherent strengths and weaknesses.

Lacking any sense of democracy's frailties - something known to every Athenian in the 5th century B.C. - it's no wonder that Americans see voting as a going-through-the-motions obliga­tion. Though most know from high school civics that theirs is the land of personal freedom and free enterprise, few could discuss the institutional challenge their system faces .

FOR EXAMPLE, few civics classes ever grapple with the implications for a democracy under which only half the populace participates. In the same vein, if democracy (by Aristotelian definition) means tha t government favors the many instead of the few , can the United States still regard itself as such?

Further, if Americans won't par-

ticipate, what is the effect on democracy of multinational fi rms, whose number and influence are on the rise? And how democratic is the in­creasing cost of political participa' tion? If the price of political office ex­ceeds the average citizen's means , what sort of "democracy" results?

We don 't have the answers. But we think the questions are obvious and simple ones that are key to the nation's future and to helping young Americans understand that democracy is not some monolothic (and , hence, easily ignored) object of devotion. It, like any relationship hetween people, is imper­fect and requires work and attention to succeed. Otherwise, the freedoms to which young Americans owe their minimal allegiance will disappear. , -Within a year, the League of Women Voters will contract with RKO radio stations to encourage 18- to 24-year­olds to vote. The effort is noble and badly needed.

But the campaign can only work if young Americans see a reason to vote that stands larger than the issues, the names, the faces and the jingles.

Copyright 1983, Field Newspaper Syndicate.

President's war power imperative By Sen. Barry M. Goldwater

T HE STATIONING of American Marines as a police unit between Druze Moslems and Lebanese

Christians in Beirut has revived an issue as old as the United States : Who controls the War Powers?

By Wa r Powers , I mean the authority to make the fundamental decisions when, where and in what manner to deploy and use the Armed Forces of this country in defense of its citizens and freedoms. It is my belief that the hard-won lessons of the War of Independence instruct us the President should make these ultimate decisions.

Let us begin with the winter of Im-1778 , when General George Washington answered civilan criticism of his army at Valley Forge:

"I can assure these Gentlemen that it is a much easier and less distressing thing to draw remonstrances in a com· f6rtable room by a good fireside than to occupy a cold black hill and sleep un­der frost and snow without clothes, or blankets ... " Washington said to Henry Laurens, president of the C0n­tinental Congress, Dec. 23, 1m.

The suffering of Washington's 10,000 troops was caused in great measure by the administrative incompetence of Congress, as were other setbacks to his military operations.

THE EXPERIENCE gained from harmful legislative meddling with military decisions during the Revolu­tion led directly to a strengthening of executive power in the Constitution. Fully 30 of the 55 delel!ates who allen-

Letters

Lack of exercise To the editor:

I am disgusted by the lack of student support that allowed the fair rent candidates to be defeated in the city council primary. Is the issue of fair rent 90 trivial that tbe DI failed not only to editorialize on the subject but even to mention It In Tuesday's paper?

I propose raising the voting age back

Congress was given the power "to declare war," but the framers rejected a proposal to allow Congress "to make" war. The difference is significant

ded the Constilu!lona( Convention had vested with all the "executive power" performed military duty In the War of of the United States. Independence. These framers also had COli/GRESS WAS given power to fresh memories of Shays' Rebellion, in "declare war," but the framers rejec­which Gov. Bowdoin of Massachusetts ted a proposal to allow Congress ,'to had single-handedly raised an army to make" war. restore order while a reluctant and The difference is Significant. Samuel divided legislature sat on its hands. Johnson's Dictionary of tbe English

Other dangers were known to the Language, current in America at the framers that are mostly forgotten to- time of the Constitutional Convention, day. Great Brilain held on to northern • defines "declare" as "to make known" military posts in violation of the or "to proclaim." The term "to make" Treaty of Paris and exclued us from means "to create" or " to bring into the St. Lawrence. Spain controlled the any state or condition," a power which mooth of the Mississippi, occupied was denied to Congress. forts in Florida and schemed to es- Declarations of war have been voted tablish a hostile Indian nation between only five times by Congress. Yet a its possessions and the United States. documented study by my office has France sought to embroil us as a turned up more than 200 occasions dependent client in its own foreign con- when presidents have deployed troops ructs. To these troubles, John Jay war- abroad and used force or the threat of ned in the Federalist No. 4 that war force without any declarations of war might arise out of the rivalry between in defense of the country. our nation and European states in Starting in the 19708, however, Con· navigation and trade "as far away as gress has tried to assert supremacy China and India." over military powers. At least 12 dif·

The framers were practical men. ferent statutes restricted American They knew the nation could not survive military activities in Indochina . The if its defense was shackled by un- end result of these limitations led to realistic rules. Thus, the president was genocide in Cambodia, the loss of a made the "Commander-in.{:hief" and neutral Laos and the'disaster in Viet-

to 21. Perhaps then students could rally for a freedom that at present they choose not to exercise.

Joyc. Morrllon

Referendum reviewed To the .dltor:

The comments made in regard to the pIIIIIle ol the United Students ollowa

referendum tend to be a bit exaggerated. It is one thing to say there really is support for USI when there is a large voter turnout, but considering that only 2.6 percent of the UI enrollment voted , this oversimplification is a bit unjustified, even if there was a record turnout for a special election.

There is visible support only among

nam. The collapse of South Vietnam signalled a period of Soviet.encroach­ment all over the glohe. from Angola to Ethiopia to Afghanista n to Nicaragua.

THE WAR POWERS Resolution, enacted over presidential veto in 1973, heads the list of congressional inter' vention in tactical military decisions. The legislation states that American forces cannot be engaged in hostilities for longer than 60 days without specific congressional authority. An extra 30 days is granted if necessary to remove our troops safely.

My concern is that the War Powers Resoluton may cause a constitiutional crisis of confrontation between the Congress and the president when decisiveness and national unity are needed. Democracies can only avoid disaster if they are willing to confront the obivous threats to their survival while these threats are manageable .

The question is : Can a weakened Un· ited States, whose president is hamstrung by congressional restric­tions , protect its citizens and freedoms? Rather than leave the mat· ter to a future crisis, it should be resolved immediately. The War Powers Resolution should be repealed and Congress should lay before the people the choice of ratifying or re­jecting a constitutional amendment placing the control of national defense with the president. Let the people, the ultimate source of sovereignty in America , decide the issue.

Goldwater Is an Arizona Republican. This article was distributed by Freedoms Foun­dalion Features, Washington, D.C.

those who voted . The literature distributed bY 'USI supporters implied that if this referendum was passed, concrete action would be taken to stop ' tuition increases. I only hope people who voted for the referendum on this premise see some visible r('Sults in the future.

Margar., Ann. Gaffn.y E332 Currier

Page 8: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

p. u. - The Dally Iowan - Iowa City. Iowa - Thursday. October 27. 1983

Metro

Rally bean countries are "deeply split" by two party elections, and instead Grenada was moving towards a chosen body that would represent special interest groups such as farmers, students, merchants and women.

In 1982, 1,000 people representing these groups - 1 percent of the total population - drafted and revised a national budget; the New Jewel Movement intended this to be a yearly event, Midgett said .

Instead, because of a military coup last week that killed Bishop and most of his cabinet, the United Stales and four mem­bers of the Organization of Eastern Carib­bean States invaded Grenada on Monday.

Midgett dismissed the OECS's claims that Grenada's army and recently built air­strip constitute a threat to other Caribbean

The rally on the Pentacrest Wednesday provided a variety 01 viewpoints (top photo). In the photo at lelt, Bruce Brechtel, center, 'expresses his opinion from the steps 01 the Old Capitol. Ronald Reagan Impersonator John Riley, above, expresses his views later at the Iowa City Post Office.

countries since "Grenada is an island, has no air force or navy, so how is a (landlocked) army going to attack?"

THE UNITED STATES has refused to deal diplomatically with Grenada since Bishop came into power, he said. By ignor­ing the credentials of Grenada'S am­bassadors and appointing a U.S. am­bassador responsible for all the Caribbean nations except Grenada, both Carter and Reagan showed their disapproval of the lef­tist New Jewel Movement, Midgett said.

Midgett described the invasion as "the final inactment of U.S. rehearsals." In 1981, U.S. troops staged a simulated inva­sion of a small Caribbean island.

Midgett says that this mock attack, Operation Ocean Venture 81, represented

Continued from Page 1

the largesl troop involvement since World War n and was designed to "overthrow a hostile government."

Bums Weston, Ul professor of inter­national law, spoke at the rally on the legality of U.S. intervention in Grenada.

He said the OECS treaty prohibits mem­bers from interfering in each other's af­fairs unless there has been an act of exter­nal aggression. Thus, OECS members are violating the treaty by attacking Grenada, also an OECS member.

At about 1:30 p.m., the rally became a march ~eading towards the post office in the Federal Building, where at least six Iowa City police cars were on hand at Camplls Security's request. At this point the group was diminished to less than 100 demonstrators.

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Page 9: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

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Arts/Entertal nment Page 8B. 9B

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i'

ifwo Hawkeye athletes decide to depart Gager Nelson wants transfer to Arizona State By Thomll W. J.rgo Assittanl Sports Editor

Saying it wa the "perfect oppor· hmily 10 leave," Junior Kim Nelson has left the Iowa women's basketball

. learn and will transfer to Arizona State.

Nelson , a 6·foot -2 ce nter from Denison , Iowa, who sta rted 22 of 10wa 's 'lT game last year, won't leave for Arizona State until January, but Iile "is not on this yea r's squad," ac· cording to Iowa Coach Vivian Stringer.

Nelson said the decision to transfer was a "career choice." She said she woold like to be a lawyer someday and it was "lime to gel my grades up. "My main concern was my ca reer,"

slie said . "Playi ng basketball has set me about one year behind It's time to gel into my major, and (Arizona State)

Student orders for tickets ,

top 10,000 , ~yJ. B. Glas. plaff Writer I

: Around 750 Iowa sludents will not receive student basketball tickets to llawkeye games this year, according

~Iowa athletic departmenl officials.

As has happened in pasl years, the elnand from Iowa students looking to et tickets ha exceeded the 6,DOO-seat . '1 allotted 10 the 15,DOO-seat Carver· ~wkeye Arena , t1ck.et manager Jean \(upka said Wednesday. i App roximately 10,400 requests were ~de (or the allotted 6,000 student ~ts according lo Kupka. , Six thousand eats a re reserved for !be,eoeral public and 3,000 are sold lo members of the faculty and staff.

Because of the dema nd, which is flar in excess" according Lo associate athletic director Larry Bruner, about 110 students will not receive tlckels this year.

I TIlE SPLIT EASON policy will illoll as many fan a po ible to ee !be Hawkeye , who open thel r 1983-84

I umpalgn under fir l·year Coach Iceorge Raveli ng on Nov. 18 when lhey host tile Italian National Team. "<AIr goali to gel a m ny people as

we can to pa rt of the games," KupU said.

Included in the lud nt demands are 1000t 5,900 new apphcation an in· crease of abouI3.000 from la t sea on There "ere approxllnately 4,500 repeat Orders.

Bued on the prtority ystem Kupka said probably the three-year priorities

, WOOld receive full season Uck ts. Stldenls with a on or lWO year

~Mority will likely g l pill eason ~Cbts for l3-eam Iowa hedule, not IlICIlldinllhe Amana-Hawkeye Cia Ic, ~ requires a . eperate ticket.

'YlUOWING TH MIDDLE lwo f!ioritles Is th zero priority range. all ~ who hav not appllcd for tickets "ore. IFor lhos fan , Kupka Id th ' re will , a split- ea on loll ry , livi ng t\'f~" ... e with a t ro priority an equal

for obtalnln II pili ason ket to the Hawkey am thl ,.ID!I.

t We're really now d," id Kupka, '!'II attributes th Incr In d mand ~ "the Inlere t In ba k tball ." She IIid that th ticket price holve not in­~sed Ince la t y r :Raveling's run·and·gun philosophy "t he had at Washington Slat and a

• ' btc team that ha l)e(>n m ntioned • the pres son r vorit to win the . Ten by 5t I and mith Ma nine Illao added lo the inler l.

ht tile futur , if the d mand con·

III stud nts ex pI n ors under ,lit. eason .y t m I a po iblllly,

r laid, , I 1_ ... " .... wrwn. lo Srun r, requesls for

!JIIeraI public tickets I re presently be­itt pt'OC.'eS8ed and tho faM hould ~ aboul tick U within th n xl lwo .. -.. :"Almolt the same p ople will ~ve ticket lhl Y r a 18 I If, lire', Jult no turnover," Brun r said .

is a good public rela lions place."

STRINGER REPLACED Judy McMullen as the Hawkeye coach at the end of last season, and Nelson denied that the transfer came about because

of the coaching change. "She (Stringer) is an excellent

coach," Nelson said. "They are lucky to have her. They are going to do great this year.

"All three (Stringer and assistant coaches Jennifer Bednarek and Marianna Freeman) are really neal people. I wish I could stay, but it 's time for me to go."

Nelson averaged 6.3 points and 5.4 rebounds a game for the Hawkeyes last year.

Stringer called the Nelson transfer a "major loss" to the team. "I was ex· lremely pleased with the way she was coming along," Stringer said. "She is a big girl , and flnytime you lose a big girl, you feel the effects. I wish she wa~ still here, so we would hav\! more depth."

NELSON, WHO WOULD have to sit out a year because of the transfer rule, hasn't decided on whelher or not she will play basketball for the Sun Devils.

In other news around the Iowa basketball camp, Stringer has reduced the Hawkeye roster to 14 by cutlinl(

See Cagers, page 28

With open arms

Netter Ruuttila third to leave Ballard's squad 8y Mike Condon ASSistant Sports Editor

Iowa junior tennis player Kim Ruut­tila decided lale Tuesday evening that she will no longer compete for Coach Cathy Ballard's squad and will leave school at the end of this semester.

She becomes the third Hawkeye player to leave the squad this season. Two weeks ago, sophomore Martine Guerin quit the squad saying she was no longer motivated. Junior Mallory Coleman was dropped from the squad by Ballard for reasons not given by either party:

In an interview Tuesday evening, Ruuttila said that many factors led to her decision. "I just decided that it has been really hard to handle the pressure lately," she said . "I would say the things that have happened (with

Coleman and Guerin ) had a lillle bit to do with it.

"I'VE DECIDED THAT it is just time to lake a rest," she said. "I'm not at peace wilh my siluation here and il

is a real problem for me. I want to do everything possible for the team and I believe my leaving would be lhe best solution. Il's nol helping the team with me being here."

When asked what the "pressure" was, Ruuttila s~id, "I'd rather not comment on tha t. I'm not real sure in my mind what caused the pressure. But I know one thing, I'm very happy with my decision and I f~1 at peace wi th myself and I couldn't say that before I made the decision."

The Springfield , Ill., native came to Iowa last season from Wheaton (111.) College where she was a Division III finalist in 1981. She has been playing No.5 for the Hawkeyes so far this fall.

Ruuttila has yet to tell Ba liard, or any other member of the Iowa women's athletic department, of her decision. Ballard is currently out of town recruiting this week and could not be reached for comment.

As for her future, Ruuttila said she plans lo return to Springfield and "just take some time and rest. I definitely want to continue to playing lennis," she said.

The Dally Iowan/DaVid Zalazntk

Gloria Palmer spreads her arms to block a goal shot during soc­cer practice at the Hawkeye Court Fields Tuesday afternoon.

Palmer, a nallve of Sewal, Iowa, is one of the original member. of Virago, the Iowa City women's soccer club. Palmer also

Ipendl a much of her spare time refereeing soccer games In the league Virago compete~ in. See story, page 48.

Tourney berth the goal for Iowa spikers By Robert RYler Siaff Writer

Forgel the record IS-match winning streak earlier this season that gotlhe Hawkeye voll eyball team of! to lhe best slart in Iowa's history. That won't help th Hawks this weekend on lhe road against Minnesota, Wisconsin and nlinol .

Iowa has ince set il's eyes on a much bigger goal than merely a winn­Ing SP8son - a Big Ten tournament berth. Nov. 18 and 19.

fowli Coach Sandy Stewart said three more Weslern Division wins, added to her team's l ading 5·1 record, would ensure the Hawkeyes a spot in the Big T n tourn m nt in Evanston, Ill .

"I think mlnois, Wisconsin and Min· nesota will p1it among themselves," St warl said. "If thal happens. 1 don 't ee how a leam with elghl wins could

not finl h In th top two."

LA T YEAR, Ohio Slate and Min­n sola enlered In the hnal four com­petition with ld ntical 8-5 records.

nn IOn

Earlier this season, Iowa downed the Badgers, who are currently 4-6, the Gophers, 5-5, and th IIlini , 2-5. Now

comes the taxing job of repeating those beatings - this time on the opponents turf.

"We've got to win at least two," Stewa rl said. "Knowing what an in· tense and greuling weekend this is go­ing to be, if we win lwo, it would really be great.

"I think we should be able to beat Il­linois - lhey' re in the cellar right now," she said. "We'll be a little tired after (Friday and Saturday night) but we should be able to beat them."

MINNESOTA (FRIDAY NIGHT) and Wisconsin (Saturday night) will both be evenly competitive as far as respective stregnlhs, according to Stewart.

"Both teams have big middle hit­ters," Stewart said, "and we're going to have to adjusl defensively to (lhose) hitters. "

Wisconsin's Megan Scoll, a 6-foot-2 senior who led the Big Ten in kills and blocks-per·match last year, and 5-11 Minnesota senior, Ma rUe Larsen, both had strong games against Iowa Sept. 23 and 24 at the Carver·Hawkeye Arena.

Once Iowa's blocking formation and back court coverage locked into lhe respective team's offensive attacks the Hawkeyes were able lo rebound vic­toriously.

Since that weekend, Stewart said Wisconsin and Minnesota have im­proved grea tly. Gopher Coach Stephanie Schleuder said after the rive­game loss, Minnesota had a great deal of improvemenl on the way.

"Minnesota is a young team," Stewart said. "But they are a greatly improved team."

THE HAWKEYES HAVE also been consistently improving since that weekend. Stewart said she remem­bered when Iowa fell behind 2~ in both contests.

"Earlier in the season, we came out slow," she said. "I think we have im­proved on that ... now we need to be consistent in maintaining'our intensity - we've had some problems with that. "

That problem was most visible in Iowa 's recent loss to Northwestern af·

ter being up, 2~. "We need to get that killer instinct

back," Stewart said. "We need lo be in each play menlally and play every point hard."

SINCE THE NORTHWESTERN match, the Iowa squad has had some lime off lo rest. Stewarl said lhe Hawkeyes are practiCing and polishing up on different Serve-receive forma­tions, as well as individual skills and conditioning.

"The lasl couple of weeks, we've been playing so much that we really have had a chance to work on con· ditioning," Stewart said.

The lhree-match weekend will be physically and menlally taxing, bullhe recent play of sophomore middle hit­ter, Linda Grensing and junior, Dee Ann Davidson may come lo help Iowa .

Grensing currently leads the team with 248 kills (72 in Big Ten play) , and Davidson leads Iowa in hilling percen· tage, .247 (.338 Bill Ten) ; solo blocks, 39 ; block assists, 71 (29 Big Ten); and digs, 248 (47 Big Ten).

Despite ranking, Hawks may be traveling By Jill HoklnlOn Stl " Writer

A th end of the season draws near, th low field hockey team finds Itself in a piviial position when the four regional tournament sites are picked Nov. 6.

Th Hawkey , who dropped to fourth in the NCAA field hockey poll la t w k, r gained third place after No. & New Hampshire heat No. 3 Ma ChU8 tts last weekend.

"With Iowa beaUn New Hampshire

earlier in the season, we felt Iowa should be ranked ~bove New Hamp hIre," said Pat Wall of the NCAA office.

Iowa would like lo remain In the top four for the rest of the season meaning lhe Hawkeyes could get a bye in the reglonaltournamenl and be considered for hosting a regional , Iowa Coach Judith Davidson said.

IN ORDER TO host a regional tour­namenl, the NCAA field hockey com· millee takes into consideration th

chool's field, facilities and geographical location. They also look at how much it would cost to fly teams lo the school.

"Ideally, the top four teams al the end of the season should get lo host," Northwestern Coach Nancy Stevens said . "What it comes down to is the financial situation.

" It cosls a IIreal deal oC money lo fly In teams for a tournament," she said.

The top four seeded teams receive a first round bye in the regional tourna· ment but are not lluaranleed lo host a

tournament, Wall said. "We look. at the top four seeded teams first, " she said. "U the criteria malches up, we give them the si tes . "

BESIDES THE COST of lraveling, where the 12 teams are located in the counlry will affect the choosing of regional tournament siles . If Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Hampshire are in the lop four , the NCAA committee W(Juld not have a regional tournament at each school because they are localed loo close to

one another, Wall said. Iewa's chances of hosting a tourna·

ment will hinge on how many teams from the Midwest are among the top 12, Wall said.

Currently, only Iowa and No. 8 Northwestern represent the Midwest in the poll and eilher school could host a tournament, Wall said. "Both schools have tu rf and good condi lions," she said. "All things being equal , the tour· nament sile would probably go to the top seeded leam, but It's not etched in

See HI_ty ... page 28

Page 10: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

'tie .. - The Dally Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Thursday, October 27, 1113

Sports ,

Lasorda named top NL mentor NEW YORK (UPI) - Tom Lasorda,

whose patieace and restraint with a lroup of inexperienced players was a key to the success of the Los Angeles Dodlers this season, Wednesday was aamed tbe National Leallle's Manager 01 the Year by United Press Inter­national.

'nIe 56-year-old Lasorda, wIIo took a team that was thought to have no chance in August and led it to the National League West Di vision title, was a landslide winner in a balloting of 211 UPI baseball correspondents from each of the major league cities.

LalOrda received 12 votes to easily beat out Philadelphia's Paul Owens for the award. Owens received six votes

for leadlna the PbIUies to the National League East JM!IIlIIIlt after tUilll over for Pat Corrales in July. Bob LUlls 01 Houston received five votes and Cbuck Tanner of Pittsburgh lot three.

IT MARUD THE second time in his seven seasons as DodIer skipper that Lasorda has earned the National League Manager of the Year award. He previously won in 1m, his first year at the helm.

This year, however, was LalOrda'S most challenging as manager. He had to contend with the loss of sluggers Ron Cey and Steve Garvey from the lineup, the drug problems of Steve Howe, injuries to catchers Mike

Sciosia and Steve Yeager, the growing pa\DJ of youngsters Mike Marshall and Greg Brock, a shaky defense that averaged more than one error a game and a subpar year from his ace pltdler, Fernando Valenzuela .

At different times in the season he allII bad to tell shortstop Bill Russell and second baseman Steve Sax that their fathers had died.

THROUGH IT ALL, however, Lalllrda and the Dodgers endured. Lalllrda juggled the lineup and his relief pitchers and the team, which trailed Atlanta by six-and-a-half games on Aug. 13, rallied to take control of the division race and clinched the pennant

on Sept. SO. Although the team lost the National

League playoffs to the Phillies in four games, Lasorda was rewarded for his efforts with a three-year contract by club owner Peter O'Malley. That broke a club tradition awarding only one­year contracts to managers that had been in force througbout the team's history.

Owens enjoyed even more success than Lasorda. Although he had not managed for 26 years, he stepped down from his general manager's post to take over the team from Corrales on July 18. Under Owens' leadership, the Phillies won 47 of tbeir last 76 games to capture the division title by six games.

Hawkeyes-.-...::~ ___ ----,_~~ __ ---,-~~ _______ c_on_t,n_uect_lr_o_m _pa_Qe_1B

stone." FLYING TEAMS INTO

Northwestern may be more economical than bringing them to Iowa, Wan added.

If two or more teams from the West are represented in the top 12 at the end of the season, the NCAA committee would have to decide whether to send the Western teams east or the Midwest teams west. " With two or more California teams, it makes more sense to bring the Midwest teams west and have the site in California," Wall said.

So far, San Jose Stale and California are ranked among the top 12 teams.

Field Hockey Top 20

But, Stanford is currently No. 13 and couId move up when the final ranking is made.

THE TOP FOUR teams in the last

C:Ci~Etr!;, _______________ ~ __ nt_'n_uect __ lr_om_pa __ Qe_1_B

two members - Holly Andersen and Ann Klldahl - of last year's 7-20 squad.

Freshman Lisa Long will be lost for at least four more weeks while she recovers from an appendectomy, Stringer said. Long, a 5-10 center from Newark, N.J., has not practiced with the team yet this fall .

Angie Lewis, a 5-7 freshman guard, has been limited to only one practice a week because of a knee injury, ac­cording to Stringer. "She is off and on," Stringer said . " We hold our breath in hopes that they don't have to operate."

Despite the loss of two talented

Hawk notes

Football Iowa football player Mike Yacullo,

arrested Wednesday at 2:15 a.m. on three charges, including possesion of marijuana and operating while Intoxicated, is currently practicing with the.Hawkeye squad according to Coach Hayden Fry.

"Mike loves to play football - he always has," Fry said.

Fry, who has already spoken with the linebacker concerning the situation, said he will wait until he hears more specifics from botb sides before he makes any sort of decision on Yacullo's status.

"There was an outside shot

members of her first recruiting class, the Hawkeye coach said pratices have been going well as Iowa prepa res for its season opener with 17th-ranked Drake, Nov. 28, in the Carver-Hawkeye Arena.

"This is the hardest workIng group I've ever coached," she said. "They are not slacking up, and you can see the fruits of that.

"There is a goal of team unity, and everyone wants to win together. I think that is a tribute to everyone. They seem to have their heads in the right direction. If there is one word to say for it, then I'm pleased."

(Yacullo 1 would play this week, and there was a very good chance he would play in two weeks," Fry said.

Fry said he will probably discuss matters with the entire team today -if he has more Information on Yacullo's arrest.

The information on injured senior defensive end, Dave Strobel, is good, and it looks as if senior tigbt end, Mike Hufford will be back against indiana, according to Fry. But Strobel, wbo could have played this week, has decided to redshirt this season and return for a fifth year next season.

"It's about time (everyone's healthy), Fry said.

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DI ClassiflfKls bring results!

weekly poll are not necessa rily the top four seeded teams for the tournament, Wall said. The ranking at tbe end of the season Is based on the teams' overall

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Baseball , of , ()Iymplc sports

~Dleles, th e _MtraUon lhe game bas I,tCOOle an Mure. Gurtcheff, an

football and U".'''''"U !loot, N.J" now be selected as a States Olympic ~r'ssummer

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Page 11: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

I I

The Dally Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Thursday, October·21. 1983 - Page H ) I '

P~:~--r-ffi--~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~ We Now Have ,

BYlrld Zlm.net ~nWr't.r

Catcher Jeff Gu rtcherf of the Iowa ~Il team Is looking for a shot at !lie Olympics.

BlsebaU. of course. Isn't one of the I otymplc sport but In 1984 at Los

~nleles, the game will be a (Iemonstralion sport to determine If Ihe game has enough support to IJe(OfTle an Olympic team sport In the More. Gurtcheff. n aU-state high school

football and baseball player from West illlllt, N.J., now has the opportunity to

• ~ selected as a member of the United States Olympic baseball team for n xt ~r'5 summer game In Los Angele . "It 's a great honor to have thi op-

I portunity but It's as much of a surprise coosidering I was chosen as the one player to move on out of the 8S people who attended the Ma rsha lItown

. tryout," Gurtcheff said about advanc­I~through a regional qualifying round in Marshalltown, Iowa , earlll'r this rnlllth.

THIS PAST WEEKEND, Gurlcheff was in Louisville, Ky., to attend another tryout and this camp will cut

the top 75 players selected in the earlier regionals into a 3S-man unit that will advance in their attempts to qualify for the 1984 Olympic team.

Gurtcheff will have to wait until December before finding out whether or not he has made the top 35. By next June, 25 players will be selected from the 35 to form the U.S. Olympic team,

"I think baseball shouldn't be just a demonstration sport," Gurtcheff said, "but I don't know if that many coun­tries could field a quality team."

In the Louisville tryout, the 75 players who particpated worked on running and throwing drills along with arm strength workouts.

"THE WEATHER WAS pretty bad last weekend but we did manage to get all of the workouts in," Gurtcheff said. "In the Olympic baseball competition there are eight other nations.

"The Cubans should be favored since they won the Pan-America!) Games. The United States will probably field the youngest team in the &,ames while

m~t of the other teams have average ages in the upper 2Os."

Gurtcheff was recruited by Iowa af­ter playing American Legion baseball in his native state of New Jersey. The sophomore said after paying a visit to the Iowa campus he was impressed wi th the friendliness of the people.

"I do like it at Iowa and I wouldn't be bere if I didn't." he said. "It really is a lot of fun ."

GURTCHEFF WAS RECRUITED by Delaware and ~hlgh for football .

The Iowa baseball team is also look­ing toward a good season next spring as 22 players return from last year's team that finished second in the Big Ten.

.. I haven 't seen anytliing come out yet but I do think we should be favored in the Big Ten this year and we do have our top two pitchers coming back," Gurtcheff said. "I think all of Iowa's sports programs are among the very best in the nation and the way they have expanded baseball recruiting makes for a much better team."

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u.s. athletes have 'golden' dreams I (Majors Only - must be declared by Oct.· 28)

Seniors Master's Professional Development Support \.OS ~NGELES (UPl) - How well

can American athletes perform In the j984Olympics? Well, the potential Is so ~reat that they just might move ahead Ilsmog. security and traffic problems iJId become the No. 1 conversation ~ece during next summer's Games.

From the big events such as track ind field to the lesser known competi­tions such as yachting, the United .\Iates should be rep res nted by men and women with great promise. Their sbowings in the World Track Cham­-ptooships in Helsinki, Finland. in Aogust served as a nollce to the rest of the world: The U.S. may field its il'rongest Olympic team ever for the Los Angeles Game .

-TRACK AND FIELD will be the most closely watched competition of

.lfte Games, and for the American men, that's just fine . Led by the incredibly

tal nted Carl ~wis, the American squad could win as many as 15 gold medals. That estimate may prove a bit generous even for such ' a talented group of athletes, but all indications are that the U.S. will show up with a better team than even the 1968 Mexico CIty team.

Lewis recorded an incredible gold medal triple in Helsinki, winning the 100 meters and long jump and achoring the 4 X 100 relay team to victory. His specialty. however. is the long jump in which he's clOSing in on Bob Beamon's "unbreakable" world record set in the mile-high altitude of Mexico City. Lewis' major competition in any of his events should come Crom fellow Americans.

ANOTHER WHO IS labeled a "can't mis" for Olympic gold is Edwin Mose • who hasn't lost in the 400-meter

intermediate hurdles since 1976. Others who figure to battle for the gold include Calvin Smith (100 meters), Henry Marsh (steeplechase), Steve Scott (1,500), Greg Foster (110 hur­dles) Alberto Salazar (to,OOO and marathon), Billy Olson (pole vault), Dave Laut (shotput) and Tom Petranofr (javelin).

The U.S. captured six wrestling :nedals in each of the last two Olym­pics they competed in (1972 and 1976) and could do even better this time around. Lee Kemp, in the 163-pound di vision) is the strongest of a strong team. Jim Martinez also gives the U.S. its first solid shot at a Greco-Roman medal.

In basketball. the U.S. men will be severely testfld for the first since they lost to the Soviet Union in the highly controversial double-finish of the gold medal game in 1972. The U.S . women

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should advance fairly easily to the championship game and will likely face the Soviets for the gold.

In boxing. the U.S. can't hope to dominate as the 1976 team and Sugar Ray Leonard did. The U.S. boxers, do, however, have a good chance at gold medals with Mark Breland in the 147-pound class and trom Tyrell Biggs in the unlimited class if Cuba's three­time Olympic champ Teofilo Stevenson should continue to show signs of age and diminishing skills.

Communication ........ Monday, Nov.7 Juniors ................ Tuesday, Nov. 8 Sophmores ........... Wednesday, Nov. 9 Freshmen ..... Thursday Morning, Nov. 10

Minors (must see Greg Olson or ... Thursday, AFTERNOON, Nov. 10

Lisa McGlaughlin - before preregistering) U.S. swimmers may not dominate as

in the past, but in men's diving, Greg Louganis could be the star of the Games. Considered one of the world's best divers ever, Louganis is capable of winning gold in both events, the three-meter springboard and to-meter platform. Wendy Wyland is the star of the women's squad and is virtually assured of at least a silver medal.

For details, read J-NOTES (Oct. 24) or announcements on bulletin boards at

Communications Center.

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Page 12: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

,. 41 - The Dally Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Thursday, October 27, 1983

f sPorts

,I Consecutive wins amaze Virago By Mell .. a Rapoport Steff Writer

Virago, the women's soccer club has more to vouch for than the Iowa foot­ball team: Virago is undefeated.

With a 440 record, Virago traveled on to Des Moines to play the Des Moines Tail soccer club and Drake. Virago traveled back to Iowa City with one major difference. They returned with two more wins under their belt, making their record 1HHl.

In Virago's first game, the team faced the Tail, a new club in the league. Because of Tail's lack of ex­perience, Virago had the opportunity to take advantage of many loose balls on Tail's defensive end, making the final score 9-2.

LEADING THE CLUB was Laura Shawuer with four goals and Mo Riopelle with two goals, along with Wendy Coyle, Martha Mendez and Kelly O'Brien, each scoring one goal apeice.

With only IS minutes of rest, Virago took to the field once again to face in­trastate rival Drake.

Due to the fact that Virago had literally " just finished playing" an 1M).

minute game, they were surprised

Sportsclubs

they defeated Drake, 1~. "As a matter of fact, after the game we just sat around and marveled," player Jan Albrecht said. "We had just got done playing ~ minutes against Tail ... so it was surprising that we pulled it off ."

Virago coach Nester Tengue, a West African native who said he "plays soc­cer like every Ameican plays foot­ball," believes the club's win is just a beginning.

"THAT'S JUST ONE step," Tengue said. "The team needs to work harder. I think they can make it, but they also need support from the athletic depart­ment. "

Virago was wary of Drake because of the Bulldogs' credentials. "The Drake team is composed of mostly Drake students, who are very athletic people," Albrecht said.

"They have also been playing together for a very long time," Coyle said.

Even though the club was leary of Drake, they earned the right to at-

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From living room stereos to concert hans DAGLISH, LARSEN & SUTHERLAND have garnered widespread and enthusiastic praise from audiences throughout North America. Whether it is in response to a Kentucky mountain dance, a nineteenth-century riverboat song, a Scandinavian wedding waltz, an Irish jig, a ballad in three-part harmony about a heroic cowgirl, or a comedic operetta about the Lake Champlain monster, crowds everywhere applaud this trio's unique, eclectic range.

Daglllb, Larsen & Sutberland are "Coming to Town," bringing with them an evening's entertainment that is sure to please. A spirited zephyr of voices and instruments; hammer dulcimer, fiddles, flutes, concertinas, guitar, hardanger, banjo, bones, & spoons.

"A charming mix of traditional American, Irish, French, Belgian, and Greek melodies, as well as a few original

compositions." -Billboard, 7-2-83.

Saturday, Qct. 29 Macbride Hall, 8 pm

Admission

DI Classiftecls Room 111 Communications Center ·11 am deadline for new ads & cancellations

tribute their success to many different aspects of the game. "The behavior of the Drake players was a disadvantage to them," Tengue said.

"They are aggressive players and sometimes play the body instead of the hall," Coyle said. "They were constan­tly getting called for it and started getting perturbed .. , Getting mad af­fected their game play."

DRAKE'S Qveraggressiveness was not the only reason Virago was able to beat them. Drake's offense was direc­tly affected by Virago's defense, due to one on one marking.

"They had a particularly good left wing," Coyle said . "Our right halfback was put on her and Nester said, 'Be her shadow,' which was good strategy, because she didn 't have the mobility she was used to."

Excessive communication between defensive players also attributed to Virago's win. "Probably the main reason we were successful back there is because of the communication," Albrecht said.

"Communication is the key ... I'm glad we're all in such good phySical condition, because we wouldn 't have

been able to play both games. Besides, we want to finish the season undefeated. "

The overall team disposition helped clinch the game. "We had a good at­titude," Tengue said. "And we won the game because of our determination."

WITH ONLY 18 minutes left in the second half, Coyle scored the only goal.

Next weekend the club will be play­ing in Drake's tournament. There is a good chance the rivals could clash again. If they should meet again, Virago is confident of a victory, despite Drake's aggressiveness.

"Yeh, I'd like to play them again," Albrecht said. "I think they're a fun game. They are a fast paced team. They make us work, and they make us earn everything we get.

"They're a very physical team. Everyone came out with a few bruises and knocks , but sure, I want to play them again. "

" It will depend on how they start again," Tengue said. "And, also, if all my players show up for the game. I think we will beat them if we play them again, specifically if we play them in the first game.

"They a re a good team, but we can find a way to contend with them."

TV today THURSDAY 1=13

.M ~.(I) .(I) •••

~I - c-. t.,.-"-' 1--.... ="_ .... _'M

WhateYer you do, do it wi1h Style. Heileman~ Old Style.

It\ fully Kraeusened, double brewed with pu-e spring water and the best i'9 edients.

Make it worthwhile-make it Old Style.

~ I .... "..---~ (' sports

(Organ pi melodrama c lowln'. On th of the sa ga of to beCome a

But we won a while beca l

Assistant Sp Iray .

You see, Cc Batterson ar, the sports st find a way to I

All good gl and prompt i

don, in his marian, ha head

your

NHL standings

I.JIIf go",.. "'" Wal" Conl.r,nc, Patrick NY Rangers Philad elphia NY ISlanders Wasll1ngton Now JerlllY P1tIl tlUrgh

Adami QvebeC BOston Buffalo

, Hlrtford foIonlreel Clrnpbtll "orllar,ln

Norril CI>fca!Io StlouIS ToronlO OeIrot!

, ""lIting off.n .. I 0 car

• '110 1 312 7 '0' T .oe 7 311 T _

7 ,25 7 370 8 4eo r.... I 424

; Pwlftg offtn .. I atc ~ ; iYII m 208 ' 8.0- 324 205 , CaIIIomi. 210 lel

... '13 loe • Vanderbilt 327 I", , _ Col 200 11\

J fI1ono St. ~ \;18 0.... 331 1,1 "'-LY 231 134 _. 2t.5 153

Draught GUilloe Stout (pint) 11 Prj e

Page 13: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

t1:441I:..,.;; .. ..:;:;~ __ _

12.

'1:_ ' 2:41 :c:~;:.:..-;;,.;.:.,=:"""'-

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NO 2:46 . ;00 .:. t 'l &:01

The Dally Iowan - IOWI City, Iowa - Thursday, October 27, 1983 - Page 58

'1' .. --------~~~~~~-............... ~----....;".- 1 _________ _

* I'ICIAL* I j

f I

I I

, ,

I I

Sports

On the line (Organ please ) The All My Staffers

melodrama continues today among Tile o.Uy Iowan'. On the Line staff, Yesterday we heard of the saga of Mella a Rapoport and her desire to become a professional prognosticator.

But we won't have any more of that story for a while because today marks the debut of DI Assistant Sports Editor Mike Condon Into the fray.

You see, Condon and DI Sports Editor Steve Batterson are the resident grammarians of the sports staff. Condon Is currently trying to find a way to become more awake in his work.

All good grammarians are usually on time and prompt for their classes. But, alas, Con­don, In his quest to become a hlgh·class gram· marian , has been neglecting his duties to the head grammarian.

WHAT IS HE TO DO? Will he fail in his quest? Or will he overcome his difficulties and find new ways to Impress the head gram­marian, The head grammarian is a cheery fellow most of the II me. But if Condon con· Unues to try his patience, who knows what may become of his mlld·mannered ap­pearance.

Enough with Condon and his grammarian. Let's get to the important stuff - the rules. Circle the winner in all 10 games, and write in your predicted score of the tiebreaker. Circle

NHL standings

Laler go_ nol oncluded Wllel Conl.rence Pltrlck W l T Pta.

~ 2 0 18 7 2 I 15 4 8 a 8 3 7 0 8 1 8 0 2

Mlnnesoll Smythe Edmonton Vancouver W'nn'peg ~oa Angel81

Calgary

Wednelday', r .. ult,

both teams If expect a tie in any of the games. To complete the ballot, sign your name and

put your phone number on the bottOm. If you fail to do all of the above, your ballot will become a permanent fixture in the DI c1rclular file.

Return you ballot to Room 111 of the Com· munications Center by noon today. You are limited to five ballots in your quest to win this week's prize - an elght·gallon keg from Gabes, a real party bar on E. Washington St.

Tomorrow the three DI editors and this week's mystery guest picker will be on hand live to give their boid predictions for this week's games. (Oh yeh - stop the organ ).

This week's winners Florida at Auburn Indiana at Iowa North Carolina at Maryland Wisconsin at Ohio State West Virginia at Miami (Fla .) Penn State at Boston College Washington at UCLA Northwestern at Purdue Pamona·Pitzer at La Verne

Tiebreaker

3

7 4 3 2 2

Michigan __ at lIIinoi8 __ '_ Name: ___________ _ Phone : ___ .,...-,..--'-_-'--'-_--"-..,

5 1

1 1 5 1 5 2 5 2 8 1

7

15 ~ 8 6 5

Wednesday's sports transactions aa,ketball

Boston - Placed forward Winfred King on the Injured 11.1.

Golden State - Walyed lorwlrd Paler Thibeaux. 1helr fourth.round drift choice from SI. Maryl.

l os Angele, - Placed -forwards Kurt Rambl. Ind Milch KUpChok Ind gUlrd Clay JohnlOn on tho Injured 1111.

THE AIRLINE

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EVERY THURSDAY

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Today Comer 01 Iowa & Dubuqu. Str .. t.

FALL FESTIVAL

.'

October 28&29, 1983 8:00p.m.

Clapp Recital Hall

A Visual Feast -for

$2.00 a plate. NYAinge'l p""adelphla NY ltl8nd ... W.shlngton

Hew J"""y f'lnsburgh

Adlml 1 8 0 2

Quebec 7 3 1 15 Boston 5 3 I 11

Wuhlnglon 2. New .ler.y 0 W,nnlpeg 7. N. Y RIng ... 6 0I1roll 8, Buffllo 5 (OT) Edmonton at Toronto

New Yorlc - P'tced gu.rd Mark Jonel,

fourt tHound draf1 pick from 81. Bonaventure, ~=;:::::::::=:::;:::::::;~~ on waiWtfI Seeme - Waived guard Steve Burk •• center

Pete OeBluchop and forward Craig Dykema; .~nec:l guard Charle. Bradley and center Sieve Hay", and loqulrvd 'orward Aegglo King Irom Kansas City for a lecond found draft choice In 1985.

Main Course: Hitchcock

"The Lady Vanishes"

For appetizers:

Buff,lo 5 4 1 11 Hertford 4 3 1 g Monueal 4 5 0 8 Clmpb,II Conferenci Norri, W l T Pt •. C1\k:lgo 7 3 0 14 SUoul1 II 3 0 12 To/OII10 4 4 1 g Detroll 3 3 2 8

NCAA ! statistics

SI. loull I I Calglry

Today'. game. Quebec II Philadelphia, 6;35 p.m P,nlburgh .. Chlcego, 7:35 pm BoIlon .t Mln"",,ll, 7;35 p.m,

Friday" game. Hartlord II Vancou_. nlghl leo Angelt ... 8 u1falo, nlghl Toronto at N Y. Range'l, night WlnmPOQ .t Calglry, nlghl

Wnhlng10n - Waived guard Bryan Warrick.

Football Arilonl - Namad Roman Gabriel quarter~

blck coectl . Cleveland - Placed nose tackle Henry

Bradt&)' on waiver •.

I --------------------~-------------------------------------------: IIo.hl"ll _" Boolon Col e 036 , cor yd. I'V td ydq Wllhlngton7 5&5 : ~. • 4to 3m u 42 3to8 "Ir Force 7 478

I _F~~ 7 382 2.50 51 28 307 , Adz 61 8 435

"'CIt 1 40' 2127 U It 30lt Net p""ting 1idIogI. 7 401 ~I ~o 22 29' 8 Coo ... "" 1 38. ',n 6. 13 2111 puntl

, 11""""" 7 311 .030 50 17 2757 S"lIhomYoung 15 ""'- 7 425 '898 H ,. 270t Wyoming . 1

.. AloIN" 1 310 tM8 50 18 2e41 Tex .. 38 ' ,,- 8 4eo 2Oe7 H 2' 2584 A,kln" 35 lulu 8 42< 2Oe3 4' 21 2571 N .. ·luVegll 33

: Paul"ll onenM Aorldl 24 , I n cmp In' rdl ld rdq ClemlOn 32 , "-S .... 45 , 8YU 282 20e I 2111 23 4023

- IG_ :12. 20& 5 2'48 • 3084 South Car 39 • ClLlOmil 280 112 12 2148 .0 KentUCky 43 30114

' ..... " .00 5 2QOol 11 214' Scor'ng oIlen .. \ V_ 327 ... " 2001 '0 28 .. \ _1:01200 ", , ma 11 2180 _Ilkl : flll/'lOSt H4 138 17 '.38 U 27" Brognam Young , IIU 33. "7 7 "23 " 2147 No. Corotllll

.... -tV 238 '34 • .130 12 28 .. Artzona I Coodnnowm In 10 1111 ,. 2St 7 Fiofldl St

Alabama lotaJoHon .. WjlCOntln

9 ,.1,.. rd' I" Id rdq Boo.on Col , BY\) 7 IIU 4'" 71 45 "70 AnzonlSI

Il10< .... • III 4JeG 71 It 548 0 C...., .. n

110 CIt 1 555 3342 80 33 417 , Au.h'no delen .. FiLIt 1 M< 330e II 34 4723 IIIbOm. , 487 2716 U 23 48U VL Toch .... • 7 4'5 321' IS 27 .,,, T_.

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I vg 50.8 472 452 483 482 45.0 435 44 0 44.1 43. '

ydl 451 504

&. 25 «4.0 San JOH Sl 1 258 512 20 & 5.5 22 4409 Arizona 8 28' 857 23 8 84 27 435,0 SMU & 247 536 22 0 51 18 423.8 Michigan 7 215 627 2.9 3

O«lahOma 7 29. 834 2.2 7 yd • .. I w.,tv. 1 241 842 28 5

.. I .. t •• g Amon. St. 6 238 567 24 5 , 17 448 Tlnl 6 238 571 2' 3

2e .56 434

• 73 43.3 PU'l ng delen .. 12 12' 42.7 .tt cmp 'nl ydl Id .3 11' 42.1 Texas 130 50 7 617 3 '2 78 41.8 SWla 107 4:; 8 663 8 13 56 ' 1.8 re ... A&M .38 61 ' 4 •• 5 3 18 .21 41.3 .OhloU 142 77 3 to7 4 17 129 408 Army 165 18 4 932 5 11 102 40.7 East Mtc:tI '.9 90 5 945 5

KenlucI<y 178 78 7 978 4 g pll IYg Con. Mich . '65 94 II 993 8 I 408 110.1 Tennell" 188 98 5 996 3 7 338 480 Wllton.!n 199 87 16 1000 8 7 257 387 Totat delen .. I 2'1 35' II plays yds .vg Id 7 2411 356 • T,x" 6 368 1188 32 a a 2'0 35,0 Michigan 7 408 1685 4.1 10 1 2« 3H Miami FII e 556 1963 3.5 9 8 1115 325 VI. Toch 7 483 1726 36 5 5 183 322 ~r.Dlme7 451 1796 • . 0 , 7 224 320 SMU 8 410 .578 38 7

No. Cor 7 441 .8oIa .. '2 I VV Id ydq Old.homa 7 <85 18018 3.8 15 18 2 85.' Toledo 7 .18 .860 38 7 20 3 72.0 Tenneasee 7 48' .883 3.9 9

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Thurs. & Fri. - Oct. 27th & 28th SHAMBAUGH AUDITORIUM

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30~FF~~

Iowa City. 118 E. Washington

Take Pregame magazine 'with you

as the Hawkeyes battle Indiana

Page 14: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

Page 6B - The Dally Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Thursday, OctOber 27, 1983

Sports

CHAMPAIGN, III. (UPI) - Forgive Theresa and Tony Scarcelli of subur­ban Detroit if they cheer for both Michigan and Illinois Saturday in Champaign's Memorial Stadium.

The Scarcellis' sons - Tony, an 11-lini, and Jim, a Wolverine - play op­posite one another on the punting special teams or the equivalent of right guard on offense and left tackle on defense.

It will be a new experience. The two played together on the Warren Woods High School team when Tony was a senior and Jim a sophomore. But this is the first lime they will play against each other except for friendly neighborhood games.

"I guess we' ll finally decide who'll get the best of the other," said Tony

·Scarcelli, who also has replaced the in­jured Terry Cole as the No. 2 left end for Tllinois.

TONY SAID HE and his brother talk after every game and the rivalry bet­ween them is friendly.

" 1 wish the best for him and he wishes the best for me," Tony said. "If I don't get to go to the Rose Bowl, I hope he does."

Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler, who brings his team to Champaign this weekend for a game that will give the winner a clear -edge for the Rose Bowl berth, had some light-hearted advice for Tony: "Tell him not to talk to his brother this week ."

Both teams carry a fH) Big Ten record into the game, which begins at 11 :35 a.m., Iowa time, to accomodat~ plans to televise it nationally.

Tony said his biggest worry is finding enough tickets for family and friends . He said he thinks his parents will probably cheer a little harder for the lIIini since Jim went to the Rose Bowl last year.

"THE GAME WILL be a toss-up, " he aid and then gave the question some

more thought. " I'm pretty sure they'll root for Illinois since he's been to the Rose BowL"

His mother, in an interview with a Michigan reporter, offered a similar sentiment.

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Jaymes Benson came to the University of California from Mesa Junior College with high hopes of becoming a starting inside linebacker for the Golden Bea rs.

He had the size, speed and desire to make a strong impression upon the coaching stafr.

But things just didn't work out. During spring practice in 1981, Ben­

SOIl injured his knee and underwent reconstructive surgery. He battled his way back into shape and was able to play at the end of the season.

He was looking forward to playing for California this year but was then notified by the university that he had used up his eligibility. Benson had been redshirted one season at Mesa Junior College but California refused to recognize that redshirting.

BENSON THEN DID what a grow­ing number of young college athletes are doing nationwide. He hired an at­torney and filed suit for the right to play.

"There certainly has been an in­crease (in the number of suits) this last year," said George Gangwere, the attorney for the NCAA from his Kansas City office. "We had a lot of suits in the 1970s but things seemed to

• calm down for a while. Now we have a .rash of them again."

Benson 's suit has yet to be ruled on by the U.S. District Court in San Fran­cisco but if it follows the national trend, he'll likely lose.

"We don't lose many," Gangwere said. "Our (NCAA) rules are based on reason and the desire for the member universities to accomplish their pur­poses."

Ben on is not the only player in the country who has sought out a lawyer to fight for his right to play.

IN NEW ORLEANS, Tulane quarter­back Jon English is still fighting for his eligibility to play and he did have a

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Bo Schembechler

"I don't know what my reaction will be, I'll probably be bawling," sh&said. "I'd love 'em both to win. But to be honest, if you're a parent, and if one son has been to the Rose Bowl, I sup­pose, I guess you'd hope, that maybe the other might get to go this time. It's just a natural, natural feeling.

"They've both been such wonderful sons, we just want 'em both to be happy. I'll be cheering, but to have them both on opposite ends, it's just go­ing to be difficult for me. I guess you have to rationalize that it's No. 85 versus No. 95 and they've got to do thei r jobs."

JIM SCARCELLI SAID he hopes he can outrun his brother in Saturday's game.

"I'll see. He's tough . He's no pushover," Jim said.

Tony, who played outside linebacker and offen ive tackle in high school, said he was on Michigan's waiting list during recruiting season his senior year. But then he was taken orr and he started looking for somewhere else to play.

Tony said he wanted to play in the BIg Ten and was recruited by then Il­linois coach Gary Moeller, who has since returned to Schembechler's staff as defensive coordinator.

QUARTER DRAWS NIGHT

WEEKVIII Isn't this getting just a little ridiculous? In the past eight weeks our employees on Thursday have tripled, our beer has more than quadrupled, and we start preparing things two days early like we're going Into battle. As an added bonus tonight we've got cream pies so if you plan to sit at the bar wear old clothes. Come by tonight and watch combat bartend ing in action.

DOOLEY'S 18-20S,Clinton

GABI'S 330 E, Washington

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2 BANDS & DOUBLE BUBBLE All Night Featuring

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THURSDAY 8 pm to 2 am

2 forI Bar & Call Liquor & Pitchers

DAIl Y HAPPY HOUR 4 - 7 • FREE tortilla chips & hot sapce

• 50( Draws ,$2 Pitcher • Mixed Drinks 2 for 1 (bar liquor only)

, House Wine: ~ carafe $2; carafe $4 • Free Popcorn

Corner of Dubuque & Iowa (below Bes Steak)

Isabel, Scooter, Mike, & Randy Say Goodbye to Scooter with MILLER

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Great 'Jazz Piano Celebration George Shearing - Lullaby of Birdland Marian McPartland - "playful, probing, and provocative," Adam Makowicz - Europe's #1 Jazz pianist since 1971.

Friday, November 4, 8:00 pm

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temporary court order allowing him to play but that has since been overtur­ned.

English had been declared ineligible for this season by the NCAA because he is required by association rules to sit out a year after transferring (rom one member university to another.

The Green Wave quarterback star­ted his career at Michigan State then transferred to Iowa State and sat out the required .year. This year, he transferred to Tulane.

English's suit contends that he does not have to sit out another season because he sat out one year at Iowa State,

ULTIMATELY, THE LOUISIANA Supreme'Court may be called in to rule on the case and the big loser is likely to become Tulane because the university could be forced to forfeit the contests English has played in and give up the money it has received in television rights for any of those games.

"I think a lot of these players find a court that is lenient about issuing restraining orders," Gangwere said. "They are ruled ineligible and go out and get a lawyer. Suddenly, they have a court order which says they can play."

In the past, Gangwere said, most of those orders have been later overruled.

Broasted Chicken

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RDAY, OCTOBER 29, 8:00 P.M.

CARVER-HAWKEYE ARENAI RESERVED SEATS

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Page 15: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

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rOBER 29, 1M.

rE ARENAI :ATS 0.50

Coach Johnny Orr will be counting on two of his big men, Brad Dudek, left , and Sam Hill- a pair of redshirt freshmen - as the

Iowa State basketball team prepares for its upcom ing season, The Cyclones showed their skills at ISU's annual press day.

Orr's Cyclones ready to challenge for elusive Big Eight cage crown

AMES (UPI) - Iowa State basketball Cooch Johnny Orr aid Monday the com­bination of four returning starters and three towering freshmen will make the Cyclones "challenger" for the Big Eight tille. "1 don't know how we'll fimsh, but \Ii '11 m with anybody," rr ~aid at th art­

nual media day, "['II be very disappointed If this team

does not win more gam!'. than any team I since ['ve been here," he saId The

Cylcones have improved in each of th Ir three years under Orr, going 9-18 and IG-17 before last year's 13-15 mark

The (ormer MIchigan Wolvenne coach said it "doe n't mailer to me at all" that Ihe conferen e coaches have tabbed Iowa . Slate for fifth plarE'

"THE TWO TrME I won the BIg Ten they picked m eighth and lOth," he saId. "The year they pIcked me first [ lost and they said 1 wa a bad coach."

• I Junior Barry Stevens lead the group of four returning starters that has Orr op­timistic , Th 6-foot-5 guard-forward, the tallest of the four. ay raged IS.S points per

I I game and wa named econd team all· Big Eight last yea r

Senior Ron Hams. who averaged 14 3 points a year ago at guard and forward,

'" wJII complement teven and guards Terrance Allen and Jeff Homllce are bark for their cOlor and .ophomor years, respectively.

Orr is e pC<'lally excIted about Hornacek, I, whom he calls "the mol und rrated player

In the Big EIght. I'm amazed by the L1ungs he does ev ry d y"

I

I I "WE DIDN'T TART him in th early

1983-84 Iowa State basketball schedule

NOll' 16 - $1 ClOUd Statl No ... )() _ V'l\derblit

~ 3 - l.x.~ Dec 5 ,. OK 10 on Doc 11 - So.Jfh OOkotl ~·~--....1oi4 Dec 1 - iiI O,ah [)Ie. 19 _ MankaID SUI18

Doc 2, - ., ColOrado S .... Oec 29-30 .. Itt Mario..1 SQ"ar. TO'-Irnlmenl With Indian'

S4lI Slltl Ino eo,'oo College Jan 2 II Mlnll8lOtB JaIl. 9 - Northern IoWI

Jau. It -- OklltlQftlA Jan 14 k>wI Jan 18 - Neb,a~a

J.n 21 KanMS Jan. 2. - It MI51Ol1fl Feb 1 at Kansas SI811 F.b. Oklaf'lOm' Stete Feb 8 - II CoIo,ado Feb 11 . 8\ Kansas Feb 15 - MISSOUri Fob 18 - II Nebra kl Feb 22 - Kan I Stat. Feb 25 - al Okl8nom. Fob 29 - al Okllhom. 51110 Mal 3 - Colorado IAI, ,. 10 - Bog Eoghl Tournamenl

going last year," Orr said. "I tell everybody it's because we wanted to bring hIm along slowly, but really we didn't know how good he was."

The l'omblOalion of the two ball-handling guards and two quick-shooting swingmen mak s the Cyclones' perimeter people "about as good as anybody in the league," Orr id

He said all three of his big freshmen -Brad Dudek, 71, Sam Hill, 6-8, and John

ulbertson, 6-9 - have the potential to be great players, but may be a weakness until they adapt to Big Eight play.

"Our big people are inexperienced. Of­It'nslwly, I'm not worried about them,

Defensively, I'm worried about them," he said. "Right now, they figure if they know your name and number they are covering you. "

ORR SAID ON the basis of fall practicE' sophomore David Moss. 6-8, would open at center WIth the four returning ~tarters.

He said he also e peets to use two big men at the same time. explaining that Hill and Dudek will see action only at center, but Moss and Culbertson mIght playas big forwards .

Stevens, who scored 40 pomts when Iowa State upset Missouri last year, said the ad­ded height in the Cyclone lineup is the ma­jor difference between this year's team and the 1982-83 squad that finished fifth in the Big Eight at 5-9.

"Everybody is more excited. more enthusiastic, because we've got these big guys and expect a lot from them," Stevens said.

HE SAID, HOWEVER, he understands the danger of putting too much pressure on the freshmen .

"That's wha t we're trying to prevent. That's why we keep telling them, 'AII you have to do is rebound.' We're not asking them to score 20 points a game or anything like that," he said.

Stevens said he wouldn't count anyone out in the race for the Big Eight cham­pionship.

"No one is gomg to dominate the con­ference like Missouri has done in the past. The talent is pretty equal m the league," he said.

"1£ we ran get our bIg mCJI to rebound and play some good defense, I think we can win the Big Eight."

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Page 16: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

Page 88 - The Dally Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Thursday, October 2'1, 1983

Arts and entertainment

Busch explores feelings, passions By David Reilly Special to The Dally Iowan

F REDERICK BUSCH, who will read from his new novel, Invisible Mending, tonight at 8 in Lecture Room II of Van Allen Hall, writes

unsentimentally about subjects many Americans are used to passing off as minor concerns, pretending too tough to be affec­ted by them : love, family and work.

We are used to television and movies that ; use the things in life that most concern our • feelings for cheap effects. or we have • allowed "family," "home" and "work" to · become flags for the reflexively conser­

vative to wave at us. U's grown to the point · where the family has become a political

issue - and political issues eventually drain us of feeling .

We might have grown caUous to what Bu ch writes about best, which makes Busch's chosen job - el(plorer of adult feeling, compassion, passions and griefs -difficult and ri ky . Critics and a growing

:. readership think Busch does that job ex· . tremely well - and Busch likes the

riskiness. "RICHARD HUGO said that really good

writers work in that no-man's land between sentiment and sentimentality," Busch says. "That is, they work the ground bet-

: ween real feeling and cheap effect. I like to push it as fa r as I can. Sometimes I go too far ." He likens what he does to the im­provisallons of great jazz sal(ophonists like Ben Webster , who lakes uncaJculaled risks with his work; though they'll eventually hit a sour !)Ote, they would never have made the beauty before it without reaching beyond their talents and trying· for

something new. Busch cia irns to h it bad notes more often

than he should, but he hit~ a lot of beautiful notes, too, partly because he writes about the pain and work involved in love and in families - in anything that involves our hearts. He doesn '( write simply' in support of traditional values, either: His writing tries to find out what has made certain things valuable to us. Many writers find it so hard to write about love that they don't even try.

"LOVE IS OUR other job," Busch says. "Also, people shy away from it because it's hard to write about love without writing about sex. And not only is that extremely difficult to do, but many people don't ap­preciate reading about sel(. Either it makes them uncomfortable, or it outrages them, or it makes them excited. They dOll't think they should know what Madame Bovary was Ii ke Jn bed."

Busch's most recent novels, Take This Mao and Rounds , are about the putting together of families, but families made not exactly in the ways most people are used to. In Take Thi Man, a man and a woman have a brief, passionate affair but the woman goes off to marry another man. The affair produces a child, a boy, who, 12 years later, sets out across country to reunite his mother with his real father, her true love.

Rounds concerns the adoption of a child whose birth, for most of the novel, is expec-

Entertainment today

Films Franz. after promising himself he'd ke.ep his

hand, clean. gets mixed-up In crime, black marketing to be exact, in the sixth episode of Bertin Alexanderplatz. Bljou at 5:55 p.m.

HItchcock moves to America, and starts his most productive years off with a Best Picture Oscar for his first film, Rebecca (1940). Sir Laurence OliVIer Is the bridegroom who can't forget his recently deceased wife. a victim 01 a mysterious death. and Joan Fontaine Is his new Wife, who has to ask herself if she might not be the next victim at Manderley. Bljou at 6:55 p.m.

Sense Is unavailable, so pinch-hitting is a more recent Luchino Visconti film, The Conversation Piece (1975). Visconti favorites Burt Lancaster and Helmut Berger star In one

of Visconti's most Interesting films. Lancaster. a retired professor, encounters a hedonistic family that brings his ~nowledge Into question. Bljou at 8:55 p.m.

Television On the networks "Sneak Previews" (IPTV-\2

at 7 p.m.) reatures a discussion 01 the recently release(l Hitchcock films, and Includes rarely seen clips from Rear Window, Vertigo and Rope . "Cheers" (NBC at 8:30 p.m.) and "Hili Street Blues" (NBC at 9 p.m.), two of the best offerings of network teleVIsion, dig Into the season with ex-cons. alcoholics and comedy.

• On cable: Fred and Ginger dance the morning away with the 1949 film Barkley, of Broadway (WGN-\O at 9 a.m.). Blue Cotlar

ted. The love and hope that all the charac­ters feel for the baby is so great, it is almost as though the child has several mothers and fathers . The biological father so loves the unborn child that he goes crazy when he learns the baby will never know who he is.

BUSCH UKES TO write about families because, he says: "That's me. My family is what I love the most. I Jive in my family. I'm a nice middle-class writer."

Busch's characters work as well as love. Most writers give their characters jobs, but rarely are those jobs really eloquent of who those characters are or what happens to them in the novel. Often a book will start with a character losing or giving up his/her job, but Busch's characters actually work. "That 's because I try not to work," he says with a smile. "No. I think what you do helps define you - to other people. It's important to show a character's passions. Where you give your love is who you are. "

Busch lives with his wife and two children in upstate New York - an area he loves and which figures importantly in his stories - where he teaches at Colgate Un­iversity. Besides Take Tbis Man and Rounds, he has published two other novels, I Wanted a Year Without Fall and The Mutual Friend (about Charles Dickens, one of BUsch's favorite Writers). Invisible Mending, his sixth novel, is due out in February, and he has just completed a new novel, Sometimes I Live in the CoUDtry, about a suicidal 13-year-old boy. Busch was a visiting lecturer here at the UI Writers' Workshop in 1976 and three years later was a visiting professor and acting director of the organization.

(Clnemax-13 at 7 p.m.) gives a new meaning to the word paranoia. The bloated $40 million (conservative figures) Cleopatra (WGN-10: First half tonight at 7 p.m., second half Friday at 7 p.m.) signaled the Initial (lownrall of both MGM and liz Taylor. Eddie Murphy's comedy special DeliriOUS (HBO-4 at 10 p.m.) has been reported to be the funniest, and dirtiest, stand­up routine in since Richard Pryor's first stand­up film . And who's gonna miss Ronald Reagan with his sterling performance In Knute Rockne - All American (WTBS-15 at 11 :10 p.m.) as the Glpper. "Go In there and win It (Grenada, that Is) for the Glpperl" Late-night bad-movie watchers will get a kick out 01 Halloween III: Season of the Witch (HBO-4 at 12:45 a.m.), surely the funniest big budget horror film of recent years.

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Page 17: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

thers

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The Dally Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Thursday, October 27, 1983 - Page IB , ,

: Arts and entertainment • , I~----------~----------------------~--------------~------~~~--------~--=-~-

UNION BOARD

IMU 'Film shows Fassbinder's genius Films the epic Berlin Alelanderplatl. Anyone who plans to spend 151,1 hours with a Fassbinder film should certainly try to understand the man behind the images.

repulsiveness, is wonderful," he said. a new vision of reality. Fassbinder himself says in his last Interview that he wanted to make movies like fioUywood does, but more truthfully. F.aturing Prof.llional and Local Acts Thursday's

from 8:30-11:00 p.m. in th.IMU Wheel room,

TONIGHT

R· AINER WERNER FASSBINDER. By the time he died at the age of SII, 41 films were lefl behind in his

name. Some were good, some were bid, some were great, but all of them ,ere labors oC a man who wouldn't, or

~ eouIdn't, stop his road to destruction. 'WIzard of Babylon, a documentary

by Dieter Schldor, contains Fasabin· der's last interview, given the evening he died oC a drug overdose, His gruff voice reverberates against the white

Since Fassbinder was working on the screen version of Jean Genet's novel Querelle, the logistics and substance behind the film constitute most of the Interview. To Fassbinder, QuerelJe is his idea of a utopia. To anyone who's read and been shocked by Genet's novel, this comes as a startling state· ment. Genet himself was a child of the existential movement, canonized by Jean·Paul Sartre and admired by most existentialists for his anti·social behavior which put him in jail more than once.

SHOT ENTIRELY ON an elaborately constructed sound stage, something usually reserved for big Hollywood films (that gives you an idea of how important Fassblnder was considered in Germany before his death), Fassbinder creates another world, the utopian world, with the yellow-orange and blue colors of the film and the falseness of the sets. Utopia, according to Fassbinder, is not faSCism, but it's dangerously close.

FAME IN AMERICA, something Fassbinder always strove for, alluded him during his lifetime, and it's doubtful his face will ever grace the cover of Time magazine as he wished. He considered the TV airing of Berlin Alexanderplatz to be his greatest achievement, simply because it reached the most people of any of his films . Pos th umously, Berlin Alexanderplatz and scores of other Fassbinder films are finally receiving the attention they deserve in the Un· ited States.

*7:30 Small Jazz Ensembles (25:224) (Small Rock EnMmble·Jack Klaper, Andy P.rrott, Ad.m Ach.pohl)

I •

1

' walls as he leans his chubby body against the couch, chain·smoklng, answering question {rom his friend and colleague Schldor.

The film's most revealing sequences is the interview with Fassbinder, which Schldor rarely edits, so that ""at we have Is an uncompromising look at the director under the glaring lights of unmanipulated Cilm .

FASSBINDER'S last interview gives !be viewer a better idea of the genius (perhaps prodigy or prima donna would be better descrl plions) behind

The world Genet (and Fassbinder) creates in Querelle is a world of bizarre sexuality and murder. This is a world, according to Fassbinder, where the individual can discover himself. "Querelle is the draft of a possible society ... which. in all its

Brad Davis, Franco Nero and Jeanne Moreau, the three international stars of Querelle, have nothing but praise for their director, and vise versa. Querelle, with its brutal homosexuality and decadent emotions, is a hard film to confront, even looking at it through a documentary ; I hope it will make it to the Bij ou soon.

Berlin Alexanderplau, originally aired on German television. is much easier to confront, but still not easy to swallow. Fassbinder's strength of vi­sion is so perSistently pessimistic that one cannot leave a FaSBbinder film without feeling a little drained, and yet a litlle enriched for having confronted

There's no need to go overboard in praising him; any man who makes 41 films in 17 years will not always be suc· cessful, and some of his failures have painfully failed. But when Fassbinder succeeded, he could put us In awe.

Pier Paolo Pasolini, another highly controversial director, once said that death gives a person's life definition and meaning. Now we can try to un· derstand the meaning of that name -Rainer Werner Fassbinder.

8:30 Live From Minneapolis Sid Youngers, Karen Soliday and Tom Arnold

and his Fabulous Goldfish Review

THE MIDWEST MUSIC SHOWCASE ]13 S Dubuque (Jusl off .Buriinglon)

CBS and ABC battle for top spot in ratings Spooner Is a classic American Pop band. A heady vibrant hybridization of Surf music & pulsating dance-oriented rock ". NEW YORK (UPI) - CBS was the

No. 1 prime time network last week but ABC Sports won the highest rating ever for a Sunday evening football game and the highest of this football season for a Monday game.

The A.C. Nielsen prime time scoreboard for the week ending Oct. 23 gave CBS an 18 rating with a 28 percent share of the viewing audience, ABC a 16.8 with a 27 share and NBC a 15.8 with a 25 share.

The new fall season's averages to date have locked CBS and ABC in a tight race for No. 1. In the fourth week of the 1983-34 television season, CBS has an average 18 rating with a 28 share; ABC a 17.9 rating with a 29 share; and NBC a 15 .4 rating with a 25 share.

ABC's NFL football special, in which the Los Angeles Raiders beat the Dallas Cowboys 40-38 Sunday night, was the No.1 show in its time slot with

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The top 10' programs for the week ending Oct. 23, according to the A.C.

Nielsen Co. : 1. "Simon and Simon" (CBS) 2-3 (tie). "Dallas" (CBS) Z-3 (tie). "Magnum, P.I. " (CBS) 4. "Dynasty" (ABC) 5. "A Team" (NBC) 6. "50 Minutes" (CBS) 7. "NBC Monday Night Movie"

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BIJOU FILMS. Tickets available the day of each film's screening. Berlin AI.xanderplatz. Fassblnder's maslerplece in 14 parts runs through Nov. 7. Check your BIJoU calendar for dates & limes. Series passes $10, individual films: Part 1 $1.50; Parts 11-XIII $1.00; Parts XIV $2.00

DEARLY BELOVED. Old Armory Theatre. Tickets still available for Nov. 2. Students $3.00, non:students $5,00.

I JACKSON BROWNE. October 29. Tickets stili available at the Box Office, and at NOON on the day of performance at Hawkeye-Carver Arena. Also pick up reserved tickets. Tickets $12.50.

STEVIE NICKS/JOE WALSH. November 19 at Hawkeye-Carver Arena. $13.50. Tlck.t Sal. Hours. 11 am to 8 pm Mon. - Sat.; Noon to 5 pm Sunday Check Clthlng Houri, 9 am to 9 pm Mon. - Sat.; Noon to 9 pm Sunday.

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Page 18: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

Page 10B - The Dally Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Thursday, October 27, 1983

wxld news

Bush helps lift Marines' morale with Beirut visit

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - Vice President

George Bush, in flak jacket and helmet, pinned Pur­

ple Hearts on Marines at Iheir bombe<k>ut base

Wednesday and vowed the "cowards" who killed at

least 219 Americans never will alter U.S. policy.

"I had not expected this much d~struction," said Bush while watching soldiers remove debris from

the Sunday suicide bombing Ihat devastated the four­

story nerve center of the U .S. peacekeeping force at

Beirut airport.

" We've given up hope anybody is alive," said Cpl.

Randy Barefoot, 21, of Kenly, N .C . "All the Ooors

are pressed down, and every1hing was squished.

There is no hope."

The Marines remained on maximum alert before,

during and after Bush' s three-bour trip for fear or a

new attack.

About two hours before he arrived, Marines fired

Slmm mortars to suppress gun and rocket-propeIled

genade fire from slums to the east of the base.

THERE WAS NO firing during Bush's stay, but af­

ter he left, Moslem gunmen were spotted selting up

gun posts in an abandoned house on Ihe northeast

perimeter of the airport.

Ma rines wi th M · 16 automatic rifles stood guard

every two yards from the airport runway to the

amphibious unit headquarters as Bush arrived on a

helicopter from the USS Iwo Jima.

Some Marines said their morale was raised by the

visits of Bush and Marine commandant Paul X. Kelley on Tuesday, although Bush spent less than an

hour on the ground.

" Just seeing the commandant, he came up and

said, 'Good going, guys,' and saluted. Yeah, that's

motivating," said Lance Cpl. JamesStepbens, 21, or Cincinnati .

Bush met with commanders of the four-nation

peace-keeping force aboard the Iwo Jima and talked

later with President Amin Gemayel at the presiden·

tial palace. before flying back to Washington.

The Pentagon raised the death toll to 219 in the at·

tack. At least 54 French soldiers were killed in a

separate suicide bombing of their base three miles

away.

" WE ARE NOT going to let down friends because

of terror," said Bush. " We are not going to let a

bunch of insidious terrorists and cowards shape the

policy of the United States.

" It damned sure has not shaken the resolve of

lhese men," he said, gesturing toward Marines. " I have just pinned the Purple Heart on a couple of

kids ... a lot of guts.

"J cannot speak for all America ... but I can speak

for one American , that's me. And I can speak for

another, that 's the president of the United States.

There is no slackeni ng of the resolve to do what we

intended to do, and what these fine fellows are help­

ing us to do," Bush said.

A special hot line was being installed to allow

Marines to call home. They also were ordered to

wMte a letter to let relatives know they are safe. A special plane was to speed the letters home.

Marine spokesman Maj . Robert Jordan said

rescuers had gone through the third and fourth

levels of the. base, and were now digging through the

second floor, a process expected to last 48 hours.

H e said identification of many of Ihe dead was dif­

ficu l t because Marines took off their dog tags before

going to s l eep.

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Ad.

FEMALE d.ncer.: For bochelor. birthday parllo. or other occoolon •. 35"0372. 11·1

WORKING FOR PEANUTS? ProJe<:! Hlrd Times unite. un­deremployed end unemployed pro'Hlional., labor.r. tnd .tu­dentl fOr mut .... al .upport. ,u,...,.val .nd IC'ion. Mond.y. Oc.o,,", 31. 7 p.m., HI'''' ttoul'. corner of M,rklt 'Dubuqu. DetJllt: 33&-6ee2. '().31

"PEDDLE" your bicycle

in the Daily Iowan Classifieds

HERKY TRIPPED .... kIOil h .... , •• 1 night-did you IOO? 11 yOU Ihlnk .... need better Itghtlng on eernpul call and tell us WHERE. W. need every "ud.nl·. Input. C LA.S.S. (CIII .. na lor Llghllng .nd S.fe SIr_-e.mpu. DlvloIon~. M·F. 10 • m. to 8 p.m. 353-5187. 1().31

DANCERS IViliablelor .tJgI. birth· d.y. and con_Uon •• 33&-0531 or 338-'3'7 bl_n 2· 10 p.m. 11·7

PIRIONAL IItiLOOGl IN COLOIIADO

See 111m and "'"'1M"." 01 • fOmIIy.1IYIt 11<1 ~ In SMlmboll Sprina •• CoIor_. _ ..... fIo""n II In .Itemltlve to fU1.ptCed con.­dominium living. Alto IN'" abOut the6r co-ed aummer camp program. 'ar Igu 8-11. Chltllng lrt D, wlldern.1I .mph.,II, hlg~ Ita1t/CJImpI( rlll0 . In lowl City Mond.y. October 31.,. 7.30 p.m. 1047WoodI.wn.337·301.. 1().3.

DOOHUIUIIYI Spectol him ()o. lober 27.28, 7 and ' :30 p.m. Shomb.~h. 1()'28

HITCHCOCk. HoIIowoon Horror. October 27. 2 • • 7 .nd 9:30 p.m. SIIombough 1().28

SAVE 500/0 Subscribe now to Iowa Sports Desk for only $12.50 (reg. $25). Get In-depth coverage· of the Hawks at half price. Send check or money order to:

ISO Subscriptions Box 1303

Iowa City, IA 52244

HAIA cdor prOblem? COIl lhe Hair Color Ho1tlnl. VEOEPO HAIR8TYLING. 338- tee4. 11·1

HICKORY HIU PARK I. loca'ed " !he and 01 BIoomIr'ilton Stroot In _ IOWI Clly. h hu many Irollo wNcI1 are g_1 for hiking or a .... OOIIntry " Ung.

HALLOWEEN HOURS

9-9 Mon.-Sat.

Sunday 12-5

SPECIAlS ALL WEEK

NEXT TO NEW

213 N. Gilbert

PERSONAtlZED Au.o Tag. modi while you wall. Oct. 24th.301h. Sycamore Min. 11).28

GO bana ... ' Lol our oInglng garUla deI""'r a balloon bouquet to .. moone .pect., TODAY. BALLOONS. BALtOONS. BAtLOONS.354-3471. 12-7

FRATERNITIES. dorm •• grouPI. Ielm •• Indlvl(f!.JII. In tlM' .. tecl In compttlUon play of the survlvl' ilama. Coli 35'·3801. .2·7

ON HoIlow"n h.ng yourlllt ... .. lIh clolhfl'rom Aardv .. k· .. HoIl Mall. 11.1i foil Collagl. Suit. 20. 11·1

HAWKEYE LIBERTARIANS ORGANIZATIONAL

MEETING What vibrant polttlcal

philosophy can neither

be characterized as right

nor left, advocates aboli­

tion 01 draft registration

and conscription. 'aboll­

tlon of law governing vic­

timless crimes, and the

reduction 01 governmen·

tal regulation In all seg·

ments of the economy?

Find out by coming 10:

OSU Room, IMU Thurs., Oct. 27

7:00 p.m.

t ........ " .... ,', .... , ............ , ............................................ , .... , .... " ........ , .... , .... ,

I CROSSWORD PUZZLE i ! ACROSS ~~::~GENE:. :~,~::ew 30 Hassles .1 ~ 51 Bright lJght In a Sterne 32 Quotidian ~ ~ 1 SIllier Lane 57 Time _ half book S3 Oversights ~ ~ 5 Make out 58 Shlepped 10 Impatient cry IS Abuse III!: ill 10 RIDIIleader's 51 Emulates 11 Disclose SI Actress De jtIII

~ torte Dorcas 12 Kind of arch Carlo III!: II'! 14 In a bit 13 Blabbed 41 Llst-ender : ~ '- 15 Walklng- DOWN 18 Spacecraft Abbr. ~ ill (elated) 1 Wimbledon problem 42 Tuckered out jtIII ~ 1. Utah'utate great 1. Thrombus a Confused ~ ~ flower 2 Good thin.. 23 Cheerful 44 Fashion III!: ill 17 "SWDust" ....~ Pay ~ .. "_Long jtIII II'! 3 Wherry, e.g. w..... III!: '- composer 4 Mint 21 Buckle down Way • •• " jtIII ill 2t Takes Amtrak employees 21 University In 41 Cob or pen ~ ~ ~! OAPpeaaed 5 Gregarious Atlanta 47 Retain III!: ! Uo f( .-event 27 AIr-conditions 48 Rotisserie ~ IJII 23 Cache (reprdless) 28 Underhanded, feature jtIII ill 24 Cotton pest 7 Elongated fish in a wsy 4. FenCing blade ~ ~ 21 Abruptly to the 8 Play by 21 KInd of ear or 51 Brake III!: ~ 28 point. e.e. cummlnp man 51 Sawbucks ~ ,IJII Pole .or 53 I, to ClaUdlus~ .. 31 Hewers III!:

32 LadyotSpaJn ! S3 - account jtIII IJII (never) ~ ill M 1930scnahlt ~ IJII composed by III!: ! 17Acrou .. ~ f1 Miadoes ~ ill 38 Actress- III!: ~ comedienne ~ I 31 ivomlin ~ ill ~~~ ~ ~ ~P;~~ ~ ! ,42T nutlto .. ~ crac ~ ill 43 A .B.A. ~ IJII member III!: ! 44 OtfsPrtlll ~ 1! 45 Assyrian love .. ill goddess III!: II'! 48 Most unteeUIII ~ ! 521938l0III hit ~ IJII composed by .. ill 17 Acl'OII III!: II'! 54 MaU tom641 ~ I ~ , I I I I I I .... " ... PIm£ I I Sponsored by: I I t" I ....... 6 """1 I lr Iowa', most complete book selection I I featuring 40,000 tilies. I I Downtown aero •• from I I, the Old Capitol.

,. ........................................ """"" ........ , .. , .. "' .. "~, .... .lI

CANDL£S- LArga.' oeIocIIon In Iowa. CATHY'S CANDLES. Hlghl.nd A,onuo.' M.,don Lano. 'Oo21

WI moke!he Fl~ST WORD In everY DI CI.Alfied bold Ind In up"" cue. You can add emphUrl lO your od by m.klng that word unlqUl. In • ddltJon. lor • ..,,011 I .. you con htYe other tto'd or upper cue words In tIM ttllCt of your ad.

WEDDING MUSIC For ceremony. recepuons. Siting • and chamber music combinations. ripe and references 331--0005 t ,~ 17

CATERING Irom CHICAGO MICKEY·S. Partl ••. keggar •• bullOHl meetings. specl.1 events For the most unique catering lPICtaU1ies in town, Call UI 81 331-2m. 7125thSLeo..Mlle. 11).13

THE NAKED EYE "A Video ViewpOint"

Featuring Interviews with:

Jeff Renander (Editor of

Hawkeye Review) on the

New Righi ; Concerned

Campus on por-

nography; Democratic

SOCialists of America.

Tuesday, Oct. 25 Thursday, Oct. 27

8 p .m.

Cable channel 26

GAY.LINE: 353-7162 '1·9

TUTOR. Chemletry. math. pnyslc •• biology and ataillb. Competlrlve rlt8l, on campus tocafion, seve,al yUr. experience. Call Marie 35-4-0325 ~fore 100m. "·7

PUNNING . lOI8(jdlng? The Hobby Prua oHera natlonaJ ~8I 01 qualIty In~talion. and IccaaorJes. 10% dllCQUnt on order. with presenta­lion of this ad. Phone 351-7413 evemngl.nd weekends. 12-2

SURPRISE YOUR

FRIENDS with a prize­

winning costume Irom

GOODWILL Shop dally,

Mon & Thurs till 9 pm 227 E. Washington

1410 1s1 Ave, Iowa City

2. HOUR moving. hauUng, junk removal, pickup-delIVery, Altor. Oablo 338-5659 "·30

DON'T FORGETI Fan Club ClrOI muat be filled by Nov. 181., TME SOAP OPERA 11).28

LESBIAN SUPPORT LINE Coli ror Informadon, suppo", crlill 353-8265. 10.28

EXPERIENCE CRIMPER'S COANeA~ the be.t hnle h'lr houn '" Ihe mldw&11. 337·2383 11 ••

LOHEL Y SINGLES' Ages tl-911 Respectable friendship dalJng cDrrespondence. FREE del.U.' N ..... Ie"er·" JAN ENTERPRISES Box 111V. SII"IIL 61262. 1'·21

RAPE victim IUPpon group for women. Drop In every Wednesday ., 0:30pm. 130 North Modl .. n. For Inlormltlon call ~53-62Ot . '()'27

PERSONAL SERVICE

PERSONAL. retaUonsh,p •• sejl;­uIUfY, luk:lcIe. Informal!on, relet'r.'. (medicol. Ieg.'. coun .. hng~: CRISIS CENTER 351·0140. Fr .. Anonymous. Confidential

BIRTHRIGHT Pregnant? ConfldentJallupport and tesllOO 333-8665. W. care 12·8

PREGNANCY screening .nd coun· leling available on a walk-In basi •. Tues 11 •. m.·2.3O p.m .. Wed. 1-0 p.m .. Frl. 8:30 a.m.-12 noon. EMMA GOLDMAN CLINIC FOR WOMEN. '2-6

ISOLAno,. tank . Treat yoursetf 10 the experience tOdayl Allow your lenslons \I) 'Ioal away 337·7580 THE LILLY POND. '2· t

INDIVIDUAL .iND GROUP COUNSELING: Contlnumg P.rson.' Growtt'l·Ufe Crises. COup'" In Conflict- Spiritual Growth and Probltm •. Professional staN, COm.. munia ASlOClate •• C.U338· 387' .

INDIVIDUAL .nd I.mlly coun.Ollng fOf depre.sion, anxl.ry, and ralslionahlp problem. STRESS MANAGEMENT CLINIC. 337. 6996 11·tO

THE MEDICINE STORE In Coraly"le where II cosl. kiss to keep healthy 354·4354. 11-16

v,eTNAM .... Veterlns counaellng F," to Veterlns end lamlh .. STRESS MANAGEMENT CLINIC 337-B11V8. "·26

PROILEM PREGNANCY? Prole$Sional counseling Aborlfons 11 eo. Coli collect In Des MOIn .. 515·243-2724. 11·16

STORAGE · STOMGE MlnI·warehouse \Jnltl from 5' _ la' U Siore All Diol 337-3506 II·S

HYPNOSIS AND COUNSELING lor atress, Inltlety, smoking Ask for Cnuck HoIlI., ... 337·6998. 11·2

PIRSONAL ~IRVICI

IIAPE ASSAULT HARASSMENT RIPt' Crll" Lint ~124hour.J

11· 1

A80RTIONS provided In comlor· tJblo. "'ppo<tl ... and edUCllllonol II""",phl" Coli Emma GoIdm.n Clonic lor Wom..,. I .... CIIy. 337· 2111. II·"

PAOBLEM? LET'S TALK: Ire • • conIl0Inll.'. • nonymoul. Crltl. Center 351 .. D14O 12A houro/ ....... d.yJ. Or Orop In " 1m. III midnight Old Brick. 1()'24

ALCOHOL'CS Anonymou.-12 noon Wec:neldlY, W.stey HouH. Solurdoy. 324 North Hall. 35' · 8813 1().3.

HELP WANTED IOWA Alver Powe, Company tt now accepting applications fOf bus per. sons. cashiers and banend.rI. Ap. ply In person belween 2 p.m. and .. p ,m .• Monday through Thursday. 501 Flrot AYe . Coralville . 1()'31

DAY waiters/waitresses, able 10 work 11 .. m.-2 p,m, Appty In pe,· son; The Breadline. 325 E. Wuhlngton. 1()'31

ARE YOU II OR OVER? Would you be InI8,"led In &Orne really In­let-estlng things two .dults could do logether? " &0, oontect the McGovern tor P'Hldenl Commlflee. POBox 2057. Des MoIn ... IA 503'0 "·2

SAtES RtPRESENTATIVE Outs landing Income opportunity selling gourmet ateaks, poullry, 5ee'OOd Local territory. Call f< en or Bob. 616-459.6.89. " .2

ANTONIO Garcia 8rown'. II now hlflng IInl cooks. dishwasher, and bus persons. PAease apply between 2 p m. and 4 pm, weekdays 81 21 1 2nd St. Coralville 11-1

NEEDED II Un""".,1y Ho""tolo: Mdl1k)nal voluntMf LloUan Ind Vietnamese interpreterl. Cell 358 2515 'or tu"her Information. 1~27

MASSAGE T .. hn,clln-Recep-1I0nllt, flexible houri, e)lcellent ply, 338-6531 or 336-1317 bll ... "n 2·10 p.m. A.k lor Debbr.. 11_7

PART-TIME reglltered dietician to prOVIde professlona, direction tor 'ood serviCe 'n II rural h08pital Con· laCI Administrator, Washington Counly Hospl1al. 400 E. Polk. P.O. BOil 909. Washi n~ton, IA 62353. 13'9)653·5481 'Oo31

COMPUTER REUTED JOBS Aceountal'lls. en~lneer., IIn8n~e, programmera, Illes, retaU. Free Inlo. Wrtle CIM·H. 9371 Kramer Unl1 I. Westmlnsler. C ... 92683. 1()'27

STUDENTS WHO COULD SELL AVON

BETTER THAN YOU? Aept8sent America's No, 1 direct· sPiting comp.ny. Utilize the valuable ,kills you've developed over the years Good aamingl. Call looay: Mary, 33&-7623.

R.N needed to work 2Q houra/ week on stalewlde project to Improve aur· "'IVai hom cardiac aHeil TraIning end performance evaluaUon of EMTI trained to dellbrlltate, Me.· tonly of tIme In Iowa City, though 10m. travel required, Emergency care and lor teaching ex.perlence I. reQuired Contact EMSlAC, Unlver .. .11'1' 01 Iowa Hospitals Ind Clinicl, (3191356-2597. The Uni,erolly 01 Iowa IS an equal opportunity/llUr .. mltlve action employet'. to-31

~Alir Coa., )t.dyenturel Join olher Iowa younlJ women in Boston area. Live v.lth family It Haf\lard Univer. 51ty. We Will pay air lare. room and board and sala .... lor light houselceeplng and chUd care (1 and .. yelr oid girls). 2 to 3 refel'ences necessary. Call or .. nt.: Tom and Nancy Dlngm81'l. 617·498--2777 tOO Massachu.ett. AYI ., Cam· bridge. MA02138. ' 11·7

WANTED. Work·atudy students for marketing r85earch sludy. Primary dUlles InClude library research and data coding/entry 10--2D hours per week, $4/hour, lIexlble work schedule Business and non.­business students encouraged to apply. COnt.C1: 353-3320. 1()'31

WANTED: Vaar.round mOthers helperlChlcago. North suburbs, 18 Y88l1 ana older, to start Jan 15, 1884 If Interested please wrIte: Janet Merel, 1256 Rosewood, o.er­field.IL 60015, Must lo~e children.

WANTED: part. lime nous.keeper/desk clerk • . {Non-­.mo~ar. only.~ KINGS INN MOTEt. IOo3,

PIIOGRAMMER: Half·tlm. S.uden. Research Asslatant, Fortran, PL/1 , IBM el(Plrlence Including JCt. Twelve month •• Competitivi .alary. 353-5301.· 1().31

ASTHMA volunteer. needed~ AllergiC asthmatk: persons who use medication, but WIthout complete rellel of symploms, are needed fOf' study 01 new antl·uthma drug. CompensatIon avadable. If In.­tereated . please call 356-2135, 8:30 1m -5 p,m. 10--31

TELEPHONE e.'" peopl. needod In our office Cail351·6433 between 4'30 and 8 p.m 1109

The Daily Iowan

has an opening in the Circulation Department, 11-2 weekdays. Must be on work-study . $4.50/hour. Apply at 111 Communica­tions Center.

A ROYAL OPPORTUNITY Rutauranl Workers

We WI"t you In our court" you're.harp, energebc, lnd lik.w()(klng I IHlle bit harder to give )'Our cUllomera 8 beuer product, you'll ftl rlgnt In

at Round Table.

W. offer e)lcellent "'Ige' ,"d bentflt1 10 dedIcated people Int •• ted In joining one 0' tn. laSltil growing busmeuea In Ihe tODd WVICt Indullry.

FULL OR PART-TIME HELP Frl8naly. de~d8b1t, IflII-lt.rter, who ~now the r.wardl ot herd work

CONTACT: MIKE PAEFTAKES

10! ,,, AVE .• IOWA CITY. IA 351·0320

THE DAILY IOWAN has carrier openings in the following areas:

'5. Johnson

·Calvln. Keswick, Wheaton

'8th Ave., 9th Ave., 10th Ave., 5th St., Coralville

'Westgate

Call 353·6203 to apply.

EARN EXTRA money helping Otherl by giving plum. Thr ••• lour hOUri ot 'Perl time each ~ Cln Hrn you up to '80 per month. P.1es k1 cash, For Inform.Jon Cllt or Itop .t IOWA CITY PlASMA CENTER. 3'8 E. BIoomiOil'on at 35,· 4701 . 11.2'

PAIIT· TIME offici help. nlQhl .nd ... ktnd hour •• aDme bocWtkeept"g 1.""lonee prelerred. Apply In pOr. tOn Mondly·Frldoy 8 • . m.·3 p.m. ONLY. pour. Olscount. 424 Hlgh"',V 1 Welt 1()'28

OCCASIONAL 'ypiOil and clorleol work In own home. Write Educatlon., ConCOPI • • Lid .. P.O. Bo. 2g70. or coli 35"'833. 1()'27

PROJECTS COORDINATOR I

Information Systems Division

Immediate opening In Iowa City offices or The American College Tesllng Program (ACT) lor qualilled person to till posilion responSible for planning. coordinating. and perlormlng administrative functlons associated with computer developmenl pro­lects.

Minimum qualifications In­clude AA degree In ad· m ln l.traUve science 01 related lIeld. 2 years of ex­per ience as ad· mlnlslrator /coordlnator In computer·related area. or eQurvalenl combl natlo~ 01 education and experience.

Competitive .alery, e.cep· tlonal benafh program. and outstanding work environ· men\.

To apply •• ubmilierter olap­plication and resume to:

Personn.1 Services ACT National O"'ce

2201 North Dodg. 51. P.O. Box 188

Iowa City , IA 52243 AppilcllI'on d •• dllne I. November 2, 1Sle3

, ACT I, an Equal Opportunltyl Affirmallve Action Emplov.t,

FEMALE nladed .0/29 ond '11" lor advartlslng Apply.t Whirling

I waters. 1().28

WANTED: For apeech researCh, adult males born with palatal clefts which wire sub.equently repaired end who prllently have minimal or no speech problema, Will pay qualified sub)oct. S20/hr. For furthif' Inform.tlon caN Sse. 2483. "·4

19&4 Calendar Prefect needl male modal., Top pay. Should be a£tree. tive and muscular. Call 712·276-4802. 1()'27

VOLUNTEERS needed lor brain. Injured chUd'a patterning program. No a_perlence necessary. WlU train. 35 .. 3366 aher 6 p.m. .().27

WANTED pon.tJme cashier. nlOnl and weekef1d hOOfS Of1ly. 20 or mOle per week . Appty ~n person only at Pleasure Palace 315 Klrk~ood. 11·2

TEST SPECIALIST Health Programs

Position available Jw medicat/~Ienlilic editor to parllclpate In lest develOp­ment activit ies with The American College Tesling Progrem (ACT) In Iowa City. Work Includes preparing. editing. revising. prOOfing. correcting. and verifying test· related materials, maintain· Ing tesl Item banks and records. and communicating wllh clients.

Qua lifications Include master ' S degree In technlcaflsclentinc writing Of

english; al leasl one year of medical editing experience and other work In health· related rleld ; or equlvalenl combinatIOn. of education and e.perlence. Should elso excel In spelling and gram· mar. and have good Interper­sonal skills.

Oulstandlng wprk rng en­Vironment, competilive salary. and exceptional benem program.

To apply. submit lenen of application and resume 10:

Peraon,* S.rvlee. ACT N.tlonll OffiCi 2201 North Do<Ig.

P.O. Bo.," 10 ... CIIy. IA 02243

Application deadline I, November 10. 1183

ACT I. an EquII Opportun,ty/ Alflrmallve Action Emp+oyer

ASSISTANT dlrac.or. Iowa CIIy Crl.l. Center, experience wll" train. lng, lupervllkm .nd VoIUnl"r organ~aUOn. hlijhly dlolro.ble. CIlI or wrl11 the Crlolo Conler lor .p­pllc.tIon duo N ... 2. 351.0t40. EOE. '1-1

TOUGH "_.1 ulignmtnilin edUCllion. oor1cullur • • hoal1h. homl .... civil enqlneorlng. olf\er .1oIt:1. 00 ~u heve Whit 111,11;81 to be I Pe.et Corps Volunteer? Two year minimum. US, cltlz.n. onlY Cell Ele.nor Young. 353·6592. '2.5

SUMMER JOII. N.tlon.' P.rk Co: •. 21 Plrk •• 5000 opening •. Compll" Inrorm.llon. U . P.rk Report. Million Min. Co .. 85' 2nd A,e. W.N .• K.II'poIl. MT 5i1eol. II· 14

WANT to villi Booton7 Expon_ pi ... w_ pold Nlnl MeGron •• 1617)731-0508. '1).31

OVERSEAS.IOIS • Sum_/yeor round. Europe, S. Amer., AU'''I'II, Asil All Field •• Ssoo.SI200 monlhly Slijh._OiI FrM 1010. Wrlll IJC Bo. 52.IA" Co"",. Dol Mer. CA 82825 '()'31

WORD PROCIIIING TYPING onto WVlbur.t Waog ullnil Script. Dioooriolioni. paPorl. I.'"mo •• leu .... ole. 337-5305. I,.,

WORD procoeolng/lyplrl\l ..,._. WORIHOR·WOIID (oo .. _tad II 511 10Wi A""'U1). Pro,.UI.mol qu.'lly 11111 mokM you look QOOd Competltlw pr_ lind lUI lurn-I· round The .... r •• umes, co", ,... lor., .nd .M olhor Iyplng nood •. 354 0262. " .28

words worth Rllum,.

Covlr Lltt,r.

124 E. Washington

33&-.. 96

WORD PROCI.IING

COM'UTER SlRVIC .. Su",,1or quoiMy on r_mM • ..­lotIer • • cll .. popero. 1_. dlplr· 1OI10n0. Our r.,es arl onon _ !hon Iypl,' •• rl_ ."., oq ... _ .. I no problom. Eleclronlc If)oItIng cnocklng. vw!eIy of prJnl &IyIOo.IOIt turn around (Ueultty tim. day on rMumes). Iagol .nd medlCOl ••• pOr~. 211 foo' Wlol1 lng1or1 • DowrHown, one t»'OClc from etmpu., 35 .. 0841 . .1-11

For EXPERIENCIO PIIOfE8S10NAL word pr..,..lng. ALTERNATIVrs. 3~,·2Otl . 11-10

SELLING your plr.n .. l? Advorll .. In Th. D.lly I ..... n Ciliolfled.

"PING RIVER CITY TYPING SI~VICI

51 t lowl Avenu • . 337·751" Bullne .. , medicii. lead.mlc I~P. Ing. edlUng. co ... ," Ir.nocrlpUon. Houri. 1()'2;30 O.II'/,. 11·18

TYPING- Ialt, Ittlclent, oheap. :)61. 1316. '2.1

TYPING SERVICE: Theil •• rBlum .. , mlnulCrlpt., term papers, diallrt8tlonl! etc. Also com­puterized typing onto WylbuJ. COMPUTER ACCOUNTING SERVICES. 705 Hlgh ... y t WesL 351·3874. 11 ·22

PHYL'S TYPING SERVICE. 12 y ... .xperlence. IBM correctlng Sel~ Irlc. 331-811V6. 11 .7

WHY SETTLE FOR TYPING? Our ra tes IriOn." lower tnan a typiSt. S .. our ad under word procl,,'ng . COMPUTER SERVICES. 2.8 E." W •• hlngton. 354-0811. " ..

FREE PARKING. Typlrl\l. ediling. word proceaelng. SpeIQ II our apeclslly1 Peenman s.cretorlll SIr· vice. 351-8~23 ,1).31

TERR Y/S U· TYPE· IT SERVICE W. ,k·'n Iyptng. IBM and Bro!her corr,ctlng tvpewrlters (In .. lercns"i!eable typo.tyl .. ~ . 218 Ea.1 We.hlngton.354-Q435 Opon 100m· 9pm. M·S. ,,.,8 8EST fOR LESSI 7k - IIIpaga. Campul piCk· up/dailyif)'. 354-2212 after 2"",. 12·6

EXPERIENCED _" .erm paperl, lenerl. etc, F •• t. lICCurate, competent rllCOQnlzlng apMMng .rror •. IBM Selectric III wllh .ymbol ball . 337·2281. .11·22

ARE the few doU.r. lived worth In unprofeulonll rllurne, lerm paper or thall.? For compWte, eJtperien· cod word prcceuiOillllCllyping coli AtTERNATIVES.351·2Ot1. 11·1.

ALLEN'S TYPING .nd EDITING. Term P.per. to dftHrtaUonl. ReSHrch In history, aoc::t.IIC~, EOiIII.n. Germ.n. 354-0135. "·'8

ALL your Iyplng needl. Cell Cyndl. 35Hoeeeyenlng.. 11·11

S.J.T. TYPING SERVICE B. Hlpporl

615·36th St. SE Cedar Rapldl , lowl 52403

131~~ 363-4964 Student fltes

prtce 'lsi available.

COLONIAL PAR~ BUSINESS SERVICES

11·11

1027 Hollywood BI,O. 33&-Il00 Typing, word.procesaJng, lene,., resumes, bOOkkeeping, whalever you need. Also regullr and micro­CIss.tte tranlCrlptlon. Equipment 19M [)Ispl.ywnter FI.t, efflcltnt. reuonlble. 11·1

ROXANNE'S TYPING SERVICE: Coli 354-2M9 excepl M. T & F ... nIOil' '()'31

JEANNIE'S TY',NG SERVICE Prot ... lon.' typ,ng on.rlng rlghl margin jUltific.tion, cor rection frw copy Ind dlfflrent 111'1 prinUfPac. ing Experllnced With m.<hclllleglI termlf'lology, c .... «. tr.nscrlpUon, thesl. requirement., lerm paper" ,elumes, etc 337·6520 12-e

EDITINGITYPING. Th ..... pro­jecls. PIpers AOlor Ellclronic, choice of type Sty"l. E';~flenctd Engili •• eacn .. 351·2117. ".30

QUALITY typing. word proclUlng. edltlng Engll.h. Sp.nl.h. French. Pick up/dellyery. 10". C,ty Bl!h 1· 1143-53<9 11·30

AUTO DOMESTIC 1'7' EI camino ~u.t 1M, k .. p try.. Ing 337.2821 t '.8

1875 Old. Omega • •• clllenl condl. uon. $1250 354-0047. c .. , 1-7 p.m '1-iI

MUST lOll: 1878 Ford Fllrmon •. 2-door. rour cylJnda", tour·.peed, 32 mpg , AM/FM casllnl, new brlkes, excellent cond ition. S2500. 337· 7379 tt-ll

litO PmlO wagon, 32.000 mile •. rust·prooted. 26 mpg. $3 250 Atflf 6pnt .. 35'·4262 11 ·2

18~ Chevy BelAIr. It.tion wagon. ...... nglnl •• ,c . IWOd body. no rU'1.337 .. 616. ''''

1.71 Ou.tlt, 000d Iltel, wlilinaptct, $200 354-2358.11" 5 p.m '()'27

1t77 Chevy Impall 4-<100r. AC. crul'e, PS, PO, lutomlllC. Brand new transmll .. on.na new tit. Ell· cetlent condition. 354.8 t 17. 1!)Oll7

AUTO PORIIGN AUDI Fonagoo. 1875. QOOd cond~ lion SI .IOO or bl., off., 35.· 7011. kHP Irylng II.'

1877 Toyol. C"ICO. QOOd cond,llon, mlny edr .. , S29OOIoH • • 351 .. 8321 11·8

1875 BMW 2002: .. 0III41nl COndI· tlon, 7',000, on. ow"*" car 331-6874. 'Oo3,

1877 TO'/01. Corol .. LI"back. good condItion, lutomahC, btiow bOOk 337-08eo or 353-8070, "'"

"71 Hondl Civio HllchbOCk, 50.000 mllol ...... brok • .• trull. tIr ... bl"lf)'. Body n_ wort. 11500 &54·7t55 • .-II19I. "·1

"7' 2·000r VW 1111>001 Run. well . 11750 338-1370 K.." Irylng 11· It

MAZDA RX·7. 187 •• &-1IIIOd '''. mag whMI' $5900/boIl oller. 337· 70ttJ 11· 2

AUTO SIRVICI VW REPAIR MR~IC" complole ntochlnlca/ IOf\OICO on .11 loroign cor~ BOLON ~W IIE'AIR . ... pm . 8411 by ,PPOInIrn..,t only .... 3661 '().,7

WHITE DOG EUROPEAN .nd

JAPANESE AUTO and ENGINE

SERVICE

GARAGIII PARKING MOTOIIC YCLI .Iorago. 180 'or ()c. Io~r 1.1 10 M.y ,.,. 338 .. 31 So 3JI. 2583. Llmlled .'.'lIblHty. 12.7

HEW IlQhlod locked gar.... • 145/month. Corolville. 331- '014 . 3~'._ 10.21

~A"KIHG lWO bloc'" north 01 downtown. on c.mpu' • • ta/monlt'!. 35 .. 84 It. 12-6

MOTORCYC ... 1174 Hond. Ce·450. wtndoltlotd. HoImlt. C.1I351-2068. 1500. 11·11

1872 HonO. CB'7~. ~.t offor. 353-0431 or 353-0437. fIod Tille. 11-22 , 1171 Hond. H."" 400. ciI.n. now blllory. In,pected. iconlld . M6O. 337·5852. 11·,

IN t 0501. S .... ukl. block. sholl drl ... only one yOOr old. look. gr .. ~ run.groal. 354·~" . '0.28

.ICYCLI GIRLS' ttn-.pood bfkl lor 1110. good condilion. I ... yeor. 010. r ... on.OIO prlco. call3!53-1470 lor Information. 11-1l

'!!-SPEEO HuHy. 2r. S65 JoAnne. 3841-0330. '''P .rylOil IOo2S

DAWES FACTORY OUTLET. h.nd­cuNed English bk:yclol. coming 10 low. Ctly. W.,ch I", d.,.,'. 11).27

BICYCLE PEODLEAS. 325 E. M.rk.t Racer-M ... II $8U5. X.C 1',1. ElI"'cyc .... _r.. 11·11

RIDI/RIDIR TWO need • rldl to 0.. MoIn'l, Wedne&dly. NOYeml)tr g 353-1429 11-1

AIDE wanted to, or dote lO, Rock'ord. lillnoil. OUring Tnonkoglv. ing brNk Co1l1(o1l1y. :J37.5524.1101

HAVE cor. wllllrlVll: Soc:tarnon.o. 11112, Wlnt perlOn to ahare IlrolghHhru drtYlng 337· 7451 IIII 11 ·1

DESPERATELY need rldl 10 Denv. Oc:.o~r 2' Wil,"'re. 351· 0153. 1().2I

TRAVILI ADVINTURI FOR IInglol only Tn.nbgiYIng Irtp '0 Puerto Rico; November 23-27. 1983. For InformaUOtl call Olnel II EnIO'/ Tour .. 31g·35HIItlt I ...

IOWA MOUNTAINIIRI

tI83-84 OUTDOOR

ADVINTURI. COlOIADO

CIIOSS-COUNm 8I(MIIII o-Mrn ·"'..,. JAIIWY

aM. CAIr •• IIII1M ...,' ·13 lEUOwmNE

cas.cOUNm 8I(MIIII J.., Z% . 27

81W10 CAIlON ... IhRtI " , n ~1 · ' .1.3 · '

44 YNr Parleel Sololy Record No E.peflence Necaalry Academic Crodi' AYlNoble

Llmlttd Quo •••

IOWA MOUNTAINEERS P.O. BOX 163

IOWA CITY, IA 522« 319/337-7163

ContlC1 Jim or Margie Ebeft

HAWKIYI .IIIORA.ILlA 75 Y.". With FlQhbng HOWkll'H

0I0 H.""oye YllrbOO" Thl H.unted Bookol1op

337·2998

SPORTING GOODS

1()'28

FOR .... kubapro Ian". rlQulltor, Ok: Exclllonl condll·on C.It:l! I· 05M 11).27

GOOD THING. TO IAT &. DRINK

Clbb.g. 1114 E.

O ... nport 51 Saturday,

MSI. homo .... ,y trom 11omo-<oo~od ..... ,., ssa-2MO. You< .... m •• , c;ould remind you 01 Mom'. 11.22

CAISP .ppl.,. 10 ... lft'M. IPPIo cIOll(. Orted Iru~ , nu' mi . .... cut. pumpkin palCh. gr .. ' c_ ... ""'. 1M lhe IrMn 'HOI1o_".ulls 11111 erl .vall.bI. -..oIlY. Corol FIU" Mkl 351·&eOe. Corl""'le "rlD. ... dilly 11·22

EAT nght It MAII).IIITE. lOtO lnd A_"..1O<o. Ctly 337.$9011 11·1

HI.PI/ITIRIO VICtOR A_oh VR.7000 r_ • • 5 ... lItJ "" chennot . .... way dubbing. lie I '/HI old IIuot 1011 by .111 MI,"offor. 351· 17' 9 '1).31

CA~ lrEREO I",,",lt). _,_ !\Md, mlkl OliO(. 354·3110 1 ..... nlr1Ql~ '101

TURHTAII.I: sony PS-X50 0...".. d'r"" drift. Orloion eo.-d-IG corlridgo . .. cellonl condlUon, 1'10, :l3M780. ".1 PION ER PL·'OO IIJrntable, pi<I\Ied ono _ . "" eorlrldge. E'OI1IrtO'. _end .. 115>4·'274 11-15

HAWKIYI AUDIO 10&. _ on tM<)'lhlrl\l _onlo TOK '''''0 12211, M .. oII UO~LI1 ceo S2 !Ie Lo_, .. r~ldOt P"C", htOh PtI· lonal .. vice Ind knowtoclgoobll ed,let. 128 I V.n luron No. II, " 1-717' . 11·"

CLOI.·OUT 'tllCll on Nok.michl,lnl,nity. Onley"' M ... iIIL 8EST pI_ 10 Ouy Hllman·KIlIIon, ....y. _ , POI~ ~_, long ,

OIUI ... Ind MagMpI.n.r T ...... Int "".1Or1 ""'let TIll ITIIIIO lHO'. 1M flfot A_ II. Coclor Aoo>Id •• 2402. au. '»4, 11· te

\ i

, ,

, ,

, I

Page 19: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive
Page 20: more troops into Grenada - Daily Iowan: Archive

Plge 128 - The Dally Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Thursday, October 27, 1983

Wlrld news I

·Cuba protest$ Grenada invasion Ride Indoors on the

In .Iock now

HAVANA, Cuba (UPI) - Cuba par­tially mobilized its militia and reserve forces Wednesday out of fear of new U.S. moves and staged demonstrations to protest the U.S.-led invasion of Grenada and laud its " heroic" fighters.

'ill~

At a news conference. President Fidel Castro denounced the U.S. inva­sion but said he would refrain from ending reinforcements to the island or

:to Nicaragua if Washington carried out :a similiar attack on that country's ,Marxist regime. : Hours later. the official Prensa :Latina news agency announced that ~U.S . jets and artillery overwhelmed :the last resistance offered by Cuban :torces on Grenada. : The news agency indicated that six :Cubans in the final stronghold died :rather than surrender. : "There is no Cuban resistance, the ;Cuban ambassador said atll: 17 a.m .... Pren sa Latina said . " The last

'~stronghold of fighters did not surren­~er but sacrificed themselves for the ~fatherlan!l .

"WE CAN ONLY communicate that at 9:55 hours (a .m.) the embassy of Cuba in Grenada informed (us ) that the latest attack of the enemy on our

;x,silions was undertaken with all the .means : warplanes. helicopters. heavy 'and medium artillery and mortars." 'Prensa Latina said .

In a heavy rain , tens of thousands of Cubans held rallies throughout the island nation to protest the invasion, state-controlled television said.

Thousands marched in Havana and the television showed similiar marches elsewhere in the nation.

Speakers at the rallies praised the 700 Cubans on Grenada and said that Washington had to use its elite troops to overcome their "heroic resistance."

USDA CHOICE 7-BONE AOAST

Thousands of Cuban. held rallies throughout the Island Invasion of Grenada, President Fidei Castro denounced nation Wedneiday to protest the U.S.-led multinational the Invasion at a prell conference.

the television said. Government officials said that initial

phases of mobilization were begun among the reserve and militia forces. with most being given messages to be prepared for an urgent call to their units.

SOURCES SAID the government was

making prepa rations in case President Reagan decided on new moves in the Caribbean.

"All the world will be waiting for the declarations of Reagan tomorrow (Thursday)," one source said, referr­ing to the president's scheduled ad­dress on the Grenada and Lebanon crises.

Castro told reporters that overwhelming American military power made it impossible to consider sending reiqforcements to Grenada.

He said the invasion was "an enor­mous political error" by Washington and the United States might obtain "a Pyrrhic military victory but a dis­astrous moral defeat."

KEY'S

.RADIA 10 .... 11'1

lilT TOM

TURKEY

NISSEN SPECIALS NISSEN SUMMER $189 SAUSAGE ........... LB.

.... NUS PACK SPECIALS 70% LEAN ,"C COUNTRY STYLE "C GROUND BEEF.... LB. RIBS.................. LB .

:::!!:': ........... 69 c 12 OZ .

RING $1 59 80LOGNA ...... . . LB . RING

~~~:~!.A .......... 89 C160Z.

OIEIIA HASH

IROWNS 240Z.

$ NAIISCO

Rill

IEIDEI GIEEN

CAIIAGE

USDA CHOICE $ 45 LOIN CUT $1 59 ARM ROAST I B PORK CHOPS.. ...... LB.

... ••• L . COMBO PACK

USDA CHOICE ' $ 279 T-BONE STEAK.... LB.

PORK STEAK &, I! C PORK ROASI.... -'B.

SWEET 'N $

LOW YOGURT

IIIDSEYE YEGETAlLES CORN. PEAS.

MIXED VEGETABLES

10LB. BAG

723 S. Gilbert 351-1337

M·I·S T·F-9-5:30

Sat-I-5

We buy diamonds dlrecl 110m the wolld'. 1t/"te$1 diamond CuttefS Eact'! <hamond IS selec.ed and gtaded OJ mee. our .,acllng s.ano8'ds A S,etlI<. Hoyt d1811101IO " • quohly Ol.mond

We bUy mounllr'lg$ from lTIany sources In or der '0 5Olet' only Ihe hnes. quah.y and $Iyl log A Soebke HOyl dtamollO "ng shows your ooOulln9 good 10',"

HOW AIOUT THIS FISH STORY' .

:::::~ ............ $ 2 89 LB .

:I~~::I ........... ... $ 189 LB.

:I~~::'~.~~~~ ...... $1 99 TU •• OT $'199 FILLETI ............. .

HARDINS$ SWEEI CIDER

KRAnS YILYEIT'

CHEISI

3LB. BAG

LB.

The Fine Wo

All Con Bring M~

Check out t downtown 14

W. offer selection of IOWI City ar

Encour. htlp you pr. tlint Intlf'vie~