Pyle PLDNV111 User Manual

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will
stop
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foIYy.
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will
IN
no
deliyery
to
12·wHic
......
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stu·
.....
elIcept
to
those
1I,,11IlI
I"
U"lvenity
m,rrled
student
hou.I",.
P.pen
m.y
be
picked
up
at
Quad"",Ie, BU",t,
U"ion
E.at
Lebby,
Llbr.ry .nd Communlufl_ Cent.r.
Seroing
the
University
af
Iowa
and
the
Peorle
af
Iowa
City
--------------------------
Eltabli£bed
in
1868
10
eeata
CIIPJ
AsIoeIated
Press
LeaIed
WIre
IDd
W"n-epboto
935
To
Graduate
;
112
To
Get
Ph.D.s
Passes
U.S
.
Company
House
Is
Attacked
Rights Bill;
Housing,
Violence
Covered
A
II.t
of
.11
d"r"
candldatt. I. on
P.,.
2.
- Ed.
Degrees
will be awarded to
935
students
at
the graduation
ceremonies
at
7:30 p.m. tonight in the Field House.
In
Highland
s
SAIGON
LfI
-
North
Vietna·
mese
forces
attacked a
U.S.
com·
pany
In
renewed
fighting
on
the
rainswept
highlands
of
central
South
Viet
Nam
Tuesday
but
Pre.
Howard
R.
Bowen will
confer
112
Ph.D.
degrees,
4il
ma
ter's degrees and
352
bachelor's degrees.
The
583
graduate
degrees to
be
awarded is
98
more
than
were
awarded
last August.
broke
oU
the attack after
heavy
------------~--------------------
Most
Controversy
Centered
On
Homeowners'
Exemption
The
College
of
Liberal
Arts
will
award
241
degrees;
the
College
01
Law
.
30
;
the
College
of
Engi
·
neering
.
14
;
the
College
of
Busi·
oess
Administration,
56
;
and
the
CoUege
of
Nursing,
11.
'nIe
featured
speaker
will
be
Coralville
OKs
1967
Budget
Of
$7
'
14,914
Glenn
Leggett.
president
of
Grinnell
College.
ill
his
speech
"How
It
Was,
The
Coralville
City
Council
How
It
Is."
he
Tuesday
night
adopted
a
1967
will
discuss
the
.
budget
of
$714,914
after
no
one
c han g e 5 i n
objected
at a
public
hearing.
blgher
education
In
other
action,
the
council
since
W 0
rId
.
passed
a
resolution
to
partici·
War
n.
pate
in
the
proposed
Johnson
William
D.
Co-
County
Regional
Planning
Com·
du.
Union
direc
·
LEGGETT
mission.
The
council
previously
tor
01
conferences
and
institutes.
had
voted
not
to
participate
In
wU1
be
the
master
of
ceremonies.
the
Metropolitan
Plannin,
Com·
I
James
C.
Spalding.
associate
mission
.
prolessor
of
religion.
will
be
the
Richard
W.
Burger.
the
com.
chaplain
.
mission
chairman,
has
proposed
Faculty
marshals
will
Include
a
reorganization
of
the
com·
Alvin
H.
Scaff,
associate
dean
mission.
artillery
and
air
power
were
called
in,
the
U.S
.
Command
an·
nounced
Wednesday
.
A milltary
spokesman
said
the
company,
from
the
:rrd
Brigade
of
the
25th
Division
,
suffered
light
casualties
in
the
engage-
ment
12
miles
northwest
of
Plel
Me
Special
Forces
camp
at
the
edae
of
the
Ia
Dr
ang
Valley
.
Enemy
caaualties
were
given
I
as
80
kUJed.
I
Bom,"n StrIke .
A
company
from
the
U.S.
1st
Air
Cavalry
Division
took
heavy
casualties
In
the
same
area
Mon·
day
while
trying
to
lure
the
North
Vietnamese
into
batUe
.
In
the
air
war,
B52
bombers
from
Guam
struck at
suspected
enemy
troop
concentrations
In
Binh
Dinh
Province,
40
mil
northwest
of
Qui
Nhon.
on
South
Viet
Nam's central
coast.
U.S.
spokesmen
also
sald
South
Korean
units
moving
along
the
Cambodian
border
had
been
hit
by
mortar
and
small
arms
fire
for
several
hours
Tuesday
night
and
early
Wednesday
.
The
Koreans
also
suffered
light
WASHINGTON (AP) - The House passed a
civil
rights
bill
Tuesday night that would provide new federal powers
for improving housing opportunities for Negroes and
pro--
tecting their legal rights.
The roll call vote on passage wa
259
to
157.
The bill, which also contains a
stiff
restriction aimed
at
Mass
March
'Set T
oday
In
Chi
cago
Inciters
of
racial
riots,
now
goes
to
the
Senate
where
it
faces
heavy
opposition.
Passage
came
after
the
House
upheld
on
a
237
to
17&
roll
call
Its
earller
action
In
e1lminatlnr
80
per
cent
of
the
nation's
hous-
ing
units
from
the
proposed
open
housing
proviJlon
by
exemptln,
individual
homeowners.
Semt
Illtmpt
CHICAGO
lI\
-
Open
housing
The
provlalon
would
prohibit
campaigner..
undaunted
by
reo
dbcrlminaUoo
by
anyone
In
the
peated.
riotous
receptions,
have
housing
busineas.
but
a real ea·
singled
out
another
hostile
white
tate
agent
could
help
an
exempt
Southwest
Side
neighborhood
for
homeowner
with
a
sale
or
rental
a
mass
march
Wednesday.
transaction
without
coming
under
of
the
Graduate
College,
Hugh
E.
The
council
rejected a .ingle
Kelso,
professor
of
political
sci·
bid
for
the
1966
paving
program.
en<:e
,
and
Donald
Rhoades,
dean
The
$49,680
bid
was
submitted
ol
admissions
and
records.
by
the
Metro
Pavers.
Inc
.•
Iowa
casualties
before
the
enemy
FOR
THE
BIRDS.
Thl".
wh.t stucltnt,
Irt
Ayl",
todlY
.bout the fln.1
tuml
tMY
.rt
t.kllll.
broke
off
the
firing
before
dawn.
aeelu •• our photo stiff
I.
bu.y studyl", for
fin.
I.
too,
this
Is
the
picture
to
lIIustrltt
tM
I
.,
d.y
The
district
the
marchers
call
the
restriction.
Bogan
lies
near
Chicago
Lawn
Owners
of
small
apartment.
or
where
on
Friday
thouaands
of
boarding
houses
with
four
famU>,
rock·
and
firecracker·throwlna
units
or
less,
who
live
In
the
dwel-
residents
fought
with
police
and
ling!
themselves.
are
also
exempt
cursed
and
jeered
at
the
march·
from
the
proposed
law.
Candidates
for
degrees
repre.
City..
.
sent
91
Iowa
counties
43
states
The
bid
was
reJected
because
IIId
17
foreign
countri~.
Foreign
it
exceeded
the
city'.
e.rtlmated
ltudents
are
from
Canada
Chile
construction
cost
by
20
per
cent.
China
Cuba
England
Greece'
the
council
said.
the
spokesman
added
. I
of
Iht summ.r
....
Ion.
The
.,Iy
bini
....
the worms?
Flylllll
South
for
tM Inttrlm period?
For·
B.ttilion
Pursued
lI.t
it.
-Photo
for
TM
lowln
The
latest clashes
came
as
aI·
________________________________
_
lied
forces
continued
pursuing
an
I
india:
Iraq,
Japan,
Kenya,
Korea:
The
cit)' attorney
was
authoriz·
the
Netherlands
Nigeria
Peru
ed
to
add
to
the
program
sec·
Thailand.
Turkey
and
the'
United
tion
of
First
Avenue
from
U.S.
Arab
Republic
. .
Highway
6
to
the
Rock
Island
rallroad
overpass,
and
to
re·sub-
* * *
mit
the
program
Cor
bids.
12 G
d
The
paving'
of
First
Avenue
ra uafes I
will
be
a
cooperative
effort be·
tween
Coralville
and
low.
Cit)'
To
Get Go
ld
Ba
rs
,
because
each
C?mmunlty
own,
I
one-half
of
the
rigbt~f·way.
Twelve
University
graduates
The
Fir,t
Avenue
section
or·
IIiII
be
commissioned
as
second
Iglnally
was
included
ID
the
pay.
I
lieutenants
in
the
armed
forces
ing
program,
but
was
deleted
. be·
during
special
ceremonies
at
4:30
cause
the
two
cities
falled
to
p.m.
today
in
the
Pharmacy
reach
agreement
on
asaeSllment
Building
Auditorium.
costs
in
time
for
the
flI'st
blddine.
Leslie
G.
Moeller,
director of
The
council
approved
the
ad·
the
School
of
Journalism.
will
vertising
of
bids
for
the
.ale
of
address
the
graduates.
$90
,
000
In
part
bonda
to
purchaae
Those
to
be
commissioned
are:
and
approve
city
parka. Bid.
will
be
opened
Aug.
30
at a
special
Laverne
Harvey,
Bettendorf,
session.
Anny
Transportation
Corps;
Mi·
The
councD
adopted
an
ordi·
chael
Jennings.
Columbus
Junc·
Dance
to
rezone
five
acres
of
Uon,
Air
Force;
DavId
Moss,
land
at
the
Latern
Park
develop-
Iowa
City,
Anny
Armor;
Donald
ment as
Hi&hway
Commercial
If.
Bergert,
Long
Grove.
Air
Force; ter
no
one
objected
at
a
public
John
McCarthy,
Manchester.
bearina.
Anny
Adjutant
General's
Corps;
Samuel
Simmers,
Monroe,
Army
Signal
Corps;
Lonny
Rodd,
West
Des
MOines.
Air
Force.
Program Against
Di
sc
rimination
In
Ads
Begins
estimated
North
Vietnamese
bat·
---
....
~-.
tallon
In
the
central
highlands
.
Earlier
they
reported
kllling
at
least
85
of
the
enemy
and
cap.
turing large
stocks
of
riflel
and
other
equipment.
Meanwhile,
South
Vietnamese
Preimer
Nguyen
Cao
Ky
left
Wednesday
for
a
four-day
official
visit
to
the
Phillppines
where
he
will
inspect
a
2.(J()().man
engineer
I
unit
expected
to
arrive
soon
in
--
.-
Viet
Nam.
U.S.
.pokesman
also
reported
that
enemy
dead
from
Monday's
action
in
the
Ia
Drang
Valley
had
been
confirmed
at
80
.
Far
to
the
north,
U.S.
Marines
hunted
about
150
North
Vietna·
mese
regulars
who
tried
to
over·
whelm
two
small
Marine
units
iust
south
of
the
demllltarized
zone
between
North
and
South
Viet
Nam.
Record Mluiont
In
between
the
demilitarized
zone
and
the
central
highlands
front.
other
U.S.
Marines
were
sweeping
the
jungles
southwest
of
their
big
base
at Da
Nang.
Undeterred
by
the
loss
or
10
planes
In
two
days
over
North
Viet
Nam.
Air
Force,
Navy
and
Marine
pilots
maintained
the
pressure
Monday
with
a
record
1
139
combat
missiOll8
In
the
north.
THE
HOUSE
COMMERCE
COMMITTEE
went
ahead
Tuesday
in
its
consideration
of
Senate-passed
leelslaUon
that
would
order
the
35,000
striking
mechanics
bact
to
work
for
as
much
as
180
days
.
Committee
Chairman
Hartey O. Stagger,
(D·W.
Va,)
saId,
"Not
a
person
wants
It.
but
they
are
going
to
voLe
lor
It
and
I?ut
it
up
to
the
pc!ople's
representatives.
the
House,
to
decide
."
A
COMPROMISE
GUN
BILL
fa
being
pushed
by
Republicans
who
hope
to
win
approval
of
the
Senate
Judiciary
Committee.
Sen.
Everett
M.
Dirksen
R·Dl'>
said the
bill
dlCIered
with
a
bill
olCered
by
Sen.
Thomas
J.
Dodd
(D·Conn.>
primarily
In
permitting
the
mail·
order
sale
of
hand
guns.
Dodd
',
bill,
whlch
the
Judiciary
Commit·
tee
expects
to
take
up
Wednesday.
would
bar
mall-order
sale
of
band
weapons.
The
compromise
bill
would
allow
mail-order
sale
of
band
weapons
providing
the
purchaser's
certificaUon
of
age
and
character
were
not
challenged
by
local
police
within
seven
days.
Ronald
Boe.
Chicago.
Army
Ar·
tillery;
Robert
Fanter.
Crystal
Lake.
m.
Army
Armor;
Delbert
Gehrke,
Mendota,
m.,
Army
Ad·
jutant
General's
Corps;
Robert
Sheridan,
Monmouth,
Dl.,
Army
Transportation
Corps;
and
Tbom·
II
PurvIJ,
New
Shrewsbury.
N.J
.,
Air
Force.
Seven
planes
were
shot
down
Sunday
and
three
Monday,
bring'
ing
the total
losses
over
North
WASIDNGTON
LfI
-
The
gov·
Viet
Nam
to
329.
The
three
lost
ernment
bas
lanuehed
a
cam·
Monday
were
U.S.
Air
Force
paign
agalnst
dlJcriminalion
1n
Thunderchie(s.
Only
one
pilot
was
the
help
wanted
columns.
rescued.
SENATOR
EVERETT
M.
DIRKSEN
of
Illlnoi.
said
Tuesday
be
is
cancelling
scores
of
campalgn
.peakine
engagemnets.
because
his
lSurgeons
have
banned
travel
for
him
.
Waiter
Reed
Hospital
sur·
geon.!!
,
who
operated
on
him
when
he
brote
his
thigh
bone
several
weeks
ago
.
have
told
him
they
must
perform
another
operation
about
Oct.
15
.
,
ANOTHER
BARGAIN
I
NG
SESSION
was
set
up
Tuesday
in
a
last-ditch
effort
to
settle
the
airline strike
and
head
off
legislation.
But
the
principals
said
in
advance
they
bad
little
hope
of
success.
The
House
Commerce
Committee
went
ahead
in
its
consideration
of
Senate-passed
legislation that
would
order
the
35.000
striking
me·
chanics
back
lor as
much
u
180
day,.
The
Equal
Employment
Op-
Helicopter
losses
were
also
Boe,
Fanter
and
Purvis
are
dis-
portunity
Comrni!slon
charged
heavy
Monday.
Two
crashed
and
tinguisbed
military graduates.
Tuesday
75
advertisers
across
the
burned
west
of
Plelku
in
support
* * *
nation
with
dlscriminatlon
by
of
the
cavalry
operation.
race,
sex.
religion,
or
national
With
on~
two
months
left
of
origin
In
their
classified
ads.
the
rainy
monsoon
season,
U.S
.
Such
phrases
as
"Men
- neat
commanders
believe
It
more
1m·
appearance," or
"White
attend· portant
than
ever
to
keep
the
ant
,"
or
"Catholic
salesperson,"
Viet
Cong
and
North
Vietnamese
or
"Anglo
carhops"
led
to
the
too
bUSy
to
lunch
their
expected
charges,
Acting
Chairman
Luth·
offensive
.
THE
STOCK
MA
RK
ET
declined
moderatley
on
average
Tues·
day
but
advances
and
declines
were
almost
even.
Another
burst
of
buying
by
the
funds
and
Individaula
in
glamor
stocks
boosted
some
of
these
issuea
to
good
gai.ns.
15
Students
To
Graduate
With
Honors
er
Holcomb
said.
--
------------------------
------
-
Holcomb
said
the
commission
was
"launching
a
campaign
against
classified
ad
violations
of
Title
VII
of
the
1964
Civil
Rights
Act"
He
said the
'75
Fifteen
students
will
be
grad· charges
were
the
first
of
a
COIl'
lilted
with
honors
at
University
siderable
number
being
contem·
Commencement
exercises at 7:
30
plated
.
tonight
in
the
Field
House
.
The
1964
law
bans
discrimina·
, '
tion
In
employment
and
forbid.
Tbe
top
2
per
cent
of
the
grad· advertising
for
jobs
on
a dis.
lites
are
graduated
with
"hij!:hest
criminatory
bas
i
s.
diltinction."
tbe
next
3
per
cent
The
commission
cbarga,
if
,
with
"high
distinction"
and
the
substantiated, carry
no
penalUes.
U further
investigation
lhowl
reasonable cause,"
Hol
com
b
aaid
the
co
mmission
would
undertake
to
end
th
e dilcrlmlnatory pra
tices
through
c
oncilia
tion
with
the
IItXt
5
per
cent
with
"distinction."
'I'hoIe
graduating
with
highest
di.tincti
on
are:
Sharell
Cater,
Iowa
City.
B.A
.;
JOhn
McKee.
Jowa
City,
B.A.;
Garry
Toerber,
Massillon,
B.
B.A.
;
lDd
Elizabeth
Anne
Horn,
New-
,
too,
B.A.
'nIose
graduating
with
high
Iliatinction
are:
karma
Schauer,
Cedar
Falls,
,
I.S.N
.;
Linda
Reed.
Council
llulfs.
B
.S.;
Daniel
Merta.
Fair·
Iu.
B
.B.A.;
Patricia
Carney,
IOWa
City,
B
.M.
Edmund
De-
I 'Oluca,
Iowa
City.
B.
A.;
Rebecca
'l'idrick,
Iowa
City.
B.A
.
I
'nIose
graduating
with
distinc'
I
lion
are:
I
Elhabeth
R.
W.
Hinton,
Dcs
l
J
ill
0 I n e
s,
B.A.
;
Basil
Swaim,
Drakesville.
B.
B
.A.;
Alan
La
n
g,
IOwa
City,
B.S.;
Carolyn
Crowell,
'Osage,
B
.S.N.;
and
Sally
Osborne.
t\arlottetown,
Prince
Edward
Is·
land,
Canada.
B.S
.
alleged
offenders
.
Riots
Erupt
In
Detroit
DETROIT
WI
- A
......".
. n
ee
......
eut
T
......
'
.....,
In I reclally-mlxecl
".
1
",
__
hood
on
the frIntt of
be
'"
.lve G,..... P
....
and
0.-
" 'olt
pOIle.
Aiel: .'W . .
...
throwl
",
.""""IIIt
WI'''O
tot
Into
the
.rt
"
Pellet
AI.
tint
...,.m
1ft..
.Icatod I
molt
of
101M
211
pe,....
were
invthH
.
The
.N.
Is
Ioc
.....
_r
Wllhr.
wor1c
.
Parie
on
PItllllYIv.nil
Street,
.,....Ite
Itllt
lilt
,
...
1.1
....
parie
In
the DttNIt
RIv
·
er.
whir.
the
lfG
rec.
rIet
......
eut
.
Students
Emigrate
T odar I
Leave
Iowa
City
Peaceful
By
GAIL
LONG
AN
ECKER
St
iff
Wrlttr
Doea
a
town
rue?
For nearly
12
months
of
the
year,
Iowa
City
is
blessed
with
a
hoard
of
college
students.
From
the
first
football
game
to
that
last
visit
to
the reservoir. students
push
tbelr
way
down
Io
wa
City
streets
buying
boou,
clothes,
cosme·
tics.
golf
balll
and
various
assortment
of
other
merchandise.
Stu
denta
are
seen
everywbere
-
on
the
itreets.
In
the
shops.
in
parb.
banks,
apart·
ments.
studellt
bouslng
units
and,
of
course,
in
ciaaIrooma.
There are a
Cew
times.
such
as
the
long
va·
cationa
of
Cbriatmas
and Easter.
when
students
aren't
nanning
all
o
ver
the
city
.
But
the
longest interim of
all
la
fast
approaching
.
MI"lt
ion
Ittl
n.
It
might
take three
bollI'8
or
three days,
but
starting at 5
p.m
.
today,
the
migration
will
be-
gin.
Apartments
an
d
dormitories
will
be
emptied
and
carl will
be
filled
to
overfloWing.
What
b
appens
In
the
next
four
weeks
to
a
town
that
iI
accustomed
to
the
bustling
air
of
young
a
dul
ts?
Many
stude
nts
IUppose
that
Iowa
City
just
fol
da
and
di
es.
So
me
students are still bere.
finlahJng the
12-week
summer
session,
and
the
Io
wa
City
realdents
are
Itill
around.
01
courH.
But.
what
does
happen
in
Iowa
City
when
the
students
leave?
Sam
Jamea,
G,
Milwaukee,
Wis.,
said.
"It
looks
almoet
like a ghost
town
.
There
aren't
nearly
u
many
people
on
the .treeta."
prtfwt
Sheppl
",
Mrs.
Ric
hard
W.
Buxton.
720
Clark
St..
said
"Iowa
CIty
.kind
of
goes
to
sleep.
It's just real
slow.
B
ut
It'. the
time
I pr
ef
er
to
go
shopping."
Mrs.
Nao
mi
Adams,
Alpha
Delta
Pi
bouse·
mother,
"You
w1s
b
It
was
an
over.
and
then
when
it
iI.
it'. a
letdown.
It',
lonely.
'!'be
Itreets
are
empty and
there
Ia
bardly any
noise
at
all"
Barbara
HerU.
AS,
Iowa
City, said.
"Tbe
downtown
area
is
the
place
where
you
most
notice
that
the
atudents
are
gone.
There',
more
parldng
apace
and
the
traffic isn't nearly
so
bad.
"Parta of the
Union
are
closed,
and I lost
my
job
because
of
that.
"It
seems
more
relaxed,
but it's
sort
of
de-
pressing
fo
r
the
st
ud
ents
left
In
the
12·week
ses·
siOD
."
Leu
Llvtly
Mrs. Laura Cathcart.
629
O
akland
Avenue,
a
salea
clerk at
Younkera,
said, "B
uainess
doea
fall
of
f
and
U's
lea
lively
aroun
d
here.
We're
alwllJ'l
glad
to
Bee the
atudents
come
back."
An
d the
atudents
will
come
back.
An
enroll·
ment
of
11
,
000
iJ
expected
Cor
tbia
fall.
The
ghost
town
atmosphere
of
Iowa
City will
once
mo
re
disappear
wben
the
students
resume
their
place
u
the
beart-tbrob
01
a
college
town.
T
tt
C ·t·· d . ers.
About
~
per
cent
ot
the
na·
I
0
rl
lelZe
The
Rev.
Dr.
Martin
Luther
tion',
housing
units.
mainly
In
King
Jr
.•
chairman
of
the
Soutb·
Iarae
apartmenLl
and
new
de-
ern
Christian
Leadership
Confer·
velopmenll.
would
be
affected
For
Governing
With
l-Party
ence
sponsoring
the
demonstra·
by
the
ban.
It
would
not
cover
lions,
was
knocked
to
hla
knees
individual
homeowners
unless
by
a
rock
that
hit
his
head
.
they
engaged
In
three
or
more
Announcemtnt
Not
Vertf/tel
real estate transactions
in
1%
A
pep
rally
announcement
that
month
•.
Cicero.
a
western
suburb
where
Most
of
the
controversy
in
the
Al
Capone
reigned
in
the
Prohlbl·
bill
.wlrled
around
thl,
provl·
BELGRADE
t.fI
-
Yugo
lavs
tion
era
gang
days.
had
been
s10n
and
much
of
the
12
days
<It
opposed
to
President
Tlto
's
one·
designated
[or
a
march
this
weeJc
House
debate
was
devoted
to
It.
party
government
pressed
ahead
lacked
confirmation
from
King"
Opponents
tried
to
the
end
to
Tuesday
with
plans
to
found
a
lieutenants.
remove
it.
ma
g
azine
to
reflect
thelr anti·
Fifteen
years
ago
Cicero
was
Mot*'
om.ted
government
views
.
They
acted
torn
by
race
rioting
that
neces-
Just
before
[Inal
pasnge
Rep.
despite
the
arrest
of
their
1 ader,
ailated
calling
in
the
Illinois
Na·
Arch
A.
More
Jr.
/R·W
.
Va.).
of·
Mihajlo
Mahajlov
.
tional
Guard.
The
Intervening
,
fered
a
motion
to
strike
the
en·
Marijan
Batinlc
and
Daniellvin years
have
made
Cicero
no
more
tire .ectlon.
but
it
was
defeated
were
elected
to
the
organizing
receptive
to
the
Idea
of
Negroes'
222
to
1~.
committee
for
the
meeting
to
be
establishing
residence
in
the
white
Voting
for
the
motion
to
kill
held
at
Zadar
on
the
Adriatic
industrial
community,
densety
the
open
bousina
provision
were
coast.
I
populated
with
persons
of
Clecho-
1~
Democrats
and
86
Republl-
lIfihajlov.
a
former
university
slovakian
aDd
italian
extraction.
, c:aDI.
Against
it
were
72
Demo-
professor
who
bas
been
conduct·
At
a
news
conference,
Mayor
I
crab!
and
SO
Republicans
.
ing
a
growing
campaign
against I
Richard
J.
Daley
of
Chicago
de-
To
pass
the
bill
76
Republicans
the
"totalitarian
power"
oC
the
I
c1ared.
"There
must
be
some
joined
183
Dem~rats
in
yotlng
Yugo
lay
Communist
party,
was
way
of
resolving
this
question
aye
while
95
Democrats
and
6:&
to
have
presided
at
the
Zadar
witbout
the
marches."
He
urged
RePubllc8ll!
voted
no
.
meeting
.
civil
rights
leaders
to
use
legal
Another
key
section
approved
He
summoned
friends
anc!
sup-
.
p!,oc«:&ses
1.0
fighting
any
racial
would
arm
the
Federal
Govern-
porters
to
help
him
found
a mag' discnmination
In
housing
.
ment
with
authority
to
intervene
atine
he
hoped
'!ould
lead
to
a
No
Compl.lnts R'ported
In
crimes
of
violence
against
new
non·CommulUst
pa
.
rty
..
Daley
saId
that
since
Chicago
Negroes
and
civil
rights
workers
But
he
was
clapped
lDtO
.
pnso~
passed
a falr
housing
ordinance
when.tales
fail
to
prosecute
any.
Mo~day
fo~
~ree
d~ys
or
l./lves!.i·
in
1963
its
Human
Relation.
Com·
one.
gation
.
OrftClais
. said the arrest
mission
has
handled
241
com·
The
section
would
make
it
a
~as
to
prevent
hun
from
spread· plaints
and
in
each,
real estate federal
crime
for
anyone
to
use
:
f~se
repolU
j
and
r
\0
g~ar~n.
dealers
were
made
to
comply
force
or
violence
against
a
Ne.
the
S~h::~:r
pe~~
y of
~~!
with
the
law
. '
flO
exercising
~is
legal
rights.
or
Zadar
meeting
. I
The
co~sion
director,
Ed·
~,a~t
a
civil
nghts
worker
he
l
p.
Notices
issued
by
the
Zadar
'
ward
MarCUllak.
reported
hla
~e·
mg
hun
to
exerclae
those
rights.
Communist
party mass
organiza·1
partment
had
not
received
a
Sl./l
· R
iot
L.w A
dcItd
tion
called
for
a
meeting
to
dis"
g)e
complaint
of
housing
discnm·
Tbe
House
added
another
rna·
cuss
the
Mihajlov
situation.
ination
in.
Chicago
Lawn
or
Bel·
jor
provision
to
the
section
10
At
Mihajlov's
bome
in
Zadar,
mont.Cra~,
where
marchers that
it
~d
be
IIIed
as
a
fed·
wbere
I
vin
and
Batanic
are stay·
faced
bostile
.tone
throwers
Sun·
eral anti·riot
law
as
well.
Fired
ing,
]vin
said
threats against
day.
. br pleas
from
members
whose
their
personal
safety
would
not
He
sald
he
has
been
1D
contact
cltiea
bave
been
tom
by
raelal
stop
them
.
with
"all the
key
people
in
the
riots,
it
voted
to
mue
it a
fed-
"
What
can
one
do
~"
he
said.
civil
rights
movement"
for
the
eral crime
for
anyone
to
CI'OSI
"One
takes
the
road
and
goes
last
few
dayl.
urging
them
to
at· a
aLate
line
to
lead
or
take
part
on
it as
far
as
one
can
.
Our
road
tend
a
conference.
"We
have
had
in
a riot.
Is
to
go
on
."
no
811!wer,"
be
said.
Rep.
William
C.
Cramer (R·
Ivin
said
eight
Mihajlov
sup.
SheriCf
Ricbard
V.
Ogilvie
of
ria'>
who
propoeed
It,
said
it
porters
were
already
at
Zadar
Cook
County
(Chicago)
announced
would
not
prevent
peaceful
demo
for
their
gathering,
and
more
that
be
would
do
everythlng
in
his
o
natratiOlll.
It
la
almed
at "
out
·
were
expect.ed
.
power
to
preve\lt
a march on' ,ide agitators"
who
seek
delib-
He
said
the
first
day
would
be
Cicero.
eratel1
to
cauae
trouble,
he
aal
d.
spent
lar
ge
ly
in
get·acquainted
He
has
information,
he
aaJd,
1be bill', other
sectiOll5
are
talks,
with
formal
discussions
that
the
reaction
of
Cicero
reai-
designed
to
eDd
dilcrlmlnation
beginning
Thursday
at
a restau·
dents
to
a march
would
"make ill
the
ee1ectJon
01
state
and
fed·
rant
on
the
outskirts
of
the
Adri·
Gage
Park -
Chicago
Lawn
- eral jurie,
and
ill
givlna
the
at·
I atic coastal city. .
look
like
a tea party. tome)' general
broa
d authority
School
Bonds
OK
J
d
For
Ballot
to
teet elvil
court
injunctloJls to
prevetlt
aomeone
from
interfer·
ring
wi
th
a NeflO', lawful righta.
Al
th
OU(h
n
umeJ'O\ll
amend·
lJI
ents
wer
e
adopted
durina the
The
Iowa
City
School
Board
Community
Colleg
e hi
Cedar
Ba-
Ionl
CGIIIideration
01
the
bill
.
adopted
a
resolution
to
place
a
pida.
only
one
dealt real damale
to
$575,000
bond
issue
on
the
Sept.
In other aetl
on,
the
board
the
orIgiDal provision.
It
took
12
ballot
at its
meeting
Tuesday
adopted
the program
of
atudiet
from
the
bill a
utborl
ty
for
the
night.
in
the
district·,
acbooII
for
11
166-
a
ttDrnq
gener
al
to
llli
tia
te
ac:boal
The
bond
issue
would
provide
~.
Additions
to
the
curri
culum
desegreptioll
JUIII.
funds
for
the
completion
0(
the
!his
fall
will
iDclude
~
counea
westside
high
school
project
and
ID
earth
science,
chemiItry. pby. 4 Students
W'.n
construction
of
elementary
school
sics
an
d literature.
additions.
$200
S h I
Petitions
with
1,732
signatures
Faculty
Council
c 0
an
Ips
were
submitted
to
the
board.
School
Board
President
O.
D.
r S b
't
N
mes
I'our U
nivenlty
journa1Iam
stu-
Bartholow
thanked
the
various
0 U
m.
a d
ents
ban
been
awarded _
P.T.
A.
groups
for
circulating
the
Tbe
Faculty
Co\IDC
U
nomina
ted
ICboIarahipa
for
the
fall
semeste
r.
petitions.
six
instructors
to
till
vacanclea
'l1!e
IChoIarsh1ps
were
aw
arded
The
Sept.
12
school
board
elec·
on
the
nin
e-man
U
nlveraI
ty
Re-
b)'
the
Scbool
01
JOUI'II8llIm
to
..
tion
will
also
incl
u
de
the
election
search
Coun
cil
at their meeting
Iected
undergraduates
on
the
be-
of
three
board
members
and
a
Tuesday
in
th
e H
ouse
Cham
bers
ala
01
acDmic
and
a
ctivi
ty
nc·
treasurer.
of
Ol
d
Ca
pitol.
orda
at
the
Unl
veral
tJ
IDd
..
The
ballot
will
also
Include
I
Tbe
nominations
for
the
three-
tential
for
aucceuful
joumalIIm
proposal
for
a
tbree-fourtbs
mill year
poaitiOlll
will
be
IUbmitted
career.
levy
to
establiab
the
Area
X
Vo-
f
or
ap
proval
to
Duane
C. SprIes-
'I'boIe
awarded
acboIarIhipa
cat/onal·Technical
Scbool
and
terabach,
dean
of
the
Graduate
are
:
Da
vid
R.
Re
id.
A4.
AlaoDa
;
Community
Co
ll
ege.
C
oll
ege
an
d
vice
presid
ent
for
Gayle
Hallenbeck,
A4,
Council
Tbe
funds
fr
om
the
levy
would
research.
Tb
e
nam
es
of
the
nom
· Blufb; Gall
Longanecker.
AJ
.
be
used
to
pu
rchase
property,
inees
will
be
released
when
'
they
Daftllport;
and
Gill')'
EIIilI
Smith.
construct
IIId
equJp
the
proposed
are
appro
ved
.
A4
,
FalrfleJd.
Page view 0
1 2 3 4

Summary of Contents

Page 1 - Graduate

r Df Delivery' e oil 'Iowan Forecast CIoWy ,",y ... ht with ecCI.""" r.l" mestfy In MVth pertIon If .. It

Page 2 - OBSERVATIONS

1he-'Oonu Iowan OBSERVATIONS AND COMMENT ... lltADUAfi t:1K.l!CI! OO(TOII OF 'HILO'O~HY IIkb ... rtc~ ... "./ lu,

Page 3 - Planned

Businesses More Cautious Meet Planned Coffee May Be Factor ;r~::'~~~:~ 'After Rash Of Robberies For Educal~ors 1.'!~RKo!~~~!.~!~:.?~~s

Page 4 - I I d

, • 4-THI DAILY IOWAN-lew, Ctty, II,,-W", Autl. 11t 'N6 Bragan Fired As Manager . Army Drafts Of A I He h k He d,Gary Snook t anta; Ite e

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