February 5 - The Daily Iowan

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•
Serving the 'State
owan
University of Iowa
Campus and
• Iowa
City
.
Est. 1868 - AP leased Wire, Wirephoto - Five Cents
•
Army To Send More
A-Guns .To · Germany'
Named in Detr:oit
As Coach of the Year
~
.,
e
I•
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oDUnurd laIr !lod mJ)II,
IDIb toll& U-68: low, 38.
Iowa City, Iowa, Friday, February 5, 1954
Vy
t
The Weather •
I
DETROIT (.4»- Halfback John- r
IIY Lattner ot Notre Dame and. dre sing room."
Forest Evashevski, head coach at' Also present was Notre Dame's
IOllia. were honored Thursday new head coach, Terry Brennan.
night at the annual Detroit Times The nattily dressed youngster had
Downtown Quarterback dinner. bluntly said:
Lattner. who turned down a bid
"We want to be the' best team
from the Canadian Foo'lbaU league in the nation. The only way you
to sign with thc PIttsburgh Steel- can prove you arc is to play top
ers earlier in the day, was named teams week after week. The sched"player of the year" in collegiate ule suits me fine. I wouldn't want
ranks.
any breathers on it."
~amed Top Coach
Today/s Examinations
8 a.m.: AU secUon
PDf 27:21: COre 11:1; Com. 6U:138:
6G:l.
Com.
10 a.m.: Clas ell Which med tlrs' TIIt8CIa", a' 3:10.
1 p.m.: All sections kills )0:35,32,31:
kills 10:22:21 ; Com.
Will Bolster
Allied .Defense
WASINGTON (A')-The army is
addlng to Its atomic punch tor tbe
defense of Western Europe by
sending still more lar-reaching nu• Off
Evashevski, who piloted his R
Iowa team to a stunning 14-14 tie
ussla
ers fl am
clear cannon to the strategically
vital frontler of Wcstern Germany,
honored as
It disclosed Thursday that to the
Previously, Lattner had been
Billion Contracts
original six atomic cannon sent
last fall, it aubsequent.\y had dtspatched other 280 millimeter gun
In Trade-Renewal Try
man award in New York. Sunday
units, and to the e, a spokesman
tbe Irish star will complete his
MOSCOW (A")-The Soviet UnTOKYO (Friday) (A")- The de- - - said, another unit will be added,
probably within the next three
"sIam" by being honored in Pitts- ion Thursday offered more than
(ection to lh United State ot were allowed to enter.
burgh at the annual Dapper Dan $1 bi! Iion wor t h 0 f contracts to
Ru ia's top spy in Japan , a pro- It was dlsclo ed Thurs4a ' that months.
banquet.
British industries for delivery
te,e of th exe!:uted Lavrenti Btl- Rastovorov, (I former perllOnal
The exact number of guns or
Evnshevski said he was "gen- from 1955 to 1957. It was the biggone
Ul' clast
ria, ap1> ared Friday to have deall courier ot Beria, mnde his nrst Unl'IS w hi ch have
sc
uinely honored" to be named gest gesture thus far in Russia's
Thc
a major blow to Russla's espionage contact with shadowing U.s. Drmy S ep t em ber was flO t rev e a ]A....
'--..••
"coach ot the year:'
widely publicized campaign to resetup here.
age'nts las t Dec. 23. That was the spokesman said the unit which has
'Rea 11 '11 lion 0 red'
(Da l1, CI
' .... n .....te)
vive East-West trade.
tui I r
Mrs
St
"This Is a ,reat victory that may day Moscow reported the ex cu- been alerted ''or movement t~ Eu "J'm really honored," he sal'd,
Th
Cl
f II
d
1 OKIE ECKARD, 01, IOWA CITY, lelt, receives he-r reai tration ma
a rom
.
afa
arr, be d I I
. J
"
A
I tI
t
bo
R
rope In the next few mon hs is
I.' 0 er was 0 owe
severa
fo
econd semester I fonda and Tuesda , and re,utration maec s v m apan, un mer - on 0 Beria, former ss or us"because don't forget our tqam hours later by the announcement 812 Kirkwood al·e. Re.1 lratlon
r
can source lIai • "It is the Intelli- sia's secret police.
•
the 264th field artillery batailion
lost three gamcs last 'fall."
01 a British ship builder here that ttrlal may bf' obtained In the b3 ement ot Unlve:' "'11 hall.
gence equlvale tot a Midway or a
Rastovorov wanted to change from Ft. Sill, Okla .
Evashevski, a grcat blocking he had signed a separate contractl
- .
Normandy (momentous battles ot sides right then, but the U.S. urThe 280 mUlfmet~r gun can tire
baek irom Michigan over 10 years to build 20 fishing [rawlers for
World Wllr II)."
my was cautious.
Ieither standard ammunition 01'
ago, s~oke. in alight vein of Iowa's the Russians tor almo t $17 mll"The Japanese government and
Ob&llned A ylwn
shella with nuclenr explosive Wll1'
stunnmg tie agalOst Notre Dame. lion.
the Russians themselves would b
hl'llds.
"There was a big controversy
First comment from the British
surprlst'd if they knew what th\5
Sour~es say Ra lovorov os~ed The army lays empha Is on thc
about the fainting spells puller! by board of trade in London said "We
army intelligence unit ha on the and obtain d AmerIcan protective range of the big gun, the tact (hat
two Notre Dame players on the welcome any increase in trade
.
whole Communl~t con piracy in custody Jan. 24 aft I' beint ordered It can deliver atomic explosives
field," he said. "That was not~ing. with RUSSia, provided it is wlthJn "Do Not DIsturb" has been cho.
Japan.
back to Moscow u.nder cll'cum- on an enemy in weather conditions
BeCore we even took the field, (l'Ie non-strategic tield."
se as the theme for Christian 'tt
Olh
'tt
b
Retistralion for second emester
R \a
Q" T ItI
stances which convlDced him he which ground bomb - carrying
three of our players fainted In the
C lied 'M j
M'
n
'
.
ml ee.
er comml ee mem e n .
I
d
T
IllS n
u
a nc
too would face a firing squad.
planes and on th extreme mobila.
. a or ~ve
Emphasis Week to be held on Include Ben Bankson, AI. Sioux Will take pace Mon ay and ues- The stunned Russian misslon,l The American informant id nLl- It of the hu e 85 ton un and Its
I U.~ ~:fl~a~ m ~a~Ul~o~ I~t SUI's campus Feb. 27 through City, Maryls Long, Nl. Fenton, day on the main floor ot, SUI's which at first refused to believe tlee! Rastovrov as director ot an tO~inl tract! 'u~lg
care . e oVlet 0 er 00 e
e March 3.
Sid Jones, A2, Allantlc, Beverly field house. Admls Ion to the field YUl'l A. Rnstovorov hod switched intel1ll1ence network that checked
.
a .~aJor move to ?ersu~de the Student Christi~n council, which Barta, AJ , Cedar Rapids, Jok house n these two da s will be sides and charged U.S. agents kld- on U.S. military movements In
Using the full, 280 millimeter
BritISh to rela~ their s(rlct con- includes 11 student grounps on tht! DeRyke, G, Iowa City, Jobyina
Q.
y
naped him, quit lalking about the Japan, penetrated the Japanese size shell that is equivalent (0
trois on stratcgJc shipments to the SUI campus, is coordinating plans Rankin, A2, Tracy, and Millie as tollows.
casco
government up to high level and a.bout 1I Inches the cannon can
~, Soviet bloc.. The otrlclals. cx- for .the we~k.
Hanson, A2, Knoxville.
Monday: 8 n.m. M-McC; 8:30 Whil
Raslovorov reportedly wormed its way into the Jnp:mcsc fire a~ut 20 miles.
pressed conhdencc the BrltJ.sh Eight religious leaders who he,'e Prof ~sor-Emeritus M. Willard McD-Mil; 9 a.m . Mim-Nad; 9:30 was baring Russia's top s crets ln labor movement.
But m a recent improveme~t. of
government wo~ld move warily been invited to the campus to par- Lampe is in charge ot arranging Nae-Om' 10 a m On-Pes' 10'30 the Far East to U.S. custodians on l
(he weapon, a device lor flflng
and refuse to ship any equipment ticlpate in activities will lead in- class room appointment and con'
.,
, . Okinawa the Russian mission in
shells of smaUer ealiber than the
whic.h would add to Russia's ';'Iar formal discussion ,roups, viSit tncts, and 'the Rev. Nancy Fo~- Pet-Q; I I !I.m. R:Rob; 11:30 Roc- Tokyo ta~ed 8 grave crisis.
bore of a gu~ .has been adapted
m~klOg potential. ,!,he oUiclals housing units and speak in class berg, minister to stud nts at the chi 12 noon SCi-Sh; 12:30 p.m. Not only wa its top spy gone l
0
to the 280 mllhmeter weapon. A
Congregational church, is advisor SI-So; 1 p.m. Sp-Sus; 1:30 Sut- but no one could com In to take
top rankjng general said this insaid most o.r. th~ Jtems !IOug~t rooms.
from the Bnhsh mclude specifiC
Chalrma.n Named
to the colllllliltee,
Trav; 2 p.m. Traw-Wnl; 2:30 his plae . Japan docs not recogcreases (he .rao~e or th~ gun to
proqucts completely embargoed
Norman Melchert, A3, Water,
nll~ thE' mlssloh because Russia r _
abOUL 30 miles.
or restricted in some way..
100,
presIdent . of the Student
Spe 11.
Inthlde .
Wam~'YIl; 3 p.m. Wlm-Z ; 3:30 A- tused to sign the Japanese peace DES MOINES (A>I - Frank L. The 280 millimeter gun fired
The cash:for-goods Soviet of.fer Christian ~ouncil Is chairman of Speakers for the week mclude Bok; 4 p.m. Bal-Boc.
treaty.
Davey, 40, Des Moines business- its first atomic shot last spring at
of 400 mIllion pounds sterhng the planning committe Iol' the The Rev, J. Ru!;SeU Gardner, N:!Tuesday : 8 a.m. Bod-Brov; 8:30
Allowed to Rtmaln
man and SUI alumnus, lfnnounced the Nevada testing grounds of the
($1,120,000,000) involves var~ed week. .
.
zarene Student fellowship; The Brow-Cat; 9 a.m. Cau-Cor; 9:30 Its members were allowed to Thursday his candidacy for the Atomic Energy commission.
equipment including tankers, 10- Ben Dlerk , A3, Iowa City, and Rev. Robert. E. Hanson, Westmln-.
.
. sta on after the oceu atlon ended
. '
A(omic cannon units arc organdustdal plant equipment and rail- Dale Haworth A4 Chnmpaign ster foundahon' Margaret H. Tre- Cos-Den,/IO a.m. Deo-Dz, 10.30
y
P
I
DemocratJc nommatlon tor secre- j d' . gu b ttali
Ith I
but anyone departlng cou d not
ze In SIX- n a
OllB, w
wo
"
"
road equipment. It was transmlt- 111:, are co-c.h airmen or . the ~om- stedr'thROgDe; jWllUlaSm sd FetllO ~JShIP E-Flr; 11 a.m. Fis-Gat; 11 :30 Gau- come back and no new memberS tary of slatc.
gun to a battery.
ted by Foreign Trade Minister mitlee on mformal dlSCU SIOns. an.
e lSI.' p es t u en re ow- Grim; noon Grin-Har; 12:30 HII$__
He is the first of his party to
Ivan G. Kabanov to a delegation Other members of thls committee ship: .The Re~. Lincoln Maynard Hof 1 p.m. Hog-Hz ; 1:30 I-Joh; 2
lie k the ortlee this year. RepubForest Evashevski
of 32 visiting British businessmen, are Cynthia Borcherding, N I, Fred- Cfl.lchmfl'S, UDlted Student fellow....
Last Ex.POW To Leave
Narn d Top Coach
along with a breakdown of equip- ericksbur apd Shirley Tolliver, ship and the R v. Jaroslav Ja n p.m .. Joi-Kim, 2,30 Kin-Kz, 3 p.m.
• •
lIean candidates for th~ post are
_ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ment the Russians said they could A3, Charles City. .
Pe;tkan, Lutheran Student assoc- L-LlD 3:30 Llo-Lz.
Japan Is Iowa Cltlan
Secretary of State MelVin D. Synuse.
Barabara Baldw1l1, G, Lancas- lahon.
Requests for students to regis- TOKYO (F Id
(A")
G d horst, and Joe Mill r , Des Moines
Result of Nerotlatlons
ter, Pa., and Max Tow, A2, Cedar Wesley Foundation has Invited tel' at times earlier than Indicated b
It r aly)( I -b tOO -t metal worker
.
h .
th R
GI
Ot' M r
d'
yes are 0 en pa n u u no
.
The British delegation-biggest RaPld~ are co-c a l.rmen ot the e ev.
en
IS ar 111, . Irec- will not be granted, but students tor Cpl. Donald Wakehouse of
Davey was boin in Des Moines
private enterprise group to visit committee for dormitory contacts· ltor of ~he Wesley Ioundal1on at may register at any time Jater I
Cit th I t
' J
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Moscow since World War ll-has
PubllciLy Committee LI ted
the University of Tennesee ano than their scl)eduled hour.
owa
y,.e as. man In apa.~ IS a graduate ot Dowllng high
NE,~ YORK (A» A "task
b
1 I
.
dl
S
Wesley Pippert A3 Mason City th~ Rev. Harold B. Kuhn Irom
.
of former war pnsoners repatrl school lIe served in World War torce was former Thursda)' to InLow bid ot $210,800 tor the con- ecn con err ng With lea . ng 0- is chairman or the ~b1icit com~ the Asbury Theological sem inary,
Stu.dents ma~ pick up their rcg- ated by the Communists. Wake.
..
quire into the vast, complex operstructlon of addi{ional steam gcn- viet foreign and domestic trade
p
y
Wil or K
11
P ese t Lhe istratlon maLenals in the basement house leaves for home by all' Frl- II 27 months, mcludmg 14 months ations of the federal governfent
erating equipment at SUI was sub- Off.iCi~IS to ascertain. what gOOds
.
lowC:: C~rls(r~'n w~ell~~:hiP.n Tht! of University hall. ~II ~inancial day and Marilyn Monroe will tell overseas.
which have to do with providJng
mitted Thursday by the Wickes Bntam can se~1 RuS! la, as well as American
Emerges
Rev. WooB B. Carper will repre- accounts \vith the umvcrslty must him goodbye.
Alter the war he worked as 10- people the necessities ot life.
Boller company ot Saginaw, Mich., possible produ~ts ,for i",lports.
sent the Canterbury club.
be ~pproved before students can Wakehouse, wounded and cap- cal ottlce veterans employment reThe move was announced by
reports George L. Horner, superinThe delegatIOn s chler, J . B.
The Young Men's ChrlS' tl'an asso- receive material.
tured In the 13 t days of the Ko.
t
P id
H b t H
·
t
f
C
t
i
C
presental1ve,
and
was
assistant
ormer
rei en
er er
oover,
tt sa Ies d Jrec or 0
romp on rom
ron
aln
eiation and Youag Women's Cbris- Fee payment dates for the sec- rean war,. has been in Tokyo army
.
chairman ot Ihe commission on
tendent of planning and construc- S co,
lUs
lion.
Parki.nson, Ltd:, manufacturers of
tian association wm not be rep- ond semester arc Feb. 22 10 Feb, '1ospital ~mc(' August, shortly after ve,tell
employment represent- or anlzatlon of the executive
A second scaled proposal - electrical eqUipment, expressed Aft
Year Chase
resented by speakers.
25.
Irepatrlal1on.
atlve.
b g h t
t
$233392 by Murray Iron Works, satisfaction with the Russian list.
er
,
ranc 0 governmen.
Bur{lngton - was also opened
Kabanov's memorandum said
He called th e special study group
Thursday and tlublicly read in Old purchase of raw materials, food
WASHINGTQN (JP\ _ J 0 h n
"A task force on s ubsi stencE' servCapitol.
and industrial consumer goods Hvasta, a 26-year-old American,
ices."
Horner says the awarding of the "could amount" to more than 130 emerged triumphantly from be"The purpose of Ihis task force
contract awaits approval by the million pounds.
hlnd the Iron Curtain Thursday
•
is to study the organization of aU
finance committee of the state The trawler deal for over six aCter beating the secret police of
federal agencies engaged in proboard of education and the legis- million pounds ($16.800,000) was Communist Czechoslovakia in 8
'
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viding subsistence services within
lative budget and financial con- negotiated by Harry L. Dowsett, fabulous game of hide-and-seek.
the continental United States," the
tral committee. This will be the chalrma.n of Br~oke Marine,. Ltd.
A saga rivaling anything beUnder the active guidance of II
announcemE\llt said.
mal~ contrac~ tor construction inWa shlD~on Viewed the ~uning tw~en the covers of ~ suspense Hollywood and Broadway writer- left the 10wa campus to join a 1932, the first anti- lynching play During his first several yeaTS Agencies whOse operations will
volvmg a bO.ller, stoke~, .frunace Of. the Soviet o.fter a~ i~tendmg to thriller came to light after producer, a growp ot SUI student New York Shakespearean reper- lO appear there.
in Hollywood Maibaum wrote be surveyed in the inqui~y. include:
and certain It.ems of Plpt~g and rel~!orce Formgn MUlls.ter MoIO: Pr~gue's Red radiO broadcast a this spring will write a series of tOry company, becoming the "The Tree" was followed by two some 20 screenplays for MGM, The Veterans admmlStration;
assoclate~ deVices. Other bids, for tov s hand at th.e Be~lln confer bnei announcement that Hvasta, television programs to be shown youngest actor ever to play the other B r 0 a d way productions, 20th-Century Fox, Paramount and the department of health, educaeonstru.chon to complete the pro- ence. Molotov m hiS specch85 who had been sentenced to 10 throughout the country.
major role of "Othello" logo on "Birthright" ond "Sweet Mystery Columbia studios This included tion and weltare; the department
jeet, Will be announced at a later there has attacked Western re- years for "espionage," had been
h
th N
Y k t
fLit" b C
M ib
. 'ned
hit
"I' W t d WI
,ot defense and the bureaus of
dale h
' t' t' s n t ad with the East " I
d" f
.
d
Richard W. Maibaum, w 0 came I.' ew or sage.
0
e, e ore
a aum JOI
s ue V cures as
an e
ngs,
I
d'i
iI
d
, e says.
s nc Ion 0
r e
. re case
rom prison on or- to the Iowa campus from HollyHis first play, "The Tree," was Melro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a writ- "Ten Gentlemen for West Point," pr sons, In an ~llalrs, an ethers.
dered expelled.
wood late last month, will teach written and produced experiment- er in 1935. His play "See My "They Gave Him a Gun ," "Bad Named as chalI'man of the study
Escaped 2 Years A«o
. and supervise the student script aHy at the University theatre Lawyer" was produced in 1939 by _ .
Is Joseph P. Binns of New York,
.'
executive vice-president ot the
. But t~e state department 0[[1- writers in their preparation of six while he was a student at Iowa, George Abbott, Its New York run TO SUPERVISECII1I~ tSclose~ that H~asta es- hall-hour programs for 'a series It opened on Broadway late in extending throughout the season.
(Continued on rage 6)
Waldorf-Astoria hotel and vicecap
rom prison over wo years tentatively entitled "Freedom in a
president of the Hilton hotels cor" 0
f the
poration
ago; that four months ago he D
more
A Condensation of Lat. Developments
reached the American embassy in emocracy. ill nteh or be
od° ed
Th1r~n other leading business'.
h I programs w
en
pr uc
h
h
Prague, were
e was given s e - and illmed in the SUI Televisionmen - including manufacturers,
ter; anhd thcat ahCter long negOhtia - Motion Picture laboratories.
transportation executives, restaulions t e zec government a d
.
rant chain operators fOod pTocesNEW DELHI, India (JP}-A government communique said Thur!\- finally consented to his departure
Malbaum's one-sem~ster apsors marketing expe~ts and others
day all but 49 of the 341 bodics recovered thus far from the Hindu from Czechoslovakia.
pointment as resident ed itor on the
'
ed t h d
. I
. .
.
.. t eac h'mg ....
~" ult
-were nam
0
ea
specla
pilgrimage
stampede at Allahabad were women and chlldren.
The
It was on J an. 2, 1952 that SUI t e 1eVlSlon
c yan d
count was not yet complete in the toll from the tragedy Wednesday Hvasta escaped from the bleak the program series itself are made
groups.
at the junction of the Ganges and Jumna rivers, the holy waters Leopoldov prison near Bratislava. possible by a recent $10,200 grant
-------Where three million frenzied pilgrims had gathered to wash away For 21 months he managed to live to SUI from the Ford foundation's
their sins. New Dellii newspapers predicted the final figures woUld underground in Czechoslovakia. television and radio center in Ann
reach '500 dead and 1,000 injured.
•
Eluded Pollce
Arbor, Mich. When completed, the
•
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Some time during that period he Iowa programs will be . added to
made. his way from Bratislava to the center's collection fOr use by
The driver of a 1953 DeSoto
Prague, a distance of 175 miles educational institutions i~ this
Thursday night skidded at the
TOKYO (~iday) (A>)-An agreemen to build, up Japan's mili - through mountainous and closely country and abroad.
northwest corner ot Clinton and
tary defenses without obligating that Japanese troops be sent abroaa policed territory, and last Oct .. 2 Scripts for the series will be
Washington sts. and rammed Into
wIll pe signed by the United States and Japan, probably either Feb he got safely iMide the American written by SUI students who enroll next week in the second-se44 or 25, a diplomatic source said Thursday night. Another move embassy.
two parked cars.
He was given asylum there IInW mester course, "TV and Radio
Ilmed at strengthening the hand of the present pro-American Prime
The car, driven by Clifford MurMinister, Shlgeru Yoshida, will be a $50 million surplus vain deal. Wednesday. With permission ot the Programs: Their Planning and
phy, 18, of Lone Tree, glanced oU
the iource added, with one-fifth ot It an out-right grant lor use by Czech government, he left Prague COQstruction ." As resident editor
Qne car owned by James FerguMaibaum w;JJ guide the student
lapanese defense industries. 'l'he agreement will call for sale of sur- ', y automobile Thursday.
son, A4, Cedar Rapids, and
Hvasta, who;se parents live in writers toward their six-program
smasbed another iluto owned by
plUS Wheat anti barley for Japanese yen.
Hillside, N. J., is a n ative of goal, wblle sharing teaching duties
Leonard Flander, 921 Hudson ave.
Flanders CaT knocked over a parkCzechoslovakia but became a na- of the cop.rse with H. Clay Harshing meter.
~uralized American citizen in 1944 barger, head of television teachThe right front lender and Irill
WASHINGTON (A>)-The house post office qommlttec agreed tc lnd served in the navy. He re- ing, and John R. Winnie, chief of
(IIUI PlI.te 1I...'ee'
boost first class postal rates [rom three to four cents, on out of tow! turned to Czechoslovakia in 1948 TV production in the Iowa labor- HOLLYWOOD'S RlCIIAIlD MAIIlAUM, ri."&, m~tI wltb &be advllOf1 ClODMIII&aee [or a new werles work of MUTphy's car was extenlllail, but may reconsider after studying administration requests 10: as a student and was employed atory. Winnie will be producer of 01 TV prornma &0 be WTl"ea aDd prod1leecl at 8U1 \ilia .priu. Memben of Ute lUlIven", co_H- sively damaled, Damage til the
tee ClOalerria. wI&b Malbaum are from left .. rllht Pro'. Joha R. Wm.le, chlef.f ,rod"'09 at other cara wu sliJbt.
lnerta8cs in . second and third class rates too. The senate interlol )rie!ly at the American consulat~ the series.
Three other paasengers were in
eOnJmlttee voted 14-1 to grant statehood to Alaska and the measure general In Bratislav~ prior to this Maibaum earned his B.A. devee SUI, Deabl Dewey B. Stult aad Braee Eo Mahan )1 sur. coUe.e of liberal an. and edenaloD dlvl·
now goes to the senate, where a statehood-for-Hawali bill already i: arrest on espionage charges in and a Phi Beta Kappa ley at SUI lion; PTofeuon Artbur M, Barnes; Joumallaa; James A. J&eobs, phyues; &0, Sieber, an. aM H. the Murphy car. No one was injured.
.
October of that year.
in 1931 and his M.A. in 1932. He CIa, BarsIlbar~r. bead of TV teacblq.
6A:7.
3 p.m. : Claues whlcb meet first Monday, at 3:10.
ThJs Is 'he final day or e amlnaUon •.
B., ·
~~~C~~;~h~~n;:~)~as
:;~~~~~p~~: ~:x;~~n Tt~OeP~ei~~
Sp
' y' Talks,· Mal·or Blow
Gi v e n Re c/ Espionage
S1
Re /_.
We k Th em e M
dT d '
Igl 0 n e
on ay, ues ay
0
T0 Be 'D 0 N0 f DIS- t Ur b_' ScForhedid
u e as ays
Reg •. strat •. on
AI
T R
umnus
un
Fo low Off,'ce
r
a
Government Plans
Study on Providing
Life/s Necessities
$210,800 Is Low
Biel on New Boiler
F
2.
UrI
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M0 V I e W.
'
J.
S
f
I
t
f
r I e r 0 Ins
a
To Supervise Student TV Series-
World News Briefs
341 Bodies Taken from Ganges
Car Skids, Rams
2 Parked Autos
U.S.-Japanese Agreement Reported
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Mail Rates, Statehood Considered
•
Wallin"
.,
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. Pace %-THE DAlLY lOW
-10\
It , h.-Friday. Feb. 5, 19 ..
'.
The Daily Iowan
'GENERAL NOliCES
Molotov Tries
Scene-Slea ling
Echo-Nomic Disturbance
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1954
GENERAL NOTICES ab.... _
deposited with Ahe eity eilter It
The Dally Iowan 111 the ....
room In the CommllDlea....
Center. Notices must be laW.
Editorial
,,. • a..m. Tile nan, I .... n ~lre.~U.n
ted by 2 p.m . the day ~
Cit,.. IOWA. Entered AI eecond clau de-,.-rl me,,', 'e the ft.' . f 011 J •• r Russia's Molotov started the sec~
D
Al1.r
IOWAN
EDrrOIlJAL
S:r
FF
llrst
publication; they will NOI
mall matler at Ibe ~I oUIce AI IOWA "U ID. bwUtI'al", Deb.q.e . nd f •• a
ond week of the Berlin Big Four
Ja('k Burrow
Cit,. under the ad 01 con,r_ of aye •• It Oped fralD ....DI~ t. II noaa Editor
be
accepted
by pbone, and . .
conference
with
a
proposal
which
Tau'.'
throulb
Saluda,;
••.
m.
I.
1%
ManaclO~
Editor
lCJolh.
rln
1I0rri
Mare.h 2, l Ilt.
..an
New"! Editor
.• Sarah Adtlm
the
Associa
ted
Press
call
ed
a be TYPED or LEGIBLY )fin.
..... , Phil O'Connor
IlUlBER or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 City Edltor
·'blockbuster" and a "haymaker." TEN and SIGNED by a res,.·
Sociely Editor
..• John,ln .. Mubl
The AMoetatl!Cl Preu 11 entlUed u4191 fnlll ""D I . m l. ol,101 ta
Sports
Edllor
... trowl" Gr nwold
dual vel, ID the \lIe for rep·,bUcalNn Call
The French might more correctly
r ep.rt ne .. Jlcuu. w.m~D.·. pac. Item.,
A
..
l.tanl
Clt~·
Editor
...
DIck
SOIO'u)·
of aU the 1O<'e' newl I*lnted In ibis .r .,..n'.DC ~l\t, t. Tbe o"u, l e",an.
called it a coup de theatre. It was sible persOD.
Chl~f Photogl8pher ...
D.<k Pltscbk
eewlJNIP« u weU al aU AP neWI Edll.rlsl
leu are la the C.ID III IDI. Wirephoto Technic n .... Jay l1~·tone
a sensation, but a sensation com~
STUDENTS W IS 0 I. G TO
clbpalches.
uU.a. Cent"f.
•
Editorial Page Editors
tori K ufo
pounded more of the make~be1ieve keep field house lockers seCOIlII
man, Nape)' Balker
IlfIl MllE Il
SubKrlpUQn rates - by carrier In Iowa
stuff of the stage than of hard, semester: check your I.D. card at
AUDIT B • AU
C1ly. 25 cenll WHkl, or $I Jl4Ir year In
gritty inter~at!onal realiUes.
the equipmen t r oom windowanu
advance: Ilx man &h.. ....2.$: lhr« DAILY IO WAN ADVEIlTI INO T.\)'P
OF
monUu. $2:10. By man In 10w8. $lI per
Buslneu Manager . Charles GO\ldlltr
By submItting the draft of a tuition is paid . Lockers Dol
CIIICUL ATJO •
,ear; .Ix montlul. 53. three months.
As.t. Busln •. I Mgr.
.. 'ax Nebt'l
German p,cace treaty, Molotov checked by March 1 will have iii!
t3. DIl othrr mall subscription, 110
Call 8-215111
.~J r ••, ...
only. ~eemlngly ~anscended the locks remo,,'~ and contenlll dJs.
per year; .bt montb., 53.Ga; \hrte OI LY l OW N ClKCULATIO!'( ST YF
T. . . . .JI, ~' w" b, 1:80 • •m. lhhmon tht. t3 %5.
Circulation Mer.
Robf-ri Cronk
prelimmary conditions of such a osed of
treaty which had been under dis~ p
.
cussion. He got ahead of himself. LlBRARW HOURS FOR TIl
His feat would take on rea lity only
it the three Western powers were
INTERIM PERIOD
to accept Russia's notions of what Friday, Feb. 5 - 8:30 a.m..$
a reunited Ger many should be. p.m .
.
And Molotov must have known
how imperceptibly Iaint that Saturday, Feb. 6-8.30 a.m.·11
,
FRIDAY, FEB. 5, 1954
chance is.
noon.
"
Proposal Has Appeal
Sunday, Feb. 7-CLOSED.
UNI\' £R ITY CALENDAR Items are cited uled in the Prcsld\nt's office, Old Capitol
The fiussian proposal, however,
Monday, Feb. 8- 8:30 a.m.·l
was
not
purposeless.
Molotov's
in
~
p.m.
Saturday, teb. 6
IAcute Bactcria l Infections," Medi&I onday, Feb. 15
sistence .that the abnormality of
T uesday, Feb. 9- 8.30 a.m.•j
1:45 p.m. _ University com~ cal Amphithea tre.
10:30 a.m. - Graduate college~
German partition "must be ended" p.m.
Ph' E ",
K
college of commerce Iccture. Pro!.
mencement, field house.
8:00 ~. m.- ~I' PSl90Sn
appa R. B. Heflebower, Northwestern
in a peace conference to be con~
Wednesday, Fcb. 10-8:30 a.m..
veneci in SIX months-or in any
8:00 p.m. - Basketball, Missowrl gymnastic exhlbl lon, 1 2 Swed~ university, "Economics as a Mecast not later than October-is 12 M i d n igh~.
b e
ish Olymplc Tca , North Gym, thod of AnalY',is " scnate chamber
er .
Fieldhouse.
"
bound to have some appeal to
Departmental l1braries will hlVl
O.C.
9:30 p,m . - Post~game party
those Germans who are unhappy th~ir hours posted on the doon.
Tuesday, Feb. 9
3 : 00~5:00 p.m. _ YWCA Silver
and da nce, Iowa Ullion.
about the separated. seml~sov-8:00 a.m.~5:00 p.m.-Rcglstra. Tea, President's home.
SUllcla)', Feb. '1
ereign state 01 their country. The
GRADUATING SENIORS WIO
tion, Fieldhouse.
7:30 p.m. - SUI Newcomer
promise of both East and West plan to work. for p aduate de~ .
2 : 00~ 5: 00 p.m.-Tea I!ance, Riv·
1:30 p.m.-Uni\·ersity Club Des~ club bridge , Iowa Union.
German pal ticipation in the con~ and who are members of Phl l1a
er Room, Iowa MemorIal Union. sert~PQrty Bridge, Iowa Union.
8:00 p.m. - Archaeological inference, the withdrawal of occupy~ Sigma, freshman hono r society,
2:00 ~ 5:00 p. m. - D u pI i cat
6:00 p.m.-Triangle Club Picnic stilutc, Prof. A. D. Tushingham.
lng armies with in a year of the should get in touch with Pro/.
Bridge, sunporch, Iowa Union.
Supper, Iowa Union .
Queens col1ege, Ontario, Shamtreaty's signing, and at least Jim~ !jarry H. Cr osby, fac ulty ad vbtr
7:30 p.m.-Union Board Movic,
Wednesday, Feb. 10
baugh lecture room. library.
" My Little Chickadee," Lounge,
ited German rearmament and mu- of SUI chapter, at room No. I ~
Tuesday, Feb. 16
7:30 a.m.-Second S e m cst e r
Iowa Union.
nitions~making also are attractive Old Armory Temporary. The nlC]ass~ Begin.
8:00 a.m.-5:00 'p.m. - Collegiate
8:00 p.m.-Iowa Mountaineers
to these people.
tlonal Phi Eta Sigma fratetnl~
Thur d.a Feb. 11
Chamber of Cctnmcl'ce Careers
Tr avelogue, Warren MUler, "WanAcceptance of the Potsdam offers two $300 scholarships cad
y,
conference, scnate and hous!'
daring Slds," Macbride audi~r~
7:30 p.m.-Student Co un c i 1, chambC'l', O. C.
.
boundaries and a ban against Ger- year on the basis ot the student'l
i um.
4 .00~5:00 p.m.-Studenl~faculty
House Chambcr, O.C. .
man pal ticipation in "any alli- scholastic recor d evidence of ert9 :00~12:00 ·p.m.-TI'l~ ngle Club coefee hour (chemistry, phnrmacy, '
Monday, Feb. 8
ance directed against any single aUve ability, evidence ot Jinapolitical science, history), lounge.!,.....:========
country which participated in the cial need, pr omise of success b
8:00 a.m.~5 : 00 p.m. -Registra- Party-Dance, Iowa Unton.
Sunday, Feb. 14
library.
war against Hitler" obviously are chosen field, anh p~~onality. Ont ion, Fieldhouse.
4:10 p.m.-College or Medicine
2 :00~5:00 p.m.-Tca dance, River
Wedne da.y, Feb. 17
less to the taste of the Germans. ly members of. P hi Eta Sigma an
8:00 p.m. - University lecture,
lecture, Dr. W. Burny Wood Jr., 100m, Iowa Union.
StJll, many who were drafted into eligible for those gift scholarshi;&
Washington University, "Scudies 2:00-5:00 p.m. - D u pI i cat e Boris Goldvosky, lounge, Iowa Un~
Hitler's army or had their homes Local deadline for applicatiOn! b
on the Cellular Immunology 'Jf bridgc, sunporch, Iowa Union.
ion.
bombed are in no hurry to get Feb. 10.
I
back into unliorm. And some
(For IDlorrnation r egard!n: dales beyond this scbed ulc, scc reservations III the office of the PresIdent,
By CENTRAL PRES
I
might feel the surrender of the PERSONS WISHING A YWe.\ '
Old Ca pitol)
By J .M. UOBERTS J R.
Television can take yea(s off records. As /I result, she wasn't eastern lands annexed by Poland baby silter may call the oUiet b
Assoclatcd PrC~8
YOUI' Jiie, according to Mrs. Ellen su re if she was 99 or 104.
is the price to be paid for return the Union, x 2240, betwecn 2 andl
Foreign lafr
/Evans of Bristol, England. When In Decatur, Ill.. a man. reached of the Russian occupation zone to p.m. week days.
Mrs. Evans reached the age of 100 the age of U4. He ascnbed this actual German control.
About t~e only tl~in~ left. now the other day, newspapermen 'hardiness to the fact that he had
Has Frencb Appeal
TOE AMERICAN INSTITUTt
-----·---------1
for the Allies at Berhn IS to ClOd a askd her the ecret of living sO not done a Lick of work since he Molotov's suggestion that this of Management is sponsoriol I
By CENTRAL
P RE 11 t
.
nole on which the
ATLANTA
G
The
en" or modify the drastic Alabama
. conference can many years. ~
was 70.
treaty would make new German contest wh ich reqUIres the WT ill"",..
o
f r man
e; :. s- r e :f
~x, tax.
Ibe ended.
Mrs. Evans said that one reason
Ta kes It Ea y
aggressioRs impossible has an BP- Ior a biography on an AmericlD
c~ntrov:'s; o~s the o~afional ~c~~~ Th campaign for modification
I Deadlocks have been reached on she'oS reached the century mark A 105-year~0Id man in Rapid peal saia that incorporation of listed in Who's Who. The winner
until It was more or less over- Ihad the su port of leaders of ali i
tw:o poin~s otlh.e agenda: an~ the lwas that she never watched tele~ City, S.D., said he'd spent the past new Germart divisions in the ED~ will rece.ive a fow·~y.eaT tuil~
shado wed by othel' aspects of the 1Shades or bOlitical opinion , labor
WASHINGTON (lPJ- The Fed- third! the. Austnan questIOn, IS so vision. She also gave another rea~ 55 years "taking Jt easy," bu,t that army would be a preventive of sChola:shIP.. Further mformaUoa
"civil righ ts" Issue, is slowly-al- leaders as well as top men in busi- I Reser~e board :rhursday aL'prov~dl.~Ied 10 With 1hal of Oerman~ that son for her longevity: "For as 10.ng theSe years had been "worthless." unilateral military action by a is avaIlable m 10~ Schaeffer ball
most unob trusively-fading away. ness and industry. and particularly Jowermg lhe dl8cou.nt ~ate lD flve ·Jl Can now get but short shrIft.
as I can remember, I've had Ice And he added: "I don't know why German government, so these
- -1 have lived so long."
other Russian blandishments can
A.,LL MEN INT~RESTED IN
The opening up of the "real" women's organizations, which had Fede;al Reserve dl.Stncts from 2, Wh~n Molotov pr.oposed that oc~ wat~r evel7. day."
elcctions in the south-the "white" a mo·t active part.
I
to H4 per cent.
cupatlOn troops Withdraw before It s traditional for newsmen to A 101~year~0Id woman in Net- be refuted-especially by Germans second semester fra ternity rllSh.
Democrat ic parties-to the mlnorArguments Listed
The new I'ate will go into ef~1 the h~lding of any el~cU.on, he interview people about th~ tin:.e ley Abbey, England, said she's lilte Konrad Ade~auer. They can ing may register now at the }'rl '
ity race, and th e issue of segre~
The anti-poll tax forces argued, fect today at the Federal Reservelmade It clear that RUSSia mtends they reach 100 and ask theu' per~ kept going over the years because ~ay that the deSire for an early ternlty Business Service, located lc
gated grade schools, now before for one thing, Lhat while the law banks of Boston, New York,l to fight on indefinitely, regardless sonal formula for such long life. "I never get flustered." She also treaty is no excuse for accepting a the oHice of student affair', Uni·
t he supreme court for decisIon, may have been intended originally Philadelphia, St. Louis and san lof the odds, for control of Ger~ The replies al'e, to say the least, reported geting a kick out 01 bad treaty.
versity hall. Rushing wJll begiD
have relegated the poll tax to a to keep the minority race from the Francisco.
many.
varied.
reading mystery "thrillers."
•Furthermore it is out 01 the Feb. 8.
•rela tively minor role In public in- polls In the so~called "Black Belt" It is expected, an informed
Would Leave West Open
However, there se.ems to be A 102~year-old man in Belmont, question that Bidault, Eden and
teres l.
counties, it actually served to dis~ source said, that the other seven
This would mean that Russia quite a bit of agreement with ·Mrs. Mass., attributed his long life to Dulles should accept this Russian THE UNIVERSITY COOPEIA.
The fact Is, however, only five franchise more whitc women- Federal Reserve banl's would would maintain powerful armies Evans that icy water Is a help. In a "very bad stomach!" "Forced me scheme just because it was intro- tive Ba by~Sit ting league book will •
states now have some form of poll housewives in the main-than any probably follow the same course within 50 miles of Berlin while the MiI[ord, N.H., for example, a fe~ to watch my diet," he explained. duced like a bursting skyrocket. b .
h
f M 'I
Madstn
tax. Six states in the south have other group.
soon.
\AI1ieS would be j)ack in France.
maie centenarian recently com~ England produced the only true Actually there is nothlng in it but f e In ~ arge o. an yn A
in recenl years done away with The states of Georgia , South
The discount rate at a Federal
It wOUla not only leave Western mended breakfasting on c.hezse, centenarian, a person who is born previously rejected Communis! JO~. ~ b. 2 ~~ttJl. Feb. ~~. "';:DI
the levy. The latest developments /carolina, Florida, North Carolina, Reserve bank Is the rate at which Germany wide open to attack but doughnuts-and ice water.
as the same second a new centw'y proposals. It enabled Molotov t6 ~ r~nt~ a
0\ 1
in the tight against the poll tax Louisinna and Tennessee have rid Federal Reserve member banks l would be openin~ the dool' t~ all
Never Eat.s Eggs
arrives lind who dies on the mo~ steal the show only for the mo~ at ~~33 e group may e cp one CI
come from Tennessee and Ala- I themselves of the poll tax in recent can borrow money from the Fed~ IWe tern Europe
"Drink nothing but cold water," ment the century passes.
ment. It he wants to progress to~ a
.
b~ma.
times. This leaves only Virginia, eral Rcscrve system. Lowering the ~ther e iden~e that Russia has agreed a 104~year-old woman in
She was Elizabeth Hobb.3 of ward a genuine settlement, he will
Poll Tax EUmlnated
Texas, Mississippi, Arkansas and discount rate, therefore, makes it no . tenr~n oC compromising her Westboro, Mass., who also warned Little Wilbraham, who was born have to come back to the Western
MAGAZINE X HAS PIETennesseans have just given Alabama still with poll taxes. In Icheaper. and consequently easier, posi~on j~ Germany was contained WOUld-be centenarians to "never at midnight on Dec. 31, 1700, and colition as outlined last week by pared an into sheet tellinl yoi
their state constitution the 1irst only ?ne stale, Virginia is it cu- for. member banks to . increase in the proposal that an interim eat eggs." This oldster piloted an died at midnight on Dec. 31, 1800. Anthony Eden. He c~nnot escape ius! how to su bmit your slorits
• major overhauling since horse alld mulatIve as much as tbree years. their reserves by borrowmg from government for Germany include airplane when she was 102.
She lived through every second the process of concession and con- lnd cartoons. Anybody on campus
buggy days and in so doing elimWithin recent years attempts to the ~ederal Reserve system.
. the East Germ:.n Communists. The .A 1~2~year~0Id woman in Bald~ of the 18th Century - and there ciliation. He cannot pu~1 his kind is invited to submit materials tor
lnated the poll tax as a provision remove the poll tax have been d(!ThIS In turn creates an easIer IAllies are never going to concede wmsvllle, N.Y~ also felt some sec~ were well over three billion of o! a treaty out of the all' and ex- the next issuo, deadline for whilb
in the charler.
l~a~ed by voters of Texas and Vir~ ":,oney situation by making it pos~ that the ComTllunists speak for the ret of longevity was lock~d in. the them!
pect anybody else to put a pcn to is Feb. 8. See your storics and an
For ma ny years TenneSsee Jegis~ gIOIa, b~t advocates of repeal con~ Sible for Federal. Reserve mem~ people they rule in East Germany, temperature of our d r I nk In g
'
It.
work in prin tl See your name in •
latures have been "repeating" the t7nded It was not a c1ear~cut test, ber ban~s, whkh melu~e most of much less .for a part of the people water. If>weyer, she recommendprint! Address inquiries to Mall'
• poll tax, only to run u p against slOce . the proposals voted upon thE' natIOn's co~merclal bankS, in West Germany.
ed that t? live many years you
zi ne X, 208 Communcations CtIl·
court decision which said il could contamed ot~er matter of a contro-I to get ~oney which they can ~~nd
All the Russian proposals made should dr~k plenty of hot water
tel', or phone x2358. Do it now ~
not be done. T wo years ago, how~ verslal nature. "
to busmessmen and the pubhc. so far-and no better ones are ex~ -and be kmd ~o people.
•
get in on the next big issue.
ever, the legislature apparently
pee ted-are totally at odds with
Anoth~r oldtimer, 10. Woodstock,
h t th All'
d
tG
Vt., attnbuted longehvedness to
TRYOUTS FOR THE SEAU,
succeeded wI·th a ]egl'slatl've act
#>
wac
les an mos ermans b i t 0 I h h
If h d
A new law partnership in Iowa
OS
think should be done.
eng nea. n y s e erse
a
.
women's honorar y swimmib, (1'
which seemed to circumvent the
constitution.
failed to be neat one day while CIty, Hart, Sh ulman and P helan,
ganization, will be held TueaG1·
am Is SI I
mI>. e . I housecleaning some 20 years ago has been established with offices
Now, ho wever, the poll tax is
Alli
Pr?grd .
~eb. 9 in the women's physlcal ed·... •
The
e plogram 1S simp e . .
. h on the sixth flobr of the Iowa
out of the consti tution itself.
' It proposes that Germans be made and aCCIdently swept out her blrt I
. .
ucation building. Sessions an! '"
-C.-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ State Bank and Trust Co. bUlldmg.
BERLIN (JP)-The Soviet Union [or 10~1l a.m. and 4~5 p.m. fd
At I.at b.a ma stlill hhas its . poll tax,
perfectly free to vote 10~' an aJlThe new members of the firm brusquely rejected Thursday night :ietaijs, con tact Sue Morse at ~
b U I 111 a pa e g ost of Its former
German g~vernment which co~d
include attorneys William R. Hart, the West's plan for German unifi~
sell. The Al aba ma levy, adopted
then negotiate a peace. !reaty With
Louis Shulman and William V. ca tion in freedom and demanded STUDENTS' WISHING TO II'
52 years ago, was by far the ha rsh ~
the World War II belligerents, es~
Phelan. •
ullcondition" l acceptance of a
._,
" c eive the certificate of foreiP
cst po II tax enacted by a state.
tablishing a new Germany wh icTl
Hart , an SUI graduate, has been "neutralized" Germa ny in a Com~ studies in February, 1954, shOllW
Veterans Excepted
would be free to .choose its own
practic ing law here since 1915. munist grip.
see Prof. Erich Funke at room.l,I
J\U war veterans were excepted,
course thereafter 10 the cold war DES MOINES (JP)-The number He was also U.S. attorney for the Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Schaeffer hall before Feb. 12.
but otherwise if a person failed to
and lD the matter of E uropean of business establishments filing southern dlstrict of Iowa from Molotov virtually d ug t he grave of
pay the $1.50 a nnual levy between
defense.
.
articles of incorporation to do bus ~ 1949 to 195 3.
the Big Four conference with a
STUDENT COMPOSERS' II·
21, voting a,e, and the age of 45,
The conference seems likely .to iness. in Iowa increased in 1953 Sh ulman, a University of Michi- totally unac ceptable Krem lin plan cital will be held at North Muli:
~'d have to pay $36 to vote for
co~tinue through flext week-Its for the first time in three years. gan grad uate, has been established for "solving" the German ques~ hall at 7:30 o.m. Feb. 12. Piano and
ibe firs t' time. Now the tax is cum~
thLrd. When it began , no arrange- The secretary of state's office in Iowa City since 1937. Phela n tion. U. S. Secretary of State Jo hn cha mber mUsic by gradllate and
ulatlve only to two year s or $3, as
ments wer~ made. for a fourth ~ reported Thursday that the 195J l received his legal training a t No~ Foster DuJles denounced the Ru s~ undergraduate stuC!entll of compothe result (Jf a constitutional
week. meetmg place. Wh~n that total was 1,176, compared with lre Dame and has been associated sian ter ms-which inclu ded with~ sition in the music departmftlt ..,1lI
amendment adopted in a rereren ~
question. comes up, the All~ed T.ep ~ 1,111 in 1952, a total of 1,123 in with Shulman since his arrival in drawal of all foreign troops be~ be presented in the recital.
dum.
resentahves probably WIll Jusl 1951, a total of 1,406 in t950, and Iowa City in 1950.
fore a Communist~devised Germa n
'In recent years there have been
pack their bags. "
a total of 1,396 in 1949.
1
govcrnmen tal election-as e xpos~
A "PASSPORT TO EVaOrr •
nwnerous uns uccessful cffor ts in
,
I
Meanwhile, the n umber of ining all Western Eu rope to Soviet will be presented at the HomeEt- ' I
the . legislature to submit a procorpora ted
businesses
\lH1ich
JU
ar mies which wo uld retain a Polish onomics Clllb meetlne N. l~
posed con stitutional ehaoge to the
ceased operatiops as corporations
.
fr ontier spr ingboar d 50 miles east 1954 at 4:10 p.m. in room 212 Mac'
peopJc,. but finally last sUQ:!mer
in Iowa in 1953 was slightLy
of Berlin.
bride hall. Home me In J:qJOJII
Gov . Gordon Persons got th rough
grealer than in 1952. The 1953
[n
Soid Dulles: "The Molotov plan wiII be discussed and illlllthted
the proposed amendment to "sort~
total was 411, against 403 in 1952.
FrIday, Febrllary iI. 19:11
would end any defense of Wes t with slides.
'AMES rJP)- An Iowa State colComparisons of the most' nu m er~ 8:00 Mornl nt Chapel
TGermany. If Germany were thus
_ _ __
lege student who voluntarily re~ ous types of new corporations for r~ ~~:IOUS Groups of Am<rlca
exposed we must recog ni ze that
turned the bulk ot his loot and 1953 and 1952 arc: Domestic, with 9:00 Mornlne SCrenade
the whole of western Europe
IV
confessed his m isdeed to the owner Io..,a· headq
uarters,
493
and
446;
9 :20 Klt<hen COllcert
would
si
ml
'
larly
be
exposed."
6
9 ' 45 Wom en's Feat.ure
,
·
of the place he burglanzed was n?n-pro f It, 4 7 and 452: and for- 10 :00 N ews
French Foreign Mini tel' George
A total or $3] ,I 01.50 was spen t
arraigned here Thursday on a elgn, with non ~Io\Va headquarters, 10 : 1 ~ ~~~,!f~»~~ ltze.
Bida ult tailed to budge Molotov's
In Januar,f by the state de par tment
charge of larceny in the nigh t.
184 and ) 74.
~~ :~ Exploring e N ew s
rcsista nce to a (ree German elecJohnson county offices h.idJed
of social welfare in Johnson counDonald B. Fester,. engineering
:~
:~~
~~~c:ft~t,!'
..srncc~ese.rch
tion with a pl ea ;th at the COl" , ",. more than $5 million during 1f5I.
ty for three welfa re programs.
sophomore from WlOnetkA, Ill., SUS
)1 :45 Hlghwn ys 10 Safety
ence q uit arguing and get down William L. Kanak, assistantlJllllll"
Recipients oC old age assistance
was charged. a fter th e ow ner of
1121:5 9 Praye r lor P•• ce
to work.
ty auditor said Thursday . .00 Rhythm Ra ",blcs
in Johnson coun ty r eceived $23,~:.h
the Ames fruit and grocery market
:2 :30 Newl
,
Ca tegorica ll y, Molotov r efused
Most of the $5,341,691.10 ~.
214. This is an average of $57.04
,called poli ce when Fester went
121 :. 4005 Sports Row.dla ble
the least shred of agreement to the passed through county oUices did
Muolc.l Chats
for each of thc 407 persons reto him and ad mitted he was the KEOKUK (JP)- Trea vy Creech 1:$6 Old Talc iln.d New
Western project fol' lettin g Ger- not involve county expcndi_ ~.
ceiving ald.
person ..,ho brol,e into the market of Afton, Mo., a Burlington bus 22 :3100 Fre nch Musk Fe.Uv.ls
ma ns, protected from intimidation but as the offices handled tile ., I'
Ald to dependent children payLetters from lta Iy
' was lOclu
.
ded on Its
....\Saturday night.
'
lines driver who a pparently was in 3:00 Chlcolo
Roundtable
I even in the Soviet zone, elect their fun d s It
..
ments amounted to $6,608. AsslstAn
envelope
co
ntaining
$182
had
a
hurry
even
though
he
was
on
~~:a~
O
IT~
'
own
rep
resentatives
to
wllte
a
a'nce
sheetl
allce went to 204 recipinets in 62
consti tution, f0lf:' a government
County treasurer Lumir W. JID'
bcen anonymously left by Fester schedule, pa id fines totaling $60 4 :00 Hot AIr Concerl
Average per case was $ 106.~,
at the office of the Iowa State on lhlee peeding cha rges here 4 :30 Tea Time
and make an und icated peace.
sa's office served as the coUecliDI
58; average per recipient was $39 .~
Daily early Sunday with a reQ ~st Thur~da y In superi or court.
~;~ ~~~,!"e,," Hour
Molotov repeatedly echoed the agency tor such items aa t81 col· '
31.
that thE! f un ds be l eturned. The
Creech was pi cked up Wedne~- ,:45 Sport>
. Kremlin's tea r tha t 68 million Grc~ lections for tOWllji, ~ltJ\IS and
.Expenditures under the aid to
req uest said "I am returning it to day 01\ highway 61 outside Keo~ ::~ g~n.;;r Hour
I
1!'fI llns with a free choice would Rchool districts and tees fo.r till
the. blind program amounted to
clea r my own mind."
kuk and charged witb driving his .1 :00 Cone• .., CI... I..
join the Western defense bloc.
registration of vehicles .
• 1,29"50 In 17 cases for an averF~9ter told police he took qnly bus 60 J1liles . an hour in 11. 35 ..rt\ile U~ ~o~~~~~o~t:W!~I Am.r} _
He demanded that the Allies "no
The largest single item on till
a.i! ot $711.26.
lon ger force" West German y's plus side of the balance1lllRt'lo1l' • ,.
LitUe change was repor ted bc~ EYES SPARKLING, 4-year-old Debbie Dains, 1954 March ot $238 from the ma rket. The amount lone, driving 65 mUes an hour in a 8 :'0 BehInd &he Headlines
~;;;':s IIlltllllRhlP
P rtici pation in the propospd Eu~ county, municipal. and scbOd 1."'ll:';~L
tween these figures and ex pencJ.i~l Dimes poster boy appears at Marl'h of Dimes f:lshlon sho\ In New the owner hllu rl'ported takl'll WIlS <Iii mi le zone (I /l c! 70 mill'S nn h.our
Cur6s lor December.
York wUh Ann Geary, 5, "ho modt'ls a fur.
" $339.
in a 50 mile ZOlle,
1.. :00 SIGN orr
• ropcnn
I
r •• ' .tryttl ..
orrors .1 ,al.
Publlsbecl clall7 nc:ept Suncla,. and
Monda,. and le,a] holIdays by Studrnt
PublIuU...u, inr., UI Jowa Iwe., Io ... a
,h'eft e. aU
.b
<rlb,rs
II
.e"te~
n,.rle'
t. LOllis Posr·Dispalch
J'red M. POWDJIU. Publlih r
E. Barnum. AIl 1o\.a1\\ PubUshu
Charles
MI"'.,.
0'
•
•
T.. ••
'OFFICIAL DAILY
BULL.E.TI~
I
I
I
Poll -Tax Begl·ns To Fade Away INew DI·scounl Rate
Interpreting Centenarians Suggest
the News How To Live to .100
I
Approved for 5
I·
Reserve DI·s'tr"lcts
.
51 Cl
3 Loco I Attorneys
Announte New
Law Partnersh Ip
h
bl
P t er Boy Goes Fas lona e
';:1nII :1
'Neu tra I"Ized'---Country
Improvement Plarined
For Coasta I Defense
Corporatl·on FI'II'ngs
TOp 1952 Mark
I
Wflll PROGRAM
CALUIDAR
Iowa State Student
IConfesses
Burglary
$5 II."on
·'1' Handl-J
8 C
' OH'm
Y oun Y ,
Welfare Program
Tops $30,000
Driver Gets
• f or Speed'Ing
FIne
r!:
cases.
I
====
;::g
-.
----
-
-
-.
....... ~ ................-........----- ---.-
--
- --
-----
-
-
-
I
·nt:my.
Itaxes,
'
TIIT D fLY IOWA~-low
Currier Orientation (ouncil
Tea, Informal .Parties
PI
Cit" ra.-FrldAy. Feb. 5. 195-l-Pace S
Miss Greenblatt To Wed odnay Sh olnick Preps To Give Concert Miss Van PaHen
ITo Become ride
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J . Greenblatt .• uscatlne, announce the en113gement 0 th ir daughter, LoLs
Ann, to Mr. Rodney Sbkolnlck,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Sbkolnick of Centerville
Miss Greenblatt'Ls a senior in
the SUI college of liberal arts,
and
Delta
T is affiliated . with
M Sigma
Shk ini
k
au, sodal sorority. r.
0
a junior In the college of law c.
is
affiliated with Pili Alpha Delta,
professional Jaw fraternIty, and
Phi Beta Kappa, bonorl1l')' scbolastlc fraternity.
Uni\'enlty H gh school wUl pre.
sent :1 program of instrum ntal D3\'Ies and Bill Spence.
music Sumfay at 3 p.m. In the Others are Gene Schuellert
.
n . .' .lcholas B. Van
Patten New V11'gtn13, announce the
I.J ~meut 01
heir daughter,
Peggy Ann, to 2d Lt. M rioo A.
Youngers, son of the late Mr.
. P . A. Youngers. S .. eld"'ld
on.
Both Miss Van Patten and Mr.
Youngers were graduated from
SUI in 1953. Miss Van P~tten .
employed In Nl!w York City and
Ir. YOUDJ!ers is stationed at
Wright-Patterson air base, Daytoo, O.
r. ;>'1,i
Garden Division
01 Woman's Clu&
.
Plans Guest NIgh'
"
ht f th
li tal t 'h
h ir
is Iso
high school gymnasium.. Directors Marilyn Peams, Jimmy Blommers,
Annual guest nlg
or e gar~' been Sf °tWh· cCa ~an • . a ta
will be Ralph C. Rea, band, and Alien Hedges, Bill Pearson, Midcnt de Jartment of the Iowa City
tlO,::e:un~i~ e urner onen Glaude Carlson, orchestra.
chael Myers, Bruce Cullen, Tom
Woman' club will be held ThursTh e or1en t a t'Ion council Is in
Included in the .."rogram will MJltner, David Keefer, Bart Schuday at 7;30 p.m. in the clubrooms
uuv
.
1..11 orl'entation probe 1 Ii
h S ch umann. cb er t, J oh. n K ern, EveIyn H ur Ib u,
t
in the Community building
tar
new stucen s cnroJllng
at SUI charge f 01 the
f h
d tr
f
se ec ons b y Bac,
.
.
for the !'econd semester.
~a:f ;:.r T:S men ~ll ans:
lend elssohn , Corelli, Schubert, and David £bel.
The illcst night ."':111 be feat urMargaret Rickett, A2, Mt. Plea- s u~ . 1 e f gTO~P II ~~es
Gluck, Sousa, Walde ufel, Mous- Other members are Leonard
ed ~n a.~ock te~~vlslon show over
pnt, is in charge of the Currier ma g p ans or e a a v
.
sorg:.ky, Jessel, Enesco, Lane and Hitchcock, Richard Erbe, Peggy
stution [C.G.C. Dr. and Mrs. W.
orientation acliYitil's and repreTarver.
Stilwell, Robert Price, Robin
f. Rohrbacher are in char,e of
tents. the dormitory on 1he unlverPlavi.ng In the orchestra will be Porter ond Mary Ellen Jedlicka.
U.le program.. A flower garden
Jlty Women's association orientat,
[
..
M' .
E'
Kath OJ mann Ann Spitzer TonL K rn and Su,tudy Will be gIVen over the mock
tioe coun('11
JrlamDavies,
15ma,Sharon yHuey,
e
, san HarrIs are
'
LInda
John
grade school stu-t a f lOn, \~I·th Th eodore Hunter,
The orientation activities will
lem~
Kern Carol Porter Ray Benton dents who have qualified to play
moderator, Mrs. Howard Crew,
open Sunday with an Informal tea
Ruth' Koelbel
P~t Pendleton' with the high school band. An:\'Irs. Herry Kruse, Robert Grill
In south foyer. New students aod
d M C Bo
list Mrs.
their parents will meet CurrIer's
Richard Burian, Leonard Hitch- other band member. Herbert
an
" . yer. panes;
.
officers and residents at that time.
NEWSOME TO SJ>EAK
cock and Steve Mosher.
Scboenbohm, is hosplmli.zed.
Frank nlrmck, Mrs. Leo Slezak,
P ro f . Ellls Newsome 0.• the
Jo Under, A2, Pomeroy, tea chair- More than 300 books were reOthers are Bennett Bean, Mike
•• ~ JenA. DeHaan and Dr. Ha"""
-,,- and marketin"
kin on, contestants, and W. T.
man, and Phyllis Fleming, A2, ceived at the student book ex- journ<UJ,>m
.. depart Gillette, Carol Crawford, Martha
•
Gamer, publicity chairman, are change Thursday afternoon, ae- ments will speak on "Dividends
lois Greenb!att
Spitzer, Donald Stilwell, John
Goodwin and Dr. Rohrbacher,
In chame of the tea arrangements. cording to Sally Rehnberg, A3, from Advertising," at the Masonic
EnfI,aged
Davie., Bill Spence, Bruce Cullen,
timekeepers. Mh. Robert CaldPajama parties will be held after ~linton, publicity chplrm~" .,1 f"t' ServIce club today. The group
Bart Schuchert, Evelyn Hurlbut,
well will give the commercials.
10:30 Sunday night. The purpose of SUI student council committee, wtll meet in the Masonic temple
Richard Erbe and P g!!y Stillwell
The m mbers in the audience
these parties is for the new stu- which is sponsorinK the e.,cn".• g.:. at noon.
Also Included are Gretchen Scbo- SUI Is one of 92 colleges and
ill par'icipate in a guessing condents to get acquainted with the
Any student who wishes to sell
-•
enbohm and Ann Wade, grade universities Invited by Linden'cst attn the television show.
other students and to have any his used books through the ex- MOVIE TO BE SBO\VN
•
school students who have quaU- wood college, St. Charles, Mo., to
Mrs. F. M. Barker's III m on
questions answered. Jobyna Ran- change may take them to the stu~e mov.le "My Little Chlckstied to play with the high school ~end representatives to a conterIowa City's petunia planting prokin. A2, Tracy. serenllde chairman, dent council o!iices, room 113. dee, starnng W. C. Fields, will
orchestra.
enC'(! on human relations to be
Ject ot 1953, will be shown by
Is in charge of these parties.
MacBride hall between 1 and 5 be shown at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in
Band members include Mar- held on the Lindenwood campus
Marion Miller.
thc ~in lounge ot the Iowa Me- ·
garet Ladd, Joan Michener, Phll March 18 through 20.
the
The last event will be a party p.m. today.
Tuesday after 10:30 p.m. in north
Books wIll be received Monday mona! Union. Bob Linthacum, M4,
Swallum Steve Mosher Bennett Invitations have been sent to
A sodal hour will follow
recreation room. The featured en- through Wednesday for sale In the ~eny, Is chairman at th~ U~- A beart is ~ heart, at least Bean no'nald Stllwell, K~ty John- President Virgil M. ~nCher and
program. Hostesses iFrncldude Mrs.
tertainment will be provided by
b
ion movIes commiUee whJch IS
'
G
1
C. O. P81ks, Mrs.
e Miller.
donnitor residents. Helen Wand- study hall on the asement floor sponsoring the event.
around Valentine's . day, when son, Mike Illette, Jim Campbe I, r epresentatives of the cpartm,nts
Mrs. Frank Bruce and Mrs. 1M
YM
. d' 'd 1 ' t ot Schaeffer hall.
heart-shaped gTectmgs
flutter Carol Crawtord, Martha Spitzer, ot psychology and sociology. lren
Colony.
IIng A3
arengo m IVI un Un!
.
1 W dad·
-" d
M
R' h d R hd
.
b
f t
arties ~hairman, 'and Miss FlemThey will go on sa e e ne ay POST- BALLOAME PARTY SET ~rough the mall and hcart-shape.d .• e ra
or~an, Ie ar
e er, is the maxImum num or a S uPeggy Van Patten
~g wlll be in charge ot the party. in Sch.sefter hall and wlll be sold Larry Barrett's orchestra wllt Jewelry Is the prettiest compli- Terry Tidrick, Karen Koser, Jo dents who may attend from any
Betrothed
m;nh~s g~~~~;o~~~:r~~I~~e~~air.
Jane Reimann, A3, Hull, tours there thr.oullh Friday. The ex- play for dancing at a post-ball- ment you can pay a lady, no mat- Ann Sander ·on, Sydna Meer, John one university.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii____iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiii_ _......;;-;..;•••••iii-ioiiiiiiiiiiii_ _
chairman, and Jo Schafroth, A2, change Will be open in Schaeffer game party Saturday troll) 9 :45 ter what her age.
---------Coming, were in charge at letters hall from 8 a.m. to noon and tram p.m. to midnight at the [owa Me- A piece of jewelry can expre~s
to students welcoming them to 1 to 4 p.m.
morial Union. Bob Fletcher, C4, this yea r's Valentine sentiments '
Currier. Roxie Beisner, A2, '1'1'1- Student help Is needed when the Cedar Rapids, Ls chairman ot the every day for years to come, and
- - - - - - - - - - - - book exchange opens next Wed- post-ballgame committee whIch the Jewelry Industry council renesday for selling books. Anyone Is In chijrge of the event.
minds us that jewelers have dewho has free time Wednesday
signed a wide assortment of apthrough FrIday and who wishes to DAJUN TO BE HONORED
propriat heart- haped pieces, in
work in the exchange should call
SUI administrative dean AUln wide price runges.
Carolyn Hornbaker, C3, Bona- Dakin will be honored at a Rotary Rings, tor lhStancc, worn even
parte.
club dinner Feb. 24 at 6:30 p.m. tit centuries ago as symbol;, at perMiss Rehnberg also announced the Jefferson hoteL Wives of Ro- ;.ollAI r gard and affection, are
Judges for the Big Ten photog- that there 1V0uid be a large sample tary club members will also be ott n set with heart-shaped stones,
raphy contest have been announc- ';:Il'd posted in the study room at honored. Dakin Ls Rotary district "uch as Q golden topaz heart
cd by the fine arts committee at Schaeffer hall to aid students In governor and is past president of llankfd by small diamonds, or a
.::=
the Union Board.
filling out cards when they bring the local group. Prot. Robert Ray, deep amethyst rtone 1~ the shape
~~
'7::"':;:Judges for the SUI contest \Yill hooks in to be left for sale.
director of the Institute or publlc of a heart. Other rm~ desiens
~,
... ~
be Mrs. James Kent and Dale Bal- Unsold books may be picked up affairs, will be master of cere- ,how small stoncs set 10 heart~.....
-ends Monday•••••• ~..:...'"
lantyne, instructor in the art de- Fell. 15 at Schaeffer hall. Money monies.
shaped patterns, such as a single
;....-: '
partment. Over-all judge of the ror books which are sold will be
ruby surr<lundcd ~y a heartcontest will be Aaron Si1!kind of available Feb. 16 through Feb. 19
IIhaped. wreath of tiny diamonds,
or nenamel
diamondsetting
or colored
stone or
in
the Institute of DeSign In Chicago, at Schaerte:- hall.
an
at black
m.
After FrIday, Feb. 19, the ex11 ht blue
gF
d
ith
Ian
10"
Unions of all Big Ten scMols change wlll close and any unclalmare sponsorIng the coniest. Each ed books or money will be taken
~r a a y w
a
.cy
union will hold its o.wn, contest, t'!, the Student Council ollices.
:Q~~~gp;;~~~~ ~~~r~~tsfo~~ ~~
and then send the wmnmg phosl"n shows an nquarmarine heart
Professor Cooper
tographs to Indiana university
New students enrollln" at SUI Co
d d !
t'
dl
d
To
Purdll(' niccrsity
where they will be judged. The
U
0
for the second semester .w lll be ~~Pr~n a~e o~~:;s °toc!n1'n t~:~~l~
entire show will be sent to each
guests at an open house flv!'n by colors so poPUIII~ fo; spring '5<1, TWO VI PROm ORS will leave Iowa Clly today lo assume ])0scl1oo1 where it will be displayed
the Union. board Tuesday from 8 many set with other colored stones Itlons In indiana and Penns,lvanJa. Prof. Dan n. Cooper, formerly
In the spring.
Michael Mulroney, C4, Elkader, to 10 p.m. 10 the River room of the and diamonds.
of ~he education department, wUl become director ot the division
on .
.
A golden h('~rt In n jeweler'!' of education lind a ocla~e dean of tbe coUere 01 cience, education,
Deadline for the contest is 4:30 has been. elected president ?f pl'il Iowa Memorl~l
p.m. Feb. 15. They will be judg- Kappa Sigma social traterOity. .
Leo Cortlmlglia s orchestra Will box is a fitting companion plec
and humanltlc at Purdue university In West Lafayette, Jod. Bl.
ed Feb. 16, and displayed in the
Qther new officers Include JIm play for dandng and tree refresh- to the paper Valentine you send family will aCCOmpany him. Prof. Wendell Smith, form~r head of
main lounge of the Iowa Memorial Carter, A2, Clarksv!lle, vice pres- ments will be served. Special en- h r. In both karat gold' and gold th e marketinr department, will be as oclated with Alderson eUnion Feb. 16 through 18.
ident; Lyle Mackey, A2, Olin, sec- tertainment will be provided by filled there are earrings, lockets, slons Re earch flrm In Phlladelpbla, Fa. Smith's family will join
Rules for the contest arc as rol- ;etary; BUl Anderson,. A2, Wash: universliy students. The party dainty pins aod bracelet charms, him In June.
lows: 1. A person may submit any mgton, D.C., treusurer, Tom Nes. will provIde an opportunity for some decorated with cUltured).-joiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.. 1
number of photographs that he ler, A2, Dubuque, house manager, new students to meet campus pearls or small slones. If you are
desires. 2. Maximum size of any Douglas ~yman, C3, Ft. Do~ge, leaders.
adding to a charm bracclet that
picture, including the mounting, is pI~dge h~a~~r, ::;~. Nor~nl ~~- Members of the speCial events already beasts a heart or two,
ChUd"
16 by 20 Inches. 3. Each picture e~ ~ec.
•
Ins, soars p committee in charge of the party don't overlook other charms apMIC'
must be mounted. 4. Any subject c aIrman.
include Fraok Sutton. A2, Clln- propriate tor Valentine's day; Cu.. hecr llll'htweight satire and In the VERY BE T OF
SllUfdlV
may be used. Each photo must
ton; Bonnie Edckson, N2, Sioux pid poised with a bow and arrow,
ADULT FUNl" N. Y. Times.
Even tn,
, !lave a title.
Each picture must Klaffenbach
Attend City; Mary Sifford, AS. Sioux a tiny calendar ml)rldng the 14th
I'0Il
110"
be accompa nied by the photog- 3 Dental Conferences
City; Charles Frandson, A2, Story of !ehruary with a brillht gem, or
rap her'!) name and "State UnIvecCity, and jlenne1.t Domack, A3, a little gilt cage holding two 10Yl:
"Another delightful excursion Into Alco Oulnne s' special
It
f Iowa"
Dr. A. Klaffenbach, professor Oshkosh, Wis.
birds.
world where perfectly ordinary people bcb:we outrageously
5 yo. .
.
emeritus of SUI's college of den-I .iiiiii_ _iiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_;;;;;_~_ _ _iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_
and make on love it." aturday Review at Literature.
For ~egistratJon and further 10- tistry Will attend three dental con-I "
formation call George Stevens, as- ferences in
Icago this weekENDS
SPLIT SECOND
LATE SHOW
siatsnt director of the union, at end.
TONITE • SAILOR of the KING •
TONITE
X2081.
He will attend the academies of
restorative dentistry and crownl-~;;;-Ij;;iiiiii.-;;;iij._iii""iiiI"~_~-~STTAAiR:1T~SIMembers of Currier hall's orientitian council are completing plans
for an Informal teba, pa1amsa p;rties,
and Tuesday
a cozy toat ethe
he dormitory
d un ay
·"-ugh
t
Student r.ounc"11 Gets
300 More B00;
ks :
EXChange ASkS A"dI
.
SU'!J '
I
\
"
d
SUI Inv te To
I" M .
Re afions eetlng
Heart Shaped Gems
Provide Unique GifIs
For VaIen t"me,s Day
Leave for New Jobs
Big Ten Schools'
Photo Competition
Judges Announced
~.
.=-::: -:.
U·
"IOn Board Pa rt y
N
S d
For ew tu ents
W.III
d
Be Tues ay
"
.........
./
i
t~..
MIT H d
roney
ea
Phi Kappa Sigma
TODAY!
.......................... _. .... ..........
... ,.
ell. Blaze. . .
...
.....,
there stood Billy
\ .'.
The I(id, mean an'
\
ugly...and there was me... I
no guns
'
as usualf' (
u:u
,
GUINNESS SEDUCES The CRITICS
5.
.TO
Presbyterial Board
To Hold Meeting
A PresbyterIal board meeting
'frill be held in the First Presbyterian church chapel Monday at
10 a.m. The meeting will include
the Iowa City Presbyterial .officers.
A lunheon will be served at
11:30 a.m. and the meeting will
cl~e at 2:30 p.m. Plans will be
made for the annual spring Presbyterial to be held in April.
The meeting will be folowed by
a Presbytery-wide institute of
Christian education from 3 to
8:30 p.m.
Et~~::o ~r:;~o~t~c:iy~o~:e~~ ~
I [' AAZ· ~ ~t~~~!
ItOW FROM WARNER BROS., THE STORY BASED
ON EDNA fERBER'S PULITZER PRIZE HOVEL
DIt~~
Starts TODAY I
The Great Lover .•• with Two Wives ..•
One in Each Port ••• Sailing
No w', 8V&'l· had if
.
"Doors Open 1:15-9:U"
~J~p
TO• DAY
Just Imagine! Captain Guinness
Merrily Berek and Forth!
..,.I
,
"A wonderfully funny little Immorality pia, about how the
old Adam tries once a&'ain to have his apple and eat It ioo."
Time marazlne.
&0
good!
"ENDS
MONDAY"
JANEWVMAN
Stomnt
AUC
HER FINEST PORTRAYAL SINCE 'JOHNNY BEUND~'t
GUiNNESS
NEW
D.CARLO
au.
JOHNSON
YVONNE
GLORY
FOR
and more
'THRILLS!
AUDIEl
MURPHY
JOAN EVANS
GARY!
Wlnne,tf
thlIY"'"
'I.,t Actw'
Acad.""
AwanU
-Added Shoril-
'North of Th. Sahara'
-TravelorueCotorloon ••••• Laie News
-- - - ---i
."
j
01.
,
IFall, 80, To Walch'
Haw~s To Meet Missouri G;;~~o;;;ortCombine The Dail Iowan
~s BI~ Ten Slate· Reopens Skill, Agility, Beautyl
An SO-year-old Hawkeye basketball tan will see her iirst basketball game Satur day night When
the Iowa team plays the University
of Missou ri in the Iowa field
house. She is Mrs. Nina Hale o[
By HOWIE GREENWALD
West Liberty, who will be the
are funny about minor sports-they have an aversion to Pace 4--THE DAlLY IOWAN-Iowa City, Ia.-Frlday, Feb. 5. 1954 guest of radio sta tion WSUI for
the gamc and will be intervieWed
The college crowd in particular rartly stops to deline that term
at halftime over the university sta_
The last hal! oC the Big Ten
"minor." It doesn't mean of minor interest, or minor talent, or minorl
tion.
schedule ope.ru; Monday night Rt
competition. It's B financial classificatIOn, and that's all.
Mrs. Hale has listened to WSUI
Gymnastics Is one ot those "mInor" sports. 1\'s a sporl which
Michigan for the University of 10broadcasts of Iowa basketball
games for 20 years. Saturday night
wa's basketball team but before
I:ombines strength and agility and beauty and skill.
the final drive to stay in the race
Coach Dick Holzaepfel came from Colorado State in 1948 and in
she will not only see the game but
the Hawkeyes will play a good
will meet coach Bucky O'Connor
Miss:>uri team In the field bouse
that span of ~ime ha~ .'Cvitalized a sport that was never too healthy
and all of his players.
Saturday night.
Twin goals of the Iowa swim- around Iowa m the fm,t place.
Her son, Dr. E. E . Hale, Is a
This game will serve to rub off
ming team in its dual meet with '
Gu s Love the port
some ot the examination week
Wisconsin here Saturday at 3:30 ,
Some or the gu~'s he's helped put Qll top of the Big Ten heap Last chance to see the University COLLEGE STATION, Tex. UP) West Liberty dentist. and her
rustiness which has accumulated
p.m.: to win the first victory of the Ihave come to love the sport somehow.
of Iowa's J 954 gymnastics team In - Texas A&M football falterer granddaughter Janet Hale is an
SUI nursing sophomore.
on the Iowans since the last pre.
1954 season and to start another
Captain Dean Willw erth is one or them. He hadn't even seen a action at home occurs Saturday at . th S th 't C !
f
victory string ovel' the Badgers. gym meet before he went out for the squad as a .~econd semester jun- 2:30 p.m, when the Hawkeyes 10
e ou wes
on erence or
vious game with Northwestern
Jan. 25.
Iowa winn ing streaks in this se- ior. He was made captain this season and talks about the team and m et the University of Chicago in more t han a decade, Thursday
Iowa must play its neKt three
ries include one of nine and an- the coach and the SPOI't like it
the field house gymnasium.
reac hed into the higher-priced
conference games on the road:
other of seven. But the Badgers his staff of lile.
Iowa has won fi~ of si .meets echelons of coaching to snare Paul
Michigan, Feb. 8; Minnesota, Feb,
at Madison last year cracked the
" It's B funny thing," he said
this season, its most recent vic- (B .) B '
t f K tu ky with
13 ; and Ohio State, Feb. 15 belatter with a 53-40 victory. The he mulJed it over, "You'vc got
tory being a 48 1'2 to 47 1 f1 upset of
e~1 ryan
tent \5000 ' a
fore meeting Illinois in the sellBHI logan
all-lime record shows 22 wins for learn gymnastics. You're not
Michigan last Monday. Michigan ,' a sIx-year can lac a $ ,
out game at home Feb. 20.
Iowa to six lor Wisconsin.
with it. ]t's not enough to
State, Northwestern, Indiana, and year.
,
But the immediate problem I a
Leads lowo Scoring
Hawkeyes lost to Michigan how to tumble. U's like learn
Western Illinois State were othcr ' . Bryant, 41, the fellow: who fOUl
Missouri team which coach BucState, 53-40, in the first dual meet to walk and balance all
victims of the Hawkeyes. Hawk- hmes ~ot ~entuck)' Into bowl
/ly O'Connor believes Is better centage is .382 and Iowa has a- Jap. 23 a'tld Wisconsin has been again."
eyes have taken 25 of their last g,,;mes I~ eIght years as coach,
than its 6-7 record indicates. The veraged 69.1 to opponents' 59.1 sOJidlY splashed by Ohio State,
Sure, but why practice
28 dual meets.
Wired hIS acceptance of an offer
Tigers have good height, with Bob per game.
61-30; and by Michigan State, hou rs a day lor a minor sport,
Bob Hazlett, who won the tram- to become athletic director and
Reiter, 6-8, at center; fair speed
Iowa Seeks 62nc1 Wln
66-27.
little glory, for small crowds.
poline and tumbling last Monday, head football coach one month to
and balanced scoring. Reiter has It Iowa can beat Missouri,
2 Provide Strenrtb
"Competition is a keen
is unbeaten in tumbUng and has the day after Ray George hadJeaveraged 17 'h points per game. will run to 62 the string of
The HawkS' main strength lies Dean explained. "U's a good
won all the trampoline competi- signed as coach of the Aggies.
Tll'ers LoR CIoee Ones
secutive victories at home
in the feats of 220- and 440-yard ing, being all keyed up."
lion except one when he was edg· From Lexington, 'Bryant wired
Missouri has lost three games non-Big Ten o,ponents. Last
freestylers Glen J ohnston and coSo you perfect your routines.
ed by Jim Norman, a teammate. that he had resigned his job at
by a total of seven poi.nts and lleat was by Kansas, another
captain Ross (Buddy) Lucas. Lu- Then what;> What happens frdm
Anoth~r heavy Iowa scorer. i.s : ~entucky where his contract had
numbers among Its victrms Ne- Seven conference team, J an. 29, cas broke the Iowa AAU record there? Dean had the answer. "You
Dean WIllwerth . team captaln, mne years to run and that he
braska, which. beat Iowa in Dec- 1942.
,
Cor the 440-yard freestyle January can never master it all," he said.
who has made 41 points in tile last would be on the' A&M campus
ember. An early season loss to Plenty 01 reserved seals wlll be 16 in the Iowa AAU champion- "There's always,something else to
three conference meet. headed by within a week or 10 days
on sa l.e at the lobby ticket ~ffice ships.
work fOI'. When you'v got one
~is 16 against Northwe~tern. He Bryant will succeed Ba;low Il'Wisconsin ~s in the r~cord.
Coach ,0 Connor sDld he mi~ht the mght of t.he game, Busmess In the Hawks' opening malch or thing perfect, you perfect someLS at his best on the Slde horse vin as athletic diJ'ector and A&M
shuffle hIS players In or~er to give Manager FrancIS Graham declared. the season against Michigan State. thing e lse."
Dnd parallel bars.
.
President David H. Morgan said
as many men as posslple the action
PROBABLE T RTING LINEUPS
Lucas took the 220 but lost the 440
Crowds at the three home meets
Hawkeye strength on the fiymg Bryant had b e '
.
they need afte~ the layoff. It is
lOW"
MI880 Ht
when he slowed down, mistaking
df
500 t 1 000 f
d
rings has been a big help recent- in naming hisenasgsl~sVteann a free rem
possible that Blll Schoot, tall and CuI C.ln (B.R) or
the finish The S artans defeated range rom
0,
ans, an n
Iy. Doug Lyman won the event S .
. . ts.
improving sophomore might start Bill . . . .r (U-5) P !lnhoonm.k.r j~ lI)
•
P
the 500 was discouraging to see.
against Michigan when he up"Ct
prlJ1g Iootball tram lng opens at
. '
D •••I . Dnl. (6.~) P Med Park (G·t)
Iowa,53-40.
"Perhaps," 'Dean went on, "fans
0
W'"
h
.
A&M Feb 15 a d
tiS a forward posihon and
Roy 8111 Lo •• n (e.l) 0 80b n.ll~r (8.M)
DI
T
T
b
'
eon
I wert
IllS teammate Norman.
1
..
n
presumably
Johnson 1s likely to s tart his thit'd Ko, J l h .... (U-G) ON.rm 'Ste ... " (8-~)
ver 0 Be our
.
don t understand the ~port t o o ,
Chicago has a gOOd team which Bryant wlll arrive about that time.
Haw.keye.low board fancy dl~CT well. Some stun~s arc SImple and
Loves TI,e Sl)orl
holds a victory over Northwestern. Thc $15.000 salary is the hi hest
game at guard in place of Chuck Bill .ab.r. (G·O) G G.r, Fllberl (6·1)
Jarnagin.
~;.r'J' 1I.I,bl : low. U·3·~; MI o.rl. Bll! K1eck IS. expec d to ~rovlde ~asy to get. Bu.t l,t'S hard to understand how much &",es into J!erfect- It is led by Capt. Herb Taylor who ever paid a coach at A&M. g
top competiUon lor Badgel diver mg the more diffIcult ones. The crowds applaud tor Lhe beauty. That won three first placcs in the - The Haw)ceyes with a record of
.~d PI... : .turd.y. I p.rn .. lo w. and captain Rollie Bestor
Iowa< bea u tY IS
. th e b y-PIO
. d UC t 0 fit
11-3, arc led in, scoring by Bill TIme
n.ld bOIl.
•
•
n en t \.... or k an d concen t ra t'Ion. "
Northwestern meet-parallel bars, .1I'::"l• • •~• •~
Logan with 204 poims and an B- TlckelS: Go.' •• ,ply .f r...... d .ato dIver Bob Hazlett, currently a
But gymnastlc& Is a sport unto Itself. A Idd who can play foot- tumbling and side horse. Bob Herverag~ of 14.6. Carl Cain and Dea- :~'h·t"I. In 14bby Uck .. ofll •• on ,am.
on the gym~lBstlcs squad~ ball or bask~tball may fall !tat on the tumbling mat. And a kid who ndon Is a strong trampoline percan Davis have average 12.2 and Br.ade.. " : W UI. low. C lly: KCRI. Ce. hopes .to complete hlS gy~nasl1c. can lumble IJke a champ may not be able to toss a football 15 ~ards. former .
10.3, respectively. Cain has a shot dar RapId.: KOLO. Mao.n Cltl': WOO work 10 B? ea.rller meet l~ tlmt
The coach put his finger on why the kids come out for the sport. iiiiio______iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiI
• Salur daY •
ercentage of 429 Logan 419' and D • • Moln .. (d. layed broad ...~ at 10:18 for the sWlmmmg competit ion.
It's apparent every time a fellow flips from the rings and lands on
P
.,
.
,
p.m .); IIo",k.1.
porI N.I .... rk ClUOA.
Di k P
. t
H
k '
"
.. J\ el"I",~d th . M • • ' ..
Bill Scaberg, guard, has .5 14, the KFNF. WOBQ. KOEL, K.8UR . KVFD)
C
enDIng on.. aw co-cap- hIS feet by a scant few mches, mstead or his head. "It's that certain
d In Ih. Land
£"<111,,, U~tI
'I",
1
best on the squad. The learn per. r.d by 10(10, Iowa OI~1 : KFltU. C'"m - tnin and ace sprmter, will be bit of daring that gets these Idds out for the sport" he explained.
C.d •• llapld •. I.",a
Sa'" Donahu. Dlr.el,
bla. Mo. __________ s1owedb y an a1'}'mg .k nee, w hi c
'
_____________~-=.::.:..::.:.:::-.
There's Variety, Too
low.', Smarted Ballroom
rSpeed"Height
TIgers BrIng
.I
1st Hawkeye Game
Hawks SIaIe
S'
WI m Me
' eI
WI'lh Badgers
'
(he~:peOPle
Gymnasts To Meet Bryant Quits
Ch·Icago Safurday
Kentucky lor
In Iowa FI·eld House Texas A & M
t
:I
Nows
the
Time to
Avoid
the
Registration
RUSH!
DANCELAND
) Holy (ross Lauds Anderson;
;' Inks ·Him 10 New Contract
WORCESTER, Mass. (JP}-While
conceding that the Eastern in tercollegiate football outlook Is " not
bright," Holy Cross bas given Dr . .
Eddie Anderson, its hend coach, a
new live-year contrllct to rl'place
the one that would expire atter
the 1954 season.
Anderson coached at Holy Cross
from 1933 to J 938 before taking
over at Sul. He returned here in
J 950. He .till maintains his residence in Iowa City.
The Very Rev. John A. O'Brieh,
S. J., president of Holy Cross,
said: " We arc pleased and proud
we are assured of Dr. Anderson's
services for at least five more
years. In my opinion , he is second to none among football coach-
cs."
·t
t·
Father O'Brien emphasized thai
HoJy Cross has no intention of
dropping intercollegiate football.
Dr. Eddie Anderson
" It has too many important vaiues for all colleges, large and
Cets ew Contract
11
d
. 11 f
_
sma ,an especla y or a pre
dominantly resident college such Flynn said Holy Cross has been
as ours" he explained
approached by Syracuse to join a
"u t' t t l th ' II k f nine-team conference that also
e ou 00
or
ld I ...J
t
n or una e y,
intercollegiate football especially wou
n".,~de Bos on college, Bosfor thc o-called IndePendent and ton university, Colgatet Rutgers,
non-conterence teams in the east Penn State, Pittsburgli lind Ford5u~h as Holy Cr~s, is not bright., ham .
Q.
9th
And It doesn t make sense to G If
plan indefinitely on fielding a 9.r
Ults a t ;
representative
traine~ ?y such
f 00a t bhigh
a I I grade
team
coach If It seems certain you can
not schedule suitable opponents
In your ares." Father O'Brien
concluded.
"I have been very happy at
Holy Cross and I will continue to
get the best out of what we have
without going out of Line with
school practice," Anderson said.
.\thletJc Director Eugene F.
Why
PHOENIX,
Fight Ariz.
It, 'He
ional Ed "Porky"
tified the nation's golf
taklng 16 strokes on the 16th
at Pebble Beach, Calif., in the recent Bing Crosby tournament took
more than he could stand Thursday.
He shot a 39 for the first nine
holes, estimated he had 39 for
back side for a 76 total, and decided that seven strokes over
was too much.
"Why try to fight it?" said Oliver in the locker room later. "I
just wasn't playing. No use staying around in a case like.. this. I'll
layoff and rest awhile."
LATl'NER JOINS 8TEELERS
PITTSBURGH (.4") - Halfback
Johnny Lattner, 21-year-old AllAmerica at Notre Dame Thursday
joined the ranks of the National
Football League Pittsburgh Steelers. Lattner, the Steelers' No. I
draft choice. signed h.ls contract
Wednesday night at South .~nd, Wul.rn Ko.lull,. II, ~lolaGD e:r
Ind. Terms of the contract were 1t•• I ••• , I ... O . .rrla iI6
not disclosed.
: ..1&10.... "6111 611, WI ...11a U",.. nll,
eag_ Scores
...9 love 'IOU to' someone
Say
was operated on Just before
Christmas. Others cxpected to
bolster the Hawks are Dave ':an
dcWnter, backstro,ke;. ~ I Higgms.
breaststroke and tndlvldual medley; and Bob Reed , 50- and 100yard freestyler. Coach Dave ATmbruster has. commented that Reed
~n Iowa Clty sop~omore, is eom109 up fIst and Wl.l1 probably see
plcnty of action thiS season.
~adgers Stroog'
.
. Wisc~nsm is expected t? bnng
o.ne of lts strongest teams mto the
fIeld house. -eadgers ~ob Kevetter
and Ray Kelbe combme to make
the 150-yard individual medley
swim one o[ Wisconsin's strong
events. The Badgers will also be
strong in the backstroke, with
John Hoaglund, and in the sprint
and medley relay events.
I'he Hawks will be bucking for
two thinss Saturday afternoon: the
first victory of the 1954 season
and the beginning of another vietory string over the Badgers.
I\\.ll III
Tunl,bt
Maybe there's another reason. A football lineman runs andl
&, Overall Ua"cc
tackles or blocks. It gets to be dull after a while. A gymnast can Or.,inalB u Clnfhllm
l in Wuter" Swlnr
tumble, he can wOl'k on the trampoline, the side horse, the parallel 1
O~CHi.S't~A
'l'0.1 OIVEN '
COIYBOY
bars, the horizontal bar, the flying rings, the still rings, and free l
" 't.r Glnrhaml, O,·t'ra U.s
Y.a\urinc
lb. Dream
4; Jrans
exercise. He has a choice and the variety keeps things spicy and in- I
DUl iul
Salurday
Leresting,
R ...r.a\lo"o NOW
Compoltr of
Back at Colorado State, according to Holzaepfel, crowds 11pckcd j
•
LAlI'nf;SCIl WI!LK'S Theme Sonr
to thc gym for the meets. Here, hc figures, folks have what he calls
"Ouhblrs In th e lVlne"
One l)r:C"~. Record .
"universlty-itis. Too many thing~ ' to do."
Coast to Coast. Nehverk
We could easily toss this major and minor sport classification
non CALAME
into the Iowa river and never miss it. The few hundred who know
&> ill S SPARKLING RIJYTII~IS
gymnastics know it as a sport in thl' purest and mosl ama leur form.
NtI(~ lV.dn •• day
There are no big names, no headlines, no recruiting drives, no
('onrenlal "OVER ~H·NITE·'
big "deals," or extra credit.
I
JACK COLE
Just a refreshing sport-to c",o::m~p~e~t:l'_I~
·n~a~n~d~t~o:...:w~a~tc~h~.~_ _ _~1~~~&'~I~Il.S~II~O~ST~o~r~.~T~A~n~s~~~~====
_
- - - -_ _
I
Coach Drops Case
Against Hoopster
~UST
The Hedges
Bring Us
Your
It took a class reunion
to show Ed Mahler, '50,
that 011 lirst johs are
not aUke. Be tells us why.
Course List. ••
We
r.
1'(
Guarantee
Cords
.
More of those
College_Cord Pants
for"
Light II...
Light Tan
We will gladly wrap
5 South Dubuque
SUPPLIES
ARRIVED
and mail your gift.
Dixie Carmel Corn
Supply
( Re(ldill g time: 33 seconds)
Candy by- Mail
Mak. your selection early from our ~any beauti·
ful heart shaped boxes; each carefully packed .
with delicious DIXIE chocolates.
,
BOOKS &
~lo~~on~a;u~n~a:n~im~o~~S~de~c~is~i~on~'ii~I~~iiPih~O~n~·i9i5i6i5ii~i
r
Iowa
,
.For All
Your
RIDE THE BUS
You've been waiting
Send
A CAMPUS-TO-CAREER CASE
PITTSBURG Kan . (JP)-A col' .
.
lege ~oach who fIled a c:>mplamt
chargmg a 19-year-old basketball
player with obtaining money under
false pretenses said Thursday he
d.oes not Inlend to press the case.
John Lance, coach at Pittsburg
Joey Giardello Favored State T ea chers C0 II e ge, sal'd h C
To Whip Cartier Again wouid not appear at a prelimina,'),
hearing Feb. I I f:>r Percy E. BarNEW YORK VP) - Joey Giar- nes, a prep basketball star in Ka ndelio, a tast improving young mid- sas City last year.
dleweight who now is ranked No. Barne, free on $1,000 bond, is
2 h 11
t
.
accused of obtaining $110 under
c a engel' 0 champIon Bob 01.
son, is a strong 2 to J favorite to p~etenslles tbaht he was enrolling at
whip Walter Cartier again to- t e co ege ere.
night at Madison Square Garden l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_ _iiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;.;1
Th
0
. be·1 '
. Cd 1 -ro~d m atcdP .. W(IABll C
)
No Parking FUSI
k
carne o~ n e W,Ol:'" ra 10
.
when you
and televlSlon N.DC) at 9 p.m.
CST.
'
This is a rematch of an OcL 26
bout at Brooklyn won by GlardelIowa City Coach Co.
terrific 'Day's
at home
•
Shop Early
at
Also - See tbe
New Da, IJeav:r
."''''''"'''-, ., Drill Ch1Bo SuntaDI
$716
The class reunion at hi alma mater,
Swarthmore College, wa an eye-opener
for Ed AJahler. The talk llJJ10ng the
CJa ss of '50 switchen to johs. Ed had
taken it for granted that e~el' bod y was
hOJ)PY with his work.
Then he found that ~ome or hL r1a~ .
mate had had two or thre jol) ince
Jeayina school. Other had kert th e
eame one but wercn t atis6ed. B s lick.
ing with his first job and inlending to
make it a lifetime career, .Ed suddeuly
discovered he had a head tart.
After heing gradllaled with a B.A. in
Economic h e went 10 work fOI' Bell
Telephone Company of Pennsylvania in
1950. He reports he chose the Telephone
Company hecause it eel)led to offer the
be t chance for a care~r.
Mter a year of trai.nin!! in which he
workf>d in each of the depllrtment! installing t elephone, handlin!! hu iness
(,0010('1
with customer - Ell felt he
had a good look III the entire company.
He was a ij\'lled to the Traffie Depart.
ment, which lIa the responsihility for
seeing that customers' calls are handled
efficiend y. The job incl~lded personnel
work in addition lo developin better
operatinl! method s and practices. He
wa qllicklr Pllt on his own.
J ow Ed has heen transferred to Ihe
job of e timatin !! tbe amount and type
of 11e\ equipment which wiU be needed
jn central ofrice a their eustomere
increa e.
Ed roint8 onl that projecting himself
intolhe fl1ture i~n't anything new. That's
. precisely what he attempted to do when
he chose his fir t- and only-job.
o
•
Ed Mahler's job i. with an operating company of the Bell Systent. But there are
also jobs for engineers, arts and lCience
and business administration treduates with
Western Electric, Sandia Corporation, and
Bell Telephone Laboratories.
(
./ . ,
Bel;L TELEPHONE SYSTEM
j
/"
UI
ot
Ri
You Will
Receive the
th
"
•
tOI
4.
wa
to
SAVE
~I
.an
25%
inl
act
AVERAGE
tov
j
on USED
Textbooks
ca
N
Sf
Before You Bt!y See . .•
t:sIIiiJ
Lu,U' SUppl, of Now 41
U ed 'l'extbooks In I.,,'"..
~
•
•j
r
Right . Books
I •••
J
of l
inc
par
Ma
~
fai l
liVE
10\\
Da\
1
Iiol
At
I"
,
I
t.1
the
'hD:. DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, la.-Frida,., Feb. ~ 1954- Pa«e
Bricker Modifies Treaty Amendment Re-Ro.ufing
' ~~'::~~!f~~~~: s~~~!~~~~~~~a~~ls Books 'For Adults' ' ~~:~;:i~; ~:i~::~
Of HIghway 6
WA~HINGTON . (JP);-Sen .. JOhn l- -'
W. Brlck~r (R-OhIO), declaring he
A blaze which broke out in a Illinois State library is stamplng Carpentier, state librarian, s a i d .
.
hallway adjoining the kit- some oC its Ciction "This book is that library workers, inlenl upon
Emil G. Trott, Iowa City a
chen in tbe home oC Mrs. Tessieltor adult readers," as an out- putting the stamp on all volumes torney, was named head of tI
~05Cr, 2.30 GoIrview ave., Unlver- growth oC a recent controversy obviously ~ntended to~ adults, be- 1954 fund raising campaign of tJ
ISlty Heights, Thursday caused over book banning.
gan the lob In a library room Johnson conuty chapter of tI
More tra[(ic could be handled heavy damage to both the hallway Among the titles stam""d it wa housJng books oCten requested by American Red Cross Thursdlly t
.
and kitchen.
..... :,
s ladults.
by re-locatlng hIghway 6 throu. gh F ' emDn aid the bel' e tho disclosed Thursday, were 20,000
"
.
W . D. Bailey chapter chairman
"
Ir
S
Y
lev
~ Leagues Under The Sea" by J ules I The librarians as a Urst step
,
Iowa ClIy rather than by-pas..;,mg fire started in a closet in the hall- V
"W d St . T ld F
stamp aU the books on the shelves
Quota Cor the fund campaig
it around the city, a letter re- . wayan quickly spread to the kit- C~:;t· ,,~n:J
~:s. fO A or in that room and later will blot which will begin March 1, h.
ceh'ed from the director of state/ chen ot the t wo story Crame house. d
ren d Y "P~Js. ,rISPrlan ~~ out the st~mt)'s from thosft sUI"Able not yet been announced. T r
MN. K oser w b0 was upstaIrs
. bersen
ogre
u
".
...·
d th a t h
i l l na~e ~ampru'
hi h .
h id
JOO an
B ' I grim s
for teen-agers
as well as tor
adUlts.
/sal
e w
g way researc sa .
when the blaze broke out was un- y
n uc)an.
workers who will assist In colee
The communication to city of-/ injUred although her hair was l But a library spokesman said the
Ions ot the Red Cross funds wit
ficials was Irom Mark Morris, re- Singed.
stamping of thele titles and others,
PINK NOW
in the next week or two.
search man tor the state highway
She managed to call the fire de- does not mean wha t it seems.
RENS ELAER, N.Y. UP)-There Trott, who is also judge of It
commission. It listed estimated to- partment betore running from the The legend will be obliterated at was pink snow in Renssel1ler Iowa City potice court, has been
tals ot vehicle trips a day the ele- house.
at later stage in process of screen- Thursday and face were pinker member of the board of directo:
va ted expressway would divert Firemen trom both Io wa City ing the library'S entire stock of at the General Aniline Dye Wo rks. o{ the county Red Cross unit fe
from local streets.
stations answered the call at about nction.
The pastel mantle covered 0 220- several year. In 1947 he Wi
The most recent ce-routing pro- 9:30 a.m. and quickly extinguIsh- I Joseph Belair, assistant public yard~wide area. A ventllatlng sys- chairman of the Iowa City Carr
posaJ would re-route highway 1i ed the blaze.
relations director for Charles F . tem spread the coating.
munlty Chest fund drive.
near the Westlawn curve or Vet•
erans hospital on the west side of l
the city and sweep across the Iowa
river on a ne-w bridge' parallel
with the Crandic bridgE!. _
F' l O S
0
Ah d
Ina s ver, unny ays
ea
' mall
I5 Propose d
was maklng .arrlmportont c~ncession t~ the EISenhower admlnlstr~~on, mtr?duced ~hursday a modlfled ~efSlon of hiS proposed constitu!ional amendment to curb the
President's treaty-making powers
,...
.
The new plan laid before the
senate drops Bricker's controversial "which clausen-the section
P res Id en t E Isen
'
h
o\Ver con ten ds
would restore to the states th!)lr
18th century right to nulllfy treaties.
In its place Bricker substituted
wjs provision :
New Provision
·'A treaty or other internationa1 agreement would become law in
the U.S. onJy through legislation
by the congress unless, in advising
and consenting to a treaty, the
senate, by a vote of two-thirds of
the senators present and voting,
,hall provide that such treat~· may
become effective as internal law
without legislation hy the congress."
I
Route Run oulh
There was no immediate indica( Dill,. I." •• Pb.to )
The new route would then run
tion that the White House would TAKING ADVASTAGE OF THE" prlnr" wealher 'thursday at. south along the east bank of the
warm up to this modification. Ei- ternoon to polish his ear I Don Hoy, P4, EsthervUle.
I student river to tile ewage disposal plant
senhower said Wednesday he will have a mJld , warm weekend to enjoy after tlnal e amlnallons where It would veer southe-ast to
woald not compromise one bit in which end today. The hl"h today Is expected to reach 45 lO 5D. Muscatln road. The plan calls
WOR~
any way which would change the These onsea onable temperatures are Quite a contrast Ie) the 10 tor overpasses at Riverside drive,
traditional balance ot power a- below zero temperature of two ","eta a"o.
Iowa a\'e., and Burlington sl. and ~:;:;::;;;:;;::::;:;=:;:;;;:;;;:;~;-:==:::::;::::::::!.C:::;:=::;=====iC=::::===========:-:====·=========:::;
mong the three branches of ledB cloverleaf at College st.
WANT AD RATES
Rooms for Rent
Instruction
Miscellaneous for Sole
eral government.
E. F. Koch, chief engineer tor
I _ _~_ _ _- - - - - - A succession ot other develo P - ,
the state highway commi ion, will
ODe da,. _........_. Ie per w.rd FRONT .Inll" room - m.n. 26117.
BALLROOM DANCE lenon•. M.lmJ YOUel' j LlJGOAGE. Footlocktl'l. Trunlu. Hoc
mcnts greeted the seventh day 'of
dl. cu. Iowo City's traUlc probThree da" ........1%c per word ROOM tor Ir dU"~ lud;nt. ~k. Wurlu. DIal 114&5.
_ 1:_y_"_L_08_"_.__________-!
tormtl debate on the issue in th°
I ms and the possible re-roullng,
Five da,....._ ... 156 per word
(rom ~ampu. P on"
Autes For Sale _ Used
IBLONDE cobinet ..,win. machln". t~el
sona e.
,
Feb. 15 at a meeUng of the Iowa
TeD da71 ••• _ •• ftc per word CO.l'ORTABLE room. Phone '-2693.
______________
atlachmenll, portable cue. Dial 8-21
Whatever you want to do this I
CIt., d
d
a
City Engineers club.
ODe IUoa&b _ ..... SIc per word ROO IS _ .in.le nnd double. CIO$t' III 11141 CHRYSLER 4-<1oor. ibdlo. twln- ._t_le_r_4_:_15;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
J S °nthGer DeeveFIOPWmenltt . (0
. e. eorg
.
a el
- weekend the weatherman iq on
owa FJ an surroun 109 re s
.
Mlnlmum curle !lie
h I~"'. .now nip Urc.. 1375. WUI PA!tAX££1'S. DIal a-.3G57.
~a .), author of a substitute:1- your sid~, according to Des M.>lnes drew nearer to their 1954 March
Morns said In the leUer, "A byCLASSJ-ED DISPLay
"?IIO. 215 N . Dubuque. Phone 8-2638. trod. 01 I 8-4155.
nendment which has strong Demh
b
t t l
.
I pa. s IIround the city would be Of!
.&.
n
SINGLE room ror mAn Cali 5892 at :l4IT
- - - - - - - - - TWO ,00<\ used r('lrl,"llor. wltb SO-d."
h
Id h
weat er ureau orecas s.
at DImes goal 01 $10,000 when ap- Ian advantage only to the traUie One insertion.............. 9Sc per Inch
.
II14S MUDSO
G ",u,pdown aedan. 83- worrenty. COMor', ReJri,cratlon Scr
· SUPPOI-t'd
,era tIC
, sal
e wou
live
.
..
dlo h('aler new tire. Very depend- Ice. Phone 31103.
10 objection .t o altering his 'Plan
.Bright . sunshine lind mild Ill,{ proximotely 250 business counter in trips now passing through the Fi ve insertions per month
IDOUBt.J: room - (urnl.hed. men, \ery .ble.' $3110. a.:1280.
•
to mcet administration objection. Will contl~uc to push Iowa tem- containers collected
Wednesday city . . . The traf!ie to and lrom
per lnsertlon ........ S8e per Inch clo In Dial 1-2222,
/.
PARAKEETS. Dial 8-0243.
But he questioned whether the ad- peratures mto 1he 40 and 50 de- IYielded $1 05080
I the city would continue in eonCllct T in I
tb
Roo\1O tor underl .. duat. wo,"en stu- "'::~~~D . New wr~c1u Ind junk .. Phone
I '
t·
fl'
gree range. The weather bureau
, . .
'Ith h I I
.(
1 t ffl" en
ser! ons per mon ,
dent - 1I-2~55
.
m mstra ~on, O? re echon, would
.
Money from the containers \\
t coca cross r e ra c.
per InsertJon ........ 80c per Inch
- - - - -..- - - - - - - consider It adVISable
said there may be mmor local
'
E t1matcs 8a ed
SINOLE room (or mal
S. 183. BUICK . -door. Good eondJUon. Call
2 S
W'!li
F .K
i d rl changes but the pi( Isant tempera- which were collected by Women of
Dally Insertions during mcnth,
Dod ... Phon"~.
.304 .lter 5.
Califo:~ia :hea~Op se~~'t: ~~ad~r lures wil: continue untJJ late this the Moose unde~ the leadership otj He continued. "It i! estimated
per insertion ......_.70c per Inch iOR-men: doUblt room wllh b;.th _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - 'd h . :, t t
g'" b
. weekend ot the lirst ot next week. Mrs. James Hen lng, contalncr col- that the propo. d
rwlocation
PhOne 4~3
Who Does It
----.,..,....,...-:-:-:---.-----l
sal
no 00 san
a Ollt
. ) wou.ld carry
gettinge IS
a decisive
voteUlOe
on the
a- The unseasonably warm weather I(ec tl on ~ h'
~~rmanS'6 btrSoOu2&9ht th e t 0- (Ih rou~ h th e city
IRooM (or Iludent men - phone 1-3491. ROO 15 pointed $8 Ind li2 1_ g,
i
,
. .
approximately 6,000 vehIcles Per
- - -_
_ __ __
_ _ _~
mendment IS' sue this \veek as he has characterized the month or a recelv ..-u to
,
.
ROOM (or- lIudenl womer!. 48:14.
SKATES
h
ed
11 k E'
had hoped. If that is the case,
he February so far and is contrasted j About 100 contamers
rema i ~ to d
aj' on th e _ec ti on be t ween (he
IJII" s .•~~~u,,:
oc - n
added the question may have to by temperature readings ol 20 and be picked up In Lone Trcc, SWlsh- we~t entrance and CollcGe st."
DOUBLE room tor .tu'enL boy., on _
_ _
go ov~r ror 10 days 01' mO'l'e
30 degrees this time last year. The l er, Oxtord and Tiftln. Scme or- 3,500 vehicles per day between
Apartment For Rent
~mpua. ~I 2to5.
RADIO AND TV .. Ie. and .. rvlce. Pick
3 Bri cker said he had bee~ told high on Feb 4 1953 was 28 de- eanlzotions are contmuing to turn College 51. nnd Benton sl. nnd 2,ROOMS y.-tth board - on bus litl@. Bo)" , .-~161 and deUvery. Woodburn Rldlo.
his 'modified plan probably would grees in row~ City.
their private collection..
000 vehkl per day from lknton lBACHELOR 8l1orlmenl.l. 1104 N Dubuque 01 I 8203.
•
.
.
ELE'ctROLUX
e'.,,,ner ... Ie. and rvlce
be voted on F eb. ] 6. "I am con(jAt mld-aCtcwoon
Thursday, L\MJ'S. J. K . 5cnau I,. Juhns
on co· ·t . 10 n June tl on \\·I'th th'C ex Is ti ~" St. Call 1-21139.
ROOMS. 2" N. CapItol.•
L II. Ebel, bonded ,epro ••nlallve
•
Rentals
dent" he declared in a statement moni reported 55 delt).·ees. The IInty ehairmnn, said that mail con- route for U.S. 6 south of the ChlW t d
-IPhone 7658.
•
•
Repairs
'
Rock Island nnd PaciCIc
an e
ROOM
un~rlTlldUJIle ~n. CION In. - . Ippllance r"plirin,. lelevlslon
-"that, .
If the.
vOice of the people IS' >ltate low Thursd
ay mornmg
was Itr Ib u II on car d s' arc S t I'll arr Iv I nl: ca"o
~.'
Phonetor8-22118.
WIRll>/l.l
•
Sales
heard in Washington between now 26 at Spencer.
Crom the 7,500 ~ards sent out to rllll\vay . overpass . o~theast of NEWLY orpnl1ed Slorlllhier Orche.Ind radio I.rvlct!. Jock.on 1'1""lrle.
Authorized
• Royal
1\ • }t'eb. 16 an adequate treatythe general publ1c.
[bOWRd CltY:I'953Thtresefl ' estIm ate are o,tr:o!'''W"~~ ~nl=~lnf. Phone xU4' ROOMS lor mtll . 123 N. Dubuque. 8-2475' 1_ _
Dealer
01 amendlJ1ent will be apNEW O()JUl\IANDANT
The 10wa City Elks lodge raiscd ase on
a IC vo l umes.
_ _ _ _ ROOMS - ,r.dulle Ihld..n". PbOll1
SHORT LOANS
Portables
Standards
cd by the senate and later by
!$287.50 Lor the compaign in ob- "It I' further estimated that LET US T..n.(~r your furniture tarely ~74.___
_
I
" ouse of representatives."
WASHINGTON (JPl-The navy serving their annual Past Exalted about 4,000 trip per day would be wIth our modtm Qulpm nt to )'our FR£Jt room til "xchoOle (or work. nc r
on
L
6 brownell Declines Comment
said Thursday Rear Adm. Richard lRuler's ni ht W~dnesd9Y evcnlnq. dIverted from the Burlin ton
home. Maher Brol. Tran.re •. Dial field hou e Dlnl 5510.
, ~~W~li~~,. _o~:f.%'.!! - I:!'::t~~:
4. Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell P. Gla~s, no.w ~ommander of t~e Pollo patients from
University bridge, about 2,000 trips per day
DOlTBLE room (or bon with communhy cumora. - 5~wJn, m."blne - lopcoall
from thc Jowa &Ve. brld,e leavSewing
kltch"n ~IB South Johnson. 01.1 &922.
men I shOt'I. III .i...
decUned to say at a news confer- 2d crUiser dIViSion In the AtlantIC hospital aU nded the me-eting.
ence whether the administration fleet, has been named commanli- )' One special container which W ilS lng them with 6,000 and 9.000. EWING. DI.l
R%?nll :~2~~·" .ludent. 402 No,rlh Dod,..
HOCK.EYE LOAN
0\"'\ "' -'051 2"~. W"'~hlngtol'
would be just as well satisIielf to' an of the 9th naval district with picked up Wednesday held $90 in trips PCI' doy on the bast.. ()f J953
..,-.
__
~=.='=~
bave no change in the Constitu· headquarters at Great Lakes, Ill. dimes.
trarric volumes."
Typing
---tion. But he said "we- can't chanj;(e
Boby Sitting
the delicate balance of power beCHRISTOPHER nobt:. Nur..,r)' -chool- ~o~ 11-2491.
_ _ _ _ _ __
tween the three branches of gov20 W", t Illlrrison-Pbono '-1782 daYI. rHESIS anI! mlnu'rrlpt I~pin, Ex~rl-I
ton
~venlnl .
•
'1
.... I
ernment. Many actions by the
CHILD core In my hom
Call $720.
a~~C~k acourale. and Il5t 'erv ce . ..,11
President have an internal cffcct
WILL care ror (our- or live-year-old bo)' - _ _ _.__________
USE
THIS
MAP
A$
A
GUIDE
TO
upon the country. We want to be
in m)' home. 1-1731.
TUJ!:SIS _ M.nu!ICrJpl typinl. 0202.
a used car?
'LAN YOUR PAlkl • IN DOWNTOWN
sure that these important presiJACK
Inel
Jill
Playschool.
Dial
8-3UO.
TYPING. Thesis .nd manuscripl. Work
dentia l pQwers are not taken /1tOWA
A.M . bab), .IIUn. In my home. Phone 8J~:3a:-nteed .
Ex-commercial teaebcr,
used furniture?
way."
In offering his modified plan,
8- 1'07.
____
B~Y .illln •. Dial '~2. ""k lor Arlme. TYPING - 783 • .
Bricker said his proposed amendbaby sitting service?
ment wiJJ s tiJI "afford substantial
LAFF·A·DAY
protection to individual rights, to
... used school supplies?
s tates' rights, and to the pJ'eservatiOd of the sovereignty of the
United States."
.
It was leamed that the new
Bricker draft was submitted t.()
George Wednesday and rejected
by him. Th is means that Bricker
probably will not get substanti,,]
Democratic support for his change.
.. 10.5t articles?
The key section in George's own
plan states that international a, a ride home?
greem ent-bu t not treaties-negotiated by the President mllSt
, a ren"er?
have congressional action to implement them as internal luw.
, , part time help?
The administraticn has argued
this would handicap the President
in the exercise of his war powers
and also in his authori ty to treat
with foroign governments.
George told reporters this section could be changed to exempt
TA1.i Q1!»f:r.t. 0' ...... PACILITIU '
these two preSidential powers.
YOUI 'ARJUN• . "liDS.
I
l
I
l
I
TAKE THE
I
..
Pleasant Weather
D f W k d
' ue or ee en
l
OUT OF SELLING WITH WANT ADS
J
D"Ime Fund T0IaI
n h S6 180
I{eac
es .
I
4191 · I-- ------
I
I
Iii:
TYPEWRITERS
I
I
I
WiKe
Typewriter Co.
-==-_-=====....==.,=:...=
' ===..=-"__
st.::.
I
a......
Local Citizens To Receive Parking-Area Map
WANT TO SELL
I
can
•
I
WANT TO FIND
U.S. Court Rules
Against Railroads
In Labor Act Fight
..
.+ ..
LOCATIONS OF DOWNTOWN parkinI' areas are shown In this map whiC;R wIll be mailed to relldents of Iowa City and nearby &radlJ1&" areas by the Chamber of Commerce. The map, Pl'ln&ed In
black , white and yellow, shows more than 5,000 space available in parkilllr lots and on met~red
streets.
\
CHICAGO lIP) - The nation's
ra4Jroads Thursday lost a cou rt
ro~nd in their e~fort to prevent / To
unJons from seekmg weUare and
ot~er "fringe" benefits under the
Three ROTC army cadets will
RaIlway Labor act. .
be commissioned in the army
. Fe.d eral Judg~ Wm, G . . Knoch reserve at special ceremonies durdIsmissed th~ raIlroads SUIt lor a ing mid-year commencement acdeclaratory Judgment that would tivities Saturday.
impose such a ban.
The new officers will ae Delm ar
AttOl'~eys for the rail J.ines said L. Cobin, A4, Council Bluffs, John
they Will. appeal 1he rulmg.
S. McLaren, A4, Des Moines, and
The railroads sought a deClara- j Donald E. Foley E4 K ansas City
tory judgment ill asuit filed Nov. Mo
"
•,
4. They contended t~at the ,RaiJCol. Walter E. Sewell, head of
way La~or act. reqUJr~s raIlroa ds SUI's department of military
to negotiate \~lth their employes science and tactics will present
O'hly on questions of wages, }'ules commissions to the three cadets
• and working conditions.
after adm inistering the oath of
They asked, in effect, a cou rt office at ]0 a.m . in the armory.
interpretatlon of the 27-year-old
act in the light 01 recent trends
toward union demands for so- Cost of Mailing Letter
called fringe benefits.
May Jump to 4 Cents
Mother of SUI
Sportsman Dies
Mrs. Clara Graham, 70, mother
of Francis E. (Buzz) Graham , business manager of the athletic department, died Tuesday night at a
Marshalltown hospital.
Mrs. Graham, who had been ill
failing health for several Years,
lived with .. daughter in MarshaIltown. She had formerly lived ln
Davenport.
The funeral will be held at the
Holy Family church in Davenport
nl 9 n. m. Frid:ty. Burial will bp
there.
WASIDNGTON (JP)- The aaministration won the first round
in its fight for higher postal rates
Thursday when the house post 01lice committee agreed to raise the
cost of mailing first class letters
from three to four cents.
The acUon may be reversed,
howe ver, when the committee!
completes its study of second and
third cl ass rates and 1hen votes
on a bill to raise all three. This
may come today or SatuTday.
A four cent rate would apply
only tq out of town mail. Letters
mailecl for local carrier delivery
within :l city "ould s till I nkl' 0
thrce cent
Classified help you solve your problem, Classi·
fieds are convenient, economical and eHedive,
3 Commissions
Be Awarded
r
CALL 4191 and let a Daily Iowan
•
''I'm Ihe gas mL~r reader. Your plumber promi<ed to give
me a game today!"
,
•
,
WALKER
FOOEY! I GUESS I'D BETTER
GO OVER TO 'THE BARRACKS
He's saving money
He'd probably pay more for his
cigarettes If it weren't for advertiSing. The eigarette manufacturers use advertiSing as their
lowest cost way to get across
news and information about
their products. On the average,
advertising for a pack of ciga-
retles amounts 'to less than ~~.
Selling goods this way makes
mass production pe sible-which
means lower production costs,
lower selling costs, lower prices,
Yes, advertising is a low-cost
selling method that helps keep
your lidng C{)sls JOtL'''.,
AND
CELEBRAilON
P..-e &-THE DAlLv IOWAN-loWII City. I .-Frtlby.
F~b.
,
5, 19501
Benson Defends farm. Policy,
Health Specialists Discuss Study
Electro Gets a Light
Wisconsin Trucker,
Hurl in Accident
Wednesday, Dies
,
Urges Lawmakers' Appro'val
Democrat attacked Prt'sident - - - -- - - - - - - - - Eisenhower Thursday even as Sec- Sparkman said dryly.
A Lancaster. Wis. truck driver
retary of Agriculture Ezra
Bolllnc' AUuIll Report
who was struck by a semi-truck
son declared that the long dip
Rep. Richard Bolling (O-Mo.)
near cascade Wednesday. died in
farm income is "largely behind sharply criticized a section of EiUniversity hospitals at noem
sen hower's eonomic report to ConThursday.
Testifying before the sen
gress which said that rural poverty
Wayne Sch~llian , 49, driver oC a
house economic committee.
could be reduced by "the growing
gas transport truck ' suffere!1 two
son took issue with the
opportunities for non-farm embroken legs at the time of the actic view" that the 17 per cent drop ployment."
cident. He was then taken to Monin farm prices over the last three
Bolling said the adminis tration
ticello hospital for treatment an.
years is the harbinger of "a gen- apparently meant that marginal
then to University hospitals.
eral depression."
farmers "should get out of CarmUniversity hospitals authorities
"The latest price report or the ing and do something else."
were unable to reveal the exac~
department showed a widespread
Protesting, Benson told the Miscause of death and said that both
improvement, averaging 4 per cent souri Democrat:
Johnson and Dubuque county COl' .
from mid-November to mid-JanWe're nol advocating the plowoners would investigate.
uary," Benson said.
iog under of every [ourth farmer."
Cedar Rapids police said that the
Prices SlmJllar
Benson said the administration
man driving the truck that hit
"For 1954, we belleve that agri- is giving "special consideration"
Schollian was Laurice Ashworth,
I
cultural prices and agricultural in- !Oerthe problems of the small !ar29, of St. Joseph, Mo. who failed
comes will be maJntainect fairly
.
to slop at the scene of the accident.
He was arrested by Cedar Rapclose to V'iose of 1953."
Benson waged virtually a lone
ids patrolmen as he entered the
battle as he urged the I
city.
to approve what he called the adAshworth told police that he
ministration's "middle- of - road"
was unaware that he had strucl
farm policies.
anyone and that he had not seen
While Democrats peppered Be!lSchollian at any time.
He s<lid that he saw Schollian's
son with critical barbs, Republi- MIAMI 'BEACH ; Fla. (JP) ( SUI Photo Sonl.e)
(AP Wlrep"o'o)
parked truck as he camc over a
THREE SUI HEALTH SPECIALISTS dileuss a new reaench study co.rnlnc care and control can members of the joint commit- Strained AFL relations with the
Eisenhower ' administration ap- ELECTRO, TJJE MECHANICAL MAN without a worry in the hill and went ove,' on the shoulder
problems of thronlc dlaeue. On the len IB the au&hor ot the study, Hlrlam Lovell Netl, G, Monti- tee remained sHent for the
cello, who will become the first woman In the world to earn a Ph.D. del'I'ee In hospital admInistra- part and let him conduct his own llCared on the mend Thursday world, l'ets a lIgbt for bis cigarette from Jeanne Dowling, a Wash- of the road to miss the parked ve.
even with AFL leaders still un- fnlion singer, as he exhibits bis abilities In Washtngton, D.C. fie hicle, and thought he did.
tion ae SUI commencement exereises Saturday. Prof. Steven Horvath, ot the physiolon department defense.
Sparkman Criticizes Plan
happy over many administration can walle, talk, follow spoken directions, smoke, play the piano
The left rear side of Ashworth'~ '
and actin, director of the Iowa Institute ot Gerontology, points out Informa&ton concerning- old ale
Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala.) policies.
and tell the dlffereJlce between grecn and red.
on one of the rrany l1'aphs Included In the study. Prof. Gerhard Hartman, of hospital admll1i.traU~n
- - - -- - -- - - - - - I lrailer '/'las damaged and a scrape
and auperlntendent 01 SUI hospitals, looks on at tbe rflrM. Hartman dJrected the research done on blasted away particularly at the ' Sec etary of Labor James P.
administraUon's proposal to shilt Mitchell came from Washington
C01\-UC BOOK PROBE?
mark along the side apparcntly
the .tndy and lIorvath served on 1\-lr8. Netf's tbesls committee.
from the present mandatory farm for a private peace huddle with
was made by the outside mirrol'
price supports to a "flexible" sys- the AFL powerful executive counLANSING, Mich. (JP) - State on the cab of ScholUan's truck,
tern, decjarlng it might trigg~ .an cil. 'Afterward bot~ · Mitch~l.l and
Rep. William S. Broomfield (R- The rim of the outside wheel on
economic shock to the nabon council members saId the VISIt was
R I O k) Th d
k d S
the last set of dual wheels was
(Continued from Page 1)
farmers.
friendly and constructive"
oya
a
urs ay as e
en. bent.
"Any shock to agriculture at this
though they disagreed on
WASHI~GTON (JP)- Th.e ide~l Joseph McCarthy (R-WLq.) to in-I"_ _ _ _ _iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_ _ _iiiii
Man of Brimstone," "Stablemates" time would be a stimulus to reman fop thIS hectic age arnved I vestigate the creators of hatred Travel RAPIDLYI
and "20 Mul e Team.
,
cession," Sparkman said.
AFL President George Meany the ~ation's cap~tal Thursday.
and moral destruction-the comic
SAF.ElYI ECONOMICAllYI
Miabaum ente red the army in
Benson replied that the shift told reporters meanwhile that he He s a mechamcal man who. can books." Broomfield said that a reRedUCing the ravages of chronic
1942 for four years service, during would be gradual not more
has settled a feud with ioreign walk, talk, follow spoken dlrecUS
t d i'
d s ase requirc~ a chain of pre- ant step is the establishment o C a which time he Tose to the Tank 5 pel' cent a year: so there would
administrator Harold tions, smoke, play the piano, tell ~ent . . . supreme cour
ec slon
,Iowa City Coach Co.
v'mtio~ and caN - from research ('hronic dL~ea se center so that pa- or lieutenant colonel and produced be no shock.
Stassen and now is willing to serve the difference between red and mval1dated most state laws dePhone 9565
alld health education throu gh con- t icnts whose illnesses do not Te- films for the Industrial Services
"A 5 per cent shock
on a special labor advisory board green and count up to 10 on his signed to regulate comic books. I
trol of every stage of the disease spond Quickly to treatment may be division, served as director ot the
which Stassen is establishing in fingers.
If.5~555~5525SE55~~~~~ii~~~~~~~~~
to rehabilitation to make the pa- I!ssured ot beds and care over long Sombat Films division, and was
the FOA.
But what makes him perfect for l ~
tienl useful and independent perilXls, ~hc continues.
r sponsible for the Top Secret
IS
Meany resigned two months ago lhese troublesome days is this: He
again, a new SUI research study "How ma ny chronic disease hos- Staff Film repor t and the HistorAs a member of FOA's public ad- has no brain , and hence hasn't a
0
OC
board claiming Stassen had worry in the world.
concludes.
pital beds are needed and how leal Film branch.
Surveying chronic care needs many aclually exist? The United
Following the war MaJbaum
.
•
the FDA's labor proThe fellow's name is 'Elektro,
and r sources, Miriam Lovell Neff, States' needs are appalling when joined Paramount studios as a
firing union men serving and he's a monster. A 260-pounder,
and we'll have
G, Monticello, points out that compared with the actual accept- writer-producer for nine films, in's overseas ol(ice and by 7 feet tall, he's made of aluminum
slow-kllUng, strengt!1-sapping dis- able number of existing beds." she cluding "O.S.S.," "The Great Gats- SAIGON, Indochina (JP) - Tbe
to help anti-Communist la- and painted bronze. With him is
eases cause one milhon American says, using American Hospital as- by" and "Song of Surrender." For French set up a defense arc rougl:t~
unions abroad.
his faitht~l Sparko, a mechanical
deaths and waste a billion produc- ~ociation figures.
the same studio he produced "The ly 50 miles north of Luang PraMeany said Stassen "has given dog which can sit up, bar k and
with drawn butter
tion days each year. Cancer, diThe national breakdown into Big Clock,' "The Sain'ted Sister," bang Thursday in an attempt to assurances that our objections will wag his tail.
abetes and other long-term illnp.ss- states shows that Iowa, flft in- "Captain Carey, U.S.A.t "Bride block a three-pronged Vietminh be corrected.'"
Elektro with his built-in elecos also force sufferers and their ~tance, has only 74 accePt~ble beds of Vengeance" and "Dear Wi!e."
thrust aimed at the royal Laotian
Mitohell, on the other hand, in- tronic habits, is here to d~dicate
dependents to rely upon relati\'es eet aside for the chroDlcally ill, A tree-lance writer since 1951, capital. A showdown battle ap- dicated he had given AFL leaders ' a new radio-television building.
and public assistance. They espe- with 5,242 additional beds needed Maibaum has authored numerous pea red near in the surrounding no promises on governmenl aid in
The photographers got a singer,
11 South Dubuque
dally darken the later years of to meet the two p~r 1,000 popula- television plays fOr the Kale Smith jungle fot' control of the city ofl;~h~e~pr~e~s~cn~t~ec~o~n~o~mi~C~S~i~tu~a~t~io~n~._~I~J~ea~nn~e~D~o~w~l~in~g~,~o~n~t~h~e~s~t~ag~e~._ _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
life, she stres es.
tion r ecommendation, her survey program, Clark Sellers "Crime 150,000.
.
In the best position to unite and indicates.
Laboratory," and for the "Men of The emergency perimeter was
strengthen lhe links o[ th: chronEarly Deteetion Vital
Tustici!" and the "World Premiere" established after the Communist ..
, ic care chain. and to coor~mate t!1e Tracing problems of control ano series.
led f~e seIzed four 'French forts
medical, social. economiC, educa- tr(,1'Itment through each link ot the Two motion pictures for which guardmg the approaches to
tiona I and religious aspec:ts of the complex chronic care chain Mrs. he recently Wl'ote the screenplays Prabang and speared to within
huge proble~ arc the natIon's unl- Nefl pOints out that early ciinlcal "Paratrooper' and "Hell Below miles ot the capital ..
verslty medIcal centers, M\S. Neff detection of the ·illness would re- Zero," arc now being shown in
The French fear Its tall would
concludes. Saturday at SUI s mld- duce not only the time lost to so- American theaterS. He wrote both have repercussions not only in Jby~ar commencement exercIs~s she ciety as a result of disability but scripts In England for Warwick dochina but elsewhere
the
will become the tlrst woman m the also the patient-load problem on oroductions, to be released in the world.
world to earn a do~tor of philoso- hospiljls, nursing homes and phy- U.S. by Columbia pictures.
On a front roughly 60 miles
phy degree in hospital administra- sicians. Early diagnosis would also Between his stage and film writ- the Vietminh were moving in lTlultion.
reduce the poverty and depend- ing commitment~, Maibaum found liple columns, concentrated on ttle
I~'
Latea. Data Collectfd
ency which lingering diseases several opportunities to return to Nam Suong vaUey in the east, the
Her research study collects in bring to many families.
SUI, and on two occasions brought Man Hou valley to the north,
one document the latest avail- Although ' some advances have plays back to the University thea- on a network of forest trails northable data from tederal , state and been made in the field ot chronic tre for exper imental production west of Luang P~bang.
local health units and fact-finding illness through the avenue of re- there before presenting them tci In foUl: days, the rebels have
committecs on the problem. search, Mrs. Neff observes
wider audiences.
captured the French stronghold:s
Graphs In her thesis show the in- considerable investigation is
Now, after 20 years of,work with of Muong Khoua and Muong Ngoi
terrelationshlps 01 chronic disease needed into the specific causes
professional writers, actors and in the Nam Hou valley, Muong Sai
~~
...,~
and age, types and causes of dis- ~ uch diseases and methods of early producers on both sides of the At- I at a trail crossroads 40 miles west
ability in Iowa, and other statisti- diagnosis.
lanUc, Maibaum is se.eking ama- nf l\If""n a Nl1:oi. and Ban Nam
Open Monday thru Saturday until 9:00 p.m.
•
•
cal analysis.
I
Diseases which ' are the leadln~ teur contributions for the "Free- Bae, 18 miles southwest of Muong
Sundpy
9:00
a.m
.•
6:00
p.m.
As a working definition, Mrs. causes of death and disability- dom" series. "Next week at regls- " '; UI. Ban Nam Sac is 53 airline
Neff interprets a ch.onic disease as heart disease, hypertension, al'ter- tra tion we'll welcome students miles almost dl!reetly north
one which provides disability or iosc!erosis, and cancer - have from any area who are interested Luang Prabang.
•
impairment to health for 30 days received comparatively little at- in writing or research for these
Supported by French aircraft,
or longer. While every age group tention. Federal health agency fig- programs, whether they've had French troops were fighting a
suffers, chronic diseases increase ures show tha t more than $100 was any writing experience or not," fierCE; delaying action in the
markedly with age.
spent in research for each annual he says.
jungles
The first steps which the Wli- death due to acute infcctious diS-I'ifr~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
verslty medical center can take in eases as compared with $50 for III
evolving adequate chronic care are each cancer death and $3 for each
educational - (I) to teach people death from cardio-vascular causes,
how to protect their own health she reports.
.
and that of their communities, and
Rehabilitation Urgent
...
(2) to develop physicians and
Especially urgent, since the
other health leaders who can as- highest disease frequency rates oesist and coordinate health service~ cur among those receiving public
in outlying areas, Mrs. Nett's re- assistance, is rehabilitation from
search suggests.
helplessness to selt-sustaining inMore Courses Needecl
dependence. Here hospitals, eduCourses in geriatrics-ctlseases cation programs, industries, imd
common to the later yeaJs of lile religious aDd social agencies need
- should be added to medical to work closely together on many
school curricula. Another import- chronic cases, she says.
AfL Relations
With Cabinet
App8(Jr On Men
Thesis Study Surveys
Chronic Disease Care
cI
Mec hanlca
· I Man r\;an
Smoke, Walk, Ia Ik
ro Supervise-
RIDE THE BUS
F
h E bl. h
renc
sta
0 f
T BI k
e ense
h h
Vletmln T rust
I'll Meet You at Smith's
Broiled African Lobster Tails
RESTAURANT
·T ODAY!
......
Lushus
TOMATO
'JUICE
oz.
Visit the Amana Colonies
and Stop at the Sign
0
•
f the
'ftol~Blh~
Mary sat at the
Lord's feet. But I
Martha bus i • d ;
herself servinq.;
The Lord said: I
can
Ox Yoke Inn
Where you'll find
Chicken
Amana Steak
Ham
Sausage
. Served fanzily style
The Greatest Story Ever Written
46
Fancy Florida
Grapefruit
.or
Thr.. Large Dining Rooms Seating Capadty for 27'
Serving Twelve Brands of Imported Beve......
Martha. M ,a r y .
hath chosen the
qood part.
Lu. 10:39-42
Many Old Amana Antiqu.. and Tooit on Displ..,
Choice
BEEF ROAST 39
u.s.
CHICKENS
39.
FLOUR ~~~b
c
lb.
No.1 Frying
lb.
Good Quality - Low Price
•
German Zither Music Every Tu ..., Thurs., Sat., Eve.
u.s.
ORANGES
.
3 tall cans
TOMATOES 33
MIRACLE
WHIP
8 pound bag
49·
c
/
Open Every Day and Evening Until 8 p.m.
Sundays: 11 a.m. until 8 p.m.
20 Miles West of Iowa City in
Bound Volume of'''''' Bib", Scenu, Moilsd',.. upo. . •1(....
Boz 447, WInUrI...... C.",.".
J!om Tlw troducdon DlpGrtm.,."
taken in at our store will go to the
cal Polio Fund. Do your weekend
shopping today. Help i·he local polio
drlve and help yourself to these
money saving prices.
Heinz ·
•
CATSUP'
c
E
:.
CHICKEN OF THE SEA
CHUNK TUNA
2.9
can
r
btl.
c
day
...
up P"'"
tIon
senti..:;
empL
Jose,
his r ·
come
and
=
,
(
'.
I
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