9Q,uB . noit29uC ab90J - m9t2,(2 Qnitrl'Qi=t-9'i - Daily Iowan ...

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.2iosbu:la b9Jaood nSllirl:JiM Jnuo:> las[ lA ·oaX bns ;001 ,UaM ;aworl ",n' ainsbuje sjaJ2 nSiid:JiM . \'8 ,2sa sal - B,(sb n9V98 lIls1 oj eqori lloo! Jeut ,nslIiri!liM bns 21uod . UaM Isvl1-rl!l1a .1soo oj rliluons s d '< s m aJnsbuie BsansX Juff B~sb 91 - sldieeoqmi srlt llnilles8 1uon 9rfJ UJou - B1UOri ill bns

.ehsJe ooiJS!lSV asmjai1nO

~D2 lertT 02 ,0 ,!lood !o 19dmun 8 918 919dT 01 bee1 oj svsd jon ob uo'( Jadl

..b1llll1Q1ai-llew .ed 1II1Mf1,T , ..... ) 01lHu8

lames Hitler,. Asks Mercy to a five-man panel of Supreme III:l' !lilt onI1 asked far the death Court judges and bis attorney has peulty (or Eklunalul but said: said he \I'ill appeal against a '1 know full ell there is 110 death sentence. Observers said .it poe5ibility to cive the priloDer the will take mooths or more lor an punilbment be delerves eveD if be appeal ruling but j{ the ppeal Is W1!ft killerI a tbousaDd times," rejected execution would follow HaUllIft' Mid In the heavy hIIIh 01

lor doiDg 1111 dutieI. Now I am ftII'a(ed by !be faet that .n my superlon tried to shift the blame to me.

swiftly. a eowtroom jammed to eapaclty. "The accused cannot rve as the AI Hausaer sat don, DefeDIe

substitute of troUPl oJ peop~," AUorney Servatius rote to begiJI Servatiu! said. "His participaUoo his nDal 5ummaUDo. But it wu in the acts for which he was con- Eidunann wbo provided ODe of the victed was an Jjct of Governmenl trial '. DDt pipping 1ICeIIeI. AD There Is no educatiOlUlI value to eyes land fit the bald.inJ, be­the punisJunent. £lchmann's pull- spectacled defendallt as be read

"Obedience djd !lilt come euiI1. 'I1Ie GoYen:ImIDt peneeuied Jna avidly. '1boIe In power ill GermaDy ~ my obecIieaee. I would re­quest that my baviq obeyed be !be IOIe (ad tabo into accouat."

iibmeot is not of importanoe." Crom a GermaIl text. IsraelJ Atty. Gen. Gideoo Hall$- "No ODe ever reproacbed me

"Today of my CI1I'II free will I would ask !be JewlIb people for pardon," be said. "But ia the light ol the grouIIda Jiven ill the Judi • rnent this would be coastrued .. bypoc:riay. ,.

ADOl.~ EICHMANN P ....... Mercy

ail State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City

The Weather Cleudy ..... w_ teclliy: ....... In the 2h. Furlher eutto.k: Con­......... cloudl_, • I I • h t I , wanner FrW.y.

Thursday, December 14, 1961, Iowa CIty, low.

Rebels • last Stand *

'2sv1921UO s:Asks ___ _____ __ ~.J.I I.

'Ire 9\d\~no~nga nowo\ '<'port Seen

,fro-Asicm eliI sdj 10 leom rlllUO·trlJ" ,bill U Thant bSVl92 evsd nswoI ,<11sa eriT :>NS, N.Y. IA'I 1s ,ajosjweno:> -10 alsai'lbs I \Vedn sd y that ·sd ajosbuje rlliw lInilhow aSIT' lBry-GeneraJ U [S"1SnSli '(lev s nl noils,ilduq s1mmediale cease· 10 laom dlluOlril dlluorti/S ,'<f Th rcqu t ap.. a'oswoI ,<lisa sdT 10 21SS,{ el be rejected in -!ls1 erlj 10 i:>sjnO!l srlt ,noilslelpport Crom the -no:J awen 9dj rljiw lsdmsm '<: the enlir Asian. 11ged asd ooijs!lilduq el01sd lr.e U.N objective no Jarlj saOS2 edJ ni ,Isihsq 0 Congo province. -msm ~JIU!l81 9rij anoias:>:Jo jecn, Britain'S per. /slsoell s ,<100 svsd bwow l r nlativ, hand· 01SW rI!lirlw asboja sd) 10 sdum to Thon! ,noiJll!lilduq 101 bsaas!lo"1q 1I0i. mllitary aelloo on 9vSrl bluow ,<&,sn911 blga forces indi-10 ,<slqaib srlJ 10 slibsIwoed N olio seeks ".ashoja oevil! oj bsbl09!lC rill!McoI solution in ,<lica sdT 101 ,<sq aJosbuj( josbuJa lisrll 10 J1Sq as nsv"ltlon 11'" not llnib'loo!ls ,,<Jia19vinU edT .a' United St.t •• , ,<lisa erlT a,<sq lsUooM 1M ... Im"'"l· 1 'rIOt f ... lble un· o slls:ios!l1eq bsjsJa B ls ncv N oblect"' "

sdJ 101 ,91s1 llniei11svbs lisjSl ~.;. .1 '<li2'1svinU srl1 ,<d bsiqu:l:lo S:JI . n" •. ,<:lia19vioU sri! bos b'lso8: niJsW"lO·A{rlcan ('oC.

. 'Isbosl closed meeung ~Iy a declara­

-levbs ns asd nswoI ,<lisa 9ni u.s. stood as ·sb bns elisa rI:Jirlw ns!a ll~lon and giving 10 JOSjOOD ~niaihsvbs sri:! alfnt.

• .1SqSq he would refer

enT 10 asUivihs edi 3nin19vo t to h~ Con~o ei2&d Is1ensll s 110 nswol ,<lee which will 10 b1S0a: srit 10 aselaulT srlJ aidT .!lnI ,anoiJs!liJduq jnelJ'n that nothlnt aln9bule evil 10 qu sbsm ai b'ltrn the Conto

.a"1sdmsm ,<!IJJ!lsl lu01 I.nl' oHlc .. l. 'Y Int.r.1t In

oj ,(1svil9b 8sbubni oOijSW!lli the United sdT .1lnill1om '(19VS alinu 3ni2 10 tao:> 9r1j sbubnl oj ooialildl Vakil of jnsbu!a lswllsl nt eooilqil:Ji the Asian·A{­mOll Jasu(l91 s lS:l1S sms:J ppreciation was as! juods sJsns2 JnsbuJa terial and mor·

Modern Primitive Thi, is on. of the './MUS f.rm _. palntwcl by An". M.rl. Robertien Mota., be..... known •• Gr.ndm. Mo .... C,lled "Chlldheod Hem.," the

plctu .... w .. palntwcl In 1,.., Grandma Moaea died W ........ ,.t the ... of ,., In Hoollde F.II., N.Y.

-APWI,.."....

* * * * * * * * * Solei First Painting for $3-

Grandma Moses Dies at 101 HOOSICK FALLS, N.Y. IA'I -

Grandma Moses, who colorful, imaginatively peopled rural land­scapes brought her fame and sta­lure as one oC the natioo's most famous painters, died quietly Wed· nesday at the age of 101. She was well into her 70s before she embarked as a hobby 00 her artistic career.

not allowed to do any painting in the nursin, bome.

At tI!'It durlftt he, flnel HI-neu, ... W.I cMtcrIIed .. ''ltr ........ Itutt.n." .... hili ..... docter'a _,MlCI,. _ and trW "aln" .. bribe hllft Into lett"" ..... .. home In ... cha .... for It,

birthday In the nurtlng home Sept. 7. It wu a quiet occuion which fOWld her lUlTOWIded by 101 red rOleS.

.bisl! '1e/leoM ,OllS ate U.N. forces, ,.lIto m 0' t U,oqlll :wo"o,l[ the United ,.1110 bn, mlllln,uol to Ilodas particularly

"She just passed away ," said Dr. Claylon Shaw, describing her

But a chronic heart ailment caused her to (,.de gradually. She still expreued III occasional de­sire to go bome J>ut Dr. Shaw said she became "10ft of Indifferent to surrouudlnp lately."

Late In life, her doc:t.or ordered. her to give up fann work. So she choN as a bobby to fill ber time the weaving of pictures out of yarn. But eventually arthriU. made it impossible for her to hold a needle and lOIIleone auggested that she try paiDtlnl .

Gr...... Motet Mcame .... tlonally f.rMUI ........ ..-called medem ,nm1ttYel. Her wwb ..,. ....... ,., ...... lclty ..... .................. MMJ ....... .way .. that the .. act numIter ... painted I. net kMwn .... It It ............ be hi the ne ....... hMcI .. ,.-.

( . .,.qlqIWIft Inel t __________ ,1 of the group

I earled and un· vliloq 21SttS Ir the U.-N. op.

hrn AMI Mery ReM,... ....

, -re carrIed oul I ... ,qxI of betlvni 1'1 "!lb~ the secretary. ·ibl lilt ot 1,ltt.1 ni .nol ParticularlY.'" abubni flum I,.ftal IIA , r..,.et and

• f.rm .,.., car-wlch, N,Y .. ... WIS the wIdaw .. Thamal S, MHn, wile ........ fl!'lt In V1r. ,Iny .nd ...... In ....... New

b n a "1u1angil netthwb exprelucl M -thweqvt ed bluodz , ..... , from lOrN

bna be:)6q' - alduob bnl of the s.­mumllUlM ..... !)x. ton bl w •• obvious­..... ." ... , .W .lb10W It Brlt.ln .nd

,nett.1 n.hod. of t

'==============:::; issued simul . in LondOn,

MITWUI V.l1

'DbneID~

previous dec· in could oot of a pollical

's govern·

declared that Uoited Na·

t at the earl· 10 gninnille8: _ .m.q an end to bos-

.22S!lS1 ,{abiloH 2sm to ~ path 6r ,:sea ,yab,uta2 egotiatlon."

- aioniill ,llni(jas'1W - .m .ewoB ill Meet

8r .:»eO ,VlbnoM W 11.1 Bo..l ,118\1j911B88: - .m.q l a "

.&BooH bl9i'il - SJsj2 rr •• ea ,yaba,udT

8bsvs~ ,Uad:i911asa: -.&BuoH

U .nO ,VlbneM l19:>illo , ~sbiloH

es~mo

Is:>1110

10

Yort. They heel 1t ch ........ Her ""sband died In 1m. Grandma Moses, bom the y~

I Abraham Lincoln was eJected pre ident, celebrated ber lOut

Until her final illness, she wu alert and spry. On ber looth birth· dll)', she jovially Predicted, "I'm going to live to be 200."

I U.S. Consulate Closed After Dominican Riots

GRANDMA MOSES St.rted p.lntllll In Her 7h

SANTO DOMINGO, D. R. (uPIl at the consulate. It quickly de­- The United States closed its generated iDto an aDti·AmericaJI Il1 i d tow n COIIJuJate indefinitely demonstratioll when pollce re­

Rrves fired. small arms and burled Wed n e • d a J after street mobs tear gas grenades and noise bombs chanting anU·American .Ioa.ms to sc:atter the demomtratonJ.

peaceful end in a nursing bome stoned a carload of six consular It was the secoDd .traight daY here. officers. of disorder. at the CODIUlate of·

The witty litt .. ll1-pound f_ No one was hurt but the Ameri- (j L_ i and port af WCHrYn IOId ..... first ... 1ntInt1 at Cta Wuo::n: V sa pass -a drul Itore he.... ,., $3 .. $5 cans spent some anxious moments fair. are bandied. Tuesday, lOme apiece. But her fame ,rew until in their statIon wagon before po- 400 youths Invaded the buildlng her rural prlmlt"'" commended lice broke up the demonstratio~. twice and caused heavy property II much lit $4,1., The coosulate officers were ldeoti-In Washingtoo, President Ken- (jed as colllllla Matt OrtweiD and damage before they .ere driven

nedy said of ber pasaing: '"Ibe George Beleber and vice coasuls off . death of Grandma Motel removes Joba SpWane, Joe "andino, Gerald 8eYeral police were felled by a beloved figure from American Monroe and Ro,elio Garcia. etooes, some the abe 01 grapefruit, life." Closure of the coasuIate follow· in WecIDesday'. diaorders. A po-

Grandma Moses entered the ed. TIle office bandies mostly visa lice bus wu pelted and dented. Hoosick Falls Health Center in and passport alliin. The youths, opposition party July after an attack of pCIeumooia. The street riots started u a mernben, showered atoaes on the Her illne8l, as it turoed. out. ended. crowd hunt for "Trujillo ...... beadI of poIkemen aeekinI to dis· bar artistic career .. Ibe ... lalIeIJ reported .. .... vJIu pene thIrm. Five were arnIted.

U.N. Planes In Heaviest Assault Yet

A"ack S .. n as U.N. Preparation for Final Blow at Secessionists

ELISABETHVILLE. Xatan­ga, The Congo (UPI) - Unit­ed Natioru j ts attacked tIll' capital three times Wednesday In the heavleet air assault since hoalillUe. beaan. The triple raid 11'01 viewed al a possible prelude lo an all·out U.N. offensive to end res1 tance by Pr Ident Mol s • T II hom be's secessionist Gov· ernIl1ent.

Tlbombe earlier warned that a mualve U.N. attack 8uppUed by

.S, All' Force Glohemasters W81 lmminenl a, a ins t E lisabeth· ville. H aid Kalang Be ore ready to dJe d ["ndlnl! thcir frl'MOm W......., n ..... a Gew-.nl cemmuni " r It r t t K • • t.".... will fllht "t. the 1.1t drop of bleocl."

The triple air assault hit the LI· do Hot I on the city's out kirts, a br wery whlcb Is ElJlllbethviOe's t a II e • t building, and scattered Kataniese positions n ear U.N. headquarters .

The communique said, "Katango troops are steadfastly awaitlng the adversary. Resistaoce will be total and not ODe inch of ground wiD be given up without (icrce fighUng t. the lost drop of blood.

"The ..... ,. world 11'111 !mew by fwrno"..., morn". (today) whether ~ta"" will win or dl.:' Meanwhile the Katanga defense

mlnlster, identified only as "Yave," was reported to h a ve crossed secretly into North.m Rhodesia to seek Ilriently Deeded fuel supplies to replace those destroyed by U.N. air attacks.

Tlbombe announced hl. Govem· ment would resist the expected U.N. attack .

He dellvered an impassioned ap­peal to the .orld to recognize K .. tanaa '. aec:esaioo as huee Ameri· can p I a n e. fiew 700 Etbioplan troops to EI.lubethvlUe WedllC!lday with 45,000 pouDda of stores, am­ll1unlUon and If jeeps. Another 105 Ethloplaoa flew In from Kindu, raising U.N. troop strength to 5.000 for the offensive.

The Kilt ..... Gewenwnent aIIr • ed U.N. Undenecnt.ry GeMr.1 R .... Bundle .. c.me he,. frem L ...... II.. ... a .ect.find .... ml ....... It .. III _III ''IwInt .. the wwkI "... of the cruel, .... hum .. actIeM of the U.N, __ fwcn en ...... KIIt'III' lOll," As Tebombe predicted. the .n.

out attack "tonlpt or early lcJaaI. row," U.N. troopI toot up poaI­tionI around three aida of the heavily bombed city. Kat&JII~ gendannel and IOldlers were ell­trendIed in the eft)' itself. CWiIle WOIMII and cbOdreo lied the bat· tle zooe .

TIIbombe'. statement came U 8 beIIvy mortar bombardmeat, lIP' parenUy by 8wediab U.N . • trous-. bit tneral buildinga iD tba diy. Katangese said leVa 0vilJaDs were killed IIIId 25 wounded afnct die bombardmeDt bepn, ., tIIM die French eoewlal. w .. wrecbcL

The U.N. f«eel are .....,mftt~ UDder • Security CouaclI feIOIu. tIaa to drive out 01 KatADI' the EunIpeaD meaunaries wbo bave direded Tsbombe'. IIJ'II1Ja aDd to ead till IeCelIIoa 01 the pnwluce from the t!eIIIral Gcm!rnmeat.

SCHOOLS TO CLOS. Iowa City publlc Schools wID

dale fur the CbrJstmas bolidaJ Dec. .. 'l1IIJ ........ J& I _

i I

I I

Editorial PaS"";-

Ne~d Agreement on Goals for Cold War

A hot war would unite Americans; a cold war seem s

to divide them - especially on questions of how to fight it. The exchan ge b etween Senator Barry Coldwater and

Secretary of State D ean Rusk illustra tes a disagreement whieh weakens the nation.

'. Goldwater charges that the United States is not fight­

ing the cold war hard enough. Rusk \yants to know just

the Arizona senator would do. Without the senator's bill of particulars we know what many of his supporters urge.

"C e t tough" is their simple recipe.

Some of these citizens are the "super patriots," de­

cried by Presidents Kennedy and Eisenhower alike. But

others are earnest folk w ho b elieve too many Americans are not yet awake to the struggle with Communism. They

see fe llow citizens absorbed in personal concerns or sunk

ip. selfish . ease. They hear p eop le a t home and abroad urging that "we must not frighten the Russians," and "any concession is better than war."

, Others in this school seem to think the chief d anger

is internal. They see millions of Americans looking to

Washington for b enefits and prepared to center more power there, unaware of the Founding Fathers' concern to

limit official powers. They rel?ard the w elfare state as a major step - some as the last step - toward Communism.

Some of the same p eople, however, have a ve.t;y high esti­

mate oJ national power and b elieve that Washington could stop most of the things going wrong in the world - if it really tried. Extreme partisan ch arges (Truman "let China

go" and Eisenhower "lost prestige") foster this error.

Equally sincere folk in the opposite camp believe the

cold war can be fought better with less tough talk, more

adroit firmness. They, too, wish to expose the evils and fallacies in Communism but are concerned about the fear

and ·hate being engendered. They think the main danger tis from withoHt. They view the struggle as mainly one of

'ideas and wish to keep it as cold as possible. They empha­

'size "negotiation," some perhaps dreaming of a "basic

'settlement" but others only sparring for time and relying

on freedom to prevail.

Such people see advocates of "toughness" rejecting aid and trade projects designed to strengthen America. They

see Americans talking of "irrepressible conflict" and "un_ conditional surrender" as if they expected to resolve the

struggle by force. They are convinced that allies are needed

and concerned by hostility to nations which have their own concepts of independence. Some members of this

school, however, are so troubled about "net\tral views"

that they fail to ask, "What is right?"

This division is bedeviled by partisanship and doc­

trinaire extremism. They lead good Americans, sharing

basic common interests, to attack one anotller and so be­co~e pawns in the Reds' "divide and conquer" game.

More of these energies should be devoted to purging

America of injustices, corruptions and immoralities which suhvert the nation's purposes and sap its strength to the core.

There ought to be agreement that peace with freedom

is the goal; that hate and fear are self-defeating; that

non-b elligerent strength is essential; that spiritual and

moral forces are indispensable ingredients; and that free

people have an advantage in keeping the struggle so far as possible in the realm of idea.

~efi9ans can gain strength through b eing true to

their heri~age of freedom and fairness, achieving unity in open, amicable debate; through teamwork with allies;

through generously wise help to the less fortunate; through

humbly joining the poet's prayer for their country: "God •.. crown thy good with brotherhood."

-Christian Science Monitor

'. COU rtesy Forfeited .. Speed ers and reckless drivers who try to run away

fiom the police will be running to jail.

They will not be released to go home on bail or with a summons to report later but will b e jailed until they can

b e .brought before a judge in the morning, Capt. Wendell

E : Nichols, chief of the police operations diviSion, bas an­nounced.

This may ' seem a bit cruel to motorists who are ac­

cu~tomed to b eing allowed their freedom until arraign­m ent on minor traffic charges. The police have authority,

h6wever, to take such offenders to jail to await arraign­m ent. Release under arraignments to appear later is only

a ' courtesy offered by the police and courts.

The runaway motorists who takes off in high speed flight when he discovers his violation has b een discovered

b )l'the police has done more than to forfeit that courtesy. Most high-speed chases endanger all other cars on the

street. They frequently end in accident.

-Des Moines Tribune ,

7h~ 1)oily Iowan

THURSDAY, DEC. 14, 1961 .... clty, I ..

• MIM •• R .UDIT .URIAU

01' CIRCULATIONI

lublllbtd 11)0 Stu4tnt PabUoattona, lac., Communlclt1olll Col\ter, lowl CItY. '~Iowa, dally exc~ Sunday and

II and le,a! h .. and n-.-pt ur\nJr the thW full _11 In AQUIt and the lollowln, week. EQo . lend u .. cond-el ... matter at the POet offIce at Jowa City under the ACt 01 ColIINa of ilardi J, JI'II.

DAILY IOWAN IDITORIAL nAI'l' Belltor .......... .......... PbU CurrIe Manl,m, EeIltor .......... .. JIm Beda NeWII Edltora .. ....... . Bob wle and

Gary Cerlach City Editor .. ........ Harold HatfIeld Spon. Edltor .... , ... . ... Jem Bllea ChIef Photo.rapher .............. ..

LarrJ Rapoport SocIety Editor .... .. . Judy Holachla, AI.'t CIty EdItOl'l .. "an Moberly and

Barbara BuUer Au't lfana,m, Editor ............. .

Lam Hatfield AWt Sports Editor ...... Jim Tuebr

DAILY IOWAN ADVIRTIIING ITAPP

IIUIlne .. Kan.,er and Ad-ftrtt.\nl Dlrtotor ... Bob Olaf.

Ad"ertblnl Mana.er . . . LarrJ I'r7bIJ ClMIIfIed liIanaIer .. ....... ..... ..

elM" lfatumr. PromoUoa Mana,.r .............. ..

Da't1d Th_PMD DAILY IOWAN CIRCULATION

CIrculation lIanaIer .... Ron rllTll' DI.' 7041'1 11 you do not rtGtIft l"ur Da1l1 lowan b1 7:10 .... TIle DtII1 towla IlrOUllltoa IIIftae .. tile> Communieatlollll Conler II 0 P I. fro. I LIL .. I ..... .....,

ISame to You, Fella'

Pros, Cons Involving SUI Trimester, Quarter Plans By JUDY SULECKI

StaH Writer Included among the items on

the doc k e t at the December Board of Regents meeting in Des Moines today is the discussion of the possibility of revising the present length of the educational calendar al the state's three in-

• stitutions of higher learning. The final decision, when it is

reached, will alter the future of graduates and potenqal graduates in the three state institutions -SUI, Iowa • State<· University ' '1\nd the State College oC Iowa.

One ot the basic arguments in Cavor ot expanding the University w 0 r k' i n g cal­endar is the in­creasing number o f students a t­tending s tat e schools. The SUI enrollment, for example, 'jump­e d another 588 students 0 vel' last yea r and ~ now stands at . " , 11,701. That tolal SULECKI ranks the University 24th in the nation in full-time student aUen­dance.

Dewey B. Stuit, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, who has

. helped in the development 0 f some of the various proposals, explained that 'there will be really "th~ee main plans under consid­eration ."

THE THREE PLANS are the trimester system, the qua r t e r plan, and the combination of the two (two normal length semesters and a quarter-time summer ses­sionl.

In discussing the board aspects of the various systems, certain advantages and disadvantages rule out each other according to Dean Stuit.

If the quarter system would be adopted. the type being used at ISU, there might be "some con­fusion. "

"n would be quite easy for ISU to continue the system," he said. "They would only have to add a fourth quarter in the summer session to accommodate the new plan. A disadvantage, though, of this plan would be stopping and starting four times a year instead of twice as in the trimester plan.

"Since we want to adopt a pro­gram which would be most prac­tical to our needs," he continued, "I would think that the trimester plan 01' a combination plan might be better. The trimester system,

thrOUllh I'rlcIaJ and from • to 1. a.m. SaturclaJ. 110.,004 .. met l1li IllilMd papen II not pOAlble, but • very effort will be made to .wntt 1IT0l'I w1th the nut 1Nut.

MIMIIR 01' THI AlSOCIATID PRE ..

The Auoclated Pre .. II entltJed ex. clualvely to the use for republica­tion 01 aU the local new. printed lsi thl8 Ilflwapaper ., . weU u au AP ne", cUapatchea.

DAILY IOWAN IUPERVIIORS 'ROM ICHOOL OF JOURNALlIM

FACULTY PubUsher... ... Fred II. PownaD Idltorla! ... .. Arthur M. Sanderaon Adnrtllln. . . . ... I . John Kottman ClroulaU,on . ....... Wilbur Petenon

TRUITIlitlOARD 01' ITUDINT PU. ICATIONI, INC.

Karen Branaon A" Prof. Dale Ben~I, Unlnrlllty Ubrary; ;r 0 h n Benryc 111; Prof. LeaJ1e G. Moeller, Schoo of JournalIsm' }\I1cbllel Ma­duff, AI; Dr. ~tJ.>{:: 'l:aStbn.\.doU ... ., 1JuUitry~ cL A. . MIIJIIt All Dr. 1.. A. -'Van Dyke, COUqe iii M -ua.a Paul ~ III.

theoretically, utilizes the present facilities to the fullest, and in­creases enrollment 50 per cent. Though it is not a saving of 50 per cent; nevertheless, the con­tinued usage of facilities that are idle part of the year would be most practical."

THE TRIMESTER PLAN would include a fall term beginning in late August and would last until Christmas. The spring term would run from the first week in Jan­uary until about May 1. The sum­mer session would be split into 7¥..·week periods, cnding at about June 20th and at about August 20th.

One central question in this suggested plan is: Would students patronize the third semester dur­ing the summer monlhs?

Stuit noted that a recent survey oC 1,000 SUI students indicated that more than half oC the stu· dents were dependent upon the summer vacation period to work and earn enough money Cor the payment of fees during the ScllOOI

year. "It would be very costly to have a full staff with only half the students attending. If the tri­mester plan were adopted, we would need more office facilities as well as a larger teaching staff.

"I don't think," he continued, "lhat we have reached the point where we can actually demand that students - J mean incom­ing freshmen and transfers -come at a certain period dUring the year to enroll at SUI. If the trimester plan were adopted, it might be difCicult to tell a student that he couldn't enroll, for exam­ple, until the summer session.

"But," he quickly addcd. "if it is determined that the trimester plan be adopted, we would move ahead here, without any dragging oC feet!"

STUIT POINTED OUT that the length of the semester in the trio ·mester plan is much shorter. At present, the normal semester r uns from 17 to 18 weeks in length. Under the trimester plan they would be only 15 weeks in length.

Stuit remarked that he pre­ferred the adoption of the com· bination plan whereby a 12-week summer session be instituted.

Feeling that this pla n might better suit the needs at SUI, Stuit said that "it would be easier to fit the proposed semester change

in our present curriculum sched. ulc."

This would mean t hat there would be a 12-week summer ses­sion for undergraduates. At the same time a coinciding eight­week summer session would be continUed along with the four­week independent study for grad­uate students.

PROVOST HARVEY H. DAVIS thought that the trimester p:Jn might have more disadvantages than advantages.

" Since the b.:imester system would begin or end at odd times of the year, I think this plan would be somewhat impractical," he said. "I don't think that short­ening the semester is the an­swer."

Davis feels that year-round op­eration, as stipulated in the tri­mester plan is not feasible. "Too many students have to work in the summer to pay for their col­lege expenses during the rest of the year. If the plan were adopt­ed, this would mean the need for an additional number o( scholar­would surmise that the quarter ships and fellowships.

"Of the three," he added, HI would surmise that the quarter plan might be better. This might enable a student, whether on the graduate or undergraduate level, to graduate sooner. Although this is possible under certain circum­stances now, it would be facili­tated more by the adoption of the quarter system."

Though opinions differ on the adoption of a particular plan to fulfill the needs of the University, one factor is predominant. Col­lege enrollments are increasing sharply year to year. and SUI and other colleges in Iowa are experiencing growth. Jus t six years ago there were 9,331 stu­dents at SUI - today there are 11,701 enrolled. More students are attending American colleges this year than ever beCore.

Indications are that no specific decision will be reached on the University calendar matter at the Board of Regent's meeting this month . The Board has discussed the issue several times before and each time has referred it back to a committee for more stDdy.

However, when a decision is reached, it is hoped that a well­defined program that has been examined carefully can be de­cided upon.

OFFICIAL OAIL Y IULlETIN

University Calendar

Thursday, Dec. 14 3:30 p.m. - Swimming, Nebras­

ka - Field House Pool. 7:30 p.m. - ' "Carols and

Cocoa" Party - Main Lounge, Iowa Memorial Union.

Monday, Dec. 18 7:30 p.m. - Basketball, Los

Angeles State - Field House. Thursday, Dec. 21

7:30 p.m. - Basketball, Nevada - Field House.

Monday, Dec. 25 Friday, Dec. 15 University Holiday, offices

4:15 p.m . - Poetry Reading, closed. Donald Justice reading from hi s Tuesday, Dec. 2' own ' poelry - Sunporch, Iowa University Holiday, offices Memorial Union. closed.

5:30 p.m. _ Beginning of . ~onday, Jan, 1 Christmas Holiday recess. • Untverslty Holiday, offices

closed. Saturday, Dec. l' Wetlne...." Jan. ,

2 p.m . - Wrestling, Dlinois - 7:30 a.m. - Resumption of Field House. CIOlSseS.

letters to the Editor ,.-

Calls . Tests . ~cademic·

Genocide To the Editor:

It has been said before; I will say it again! It's time something is done about D·days (multiple· test days). The diabolical machin­ations of the various departments, resulting in academic genocide for the students, must be ended. n's inhumane, fiendish. brutal , un·American, and destructive of human freedom and welfare. It's probably even un-Constitutional.

Surely the sight of students pouring out of their third consecu­tive test in one day - eyes glazed, face cast down in utter black despair - brings a broad smile to the faces of those hard­hearted , evil men who plan the test schedule. And when the stu· dents running to the water-foun· tains in Schaeffer Hall vainly at­tempt to drown themselves, reo sounding peals of laughter must ring through the faculty offices. How a b sol ute I y uproarious­ly funny to watch scores of stu­dents fling themselves to a grisly death from the top of the Physical Plant smokestack I The instruc­tors must assuredly by this time be rolling on the floor in uncon­trollable fits of ghoulish laughter.

Any appeal for the correction of the injustice of multiple-test days

.must be made to the student body. There is not a single grain of compassion or benevolence to be found anywhere in the teach· ing echelons of SUI. Here is a cause Cor pros, antis and anti­antis to unite behind. Here is a more present danger than Com­munism, Birchism, or even the Old Dental Bullding.

Larry Meisgeier, A2 332 N. Van Buren

Fre~ Speech , A Faulty Connection

To the Editor:

Re Mr. Cunningham's letter of 8 Dec. '61.

It would appear that he has at­tempted to establish the fact that world Communism is oh, so much different than the Communist Party of the United States in aims and ideas. Is it? The writ­ten and here-to·fore successes of world Communism have every indication of staying completely in the fundamental idea of world Communism, i.e., that of world domination. This idea has been consistantly referred to by Lenin, Stalin. and now the present K l' e m lin Santa Claus, N. S. Khrushchev. How so, then, can Mr. Cunningham differentiate be­tween the basis theory of world Communism and the "Commu­nism" of the U.S. Communist Party?

I will agree that the Flynn. Hall and Co. group are about as liable to overthrow the U.S. Gov­ernment as Mr. Cunningham is liable to become President of U.S. Steel. But is this the point of the recent Federal Court Or­der requiring registration? Hard­ly, as besides the advocation of World Communism as an even­tual fact of world domination, the principles by which this fact is to be established by means of infiltration, agitation, subversion, consolidation, and finally, con­trol. From this point it is un­necessary to continue, as the facts are in daily evidence.

In regard to the statement about Judge Holmes, I refer to the present Attorney's book "The Enemy Within." One should re­member that the lllwS are made by legislators, only interpreted by the judges. The learned Judges of the Supreme Court of the U.S. saw fit to interpret the registra­tion law as constitutional, there­by showing the population and legislators that they, the highest Court of the U.S., considered the U.S. Com m un i s t Party as 1\ "clear and present danger".

In closing, I would like to say that if the U.S. Communist Par~y. is hiding behind the basic ideals of our democracy, it would ap­pear that the party is fearCul of public indignation in claiming for the party public support as its legality of existance, which has been its mainstay in all previous political successes with the ex­ception of a Cew instapces.

Finally, I shall voice my own impression that (1) all this pseu­do·intellectuallsm Which the SDC and assorted "Cree-thinkers" emi­nate appals and revolts me, (2) that all this talk about "free speech and association" really has no place being connected to the U.S. red party, and such talk appears to show ' a firm bellef in these principles, Hqw can tht! connection be made, then, when the world-wide evidence of the "good" of Communism is there tor review?

........ G.... ...... iA1 1·'.7 HilleN.

Structure or Df· Appears Typical

By BRYAN REDDICK StaH Writer

(EDITOR'I NOTE: Thl. I. the fou rth of • flv..,art SIrles explainIng the .tructur. .nel op.rttlon of Th. D.lly lowln.)

Of the letters sent last summer by The Daily Iowan to other campuses, eight were returned: from Syracuse University, the University of California, Mar­quette University, Iowa State Uni­versity, Oklahoma University, In­diana University, the University of Michigan, and the University of Kansas.

"We feel our student news­paper is singularly Cree of cen­sorship, " wrote Walter Freder­ick, publications manager at the U n i v e rsity of · C a I i f ornia. "This does, of course, at times cause problems; but we feel that it Is a better system than hav-ing faculty or ad- REDDICK ministrative control."

The Daily CaliCornian, the let­ter explained, is not at all con­nected to the Department of Jour­nalism, although about one·half of the staff is made up of stu­dents in journalism. The govern­ing board consists of seven stu­dents, a professional journalist, and three faculty members. Fin­ancing and circulation is similaF to that of The Daily Iowan.

ALSO ENTIRELY separate from the School oC Journalism is The Daily Orange of Syracuse University. The governing board is divided equally between stu­dents and faculty members. Edi­torial policy is, according to W. C. Clark. Dean of the School of Journalism, left up to the student staff members.

The University I of Michigan was the only school replying which operates two newspapers : The Michigan Daily, a student­edited newspaper not connected with the School of Journalism; and the Michigan Journalist, a laboratory publication controlled by a board of journalism faculty members.

All the remaining letters des­cribed situations involving lab­oratory publications, ranging from faculty editors assigning their stUdents to particular jobs, to stUdent editors working under more general facuUy advice.

In all situations except at Syra­cuse and at Marquette, the gov­erning board has a larger student majority than at SUI, where the board consists of five stUdents and four faculty members. At Syracuse the representation is equal between students and fac­ulty members; and at Marquette the governing power (although reportedly seldom exercised) rests in a faculty publisher and in the University Administration as a whole.

OTHER LETTERS REPORT· ED:

"It takes a courageous presi­dent of the University to support maintaining of balance between the pressure on one side to pub­lish a University house organ and on the other to provide a crusad­ing newspaper," wrote John E.

Stempel, chairman of the Depart· ment o( Journalism at Indiana University. "Generally speaking, the President (at I.UJ and J have ne~r questioned the editorial p0-

sition that the editors take," be wrote.

The editors of the Indiana Daily Student take Cull legal responsi· bility (or their publicatiOll, Stempel said.

AT IOWA STATE, lhe Daily is closely connected to the depart· ment oC Technical Journalism; however, the board which c~· troIs the paper's activities is made up of five students and two faculty members.

"Extending this much freedom to students has led to occasional moments of pain , embarrass· ment, and frustration for the De­partment as well as for the Uni· versity Administration," accord· ing to J. W. Schwartz, acting head of the Department of Tech· nical Journalism. "The journal· ism facul ty has long felt that responsibility is not taught suc· cessfully by withdrawing it or by transferring it. Our students cherish their freedom, perhaps more so because they are re­minded constantly that they must continue to merit it." ,

The board at the University 01 Kansas which governs the policy oC The Daily Kansan consists en· tirely of students. Faculty memo bel'S serve as advisers in tbe production of the paper and on the various committees operated by the board; however, Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism wrote The Daily Iowan that the faculty members on the editorial committee have no vote.

THE STUDENT EDITOR o[

The Oklahoma Daily (Oklahoma University) is responsible for the editorial policy o'f his publica, tion. Faculty members serve as advisers to the news reporters.

"The editor is free to comment on local situations," Mrs. Louise B. Moore, supervisor of student publications at O.U., wrote, "in· cluding university policy. Natur· ally, editors are considered rna· ture, capable students; and their judgment is usually sound and fair. They are encouraged throughout their journalistic aca· demic work here to consider botIJ sides of all issues, as good reo porters do on commercial news· papers." •

If the eight newspapers des· cribed in letters to The Daily Iowan can be considered a repre­sentative group, it would appear that the organizational structure here is quite typical as far aa finances and circulaton are con· cerned. The governing boay here, however, contains a smaller stu­dent majority than in most of the situations examined. (TOMORROW: Whit Is I umpus newspaper and what i. It. respon· slbllltv to the student body II serves?)

Letters Policy Readers are invited to ex"",, opinions in leHers to the Edi­tor. All letter. must include handwritten signatures I n d addresses, should be typewrit. ten and double - spaced and should not extHd a muimum of 375 words. W. reserv. the right to shorten leHers.

University Bulletin Board Unlve"lty lulletln _rei notIce. must be received .t Th. Ditty '­offIce, Room 201, Communlc.tlons Center, by noon of the day be*- '"'" IlcatJen. ThlY must be tr,peo and signeel br an Idvlse, or oHlclr "tllt .... .. nlntlon beIng publiC zeel. Purlly IOCla function. arl not ollllb1t tw thl. Metlon.

COOPERATIVE BAIYS ITT I N G PHYSICAL EDUCATION '''ILLS LEAGUE will be In the charge of exemption tests: Male studeDt. w!Ih. Mrs. Dean M ••• ey through Dec. 26. ing to take these tests mlllt re ... r Call 7·2826 for a sitter. For Informa- before Jan. 10 in 122 FIeld HOUIt. tlon about league membership, caU Male stUdents who have not re,.. Mrs. Stacy Proflltt at 8-3801. terell by that date will not be per-

--- mitted to take the tests duriJII thlI IOWA MEMORIAL UNION VACA· Bemester. Testa are now lIyen at lb.

TION HOUIlS: The building will be end of tbe semester ratller thlD II closed afler 5 p.m., Dec. 15. ]t will the beglnnln • . be open from 8 a.m. to nooh, and from 1 to 5 p.m., Dec. 18·25 Dec . FEBRUARY DIORII CANIII-27·29 and Jan. 2. 'I'h. TV Theatre OATES: Orders for offJc:1Il ,radlil' wlll remain open unlU 11 p.m. lion announcement. of the Feb. throu,hout the entire vacaOon 1962. Commencement are now beIIIII period. Cafeteria service will end taken. Place your order bef..­aCter the nOOn meal on Dec.]5 and noon, Jan. 3, at the Alumni H_ will open on Jan. 3. The Gold Feath. 130 N. Madison St., acrOll from the er grl!l wlll be closed from 2 p.m., Union. PrIce Is 12 cent. an ann~ Dec. 15 through Jan. S. ment, payable when ordered.

GUILD GALLEilYwIll p_t Ita UNIVERSITY LIBRARY VACA· {lrst annual Christmas show .t UO~ CATION HOURS: S . Clinton St. from Dec. 3 to JS pd

Dec. 15-7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. {rom Jan. 7 to 13 . . Dec. 16-7:30 a.m. to noon. Dec. 11-Clo .. d. Dec. 18·22-7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 23·26-Closed. Dec. 21·29-7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. nec. 30-7:S0 a.m. to noon. nec. Sl.Jan. 1-Cloaed. Jan. 2-7:30 a.m. to mIdnight. Browsln. room wlll be opened at

the followln, times: Dec. 15-11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. ]6-1'-Cloaed. Dec. ]8-22-11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 23·26-Closed . Dec. 27·29-11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 2O·Jan. I-Closed. Jan. 2-11 a.m. to 5 p.m .

lUI DAM II wlJl hold a Christmas party at 7:45 p.m., Dec. 1', In the Unlveralty Clubrooms.

ZOOLOGY I.MINAR will meet at 4 p.m., Dec. 15 in 201 Zoology Bulld­In,. Dr. ErIch W. Six, aqlstant pro­lesaor in the Department of Bacter· lolo,y. Colle.e of Medicine, w II I apeak on "Bacterlophaie P2 88 an Epl.ome."

MATHlMATICI COLLOQUIUM will meet at 4 p.m. Dec. 14, In SI1 Ph)" _Ies Bulldln,. Prof. W. T. Reid will apeak on "Linear DlrterenUBI OperBt. or. of Minimum Norm." Coffee will be aernd at ~:30 p.m. In 311 Phyl1cI lIu1Jd1ni.

UNION BOARD .. ,poMorlng a Chri,tmll vacaUon travel board in the lo/lby lOuth of the Gold Feather R_ In the low. Nemodal Union. Stmlen" 'liiho need or can supply tranlportaUon to and 'I'IIm 9a"'lIu8 are encouraged to place notreta on &M blllMIJD 1IOttd.

SlNIOR & GRADuATI atadlJIII (except .enllneerllll studenta) _ exeect to receIve de,,.,.. In JUMo 1962, or Aug. 1962. and who wIsb, ~ take advantaie of the aervlcn • the Buslnesa and Indllltrlal PII. ment Olnce should hive their regIstration material. on file 111 !If Unlverslly Hall before ~ vacaUon. Employers cominf to ilia campus want to lee all IfIdIatIII re,ardles8 of military llatUl.

.~

INTIRNATIONAL ClNTI. ~ CIATION volleyball pract1ce for fflo elgn stude nIB wIll be held 4!"f Friday at 7:30 p.m. In the Zaat·" of tbe FIeld Hou ... Tb_ In~ a re Invited to meet at the 9tIIIIf at 7:15 p.m.

PIRIONI DIII.ING ltabr .... for afternoon or e""ninl hours ..... call YWCA (dUO) bet" ••• 1 .. I p.m.

RECREATIONAL IWIMMINt_~ all wollltn atudenb IloDdaJ ... -Desday, Thuradl, and nJdI1 '"" . : 15 to 15:15 p.m. II the ....... GymnaalUlD.

CHRISTIAN ICIINCI Or,~ hOi de • testimony m"tIIII ~ .. ~ Thursday evenln, in the Uttlt ~ of the ConlJ'l,atlona! Churcll. .ODJ'I! er of ClintOn and JtIIl~ .,-. .. It 7:00 p.m. AU art wetco.ll to tend.

INTIIl·VA ... TY c:~ LOWIHI' .. Ill meet for aD 11 Bible 8~udy each Tu 'r.30 hi tile mart LoIJII)o Room 01 till low. IIeIDorIIl VIIIIIo

Stump Says 'J

DES MOINES II! -stump, 22, was release< County jait under $E Wednesday and said "i be out."

Stump, convicted of gree murder and sent. yeaI'!! in the state penitl quickly taken by car hotel for a reunion and family.

The youth planned ....,. for hls ' hometw kuk to spend the Chrl days with his puentt

Stump had been in JWle 10 - the day all Daly. 22, of Des Moine Stump was convicted shooting Daly.

Stump's release time after his McManus, tiled and posted a $50,000 Jowa Supreme Court.

The Supreme ClUrt Iy accepted the Keokuk re.idents In re.1 .. tete II $50,000 appeal bond trlct Judge C. Edw

The High Court order directing that lensed. Stump will bond until the SUtlrernE on his case.

The bond had Michael H. Doyle Jr., District Court clerk, fused to accept it hearing on the value curities attached to it.

Judge Moore, t.nced Stump last g Iv.n him until 9 to post bond before to the penitentiary at son.

Stump left the companied by his Stump oC Keokuk, He carried a box longings under his clothes.

He stepped into a which took him to a a number of relatives

Bill of Ri Day Is F

Bill of Rights Day served Friday in of the t70th anni adoption of the fi ments to the United States. Such as trial by jury and of speech, religion became a part of to be henceforth Federal Government, 1791.

The new Iowa City the American Civil ion is offering a week to teachers, students at all citizens that a rpt'M1I1mj

of Ri ghts would priate way to r"..,u~ 'Ill>

for no other doc~un~enlt l clearly about guaranteed fre;edo.ms. preme Court wrote recently, ' is the primary information as by ' Constitutional guards enshrined etched in the fOUiadatil erica's freedoms."

It is interesting to General Assembly Nations, when it sal Declaration of in December of model in our own written more than 150 ier.

SUIOWAN IS An SUI instructor

ing, Keith two judges for Drawings. and al the St . Louis St. Louis. The show day.

of DI Typical

Stempel, chairman of the Depart­m ent of Journalism at Indiana University. "Generally speaking, the President (at 1. U.l and I have nevl!r questioned the editorial po. sition that the editors take," be wrote.

The editors of the Indiana Daily Studcnt take full legal responsi­bility Cor their PQblicatioll, Stempel said.

AT IOWA STATE, the Daily is closely connected to the depart­ment of Technical Journalism; however, the board which COD­

trois the paper's activities fa made up of five students and two faculty members.

"Extending this much freedom to students has led to occasional moments of pain, embarrass· ment, and frustration for the IJe.. partment as well as for the Uni­versity Administration," accord· ing to J. W. Schwartz, acting head of the Department of Tech· nical Journalism. "The journal· ism faculty bas long felt that responsibility is not taught suc· cessfully by withdrawing it or by transferring it. Our students cherish their freedom, perhaps more so because they are re­minded constantly that they must continue to merit it." ,

The board at the University of Kansas which governs the policy oC The Daily Kansan consists en· tirely oC stUdents. FaCUlty memo bers serve as advisers in the production of the paper and on the various committees operated by the board; however, Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism wrote The Daily Iowan that the faculty members on the editorial committee have no vole.

THE STUDENT EDITOR 01 The Oklahoma Daily (Oklahoma University) is responsible for the editorial policy of bis publica, tion. Faculty members serve as advisers to the news reporters.

"The editor is free to comment on local situations," Mrs. Louise B. Moore, supervisor of student publications at O. U., wrote, "in· cluding university policy. Natur· ally, editors are considered mao ture, capable students; and their judgment is usually sound and fair. They are encouraged throughout their journalistic aca· demic work here to consider both sides of all issues. as good reo porters do on commercial news· papers." '

If the eight newspapers des· cribed in letters to The DaiI), Iowan can be considered a repre­sentative group, it would appear that the organizational structure here is quite typical as far as finances and circulaton are can· cerned. The governing bo(Jy here, however. contains a smaller stu­dent majority than in most of the situations examined. (TOMORROW: Wh.t I. I clmflUl newspaper and whIt I. Its rupon­sibility '0 the studln' body It serves?)

Letters Policy Readers are invited to .XPAII opinions in lett.rs to thl EdI­tor. All letters must incl'" handwritten signatures and addresses, should be typewrit­ten and double - spaced and should not exceed a maximum of 375 words. W. r.serv. the right to shortan I.ttl,..

Iletj n Board IN rlcelvld It Thl Dilly ~

by noon of thl day bifoA ,. In Idvlsar or offlclr of the '" function. Irl not ""llbM fer

PHYSICAL EDUCATION SKILLS exemption tests: Male student. w!Ib. Ing to take these test. mll.t relilW before Jan. 10 In 122 Field HOIIII. Male students who have nqt rep tere~ by that date will Dot be pIf­mltted to take the tests durin, tbII semester. Test. are now flven It til. end of the semester nlber ibID ,I the beginning.

FEBRUARY DIORII CAND~ OATES: Orders for o£fldal l1'aduI­tlon announcements of Ibe reb. 1962, Commencemeot are now beIaC taken. Place your order before noon, Jan. 5, at the Alumni H_ 130 N. Madison St., acrOll from tilt Union. Price Is 12 centll an anno_ ment, payable when ordereeL

GUILD OALlEiiYwUl pre_t II fh'st annual Christmas ahow at 13'~ S. Cllnton St. from Dec. J to 2S .4 from Jan. 7 to 13 . .

SlNIOR & GilAiiiiATI .tudeJIII (except .englneerln. Itudentll) .... exeec! to receive degreel In J .... 1962, or Aug. 1962, and who willi ~ take advantage of the .. rvteeo -the Business and Indu.trlal P)aeI­ment Office . hould hive tIIeIr re,lstraUon materials on file In !If University HaU befclre ~ vacaUon. Employers co. t. ' 1M campus want to see III l1'adUalll reeardle55 of military ItatUi.

.~

INTIRNATIONAL ClNTI ..... CIATION voUeybaU practlee for f .. el!ln ,tudents wIll be beld ~ Friday at 7:30 p.m. In tile But 'o,I! of the Field House. TbOle In~ are Invited to meet .t tile ..,--­at 7:15 p.m.

PIRIONI DI".INO babr ... for afternoon or evenlnl boan ..... call YWCA (dUO) between I .. I p.m.

RICRIATICINAL IWIMMI"'_~ all 100l1li" .lodanb KoDda1, .. -.... day. Thuraday and rtIdJj.:= ' ;t5 to 15:15 p.m. at tile "I Gymna.lwn.

CHRIITIAN iCiiNCl Or,~ bolda a testimony mM_. ThursdaY evenln, In tile Utilt _ of the Conaie.atlonal Chu~ er /1f C1lnton and Jet,"noa to" at 7:00 p .m. AU are ~ tend.

INTIR·VARIITY CH.'IT::ilJIAN PI&.! LOWIH'" will mMt for aD BIble Stu4Y .a~b TveldlY 'r.SO II! HIe Ealt Lollb)' elf ..... iooaI 01 tilt Iowa IIeIiorIII .. -

Stump 'Leaves Jail in D.M., Says 'It's Great To Be eut'

DES MOINES "" - Ronald M. Stump, 22, was released from Polk County jail under $50,000 bond Wednesday and said "it's great 0

be out. " Stump, convicted of second de­

gree murder and sentenced to 75 years in the state penitentiary, was quickly taken by car to a local hotel for a reunion with friends and family_

The youth planned to leave .... r for hl, ·hometown of Keo­kuk to spend the Chrll1ma. Mli­d.y. with hi. p.rent ••

Stump had been in jail since June 10 - the day aIter Michael Daly, 22, of Des Moines, was slain. Stump was convicted last Nov. 4 of shooting Daly. .

Stump's release came a short time after his attorney, J. Riley McManus, filed notice oC appeal and posted a $50,000 bond with the Iowa Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court unanlmou .. Iy KCOpted the gu.r.n .... of :n Keokuk relidontl lil1ing $229,000 In ro.1 ol1ato u backln, for the $50,000 appeal bond set by 011' trlct Ju",e C. Edwin Moor •.

The High Court then issued an order directing that Stump be reo leased . Stump will remain Cree on bond until the Supreme Court acts on his case.

The bond had been offered to Michael H. Doyle Jr., Polk County District Court clerk, but he reo Cused to accept it without a court hearing on the value of the se· curities attached to it.

Judge Moore, who h.d len­tenced Stump last Monday, had given him until 9 a.m. Thursday to post bond before being taken to tho penit.ntlary at Fort Madl­Ion.

Stump left the county jail ac­companied by his fatber, Maurice Stump of Keokuk, and McManus. He carried a box of personal be· longings under his arm and some clothes.

He stepped into a waiting car, 'which took him to a notel where a number of relatives and friends

Bill of Right~ Day Is Friday

Bill of Rights Day will be ob­served Friday in commemoration of the 170th anniversary of thl" adoption of the lirst ten amend­ments to the Constitution of the United States. Such essential rights as trial by jury and the freedoms of speech, religion and the press became a part of the Constitution, to be henceforth guaranteed by the Federal Government, on Dec. 15, 1791.

The new Iowa City chapter of the American Civil Liberties Un­ion is offering a reminder this week to teachers, public officia1J, students at all levels and ordinary citizens that a rereading or the Bill of Rights would be the most appro· priate w~ to recognize the day, Cor no other document tells us so clearly about our Constitutionally guaranteed freedoms. As U.S. Su­preme Court Justice Brennan wrote recently, " The Bill of Rights is the primary source of expressed information as to what is meant by CODstitutional liberty. The safe­guards enshrined in it are deeply etched in the foundations of Am­erica's freedoms."

It is interesting to note that the General Assembly of the United Nations, when it adopted a Univer­sal Declaration of Human Rights in December of 1948. found its model in our own Bill of Rights written more than 150 years earl· ier.

SUIOWAN IS JUDGE An sm instructor in print mak­

ing, Keith Achepohl, was one of two judges Cor the Annual Prints, Drawings, and Crafts Exhibition al the St. Louis Artists' Guild in St. Louis. The show opened Mon­day.

There were over 200 entries from 90 artists. The judge. selected 55 objects Crom 37 artists Cor exhibit,

says AIS4p. But he has o"e great WNk­tiel!. And he knows it In this week's Satun1,y E~njnll Post,you'/I read w/ty the utellite ",'1aM .re,iyi,.. Kremlin bill shots the jitters. Urc''''I , 1962 C"'IIND"" ''''GES Dec. 16 issue N:m now an ,.Ie. • •

awaited. Stump refused to Lalk to newsmen otber than to IB.Y he wu glad to be out of jail.

Stump has steadC",Uy protested his innocence in the slay ing of Daly.

Leanne Je.- Skuitety, 21-)'e.,­ellI attrectin ~ .. hter of • De. MoiAe. phy.i<~n, tel1lfled duro I", StUmp'l thr"-w"k-Iong tr~1 th.t "I sew Ron ...... Mlko,"

MiSil Skultety. formerly engaged

Found 'Stiff as Boards'

to Stump. wu with Daly the night he was gunned down in front of his home. 'nle firl sajd she had planned to marry Daly. She admit· ted she and Daly W~ expecting a child but that she lost the baby alter Daly's funeral.

At his sentencing Monday, Stump told Judge Moore be did not shoot Daly and that he hoped the real kIDer would be caught whlle he was in jail.

2 Frozen Hunters Improving RENOVO, Pa. CUPIl - A minor miracle was taking place in this

Central Pennsylvania mountain community Wednesday involving two Ohio deer hunters who were frenen "stiff as boards" wh n brought to a hospita~ five days ago.

Mrs. Alice Cleveland, superintendent of Renovo Hospital, said every­body is working "as a team" to save the livel of Richard Lansberry. 26, of Elyria, Ohio, and Robert G. Wise. 2t. of Gralton, Ohio. She said both were responding to treatment, "but it's with the will of God now."

"They were a1J stiI( as boards when we cot them Saturday," In. Cleveland said. "They were like a wash hung out In the winter."

TIle plight oJ the two hunters recalled the caSe of Dorothy Mae Stevens who was found lying In a Chicago alley in 1951 frozen so thoroughly that she was thought to be dead. She recovered but her legs and all her digits except a left thumb had to be amputated.

"We're sUII working hard to save them (Wise and Lan. berry)," Mrs. Cleveland said. "We hope no amputation of extremilie Is nece -sary."

Wise was listed in serious condition and Lansberry was reported fair.

Lansberry and Wise were discovered early Saturday morning by two other deer hunters who came upon a parked truck and heard moans coming from inside a cabin-like slructure built on the truck bed . Both were clad only in underclothing and a small 011 stove In Ide the shelter was out. The outside temperature was to above 7,cro.

"All oC their extremities were frozen solid," Mrs. Cleveland said. "The only movement we could detect was in their chest from breath­ing. That's the only way we knew they were alive."

Renovo pollee chief George E. Shilling said when the small oil stove went out while Lansberry and Wise lept they were overcome by fum ell.

Lansberry told rescuers that the last thing he remembered before being rescued was going to sleep Wednesday nil:ht. He and WI ar· rived in Pennsylvania last Monday to hunt deer.

FBI Arrests a Salesman I

In Theft of Masterpieces PITTSBURGH (uPIl - The FBI I retv,n with "no queltionl asked,"

announced Wednesday the first Ju .... Henry X. O'B,i.n oHered break in the theft last summer of to act •• , .. betw"n if the tr.n •• more than half a million dollars in .ctlon m ..... i.liled. paintings. A U.S. attorney said the There was no word on th 1><1int­government hoped to wrap up the ings until Wedne day' announce­entire case "within 48 hours". ment by the FBI of Hobb ' err. t.

The break came with the arrest Judge O'Brien said he had nothing of Ralph C. Hobbs, 45, a happy- to do with the arrest. go-lucky unemployed salesman The specific charge against from B~aver Falls, Pa., 35 miles Hobbs, father or six children, .vas northwest of here. inlerstate transportation of stolen

Hobbs, who wu brou,ht before • U.S. commissioner Wedne.day, waived • hearin, and was hold tor the foderal ,r,nd lury in lieu of $5,000 bond.

"Everybody has to make a liv­ing," was Hobbs' only comment as he smiled his way through the proceedings.

He was arrested in the commun· ity of Bridgewater, Pa., near Beaver Falls. The FBI would not disclose the status oC the 10 stolen masterpieces.

But Assl.t,nt U.S. Attorney W. Wondoll Stenton s.1eI tHer.1 agent. w., •• ttempting to ..... cover them "ond those peopIa In. volved in tho _"empted ule_" "The Government hopes to wrap

up this theft within 48 hours," Stanton said.

The theft occurred at the home of interna tional art collector G. David Thompson in suburban Whitehall borough last July 28. Taken were six Picassos, two Legers, a DuCy and a Miro. Three other paintings in Thompson's col· lection were damaged.

At the tim., Thompson offered • $100,000 rlward for their •• fe

Iowa Stations Get Yule Recordings

goods.

Says Firm Sold Drugs At Cut Rate

WASHINGTON (uPI> - The president of a nalional dIstributing company told Scnote inye tigators Wednesday that his firm Was seil­ing its own drugs at as much as 90 per cent less than brand·nam prices.

Herman C. Nolen, head of Mc· Kesson &< Robbins, said the 128· year-old company began manufac­turing drugs in February in reo sponse to pleas from druggists, hospitals and the public.

He told the Senate antitrust sub· committee that these cuslomers wanted "reasonably priced" drugs that coule! be sold by their gen riC or official name rather than a brand name.

Nolen endorsed a bill proposed by subcommittee chairmarl Estes Kefauver (D·Tenn.) which would require that drugs be idenUCied by their generiC name. The sena­tor has contended this would bring down drue prices by allowing doc· tors to prescribe a medIcine with­out specifying its possibly higher­priced brand name version.

More than half of Iowa's radio Kefauver pointed out to Nolen stations have scheduled Christma. that patients would not receive Lhe programs by SUI groups. benefits' of McKes on 8< Robbl,ns'

Four programs have been of- lower prices unless aOClors pre· fered the atatioAs: au excerpt from llUibed by ,eneric rather tban the traditional Christmas concert brand names . by the Oratorio ChorIII and Sym- "We will make our drugs avail­phony Orchestra, a 45-mlnule pte. abJf. to any druuest we serve." gram recorded durin, the Uni- Nolen ·replied. He ' said McKesson verslty Choir coneert Nov .• , •• Ro~ maintained warebou es' t5-minute recording made by the in nearly every state. Old Gold Singers, and a 24-minute ") think the pharmaceutical panel discussion on "Tbe Meaning manufacturers understand that a of Christmas" moderated by Pro- need has developed for generic fessor Robert Michaelsen, director drugs," Nolen testified. "Of course, oC the School of Religion. some manufacturers who lu\ven 't

Radio station KXlC, Iowa City, understood our mGtives are some­one of the 40 stations using the what upset. But certainly at this recordings, has ICheduled "The .,. no one has threatened us." Meaning of Christmas" discussion He said McKesson 1 Robbins Cor 7:30 I.m. Sunday. The Old Gold would continue to distribute drugs Singers recording is tentatively manufactured by tompeting com­scbeduloUor the 7: ............. s. n.e geaerally are sold Christmas Eve. under brBnd names.

N QJ Ie E 1.1 For Cleaner Laundry

Try Our

Famous WettinlhouM Washers.

ofaunJromal .... ' ... 1",

'" I. .. ...... ngtGtt no I. Burl."..... .

Mott Portrait Dr. Frank L. Mott, former director of tho SUI School of Journalism, was honored Sund,y ,t the Univ.rsity of Millouri. HII port,. it was presented to tho school at its annu.1 K_ppa T,u Alphe ,ecOfnition dinner_

Sen. Frommelt Hits Budget Director Post

DES 101. Jo;S r PI) - D mo- I agl'n i would havc to onfcl" also erotic mcm!)(>t or the L gi 'Iallve with him," Fromm II aid. ( n t e rim Commiltt· We~n' d"y Allhough III Ie r Illture oullinl'd ~arned th c~mmllt again 'I. let- th genl'rul power of tho fi calor. tmg Ih · .,tate s new budget dlrt'e' fic4!r, it IcCt up to Ih' 10-m n In. tor get too powerful. t('rim c(lmmitl • to d 'fine the d •

Sen. Andr'w Fromm It rD-Du- tail of his Dcti\itiel;, Fromml'lt buquel empha iZl'd h wa not r~- oddl:'d. ferring personally to the ncw di· "We're JII·t II lting larttd on rector, II. Dwainr Wick r. but thl., 0 WI:' hav~'n'l had tlmc to d to the n wly created po. itlon In cid,' Pl'cillcaJly on whot Ihe riscul g neral. dlTt'elor iii a tunlly be doing,"

The commlHN h.ld • .ped.1 I he , plain d, seuion to ,pprove bids on. Fromm 'It Js minorily I <lder in number of Board of Control proi· Ule latc . ('nate. ects. - ____ -,. The 1961 se sion of Ihe legisla·

ture, ovcr heated protc t from Democrats, approved permlt:ing th Republican-controll d interim Commiltee 10 hir' a budgl,t ,PC ciallst 10 help it watch OVl'r state Cinances.

U.S. Jobless Rate For '57·'60 Is New Postwar High

Wicker, a Cormer d('puly tale W SHI GTO ( I'll -r A Con· comptrolll·r. was hir('d • ov. 14. gl ,-!S. ional 'collomi t rep 0 r te d and the committee vote on his hir- Wednl:'sday tha( the nulion's un· ing was on parly lines, with till 'employmcnt rate an'ralled 5.9 per GOP memb rs Cavoring It and the c nt in Ihe lnS7-(,o (It·riod and "af­D mocrals oppo d, particularly fected workl'r in c\I:ry occupation Fromm It. and indl! try."

Frommllt seid there w .. noIY The figure compared with an dan",r of three buc!geh being un'rage of 4.3 per cent for other cr.ated - one by the governor, po t·World War 11 yrars. Jam s one by the bud,.t di,.clor and W. Knowlc. ('conomi 1 ror the anoth., by the 1'lIisl.ture. Hou e- 'oot· Economic Commit-"Ther is a definite danger 01 te aid in a study pr p:lrcd for a

oerious duplication," th Dubuque ubcommitl 'on I'mplo m nt. D('mocrat said. "Thl has hop. "Thl' rI. e wa. pllrticulorly~harp

pcned in oth'r state wh r L!w among in xJll'rienecd worker ," fi cal directors have become II he said. tremendous power in the stat<'. "T ehnologicnl change and th and th. c states have riou '1 dl:'clinlng importance of goods­problem ," he added without idell' producing indu.tri and blu· tiCying the "oth r tatc." collar occup:llion' as ource of

"10 some oC th'c tat , the ('mploYl1lcnl opportUJlilies have not fiscal director has pow r equal to significanlly robl'd the unemploy. tbe governor in budget matlers," mcnt levcl. but they have Irad to Frommelt said. . vere sorinl ;Jnd I'conomic prob-

The 1I0vernor submits a bien· lem for workl'r and familie con­nlum budget to the legisl,ture cern d." 1< nowlc. said. when it mN'. every two ynrs, Th tudy was mad public by and the legislature thon m,ka. Sen. William Proxmire rn·WiB.1 its .ppropri.tion.. In each cne, cbairman of th subcommittee the various st,t •• geneles must which will begin h aring Dec. 18. confer with the governor when ho prepares his budget and with the appropri,tions ,ommitteo of the legislafvn when it aprlNr .. its r"omm.nalions 10 the full legislature. "If the budget direclor also pre·

pares a budget, then the state

ALL

BOMBS GIRL FRIEND LYO , france ( PI) - Reject­

ed uitor Jean Bernhard, '1:1, told police Tuesday he exploded five bomb outside the apartment oC his former girl fri nd in a lit of pique. Domag wa nc Iigible.

CHRISTMAS CARDS

GIFT WRAPPINGS and

RIBBON

1/2 PRICE

Mott Porlrait P;'senfed

Former SU I Prof Honored COLUMBIA, }fo. - Fr8IIk LuIb­

er ltott. forrne:r SUI pral_ IIId present dean emeritus 01. the Uni· \'ersity of Misaouri SdIaoI of Jour­nalism, w bonor«l when his por­trait wu preeetlted lei the IdIooI at ita annual Kappa TIU Alpha ~­nition dinner.

lott , whole honors hay e III­cluded the PuUtur and the Ban· croft prizrs in h.istory, wu tile fea· tured ~ak~r It the CIiIIDer as ell

I( • as the gllHt of honor, livin, his

nnu .I Kappa Tau Alpha initiation addre . His talk. which continued the journalism history t.beme 01 his pa t initiation addresses, was titled •. A Revolution In ew pa~r Jour­nalism."

The portrait was a eift fram friends, coJiealueJ, r~r • t u· d nLs and admirers who contribu· ted to a fott Portrait fund (or the purpose.

Mott I, a former dinclor of the

New Offices Near Completion For SUI TraHic Dept.

Added space and mOre privacy will be the main advantaees Df the new quarters beln, built Cot the SUI Traffic and Sar Iy Depart­m nl.

Work has been eoinl on for bout thr w ks and should be

compl ted in a month. Ilccordin, to Raymond Phillips, uperlntend­cnt or tbe SUI phy leal plant.

Th n w quarters will be housed in Law Buildin, temporary A. 1L will feature prlv te offices for Bru e Pork r chIef of Ul police, hi secr larl s, and a room fOr tb policemen who are on duty.

'Ethics' Semina~ To Be Broadcast

"Cont mpor.ry Volu s" wllJ be th ubject of a special prolram to be broadca t Saturday by radio laLion WSUJ. Th' proiram will consillt 01

spe ch s recorded at ad ethics minor held at SUI Dec. • and

att nded by 24 repr nlaUves of [ow a colleg and uni\ler ill .

Topics of dl cu Ion to be broad· ca t includ "Value Systems and Modern Life," "Conflielinf Valli lind the Problem of Power" and "The Re. ponlllbllity or the College for Stodent Values."

Robert Michael n, director of th S [ School of ReUglon. dnd Jack Culley. director of th Bur<.'oll of Labor nnd Manaeem nt - dt.'­partments which co-sponsored the S I seminar - will be interviewed pr ceding the special broadca l to explain the purpose and accomp­li hm nl of th seminar.

SEIKS FRIENDLY RELATIONS MO COW (UPn - Premier NI­

kita 5. Khru hchev hal cabled YOio.lav Pr ldent Tlto his hopei Cor friendly relaLIona between the two countries, the Tass news agency reported Wednesday. The m s age was sent in connection with Yug06llvll'. NaUonal holiday,

ostablished 1854

SUI &boo! of Journalism and was publishinc re&ional editions; • e fOtlllder 01. the UI chapter of Kap. said "it Is inconceivable" that oth· pa Tlu Alpha, an honorary jour. r major papers should not try IIIliIm troUP. (or national distribution.

In biB addre Sunday. fott told He added that the mor~ ec:eu-the laree gathering that "a revolu- lui n papt'r'S lend to become lion in the industry and the prole· more and more journals of ~ sian of new pa~r journalism ap. nd review. Thi , he said, they can ~ars imminent in the decade in do w II in competition with the which we Iive_" I modem communications medii, os

Tbe revoluUon. be said, pring they h:m~ more space for report· from our foor "er at social and ing ~n depth and f~ riOWl~'-

.. • CU I n thlll! televiSIon, more tune teehnoloelcal chang . H~ It ted than radio, and more seriOWl and the cban& as new techmqucs in ignificant objectives than the cln. photosettinf, the use of pi lie m. plates, and offset printin,; . hit of Th noted historian of American population that imulate the found· journalism, who comes Crom a long in( of new uburban new p:lper: line oC Quaker ancestors, was born new techniques of transmi ion th t in Keokuk County. near W hal encourlce metropolitan papers to Cheer, and wu educated in the try for national 01 lributlon; and school of What Cheer, Tipton, lind new communications media that Audubon. Before going to the Unj. "have maneuvered the great news· v('r ' ty of lissourl. ott Wll dl. paper roor aNI more into the po- r tor of the SUI School ot Jour­sitJon of I recorder and xpound r n lim. H e bad earlier tau&ht of events and Ituations." Am rican lilerature and short $tory

The shifts in population from ur- writin,. ban centers to ~x-urban commu- i'=++i+i~i+t++t+i~i+i++i~r nitie ,to uburbs. Ind to lin t- i t1ements a Ion highways. 'Iott FOR EVERY

id, lImulate the founding of n w 1FT GIVING newspapers Dnd promote a com-munity jourDlllism that m tropoli- OCCASION tan newspapers cannot quite at· lJIin. Inle,rated wilh technologicnl chane • the uburbnn daily Irend, he said, points to a probabl in' c:rea in the total number oC n w • papers.

.. MOlt pointed out that three of th

Jarg t Am ricnn papers through I modern t chnJqu s or transmi sion, FINE JEWelRY IC.K'h a electronic facsimile, are ,""""""" I "" I , , , •

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fiatuL J-t, S,- I.! ne hundred nino eolt walhlngton ..,.... ) -.. ............. ~ .....

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P ... 4-THE DAILY IOW.N-I .... City, I.~"'" ..... r, Do<, ':' .. , • • ' Allege'd Early Sigriing~ I Hawkeyes' HIgh FlYIng HankIns Takes Off Of College Gridst~rs

f

Causes AFl-NFl Rift HOUSTON, Tex. (UPI ) - American Football League

President K. S. (Bud) Adams hinLed Wednesday at an alloOJl pro football war over signing of college stars as tlle result of l rift over recrlliting practices.

Adams, owner of the Houston Oilers and one of the lounders of [he year-old AFL, charged that "no less than 10 play­ers who still have bowl games to play" are already under profes· sional contracts to rival National Football League teams.

In New York, NFL Commission· er Pete Rozelle said he has no record of any NFL club that had signed a college player with a bowl game still to be played. "No contracts have been submitted to my office for players who still have bowl games to be played this season." Rozelle said.

Last Friday, Adams broke a report that Utah St.te t.ckle Clyde Brock allegedly had sl,ned a contr.ct with the NFL Chicago Bearl six d.ys before he was to pl.y In the Gotham Bowl at New York. Brock denied the charge but was

held out of the bowl game with Baylor anyway by his coach .

Wednesday Adams urged that college athletic governing bodies step in and investigate profession­al recruiting practices or else "this whole maller will get en­tU'ely out of hand in a burry."

Adams said the authorities of coUege athletics should not ex· pect AFL teams "to stand by and lose football players to NFL clubs" that violate NCAA agreements. He hinted that the AFL might follow suit if action is not taken soon against the alleged violators.

charged that Rozelle has made 110 attempt to stem a rash of wb;t Adams called "sneak" si~ before college players are throuo with their seasons.

Adams said he got his inlo~ tion about the 10 or Ii10re playert alleged to be under NFL contrad! while awaiting college bowl gaa. from the same source who ti~ him that Brock had signed ~ maturely with Chicago. He did llIt name his informant.

"AIter our scoul. talked w" Brock Friday afternoon " aid learned that Brock had signed I $12,000 contract and aceepted I $3,000 bonus five days before the Golham Bowl: I informed Foss aDd asked that he notify the NCAA 01 the rules infraction," AdamS sac.

"Our greatest concern in this case - now that the Bears havl gone through a 'dummy' sigDill, after the Gotham Bowl - is nollt ask NFL commissioner to nullify that contract, but to attempt It prevent recurrences of these 'sneak' signings before college players are through with their sea­sons."

" HEARTY

"HELLOI" Is The Trademark of lowl City', Frierdlielit Tavern

You'r. R illhl Ifs "Doc" Canneli'll

~ t _ .. The Approach ... The Takeoff . .. The Dunk

"If the NCAA is interested in learning the true faets in the Brock case, I would like to see them c.1I in Brock, Georg. Halas Chic.go Be.r owner, Bear scout Fido Murphy and our awn scout and question them .11 under oath with a polygraph," Adams said,

The Annex

~ ' j

i J , ' \

" I

. '

;. .~ .. The young oilman-sportsman 26 E. Colleg.

~ 10w<1l's sophomore guard Andy Hankins is only 6-feet tall, but he can rebound right along with the big men. During Wednesday's practice

~ ~e .dribble5 toward the basket, apparently heading for a routine . Jayu~.

But Hankins sets his sights above the rim for this shot. The basket.

is l~feet above the floor and four feet above Hankins' head. A

dunk shot for a six·footer is a r.rity .•••

But he makes it easily demonstrating the leg spring which makes him a top rebounder. Hankins is a scoring threat too, hitting 17 against Miami of Ohio and 21 .galnst South O.kot. St.te.

• RRISTtJAS • BIRTHDAYS

. Photos by L.rry Rapoport • ANNIVERSARIES . • GRADUATION

More Money Than Ruth Made Miami/s Mira Sidelined

: ~Manf.le Signs lor Estimated .$85,0.00 ... .. '

his chances of topping Maris' record homer total next season.

CORAL GABLES, Fla. <UP~) -The hopes of the Miami Hurri­

canes have been jolted by the ill· ness of sl<\l qUQrterback George Mira.

The sophomore quarterback is reported to have a light case of the flu . Doctors said his fever dis­appeared Wednesday but he 'is be·

as a precautionary 't.:.;NE\VYORK (UPI) - Mick· t;j Mi1l1t)C, the "other half" of baseb~lrs most devastating hojnc' run crew, Wednesday sign~d . an estimated $85,000 ~~l1li:act .• thal topped Babe lUlll)" p~'1k salary and made Nm thc.f :sccond highest paid NeW -York ;Yankee of all time.

"That's a lot· of homers," Man· Ue said in discussing his cbances of exceeding 61. "I had my best shot at it last season and I COUldn't make it. Roger did an amazing thing. I won't be disappointed if I don't beat his record. I'!I settle for the same number I bit last season (&U."

the MVP votin~. The new contuact I I'll be satisfiec,l'''(1 1l.~fl ~id . • "I'll was his 12th WIth the Yankees and be 35 by then and I don't think lie is ~e first member of the world my legs can make it until I'm 40." champIOns to come to terms for u " k 'd h

Mira was conuned to the infir­mary Wednesday and may not ac· ~m~~the fu~b~l ~am w~n ~=~------------------------~-~--.---~

r..la~tle,: whose outside business interests Quring' the next year are

ly to -t:orn him almost three Umcs his Yankee pay, signed after &' five-minute morning talk with

eneraj Manager Roy Harney. ,} Hamey then announced at a .press conference th.t Mantle's contract topped Ruth's highest

~ ~a,lary of $80,000. The only high· • .r Yankee paycheck was Joe 01· • maggfo's $100,000. , lAt lhl) same time. Hamey dis· ,~~osed ' th'lt· he bad arranged a Is lary conference today ~ith Roger • aris whose record 61 bomers ;h&'lp:ed 'win him the American !League's M.o s t Villuable Player lyward. • '". ~ltaJkcd to him. (Maris) yester­day and he didn't sound tough to me, .. Haney said. Previously he had planned no salary conference with Maris until January , but said, "We might as well get together as long as he's in town."

Mantle, chipper and nattily dressed, was not optimistic about

BULOVA

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, YOUR CHOICE 124.71 As little IS $1 • week II

WAlNER'S JEWELRY • Qrbdullte CClll010glst

107 E. Washington •• IOWA CITY, IOWA

·"1 long •• ClI', cry.,,1 Ind C'own Ire In'oct. PrIm plus Ttxl . ;

Mantle balled .317 last season and wound up second to Maris in

1962. mlC ey sal e saw no reason it leaves today for Phi I a del· phia . The Hurrlcanes play Syra­cuse Saturday in the Liberty Bowl. He said that the gaping thigh

infection which kept him out of nearly the entire 1961 World ser· ies against the Cincinnati Reds has healed completely and he felt in excellent shape. In answer to questions about

how many more seasons he thought he might play, Mantle said be would like to make it 10 more years, "But I doubt if I can make il. "

"U I can get five more years

Intramural Basketball TONIGHT'S GAMES

6:30 - North, Phi Epsilon Pi vs. Acacia; South, Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Phi Kappa Alpha; West, Alpha Kappa Kappa vs. Phi Rho Sigma; Varsity, Nu Sigma Nu vs. Phi Bela

why the Yankees should not reo peal as pennant-winners.

"We've got the hitters and we have some real good young pitch­ers," he said. "1 think we can win for the next four or five years. "

But university officials said Mi· ra will go to Philadelphia F~iday and be suited up for the game.

Pro Basketball NBA

Van Winkle Named Chicago 113, New York 112 Cincinnati 136, Syracuse 126

National Speedways VP ABL

. DES MOINES. IA'l - Gene Van .C.I.ev.e.la.n.d.l.17.,.C.h.ic.a.gO_95_iiiiiiiiOliiii Winkle of Lincoln. Ncb., a veteran I' auto racing official , Wednesday was named vice president or Na­tional Speedways, Inc., a promJ­tional organization with beadquar­ters here.

Announcement was made by Al Sweeney of Tampa, Fla., president of National Speedways.

Van Winkle bas been chief :;taTt· er for the Iowa State Fair auto races for several years, as well as chief starter for other major expo­sitions in a 17-slate area serviced by National Speedways.

SKI/PAL at

Ivanhoe Mt. Vernon, Iowa

SKI RENTALS & SALES 4 SKI TOWS

: N.w Lod,e Near Rest.urant & Motels

Phone ELY 848·2810 Pi;:30 _ South, Tudor vs. East , ••••••••••••••••••••• U •••••••••••

Tower. • C LIP T HIS II 8:30 - North, Bordwell vs. Mott; II • South, Phillips vs. Steindler; West, _ •• Delta Tau Delta vs. Alpha Epsilon - cl.

Illinois Halfbacks Pi; Varsity. Phi Gamma Delta vs. II Ancl Use To Or et Your P,zza II Phi Kappa Sigma. , . •

'Re-enter School 9:30 - North, Ensign vs. Sea- • M'ENU" 14". shore; South, Thatcher vs. Trow- • 12 •

After 'Suspension bridge; West, Alpha Chi Sigma vs. . CHEESE ............ ~ ................................... ... ... 1.00 1.50 II Delta Theta Phi ; Varsity, Ensign II ONION .. .. ........ .. .......... ... ..... .. ..... ...... ....... 1.00 1.50.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP!) - Two vs. Seashore (lightweight>. • SAUSAGE ................ ..... ... .. ..... ...... .... ....... 1.25 2.00. prospective fir t·string University • 1 25 2 00 • of Illinois haiIbacks, were read. WEDNESDAY'S SCORES BEEF ..... .. ...... ...... .. .. ..... .. ........................... .• milled to the University Wednes- HEAVYWEIGHT II GEORGE'S GOURMET SPECIAL ....... ......... 1.25 2.00_ day after a six month suspensi~n Sigma Alpha Epsilon 50, Lambda ChI.. Sausage, Onion, Green Pepper II for their part in a Memorial Day Alpha 25 PEPPERONI 1 25 2 00 • Delta UpsUon 16, slfma Pi 0 (forfeit) • ....... .. ... .... .......... .................... • . w~~~ ~~~~en , a sophomore speed- Pt;\h~t~P~~ Sigma 1, Phi Delta • KOSHER SALAMI ......... ..... ............ .. .......... 1.25 2.00 •• ster from New Orleans, and Norln Delta ChI 27. Sigma CItI 26 • MUSHROOM ........ ........................ ............ 1.50 2.25

Totten Aces 44, Leonard Machine. 34 • Willis, a junior from Dayton. Dean 65, Pickard 16 .11 GREEN PEPPER ................ ............ ~ ............ . 1.50 2.25 I-Ohio, were re·admitted on a good ~~~\,C~~~ ~:i,Sl:~~:~d28Ace8 21 SHRIMP ..... ..... ...... ..... ... ....... ........ ............. 1.50 2.25 conduct probation. Bush 26, Fenton 27 TUNA FISH ' 1 50 2 25

They were among 37 studenls L~O~\~~Crre~DrJ3'e7·,§oU~8pi.hpe~1~D~~r.,~19 II ANCHOVIE ':::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'1:50 2:25._ either expelled or suspended for v ~.

taking part in the water tight al1.d Kappa Alpha Psi 22i Hawkeye 19 •• FRIDAY SPECIAL ................... " ..... ... ..... .... 1.50 2.25 I Air Cadets 46, Med- 43 SPEC AL 2 00 3 00

a melee involving 5,000 students AI&ha Kappa Psi 47, Delta SIgma • HOUSE I ... ..... .... ...... ............ ... ... .... ' '. that followed. The school said War- Pbll.J:ha Delta 23, Psi Omega 18 • Delivered Piping Hot in • ren and Willis took only "a light LIGHTWEIGHT. d I • ppa.r.t"iiiiiiiiiiiin.t.h.e .o.ut.b.ur.st •. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTr.o.wb.r.ld.ge.4.0., P.h.II.11P.".2.1 iiiiiiiiiii~;;.1 George's Oven-Equippe De ivery Wagon I

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l COUPON GOO,! TH'RO_UGH SUNDAY: DEC. 17, 1961 I ~ --------------LOWER PIlei

Haw Open Agai

Nebraska ming team as today at 4:30

Tlle meet, Field HOllse, will is unusual for early but It is expected the breaking of course records.

One of the r~'orrll!l l

broken, according ming coach Bob yard backstroke. probably pit who holds school 100 and 200-yard Larry Ferrel, one top swimmers.

Allen .1 .... iel the 2OO·y.rd .nd the ".v.r-dl ml9ht ,..siltly Cra. Irwin will the medley and holder, Dennis swim the ........... _.-..1 Nebraska expects

Roman He'll PI

RALEIGH, N.C. Carolina State man Gabriel, Atlantic Coast records, Wednesday will play for the Los o[ the N alional

He was the first of the Rams and the picked in the NFL was also the first in the American draft. being chosen Raiders.

The 220-pound, inch passing star Earle Edwards. nouncement of the

try soma.

Coral Fruit 2 Mil •• WH. OIl

gro dent which is a book club. with the well tive League of been nraJ!lniz,ed organization of students' sole UUJ""""'" time, its .... rui .....

to stUdents, and bers, on this caml Ing for membersh students can receil of the firm's low G stock turnover, dlI publishers, and market.

As I.S.C.U. e x I campus to campu students to direct i each campus, At Senate President meyer has accept! ment as lS.C.U. r

What are the I membership? Firs book clubs, I.S.C can order any b They are not con

r;hn-::.~ International 5 15 East Harrll low. City, 10"

I, ...... . ... .. . . , apply for membt Unioo 8IId agre preaentbt or ber

Them

Acid,...:

~n~ ... =

rly Signing Gridst.ers -NFL Rift

,.

- American Football League bin ted Wednesday at an all-out

of college stars as the result of I

Oilers and one of the

charged that Rozelle has made II attempt to stem a rash of whit Adams called "sneak" ligninJI before college players are t.IIrouP with their seasons.

Adams said he got his inforJlll. tion about the 10 Or more pjayetl alleged to be under NFL contracts while awaiting college bowl g81111 from the same source who tiPPfd him that Brock had signed pre. maturely with Chicago. He did DOl name his informant.

"After our scout talked w~ Brock Friday afternoon and learned that Brock had signed a $12,000 contract and accepted a $3,000 bonus live days befon! the Gotham Bowl, I informed Foss and asked that he notify the NCAA (i the rules infraction," Adams ~

"Our greatest concern in !hi case - now that the Bears ball gone through a 'dummy' signing after the Gotham Bowl - Is not to ask NFL commissioner to nullif, that contract, but to attempt to prevent recurrences of these 'sneak' signings before coUege players are through with their sea­sons."

A HEARTY

"HELLO!" Is The Trademlrk of lowl City', Frie,ndllest Tav,rn (

You're Right It'. "Doc" Conn,lI'sl

The Annex 26 E. Colleg,

• BIRTHDAYS • ANNIVERSARIES • GRADUATION . in fact , on any occasion

something better than 'Hv.·nu", is requJred, we urge

to ~avitate toward the "gifted" shop in town. to 9:00 P."1' until Chrlstlllli

genll.men It

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rocery Order DEC. 17, 1961

I I -_ ...

Hawk Swimmers­Open Season Here Against Nebraska

I, GAlY SPURGEON StaH Write,

Nebraska will provide the opposition for the Iowa S'o\;m­ruing team as the Hawkeyes open their 1961-62 season her today at 4:30 p.m,

The meet, which will be he ld in the swimming pool of the Field House. will cover a long course (50 yards). This distanc is unusual (or early season meets, but it is expected to provide for !be brea king of several loug course records.

One of the records that may be broken, according to Iowa swim· ming coach Bob Allen, is the 200-yard backstroke. This event will probably pit Iowa's Les CUller, who holds school records in both 100 and 200-yard events, against Larry Ferrel, one of Nebraska's top swimmers.

Allen II .. ..w that ree .... for the ... yard Indi.,ldu.1 mocI.y .nd the 2tO-y.rd brelStrok. might poI,lbly 'ali. Sophomore Crll, Irwin will be iwlmmlnt tho moctl.y .nd Khooi recerll "'.r. Dennl, Vokolllc, will 'wlm the br ... tItroIce. Nebraska expects to have a

slightly better team lhan IlISt year's SQuad which finished with eicht wins and four 10 The Cornbuskers have Ix lettermen back with most of their t am depth being concentrated in th sprints and freestyle events.

''There ,hould be lOme .w­fully clo .. ruo, in the ....... yle and bre.'htrok .... s.id Allen . He also said, "We will be count· I

ing quite heavily on <Les) Culler in the breaststroke, (81111 Meyer· off and <Ralph) Laughlin in the freestyle , <nenni I Vokolck in the breast trake, and (Craig) l l'win in the individual medley."

Jim Robbins will repre ent the Iowa diving team in the opening meet. He will face two top no'cn performers in Chuck Loy and Pllt Drake.

Roman Gabriel Announces He'll Play for LA. Rams

RALEIGH, N.C. <uP!) - North I Gabriel said he would receive Carolina State quarterback Ro- "somewhat more than I had hoped man Gabriel, holder of numerous for." The Rams signed Wisconsin Atlantic Coast Conference passing quarterback Ron Miller Tuesday_ records, Wednesday announced he Gabriel, a native of Wilmington, will play lor the Los Angeles Rams N.C., was Player-o{-the-Year in of the National Football League. the Atlantic Coast. Conference in

He was the first draft choice both his junior and senior seasons. of the Rams and the second player He became the first man to re-picked in the NFL draft. Gabriel ceive the award twice. . was also the [jrst player drafted The ACC records Gabriel hold in the American Football League include : Most passes completed, draft being chosen by the Oakland 285 ; passing accuracy, 285 comple­Raid~rs. tions in 506 attempts, and in total

The 22O-pound, six-foot, four- touchdown responsibility, 34 09 inch passing star and his coach passing and 15 runningl. In three Earle Edwards, made the an: seasons Gabriel compiled 3 267 nouncement of the signing. yards tolal offense, 2,951 by po s­

ing. He missed half of his sopho­more season because of injuries. JUST RECEIVED

A NEW lATCH OF

CIDER If'. frHh .ntI I.

unpillteurlzecl ••• try tome.

Coral Fruit Market 2 Mil., Wilt on HI,hwIY ,

HELP FOR DAVIS WASHINGTON CUPll - The

Washington Redskins revealed Wednesday that Rep. Adam Clay­ton Powell CD-N.Y. I, has agreed to help them sign Syracuse half­back Ernie Davis.

The Negro congressman not only has of[ered Davis a job in his offIce, but also promised to talk to the Heisman Trophy winner after he winds up his college career in Philadelphia's Liberty Bowl Saturday.

ANNOUNCING A

STUDENT BOOK CLUB

In the past several years, a great many people have joined book clubs - and with good reason. They can save mooey on books they want to read and own.

, .

,_ ........................................... .. • • , , , , , The Dail Iowan • , , , , , , , , , ,.-.-. ,--.--.... -~ .. -.. , .. ,--.-." ... -.--.~ .. -. THE DAILY IOWAN-low. City. I • .-Tltur$day. Dec. 14. lHI-P ... S

Giant Killers? Quarterback Milt Plum h.nd, the b.1I to fullback Jim llrown ., the Clevel.nd Browns pr.ctlce .t hom. for their big ,.me .,.Inlt the New York GI.nts Sunllay. The Brown' .re .imln, to knock the GI.nh. who hive clinched • tI. for the Elltem Di.,I,lon title. bvt could be forced into I pl.yoH with Philadelphi.. -AP Wlr.photo

Musial Announced Leading Outfielder

I CJ A Tl ( PI ) - Chalk up another record for tao (The M un) \lu. iul , only h · uc omplish d thi on with his glow ins\l'ud of hi bat.

For th ' third time in hi brilliant career, th Louis Cardinal' star I d all Nil- ------------­tional League outfielder in field­ing 13 t ea ·on. according to offi­cial figures rei as d Wedne day by league headquarter .

Musial committed only _ er· ror whll. h.ndllng IS' tot. I chances Ind th.t g.ve him I .9f4 everage. Th.t WII four points higher than the next best mlrio: of .990 compll.d by both Fr.nk Robinson of the Clncinn.ti R.ds and Felipe Alou of the S.n Fr.n. cisco Gi.nt._ Joe Adcnck of 1i1waukee made

it two in a row wh n he topped all first ba emt'n in fielding for the second straight year with a .003 average. and teammate Frank Bolling led all the second basemen with a .988 percentage.

Jim Davenporl or lhe Gionts paced the third ba men for the third st ralght year, ficlding .965, while Roy Mc 1il1an oC M.iJwau­kc was the best man among th'

5TA" MUSIAL Lead, Ovtflelderl

shorl tops for the rourth time in 1-----------­his career wilh a .975 percentage.

Smoky Burgess of Pifuburgh College posted the highest defensive mario: among the utchers for the ba II second straight y •• r. HI. Iv.r· Basket ag. was .991. Bob Ander on of the Cub wa

the best fielder among the pitch­ers, handling 52 chances withoul

Navy 80 Getly.bur, $3 Army 79, Lebllnon Vlllle), 81 Temple 65, Prtne.lon $$

Now a new organization has been established - the f a s t­Il row i n g International Stu­dent Cooperative Union, Inc .. which is a wholly new kind oC book club. I.S.C.V. is affiliated with the well· known Coopera­tive League of the V.S.A. It has been organized as a Don-profit organization with the reduction of students' book costs as its sole objective. Now, for the first time, its services are available to students, and to faculty memo bers, on this campus. By apply· ing for membership in I,S.C.U., students can reeeive the benellts of the firm's low overhead, high slock turnover, direct access to publishers, and midwest·wlde market.

choice to a lew current selec­tions. Second, they are under no obligation to buy a certain num­ber of books every year. They may purchase as few as they wish. However, they may not abuse their membership priv­ileges by ordering books for non­members and are limited to $100 a year in total purchases. Third, the savings offered are lruly un­usual. There is a 25% discount off publishers list price on all non·text books. This includes all paperbacks. This means t h at members pay $1.50 for a $2.00 book, $3.00 for a $(.00 book un­less it is clearly a text book. The discount on text books is 10%. Books are sent postpaid from Chicago. These books are all in original bindings and are not inexpensive reprints, as are many boo.k club editions. There is no other organizalion that can offer so many advantages. ]f you buy $10.00 worth of books a year, you can save money by joining I.S.C.V.

. an error. Lehlah 71, Col,ate 71 Villanova It Fordham 48 Delrolt 911, luumptlon (Ont.) t5 Ruller. II , Cohunbl. 59 Provlclence 10, Brown 75 lIarvard 14, Wule),a" 7'

As I.S.C.V. expands from campus to campus, it appoints students to direct its business on each campus. At IOWI, Student Senate President J 0 h n Nie· meyer has accepted an appoint­ment as I.S.C.V. representative.

What are the advantages of membership? First, unlike other book clubs, I.S.C.V. members can order any book in priot. They are not confined in their

To receive a membership cer­tificate and other materials, re­turn the application below to­gether with a $1.00 membership fee. Do it now and be prepared lor second semester book pur­chases. For students and faculty members too, I .S.C.V. repre­sents the greatest advance in book distribution since the dis­covery of movable type.

I , I

I JOhn~.,.r, I ... =-ntatlv. - --l ,I

Int.motional Studonfl Co-oporatlv. Union, Inc. 15 ECIIII Harrison I J Iowa City, Iowa I ~ppi7 ' ;or 'memberShip' bi 'the 'Iritematlonai Student c:pe~:~e~ I . UnlOll and agree to abide by the Articles and By-Laws as

Milwaukee took (cam hOtlors with an average of .982 while San Francisco and Cincinnati tied for econd with .977 each. The Cubs

were la t with a .970 percentage.

OLD SHEP TO COMPETE SKUNK CREEK, Ark. - Irving

Finster's blue ribbon coon dog, Old Shep, WaS named Wednesday as a late entry in the Leo n County Christma Coon Dog weepslakes to be held here Friday.

ornell 83 Syracu,", ea Duke 78, South Carolina fl' St. Joseph', (Pa.) rI, ltlehmond 58 Indiana Slate ea, CataWba fll Hunter 15 Quee", 63 Sleven. Tech 58, W.V. M.rltlme •• Morrl. H.t'Vey 83, W. Libert)' t5 Wm. It Miry 71,. Vlr.lnta 83 Houston 75, TCu 71 Rlnclolph Macon 74~ Re>aDolle M We,tern CarOlina 11, Howard 41

CITItUS INVITATIONAL Pre byteNn 75, RoUlNi 57 Fl • . Sou. 83, tint. SouUl 8$ (3 ewer· I

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Hawkins Having Great Year; Might Become Super Star

RGII (AP) - In I Pittsburgh Ren.. nd he i I ~.highlY of the ~ youngster_ efThah.iSt• founotl W

bad"· for a kid whole

'- I 11 'bl b b' h-' t1' len use notbin but superl -n Ba >o:ct) po I Y t Igg t It 10 1\ tl~es when talking about him," only coli e e peri nee was fresh.

t J Ct'Iltcr lIine Bill _ ( IcLtndon said aft r in Hawk- IlWJ competition at the Vniversity lammed a ba ball pour in 42 and 36 points, re- of low .

pecU\'ely, a, inst bis team 1ast " I don't think J'\'e met a oicer Saturday and unday. kid 10 coach or WOI'k with thaD

"We have never defensed him. Conni ," Johnston 18)" . "He's toll­H ' a good rebounder and SCO~r i tently trylDg to improve him· nod that ' all it t kes to be a great sell. I don't think he realiud at ball pi y r. the rt ho'A' rough pro ball would

"And HO'Akins i mor ver tile be And he' had to adjust to that. than he II showD, loo," fcLtn- " Jf be has any dtsadvant.a&e it don dds. "He has nou&h 01 I is his lack of weight. But he'. still Deeds of Ruth,

Hutson, Baugh Now Fading

er. repertoire to doubl what he is do- .a=kl:·d:a:nd==w::iJI=grQ="':':" ====i1

lIy STEVE SNIDER United Press 'ntern.tion ••

NEW YORK - Th ch nging limes tit r catching UP on the records of lhr pro POrts im· mortals - Babe Ruth, Don Hutson and Sammy BaUih .

New 51 r ,new t}ll nd ex-panded schedul~ are dimming the deeds of the r at old thletic h roe In til e)'c of younc-Iimers who never saw lb(>m play.

By odd colncldenc., .11 throe had historic reeord. broken or tied In 1"1. bvt ,ven .ft.r ,11 ttl ... Y.I,.. they Itill h • .,e other m.rio:. left on the books fo, to­.uy', kWs to shoot .t.

Greal? Th y h d to be to tay on the book 8 long 8' th Y ha~ . Ruth quit b b II in 1934. Hutson pi yed hi 18 t pro football game for th Gr n Bay Pack r in 1945. 8augh, 16 )' at with th Wa. hine· ton Red kins, "enl out of the a­lional Football League al the end o( '52.

Ev n so, some of their FlIllcn marks would hllve 10 ted longer if it w ren't for II scheduling gim- • mick that gave mod rn record· breakers a br ok.

R ... r M.rls ef the Y.nkees bec.me the flrtt m.'or I ••• uer .v.r to hit 61 homers In • ,Ingl. .e.son - bvt h.d to h • .,. • 16%­•• me Ichedule te 110 It.

Bobby Layn of th Pittsburgh tcelers luis tied 'Baugh's !'('Cord

for total touchdown pa. 111171 and Lou Grota of the Cleveland Brown h topped Hutson 's car r scoring record by one point with 826, both with an a ist from lI­panded schedule .

Baugb and Hutson, nerally op­erated on 100aaID IiCheduJ s, th moderns on a 12-lame ason. Cur­renUy, they'r In a 14'lIame ch d-ule In lhe NFL I

How ver, Whitey Ford of th Yank ecllpsed one Rut h I a n m rk wIthout benefit of outside ald. When he retired lifter five score­less inning o( hi second World Seri s start a ain Cincinnati last (all , it made a tolal of 32 con cu· Uve innings of World Series pitch­Ing in which h hodn't allowed a run.

Ruth •• mighty pltch.r before he hit the hom. run tr.II , owned the pr • .,lous record of 2f~. Hutson wa the p -catching

marvel of hi day. Many of the things h did as a pion r r ceiver are dupUcated Crcqu nUy by others today but Don wa the firsl and still the best on the record.

He also had to play both of(ense and defen , though after tb first three sea on hi defen wa con· flDed to safety while tough block­ing back Larry Craig took over Don's Blot at defensive end.

Baugh, too, was a two-way play­er for mo t of his 16 seasons and part Of the time he wa a sIngle· wing tailback, not a T-man.

Yes, the old·timers were great - but Lime, and changing time , arc rough on record in any sport.

"At this at ... rtf cNve\epment, ~onnlo \. furiller .Ioftt tIYn 0111-_ I've ."., _ ." adch J ........ ton. wtw. .petlt eight Y.lrs as • pl.y.r .nd twa ye.rs ••• coads In the NBA.

CONNIE HAWKINS Senll,Ion.1 RooIIle

inl:' Ii Just what i, the 1I,...lyn. N.Y.

n.tlve del",? Acconl ing to the I.telt statistics, H.wklnt Ie_ ... ... • .,. In both Icori", lind points lind 14 reboundt • ,.m., reboundl. H. I. ..,.r .. ln, 2J AM he h.s hit l1l'i 47 per cent rtf hi. field goal. and " per cent

,. old ., • • 'owin, up the D.ltlc,P Bob Cousy Is 33. Te,mm,te ClIrlBreun '$even older. Wtll old It PIII.n end to the Boston Celtlcs' Winning slte.Ie' Coach Red Auerbach reports in thIS week's ~turdilY fvenmll Post. s,rC/AI , 1962 CAUNDA. 'AGfS Dec. 16Iuu. now on ul ••

ON CHRISTMAS FLOWERS

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... ,. I-TH. DAIL" IOWAN-low. City, I •. -Thurad.y, Dt e. 1of, '''1 ...

Aaopt Mefllo(j for Solvin AFL-CI6 Inter-Unio,n Riffs

Husban~ at trial Ct1arges Physician Assaulted Wife

MIAMI BEACH (UPll - The AFL-CIO overwhelmingly adopted Wednesday a sweeping new peace formUla to settle inter-union dis­putes.

The new plan is based mainly on impartial arbitration.

George Meany, f.deration pr,.ldent, praised the new IYS'

te~ a •• "realOnable .nd decent way" to reduce conflict. within the labor movem.nt over job right., membership r.ld. and uniair organlling tactics. 1iIe G7-~ear-old Meany kept the

29-man AFL-CIO Executive Council in a showdown session until 3 a .m. Wednesday to hammer -out the agreement. It was ratified by the convention Wednesday afternoon .

Auto union President Waiter P . Reuther, who had demanded a stronger ' form of arbitration, ba~ed the compromise plan on behalf of the Industrial Unions De­pa~ment.

So dId C. J. (N.iI) Hagg.rty, head of the Building Trade. De· partment that had oppos.d the Reuther·l.d bloc'. d.mand for out.id. umpire. to handl. dis· putes, Elmer Brown, president of the

International Typographical Union, spoke against the scheme and said his union would disaffiliate if any arbitfation decision affected its jurisdiclional claims. ~oth , Meany and Reuther gave

ground during the all·night session that ended with agreement just before dawn.

Und.r the plan, di.put.s would be submitted to an umpire for II

dflcision if voluntary mediation did 'not work. Unions which might lose in a

ruli.ng w,ould have a limited right

of appeal to the AFL-CIO Execu· tive Council if a three-man sub­committee headed by Meany agreed that the decision shoulu be reviewed.

Unions tbat might defy the de­cisions would be madc targets for raiding by other AFL-CIO af(iJi· ates.

In the naw paacaful atmos· phere, M.any announced that several unions had r.ach.d prl· vat. agre.ments to .nd f.ud. over organizing. He said this was a hop.ful sign for the futur •. In a statement hailing the plan,

which is to become effective Jan. 1, Reuther added :

"We can not get on with the historic task of the labor move-

ment and cease to use our reo sources in divisive batlles among ourselves. "

Ch.ers and whistles greeted the overwhelming favorable action on the plan that had created new friction between rival factions in the AFL·CIO for the past month. Reuther was forcM to drop his

demand for AFL-ClO action against unions thal boycott products of a sister union. The majority of thc AFL-CIO high command fell that the nation 's labor laws provided relief for this problem.

Meany and the building trades, in turn, relaxed some of their op­position to use of impartial ar­bitrators to decide inter-union feuds with virtually final rulings.

Poignant Civil War Diaries By Soldier Given to SUI

Although he could still hope for 1862 until he was separated in 1865 release from the miseries of the prison, First Corporal George M. Shearer, infantryman from Iowa, found little to cheer him at Christ­mas time, 1864.

The faded pencil entries in the diary kept by Shearer leave little doubt of the deprivations, sickness and horror that were the day to day lot of those ragged Union sol· diers in prison near Andersonville, Ga.

"A gloomy Christmas for us," h. wrote at this time 91 y.ars ago, "Rainy and cold and no shelter," th. entry conc:luded. Three diaries k e p t by the

Agency, Iowa, soldier fro m the time he entered the Union army in

were given to the SUI Library re· cently by Shearer's great-grandson, Richard T. Feddersen, Iowa City businessman. Window-Gazing Season Always brief and frequently deal· ing with the weather or the mail situation, the dairy entries never. Items in a stor. window attract the inftrests and m.ny g.lIy decorated stor.s towntown. With only theless provide an insight into the I ages of all. An unid.ntified low. City f.mily, nine shopping d.ys until Christmas, window life of an Iowa soldier, who , at 24, pausing for gift ideas, gaze Intently in one of the lIaz.rs will b.com. busy shoppers. enlisted in a cause that took him - Photo by Larry Rapoport through the seige or Vicksburg, the ---------------:------------------------­battles of Corinth and Missionary Ridge, where he was wounded, and E. German Guard Shot at Border -finally through three rebel prison camps.

Gunfirel-iqlts Escape Dash BERLIN (uPD - Communist police force. ed to North America.

L.sli. W. Dunlap, SUI library director, emphasized the impor. tance of placing such documents in safe repository, The diaries w.nt into the library's special coll.ctions section. gunfire claimed a new victim , Disclosure that the carbines had A U.S. Army spokesman said

ST. LOUIS (UPJ) - The hus' band of a young mother who charged that her doctor criminall)' assaulted her sUer giving her drugs said Wedneeday that he heard the physician ask his wife to disrobe so he could give her a rubdown.

The statement came during the s~ond day or the trial of Dr. James G. Middleton, 34, in County Circuit Court. '

An all male iury heard the husb.nd t.stlfy th.t hit wife, • mothfr of three, Mid .... was .t· tack.d by Mlddl.ton 1.1f July 11 in the bedroom of her home. He said th.t on the d.y of the .1· leged .ttack he returned heme from work to find hll wife clad only in paiama troUM,. and in­coherent a •• he tri.d to prepare supper. According to the man's testi·

mony he teleohoned Middleton to ask what medicine had been pl'e­scribed and was told by the doc­tor that it apparently was inef· fective and should be destroyed.

On the day following the incident Middleton returned to the woman's home. The husband said he was hiding outside an open bedroorr. window.

He corroborat.d Ifat.ment. mad. Tuesd.y by his wKe th.t the doctor attempt.d to give her

Schwengel Will Host GOP Appreciation Fete

Congressman and Mrs. Fred Schwengel will be host to the First Congressional District Republican officials at an appreciation dinner party at Hotel Muscatine in Mus­catine tonight.

N.~Y~ · 'Prisoner Puts the Bite . " . \

"We can hear nor see nothing," along Berlin 's East-West border Shearer wrote. "Prisoner shot dead Wednesday and West Berlin police while trying to steal a board over disclosed they have been issued the "dead line" limit. It is gen· American M2 carbines to increase erally supposed that the ensuing their defensive fire-power.

been provided by the U.S. Army today's two convoys - one from came in 'the wake oC a weekend and one to West Berlin - passed rash of Communist border shooting through Soviet checkpoints on the

County chairmen, vice chairmen, state legislators and other Repub· lican officials in the District have been invited. About 90 acceptances have been receive<\ and everyone of the 12 counties will be repre­sented at the dinner meeting.

On Judge for New Teeth year will end the Civil War in Communist East German police

NEW YORK Iil'I - A prisoner stood in State Supreme Court last week, fixed the justice with a steady gaze and bared his teeth.

His punishment? None at all. He 'gdt a benign nod Of approval from the justice, instead.

'If this seems odd, wait till you hear the rest of it.

The prisoner was James Bar­rett, 30, serving six months for attempted petty larceny.

America ." rett. Barrett had asked that his Sh.arer was freed from prison shot and apparently wounded or teeth be ' removed because they about April 26, 1865, and soon he killed one of their fellow-policemen were diseased, officials said. was in Davenport en route to his who tried to dash into West Berlin.

The justice figuratively hit the home near Ottumwa. Police said witnesses told them cl;!iling, anyway. One of the most important bits of the East German guard fell under

"You can't extract a man's historical information fOlmd in the Communist gunfire on the border teeth and leave them that way," Shearer diaries was the record- of the French sector. A police declared Hofstadter. "Are they ing of Iowa prisoners' voting at patrol car reported the guard was all out?" Camp Lawton, Ga. in the election latcr c81Tied away in an East

"Yes," answered Barrett. of 1864. The results {or all of Camp Berlin ambulance. "You can't take all of his 36 Lawton were 2,778 for Lincoln and West Berlin police disclosed they

incidents that resulted in the death HO-mile Autobahn connecting Ber- KING INVITES GUESTS o[ an Austrian student and capture lin and West Germany. ATHENS (Upn - Thirty-nine of two West Berlin youths by com-I In Berlin, police reported that members of European royal laml­munist police. 11 more East German refugees lies have been invited here lor

Allied officials admitted concern slipped across the border into West King Paul's 60th bir~hday oele· that growing anier among West Berlin in a 24-hour period. brations Thursday. Berlin youths. frustrated by what -----they consider Allied inactivity in countering the Red's Berlin clamp­down, might lead to more border incidents.

i. ,

a... ,:'

.n IfIlection .... .lktel ller .. dlarobe. After 1I0ln9 to a lIB .....

i;r" home to telephone pella, t • man Mid, tr. returned ft ..

IddJetan leliling .M .'-raclle iii. wIf., /Itt this ,elm he .. into the room and .nlla .... In • Ifrunle with the docter, he lIiII. The defense called its first wit.

ness to the stand during the after. noon session. The witness w .. Middleton's wife who identified herself as a laboratory tecllllicilb. Sh~ laid that the drugs her h", band prescribed ror the viclil\ were not potent.

During a night session Tuesda, night a police department criDle laboratory technician said file prescribed drugs contained stimb. lants and tranqullizers.

The YOWlg mother told the eGIIt Tuesday that alter being given • shot and a pill by Middleton she became limp and helpless. After being carried into her bedroom, she testified, Middleton disrobed and asked her to "call me Jill!' and the attack followed. She said she was nude at the time bat cdulan't remember how she PI that way. '

TO JOIN RHEE TOKYO <UPIJ - Rhee In 500,

adopted son oC former President Syngman ROOe, left Seoul by ftir Wednesday for Honolulu to jilin Rhee in exile.

Let The University lake Care of Your Banking! Call extension 2131, a.k the

payroll depa rtment to .anel

your check to Coralville Bank & Trust Co, The first 01 each . month you get Ii

slip detailing the vorloul c!)arges and the amourd

credited to your account, '

There Is' no be".r or easier Vlay to handle your banking

~usine,~, So 'imple to pul Into operationl Phona ax,

tension 2~ 31 today,

5 .. I.al •• fr •• '.wiD •••• He first showed up in court two

wepks ago on a writ oC habeas corpus. It wasn't that he was trYing to gain £roodo(ll. No, sir. Ife ' wanted ' to "show cause" or-

teeth out and leave him high and 1,844 for General McClellan, while had begun training in the use ot dry," snorted the judge. "Oh, the men of the 17th Iowa voted 213 the American M2 carbines Wednes· ~. , cf]' _~_I no. They have to give him den· to 16 for Lincoln. day. They said the carbine, a light 1JI1ta tures." Shearer died May 17, 1912, at 74. automatic weapon with a magazine

The U.S. Army sent two more 200-man military convoys across East German territory Wednesday as a Moscow Radio broadcast charged anew that U.S. troop movements in and out of West Berlin "are outright military dem­onstrations - meant to aggravate

do~~f~a~~~ pO;~~[:d that it be T1Shge3 h1'neadtheWocuhnadrgSeUftetreMd IsNSi,?Von

' a~i,J capacity of 30 rounds would be dis- & TRUlY COIIMN' a y tributed to" units" of the elite 3,600- The warning was carried in an OOP.,III 10 II .....

And so, that was why Barrett Ridge had deafened one of his man alert police as well as to pa- English-language broadcast beam- ...... r.. b, r.DJ.O. der. .

the situation in Europe."

Show Muse for whilt? asked Justice Samuel Hofstadter.

~red h~ ~clh ~ the ~dP, . e&L ~o~ cl the ~d~~y W,~-m~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ __ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ __ ~~~~~~ flashing his plates in a big shiny I

"I want them to show cause wjly they refuse me teeth," re­plied Barrett.

white smile, hack in court again USE I d A h T~~~d~~~y work all right?" ask. _. Xp 0 es not er

T.he gstonished juris( asked for a bit better explanation.

Well, said Barrett, in prison they had pulled all his teeth and then reCused to give him any sub­stitutes. Prison officials said it wasn 't a matter of refusal, just that many other prisoners were on the waiting list ahead oC Bar-

ed Hofstadter. Small Atomele' . O· eV·lce "Yes, judge," said Barrctt. "Are you satisfied with them?" "Yes, judge."

'1'1I.e day you know yoU must provide

"Yours was a very just posi-tion. No substitute for teeth is in a sense cruel and inhuman treat· ment."

Case closed, added the justice.

Suddenly, .the problem of your . . f~t~re security seems to shrink ...

,When You rememiter, as' a tuihe~an you can turn to 'our Brotherhood _

Provider Plan

This is especially important when you think of the family responsi­bilities in your future. It's reassuring to own Brotherhood Provider now ... against the day wilen 1I01l know 110" 7ltWll provi4e. Look at these big advantages:-- $10,000 of permanent, dlvidend­

paying lite insurance, • If You retire at 65, you can get

$13,00() in cash-a return of $1.83 for each dollar invesLed.·

• If you die at 65, your beneficiary gets $16,760-your total investment is only $7,097.· • Lutheran Brotherhood pays all

premiums if you are totally disabled before 60.

All this and more for an invest­rilent of just $161.30 a year ... about 44¢ a day. You pay more than tliis [or lunch.

Right now, think about your fu ture .•• the future of tbose who will depend on you. Call your Lutheran Brotherhood campus representative and join the thousanda of Lutherans who enjoy security and peace of mind in the bond of Lutheran Brotherhood. ·Ba.~t.d 0" (toe IJ «lid cm ~n-e'nt dl'vidfmd ratt!l, 'Wllil:h i. 1I0t ultara:ntt.~.

LUTHERAN 'BROTHERHOOD A "fIIll , ... , .. LIn: i /'iSURANCE IOCitlr • 701 Second Ave. 80. , Mlnne.poli. 2, Minn.

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I Him' I I : I Address I , , ICilY Ion Sllle :

: Plea.e furnish me: ! : 0 del,II. Iboul Lutheran Brolherhood life Insur.ne, : : 0 Iree r.producllon 0' Marlin Lulher window I & ______ ________ ... __ ... ________________ ... __ .J

E~WIN FRUEHLlNG AGENCY 123 C.mburn taurt S,E., (edar Rapids, Iowa, Ph.: Emplr. 2-4992

BERNARD ALDEMAN I.x lit PIIene 1· .. 1

WASHINGTON (uPIl - The United States today exploded an­other small atomic device under­ground in its nuclear weapons test program at the Nevada proving grounds.

The shot was announced by the Atomic Energy Commission in a one-sentence statement. The device

was described as of "low yield," meanipg its force was measured in thoilsands of tons of TNT.

The detonation was the sixth an­nounced blast in the U.S. weapons series, started two weeks after Russia broke the three-year test moratorium on Sept. 1.

In addition · to the weapons tests, the United States set of{ a small

I d· F · nucle&r device in an underground n ICt I rm salt mine in Carlsbad, N.M. , Sun-day in an experiment on peaceful

O C h uses of atomic explosions. n a rges It was believed that the United

Of I States has detonated a number of Monopo y nuclear explosions that were not

I announced. WASHINGTON (UPI) - 1'he I The last Soviet atomic test was

Minnesota, Mining & Manufactur- announced Nov. 4. It was the 31st ing Co. was indicted Wednesday 011 Soviet detonation announced by charges of price-fixing and con- the United States. But officials spiring to monopolize trade in sev· have said the Russian test series eral leading producls, including actually included about 50 tests. Scotch Tape. Russia has threatened to con-

A federal grand jury charged the linue nuclear testing if the West St. Paul, Minn., firm with violating sets off any more atomic explo­the Sherman Anlitrust Law in an sions, including underground explo­alleged conspiracy dating back to sions. 1931.

The nine-count indictment al· Justice Will Read leged that Minnesota Mining fixed prices, conspired to restrain and From Own Poetry monopolize the manufacture and sale of three categories of prod· F ·d t U • ucts - pressure-sensitive tape, rI ay anion magnetic recording tape and alum- Donald Justice, assistant pro-inurn presensitized lithographic fessor o[ English, will read from plates. his own poetry from 4: 15 to 5 p.m.

It said the giant company also Friday on the Sun Porch of the engaged in unlawful licensing ar-, Iowa Memorial Union. rangements. This is the fourth in a series of

The indictment was handed down poetry readings sponsored by the by a grand jury at Danville, Ill. , English Department in coopera­and announced here by the Jus- tion with the fine arts committee tice Department. of Union Board.

The three product lines account· Justice, who is .an instructor of ed for about $136 million of the poetry in the Writers' Workshop, company's 1960 sales which to- was the winner of the Lamont taled nearly $550 million. I Poetry Prize in 1959 and the Incz

Nine other corporations were Boulton Prize awarded by Poetry named as co-conspirators but not Magazine in 1960. He published a deCendents in the counts involving I book of poetry, "The Summer An· pressure-sensitive tapes. niversaries" in 1959.

NOW OPEN FOSTER IMPORTED

j ,

AUTO PARTS Po 1'1 s and Service ExclUSively

For Fore/gn Cars Corner Benton St. & Maide~ L.n. Ph, 1 ..... 1

'0 'W1h~t 1h~[P)[P)@[J\\~ i-J(f W® U'MIfu ©wnt ©if ®~ 1

Must tomorrow's travelers resort to howdahs and camel litters in order to get about? Not so, say our Ford Motor Company scientists.

First-aside from the unlikely depletion of our natural sources of gasoline-the prospects for higher-efficiency internal combustion engines are excellent.

Second, while gasoline still appears the best con· ceivable automotive fuel, our scientists are study· ing the outlook for new energy sources for cars,

Among intriguing possibilities: new energy con· version systems using degraded fuels, or fuels synthesized from low-cost power produced by nuclear fusion, Magneto·hydrodynamic gener­ators and solid-state thermoelectric and electro­chemical converters offer other possibilities,

This is all part of a broad quest for fundamental' knowledge, earning Ford its place of leadership through scientific research and engineering,

MOTOR COMPANY The American Road, Dearborn, Mlchrqan

,aODUCTI '0111 THI AMI_ICAII IIOAO • TN. 'A 11M • "'IDUITIIY. AND TH. Alii 0' e"Ael

~r SWli1gi'ng i; .. Ike: States

LANSTNG, Mich. (uPl) -er President Dwight D. Ei er ~id Wednesday "the DE of pOwer has swung far fl st.tes toward the federal menL" because the statE failed to meet pressing needs-

The states must be ever "the kind or America \I

koown" is to be preserved bower told members of Mi Con5titutional Convention.

Tbe former Republica executive said "the pre

Yule Party To

At SUI H~spitc The Quadrangle Associa

Maude McBroom House 0 Hall will sponsor a Cl party this afternoon in II atrics ward of University and in tbe Perkins School ren's Hospital , p.m.

The group, led by will begin its tour in the ward and then will go to where it will distribute ing books, games, blackboards.

An entertainment which there will be reading and caroling will

Punch, cookies and will be served.

..... ,

rraf CHarges ulted Wife

on Inlectlon alld ... ecI her '­dlarobe. After 1I0lnll to a no .... Itor·. home to telephoM .... Iee. the man .. Id. he returned .. ~ Middleton ki ...... and ""'KiIt III. wife. At this JIe/rtI he W. Into the room and Oftll ..... it • '"""It with the doct.r. he II" The defense called its first wit.

!leSS to the lltand during the •. noon session . The witness WI! Middleton's wife who Identified herself as a laboratory technic .. She Hid that the drugs her hili­band prescribed for the vict.ill were not potent.

During a night session Tuesda, night a police department criJrie laboratory technician said t't.e prl!scribed drugs contained stm.. lants and tranquUlzers.

The young mother told the eGIIt Tuesday that after being giveII a shot and a pill by Middleton she became limp and helpless. After being carried into her bedroom, she testi£ied. Middleton disrobed and asked her to "call me Jim" snd the attack followed. She sail she was nude at the time hal cOuiftn't remember how she gal that way. •

TO JOIN RHEE TOKYO CUPll - Rhee In 800.

adopted son of former President Syngman Rhee, left Seoul by air Wednesday for Honolulu to join Rhee in exile.

Let The University Take Car. of Your Banking! Call extension 2131. oak the payroll department to .. nd

your check to Coralville Bank" Trust Co. Th. flr.t of aac:h month you get a slip delailing the vorioul charges and the amount credited to your accou!". '

Th.,.. Is no beHer or easitr way to handle your banking business. So simpl. to put Into operationl Phon. .x. tension 2131 today.

5 "'nl.1 t, •• ..... tew.

~$tDtA

'"

& TRUIt COMMNY OepOI'1t '" $1 .....

........ b, " • .,J.e.

Ire; ;::s ih::;;n~;t Needs Oriental Art E xhibii Opens 1.ANS~G. lil;h. jUPI )-ForJ~'loc our . tate as vi orou. powt·r· Ie -da at SUI Art Bu,-/'J,-ng

er President Owight D. Eiscnbow- I r~1 Governm Illal entilit'. b f: . n- r -r I Y . u er S1Iid Wednesday "the pendlilum tilll to permane~t mdl\'ldual fr. - . of power has swung fa r from our dom and to n lonal growth. states toward the Cederal Govern· "I hope the rewritten draft of ment" ~use the states bale Mi higan' constilution will dellne failed to meet pressing public carefully the r ponsibilille that needs. its people believe hould belong to

The states must be ever·alert if Michigan and that they well Corth-"the kind of America we have rightly as ume ane ex rci th known" is to be preserved. Eisen. authority essential to the carrying hower told members of Michigan's out of tho. respensibiliti -:. Constitutional Con vention . EisenhDwer said tat· hould

The former Republican chief seek to preserv the principle laid executive said "the preservation down by the nation' [ound:ng

Yule Party Today At SUI Hospitals

rathers. that "those who would be and would stay free mu t t cd elernal watch again t undue e"n· trali7.ation of power in Govcrn· ment."

He aid Michigan's people could The Quadrangle Association and lead tbe way to a return of p .

Maude McBroom House oC Burge I sponsibility and authority to the Hall will sponsor a Christmas states. "lichigan's example of party this afternoon in the pedi. self-examin~ti?~ and its asseni?n atrics ward of University Hospital oC responsibIlity and authority and in the Perkins School at Child. could lead to like action in other reo's Hospital , beginning a t 1:30 states." he said. p.m. "The only limit placed by lh!'

The grouP. led by Santa Claus. constitution on th: kind o[ ,tate wiD begin its tour in lhe pediatrics Gov~rnmen.t estabh hed by I. peo­ward and then will go lo the school pie ,s.~ha~ II mu.t be r. publican In

where it will distribute dolls, color- form. EI nhow er saId. ing books. games. and magic The constitutional convcntion. blackboards. which is rewriting Michigan' 53

An entertainment hour during which there will be story telling. reading and caroling will [ollow.

year-old ba ic law. also has x· tend din vitation to former Prl' -idents Harry S. Truman and Her· bert Hoover Lo addre s the body

Punch. cookies and ice cream Truman said he would speak here will be served. sometime next month.

_ DOORS OPEN 1:15-

I~:[tj!~ui TO-DAY

Oriental tArt-from Iowa East mHts West bell inning Friday in the Gallery of the SUI Art Build inll as Orient.1 art objects from across the stlt. 110 011 display. Above Ir. (left ) an lath century de_ mI.Ik. alld • 1fth antwy India n wood cerving " OUrll. Killing the DemOfl."

Stamp Windows To Stay Open SaturdaYI Sunday

Patrons have becn cooperating with the Post OHi e 0 far thi holiday sea on. according to Iowa City Postma ter W It r J . Bor-row.

IiI' reminded Iowa ilions again

to mail packages and ClIrd early. to follow proper procedures for mailing packa e, nd to obtain wrappers for in·town nd out-of· town bundle of mail .

STARTS TO-DAY "SEE IT BEFORE YOU GO HOME" ~h~t°c7re~.' ~ Illinois Girls

~::~~. .. Offered Grant

"The P>lrcel post nd stamp win­dows." he added. "will be open all day Saturday and Crom I to 5 p.m. Sunday."

B rrow also stated th t parc I post ha been heavier than WAS snlicip ted and thal. i[ it conlin­ues. ther may be light d lay in deliverl . Til weath r has also added to the slowup in getting moil

- ~Iu. - Color Cartoon "SEARS ANa SEES"

And • Specl.' "FOOTBALL HIGHLIGHTS"

BIG . . . .

Plus • Color Ca rtoon " UNSUNG HERO"

~-

..

for a r ~erry Ch~istmas

~~ctS~tll Christmas is a sell~ ~l l of light and ~ laughter,

·but it's also a season that requires extra safety precautions, For safety's sake, check decorative

' . . light sbings for necessary ~fo ~~i:===~~ 'repairs and repiacements.

Place lights ' away from : . . tre~ needles and arrange '. cords so they do not

contact metal objects. Don't leave tree lights

. bumiDg while away from . home. Give candles

special c are when used as holiday dec·

.. orations. Be alert for safety and yours will be a merrier as well :is a safer ~hrisbnas.

A $2.500 fellow hip is being offer­ed by the Ulinoi State Federation of Business and ProCessional Wom­en ' Club to worn n who has been an Illinoi re ident for at I ast five years.

The Celia I\l. Howard Fellowship i offered annually for tudy ot FleLcher School of Law and Diplo­macy, a graduate school oC interna tional affair limited to 50 men and 20 wom n in 1edford. Ma .

The program oC study is de. ign. ed to provide graduate training for careers in diplomatic ervice. in the niLed Nation and other in·

IternatiOnal agencies, In interna · tional business, finance. journal· ism. teaching. and r . earch. The cours of tudy leads to !II .A. and Ph .D. degrees.

[n considering applicants. spe('lal consideration will be given to tho with previous graduate study or practical experience in bun ines or government. AI 0 considered will be women who have majored in economics. government. or history and who also have extensive work

to patrons. •

o easonal employes have been added y t. Th y do not come to work until unday . All mail m· ploye have been working lool! r hours to fill the n ed, Barrow said,

Barrow said there will be fooL and Pllrccl po t delivery on Sun· day in town but not on rural route, .

A i tant Po tma t r Shea advi e late mailer to us air mail. special delivery. and . pedal hnndlinll warnings to CacU!· .ate operlltions.

Shea al 0 requests the u e ot first e1as mail with return ad· dre. s for greeting cnrds. This en· obi the mail r to seal the n· velope. add a me age in Id , :md get th I ter or card back in ca e oC non-delJvery.

in the other two fields . They should J FK SENDS LETTERS ?e conversant in at lea tone lor- JAKART (PI! _ Foreign eign language and should have a B A B S d b 1 962 Mini. ter Suba/ldrlo said Wednes· . . or .. egrce y ept. • 1 .

Applicalions. credentials and sup- day that Pre ident Kenn dy has porting doto must be on file with sent a I tLer to Pr id nt Sukarno the Celia M. Howard F ,llowship outlining U.S. views on the West Fund Committee on or before Jan . Irian Dutch New Guinea Que· 17, tOO2. tion . ~tllils were not di clo ed.

-----------------------Good listening­

Today By LARRY BARRETT

Written for The D.fI, low. n "PAN-AMERICAN CRISIS" is

the title oC the first of this day's talk Ceature at 8 :30 a .tn. A ew York Times correspondent in the area. Tad Szulc. and ev ral stu· dents of Latin American afCair will combine in a discus ion rec· orded by the Georgetown Univer· sity Radio Forum.

FORMER ART DEPARTMENT HEAD, Dr. Le ter Longman, will be heard at 2 p.m. in a lecture. "Conformity and the Arts", deliv· ered recently al Simpson College. A member of the SUI faculty for some twenty years, Longman is now director oC tbe Department oC Art at U.C.L.A.

AS FOR THEATRE. tonight·s of­fering is "Venice Pre erl'ed". a Re toration play by Thomas Ot· way. It will begin at 8. A BBC World Theatre production, "Venice Pre erved" enjoys a spiffing cast headed by Sir Donald WoWl. The tragedy - for that's what it is, make no mistake about it - con· cerns a plot to overthrow the Venetian republic in t618. The ea r· Iy action is reputed to be reminis· cent of the conspiracy in "Julius Cae ar" (Shakespeare's, I up­pose). Special m usic has been added "being variations on a con· temporary theme by Henry Pur­cell."

BEFORE THE THE ATRE. to­night at 6. there will be another interesting program oC music from

on WSUI · the 1961 Vi~na Festival.

OlD A S RlIEIl'lGOW " - the opera, not the beer - will be of· fered tomorrow even ing at 7; 15.

I

"0 kilOCycles Thune"" Oecember 14. 1"1

8:00 Motnln, Ch.peJ 8:15 New. 1:30 Momln, F",' ure 9:00 Mulllc 1:30 Boolub"lf 9;J5 New.

10:00 Mu c II :S:; ComJn6 Evenls II :58 New. C.psule 12:00 RhYthm Ramble. 12,30 News J2;U News Sack, round

1:00 Mu Ic 2:45 Ne .... 2:50 Music 4:25 ew. 4:30 Tu TIme 5; 15 SPOtt. Tim. 5 :30 New. 5:45 New. Blck,round 5:00 Eventn, Conc.rt a:oo Evenln, ., lbe Thea l re:

0 1W8Y. Venice P reserYed 9:00 Trio 9:45 New. Fl.nal

10:00 Insl.lht JO:01 SIGN OFf'

Make It A Delicious Christmas

• • • Ch,i.tma. Candies Fruit Balk ... Tosty Nuts

Get 'em ..

Coral Fruit Market 'l Miles west lilt Highwey ,

TONIGtJif PRE VACATION DANCE

ROCK IN FLAMES THE HAWK

The OrienLal Art uhibit opming Friday at the new Art GsU~n' in the Arl Building displays objects from 23 collf'Ctio around lbe tate. "I was urprised to ftnd $0 much

oriental art in Iowa." ~id Chu­l! ing Li. assistant prof r of art. "I (01 and ~w many more things than anticipated." He added, "We ha"~ a rather impre -h'e represen­tation here nd not e\ery quality object bas been inclUded."

The collectors. Chu·tsinc phil ized. afl~ not all peei r they m rely have th int re t and love of art n ry to , ther line &amp!

The most "aluable slngle paint. ing Is worth about $3.000 and the I'TIa.t valuabl item is s piece \J( jad worth approximately $5.000

Chu·t in, said that Ihe exhibit wa brought into being due to the llrowing inter t in th Ori nt and

CHRISTMAS GIFT SUGGESTIONS

IlAJuroNY flAlL: Six 11M! ste~o )lull.Luk _ nal loaler an" lor Chrlatm .. Catdc llapOr1eol. fonlp pOrtables; neords, radloe, stereo- O.d, Mom. SI n, and Brolber ., l.nl\l.,.L...-eDII~"PO"J")( .. "..11

tapH. REDDICK SH .~lon. nor; BOOKSHOP.

SWAILS o/(H/I nOOftr acuum d.ane.... wuhe.... and poUIhers.

U. Imported ,Ia w.rer· bottles. ntH, .k . • FURNmJR.£..

LADIES me ... reconctlUoned .... t~hH •••• 611 ...... t.ed .•• ~.lOnable price •••• . • 1 WA YNERS JEWELR Y.

A nf)' opedal .n-- _t .... Thllnclerdoud •.••• 1 JUWWOOD

ANI) RO •

GOODYEAR SERVIa STOU otl,ra all to)' .,. IS" dbeount.

MAl.COLII J EWELEllS p •• len I. ----tree-Iorm mrJJ~ IllYer Jewell'J/

CIIRIST1tAS T1IEES ..,. .. 1hI, lad ~omplei<t line of bird reede .. and r,.6:;r.'1e .. , BUNNEItAN &£ED by Orl>.

ANDES CANDlES oIfe ... an IInu .... 1 ilne 01 Chrbt ..... novell~1 pI ... II

H,ulllr UIOrtment of fine cantil Gel Jl'our ~PJl' 01 8n1.,. CaUoP' ..

Save on loy •• nd ,lfla tor ... ryona "ComJn, Fu.,... . . . . ChrbtmU ., WES1l:RJI1 AUTO. p ..... publk.tlon prke, ~" • . • .

J.nuary. Jt82~.J5 at HAWKEY!: BOOK TORE.

the ~ pansion of tud! In lhe I. I'UI1tS lor beautlful atu1lnt U.er ar a. Uo~?Orh.m, WaltaC<!, a"d Dlema. f100r and

I. FUlKS lor dlIIDOIld and CUltlired pearl nm-ch.ln ... nd pendantL

Followln, the exhibition, two The Ideal lilt at. 'OVO~; H •• d. w~J· :roll peak r will deli\'er lectur s. on quarten tor: bky~le. trIe)du, . _TtJ~RIC~. :-:::--:-::= __ --:----:-:--

TEPIi£NS: The London For Ill ..... eoat ••••• TIle perfect rift for

any man. ..

ace UOri .. lOR \ • F'UBNJTt1IUIl for ~or-on J an. 15 and the second. on YOUNC TUDIO: Photo IJ1IeUn, I .lo. 'Wow. m.ple leceuorl., Jan. 17. YOUNG STUDIO: Th. IJIIt only nrds eu lom m.de III our dark· cwltlllU le/ll ... acnen r_ ctlv1de ...

10U can ,h' •....• parlralt. room. ....olttn' '.nelll. •

Th fudlctu~wm beg~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ by Sherman Lee, director of the » Cleveland [us urn of Art and well· known Orl ntal art xpert. His topie will concern Chin e paint· ings.

On Jan. 17. Unh' r tty oC Penn· ,ylvani art prof r St lis Kram­ri ch. also a well·known expert on Orient I arlo will pr. nt her id as on Indi n art. Kramri h WIll

spe k. lIS P rt of th Bo I lure program.

Mobile Missiles •

Program Dropped WASHINGTON I.fI - The Penta·

gon killed p I a n Wednesd y to mount MlnUI m n Int rcontinenl I balli Lic mi 'il son hard-to-hit moving train .

Instead. it acted to boo t th r 0 r ceo [ lind r~ound·launehed Minutemcn by perhap 50 per c nt.

Advertising Rates Three Da,. ...... 1~ • Word SIx Day. .. ....... l Dt • Word TeD Oay, ... ... :u a Word OM MOIItb ....... W a Word

(Minlmum Ad, I Worda)

CLASSIJlIED DISPLAY ADS OM IIIMrtlon a Month . $1 .16' F in Insertions a Month .. SUO' T'lft InHrtlon. a Month .. tOc'

• R.te .. .... Each eel""," Illch DeadLine U ;80 u.m.

Phone 7-4191 From' a.m. to 4;30 p.m. An Exporien(ed Ad Tak.r Will Help You With Your Ad.

THE DAILY IOWAN RESERVES A Defen e 0 partm nt pokes· THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY

man srud th Penlaion has dec,d~ , ADVERTIStNG COpy " not Lo eo ohend with the mobile • linutemon program." = Secretary or DeCen Ro rt S.

{cNemara h recomm nd rath er that lunds b allocated Cor an Who Do. . It? inerea d number of 6.SOO·mile. - ------ - -------­r nie tinut m n mplaced in be· low.ground sites. the spoke man said.

He dId not S3)' how mu h mo money would be ked tor Minute· m n in next year's budget OP how many additional ml II would be planned.

OffiCials iave no 'ca. on Cor th decision to drop the once highly touted moving tan: t idea 00 which

------------------ -"IOWA CITY CRE'tAIUAL IRV-JCl!!." 'l'ypln,. dictation. tape·record· 1ft" book.lteepl.nl, I~com. l .... I<I<'lal

"~UrltYL ",lmflQlr.phln!!. photocopy, Over ~'orct.l IOpiln. Dru,. Phone 8-nOt. J2-29

the Air Force hns spent about $101 rypJn, million.

_ry;.;p_l_nSJ:..-________ 4 Room. For Rent 16 JER1W NYALL Elp~trlc ":"n>1nI Sa ... ' RARE /lOOMS. Male. KIUMII. prtvl-

Ice, phone 8-113. ___ ~ lere • W &t Ide. 1410. lHI

TYPING, U~rIe""CI. f"uon.bl. . -----Dial 7·2447 I .. R ORADUATE men'. room. Cookln". 5

N. CUnlon. 7-*1 or 1-6417. 12-15 _C_h_il_d_C_G_'e ________ 5 'e1 OF DO B

01.1 7-2l182 IVANTF.D, Baby JIlin, tn my hnm*. J •

Ca1.I 7 ... 007. 12-14 ROOM WITH kltchen.tt,,"; rap",

Automotiv. phon I .n4 TV room. Pine Ed

12., ..

I MOI.' . I-SOII. .3IJ

MU T leU ItIIl VoU.-w., I\. 1.3168 • 12-15

MAJ R A [) I 'OR repalN fllClU.dllll tor I n m.k ; altO e pert power

",ow"r rvl... . T .. o m ch.nl on duty. ~.v·1 . k II , rv'r . Corner 01 Colle,. and GUbt'rt , Phon. 7·11911-

l2-llJR

Wanted II

WILL BlI)' l"dlln·He.d penn/d. If cen'" ... h AlIIo other CO," • DIll

7048$4 or 7~ I. 12·16

\ ANT. Good Uad &tar 0, b'"y"I", melro •• Dill 1·51 .. , . 1201' . ,

-;;P~e""ts-----~-------';"'-:-;;:9 WANTED~ Roommate to wre .part· m nl doa In , Very nice. 1-0413.f r

500 p.m. 12·18

19 H .. lp Wonted --~-----------------~

NEED BABY ITTER In f'lnllb'n. P.rk. 2 children. 2 month. and ,. month •.

Mlle. For Sale 1 t Ett •• U. J.n." lo 5 on "'Hk d.YI. ________________ 0,., 8-6684. 12·18

OPRA'O RECORDER ",lIh In-lruc· WOMA or ma.n to cook Sund.y noon II"., book. Woodwind 011 . Phone m.1 tor ~'rll rnlly. D,.I 7·2t83. 11023

8 "110. 1~·18

led. Wo"\~n;: Work Wanted 20

I.EM .ft.rallona. maklnll UlUe .Ir.o cloth In,. Phone a.U87. 1·IOR

7SISTEii ]I; ~ble ton Ie . Re· movable • -fl!. 0t.1 8-1104 .'I~r Rides or Rld.rs Wanted

800 p .m. 12·14 23

1'YPlNG. ",1_O,up1>"'r. nOlllf)' co SDIRECTOR I \ C cd public. M.I'J/ V. Bu.rlUl. 400 Iowa . . rumpe . ,0 con·

• . I

,. Ilut,. p.,hln, A/. d'IIIIIt,,. too f,,.P At 21 •• ctraSi Nancy Sinatra is 011

her w.y up. But is her did push· Ing her too hard? In th /$ week" SalurdayEvenin, ~r, YOU'/l meet l dlJlJrhtersof show·biz CflIeb{It,es. And learn how their pMlM/$ feel about another ,t., in tire famIly. SHC/A t: 19112 C"IfHQAI '''CfS Dec. 16/Ssue ~ /lOW 011 S.M. •

;1.'. 8.n~ "u1JdJn,. Dial 7-211ll1 1:1-17 dillon . E'C'elltnl 1o" •. C.II 7·114911 " '" ailer 4;00 p.m. 1.7 I)!AP!m ren. I oervl..... I'Irw f>rO('~

Laundry. Otal 7-86116 11·19R

n GEl'l'S TV. Cuaranteed ,,,I vision Mrv1c1n, bv ~ertlt"'d .. ",Iceman ~m~ 8-10111 or 8-354.2. J.4R

TYPING: Neal, accur.te. DIal 7·7188. 1-51\

~~--------------TYPlNG - E"perlen~d . reuoneble. P hone 7051.. U-18R

u.&CTIUC I,yJIln,. A«urate, ex· fWtrtence4. Dona Evant, :''tone

PORTABLE la,nlvo. Stereo. 1 veer Old, P rie t condition . Dial 8-1 I.

12>14

13 1 ------------------------- 1 ) 01..0 IAL hom 4\' " 10'. Take I

over paymenlll. 8-8S3a. 12. t5 1

18S6 NEW MOON. a' "46' lar ••• n· bU, waah.r-dI'J/'" Call ~Ul. 12.16

.... J . U-JSR Apartment. For Rant 15 I'YPING - ...,274 bero,.. (II • m.. ... II<! r

4 p.m.. aU weekend. 11·28R

l'YPlNG ".,t, . " UrltI, eaperlenl'f'tI. C.U " 110. J-4Jt

I'YPlNO. JBM typewr1l11r. 7·2111a. 1-5R

a·ROOM APARTMENT lor r~nl Prl­v.le bath. rurnWoed. No child,.." nr

pels. D'.I 1-5852 or 7~$53. 12.12

M~ TUOENT lo Ihare . p.rtm nt . I ])'.1 '-'118. 12·20

TRREJI! "nlcel1 Clll'nlshed" I·bedroom nU:SE .se.dlJne <:omln, up. Need apartments. All utWlI • furnished.

.n uperlC!n~d IJi'plst? C.II 8-51711 7·722S. ' 11l-15 after 6:011 p.m. 12-21

MONIY LOANED DIameIMh, C-r .. .

r"..IIt.n, W.td_, L ....... .

GUM, Muslc.1 Instr1lllMnt. 01.' 7-4535

HOCK·IYE LOAN

Ignition Carburetors

GENERATORS STARTaS Irlgus & Stratton Motors

Pyramid Services

THE ..

DAILY

IOWAN ..

ADS

PHOTOFINISHING , SAVE 2Ic

~AlTt CUSTOM SlRVIC. DIne III eur 0- DartrrMnt YOUNG'S STUDIO

• Ie. D16I"ue '21 S. OubUltuo 01.1 1-57U --------~---------------------------------------- -----------~--------------By Jobooy part -----

t.' , I'!at,....-.-.:;.. _ _ • • . .. W~~=n:.·~· .0.:. <..P: C()

• . '"(Y • - ""'~~ -~~ ....

. , . '1

-----=""'"=-"" F " .

BEETLJ: BAILEY By MORT WALEEB

AND smAl6Im:N UP nt05E Rt\NKS

ott I'U, liE . eemNG uP

.~ YOU SU'IS

.... ,-

"'&AN.'

. -\

: I

I I

I I

I

••

Pag. I-TH! DAILY lOWAN-iowl (Ity, la._TliurlCley, OK. 1., "'! . U.N . . (;roup Seeks Disarmament -

Votes To Resume Talks SUI Senate Seeks Gifts for African Starvation Relief

UNITED NATIONs, N.Y. :A'I -­The U.N.'s main PoliticaL Com­mittee approvea unanimously Wed­nesday night a joint Sovlet-U S. proposal that a new 18,nation body resume the long-dead-Iocked nego­tiations of disarmament.

The SUI Student Senate has have not yet tackled the task of I in said also that there are "quite asked students, faculty and Iowa dlsarmlnll," he declared. I a few obstacles" to agreemer.l ou Citians to contribute to a relief He said that "because the arms disarmament , and that Lh\! new fund for African people suffering

race bears so crucially on the sur- body faces complicated npgolia- from an intense famine. vival of the human race, even a tions. Contributions may be sent t6 the beginning must be welcomed by He pledged cooperation with all African Famine Relief Committee vast relief by aLi the peoples of Lhe members "but especially wiLh the in the Student Senate Office in the

In a rare display of unanimity the two big powers joined in sub· mitting the resolution to the com· mittee, asking thal the negotia­tions be' resumed on an urg~lIt basis, and that the Is-nation group report back by next June 1.

world." United States." Iowa Memorial Union. From there , He suggested that the disarm:)- Oelegat" from Britain, Melli· the contributions will be sent to the

ment negotiations be resumed in co, Argentina and many oth.r Oxford Committee Cor Famine Re­Geneva. No date has yet been nations joined In hilllinil the lief in England. agreed upon. U.S.-Soviet allrHment. The famine has affected persons

He caUId the Sovl.t-U.S. ilgr .. - The Soviet-U.S. talks had been ' in Tanganyika, Swaziland, and oth-

. But both the Un It tel States and the Soviet Union warned that the road to eventual allreement would

ment on the new negotiating body in progress off and on since last er African areas for the past two a gratifying development. I March in New York, Washington years. The. Oxford Commi.ttee has Soviet delegate Valerian A. Zor- and Moscow. been droppmg food from alfplanes,

------- --:------:::--===- but heavy flood conditions have

be III difficult _. j,

Agreement was by acclamation. No vote was taken_

Adlai E. Stevenson, chief U.S. delegate, described the commit­tee action as "most gratifying." He added that it represented only a beginning.

"We have found the way to re· sume consideration of actuat dis· armament mea.ur .. ~ · · but we

Yule Plans Announced By Jaycees

Tbe Iowa City Junjor Chamber of Com mer c e Wednesday an­nounced new plans for its 1961 Chl:istmas aid program.

The Jaycee plans Include three area projects: the needy childrens' Christrtias party, Christmas bas­kets for needy children, and the annual Christmas home lighting contest.

The Jaycees wiIJ host approxi­mately 150 children this year at the Christinas party. Entertain­ment, a meal and gifts will be pro­vided lor the children.

For the 14th year, the Jaycees

SantaJ s Little Helper Janine Poznanski, 6, pours some hot tea for her father, Frank, who works as a Santa Claus in Chicago collectinll funds for charity on a downtown str"t corner. The temperature W.dne.day was about 15 degr ... above zero which made the cup doubly welcome.

- AP Wirephoto are asking local residents to con- ----------------.,----------

tribute Christmas bas k e t s for U S T DO - T Off ( t needy children. Earlier this month, e e 0 ISCUSS an U S the Jaycees distributed baskets to

ri~~~e~~o~to:h~~P~~:~~~hlo~~~t~~~: WOlth Comm" on Market Group chants, and through goods bought with the profits from the Jaycee sale of Christmas wreaths j the .bas­kets will be filled with toys, can­ned goods and staples.

Tile third project, the Jaycee Christmas home lighting contest, has undergone some changes. In the past one prize was given for the bes~ over.all decorations, with first prizes for three main areas -originality, ~auty and message.

This year, the contest will be judged in four areas - religious theme, message, beauty and origin­aUty. The home which accumulate~ the largest number of points will receive the sweepstakes award .

WASHINGTON <uP!) - Presi­dent Kennedy Wednesday sent a trade expert to Brussels to work out an agreement with the Euro­pean Common Market for a big tariff-cutting pact.

The White House announced that Howard W. Petersen, Kennedy's special assistant on trade policy, is flying to the Belgium capital~ headquarters of the Common Mar­ket - to discuss the joint tarif! cut.

Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said the purpose of Petersen's trip is to reach agreement with the Common Market "on the remain·

Rockefeller Blames ing issues standing in the way of the Geneva tariff negotiations."

The United States and the six· 'Demo Boss' for member European Economic Com·

munity common market have been

issues now involved "lie largely in the agricultural field."

Informed sources have said that in the Geneva negotiations, the United Sta~es has exhausted the tariff-reducing authority that Con­gress granted the Eisenhower ad­ministration in 1958.

That Congressional act allowed reductions of up to 20 per cent. But it forbade cuts on many items where duties alteady were con­sidered at the "peril point" for domestic industry."

Kennedy intencts to press for a liberalized tariff policy when Con· gress reconvenes next January. He has said that this is necessary for the United Slates to deal with the Common Market, composed of France, Germany, Italy, the Neth· erlands, Belgium and Luxembourg. Retirement Report carrying on secret negotiations in

Geneva. bl PRINCETON, N. J. <UPIl _ Informed sources said Tuesday I.C. Pu ic Hearing

New York Gov. Nelson A. Rocke- night that U.S. negotiators and the common market nations are 0 5 Interchanges [eller said Wednesday a New York close to a major tariff-cutting n

City "Democratic boss" may have agreement. . S h did F ·d been the source of a newspaper re- The sources said that under the C e u e rl ay port that the governor will not sclek agreement, the common market I " . re-election and may even resign would probably make a 20 per cent A puhhc h~armg. on the ments before his present term ends. across-the-board cut on industrial Of. constructing five I~terstate

Rockefeller, attending a meeting products. I Hlgh~ay 80 intercha~ges. 10 Iowa in connoction with the Delaware The United States in exchange City IS scheduled Friday at 10:15 River Basin Commission, termed would agree to less extensive cuts. a.m.. . lhe report "absurd and without A source said that one concession I The hearmg, Which was suggest­validity.' • would be tariff reductions of up to ed by Congressman Fred Schwen-

The New York Daily News re- 20 per cent for foreign cars and a gel, Will be atte~ded b~ R. M. ported that Roc~efeller probably number of other products. Tutto~, deputy chle.f engmeer for would give up the governorship be- It was learned Wednesday that the HI.ghway CommIssion. S~hwen­cause of personal problems _ the the remaining points to be worked gel WIll not attend , according to impending divorce Crom his wife of out involve agricultural prOblems. , Mrs, James A, Van Allen , 5 W?od-31 years and the recent loss of his Accompanying Petersen on the land, who announced the meetmg. son, Michael, in New Guinea. flight to Brussels was Charles In a letter. to Mrs. Van Allen,

Murphy undersecretary of agri-I ~chwengel said he th~ught the en-Winning re-election had been con-' lire schedule concermng the con-

sidered a necessity if Rockefeller culture. . .. struclion of interchanges should be is to be considered as a serious Salm.ger . said Murphy IS gomg restudied to determine what chang­contender for. the 1964 Republican along ill view of the lact that the es can be made in the public in-presidential nomination. terest.

Rockefeller said the 'report that I $2,500 Fire Destroys Formerly, it was .understood that he planned to quit was "wishful ' Schwengel was agamst the plan of thinking" on the Pllrt of the Dem-.. Local Garage, 2 Cars ~onstructi~g so m,~ny interchanges ocratic "boss" whom he declined I In Iowa City, In hiS letter to Mrs. to identify. ' , Fi~e destroyt;d a shed, two auto- V ~n Ulen, he, said that it is .~

made it difficult for the Africans to travel to the areas where the food lands.

The Prime Minister of Tangan-. yika said that 366,000 persons have been aided by the Oxford Commit­tee. But the floods have caused transportation costs to rise and consequently the Oxford Commit­tee has spent nearly all its funds.

Sioux City Election Results Now Valid

SIOUX CITY IA'I - Validity of Sioux City's municipal election last November in which the election of three City Council candidates was challenged by the three losers \las upheld Wednesday by the 4-3 vote of a board of judges.

The deciding vote was cast by Mayor George W. Young who was chairman of the board , The other six judges were divided evenly be­tween representatives of the win­ners and the losers.

The elected candidates were Dr. James E, Reeder, Jr.. Stanley Greigg and Julian r. Thorgel'son, all new members of the council.

The losers were Donald Oldis, Mrs. Mary Jean Jacobs and W. W. Wilson, former mayor. I

Testimony taken by the board concerned alJeged irregularities in four precincts.

The losing candidates clai med that lhe city clerk erred in refus­ing to permit them to have chal­lengers present in these precincts while the votes were being oounted on election night.

Thy also protested a ruling by Assistant City Attorney Robert J . Crary that the right to have chal­lengers present did not apply to non-partisan municipal elections. They said they would appeal ~he case to District Court.

Heavy Crydal GI.

SNACK TIME HOSTESS SET

.. "t .• Iea.

.I~ .. and •• t.h.". '14" "'wl. .............

\r-_ mo!1 .68 GIANT

SANTA fACE ~·.IW. F ......

.......... :.w25 PLATE GLASS

mrMIRROR Ixc.n..t

~ . ca.t.t.a.",..

'4 .. $995 , -

PITTSBURGH PLATE GLASS COMPANY

122 E. Collelle 1-1161 The governor said I. was "ill- ! mob~les, an mr compressor, ~nd misunderstanding an? that he I~

teresting" that the story was pr~- fenCing early Wednesday morning nei~her for nor agamst the plan

pared by "writers who are not at 1711 Roc:hester Ave. Total dam- aa~s~lt~no~w~s~ta~n~d~s.iiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiii~!iiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Albany correspondents, but city age accordmg to the owner, M. D .• hall correspondents" In New York. McCreedy, 2 1 Hawthorne A v e.,

-.,--------- amounted to around $2,500.

So uys Is week'S S,turd.y f:vtn!1II PINt. Ha tell. !fllY th.y're ;nf.rlor. And ,iVN his recipe for puttin, "the little bellts" in th.ir plac •. (P. S.: Mr. Albet I. h.ppily married.)

UKIAtt '''2 '''''/4o". ,,,GIS Dec. 16 Inu. ~~ nowonu',. ~~.

e • ---"',.,.,.. ....... II~ .. . .. _~ ..

The blaze was attributed to a short in the wiring.

McCreedy, 0 w n e r of the Mc­Creedy Construction Company, said he would tear down the remaining parts of the, structure an~ build an­other garage-elsewhere.

The carll burned were an old Packard, which McCreedy, mem­ber of classic car groups, used Cor replacement parts, and a 1950 Pon­tiac belDnging to the tenant on the property.

Christmas Trees CHRISTMAS ROPING AND

DECORATIONS

The Nicest Selection

In Townl

Cor.1 Fruit M.rket Z MI~ W'lt til Hi,hway ,

WOW! '1011 . PlfZZA 80~

JUST THINK •••

A PIZZA and a BOTTLE of BEER ONLY $1.10

at the

PIZZA VILLA WE DELIVER TOO!

OPEN: 5 P.M. -1 A.M. DAilY 5 P.M. - 2 A,M. FRI., SAT. DIAL 8-5735

TASTY

BRACH'S HOLIDAY

ASSORTED

HOCOLATE BIG 3-LB.

BOX

5 LB. BOX

FULL POUND BAG

EGGNOG NON

ALCOHOLIC

REG.

75c VALUE

SHELLED WALNUTS Diamond

Brand 98·c

BROWNIESiMmIti$89 RIDING $ 3 33 OUTFIT I HORSE AT 05CO

~~~~----------------LEATHER BILLFOLDS --~ ....... PLASTIC COATED

RONSON eFL MARK II PLAYING' CARDS

JOHN .. REB CANNON

4 ROLL RIBBON TIE •

°

IN GIFT PACK 24 IN. DOLL HI-CHAIR

2i::::$15 BIG METAL SERVICE LOTIONS STATION COMPLETE __________ 1 WITH CARS

°

DOLL BUGGY €14 -&'q;e celoMlc CJ~~~; N t· II • AGED a lona Y IMPORTED $ 98 Advertised BRIAR

Since 1923

REG. $8.95 VALUE

STANDS 29

INCHES HIGH

PIPE ORGAN

EMENEE ELECTRIC MOL 200

Reg. $20.00

$1388

PARKER T BALL JOTTER

A FINE

PRACTICAL

GIFT

• HARD VULCANITE BITS

• VARIETY

OF SHAPES

OPEN SUNDAYS THRU DEC. 17th

TINSEL

f~25C SET OF 7 MULTIPLE

TREE LIGHTS 88~

TOM THUMB

VALUE

CASH Register

Compltlt

With

Plly

Monty

TREE TOPS REG. 49c 39C

MOLDED HORSE

ALL STEEl

FRAMI

WITH TR~IL'R

$4.88

.'

Says 'Wron

Chane •

Comb Intel from LI WASHINGTON -

lense Secretary Ro: patrie said Thursda gon might have bE think it should order active duty to meet war emergencies.

In candid remark conference, Gilpatric planners now though the best strategy mi crease in the size : of active forces .

Gilpatrick also s won't decide until n the timing for releB! 000 reservists mobilil

Officials, includlr have contended tha' call.up was the onl cre.se U.S. fore .. q luade Soviet Pre Khrulhchev that meant business in I GiJpatric said he

reserves could be I

demobilized to meet minisLration foresee series of crisis slim sia.

"I may have be that," he conceded. that we mght have regular forces to d type of recurrent c the reserve for large,

Gilparic told new hours after h Is pre' that he was "refe, Ilble res'''''e eallll' future criSl'." He s.

$700-~ For Sh

WASHINGTON ("I istration proposed $?OO-million civil def pointed at cost-shari caliUes to build falll schools, hospitals an structures.

Deputy Secretary Roswell L. Gilpatric Kennedy will send hi of the federal civil ( Congress in his bu next month .

he $700-million 0 fiscal year beginnin would be in additior million program M which includes a Sill

LAST CHAN

01 DELI\ Students who wist

Daily Iowan deliver Christmas vacation the Circulation 0" Communications C 5 p.m. today.

Leftists Bomb

More J Combined from L

CARACAS <uP!) American violence Thursday night onl) fore President Kef uled arrival here S win g and Commu hurled Molotov cocl U.S. enterprises hel'l language Caracas and the Sears, Roet partment store.

* *

Tot ,..,1", .".,. wearing ml ..... II. Pollc. ThurlClay • • ....... w .....