Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1954-11-16

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Transcript of Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1954-11-16

Serving the State University of Iowa

Campus and Iowa City

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C eh . 1 O,· TIIeIIda,. &lid WeclaMda,. Dl&'M

. ClmpUS es:, lIVe ~~:~=2=~u: President VlrJdI M. Hllocher

Monday nllht atruclt the first match in a matc:hUIh~ cere-

Tlcketa an a .. Uabie ..... pre­__ utloa ., .... eal JD carU 11& NOla lA, 8clhaeff., lulU. The .. -nee cJ.- at t:3O p ...

mony which ofllelaH,. opened the -_-=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--=--: _ _ ______________ ~-'--~_:_-=----------..:.-___ ~-~ 1954. Campus Cheat drive. fdonday the Cafl1l)Ul Chst

committee distributed about 2,-590 matchbooks to be used at the rallY. One hundredth of that number - 25 - ~re struck when Hancher lit uP a torch held by Herity the Hawk. The torch syrnbollud the U»!lt that the proceeds 0( the tund would brin( to persons in n~.

In hioS address Hlecher polnted out that "Ute .harlr\l Ql what we have with the people who are less fortunate is a practical ap­plication of the Seeond Com­mandment-Ion l~,. neighbor.

'o.Dye,. .. .,...... "I hope that )'ou and those

who eampaiJn lor thll lund will be able to convey th.t thought to your (rlends lind thOl4l whom you soUcH," he aal4 to ItJa 2/1·peraon audleJJte. •

Iowa Memorial Union Addition Nears Com!)letion .. r

UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (.4')--: The United states dramaticallY Informed the UN Monday it has set aside 220 pounds ot lission­able materials to activate atomic reactori f~r peaceiul pUrPoseli throu,h the world.

It was the first time In the atomic age that thk country has o{tered to ship so much atomlc ~tedela. estlmated to be ellO h

. ProI. Ro'bet1 Hlca,aeioSen, dlr­~tor of the school of reUglon and adviser to the Chest plan­nin, committee. alJ;o addreased the assem!)la,e. W" Pippert, A-4, Mason City, Will rputer of ce­remonies, and l1\e~rs of the SUI marchio, band provided

on~ atomic bG$b, oUlsidlf ita Iblll-If.era 0lI a miSsion ~f peace.

(Dl Photo b, Ho .. lo Groen ... ld) SUI PRESIDENT Vlrcll Hancher lItta tbe matclh. that .i,nal. the official kickoff o~the 1954 campus cbest drive. Hancher expreaed lite hope tba, the few at(,endlnc would convey hJs words aD' the Iplrlt of tbe drive to their friends. I

(ity Council Delays Adi ':

music for the rallt. Michaelsen told the Jfoup "U

we are concerned about a better and more peaceful world. then it Is o\lr job to .help make 1\ so in any way we can. We can shO'W our Interest by ,1,,101 our one dollar to the C8{npua Cbest drive."

The funds acquired in the drive wUl ,0 to llye or,anIza­tiOIll ooOlen In • poll of hOUlII\I units and other ClltnpUS organi­zations.

The five a~: World Unlver.lty Service, a

loan fund for the needy foreign students at SUI; Save the Chil­dren federation; CARE book fund; National Scbol.rahip Ser­vice, anc! the fund tor Negro Students.

WlUJ.cement of an auction In Iowa Mllinorial Union. the pro­cedes from which :Mil supple­ment CampUl Chest funds. wu made by Plppert.

The luctlon /Will be held Thursday at 7:30 .p.m., and arti­cles are being aubmitted bl(" stu­dents, faculty, and lawa City Merchants.

THE ADDmON TO tbe Towa Memortal UnJ.D shown above ~ oo .. trucUon coDtlaae' MondaJ Js expeeted &e be OpeD for • 'aelent use Ihor1ly aner &be ldan 0' tlle Moond Mmaier. Coa-

(0.11, I.... Ph.~ ~, 'an, •••• r> .truetlon on tile additional laelliUea, wbloh wlil Include IOUD,eI. NW"", lanes aDd a teITaee. was bellln In May .

Case Switches .Sides In Censure Row WASHINGTON (iP) - Sen. ------------------------------ ---

Francis Case (R-S.D.), a mem- / lt is now evident that hIgh army ber of the six-man committee otflclals 'let Peren slip out of tbat recommended censure of their grasp," and pve him an Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-Wls.), honorable discharge instead of a Monday announced he will court-martial, even atter a court­switch sides and vote against re- martial demand fx:om McCarthy bUklnr McCarthy on one of two was delivered to tne "responsl-pending charges. ble army staff."

Case said new evidence sup- In the wake 01 Case's an-plied by Secretary of the Army noun cement, Sen. Samuel Ervin Robert Stevens convin~ him CD-N.C.) took the fiooor and ~cCarthy should not be cen- IBid he came to the senate ope sured for alleged abusive teeat- posed to expelling McCarthy. or ment qf Bri, . ..cen, Ralph W. &trlppiri, hll1'l of bis conuidttee Zwicker when Zwicker testified chalrmanshl~. but h. ,/1ecLared: on the army's handllng of the "I'm wi1llng to admit I have Perea case. changed my mind in both partl-

The South Dakota senator 81lld culars." Won" Prepoae ixpablioD

L. Barrymore, Ervin. who succeeded the late

. Noted Actor,

committee, Sen. Arthur Watkins (,It-utah), sought meanwhUe to pull the rug from under Mc­Carthy's "who promoted Pe­reas?" campaign. Watkins said McCarthy himseU can readily diJ out the anlPWer on the basis of Information already supplied by ltle army.

auabed Dllchar,e Throucb Denying tbis, McCarthy de­

clared, the Pentagon Is sWl shielding "the secret master" ""ho pl'omoted Peress - a New

dentist who had refUsed to say wbether he was a Commu­nist - and then rushed through the discharge whlch. made a court-martial ImpossIble.

McCarthy and WatkJns clashed often and heatedly at a hearing called by McCarthy. who still heads the senate investiga­tions subcommittee, just before debate on the censure resolution resumed on the .!Ienate rloor.

Incapacity" or "moral Incapa­clly" when he charged the Wat. klns committee members acted as "unwlttiOl handmaidens of the Communist party."

Holda Sword Over Se .. tora Ervin declared McCarthy holds

"libel and slander" like a sword over the heads of all senators who disagree with him. And, taklnc sha~ iuue with Case'. new stand, Ervin said Mc­Carthy's cross-examination of Zwicker was nothing but "oadg­ering and browbeatlne,"

Prior to resumption of the floor debate, Oase sent Watklns a letter saying the Dew evidence from Army Secretary Stevens­an old antagonist of }.(oCartny's -"throws Into new focus" the background of McCarthy'a clash with Zwicker at a New York hearing last Feb. 18.

ClOiin, hIs second big s~oh to the UN poUtical committlCe on President. EisenhOWer's plan for using atoms for peace, Henry Cabot I.,odge jr. ~ald to the sud-~ denly-alert dele,ates:

"There Is one final matter which I would like to lay before you. and 1 hope it will once and fqr all remove from the minds ot all any conf~sion as to how specitlc (he United States 'atoms ' fQr peace' pr01>061tlotl is. whether or not the scope of our proposal has been narrowed.

'Au&horkecl by PresldeDt' "I am authorized by the Presi­

dent ot the United States to say that the Atomic Energy Commis­sion has aJlocal.ed 100 kiloarama (220 pounds)' of t1seJonable ma­lerlal to .erve as fuel in the ex­perimental reactor. to which the secreta~y of state and I have previoualy referred. Tim amount of fissionable material is enough to activate a considerable num­ber of these reactors throughout the world,"

'ntis MI. the answer of the cbJef American dele.ate to com­platnts by Russia's Andrei Y. Vlshlnsky that Lodge had "nar­rowed down" the program put before the UN assembly Jut year by President Eisenhower and that the U.S. III "deiaying" the matter.

Answera Ilomalo

On Raising Eleclr~c. Rales Ike Asks Senate For Ratification Of NATO Treaty Dies at 76

l Sen. Clyde Hoey CD-N.c.) last June, added, however. he does not intend to propose expulsion of McCarthy durin, the present debate which Is.on a recommen­dation by Fzvln, Case and four other senators that McCarthy be censured on two counts ot. un-becoming and contemptuous con­duct. The Iowa City council Mon- WA.SHlLNGTON (1fS) - Presl- HOLLYWOOD (iP) _ Lionel

Watkins, appearing as the sole witness, told McCarthy It may well be nobody is "criminally" guilty in the army's handling of Peres!.

Thls was alac Lodge's answer to a proposal by Carlos P. Rom­ulo, phll1pplne delegate and

Top of World ' former president of the UN as-sembly, that the United States and other atomic powers chip In

. • 220 pounds of atomic materials

FII·ghl Begun -enough, Romulo said, to make day night delayed a decjsion on production costs were not ai- dent Eisenhower Monday called Barrymore. veteran stage, screen The chairman of the censure the prop'Osed raise in eleclric ways accurate and that most on the senate to ratify the treaty and radio actor, died Monday

were varlalble from 25 to 50 binding a sovereilll Germany nlnht a!te a 1 lIines . De ttl rales -after hearing a three-hour closer to Western defense sa a. ...... r ong s a debate by both sides conn~ted per cent. 'boon to '\peace and freedom in apparently was due to a heart wtlh the raise. Elderkin claimed deprecia- the world as a whole." . attack.

Mayor Leroy Merc.er said a1- ted reproduction costs were fair The President sent to Capitol He 'Was taken to Valley hospital ler the meeUng that 'the councB because of the economi'C inflation Hill, for action by the senate in the San Fern-WlUlted , JPore Jime to ,!i'tudy. <the ~f th,e past 15 years. next January, a stack of aaree- ando valley Sun-

t t d I th Patterspn, ot Black and ments resultln, from the nine- day night and . ,_. :"umen ~:~j~n he l: e !SSU~ Veatch, engineering fIrm hired power conference and the North h 0 r t 1 Y atter-

y consu ... 0 , n,. auer l;!an b th '" II d hi Atlantic Treaty see-ion I.. Lo~- ward llrpsed into tbe Iowa-l Unoi/i Gas and J!;\ec- y e gaS company, ca e s _ ... u-u.ic cOIJIPanY. I, reprodUction costs "conservative don a.nd-i'aris tjlts fall. He uked a coma.

T and fair". the senaie to study them care- Barrymore, 76, The compaQy is asking per- fully and riilly them at the was prominent in

mission to raise electric rates regular seuion. the "Dr. Kildare"

in Iowa City by 14.3 per cent. Poll"ce Chl"et Adml"'s His letter of transmittal ap. radio and movie Mercer said that plans for pea red aimed not only at quiet.- series. HIs was

another council meeting on the ing any Qualms \.he senate mlght an almost limit-Issue would be made later thls Asklang for Help have about the peace but alao to BarT)'mol'e less talent. He week. do a.way with misgivings voiced waS an exceptionally talented

Bauer, New York rate ccm- I Sh d SI" abroad by Germany, France, and dalnter and muslelan, and pos-lufiant hired by the city. and n . eppar aymg even Russia. sessed of a rich, deep-pitched Cedar Rapids lawyer Dave EI- __ ..I cI voice. derm and engineer Arthur Pat- CLEVELAND {A» _ A subur- Frighte..u loy Frlen . Dr. John Paul Ewing, his phy-terson, representing the com- ban police chief. a big, quiet, Stays Away 52 Yean sieian, said Barrymore died of a pany clarified and debated re- ~omplicatlon of ailments, includ-

hamfisted man, admItted Mon- . rth itl Th i dl te POrts on the rate issue. tng a r s. e mme a day he was at sea when con- ROANOKE, Va. {1fS) - Fifty- cause. said the doctor, WJ18 heart

The core of tpeissue is w,heth- f.ronted with the murder of two years ago aiarUe Lee Dick- co~tion. et deprecia.ted reproduction erson, then 19, was frightened Son of the celebrated theatrl-

Is " I' t t "hall Marilyn Sheppard. He had to ask h 'f th COS or ortgma Inves men " by his sweet eart 8 a er - so cal team of Maurice and Georgia be used in detj!Tmlning the l .. iT city detectives for help. much so that he broke bill en- Drew Barrymore, Lionel WJ18

.TIte of return, "Our experience was very gagemen~. ~ born in philadelphia. 'Brother of ·.8auet, who .favors, the original little alo,!g tnose lin~, " Bay Vi,l- J:1ut he •• aof over the frlrbt {~I) areaj :John and of 'the famous

invllstm.ent <formuht, , b.~ked .up lage P lice ChIef John P. lIatcin. eventually; ~eraoil and hla Ethel. tbe sha4IY-ilrawed veter­,his eallier report by Saylli, "the 60 testifieel at the flf/lt ' degree -.I.""eetheart, ,. .... "lIarth8 Shel- alI made his stage debut at the

... , investors Q~peoteda faIr .Tate of m~rder trial 'of Dr. Samuel ton, were ,married here. It was age of five.

'l)ereUci In Dub'

Co'~ncil Says Naguib. Ploned with Reds

one bomb - to an atomic re_"cwr Sternly, McCarthy replied any to be set up under the UN.

senator who holds that view Is COPENHAGEN, Denmark 1Jr:A In his speech Lodge made it "derelict In his duty." I" 'j clear to the Soviet Union that tl(e

"I don't believe you can ever - A Scandinavian A I r lin e S West will not .ccept any veto on be satisfied." Watkins shot back, (SAS) Super-Cloudmaster car- operations of a proposed inter­"unless you can !lnd some one ryiOl three prime ministers and national atomJc agency supervla. .. '

oA1R6, Egypt C.4>,-The Revo- ~o .could obe .4hol or hung." n Danish prlnc~ took 0« Into the ln, the atoms-for-peace pro-lutlon cOlJIl.!:U chirged Monday ofn 1he floor debale Ervin {e- . I ,j. u_f"_ ......... a cha.rie he made on a chilly darkness l'YJonday night lor ,ram.

n ght '1,at A_, . ....,n. _yuame .... ...,"OV .. "UII proara1T1 Sunckly-that Los Angeles, laun<:hing the fIrst hIHef all~ tOldf

Vish~nsdk,yth - bis Naguib, newly ousted {rom the h ... d'''' ilh " tIC e cr tic so ar -an e com-presidency. had CQdJ>erated with .s owe e or men a east-lo-west commercial paasen- mittee that smaTl countrla will Com m u n is t a and ger service across the top of the have a voice in the governln, brotherhood fa~atics in an eHort world. board pf the agellcy. that We to overthrow Premier Gamal

At the same 11me, anothe.t SAS program is open to any coJ.IDtr:Y. Abelel Na!lSer's government. • d A figurehead chief executive Super-<::Ioudmaster, which had and that the United States an

for seven months until his fall Los Its atomic amea do not intend to leU Angeles about 11 hours confront any country with an

Sunday, Naguib wu pktured as earlier, was winging its way .to seeking to reclallJl power for accomplished fact. hlm!elt with the aid of troops. Oopenhagen with a group 'Of Im-

The charges were made in a portant civic oUielals. movie background statemeht issued to stars, and newsmen to initiate foreIgn correspondents. the west-to-east. flight. .

The statement said Naguib The two were scheduled to sought the support of lett win, pass each other about 100 miles otfiCI!l1i under .IIaj. Kltaled Mo- east of Angmagssalik, Greenland. heddin In February to over-throw Nasser and Install a gov- at 9:30 p.m. (EST). ernment with Naguib as presl- 'Aboard the airliner Helie Vlk-denl and Mobeddin as .premJer. Ing when It look o&t IfrOm here

The councll'l account char,ed at 2:10 p.m. (EST) were Prinl:e they planned a revolt 1~t-:A~!1 Axel of Denmark. Prime Mlnis-and consplre4 with leftist:. ter HailS Hedtott of Denmark. cers and the M;osl m , k ............. _-'- Oscar Torp of NOl:Wl!y, and Tap hood. . ., r ' ~ Erlander of Sweden, SAS Chair-

Naguib Is under hbuse.· arrest Sen. <FrOnds Case man Per M. Hansson. SAS Presl-at a government dweli41g ~LtId,i; , dent Per A. Norlin. and news-Cairo. ' Against "Abuse' , Charge men.

t I

Formosa To Avenge Torpedoed Warship

TAIPEH. Formosa (Il'uesday) (1fS) - An intensified vest pocket war Tuesday seemed lilIel)' 81

the Nationalists plqed the "_ verett blows ~ible" for the sink1ng of a destroyer escort by Red torpedo boats.

return only on ,the 40Uars Ithey Shepparor actused of slayin, bls t~e secondr marriage for both' • He was eduCated in New York ,put In.'' '.. wife.llj!ton has headed the seven tne 70-ye • ...,.old wom,n and the' and by prfvate tUlor, and attend'

1,11. He went 011 to '~tate that re- man :police force for 13 years. 7l-year-o." mao. ed Seton Hall, at Orange, N. J.,

.Workmen StiH fighfW~ Va. Mine' Fire ~;':~3£'~i."E High ·€Gu '~ DivHted on Indian ·B·urial quit to study art in Paria. Re-

··.FA:'RMlNGTON. W. V'll. (.4')- turninl, he Willi! an illustrator for WASH1NGTON (JP') - --The-

The pledge was made in the defense ministry's communlqu .. It eonflrmed that 28 of the 180 officers and men of the 1.800-100 Taipln, periahed Sunday In the en,."ment all the Tachen is­lands. tl5 mila north o(Fonna.. III.

Natiaaaliat warplanea flew co­ver whUe EftCue ships p1cked up survi~ but no Chlnese Com­mwaUt plana tried to interfere. Workmen l!lbored with a huge pushing aside the huge steel When the cap on the air sh.n a year, then joined his brother. supreme coUllt divided t-t Mon- ial wu refused on the ground

crane late Monday to complete plate on the ajr shaft as well blew, black amoke btllawed .ky- John, in "Peter Ibbetson." day on whether a cemetery may the widow had sillled a contract capping a ventilating sh.aft as one on the main Shaft at the ward and Ihe men were wlth- There never was any question be sued for damages for re- which restricted use of the cem­blown open by two new explo- slope mine located In a valley drawn mo~ ttian 1.000 yardl of his forte. He became a star fusln, burial to an American etery to Caucuians. lions in a coal mine ' where 15 of north-centr.aJ West Vlrlrlnia. from lhe spot for fear of another with his .perfotmaJ1Ce In "The Indian killed In arm), service The oaR attracted widespread lIIen were entOmbed. The circular plate on the aU blan. Coppertlead." Next In "The In Korea. attention and former President

The Jamison Coal Co. No.9 shalt - 13 feet in diameter - The seeUIII ~ nec:esur)' to Claw" he appeared with Irene The tie vote upheld. declsJon Trumm Invited the widow to IIline had 'been sealed ort last is made of three-elghths-Incb cut off the flow of air and Feuwk:k. They were toJether In of the Iowa supreme court that send t\le body to ArUngton Na­nl~t a~er a violent explosion sheet steel, reinforced by H- smother a fir, bumlnl deep un- "Laugh. Clown, Laugh." and Mrs. Evelyn Rice white widow tional cemetery, wtlere lie many and fire Saturday trapped the beams, and weighs about 2", derll'ound. were married In 1823. Their 1"0- of set. John Rice: bed no rilbt of !the naUon's heroes. Pull mH-lG men deep undellground and tons. It was lifted IJke a giant The mine, wlUch employed 200 manc:e until her death In 1JIJ36 to sue the Sioux City Memorial ltary h.ono" accoJIlSl8n1ed the tilled <8 16th man on the surface. coin by the ex>plOiions. on a normal wortdDf day. will was one ot Ideal devotion and 'Park c:em1!lteQ for $180.000. Ar11ncton burial of Sgl Rice. It wsa West · Virginia's worst Tne rectangular two-ton cov· not he reopened untO tes1I mow happinea. After graveside .rvi .... <-Ute ' • '11le tie Y'Ote--!n lbe supreme

. iblne tralredr iir· l0 ye!JTlI. or on ,the main shaft w~ broken the air la .,,'.1IQUIh for ra- In. lllJe .. he joined Metro-Gold- cemetery Il'Otified .Mrs. Rite -thal- rourt wu made' pOss.,le bylhe '! : ·Mdnday.l two mhiof blasts in , two by the other expIOIlon • . cue teams to .1«. ~t 1Da1 W1D-~1~to .tar .in "The Bar- her. humantCl bocS7 woQJd 'liot dfttJI' of Jut(lce' Robert H. Jac:k­t. -!loomed inside tne diggin~s. "bout J no yardfi I!way. take days or months. tier," 'bfo lowered mto the gave. Bur- IOn. which reduced the court's

, , '( .1 ..

membership from 9 to 8. Of .... _ued 28 were woun. Mrs. RJce has 25 days in ~b ded. nine serioush-. •

to ask lor reconsldeTation. It, HiIh level NationalJat oWciall Is conceivwble that by that time conferred lor houra :)fonda), and the senate may hJlve confirmed there ""'AI tPeCulallon that &be President Elsenh'ower'. nom,1na- NaUOIIalUta would launch a ma .. tion of John Marshall Harian of live retaliation attack. New York to fill the court va- The defanee mlnistry'. eom-cancy. munique cave an official aocouat

Mrs. Rice's attorney, Nell Me- of the .. battle. Tbla wu till Luban of Wlnneba.o, Neb .• pld Becla' ftnt ... v~ lr1w:nph in .... the supreme court very ,probabb' coutal war. ,They thwI ~ ~ould ~ aaked to recorakler ItalJ)ed from the thin Nationalist na­rUlinc ill h'o~ a ~ Dine- Y1 ODII of the ,WU'Ibl.Pe tumed member court .miIbt be avall- over to CIltuI KaI-.beIt b1 th. able to' make the decilion. United States. , .~

~e ~ftE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa CU" I&.-raes., HoY. 1 • • list

PublUbed daU7 _.,..pl SUDdaT aucI Monel . ." and 1 ... 1 hoUdayw b,. Student Pulllleationa. In .... ue loW. A ve.. 10 .... CII,., Iowa. En~red ., ..,.,nd ~_ awl maU.u .t U>t ~ oIt1c:e . 1 Iowa Cit,., UDdc:r tba .ct 01 con .... of March I. ItT ••

..... &A ., .1Ie A oCIATaD .a ••• 'J1Ie '-"-Jat.d Pre 1t enUU'" es­cuh'elY '" Ibe \Pe (ar r publk8tloD AI aU tb~ IotaI news prlnl*' In Ibla == u tv U ... 11 AI> Dew.

• "IIBJ:. AlTDIT BUILKAU

or CJaCULATION.

CoU 4191 If ,. •••••••• _. , •• , D&II,. ........ , 1:1t ......... -• _ _ .. lee b II. • •• aU ..,.1 ..

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1954

unn .t ..w •• ~",,"n If .. ,.~ Io~ ...... Tu Dail, I ..... elre.t.U •• ......-.t, Ie CI... Ball. D ..... .. ............. b .... , ...... La.. .. II ........ 4.~ "'· •• '10 Frlol., •• 01 f .... I. U ...... I ...... ,..

Call 4191, .. _ ...... aJoI.taW .. "pert .'.-1 It.... . .. t:.-' .. ,_ ...... . r ........... ,. ,. ,.-... Dab, ....... loll'. rial .,n... a.. Ie ft. C ........ U ••• C ..... .r ..

Subacrlptlon rale. - by carrl« In low. Clry. 2S c"nts w .... klJr or .. per ~_r tn advance: ..... montbl, " ..25; three monilia. PolIO. By men In low., sa ~r ynr; &Ix monilia. 15; IhrN IOOlllho. ": eU ot..... maU .ublcrlp.. Uons, ,10 ~r y .. r; &IX Dlonthl, p .lIO; th ... raontbJ • ."..

e €I ito r i-a I h~e Hustling Hawks-

By this tim .. the Monday morning quarterbacks and second gu ssers have thoroughly picked apart the Iowa foot­baU team's p rformance in Minneapolis Saturday.

But no one can rightfully take anythjng away from the Iowa team. We lenow now why they are called the "Fighting

J'recI • • Pownall. Pu 1I11ah«

DAILY IOWAN IDITOaJAL STAF .. I:dllor ............. Dw1cht E. ""nsen New. Edllor .... Pal H ,,"'~r Jellien Clty Editor .......... Ira Kapenaltia Sporu Editor . .......... O"ne Incl-Soelety EdItor .... .. Jean L4!lnhaUlin Pk!lur. Editor .. . ....... . Am Oore ChJ.,r Pbototlnpber, Dick JtI chkb,

Editorial tenl. Drake Mabry; A6-• lrtutl N •• Editor. terry Alk l ;,....

tall ! City Editor. "erry Hess, art .. Kamlnkowln; AIIislonl Sports Editor, Arlo Jlcobton.

OAILI IOWAN ADVllaTISINO STAn Bu-.ioed Mana.a:er .. E. J ohn Kotun.an Aat. Bwdness Mill'. J am" l'et~naklt CI lilt<! MU' .. WlIIlllm J . Vaughan Promotion Milt .•• _ Robert Moorman

DAILY 10lfAN ClSCULATION STA .... Circulation )4U. ..... Robert Cronk

Interpreting the News

B, UI. ROBERTS J&. Forelcn S&alt

AsIoe ... ect Preu

Western diplomats- have al-Hawkey s." ways held in the back of their

W h ave s n otb r great Iowa football teams, including minds the possibility that Soviet the Ulron Mell" of 1939 and 1940, but none can top the cour- Russia, faced ·with rislng Allied

d d' I f H k d' 1 d . strength which threatened to cut age an sir t I current crop a aw eyes ISP aye agalilst oIt Ior good her hopes for expan-Minnesota Saturday. • slon, might seek to break out

It was a tremendous emotional pitch which the Minn sota by force before the dom s were t am carri d into Saturday's game, The team and student body complctely barrcd.

In the last two or three years, had pointed toward the game for 12' months. Western rearmament having

Sino the 1~54 football season beg n, in fact, since the reached the stage where tiJ.:! pos­Coph r ' 27-0 d feat at the hands. i' jowu last year, much of slbiLity of a successful war by

anyone has become extremely the talk on th Minnesota campus bad Jj en about the Iowa r mole, there has been a lend-gam. It was as if winning the Iowa game nlong would make ency to discount this Idea and their season a slIccess. Several Minnesota students told us this to assume that Russia would !ls-

I ' sess the remaining posslbiliti!.!R was a g noral f ling. as nol worth the risk

So the Iowa teDm stepped into a fi ree b attle and came Reds Chana-c VI wpoint out lookin ~ like a team of ch ampionship alib r - which it is. Th(ll e has even been some Post-War Years Bring Peace,

Korean Farmer his 1 wa team proved that it is possible to play good hard hope, though this has been more

football withou t using "d irty" methods. Not one persOnal foul prevalent in Europe than In the United States, that Russia would

was all d on an ]owa play r. begin to revamp her political Gooo Crop To Th H awkeyes drew only 22 yards in p nalties. Uofor- as well as her mllitary vJew-

I h h if f point to meet this changing con-Editor' Note - Last year,

befort' the Arm! tlce stopped the Korean war, an Associated Press reporter wrote a memor­a.ble a.ccount of the hOJle held by a simple Korean farmer. Here Is a report on how that farmer and his family ha.ve fared since the war ended.

tunat Iy, t ley came w n th y urt most. F:' teen 0 tbem w r dltion, and that points of tension for th clipping incident w.hich occurred during the h a t of migtrt ,be negotiated, leading to play toward the end of the game and cost Iowa the winning a leveling oU of the arms raee.

Tha l has been one reason be-touchdown. hind the eoncerted effort to mo-

Saturday's game was football as it should be played - bi\Jze the lull strength of Eu­c1 an, )lf1rd and rough , with team play which deserves all the rop, including Cermany, des-

. . pite the nervousness among many pra! c on an gtve it. Europeans a,nd some Americans

Thousands of fans I ft Memorial stadium in MinneapoHs over learming Germany. This aturday w ith a lot of re pect for th Hawk yes. Iowa root rs nervousness is openly expressed

d fIll k ' f M f in the latest Soviet note. w r proll 0 t le aw s per ormance. innesota ans were The Rusians have now quit

CHANG DONG, Korea (J.P) -The old man looked out over th jigsaw patt rn of gr en rice Cields, mopped his brow and squeaked in high-pitch d Ko­rean:

proud that their te.'lm had beat II one of Hi bes t in the nation. operaling lhrough a smokescreen * * * and gotten down to th bedrock --", 't J d DOC of their policy, which is to block t;;",an u ge aVles as_ Europe-wide mobilization. Th y "Fortune has been good to me.

This has been a good year."

_ It is not possible to judg fairly the case of John Patton .' Davies, forei~n service officer recently di missed by Secre­.• mry of State John Foster Dunes. ,. W~ do not have the racts about Davi s, and Dulles has : indicated that w wouldn't get them in the interest of "national

• security." .• But we do know thtlt Davies was severely cood()mned ," for exercising a privil ge that Dulles has elevated to near

'. prinCiple. ,. . One of the charges aga inst D avi s was that he "made · ,known his dis ents from established policy outside of priv­': ' iJeged boundaries." This means that Davies, among oth rs, ' Imad~ his opinions known to the press. '. . It is difficult to see how Dulles could clear himself if ,' ;his own record were subjected to the same test as Davies' .: ~ust have undergone. . • Dulles, on the record, is perhaps one of the greatest dis­::senters outsid of privileged boundaries in the recent history '!Iof Washington. • :' He has maintained an independence of mind through both .. the Eisenhower and Truman administ,raUons and has stated It . T

, .' the~e diss'ilnsions freely even when they djffered fundamen· ", 't ltally from the policies of his superiors. ::: A~rding to Washington correspondents, Dulles has gone "; to more dinners with reporters and registered more dissents l oom established policy in the last ten years than any other " 'official in the city. 11 "

1", Davies was fired on the basis of his superiors' opinions. .. ' ,,", 1'1 oJ. nese opinions depend ver'.' much 00 the mentality and back-:: :gTound of the men passing judgement and on the security I:: regulations they administer. 1' 1 Davies was also critici;led for his "lack of ,'udgemeot, j.,. . " Idiscretion , and reliability which raises a reasonable doubt :: :L~t his continued employmel)t is clearly consistent with the lOUt tsf t' I ." ,.I JO ere~ 0 na lona secunty. I::: ,The Jeey words here are "reasonable doubt." What may , '!be "reasonable doubt" in one mao's mind may not be "reason-"I l • 't1 ob,e doubt" in the mind of another. "" Th d " f .. ble db" . , II.. e o~nne 0 rcaSODa ou t is open to mlU)Y 10-

::,terpretations. Dulles evidently ' thought Davies was wrong. ::, But nobody can reach ' a true judgement on that point :;unless he reads the entire of(icial record. • And Dulles won't give us the record.

: I ----~--------~--------------------~~----------~-

::: Public SchoOl EnroHments, Costs Increase •• • .. DES MOINE (JPJ - Public: ,: school enrollments ifi . ldf.I' are

' : , ~~:~~: ~!er=~t !~lIr: '1lOint up even taster, the Sta te :.'Department of Public instruc-

I: Uon said Saturday. Two fac.lDrs • are primarily responsible for

I" the situaUon. One is that the ,: birth rate has held at _ high "')evel ever slnee the close 01 ~'World War JI. The other is tilat , .there wa, lltUe bullcl1nC In tibe • war y .. n, and a lot now, '0 Enrollment tor the current ,:lII!hool year is estimated et 542,-• 000. It was &35,300 last year and • 1110,933 for thepNYious yeer. ,

This year's enrolhnent includes about 412,000 in Itade school and 130,000 in hjgh school. Last ear there were too,OOO In the grades and 125,000 in high school.

School aperatin, costs are ex­pected 10 ,0 beyond 200 million dollars this year. That compares with a total of 'llbout 178 million last year. Of tilis year's outlay, 153 mlliion will be tor operaUng expen!lel .ntt :19 mllUon for buiJdtn,. 01 last year's total, about 132 million was for oper­ations and about 48 mlUion was 16r ImproyemeDls.

even app ar to ,be ready '1.0 make SOlUe concessions - whether or not they intend to abide by them - to attain this end.

AUied Conccsslons The Allies think they will

have to make more concessions, and be forced to abide by at least some of them, If lhe ne­gotiations come alter and not before, ratification of't.he West­ern EUTopean Union.

Aside trom the repeated as­sertions that forma lion of oppos­ing blocs leads to war, the Soviet note contains one very definite threat. It says that if the West goes ahead with the Western European Union, "it would be entirely natural" for the Soviet bloc to adopt new measures to insure security.

No inkling is given of what these measures might be.

Fitipino Land.Reforms Help Tenant Farmers

MANILA (.4') - The Filipino tenant farmer has been handed what proponents call the most progressive land reform to be passed anywhere In Asia to meet the age-old hunger for land. Th new law grants incr~sed man-

This was farmer Han Chul Hi, a smail, , hollow-cheeked man of 66 years, who like so many of his neighbors has known only to work the soil sinee he first I arned to use his hands as a boy.

Farm.ers Own Land In 1948 Came the land reform.

Out went the landlord-t nant farmer relationship. In came a new opportunity for the farmer to own his rice paddi s.

An Associated Press reporter visJted farmer lIan lust before the armistice last year.

He was hopeful then that the coming year would bring peace and a chancc to grow a good crop.

His hope, born in some un­certainty, seems to have come lrue.

Fanners Unconcerned lIan and his neighbor are un­

concerned about problems of Korean unificaUon or the with­drawal of American troops. They ore too busy tending the rice.

In fact, they knew virtually nothing about the Americans leaving until they saw the move­ment of troops and vehicles toward the south.

Han has seen enough trouble.

agement rights to tenants and a COLLEGE ITE SOLD better security of t nure. A ten- "BOYDTON, Va. (,4» - The ant now can be evicted only by campus and the orilginal build­court action. All doubts are to ings of the first Randolph-Macon be resolved in favor of the ten- college, ol~st Methodist college ant. in America, ha~ ,been sold to

Land tenure reform supple- Mrs. aZdie Stuart Hundley ror ments the land for the landless $19.273 at publiC; auction. Mrs. program. Resettlement Iprojects Hundley, wJ10 held a mortgag have been undertaken for land- on the property, isn't sure what less on the b.lg southern island she will do with the 88 Y.t acres If Mindanao. But many tenants and buildings. The site has not on populous Luzon do not want been used for college purposes to move south. I for many years.

FIVE YEARS AGO ISome major colleges and univen;iUes may have superstadiums

in which all fans sit on the 50-yard line, according to Frank J . Havlicek, SUI business manager of athleLlcs, but until then he will have to put up .with cries and screams of thOusands of dissatisfied and unhappy fans.

TEN YEARS AGO An lowa City store reports the sale of six-dozen corn-cob pipes

as Iowa coeds find substitutes during cigarette shortage. Tokyo reports Superfortress aHacks on two islands, while

American troops on Leyte in central Phllipplnes capture three strategic mountain positions.

1t was difficult tor D~lic opinion polls this year because eight million potential voters were in service, accordirog to Prof. Norman C. Meier ot the psychology department.

TWENTY YEARS AGO fl'he double duty James A. Farley does as postmaster general

and Democratic party chairman Willi criticized today oy Senator Vandenberg (R-Mlc:h.), who suggested that Farley quit one or his "absolutely incompatlble" jobs.

~i1ady Is using more alcohol in her cosmetics than milord does as a beverage, even 'With the passinlt of prohibition, the American Inltitute 01 Cbemk:al En,Iineers wu informed 1od8,Y.

Six time' foreign armies have marched over his land, forcing him to leave and become part of the swelling mobs of reful!ees.

Han now supports his son's widow and five children, as well as his own wife and two younger children.

T. work ot tending the rice is arduous. Up at 6 a.m., Han pa.cks his traditional Korean /!.­frame on his back, trudges aU about two miles to his rice paddies und works until dark.

Han, un uneducatcd man him­self, wants his children to learn. From his meager profits he sends a 15-yoill'-01d daughler to high

KOREAN FAMILIE like this one, 5100lar to lIan's, were broken up by the Korean, wa .. Han was lucky; he lost only one son. But he supports his son's widow and her five chil­dren with his rice crop, an"d own determlnation.

school in Seoul. Feelll Old, Tired

He says he feels old. He is tired. He would like to rest. But there is still much work to be done. Perhaps, he says, his mOrTi d son can carryon.

"Look:" he pointed with hand, "my house Is still not fixed."

He muttered an old proverb: "Don't look up, look down," he .aid.

In essence it means: Don't look to those Wi10 have more than you, but look down to those who have Jess ond you con be happy.

WSUI PR06RA~ CALENDAR

Tu •• 4"" N .. ember I~, 1t54 9:00 Momln, ChatH!1 8:15 News 8:30 Lire Problema 9:20 The. Bookllhell 9:45 Women's Feature

10:00 New, 10:15 Kitchen Concert 11 :00 Lel's Sin, II :15 Slrflc. Ui> the Band 11:30 From the !:dltor's Desk

11:45 Iowa SUIte Medkal Society 12:00 Rhythm Ramble. 12:30 News 12:45 ~uslc from th~ Old Countn I;rt) MUsical Chats . I :~ LeI Selenee T~1l u. 2:10 Artist o( the Week 2:30 Proudly We Uall 3:00 'Andlo CbJld Study Club 3:15 Cllmpua Chetl 3:30 New. 3:45 Her.·s to Voter .... 4:00 Iowa Union Radio Hour 4:30 Tea Time 5:00 Chlld.en's Hour 5:30 New8 5:45 Sporlstlme 0:00 The Dinner Hour 0:55 News 7:00 Chlca,o Roundtable 7:30 The Green Room 8:00 Man's ~&ht to Knowled,e 8:30 Mwrlc Y'lu Wenl 9:45 New. and Sporn

10:00 SION on

'1;'UESDAY, NOV. 16, 195t

UNIVERSITY CALENDAI Tue day, November 16

8:00 p.m. - University Play, "Never Ending Frontier", Uni­versity Theatre.

Wednesday, November 17 8:00 p.m. - University Concert

CouTse, DePaur Infantry Chorus - Main Lounge, Iowa Memorial Unjon. ,

8:00 p.m. - University Play, "Never Ending F rontier", Uni­versity Theatre.

Thursday, Nov. ]8 2:30 p.m. - University Wo­

men's Club Thanksgiving Tea­Universily Club Rooms.

6~00 p.m, - Triangle Club Tournament, Iowa Memorial Union,

7:30 p.m. - Campus Chest Drive Selvice Auction, Maln Loun,e, rowa Memoria l Union.

7:30 - Debate: SUI vs Iowa State college, Senate room, Old Capitol.

7:30 p.m. - Meeting - Iowa Section Am,~rica n Chemical So­ciety; Speaker; Prof. H . A. Laiti­nen, U. of Illinois - Rm. 314, Chemistry building.

Friday, November 19 5:00 p .m. (Continuous show­

Ing) - Student Art Guild Film Series, "Torment"- Shambaugh

Lecture Roo~. 8-12 p.m. - AU-University'

Dance, Main Lounge, Iowa Mem­orial Unjon.

Saturday, lIfov. !t 1 :30 p.m. - !'Dotball, Iowa Vs'o

Notre Dame' - Stadium. 8-12 - Post-baUgame AlI­

University Party, M'3in Loqnge, Iowa Memorial Union.

Monda" November II 7-8 :30, 9-10:30 p.m. - Con­

cert: Les Brown Orchestra, Main Lounge, Iowa Memorial Union.

Tuesday, November 13 7:30 p.m. - Uwvltr$Uy Wom­

en's Club F;veobl, Bridge, Uni­versity Club rooms, Iowa Mem­orial Union.

WedDeeII&,., Nevemlter It 12:20 ·p.m. - Tha~givin,

Recess BeCins. SUDda" No~her II

2:30 p.m. - Iowa Mountain­eers travelogue - "PortraH of Paris" by Curtis Nagel - Mac­bride Auditorium. '

8:00 p.m. - Iowa Mountain­eers travelogue - "Rhine Jour­ney" by Curtis Na,e! - Mac­bride AuditoriUlll.

MoDda)'. NOvember 29 ~:30 a.m. - Resumption ot

Classes

• UNIVERSITY CALENDAa IWiIDa aM- MIae4.aet

.. ... e Preeldeafl ..moe, ON CIt ......

\

'5 Apply far Editor Of The Daily · Iowan

Five applications for the edit­orslrip of The Daily Iowan \\lere received by the Board of Trust­ees, Student Publications, Inc ., before the deadline, Friday, Nov. 12 .

Tbe applicants are Larry Al­kire, A4, Des Moines; Jerry L. Hess, A4, Schleswig; Gene Ingle A3, Des Moines; Arlo M. Jacob~ son, A4, Gilmore City, and Car­ter A. Pitts, G LeMars.

Candidates will be interviewed by the board Thursday, Nov. 18 . Announoement of their choice tor editor will be made Friday, Nov. 19.

The new editor's tenn will start Dec. I, and end May 31 , 1955.

AlJdre attended Drake Uni­versity a year before coming to SUI. He hps served on The Dllily 10wan as a Teporter, copyreader and assistant news editor.

Hess Is now the assistant city editor of The Iowan, and presi­dent at Sigma Delta Chi, pro­fessional journalism fraternity.

JACOBSON

INGLE PITI'S

Previously he has been a re­porter and copyreader.

Serving as The Iowan 's sports editor since June, Ingle is vice president of the junior class of the Associated Students of jour­nalism and a member of SDX.

Jacobson has serve<1 The Iowan as a city reporter and pho­tographer. He is now assistant sports editor. He received the Cedar Rapids Gazette award for the best photograph of the 1953-54 year in The Iowan.

Pitts has . journalism ex-perience on the LeMars Senti­nel, and The Iowan. A gradu­a te of Grinnell college in 1951, he is a candidate for a MA degree in June 1955. He is a member vf SDX. ALKIRE

The appointed editor will se­lect his own stafr.

GENERAL NOTI€ES GENERAL NOTICES should be ,deposited with the. City editor ., The Dally Iowan In t1!e newsroom In the CODUllJJUICBlIonl CeDW, NoUc!es m .... be lIubmltted by 2 p.m. the clay precedlnr flut pub­llealloD; &bey wUl ~OT be accepted by phone, alld m ... ' be T1t'PED or LEGIBLY WRITfEN and SIGNED by a re8poDl1bl. perIOD, UNION BOARD ANNOUNCES

a tree movie, "Miracle on 34th Slreet," Sunday, Dec. 5, Ilt 7:30 p.m. in main lounge, Iowa Mem-orial Union. I

NATIONAL HONOR SOCI­ety o[ l'ersl'\ing Rifles, Company B- will meet Tuesday Nov. 16,

o jun. in field house. - ----- . NCH CLUB WILL MEET

TueadiY, Nov. 16, at 7:30 p.m. at :824 ' North Gilbert street.

FIR S T PRESBYTERIAN church announces the following schedule: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., leadership training s c h 0 a I, Thutsday, 12 noon, student Bible study luncheon. 6:45 p.m., junior hi club, Friday, 4 p.m., &raduate discussion group.

SUI AMATEUR RADIO CLUB will meet Wednesday, Nov. 17, at 7 p.m. in room 206, Engineer­in, building. R. M. Mitchell, Of the Collins Radjo company, Ce­der <M~lds wJll present a talll an" anlateur radio.

"1 ----ZOOLOGY SEMlNAIl WILl.

meet Friday, Nov. 19, at 4:10 p.m. in room 201, Zoology build­ing. Dr. A. K. Fisher, professor and head of oral pathology, col­lege of dentistry, will speak on "Paleopathology."

YMCA BOARD AND STU­dent members wil meet in the north television lobby at 3:30 'P.m. Friday, Nov. 19. Vernon Hathaway, executive secretary of the north central area, will attend the meeting.

NAT ION A L RESEARCH council and Nationai Bureau of Standards announce post-doctor­al research associateships in. chemistry, mathematics and physics. The annual gross sti­pend is $5,940, Applications for the academic ye~ 1955-56 must be tiled on or before Dec. 10. Requests for applica lion blanks or for additional information may be obtained from the Fel­lowship Office, Nabional Acad­emy of Sciences-National Re­search founcil, 2101 Constitution avenue JlfW, Washington, 25, DC.

BILLY MITCHELL SQUAD­ron wJll meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 16, in the quonset .hut with tj'Ie yellow door ·south at the ~uadrangle. Uniforms should be "Yorn because there will be an activation ceremony.

aEV. lilA: HOOVER, PASTOR of the Church of the Nazarene, will speak to the Iowa Christian fellowship Tuesday, Nov. 16, In conference room one, Iowa Me­morial 'UQJon. His topic will be «Living Dan,erously."

qJLLEGlATE CHAMBER OF Commen:e will meet Thursday, Nov. 18, from 6:30-7 :30 p.m. in 101-H UniversMy hall .

SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHRO­peloID' Colloquium will hold its b1-weeldly luncheon meeting Thursday noon, Nov. 18, lit the Iowa Memorial Union. Speaker will be Prof. Harold W. Saun­ders.

JUDICIARY BOA R D OF UW A has cranted an extension of hours until 11 p.m. Monday, Nov. 22 for undercraduate wom­en attendln, the second concert by Les Brown . .

JUDICIARY BOA R D OF UWA has granted an extension of hours until II p.m. Thursday, Nov. 18, tor undergraduate wom­en allending the Campus Chest service auction.

UWA IUGn SCHOOL CON. tact committee requlred meeting Tuesday, Nov. 16, Senate Cham­bel' of Old Capitol, 4:10 p.m.

STUDENT FACULTY COF­fee hour committee is giving ·1

coffee hour honoring the Polll­ieal Science, History, English, and Religion departments, Thurs­day, Nov. 18, 4 to 5 p.m. in the Library lounge.

Til ETA SIGMA Pill BUSI· ness meeting, Wednesday, Nov. 17 at 4 p.m., room 116, Commu­nications Center.

P II Y SIC S COLLOQUIUM will meet Tul!sday, Nov. 16, at 4:10 p.m. in room 301, Physics building, to hear Dr. Walter Orr Rob~ts, director of the high al­titude observatory at Boulder, Colo. His subject will be "Cor_ puscles from the Sun."

CENTRAL PARTY COMMIt· tee .presents Budd~ Morrow, his trombone and orchestra, Friday. Nov. 19, from 8-12 p.m. in the main lounge, Iowa Memorial Union. Tickets go on sale Mon­day, Nov. 15, at Union desk at $1.00 per couple.

LES BROWN'S ORCHESTRA will play two concerts Monday, Nov. 22, in the Union lounge from 7-8:30 p.m. and 9-10:30 p.m. Tickels priced at $1.50 per pel'son will go on sale at the Union desk Monday, Nov. 15.

WRA'II SECOND LECTeU in the football series will be Wednesday, Nov. 17, at 7:45 p;DI .

in Shambaugh lecture room. John Wilson, Big Ten official will speak. Movies will lie shown.

DELTA pm ALPHA, HON­orary German SOCiety, will m~t Tuesday, Nov. 16, in room 122 Schaefler hall at 8 p.m. Prof. Carl Anthon will speak on "Post­war University Reform in West Germany."

THE ENTIRE Ph.D. GERMAN reading exam will be given Wednesday Nov. 17, from 3 to 5 p.m. in room 104 Schaeffer hall. Register in room 101 Schaeffer hail by noon Nov. 17.

THE UNIVEllSITY cooPII­tive Baby-sitting league boOk wil be in the charge of Mo. Gloria Westfall from Nov. 2 to Nov. 16. Call 5936 for a sitter or information about joinln, tIJe ira up.

TIlE TRINITY EPISCOP .... church announces the followill& events: Sunday, Nov. 21, 9:15 a.m., confirmation, Bishop Smith will officiate at all three sen­ices during his annual visitation.

HOURS FO. ·THE MAIN .... braryare:

Monday through Friday, I. a.m.-12 midnight

Saturday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday, 2 p.m.-12 midnJlbt The main library will clole al

12 noon on the followln, Satur­days of home football ~ Nov. 20. Departmental libra"" wlll post their hours on the d~

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SPOrts

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sur's Lambda chapter oC Gamma Alpha Chi, prolessional Sidney Bl:lrnstein, editor ot A~­advertising fraternity for wo- vertising Age; Honor Gregory men, received an award r om the House, president of Gregoty United States Treasury depart- House Advertising company oC ment tor outstanding service Cleveland; Constance Weber, in the promotion ot the sale of mid- west eciltor of Vogue ; Ken­treasury bonds in 1953 at the Delli GreeDwood, asslstant dl­fraternity's biennial convention rector of KMBC-TV In :R:3l\Sa, in Lawrence, Kans., last week. City, Mo., and Bruce 1B1·ew,a,

Plaque Given P.l;esWent of Brewer Adve;r~~ The award is a certilicale and ing company and one 01 the di­

plaque with President Eisen- rectors 01 Radio Free Europe., hower's inaugural prayer hand BOIl' Chapler printed on it. The prayer is Official host tor the convention framed in wood which was tok- was the Gamma Alpha Chi en fram the inaugural stand. chapter at the Univeaity <l!

Accepting the award for Lam- Kansas. Most ot the events 'W e bda chapter were Margie Hahn, held in the Kansas Memorial M , Cedar Rapids, presi~ent and Union. Convention delegates also official ~elegate, Jane Greer, ~4, visited Macy's and KMBC-TV Des. Momes and Grace ~amm- in Kansas City. , \tOWltz A4, New York cIty. _______ _

• Nat.lonal Project ·w·' Ie ' As a result of Gamma Alpha I son To S pea

'Chi's efforts in 'Conjunction with 0 , b" . Alpha Delta Sigma, professional n oot a

::Don i \ fJ. f 5 League Groups eJ..it Plan Meetings

t e · Five discussion 1J"0ups of the

His father is a very ':ell to do farmer, and this studious youth :;:~e:;f t~m:u~o~rsm:itl! is in the university to have what his lather missed when he was a ing on education this week and

Thirty-eieht students have boy. He has two ambitions - at pent. to be considered by the the sixth &roup will meet Tues­been pledged to Phi Delta Phi, sorority girls "a good date," and laler to acquire for him elf a wile day, Nov. 23.

The south ast group ill meet professional I gal fraternity. . who will liv OIY his modem farm, wear her clotbes well, and drive tonight at 8 in the home of Mrs.

Pledges Includ .Joe V.n Esch- the family ear. F. Miles Skultety, 1100 Y w 11 en," Lt, Ackley; Wllliam Eads, He would consider hilTl&'lf disgraced If he didn't appear a all st. Mrs. Morton Hammer will a -Lt, Arthur; ~nklin Craig, Lt, the fonnals. He wouldn't think of dating a non-aororlty girl, and he ist ?tin. 5ku1tety s hoste Aurora; Heinrich Taylor, LI, is neyer happier than when people s e him out with. on of the 50- and Mrs. Bertram Cohen will

lead the discu Ion. Bloomfield ; John Cray Ll, and called c mpus Queens. He likes to d te them aU now, he tells me, University Group Byron "RUey, LI , Burlington; but by golly, when he finds the right litOe ,Irl, he's golne to put a Mrs.. John Franz will be h t-Arthur McGiverln, 1.3, and Rob- pin on her and settle davm. and believe him, she'll be a lucky girl, ess to the university housini ert Stone, L1, Cedar Rapids. too, though he's nol bragging. or as .-roup t her harne. 126

• Pled&" His dad wlU do anything for them-build a house for them on Templin park, at 8 tonight. She the farm nexl to his---and once a y ar they'll take a trip-run ir} to I also will be discussion lead r.

Jam~ Snyder, Ll, Charles Chicago and see all the ood hows. He wants his g:Jrl up to date, Wednesday at 8 p .m. the north City; Walt KoILmorgan, Ll, Char- all right, but no s~oking or drinking for his wJle. She must be a group will meet in the home of ~er Oak; Don Doyle, Lt , Dav n- d rn goOd cook, too. Mrs. Frederick Leach, 414 Brown port; Dkk Chal ed, LI; Dick He strives to do always just the right thine-in dancing season st. Mr .. Paul Cilek will be as­iHlln5en, Ll; lTam Nemmer ,h danc ; when il' canoeing lime he canoes; when he has be n sistnnt hostess. Mrs. Leach and Ll and Marvin Winick, L1, all out with a girl thre limes, he is du to klss ber. U she is unappre- Mrs. Samuel Hays will lead the oC'D ,'Moines; Jim Nolan, Ll, dative of th favors Ite has bestowed on her, he wlIl find omeone discussIon round. 1)ubllquo; Park David. on, Ll, else. ~lways plcnty of food fish in the s al The city wide d yUme group p~irCield; Chanes Knud n, Ll, . H frat rnity i.s the best on campus. He was bid Phi Chi Theta will meet Thursday at 9:30 a.m . • Ft. Dodge'; Mark Putney, Ll, Pi, but th re was just , 'om hing about his bunch - they're d m at the home of Mrs Henry Mat­Gladbrook. g~ in the west and south, you know, and a fellow has to think ot 1m 358 Lexington ~v . The dls­

advertising fraternity for men, the sale of treasury bonds 'Will be a national project this year.

Tom Hamilton, Ll, Hartley; all thaI. wh n h joins a fraternity. The !)roudest moment of hts cuSsion will b led by Mrs. Glen The second In a series of loot- Duane Clork, L1, Indianola; life w wh n he put the old pledge button on. All his !Ive sisters Cia n.

ball lectures sponsored by t,he John Foss, L3, Inwood ; William ist r pins, and they're darn proud ot them. E t Group

PrcsWent Eisenhower sent a telegrtlin to the convention con­gratulating Lambda chapter on Its work in promoting and publi­citing the drive and wishing the convention a su!X:ess. Ear­lier, a phone call from the

Women's Recreation flssociafibn Curtis, Ll ; Jack Dana, Ll, and -:---:----.-.:..------~----------­ Mrs. Richard Popkim will en­terla!n the east JTOUP Thursday at 8 p.m. t her home, 510 Oak­land ave. Mrs. Bruce Wohlw nd

will Ifeature John B. Wilson, ~Ig Philip FalYey, Ll Iowa City ; Ten football oUielal, Wednesctay Harold Keenan, Ll; Manche~ter; at 7:45 p.m. in Shambaugh lcc- Denis Sullivan, Ll, Marengo;

Hawkeye Picture Progress Checked

'Whlte House informed the con­vention that thi.s was the first lime such a wire had been sent to a (ra ternal group on any oc­casion.

ConventJon Speakent

ture room, University Library. Bill Nardini, LI, Mount Vernon; Hawkeye picture progress as Wilson will speak on football Bob Cambier, L1, Orang~ City; checked !by the ye rbook's en­

from im oUlcial's viewpoint.-He DIck Bittner, L I, P rry. graver, R. C. Walker, Tulsa, graduated tn 1925 trom Obip Don Loot , Ll,Pomeroy; John Okla . S turday ,when he con­State unIversity, where he n Beckman, Ll, and John Kirk,. lerred with Hawkeye editor Jo three major letters in ;[oQt~II, wood, Sioux City; R<lbert Young, Murray, A4, GaleS!:lurg, Ill.,

nd letters in baskct.t>all .np Ll, Waterloo; Craig Ann iTong chic! photo r pher ob Hul-track. ~ Ll, Ottawa, lll.; Ben Morris, Ll; bregtse, A4, Hull ond Wilbur

No admission will be ch~ Rome, N.Y.i Jo1m Nelson, Ll, Peterson ot the school ot jour­for the lecture, which is pen to *rie, Fa.; Roy B. Schneid r, LS, nalism, Hawkeye editor. students, faculty and the public. Park RJdg&, 111. Walker arrived In Iowa City ________ ~---~------~'L--'r-~I---~~~~~--------------------~

A few of the outstanding speakers at the convention were

• calls for g eenbacks! Cheering fullbacks •• ., • • • • • • • • • • • •

GET 'EM BY TELEGRAM I

Having a big time at the big pm. C:OIlt. money. 1£ you need financial reinIorcement.. tlaah home your fund appeal by telegram. Instead of a lecture on Economica, you'Jl ,et back coin of the reolm as requ.ted,

(

will I ad the group. The west group will meet at

lale Friday night and held con~ the home of Mrs. John Herrin" ter nc s that night and Satur- '210 Koser ave, at 8 p.m. Tues­day morning. He approved 65 day, Nov. 2S. Mrs. David Stout prints tak nand proce sed trom will lead the di. cussion.

Y CALENDAR ON ALE Hawkeye photo nliht which was held In the Iowa Memorial un­ion Nov. 8 and apprOximately 150 shots taken of University ac­tiviUes thu far this year.

YWCA oelend 1$ have now <been reduced In pricc to 75 c nt . The calendars, which w re pre­vlou ly sold tor $1.00, or vDII­abl in the YWCA office In th Iowa Memori I Union, or In housing units.

The tina1 edition of the yeal'­book, scheduled for distribu­tion in late May, 1955, will con­taln approximately 650 ~ngrav· Ings done by Walker's company, Southwestern Enanvlng. The linal 650 will be chosen from over 5,000 pictures taken dur­inr the year by the Hawkeye photo staff, Universlly photo \ servlcc and Iowa City commer­cial photographers.

I

0. '" Pri;tst4' .... , fIectrIdtr

W .. ,~ Stili Cui

prUlIIU the " lmport4JJ' ~ .. drm ••. hJghlightintl

CI flattering ~, ~kline

and the llim·walJlM Princul litle. Spot rtxllallt

ChronJ 'PUll ACt/are Taffem In Blaclt, Ntprutle Cretn, , ~mtthyu alld Copper/one; YOIUIf·in Mail' I

16.95

r

It's juat Basic Psychology. A tele­gram is alwaya something "special" -always geta attentlon-aet. result.. So uao 'em for any purpoee­invitations, greetings, reaervatioll8. Just call your W Item Union office.

• · ~.~

Phi Mu Alumnae Club Sets Dinner Wednesday

Members of the Phi Mu alum­nae club will hold a dinner meeting at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the home ot Mrs. D. A. Armbru­ster, 210 W. Park road. Miss Es­ther Reinking wIll ~s ist Mrs. Armbrust r. All Phi Mu alumna

Willard' Apparel Shop ' • ",~",/t~trW;S~re WESTERN : ~UNION

110 E. Wa hlncton t. • Tel. 3141

M.onday s child is fair of' face,

Tuesday's child is fu ll of grace,

Wednesday's child L~ full of woe,

Who is Thuf5day's child? Thurs­day'l child is the crippled child. H. hal lost a leg . . . or hal been crip­pled by polio. He was born with a twisted back or a limp arm. He , was crippled in an accident , .. or he hal cerebral palsy. Thursday's Children are the physically handi· capped.

And there is II speclal kjnd of lone­liness reserved tor those who go through lite with a physical handi ­cap. In their minds they can do everything that everyone else can do ... run . . . play . .. dance. But there is an insurmountable mountain be­tween. what their minds can do and what crippled arms and legs can do. The crippled child needs our specia care because he laces a complete lifetime tilled with frustrations. But we can smooth the way for him. We can narrow the gap between what he '>ees other youngsters doing and the 'things he Is able to do. BUT COURAGE AND DESIRE ALONE ARE NOT ENOUG H

Medical science, In the past few years, h as made gigantic strides in developing new metbods of treatment for specifiC physical handicaps.

T hese t reatments ar~ effective. They can mean the dilference be­

tween a lifetime spent in bed or In a whee l cha ir . .. and a li!etime q! in­dependence and productive activ ity.

But these treatments must be given by trained therapists using compti-

are Invited to attend.

) \.

cated equipment. To be most effec­tive, many phases of treatment, phys­Ical therapy, ocupaUonal therapy, vo­cational training . .. a ll m ust be ca r­ried on at the same time and under controlled conditions. That means a special iroUP of buildings dedicated to this humanitarian work. It means a staff of trained and skilled thera­pists whose lives are dedicated to the handicapped. HOW DOES THIS CENTER SERVE EASTERN IOWA?

You may have asked yourseU tha question. The answer is simple. Chil­dren from every county in the state

.pI Iowa may receive treatment in t hij new Easter Seal Reh abilitation Cen­ter now. In add ition, a Mobile Unit oper ated by t rained personnel w ilL operate from the O~nler, bringing the treatments to those who are un ­able to go to Des Moines. T hen, too, as the great good that can come f rom a Center of t bJ.s sort becomes known, all handicapped chiJdren everyw here wLn benefit. Today we serve h un­dreds . . . in a few years <we will serve thousands. The !Jowa Society for Cr ippled Children and Adults is dedicated to the task of p roviding proper care for EVSRY handicapped child a nd adult in Iowa. YOU ARE BEING ASKED TO GIVE NOW BECAUSE ....

... twis'ted arms and legs that can be helped now may be beyond hope next year. Th is week every home Ln Iowa has r ece ived an envelope In which they can l ive to this cause.

130 E, WASHINGTON

- .(),,'.d by the ,.,iwt MoM. BoanI oJ ~

READ' THE DAILY IOW4N WANT ADS

Chlldren/s Bulldin&", Easter eal RehabUitation Center

Earh famIly Is ilei n ~ '<lsked to heLp build this needed building.

You are asked to COUNT YOUR BLESSINGS ... and then joIn the hundreds of thousands of Iowans who, out of the ~oodness of their hearts, arc making these buildings a reolity because crippled chHdrcn need them.

THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO HELP "THURSDAY'S CHILDREN" W1 TH YOUR DOLLARS

· JQ MEtP CRIPPLED CHILDREN This message on behalf of-crip­pled- children spoll~ored by the gift of a person whose name . . we have been asked to with~ hold,

I.

,The Iowa. 8ocIel1 lor Crippled ChIldren and Adult.

12917 Grand Avenue, Des Moina

I I 'OHicers & Directors li!:rec lltive C omlllUtee

HAROLD O. B ENSON, Prendelll , Sidw: City Mas. JAY E. TONB, JR., V lce-Pre, ldent,

" o.es Moines ... PAUL' ToRNQUlST, Vice-Preslde,u, Davenport

,Mas. CunTVl ¥OCOl>I, Secreta"), Chariton

J. R: ArTLEY, TrelUUrer, Des Molnes· ETUAN AnN, Waterloo MRS. WA1.TD BARN£S, West De! MoiDes R 0 8EHT Btl It, Des MoiJles \ ENDELL J OH SON, PH.D. Iowa Cty Mns. J. H. NES~OTH. Iowa City Mns. CLYDE REID, BooDe

ExccltHvc D irector 1I. HAROLD Hn.{ANS, Des Moines

Directorl EDWARD BunCHE1T, Bloomfidd

MM, WARD Foui,Jd, Council Bluff. EVERElT M. G~E, M.D., Des Moillet DoNALD H. CEI\DOJIf, Burlington DAVID KBtlIDENum. JR., Des Moines LooIS F . .KURTZ, Des Moines Mila. J. W. LEut'ING, Newton MM. TED H. Lrrn.B. Des Moines ROBItRT LoONnEflllY, MeCaIlsburg ROBElIT J. MANOEloBAVM, Des Moines M .... HAROLD S. MAII'IDI, Hamburg La R. MUnN, M.D., CoUDcil BluR.

C'roIICE M.&WIIOR1', Des Moines VlRCU. MEYEJI, Chariton PETER B. NAllEY, Spirit Lake EIINEST PALMa, JR., Fort Madison J. WA1U\EN PATtlE, Man~ A. T. PuuNB, Cedar Rapids CunoIm PowBu. Oskalaeu ' R, R. RDOOLT, M,D .. ~ cay M ..... MAIi11lf VAM Oonmutov'r, Oran. City MIlS. CLAy VARNa, Decorah WALTER J. WALDR, MIIIOIl City Mas. J, E, W~ Sumner

--------- -- -- _. - - ~ - -- - - - -- ---- ----- - ---~

By GENE INGL£ DaJly 10waA ports EdItor

'We lost playing our best of­fensive game of the season."

Speaking' was the'disbdrtened, almost tearCul coach of the Iowa Hawkeyes, Forest Evasbevsld.

His team h d just lost a 22-20 ball game to Minnesota and now Ihe players were showering, ge~­tinl( ready for tbe long trip back to Jowa City.

He had no aLibis. He knew his tea~ had been bealen by its ~t.t nilst.kes. Th~ mi!ttket?-

i 0lll_ I. MI.~I... ... MJD •••• ' • ............. I •• a JafJa ••

. a clipping penalty which nulli­tied Earl Smith's 89-yard touch­down run and a tumble in Iowa's end zone which cost the Haw)ceyes itwo points and the marlin or victory. •

'Ooe of Those Tblnrs' r t "It was just one o~ those ltaings," Evy went on, holding !ltck his emotions. "We must 5ve clipped and you can't

~J'ant fox!. -f;,pte 'Crown Winne~, Dead P~,~1" ... !A')-The qeath of

calriill! Fo>(, 1X>llln r Lot rattng's triplei Cro~WIl:l1) l~O yrIl& r. p ll .... ed Monda.

Thc 27-year-old champion died at the A. B. Hancock farm Sattlrday UtilI' • w~~k'5' ilIne'1s.

II) 1930 be WQO full ~llntucky Denby, Preakness and the Bel".. mont to become the first to cal)­ture the big 3-year-old classics since the leal was accomplished in '1 919.

Blanda Sidelined ' For Season

I OHIOAGO (A»-Gcorge Blan­~a, veteran Chicago Bears quar­terback, is expected to be side­

"llncd the remalnder of the Na­tional Foolhall league season wllh a right shoulder separation.

.. ;Blanda, one of the league's --top -l'ankM passers, was in­jured during Q third quarter pile

I up, in SUPcjlll'S Co. with tbe ~d1llDl\ Brown",

~ • I , •

-;..£&0 COUNTRY CHAMP . ' NEW YORK (JP) - George­I, :rerry, the only runner Irom .Boston university in the event, f4fwon the ' ICIlA ~r_ country :: 'chamtonshiP M 0 n day. The

,sopho ore was clocked in 24:36.4 :for th five-mile grind over Van

, CorUafld P. rtt's hllls and dales, . 'just 5.3 seconds off the course l: 'record. I', It / '

" ~~ ,0. ",.-iitp, •.

tl .... , EltctrkJty . I'WWW S,. (1St

.

. , •

- • count those plays. Stearne! coming around !rom

I' . Here is when Evy ,ot the tee Although givin, much credit 81D1Ul Bad »-bta • 1 Jowa 111)"; coach sJt, ),lora all season and naturally we were

ready for a field ,oaL But Rei- to the fine Gopher team, Evy I Smith, wbo ' ,alloped for 117 . f~ised Gopber fir8t-y'ear Coach tlred in the . last quarter." "We had the tee all set up in Gilliam's left. A gopae.r bit them Ihe linal minutes Cor a field both at the same time and the goal," be said. The .Hawks never ball squirted to the ground got a chance to use it. where Dick McNamara recover-

chow tried a paSll instead, in- didn't fail to praise his own yards in 13 cames said be ex- urray Warmath for "doin, one :The inte1'ception was eVeD tended for Binkey Broeder in Hawkeyes. He was especially , . fJ!:k of a ,ood job." toulber to take when Elliot said the end zone. He would have bad happy with the offensive attack pected to have his 89-yard punt , ' Iilat Jim Freeman was in the it had it not been for Cochran "We must have made a millio~ re~~ ealled back.. .. ReichoW' EspIa1Da open when Reichow threw to Iowa started what appeared I ed it. on the 16. tippin, tbe pass in. to the hands yards," be said. Actually, it was J just bad a feeling that some- , ,Rei,;how ... owas explaining Stearnes.

Few Iniured Hawks of Swanson who ran it to the 7, a mere 398, second best ot this ' r i Iowa Willa In StaUaUca Time ran out and Minnesota had season. Minnesota bad 207. ' Minnesofa tftkes Floyd On paper Iowa came out on ' won one 01 the most excitin" Form Reversal i r ,top in eve~hlng .but the score.

Iowa came out of SaturcJa,,'. neree 1MIttie with Minnesota with breath-takin, gaIQ!!4 ever to be Broeder, who wu one of nine JI1o,d of a_dale I. ruUaa' q"le&l, In Go~"Ule w.,., tol- Here's the way it looked: First three lnJurlet. DODe believed to be ,erloua. played on Memorial stadlum's H'awkeye seniors playing their lowlq MiIlDftO&a'. %2-%1 vldo..,. pver Iowa Saturda,. down_Iowa 19, Minnesota ';

Evy said that ead Loa Mat,kJe'A'lea ,altered the wont 1aJIU'1, 30-year-old turt. last Big Ten game, pitched in, The eoUrt Gopher ".4 ~oUowed tile Hawk., •• Into the play_Iowa 68, Minnesolt.a 14; a broken nOlle. 'f\. almost sent in the ti~ld "We've been up real .bieb for d.re.iA~ roo~ alter the .... , I l( I rushing-low a 9S9, Minnesota

Rod&'er Swedberc relaJured bll .1IA;d kA~e bu' wu worldD&' ou£ ~:o ~e~ :eit~adtwthe b!~~:~ =n~~e~ ~~ow;a:j.)~ bro:::~'~:>U1*!~~~lj.t:ra:;' .ou'" wtUl ~o,d, the ;091i:us!~skIOa~:r!~~ ~n~: wfijl the SQu.a Monday. , • f' , ,the 18. But I figured we'd bet- 'claf4tied bis statement by add- ",tllolICk Ole ,~· ~~, !ul)fI ce ' •• ali; 00 IoWa', aehedale, .867, Minnesota !500; puntlng C~ Cummina received a blow Ia' the crolh bin r~.ft1'ed In ter 'st,lI ou 11Ibe time rather Ih" "It was Just a reverse of pIa,.lIn of boUL &4-~,~ :iller dreaiu:r .... , ., avera,e - Iowa 114, Minnesota

the drewDI" room after the 'Jame. I • I ., . than give Ill> the baU,"'Evasbev- lut year. 14innesota ,was the The _oe was a bapp~~a¥M &0 "'D"~ ~ lctwa-~~ta 39; 'Penalties - Iowa 22, Minne.. Ceater DIID. Suoh,. II .t.lIl ·~~t ;*,~. bldl, .1Ir~~ aDlde, Id said. team -today that was sky bl,b. ,a~ .01 ~qll8 ye.~. , I ',' ,,,/" r I' sota 70.

.' . ' • , . I , 'TW9 Good ClubB' ," We were up, 'but .oot ' like we 'But Mlnn sO'ta got the breaks to be its Ji~l touchdown drive' lr&m its own 28 . .sEWen and one­hal! minutes remained i~ the ganie. Five minutes and elev~ plays 'ater, the Hawkeyes were on the Minnesota 20.

1t looked as it that .was Jt lor "'Ok ~ds really fired up in were tor some other games,'" thing was ,olng to haP.Pell' ;'~l.~ ltwaNlOn's 1l¥lt-dJich p,ass inter- arid won. ' the Hawkl!Yes. But the ' ball the s'~ond half ad came back. Broeder was Quick to' add, Bump ElJiot, lowa "ba,ckfillld ~~1i9n ' in ' the eno zone . )¥hicp ;It * * chan(ed hands twice more be- Act\la,lly," be went Ofl, ' tbe ,ame "Don't take anything away !rom coa.t'h -who tool( care of the SCQut~ favl .-the Gopbers .possE!Sllion in ' Meaf\whlle, Evy let newsmen '0':8 Ihe game I/(as qver. ' didn't prove much ()ther ¢han Minnesota. They are a .great ing trom 'the · ,press box, /'$~d iha Closing seconds. ' watc~ only l"Iart of football prac-

Shorty Cochran, Gopher hal!- there were two reallY ' ,ood team." Gopher fullback and right halt , "Bobby Stearnes got -behind lice Monday before he shooed'

Reichow Conned. back, hit tor two yards . .Jrhen clubs on the ,field ." This seemed to be the feeling Bob McNamara is one of the the detense and was open for the/Tl out and said practice 'Would ' Quarterback Don Swanson "You know," he said. "I'm of all the Hawkeyes as they best backs the HawkeiYes bave a minute. I didn't see Swanson be in 'secret the rest of the week. fumbled and Jim Freeman re- one guy who said before the dre§ed. .rohn ,Hall, Hawkeye faced this year. fwne /lcross, but he did lind He lndlcate<!l the HawkeYe! Quartet'back Jerry Reichow

then hit Frank Gilliam with a pass on the ll-ya-rd line. GiWam started. to hand oft to Bobby

~overed on the 18 w.i1!h a minute season tbat Minnegota was golng guard who played one ot the Smith chimed in, "It takes a fnade the interception." would be -brewing something and 19 seconds lett. to have a good team. They sure be~ games of his career, said, good tackle to knock him down. i, .'lie added that the ilrst team special for Notre Dame, Iowa:s

Coaaldered Field Goal proved it out there today." "They've got a great ball club." He's a great back." . !'Played more today <than it· has opponent Saturday. . * * * * * * :.. * * * Scout Archie Kodros said the Irish are a "well 'balanced ball

McNa' mara~· ,wQ·wkeir' ~~·;e· I Backs' ~~~e::n::.f.eX~V: r:u?ll!~Sew~ r::J be unalbte to, concentrate on an)'

F W ' 5 ~ -t:!, one ppot or man Satu:day." astest . e ve eeh _n~O., . r 'or· fjr~~~;klpla~~~a:rf leli:~ . i " light sl~al d~ill hut sent his No.

a, DWIGHT JENSE1-i uau, low&ll Editor

, , ' 2 1 ~lt. lhrol,lgh ,a hard offensive against 11. He had just one jdea half, ~ am~ra also scbred SCl'~m~ , agair!st the tourth

''Those Hawkeyesare the ~ team we nave played all year. They were terrUic, commented Mlnnl!lSOta Captain Bob McNam­ara, following the Gophers' 22-20 \/ictory over Iowa Saturday.

in mind : to take it all ,the 'Way. lfirst toucbpown i team. " It was- the finest example of brll- out . . H~ pl.ck«lllp, li_iiiiiii-.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_ liance and desire I have eVer 1 1 "-~IY , .~ .~¥,, ·. in 15 ' ~31r..(ell · ~R~' l~~, l .......... ~ __ ..;. __ ~ ____ -.

McNamara, who ' looked as an all-American against Iowa as Gopher fans had said he would, stopped after signing dozens of. au.to.graphs outside the Gopher lcx;ker room to heap praile upon Iowa backs Eddie Yl.n.cent and Ea,'rl Smith and guard Cal Jones.

seen. 1It.e'!;c'epted onp' IYW" IW~ ,." ~l "l! Bob isn't an all-American, til· W!LS ilroud ot all the ~

I 'ye never seen "one," he said. 'Dn the iirst Minnesota 'team • .j t has coached. '

t:s the steam from Jhe showers WX"" :"II.,~I Clit!ared 8JWay, Blll Earley, forlll- ,.~ er Notre Dame star rwpo has been '""c .... 'u'li Iowa for the Irisl:t, stop-

to congratulate him, S 'Ithis was the tea~'s b,av.,iest HilTS.

, IY • J

IOWA LEFT JlALFBACK Earl Smith Is ~topped on the Hawkeye 2.1-yardUne by ~eso~ rlrht end Jim SoUau .fter a one-yard cain In the first Quarter of Saturday', rame. Iowa P\l'yer sprawled at the leU 1s debt CAd Jim Freeman.

"Those backs were so fast they re~lly had us going. I never saw backs so fast," ihe said. "And that Jones, he was in there all the time. He's really a hard man

mo"\ent of the sea80n anti my Hhppipst, too," said Warinath. , ..... . /

,:,prawled lazlly across a 'bench, Warm lith spoke in' the "thick dt;a\Y.~:~ brourbt to'Gop}lerland .t11Wi y~!~om Mll;sil5$l~p'i State. . ·~~W~lIe qone !better th;In a:tQt

K'E L L EyrS.

. -'Sad-Sacks' Tumbled Indiana, 6-0-. ,

.... to take out at a play."

Iowa Pair OukaiA Gophen ~hh and Vincent, 1Wti0 each

carrfed the ball 19 times Satur­day, netted a total of 270l yards,

• 62 more than the 'entire Gopher

Miami (Otf:lardlv Suits Up,ln'Piadice =~d~;':.,,~k:~k'~:'!~ , . " 1 " rr Inside the Minnesota locker

OXF"'RD Qh' ,trY\ ' A I I 1:00m, lIcNa{llara received some '" , 10 \n J - J O!">ny ) rs ,.I_ . • I· -,- 1~ pra.- himselt. His coach, Mur-sandiot team out!1tted 'WIS! way lell before 1he University of tices - _out 'ot courtesy. ray Warmatlf, termed h\m "the

Murray Warmath • 'My Happiest M01]Wn,f

would have felt a areat w-ave ·of 'DaYtOn· 145t Saturday ' == was But it 15 1'I'0r~ 01 note ffiat greatest I have ever seen In mY the field at Indiana university's not in its best bilb and tucker. Coach Parseghian didn't order cl\reer as a player or -a coach." , . \ shame. But there, trottinJ 011 !But <to Indiana observers, the the gll'les closed, and even Indl~ Warmath called M1cNamara's 'There never was a lmer play-Memorial stadium a week iao to~, patched, dirty and .other- ana officials admit a few ot the 89-yard kickoM return lor Minn_ler ... last Friday l or lis last pre-game W1S~ disreputaole appearance of Jroosier footbalr squ~d "may esota's second touchdown "The ' Doubles" 2 Spota practice was the sorriest band their foe of t.he morrow was have peeked." .greatest example of on~ man Playing at both fullback of ragim uffins the gridiron had somewhat more than astonish- Whether it alfected Indiana, * * * * * * ever seen. ing. Commented Indiana Coacb the natty tribe ot Miami Red-

An onlooker couldn't tell by Bernie Crimmins: skins which swarmed on the WHITNEY MARTIN'S _ "Their unUorms looked as if field the next day, scooped up ,

the uniforms, but the s,d-Iack ~ band was the Miami of Ohio they picked 'em up elong the six Indiana fumbles, interceptea football team, champions of the road." three Indiana passes, carried oft t Mid-Amerrcan conference. Officials at Indiana report the vlctory and ihad nothing to 'P0r ~

they encourage their ' Hoosiers be ashamed of - not even its The sorry spectacle was visible not to wat'<:h opponent's prac- appearance.

Arizona Coach ,

NEW YORK (JP)-The Monday morning c1us of toobball coach­es looked at the Old Professor with some concern. The usually alert old ,ent had a vacant stare, a hollow laugh, and was empty handed. Just a shell of his former selt. Vacuum rpaaked, you might say.

l.ef,·;eE!oole thought ' ~e'd do," be said. Gopher~, rated far down in.Big Ten stai1dints at the start qt~, .ellso,", ba.v.e won se­

o! their eliht 'Jlmes, They I Wiscoosin In their final Saturday.

. Iowa OpUOD .,la, WOl'1uI , agreed !With MoNam­

that Iowa's quarteJlback. dp­play caused them the most

tro'lble. "~e pittbout plays h'urt us tre­

mendOusly," he said, "because we thought Reichow iWould keep ..

to the cUpping pen-­Smith's 89 yard

run lWIhich , would Iowa ahead 26-20, but

up with Minne­sot.II\"'lin1n, the game-IWinnllli

couple of plays tllter, WAl't11Ionn said, "I dIdn't even

was a clip, but I'm sure was.

had gotten that touch­might have been the

,point of the- game. then who knO\\ls. When out there :flghting tooth

mean the cllfferenc.

betw.on

DRESSED and ,to

( ~ . . DRESSED U~I J' I

, . wear .

THE SHIRT THAT ' .. ' SMILES I

• Properly Starched

." Wuhe4 .aly Ia ,L~1

• Cello,bane Wr,ppecJ

• BU$ton. Replaced

Sanitone Sunday Night News

With Cole McMartin WMT·TV-IO P.M.

Channel 2

NITE or DAY DIAL uu

KELLEY ,

to all who wlshed to look the day before Miami was to meet Indiana! But the story of wba~ may have .been one of the best psycbologlcal pranks of the 195~ football season :began to .get wide attention only Monday. Let Me 'Coach

Says Team

Old Proteasor-Excuse my appearance, gentlemen. Didn't have time to eat any breakfast, and that accounts tor my blank look. Feel end the score's 22-20 CLEANERS

The point of the 'Whole thin, for those whose memory fbr football score's ~'t the Pe~t is this: Miami the next day »elt Indiana, 'Conqueror of mlibty Michigan, 6-0. I •

Miam l Coach Art Parsegblan lsn'tl ~\tiI1, a .thinl - ~t th~ psy~tio\ogy a ogle, 8D1how.

ilie will go so far as to say his club - unbeaten. until It

TUCSON, Ariz. (JP) - IIfead oo.t~a¥ ~oach WElJ1I!r Wo~on

of the t1rti.;erslt; ~ Arlzona (5;}) 1140 day told downtown ijoOSt~ ~ tlu*t ':by,.. b\lfl­ness and Quit Interlerlng with hU.,~ ". ;~

'.liiilJormed thl! Town'!ats, the ~oost~r 9rganizatlon:

"You think you ale supporters. You aren't. You ere tearing the

l team down. Give us a chance."

MEDICO Almam. FILTER PIPE 'a!! & 'S!! !~~T~~:

Woodson had !been asked at the Towncats' weekly ,luncheon why his team passed on fourth down with two yards to go lor a first down 00 Texas Western's five-yard line Saturday night. Western iWon 41-21. He answer­ed the question, then said:

"You may not like it but you are going to hear the truth. Let's see it you can take it.

'II think you have 'killed our

Race Track Betting Rises in Ontario

like a million, though. . Forest EvashevskJ. ,Jowa-Speaking of million, professor, we

must have Olllde a milllon yards Saturday. We moved the ball ibet-qUllrterbackiS here in Tucson. ter than In any other came this season. Minnesota showed us noth-

"I know you have crucWed in, we didn't expect. . I

Bleakley (quarterback Blitry , Warmatll: 'Game We Wante. MOIIt 01 .4.11' Bleakley) right here. You've torn Murray Wal'lNth, MinnlllOta-That was my happiest moment hlm to pieces. He knows bow of the' ·)'ea.r, as it was the game we wanted mOlt Qt all. That Bdb you feel about hlm. lie doem't Mcffama-ra ill a champion. We had our biaest ~adache with the think he bas a friend . Iowa quartenback option plIY, but tinally managed to ~ut their

"This upsets the quarte:rba~ks pins ,from .bi, into little piect's. d th It ti lUl Old Professor-The unldndest cut ot all from the Hawkeyes'

an e team. s rs up fee g st."dpoint, no douibt. Mr. Cberber", '"'U seem: ·pJ.eased considerin" when you openly find fault ~. .. oJ v ..

with the quarteroacks. Even ' the your defeat. players are beginning to criti- John Chemerc, Wasb1niton-WeU, professor, it was a moral clze them. This sort of propa- victov-we didn't ,et any regulars wrecked.

HIU WouJd Uke To Vie lI-Mali Det ... ganda burts us. Jess Hill, Southern California~"Jll've got to say, professor, Is

"I'm getting somethlDC off . my that 1'0 like to use a 13-man detense apinst UCLA. next Saturday chest," be went on. "I !plead if Red Sanders IWlll let me. Then we might win;' with you : Give us a chance to Old Prote.ssor-I understand that's illegal, and a rule is a rule coach our boys. is a rule, a8 they say. Mr. Woodard, if you had a dollar and spent

"A lot of you think you ~an 25 cents, what would you have left? do better. I don't. 'I don't try to Woody Woodard Southern Methodist - Three quarters, and tell you how to run your busl- th.,,! ijle length of time our boys played the ball ot wblcb they are nease!. I don't interfere with you. cql&ble, They wereo't awed by Arkansas' great record. r ask ·that you give us the prlv- . W"a*': 'SHU RealI,. Wu B,eadT for U. liege at coacbin, our quaner- : Bowden Wyatt, .\rkanau-We were up agaln.st a team that backs. You have them in such a really HS relHty for U8. They hUJ't. us .before we could .. e~ .~ When condition they are afraid they we were' behlnq 21-0 In the foutth quarter plenty of teams., would are loing to make a mistake al- bl&ve- Jlven up, but not our ·boYl. ,_ :J,J..' ';" I ~t. every time they call a 014 PfofessOT-Ur. SHclay/,when Is the best not ~! play. • . Georae BareJay, North C~lIna-Well, our best lime; !Would

"I know more about foobll no' ll4.ve, beeJr'much ,ood .bie 1'ay Notre Dame pla)'ect S~turday, than anyone bere and I'm smart- and we ;played • poor •• me. . ." ~, I ,

~inutes left, the laJTle J.' S. Gilbert yet." ~ ~. " . .

Dlsi CIa ,

. ' M,.,c!;"'nl·llltcr stnins smoke of nicotine, )iice!,

roROlnob ~rib race track followers poured a record '59,~7,080 ~to 'Pari-mu~el bet­tipg n\a~biqe5 ip ~~e pro~in.c~ In tllll~, ·at"lmteiSt! 61 $7~"06 OVer the 1963 figure of $52,272,-874, the previous high.

e''4bo~t football' than you. Stay Terty Brennan, Notre D.ame-This was the fuat tiJ¥w.-e played out of my business ~ I caa do ls a te~ Wlit 'trom ,,*-e .~ 10 Yff.1ooked pretty pd . tid were

'8I"S, na'~C5.When filter turns brown, throw inn"a), all the impurities it has trapped. 1lCfI_Icc

with I flab filter 'for mild, ~ 1IDOkiJia. ,. TJlis~" ,"sPh" ' r'" 166 days compared with' 1S1 las~ year.

better." able.to eet oranJzed lor Uiattrl"8~nd.q~r1er'J . )'. . The Towncats IBV~ W'OodlOn a, . 014·PtoMsot'-INoU,rn, I~ cetUnt~\f..tld, 1.b~~~ Wh.lch

ltaoding ovation when he had r~miiic:la me, I Jlave a ~e otWanizln, to do DiY!MI1f, ln~ '81 ~ time Unishfd talkin,. ' ,Is up ~'ll pt startecL lAn70ne have a .andwkhJ· , .

, ,

-MEDICO PIPES- Edward' ·S. Rose ..... .1'11

All Wint.r -:. Any Weat~.r-'lbMIIIa ... 0 _, .... Baa.­~ea we .. earr" W .... tb&& beloa, In a DNr " ... - .. we IIIIl (1ft hetler aMeat.loD to ,. ..... waD" ......,.­be Vi ....... Dnp, Medici .... .... ftD~ 01 YOn pal:-8C&IPTION - Yo. an &I-. ..,.1 weIe_e - _ .

~ City'. fa .. rIte Drive-in ..... urant • Open 22 ....,. a dayJ

• Ceme .... today for .nne, . , tI-

(

. ~ .

Ath

Alp any my con not YO\

CUI

Joe

feel

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'5-

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II

I The lPaily~p'~q~ '

NEW YORK (A» - Ohio State- I * * * returned to the top of the week- ga~. . INS POLL BJ[JpS IOWA * * * 'Hawks Great Team'- * * * * * ..

I ~ 1) Associaled Press football UOLA was idfe last Satutday, Iowa failed to 1)Lace Ln the

[

~ ranking poll Monday, but by a wh.i1e Ohio State turned In a INS poll Monday. UCLA led the tnargin so close that the fonner solid 28-6 victory over Purdue INS poll which ranks only the Illader, UCLA, would be jusillied and third place Oklahoma pined top 10 teams. Others in ordet Ln demandlnl a recount. ground by walloping Missouri, were: Ohio State, Oklahoma, No-

Afhl ,. r B· M '- lowa's Hawkeyes plummeted 34-13. tre Dame, Army, Southern CaU-

l e les uSlness anager- l trom 9th to 19th after their 22-20 Ohio State was tile leader three fornia, NavY, ArkansJlS, Missls-

Evy Predicts Iowa DES MOINES (A')-lOWI will ---------~------------~' ..

I l

r

, IPss to Minnesota Saturday. As weeks ago, then UCLA took o~er sippi and Micblpn. . . i result of the victory, the Go- after a couple or whopping VIC-

P f Goe' f P' k ( II ' "hers rose from 13th to 9th. tones and stayed on top for two I • h V • DOli OS S 0 ar e arro . ) j Wben the ballots oi 222 sports weeks. I riS arslty rl s

AI. '! writers and broacasters were tal- The leading teams with lirst W· h U I R - .~' ·tied uti \he usual !>Oint buls of !,Iace votes and wOD-lost recorda It out sua est

KANSAS CITY liP) - Parke ----------- 10 lor tach first place vote, 9 'for In-parenthe ;

New York Yankee puSball SYII". s ",u. .. wi .... in tbe,.IIcxt f IlDV" 1tY'~,010 Points and UCl:JA 2,003. ~o ...... ...; (.11 (M) I ""J Ire Dame's re,u1ars, usually ex-tem, Monday was ~amt:d vke ~ .' ".. ew...",., gut the UditlS drew ·9lrtbf·the •. N.1Le D .... t I J"II i'~ cused from llonday football

come up with a football season I close anymore. R$t now I am "wLnner" within the next three ' diseoura,ed.. coming so dOle and years, Coach Forest Evuhevskl not wlnnin, them alL predicted Sunday nifbt. "But somebody is ,olng to pay

In hia wee k I y television for It to Ute next few seasons .•. (WHO) interview, Evuhevskl and these kids will go all the Hid he corulders the H.-wkeyel way." "one of the Irelt football teams Evuhevskl said the HawJteyes ot the nation." , l)ad poWn, to be .. harned of in

get 'em up tor Notre Dame-i '

Evashevski ~alled thl .oi!uoh t play which resulted in the .ame- '. lolin. safety "a JOOCl calL"

"We hadn't fumbled the optibn , play all day," he said. "We hi d . to ,et out of there and " if ... ~ ; hadn't fumbled, the plAy l'oUid . have ,one." ., .. "

Evashevakl said qua~~It ·

Carroll, a veteran o.perator in, thejSOid he . ho~s to complete' eta -se(;olKi, C'\C.,' it W8$ 01110 Mate k'9~~ ~J (r~/a-.~ ::U: SOUTH BEND, Ind. riP) - No-

president and business managee) I Important poIts-yet to b6 fiUecl. IH tint place ' voles and Ohlo's ~ ~=r..:~' (1) (H) • .!;r drlllJ, tUl1led ou~ in fotcC Mon-o{ the new Kansas City Athletics _ are1thoSi! 'Of fWd inana,e", )Set'- Buekeyes·87. ~ " ", I '!fi.~:.~~r.;!~ 0aI11.,.1. (f.1) ~ day as Coach Terr,Y tBrehnan op-or tile American leagu,e. ,. sonnel manager and tarm club The recount wl11 ' be ~de ' ot ._ A' ....... 1111 /1.1) I, AlII ened preparatioN for lowa.

. II th fi t I director ~ - ' , Jt. Min .- n-Il eH Brennl\n fa!) his varsity

He said it was disheartenIng the 22-20 loss to MLnnesota. In to hit w.yers to come sq close P9Dlmen\S to newsmen after the to belnc unbeaten, two 5easona game he sald he woUld "rather Jerry ReIchow "did a Io¢ j~b ~ Iq a row, and ~Id he realized h,ave been drubbed" because "we of staym, with what was wdrit- .1

"the fine people of Jowa have would have a better ~ance to I I",." . "! Nammg of Carro was e rs' . course, after next ;5atill'day 5 II ••• 11 •• ,. JII.uoMlI I (6-1-1, ~M official acl dealing with person- I Mi?6t prorq.inently menllol\elA, In ,ames, when OCLA. !Ights It oot ' 1:. 11'<.104 •• (II-~) ,u ltu1>~ workouts on defense and

I b A Id J h Chi ' .... ..: -~. ith th "-ld I So 1 I II. N&r~I&" (iJ-~·1l lat also Ii ar""ncd up a ·pread tor waited Cor a lon, time" tor a . .• ~

w~e;~::/;o~~~~anything "'f lAVE on ' You, Ir.it. ·~ · .. ;·<. ­~It [will do ... but I know the 'HANKla IV I' .. ·:· I"" ~

ne y rno 0 nson, cal{o OO~lon we..., mana,.. w th uthern Ca Ifom a for the ••. WetI' VI, ......... 1) le. "" Q -

businessman, who purchased the '11' Job III Lou lJoudl'ejUl, recently PacU\c Cout Conference eham- IIJ.. VI"I.I. T •• ~ n",-I, II ~a\lQn attack that was used for Athletics from tbe Connie Mack lilt out as mana,er ·of the Boa., plonshlp lind Ohio Stale seeks tult =~!!"-(.'.~)ll ~ e fIrst time agalnn North Car-family last week. ton Red Sox. clinch the BI, Ten title at 1M II. Aa-'" (~SI No olina last week.

Carroll, general manager 01 Johnson said the pe~Dn.) ex.pense or its old rival, Mlchl- ~: ;:.';:.:'(:!~) ~ Co-captaln Dan Sh.annon, lett Hawks wllllivc them one wlth- 'Hom. for • In the next three year.. •

the old Kansas City Blues of ihe mana,er will have charge of * * * * * * end, fullback Don Schaefer and Amerkan association since 1951 signinc contract. and makil11 lett haU Joe Heap - all otwhom and a lop Yankee ifarm hand player deals. Ielt saturday's game with appar-since 1945, was signed to a three- AF. in the case of the Phlladei- ~ 'fA ~1~~.injUries - reported for ac-year contract at his own terms." phla Athletics, there'D be no 't. Th I t d ' 1 d 'PO,. 'A t"w.rA Al$O In uniform were right e sa ary ,was no IVU ge . "general" manager by that name ~ 1:'1 ;J

J h 'd t f th I b halfback lPaul Reynolds and rl"ht o 05on, presl en 0 e c u , here, at least the f.irst year. Car- .. end Gene Kapish. They have roll will ,be engaged primarily in BJ GeDe 1I.,Ie-DallJ l~waD 8peria E411\er missed more than haU 01 \be

Wow, Watta game! I( Minnesota plays like that all scason, It - ~

"We've IT'OWU to expect a Ireat ,ame every Saturday and we're not satisfied to just come

* * ~ * Smith Loses lcoring· Lead 10 McNamara Cyclone Fullmer hClalntbd.lIng the buslnl!liS end o! dt.. season with I .... injuri-

W· 26th St ° ht should be the team to go to the Rose Bowl, not Ohio State. Minne- C'HlCAGO (iP) - Bob Mc-Ins ral9 sota pU!yed a bettcr game against the Hawkeyes than did Ohio Mllwauk .. Signt Namara, the player who Mlnncs-

BROOKLYN, N.Y. (JP)-Unde- Scorfichini "Wins State. ,. , 2 New Scouts ota coach Murray Warmath call. fcaled Gene (Cyclone) Fullmer ' But don't take anything away from Iowa. Iowa h d the better ed an alJ-American "i( I ever 01 WestJordan, Utah, fltC:k~d Up ISplit Decision team on the field 'Saturday. Ragged In !!'!lOts, but It was beUer. . MI.IJWAUKlZ (..P) - The MII- saw one" scored a pair of tcruch-his ' 26th victbry 'MonallY illgti't ."" "0' ,. , In my mind, it was the best. game the Hawkeye!; have "Iayed waukee Brave. ~ Monday an- dc.wllS al~lnat Iowa Satttrd.y and spoiled Peter Mue!lert:' I ~) YQB,KC.f)-IbilO SCOI'- this season-and they've played 80m ,dOd ones _ Ohio State, nounced the al,nl", of two and baa taken the Bla Ton scor-Am!tielln debut" br · deoiaWeijr; tk1.fnj '· mll~thg his ttr~t stBTt ' al, ' MIc:hllan ~tatJ:, Wj~oonsin, Purdue-ell ot them good. But this one I seouts Ln their farm sy.teJll. Jot: lea!1. . . llUapokiiin th 'orm~l'-G~l'map : (.ttf~1j~1"e'1t10nth · 1~y'Orf. brushe1l took the r,ake. ' 1 Sam Allen Qt 1'(a)eJch, N.C., The Minnesota :tuILbac~ ran m t champlon in .. aside Lu{h~r R~!WlIlig.s' stin,'n, Minnesota's Bob McNamara is a terrillc back. I'm inclined to who had held I .Imllar ~t .witb his touchdown total to JJ 19r 61 ~c'~"ilac ~ 10;~.lJni~ at lIeU jabs 'Monday night and' u~ iO along with Gopher <::oach Murray Warma th that McNamara Is the Chicago WhJte Sox, was ap- pOints to ,0 ahead at Iowa's Earl Eatlterr\ p~r~waY' ~up,. F'dHmet !'lit- superlor'° st'ren&'\h to win I better than Alan Ameche ot WllfConsln. Ameche is a good man for pOinted to handle the Southern Smith. WeiVle.d.. 155 ~, Mu~I~~ ~S5~. split decisioJ'l In a 10-round. three or four yards. McNamara is ,ood for three or four or 30 or section of the lIaUon, and frank Smith scored once and heJd on-

)fii\\ID~r, "':'ho. whtlll1ed .,Jackie match·at Bt. NI«;bolas Jlrena. i , 40. He's an excellent broken flcld runner In addition tD hein, a fahey, former~t. Thomas Minn. to second place with 60 J)Olnts. La Blia 1n IllS ~Jrst. eastern bout ScQl't1cJtini weighed l54,~, power runner. He's one of the ~sl In the business. coUele baseball coach: wu However, Smith stiU is tho last Monday mght at the same Rawlings 146 ""'unds, named to watch Minnesota and point. leader in conference gamel

t k th I f tb "" .. Iowa's Earl Smith and Eddie Vincent hit their stride In the North and South Dakota. Fahey only. Smith has 48 points. arella, 00 e p ay rom e IRawlings, whn Is scheduled to MI t B S I h" 8 _... ..... I st k r'_ I th ... nneso a game. ut m t s 1bC$. run- an 9-ya,,, runba""" 0 a had couted previously for Bobby Watkins of Ohio State game, oc y v.:rman n e very report tOI his Chi.cago . draft, t II d b k b H k 11 ed I liM'

fl t d d "i tid hi ' pun -was ca e ae ecause a aw eye c pp . mag ne In- Cleveland, St. ~ -uls and the Chl- remained In third "lace wJth 57 rs roun an rna n a ne 5 board this morn in" after ~ ser- ta f I d th d d Ilk "'" 0" edge 11 th .... neso ans are g a to lice at game come an go an fee uc y calo CUbs. points whlle three other players a e way. ies of difficulties with se Ilc~VIl that Vincent racked up only 154 yards and Smith only 117. tied for fourth .

.. fa c. ... rtr service oftlclllls, was un,abJ~ to One Minneapolis newspaper called the iame an all-American d • .t II Hopalonr cassady of Ohio I stand otf the swarming 'Italian. contest. It was that-and more. Hoa I Ro. , ROHwa Stale. Abe Woodson of Illinois T,here were no knockdowns: ••• Hartwig Named Cuppers and Alan Aanecbe ot Wisconsin

Judge Arti~ A~dala scored It What impressed me was that Iowa, rated u a llrst-quarter were deadlocked with 42 points 7:..a and' Judie Artie SchWartz team all season, clime tback nd came back hard. Minnesota was MELBOURNE (.4') - Lcwls each. Ameche tplayed hardly at 6-3-1, both for IScortlchtrii. Ref. held to 15 net yards Ln th~ second half. The kids fought gallantly, Hoad, Rex Hartwig, Mervyn all agaLnst IllLnols and never ear-eree 'Ray Miller's vote or W~_-l '10 R d K R L1 1 WI ... ·d d courageously and never let wn. ose an en osewa were rled the .hal w e ",assl y an for Jtawlings drew jeets 'from d M d I ht .. th Woods # t ...... d r Jerry Reichow summed" up In the dres In" room when hI' said name on ay n i ouy e on ran ~or one ou"' .. own

(l )SlopotlcklJn,lDlIpPar the ,srD.,allcrowti . • ,,' 11,,· .. '!" La T I I tl fA h bruochl.1 "'POD. (I) .... :r ,1 thJa is the first time that th~jIlo. 1 unit has !been used this much. wn enn s assoc a on 0 US- eac . ~.IeI~th'" ~ .. ~, . .!l 'I STANDING BOOM? "We were getting kind ot lirad out there in the fourth quarter." Iralla as the nallon's 19:;4 Davis Purdue's Art Murakowskl was _w ... .."..... _ Cup squad. , in seventh ,pl~ with 36 points _tID, actIGoa. (II) Baa. , Micbigan State's Macklin field raul they're a great bunch of kids, thesl1 Hawkeyes. They've The Australlans will delend followed -by Geno Capellettl of =i'::~~'l=eo:': ~ti1diutri has a seating capa~lty IOBt all chances for a ;all Ten. title or even a share. But they're the huge Lnternational trophy Minnesota with 32. Lou Baldac' J~uely p/IJ.,. aod """"" of 50,745. Last ,Year, however! gteat. teal great. I a,alnst either the United States cI of Miclligan scored two touch-

.... ~ .. , pattIcuJ~ u:i~t~I=·"'~t:; I thet ~r WLn more than '{&I,oo.o ' Gopher center 'ChUCk ,StainS: hror had a ~etsonal reasoo for or Sweden lllte in December. downs and an extra poiht to l'UD

..... ~ B1l0~CHOLA. spectators 'four 01 the r live wantLn& to beat the Hawk~e's Saturday. "I was stationed at ft. 8111 The two challen,ers play each his total lo :t1, movin, ahead ot I ' ..... i y I ~dDle "games. ,',. I (Oklaho~) this summeK: )Ylth a squadron of Iowa cadets 1tIdudi~ other thf,! ,mIddle of next month six otlier players tJed at 30

Th.,. are n. low., fo, •• 1

John Hall (Hawkeye tackle). "The~ wou1dn'llet~mc {oraet 1& ~7-Q for the tllh-t to p~y ~wtrallia. paJata.

bea ting we took last year." iiiiiiiiiiii~ii~iiiiiiii!iii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_i!iiii.~.". Personally, I think Chuck rates along with our own Bud Law! ( .

~ ~~~!'J~~!!!run~~ l ,J I _ .(,,, \.. 1

~, J> .. ~ .. " ~

Alphabet Squea, who coU~ .!he bfllal let ten anybody, laYS, "J will alWayf ... t aritt1or .,""liIlV.

my boo~ .. H&,~t~. !!. •. ,i ihd tfere'. DO btJ .... ~ comfort vaiui .4Jl ·t~·,~¥ mortal not lay .~6t .to~ • .• ~~~ ::! .. ",.J,.~'7 . You don't bav~' ~ ·08 · WttIw-QW1 to fIlioy cuual, at-eaee appearance t hat com.. from WAllU'bw....

Jockey .hortal Better drQp .into yo~ deller's IO(!Ia •. . buy a supply of Jockey lIborta and T-ebirta, . feel aa good as you loo~.

. ,

son as two ot the finest centers In the Big Ten. • • •

Iowa Athletic Director Paul Brechler failed In his attempt to get the Minnesota game televised Into the lowa .fIeld house and some Iowa and Minnesota theaters.

'Brechler said It would have cost $10,000. Everyth{l1J "*' sef. but the plans had lo be cancelled when Iowa COUldn't get a caMe from Minnes'polis to Iowa City.

Brechler said lhe Minnesota fans didn't particularly go for the idea either. They didn't feel they wanted Lo drlv.c to MLnneapolis just to see the game on television.

• • • He also said that Iowa could sell another 100.000 tickets to the

Notre Dame -game. The ,business office has already returned $225,-000 to foo~all hungry fans who wanted to sec the game.

The Notre Dame game will .be televised in some Iowa theaters. • • •

Brechler denies that anything new has developed about hIm moving to Indiana as the athletic dIrector. "They haven't ap­proached me ~ince last spring," be said.

AYE •• , YOU'LL SAVE A;N.D :SAVE AT DAVISI ,

1 i':"

··:THR .. ,iy · "-

. HOUSEHOLD CLEANING ·.PECIAL ••

Now ... with bolldaya abud ... IJ the time 10 have your bouJe., hold Items c1eaued, At DavIs· Clemen, )'0011 DOt ooly MVe durlill thls apeclal .... , hut ~'U let let·ActioD P..wI C1eanlu, at the SUM low PIbI

1 South Dultuque ........ :

MEET YOU AT WHET'SI ALL NEW, MODERN FOOD EQUIPMENT ENABLES WHET'S TO SERVE YOU

TASTIER MEALS AND GIVE YOU BETTER SERVICE THAN EVER BEFOREI MEET

YOUR FRIENDS AT WHET'S FOR BREAKFAST, OR NOON LUNCH, OR FOR

THAT EVENING MEAL ••• THE FOOD IS DELICIOUS AND THE SERVICE IS TOPSI

, • ALL NEW EQUIPMENT

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/0,. 'IOUI' convenien.~~ W~el ~ ~w Jpecial JacteJ ice ~,. alloccwionJ

IN 'IT'S 80TH YEAI AS A STUD6NT MEETING PLACE

.WHEtSTONE DRUG (O~ ON THE CoaNIIl ACIOSS flOM THE CAMPUS

32 SOUTH C~NTON

_____ ._ ~ :~ .. ~ .4,. ·i ~~~=s~~~~==~~-~;~~~~_ ... " _~____ ~1I ........ ~~ .. ~~~ ................ ~ .... ~ .. IIII .... II .. II .. ii~ .. ~~ ........ iI ... ~~ .... 1I - .--------.. ~-=-- - __ L-. • • . _.

. . " t

,

Journalists Needed, Moeller Tells Club

"'orking journalists mUlIt make a direct effort to interest more good QuaUty young people in journalism as career, Prot. Leslie G. Moeller, director of the SUI school of jouml .. :.sm, told the Headline club, Ci.::ago pro­fessional chapter 01 Siiffia Delta Chi, national professional jour­nalism fraternity, Monday eve­ning.

Such an ettort Is essential to make sure that the mass media of tomorrow will have staffs of good Quality, Moeller declared.

Good staffs are a must if the mass media are to carry out sa tisfactoriiy their most im­portant function, the distribution of intorJl'la tion which Is basic to the proper operation of demo­cracy, he added.

To .get more good quality young ~ople Into journalism, working journalists must Ii&ht' the misunderstandings a ball t journalism as a career, Moeller sald.

, ncovers F~rmer 'Jiome

(A P WIr~p"~lo) A PROLONGED DROUGHT IN TENNES EE uncovered the foundation o. (be former home of Ray­mond MilsaPII In Ule lime town of Butler which wa Inundated _by Tepncs ee Valley Authority 's Wa­tau~a lake In 1949. The lake normally covers tbe f!)undatlon with Idg feet of water.

Electrical Drugs Aim' Frosh To~omp~te • In Speakmg Event

l'tfORN~ COMF:ORT NEW HAVEN. Coon. j.4')

A man was arrested for siealinC 50 cents and a newspaper from an unattended news sland. He told police he wanted the money to buy breakfast and the oews­paper to read while he ate.

"Doon O)::en 1:15·9:4$"

mitf!~~ STAR'lISG TO.DAY

FIR T TIMF. - FIRST RUN -

THE DE PAUR INFANTRY ClIORUS. scheduled to pre ent a concert at the 10 a Memorial Un­Ion W dDe day, ha estabJl hed a reeord as the most heavlJy book~ct. concert attraction In American musical history, Tbe concert will Include songs of lands visited by the chorus durinit' army tour, lon~s of World War 11, son .. s of LaUn America amI others.

!Many young people do not fully understand the important service responsibilities of the mass media, h~ pointed out, and it is important to make this clear since most high school stu­dents today want to hold posi­tions which are useful In and im­portant to society.

At S to p pIn 9 Bfloo a C lot s m!~:1 S;un;:~~l :;e~!;vrccon~~t ATLANTIC CITY (JP)-Special

electrical drugs are a new pros­pect for preventing blood clots, the cause of killer heart attacks.

teries, and so are prime targets for trouble from blood clots.

for freshmen will be held during the first two weeks in December,

rol. Orville A. Hitchcock of the ~peech department said Monday.

GEORGE MONTGOMERY

~;;;,is ),;i;u

There is a

DEMAND For young Americans care· fully trained for successful careen in

Foreign Trode or

Foreign Service Leadln, American bU!liness firma have come to depend on the American Institute for 'orelm Trade as a major lource of trained personnel for theJr international opera­tiON. •

A hlll'd·hlttlne, intensive one· year coune at the graduate level will give )'01.1 the back­,round you need In languag· u, area studies and business a9mlnlstration as it obtaj)u to world trade,

Writ. '0: Admlslions 'CammIU ••

Amukan INtU\I', far

Foreign Trad. Thunderbird Field I.

Phc.ni:c, Afilanl

De Paur Tickets Available at Union

Tickets arc still available for the concert by the de Paur 1n­f<lntry chorus to be given in the Towa MCl\lorial Union, Wednes­day at 8 p.m.

StudenL~ may .btain tickcts by presenting their identification cards at n desk in the Union lobby. R£served seat tickets arc on sale in the Union lobbY at a cost of $2.

The chorus was organized in 1942 by men of the 372d intan­try regiment stationed at Ft. Dix, N.J., as a morale builder tor the regiment. . Thcy are under the direction of Captain Leonard de Paur and have given 3,500 performances. They are now making their rifth civilian tour, and wlll ap­peal' at the Union under the aus­pices of the University C()acert course.

Steigleman To Address Industrial Editors Group

Pro!. Walter A. Steiglemon, head of the editorial journalism !' qucncc at the SUI school of journalism, has accepted an in­vilation~ to address the Delaware valley meeling of the Industrial Editors' association in Philadel­phia, Tuesday, Nov. 16.

The Delaware Valley district of the as ociation includes ar as in Pennsylvania, Delaware and New Jersey.

WHY NOT STUDY IN MEXICO? New Campu. Mild CII",.I. lb. Vtar·1tound

MEXICO CITY COLLEGE Wln'.r Quarlfr: Jan. 1 lo ~Ur.b 1G Cml,h •• 1 on Spanloh. Lalln Amerle.n ludl .. , Forel,n Tradt. JII . .... r' (·r.~U .. Wrlll"l. ,\nlllro,olo" (irall n .• a nd M. . dtlreu i\ "pro\ cd for etfrans , ~prln .. (auI"",: t.t.h ,!'! to June '!. h\lhUncr H len: Ju"'e 13 throu,lb AUIO t.. 26

SI,,"ol Workshop. and Inltn Ive Cours •• : June II throuch July 1:\ July 111 IhroD,b AUluol IU

For information write: Dean or Admlsslons Kilometer 16 Carretera !\Iexlco-Toluca. Mexico 10, D. F.

With Lots of Body, AND THE BEST INGREDIENTS

and." only . : .

,

I HOT. SANDWlfHES (1 Block South of Flrsl National BaH)

-CLEAN - FRIENDLY - COURTEOUS-

KXIC In Air

To Particip~f.e Defense Test

Radio station KXIC wedneS-!' jay will take part in a nat!on- tor 15 to 30 second intervals', wide test of the "Conelrad" sys- then off for periods of one to .em for defense against enemy three minutes. bomber~, but listeners will have In metropolitan areas l1steners to get up early to hcar the opeJ'a- will hear one continuous pro­lioll. ~he test will take place gram, which will be passed from ;ome time be\ween I :30 and 4:30 station to station at short inter-. m. vals. "Conelrad," named from "con-

trol of electro-magnetic radia- KXIC, like other stations in Lions," is designed to confuse the U.S., will shift to one of two enemy navigators by having all frequencies, 540 or 1240 kilo-3tations broadcast Identical pro- cycles. (l rams and operate on the same Durwood Early, program di­wavelength, without giving sta- rector, said IOUC, as a partici­tion identification. pat.lng station ill the test, will be

When the "Conelrad" defense on the air at 1:30 a.m. Wednes­is operating, bombers heading for day, although normally the sta­U.S. cities can not navigate by tion does not .froadcast after following broadca~t-beams of 4 :45 p.m. stations in target areas. Radio statio WSUI is not

In areas such as Johnson taking part in e Conelrad ex­county, where there are few sta- ercise. lions, an on-of! system will be Early said C wm probably used. Slations will be on the air broadcast spur of news and -;- civll defense releases during the

b short p'eriods t broadc\lstlng. ISC-SUI To De ate · Material on civ ' defense will be

1 I• furnished by Leo A. Ruppert, On Mi itary Po ICY Johnson county'civil d,efense di-rector, tarly !iil41 ..

• -"Docs thIs houso apt>l'lW~ 1lY Listeners' onlY' warning when the military policy of massive re- the test begins will be the an­tallation?" wlll be the issue in a nouncement that "this is a symposium - forum with Iowa special exercise \) ing conducted

tat colle e Thursday at 7:30 jointly by the United States air p.m. in the senate chamber of , force, Federal Communications Old Capitol. commission and civil defense or-

Four students, two from Iowa ganizations." State and two [rom SUI, will spc<lk. Prof. H ugh Kelso of the political science department will [Ict as moderator.

James McKinney, A3, Musca­tin~, and Ida May Brendel, A2, [owa City, will represent sur. Howard Hyde and Ron Decker will represent Iowa State.

2 Sioux City Officers File For Vote Recount

Student's Wife Hurl In Head-On Crash

Mrs. Leslie Paleg, 26, wife of an SUI graduate student, was re­ported in good condition Monday at University hospitals with a Iractured leg sullered Saturday in a three-car crash.

They would strengthen or re­store the normal electrical charges of the blood and the blood vessel walls. The aim would be to keep blood com­ponents from sticking to the walls, starting dots which later break loose and lodge in . the heart or lungs with disastrous effects.

New evidence as to why and how such drugs might work was presented today to the American College at Surgeons by Drs. Philip N. Sawyer, Bernhard Deutch and J. Mayers, Univer­sity of Pennsylvanlas school of medicine.

Like Charges Repel The inner walls of blood vessels

normally have a negative charge. So do blood cells and proteins in the blood. !Since they all have the same charge, they rellel each other.

But if the vessel wall develops a positive charge, through injury or other cause, it could attract cells and proteins, and this stick­ing could start clots. This is a theory.

Dr. Sawyer described experi­ments in which the inner walls of blood vessels were given a positive charge, Clots started to form.

Effect ot Charges When injured arteries were

given II negative charge, there usually were no clots. When they were put in a positive electrical field, clots ollen did form.

This is evidence that the elec­trical field or charge can be a trigger starting blood clots.

Perhaps drugs could be found which would coat blood vessels with a negative charge to repel blood components and prevent Or halt clots. Such a drug could be given to persons who show signs of hardening or narrowing of ar-

Newsome Named Group Chairman

SIOUX CITY (A')-Two Wood­bury county officers d lea ted in he N9V. 2~eneral election Mon­

aay filed motions with the coun­ty auditor for a recount of the votes.

Five persons were injured In the accident north of North Llb- Pro!' Ellis H. Newsome, head erty on highway 218. All but of advertiSing at the SUiI school Mrs. Paleg, who lives at 124 of ~ournalism and marketing de­Quonset park, ~ere released partme'lt of the oollege of com­after treatment ror minor In- merce, has been elected chair-

man at a newly formed educa-The two, both Republicans, arc

County Attorney Wallace W. Hutf and A. Bert Erickson, a county supervisor. Huff lost to Donald O'Bd n, Democrat, by about 500 votes and Erickson trailed Democrat Daniel Murphy by 130 votes.

juries Saturday. Uon committee to represent mid-A car driven by Mrs. Pale$ western teachers of advertising

collided head-on with one driven in their relationship with the by Mrs. Lyle Van Camp, 29, of central region of the American Oelwein, then careened around Association of Advertising Agen­and hit a semi-truck driven by des. Ervin Gerald, 48, of Onalaska, The education committee has Wis. been Cormed, according to New-

Others injured: Mrs_ R. C. In- some, to provide for a coopera­gersoll, 74; Mrs. Vern Peterson, t1ve !lrogram ,between the teach-

Des Moines Council 44, and Mrs. Van Camp, all of ers of advertiSing In the midwest o Iwein, and Mrs. Stuart Demrp, and the member advertising

Grants Bus Fare Raise 26, 120 Quonset park, ot Iowa agencies of the central region ot

DES MOINES (JP) - The city iiiCiiiiit:Y:' =;===:!::=;t=h;e=AAAA~iiiiiiii'~~~~~;j~ council granted Des MOines

Transit Co. permission Monday I to increase the adult cash bus Starts TODIY' fare from 18 to 20 cents, while 1:15 P.~\ • rctaining the presen l token price ot three for 50 cents. T · f M L ,

In authorizing all other fare ef1S10n 0 a annunt. changes a'Sked by the company T, ,...... .... i jf oil ... n wcek ago, the council rejected, NIp".,,,, "J roB nB 0 IDClIe however, a request tor elimina- in 1M IaiBh Sierrtllt tion of \he $3 weekly pU1lS.

TRY OUR YELLOW TAG 216 E, COUEGE PHONl3663

'-GUARANTEED QUALITY COSTS NO MORE

-FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY ~

Aelelecl s_~ 'CIRCUS TB."INIIl'

- SPBCIAL-Color CanoeD •

La&e Worlel News

, •

Some doctors are experiment­ing with an anti-clotting drug, phosphorylated hesperidin, which shows promise of helping people who have had heart attacks, and face danger from new clots.

v

Professors To Discuss Federal Tax Changes

Two sur law \ profesJ;ors wil, discuss recent federal tax chang­es at fte 20th Iowa district ta law institute Friday at Burling~ ton.

Prof. John C. O'Byrne will speak on the new changes In 'the -federal income tax la,ws and Pro!. Charles W. Davidson will discuss recent changes in federal gift and estate taxes.

Lawyers and judges of Burlington area wlIl attend the one-day institute.

Quality Control Group To Discuss Statistics

The SUI section of the Ameri­son Society lor Quality Control in the Quint-City area will hear sur malhematics Prof. Allen T. Craig discuss some aspects of statistical inference Wednesday night.

ASQC meetings are held , throughout the year in order to give industrial representativ~ an opportunity to talk over the problems ot quallty control as they affeet manufacturing pro­duction.

UNFAIR EXCHANGE GREENVILLE, S,c. (A')-Wil­

lie May Abbott reported the theft of a new tire from her au­tomobile bu t told police the thief left an old tire, worn but road­worthy, in lis place. I

Tbi. is

KERIMA .. the moat evil

w~ who ever livedl'·

J Contestants will present an 8 to 10 minute argumentative speech on any vital question of the day.

.. ~~sAG' Any freshman interested in

el1terlng the contest should leave I his name and the subject he in~ WodS to speak on in the speech MIlce, 10 Shaeffer hall, by Dec. 1.

A 20", CtNIUIY-fOl lNCOIIIIIU_1

ENDS TONITE • IlliGHT PEOPLE • WICKeD ·WOMAN,

WHAT A CAST!

HIE

SURPRISE

COMBImNG TIlE EXCITING TALEllTS OF FOUR ACADEMY A\\0\RD WI NERS!

HUMPHREY BOGART Academy Award winner for "The AfriC.1n Queen"

AlJDREY HEPBURN Ac:ldemy Award winner for "Roman Holiday"

I

WILLIAM HOLDEN ~c:ldemj' Award winner for '.'Stalug 17"

• . BILLY IllLDl:1I 1_ ........ 1 .. ""

" A<.Mo, A.." _ 01

:,.

..,.,. ..... _ ·-ik%ilr

Uuug/l .. (;I, u.,.u u ....... -u ..... 0.1 • • "

how to llind IIcr mall ill 'Cll' Y·d! .. ,It,

WAtmt NAWPIlf:lj, JOliN 1I1U.IAMS, MARTHA IIY£II, JUAN VOIIS w.~ .... r.J, .. s._~ IIIJ.Y "'ILDER~Ulun. T.VI..Oll .... £l!NF.5T UllMAN ,,- ;0.""" "'ML TAYlOII • A PAIIAMOUIfT I't~TUU ~

, .

( r l

f

r

I

[

Alice ..... and 123 N. D Wednesda KBIZ,Ot tussion 0

results of Mlss S

teacher e Heights freshmen leeted to

The pr 2:30 p.m., raclallWe ect to pr groes .

D\lI'ing will also question audltoriu

The rad alyze the prejudice. clal inj Ing and I conclude lions for barrier.

The all diUon Lo and the posters, plays, an subJect.

Predoct shiQs in h ences, and biochemist no.w availa public hea tQ an anno Dean Walt grad\lllte co

Stipends vary from an additlo Is made fot winner an child. Th bule tuiliQ costa.

Appllcati time, and i the llrogra tion blallkS Writing the Branch, D Grants, N ,Health, Be Loehwing

lUes two p day, but h

He desie Nov. 21.27 Week" and 21 "Easter Center Weel for Crippled is raiSing ! , habilitation Iowa handi(

Mr, and tv. Wellman, a I hOlpital.

Mr. and ~ 801 E. Bloo Saturday at

Mr. and ~ JUt 3, Oxlor, Mercy hospi

Mr. and M 708 9th ave. Sunday at M

Mr. and I Kalona, a gi bOlpital.

Mr. and M 730 N. Unn : Mercy bospil

Mr. and 1i JUt I, Iowa ( at Merq hos

D IOhn Darrl

Friday at Un lune Alexi

qua, "Satura&l Pi~.

ftose Swicl

~RT In.IJPj _

or stealinc ':r ! D.

nd. He the money th!ne ..... ," ! ate.

-----=. ,9:1:;"

~ ny raUN _

~ ---­T8

SDA1 IDAl'

RISE )F

YEAR

--,

,.

• /

I •

r

Article by Johnson In African Journal

, Kalona Hunters Shoot 3 Deer 'n

An artide by Wendell John- ' son, director of the SUI speech clinic, appears in the new issue ot the J ournal of the Sollth Af­ritan Logopedic society.

Entitled "Stuttering: An In­terpretation of Research Find­inlS," the article was submitted at the request of the jociety's editorial committee at Witwater­srand university, J ohannesburg. In it J ohnson summarizes SO years of research in the SUI speech clinic, site of some 250 studies on the problems of stut­term,.

( O~

Data for the artrcle was drawn from a forthcoming book edited by Johnson with the assistance of Ralph Leutenegller. fOnTlpr SUI craduate assistant 1n speech pathology who is now on tn staff of Michigan State college. The book will be published next spring by the Universlty of Min­nesota Press under a grant from the lLouis W. aoo Maud Hill Pt.mily founda tion.

The Hill foundation supported • comprehensive two-year study of the onset of stuttering, just comp]et,ed at SUI. •

L.F'. DUWA.leU, and nephew Donald Duw. or K a lona passed throuth Tow .. City Monday with three deer the two men alld Mn. Duwa idlled Deal' N~ter F a", Ontario. Canada. T he Duwas, who are the I parents of Mrs. Leonard Kro&a. !S30 Kirkwood ave .• ltrou, ht down the two bucks and a doe On a seven-clay trip throur b lOulhern Oniarlo. 'The buclu wel,hed a bout 190 pounds a piece. The doe wu about 1.50 pounds.

lOtai Girl To Talk On Racial Prejudice

Alice Sueppel, daugh tel' of Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Sueppel, J23 N. Dodge st., will be heard Wednesday over radio station KBIZ, Ottumwa, in a panel dis­cussion on the ,psychOIO,p' and resul ts of racial prejudice.

Miss Sueppel, a sophomore in teacher education at Ottumwa Heights college, was one of five freshmen and sophomores se­lected to maite up the panel.

The program, on the all' at 2:30 p.m., will highpoint Inter­racial rweek, Nov. 14-20, a proj­ect to promo{e justice for N e­groes.

During the week Miss Sueppel will also speak on the racial guestlon for um at the college auditorium.

The radio panel will f irst an­alyze the psychology ot race prejulilce. After examining ra­clal lnjustlces in education, hous­ing and labor, the panelists will conclude with practical sugges­tions for breaking the racial barrier. . .The all-women school, in ad­

dition to the radio presentation and the assembly, will prepare posters. book and pamphlet dis­plays, and will show films on the subject.

Government Offer He~lth fellowship

Predoctorate re!tCarch fellow­ships in health', the medical sci­ences, and such related fields as biochemistry and biology are now available throu.zh the U. S. public health service, a<x:ording to an announcement received by Dean Walter T. Loehwing of SUI graduate college.

Stipends for the fellowships vary from $1,400 to $1,800, an~ an additional allowance of $350 Is made for bhe wife of the /IIward winner and for each dependent child. The program also covers basic tuition and certain travel costs.

Applications are invited at any time, and Information regarding the program as well as applica­tion blaiiks may be obtained by writing the Research F ellowships Branch, Division of Research Grants, National Institutes 01 Health. Bethesda, 14, Md., Dean Loehwing says. .

2 'Weeks' Proclaimed . By GOV. Beardsley

DES MOINES (JP) - Gov. Wmiam S. Beardsley ' seldom Is­sues two proclamations the same day. but he did sO Monday.

Jie designated the week of Nov. 21-27 a "American Home 'Week" and the week of Nov. 14-21 "Easter Seal RehabJll tation Center Week." The Iowa Society for CrIppled Children and Adults ls raising !funds to build a re­habilitation center to serve all IDWa handicapped persons.

Panel Drawn Here In District Cou rt

A seven-man grand jury panel for the November term of court was drawn Monday at 2 p.m. 1n Johnson county district court. Tl,e November term began Mon­day under Jucge Harold D. Ev­ans.

The grand jury loreman is Mabel S. Bales ot University Heights. Other members select­ed are W. J. Arndt. Liberty township; Fred Beranek, Big Grove; Ben Mouchka, Monroe; George Prybll, Scott; J oe Raim, Cedar. and Clarence Schalow, Oxford. I

T'he grand jury met Monday a·tter being sworn In and ad­JOUrned, until Wednesday. I Elementary School I Dedicated Sunday

Mark Twain school. the llec­ond ot Iowa City's two new ele­mentary sch'Ools, was formally dedicated Sunday afternoon. It is a part 01 Iowa City's $1.U.D00 elementary school constru -Ion pl·ogram.

Pres. J . W. Mauker ot Iowll St'<lte Teachers college, was the prinCipal speaker. He asked for a spirit of confidence and trust in sch'Ools and teachers and con­gratulated Iowa City in its ef­~orts to · retain experienced and qualified teachers.

Alyce Jayne Venzke, AI, Iowa City, received the first award from the Educational Memorial tund in honor of Kate Wickham former Iowa City teacheT. The fund ls to help lo­cal students finance their cdu­cation to become teacherS.

Not a Federal Offe t" -,

To Dilute Whisky MINNEAPOLIS (JP) - DlJut­

ing whisky with 'water or sub­stituting an inferior quality in a bottle conslilu tes no fra ud against the government, Federal Judge M. M. J oyce ruled here.

He dismissed grand jury in­d ictments that char ged nine Minneapolis bar owners and employes with diluting the bot­tled whiskie$. If there was an~ fraud, Judge J oyce said, It wa$

'against the potential purch3sers of the drinks.

POLICEMAN HAS A HEART RALEIGH, N. C. (JP) - NortH

Carolina Budget Bureau Engi­neer Frank Turner says there' a t least one soft-hearted police­man. Turner saw the otticer ap­proach a car parked overtime in a meter zone. The driver, ap­parently fagged out, was asleep. Ths 1policelnan started to write a ticket, paused and then took an­other look at the driver. He reached into his pocket, took ou t a nlckcl, inserted it in the meter and continued on while the driv­er snoozed.

CITY RECORD BIRTHS

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Raders, Wellman, a boy Friday at Mercy hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. John A. Davis, 101 E. Bloomington St., a girl Saturday at Mercy hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sippe, RR 3, Oxford, a girl Saturday at Mercy hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Virgil E. Parker, 108 9th ave., Coralville, a boy Sunday at Mercy hospital.

day a t University hdipitaIs. Suzanna Stevens, 97, Inde­

pendence, Saturday at University hospitals.

Bell L. Crane, 84, Central City, Sa turdllY at University hospitals.

Grace Welsh, 77, Oxford, Sun­day at University hospitals. ~ekiel Phipps, 72, Ft. Do....e.

Sunday at University hospitals. Kenneth FIscher, 5, St. Bene­

dict, Sunday at Universit.y hos .. pita]s. ,

Donald Todd, 30, Charles City, Sunday at University hOSpitals.

Nathaniel Johnson, 83, :Chero­ke/!, Sunday at University hos­

Mr. and Mrs. Erling Odegaard, pitals. 130 N. Linn st., a girl Sunday at John Hatton, 70, Traer, Sun-

Mr. and Mrs. Mar vin Yotty, Kalona, a girl Sunday at Mercy hospital.

Mercy bospital. day at University hospitals. Mr. and Mrs. Orval Walker. Henry Har ris, 62, West Liber-

aa I, Iowa City, a boy Monday ty, Saturday at Mercy hospital. at Mercy hospital. DlSTalCT COURT

DIATHS Oscar Clarence Banken, 432 S. John Darrow, 46, Montlcello, Johnson at. , was fined $SOO and

Friday at University hospitals. his driver's license was 8uspend-

• LEFT THE BOUSE WEATHER REPORT BUGS

MEADOWS' OF DAN, Va. (IP) KEARNEY, Neb. (IP) - The - Arnold Hawks told p()lice Kearney Hub reporter was mak.­about all he had left was hls ing a checkup on r intall when house. Thieves took a retrigera- a recorder answ red "the gu ge tor, a bed room suite, a washing shows .80 of an inch - but J machine, a sewing machjne, an think we only had about .75 electrJc iron and mast or the of an Inch, because there were bedclothlng. two bugs and a rly tn tile gaulre."

Memo To Advertisers:

, "

It Figures • • e

Just as 2 plus 2 equals 4, it figures

that if you want to sell to the stu­

dents comprising the University , , Market, you must reach them With

your advertising message. The

only way to reach ALL these pros­

pedive customers ALL the time is •

to advertise in the one newspaper

they all read •.. The Daily Iowan.

Why miss out on your shore of

this valuable market? But don't

take our word for it. Prove to your­

self what a v~luable selling aid

The Daily Iowan can be for. you.

Start now to reap those extra profits. Right now, today,

.

~119

J

II

lune Alexander, 57, Keosau- eo tor 60 dsllS by Judie Harold qUa, "Saturday at University hOS-1 D.' Evans, after Banken pleadtd PltaJr. guJlty to a charge of operating a

- SwIck, 97, Tama, Satur- motor vehicJe wh!le intoxicated. ~----------------------------------------~----"

ODe da, __ Ie per w.nI 'I'IIree d.,. _ l!e per wcml FIve dar. __ 15cl per word Tea .. ,. __ %Ie per wenll

ODe _til ._. see per • • d Ktalataaa dlarl'1I 510

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY One lnsertJon . __ 98e per Ineb Five insertions per month,

per Insertion ... _. 88c per inch

Real Estate

WANTED TO TRAnI: a ...... bouse 011 a {arm or a~e nnr lowa Cill'. Wr1u

Box U. Dally Iowan.

,THE ~ULY IOWAN-Iowa. City, Ia.-Tues., Nov .. I ' , l~~ .. e '7

Misce llanea",. tor Sale I Autas. For Sole - U_ ~ FOR SALE: Bau.nt .. Lomb mkro-ICO~ 2 yuno old. ~uonably priced. ~ALOPY. !n~neerl '31 ChJ'y1ler Mdan

cau at 121 Flnkbln Parle ~r $ p .m. rou.otaboul. CwrrantHd cha~n ....

FOR SALE: Cll~rt 3-18 Amer1can FOR SALE: '1'w()o~room N_ Borne. FlYer 8.M traclt. "ery ,ood n-

read, to move Into. Ou heat. lull dillon. Call _I t tel 5. "-menl. Nov School. aJ1le lot, lm-

B...,.1t It down. Mak~ II run. Name your junk.plus price. ~1.

ItISO IWO door II OldsmobUe Hyd ra· malic. h""ter. radio. Call 10M.

medillie pOueuion. Dial tal. Lartw roll SALE: Black tuxedo. t.ola and Compan,. troU~ts. Site ,., call mo. FOR SALE : 1141 PI,mouth coupe. D ill I

12%3.

House for Ront Y.2 !'Ilkon camea. Like new. ,150. GOOD 1m Dod&e and ~ltceJl.nt Urn. 8-1311. S:OOxl8. Any offe.! Phone I-SllIII.

CA.BlNET· STYLE radio. &ood COn- UH4 CHEVROLET. clean. Good c:ondJ-dillon; ch Of five draw"n; el~e tlon . x33t0.

,.OR ~n. - New ho ..... $11S month. Write Box 11 Dail,. l ow ... .

Ten lnseruons per month, Autos per Insertion .. ,_ 80c per Incb ;_----..;...;.,;.;.;;.;;...-----

food mixer. Phone G'7~f. -------------AUT8MOBILES, everylhln, trom the

LOTS 01' CALLSI ~&anlle of the oldelt jalopy to the yean lal~st mod· els are ..,Id Ihrou&h Daly Iowan Clas­IJfledl. PUlee your clr Id 1n the 10' wan and lee whal rapid ..... ul~ l'0U'1I ravel Phone UII.

DEADLINES

" p.m. weekdays tor insertion in followinr mornina"s Dally Iowan. Please check your ad in the first Issue it appeau. The Dally Iowan can be re­

sponsible for only one Incor­rect insertion.

4191-Want Ads

Bring Results

GLASS By'ron Hopkins

20 W. lurlln,ton - DIal 3212

EXCLUSIVE IN IOWA CITY AT

Wee Wash It New Speedy Agitotor

W ashers & f luff Dryers

Look......-. ---"'--1

WEE WASH IT

WASH,DRY & FOLD

ONLY lOe LB.

DIlY CLEANING AVAILABLE

Wee Wash It 229 S. Dubuque

WANTED: WRECKS AND JUNK. Zajl· eel<. 1-2111.

Work Wanted

SEWINO. repalrln,. 1481.

lin oC your .. Ie. you'll tum unneed· ed lleml InlO re. y Cash. Phone 41'1 and pillce your IJ In the Iowan CIas­.We<U.

roll SALE : Uled balhwbl. lavaloriel. tol\el.l, and noken. Spec:lal prlee o n

complet. new bath. Larew Co. acTON Instruction

ORDERS laken kI. home bIIltln&. Phone lrom City HaU. BALLROOM dance leSIOna. Illml Y0Y4, U12 alter 5 1'.11. roll SALE BY OWNER: 2 new hom... Wurlu. Phone 14JS.

wANT!J): Alleratlona, plalJl -u... bed~!!':'·o~:~:~r.:::~e dd~~te I- WANT I learn SplnlJh1 can 8-4e8t. Dial :UII.

SEWJlIIO. , ....

HelD Wanted W>'NTED: stud nt to run ".111 nlahla.

Experienced. R.Jcb·1 Caf". ---

USED ... mvel, r efrl,t!rator •• and re­buill wuhln, machine.. Larew Co.

DJaJ ... 1

Who Does It

FULLER Brush n..al~r . Phone 1-21147.

FOREION-U.S. ~OB 10 $18.000. M."y DO IT YOURS!U wIth tool and ovetaa eountnes. rar ~Id. SklUed- ~U1pment from BENTON ST. RENT·

UoskJlIed Trad ... OWce. Stamped ",,11- AJ. SERVICE. f02 £. Benton. Phon .. addre_d env. brln,. reply. Job Op· 3·383J. pdrtllnltl ... W a .• ."B. Minnesota. -------------

IOWAN Ctas \fled. will dOl )'our sellln& lObi Phone UP)' NE!Uml Man or woman at onee to

t..ke care of ellJablJlhed cllatomera In Iowa Cit), ior 'amoUi. naUon.lll' ad· vertllle<l Workln prOduc~. Good earn· In" Immedlaotely. No [""ettm nt. Wr1I. J. R. W.tklnl Co .. D .... Winona. Hlnn

Typing ---....:.-----NOTAR V PUlII.JC. Mlmeo.raphlne

I),pln,. )(ar), V. Burnl. 001 Iowa Slate a ank Bulldln •. Dlel ~.

TYPINO. '834.

TYPING, tb I and manu..,rlpl. Ex· commerclwl teach r. Work ",lr .. nlPe<!

01.1 S· J4".

TYPING. 2441.

TYPLNO - Phone 61st.

Rooms For Rent

ROOM lor rent. Call 8·328'/.

Wanted

Student wlte d esires tlck~t Nolre name •• m~ 3411.

Fender a nd

-Body Work by

CUSTOM work wllb traclor. 3Ofl. J adr SUr Ian ...

Baby Sitt ing

WILl.. CARE IQr child In ml' hom . 0101 1-11131.

WANTED: Child .are. D.lly. w kly. ev nln,". DlaJ :KII.

Troilers

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I I

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EXPERT WORKMEN

Kennedy Aulo Mart I '{ OI\T Fr\ ndh), Clu1l3\eT, ~\!JmoUI~l,

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MORT

;a: » F. I .,

I

..

. .

French Premier Visi ts Canaclian School iiD~~ PI· ~fI;rea.t_~~ " . ·Ac~~"·N aitifi· W,w<JNGroN .., _ Th.

WASHtNorOif' .~- ~~rn-I . vErnment decided Monday to eYB tor Nqro pi.fe~tI to~ the deciJlon the court decided to m;ike 'lJo move toward deporting

. supre~ court 1I(~y .they bea-r further argument on how FORT LEONARD WOOD Mo: ~ Hayworth's h~band, ac-

next Septeabr, ~ stai'l . of .Ute wu tbe deadline for filing briefs son, 20, ot Slater, Iowa, was How long- it might take to get next schooJ'year.' · • o~ "dlleh tbe oral presentatlons shot and killed last Friday in an 'e' lull court review was indefi-

protested hE had been trap~. that ne had not been told betore the trip to Hawaii that he would be ineligible to relurn.

Ten da;s ago thc board of im­migration appeals upheld the de­portation Older, saying there had been no entrapment.

would accept a delay in the aeJe~atjon could be carried (JP) _ Ar uthorJUes re~rted ' tor:'slnger Dick Haymes, until wi.ping olit. ot ractany Mll'epted 0\11. 'toese arguments are sched- my a the courts have passed on his public schqols, bu,t only until UJe9 to stut .Dec. 6. Monday Monday Hl'at Pvt. Jl«!k L. Hut-Icase.

However, ~~ 80utftern st~tes wj)1 be. based. . attempt to escape while beinl! nite but it seemed likely that told the court- a~ ! ab~pt swItch The supreme court Invited taken to the stockade. r Haymes, born in Argentina, Power Lineman Killed would be dancel'QUl lqI. would Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell to " could stay In this country for • dlsr~t,. !P!i! ~i:atio~.l sy~- pariicLpate in the December ar- The authorIties said Hu~on months, at least. When Truck Hits Pole teT9s-. ,:rqj.ll..l9veet ebbcern, was_ ~~~ Hi. Alnn '9:i!i lQday!pc had bcen ~rresled the day ,~e- . 'H.aymes' lawyers were to have .' e~~~~I . .b)I t~~ ~~oljJla, ~~CIe departme~t will tne iti fore after ibeing absent witnout argued in U,s, dis,trict qourt to- ,CHESTER, Iowa (.4') - An wiuea . lla~i!r~ fA I olt •• oL tile ~riel; . p"'"mllld\-l ·tb lhe atgu-- leave since Sept. 28. It Was his day for an injunction against '11)~lItate Power company line­face1,;mJ~ brine. • .tbJoOdf 1'~ I mefatr *,lon5. in a week or ten thhd such a.bsencc since he join- deportation but bSSt. U.S. Atty. fT\aA wa~ kille~ Monday when a rlqtb a'tI ' fts I'Ctdal da75. j ed the service last April, the Frank StricRjaf tQl.cl. Judge Al- ~UCk load~d With h~~\st~Ck the

~~ .=sua ~on riQn·~ .~1 '. IIi . 3)~\.' .. ' i' i! 'r.~. .army spokesman saki. " I .. ~J1der liol~zOtf, his wouldn't' ~~wke: po e on wee wu . . S ~! r. t ." h~, > \ . .." I ., .~ I '. I I wor mg. • "yo . ~ ~trlct . 1(', · ~~~rn· ,. .. ~~ guard. ~~o f red the sbO\ nec~sary . . ,l~ , . I, • '~he victim, ElWin Knapp, 40,

tourts ltt-tM-sW."w ___ dOJJ , •• y. . (DC .;.". wa.~ ' nOt id~nti;fl~. Th~ 1i~~!lIl II ~trickler ~~ . tI\e g~vennent ~dams, Minn ., was strapped to ex-. ~"nd;jNir,uu.. Del· '1 1 . ':-> ... " -8.fr ma.!l'~ld fl~tso~'S ~C,o~9~?~d wi:1l lJdt tAke ·thtd custo~ o.r the pqle. \fuelltife. scboel 'lbqilt~ ot (i!~r.. ·.tide .'h" Ii'·r"J~1 l , '11'9 , ~0.nvl<:\!9nS as a; oiYl~ia , tIl att~mpt t9 deporf, Haym~~ U~t1~ Tflldtuck.drlver. Martin JODh

. endon "co'1uty, S~ .-.nd',the at- • ~ ~<CII , t~lRI t. , lOSt ....... 101 . lllrteny at)C\ . P!!ace the case has Ibeen heard. With of Lime Springs, Iowa, was In-torl\t:Ys. 1cn- NeltO puen.ta ·~o . 0·,1., ,'" ,,;';> - iHstul'l>ahce. t,bat, !laymes' lawyer, Welburn jured s]jghtly. are- 'PrJnclpals In ~hll ~~eCailoD DI!S MOiNEs (IP) ,.4 What Pvt. Hutson is ' ;urvived by l4Ji~oc!k, withdrew his request i----------iiiiii cases before the, I\j~ court. i, be(¥l"09 tQ be the largest num- his widow, Mrs. Mary Jane Hut- ~ i.njundion.

The states \IrJed tIlet t.he low- b.er ot 'defense attorneys lind de- son, of Slater ; his mother, Mrs. ;tr.tfe 36-year-old Haymes' im- • CANTONESE er <:<Iurts ' ~. ;iv.en b.roa~ \115- fen~a{rts to appear in federal Dwight A. Hutson, of Am~ ' : - iate troubles grew out ot a cretion to direrct t4e Jnterratlon dlitrlct court . here for tri~l ,ga- and his father of Witchlta, Kan:" "tr!p1he made to Ha wail in 1953 .• DINNER to meet local conditions, 'n1e at- thefed Monday In Judge Wilham ~" his courtship of the beautltul a-ned Dall

v -"r • P_

torneys tor the. NesrDeS 4Sked f. Riley's courtroom. (Ss • Hayworth. After he rc-"'" , Mil! • .-

the cou.t,.to lay do'IfU strict llm- ~ine. attorneys representing Court OK's Sale ' Lti-ned to the mainland the gov- ' PREPAREU BY EXPERT (AP WIrI,,,,") italions to avoid "any invltllt.1on leyen ttefendants - five Indlvid- .. emplent contended he had no CHINESE CHEFS

to procrastinate." uels aild two firlns - and two Of Lawsonomy U . I'i~ht 'to become a citizen of the FRENCH PREMIER PIERRE MENDES-FRANOE, enterlnr S~nlsla. II4lhool In Montreal, Canada, reeeivel a aalute from Canadian BoT Scouts. W~'h the Premier, at lett. II Scbool Director Bemard 8ernlque. Mendel-Franee wUl arrive In Waablnct4n. D.C., Wedneada,. ror top-level talu with PresIdent Eisenhower.

Arkansas propose'd that the government attorneys started • {Jnited' States and hence had court ask c:on,ress to say hOow trial of the defendants on DES MOINES (JP) _ The way ' !hade' an illegal entry.

YOU'LL LOVE OUR SUBGUM CHOW MEIN

BEE "LARM

desegregation should be accom- obar.,cs that tlhey conspired to was cleared Monday ior sale O'f ' An immigration service in­pUShed under the COUit'~ ruling fraudulel,ltly us.e federal. home the campus of the Dell Moines jg'\dry 'otrlcer ruled last March 0,1: last May! 11 tbat raCial HI- ldlprovement loarls to fmanee University of L;lwsonOmy to F. h~ would have to be deported -.REICH'S OAFE

WEST HARTFORD, Conn. (JP) (0 I d' I In - Policeman Robert E. Muldoon ns ru Ion ~ crease-saw smoke pouring from a tree . V , ,

I"!:,atioo In the IChools violated automoblle' pt,I chas~ . A. DePuydt of Des Moines torl 'O;;h;is~n;at;iv~e~A;rg~en;;t~in~a~. ;H~a~y;m~~;Sl;~~~u~s~o~a'~h~D~U~bU~q~U~e~~ t.be COI)5tltuMn. ' trial .8r.~ ~be. F~t ~era) $250,000. ;:

In , han~ln~ dOWll its Bank, .De!! , M9lne~; Ray- 'l'he campus has been the ob-!lnd sounded the alarm. Whcn the · I 1/ 'I"

~~~~~n o~;r~~~' tir~O~~n~~c~~: For casll% Rise, inl ~19,55' • ). nf,·· I mond B. U~\di!f., ' f~ mel' 'I1resl- ject of frequent tax ~ontroversies 1:. ......... D_~ I:. !ieslt Of ,~e, ' bW~i :.\tmli"am:, ~. , in rec~nt years. A1tred ~w~n

bled down the tree. He explained • " I" ,

~: 'uuua ftUIIU, SJ\J;eup Ha!lldnson, ~ 101'~r'i ·vi~.;j!J)Cfi!SI '" of Detroit, Mich., he,d of ,the', ", ~ent and cash let r~ tl'le ,' bankf LaWsonomy 'n&titut~onl Cljljm~;. !,; .

Ilii.1IlI:t.:.r .. a-> • ~- ~ ThOJllas . J. W/lJ~n, e~tc)ye of it Should be la~-lexemp~ as an 9inoklng out a swarm ot bees ,...", . e I for a triend.' . g()vetnm~t . M~"l\y fO'(eaast a relatively ~table, and disposable

to his colleagues that he wa~ W?a.9HINOTON (_ _ Tb I(C·~ ~I) ' 'UIllteb the MU/det MQrtgage, Co.~ .CH~nn ,educational institution. a. ~ith, Inc.~ , !6r}.1lcr1y Mtd- -----------,....,.....,

... iiiiiiiii _______ .... iii1~ new rccord !breaking construc- Income (income atter taxes) 01

Ro g ' tion year in 1955 with an In- consumers will continue at a I I) ner s . creasc In total construction out- record rate."

Cleaners lays of about 7 per cent to 39 1h Addit!onaHy. the forecaSt said, bllllon dollars.

"there should be sumclen~ ca.p-

DI:S ' ~OINl.'S (.4» - John W . Coverdale of Wi terloo was re­elected prelllden~ ef the Iowa gOOd roads assotilltiolt at the ot­gaM~llon's annuAl l'iI~tln. hert Monday . . , ! '~ . '. '

Plc!cup and Delivery 109 5. Cllntan Dial 2717

The departments ot CommercE and Labor, which made tbe 1955 forecast, had !previouslY pre­dictcd on the basis of the first nine months of this year, that construction in 1954 would sel a new hi-gh of 37 blIlion dollars,

. .. \ . ital funds availa'ble to finance . Oth~r oltl~ re-el~ In-

cluded :vue ' ':P,I!s~ent, ~~ble a very large volume of construc- Nelson, oChetoliee;,. sec'n!tary-

AnJ~:J eanJi~:J The Peak of

.. A II Candies

tion at comparativaly favorable treasurer,-;H. "-W,t {;all~n,~ Wln­!'lites, and it is assumed tqat con , tJrlet; ahd' exeoyuW .~¢ret'ary, sttuction costs will remain rel- ' Gerald .ap.an; l1js"Momes. .

compared to 350/4 billions in atively stable." 1953. . PrIvate Bulldlnc Inc~ease

12 Billion In 1946 Both private and pliblic con-Total construction ' out.lays su uction wlll rise to new highs

were 12 billion dolars In 1946, ne~~ year, accordhlg to the out­the first postwar year, and have look given in the join~ to~ecast,

MAKES EVBRY DAY risen steadUy each year &ince. wHh ,private spending tor new

A HOLIDAY The government forecast for bulldlng estimated to ·rlse . to ACROSS FROM TIR 1955 was 'based "on the alsuml1- nearly 27 ~ bUlion dollars, a HOTEL JEFFERSON tion that the general level ot 7 per cent increase over the 25lh

~~~~=iiii:i~~~~~~~e~c~o~no~m~iC~a~C~ti~'I!~it~y~W~I~l\~rem~~ai~DI billions expected for this year. ;: 1t was predioted tbat public

. Mor~ . ' thli~ · ,300 ", fttend.­ed the " I8U,ie~' . wbich ' . re· alfirrh~ the ', Jat!on poll~ outlined earLler,., Il , ~e year by It. PoUCy C~rnm~tee . tJealled' by Chatles , T. ~_.: Des ~~i~ea.

Till. calls for ~ pay-as-you-;o protrim. 'tor' .hipway improve­!)'lent in l'o.\va .hd 'an ' increase (h , the state:,· :~. Une ~ax .by two '~n, per,_o}l. , ,

:rown MotQrll, I~c.; Fred F. Park- , hUrst, lormer- lIice president of the fOl'mer Mid-Town Motors. ine.) of Mason CitYI and Eldon "~.lfClal, to~: salcsmlig for ;the t()r.tr\(~r- Mld-'1'own MofOrs, lnc, , 'Vejeran employes of the led­

eOllrt buIlding sold the last tl1eY ' Coldl~ remember there suell an aggregation of a t­

and defendants was in when i6 de~lmse attorneYs · one . ~ . .

. ~QY St~phen80n, U.S. district a"or.ne>" said no obher similar cllsel·fu 'the federal courts of the country has -come to his atten­tion. He said he was talking ~o!1t home improvement loans to 'PlU'chasc cars. • . Selc.etion ot the jury '~as ex- 'I

~d to be completed late Mon-d'j'y .-!!ternoon. .

0.'" ".,.. .... , IIKfrldty

WHld Stili (.If

4 • I

AMERICA 'S GREAT !lEW CHORUS " UNIVERSITY

.,~ ,,';-hilfll <;:ONCERT COURSE (..~' ~~r ' ,

,",1 .>. , .. /;:.-: dePAUR

INFANTRY

CHORUS

Wed., Nov. 17 Iowa Memorial

Union 8:00 p.m .

~tudeht Tickets ~ree on Identification Cards

Non-Student Reserved Seats - $2.00

Ticket Distribution - Iowa Union Lobby

D.ON'T· MISS .'IT govermental spendll!.r tor con­struction next year would In­crease by about 5 per -cent to approximately 12 bHliol\ dollars, compared with 11 ~ billlons~ tor this year. The joint forecast said that federal outlays for construc­tion would continue to decline next year but that the reduotion would ~e much smaller this year.

Eat~r; u~ J\eP.. 'Terry Mc­Gregor -(IR-otJio.) livid the IIsso­clatlon that .. 11M - demand haa swelled ~, lIbe i country tor improVed hithw-rs.. He ', nOl-eel that QOnlte~ b~ 'Votild an lit­'crease of 500 .,mmfon40Uir, in fedel'il iJd tq ~I·.tor. highway

;1 .< In the whole wide world-

,;',~o cigarette satisfles like a Chesterfield! ~ampus Chest Service Auction

Thurs., Noy. 18;.1 :30, P.M. IOWA MEMORIAL 'UNION

Fun for EY~ryon~1 COME AND "HELP HlRKY

LIGHT THE fAA TeM"

"

BUDDY

MORROW AND HIS ORCHESTRA

Mon., Noy. 22 TWO CONCIITS- : . 7 to 8:30 9 to 10:30 ONLY$1 50 I

. per person-

Man Evades Fare; Receives S2S Fine

William HOfstetter, 28, acmen­dorJ, who fell from a Rock bland who ~e\l I{rom a Rock Island freight train Nov. 5, Monday re­ceived n sU9pended $25 tine In j \.LItlce court here. I

tiEst.euer was charged by the af ~ith at~mpti"' to ,ain ge (1ft a train without pur­

chasing a tlckct. He ,bas ~n ~der treatment

.t Un~rsity Hospitals since he apl>8l'ently stepPed from the moving lrei&ht train Nov. 5, suf­fering severe facial and head la­cerations and abrasions.

He Will found early the next day alonJSide the trac~ and wa~ brought Into Iowa City by a train crew.

be f'" t . ., . t.~enne.n .:, 1'" '

"l'hr.,e new 4tr~r5 .· wert eLected 81 tb~ alisocIRt{on: Mat­tlh Wiley .of!,~Jh.:f>idl; ;aaJtltld,~ C?f, ~.,~~ion:: a~ . mer S~'p~enc 'of : Clli!i~'" l _ DJreotorsre~.JM~: ~rUdea: James W: W!l£qJi .'9f . Carroll. Lee ~MtS 'lot ~orr'llnl'i ~. ' H. Anderson of .Dt1eftport, ( Ivan tioland, oJ. We~ 1 Liberty, ~elll'f F. Ad.ms' at 'M6nUceUo, ~onl Baloes of ~~bwOoct. H. W. clil­Jlso",ot Wini.t:jIet,'K. A .. Cl}aron ot :Fort Dbdi.e,. ,nd. Ray A. RQ­deen-..ot Sio\1¥ ' ~tY, . .

f:anMPi ~I." 'r.~"nttr '1~ ' k

IBOONE (JP) ~ Ottlc1als .. 0

the Fort PodI~ , Oes ~ea ~ So~ . . ~,Hwa7 Co. "onda w~e pralslJlc Frecl,: 'WUcqll, Boaoe cO\llrty farmer 'Wbo lives near the Dea MoInes YlllCA camp. tor hls qulck aclioDi Sat-urday. t •

WilCOK dllCOvi!l-.i ,1.0. rail i road track bad bftn ' rtpped ' 'up: by a farm tractor ~ Jitter "",,, ing to .ote}~o~ tbe 4Japatlcher, heard a 58...eid- tri."., tnaln . comin6. .'. .

lHe rJiLpo~~ the track and nailed the tram .~ ~ hJI bat. Rallroad blfida" aa1~ the damap done ,117 the trector would have befo enoulh to de-

I I .raIJ.. /Dlost QJ.~" beavU7-~

1 . 01ll'8 . OD Mle~ ~ .train.. ' 1

Am. ·.h9Jlr'. ~:w0C'lt ~,. a I RCU04 ,uew J'!IIPII.lredP.t~ . cla!Due. -

• • • Call 'n your orderl and w. will hay. them ready to go. 0,... Dally 6 a..... • 1 .....

.q 'ft ,!l , . , ""-~ltCl1tft ,"~Enaln .. ,: I T~' Be! Df.played

.' .An . f~ ,nllp(1~ lilb,lier. ·.borpber .. d :~.~~aft ~. wlU, be .AiaP,lamJ~~ov~.l';. JQ, ~ an exhiblt.~· b7 SUI Anl(11'C ~te~ent.

The dl$Jay.-wtu ~ In. tbe ~r .. mory at .the . rear Of the field b.oua. Air 40 .... ~el Will be on band io "txP1J1D the ex­blbU. and &DIRr queaUOftL

The two ~ • Jet ,J·n and a convea~ pilton ~ are eut away to '~ ~plex

BIG '10' INN .--par1a·~·~1 . • I

SeutIt .. .... iit .,. ~. II.'

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" HOWAlD STOECKER-PAN AM~RICAN OVERSEAS CAPTAIN and ELLEN FOUITH. STEWARDESS

.' ";. THEY fiATISFY MILLIONS booaU8e ' only Chesterfield I •• _. .' has the right combination of the ~orld's beat

tobaccos. They're highest in quality, low ,n nicotiri~. : ! ! I I

You smoke with the greatest pos8ible pleuure I <

when your cigarette is Chesterfield. It's the largest •.. selling cigarette in America's coll~es! j

. "

--. AI 4-

The luction p.m. Ir

r union \ campus

{ gresJ.

ArtIcJ. been laculty chants .

Miss rector prOvide tour.

. ,