~!I Niemeyer ' Re~llises Rlcirr To. Reunite SUI Young 'Demos I By JOHN BORNHOLDT Office of student Affairs under the supervision of Dean M, L, Huit, Dennis M, Gray, president of the new sur Young Democrats, Be said that the Young Democrats at SUI can't pGIISibly hope StMf Writer ''The first motion after the election of officers shall be to re- said that the consensus of opinion of his executive council is that to have influential men in the party come to the campus to apeak c IUchard McAnaw, a member of the executive committee of the quest recognition by the Young Democratic Clubs oC Iowa, The second they can't agree to the merger at this time since Niemeyer ap. at meetings without their having the belp and CODDectioas of tile Young DemocratJc Clubs of Iowa, hall submilted a written agreement motion after the election of officers shall be to accept the constitution pareotly wants tel cancel the affiliation of the sur club with the state ., to both [actions of the SUI Young Democrats 10 an elIort to ease the of the SUI Young Democrats or the constitution of the charter young organl1.ation . state organization. tension which has come to a boll during the past few weeks, Democrats. Gray feels that the real purpose of the present organization is According to Gray, the new club will go ahead with plans to pre­ John F. Niemeyer, L3, Elkader, leader of one laction, said that ''This agreement and all subsequent actions wbich may follow to provide "qualified and beneficial political education for the YoWlg sent former Democratic state Senator Ed Gilmore, GrinDell, as I • he would IIOt go along with the "ambiguity" of the wording of the from it will be accepted as linal and binding and that each signatory Democrats at the SUI Campus." guest speaker at ODe of their future meetJncs. statement. The other faction, headed by Dennis M. Gary, AS, Maple­ to this agreement, regardless of the outcome 01 the election and the "J have proposed that those members of Niemeyer's organiza. On the other hand, Niemeyer says that he is not satisfied witb ton, said his group couldn't a g r e e to the merger until Niemeyer vote on the two motions, will cease aod desist in all activities wbich tion who bave not aJready atnliated themselves with the SUI Y0UJlg the present state organization of the Young Democ:ratic Clube 01 changes his position, bring into disrepute aoy person, groups or persons, or organization Democrats should do so at this time." Gray added that there shan be Iowa. He says be is in the process of seriously c:onsider1na the The agreement states: related to the allairs of Young Democrats." no "black list" and all dues-paying members shall be eligible for launching of a DeW state organization. His reasons iDclude: ~~III'lII ' l/Ii "We, the SUI Young Democrats and the Charler Young Demo­ Niemeyer said be would like to see the following additions to the election as an olficer. • The present leadersbip of the Young Democratic Clube 01 crats. agree to submit our differences, whatever they may be, to a agreement: ''That every student who is a dues· paying member of Gray said "new elections could be held and Niemeyer and his Iowa ha not been efficient TOM vote of all persons who are members of the SUI Young Democ:rats either or I>oth c\ubll will have one vote, which may not be delegated present executive council could very possibly be elected to their orl· i andlor members of the Charter Young Democrats. to a proxy , but must be cast personally at the meeting. The consti· t ginal positions if they joined our organization ." • No sufficient emphasis has been placed on the partic:uIar "The membership of the two clubs shan be joined together into tution of the SUI Young Democrats will be the governing document ''The only thing we waot is the assurance that our club is af· problems of the individual college clubs in bebaU of the state or· - one club and one set of officers shall be elected and sball speak for untll a new constitution is reported finished by a committee appointed I filiated witb the state organization. U we don't have this assuraoce, ganization. - the combined membership. The officers of the combined club shall be by the newiy-elected officers. the programs presented to the club in the future would contribute • The state ex.ecutive committee ls primarily domlnated by five in number: president, £irst vice-president, second vice'president, "Officers should assume their positions immediately upon elec· to a very narrow political education of the students in this club," members from a single IChool. It should be more dIrec:tIy coo­ treasurer and secretary. The election sball be administered by the lion," Niemeyer added. Gray said. trolled by other county aod collegiate groups.

Collegium Musicum ~ Today' s Weather IriM IOuttMrly winds r.l...... Prof.. ..,. "putl on track Ihoes" to conduct hI. .e,.... low. Frld.y, AnathIr WMthar ...... cia .. In collegium mUllcum, T.... whit col· should reach Mrlhw... I...... ,., ..,... 1"lum mUIlcum moan. .nd who tHCh.. tho .C temperatures In .... 5Is, .... IIrIntlnt ~ cl.", IN Iowan al tho R.ln I, opoctM In .....,.,. I... p.,. ,. Serving the State University of Iowa ..or .tn., and the People of Iowa C"" Sunday. 10 Cellta Per eo" Iowa City, Iowa - Saturday, November .1, UIJ Church Solt-Pedals Withdrawal : 55~ , . Its Values: Forell Of Soldiers Senate Finally Passes By JUDY HOBART Begins Dec. 3 "The religious establishment in the United States will soft· 89~ pedal any of its values that are in conflict with the values General Announces of society." 1,000 To Be Removed This was the assertion made by Dr. George Forell, professor From South Viet Nam 3.7 Billion' ·Aid Bill 49~ of religion, as he opened the second session of a symposium SAIGON, South Viet Nam (.fI - on "The Individual in Mass Society." Forell was the moderator The exodus of 1,000 U.S. service· ______Friday night of the panel that considered the individual's rela· men being withdrawn from South Viet Nam will slart Dec. 3, Maj. tion to organized religion, Gen , Charles J. Timmes an· Approval Comes After Mundt He went on to say that It was tbe nounced Friday. All are to be out Regents OK duty of organized religion to at· by the end of the year, reducing tack the "Idol of happiness and the AmericaQ contingent to about adjustment and make us malad· 15,500. Withdraws Grain Sale Rider · justed to evil." Purchase By coinclclence, the announce· WASHINGTON (AP) - 111e Senate passed a $3,702,365,000 Dr. Harold Taylor, past presl· ment came after tbe bloodiest week ~ent of Sarah Lawrence College, In the lon, war between Com· foreign aid bill Friday after 15 days of debate, slicing away at Of Furniture opened the discussion. He stated munlst Viet Cong guerrillas aDd Pre id nt Kennedy's $4,529,615,000 request and adding re­ that the individual's relation to U.S.·backed iovernment troops, Iowa Board 01 Regents Friday religion, culture and society Is straints he protest d would eriou Jy tie his hands. approved the purchase of $28,000 wbat gives meaning to his religion. The general heads the U.S. Mill· tary Advisory Aselstance Group in The vote for the measure was 63-17, with 10 Democrats worth of office and classroom fur· IN THE UNITED STATES, he and 7 Republicans opposing It. Voting "aye" were 43 Democrats niture (rom E and I Cooperative continued. the people do not act Vle~ Nam. His chiefs i1I the Penta· Service without discussion. out of convictlon. There is a moral gon have ell-pressed belief that the and 20 R publicans, A question of conflict of iAterast lethari)' because no one raiaes the Communists can be so ~h[pped Final action came quickly after had been raised during the Re· concept of ethical conduct for the down thar the need for majOr Af!!. !)ehind·the.scenes dickenng side· individual. So the Individual must erican involvement in the war will 01 Articles gents meeting In Ames Thursday tracked until later a bitter fiibt regarding the Cooperative aDd Uni· find a personal ethic for himself, be ended by December 1965. versity Officials' association with he added. The individual's problem About i50 Americans are ex· over a move to bar the Export it. therefore becomes tbe discovery of peeted to make up the first de· Import Bank from guaranteeing reo On GI Bill A board member bad raised the a set of personal beliefs with whlcb tachment to leave. Tlmmcs said payment of loans for U.S. grain question of allowing the Coopera· to judge himself and his culture. they will be logistic and non· sales to Iron Curtain countries. Draw Pra.·se 'live to bid. Ainsley Burks, SUI pur· Taylor sald. technical servicemen including ad· The Senate slashed the spending chasing agent, is on the coopera· Richard Lloyd.Jones, associate visers in engineering, ordnance, authority for the current IilCai Five articles wbich appeared In tive's board of directors and has professor ' of English, and Max medicine, naval affairs, and ad· year by $500 million. This came The Dally Iowan between Oct. 23 been [or six years. The job pays Dresden, of the Physics and As. ministration. 00 top of a reduction of $327,250,000 and Oct. 29 have been reprinted ill no salary. tronomy Department eacb said Timmes said no requests had by the foreign relations committee the U.S. Senate'. Nov. 7 ConJl'e" ISU officials, however, assured that if Taylor's concept of the per· been made by the new govern· Rapid End To Jail Segregation - for a total of $827,250,000. sional Record at the request of Sen. the board that E and I receives no SODal ethic was valid, then there ment of Maj. Gen. Duong Van The final figure Is expected to Ralph Yarborough (D·Texu), special consideration when bids was no need for an organized reo Minh to shift military advisers Tho Rn. P.ul Ch.pmln of BOlton, M.ss., loft, 15 mlni.t.n .rrolted Thund • ., whon thoy be even lower thao the $3.7 bU· Dennis Binning, A4, Iowa City, are taken and contracts awarded. ligion as such. whose Vietnamese counterparts Ind Tho Rev. P.ul 5tlgg of V.II.y Forg., P •., m.rchod In In .ntl.,.grogltlon domonltr.tlon lion voted by the Senate, ill a com· staff writer for 'lbe Dally Iowan E and I Cooperative Service is a Forrell rebutted this argument by have been replaced since the look somowhlt d.joct.d in tholr Mlrtln County, with Nlgros. Th. minllter. onclod • hun,.r .trlk. promise with the $3.5 billion voted and maoaging edI· '. ' .';. .... '4 non·profit organization formed by saying that an individual must Nov. 1·2 coup in wbicb President North Carolina, ,.11 coli Friday. Thoy Ire two of Friday whon tIIo collI woro Intogr.ted. by the Senate, in a compromise tor of the Iowa I I purchasing agents of U.S. colleges ,.11 know his own past in order to be Ngo Dinh Diem was deposed and -AP Wirephoto with the $3.5 bilUon previously ap- Alumnl Review, and universities to sell supplies at an individual and that this was the slain. roved by the House. wrote a live·part discount prices. Both SUI and ISU, primary function of organized reo A U.S. military spokesman said as members, buy from the firm. Ministers Miss 2 Meals- Even deeper cuts are certain to study of the cold Ugion. the Communists were trying hard war GI Bill intro­ Burks had been out of Iowa City Court Restrains Yocum be made in the appropriation bill d u c e d by Sen. , 1 "I DO NOT DENY the slgnifi· to discredit Diem's successors 10 carrying the actual funds. The au· Yarborough this " during the Regents' two-day lIleet· cance of the community," he con· the eyes of rural population. thornation measure limply lets ing alld said he had not known of While Suit is Pending tinued, "but It must IIOt suppress Communist attac.ks on bam lets, Hunger Strike Brings terms and cellings. ye;~' r e que, t. the controversy and could offer no City Councilman Max Yocum the individual's concern with reli· outposts and patrols in the seven Kennedy was not able to stem ing that Binning'. comment. gion." was ordered In Johnson County Taylor, taking up the matter of days ended Wednesday cost the the tide of sentiment for slashes articles be printed the community's relation to organ. government 925 casualties - the district court Thursday to refrain Quick Jail Integration even with backlog from Senate in t be Record, IINNING Regents Approve ized religion, stated: "Organized highest number ever killed, wound· from "10 any maoner molesting" Democratic leader Mllce Mans· Yarborough .1 i d, "'l11Is Is the religion has failed to live up to the ed aod captured in a single week. his Wile, Donna Gean Yocum. WILLIAMSTON, N,C, (.fI - Seg· Thursday when they defied a field of Montana and Republican floest writing 011 the GI bill tbat claims it bas made for itself." He Communist losses were estimated regation in the Martin County Jail court order and led a march leader Everett M. Dirksen of DU· I have seeD in 8JI)' paper or lUI· Saving State Land Mrs . Yocum'. request 10 prevent lIOi8. azlne. elaborated by saying that only In at 740. her husband from occupying their ended Friday and 15 northern min· through tbis eastern North Caro­ about the last five years had or· lina town of 6,000 protesting racial Sen. Karl E. Mundt (R-8.D'> de· Yarborough read 1mII'a1 pit. . For ISU Greeks nome whlle the suit is pending was islers called off a hunger strike layed expeeted passage of the bill agrapbs from BinJIlnI's fifth utic:Ie ganized religion become concerned denied. Mrs. Yocum Ciled suit Cor after missing only two meals. segregation. They refused $500 Tbe State Board of Regents vot· with the welfare of the individual. Thursday night by offering the in the aeries and then compIj. Zorin Says divorce Tuesday. The white clergymen were jailed bond. controversial grain sale amend- mented Binning furtber, SI1iDa. , ed 6-3 Friday to reserve a 26-acre Forrell tonk exception to this tract Ro­ Sheriff Raymond Rawls agreed to ment. He agreed to withdraw it "Mr. President, I have never MIll of Iowa State University land statement by arguing that the afLer sessions Friday with Mans· Mr. Blnnlng. I do not Imow him. .a site for new fraternity and Catholic churcb bas integrat· Soviet Union the ministers' demands that tbe as man field, Dirksen, Fulbright and of· I take my hat off to him lor domI sorority houses. ed its parochial schools in St. Louis jail be integrated before they (jcials of the Treaaury and the ex· one of the finest pieces 01 wriliDa In a debate on the proposal Jast before integration had ever be­ Today/s News Briefly port·import bank. I have seen siDee til tile month, three board members come a national concern, He used Wants Peace would accept food. He transferred COIIIiDa argued that fraternities and sor- this statement further to refute an some Negroes to previously all· The agreement was that the pro- Senate." orities are undemocratic organ· earlier one by Taylor that the con. MOSCOW III - Pravda, ignor· PLEAD INNOCENT TO SPY CHARGE - John William Butenke, white cells and some white inmates posal will be taken up as a sepa· rate bill Nov. 25 or 26. Mundt im· izalions which sbouldn't be encour· servative religions were ignorant \ng the arrest of Yale Prof. Fred· an American electronics engineer, and Igor A. Ivanov, a Russian to Negro cells. Final Home Gam. aged on the campuses of tax·sup- of personal needs. erick C. Barghoorn and the fury it mediately offered his p~posal as chauffeur, pleaded innocent Friday to charges of conspiring to trans· He said he decided to mix the sucb a bill and chairman A. Willis ported schools. Dresden led the discussion to has caused in Washington said Sat· rolt defense secrets to Russia. The government expects to move the prisoners racially after the white Robertson CD·Va,) of the Banking Student Tick.ts The otber members, however, other matters by stating that there urd th So I t u ' Is t said such organiza"-. provide ay eve 01011 wan a case for trial early in January. CODvicUolI& could meao the death ministers annoUQced that their bun· Committee scheduled bearings 011 "v.... was 110 relation between an indi· f aod in it for next Wednesday. housing for some students, re1iev. vidual's beliefs and his actions. cooperate or peace eco- penalty for botb men. ger strike "would probably end if Available Monday ing the pressure on the state to nomic ancl cultural spheres. we are reunited with our Negro The major controversy witb the Tickets for the IowI.NoIre Dame build new dormitories for rapidly FOR RILL said the relation be- De ut F I Minis' t V I RUSSIAN BREAD BLACKMARKETED - Moscow newspapers House may center on the Senate's increasing student enrollments. tween these two Interests w,as ~~t. p yore gn er a • reported Friday that 27 RUssian men. were jailed for up to six years brothers." 55-14 vote some days ago restoring game Nov. 23 can be picked up Voting. :'no'~ on the proposal were ed by Cbrist wh.en he said, .. As erlan A. Zorin said Friday he for blaekmarketlng scarce bread. Police jailed the 15 ..inlste~s and Kennedy's power to continue mOlt- with iI Student ID card IItartiq board lI)em~rs Mrs. Josepb Ros. long as you do this to one of these, failed to see bow the arroot "can The official news agency Tass said the men, bakery officials, 54 Negroes when they stagect I'l favOred·oaHon treatment in trade Monday in the New Lobby '01 the enfield and Mrs. Harriette Valen.' the least,?, my brethren, you do it color the whole range of Soviet· bakesbop operators, and bread truck drivers, stole 10,000 loaves of three . block long protest march relations with Poland and Yogo- Union and at the FieIdbouIe. tine"both 'of Des Moines and' Mel. unto me. American relations," black bread which they diverted into "illegal channels." Bread is Bold through Williamston Thursday. slavia. studeIIts wJtb m numbfn fraIb ", Vi", 'Wolf of Waterloo, who argued Taylor added that the authority Zo' dIed P id K They were ~barged with parading The Senate sought to make its 1 to 108,000 ...~ up ...... " ~ month against encouraging fr.· of a religion doea shape the gener. ~ID ep or res ent ~. in the Soviet Union only through state stores. It may be manufactured ft.... only In state bakeries. without a permit, unlawful as~ acceptance more palatable by vol· -.-.. I""" ~.... ", lernitl~ ~ sororities. . al posture aod attitude of the indl. nedy s pOstp!lbentenl of Degotia· sembly and obstructing traffic, ing to wipe out Kennedy's existing from 7 a.m. to noon14onday. From I , • vidual. He said that in the Catho- tion:' for exten.lon of the U.S.' lic church It was done through SovIet cul,~ur'l ex~hange program SULLEN AFTER MURDER CHARGE - Boone police sald a Leaders of the Williamston unit discrtionary authclrity ot extend noon to 8 p.m., numbers 108,GDl to Amana Driver formal saoctions of the church's and said I think 1t Is a complete· construction worker, sullen after a day of drinking, beat up his of the Southern Cbrlstian Leader. economic and financial aid to Yu· 116,000 are lCbeduled, hierarchy and in the Protestant ly artificial link," mother with his fists Thursday night 10 a fight that lect their bome a ship Conference (SCLC) said they gos~via, ~ol~ aod other Com· On Tuesd !l1IIIlben 118 011 to shambles. The woman died Friday. planned more anti.segregation munist .nations if ~e finds it serves ay, , . Faces OMVI Count falth, it was accomplished through The organ of the Communist demonstratioDli. The marches will the national secunty interests and 127,000 can get tickets ill the -.to Richard Garrett Johnson, 26, pleaded innocent to an open cbarge more informal social sanctions. party, on the 90th allniversary of continue indefinltely, a SCLC so reports to Congress. Surpl~ ~ood ing. r.D. numbers from trI~ oa After Mishap Her. During a question and answer the resumption of dIplomatic reo of murder Friday. He was ordered held without bond ill the Boone spokesman said. Sales and the Peace Corps 1J1lIII10DI are scheduled lor tick.. 'I'ualiIar period following the panel discus. lations between tile two countries, County JaJl. • are not affected by that amend· afternoon. U; , A 47·year-old Amana man was sion, a question as to the work. took no note of the tensions cre· The fifteen Protestant mmisters ment ,,; arrested Friday evening after his ability of organized religion's con. ated by Barghoom's arrest on spy THOMPSON TRIAL TESTIMONY - Sheldon S. Morris, 34, a arrived in Williamston Tuesday • SUI Fa t" car hit another car on Highway 6 cepts for the individual was charges. Instead, It claimed there former Minneapolis taxi driver, became the first of tbose charged in answering what they caned an 'J.'he measure, carries ~ Ie- owan ces at the entrance to the Veterans raised. were "weiahtler niaIoha thao be· the murder of Mrs. T. Eugene Thompson to testify. Thompson, a st. emergency summons from SCLC strl~ions on. rni1itary alliltance. ~ Beer Char­ officials bere. Latin America,. and on Iny mill· .- Hospital, ForreD answered first: "People fore to hoPe" for closer U,S,·So- Paul" attorney, Is charged with instigating the murder of his wife for lary or econonuc assiataDce to In· Harlen E, MarteOli was held on are persuaded by the Christian doc. viet cooperltlOll. money aod aoother woman. The Rev. John Harmon of Rox- donesia and Egypt and other na· 'lbomas E. Yerkey, AI. Aledo, I • charges of operating a motor ve· trine, therefore it is workable." "The Soviet Union," Pravda Morris testified Friday that he sat in on conversations when three bury, Mass., sald he wired bls tIons labeled "aggressors." It also m., was arrested for att!ImPtiDI to hicle while intoxicated and being Dresden said : "The Ten Com· concluded, "wants to cooperate bishop, the Rt. Rev. A1l8OI1 Stokes, bans assistance to countries that different men were offered money to commit a murder. The prosecu· buy beer at Joe'. Place, 111 .,.. Unable to stop in an assured clear mandments are workable because with the United States in the atrug· saying: "Six of your clergy in expropriate properties of U.S. com· Ave. . . distance. we .use them. They give order. gie for peace and International se- tiOil contends that10ur men were approached about ItilliDg Mrs. Thomp. jail lor protesting peacefll1lt panles or IlIIIIUaI exliItinl contr8cts Yerkq, _, W8I reIeued 011" r .. Da.maae WII' estltnated lit $250 ,Any divine InlpiratlOll that might curity &lid .also hi l economic and SOlI. St. Paul pollce say U1at tbe fourth, Dick CI Anderson, took the agaiDlt radal separatlOll. ~ Re- .wtth " tlrerW't\jfthoaf edequau BDd • •On' Pilch 0( the two cat!!. be behind them ,~ irrelevllnt." culturnl Rpheml," Job. Mrs. 'l'hompslIJI 'wlIS slnin in her st. Paul hmne Mllrch 8, ]96.'" qtJ!lSt your prnyera .• ," .• , prompt · ~ t . _ bond. . t _, ""t .. , .. .. -"" 1 _ b ., I ~ ~llt OBSERVATIONS By JON VAN aile inspection of all fraternity housea Editorial Page Editor Acting Prnetor David Goodman, who conducted the inspections I AND COMMENT Winter Is swilUy approaching. Birds are flying south (airplane said that he had "not found any basic things wrong," than that ( reservations are growing scarce'). Bears are hibernating (No Do7. "College boys live like slobs." ArVel Smite down the Shaff PllJn. !¥Iles decline sharply~. And students are picketing (making side· Well, if he doesn't like it why doesn't he do something about It Vote NO Dec. 8 walks more and more crowded for Christmas shoppersJ. handle the picket situation. An "all purpose march" was helel by - like picket the frat houses? SUIowans enjoyed this year around activity Thursday night at students there. • • • SATURDAY, NOV. 16, 1'63 Iowa City. '~a a Civil Defense meeting held by some engineers from Iowa State. Signs bore such slogans as "Love Without Fear," "Who Killed WOI radio and television, operated by ISU. is going to get a Students on other campuses have also been en­ College Radio," "Help Stamp Out Flaming Ducks," "Shame," and new home soon. TIle new building will be so sound-proofed that "a joying this traditional ritual with several ob· "LSD." jet could buzz the place and it would never be heard by the people • dol' jectives in mind and on placards. To the tune o( "We Shall Overcome," stuJents sang "We Shall inside," according to the chief engineer (or WOI. Un The Daily Californian reports pickets at a Overrun." I ~nymore th~y iust drive-in restaurant in San Francisco. They want THIS SOUNDS PRETTY bad, especially if a plane is going 10 OYE ~egroes hired "up [ront" at the establishment im· • • • crash into the building and the people inside can't hear it coming Demonstrations at Iowa Slate octen take OIl a different aspect, , gel mediately. They do not believe, however, that .so they can escape. Wonder if they were outside the building and i I WRA girls are hoping to find the dormitory ste.ps less crowded be­ :dan1' I'give a '/Hoo whites or anyone else should be discharged to the plane was flying around inside the studio - could they hear it? cer tween midnight and 1 a.m. hours. ' according to the Iowa Stale r I ~. IC not. could they hear it if they were in the studio with the plane? ra make room for them. The answer to this problem Daily. WHATE;V,ER HARfENED TO THE hootenanny? is simple - just get the picketers to buy all their Maybe the main problem there is the fact that the jet planes are vi IT SEEMS DURING this hour the girls find It difficult making I ~!r J!niyersities across the land are scheduling these fQt.¥ meals at the restaurant all the time and then hire just·too quiet to be considered safe. It's terrible to have them sneak their way around couples kissing on the front steps. Why so many up with no warning. " lal' some Negroes to handle the added business. The VA" ag song fests every w~ekend, while SUI seems to have retired picketers must be sure to buy the food "up front," though. II couples would be kissing on the front steps at this hour is hard to h • • • Fir into the sedentary practice of just "sittin' and watcbin'" as' they bought it "down back," and the new employes had to serve imagine. Most SUIowans would agree it's a lot more fun for North Carolina educators are fighting a "gag law" recently couples to kiss on the lips. But to each his own - maybe it's some the worJq goes by. Some very fine folk concerts have been them there. nothing would be solved. passed by the state legislature which bans anyone who has taken • • • new ISU tradition or something - like IBM dancing. the fifth amendment from speaking at any state college or univer· P~es(lfltedthis semester, but there has been a marked Yale men and their girl friends staged a "March on New • • • sity. These people may still speak in high schools or on the post JlPsence of any g~ time, foot stomping, hand clapping Haven for Equality in Ivy League Admissions" earlier this month. An election of representatives to the All Student Council at ofrice steps but may not speak to university students. Kansas University was enlivened recently when Walter Bgoya an­ hootenamiies such as those successfully presented at the THE BEER·DRINKING demonstrators carried signs with such TIlis is a much needed piece of legislation; il protects the poor slogans as "We Want Damesl," "Don't Let Tradition Impede Prog, nounced his candidacy as a write-in. Walter will have a difficult weak minded studenfs from hearing any heresies from speakers Vnlon last y~ar. ress." and "We Want the Fair SEX." time getting elected; his last name is spelled funny and isn't easy SO vile as to take advantage oC their constitutional rights. It would J>erhap~ the presentation of a teleVision program called Undoubtly the Yale-Harvard rivalry had something to do with enough to remember. His chances would greatly improve were he be wise for the legislature to expand the law to cover anyone who this demonstration. Alter reading about the sex scandal in Har· to change his name to something easy to spell - like Malcom X. uses any consVtutlonal right. People who don·t pray in public "tIootenanny" has brought on this practice of observation vard's dorms the Yale students felt left out. • • • schools, because of their freedom of religion under the Constitu· os opposed to participation. Or maybe the SUI folk en­ • • • In an attempt to insure that all students at Columbia Univer­ tion, for example. ate another group who should be banned at once .. thusiasts are just becoming too sophisticated to indulge At Columbia they have definitely discovered the perfect way to sity have adequate housing, the Dean's Office has begun a system· lrom speaking before college students. in s\1ch a crude and vulgar pastime. No matter what the --~~~;;'~;;~~::::::~~::::==~==~------~------'H' reaSOD may be, it is really too bad. A lot of people miss the Letters- good fun 8 good "hoot" can bring, but it might be they lIre ' just old fashioned. -Jon Van U rg~s a'Yes' merger vote To the Editor: port more equitably. This was the main reason .Outbreak of sanity On Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1963. tbe Coralville and that the Iowa City School Board urg~ lhe sur­ Iowa City School Districts vote on whether to rounding districts to merge with the Iowa City merge or not. The decision to bring this to a vote Community School District on May 22, 1963; at this time is not a hasty one. Both the Iowa City in order. that the assessed valuation of each ov rtake Baltimor and Coralville School Boards. as well as the distl'ict help support the education of those I I , n~OSE WHO SCOFFED lit the pickets protesting Study Councils in both school districts, have dis· pupils who were being tuitioned into the Iowa clIssed this at great length. City schoolSl the meeting of the Civil Defense Shelter Committee in It seems to me that there are important ad· All of the children in the area are entitled to 8 Iowa City Thursday night might be interested in this vantages to both districts in favor of merger. quality education in a highly dynamic society. The editorial appearing in the ov. 2.'3 issue of The Nation importance of a good basic education for later 1. The basic consideration is to maintain success in higher education is apparent to the about the "outbreak of sanity": and improve the educational opportunities for University student and faculty. This is why I be· the children of both districts. The chlldren of City by city' and state by state, the American public lieve that the best education of all children at all the Coralville School District will benefit by levels of ability is the responsibility of every continuation of their high school education in is awakening to the fact tha t, asscrtions of civil defense individual, and should not be left to the discretion of the Iowa City High School. TIlose children who people with a vested interest in a community. I tq the contrary notwithstanding, mode.rn man is not a are in the Iowa City districts surrounding u.\'ge aU eligible students an~ faculty to vote "Ves" troglodyte, nor can he seek wisdom of the ostricll. The Coralville school will have. those lichools avail· on the merger of the Iowa City Community School able. latest (lutbreak of sanity on this issue has occurred in District and the Coralville Independent School Dis· 2. More e((icient use of school tax dollars Baltimore. trlct. by beUer planning fot the entire district. Michael Bonfiglio, M.D. Early this fall, a number of Baltimore citizens, in· 3. To distribute the burdens of school Sllp· Director, Coralville School Board , . clud~n~ leaders of SANE, Cary Ramsey (1962 peace can­ . ~ didate for Congress) and a real estate mllO named Leon Shapiro, talked the city's largest television station. into New n~me needed' for Niemeyer~ carry~ng special program on civil defease. Appearing as a To the Editor; Since two clubs cannot serve one meyer "group" to adopt the star Witnesses for the opposition were Arthur Waskow and I have been busy with aca­ master and a plethora of Young suitable title. "the Young Team· demic matters or I would have sters," and "continue to run Stanley Newman, co·authors Qf America in JIj~ing (BaHan· written sooner to offer the ob­ Democrat Clubs is about as weI· much superior programs." I ' tine BooKs). vious solution to the campus come as yellow jaundice, the best William DulX. G catastrophe of current interest. solution would be for the Nie· 114 E .Marktt T~is p(ogram (it should have been on a national net· wor~; perhaps it still can be) stirred an intensity of local controversy that moved the Baltimore City Council to call a special meeting on the subject. Baltimore is both a m.ajor ~ity iJl its own dght and within easy blast range of the na· AGUDAACHIM ST. PATRICK'S CHURCH OU~ REDEE¥F.JR tional capital, so civil defense director Steuart Pittman de· SYNAGOGUE 224 E. Court St. LUTHERAN CHURCH 103 E. W.shlnrtoo st. Sunday, 6:30. 8:15 ••:., and i1 •. ID ., 2301 E. Court cided he had better attend this Sept. 23 meeting. On arriv­ -0- SlIod.y M..... 8:30. 10:45 a.m .• ServIces 1:45 end 8:15 a.m., Dally Maue. 9:U a.m., Sunday SelIool ing, he found himself confronted by Dr. Donald Michael ASSEMBLY OF GOD , 13M Keokuk S~ . of the Institute for Policy Studies and Dr. Thomas Stonier lunday. 10 1.111 •• Sunday Schad GLORIA DEI REORGANIZED CHURCH 11 a.m •• Mornln, WorshIp LUTHERAN-- CHURCH I OF JESUS-- CHRIST of Manhattan College, both e~oquent opponents of burrow· University Bulletin Board -0- (Meetln, at the lIn,lert Theatre) OF LATTER DAY SAINTS UnlY.rslly lull.lln loard no,lc.1 0111.1 be r.cely,", at The D.II, lowln oHtce. loom ., Communlcto Sunday, 9 and 11 a.m., Servic411 ing to securitr. They gave Mr. Pittman such an exceedingly 110111 Clnlt(, by noon of Ihe day before publlCillon. They my II be Iypeel .nd ",ned by .n .ctvl_ BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH 10 a.m., SUllday SchOOl 221 Melrose Ave. difficult time that Mayor Theodore McKeldin continual or offIcer of the o,..lnlullon bel". pullllclud. ,ur.ly IOClal functlonl are not .,1111I1e fOr thll B St... FIfth ~n. -0- Sunday. 9:10 '.01 .• CIIurt:/l Scbool aectlon. Sunday. 8:45 a.m .• Sunday School 10:30 a.m,! Mornln, Worlhlp .. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN -0- to ~ebate in his private office. 10:45 a.m .• Ilornln, Worihlp "SCIENTIFIC COMMUNICATIONS STUDENTS who are to receln an CHRISTI"N ICIINC. OlaAH. 7 p.m .. tvenlnc Worship CHURCH ST. PAUL'S -PUBLISH OR PERISHI" will be (he 'Under,raduale or professloDal de- IZATIOH bold. a testllnony mee:.tn' -0- U E. Market St. Mayor ~c~eldin pondered this donnybrook {or a topic for a panel discussion at tile ,ree In FebrUaryl June or AuauS.tl pyery Tue.dav In eR 1. River Room. Sunday, 9:30 and 11 a.m.. Church LUTHERAN CHAPEJ. November meenng of the Gamma 1964. and did no pick up .n lBlIl Union, at 7:15 p.m. Student.. lacully, BETHEL AFRICAN School and Worship (Missouri Synod) month and . then, on Oct. 26, announced that he was re­ Alpba scIentific society Thursday. card at Fieldhouse durlnJr regl,tra. and Irleoda Ira cordlaUy invited to METHOmST CHURCH -0-0 404 E. Jef.lerlQn Nov. 21, at 8 p.m •.In Room 300 or the tlOD. may stm sign up for • free .ttend. 411 S. Governor St. Service. at 9 a.m. and 11 I.m. " or~alii~in~ Baltimore's civil qefense tmc\er' the fire depart­ Deparlment of Pharmacology at the 1964 Hawkeye at tbe Realltrara' Ol- Sunday. 10 a.m .• Sunday Scbool FIRST METHODIST CHURCH iunllll' School at 10 '.ID. Medical Laboratories. Members oC flce. The deadline lor a1,DIn( up 11 '.m., Cburch Service JeU.rson " Dubuque Streeta -0- ment, ~ move qllcu~t~d to save 6() per cent ~f CD e'\Pendi. the panel are Drs. J. R. Porter, pro· Is Nov. 15. 'AIINTI COO'IIATIVI IAIY. ':30 and 11 am. - Church School IITTINO LEAOUI. Tho.. Inlere.led -0- 8:30 and 11 a.m. - Worahlp Service. SHARON EVANGELICAL fessor and head or mIcrobial on; J. In membershIp should call Mn. Van tures. 'Inc mayor in his message took note that "many J. Kollra~, proCessor and head of SUNDAY RECRIATION HOUI. TRINITY CHRISTIAN 4:30 PJII., Uolveralty Studentl UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH zoology and N. S. Halml. professor of Tbe Fieldhouse wUi be open lor Atta It 7-5348. Tbose dellrinl a1t. -0- Kalooa peo,ple" cOnsider civil defense "one of the nation's greatest 81l<1(omy. All Interested studenls and mixed recreaUonal actlvltJe. from 1 ters should call Mrs. Plra,es at REFORMED CHURCH SundlY. 9:30 a.m., Sundar. Scbool •• faeulEy members ore invited to at· p.m. to 5 p.m. eacb 6Unda~t.r. 8·1564 after 5 p.m. E. 'Court .. kenwOOd Dr. FRIENDS 10:30 a.m., Dlvloe Worab p 1*>n~~~les ." One gets the impreSSion that he is among Ifnd. noen. AdmiSSion to the bull wUi Sunday. 8:30 a.m •• Chun:b Schoal Phone B-2a71 be by tD ~ard tbroullb tile no eut THI UHIVIIIITY CANOl HOUI. 10:30 • .m., MorDln, Wonb\p towa lle~9r1al UnlOll thos~ many; but he is also a politician and practices the art FOLK DANCI CLUI meets every door. AU facUlU~ ... UI be .vall.bI. wm be open (weather permltUnI) 7 p.m .• EveDinC Service Sunday. 10 a.m., Meelln, IQr worsbJp ST, ANDREW Mand~ at 7:30 p.m. In the Women', except tbe aymnastlc are •• -0- PRESBYTERIAN-- CHURCH from Oct. 20 throuah Nov. 15. Mon.' -0- of the possible. It is at least a step in the right direction to Gym. veryone'WelcolDe. ,NTlI.VAIIITY CH It II T I A N Thurs. 3:30 p.m .. 8 pm.; Sat. 10 a.m.· FAITH BAPTIST Sunset'" MelrolNl Ave. 8 p.m.; Sun. noon-8 p.m. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST UniverSIty Uelltht. sa , ~ ' ~e ~ ~ayer 60 per cent on the cost of pl1.rslling safety WOMEH'S IECREATIONAL SWIM­ I'ULOWIH.,. 11\ Interd'QOmhl.· 1311 Kirkwood JilELLOWSHIP Sunday, e:3O • .1110 WorShIP. Cburdl MING will b~ ,"aUable 4·6:15 p.m. tlanal group of .. "dent...... Ie Runday. 9 a.m., Bible Stuc17 TImothy R. 8arrelt.. Pastor School , down @ b~\e in the ground. 1I0nuy throuah PTldBY al th. Wom· every Tue~.y In th~ Ealt Lobby UHIVIIUITY LIBIAIY HOU.III 10 a.m .. Wllrahlp Mon!6omery Hall. 4-H ~'alr,roUDdI 11 a.m .• Worshlp. Churcb 8cboel en'. Gym pOOl lor lIudenl.. .talf Conlerellee Room of Ih.. Union to 1l0nday-Fr1day: ':30-2 LID.' satur- 7 p ...., Evenin, Wonh1p Sunday, 9:30 a.m .• Bible School. and faculty wlvea. consider y.rlou. toplca 01 '.!IIra! 1117: 7:30 ulI.·10 P.lll.; Sunday: 1;30 10:10 I.m .. Morning Worship Inter•• t, All .... awdlalb lnvlt.4 10 1L.m.·2 • .m. Service Deab: l(aou7" 7 p.m .• Evenln, Service LUTHERAN CHURGH Ittend. Thursday: 8 l.m.·lO p.m.; Frtday and CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIS'I' -0- OF CHRIST-- THE KING • J 1 FAMILY HITII at the Fieldhouse Saturday: 8 1.111.-1 p.m., 7-10 p.JII. .- OF LATTER·DAY SAINTS UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Corner of IWV Road ]1111.. -- '.r Ul .. 'Irst oeme.\<>r will be h.ld BABYIITTII. may be bbtalned 111 (R.. ene onoy); Sunday: U 7- ,.., . ·a I yow a n from 7:15 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. Oct. calling tile YWGA oUlce d ...... the 10 . p.rn. (Reserve only). Photodup1J. 910 E. FalrchUd St. SERVICES and Coralville Road ~ e 23, Nov. l3, Dec. 11 Ind Jan. 8 and II t __'A --. Sunday. 8 aJII" Prleltllood Sunday, 9:30 a.m .. Worshlr 11 caUoo: MoDClay·Prtday: ••.m .-I P.... : n . StUdents, S18rf and facully are ternooo I ...... 10:30, Sunday :;cb~ "5 Uolveralty Hospital 10:30 a.m .• SWlday Sehoo Invited to brln, their spouses and Monday·Thursday; 6-10 p.m.; Satur­ lunday. 9:30 1.Dl.. WorshIp 8en1cet day: 10 l.m. IInW 11000, I.. p ...., • p.m .• Sacrament I(.. ttnc -0- i , n.DIt!I;I_"_""~bylt1UUntllJll4"g0ll8l'll'Clbya CamlUea on tIlese datel tor recre.. 'LAYHIGHTI of mInd recrea· SUDda7: Up.... FIRST UNITARIAN SOCIETY ~ ;., 4in. ...,,1_1 .1.~ • .J J... tlonal swlmmlna and famUy·tyP8 Uonal acUvlUe. for .tudent.. ltaft. I ZION LUTHERAN CHURC"H -,:--- VI. I~ ' '''-r''- ~ ...... !Idem body tmd sport IcUvlUe •. Children may come faculty and their .pouses, are beld lo ..a Ave, • GUlH!rt st. u, u.. .. tour CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE JohlUOO .. BlOOIIIlQtOD-- Street. -"-~.:I"'j.oL-...... u-'oft"'U /MI" TL'DnlJ.'1 • only wltll their own porent. Ind at the FleldbollM .aab Tliet41, IOWA MEMOIIALUNIONHOU.I: 1035-- Wade St. Suoda7. 8 and 10,30 • .m., Servlcel Khoren Arlalan Jr., )Unllter .. .,. I"--'W 0«10"" .... 11:.0 j)J1l. ~.",--." n ~ 0UJGn. mll5t leave with them. (AdmlsaIon by and FrIday nl~ht from 7:30 p.m. to Cafeteria opt;o a.m ••l IUDday. e : 4~1, Sunda7 School 10 a.IO., Churcb School and Adult l1li til stalt lD .: 15 l.m.• SlIndIY School DllCuialon IfIUqrfal JIOIit?:v II flOC "1'!.... at SUI ~Gtion ....unu Rudent or card,) 9:30 p.m. prov ded no home varsity Monday.satui'd'Y; 1-8:4' p.... , 11_ 10:" p.m., worship I:JO • Adul~ Bible ClUI ~ ...... __'- , ,.....,., contest I.s acheduled. (Adml.salon b, day·Frlday; 11:30 • .m.·I:30 p.m., .m., 11 '.01.. Church Service S1 7:8G p.m .• Evanlnc Servlee -0- ~ .. -., ,..._. . • t , A AIT IHOW at tile Gulld Gallery. .tudlDt or lD ..rd.) 1117. Gold F•• ill~r llo_ apen 7:30 p.m. Flreslde Club .t.o" -0- , , d " . ., 130~ S CUnton: Openlna Gro)lp • .m..l0:45 p.lO.. Monday.Tbunday; FREE METHODIST CHAPEL -0- '1 . , . .' Show of palnUne. prints, sculpture, COM'LAINTI. Studentl wlahln, to • .111.·11:45 p.\ll., Friday; 1 a.1II.·11:ta THE CONGREGATIONAL , 2021 G st. ST. MARK'S '. ' , 'ubll.... r ...... I""a,. ,. lape" j\eramlll and enamel.. Houra are fUe UnlverBlty complaInts CAD now pm. SaturdaY; 1.10:45 p.m. Sunday. CHURCH -0- METHODlST CHURCH k" I , ~~~'MOIl't~u =1~:~In;; 'i_ito; .:::: ~i~'D::::: . ~~30p!i~'M~o"d5~!0 tCr~ugtn~l~u~ci':y: flg~ ¥fes~e~ ff:"'u~\:e .~':{o~ 1i~~~!~~.=Y~pe: 8':'1~~ ~1: CUoton • JeUel'lOll 8tn8U CHURCH OF CHRIST 1910 Muac.Une A... , , , City ••ot . i.~ ...... , . Ie F.... r Open SaEurday morninal before them In .t the SludaDt Sana... Of· n1cht, Frtday Ua4 laturW. ioU Rev. lobn G. Cnl£ (Ileetlnl'ln the "U BuDdIN! Sunday, ':30 ... 11 a.m .. WorshIP ~ ~i" CIItCUW1'IONI Hew. Editor ...... lC~r . home footbaU .ameL flee ...... ,, __ 10:" • .m.. Wonblp and Churcb ." . . 'port~ Idltof. .. .. Harr One MIle South on Hl,bway 211) ' :4~ a.m .• Church School. Adult nllo .n _____ -'-______. ______School Sunday, , a .•.• MorniDl Worllllp CUlllon Group f _ :J.. ~_ .:' . " . · ldlIOrJ.~t... IdlIOJ ...... J · V.n · e:8G p.m .• Pllarlm FellowshIp 10 •• m., Church School -0- :.u:.=--~;= C~:.~~II9I::~ipher':·.·=r~r:'•• r 0 F Fie I A 1 D A I L Y I U L LET I N GRACE UNITED S1'. THOMAs MORE CHAPEL . •. ~J~pt SWlda)' add Alit. ~Ity Editors " • EVANGEUCAL 105 N. Rlver.lde Dr. lilt and \'1 boUdan. bleNd . John L.warne and Hlldlne GHwln MISSIONARY-- CHURCH Sunday, 8:30, 10, 11:30 1.111 ••Dd • p,Jl!l. ~ 'REEl CHURCH 6) 11M Ilg_tlne ,(va. Sunday MUlea. The 10 • .m. ,... It I • OF CORALVILLE Sunday. t :tII • .m., Sund.y School • Ullh Maa 'u", by the c0DfJ'tl" lIunda,. 8:" a.m .l..~uDCIaY lIoboel 10:45 I.m.• worahlp Service tlon. H'l!!::i£t~~TJ ;j§~~ik·.:·.: ~~~ ~ < ~ ~ Untlv~rstlty r,alendar II a.m. Mornln, wonhlp 1:30 and 7 • •• ., • p.m., Dall¥ ..... " . Advertl,lnl Mana •• r .• DI&II ....n · \. Mr. Vernon Schrock. lpelkllll IOWA CITY Conlelllo.,. on Saturday fr_ '-I:...... rr- __ to III1d!I1Pt to C1l1llfled Mllr, ., Cathy I'Ischlruncl 7 P.III., EYeDinC SenlCe 1l.p1.; ''':SO p.m . • BAPTIST-- CHAPEL -0- ~ : ie.. It-. WVIII8Q', ~ Alit. ClaulfjeCI Mer...... KOlek -0- ~ .. Uft=-:n\a to H.I'I. Actv. Mar..... G.ry 1"'I'I"n n2 South ClInton "- - Adv. .... Dennll linn.... FAITH UNITED OHURCH (Afnlilted WIth the ST. WENCESLAUS CHURCH 1:4110 CIflIce. are In ~i'h0n'Ulllnl n ... Saturday, November 16 •~ .._.·'tIa- "'Dler Actv. MotIr.pII.' ...... llecIIta Larry Martin. sponsored ~y the 8 p.m. - Union Board Post- (Bv ....elleal and Jlefol'llUld) Sooth~rD BlpUit C9nvenUonl .18 E. D.venport St...... ,. - "". (I"utallor ""'\ •...•... Jim Clllller 7:30 p.m . - Panel discussion • Game Dance. River RoomUnion. l807 Kirkwood Afe. Sunday. I:U • .111., lun~ Scl\ool lunday, 1:30. 8. 10 Ind l1:tII ..... a_ Friends Student Association, Pen· 10:ta • .111., Mornln, Wbnblp d.y MalleI "The Individual and Society - Sunday. e:15 a.m., Sunday Scbool , .ncl 7:30 • .m., Dall¥ II-. ~1;..;;IC;,.;;' .. ;.,;_iI~ittcI;;;_;B7~~ean1e;;;;;,r;_;;1D Trust.. l, Board of ltv...... " tacrest Room, Union. Sunday, N.¥lmber 24 10:30 ...... llol'll1llC Worilhlp • p.m., T~a\nlnI Union I Qtlonl, Inc.: Nancy C. 8h1nn,-A'1 Slave and Master?" H 0 use 7 p.m., Bvenln. Worlh p -0- .... Clq.. t1~ ,-. In ~l lII.t1Iee R. Teeeen'rA3; Lee I. ... ~ I tlnt .on ...... Chamber, Old Capitol. Wtdnt.dlY, Novln'lbtr 20 8 p.m. - Iowa String Quartet FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCI ~ LI' Alan I. ouch. At; WI')'u. JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES By tUlI. iii ow.,,, ,earl l1li .0 8 p.m. - University Concert Robe.rt E. Hobbunmer, Rec\Or IIitDth&. ..; tIInt ."nlba; ... All D. 'rraV\s, "". Prof. Dale lI. Bentl, Sunday, November 17 Concert, Macbride Auditorium. Nortll CUntoD --• hlrchUd StrMb 2120 H St. 120 I. Colle,e St. UnlYerslty LlbrU7; Dr. Gearte I. Sunday, 8:30 and 11 ' ' .01 ., Wonbl, -- ether iDaIl I\llIecr1pUO'!;l" ,10 per Eutoo, Colle,. of D.ntJatry; Prot. Course: Moscow Chamber Or­ SUlldIY. S Po.III., Public Addre .. lunda7. 8 '.111. Holy Euchan.. ~_....: ntll" ....eo: uu. 7 p.m. - Uniolj Board Movie: chestra, Main Lounge. Union . Monday, NClvembtr 2S .:ta • .m .• Churcll8cbool .:11 p.m. W.u:hlow.r Stu41 e: 15 a.mv FamilY Service .nd Cburell LesUe G. Moeller, School of Journal· 8 Sehool 1 ImIl Prof. Lauren A. Van D7b. C0l- "Farewell to Arms." Macbride 8 p.m. - Address by W. Cleon p.m. - Humanities Society __ ., Ieee 01 EducaUoo. auditorium . lfENNONJTE CHURCH 11 '.m., Choral Eucbarlat , I Skousen on "Naked Communism" Lecture: "On the Persistence of FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH -fI- t.4 Pre. II _titled 811:. .. Dill ,o4m If 70U .-o-o-o-t nte--II''''-3-~­ 11. --Clark St. 7 p.m. - Film·lecture (spon­ (sponsored by the Iowa Conser­ Mus'c as Number," Professor 117 L Iowa AM. lun~La:. and ID:" LID .• lIIornlnI HILLEL FOUNDATION .UIIl__ fw "".. illicit- Dally to an b7 7:30 '.JII. 'I'll. D~ Eugene Helm, I auditorium, Art Sunday, 1:15 ~ CIIutc1> IcIIooI WOJ'IIUP ~ sored by Iowa Mountaineera) , vatives) - Senate Chamber, Old 122 E. IImet St. 'jkIing Over Mount McKinley." BuUtllng. I: . ' 18:. a.m.. W __ ,:tII •.•.• SundU School 7:80 p.m .• Frtday, Sabbath s.r.toII J .... ~'"::'.s:.ft .. · ~,'!;~. ~~1i0 Capitol. 7:. p.m. EYwIlhl, ..me. -0- M'~ . ".1 i:liI';7o~-' on~o ..:! Ra1I8 Gm06er, Shambaugh audl­ . 4:.10 p.IlJ~~ ·' Cobeie '· ol CIJU1t~H l ' ( fJRST ST.' MARY'S CHURCH .&-ium .. S,..,rdIY, lIIov,mber D cini: Doo':". PaweeU; ~" ' .; OF CHRI&T SOIlN'Nft . Vf11R§l~Jl~n'~" J.flerlOll• • IJDD :JtfMtI 'I' ....;; ~'I •• ArtIIItr ~ . Il~ ~:~llbl~~;~~~ . , . I 7:30 p.m. - "The Conscienti. 1:30 p.m. - Football: Notre Hert'ey" pnJf~ssor •. /it ii\n Yo ' 722 I. l:~{je"""d1."""" ~ -- SUnday, e. 7:30. e, UI:15 .nd 11:30 .... -.a:"MWftIaIIII~ ...lelln 1[. bNM ... r...... ' hit ·.r"" HIirvard Medicai School. -. I • lin 'Y 11 • .m .. ~.on.sermoll . Sund.yb!.';:'" WorshlP. _ Sund.y Mllses .... ""wI...... M&t~ Objector and the Draft," Dame , i 1IIIdIf . . • ..... UIIIoII ...... 1IiIIIdaJ .:tII ailit 7:10 ..... lair ...... :...-"...... ~-.:......

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1M! DAILY IOWAN-I.. . City, Ie. S. t ...Ny ,..." 1f, tta-f'.,. , '62 Flooil 8dJi;' ge Si , ~a C)u1 1J ' 3SUIowans 2nd Crawford Play- ions In Rhodes I that Costs SUI $47,919 Changes Sent Competition Studio' Theater .. ~t It Flood damage at SUI due to excessive rain in July 1962, cost the To Regents Three S I students have been ltate $47,919, University officials reported to the State Board of Regents nominated to represent the Uni­ Comedy Planned in Ames Friday. One appointment, one versity in the annual Rbodes 'Ibe Regents heard a £inal report of expenditures to repair damage tion, and four leaves of absence Scholarship competition, "HaH a POUDd 01 Tea," '4'hJch open8 at the studio Theatre Decem­ , dOne in the SUI Art Building and for SUI faculty personnel were re­ Jim Ashton, E4, Davenport; Or­ ber 15. marb the end 01 work OIl a Pb.D, for It.I p1aywright, Jerry L. university Theatre on July 13, ported to the State Board of Re­ win Carter. At. Hillsdale, m., and Crawford. Mike Martin, LI , Iowa Cily were For • Pb.D_ iD pJay-.\1'itiDg at sm. two plays must be produced 1962, as eight inches of rain feU Speech Meet gents at Ames Friday. selected by a (acuity committee overnight. In other action, the Re­ Joining the University faculty as bere_ Crawford', fint play. ''The lor nomina tion. Dark Roota," WII dooe iD the gents authorized sur to reinvest full proCessor but without salary Rhod Dunlap, director of the Twelve SUlowans spring 01 1961, but it was DOt unW certain fun~ in the John F_ Mur­ Attracts Six from SUE is John L. Holland, new- honors program aoo chairman of this fall that be wrote another ray endowment fund, which pro­ Six SUI students will participate Iy appointed vice·president for re­ the nominating committee, said Get Scholarships play suitable for the Studio Thea­ vides for scholarships and lectures_ in the 14th annual Intercollegiate earch of the American College that candidates were selected on tre bill. the basis oC cholulic attainment Twelve scbolarshipe were aWard­ Expenditures on the Theatre to­ Forensics Conference Saturday at Testing Program, headquartered Directed by Jean Scharfenberc. moral force of character and physi- cd to SUlow8D8 during October_ visit10g lecturer In dramatic arta. taled $11,265, the Cinal flood dam­ the University of South Dakota. in Iowa City. age report showed, while at the The students include Karen Col­ cal vigor. Scholarships went to the follow- "Half a Pound of Tea" is wbat Fine Arts Building the damage lins, A2, and Patricia Reading, A2, Leaves were granted to H. L. The United Slat is divided into ing ~tudent8: . Crawford calls a "character, or was much greater - resulting in a Cedar Rapids ; James Frahm, M, Dean, nssociate professor of bot­ J6 districts Cor the Rhodes com- Alice Baxter. AI, Central City, domestic comedy." It is a real­ of i $30,085 expediture for repairs, re­ and Mary Ann Wilson, A4, Ot­ any; Erling Theon, retired proles­ petition. Iowa is in a district of ~ (rom Order Rainbow for Istic play, according to Crawford. tumwa; Linda Mabus. ,A4, Rolling Ix tates. Each district is allowed Gl~ls, Ida Grove; James Walt, PI, placements and labor. Sale oC dam­ or 01 dentistry; E. W_ Ringo, pro­ set in the present 10 a small Iowa aged Curniture yielded $200 which Fork, Miss.; and Kathryn Greer, two Rbodes scholars. Clinton, t445 from ~algreeo Drug town. was deducted from the total bill. AI, Tyndall, S.D. All are members fessor of Romance Languages, and Stores, ; Anita Goodman, The three DOmin will be inter' AI, Davenport, $250 from Iowa The main character In the play of the SUI forensies society. Donald Justice, associate professor viewed by the Iowa screening Is Chester Jones, a father of fout SUI had asked and received an The intercollegiate meet is spon­ FederatlOll of Women's Chilli, Ear­ emergency allocation of $58,687 of English and a member of the committee Dec. 11. The district ly; Sarah Turner, AI, Gladbrook, who "attempts to slow his mod· sored annually by the University of ern, last living family down &0 they lrom the Iowa executive council South Dakota. This year speakers Poetry Workshop. The resignation Ragged Mountain Music- committee will select and an­ $100 from Tama County Health Im· contingent fund to undo the dam­ of George G. Zabka, associate pro­ nounce the two winners Dec. 14. provement Aaaoclatloa. Toledo. can become aware of the values from 25 universities and colleges he knows." age. The amount of the request in the midwest will attend. fe sor of botany, was reported. A The scholarships were establish­ John DeMY, AI, Grinnell, $250 # was based on estimates at the The SUlowans will participate faculty member at SUI since 1958, ed by ir Cecll Rhodes in his will Crom GrinneU College; Virginia Crawford said that Chesler Jones time. in a discussion on "What Should he will join the Ohio State Univer­ New Lost City Ramblers to provide an exchange program Renaud, A2, Grinnell, $250 from is "a ball of fire; an old army " The buildings hit by the storm :Be Done to Minimize Friction sity faculty after Feb. I , 1964. between British and American uni­ Grinnell College; Jack Porter, AI, serleant who thinks be's runninI water are on the west bank of the among Racial Groups in Ameri­ PROFESSOR HOL LAND'S ap­ versities. Th scholarships are for Lorimor, $100 from Lorimor Stu· his home llke a barracu_" Al· • Iowa river along Riverside Drive. ca?" Mi.ss Collins and Miss Read­ pointment in the College of Educa­ a two year period, with a renewal dent Council. though these characters have a Basement rooms were flooded, ing wlLl participate in oral inter­ tion and In the Department of Psy­ Schedule Conce'rt Here option tor a third year. Marjorie Rush, G, Marengo, $250 great deal of love for each other. • they do not seem aware of it. mainly because rapidly rising pretation also, while the other will chology, College of Liberal Arts, Mark Sh nu, an SUI student who (rom Iowa Federation of Womens waler overwhelmed pumps and debate "Resolved: That the Fed­ will be on a part-time basis. He The New Lo t City Ramblers, folk singers who specialhe in the Clubs, Early; Gary Eills, EI, Ot· This play hu the same theme, rougb, ragged mountain mu Ie oC the 1920's and '30's, will present a received a Rhodes scholarship last caused the electric pump motors eral Government Should Guarantee will participate in seminars, act as year, began studies at Oxford this tumwa, $500 from the Ottumwa Crawford said, as his earlier play, to burn out. an Opportunity for Higher Educa­ consultant to faculty and students, concert at the Iowa City Moose Lodge Thursday at 8 p.m, fall, Rotary Club; Avis Paeth, AI, Per­ "The Dark Roots," bulls from the The Regents also approved a tion to All Qualilied High School serve on faculty committees and The concert will be sponsored by 'Ibe Paper Place, owned by Ger- ry, $200 from the Perry Kiwanis opposite po1ot of view. The earlier Graduates." thesis committees, and direct grad· recommendation of the SUI Mur­ ald Stevenson. Assisting Steven- P I J M Club. play dealt with the son's dHflcul­ ray endowment fund committee The students will be accompan­ uate students in research projects. Patricia Podhajaky, Nt, Traer, ties and this one with the father's. ied on the trip by John Bowers, as­ son In planning and preparation M . ro . · utray • calling for sale of 2,000 shares of Prior to join1og ACT, Professor are Dr. Harry Oster, visltlng pro- 0 un ta I nee rs T S k t $100 from the Tama County Health The plays also differ in that the American Home Products Co. com· sistant professor of rhetoric. Holland had served since 1956 as fes or of Engll h, and Paul Kelso, 0 pea a Improvement AssociaUon, Toledo; earlier was a serious play wl\ile mon stock and reinvesting the pro­ research director of the National and Linda ColllnCWood. AI, WiI· "HaJ( a Pound of Tea" is deci~· a graduate student in Engllsh_ S t F'I T Ik · lIamsburg, Iy comic, ceeds, estimated at $127,250 based Merit Scholarship Corporation, The New Lost City Ramblers elm a AWS SymposIum on current market quotations, in Ted Hunter Evanston, 1Il. A native of Omaha , were formed in 1958 for the pur­ " five-year U.S. treasury bonds to Neb., he received the B.A. degree pose of re-creating the hlllbilly Hans Gmoser, one of the mo t Delegates to the AWS 'Symposi­ ,~ yield approximately 4 per cent at in 1942 from the University of style seldom heard today. The outstanding and respected moun­ Urn wlU hear Jamea Murray, asso· maturity. Named Prexy Omaha, the M.A. degree in 1947 Ramblers combine their singing tain guides and ski tour leaders in ciate prof sor of politlcal sci­ Our NEW Number fo,. and Ph.D. degree in 1952 from the this hemisphere, will narrat his ence, speak at a luncheon today. Also authorized was the invest- University of Minnesota. His other talents with skill on the traditional I ' ment of $l3,000 on a U.s. bond stringed, folk music instruments color film "Skis Over McKinley" The luncheon Is scheduled for noon which matured Friday in a five­ O~ Eye Bank professional appointments have in­ - the guitar, banjo, mandolin, £it\­ ot 8 p.m. Sunday in Shambaugh in the River Room of the Union. cluded instructor in psychology Auditorium. the FASTEST FREE year treasury bond to yield ap­ Ted Hunter, research assistant and director of vocational counsel­ die and autoharp. The final event of the three-day proximately 4 per cent. Gmo er made the film last May sympo ium will be tonight at 7;30 professor of psychology at SUI, ing at Western Reserve University, From recordings made during when he and seven companions The endowment fund now con- was recently named president­ and stafr psychologist and chief of the peak of the popularity of the mad the fi rst ski cro Ing of Mt. in the House Chamber of Old Capi­ PIZZA DELIVERY I Iains 10,350 shares of American elect of the Eye Bank Association vocational counseling at Veterans mountain music, the Ramblers ltlcKinley, the high t peak In tol. Max Dresden, proCessor of Home Products Co. common stock of America at a meeting In New Hospital, Perry Point, Md. hove become thoroughly indoctrin­ NOrth Amcrica. The entir filming phy ics, will moderate a panel, In a total of 10,867.5 shares of all York, ated in the style of the music. In­ of the trip took four months. which will discuss "The Individual in ACT, FOR WH ICH Dr. Holland and Science: Slave and Master ?" service town: types of securities in the fund. Professor Hunter will serve a now directs research, was created stead of copying the original note III a letter to the editors of Ski· University officials cited a desire two-year term in the office before for note, however, the young men Int magazIne, Gmoser described Other members of the panel In- largely through the efforts of SUI elude Robert Boynton, associate 8 7881 '\' to fUrtber diversify the fund hold- assuming the presidency of the or­ personnel to broaden the applica· have remained flexible and leave th hazardous adventure : "While ings as the principal reason for ganization, which was founded In tion of testing procedures devel· room for Improvislon. on the climb, most of the time we prof or of political science, - ' recommending the sale of 2,000 1962 to further improve, extend, oped in connection with the Iowa Tbey deliver their numbers with had to carry our rive feeL long George Forrell, professor of reli­ shares of American Home Prod­ and coordinate the services of eye Testing Program. Last July the a relaKed stage manner and hu- hdrtskis up hecr ice towers ond gion, Adrian 1I0gben, head of the ucts. banks in the nation. morou side remarks. prkipitous slopes. but they proved The Iowa Lions Eye Bank at ACT program tested the one-mil­ Physiologyton Ro enbaum, Department, associate and proCes· Mil· PI Z Z A VIl LA Each year five $1,000 scholar­ lionth high schoo1 senior since tbe Pele Welding of 'Down Beat' a lrem ndous a et on the way ships are provided by the Murray University Hospitals was a charler program started four years ago. SOl of psychology_ member of the association, which magazine calls the Ramblers an down the outhwe t side of Mt. fund in addition to one or more "exciting, accomplished, and thor- McKinley. At 9:30 p.m. the group will break ~~~~~'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ now includes 49 eye banks. Profes­ Professor Dean was g ran ted up into seminars at the Delta -= distinguished lectures. sor Hunter was one of the Lions leave in the second semester of oughly professional group" pre- The program is a special event By terms of the will of the late the current year for cc)mpleting a senting a pl'O(ram which Is " 1I(l911 red by 1he Iowa Mountaln- Zeta and Gamma Phi Beta sorocl· Club members who was instru­ Ii, gma Phi Epsllon and Phi Mrs. Bessie Dutton Murray, Wheat­ mental in founding the SUI Eye textbook and revising a laboratory vigorous, and wholly convlncmg.' ee"rs, CnioSct h Lt!rved ~s I~uide land, the five scholarships and lec­ manual in biology and botany. i k ts f th t III for the group on several summer Della Theta fraternities, and Bank. T c e or e concer w ,0 on eltpedition . Burge Hall-Clara Daley House. ture series are presented each ProCessor Hunter was also Travel and language research in sale at The Paper Place and cam- I Admission will be 90 cents, with year at the University as a me­ na{lled to three committee posts in Spain are planned by Professor pus Record ~hop Monday at $1.50 the tickets 8vailoble at the door. morial to her husband, the late the association - the ham opera­ Ringo during the second semester each. They Will also be sold at the Ground-Breaking John F. ¥urray, a native of Mon- tors committee. the standard med­ of this academic year. ProCessor door of the Moose Lodge on the roe. ical operating procedures commlt­ Justice will be on leave in 1964-65 night of the concert. Liberal Group Ceremony Set As a youth, Murray left Iowa tee, and the regional planning to accept a Ford Foundation fel· , . with a touring company of the committe for regional centers. lowship in creative writing for the Plans To Create Uncle Tom's Cabin players. He With leadership from the Iowa theater. The leave Cor ProCessor Off PI For Sunday at 2 later became associated with Wil­ Eye Bank, ham radio operators in Thoen is effective this academic er ans Political Interest Faith United Church 01 Christ In liam Wrigley in the promotion of all sections of the nation have year. ·es Tentative plans for combating Iowa City will hold a special chewing gum sales and rose to a formed a network which helps 10- For Studl political and intellectual indiffer- t high position in tbe advertising and eate eyes fOf emergency opera­ ground-breaking ceremony Sunday I business promotion fields. At his tions. Dr. Alson E. Braley, profes­ Holiday Home Fair In Europe ence on the SUI campus were dis· at 2 p.m. 1. What's the matter. no appetite? t. Worried about eUlD5, bub? cu sed Thursday night by memo death in 1936, Murray, then 63, was sor and head of ophthalmology at The c remony will be at the a millionaire and head of the SUI, also was named to the radio To Be Dec. 5-7 bers of a newly formed "Llberal" I have more imvortant things No, about lettiog old. group. building site next to Mark Twain to think of than food. , American Home Products Co. and regional planning committees. Undergraduates 10terested in at- Kirk Stephan, AI, Portland, Ore., . school, followed by refreshments ,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "Holiday Hom e" Christmas tend10g a fuJI-year study program the group's temporary president, I • Fair, Dec. 5-7, sponsored by the in Europe have until June 5 to said that there were many liberals in the temporary chapel at 11107 .IMPO RTE RS .. Johnson County Extension Service, Kirkwood Ave. These will be will display decorating ideas for submit applications for the 1964-65 on campus, but they never had COST· F1.US actively voiced their opinions as a served by members of the Wom­ . the home, gifts to make, pretty programs, according to an Insti- group. , "Where Good Taste Cost8 No More" en's Guild. Participating wltb the packages, Christmas cards to tute of European Studies announce- The Dew group plans to create Highway 6, We.t (Next to Alamo Motel make, and Christmas foods. members of the congregation wilJ ment. a interest in polities by staging de- be the Rev. F. C. Schmidt, Par· l urop.. n 011 p.lntlngs wldl .uorlml nl of IlIk The public is invited to the Programs will be conducted in bates with the Young Conserva- ish associate in the Congregational .frlc. n wood c.rvlngs n ttl n ch.lrs display which will be in Mont- lives and other political groups I . dutch cOPIM' . nd nlckllw.. . "IIlII p"lnl door mlts gomery Hall at the Johnson Coun- Paris, VieMa, and Frelburg, West who disagree with a liberal policy. Church of Iowa City, the Rev. orllnlll pottl,.., Phillip L. Shively, minister to the ty 4-H Fairgrounds. Germany. Satirical papers attacking conser- campus in Iowa City for the United ANNEX In ttl. at OPEN The open hours will be from 7 APplication periods for the three vative policy will be encouraged Church of Christ, and the Rev. ~OTEL JEFFERSON 1_, clir.d to 9 p.m. Thursday and Friday programs opened Monday, three by the g~oup. John G. Craig, minister of the , SUNDAY 12·5:30 evenJ'ngs Dec 5-6 and from I . . A motion was made and passed . NOW OPEN , . . . months earlier than usual. ThIS is to Wfl·te to the Amerl'cans Cor Congregational Church. afternoons, Dec. 6-7_ because enrollments for the spring IDemocratic Action, a national lib- .'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~il~m~PNi~~p~ r;I C;" ~~~~~~~~~~~t~o~5~P~.m~' iF~r~id:a~y~a:nd~s:a:Uud:::ay- 1964 programs in Vienna and Frei- eral organization and inquire about burg are ruling up rapidly, Instl- affiliation with it. eo . Cla S8J. plans to seek recognition as an of- .. y.,.'l8ldddiug' 4. You houId be Ilelebrating The Paris Honors program, lim- fieia] University group from the !lOt t.ooding. Not at aD. I've reeebed a !tedtut toffi' B-average 11 'd juniors and out- I Studen~ Senate soon. . • ;~T~h~e~g~rou~p,~a~s~y~et~u~n~n~am~ed~'~;IIIIIII~11 1 milestone today. I'm 21. The The age of responsibility DRY CLEANING standing sophomores, allows lib- I Ephrla~ Sando, mstructor m da)'l ol lDYyouth have au-. II uponDJe. era ar s u en 8 u y m. th'elr English,__ IS adViser_ ____to the group_ . • 1 ts t d ts to t d " . major fields at the University of SPECIAL Paris and other Paris schools. " ~ The Paris program is under the , . direction of a professor of the In- ., stitut d'Etudes Polltiques, part of Monday, Nov. 18 - Tuesday, Nov. 19 - Wednesday, Nov. 20 the University of Paris. Students 'ht,e",t._ must take six weeks of intensive ~ . . lllt emIIl language training before classes t : : OF THt SPORT COATS ... GOlDEN open to prepare for courses, which • .. ~Ll 59¢ are taught only in French. ... ,I .... U~LlNED JACKETS • • • • The Institutes "European Year" program at the University of Vien- LADIES' OR MEN'S na offers a choice between courses j taught 10 German or English. 98¢ Courses will be offered 10 history, LONG COATS • • • • • political science, literature, philo- sophy, psychology, economics, fine , . arts and other fields. LADIES' OR MEN'S "Das Deutsche Jam" at the 500- I . How come you're not a ___ 8. Relu. Toa DID let LiviDg .~ SHORT COATS • • • .8~ year-old University of Freiburg, in BECKMAN'S of the Drama Club? IDIIIftIICe from Equimble taQ Germany's Black Forest, Is con­ ,.., 01. ~bilities. lt CIJl .... ducted for juniors in political sci­ Already Illy father's provide foi your fa.aUly. your WATERPROOFING 7Sc EXTRA ence, history, literature, philoso­ FUNERAL HOME taIldng • bout lDy being mortgage, the kids' edU<:a~ ~J phy, educational theory and psy­ "self-supportiDg,n I see , , , eVeD build • sizable chology. All courses are taught in rtsponslbililifs aD UOIIDII ~t fund for you. .• .1 JDe-wife. chiIdreII, German . lawa, '. ." _vel. Say, this is good ~gbiIIt. :' l: The F'feiburg program offers ." complete 1otegration into a Euro­ , 'lip ' ...,l- pean university, together with ; • ~ .. 14~ about one bour of tutoring for 507 E. COLLEGE ST. every hour of c18Sl. Applicants must have a B-average. For infOl1llltioe abqut Living IIISIIJ'UlOe, see The MaD from Equitabla. :~ Each program inclUdes two field For informatiOD about career opportuAities at ECJ..uimble, _ your ., tri", In wesltlrn Europe with In- PHONE 7·3240 PleeeiDeatOlBclr. OI write toWm.. E. BIeviDI. EmployaleDt Waaq.'. ~ 8titll ~ ' IeCturfk A folder delCrib­ the Equnuu Life ANur.. Society of1he United ~- Ing ~ qTOgr8IDI is av~le (rom the o[ European StudIes I .. , Ipe ~ ~ A-. ~ tM ~ New 111,)1[; !..!l~t~'! 35 E.Institute Wacker Dr., Cbicaao, IlL 1______.... 1'01' Pa,e 4-TH! DAILY IOWAN-Iowa Clry, la.-Saturd"y, Noy. la, 19~

~ " ... , "'D' ::0' ; Illinois at Wisconsin SEAT 19 en:fTI' en:, Tops CSonference Slate ,,: CmCAGO I.fI - Dethroned cham· a title tie with the Buckeyes. In l>' pion Wiseon in and Northwestern, that event, Michigan Sta~ pre­ E PRESS ROW (J): the collapsed pre-season favorites, sumably would win the Rose Blr!JI } (J): can ruin the Big Ten title hopes of bid since Ohio State last viltted' t Not many teams have as good reasons as Iowa and Michl· , two other contenders in Saturday's Pasadena 1958. 8y HARRIEn HINDMAN , semi·final conference football gan for creating a rivalry. When the two teams meet at Ann B Sports lidltor ! round. ) Arbor at 1:30 p.m. today, four of Iowa's starters will be natives Last week's contest was a tie at H, so I guess, in Jon Van's WISCONSIN IS HOST to Illinois ISU frosl1 I of Michigan, Iowa's Head Coach is a Michigan alum, Michi· language, we're both haUwits. At. tbe Big Ten season nears its end. which has a shade ot a champion' I here are the picks for this week: ship chance. Northwestern invades J gan's Head Coach is a former Hawkeye assistant coach, and Ohio State, whose Buckeyes must IOWA 21, MICHIGAN 14 - The Wolverines have beaten North· Lose First one of Michigan's quarterbacks is the son of Iowa Athletic win to overtake also unbeaten western and II1inois in the last two weeks, and Iowa Coach Jerry Michigan State in the league's Director For~t Evashevski. Burns calls them the "most improved team in the Big Ten." But, LINCOLN, Neb. 1.fI- NebraIta'. Today's contest is the 23rd meet­ hectic stretch drive. freshman footballers routed lC!l'& son, who scouted Iowa's 27·13 win the Hawlteyes are "up" after their defeat of Minnesota and need Michigan State, owning a 44-1 ing between the two teams with over Minnesota last week, has told State yearlings 49-13 Friday d Michigan holding 16 victories this game to finish better than .500. Having several Michigan boys loop mark and No. 4 spot in the a five· rampage in the the Wolverines, "[owa is big and on the Iowa squad may help the Hawks, too. Associated Press national rank· against 4 for Iowa and two ties. active and has two of the best second half. t The Hawks have won only two ILLINOIS 21, WISCONSIN 17 - Tbe Ulini, whose Rose Bowl ings, marks time with a noncon· Tied 13-13 at the lntermtsaJOI1, linebackers around in Hilgenberg fllrence joust with buffeted Notre games at Ann Arbor, the last being and Reilly. Iowa passes and runs hopes were dampened by their loss to Michigan last week, aren't Nebraska rallied for two touch· in 1958. ready to gi ye up the idea yet. Dame at East Lansing, Mich. downs in the third quarter, ODe ( about equally and they have good [ Iowa, batting for better than .500 personnel for both types of game. INDIANA 1., OREGON 7 - The Hoosiers travel to the West A WEEK FROM Saturday, Mich· of them on an 88-yard run by ball· mark, has a 2·3 record in the con· [n the close games that they lost, Coast and bring home their fourth straight victory, quite a (eat igan State is home against Illinois back Kaye Carstens of Fairbury, ference while the Wolverines are lack of depth probably hurt them which has a current 4·1-1 Big Ten and added th~ee more in the fil1ll for the hapless Hoo!tiers. record and Ohio State now 3-{)'! period although Coach JohnjMelloQ tied with Purdue for fifth place in more than anything etse. They're MICH,GAN STATE 21, NOTRE DAMI 7 - The Spartans' de· the Big Ten with a 2-2-1 mark, in· a well·coached aggressive outfit." plays at Michigan in the season­ by that time was sweepmg hiI cluding upset wins over Northwest· fense and title hopes are too much for Notre Dame, which isn't ending round . bench. Meanwhile, Jerry Burns cau· ev~n havj~ '.'Ute luck of the Irisl)." this ~eason. In other S(ltiJrday games, Michi· ern and illinois aDd a 7·7 deadlock tioned the Hawkeyes that the Wol· It closed out a break -even sea· wit h league-leading Michigan PUROIfE ,Z.I, ft1jNNESOTA 7 - Ron DiGravio will have one of gan 2·2·1 ~ which last Saturday son for Iowa Stale frosh, 14-0 \tia- verines are "the most improved his best passing days while the Gophers are wlliting for Boiler· upset Illinois - entertains Iowa ner over Missouri in earlit't State. team in the conference," and an· an In Iowa's starting lin~up will be maker mist,ak~s . 2·3; Minnesota 1-4 is at Purdue 2·3, game. Nebraska whipped RIUIJU I ticipated that Michigan quarter· and [ridiana 1-4 visits Oregon for a flanker and co·captain P a u I ~IlTHWESTIR . OJI}O STATI 21 - The Wildcats should State 43·22 in its preVious test. back Bob Timberlake "may pre· '1. non·conference tilt. Krause of Flint, Mich.; Gus Kasa· sent us with some defensive prob· win one more this season as Tommy Myers shows some r of last Iowjl Stqte shOWed off t)\'o' of pis and Bobby Grier of Detroit; ILLINOIS, UNBEATEN in six the game's hardest charging bacta lems." year's All-American form. The Wildcats' biggest problem will be games prior to its tripping by and Bob Sherman of Durand, de· stopping" Tom Barrington. in Eppie Barney of Cleveland, Ohio, fensive halfback. Rounding out the Michigan, is a slight underdog and Tony Baker of Burlington, and starting Hawkeye eleven are ends IOWA STATIE 21, KANSAS STATE 13 - Cyclone coach Clay against Wisconsin 3·2 as North· got fine quarterbacking from Ron Tony Giacobazzi and Ivory Mc· Dean Carl Stapleton is, busy installing a new of(ense in preparation for K-State. western 2-4 will be before .84,000 Halda of Des Moines. Dowell, guards WaUy Hilgenberg With All·Al1Ierican candidate Tom Vaughn, he should be able to Buckeye parUsans at Ohio State. But Nebraska countef1!Cl with and Mike ReilJy, center' Gary make it work. Both Wisconsin and Northwestern backfield talent in depth and a rug. Fletcher, tackle Leo Miller, hall· OKLAHOMA 24, MISSOURI 21 - Bud Wilkinson's Sooners keep sagged after impressive starts. ged line that permitted Iowa State • back Lonnie Rogers and quarter· their No. 5.national ranking against another Big Eight powerhouse. The Badgers failed to come up only one sustained scoring drive. Heads Field with a quarterback to match Ron back Gary Snook. . NAVY H( DUKE 14 - Staubach's crew won't be pointing ahead Iowa State got its first toucbdOWll l Vanderkelen, star of the last Rose MichIgan End Coach Jocko Nel· too mucb for Army - it has a No. 2 ranking to worry about. on a break when center Bob Buill Bowl game. The Wildcats, hurt by snatched a N~braska fumble and At Aqueduct T.EXAN1, TEXAS CHRISTIAN 7 - TCU has ruined Texas's top injury to key linemen, lacked run· ran 32 yards to score in the rll'st ranking thr'ee times and the Longhorns won't let it happen again, ning strength to back up star pass· quarter. Bears-Packers The $75,OOO-added Gallant Fox as they stdy the only undefeated major college t am in the coun· er Tommy Myers. Handicap, with 12 starters Includ· try. ILLINOIS, PLAYING seven con· ing highly·regarded Dean Carl, ference games, compared with six heads the national racing program By E~IC;: ZOECKLER each Ior Michigan State and Ohio Now Open for Breakfast Meet in Top today. N.ws Editor State, still can win the undisputed Dean Carl, who has earned $118,- You Bw:e can tell picking football games has been a tedious crown and a Rose Bowl trip, But 750 in winning six and finishing aCfair so far this season. the trick can be turned only if second three times in 15 starts the Illini whip Wisconsin and Mich· Lassie's , t NFL Game this year, is favored at odds of Why just notice the change in the appearance of our beloved igan State and Ohio State is beaten 5-2 to win the 1%·mile event at SpQDWl editor. In two months her hair color has changed from a once. CHICAGO 1.fI- Chance of "Halas Aqueduct. The 3-year·old son of nlity blonde tinge to middle·aged gray. MICHIGAN STATE'S defensively· Red Barn Weather" for the big Packer·Bear County Delight w1l1 carry top Harriett - who claims "I'm the greatest" despite her .35il strong Spartans are in the driv· battle weight of 124 pounds, including (estimated) average in football predictions this faU - won't sav er's seat. Even ii Ohio State can .J exas Risl