k) President Hancher: Your Education Depends on You IY, a President Virgil M. Hancher told SUI students In the aMusl induc­ tion address Thursday that what they got from their college years depended enUrely on them . "Teachers can lecture, books lie open and laboratories stand ready _ but what they do for you will depend on you. Nothing can force an education on you. Hancher said. "On the other hand. nothlng can keep you from an education If you are determined to have one. " THE INDUCTION ceremony launched the 1963-64 academic year for more than 12.200 SUI students. Hancher emphasized the need for establ is hing the right patterm of work during the opening days of the semester. He told students that "In aU probability the next hun­ dred days will he the most Impor­ tant hundred days in your unl versity wa. life ." of Addressing his remarks to new hi. SUI students. he warned they would a find themselves among their Intel­ the lectual peers. "Here is a challenge you must accept at once." Hancher said. HANCHER told students they are ] embarking on "strenuous times." They face complex and competitive problems : the rise of the European had F.conomlc Community. Khruschev', tha "We will bury you threat," the rt· emergence of Red Chi.na and the rising tide of nationalism In Africa. This is "the Great Adventure." Hancher said. He asked the students to take advantage of the univer­ sity's facilities to cope with those complexities. "With proper application to your studies, your future here should be secure." 01 * ..... ,11 0 by 11011 N.nclell Miss SUI Contest * * * * * To Be Presented Beginning Oct. 5 Presentation of the candidates for oil Iowo-n Miss SUI will be held In the Union Serving the State University Iowa and the People at Iowa City Saturday, Oct. 5. at The ten semi-finalists will be se­ Established in 1888 10 Cents Per Copy A and Wirephoto Iowa City, Iowa. Friel y, lected that night by a three-member J panel (two men, one woman ), all of whom have had past experience with Miss America Pageants and local pagaents. Before the Union presentation, JFK Appoints Representatives judges will interview the candi­ dates. They have been asked to se­ lect 10 girls whom they feel are most representative of SUI co-eds as determined by the candidates' poise and abillty to answer ques­ tions. Blaik, Royall to Birmingham I At the end of the interviewing phase, each judge wlU be asked to WASHI GTON III - Pre id nt ri 10 fear and distr KennedY aaid the Fed al Bu- select the top 10 girls as determined Kennedy Is sending Earl H. CRedl The Rev. Morlin Luther King. rrau of InvesUgation, 'II U a I' by the Interviews. Each will cast Btaik, former Army football ~ king for th d I atlon, id f I I I . aT rna 20 votes for his choice of the top coach, and Kenneth C. ROy h. Birmingham', N groe ore "frus· "m ve eUorts Lo bring to jUJo girl, 18 for the second, and so on former secrrlary of Ule Army, traled, confu and almost on li(' lh~ (If'rsons r pon ihl for IIJI until he reaches the tenth girl, who into Birmingham, Ala .. to try to the verg of d p ir." lhe bombing on unday aod pre­ will receive two votes. The votes ease racial tensions there. viou Ineid nl ." of each judge wiU thell be recorded. King , pre iden! of th Southern Kenn dy said Thursday the two Chri tian Lead rship Confer nee. '" urg ev ryonc to coopernt The second phase of selection wlll will go to Birmingham In the n xt read a statement which Mid tb with them In lhi effort and thaL be the Pageant on Saturday eve­ few days "to repre nt me per­ gro I aderl had promised full ail citizens of Binningham nd ning, Oct. 5. sonally In h Ipine the city to worlc cooperation with the PresidenL Lo Alabama will give th proc Skits will he presented for each a a unit in overcommg the fearll avert further violence. of law enlore menl a full opportu­ girl by members of her housing Loftiest Perch and uspicions which now eKi t." King saJd they discussed tho nity to work," K nnedy said. unit. After the pageant, the judges Daily lowen AIII,tent Photographar Bob Nandtll probably wa, the In Birmingham, Mayor Albert efro leaders' rcqu t thal fed· " I ure all citi~ns In the neltt will select the top 10 skits In order, eral troop be cot Into Birming­ SUlowln with tIM loftlt.t perch during Thursday morning'. Indue. Boulwell said Blalk and Royall dnys to conduct. thcmscl\l 5 with casting 10 votes for t1Je number one are welcome In the viol nc - ham to replace slate troopers. r traint nd reapolliibilily:' skit, nine for the second, and so on. tlon ctremony at Old Capitol. Although many .tudents and faculty plagued city_ The tenth skit wilJ receive one vote. member. Witched the certmony from window. In Sche.Her and Kennedy lold the egroes that Th White flou onnoull Cd th The President. who eooferred appointm nl or Blaik and RoyaU Judges will consider Ingenuity, Macbride Hall., Nandlll was. atop the dome of Old Capitol to .hoot national guardsmen fed Tall zed os a public commiU to work originality, and talent displayed by the panoramic crowd .caM .bovt. -Photo by Joe Lippincott with ven Negro leaders. aid the Ja 1 week for school lnt grotion the various housing units. tragic deaths o[ four gro girls arc stili on duty, King said, and with while and • earo leaders in in the bombing of 8 Birmingham that he would wait and what the Birmingh m crlsis. Total votes for each candidate develops in the next few days. On . 10nday KeMedy will con· will then be added; the ten candi­ * * * * * * church la t Sunday hay given dates with the highest ratings will be semi-finalists. The interviews thus count two-thirds in selection of Miss SUI semi-finalists and skit Says Dionne: Committee Posts Open Soviets Ask New Step' presentations count one-third. To Students for 1st Time Death Penalty Set I Did My Best Toward Disarmament tudent Senate President 1ikl' ,arver announced CALLANDER, Ont. IA'\ - The UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. (II - Ife cited Bonn's op ilion to a For 81uHs Man father of the Dionne quintuplets Thursday that students will he n·prt·~ ·nted on tl l~ Concert Sovi t Forcign ~initel'1 Andr i reduction or W . t rn troop rength Cour and the Lcctun' and espcn Committee (or the Gromyko came up Thursdny with in Central Eurol and to malting COUNCIL BLUFFS (II - A Dis· said Thursday hI conscience i· n w proposals on di armament, in­ that ar a d nuel arired lOne. first time thi ·l'ar. lrict Court jury Thursday nighl clear aboul the way he Dnd his I cluding the holdinl of an IS-nation Th 18 nalions invited to send convicted Leon Tice Jr.. 22. of wife brought up their five famou pplications (or tJI~e two committees will be avail­ ummlt m bng on that' u before th ir head. of ·tat lo the sum­ Council Bluffs of first degree mur­ daughters. able today at the [n fonnanon Desk of the nion. ny stu­ next June 30_ He offered Moscow mit con(·r n on disarmam nt der and fixed the penalty of death a a liite. He said a magazine article in dent is eligible to serve on thes· committ s and the ap­ would be those whkh have been by hanging. His proposals were contained in taking port in th I 'ngthy talks in Sentencing was set for 10 a.m. wh ich th e four urviving girls plications must be turned in at the tudent (' nat Office a major pollcy peech to the U. N_ Gen va . Sept. 27. charged they had a hard and un­ by S pt. 27. General A sembly that was devoid Tice was charged with slaying happy child hood "is full of un­ One post on each committee will be opened up to stu­ of cold war languag as fa r as Bond Set at $10,000 Judy Ellen Jackson, 13, last June truths." the United tates and the other big 21 in a shooting rampage that al· dent . The two tudent will be lected by a election Western powers were concerned. For Byers Thursday so took the life of Randall Curtis But Marie contradicted him. U's committ e formed by the Stud nt nate and Union But it was vitriolic In respect to Burtness, 2, at the Jackson bome "true, true, true," she said at her Bond for Ike VanBuren Byerll , Board. W t Germany and Chancellor Kon· here. Last Induction home in Montreal. fad Adenauer. 62, Des foin wa t at $10.000 Police said Tice opened up with Carv r said that he hoped a large number of tud nts "Our conscience is clear," Oliva Gromyko pok in advance of th in Iowa City police court Thurs­ a loaded .22 caliber revolver, ap­ SUI President VlrgU M. Hancher (in academic IIOwn at top center) appli d for th po t that two comp t nt rodents could policy speech to be delivered in th parently in anger, when be called participate. In hi. last SUI induction certmony Thursday momin, Dionne said. "We tried our best day afternoon_ Byers is in John­ be el ct d. H aid that compet nt m mbers on th e assembly Friday morning by Presi· son County jail here on a charge lor Mrs. JoAnn Burtness and was on the ta.t .te... of Old Capitol. Hancher, who will rttire next J~, under very try ing circumstances_ d nt Kennedy_ told she was not in. committee might lead to more repr entation on other of grand larceny in connection hal opened tIM academic ytar at SUI with an induction cerlmony "1 cannot understand why thl! The diplomats noted that while Officers said Tice had daled Mrs. for the past 24 ytars. It never has rained during Hanc;har'. ttnUrl girls, Who will be 30 next 1ay, University ~mmjttee . Gromyko made no direct reference with th Uieft September II of Burtness. molher of the dead boy during Inductlen. -Photo by Jot Lippincott should after all these years sud­ The Concert C01,lr e Committ est up conccrts and to the bitter dispute with Peking. nearly $6,000 from the ~oll and a sister of Judy, while she was denly hold their parentJl up to pub­ obtain p rformer and orche tra for the concert . The he declared that the Soviet people Sampl r iden , 223 McLean estranged from her husband. "refute as essentially antiscientific AYcnue. lic ridicule and dishonor _" Lectur s and Vesper Committee is in charge of ecuring They said Tice apparently be· the concept of war as something Police are till looking for came embittered after she and her Real Issue of Election. Is The a r ~ic l e complained about the lecturer and scheduling the lectur . inevitable." Peking challenges Uris Byers' son, Mike, 17. Byers and busbaiKI were reconciled. housework they had to do and idea. his iOn completed a waterproo(lll& Wounded In the shooting were about the shorl allowance given Besides proposing the SUIIVIlit job in the Sample basement the Mrs. William Jackson, 45, mother How Much Change-Shaff them wh en they went olI to school. meeting on disarmament Gromyko day the mOney was stolen. of Judy and Mrs. Burtness, and advanced a plan to let the United I _~~-======William Perkins, 7, son of Mrs. DES MOINES (II - The author The Shaff Plan provides for a The quints left home when they Barry Reaffirms Aversion __ -.. were 20 - a year belore being Stat and the Soviet Union retain II Burtness by a previous marriage. of lowa's controversial reappor­ House of 99 members, one {rom some nuclear rockets until the rmal Tlee also turned the g\lll on him­ tionment plan, state Sen. David O. each county, and a Senate of 58 able to claim their $1-m illion trust stage of disarmament is achieved. Union Open .... self but received only a superfi­ Shaff (R-Clinton ), Thursday said members. elected {rom districts fund - aDd seWed in the Montreal Toward Test Ban Treaty based on population with no more area. This toucbed 0[( stories of He al 0 said the Soviet Union cial head wound. "the real issue" in the specia I wanted agreement with the United Tice, who .aid he had been election Dec. 3 is "how much of than a 10 per cent deviation. Pre­ family discord . WASHINGTON"" - 1£ his vote against this treaLy is to commit House Tonigh' sently. the Iowa House has 106 against the limited nuclear test · political swclde. States to ban placing objects con­ drinking heavily the day of the a change is necessary" to satisfy In a linal word, Papa Dionne taining nuelea r weapons in Olller the people. members, one from each county All .tuIIents arw Invited .. a shooting, was quoted by police 8S said: ban treaty will mean his political "I will vote against this treaty space. the Shaff, in discussing the reap­ and with the nine largest counties Union Optn HOUM in I_a saying, "I don't want a life sen­ "We feel badly about this article, suicide. Senator Barry Goldwater because in my heart, mind , soul Memorial Unien from • to 12 tence. I am ready to hang." portionment issue at the conven­ having an additional representa­ U. S_ Ambassador Adlai E. Ste­ but Mrs. Dionne and [ do not intend .(R-Ariz.l declared T h u r s day, and conscience, I feel it detri­ venson said Gromyko's emphasis tonight. A dance in the Rlwer tion of the Iowa Savings and Loan tive; and a 5O-member Senate. but to commenl further ." League. Inc .. said that population with no county having more than "then I co:nmJt it gladly." mental to the strength of my on further steps to reduce tensions, Room, featuring "The Ftll.. " is under represented in the pre­ one. However, he added laler: Taking the Senate floor for an- country . . ." especially in disarmament, "was will highlight the evtning. .. Cooler sent legislature. Shaff agreed that area has been "Despite what the quint'! have very welcome to the United States." c;ial print will be offered In ttM other speech against the pact Earlier, Sen. Itoman L. Hruska. recrwatfenal and food areas .. Mottly cloudy -Itht wtth ec· He contended. however, that his "completely over-represented" in done to us in the magazine story, the leadina contender for the Re- (R-Neb,) announced be bad de­ Gromyko accused the Adenauer ca.tonal ...... ,. and thunder. reapportionment plan would set the Iowa Legislature but conlend­ as parents we still love our daugh­ regime of attempting to blackmail the Union, a. _II a. • ".,. record ctrtlflcate for the win. showers. C.. ler In the IWfh to· up a "balanced legislature" in ed that if population alone was lers and would welcome them back publican presidential nomination cided with difficulty "against a any government which opposes day. Hith ..ay In the UIIPtf' which "no one is going to have the basis then 17 counties that home any lime. It will always be next year. said: background of some doubt and what he called "the revenge-uek­ ner of the ''Mst dance" con­ 60s north .... to Io,...,nd • In .... his way" and that all Iowa prob­ have more than half the state's in the bottom of our hearts to for­ "I have been told, as have brutal realism" Lo V«C [or the ing" demands stemming fro m .test...... t. Il'ms will hove to be considered. populntion would coni rill. give Ihem . Thlll's only nllturII L" others, 1 am sure, that to vote 1lo1Ct. ---'--- Bonn." ., t • r

S 4tl • Birmingham, guilt is widespread- 11\()- 'Dally towan ' .. .., The 'harvest was sown lit AND COMMENT TI : 4i By RALPH McGILL troops. At that lime the condition ernor, the clergy, tbe Informa­ 'agt2 FRID_Y, SEPT 20, "63 Iowa City, Iowa H it be true, as the ancients be­ of coal miners everywhere was tion media or the business and lieve, that the gods look down at one of piteous exploitation. The political leadership. mankind from Olympian Heights strike produced perhaps 100 or The decision to murder or III and are amused, angered, and more incidents of dynamiting and maim as many children as p0s­ 'I1 made compassionate by what violence. sible (just because they were II they see, there must have been loud, ironic laughter when Gov­ In the national coal strike of colored) was not merely an sci D ernor George Orley W!lllace, of 1922, when for the first time the of barbarous brutality. It wu a C. Alabama, offered a reward of deplorable conditions under which challenge to humanity by thole $5,000 for the arrest of the men human beings lived and worked who think that Lerror will defeat THE TERROR OF the bomb that exploded in a Birm­ responsible for dynamiting a Ne­ were mjlde public, . vlolencl! be­ law. gro church in Birmingham at the came almost a way of life. For ingham church ,and killed four children did not stop in that the duration of the strike, as GOVERNOR WALLACE has Sunday school hour and killing, been careful to recommend AI thereby, four children and injur­ Birmingham's mines kept work­ southern city. 1t spread across a nation still too oomplacent ing, organizers were killed, bel1t­ against violence and to urge that fe ing 22 at the moment they were there be none. But he has at the en and dispers~. in its "your pr-oblem, not mine" attitude. hearing the (;{Jspel chapter , Dnl same time sought to defy legal love. ' " , I As 'late as 1936, union workers If any good can come of tl1e deaths of Sunday schoo~ courl orders affecting schOOls. He This bombing, like others be­ at a tire and rubber plant in sent national guardsmen to close chjldr~n, it must be the realization that the United States fore it, was a harvest of things Gadsden were beaten up and school doors which orderly proc· can no longer abide, any rac-ial discrimination. sown. Governor Wallace, for all driven from town. Their head­ esses of law have said should be his urgings that quarters was dynamited. A com­ open. Ralph McGill points out in an adjOining column the there be no vio­ mitlee. headed by Professor H. C. irony of Gov. Wallace's reward for the children's Nixon, then of Tulane University, One can only surmise what $5,000 lence, can not this means to the men whOle .. mUrderers. What Gov. Wallace must realize is that he escape the wide­ and th e Reverend Charles H, S. HouK, was refused permission to recourse to law-defiance is dyna· ly held opinion mite. One wonders if the gover· " helped murder the children, with bis attempts to prevent that he has, by register at Gadsden hotels and Lo integration of the state's schools. his closing of lise the city auditorium for a com­ nor really expects violent, law. school doors munity meeting. less men to believe him, bow· What We all must realize is that we all nre the mur- ever sincere he himself may be, against court or­ UNDER THE RECENT regime '" derers of those children. All of us who stood by and when his troopers are removed ders and his ap­ of Birmingham's police commis­ by \he Federal Government and watched the impending conflict caused by a minority de­ peals to the peo· sioner Bull Connor there was a pIe to "keep up the governor then appeals to the manding its just rights in a just manner, all of us who large number of dynamitings people to carryon the fight. the fight ," contributed 10 lhe cli­ Lhat went "unsolved." In the re­ watched as Negroes were jeered - not in the South but in male of general resistance by cent months before the deliberate This is an old lesson. When , the North - because they chose to reside in a "white" those whose only concept of decision to dynamite a church at men in high places, elective or "fighting on" is th e dynamite privale, fail to give full and , neighborhood, all of us who have laughed - in our sophis­ the Sunday school hour, with the bomb, rifle and pistol fire, and full knowl edge that it would be quick support to the processes of . ticafed way, of course - at "nigger" jokes: we all kill d lhe fire bomb , by nighl. crowded with children and that law - then they thereby lend en· couragemenl to those who want . the~, BIRMINGHAM AND the indus­ some would be killed and wound­ ed, there had been more than 40 to take the law into their bloody Most of us, of course, will never admit it. The mur­ trial communities about it , like hands. olhers in coal and steel areas, bombings in Birmingham. A~ 1 ders were too far removed to tinge us with guilt. But it have a lon g and ugly history of were "unsolved." The extremists in high and low tal-es little pewepti,veness to see the same kind of racist violence . The sharecropper who 'rhat lhere are in Birmingham places - who inflame by word came lo th e mines and the steel and the induslrial satellites about and example, have for a long hatred in our own prejudices as in the twisted minds that miUs broughl bitterness and prej­ il many men who think nothing time been sowing the seeds now killed children for "a cause." The difference is only one of "We've decided against the test-ban treaty­ udice wilh him , It remains. In of Laking human life if it is an come to harvest. degree, and we have witnessed before how unimportant 1908 a miner's strike in the Birm­ object of lheir inlense hatreds and (Distributed 1962 we want the right to develop our own bomb" ingham distri ct was broken by by The HIli Syndicate, Inc.) that difference is. prejudices is no secret to the gov- (All Rights R.served) l:b'l IUI:ld! IUUU:! 1t!IIIIIIUIIUlI: ·,I!liIIUlllJnu: !1111111 llnll:I1I1IlUU: I JIIIUmmIIIUCIIUIIOUIlI1IlMDJIUlllllllllUIIU1I1unninmlInIU!l'~aJllmlnlll1l'nllll"'nl"l! r IIIlUIIIIII'"il:)llImlllln'llmlItIlIIIIR~'WIlU:tI!lnllllll'llll ...nblllllUltIlUIIlUIUIIIII~U1UIIUIIUUJlu,~!lillllnml'nn .. Who was responsible for the deaths of millions at Bucllenwald and Auscl1\'1itz? Was it the poor creton who shoved those Jews, like animals, into the ovens, or was it U.S.S.R. progressing in agriculture- the German people who followed a racist madman and made his bigotry their own? ! The warped men - the killers of Jews at Buchenwald i or of Negroes in Birmingham - are always around, ready Iowa's GC[Jrst Russian farming on ~ to crawl out of the woodwork like vermin. They are allowed By HANS VLADIMIRSKY ' I very encQuraging to see that the areas sown to corn have in­ to crawl, however, only in an atmosphere that is favorable man have been in friendly contact - a model example of inter­ Moscow News creased." national cooperation. I, to their particular specialty, "Since my first visit to the Soviet Union, in the fall of 1955, ON HIS VISIT to the Terezine experimental center for cattle Asked about the long talk he had with Khrushchev on this So far, the atmosphere in tho United States has not you have made great progress. Not only progress in agriculture breeding, Mr. Garst was especially interested in the research visit, Mr. Garsl said, "The talk was on agriculture, basically. 1 ~ nurtured as many as Germany once did, but it's getting but progress in urban areas. I know that progress will continue. done on artificial insemination. "We recognize that the Soviet told him that you were making great progress, and expressed my What a great country and whal fine people," point of view about the need for greater use of insecticides, chem­ dirtier and dirtier. It's mighty hard to breath in many Union leads the world in artificial inseminalion," he said. When I Rosewe\1 Garst, tbe famous (Coon Rapids ) Iowa farmer, was he learned that an experimental plot at the center yielded a ical fertilizer and simples sets of farm machines. places in the South and the Nortll ~ right now. . being interviewed in Kiev after a week's tour of the Soviet Union. harvest of 118 centners of corn per hectare, he remarked: "What Mr, Khrushchev said that everything was being done to meet ~ TIle Birmingham bomb should have shaken us all 111' au I " One can hSI'tIly ' choose a better time to visit Kiev, in lhe , .~. y.~ c;pn do PO fiv~ hectares (12 acres) you can do in a whole the needs of Soviet farming In these areas. 1 wish to emphasize I bit, Perhaps it will make those suburban housewives who Ukraine, than in mid-May, when the chestnut trees are in bloom region." that my meetings with Mr. Khrushchev have always been most cordial and marked by unusual frankness." self-righteously jeered prospective NegrQ neighbors realize and the graceful lilacs accent the magnificent new buildings of • Mr. Garst spent a good deal of the time on the cattle farm. this town raised from ruIns after the war. His remark after seeing the young animals was, "If I were a ABOUT THE SO·CALLED crisis in Soviet agriculture certain I; .. ' ,thl)jr difference from the Birmingham murderers is smal\. Western llublications have invented, Mr. Grant said, "I do not HE SPENT A DAY in the nearby countryside, leaving the city calf, I would like to be born on this farm." Perhaps it will make us all realize that our darker sides ar¢ believe it is lrue; I bave said as much in the press before and I at II a.m. and returning at abollt 9 in tbe evening. "That was the "I am perfectly aware that the United States and the U.S.S.R. am prepared to repeat it." • always there, waiting to plunge us into the full darkof!ss of developed differently. Not everything depends on people; much most enjoyable day 1 had in the Soviet Union," said Mr. Garst. One of the main arguments advanced by the manufacturers ~ hig0trY - or to blind us to the bigotry of others. , depends on circumstances. While you were fighting the war and At the Friendsbip Collective Farm he had a lively farmer­ of this "crisis" is that agriculture cannot be centralized. In Mr. the question was being decided "to be or not to he," the United 9ur prejudices are all of the same brand, and a slight to-farmer talk with the chairman and specialists, giving welcome Garst's opinion the best refutation of that is the progress of Sov­ States was developing without disturbances from without. shift in power-Wielding officials could consolidate them advice and frank criticism. iet agriculture. particularly in recent years. I HOWEVER, I AM confident that as soon as YOll meet your into a force as terrible as Germany's, The guilt of Wallace "In those areas where the a,verage precipitation is small, "I must say that your agriculture has made great advances. more attention has to be paid to irrigation," he noLed, He was program for greater production of chemical fertilizer, you will I see that you are supplying more electricity, more mechaniza­ 1 and all the o¢er whites in the United States is the guilt pleased to find his own books on corn cultivation in the farm's be growing as'much produce as the United States." tion and doing still more research. I have no doubt that your agri­ I ~ of Hitler, of Eichmann, , , the difference is only in degr~e. library. He wrote this in the Visitors Book: "I have enjoyed this The same day Mr. Garst visited the Ukrainian Machine-test­ culture will continue to develop rapidly. Birmingham has showeC\ us how small that difference visit, particularly the museum which shows the extraordinary ing Center wbere he was shown new agricultural machines. He When I visited you in 1955, I thought your agriculture was 30 f progress being made . . . typical of the whole Soviet Union. was particularly impressed by tbe l\harkov T-125 tractor. This years behind ours. Today I can say that the gap has shrunk to may be. Buchenwald and Auschwitz specialized in innocent I Wonderful !" 130 horsepower machine does 30 kilometers an hour when used eight years. In other words you have covered 22 years in eight. 1 • children, too ... , -Dean Mills After inspecting corn and sugar-beet fields, Mr. Garst said; for transport. Addressing the staff of the center, Mr. Garst said: always expected you to make this progress. Wbat I see today is I "From what I have seen, Soviet farm cooperatives are making "The most important thing is to make more with less expend­ a confirmation of my previously formed opinions." R I ~ effective use of insecticides, and it is particularly pleasing to see iture, and see that you are dOing that very lVell." In conclusion Mr. Garst said: "I take pride in the contribution ~ Vietnam: two tests that the farmers have been cultivating corn over corn for sev­ THIS IS THE FOIJRTH visit Mr. Garst has made to the Soviet I make to your agriculture. I think of it as a contribution to bet­ I ,. eral years with a good yield. Union since 1955. A few years a~o Nikita Khrushchev was a guest ter understanding between our peoples." ~ ! Describing the situation in South Vietnam as chaotic When I was here in 1955, the une~onomical grassland system \. at Garst's farm in Iowa and sPQke highly of his growing methods . - Reprinted from of fal'1'l1ing was wide~pread. Now 'it is a thing of the past. It is I aud going from bad to worse, U Thant, Secretary-General Ever since that time the American farmer and the Soviet Chair- the SovIet magazin., I,ISSR I of the United Nations, offered Thursday two searching and :n i illllnttll'IIttIlUlllllnllll'l~n 11:l111r1U1i 1,11111111111111 IIUIIII IIIUIIIIJ,QUJ,QIIIIItW I!Un il'lI n:IUUlUII:liu nl1:IIJI UlllllP1III1UIIIIUIIIIIIIIUDUIlIIIWlllllllmUli ll nlUmJllnnlllDIIIIIIIUnllmUJP ,1111111111111111111, IIUIIIIIIIIIIIQ:1I1111111111IDntI:JIlII11II!It'1IIU mI'lUl1U!llJTI11:11;1I111111111P1'1I:1 ,lIlI lfl1iJ:Iiro1l ~Ir • apprOpril\te ,tests Qf the,Government of President Ngo Din.h Di~~. He said: , [etters' to the editor Robert Frost revealed OFFICIAL DAILY "One of the great virtues of democracy is its ability to ... t , change governments by peaceful constitUtional processes and without resort to force - a feature which is completely Calls Iowa City Challenges lacts himself in his letters University Calendar absent in the Republic of Vietnam. : friendly, honest in ad editorial BY MILES A. SMITH shop talk in them, and he has snap­ "Another gre«t virtue of democraoy is that it uses JP Arts Editor pish things to say about many of his Thyrsday, S.ptembtr 26 persuasion and not force in the conduct of its public affairs T. the Edl..,: To the Editor: THI LETTIRS OF RO.ERT FROST rivals. He also makcs some tart re­ Friday, September 20 I recently drove through your TO "OUIS UNlERfo\EYER. Holt, 3·5 p.m. - Women's Recreation - again, a feature which is completely absent in the Re­ The Chicago Sun-Times led I'n.hlrt. ,7. marks about teaching, a field in New students dance - Union ci\r, While- there, I stopped to For anyone who is even slightly which his experiences were pot too Main Lounge. Association Patio Party - UnioD public of Vietnam." have my car serviced. About the you astray with its editorial "Ad happy. Patio. -The Christian Science Monitor time we reached Des Moines, agencies may catch the disease," interested in literary affairs of this . Sunday, September 22 Of course tbis is a specialized Saturday, Septembtr 21 JlW dallllht~r realized she had (see Thursday's Daily Iowan ) by era, Frost'. many letters to Unter­ 7 p.m. - Union Board Movie: left her purse at Joe's Deep book, too voluminously detailed for inferring that Evan Llewellyn meyer constitute a remarkable doc­ the casual reader. But in the liter­ "Psycho," - Macbride Auditori­ Football: Washington State Rock Station. ument, highly reveallng and oharg­ University. I called from Des Moines and Evans was head of an adver­ ary category it is a pretty spicy um. reached an attendant named Ro­ tising agency in "The Huck­ ed with strong personal insights. item, etching Frost's individualism 8:30 p.m. - Union 'Board Post. 111e-'Daily Iowan as deeply as his own poems. Tuesday, September 24 I>er~ Miller. He was very cour­ sters." The implication is even A long friendshIp between these Football Dance - Union River 12: 15 p.m. - Joijlt Service Club Tht DcrIly IMII " tIII'IIfBn 4114 8jiUed by lfudent8 and Is gllWmlld by. teous, said they had found the stronger after comparison of tbe two men - Untermeyer, the poet Room. purse. and would be glad to Luncheon - Union. hoatWof 'fiu. ~ trulfe61 eleDfed by tile .tldent body /iraq fou, fictional Evans with Fairfax and critic, as LO years younger mail it to my Omaha resid~ce. than Frost,- beglin il) 1915 and was \ Sunday, Sept.mbtr 29 ""., ~nttd by 'hi pHIIdeN of ,he Ullloer#ly. Till DQ/~ 10W/lII', Cone. 3:30·5 p.m , - Y.W.C.A. Patio Idl~ ~". ... Gn ~II SUllldm~ ~_ Tbe . NSII, .Ijlld a,Il of its coo­ cut off ~ly lIy ~he .elder's death. Lett.,rs Policy : 4 p.m,. - Reception for Wood· of Y :Party '- Unidn. tents ~luding several· dollars Frost's letter! are completely un~ .pMfon, '" /JIIy~, . - , The Cact is that Evans, in his le.de .. Ire Invll.d 10 e.presj row Wilson Fellows - Union Old in cash, arrived in a couple of guarded and Contain a good many opinions In Letters to the Editor. \ l. • J ~ ;. r ., capacity as guiding genius of a Wednesday, September 2S Gold Room. Publl.h.r .. , ... .. Edw.,d 1' ...... " day •. things he would 110t have SlIid for All lette.. must Include hind· _ M.fo\.... • .dltor ...... De.n Milli Needless to say, my family has soap company, was a cUent and written .Ignature •• Idllre .... Ind 8 p.m. - Home Economics I ,...... In. Idit.r .. .. ••ry .'''..... n publication. He always refused to should be tvpewrltt.n Ind . Monday, Sept.mbtr 30 AUDIT o',URlAU a very warm spot in its heart for employed Victor Norman and spaced. W. res.rve the right 10 Ciub Mixer - Dining Room, • Cltv Idltor ...... C.I. F • .,..r go autobiographical. His biograph­ shorten lett .... 6 p. ro. - Panhel\enic Scholar· CI.~ULATION' News Idltor .. , ...... Irlc !o.ckler , ~e residents of Iowa City. We ers certainly will have to take these Macbride Hall. 'P6r!1 Iflt,r .. . ' Harriett "'Ind~n others to produce and to place ship Banquet - Union. Chltf I'hototraph., " J.. LIppincott • will always remember their letters into account, (or they shed [ . " PIIblIab.d _.1 Sluclen\ PubUcaUoJll, Alit. City Idltors his company's advertising. Inc., COlDIDuDlcoUODI Col1ttr.' low4 J./ln L.warn. a...... "wln f r i en dll n e sa, ho~esty and lights of many colors upon his life Ctt)', Iowa, dally neepl Sunday a~ ' AliI. 'portl .IIltor ...... Jim 1'1 .., . thoUghtflilneas, Ellis H, N.wlO"" work. .obllay, aDd le,a1 boDda,.. inteNd Alst. I'holotr.pII.r .... • ob NI~II Howard Dr.w at _ond-e"" matter .t the po.t AIIv.rtl.,n, DINCt.r .. Irv Or ...... n Associa .. Profellor To tbe general pUblic, at least in Unlversfty Bulletin Board office at low, City \II1dell the Ad Adv.rtl.,n,. Nlanl,., ... Pick I.,.n Omaha recent years, Frost was a nice old of CollIn" of Mardi I, 1..... CII ..HI.d Mlr . .. , C.... y 'Isc/l.,"nd Unlverslly 'ulletln Board notlclS must be rece ived .t The Dilly lowln 'lHlc., loom 211 Communlca. ''",. Claulfled Mlr . . , .. "lin lCot,k rugged individualist who said home­ tlon. Cenllr, by noon 01 the d.y b.for. CUbllcltlon. They must b. IV ...d .~d signed by .n .IIvl .., Nlt'l. AItv. Mlr ... , . • Iry ',urg.,n or offlClr 01 the o... nllatlon IMlnll pu IIclled. Purely soclll function ••,. hot .Ilglbl. for thl. ~':J,~"':!J!mrte::" :a:!""~~:: A"v. C;olllUltlnl .. .. Dennh 'Innln, ly things about American ways, in .ecllon. ttli'm. and announcement. to Tb. Adv. !'hotHrlllMr ... . 1I0t1 lI.chl. , Did you know? unabashed rhymes untainted by ex­ IOWA MEMORIAL UNION HOURS: doy: 10 n.m. unUl noon, 1·5 p.m,; RICREATIONAL. W , hi MIN G D'lI¥ low.n. EdItorial office. are In CI"vllllon fo\lr ...... Jim COIII,r perim~taJ trjou. Cafeteria open 11:30 a,m,,! p.m. Sunday : 2·5 p.m, (WOMEN) will begin Wednescla~ (II) ., ta. eo.alllllNtIonI Qeat4r. Monday·Saturday; 5·6:45 p.m., Mon· at 4 p.m. In the pool a~ the Women' • Tru.t"., 'oard of 't"dent "'bile., Moat of the 307,000 residents of The Amazon River's 3,900 miles That image is not changed, but day·Frlday; 11:30 a.m.·l,30 p.m., Sun· WOME1-l STAFF MEM.ERS and Gym. Pool will be 0rn to students, 'IIbtc~OIl .,tN! IIJ earrler In tlonl,: Lee Thleaen, Af; Llrry Pl'}'bIl, Zanzibar earn their living picking -draining from the Andean high­ definitely Is mOdified, in these let­ day. Gold Feather Room open 7 !acuity wives Intorested In bowling .t.rt In\AN EXAfo\· are av,Ulble at U:30. ):30, 3:30 Ind 1D0n bl, ".11. Dyke, Colle,. of Ioducation. come the familiar kitchen spice. length. least a rival, In every contemporary INATION will be given wednesdaY 4:30. p.m. Monday through Thufaday Sept. 25 Irom 1:30"':30 p,m. In 10 i In ~ Old Mlllory 'telllROr..,., Ja­ "l'bl AIaoolaled Pre .. II entlUod .x­ D'at 7-4191 II yo," ..0 not ~IV'~~ . ?"}' ",' .' • • • • . sense, be emphasizes hi~ conserva- UIjIV'RSITY I.I'-ARl! ~'QU~: Schaetter Hall. Candidates must reg· terested personl should illn .t the alu,lVtll' to th. \III 1o. repubUot· Dally Iowan by 7180 •. m. Th. ~tr, " i . ·$ante·' too 0\lQi ,y.ilIiOl'll.' USUally James Wilson, America's fi l t tism and IsolationIsm. He disliked Monday·Frlday, 7,31~ a!ln.· Satur­ tster before Sept. 25 with James rhetoric tablo at reglstr.tlon or .t aD Iowan p1l'\lulatton office In Ihe oml ' bl . ' i i. • sa OAT. For lurther 10f0I'lJ\*1I00 clll tlolI.of Ibe local ,,., printed mUlllcatlon. C.nter .. open I~. rowse at the 8"nUI\I !3rolldwalk globe maker, lived to be 92. ife cbange, In either rhyming or the day: 7.30 a.m.·10 p,m.; Sun~ay, )'SO Sandrock, 103 Schaeffer 8AI1, .. l1l1I .."' ...... 'u aU tV' . p.m.·2 a.m. Service Desks: Monday­ )(2274 . ..WI and dtlp&tcb... , !~'~1I5tf':'8~:II~ ~m~r4q; Art Show lit Virginia Beach, Va. spent his last years building a universe . Thursday; 8 q,m.·IO p.m.; Friday alld I PH.D. FRINCH EXAMI'I"TIONS will I'rJle.,ood "mce 01\ m"r",d nl!8J'l Art from some 950 paInters are llalurl1ay: • a.m.·S p.m., 7·10 p.m. ' be liven on Thursday September 21 'ARENT' COO'IIIATIVI IAIT, planetarium which, by crank~'n, 'l'he letters show there was more (Reserv~ o~ly); Sunday: ~·5 pm., 7. 1 from 4 to ! p.m. In 3h A Schaeffer SITTING LIAGUI - T bOil IJI. ~e o~~l:,:~b~'o,~:~t e:::lll'tm lr. ,. \ d~played. fo~ 'six blocks again at shOwed the earth revolving aro d cider vinegar' in 'btm thllri many 10 p,m. (ReaeTVe only). Photodup,I. , Hall. Candidates should .slln up on terelted In membership .hould ull next laue. a background of sand and surf. cation: Monday·FrldlY: 8 a.m.·S p.IIJ.. ' the bulletin board outside 307 Schief­ Mrs. Vlh AUa at 7-5348 or dell"1 the sun. • have surmised, Tbere is a lot of Monday·Thursday, 8·10 p.m.; Satljr. fer Hall. Mr•...... ,...... - ...... ,.. . _... " ." . . , , ." IIUers c.ll D.nt.1 Hu, at 8-51 • r .. Welcome, Students To ·SUI Activities Kn itted Styles Are Men's Fashions Cha nge For Campus Wea r SO CIETY . NEWY~RJ(~KnitsareCorthe For The New Fa II Season '------'l ltldlvk!ualiat th)S year. TH E DAilY IOWAN-Iowa City, 1__ PrKt.y , s.,t. 21, ltU-P... , Gay wool sweaters in of [beat ~ng along with a dark suit (or ' --- i~fortn a. stripes or solids keYJIote the new business and anoth r dark suit for iness and Pinned, Chained, Engaged young 100II: in knits. Sleeveless tank dressier occasions tabels you as a PINNED Arlington Heights, m.. Theta Xi, tOPI or V·necks, they are worn backward w6l'drobeist this fall Judy Underwood, A2, Glenview, University of nlinois. over long·sleeved stretch nylon The well balan<:td wardrobe ~ urder or m., Zeta Tau ""'1 ph a to Wayne Dottie Morrison, AS, Rock Island, turtle·necks or ahirts for a layered turns this [all, in hid! both colorful n as !lOs- Thompson, B3, Arlington Heights, Ill.. Alpba Phi to Jim Mowen, AS, look. Do ubI e knit pan and suits and dark suits have their place ley were Ill .• Pi Kappa Alpha. Algonquin , Ill., Sigma Phi Epsilon. straiaJat or A·1lne JItirts complete and their 01l'D virtlles . .. not the Iy an ad Nancy Lien, A2. Peoria. IlI. , Delta the ensembles in vivid colors like least of which is the chance to Delta Delta to Joe Coniglio, A2, E~GAGED shocking pink. green or yeUow. break up the monotony of the look· It Was a Cedar Rapids, Acacia. Jan OberwelS, A4, Aurora, 111., Knit is it, too, \\~len It comes to like dnrn. by thOSe Carolyn Tuty, Dx, Siou.x City, Zeta Tau~lpha to Tom Clark, P4'l unusual items. Some to choo.se There Is II lighter and brighter 'ill defeat Delta Delta Delta to Jim Powers, Monroe, WIS . from include ; a two-piece "action Cuture in ore (or men's suits this M, Cedar Rapid, Sigma Chi. Jan Stapleton. Dx. Glen EUyn, suit" ol tank top and matching faU . Dark colors will no longer dom­ ~CE has Kay Hildreth, M, Des Moines, 1I1., Alpha Phi to Jack Higgins, G'I sweater-cuffed paats; a peaky cap inate the choic 01 men seeldna to commend AlpHa Phi to Bill Stidwell, D2 , Jef. West Mount, Ill., Ohio University. in thic~ <:rimson wool;. a shoulder replenish aJId update their cold· I urge that . bag knit III leopard prmt; a wool w ather wardrobes. Paced by gra)'s las at the ferson, Delta Sigma Delta. Carol Beebe, A4, SIOUX City, Delta knit hanqbag with gilt "banile in the medium.to-light ~ and lefy legal . CH~'NE:D D.elta ~Ita ~o AI P~ac~. Ml, bracelet': handle; and a bri~bt foIl ~ wed Iy bY.bri4bteoecl :hools. He Ja?'Cartwright N3, Peoria, m., SIOUX City, SIgma Phi EpsJlon, AI· hulky knit cloche hat and m:Jtcbing blends of btu ,browns and greens, n to close :r>etta' P!!lta )';lelta to Bob Wolf, A4, pha Kappa Kappa. abon·thHlbow length mittens. tbe curreDt clclthinl fabric move Capes Vary Girls Copy erly proc. -'---~------into a new era of color that, 'A'hlle should be refreshinaly differ nl fro m tb tygian shades of tb past, are sUU Autumn Look Cordovans lise what The Fashionable Mi ss lilithin the bounds of good taste and A NEW IRI DESCENT blu.­ ~ n whOle good sense (or both business and .u". shadow ItTlpe adels luster NEW YORK - Ca will stud NEW YORK - A boy'. favorite ! is dyna. social oce ions. Ie ... Important two-button suit New Sport Coat the ~ape this fall Th dra· cordovan shoe is 01\ the other Coot he gover. The Importance of thlll move to model. It f.. ture, dressy sl.nted matle cover·ups ,0 with dr thl year - his ,Irl friend's. lent, law. Wears New Soft Colors colorful. me

Instrument Room

Rob.rt Sac Ie, Plo Oy.nville, adlu.ts the gil I chrom ....r."" in the .I.ctronic Inltrument room Grad Student Labs while fellow student P.t McDonn.II, P2, Clinton, w.tches, The chromatogr.ph is part of mort ttI./I Two·man laboratories for Iraduate students offer improved facilities for research. Stud.nls luch al $100,. worth of tquipmtllt In the room. Tom Parker, G, DIS Moin'l, alr.ady have oc­ Louis Zopf, Dean 01 Pharmacy cupied their quart.r. lind I.t up apparatu. Ilk. thl, Louis C. lopf, dton of the Colle,. of Ph.rmacy, the ,taH of instructon. A part of the adminl"ra­ to synthesize mltabolit.. for biogentlil studies, dltt.t. ,om' lest"",lnute letters to his sec,..tary, tive section al .. Indud., a formula flit ncI a ~ ­ Mrs. Gloria Jacobson, shortly before the open "II f.rene. room. The ColI"e of Ph.rm.cy hlCl ils of the n.w building Thursday. The building, a four ­ hom. In the Chtmlltty Building Iinct 1"'. Making Ointment .tory structu,.., houses offiCI' for the dun .1Id

In the manufa~urinl room I of ttl. n.w Pharmacy Building, luppll., ar. mMie for 11M by all of ttl. 1 Unive"ity hOlpitals. H.r. Professor H.nry P. Bau· mlnn wltChel .. Troy H.ltm.ier, P4, Med i.polis, feeds an ointment mill.

Daily Iowan .. Photofeature by Tissue Culture Pill Machine General Prescription Laboratory Mike Toner Fran Htrdkloh studies I ti ssue culture through on. of th. electrically.lighted microscoptl In the "" G.ry Acle.rman, Pl, D.v.nport, petra Into tht Th. g.neral pr ••crlptlon I.boratory on the flrlt eaeh student. The laboratory has an adlolnlng pre· and floor pharmacognosy laboratory. Tht ph.rm· loading .nd of • tabl.tlng machln. II finilhed floor of thl newlv·opened ColI.g. of Pharmacy scription fiI ••nd r.ferenct libr.ry. All fumllhlnlll .cognosy llborltory Is ultd by all und.rgraduate•. t.bltts pour I/lto • bulle cont.lner below. The II Vlad by Itud nta for practicel pharm.cy work. art facad with formica 'or UIY maintenance, A The lab cont.ins spedal dru" Itorage c.bln.ts and machine I. part ., the drug production machinery It hal I b .tationl for lO students with Inclivldu~l zieue window ultncls aueu the front of the I., In herb.rium. In the ballm.nt m.nufacturlnll ar... • ~ chemical IUppUIl and ,epl"te Inltrum.ntl 'or allowing vl,ltors to watch ltud.nts at work. 'New Pharmacy Facilities .Should Spur Research' (EDITOR'S NOTE : Tod.y Thl Dilly of study and research-pharmacy, oraLory hu one o[ th mO'1 com­ cial instrument room from which I building there wa no safe l)lace Isupply, alill a. ,afely hower wlLh room IS a spinninl( !land column 101' outlet tf) the roof (or OlOn , a toxic low.n ..plor .. thl r .....ch going on In the now Pharm.cy Bulldnl,. pharmaceutical chemistry and plete di piny o[ .pre criplion spe­ both tempera~ure and humidity are to u e this cquipm nt. mellli eh in III r('llla waler In I di. tlllotion prOC('(lure • vlliullbi in gao This I. thl .econd 01 • thr.. · part pharmacognosy. Twelve other grad­ ciaille' to be (ound anywhere. A controlled. Electronic instruments A polarimeter, which mea ure ('41 l' th~ dnthlng ~f II r eareher mcdiclOal eh m~lry experim 'n. Th ten·foot.quar walk·in rcfrlg­ .. rll •. Tho lin., IrtICII, to run 511- uate students are studying for M. S urd.y, Will de.' with tnl consollda· reference library In an adjoining worth mor than $100,000 are kept the bending of a beilm of liltht by hould ~' atch fir . Fire blankets and The laboratory . for beginnin~ cmtor will (lI'rmil experiments to be tlon 01 ph.rm.clutlc., .. rvlcl") Degrees in the fourth a rea - hos­ . . exhn 'UI. hers are al!;o avallabl in IIraduat' lud!:nt In pharmaccutl. Pharmacy The new expanded facilities for pital pharmacy. room houses pr cription files, reC­ in thiS room (or u e as needed by I ~Ugb, is boued 10 the darkroom. this ar a. cal ch mistry hus un orone gen r- - some 30 researchers 10 all area of Since the biOlogical actiVity of drug A feature of the Jll.'Cial equipment ator with a hOOd provided with an (Ph'a (' Turn to Page 6) the SUI College of Pharmacy will Four students are doing r carch erence book and product data at the post-(!octoral level in a spe­ files. All furnishings of the labora­ study. . intimately connected wi~ their ";;____ ;;.; -;,;- _ - ';_;';__ ;;';';; ___;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiii-~~ permit (acuity members to utilize cial laboratory on Ibe second floor tory are laced with formica [or .' abllity to bend a beam of hght to • teaching time more efficiently and of the new building. easy maintenance. Th' ~Ird floor !S devoted to pharo the nght or left, the polarimeter maceullcal chemIStry Dn~ pharma- will be highly u Cui in studying th to speed up research in all areas S'p.rat, laboratori.. arc provid· Windowl extend almost Lhe fu II reports Dean Louis C. Zopf, ~ogno y, The ph~rmac utlcal che!"- chemistry of new dru . Dcan Zop( ed for instruction at the undergrad­ length of the wall of the pre crip­ I try area con tams two laborlltorles notes STUDENTS, For the first time faculty mem­ uate level in the various areas of lion laboratory which zigzags along for graduate students, an under- . bers will have separate areas In study , so that fa culty members will the main corridor of the first floor, graduate research room, a special Th graduate laboratory for ad· which to teach and do research, have avallable the special equip­ providing an inter tlng architec­ equipment room, a photographic vanced students in pharmaceutical eliminating interruptions o{ re o ment needed in leaching any course turnl fealure and also permitting darkroom, a walk-in refrigerator, ch rnlstry contain five two·man Catch This Offer! search operations. Nearly 35 per without resorting to adaptatIOns of visitol's to walch students work. and a hydrogen room for experl- laboratories, providing a desk, a cent of the space in the new Pharm­ materials. Also housed on the first floor are menls inYolving hydrogenation. book heLf and 18 fect of laboratory acy building will be devoted to reo bench space for each student. An A large laboratory which ex­ the dean's uite of offices, with a All electrical outlets. switches adjoining corridor for use of all ten Surprise Your Parents - search. tends across Ihe entire south end of conference room adJoining: a sem· and motors of hydrogenerators in students is equipped With fump I Graduate students now are work· the second floor can accomodat.e inar room; the Pharmacy Library: the hydrogen room are spark proof, hoods, an ice machine, a dry icl' Spend Some 01 Their Money ing for Ph. D. and M. S. Degrecs some 70 students for various pharm­ a student-faculty conference room, A "blow hole" in the room's ceiling. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ih three of the college's chief areas aceutical technology courses. and two large cla~srooms contain­ which is also the roof of this part I A pharmacognosy laboratory for ing lightwcight movable chairs of the building, is an added safety IF YOU WANT THE On Theml LEGAL PUBLICATION with desk arms. One classroom on ASSESSMENT NOTICE undergraduates on the third floor feature in case an explosion shouid BEST HOME MADE SOUP is equipped with high stools with the second floor and another on the occur, It now is possible for SUI reo TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: PLUS A SANDWICH, VISIT Notice Is hereby given that I plat back supports, making it easy for third floor are equipped with com­ searchers in pbarmaceutical chem­ and schedule are now on flIe In lhe stUdents to do microscopic work at pact movable chairs and narrow istry to work with hydrogen gas at office of the City Clerk In the CII)' Lubin's luncheonette of Iowa CIty, Iowa, _shOWing aSIe'" the laboratory benches as well as "strip" tables which are boiled to pressures up to 2,000 pounds per menls proposed to De msde tor .nd the floor, adding about one·third square inch. In Ibe old Chemistry on Iccount of the cost of construe· conventional chemical experiments. Can you think of a better way to start off the new school year? tion ot certain storm lewer Improve· Specially designed storage cabinets to the seating capacity ·oC these ments. wIthin the City of 10Wl City, room. Iowa, In the followln, loc.Uono, to­ (or drugs, and seyeral herbarium And how pleased they'd be that you took out a few dollars for wll: cases are features of Ibis labora­ In the pharmacy research labora· ALLEY In block 84, Orlglnll Town, tory on the second floor are study Iowa City, Iowa, from the We.t line tory. No pharmacognosy laboratory them. , . and spent it so wisely! That's right, just a few dollars of Linn St. to tbe Eut line of was provided in the old quarters, cubicles for 16 students. Tables at Dubuque St. each end of this laboratory provide ALLEY In Block 65, OrigInal Town, so the course is being taught with will buy them a subscription to The Daily Iowan -the one source Iowa CILy, Iowa, trom lbe Weat line the use o( a laboratory (or Ibe first a la-foot work space for each stu· of Linn St. to lb. East line of dent. Tables along the walls contain Dubuque SI. time. that records for you - and them - the daily happenings in your ALLEY In Block 66, Original Town, The prescription laboratory on the equipment for use by aU students. Iowa CIty, low., from the Weat line Two laboratory tables in the com· of Linn 51. Lo ,the East line of first floor will accomOdate 30 stu­ life here at SUI. You can bet your parents will want to know U4buque St, dents at a time, nearly double the mon work area have special hOOds ALLEY In Block 82, OrIginal Town, capacity of the laboratory in (he to carry oCf toxic fumes . A solubll· Iowa Clly, Iowa, trom tfie west line about it! We make you this offer: Send The Daily Iowan back of Dubuque SI. 10 Ihe East line of old Chemistry Building. Students ity room adjoining this laboratory Clinton SI. will work at individual units like is temperature·controlled (or re­ 'galnst all properties located wIthin home every day of the school year for just $7.00; send it home 1 tne ooneflted ....ssment are., the those in the prescription depart. search inYolving drug interactions. ..me oolng .11 property abutllng on ment of a pharmacy. The new lab- and adjacent to ..Id sewer Improve- Also on the second floor is a spe- every day of the fall semester for just $3.75. samenlsme, andwhIch lpecUical1y may 00 lervedlhe following by the II1i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ deacrlbed property will 00 l ubJect to a .....ment tor lbe cost of ..Id im· provements, to-wit: ~ ...... •...... •.••.....•.•...•••.....••.•....•.•••..••. All lots and parcel. In Block 84, TONIGHT TRY IOWA CITY'S Circulation Department Block 65 Block 66, .nd Block 82, Orllln&l Town of lowl City, .n orn­ FINEST PIZZA from GEORGE'S GOURMET BECKMAN'S T1te Dally Iowan claf PI.t now In .nd formin, • part Of the City of Iowa City, Iowa. The plat and achedule show. the Iowa City, Iowa 52240 ieparate lots .nd parcels of around proposed to 00 a_lied lor lhe co.1 I want to send The Daily Iowan hOlM to my Of Slid Improvement., the name. of FUNERAL HOME the owners thereof, .0 far IS known, parents. Please Itart sending it at once. I am en- .nd Ihe amounl to 00 .uelleQ FREE! ••alnat each lot or parcel of ground .nd against railway or . treet railway companies a ...... ble therefor. Within Prompt Delivery closing $ ...... ,... for a ...... monthl lubscriptlon, twenty days aIter the flnl publica. Anywhere In Iowa City tlon of lbll Notice, In whichever new. paper II publlahed lalor In ..Id mUnlclpallly during tho week of the My Parents: flnt publlcaUon .11 obJectlona 10 ..Id DIAL 507 E. COLLEGE ST. aIM..... enl or t0 the prior proceed· GEORGE1S In,. on Iccount of errors, lrre,u· lulti.. or Inell.ullltl •• mUlt 00 m.d. 5'reet: In wrltlnlt and flied with the City GOURMET 8-7545 Clork, and any obJection. not . 0 , mlde Ihall 00 deemed waived. 114 s. Dubuque It. PHONE 7·3240 Dlte of flrst publication September Across FnIIII ,: c'tty: ...... 20, 1K3 In the Iowa City PreS!! CIU· Hoftl J.Herson zen; 0.1. of first publica lion Seplem. , ber 20, 19631 In the Dilly Iowan. • AI, C8IIII1tieMc1 Orders T. Ge Wo\I~ KER W. SHBLLO\[)Y : State: City elerk of Iowa Oil y, Iowa Judge Rules City , Peddler Ordinance Is Unconstitutional lawn City's ordinance governing door·to-d90r salesmen was ruled invalid Thursday by District Judge Clair E. Hamilton. Judge Hamilton peRK EH0PS ordered a permanent injunction against the city's enforcing "or attempting to enforce," the ordi· nance's provisions. Prior to the ruling. salesmen operating in Iowa City were reo quired to obtain a health certificate and a permit from the mayor and LB. then renew them every five days. , t ., I ~ .... Hamillon said the ordinance was a burden on interstate commerce and therefore violated the com· merce clause of the Federal Con· I' stitution . " .Holy Eucharist , " L.OIN PORTION IUB PORTION , '" . LB. 49~ • • L.B. For Miss Ward PORK ROAST PORK RO'AST 3~ ARMOUR'S STAR ARMOUR'S STAR Canterbury Association's first .: Falling leaves enhance SUI's picturesque campus but a "$Cum" service this fall will be a cele· . LB. ROL.L. 29~ L.B. PKG. 59~ "on the Riverside Park lagoon near married student housing cer· bration of the Holy Eucharist in PORK SAUSAGE BACON tainly does not. Lovers of lall'$ beauty, despair not. According to memory of Kay Ward, member of ARMOUR'S STAR ARMOUR'S STAR 'Fred Moore, Asst. Superintendent of SU 1'5 Physical Plant, the ugly the Association who died after green laver is a common fall occurrence but will disappear with brain surgery September 9. BRAUNSCHWEIGER • OZ. CHUB 29 ~ WIENERS L.B. PKG • 49~ , ¢older weather. He explained that the "scum" is composed algae The service will begin at 5: 15 and probably some dead vegetable m!ttcr. p.m. Sunday at Trini ty Episcopal COUNTRY STYLE GUS GLASER'S Church. Miss Ward, Logansport. Ind .. SPARE RIBS SLICED BOLOGNA • • LB. PKG. would have been a senior 'It SUI this fall. ARMOUR'S STAR GORDON'S Show Surprise at Evening mea) will be served at 5:45 p.m. Sunday with Canterbury CANNED PICNIG:S BREADED SHRIMP. .. IOZ.PKG. 49¢ Association meeting to follow at 6:30 p.m. ,111111 !111ll1::1 ..'lIU 1llIlIUIlIOhliUII1I::lIu:nil,JlUIIIlItIIl,IIII:lIlLIlUlII ap~ np,'lltU:I'QlI1I!1IUllIIglllfl:IUIUPDIIII!! Trade Proposals L.IBBY ... SlIccial Sole! THROW AWAY CANS, TOO TALL '1 WASHINGTON IA'I - Adminis· culture Department said they have CAN~O); !;!"Il4iugs i FRESH FROM OUR iII. tration farm officials expressed received no reports of such offers . JUNCTION CITY. Kan. IA'I - The PRUNE PLUMS 5 CANS $1°° surprise Thursday at pressure Soviet crop conditions have been rattle and bang of trash cans on now I IN-STORE BAKERY ! building up in Congress and else· poor recently. garbage COllection days will be a HY·VEE ~ where for more liberal U.S. trade On Capitol, Hill, Scn. Frank thing of the past if a trial run under 3 46 oz. ~olicies - particularly in grain and Carlson. a Republican from wheat· 'Pair way at 250 Junction City homes CANS $1°° 9ther foods - with Communist bloc surplus Kansas, joined a number for the TOMATO JUICE ... 4 GERMAN CHOCOLATE proves successful. The city is ex· I countries. of other lawmakers in calling on price HY·VEE I An aide of Secretary of Agri· the admini stration to study what perimenting with disposable paper oftwo! 400 Count culturc Orville L. Freeman reacted he called proposals to do more containers which can be quietly and CAKES quickly picked up and hauled away, BOXES $1°° I with these words: "How are you business with the Reus in such FACIAl- TISSUES. 5 going to sell them anything when materials as foods. contents and all. • I they have not indicated they want ------it?" EACH C Talk of possible U.S. sales of :49 1 surplus wheat and other nonstra­ STARKIST OR CHICKEN 0' THE SEA tegic materials have ballooned in Congress and in commodity mar­ Campus Notes CHUNK STYLE kets since Canada agreed earlier the Pentacrest Room of the Un· c CHEESE FLAVORED this week to sell the Soviets S500 Folk Dance Meet ion. The club's program for the million worth of wheat and Aus· sur Israeli Folk Dance group, coming year will be discussed and tralia sold them $90 million worth. Harakdanim. will hold its first members will show their summer A State Department spokesman meeting of the fall semester at work. ROLLS. . said the U.S. government has re­ 7:30 p.m. Sunday, in Conference All interested stUdents are invito TU NAt · ceived no Soviet offer to buy Room 203 of the Union. Mik e ed to aUend. Kenney, G, instructs the group IIi wheat, and does not expect to reo • • • DOZEN ceive any. which is open to all interested stu· MRS. GRIMES HY·VEE dents and faculty members. Theatre Tryouts 25c: The Freeman assistant, Rodney • • • Tryouts for University Theatre's Leonard, sa id the Soviet Union has first production this season will CHILI BEANS TALL CAN lOc PORK & BEANS TALL CAN 1Dc .. not made a direct or indirect ap· '. f tit . '/t I"" 'Miss SUI' Deadline held from 1:3'0-4 p.m. proach. Housing units must file nomina· and from 7-10 p.m. Monday at GERMAN i , Some gra in traders reported that tions and pay fees for their re­ KRAFT AMERICAN ARCHWAY I .: University Theatre. The play, they have been approached by So· spective candidates for the Miss "Rashomon," has parts for six viet representatives about buying 'i RYE BREAD ! SUI Pageant at either the Union men and three women. It will be SPAGHETTI DINNER 2 Box .. 3?c COOKIES .... 3 PKGS. $1.00 I A wheal. Grain officials in the Agri· Board Office or the New lnforma· directed by Prof. Larry Clark. j tion Desk in the Union by 5 p.m. Playwrights are Michael and Fay Sunday. Kanin. No theater experience is I LOAF 19 i Ph.armacy- • • • necessary to tryout. I Duerksen To Speak • • • HY-VEE I- ~ , (Co ntinued from Page 5) Harold Duerksen, assistant to Library Tours I WHITE SLICED 4 I ~ the director of the schooL of re­ Library tours for new faculty ~onducted in a cold environment. ligion, wi ll speak all "Religion and members and graduate students i COTTAGE BREAD ~ I _.Foil I' students on National Sci- Academic Values" at 4:30 p.m. will be conducted today at 10: 30 4nce Foundation grants and several Sunday at Wesley House. Supper a.m. and at 3: 30 p.m. Tours will ndergradu~te technicians now are will follow. begin at the lnformation Desk. working in the undergraduate reo • • • I 2 FOR 2~ I ~earch laboratory on th e third floo r. • The pharmacognosy area on the Wives Auxiliary To Meet !UlIIlIbI'IID;JIJ!ll1 llOllmrl, lan!tII!I~! I:r.ni!.l!n~I~III,IIII IIIiIIW'llIIl'~lli'.llIMIUU 11I11!1!11nllll!u:nI I Ill~IIIHnNIlUlI ~~ srame floor has two laboratories in SUI chapter of Wives' Auxiliary dddition to the undergraduate lab· of the Student American Medical Soviets Warn NSTANT HERSHEY'S ut 10 • bwhel ub6ldy on As Kitchen Counter Wheat Sale Liddy aUO F man aid be :auld be ",iUin, I .S. wh 10 it can be pric~ • DES MOINES 10\1'3 Ag- of agrirullure to . II orne of lb' n tion' or- competiUv ly in world trade. He To Get Flu' Vaccinations Top IgnItes rirulture Secntary L. B. Lid­ ers Union C FL·CIO I. ' :00 )1;.,.. Hudllne Ten InsoMlon. a MO'Ith $1 .15' There were widespread out· ported by the local organizallon. 1:01 Alomln. Cha.,.,1 breaks of Asian influenza (type A1 Both the Hawkeye Union and the I :U . e ... 'Ratt. 'or each Colt:mn Indt last winter, with the exception of "Concert of Notions" will be the Packinghouse Workers had soughl 8:30 Mornln, Fe. lu .... program with demonstrations of "10\\ . City chaol" recognition from the company aft· 9:00 Polpourrl MOBILE HOMES FOil SALE native dances (rom South Ameri. er it purchased the Fort Dodilc 8;30 Book htlt Phone 7-4191 ~T"e PrI~ or Clory" ca, Spain and the Phllippitres. plant in February. 1962. bv AIII.lalr If om NEW Ind u d mobU hom Puilln •• FREE T.G.I.F. Other features will include a Japa· The board said the company 9:115 ·e ... towln. Ind pulL Den nIJ Mabin 10'00 Xu Ie Ro",. Court. UIJ Mil IUn Jh . rn... nese tea ceremony, fa hion how threatened to move its Operations 11 :00 u.tc Cit,., "'-4"1. f.20AR SESSION from India. Mexican seranade and 10 Denl on if work r aU mptcd C.rcl' Recordln. of This Aflernoon music from Broadway. to get the Packin thou e Workerz H :~ il~~i'h m I PIt ~'::bl e recognIzed II their bargaining 12:S0 Aflernoon II port with 1\e.... IIlcll ,round 1 PLEADS GUII.TY- a~ent. I..100 Mu Ic THE ESCORTS George A. Furnam, Route 3, waJ The board SIIid the company 2:00 'leN 0" fined $300 in Johnson County DiS­ should not recoani1c th Jlawkeye trict Court Wednesday afternoon Union "unlil such lime as it hos 'USON~.1 TONIGHT - MYRON LEE IF YOU WANT THE and The Caddies after pleading guilty 10 driving been certified by th board as the while intoxicated. His driver ', li· exclusive repr ntollve oC the em­ BEST HOME MADE SOUP From' •. m. to 4:30 p.m. wHk· MONIY LOANiD cense was suspended for 60 days. ployes in question." PLUS A SANDWICH, VISIT dIY.. ClOt" SCltllrdayt. An Experltrtctel All Taker WJII DlanMII4t, C..... ra., THE HAWK He was charged after an accident However. the board aid the com­ fY'tw ...... W.... , I.""... . Tuesday night in Iowa City. pany shOuld not chance any of the Lubin's Luncheonette H'lp You With YOIIr Ad. Guns, Musk" 'nttrum.ntt terms of the present contract with I~!!!!,!~~. __• ___~ DIe! 704m its workers through the Hawkeye THE DAILY IOWAN RESERVES ALTERATION /Jirl'ct from Chicago's Old Tou:1l Union. THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY ..oa-IYI LOAN ADVERTISING COPY. Tbe trial min r who i. lied BOX OFFICE HOME FURNISHIN~S Chock Durang the original ruling wa Henry S. and SNACK BAR Sahm. '"elOry to YOU mitt,. l ind boxe 00 YOU SET YOUR HAIR The board's rullni was signed by Optn at 6:30 Pleklrd M.tlre Company. Coral· Judy Bright vlll. t.l 2nd . IOD UShl. IIZI LIKE JACKIE? Boyd Leedom and John H. Fan· CHILO CARE in a ning. The Ihird member, Gerald A. HELP WANTED OR do you SpoM a crew cut and Brown, .aid he di agreed only with WII.L CARE I~ r child. my hom •• Dil l a casuII Ivy le,,\It look? And the board's finding that fiye in· .,,:137-:l84'. . 19. 10 .ra you _ 0' the hllndrech of ·FOLK SING with cumbent oWc rs of the Packing­ 'ILL CARE ror chlldl" n In my I,ume. thousand. who decorate tholr t ' • house Workers Union were not dis· ' ·"IS. HI room. with Utrillo, Van GDflh BABY SI1'TINC In my hom . 1·"U. It' Da,.. pri.t,? criminated against because of their He PAUL 'KELSO union activities when they wer 'lot TONITE and IF ON THE OTHER HAND you hired by the company. ---~;------~~~~~--~~~~BABY IT'lTNO In my home, N. v,llIt your Individuality, com. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 TM Packinllhouse Workers Union SATURDAY! Dubuque. 7·2338. "24 In .nd ... our d.libtrat,ly 11m. 8!00 P.M. had represenled workers al the CIIILD CARE In my hom., 40 ~n" lted .. I,cil.n .f tllcltln, Dr in" plant - formerly the Fort Dodge pe r hour. ....~I . 11).2 by Arllm Rllbtn,teln, IInc:ludin MOOSE LODGE, 114 S. Clinton Packing Co. - before It was pur­ Jane and Elvis IGNITION Tho Jan Pia.,. .... "rl.. ) .n/y cba ed by Iowa B ef Packers, Inc. CARBURETORS $1.50 tftJ, w.. kend. On Ona Progroml Tickots

" Johnny Hart - {r .WONDER IF I WeNDER How MANy' r,WONDEl< WHAT THE ~ LONVI CrED. y'EA~s I'LL G>Er. CHARGES ARE. -y- -- Ir " 1

BErnE BAILEY .y Mott Walle., 1

.HsOi BRUHL ' ARMENDARIZ' ABRAHAM 1111111' ., " , Ut" ...... " &Moo. B.Wm n HNIRv IWs .8'I1IoN 1m .FRANK KING and HERIMN KI«l ADDED PLEASUREI 3 .. STOOGES , , . c.uTOON " 1 • '0 . ' .. 1 CANDID MIKE - COMEDY , ... I-THE DAilY IOWAN-lowe City, lowe-Friday, Sept. 20, ""

~~ . SO GOLD BOND STAt.t'~ 3 CANS SUPER VAlU 2700 EXl"RA GOLD BOND STAMPS @. ina" WITH PURCHASE OF TUNA ARMOUR'S STAR 3ls. -, AT ~ANDAll'S - THRU SEPT. 21 THIS WEEK DURING RANDALL'S CANNED HAM

WITH PURCHASE OF POUND OF WilSON FRANKS 1

WITH PURCHASE OF ONE PKG. PORK CHOPS $0.00 I N CASH AT R~NDAll'S - THRU SePT. 21 ON EACH OF THE 10 RANDA1LETTE NUMBERS THIS WEEK , TENDER - MILD - READY TO EAT ~GO,,!~!!::::rs LIGHT BULBS 4lBS. JONATHAN AT RANDALL'S - THRU SePT. 21 APPLES SWEET FAME REP TOKAY AT RANDALL'S - THRU sePT. 21

1lZ--.-..-2 lB. PKG. GOOCH'S MACARONI Lb. AT RANDALL'S - THRU sePT. 21

WITH PURCHASE OF 3·. OZ. CANS OYSTERS c AT RANDAll'S - THRU SEPT. 21 LETTuce tb. AT RANDALL'S - THRU SEPT. 21

WITH PURCHASE OF 2 • 12 OZ. PKGS. GOOCH'S NOODLES I AT RANDALL'S - THRU SEPT. 21 AT RANDAll'S - THRU SEPT. 21 "GOOD TO THE LAST DROP"

WITH PURCHASE OF MAXWELL 4 PKGS. SHURFRESH FROZEN MADE FOR YOUR CAR 1 HOUSE AT RANDALL'S - THRU SEPT. 21 AT RANDALL/S FRIDAY & SATURDAY HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO GET AN EXTRA WITH PURCHASE OF KEY FOR YOUR CAR IN CASE YOU LOSE ONE ONE GAL. FLAVORITE AND IT WON'T COST YOU A CENT I WITH PURCHASE OF NO PURCHASE NECESSARY ICE CREAM 2·12 OZ. TUBS FLAVORITE AT RANDALL'S - THRU SEPT. 21 COnAGE CHEESE 1 DEBBIE'S LIQUID AT RANDALL'S - THRU SEPT. 21 100 DETERGENT WITH PURCHASE OF C WITH PURCHASE OF 10 PKGS. FLAVORITE FROZEN GOLD BOND STAMPS ANGEL GAL.~ 79 ONE VEGETABLES WITH EACH GALLON HASSOCK AT RANDALL'S - THRU SEPT. 21 CANADIAN ACE AT RANDALL'S - THRU SEPT. PRESTONE BEER FOOD 21 1· CAKES DOUBLE STAMPS C WITH PURCHAsE OF WITH PURCHASE OF * ANY ON ONE BOX DRY CLEANING P~~K 79 SHOTGUN SHELLS , AT RANDALL'S - TH~U SEPT. 21

GOLD

BACON AT RANDALL'S - THRU SEPT. 21 25 LB. FLOUR BAG 1 ONE OPEN EVERY NilE & GET ALL DAY SUNDAY I MONEY DAY ORDERS ~ .100 GOLD BOND. STAMPS FILM HERE AT RANDAlL'$ - THRU SEPT. 21 DEVELOPING FILM FOR EACH EMPTY 6 PACK OF PO P BOTTLES YOU BRING TO OUR )CAI~~M~WWM~" SUPPLlE$ STORE THIS WEEK ENOl OR MAY HAVE CMH INSTEADI