,
Top,Stories 01'60 ~ , • ,. Th. Wealh., Wh.t wore tho top now ••torl .. of lHO? lef_ Cleulty ....., with ac.cuJeq1 I ..... _, ...... ",rnlnl to PIle , to .H how tM A,soclat" Pre.. ...-.lIy In .. c .."""" ...... "..cMN .., ",Ill" thlm, makl up your own mental I\,t ' oc.cuieMI I"," _ .... In _ ... Fwthar ....m 'hi pa,o, of 19.0', outstandln, IVinb. autIoeIt - Priy cleu!fr with IIttte ...... Mow ••• you may check yoursll, 1,lln,t pa,. 3. 01 owan tuN chaIIte W...... y. en 'Serolng the State University of IOfDtJ Mil fIae Peopk of l~ C.,. Established IJI 1888 Herald Tribune Newl ServIce Leased Wire As'lOClated Press Leased Wire And Wirephoto Tuesday. December Z7, 1960. Io.a City, 10•• who was the youngest ever to win the title when he beat Archl~ Moore in 1956 at the age or 2\, became the lirst man to win :: ~ back when he knocked out Johana. The Big Silence Holiday Death son in I : 5 t of the filth last June:" , By ALVIN J. STEINKOPF at New York's Polo Grounds. ~; Johansson. 28. has a 22·1 recdlll LONDON (WI - Monday was the dlY of the big .lIlnee In Brlt.ln. Toll Running with 14 knockouts, The defeat 1!IJ hife House Co"ntrol It wa. Boxing Day. . Patters on in June was his fff" since leaving the amateurs. Pit. Dog. don't blrk. ParakHt. don't squllk. Evon thl baby crl .. terson. 25, wlll be 26 on ,Jan. 4. He ' pIanissimo. Below 159 has a 36·2 record. After wi~ Boxing Oa, I. ,the dlY ....r Chrlatmaa ••nd by ancient tr.dltlon the title in 1956 he defended ::k It I. tho doade't day of thl ye.r. Violent Deaths Dip four times before he lost the croWn Briton. UII It to got over Chrlatmls. to the Swede's hammering rlgbt Not until aft.rnoon do soma ptople betln to atir, and th .... not Despite Monday's hand. much. Soml blue blood. go fox huntl",. Thlrl I. I spot of Bad Driving Weather For Federal Agencies? football .nd racing. By Thl Associated Pr." But ovln Into thl af"moon .nd night, thl mo" popullr and rlgorou ••port probably Is the crossword puule. The pace of traffic fatallties on Therl I. practically nothing movlnll In thl IIreat sprawl of the Nation's highways stackened 5 ISTC Landon - Ixcept the rlln. And It SHm" uncommonly dismal in the waning hours of the Christ· mas holiday weekend. The Nation· Kennedy Given MoneIay. Thorl is no clang of garbage clns. Thlro Is no glrbagl col· al Safety Council (NSc) said Mon· day night if the trend continues 'Ictor. Thorl Is no m.iI. Banks don't w.nt Ylur bu.lnes •. All yOII it will have been comparatively Athletes' ,It from tho telephone Is no answer. There are no n,wspl,.rs. the saIest Christmas holiday since There Is no clamor of traffic. Critical Report 1949. A few buses crawl .round through Impty streets. but they By 1l p.m. Iowa time. 453 per· and w.. often ".ed to bring pI'n PALM BEAC H, F1a , (IIT S) - Pre ident-elect John F. Ken in from the bench under "" have no lest and are lik.ly to stop beforo th.y 9at .... ywher •. Thl sons had died in traffic accidents, "wild card" rule. ,reat oHlces in the Inner city are mutt a. tM pyramids. 75 had perished in fires and 77 nedy Monday r ccived a f('port call1ng for creation of a White The 2()().pounder ha s ' now tun.. R.. taurants have quit. THI Government office. are lockld. were victims of miscellanl!ous ac· Hou se office to rid h rd on Fed ra l r gulatory oommis ion. and cidents, The over·all violent acci· cd his attention to wrestling. aJiI Thl official spokesmen hive nothln, to SlY. draft weeping reforms for Ihose agenci ' won his only dual·meet assignment AllO obslrvld In Australl., New Zealand, Ireland and South dental toll stood at 605, as a heavyweight. : Africa, Boxing Day has roots in history. . But a council spokesman noted This wa the kc rccomm ndation in 11 1 ngthy tudy of tbe Watt came to Iowa Teachers as There was a timl when ploples' houlls, on Boxing D.y, wore that the present pace would put huge scandal.plagucd agencies ubmiltcd at til Pre {dent·elect's a highly trouted baseball pilcher/ the final figure below last year's full of 'boxes. h"". thl name. It WI5 the d.y poor but honest requ t by Jame 1. nOi, form r d an of the Harvard Law and a solid basketball prsopect..A and well below the NSC's pre hefty 5·10 guard. he has alreatt. tr.desmen. and person. such as chimney SWHPS. 'Irdener. and holiday estimate oC 510 tralCic fa· School. a broken into the cage ll ncup willi ...mstressIS, caliid around for 1i"le !lifts. Ulually the boxes con· tallties. . The 17.p.gl .. eport WII ..v.re· evllH" by fretl.... '" .t airllM h1s alert floor play and t1mel1 'I talned 'Iftov.r, from M'Lord'. Chrl.tma. dinner. The council said: "The toll has Iy critical .. tho ..Inc I.. In exptn.. . hooting, Now .uch gifts arl more .ppreclated In the form of ch.cks taken a turn for the better and v.ryi", dt9roo, r ...rvln9 Its In ddltlon to callin, for crea· Watt is a right·hander with • .nd cash ,Iv,n b.fDr. Christmas, and Boxln, Day is used now there now is a chance it will be .harpest bla... for the Fedor.I lion of II Wblle Houa office for sizzling fa t ball and is expect~ ' mos"y for sl"ping. below the toll for the Christmas Power Commlilion (FPC). which the over Ight of r eulatory ag~· to be a front·line pitcher for tbe weekend of last year. That will It call.et a "dI.mll fillure." The cie. the Landis report recom· Panthers thls $pring. mean it will be the comparatively Pedoral Communicltlons Com· ml.'ndcd estllblishm nt or three safest Christmas weekend $ince million. (FCC), which Is said hall other n w office In the White Stanleyville Rebels Kidnap 1949 when the three. J..,eopoldvUle and Equator provinces I took 609 lives, fires 68 and mls .. F. K.nn.dy are .hown Monday In P.lm alach. - AP Wirephoto a long. arching look Monday (r to the Pre Ident-elect, said the and part of Kasal among the Con· * * * ceUaneous causes 105 for a total way to strenglben the U.S. space recommendations may form the gQ's six provinces. ' K, p. of 782. pro ram and the operations of lh ba i tor executive acUon or leals The rest of Kassi and Katanga a ang,o lov,nce, Six persons were killed Monday Stat DepartmenL abrolld. lalive propo als by th Pr•• ldent· Srparille conrefcncl' ori Inally elect. "The Senator hU lqOg held I provinCeS have .broken away under U.N.' Con9-1 Un,." night In 0l\e of the wor ~t l hi~. Katanga President Moise Tshombe, " way trakedies when ' two cars !lChedul~ wiUl klty con. ultarJts on the opinion that.. something musl / ·The- leCt.i8t. 1"ebels.- hold sW8y_ ln. _. lL ~ ~ ualhed OQ-a ~kened road near tbes two topiC, were combIned be don about these agrncle ," be Oriental Province. which lit!s Cement EnJente Boron, in Southem California. into on . weat ~ft for iOIJrs ak ' ~Id, north of Kivu.i " I r . / 1.1i I • \ ,,'j ." Four others died in a head·on col· Kennc I .' i · , 11l~ 1)'Oily Iowan Many -Good Novels in '60; TIa" Dally Iowan .. tDrl#en and edited "" IfUtknll and .. goomaed bq • I boorcl. of fi.,. Itudene trustlle, elected by the Ifuaene body and four trulfefll . appcnnted by the prea/dent of th" UnioersUy. The Dally Iowan', edltorilll poUcy II not an e:qn'esalon of SUI administration policy or opinion. In ~ particular. , But ;None Is Revolutionary ". '1 c TUESDAY, DEC. 27,1960 \. . By w. G. ROGERS have a poinl of view that is fresh to pick tho incidents they want Auociated Press Arts Editor and unspoiled , a thought that mat· to describe and the language in ~'i ters In a world upon which they which tbey wi sh to descrIbe them '. NEW YORK - On the first look wIth un weary eyes, and a - but keep them up on the top best-seller list of the year were style that arises out of not only shelf higher than youngsters can . ndia Gives Free AHen Drury's "Advise and Con· serious end eavor but also the rcach. sent" and James Michner's exuberance and vigor character· There was th e Inevitable trunk· "Hawaii," for fiction; and for izing all pioneers, non·fiction. D. C. Jarvis' 'IFoik fu! of Civil War books with, pro\). Medicine" and Vance Packard's Among American s on th is fo ably, volume II o[ Altan Nevins' Enterprise Boost "The Status Seekers." vored list orc Jane Mayhall, "The War of the Union" at the J 0 h n Knowles, Laurence D. top of the hcap. There were ex· On the last lists of the year Second of Two Articles dia's most difficult problems. The Savadove, Robert Musser Brown, cellent autobiographies and biog. there will again be "Advise and Philip McFarland, Peter S. raphies, by as well as about pie of investment is small and it Consent" and "Hawaii," in fico By ROWLAND EVANS JR. must be cut at just the right Beagle, Donald Winks, Lester Marcel Pagnol, Maurice Cheva tion; "Folk Medicine" for non· Goran , Moira Pearce, Barbara lier, General Lord Ismay, C. NEW DELHI, India CHTNS) - place. The capitalists are wor· fiction , and along with it, though ried that the Government is Probst Solomon and Lewis Lus· Day Lewis, Leonard Woolf, and You can sense the change in thc not "Status Seekers," another ardi; among foreigners. Robert Peter Qu ennel! , and merely abou~ last [our years, and it has been generating too much spending Packard book, "The Was t e with its new five-year plan and Shaw, Phyllis Paul, David Storey Rob rt R. Livingston, Thomas in the right direction. Makers." and Michael Campbell, a1\ Eng· Wolfe, Ivar Kreuger, Colette, Sir. would like to see it reduced a bit , These are not the only authors The speaker was one of the to curb inflation. Inflation robbed lish, Jacoba van Vel de, Dutch Walter Raleigh, Bernard Beren. senior American diplomats here. the second plan by a substantial who have scored twice in 12 and Mercedes Sallsachs, Spanish. son. the Goncourt brothers and months with one book. or second They are interested in hum:m . Marilyn Monroe. He spoke convincingly. amount and the hard money with two books. John O'Hara has The most significant change has boys, eyeing a 19·per-cent rise in grandeur and dccadence, the Th(' American scene had some had fi novel and ~ set of three stuff of man, the beat of the been the Nehru gove rnment's en· wholsesale prices, would like to novellas out this year, and Law exceedingly sharp critics, tbough couragement for developing the sacrifice some of the new spend· heart, and they leave to their they were all friendly. Among. rence Durrell has been repre elders, or successors, problems private sector of the economy. ing plans entirely and jigger the sented by "Clea," winding up his foreJgners who took us to pieces I According to economists and dip· rest in such a way that trans- like war, poverty and racial ha were Sir' Anthony Eden, critical ' Alexandria quartet, and by a book treds. lomats both inside and outside port, fertilizer and power would reprinted from some three dec· in particular of S cretary of State,. the government, the private sec- get an even larger proportionate ades ago, "The mack Book." The "name" writers have turn Dulles; Lord Kinross, a casual ':: tor - contro\led by private capi- share. While we're dealing in pairs, ed in performances of varying visitor; D. W. Brogan. a regular : tal as opposed to government- Meanwhile, education, health numerous subjects have inspired quality. Irwin Shaw and Henry visitor. But we were no less harsh '. owned enterprises - is expand- and some other welfare units of two or more books: Two biog· Morton Robinson did bodly; our elves. Frank Gibney in "The : ing as a pace that would have Government are sure that the raphles each of poet Robert Harvey Swados and John Hersey, Operotors" condemned moral" been unthinkable five years ago. new plan is already overweighted Frost, singer Maria Callas and indifferently; Paul Horgan, Jer· supineness in the face of taxf A second change, as the Indian in favor of heavy industry. Be· artist Claude Monet; two Emily orne Weidm an and Pierre Boulle, dodging, dubious trade practices" ecpnomy is viewed by American fore an al\-out assault can be Dickinson books ; and many more fairly well. The best were clear and the like ; Edward Iligbee in ~ experts, is the new attitude to· made on the population explosion, than two about the Civil War, ly the women: Kay Boyle, Flan· "The Squ exe" accused us of' ward American investment. The some officials say, India's iIliter· World War II, and the nature, qf nery O'Connor, J. Compton-Bur making the country less habit· dollar total s are comparatively ate millions must learn how to American society. 'i nett ond Francoise Sagan. able; and Vance Packard in "The very small, bu t new incentives read so that they can understand In a year with many good There were novels which must Waste Moker" said we made that permit rapid amortization the pamphlets put out in vast novels, it does not seem to me, be kept out o[ juvenile hands. waste - strong and ardent anti· on reflection, there was aoy Pedple not i" touch with modern Packard forces were not content and income tax holidays are now quantities by Family Planning, with attacking him, they Wljng I law. As a result, American busi. the Government agency trying 10 single one that wouldrevolu· fldion have no idea how free tionize the eourse of literature. and untrammeled it is. ] do not at critics who didn't find fault ness men are floodin g tbe em- reduce the birth rate. Population I. with his book. bassy and its economic ad juncts is climbing here by close to or could be guaranteed to sell speak of paperbounds labeled with an unprecedented number 10,000,000 a year, an increment a century hence. The top novels, "experimental" - and indeed Ie There wos a superb animal · of queries, and firms such as ~hat constantly threatens to eat as it happens from established gimimately so. I speak of regular story: "Born Free," about the . Firestone Rubber, Alcoa, Good- up the increa ~e in the national "Good Hea ens-That S.tuff Is Dangerousl/~ authors, were William Sly ron's • har~bound t,ade books that go Adam, ons' lioness; a superb bis- ';, year and others are exporting income. "Set This : Hobse 00' Fire" ~ and ,way ,beyond once shocking items tory, "The Rise and Fall of the j' capital and technical know-how "In 25 years," a Bombay intel Wright 'Morris' "Ceremory in 'like Norman Mailer's "Deer Third Reich," by William L:~ from the United States, often in lectual says, "we will have edu Lone Tree," and the foreign novel Park" Nabokov's "Lolita" and Shirer; ('vera I superb World partnership with Indian concerns. cated our people to the point that of greatest scope was "Lasso that' classic "Lady Chatterley's War II books, among them they will know how and will want Round the Moon " by Agnar LQ3er." ] don't speak, either, "Seven Men at Daybreak," by A third chonge Is the gradual to practice birth control, but by Drummond Suggest,s Countering Mykle. of Grace Metalious, but of lit Alan Burgess, about the assassin· , increase in newspaper and Por- that time there will be so many But I al ways find, my \lIost eraturc, or aspiring literature. ation of Heydrich; "The Greatest.·.. li amentary criticism of the Prime of us we 'will be eating each exciting reading was provided by Novels in point are "Lasso Round Raid of AJI, " by C. E. Lucas Phi). ·' Minister, the Congress Party and other." the young novelist, or at least the the Moon, " Durrell's "The Block lip, about St. Nazaire; and other hitherto·unimpeacbable in- ff . I People-Predictor by President-Predictor new - there are many first nov Book" and "Rabbit. Run ," by the "Narvik:' by Donald Macintyre, .·, stitutions. This criticism is view- And a high Government 0 iCla . elists who begin to publish at the John Updike. Th~se writ· ed as a healthy sign in a brand. says: "It's easler to teach a cow . talented about thp Brlti h too little and too ·: how to practice birth control By ROSCOE DRUMMOND one President-predictor to one a box o[ matches or even atomic age when life begins: 40. They ers have every right to be heard, late in NOl'wtly. new democracy in which virtually than an illiterate villager." people-predictor. energy, it all depends on its every important power resides h Don't think for a minute the ,I. in the last instonce in the person This is, quite obviously, t American public need be helpless Surely, if you can create the proper use. If Winston Churchill ' " . f' e r. composite voter, the mOdel of the D· C II of Nehru - because of his ex- 'rankest sort o~ hyperbole, but It in face of this new mechanical had had' a simu\atics machine 'Te'sf"" Elfe"t ' A ' eSlre on 0 eglans whole U.S. electorate by feeding dUring tHe 1930's, he mlght 'have I 01 ~ '" U .. ~raor~in a ry po~u.'arity and s t a~d' l ~~~~~~e~~e P2~'h!e g;;:rg~a~~~ mpn¥~er ,- t~ ~ peop\e.~r e dictor 1\ , ,.,.. • • g enough data into the mechaniGal been warned away from risking ,II' m g.~ °ln If~'~rl ~.'r ~,otr- l ~VbI~ttemVith ~e~Jjrtg l tbO i ft. l ~cf!¥l" , fl~lcl1q.~frte Ih ~ mJl· ~mon', ! .~le nc~ ' ~a;tI! for: e tn- his popularity by trying to . stir By . TIlRRY FE.~E. ~ , incrtasinglY required by college 1~$OOIfS r said. "Next would be 0 l zemll ' .. . ly with the acute problem a lion fac~s and predlc how nearly his 'collOt.ry oul: df l its 1 wishful .., V R P ltI ' ,adm ssio~ , .4in{jpIiS " , jllli do I th pcin\ 1 grquR - _",hat your '1 lethargy '- but Iwhat 'is ' m'O,e ' :'~rv. I( ~ ~'I : , ?N~;1-I. H6~ , badl on SChle~dr'~ tcsts''u~bally l rriends,~ fellCIW sllMeh\!i tll~" . fa~tmt~~~lmW\q~OO!.~, f~~13~ut1II1~~UIli i In, tW4eiK~I', 0 ~ II?DJ , I vot~. tan," ~~ ,~ hFJ !rl) I b~ n1mhql's ~u., . ~ , likely, he ' would liave be~n ·WiIl· dq ~P,~ ~C,' u,t~ np"': I m.~C~ a . bo ~ I.,do ~r college work. of you. fii:ru,~i~~~K'""i ing to ' doubl,! his l) 'ripopU1~ r'jty 'In ' w¥JIts to. go to college?1 ~r how The llr:t \rlQ-1\)1n1ll.e Schlesser As would be txptelDd; ,tbdructs ports • " fill II 'Ji ~ '~,m~ ~11~P'§~ii~l1dt ~fto ' $t~TzJ h ' ~lil ' ~'e , Anq/p~rym the ''Same c\lJse:' , . ' \ ' f much..he wants ,. to be an acallemic, test is an "autobiogr jell/'o in the home adversely aCfect aca· dwJnd .· 91 1!!~0"t;:. lta l !Jt:er'~~at~ "Ot""·thl! ,.\ and moti\rlt hleb ~a l\ be e~. (jrf~ oC"'tttO" ln vehto Ps- "bf' sNrifJ!I,Usul!ccssl evon if he is, not IW vevy , vent ry," in which, he ·explll!t:led. demic performance. If pareDts • \1 O\t • on- ra!el)l I)srlr\tie(\ Ito qlml Aln~ 1$0 latics, m 'iel 'D 1S6!ll Pool or MIT/ I goOd ' studeht? 01'1 WHether ' hi S: , :'the student's and their to others, he \l$1~( b,i~!14rtl 'T ~ik ~ '~hr ·. ~i(~.UIt~ fof'g~~g, ,·Cam. l b~ff '~~un~ p~aise ~?n taken • + ! ~. Y'~S~t~l ~ ' $!Xl.!i., ! , ~irY1- ~'~o lOro~atJOIi to most. ; a COMPll ite :Nixon or ~ C()t'uposiie puts It this way ~s quotJd in ! .. .I . _I , nee for achiev " I)t I ' rnea- WJil usuillly acljl~ve mOre. A stu fiscal policy. of 1i!dla ~. 650!oOO v illag~ . staggers. ·wh y Goldwater or a c/)mpo~ite illilckj;. "Harper's Magazi\\e':~ "The reo, ", demot;'1 ~ tra!.~d .0' r,l v ~ "';i!1 . beL,. surcil." I II! "II d~nt who tlln Identify hlm~lf , , ' , The three big requirements to. the Imgamahon, but Cflhcs of the , Pierre Salinger, feller. search We have clon e for ' the. cha.nneled m~o too mu~h drinking", Tile second tes,f J}$()120 mtnu. wlth!l lK!Ce:lstul adult also will t \ I da¥ ,are still the s'ame - trans. .1 ~rese nt Government p~ogram bei the Presldent Then when the people·predictor ?emocrats ( waS fOcused bn , U1~ ., or hot-rodding rather than iptp, tes In lenglh, is Ctlllbd ttll "per. do belter. . port, power and fertilizer. Bu t heve more, could be don~ .. elect' press sec begins telling the politicians Issues and what they mean to the study? , . • " sonal values in 1:l)tbry," This, St\ldy pf socio-economlc fact. other claimants al;e pounding These are a few of the J dlffl~ult retary, should be what the voters ate going to be voters .. Its pu~pO!!'e was to m~ke Prof. George E. Schles~er: edu. Schl sser said, "lTK'a ures the ors has al o. reve~led tha~ stu· • desks in government offices to problems that conIr.ont the Indian so skittisb about like on election day, the Presi· It poSSible to conduct a campaign. . direction the need for achieve- dents from higher mcome groups have their needs favorably as- Government. Well·mformed Am- how much the dent·predictor can begin tell ing in the wayan intelligent demo- caUonal psychologist at Colgate t '11 t k " generally have done beUer in sessed erican officials in the capital are "predictor" was the people what the Presidential cratic dJ.scourse shou Id bU e con· IlIVer' SI't y, has been deve I'opmg men WI a e. high school, whl' 1e tu de nts f rom ]n Bombay, for example, a convinced tha~ Prime Minister in the Ken· nominees will be like on the day ducled - by debating the issues such tests of academic motiva- The personal values inventory, poorer families have performed textile mill hires 4 000 and works Nehru and hiS planners have nedy campaign. after election day. that matter to people and ex- which runs up to 150 questions, unexpectedly welI in selective tion for almost 20 years. Now, k th t d tid' around tne ' lock in three eight- come a long way in the last. four Unless, of course, they are This is only f~ir play. The plaining to them things they as s e s u en s ea 109 ques- col\eges becau of their desire hour shifts. Its desperate need years. They are also convlDced afraid that the people will turn Presidential c~Jndidates can peer wish ttl understand." under a three·year grant from lion;; on what he likes to do. to improve their socio-ecOIlomic today is modern weaving mach- that India's s.uccess is esse~tial against the people· predictor and inside the people nnd the people Well, maybe. But if it is as the College Entrance Examina- what friends he most admires, stotus. inery. It isn't made in India. A~- to the secuTlty of the Umted against any politician who uses can peer inside The presidential neat and nice as all that. what is tion Board, he has administered how he spends his time (is he Eight colleges have been giv. cordingly, preciolls foreign ex· State~ . They hav~ been ~ecom· it simply to tell the people what candidates! / needed is a two·way "discourse" his tests to more than 10,000 stu- always putting oU tudying?), ing thc te ts (or two years. They change is required to buy it from mendmg changes ID the aJd pro- they want to hear - all in order Then it wiH at least be an - . and that will require, as I whether a car is more important are Boston, Colgate, Fordham, England. The requ st has becn gram to give it far more f1exi· dents at 11 colleges and univer· t h' th h'gh ks d to get elected. equal contest. have suggested, one President- 0 1m an J mar, an Getty burg, Ly oming, Platts- silling in a Government pigeon- bility and to gear it Cor a long predicfor to one people·predictor. sities and e i g h t secondary whether he objects to being call· burg, Russell Sage and Yale. hole for months, noplng to get haul. But, believe me, this isn't the • • • way to get back at tile simulatics I am not arguing that the peo· Let's buy one. schools over a two·year period. ed an egghead. "From the on- This year they w re joined by approved. The ~ennedy Administration pIe-predictor is a social evil. Like This is, of course, one of In- seems likely to go along. machine, the massive mechani· Ie) 1960 New York Herald Tribune Inc. Prof. John A. Finger of Colgate swers," Schlesser said, "we can Elmira, Pittsburgh and R¥d. cal memory which is tpe very • is co-adrbinistrator oC the t,bree· preidict with some Is u c c d e s ' s For college •'l,d ents, the tests composite of you and me and \ year project. whether the boy wi! spen hiS are lJIiualIy given dW'ing fresh- 69,000,000 other voters and which coljege years hot-rodding." man week. has packed in its nerve·cells Good ' Listening- .~ Schlesser discussed preliminary results in an lnterview. His pri this Colgate test also measures In the eight high schools, "bien some 100,000 Gallup-Roper inter· wh~t Schlesser calls "learned used the tests la t year, results II Chinese Reds Sell_Art views during the past eight years. mary. conclusion: Academic mo tivation has as much to do with traits of charaeter" - long- were u ed to help students de- ' carry a propaganda message. .· Toda·y On WSUI· By ROY ESSOYAN I [eel pretty sure I have the an· success in school and college as ra~ge per ist nce, deliberat ne s cide whether they should go 16 f Ancient and modern master swer to this people-predictor - and self cdntrol. Persistence in college and where. They were : HONG KONG UP) - The Chin native intelligence. Further, his pieces are reproduced by a Chin· and future Presidential candid A TIME FOR CHILDREN form ed on June 16, l!'l6O, by the hard work, a "stlck-to-it" qual· helpful to coHege admissions of· ese /Communists are trying to ese woodblock process that dates tests have proved as successful ates better look out. (which is what this whole holiday Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra in predicting college-student per ity, has prov d th best indicator ficers in predicting the college cosh in on 2,000 years of Chinese back 400 years. Some 300 blocks period is all about) has becn under the baton of Franz Konwit· formance as the scholastic apli. of future college success, Sehles- performance oC borderline appli· art. are used for the average repro • • • ser said. cants with ] .Q.'s of 105 to 115 • It's good propaganda and it duction. A large classical paint· espeCially set aside this morning schny. Their principle attention tude tests used across the coun· All right, it science can perfect try. Deliberateness is defined by They w re ma 1 u eful In help- provides much-needed foreign ex· ing may need as many as 1,000 a people-predictor to forecast so that youngsters with musical is required by the Bruckner Fifth Schlesser as "a way of aLlack- Ing to pot the potential A slu· change. woodblocks. One 10·foot long what the public wiJI do, science aptitude may receive some es Symphony; but there will be a His followup studies of Col ing dan gerous sItuations - it is dent and encouraging him to do scroll took three years to com· gate students, who have taken Through o~t1ets rn Hong Kong can perfect a President-predictor sentially painless instruction in rendition of thc Brahms Second the oppOSite o[ rashness." A oven better. plete. - the two 20-mlnute tests for al nel:ative attitude toward self Schles r and Finger wl\l test ond other neutral points, thd to forecast what a Presideutial The Instruments of the Orchest Piano Concerto with Wilhelm Most of the contemporary art most 15 years, as well as of stu· control would indicate pot ntial anolher 5,000 students next faU, Communists are selling - at bar candidate will do and what he ra. With the redoubtable David Backhaus as soloist. This even gain basement prices - repro glorifies life under the Commun will be like if he is elected. dents VI ho took the tests at other deJJnquency or incipient alcohol- the last year of their College ductions of lIhcient masterpieces, ists. Industry, agriculture and Randolph conducting them, th~ ing's concert stl,ll'lS at 6 p.m. colleges last year, have convinc· Ism . Board grant. If their research water conservation are important Two can play at this game - kid dies will be taken out tour, ed him of two points: Students The test results help explain continues at its present highly· paintings, sketches and woodcuts or at this science - oC predicting. SPEAKING OF MUSIC : the as well as clay ' and porcelain themes and the workers are us from desk to desk, through the wbo perform badly in tlie schol· why some brIght students do succe ful level, coli ge admls, And ] am ready - well, almost December 9 concert of the Iowa as~ie aptitudes sometimes do well poorly in college and other less sions procedures could be algoi· figures and ·pottery. ually shown smiling, laughing or personnel oC one of the world's cheering. ready - to start raising a fund String Quartet was recorded for on his tests, and subsequelltly do intelligent students turn in a ficantly affccted. You can buy a contemporory right now to hire the social sci· great symphony orchestras. Each woodcut for the equivalent of Even art that predates the bl'oodcast Wednesday at 8 p.m. well in college. But students who superior performance. Studcnts Most coli II admissions d1rett· entists and the mathematicians of the instruments will be exam do well on scholastic aptitudes - with grellt perSistence and s<> lf ors now conIine their testing to 10 American cents. Reproductions Communist revolution is made to on WSUI and KSUI. An aU· of thousand·year-old masterpieces serve Communist purposes. to perfect the Pr~sideDt-predictor ined, aurally, a demonstration oC control do above-average work in scholastic aptitude and achlevl!- - or a $enator.predictor or even Mozart concert by the Vienna sell for as much as $300. Pre·revolutionary pai n tin g s its individual propensities will be college even though their intelli· mcnt tests. The Colgate profes· a wlfe·predictor - so that it will Philharmonic Orchestra will be gel)ce and ability to communi· SOl'S believe that academic mo- Connoisseurs here say the most widely' circulated today conducted and selected iI1ustr a· quality of the reproductions oC usually depict. ragged Chinese be ready for the next election. the Salzburg presentation ' of j~~Y~~ cate arc far inferior to those of tivatlon lests, combined wIth ancient masterpieces is excel peasants with woebegone expres· I'm not t~lking about any old tions of its utilization In musical Thursday at 6 p.m. And the some of lheir c1as motes, Schles- scholtlSlic aptitudes. could double lent. sions. 'Fhe captions explain that fashioned Maginot Line defense 'literature will be offered. In ef opera on Friday" also by Mozart f. .. UnlvntY ser said . the l'ffJcicncy of forecasting col· The.-eontemporary works are these are typical of life "under against the people - predictor. fect, today's music for children out of Salzburg, is "The Marriage .. The fllctors which influence a Icge performance. Such stren,,· painstaking but uninspired. Most the reactionary rule beCore libera What Is needed Is an absolute is the advanced counterpart of of Figaro". It will begin early: • Caf.ndcri student'S pc,'formance have aJ 0 thoned pr di Lions coul~ be In· of them are mass·produced and tion." balance of political armaments: the Music for Children written at 6:30 p.m. been iSQlaled. "The Infiucnc of valuable to both the stlfdent and • by Carl Orff and heard from Taeaday, Deet. 27, 1961 T .....y, J .... :I the home is the greatest," the college. WSUl on its Christmas Party '1 a.m. - CI8SlICS l'esume • ...... DAILY IOWAN IDftOUAL 1TAn' 8:00 Morning Chl\Pt'l AUft .lIaUD Editor ...... lla, Bunllall last Saturday. The Instruments 8:J5 News Wtdnetday, Jen. 4 1 II ' Edltortal AlllataDt ... JIarold Hatfield of 8:30 Holiday MU Ric o. Mana,ln, Edllor .... Darold Powen thc Orchestra will be heard at 8 p.m. - Recital, NOllma Cross, And OI8OVU'IIO" New. Edilor ...... about 10:15 a.m. 9:00 Centur1( of Sont .nm ...,...... f ... & ••OCIIA,.ID ..... D:3() Book' hcl! Plano - Macbl1ide Auditorium. • tlty EdJ 1M ...... • • CAlllD had he Dan"" Tbe Auoelale4 ..... II .ntiUed IX 9 :5D News Sporta Edltor ...... Mlke Pauly .Iullvely to Ibe _ for NpUbllcalloa University Bulletin Board , UNUSUAL ITEMS OF MUSIC 10:00 Music Setvrlley, Jan. , i Chief Pholol!'lllllla' ... . llalpb 81*01 PubUabed clan, ucept IluDdQ IZIIl of all \he Ion1 IleWl! prlnte.i III IbII 11 :00 Let·. Tum a POlle pow be Ifillata, and I.... boBdQe bJ Btu Boclet, Edllor ...... t A\llUlUU (in addition to the above) arc '1 :3() p.m. - Basketball, ?II __ Aasjat. CUy EdlllOr ••...... BW Maurer n.w~aper u .eII u III U ... I! :15 Ml1slc ft' ...., IIw. • 1 PubUcationo, Inc. CommUDlee· dllpeteb.. scheduled throughout this in 11 , 55 ComlAlll Event, IOta - Field HoWIe. ".11."", •• n...... ,. ... "' ...... _.... ,. several tioJuI Center, low. Cit)'. low.. 1:11. Ant. Manqlnl EdItor .. 0.,.,. Ger*" I...... «»al.. , " .... II .., .., ..._ " .... Aut. IlION Wier...... PIaIl CurrI. terim. Today, for example, an 11 : ~8 News C~p.\tle ...... _, ea.... tend U MeOnd-cJue matter .t lb. 12 :0.0 Rtl ythm noroolH T.,...,., J ..... poll oUIce at Iowa City under tile DAILY IOWAN ...... , .... It. It, ...., .... AI' ~"... " tilt sold .un.nlo" no. operetta [rom your salad days" 12:30 N.w~ 4 p.m. - E.D. Plall Memorial I,,.. ••• II,... MI 01 -.r- of lfarcb'l, 11'11. DAlLY IOWAN ADVU'l'lllJlfG IT...... IV.OOL 0. 'OUUlAWIf .&CULTl' mayhap, called "La Fille de 12 :45 Review I>r tile Brltl.h WMkllft , ,..... ,...... , ....., ...... BIdIn_ UUS ..... Mana...... PubJlaher ...... loba I&. ar.arn- 1:00 Moslly Mo..le Lecture - Medical AmptUt.heetre, aa._ - Advertilln, Dtreetor •• .... Olaf8a EdlloJ1al ...... ArtllIIr I&. Iud_ Madame Angot," will be pre· I :55 italian Compo•• n Sert .. General Hospital. AdverUalna M.na,. .. 11m lfll\lll sented (in French dressing) at 3:l1li News v A 0 A T ION LlftllAIIY HOUIIS, I."~ IfIIlOUAL UNION...... , CIalllne4 MelIA" •• AnIoI4 1_ Advertlallll .•••.••.•. lobi! KoIUnaJI 4:00 Ten Time w..... y,J .... n Tue"".y-Frldny. Ot>c. 27· 30, ' :30 • .m.-O 1!!1IndlY lhroulll Tburld., , . .... ", Promotion )(aM",,, ..... Ma17 RoOI C1reIIlIIU. ..,..... "1IINr ..... about 11 a.m. Another in the 5: 00 Preview p.m., 8allll'd8.1"1 Dec. 31 . 7:30 ' .m.· 10:30 p.m. Frida, ."...... , 5: 15 I!!porto TIme • p.m. - Recital, David Lloyd, II noon ID."ln open • 8.m.·noon'l •.m, .. 1. nUoIIIIIIL DAILY IOWAN oaaoVU,.IOJlf ItaUan Composers series of pro· Sunday-Mond.,.,' Ian. 1.2, cloll('(\; , cu.,ulatlon 1IaDat- .... RDben BIll nV.HI" 8O&aD O. IITVD .... 5:30 News tenor - Macbride AudJWc:lum. l1'ams, "Concerto Grosso" to 5:45 It Sny. Here Tuetlday, Jan. 3. 7:30 a.m.·J 8.m. .ADr·SITTING LIAOUI. Dell. • PUBLICATION" 1)(0. 8 p.m. - ShIImbAuah Lecture, I KmenlaL . ; Symphony·Corelli to Vivaldi, is 0:00 Eventnl Concel1 DepI Llbrlflet will IJOIIt \hl'OlIlh Jan. I - Call Nn. R. " .. DIAL '-41" If YOU' do not receive I.n. OUchrtat, At· ~. (Ieor.. Vienna Festival their hour• . E.lton, Colle,. of benU5l,.,.; Paul set for 1:55 p.m.; Bec:;thoven's nobert C. Ansell, "oeCense of Icr.ld, a'''3a, "~8J ...... B)" .rrIII III your PaU, loff.n bJ 1:10 &.111; 'rile 8:00 Evening Feature ~.a Clt~, » ce ..1a WHirl, or 110 PM DaJ,b' low.. alroulallOA o~e lit the Penn1n ... o~. "U; pror, H"Ib ICe!», oilly ballet music, The Creatures 8:00 Trio What?" - Sharnbauah Auditor· CANDIOA'II" ro. DIOIIIII IJIf ,.ar III .dvAllc!i IIx montJi.l. • .1101 Com)nunlc.l1oM Center .. ~ frolll Deparw.,nt of Pollt1cal gelenee; Jud7 9:45 News Flnol lum. nBllUAIIY! O(d,'" for ol/Ielal ,ud· ...,.. mon.... III. BlI 11\0,," III Je... • .... ~ I 11.111. Ifond." \hrOutll J'rI. Xle.n_udl &4; PIof, ,LeaIJe Q • ...,..;. at Pro,metheus, follows at 2: 55. 10 :00 SIGN orr Uliion .. h.nouncemento of the JI'.lInNtr, _ .... at ~GIIn\A~; Jlllut Pe.st&r&duite Catr.ae In 0bIte(. .. ::J1f«:U'1 .ur.. mulbll, \lat. dQ UI4 tIM! • Ie at .. ., 1MIWa,. CeoowM ..... e\lt a. 11M Alu ..nI )fo .... 8II1II III: An olber II\ln '''t_.erlp. Hllhrt, M; Prof. t.. A. Va n,k.. TONIGHT'S VrENNA F'ES1'[ K~V'-t" - 91 .7 •• I•• nt DI8I rfcs and G~o&J - SbIm It. M.dloon !'It.. aero.. from the 1IaII...... _~ ..... 7:00 Frna lItusltl . I.UnlOll, ",'ort • p.m~ 'n"&r...,, ~ ... cou.,. ....- ...... --;r,,---_' ...... "" ,AI. orrerDlI was orlihlaDt per· 1.0:00 SIGN OF)' blup Auditotiutn. · '. _ . .. --- \ • In· '6'0; i ~ lonary• pick the incidents they want describe and the language in ttt cy wish to describe them keep them up on the top higher than youngsters can Iy TOM HENSHAW There wa the inevitable trunk. of Civil War books with. prob. AP Newafeahlr.. Writer volume II of AITan Nevins' Sen. John F. Kennedy's suspense.rilled victory over Vice War of the Union" at the lhe heap. There were ex· President Richard M. NL'