Nice Fair th .....h tanl,ht. Walm' CJIi'l er TUHd.ty. little dN,. teo owon n"ht. H""I laday In the lOs. Serving the State University of IOWtJ and the People of Iowa Cit"

Established in 1868 10 CeDta Per Copy Associated Press Leased Wires IlIId Wirepboto Iowa City, Iowa - Tuesday, October 1, 1963

It to£> Moroccan Troops Poised ;;G gerla• Ben Bella Views Move As External Deception .ALGIERS (AP) - President Ahmed Ben Bella charged Top Achievement Monday night that Morocco has troops poised 10 yards from Diane Durfee. A4. Om.h •• Neb •• left. ch.lrman of the Panhellenlc the Algerian border and is backing a Berber uprising against Sc:holutlc Commlttte. presents trophy for outst.ndln, Ic:holaltlc ., his government. In Bomb Cases achievem.nt Monday night to Barblrl D.rr. A4. Cedar Rapid., The Algerian Political Bureau called for crowds of Al­ Icholastic chllrman of the Delta Gamma lororlty. gerians to demonstrate for Ben -Photo by JH Lippincott Bella this evening. charged that Algerian Berber lead· ~Iabama In a dramatic radio address to er Belkacem Krim, one of the au· Officials Won't Honor Sorority Members- the nation Ben Bella said: thors of the French·Algerian Evlan "Moroccan soldiers of Moulay peace treaty, visited Tangier in an Make Specific Charges Hassan (King Hassan II) are 10 eUort to obtain Moroccan help. meters (about 10 yards) from the Morocco and Algeria have been Delta Gamma· Wins Algerian frontier. feuding for some llme. Morocco BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) - Two white men were held in "We know what It means. We claims part of the Sahara held by jail without charge Monday in connection with unspecified fear nothing. We can defend our­ Algeria. The conservative regime bombings in this city where a church blast two weeks ago killed selves .... of King Hassan has been hostile Scholarship 'Award "They (the Moroccans) would to sweeping radical measures lour Negro girls. ' like to see our troops concentrate adopted by the government of Ben Whether charges would be placed ciUed the bombing of the 16th For the fourth consecutive' year, Delta Gamma sorority was pre­ too. . . . While our country is be· Bella in Algeria. against the men the state safety Street Baptist Church in wbich sented with a trophy for having the highest grade point average among oC director. Col. Albert J. Lingo, the four girls were killed. ing threatened by internal subver­ IN THE confusion the Kaby· the 14 SUI social sororities. Sigma Delta Tau had the second highest sion, it is also being attacked from Iic, Col. Mohand Ou EI Hadj lefl would not say. His agents made However, a second statement the exterior. . . . This operation Michelet after being deposed by the arrests Sunday night to the from WaJlace dId not mention the average and Pi Beta Phi ranked will not succeed." Ben Bella and took with him dis· surprise of local authorities. church bombing but said only two third. There was no Immediate reaction sident parliamentary deputy Ho· "We're not through yet," said persons were being held "in con· The trophy was pres~nted at the from Morocco to Ben Bella's reo cine Ail Ahmed. Lingo, personally directing a state nection wit h the Birmingham 25th annual Panhellenic Associa­ Mrs. Kennedy marks. The two men, accompanied by investigation independent of local bombings ." tion scholarship banquet held Mon· WHILE BEN Bella spoke, COD­ about 50 body guards, drove off and federal officers who launched Local law enforcement officials, day night in the Union. fusing reports poured into the capi. in a convoy of small trucks, turn· On Sale Today au Intensive probe after the Sept. asking that their names be with· Nearly 800 sorority members, tal about loyalist and dissident ing off the main highway into a 15 church bombing. held, said the arrests had come housemothers, and representatives Off to Greece The first Iny at SUI. Mrs. Virgil M. Hancher, is the first SUlowan of SUI's colleges and administra· troops moving around in 'Kabylie, dirt road climbing high into the to wear a 1963 Homtcomln, badge. The badges. which go on sal. The men were identified by Lin· as a surprise to them. Both Cagle mountains. tive staff attended the event. One WASHINGTON IA'I - First Lady east of Algiers. . Iad.y, bear a portrait of President Hlnch.r in honor of his long go as R. E. Chambliss, 59, and and Chambliss had been under Some Army units were In a state A unit of government infantry Charles Cagle, 22, both of the Birm­ surveillance by local and federal hundred sorority members who Jacqueline Kennedy leaves today of mutiny in Kabylie following their from Constantine in eastern Al· service al head at the Unlv.rsity. Pr.senting Mrs. Hancher with the ingham area. Both men have been agents. earned grade·point averages of 3.5 for a t wo·week vacation in Greece commander, Col. Mohand Ou EI geria parked its vehicles outside first badge ar. Clrolyn Calldy. A2, Wayne, N.b" who h.ads the active in anti-integration activities. Chambliss, a mechanic and auto or better during the 1962-63 aca­ and a cruise aboard a fabulous Hadj, who was deposed by Ben Mlchelet. The men stared lazily campul YWCA ,roup In chlr,' of bid,. sales, Ind David Marston. Chambliss and Cagle faced more repairman. has a long record of demic year were honored at the borrowed yacht. Bella as chief of the 7th military at the sharp mountain ranges cov­ 84, GI.nw ..... whose D.lta Upsilon fraternity 1.les committee will grll\ing by state agents, Lingo said. engaging in anti·integration activi­ 'banquet. Before she departs, Mrs. Ken· region. Mohand Ou El Hadj oPen· ered with light mist wblle officers be tryin, for • third straight championship in sales competition He would not comment on which ties, Sheriff Melvin Bailey said. Stuart Gray. assistant professor nedy will join the President in an . official ceremonial greeting for Iy proclaimed opposition to Ben talked to town leaders, all backers aman, houlln, units. bombings were allegedly connected Policemen restrained Chambliss in the College of Education, de· Bella. . " of the dissidents. to the two arrests, the first ever recently when he engaged in a livered a talk on "Five Steps To· Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethio­ Accj}rding to some reports, gov. In nearby Ft. National. apparent· m,de in 43 bombings since World near·brawl with a newsman at a ward Maturity." pia. ernment troops sent to stem the ly abandoned by 1 t s locally reo Hint Progressive Changes- War II. segregation rally. He also was tried Girls from Iowa honored at the While the President and his revolt evacuated 80me pQints they cruited garrison. a government When asked if the men were be· and found innocent in 1949 on a banquet were: mother. Mrs. Rose Kennedy, enter­ Kalhryn Bay, Dl( Al,ona' Nancy lain the roval visitor at a White had occupied earlier - only to re­ unit took up positions. ing held in connection with any charge of flogging. Walker, A3. Anita; Karlyn McKenzie, turn several hours later. THI TROOPS marched slowly specific bombing, Lingo said: CAGLE IS a laborer for a sales A4, Baxter; Barbara Derr, A4, Cedar House state dinner tonight. Mrs. Rapids; Nancy Files, G, Cedar Rapids; Kennedy will be on her way by Small convo~ were croSsing o-.e pilat grim, silent Berbers and set New Catholic Views "Bombings." He would not elab· and enginering company. He was Linda MorrllOn, All, Cedar Ral'lds; another and bewildered oUicers up posts near the old city waJl built oraCe. · .. • , ,,,I • Linda Rebec A4, Cedar Raplela; Bette commercial plane to Greece. arrested last June while going to a Smith, A;' Cedar Rapids; Linda Johns­ claimed they knew nothing. There by French colonizers last century. "I CAN'T say if there have been Ku 'Klux Klan rally near Tusca· ton, All, umlervllle' XlI1'en R. GIBher, Originally, MI'l!I. Kennedy was were no c1asbes between the op. The Berbers, fierce fighters in due to leave Oct. 2, but the White any more developments," tingo loosa a few days before the Uni· G/ Cha11lon; Paula Ervin, NSj Charles posing forces and the number of the war against the French, are ,Studied ' by Council said after catching a few hours versity of Alabama was desegre­ C ty; Mar/laret S. Reyno ds, A2. House announced the earlier de· native to Algerian soil, they have Charlcs CltYi.,.Sandra Clark, A; Clear government troops engaged in the VATICAN CITY IA'I - The Vatican Ecumenical Council began lhe sleep after a night· long series of gated. State officers identified Lake; Carol ... Ingraham, A4, ",linton; parture Monday and added the in· movement did not exceed 1,000. resented for years their domina· Joan M. WeUs, A} Clinton; formation that Mrs. Kennedy will work of its second phase Monday amid signs tnat the progressive, out· interrogations of several white Cagle as a Klansman and said he Sharon Cortlml;\I~, A%, Coralville; In his radio speech, Ben Bella tion by Arabs who migrated into men. was carrying a weapon. Constance HlpweU. 1.3, Correction· cruise in the Eastern Mediterran· this area of North Africa in the ward·looking attitude soughts by Popes John XXIII and Paul VI will vllJe; Myra R. Coben, G, Council ean on her vacation aboard Chris· prevail, We'll release a statement later Several other white men were Bluffs' CJ&Ire Hyman, Af, Davenport; seventb century. 011," Lingo said. questioned and released Sunday Jean Fee, A2, Denison; Lynn E. Bar­ tina, the S03-Coot floating palace The topic De Ecclesia (Concern­ rlcks A2, De s MoInes; Barbara Early, The Berbers number about 2- real, fundamental constitution." The statement probably will night by state investigators. A3, bes Moines; Lois E. Grund, A4, yacht of Greek shipping magnate million - one· fifth of the Algerian ing the Church) was put on the The original topic, of schema, come from Gov. George C. Wal· A large force of FBI bomb ex· Des Moines; Georgiana Sexauer, G, Aristotle Onassis. population. They suffered heavy Des Moines; Julle Stewart, A4, Dcs floor thoroughly rewritten from the caused criticism last year, Many lace's office, he said. Lingo gave perts has been assisting city and Moines; Charlene Stroeber, N4, Des Christina not only sports a mar. casualties in the fight Cor inde· version the 2,500 Council fathers prelates called it too academic no indication when the statement county authorities since the church Moines; Andrea Williams, G, Des ble swimming pool witb a mosaic pendence from France and live Moines; SUBan Mockrldge, A3. DeWitt; debated last December just before and rigid in tone. The more mod· might come. . bombing, which left four dead and MIchelle Gollobltz, G, Dubuque; tile floor that can be raised for throughout the Kabylie region in a nine·month council recess. ern approacn was backed up by An announcement from Wal· a score injured. Two other Negroes Brenda Lee Schnede. A2, Durant; dancing, but is well equipped with poverty. One of their chief com­ Sally Echlernacbt, G, Fort Dodge; Pat· A body of European prelates Pope John when he ordered the lace's office Sunday night had said were shot to death in the wake of rlcla BersUer, G, Fort Madison; Kar­ speedboats lor water·skiing IlIId plaints against Ben Bella is the gave the new version general en· entire slate of Council topics reo arrests were imminent and spe· the violence. men Hobbs, A2, Glidden; Sblrley Slel· even a small seaplane. post-independence economic prob­ vised. Pope Paul saw to it that ken, A2 Grundy Center; SheUa Nolan, lem afflicting the country. dorsement Monday. De Ecclesia, ------AS, Guth 11e Center; Vlrllnla Lisle, G, She will be accompanied on her considered a foundation stone of John's idea was carried out after Hastlnes; Sue Ellen Blackmer, A2, vacation trip by ner sister and Tizi Ouzou, about 55 mUes east Holstein; Mary J. Bywaler~ A4, Iowa the entire Council, takes a new ap­ his death in June. CIty; Mary F. CUek, -'!l!,. Jowa CIty; brother-in·law, Prince and .Prin­ of Algiers, is their commercial and Ruth V. Hieronymus JU, Iowa CIty; political center. proach to the way the Roman The second Council session was Southern Senators Blast Shirley Stevens, G, fowa City; Judlth cess Stanislas Radziwill. who the Catholic Church looks at its own reopened by Pope Paul Sunday in Ultermarkt, A4~Iowa City; Sharl West, White House said obtained use of G, Iowa ~1.y; JlaD\I~~N2, Jesup; structure. st. Peter's Basilica. De Ecclesia Janet Pbelps. A LKlngIiYk' Jane Ho­ the yacht for her from thei~ friend, Attend Meeting bart G, Lake CILl" Unda ay .Ralda, Onassis. Pope Paul, speaking of the topic was put before a closed Council 9J Lake View; Raleigh Levinson, A4, Conrad Stucky, assistant direc· Sunday to the Council, said: "The meeting for discussions expected to Civil Rights Commission Mason City; Joan Countryman, AS, tor of the Bureau of Business and principal concern of this session of last almost until the next recess Nevada' Dec. 4. WASHINGTON IA'I - A flood of bitter denunciation of the Civil Judith McCrea, G. Newell; Carole Economic Research, will attend the the Council will be to examine the Rights Commission by Southern members opened Senate debate Mon· g:~!o!~' ~~~!~n;~~ff!~~ttalaso!t: Community I loth Annual Conference of the Mis· intimate nature of the church and Joseph .,cardinal Frings of Co­ day on a move to give the agency a new one-year lease on life, we!'J; 'fanl R. Grafft, All, olin; :Marcia souri Basin Research and Develop­ to express in human language, so logne, Germany, said he was J. wolfe, G, Ottumwa; PboeDe He"· ment Council in Excelsior Springs, far as that is possible, a definition speaking for 65 Scandinavian and The Southerners were led by Sen. Richard B. Russell (D·Ga,), who lett,. G, PomerOYj Susan Dalen, A4, Givers Drive Mo., Oct. 7-8. that will best reveal the church's shouted, "Let it die" and said, ~:~le~~~te~a~~~:a~s'G~'R~~ German·language bishops in prais­ "Th ' h hal' , Rap/ds ' Carol MadIBon All, Sac City; ing the revised topic as acceptable IS agency as s own pre • • Establishment of a procedure Susan F. Barrlcks.. G, Sloul( City; Kath. udice that disqualifies it." b lif'ed N leen Farrell, A2, "loux CIty; Elizabeth in its pastoral and ecumenical Other phrases hurled at the com- y qua I can Randall, A3, Sioux City; Cynthia Bal- Ope'ns Today At SDC , Meeting- spirit. The group that Cardinal wh~~e egr~ Frings represents includes the mission's proposals by Southerners pet~bon for and have ~PPOJnted a ~t'.fh~~ig~~Sc~~tt; ~~.i!o~· to\'~: The annual Community Givet'll Dutch and their leader, Bernard included "cruel and inhuman" votlDg referee to regISter them ton; Gretchen L. Garlock, AAI Water. combined fund.,raising campaign in "vicious" "inflammatory and un-, .wh ere Ioc aI regIS. tra rs discruru-·, 100;Joyce JanisLemson, Graham, A4, Waterloo;A2, l'Yaterloo; Linda Iowa City, CoralviJIe and Un Iver· Jan Cardinal Alirink of Utrecht. sound." ' nate against them. A2, waterloo; Unda Stock, A4, sity Heights OpeDS With the Like Frings he is a leader of a Mast~ tod~y Outlooks Diller Sharply group of progressive bishops. The commission itself, in its last • If all else fails, congressional w~~n~PdwaDs bonored were: Barbara beginning of solicitation in the busi· 'stence, provl'ded the legislation would trim the number NuttaU, M , Welsbaden, Germany; ness and government divisions. legal day of eXI Janet oberweIsL..~4, Aurora. ruw· Patrl· is Southerners with new ambition by of members in the House of Rep. cia Newsome tK, Belleville, .; JOY The goal of the drive $93,~. making public a wbole bath of new resentatives in states in which vat- lerKaplan,G, A3,Des CbJca/lo;Plaines, Maryru.; JacquelineA. Aeger· DLawrence M sd'O T. Wade and Roberth I JFK Opens civil rights recommendations for er qualifications continue to be De l.. I. AS, Downers Grove m.; Nan· . ar en WI serve 88 co-c a r- On March on Washington Congress and the President, includ. used as a device for discrimination. cyToohlll, J. Oloae, G, Farmlnlton,G, EvanstonJ. lIl.; bl.,LJUdlth .tUIl'jorle menI teeand will khead a force of 500 ing some tough penalities. The commission also called for L_ Rudman Dx, Galesburf, Ill.; Linda vo un r wor ers. Florey, G, i.AGranee Park. m.; Carole The busm' ess and government By R08ERT HillS changes the two extreme images of himself, no World Bank AMONG THEM, the commission enactment of fair employment Mld/lard, q. Maywood, ru.; Carol I wil In til 5tlH Writer legislation will help," she added. urged that states which refuse to practices legislation for the first Faulk, A%, Mendota.!.. ru.; Nancy Berl- campa gns I cont ue un Oct. . . fed sten, 0\4, MOline, ill.; Susan Jaenbs, 8 and 9. SUI employes will be Sharply contrasting views of the Aug. 28 march SPIAKING OF THE Kennedy Administration's grant Negro voting rights be pen· time. And It recommended eral A2, Park Ridge, 1Il.; Sharon Graham, asked to contn'bute on Oct 10. TIle With Pledge ' th ' ber pressure to desegregate school dis. A2, Quincy, Ill.; Nancy R. Little, Dx, on Washington, ranging from pride In a "first step" proposed civil rights legislation, David Peterson, a II Zed by 5 lashJOg elf mem . Quincy, 1lI .; DIane Majerus, G, QUInc7.' drive will conclude with campaip to shame in its "watered.

No matter what YOUl ta te in badge buying may be, • r however, we do suggest you buy one today. They may out by tomorrow and you'd be out of luck. If you don't have a hole in your shirt, do us a favor - 'Bfink of Life' examines the viewer, too pretend YOll do. -Jon Van By RAY PRESTON through those doors th an Ingmar Bergman 's actor­ I WENT ALONG for awhile expecting the film their answers takes her first hard-won step into life. Iowan Film Critic subjects can wriggle out from under his relentlessly to say something abo ut motherhood and the birth THE PERSON IN the most dangerous posilion THE IRINK OF LIFE. Directed by Ingmor Berg· of babies and discovered three grown women on m.n. lowl Theater Ihrough lonlghl. patient camera lens. Exactly like a butterfly pinned is the naively healthy Miss DahLbeck. Bergman is The ward doors swing open and in you go. you, the brink of life. Each of the women had her own abLe to force the other two women to work through Food for Russians: to a board, the lens stabs the subject to the hos­ brand of well-worked-out, simple life before she the camera. and Ingrid Thulin on a hospitaL stretch­ life to an honest result. In Miss Dahlbeck's case pital bed until the complete examination is over. went under Bergman's lens. Ingrid Thulin is an there is no complexity to fall back on and work er ... in you go to Dr. Bergman's laboratory. The You can feel the force on the subject as she is doctor then examines and operates on three preg­ intellectual with sound reason that ex<:ludes blood with. She had made her life simple and easy. When pressed closer and closer to Bergman's essential and pulse. She has understood and ordered th e facts Bergman presents her with a first·class experience food for thou'gnf nant women and you. the viewer. Eigbty minutes questions. The patient wriths and squirms. scream­ later the ward doors again swing open and you are of her life so carefully she is able to effect an she can do nothing but lie in a stupor unable to THE QUESTION WHETHER or not to help fill the ing to be let free. And every time the patient comes intellectual miscarriage. (The third woman fail s released. helped in some degree, the doctor hopes. begin to understand what has happened to her. She up with an easy answer. a cheap solution to life. with the ordinary equipment: brandy, quinine. and Sovi t Union's need for wheat is one which has to be It's rough going in that clinic. for aIL of us. has no ground on which to begin life. Bergman jams his lens even closer for a more jump rope. ) Eva Dahlbeck is deluded with a robust One scene of Miss Dahlbeck's was especially sig­ During the examination you can no more escape treated by the experts as political as well as economiC. exacting look at the problem. quite·all-rightness that leaves most things up to nificant for me. She lies on the delivery table her The need of millions of human beings of whatever faith. With a flawless husband and a home of love feet slung high in shiny chrome stirrups. doctors she must become the perfect mother; but. 1i£e is stand helplessLy by in unnatural glaring Light, and political complexion for food, 110wever, tends to transcend denied her baby. (The only thing needed to com­ for thirty minutes Miss Dahlbeck goes through the both economics and politics. For thiS' reason public re­ plete her life,) The reason for this? None. The sci­ most horribly poinful dclivcry ] can imagine. She entists are at a loss for explanation; everything sponse to it begins at a very human - and at a humane - . just lies there and acts. Truly an incredibLe piece was in order. birth shouLd have been a matter of of work. I submit that this scene might serve for level of thinking. course, th e expected thing. All they can offer is. Bergman as a microcosm of the experience of life. The recent Canadian-Russian wlleal agreement got a in this case "life was denied." All of this material in the hands of anyone but Bibi Anderson. the third woman, is younger and Ingmar Bergman must resu lt in classic soap-opera. much better press than it might have received before the has no interest in committing herself to life in any This film is handled in true documentary style. United States and the Soviet Union had reached an under­ manner. She is unmarried and only wishes to kill there is none of the sawdust and tinsel, the theatri­ ; ~ . the life in her body. But being younge. she bas the cal wizardry which made him famous. With this standing about nuclear testing. And it is i~ ' th~ imp~~ved advantage of not having her life carefully worked film Bergman proves that he doesn't need his tricks political climate of the test ban that the United Sta'tes out as deftly as the others. She carefully watches and fireworks to make an important, compelling itself is considering overtures by Soviet buyers for $200 the tragedy of the olher two women and rejecting statement. million worth of wheat. ~ Perhaps the time has come when the West's political The Ralph McGill column- strategy would be better served by a careful revival of some of the American attitudes of Marsha1l' Plan days - , attitudes which might have preoluded some features of the lane of Eternal Stability' Cold War had not Moscow refused' to accept, ?t to per-. ,. mit small countries on its borders to accept, aid. a good history teacher It is apparent today that the Soviet Union. beseiged on other fronts than those of the Cold War - by Commu­ By RALPH MeGilL. talked with Mayor Wu in Chung­ and even Japan moved in to win During Chiang Kai·shek·s war· king and somehow one had never a war, take Formosa. and be· nist Chinese pressures, and by a food failure at home - time months in Chungking the thought of him as a novelist. But come a concession power. needs things quieter on its western front. It needs more, mayor of that sprawling, crowded and kaleidoscopic city of hills and he is. and this is a good one, SUN YAT·SEN came just be· namely aid from its former alUes. caves was K. C. Wu. He was especially for lhose who are inler­ fore the century turned. It was ested in things Chinese. Shall this aid be offered only on such exacting terms known then as the Jim Farley of inevitable that some of the young Chinese politics THE NOVEL has a wide sweep, men who dutifuly had worn their as to ' suggest a demand for "unconditional surrender" by and was an ami­ dealing wilh the fir st half of this pigtails. and who had never ques· the Russian opponent? Or shall it become another meas­ 'able gentleman century. The characters are well tioned fili al piely and loyalty to with a huge fund drawn and are alive to the read­ the dynasty should learn about ure fbr damping down a cold war that the male extreme of 5 tor i e s, a er. The web of Chinese revoLu­ the new ideas and should dream, ready s mil e, tionary politics is not too tightly Communists in the Far East seem to want to see fanned too, of making their country tru· and an infecti­ drawn and there is a fascination ly independent and meaningful. into flames of an Eut·West conflict, and especial1y an ous laugh. After in following the slow unfolding of lhe war ended the student activities and the Novelist Wu uses the uncompli· American-Soviet one? cated framework of a family ... he was. for a growth of a free China concept. three generations of it, around That is a central question. And it may prove to be the while, mayor of The cynicism and corruption of which to tell his story. There is Shanghai. When the right and left wing groups are governing one. even a convincing American mis­ the roof fell in on Chiang in the convincingly presented through sionary doclor on the street of -The Christian Science Monitor Corm of a Communist victory. Mr. characters involved in them . All Eternal Stability and he is a con­ Wu became governor of Formosa. and all, it is a good story that venient figure about which lo Later he broke wilh Chiang and teach es history in its fictionized reLate the conflict wilh American came to the United Stales. personalilies. One. of course. en­ policies and decisions. This is a meager background gages in the game of identifying to a new novel titled. wilh a cer­ some of lhese. Chou En-Iai and It is a good. fat novel, with 111~'Dail!J ' To·w'on lain irony. "The Lane of Eternal others who 1V0rked to bring Mao plenty of love inleresl. secret so· 'Somehow, this campaign just doesn't Stability." It has been man y a Tse-tung to power are in lhe cieties, intrigue and action. It TM DIMly IIJII)QII " tDI1fteII tJn4 edII«I ~ duden&I mI4 " g~ b!l. year since one had drunk tea and pages of Mr . Wu's novel. And. of may well end up in Hollywood. hoCIfd of ~0fI dtuI..V Iruiwa .Jm«i by tM dtuIenI body Gild tou, have th, old zing' course, some of il inevitably is But il does remind us very firmly that all the lanes of eternal sta­ '""'"'"",...,«1", tlat prllkUrrt of cM UmomIty. TM Dally Iowan', OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN autobiographical. «i/tofidl poUcy II me ...... of SUI admillim/ltlon polq at bilily which, in 1900. seemed so In the inland town of Yi there firmLy based as never to change. ~ .. IIIIf potfIlIUW. was a street called "The Lane of are gone. along with the lane in University Bulletin Board University Eternal Stability." There was the city of Yi. The old ideals and Publl .... r ...... 1 ....nI ... 1\1"" such a street in fact. It serves MIMa•• Edlto, .. _...... _.. D•• " Mill. Unlftl'lHy Ivlletln ...rd notfc .. must be rtcllvg •• Th. Dilly low.n .:.Hlc •• Room 201 Communlc.­ customs will have no validity for A"DIT .U..... U Mlnagln. Idlto, .... • Iry Ipu,.... n lions Clnll' by noon of Ihe d.y before publication. Th.y mu. be tr,PId .M siting by an .dvl.. , Calendar admirably as a symbol and a th e young if they have become 01' City .d"or ...... C... '.mer 0, offlc.r 01 the or.lllllilion being publicized. Purely socl.1 funct ons .r. not 11I.lblo for this warning. The Lane of Eternal CI.CULATION. NeWS Edlto'...... rlc l!ltCkler lMlion. merely shells of somelhing long lportl .cII'o, .. .. H.rrl.tt HlndllUln Vil'UANI: Each student under THE "TOOL" IXAMINATION! In Thursll'a.Y: 8 '.m.·IO p.m.; Friday and Stability connoled fixed beliefs - since dead, signifying merely a • dllo,111 P... Id/tor...... ,Jon V.n. PL550 or PL634 must sign a form statistics will be gIven In a room Saturday: 8 a.m.·S p.m.. 7·10 p.m. Tuesday, October 1 by centuries oLd and regarded as im­ ritual repealed over and over . PubIIabe4 Student PUb1lCaU-. Chllf ..hot ..r .....' .. J .. L\rIIIIIKI, to cover hi. attend.nce Sept. 19-30. to be announced laler beglnnlllg at (ReNnoe only); Sunday: 2·5 pm., 7· Beginning of the Iowa Labor mutable. They were the basic IDe..• COIIIIIIuntatl_ C.Dter. Iowa All'. Cit, .d"o" The lo.m will be av.llable In ~ 1 p.m. 00 Wednesday Oct. U. stu· 10 p.m. (Reserve ollly •. Photodupll· It 's good to have the mayor of City, lowi. dally except S1illUJ and UnIversity Hall on Oct. I from 8:30 dents expecUnll to ta~~ thIs exam- cation: Monclay-Frldl!Y: 8 a.m.·5 p.m.; Law refresher course - Union. virtues of Confucian society. Chief MooclaT, ••d lepl. boll..,.. Entered Jolin L.wlrnl .M Nadine Godwin the old-China Chungking, the Jim Alit. SIIOrts Editor ...... Jim Pi..... a.m. 10 noon and I /ldll. to 4:30 p.m. Inatlon sboulcl nollly the secretary. Monday·Thursday: $-10 p.m.; Salur- Friday, October 4 omong them were fili al pi ety. .... _d-dul matter .t tbe po.( AlIt. PlItt.. , ...., .... 1M oN4Iadeli ?.Jf.J) .. 301 UDlverslly Hall, Oct. 2. ' clay: 10 a.m. ulIIU 0000, 1·5 p.m,; Farley or his cou ntry'S early po. .me. .t Ina CIt)' unclei' tbe Act ...... rtilin. DIrector . . I", ...... n ITUDEIU: :,."'...... , '10 a 1963 Sunday: 2.s p.m . 7:30 p.m. - Demonstration for loyally and inlegrity. But, alas. 01. Concreu 01. Ilafth J, 1m Iilics , with us as a literary man. Allv.rtlslnz-nl.. r ' " Dkk •••• n H.wkeye ~wlto.f .•" J . ' et picked I THI "TOOL" EXAMINATION In mixed couples bowling League ~ change came to China. The old Cla.HIt4I • .. • C•• hy rrllChe...... uro thelt, boots ··a ...• 'ur, to do .80 economics wUJ be gtven tn a room INTER.VARSITY CH R 1ST I A N (Olllributed un Asst. CI ... eIf,.r, ... . Alon kotolc ~. EIWbiel sW.d.ents are those to be announced la1er beginning at 'IiLLOWIHIP. an Interdenomlna. Union Penta crest Room. dowager queen had become more by The HIli Syndlcatl, Inc.) DIal 7-41t1 fre. IIDOD to IIIldDlcbt to 1 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 8. Students Ilona I noup of studonts. meets report DeWi "-. W01ll0n'1 ~,. NtI'I . ... d •. MIIr ...... G'N lpurgeon r Who ppreliosed books and seniors Saturday, October 5 mylh than rulel·. (All Rights RuerYld. IIaiIDe and lII_nta to The Adv. ConSufNM .... De""" IInnInt who _r~ graduaud during 1963. expecllng to take Ihls e.amlnatlon every ' Tuesday In the East Lobby Football - Washington Univer­ DiU, low... EdIIor1aJ oftu. an III Adv. Phot ....."..r . .. . • on IIKllta TlIe books are avaU8blAl at 201 Com· should notify the secretary, 201 Conference Room of the UnIon to We forget, in lh ese days of lhe tile c-atunlelUou CeDter. Clrcul.tlon Mgr•...... Jim Collier ' munlcatlOni Center from 8:30 a.m. 10 University Hall, by Oet. I . consider various topiCS of general sity. cold war and of the ideologicol Tru ...... nI of ltullttlt, 'uba. 4:30 p.m., Mondoy through Friday. Inter.at, AU pe cordially InvIted to Or So They Say RHO DES SCHOLARSHIPS for attend. 8:30 p.m. - Union Board Post­ struggles al'ound the gLobe, that ...... Inc.: Niner C. Sbl!!n, A4; study at Oxford are offered to CONTIMPOU.Y DANCE CLU8 Football Dance - Union Riv er China had losl a small WI1r to Martlee R. Teecen A3; Lee S. Thel· tryoQuta wUJ be held Tuesday and JunIors, senlora and grad~ate .iu­ PA •• N" COOPIUTIV. 8AIY. Diplomats have been gallantly len... Lil Alan J. Touch, A4; Larry Wednesday (Oct. 1 and 2. at 7:30 dent. In all fields. Nominations for, IITTIN. LEAGUE - Tho. e In· Room. Great Britain in 1840·42. It was tipping thcir hats and exuding Old D. nevil, AS' Prof. Dale M. Belli.. p.m. In lbe Mlrro. Room ai the Wo­ thIs ye.r'. competition must be terested In membership should call Miss SUI Pageant Board var­ UDiverl1ty Llbrlry; Dr. Geor,1 S. mlde 10 mJd.()ctober, and potenllal called the Opium War and it does World glamor for generations, and Euton'. Colle,. of Dentillry; Prof. men', Gym. The IIroup Is open to Mn. V.n Alt. at 7-5348 or dealrin, iety show. all men and women. E.perlcnce Is candldales are askeo to confer at Ilttert call II.... Daniel Hili at 8-51~. not make a good chapter in lhe In the process mankind has been LulIe G. lleell.r, SchlOl of JoUrnal­ once with Profe680r Dunlap, IOI·B Sunday, October 6 \mI; PrOf. Lauren A. V.n Dyke, Col- not necessary. (10·2) affairs oC civilized men. Ameri­ pushed to the edge of the abyss. S.B .. Exl. 2173. (10·19. IOWA MIMO.IAL UNION HOURI: 7 le,e of EduuUon. • .... YSlTTIItS may be obulned by p.m. - Union Board Movie - cans were too e molionally What statesmanship needs is the WOMIN" RIC.EATIONAL IWIM­ Cafeleria open 11 :30 a.m.·1 p.m. "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" - Mac­ Dial 7-4191 If )'01. 4IJ not reeelYe your call1ni the YWCA office dunna lbe Monday-Saturday; 5·6:45 p.m.. Mon· aroused in 1856-58 wilh the idiocy good sense to dea LeffectivelY with Dalb 10wID b; 7:30 a.m. The Dilly aflernoon at x%240. MING wUJ be available .·5:15 p.m. day.Frlday) 11:30 a.m.·I:30 p.m., Sun­ bride Auditorium. of entering a long and bloody civil Iowan elreul.Uon oUt.. In the Com· Monday lbrou,h Friday It th~ Worn· d&)t. Gold Feather Room open 7 such dominant human realities as munlcaUODI canter Ia open from • CH.IITIAN ICIINCE ORGANIZA· en's Gym pool for studeoU. .taif Thursday, October 10 war to pay mu ch aUention to a aod !acuity wl\lel. a.m.-l0:45 p.m .• Mo.nday.Thursday; 7 hunger, freedom, the bomb. The .... to a p.m. lloa~ tbrou,b FrI. TION hold, a testimony meelln, a.m.·11:45 p.m., Friday; 8 a.m.·11 :45 7 p.m. - Dolphin Show begins war against Chi na by France and -.r u' from. to 10 a.m. SaturdaY. e.ch Thunday aiternoon In the little pm. Saturd&)t; 1·/0:45 p.m. Sunday. deft touch there ; that's the thing. MMe-,ood ..moe on milled poPel's chapel 0( lbe COngregational Ohurch, UNIVERSITY LIBRARY HOUR.: ltecreaUon are. open 8 am.·ll p.m. - Field House pool. Great Britain. UnW the Second The hat can wait. Ia nM 1IOIIIble, but .""" eUon will comer of Clinton and Jefferson MOnday.FrldAY: 7:30·2 a.uf.i IUtur. J' MOn;ay.Tbund&)t; 8 a.m.·J2 mid· 8 p.m. - Art film s of China - World War foreign countries reaL. -The Adami be m.... to eorreet erron with u­ Street'II' : l~ p ... All a~e wcl~me day: 7:30 a.m.·IO p.m.; Sunoay: 1:30 .!,I,ht, Frld&)t awl SatW'day. 2·11 Dut 1IIu. to atteWd: ' • - p.m.·2 '.m. Service Dellu; MOnd'y, p.lII. llUJldjy, MaCbride Auditorium. jy ran the "busIness of China." (N,Y.) Jtfftrlon COllllty Joumtl

I ~ I • , . " I" • I IQueen of Hearts'- Eye Ban~ ' .,, ~d Dfiiv8: Starts fllerguson Bana To Play lst the ~ it the Here Sunday ~ ld not i he is Iowa City'S Lions Club and Ama­ At Homecoming Dance fellow teur Radio Club will join forces Maynard Ferguson and his orchestra, often Maynard Ferguson, often called the "young B prac. Sunday in a drive to sign new don­ called the "band with the big sound," will perform man wUh the golden born" or the '''Boy with lots . lim ita· ors for the fowa Lions Eye Bank oC Brass," is already a trumpet·playlng legend. Depart. for the "Queen or Hearts" Homecoming dance in at SUI Hospitals. Sunday is the Jazz polls state that he has bridged the ,ap ,by ~ s. An4 the Union Oct. 12. opening day of National Eye Bank The dance, presented by the Central Party finding acceptance among jazz purists as well as Week. Committee, will be from 8 to 12 p.m. in the Main among the dancing crowds who like jan slightly A neet of cars equipped with two­ Lounge. diluted. Lovers oC jazz call this his split musical way radios will operate throughout Ferguson and his group of 12 musicians, includ­ personality. the city rrllm 2 to 5 p. m. bringing ing Ru[us Jones on the drums, are rated among the Jazz experts comment that he stresses the mel· (lards to donor's homes for sign· top four dance bands in latest Downbeat Magazine ody Cor dancing but underscores it with a heavy ing. Members oC the Radio Club, jazz poll. dose of improvisation. Furthermore, he keeps the dance rhythm intact but empathicatiy surrounds it and possibly some ham radio op­ Ferguson was also rated high in music pop­ with a pattern that is "solid modern jazz." Moe/s New erators from surrounding towns, ularity contests at SUI last year and has been New Eagle Store constantly in demand on college circuits across the Tickets for me event will go on sale Oc:t. 8 at will operate the radio network. Li­ country. His group is always booked many months the Union Information Desk, the Campus Record Liturgy ons Club members will ride in the in advance. "Swingin My Way Through College," Shop, and Whetstone's Drug. Price per couple will Sung cars to provide neceSsary notary MAYNARD FERGUSON To Be Built Here public services. is one of Ferguson's latest records. be $5.00. His Big Sound Is Coming By Students . Donors pledge that their eyes Construction of a new Eagle Food Center in Iowa City was an· may be used following death lor nounced Monday by Bernard Weindruch, president of the Eaele firm . Dr. Daniel Moe, director of SUI's the resoration of sight in persons Writers Workshop The new store will be located on the northeast corner of North Dodge University Choir and Oratorio who can benefit from corneal trans­ and Church Streets. Chorus, Sunday led CjJristus House plant operations. Almost 11,000 To. Aid in Home Weindruch said the Eagle man· will be used throughout the sales members in singing a ontempo.. Iowans have pledged their eyes to agement conducted a study of the Iowa Lions Eye Bank and more Study Course Iowa City's growth and progreso area. Sections will be surrounded rary litUrgy that he set 10 music. than 240 corneal transplant opera­ sive attitude. "Iowa City was with wide and spacious aisles. This new service of worship for tions have been performed at Uni· With starf members of SUI Writ· chosen for a new Cood center be· The architect's design for the in· Holy Communion was commissIon· versity Hospitals. ers Workshop serving as teacher· cause of the healthy business eli· terior will make it easy for the critics, two new home·study cour­ ed for the National "Ashram" of HAM RADIO equipment at the ses in poetry writing will be of· mate and the vigorous growth in customer to identify and locate the Veterans Administratipn Hospital this area," he commented. various departments. The entire the Lutheran Student Associ tion of fered by Britannica Schools divi­ America held in WiscollSin in Au­ will be used as the central station "The new store is designed wilh store will be departmentalized by sion of the Encyclopedia Britannica gust. Sunday's singing "8 th' fir.t for the donor Card drive. Persons Press, Inc., oC Chicago. fore~hought to give the people of using wood paneling, wall paper of many campus performances to who wish to sign cards should call lhe community an enjoyable en. and lighting. Large aisle direc· follow. the Veterans Hospital, 8-0581, be· The new elementary course, Po· vironment in which they can shop tories will help customers find the tween 2 and 5 p. m. etry Writing. is divided into 10 les· Cor oulstanding food values in na- various food sections. The text for the liturgy was wIit· sons, with each assignment pre­ tionally advertised and local brand Eagle will feature produce at the ten by the Rev. John Arthur, (orm· Calls coming into lhe central sented in three parts: reading, stu· names," Weindruch said. front of the store. The dairy depart- er campus minister at Stanford switchboard or the Veterans Hos· dy questions, and writing. Covered "IOWA CITY is moving ahead, menl will be easily distinguishable University. pilal will be routed to extension in the course are such aspects as and we are proud to be a part of by a barn effect created by use of Moe noted that the liturgy "gath­ phones opera led by volunteers. the subject malter oC poetry, the Iowa Cily of tomorrow," he rough boards, and will have a 32· ers momentum" and finally ends They will relay the names and ad· rhythm, poetic structure, metaphor, added. foot long self·service display case. on a note of rejoicing. He said that dress of the donor to the central symbol and image, tone, sound, by radio operator who will contact lhe Slacks The 138 by 120 Coot building will The store's department will (ea· "liturgy is all of life. We must verse forms, revision and evalua· move out into it and live it." radio·equipped car closest to the tion of poetry. have 11 ,000 square fect of shopping ture pre-packaged meats, trimm ed address of the Oonol'. @ Drea. Seven checkout counters will of excess bone and Cat before Dr. Moe, who did his graduate The advanced course offers ex· insure efficient service. The Eagle weighing. Meat men will be on WOrk in music at SUI and an as· Iowa City Lions Club and Radio perienced poets individual and de­ i is designed [or maximum shop· hand at all times to cut meat to sociate professor oC choral music, Club officials said they hoped club tailed criticism through on-going 1\eawooA Ross ping convenience. customer's specifications. has composed many sacred choral members in other Iowa cities "confe~nces by correspondence," The one·story masonary building Eagle will (eature a complete works which have been widely per· could plan similar donor card similar to the techniques employed A will feature the most modern and line of baked goods and a large (ormed by college, high school, and drives during Eye Bank Week. The ill two earlier home·study courses campus up to·dale architectural design and frozen (ood department. The new church music groups. two gtoups in Fairfield cooperated in fiction writing oerered by Britan. in a drive in tbe spring which in· nica Schools and utilizing the ex· tradition. construction materials. The build· food center will offer a complete His present liturgy was commis· Faultlessly tailored ing's facade incorporates stone ag- selection o( all foods and minor creased the number of pledges in perience of the Iowa Writers Work· " sioned by the Division. of College lhat city hy 34 pc:: cent. shop slarr. . , of Glilley & Lord's Square-ply gregate panels in the front design household needs. and University Work of the Nation­ • wilh accent lighting shining on it. Public restrooms, air condition­ al Lutheran Council which also Pledge cDrds can always be ob· Dacron· polyester and cotton. tained through local Lions Clubs NEW BOOKLET A porcelain enamel canopy along ing, automatic exit and entrance sponsors Christus House. '~ I ... New Fall tones or by writing to the Iowa Lions A new booklet, "Guidelines for the lengtb of the glass front will doors, all· weather vestibule and Employee Training," is now avail· : neutrals. $7.95 parcel pick·up station will be in· The liturgy is to be published by Eye Bank, General Hospital, SUI. . ;/' _, IInd,the c\a~ic serve both as an eye·appealing dec· the Lutheran Student Association of able through SUI's Bureau of La· oration and a protection (or cus­ c1uded as customer conveniences bor and Management. and safety features. A large aU· America and ready Cor general tomers entering and leaving the Skit Practice Today ~-- weather parking lot will be illum· church and group use by January, slore. 1964. Plastic faced, fluorescent·lighted inated at night. Skit rehearsals for the Miss SUI SUGAR 'N' SP ICE .. ~'·.- Git.y. ~torJ Presentation will begin at 5 p. m. sign panels spelling "Eagle" will The new Cood center will be fin­ BAKE SHOPPE ished early next year. Eagle's To Attend Council today in the River Room oC the accent the building Cront. Multi· Union. colored pennants will fly from flag personnel department will be in CAKE DECORATING 1401 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 18, N. Y. A Division oC B1trlin~tbll Industries poles situated along the edge of Iowa City prior to opening to begin Representatives Crom 11 Midwest The presentation will be Saturday I PH. 338.5646 @ the building. hil'ing local people to operate the universities were meeting Monday at 7:30 p. m. in the Main Lounge 911 First Ave, V. A lighted, revolving identifica· store. and today at Racine, Wis. to dis· oC the Union. tion sign on 3d-foot pylons will be Eagle Food Center is a subsid­ cuss productivily and economic v~iiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii placed on the cornel'. iary of Consolidated Foods Corpor· growth in the midwest. The con· I .;'_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii" THE INTERIOR will be com· ation of Chicago. The company, ference opened Sept. 30. S 25 % pletely modern in design with soft with executive offices and ware­ Attending Crom SUI arc ProOf. B. ave 0 pastel colors in subdued tones uscd house in Milan, III., operates 120 L. Barnes, dean oC the College oC on floors and walls. A combination Eagle and Piggly Wiggly Food Business Administration, and Prof. Kalonial of suspended fluorescent and reo Centers and May's Drug Stores in Lewis E. Wagner, director 01 tb On All Record Albums cessed incandescent lighting fix· eastern Iowa, northern Illinois and Bureau of Business and Economic Town House and Cafe lures will be used to accepl depart­ southern Wisconsin. Research. SEND 25c FOR COMPLETE CATALOG ments. In the H.lrt of the AmIsh Community I Attractive vinyl asbestos flooring CAMPUS DISC CLUB G.nuine Amilh Cooking, Flmlly Style. P.O. BOX 183, CORAL GABLES, FLA., 331-34 Enloy taatrj dishes prepared by Amish People with Unless you 11006 eotell here yo" ME ha oe seen notiling of ils kiml. You Krapf To Play FOR COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES ONLY your choice of meat, including Char-Br()/led Steak and qctually get marc delicious food chicken. Only our best is served. You will be delighted than you can eat for a very reasOIl­ with the atmosphere. able price. Air conditioning If an Bach Fugue oc/liell extra. Gerhard Krapf, associate profes· DRY CLEANING SPECIAL Open Monday through Saturday from in Downtown SOl' of music, will play Johann Se· 5 to 8:30 p.m. No Sundays bastian Bach's "Die Kunst der Fuge" ("The Arl of Fugue") in an • Tuesday - Wednesday Kalona, Iowa organ recital Friday at 8: 15 p. m. DIAL 656·2514 for Reservations Tlk, Hwy. 1, S.W. in the First Methodist Church i,n Iowa City. Like "The Well·Tempered Clav· ier." "The Art of Fugue" belongs to the category of Bach's well-or· CLOTH c dered musical universe which are EACH built as one piece with almost su­ 99 per·human craftsmanship. It is the COATS most introspective art work of the entire Baroque era, consisting of fourteen fugues and four canons, all built on the same lheme, em· ploying all the devices oC strict 9~VIS CLEANERS coullterpoint, and centering around lhe single key of D minor. 1 South Dubuqu. Hours: 7:30 A.M. ·5:30 P.M. Unfortunately, the engraving was not complete at the time of Bach's death in 1750, and the early edi· tions were hopelessly scrambled. DRESSY FLATS Few musicians of thal time, the INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL superficial age of the Rococo, were inclined to delve inlo this compli. TO GO cated score, which they considered pedantic, overly demanding and un· com[ortable. martha ~ Beaut';! Salon ANYWHERE Professor Krapf is a graduate of the Offenburg Gymnasium, the Karlsruhe Hochshule fur Musick, QO ANYTIME Dnd holds a master of music de· SAV-E $2 gree Crom the University of Red· lands, . From 1950·53 with KrapC was supervisor of church on any permanent music in the state o( Baden, Ger­ (includes cost of haircut) Complete Comfort many, also conducting oratorio per· formances in the area. Here's deodorant grotection With This Introduction To In this country he has laught at Northwest Misouri State College, Joanne Maryville, and at the University of Wyoming, Laramie, where he YOU CAN TRUST Marilyn served as head oC the department & of organ and theory. Describing "The Art or Fugue" . Old Spice Stick Deodorant. .. lasted, nealest waY' to all· J"di and their excellent styling as "fantastic - the sum total of day. every day protection! It's the man's deodorant pre· (limited time only) Bach's musical thought," Krapf ex· plained thai the work "shuns every ferred by men ... absolutely dependable. Glides on The Wizard with the Scissors cheap virtuoso effect. It is com· smoolhly, speedily .•• dries in record lime. Old Spice Slick MARTHA pact, cosmological, and as are· Deodorant - most convenient, most economical deodorant Specializing in Haircutting Only sull, brilliant!" money can buy. 1.00 plualax. DIAL 8·3113 for Appointment FOR AN IOWA COLLEGE- / " I. WASHINGTON 1m - The Com· .,.." .. /?jJ~J -@., ~ STICK I " munily Facilities Administration marlha ~ Beauly Salo~ Monday announced approval of a tf,la DEODORANT SIZES 5J~ to 10 loan of $400,000 to Northwestern aIm l . 23 South Dubuque CoUege at Orange City, iowa, for Narrow or Medium Widths constru ction of a residence haU SHUL.TON Follow the Pink Walk to Hair Styling Excellence and student union...... -~ ..~ ... --

State University o~ Iowa LJBHAH1ES R.C.A. 16" PORTABLE T.V.'s . REGIS,TER TUESDAY REGISTER WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY DRAWING WEDNESDAY , DRAWING FRIDAY

REGISTER FRIDAY & SATURDAy RIGISTER SUNDAY & MONDAY DRAWING SUNDAY DRAWING TUESDAy

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FIRST OF . THE WEEK SPECIALS GOOD c TUESDA Y - WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY TILL NOON LB. . FRUIT FILLED KOLACHES f MORRELL'S VALU FULLY COOKED BUTT PORTION Li.49!' MORRELL'S VALU FULLY COOKED . c CENTER SLICES La. 69' EACH

PORK LAMB SHOULDER STEAK . lb. 59~ TENDERETTES . . . . . lb. 59' • • • WHITE-SLICED

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HY·YEE INDIYIDUAL WRAPPED SLICED PEACH ES CANS WITH EACH POUND PACKAGE AMERICAN CHEESE •OI. PKG.29c HY.YEE HY·YEE HALVE , •••••••• MORRELL PRIDE GORTON'S FROZEN : 25 : FRUIT COCKTAIL ... 4 ~:~~ 89c PEARS...... 3 ~:~~ 89c • EXTRA.• BREADED SHRIMP 'P~!: 49c • FREE • : STAMPS: •••••••• BACON HY·YEE HY·YEE MALVI HY·YEE PRUNE JUICE...... :~~ZE 39c APRICOTS ...•.... 4 ~:~~ 89c GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS 3~~~~ 89c

C HY·YEE HY·YEE FANCY HY·YEE LB. PKG. .. 59. BUTTER BEANS .... 2 ~~~25c GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ....46 c~~ 39c CRANBERRY SAUCE 2 ~:~~ 39c HY·YEE HY·YEE . , HY·YEE BLUIt LAKE CHUNK TUNA ..... 3 '~A:;' 89c (S At TALL $ A PAKAGUS .... 4cAHS 1.00 ~UT GREEN BEANS 5~:~~ $1.00 HY·YEE HY·YEE PURE OLEO ..... ',' ... 5c~~;~Ns$1.00 Strawberry Preserves !:Z. 49c t!Y:YEE +tY.YEE CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEl. PORK & BEANS 5";.; $1.00 'GOLDEN CORN . . . . . 3~:~~ 49c GELATIN DESSERT .. 3 ::xGes 25c HY·YEE FRENCH DRESSING .. .!~~I! 29c HY·YEE . HY·YEE PEAS ...... 3 ~:~~ 49c TOMATOES ...... 3 ~~~~ 49c HY.YEE SALAD OIL ...... I~~~~ 49c HY -VEE FANCY HY·YEE ALL PURPOSE FLOUR 5I~!. 45c 46 oz. $ CANS MY·YEE TOMATO ' JUICE FOOD STORES FACIAL TISSUE 5_'::'NT $1.00 THE DAILY IOWAN-lowl City, low_TutsdlY, Oct. 1, ".S-t'_ s -~- ~

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RICHELIEU DEL MONTE FANCY WESTERN DRESSING 81~T~~E 49c 14 OZ. RICHELIEU STEMS & PIECES CATSUP MUSHROOMS . . . . 3 ~AO:S $1.00 --Page '-THE DAilY IOWAN-Iowa City, Iowa-Tuesday, Oct. I, 19&3

Koufax, in Series Opener ' ~ (n For(J"M~et a~ ,. • I , A Uve will interviey N.Y./s Mantle, Maris Ready; dents im serve. 11 Captain: U.S. available Dodgers' McMullen Iniured in the II Can Reclaim Room. EW YORK (AP) - Ra lph Houk picked Whitey Ford and AI Downing to pitch the first two games and Davis Cup Kan gave Jim B uton, his third starler, a workout Monday while Prof. I LONDON -Bob Kelleher. non· of the ( the were flyi ng in for Wednesday's open­ playing captain of the U. S. tennis partmen er at Yankee Stadium. team, said Monday he thought his commit! , the Dodgers' "but it got so embarrassing that I men have a Cine chance of winni ng tcd the ace who will face Ford in had to take him out. " back the Davis Cup from Australia. p~trick . a most-important baUle of len- THE STADIUM WILL be a new The Americans - Chuck McKln· nee~ing . handers in the opener, was bother- experience to most of the Dodgers ley, Frank Froehling and Dennis ~e ed by a slight cold. Manager Wal· but not to , their part Ralston - whitewashed Britain. o\h~'i ye ler Alston had planned to give his time first baseman. The Moose, a 5-0. at Bournemouth last week in best COl 25-game winner a short trial run in Yankee in seven Series, will be at the inter-zone finals. They next merit of relief of in the regu- flfSt base ins tead of play India for the right to chal· tries anc lar season finale but passed him up when they face Ford in tae opener. lenge the Australians. professi( because Koufax was feeling sub Skowron had an off year, hitting "I have said all a l o n ~ that the par. only .203 with only (our I horners wi nners of the mQteh in Bourne· . c; , the Dodgers' and 19 runs batted in. Most of the SANDY, KOU, FAX WHITEY FORO mouth might well mean the tro· fine bullpen stopper, also was feel- lime he played second fiddle to phy," Kelleher said. ing a bit shaky from the flu bug. Fairly. Two of the Malor Leagues' Best "We went in against Britain feel· TH E SE RIES COU LD hinge on Houk surprised nobody by his ing confident. I shall feel the same the outcome of the Ford-Koufax announcements before the workout. l optimism when we meet Australia opener. If Sandy beats the cool Downi ng, a 22-year-old lefty, was - that is, if we beat India fi rst." Yankee veteran who always is at sensational after he was recalled Indians Pitching -~oach British critics spent the week­ ' ... and Then Throw That Ball' his best in October, Dodger hopes end looking for superlatives to de· will brighten. In a best-of-7 series from the Richmond farm club in scribe McKinley, the agile star Iowa Coach Jerry Burns give, I.st socond instruc­ Snook lofted the pig skin 4S yards against the wind with a day off for travel after the June. He wound up with a 13-5 from San Antonio, Tex. He was tions to sophomore quarterb.ck Gary Snook be· to halfback P. ul Krause. who was pushed out-of­ second and fifth games, the first record, a 2.56 ea rned run average Fired; Wynn Employed hailed as the star of the match. for. send ing Snook in to execute Iowa's last des­ bounds as the gun soundt d .nd Iowa's opener game starters can go three times. and 171 strikeout, in 176 innings. CLEVELAND ( P) - Piteh- r He said his release came as a Kelleher sa id Ralston oCB akers· perat, play In the .tt.mpt to beal Washington ended in a 14-14 lie. If Koufax fails, the 7¥.!-5 odds fa- The young man from Trenton , field, Cali £., who partnered Me· Stil. Saturday. Wilh three s.condl on the clock, - Daily Iowan Photo by JOt Lippincott voring the Yanks will soar out of N. J., completed 10 of 22 starts, ing coach Mel Harder, wl10se SUl1[lrise and that he was given no Ki nley in the doubles, was disap· sight, and the American Leaguers fOllr of them shutouts. It had been 36 consecutive seasons with the explanation. pointed at being left out of the might romp. a foregone conclusion that he would Cleveland Indians was a tenure Wynn joined the Indians in late singles matc hes. The long range weather forecast pitch the second game with Bou- May after the Chicago White Sox "I don't know whether we shall * * * * * * * * * called for a fair , mild day with no ton, a 21-game winner, facing Drys- record in major league base- -After' 14-14 Tie with Cougars- failed to renew his contract. His keep the same line·up for India," rain in sight. dale in the th ird game at Los An- ball, was fired Monday. Kelleher said. "I lJke to watch 300th victory was a 7-4 decision Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris, geles Saturday. He will be succeeded next year the boys at practice until the last over the Kansas City Athletics on who missed a good share of the, YIP "