1 ntries Public Conflicting Reports 'on Reel ' f Drug Halt of Support for Castro Serving the Slate University of Iowa and the Peo ple of Iowa City UN!'I' I';)) NAT IO S, N. Y. !UPll l 1I0wever, the Soviel Union was I. Mikoyan when the two conferred - Ru s~ ia wus rl'porll'd Tuesd~'IY r!'portcd supporting Castro's resisl- briefly before a dinner given (or Established in 1868 United Press International and Associated Press Leased Wires aad Wirephoto night tn hl1 ve drop(X..a Its sUPfJlt ancc to U.S. demands (or on-site Iowa City, Iowa. Wednesday. November 21.1962 for uhon Premier [o'idel Ca, ll\J; inspcclion of oeren ive weapons top U.S. and Rus ian crisis negoti. Five-Poinl dcmands [or a crisis syslems in Cuba and insisti ng upon alors by the U.N. ChieC Executive ------.------~ettk' mcnt , includ ing U.S. with· reciprocal inspection oC "invasion" lasl night. drawal from the GuantOloamfi Ba, bases in Florida. With these reports the likelihood Naval base. either U.S. nor Soviet sources .'. Reliable sources said Acling Sec- confirmcd lhe report. I of a Secunty CounCil wrap-up o( rclary General U Thant passed on It was understood the Russian t· investigation was this inCormaLion to confidants Tues· position was made clear to Thanl BULLETIN in the Nether. day. by Soviet Dep uty Premier Anasta A report WIS sent lite TuesdlY Kennedy Sets Meeting night by the Associlted Press: I Affairs and "We hive clMcked a report that istry warned aij the Russians ;l'V' dropped sup' not to use an) port of Cuba/s five demands, in· without a prcscr i~ 97 Kil led I' as· Jetliner cluding U.S, withdrawal from the results of tests Guantanamo. A high U.N . lOurc. whether the dru!s I on unborn chil. , , slys the report is without foundl' ble shortly. Crashes In Peru Andes tion." -The AP 'itlr.· Miko,an on and Denmari Cub'a LIMA, Peru 1JT1- A Brazilian jet­ Iy. 'l'hree minutes later, we under· t he Cuban crisis this week Caded. tile dr uq PoSla· It was p'ossible that the United i rp."I"rini Postafen lincr, bound for. Los Angdes i¥ith stand, the captai n declared 'This 97 persons aboard, cras.heg and is an emergency.' This is the very Stales, Russia, Cuba and Thant ~ ,,:r\lJ''') ~ drug. might all setUe for filing lelters on Charles Pfizer exploded in tHe Andes TUellday lali we have heard Ot the plane." minutes before it was sc1leduled to their position with the council and White House Scheaules the banning or The captain gave no hin t of what let the issue die quietly here. drug, and said reach Lima airport fOr a landing, caused the emergency. investigating the Peruvian officials reported. 'rhe jelliner left Rio de Janeiro A showdown meeting of lop U.S. developments. ThE' Ministry of A viation said at 9:55 p.m. (CST) Monday with and Soviet negotiators is SCheduled First Talk Tomorrow Preludin devel. wreckage of tho Boeing 707 had stops scheduled in Peru, Colombia, for today. in England reo been sighted and there were 10 Panama and Mexico. Mikoyan was el(pected to attend WASHINGTON (U P!) - presi' l cussed when KennooY in~8 Mi· had given birth to survivors among the 80 passengers Among th'e pauengers reported today's negotiating session called dent Kennedy will conCel' with koyan at the White Bouae 8~ .4:30 after taking the ,. and 17 crew members. by Varig to be aboard w.re Raul to iron out the major remaining Deputy Soviet Premier Anastas p.m: EST Thursday. The mInistry said the wrecked Cepero Bonilla, economic adviser snags in the way of a crisis settle­ . . . Mlkoyan, who returned to New $S·million Varig Airlines jet was to the Cuban National Bank; and ment. They were adequate verifi· Mlkoyan Thursday mil . s~lal York last night from a 24.aay sighted -!lear Ciudad cle Dios - fo Fidel Castro and president of cation of the removal of Soviet of· con(ere~ce on the Cuban 81tuallon, stay In Havana, will be here both City of God - about lO miles the Peruvian minister of agricul' fensive weapons from Cuba and the While House announced today. Thursday and Friday and also south of Lima. ture, Mai. Gen, Jesus Melgar, foolproof safeguards against the ' Arrangements Cor the meeting will sec Secl'etary o( Stale Dean with wife. The plane had bcen missing reintroduction of such arms. were announced amid indications Ru k and other orneials. about 10 hours when ille ministry of a further casing of the clash The White House announced r('ported the wreckage was slg' \.ed. belween the United States and plans for the Kenncdy.Miko),an The flight originated in Brazil. Russia over the Caribbean crisis. conference as the President re· Only nine nassengcrs were baoked JFK, Macmillan To Confer Washington sources said that ceived a first hand report from all the way throuyh to Los Angeles. RUssia bas drOJ,lpea Its support for IAdlai E. Stevenson, U.S. Amba . The rest o( the passengers were to Fidel Ca tro's five point demands dar to the Unlled Nations, on get off at Latin American stops on On Allied Cold War Strategy for II crisi setUement, including his meeting with Mikoyan at the the flight north . U.S. withdrawal from the Guan· Uniled Nations Monday nlghl. This craSht:'r all 97 aboard are WASHINGTON (UPIl - Presi· Western llemisphere. tanamo Naval Base. It will be Kennedy's first meet· lost - woul e the "'arid's fifth dent Kenn edy and British Prime The White House said only that Officials said, however, lhat Rus- ing with Mikoyan. lonll a close major air d ster in five days Minister Harold Macmillan will Kennedy and Macmillan "have felt I sia still supports Castro's de· per onal associate of Premier Ni· and the second within 24 hours in- meet Dee. 19-20 for tile far-ranging that it would be useful to have a mands that on-site inspection or of· kita S. Khru hehev. Mlk~yan is volving Brazilian planes. EightY-I' review of Allied cold war stralegy further meeting to continue the in· fensive weapons systems in Cuba Iexpected to return to "Moscow four persons pcrished in the Cour in the wake oC the Cuban crisis and formal series of reviews of the be underlaken only iC there is reo shortly after his visit here. other crashes. amid evidence of growing dissen- world situation which they llOld ciprocal inspection oC what the White Hou e Assistant Pre s Authorities at Lima's Intema· sion in the Communist camp. from time to time." Cuban. leade: called "invaSion '" Secretary Malcolm KUd~( '1Iaid tiona I Airport said the plane ra· The White House announced Kennedy has described the cur­ bases 10 Florida. Thursday's meeting was "mutual· dioed a normal position - flVi~ Tue~day that the conference would rent international situation as "a The entire situation will be di 'IIY agreed" upon. at 12,000 feet "ear the PilCific - be held at Nassau, in the British climactic period." He and MaC­ Meanwhile Stevenson met with only five to seven min ute. before Bahamas. 190 miles cast of Miami millian are expected to consider Illmlllllllllllllllllllllmllllllllll~lllIIlmllmllWJllllllmmlllllllmII Kennedy and John J . McCloy, its scheduled landing at 2:10 a.m. and 200 miles north of Cuba . how the momentum generated by special adviser to the President • I (CST). No agenda for the lalks was an- the successful U.S. handling of nnd Stcvenson on lhe Cuban When the pilot's lo st radio re- nounced but Macmillan told the Khrushchev's Cuhan gamble can port was received at Pisco, Lima House of Commons Tuesday that be exploited to make more progress 1W ee k Off Premier Fidel Castro has airport officials said there was vis· the sweeping review was designed crbs~~an RINE on other East·West conflicts. a ibility here for 8\2 miles and the to "deal with practical problems Banishing the Duchess balked al Husslan agreement U.S. officials believe Kennedy's under which on site inspeeUoas ceiling was about 1,500 leet. This which might be capable oC solution Banishing the Duchess of MaNi, portrayed by SERVICE is considered good vlsibiijty ior at the present time." He said the tough stand on Cuba may have can· sity Theatre 1"2·63 season, which wlll open Thu rs· For Easter! would be made by the Uoited Na· Lima. aim was to find ways to lessen vinced Khrushchev of the rirmness Justine Gallagher, G, Muncil, Itld., left, from the day at a p.m. in Univ.rsity Theatre. Th. lady·ln· tion In Cuba to make sure all or· Varig reported the piM... Capt. IiJlst-West tension. o( Allied pledges and willingness palace is the Duke, played by Alex Murray, A4. waiting, center, is portrayed by Carolyn Lein. A week· lent Easter vlcltion rensivc weapons hod been pulled OCESS Ebu Michel,had flashed arf'emer· U.S. officials said Berlin, dis· to fight If necessary in tho Berlln Marshalltown, in this scene from the "Duchess haus.r, G. Ottumwa. hl$ bHn provided for thi. com· out. Presumably this is one o( tlllt gency call aboul 10 minytes before armament, Red China's attack o'n area and on other fronts. of Malfi," the slCond production of the Univer· - Photo by Carolyn Gottschalk ing Easter according to a rlvlsed 1·9666 ... th!' airport pickcd up his message. lndia and Moscow'S increas.ing dif- Macmillan will fly to Nassau University Calendar lint out last things thal Mlkoyan. lhe Soviet --~ "The plane was about 20 nlinutes ficuIties with Peking undoubtedly shortly aCter meeting in France week to dean., directors, and de· \Jnion's Dumbtr ono trouble shoot- padment heads by T.d McCarr.l, er, has been discussing with Castro from Lima, " a Varig spokesman in would be the major topics. Ken­ with President Charles de Gaulle, , New York said. "The captain had nedy also could be expected to dis­ whose reCusal to cooperate whole· dean of student ..rvicts, durIng his unexpectedly long St3), asked Cot clearancu to land. Every. cuss the long-range prospects for heartedly in NATO is a cause of India Riaicules Red China; The rev lsed cal.ndar calls for in Havana. thing v,' s apparell11y goIng normal· halting Communist expansion in the continuing COncern in Washington. the vacation fo begin .t 5:30 p.m. The White House said Stevenson Friday. April 5 and to run until Iand McCloy spent 20 minutes with 7:30 a.m. MondlY, April 15 . the PresIdent. prcsumably review· ing highlights of the Miko)'an re· Signs Aid Pact with Britain Ea.ter r'cess.. have .Iso been port. Plan To Print planned for the nut two school Earlier Tuesday the President NEW DELHI - Presi· eral constitution that wou ld provide I versity Board of Publications to than 7,000 reported to have been Pakistan's frl.ndship with Com. the L7-natlon disarmament confer- bers or the Student Senate Com. dent Kennedy and Bdgian Foreign fol' a s11aring of the rcvenues oC the I include in that body's by-laws a rushed to Guantanamo Bay, some munist China is "unshake.bl. ence waited for some sign from mittee on Legislative Action by 6 ?Tinister Poul·lI('nri Spaak warned Katanga mining enterpriscs. stat~ me~t prohibitin~ a.1l universily by air transport and some by ship and unconditional" and that a New York that the United States p.m: Thursday. T1ICsday thai "scvere eeenomic At the time the Thonl plan was pubhcallons from prmtmg any POl'· French Goy/f through the Panama Canal. non·."re"lon pact with p.kin, nd th Soviet Union finally have , rneaslfres" will) he necessary to disclpsed Aug. 20, con~('ration tion oC a professor's classroom lec­ would not harm Pakistan's Wilt. a . e Representatives for the 99 COUll· cnrhpcl \lnHi olit n of tbe Congo if was givcn to economic sanctions to ture without lhe consent of the PARIS (upn - Pr e sid e n t The Pentagon said "a phascd ern .ies. buttoned up the Cuban problem. tics will be briefed on the UIUver· , It is not llccomplished voluntaril y force Tshombe to acceptreconciJia- professor." Charles de Gaulle forma lly a ked Ircdeployment oC forces sent to The minister told tho National ••• sit)"s immediate and future mone· iI) " "very' short period 'of time." tion . These wbuld Include a boycott Both motions were passed by an Premicr Georges Pompidou Tucs- the so utheastern United States Assembly lhat membership in pro- • WASHINGTON Reports tary needs and wl1\ be asked to In a .iulnt statement iSS ued ilCter of Katanga products. Considera- 11-5 vole after a three hour meel. day to form a new Government during the Cuban crisis has be- western military pacts should not that Soviet reconnaissance planes talk with county legislators durin" " a White ~-Iou s e rneclihg, Kennedy tlon also was given to scvering Ka· ing of the student senate. backed by the greatest parliamen' gun ." bar Pakistan from trying to im. have scouted the southeastern the ChrIstmas vacation. \. and ('pal\k' said thus far the United tanga transporlation links with the . tary majority i.n the history of the The redeployment followed by I prove relations with Communist United Slates were described by Applicants will spend about t ... o States and Belgium havt! worked outside world. Reasoning behlDd the senate French Repubhc:. . , one week the !tiling of the Naval China and the Soviel Union. the Defense Department Tuesday hours in briefing SC8SiOll8 and for til lmiflcaUon plan of acting But it was agreed that Tshombe resolutions was explained in an . Inste~d of askmg him to form It blockade around Cuba and by one British Commonwealth Secretary as "completely without [ounda· studying information ~bects to be commi .N. 5 cretary-Generol Thant. and Adoula would be encouraged to accompanying stalement: "The Immediately, as had been expecte~, day ~he visit oC President Ken. Duncan Sandys is due here (rom (ion." distributed at the meetllll8 . iOll, 1 Cear that statements made in a the way! J Thunt's plun c(' ntcred on volulI- "vu lunta ri ly" come to agreement classroom might be printed De Gaulle gave PompI~ou unl11 nedy to southeastern bases in New Delhi to try to calm Pakistani Assislant Defense Secretary Ar· Interested persons mar apply by I nry di ~clls~io n and action by Con· on unlflcatiun. Dec. 6. when th~ new Na.l1onal As- Geol'gia and Florida where lhe fe ars that arms supplied to India thur Sylvester. the· Department's calling one 01 the lollowq com· wrong. Boy, . " would have an intimidating effect sembly .. chosen ID lands!tde gener· buildup had taken place. will be used agai nst Pakistan. official spokesman, J18id there was millec members - C\\ft'tu, Sue 1(0 I esc PrCllllcr yrlJlo AdonIa and Sborlly before the joint statemenl on both faculty and sludents and 't trade the al electIOns Nov. 18 and 25, meets A II H . S "no substantiation" in the Penta· James It 3241; Burge, Judy Steel· Pr('~idcnl Moise Tshombo o( se· was released, Spaak told reporters would destroy the necessary (ree. Cor the first time. Pompidou's de· The special airborne alert C81" vcre r tarf~Imd, an, h~ad . of at U' . gon [or the reports which have man 115349 ; men's doI'mIr 'Larry my word ccssionisl Katanga province. "We are in complete agreement be- dam of thought and expression (eat in the old assembly led to the ried out by lhe Strategic Air Com· a~ms . ac • ~ 10g miSSion 0 In· ...... J'--K I · mand has been discontinued, the dla, Will arrive today Cor the same been published during the Cuban SeuCerer x38IIII ; town 11l1:li. "'.. e· ller I stay in "This approach has not, however, lween the Americans and the Bel· which is prereqUisite for signifi. new eIe c tIons. I P . d I I purpose crisis. ley 7-4607, Peto Placek- f4M9, or produoed th neve s~ ary r suits." gians but we must have agrcement cant education." Pompidou accepted the mandate entagon saId .. The Cornman a so . • •• Allan Frenkel 1H2S1; tow.II women. what rve th joint statement said: " I( there oC the United Nations." and relurned at once to his office has retu1'l1ed Its B47 bombers to • HAVANA _ Soviet First Dcpu. Cathy Fisch,rund or~' Ferner my age is not Subst31ltiul pro_ss within Spaak was continuing discussions Correction to resume the talks he has been I' their home bases Crom other air· The Weather ty Premier Anastas Mikoyan told 8-6882; lralernlty men. ~"I'hJesen a v'ry hart l)Crlod oC Ume, lho with Thullt in New York Tuesday carrying on with polilical leaders ports to w~ich they ~~d been dis- Fidel Castro in a lelter printed 8-1149; sororIty womeli. DebbIe or living ~his United SloiC . . Gover nment and the nighl. Malcolm MUII.rldg., former si nce the end of last week. pel'sed durll1g the criSIS. Party cloudy In the Illtreme here Tuesday their recent tal" Hawkins 7·3147 or- Kay~le'hDaoo two year ih overllment of Belgium fully reul- It had been reported that Spaak .dltor of the British humor wllk· The fact that Pompidou spent two The nuclear bomber (ol'ce kept latt, -with censlderable cleudl· conrirmed "how firm and un· 7-11641 . iw it will be necessary w execute ,come to Washingtoll with a po~si ­ IYI "Punch," wlll ,I", the "CORd 90 ontl 1L' II be hours with De Gaulle and le(t with more . than per cent or its ap. nl" 'and (4rlllle anet fot In the breakable are the bonds of [riend· furl/wI' ~ pha os oDt1er ~hl' United bl· compromise plan for a setlle· talk in the 1"2043 Unlver.lty Lec' more than a week to Corm his Gov- pt!oximately 1,500 bombers on 15- J IlliMt- In" central "'y. Con· ship between our (Communist) CHRIITMAI-tuu. . ,. '· tltlon" Ililill>. wi ittl In~lude severe ment oC the Katanga revenue 'Ques, turf Setl.. In the M,ln Loun,. ernment gave rise to some specula. minute ground alert during the 'ctinued l' clOtMly tonllM willt Ie· Parties and Governments." The a ..... ChrtstmM ...... " ,,~titowwTI\\ Murell. '~ I ,r tlon, which hopefully would lead to of tho Union a' I p.m. W.dnl •• tion that De Gaulle might have reo crisis and alllo"st.epped\ up the 1air- 't•• I...... rain . "'..,.blll over ••• The Dan, low ... will III PUW~ "I · l"nn dY\'lll1d ~aak rll~mrmed a ltIement of politi~l issves. He dav, DIC, I inst.1eI ef (Novem' jected some of ,the ministers he j borne alert which nOl'mally con- molt of the .tate. Little change • BEIRUT - President Ken· tem.. , ••• The I..... "mlll c-. ber 21) MeI.y a. InnoUltCed In proposed. But there was nothing of . .lists of about 30 B52 intercoDtin. -In temper"ure._'HI,,, t.y 45 nedY has written to (our Arab peMCI .. II ,..... IncIu6le eM .l tt~ lI~Jt •.' fuli support" [8r I the 'Tbllnt declined comment on questions by ficial to conCirm such speculatlon. ental bombers. _ _ _ to SO. leaders Involved in the Yemeni ,kture ,..e. plan L()I' unlflcatiQll U1Iiel' 1\ FtCtltlve fea· tional right of citizenship, then only if they deem it too hot an issue to handle, or the more customed" to federal borrowing, To find out w will suffer a reduction in volume tures of it are, to be sure, exact­ it, and other states, could deny lege senior kn likely incentive, if they ar uncertain as to the degree of ~ ;0:, .;::: .,:".' ing, even ruthless. But the social still other rights held in common "I' 'i', of loans. Here and there were affairs, the Ca popularity which the liquor-by-the-drink proposal com­ some who vaguely said they conscience is there. The morality by American citizens. American T" commissioned I thought the order unconstitution­ of it is what has kept it strong. enterprise cannot join in degrad- I , a former profl mands. We now are at another plateau . ing others without degrading it- ", The referendum seems to bc the best alternative to al. But even they made such Columbia and comment as part oC estimating It would seem that those who di· self. Council on Fa avoid death in the legislature, but even if it is held and the business effect. rect American industry and busi· We are engaged in a great and .,,~ study the probl +," ness must develop a public decisive struggle with the ideals passes, the final responsibility for passing the proposal Here we have again illustrated Dr. Bidwell I philosophy. The President's ex­ - or lack oC ideals - of com­ test given in resides with the state legislature. A favorable referendum the lamentable lack of a public ecutive order was proper because munism. This is why our system ' n,)~ some 1,900 stud, vote cannot make the proposal u law bt,t it would certainly philosophy on the part of an­ constitutionally we are one coun­ is required to support the moraf , ~:, other segment of the American dum from the 5 infl~fl9ce the legislators. try, indivisible, under God, with reasons why there should be no " business community. American liberty and justice for all. The discriminations in housing built .;" colleges and un It must be assumed however, that to favorably influ­ capitalism has proved itself the ' ,' country. The te dollar sign cannot afford to take with federal aid. There is a mor- ~ .I l the Educational ence Ca.pit.~l Hill, the referendum would have to carry by a world's most efficient producer of a stand opposing human rights. al factor in the symbol of state ill consumer goods and food. Com­ the basis of SUI 60-40 vote. A lesser percentage in favor of the proposal A good many people may not like universities and public schools I IIJI 100 persons wit munist nations seek to emulate it. but on the face of things it is pp would not be sufficient to convince the legislators of a .; being open to all qualified a li-"'1213 eign affairs . our productive successes. They neither legal, nor moral, to use cants. This morality is an essen- need for a wetter ]owa. fail because their attempts to public money for the benefit of tial ingredient in the vi tality or "ur~ Iowa schools To ensure a favorable vote it would be necessary to ':?! adapt U.S. capitalism's proce­ a selected group. American capitalism. Our profit ,.' the test include f·" nell and Simp draw./i heavy "yes" vote from the heavily populated eastern dures lack the human dynamic IT DOES NOT matter who is dollars has a social conscience. .'" -. of incentive. students in bl -~. . ' ":~" . ' ~ .. president - the government's This is the basic strength of our ,. counties and also from Polk, Woodbury and Black Hawk U.S" CAPITALISt!' very little money that is used to build hous­ way of life. To reaffirm it ,;~, tion, education :::'; .. liberal arts too countIes. With the present state of liquor enforcement in resembles the European. or c1as­ ing may not be used restrictively . strengthens us as a nation. III these'and' other counties in Iowa, it is improbable that the sic, Icapitalism. Karl Marx looked It would seem that the present Distributed 1962, swer sheets \I by The Hull Syndicate. Inc. ' .. the analysis ha on the operations of a system and future of our country would (All R1i hls Reserved ) necessary votes would be gathered from these crucial coun­ .', and so their 5' ties . . .. ·tt Was a Real Coincidence, His Being Home on the Same , cnce tcst resu. Tliu5 if Harold Hughes, the resurrector of the issue, Weekend and All - and Then He Showed Me His New Roscoe Drummond Reports- is' to'see that issue passed, he must put an abrupt and very Convertible and We Started Talking Over Old Times - t ' * dry hilt to the illegal liquor sales now going on around And So, Here's Your Pin Back!' the stl\t.~. . Und Hughes can be assured of the necessary votes to carry Will Britain Get In? a referendum, and favorably influence the legislature, only Matter of Fact- Prime Minister Harold Mac­ The premise of the most ob­ political unity and lhe economic when the sole liquor sources in the state are the liquor millan is increasingly confident jective . observers - the Euro­ concessions he is seeking, prim- pean and American journalists arily for Commonwealth food • store~; Tllis situation can be made possible only through lJIat he will not have to take no In F who have been covering the products, would be temporary to the strict law enforcement which some counties are not for alt answer to Britain's bid to Brussels negotiations - is that in ease the transition. join the European Common Mar­ now enjoying. -John Klein Y00 Hoos From the Kremlin the end the transitional economic It is President De Gaulle who ket. disagreements will be settled appears to be the principal reo Three SUI, By JOSEPH ALSOP mind, however. So must the Cact States is weak of arm and will. Mr. Macmillan has never been and Britain will be in. But their sister. Having made the great " rindings that The wires from Moscow, these that the super-Machiave llian cov­ and there fore safe to push around. more intent, more earnest, more estimate is not as optimistic as rapprochement with Germany, graduate know days, are burdened with amiable er and deception plan Lcd Kh rush­ In this connection, the · total determined to cast aside Britain's Mr. Macmillan's. TIley see Bri­ he hesitates to share his leader· "yoo hoos" from the Kremlin cessation of the old hard-line talk Dr. Patrid Academic Freedom, Hell! chev himself to send a grossly, historic aloofness from the con­ tain's entry as probable, but not ship in Europe with Britain as history and a ramparts, all aimed at President flagrantly untruthful personal about Berlin is highly significant. tinent and become a full-fledged certain and certainly not auto· well. And while France wants ac­ , A group of Michigan State University faculty members Kennedy. According to report, the This taLk had been getting uglier core course fE message to the President of the partner in both a politically and matico Some see it as little more cess to th e British market on accounting for President's private letters [rom and uglier. But since the Cuban economically united Western Eu­ than SO-SO. low-tariff terms, it doesn't relish have recently taken a step which should have been taken Nikita S. Khrushchev are also full United SLates. crisis th ere has not been a whis- fairs. These b. a long time ago. Since th e 16th ccntury, there rope than today . The resistance among the con­ competing with the Common· of friendly expression. per of it. 1 To speed the decision and to wealth countries. Also , De Gaulle ing of history has been nothing between chiefs ADD UP all these considera­ tinental Six to the transitional The MSU chapter of the American Association of Uni­ The current Kremlin line was facilitate it, Mr. Macmillan is Is against any political federation. ,~\'J. guage. of state quite like this Khrushchev tions, and the 'result of the sum concessions which Britain feels versity Professors (AAUP) overwhelmingly passed a reso­ probably best summed up by a message ·that the Soviets would taking personal it needs to adapt Lts sheltered THIS IS WHY Prime Minister Alston stale Long, obviously authoritative ar­ is very interesting indeed. It is charge of the Macmillan 's meeting with Gen. tury a univer lution urging the reinstatement of students disciplined for never implace in Cuba weapo ns not urgent to be nice to Khrush­ agriculture to European competi­ ticle in the offi­ capable of "reaching American negotiations and tion and to ease the effects on 'De Gaulle in Paris next month bring any me. vjol~tion of the MSU speaker rules last month. chev. It is not prudent to forget cial Izvestia by targets." It was sent after work is acting to cre­ Commonwealth trade is not with­ is crucial. Out of it will come the , to foreign aff. Nikolai Poly an­ that message to the President. It ate the climate Common Market breakth rough or .., fI,'b.e Michigan Legislature has passed a law prohibit­ on the Cuban missile bases had is perfectly idiotic to suppose that out some reason . The Europeans regularly, at : ov. A I th ou gh already started. And the junior at the highest invited Britain at the outset to another lon g period of painful ' . non-English la ing Communist speakers from speaking on Michigan cam­ Polyanov is the the Soviets will not gouge your Soviet diplomat with New Fron­ level so that the join in founding the Common and, perhaps, stalemated nego· of the Angio-S puses; The University "screening board" reportedly has re­ leading Moscow eyes out at Berlin, if and when technicians can tiations. tier friends, who was charged .they ever think they can. do. so Market - and the British re­ of the regular jected othEilr speakers with "extreme political views.") analyst of Ger­ with carrying th e message, was more e a s i I Y fused . Now that the Six have done The survival of the Macmillan man afCairs, he 'with impunity. reach their government is deeply involved. world is think 1he students, including student body president Robert even required by both Khrush­ That is one-half of the sum. But all the hard preliminary work did not eve n chev and Mikoyan to write the a g r e e ments. and have lived through its un­ But it is inaccurate to suggest "The undel Howard and the presidents of six other campus organiza­ men t Ion the t.le other half of the sum is that This is one of that the Prime Minister is play­ eluding his ov very words in his notebook, in the So viet hardliners have un­ certainties to make the Common tions, were disciplined for refusing to cooperate with a never-e n din g order to make them seem more the major pur- DRUMMOND Market a burgeoning success, ing politics with a mattl!r as Alston said. • Berlin crisis. In­ doub tedly been diminished and poses of his trip to Paris and grave as his country's entry into univerSity board designed to pass on all speakers for uni­ convincing. di scomfited, while the Kremlin's they hardly feel called upon to him a few fa stead, he listed Washington next month to confer make excessive concessions to in· the Common Market. He cour­ will rapidly It versity appearances. IT IS KNOWN that this episode l'espect for the United States has other outstanding questions, like with President De Gaulle and elude the once recalcitrant Brit­ ageously initiated this step when to inlroduce h the nuclear test question, and of the fal se message has left a been proportionally increased. President Kennedy. British public opinion was either Howa~, who was placed on scholastic probation strong mark on President Ken­ Copyright 1962: ish. added: New York Herald Tribune Inc. His objective is to reach a indifferent or hostile to joining Dr. James which automatically removed him as president, refused to nedy's thinking. This is certainly FURTHERMORE, at one time political scien "Probably the world has never political decision at the top so the Italians, the Belgians, and and be is pushing it now that sit on the board, charging that it was necessarily an organ been near such an important turn­ one of the reasons why there are OFFICIAL DAILY BUUETIN British opinion is shOWing itself greater awar« few signs, in the inner group of that the uncertain divisive hag­ particularly the Germans felt of censorship. He and the presidents of the six' other groups ing point as today. The ending of gling over conditions can be re­ that Britain, while eager to get anti·Conservative party and pro- , students of a the Caribbean crisis could also American policy-makers, of the Common Market. also invited speakers without clearing them through the extremely woolly response to the solVed by mutual concessions. the economic advantages of the "There is become the beginning of the end University He knows that Gen. De Gaulle's But there is little chance that fairs," Murra board. happy outcome of the Cuba n cri­ Common Market, was intent upon oC other disputed problems." attitude is crucial. He believes retarding the political integration Britain's Conservative govern­ jority of stud. sis that is rather wid espread else­ Calendar ment can survive a general elec- '. , A number of professors at the AAUP meeting re­ In addition to writing to the where. Mr. Kennedy can - and will - of Europe which the others feel gory 'problem President, Khrushchev has been help. He is prepared to make must and should accompany its tion if Britain's entry into the portedly praised the student leaders concerned for being As we ha ve just prevente d European Economic Community but about whi dropping the same sort oC hint Thursday, Nov. 2' reasonable concessions himself. economic integration. "far ahead of us in the fight for academic freedom." The all over Moscow, with his usual Khrushchev [rom doing great remains in serious doubt. This, According harm to us , so th e woolly argu­ 8 p.m. - University Theatre . ALL OF THIS means that the There is now little, or no, basis AAUP als.o appointed a committee to investigate the affair. elephantine delicacy, both on so­ big push to bring Britain into the for this kind of resistance to in part, is why Mr. Macmillan is attributed to I ment runs, it is urgent to be very Production, "The Duchess of Mal­ acting to resolve that doubt as We feel that the students' actions in defying the cen­ cial occasions and in private talks fi, by John Webster - University European Economic Community British entry. Mr. Macmillan has complexity of with Western diplomats. Having nice to Khrushchev, no doubt as is in the making. shown every evidence of wishing soon as possible. is nothing the sorship board were completely justified and that they balm for his natural feelings of Theatre. Copyrllht 1962: caught the muggers before the Friday, Nov. 30 Will it succeed? to be an active aUy of European New York Herald TrIbune Inc. Ulrich Tt:w should be immediately reinstated. preparations of the mugging were frustration. When simply stated in this manner, the argument an­ 4:10 p.m. - College of Medicine and a Wester The Michigan State incident was but another example Quite complete, in fact, we are Lecture - Sir Reginald Watson­ now being invited to take tea swers itself. undergraduate of the constant effort to stifle academic freedom among the Jones . physician to RM . Queen LeHers to the Editor - "in many caE with them, with the garrote tact­ IN THE FIRST place, Khrush­ Elizabeth - Medical Amphi­ n nation's so-called liberal schools - including Yale, where fully hidden under the tea table. chev is still, quite evidently, in theatre. hampered by ground - the Lincoln Rockwell was rejected, Colorado University, where IN EXCHANGES between na· solid, unchallenged control of af­ 4:30 p.m. - Poetry Reading - . ~ . tions, it is almost as foolish to fairs in .Moscow . In the sccond the biggest voice on campus is Sen. Barry Goldwater, and Sun Porch, Iowa Memorial Union. give way to righteous indignation and more important place, there 7:30 p.m. - Project AID variety Says Cuban lBlockacle' Was SUI, where Pete Seeger had to sneak in the back door. as to expect enduring gratitude. is no doubt at all that the Moscow show - Iowa Memorial Union. -Larry lIatfield Therefore, the fact that an ex­ hardliners and wlJl'hawkq are pre­ S p.m. - University Theatre ceedingly Machiavellian interna­ cisely the people who hil ve been Production. "The Duchess of Mal­ --~------tional mugging was attempted in most disconcerted and weakened fi" by John Webster - University Cuba by the Soviets should not by the Cuban episode. If the at· Theatre. . Victory for Democracy Tl ~ 'Daily Iowan debar this country from ex­ tempted mugging had succeeded , Saturday, De,. 1 changes with Moscow that prom­ it would have been th eir triumph . 8 p.m. - University Theatre To the Editor clear that the quarantine merely became quite apparent that Cas­ rh DQUy IOII!ll Il I.t wr4tUn and edh~ by ICudentI and .. gooem«l by .. ise a useful result. Its failure has disproven their Production - "The Duchess of The 20th Century dramatizes compelled Russia to declare open­ tro did not want our support. be­ board ",f . /ille atudent tnut.. elected by 1M IIudent bod" and tOUt The mugging must be borne in central argument. that th e United Malfi," by John Webster. man's attempt to decide whether ly that sbe was aiding Castro in cause he continually used the the tyrannical subjugation of trustees tJt:ll>olnted by the preafdent the Utdoer"'y. TM Dally IOtIHIfa', United Stales os a scapegoat to of all men shall have the right of Cuba. Four years 'ago, when Cas­ cover bis failure to fulfill the eduoril!l jiilJc!I " not 4n npreuion of SUI adm4n~ JIOlq 01 self-determination or whether the tro's revolution successfully oust· promises of his revolutJ()n to lhe apitdOl ~- ~ ponictJlar. University Bulletin Board human race shall be subjugated ed Batista's dictatorship, the pea­ Cuban people , who iro historical­ ~ . • i"i !pIe and government of the United lIalftnH, ••0.110 a.,..... _ .... bl , •••1 .... , Tb. Dan,. '."AD emOll. a •• _ m C ...... by Russia's monolithic Commu­ lyon of th Illost notionalistic P.,e ! ;~, . WEDNESDAY, NOV. 28, 1962 I.. ·• City, I... States made all possible erforts wOI' ld 1111 8 .... C.... ,. " .....f til••• , '''.r. pab".a"••• Tiler mull b•• " •• ud .Iraed b, •••dyll" ., nism . In the midst of this strug· groups the vee known...... f ...... "",baIl'. ','e, ,.'U.bod. Purol, ..fIlal /auction •• ro DO' 01l,lb18 I.r 1111, •••11 ... to sllpport the new .government of John B. Ol ..n, A4 PublUher...... SdwU'4 P. au.tI MaM.I .. MARINE CORPS OFFICER S~lec­ .....YSlTTERS Dlay be obtaIned SI:NIDRI AND GRADUATI ITU. gle Associate Prof. Alslon has Cubu. However, as time passed It '15 Woodai. pllc. 4UDIT .URIAU =,~:~. Eciii4ir :::: ..~"i{.=: tlon Team will be ln the Gold Fea­ durin. the week by calling the DENTS who expect to .raduate In ask~d : "IS the economic and dip­ 0 .. Ctty Edtfor ...... Ion AlldenOD ther Launae of the Iowa Memorial YWCA oUlce, IMU. at Ext. 2240 dur­ February .nd who W.llt jobe I.n CIRCULATIONI He". EdItor ..••• . •.• . .. Doua CarWOD Unlou Dec. 3 and. to give the oW­ InI week4ay afternoons. bus.l.ness, Industry or lovernmeB: lomatic, not to say naval, block­ All\8tant Cltr cer selection test alld Interview stu­ must he relll.te~d in th .. Bullne.. ------'<.:'.~------dents Interested In earnlni Marine and ~dustrlal Plecemellt Ottlce./. 107 ade of Cuba a defeat for Demo­ PublfJNlI ':117 Studeat Publlcatlqlll, ~t .NeW. ' utO'r ..Ea~ &n":! Corp. CommissIons. Three officer PARENTS CUOPERATIVE BABY­ University Hall Immediately. \Oom­ Tnr .• Oelllnunlll.Ue)J". Caaler, IOWI' Sporta Editor ...... Erlc Zoeckler trainIng programs are offered by SITTING League is In the chulle pallies wlU be COnlin, to the eaJIIP­ cracy?" the Marine Corps. None ot the pro· of Mrs. B. Jones. Leag ue membo ... CIty, Icnr.- .dally except SUllday and Soelety Editor ...... S\UaII AN wanting sitters or parents Interested us Utls laU to Interview j)roapectlv. MOndaT. :nii'~'aI hoUd.,.. Eutend ChIef l>hotol!1lpher. Lippincott .rams requIre on-campus training, employees rell.relless of dr.ft at.tu•• The quarantine, not blockade, of ,.Ioe reserve meetln,s, or drills during In joliling call 7·5827 . • as aecGll!!!cliaU matter at the poll A ..a.tant PhotOI!1lJ!J;,~~, Carter JUI"e and Au,ust ,ndu.t.,. of 1... oWre 1t"',lQin City under the Act the school year. Junior and senior .re urlled to take c.n 01 ~ Cuba represents a dccisive vic- · women are eligible tor the Woman ttnn •• .,,,," •• onatrlbl. 01 ConjftiJa of March 2. 1871. ~~ . ~ . ~...... oIIIl mm ITUDINT. who Slgne~ for • 1962 4Mlatallt Sport, Officer Candidate Course. Freahmen. tory for the freedom and inde­ ~~t ' sophomore and JUlllor men are eli­ H.wkeye .nd have not yet picked Editor ...... Barrlett JIlndJDa" up their book. are urged to do 10 SUI OBSERVATORY will be OpeD pendence of the Western Hemi­ Olel 1~'''' ffOm 110011 to mldllllht to gible for the Platoon Leader. claM. To the Editor: rore me. " Jt (Mr . Engle's poem) ~== DINctor .. .m G_ fa a. loon II possible. The books ar. for the pubUc evel')' cle.r Mond.y "'PGI" DeW. Item.. "omen'. ~ nle Oltlcer Candidate Course .v.Uable daUy, except Saturday. sphere. The Organization of My demonstration gets to be is more an ad Cor thot myth It_ and ' aDIIouncemenu to TIle Mana.er...... Delmll BIImInJ open to senIors and iraduates. between 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. throu,h. frOUl 8 8.m .• to 5 p.m .• at 201 COlD' out the fall and slIrina "me.tera eIl­ more fun every day. which Adam Smith termed 'free Be 5. Dall7 Iowan. Idltorlal offleea an .. Clallllliid llanap!' ...... BU! IUaaet munlc.tlon. Center eept durin. univerSIty holiday.. Any American States united to reaf· the COIBllialllClUOII8 Cellter. Advertlatna Conaultut ... Bm BrYiDt RIC ..IATIONAL IWIMMINO for Mr. D. M. Kelly, who very 8en­ cnterpris". th.m 11 I)() m." _II: the Field HOUle pool will be person Interested In vlewlnll with firm the concept of the Monroe Ctrcul.UOll Mana,er ...... 11m Col1Jer thl! tele~c?pe may viall the oll..,rv.. With OjMIn to Dlen ani)' frOID 12:20·1:20 IOWA MI!MORIAL UNION HOURI: sltlvely unearthed my implicaLlon I think I de crve from Mr. Kelly Iv_rl...... • "t"l By carrier ID Tru..... , .011'11 of ltudent Pullllg. dAJl)', 5:30-7:30 P.Jll. daII.Y. .ud 10 tOry durin. the" houra WIthout re. Doctrine : tho Western Hemi· Iowa Cltr, $10 per year ID .dvance; tlon.. Inc.: Lee ThelleD, At· 1.arrY Cafeteria open 11:30 • .m.-1 p.m., ervatlon. Friday nl,ht. Ire reeerved that Walter Keller was leading an a public an w~r 0 to whether he \ It won" ."'.-11 P.lll. OD Sal\ll'day.. m or ateII Ilonday.saturday: H:45 p.m.. MOil· fo,' Iroups or achaol cblldren or sphere is closed to European lis moatl!a. •.110: three month.. p. PrybU./ G: Nancy Shl~'!t A~; Prof. earcle .... required. day·Friday: 11:30 • .m.-1 :30 p.m" Sun­ organized claque, shows a Iitl Ie doe or doc not thill k the state· lO say B7 m.n hi low., $I per ye.r. alx Dale Deull. tJDlvenity LIOrll')'; Pror. people In other public or,.nlUitlolll. colonization. This a(fil' :nation of day. Gold Feather Room open., '.m.· Those who wlah to obt.tn • neen.. less sensitivity about reading 0 • onUla, IS; UIree moutba, P. All Lallie O. lloeUer/~ool of 10UJ1l.'· ..AMIL Y NIT.I at the "eld B·III .. 10:45 p.m., Monday·Thursday; 7 a.m.' the right of all pcopltos to self­ ment ] ha ve quoted I thegls Chrlstn other IIIaI1 IllbacrtptlOlll, ,10 per !!om; lIlclIael Il.cnur, L1; Dr. Oeorr. for the I'lrat Semelter will be frOID tlon lor a parUcular IfOUP mil/ call words thal have appeared In print 11:45 p.m., FrIday; 8 a.m.·1l:45 p.m., cl4M "r ..4W nbout the poem. the lar. ~: alx mon&hl •.10: three IDODtba, ....on eou ... 01 Deatljtl')" IlIchaid 7:15 to 9:00 p.m., Dec. 12, and Saturday; 1·10:45 p.m .• Sunday. Rec· determination has given Russia's for all to see. ".JO . . A, MWe':L Ll; Dr. Laureu A. V.. J.n. » and 23rd. StuCientl, Itaff re.tlon nea open 8 a.m.-l1 p.m., imperialistic bid for world con­ No more weLl S ilnll. Mr . Kelly, Supply Dyo, C_,. of EducatloL and f.culty or their .pouses may Monday·Thursday; 8 a.m.-12 mid· ' UNI'/IRIITY LIBRARY HOURI. In his letter Mr. Kelly says, brln. theli own children with them IlIl1bl, Friday and Saturday; 2-11 Monday-JI'rld.y: 7:,1),2 a.m.: 8aturday: quest the most thorough and com­ and I do quote, with the paper pleose. Spit It up In my hand . Tbe A..,.,..led Pre. " IIItlt1ed U · Dii!r::'", If ~dO Dot neom.78Ur on the.. llIahi. ChUdnn may not pm .• Buoday. 7:30 • .m.-l0 p.m.; Suuday: 1:30 p ....- plete rejection it has ever re­ SHe d usl eJr, to the u. for repubUcatlOll DaIIJ JOwaJI '1:10 0"'. The D8IlJ come without th,,1r own JI.reGIa and I ..... ServIce Delk.: IInndtllf-TIIu~ open before me, (D!, Nov. 21,) In caae · d Ilcalo readers are 01 aLI t ." local _WI prtll1ed ID tbII 10wIII ~ office ID mult le.ve with them. SWf or Itu­ day: 8 •.m..I0/""; l'rlday 1114 Sat. ceived. oewlpaper u well u all AP _ .unica ODI Cauter Ie etl8u:l;- • deut m carda an requited. CHRISTIAN ICIINC. ORGANIZA. urda)': 8 a.m. p.m., 7-10 P""J: "Keller is not pretend Ina to ad­ worried about lhe unseemliness I and dltp"lcllu...... to p .... lIondaJ throq M TION II 0 I C\. • testimony meetln, lerve only); Sund.y: 1-1 p.m., -10 While some believe that the vallce a theli. about the poem." of thIs la t expressIon, I am {lOr- \ r ••CUATIONAL IWIMMINO for e.cb Thurac\u4tternoon In the little p.m. (Reaerve o1llY). Phoiodu o. .... ~o:r:.:: :- =-'1'~ an "omen atuden~ womell f.cult7 oh.pel 01 the Congrol.Uonal C"urch, Uon: 1I0nday·tr{clairi • ...... p.m., withdrawal of U.S. diplomatic and In the revIew thal appeared rowing it rrom Mr, Dooley. $;WQ rr.:t'~, ltat "'r)' .ilJto;m _ben ...d feeul~_ wI"•• 1I0nda)' A " r n ., .., Cllnlnn .nd Jel't'llrann Mond.y.ThuradllY~ "10 p,,,: htlll' economic sUpPort of Cuba forced Nov. 15 Mr. Kener wrote - end R. Y. C.~.IH · " L~~-wItII .... throu,b I'rldaJ. 6:1H:1I »... " &lie Itn.t. at 1:111, All are woleollle &II da)': 10 •.81. uuW DOOII, l;a lI.III.J ...... ,.. aU-ad. , '1IAdIl: N ,..... " her to JeCk Russian Bupport, it is ( quote WiUl the paper open be· Ltchlr.r, En,lIth , .., THE DAILY IOWAN-I_. city, I•• -Weclnl • ." ...... , 1MW~. ' .11 foreign Affairs Test - .... • SUI To Host ­ e from all the Presi· Seniors .'Uriinformed' er and thot Administratof$ and require, Iy BILL SHERMAN Information on enrollments in I Ana '.her comparison test scores half the total had taken no cours· ents, there Staff Writer undergraduate courses dealing with made ~IY the author was on the es in any subject directly related - not criti· ,I foreign affairs was obtained by basis ( 'f geographical regions. to foreign affairs. Meet Monday " prise syslem I Few people would deny the analysis of the academic records I These r d suits showed that seniors COMPARISON OF SCORES in human ever growing importance of a Iof about 1,600 seniors selected at enrolled .. in collcges. in New E~~: BY CURRICULA "Problems of Racial Di crimina· on in com· " .. . f I random from 36 colleges and uni· land, Mil i die AtlantiC and ~aclflc Avera,1 Curriculum Score Range tion" and "Disciplinary Procedures Iii. broad undel standmg 0 ot ler versities. To find out detailed in. states knt" v more about foreign af. (''Ouotries and of U.S. relations formation on the content of these fairs than • did the seniors en roiled Engin ..rin, 47.4 17·n and Student Records" are among or example, Liberal Arts 46.6 15·75 { Mississippi with the rest of the world. courses, Dr. Bidwell personally in· in . colleges loc~ted in the Moun· Business 42.7 17·77 subjects to be discussed at the an· or the whim terviewed faculty members and ad· tarn, South, MIdwest and Great Education 38.8 15·]0 Inual meeLing of the Iowa College t because he In the past many well informed ministrators in some 40 colleges Plains statel :. Discussing the results of the test, observers have stated that Amed· and universities, and addressed COMPAFt ISON OF SCORES Personnel Admini trators ionday to be there. 01'. Bidwell said "the fact that a in the Iowa lemoria! Union. f American can colleges and universities do questionaires to academic deans I BY GEOGfb ~PHICAL REGIONS representative sample of college not "produce graduates who are and heads of departments in 226. A;erage R Approximately 50 deans, coun· s who simi a 1 seniors could barely answer half ' adequately informed, interested, representative institutions. The NRe'IoEn I'" c.~r8e 2l n'3 of the questions must be consid­ selors, and directors from 16 01 itted to edu· I· t' 't' d pon . , ew ng an"' ... · . 7 are symbols rea IS IC, sensl Ive, an res .. 51' deans and department heads were Middle Atlant. ~ 46.3 15.74 ered a poor performance. It con· lowa's 23 four·year colleges are ex­ flag. If one ble SO far as events and conditions also asked how lhe average under· Plcific 45.8 19.72 firms the general opinion that with outside the United States are con· graduate's education in foreign af- Midwest 44.1 15.75 pected to attend the meeting. one constitu· 1,1'1 respect to foreign affairs the aver· ensh i p, then I cerned." fairs could be improved . Mountain 42 .2 16·74 age college senior is inadequately Followln, I ':30 I.m. c..... hour .nd rl,ist,..tion period, the could deny To find out what the typical col. This study differs from earlier South and prepared for the responsibilities of .' lege senior knows about foreign ones by dealing only with the com· G SOUtt~~S! :~.: ~~'r~ citizenship and for the full enjoy· "ilion will betin with M. L. in common ~.I' Hult, De.n of Stud.nts, ,residin,• s. American , . ., affairs, ~he Carnegie Corp~ration mon run of u~dergradl.lates a~ .op· ;:afar :~nihe ty\ 'e' of instit~lion ment of liCe as an educated per· commiSSioned Dr. Percy Bidwell, po~ed to f~relgn .aHaHs po!rtlcal i concerned, senion in private uni. son." John C. WI.ver, deln of .... n in degrad· I f , Gr.clultl Collet., will w.lcom. egrading it· '" a form~r professor. at Yale and ~cle~ce m?Jors. The re,~ ults appear versities made a tl Btter showing FEELING OF APATHY Colum.bla and a . director . of the rn BIdwell s . ne~ book . Under~ra~: Lhan those in any oU1\ ~r major type In many areas of the country the the ,Ulsts. author found a feeling of general a great and "'IJ CounCIl on ForeIgn RelatIOns to , uate Edu.catlO~ m Foreign A~falr~, of institution. Dr. Leonard Goodstein, Director b the ideals study the problem. It con~arns !rtLle encouragmg ill· COMPARISON OF . SCORES apathy toward foreign a rr airs. ot of the University Counseling S4trv· only was this condition prevelant Cement Truck Burns - of com· Dr. Bidwell used an SO·question formation. By TYPES OF INST' TUTIONS ice, will present his "Student Pro­ lest given in May·June, 1960, to DISCOURAGING RESULTS. Type of Avera.,. in the rural South and in the Plain An Iowa City fireman is eXimining the Cenl,..1 our system ' the truck, I.. ped to safety throu,h thl truck win· file 1962." A critique by Dr. Donald rt the moraf , '~Ql some 1,900 students selected at ran· As a whole the group of senIOrs Institution Score' Range states but in upstate New York as Ready Mix truck which was elltenlively dlml,td dow. Onloobrs said flames lelped 25 f.. t into the weli. P. Hoyt. associate professor 0 hould be no dam {rom the senior classes at 175 averaged only 55 per cent on the Private Ihis morning when it burst into flam. at • Bur­ air, -Pholo by Joe Lippincott 'I colleges and universities across the test _ 44 out of SO. The lowest University 45.8 17·74 As far as Iowa is concerned, a Education, will close the morning ousing built I.,' lington St. stoplight. Stanley EVins, the driver of I country. The test was prepared by scores were recorded by several St.ate University 44.2 15·77 representative from an anonymous re is a mar· ~"j proceedings. I Ihe Educational Testing Service on students who got only IS right an· Llber:,1 Arts 17.72 "small liberal arts college" was ------bol of state dl quoted as saying that the students A luncheon will b held In thi!' bHc schools IIUI Ihe basis of s~ggestion~ fro":J over swers. The highest ~cored wa~.77 Tech~i::t School :~:~ .20.72 100 persons WIth experIence ID {or· by a student ID bUSIness admrnls, Complex College 42.7 \ '5.74 there are "wholly allergic to the Old Gold Dining Room of the Iowa a.lified appij,." r1al5 woJ'ld outside their state." Arithmetic Teaching Methods R& T Editor IS an essen· eign affairs. tration at the University of Texas. Teachers ColI.ge 39.5 11,1." Memorial Union at 12: 15 p.m. Iowa schools that participated in Seventy.five per cent of the stu· The ranking of the four cu.':.ricu- Dr. Bidwell offers several ex­ e vitality of '11 , planations for this foreign affairs At 2 p.m. the meeting wUl be di· . Our profit 'I ' the test included SUI, Drake, Grin· dents answered less than 53 ques· lar groups produced perhaps" the vided into three discus ion groups. nell and Simpson. Although SUI tions correctly while 25 per cent most surprising conclusion _ stu· allergy. In lhe first place only a conscience. :·1 small proportion of the undergradu. About To Improve, Profs Say To Speak Group A, headed by Or. 1ava ength of our " students in business administra· had less than 36 right answers. dents enrolled in engineering .'md tion, education, engineering and Results from the test indicate more knowledge of foreign aHa.it·s ate body in any university takes ad­ HoLmes. a sociate dean oC 4tudenl$., reaffirm it '0' vantage of specialized courses to A much improved situation in the the results will be," At Banquet nalion, liberal arts took the test, their an- male students know more about than liberal arts, business and edl'l' teaching of arithmetic at element· The improved situation will re· at the State College of IQwa. , will Iwer sheets were received after Coreign affairs than women. The cation students. learn about foreign affairs. These 962. ary and secondary levels should suIt from a modification of pres· Frank Eyer!) , managing editor meet in the Pentoerest Room ond cale, Inc. the analysis had been undertaken, average score for the 1,321 men However, an analysis of the aca­ courses are not popular as elec· ervedj '" tives since they appear to have no I th · ct of the "new" ent prqgrams and not from a com· or the Des Moin s Register and discuss "Programminc in Resi· , '. .nd so their scores did not innu· tested was 46 while the 529 an· demic records of students in engi· deve op as e Impa plete discarding of what we now ? l., 'jIIocalional value. Tribune, will be the featured speak­ dence Halls." I cnce test results. swered 39. neering showed that almost one· Bidwell blamed ' members of the or "modern mathematics" move· have, he said. ment, 1wo SUI educators said here Price, speaking on "Modern er at the annual Wayzgoo e jour· Grou, B will discuss "Dlscl,lI­ d\~partment of history and social nuy Procldure, Ind Siudent s c. ience for the avel'age under· nalism banquet at 6:30 p.m. at , ' * * * * Tu sday. Mathematics in the S condary Rlcords" with Dr. E. C. Wlllln­ * * * * * gn ,duate's ignorance of interna· The two professors - Herbert School ," agreed that most Of the the Mayflower Sunday evenin!1. tio., al affairs. He states: "His flldt, counselor to min It SUI, Spitzer and II. Vernon Price, both "new mathematics" i not a "mon- Eyerly, man aging editor of the as chairm.n. Th. group will meet Undergrads Lack Knowledge teM. hers and the writers of his strosity in eilher content or in Register and Tribune for the past textt. ooks appear to have neglected in the SUI College of Education - methodology." He said that most In the East Lobby Conf.renc. Room 1. rich ,opportunities, in inll'oductory spoke to aboul 600 Iowa school ad· oC it is not new at all, in the sellse 15 years. h3 be n as ociated with he eC(lMmk that newspaper for about 35 years. king, prim· COlli' 's in history and the social ministrator here to attend the of introducing new content. "Problem DC Racial Olscrlmi· scien(\ 's, in literature and foreign He IS a past president of the a· nation" will be discussed by Group wealth food t 47th annllal Conference on School "Some of it, I am happy to tional Associated Press Managing temporary to In Foreign Affairs: Profs langu a~ 'es. to broaden and enrich C in the East Lobby Conference his kll\ 'wledge of world affair . AdminIstration and Supervision. say, is new to the secondary Editors AssociatIon. By BILL SHERMAN According to Trumpcner one reason for this is They ha ve failed to recognize that Dr. Spiller, who spoke on schools and has been too tong ~n Room 2. Beading this group wilt Gaulle who coming," he added. " The bulk The Wayzgoose banqu t derives Three SUI professors agreed with Dr. Bidwell's that many students base their opinions on p'lpular for the bulk of the undergraduates "Modern Mathematics in the Ele­ its name from an old printers' be M. R. Kratchovil, dircctor of principal reo of Ihe experimental materIal Is student aClalrs at Iowa Stllte Uni. • I these op.r;'ortunities are presented mentary School," said there will Christmas festival, when printers e the great findings that thcrc is a definite lack or under­ magazines am! newspapers. well·conceived .nd well·written; versity. Germany. graduate knowledge in the area of foreign affairs. almost tlX clusively in the survey not be the revolutionary chllng. would fete their apprentices with "While doing a good job in analyzing current af. courses usually taken in their es as some would have us believi. some of it is questionlble. All of Following the afternoon sesstQll. e his leader· Dr. Patrick L. Alston, assistant professol' of it can and will be improvld with food and drink. Britain as fail'S these publicatiolls are doing a less adequate I freshman \ and r;ophomol'e years. "B u t," he added, "elementary Lhe group wiJJ tour Burge Hall. history and a lecturer in the Western Civilization effort in depicting historical background . Thereby ... The t'ypical college professor experience. Tickets for $1.50 each ore now ce wants ac· core course felt there were "two main barriers" school arithmetic has already available from more than a dOlen Among the 16 colleges and uni. market on they obscure some of the basic issues, " Trumpeter shows little I concern for lower di· Evidence indicates that the vio· accounting for a lack of knowledge in foreign af· changed much in the last five journalism students and in the of· versities to be rcprescntcll at the oesn't relish said vision stude nts who are not poten. years, and I am sure it will change lent part of the mathematics revo· fice of the School of Journalism, session are SUI, Iowa State, Cac, e Common· fairs. These barriers are a lack of an understand· . tia! majors in his own depart· even more in the next few years. lution is over and the reconslruc· As a solution to the problem Trumpeter slated menl." tion period is underway, he said. Transportation to and from Lhe Comell. Parsons. and Drake. The · 0, De Gaulle ing of history and the knowledge of foreign Ian· meeting is held at a difCell.lDt col· guage. that "more rcol history courses must. be taught CALL .FOR REFORM "It's our responsibility to s e that "The time has come to give the banquet can be arranged by coli· al federation.·~-u. I the changes will make Cor improve· lege each year. in secondary schools so students wouldn't have The authol' feels that before the curriculum back to the teachers," ing the School oC Journalism aC- iDle Minister Alston stated "In the second half of the 20th cen· ml!nt :lnd not be just change in g with Gen. tury a university graduate if he is to be able to to ~tart from scratch when they come to college." common run of undergraduates is he concluded. "Because the con- fice . POLICE SMASH PLOT . • made more a;ware of foreign af- order to be different. This is a big next month bring any measure of independent, critical thought Replying in defense of the efforts of performance fairs there mubt be a change in at. I'esponsibili ty and a difficult one," lent and methodology h a v e not 2 BRITISH PLANES CRASH MARACAIBO, Venezuela IA'I. - ' ill come the I to foreign affairs, must be able to read, and read he added. been frozen, the classroom teacher LONDONDERRY, Northern Ire. POlice smashed a new plot ~ akthrough or , of the high school in educating their students in titude of teacbers and students, and regularly, at least one newspaper or journal in a foreign affairs was Dr. Lauren A. Van Dyke, in climate of d8mpus opinion. Re. Citing the interest in the "mod· must become the ultimate experj· lond IA'I _ Two British navy Gan. sabotage the oil·rich Lake ~lara­ of painful ' non· English language. Otherwise he is the prisoner menter and the final authority. nett planes crashed into a hill ide caibo installations, the interiOf' mated nego· professor in the College of Education. Van Dyke is forms can't bo ' restricted Lo the ern mathematics" of many com· of the Anglo.Saxon point of view, and at the mercy presently serving as state consultant for secondary undergraduate level but must be pot.nt people, including mathe· "The teacher will not have the neal' Loch Foyne on Tuesday kiU. ministry announced Tuesday, e Macmillan of the regular interpreters of what the rest of the curriculum and chairman of the 19 state North Iconcerned with American educa· maticians, S pit z e r predicted, time or the energy required \Vi~h. ing all ix crewmen. Communi ts and admirers of Fh Iy involved. world is thinking and feeling ." Central Association Commission on Secondary tion at all Leveh;. "The over·all picture for arith· ~ut t~e f.~l1 support oC the admm· The Gannet is a three·seat anti· \ ?el Castro we.re blam~d C~r blow- to suggest "The undergraduate's ignorance of history, in­ Schools In the elemen tary grades teach· metic is a bright one. I don't see IstratlOn , he saId. submarine ail'crall sometimes 109 up four bIg electl'lcal lDstalla- . . ers shonld mal~e greater efforts how we can fail to profit from The conference is sponsored by used as a trainer. Cau e of the tions of the U.. -owned Creole ister is play· cluding his own national history, is almost total," "The high school is devoting as much lime as to stimUlate curiosity about for. matrer as Alston said. "However, it is not enough to teach Ihese very fori un ate circumslanc· the SUI College of Education and Icrash was not i m m e d i ate I y IPe .troleum Corp. here. ~t the 's entry into they can in their over all cutTiculum to the teaching eign lands and their peoples. 1'he es, and I'm optimistic about whit the SUI Extension Division. known. heIght of the Cuban crlSl . him a few facts, to give him a survey which he of history and government," Van Dyke explained. secondar:7 schools need to do a et. He cour· will rapidly forget, but the major task should be is step when "One year of American history and one semester much belier job in preparing their n was either to introduce him to historical thought." of American government is required. In senior students 'in Amorican history and e to joining Dr. James N. Murray, associate professor oC problems courses, many high schools are devoting government, . in world. geography it now that political science, felt that students today display a more attention to intel'national affairs than any and wor~d hIstory. " howing itself ereater awareness of major political events than problems considered during the senior year," Dr. ~dwell feeLs that !t might rty and pro- . .. be adVISable to drop the Introduc· Have a real cigarette-have a students of a decade ~r two ago. CAM EL " In addition apPl'ox1Il1ately 90 per cent of our tory course in American history "There is considerable interest in foreign af· high students in Iowa complete a course in world and government from the college chance that fairs ," Murray commented, "but probably a mao tive govern· history which is elective in two Lhirds of the curriculum and substitute courses general elec· . jority of students put foreign affairs into the cate· schools," he said. in comparative government, intel·· try into the gory 'problems which we recognize are important, Van Dyke admitted there were "big gaps in the national relatiuns, or non Western Community but about which we don't do much thinking.''' high school program - a lack of a COLJrse in world ci viliza Uon . doubt. This, According to Murray the reason for this can be geography and a lack of courses in economics He aIso calls for reform of edu· cation the graduate levC'~ to im· Macmillan is attributed to two factors: "a feeling of tremendous which deals with international economic problems." at at doubt as complexity of the problem and a feeling that there prove tl'le teaching undergraduate In order to strengthen the high schooL program subjects related to foreign affairs. is nothing the average citizen can do about it." Van Dyke said two things must be done. Social Finally. he argues that every Ulrich Trumpener, assistant professor of history stUdies classes must be assigned to teachers who college and university president and a Western Civilization lecturerer, felt several are majol's in the fieLd of social studies and there should assign to a senior profes· 1 undergraduates keep up with current affairs, buL must be a wider usc of curriculum materials being sor or member of his administra· "in many cases their understanding of a crisis is developed by national committees such as the North tive staH the duty of coordinating hampered by lack of knowledge of histoN,.cal back· Cent.ra! Association Committee on Foreign Rela· curricular and extracut:r1cular at· ground - the roots of a crisis." tions. tivities relating to foreign affairs. The author conclud~ by stat· ing that the need for qualified lead­ ers of opinions on que!tlions of for· Havi You Visited eign policy has been recognized. Lubin's Newly Remod.l.d Now it is necessary to recognize that leaders are 'powerless without LUNCHEONETTE? followers, and that U.le quality and effectiveness of leac'lership in [or· ent that Cas· See Page 4 Ieign policy will in large measure I' support, be· ~~~~~~~~~~~~:ld~epend on the respanse of educated lly used the __• public opinion . scapegoat to ~ ------.------.~- to fulfm the o\utjon to the are historical· t nationalistic s ever known. OIMn,A. Ilcl. PI.c. SAVE 30~ With Thl. Coupon on a ·MINIT CAR WASH Coupon Good Tue •. , Wed., , Thurl. Nov, 27, 28 and 29 I Be Sure To Say Merry Christmas LimIt on. coupon per customer po m." With 'Christmas Cards This Yearl rom Mr. Kelly lO whet her he I It won't be hard to find that "just right" card link tho stale· to say what you feel for your loved ones this ~d I II lhe!ls Christmas when you purchase your cards Crom the large display now on sale at Iowa Book and Greal., Saving. With Sh.1I Ga. 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NEW YORK (AP) - Phenomenal , the qr('- I------...:.----L-~-----'==1_...::,.:.~_ thopedic sUl'geon beth, will speak Sharm, Team Point gon State honor student who played tootball by aCcident, ,'as ' Sf f d G'd lege flf ,,It!edicin, , I To Jan. 1 Peak Date named winner Tuesday of the Heisman Trophy as the- /out- an or rl · The ~iSh su By ERIC ZOECKLER . standing performer in the 'COllege the Stei ler Me Sports Editor g~me . ' 4:10 p.m, in the The T·formation quarterback and theatre' lhe ~Jonday night's Freshman­ Cincinnati No. 1meehanical engineering grain won Coach Fired He will '-peak 01 Varsity basketball game can be in a clo~e race with Louis ana State Surgery "if lhe ) I halfback . Sir R . ~nald, I I viewed as just another step in the experimentation process I The poll of '.109 Iccredited After Big Win the ol'tedlc . Cage Team .pe.... *rlters and broadcaster. partme " dC I (or the Hawkeyes as they point ,Ive Biker 707 point a' ,o 618 for I served ' ... orth() to January and a rough Big Ten THI TO" 30 STANFOR D, Calif. IA'I - Jack TIAM JIOINTI Stovall. J King GlOrge VI schedule. 1. Clnclnlllfl ...... (31, 341 Curtice was fired officially Tues· Although the Iowa yearlings gave 2. Duke ...... " .. /, "2 Baker is a remarkable southpaw day as football coach at Stanford Sir Relinald 3. Kontucky ...... 1 III Jones will spen the veterans a rough time in al· 4. WOlt Vlrllnll ...... 1) 131 passer and a decepti ve runner with just lhree days after his team wal· S. L.yoll (III.) ...... 12' long, loping strides who has climb­ I SUI. In; add i tio most every department while drop­ •. Oro.. n Itlto ...... ".. 121 loped arch-rlval California with the on Frida;' Sir R ping a breath-taking 66-65 deci· 1. MlIllIllptti Itl'o ...... ,. ed to second place in lhe all-time I. St. I.nlventuro ...... • 73 care!!r total offense leaders. His Indians' highest score in that tradi­ severaillours wi sia n, the experiment can't be con· t. Wlsconiin ...... , .... ".. 53 4,980 yards (or -'three years of tional battlc since 1930. Departrfl!tn~ or sidered a Cizzile, according to It. (Tlo) Itlnford ...... $7 Saturday. he w Coach Sharm Scheuerman. ••wlln, Gr...... , S7 vars-Ity competiti~ is lonped only The 30·]3 triumph gave Stanford loc.nd II - 12. Deyton. 53' U. II· by Johnny Brigljt;of Dra'{e, a star • Grand ·lJ.ounds "We learned a rot by t 1\ I I llnot., 47; 14. Klnlll Itlto; is. ArI· a 5-5 season record. the best in the members of ION Itlto. 40; , •• New y.rk U~ 33; of a dozen year&'ago. who gat:lc rcd game," Sharm said, oven before 17. UCLA, H; ,e. CoI.nd. Iht. U., five years of the Curtice tenure. SOciety . he and assistant Dick Schultr le; 19. Cr..ht.n. 29; 21. Indllnl. 2:1. 5,903. viewed gemo film. Tue.day aft. Oth.n - 1.. "le. 11; Pr.ylelenc., Baker has sewed up ·Ih.. "62 In the official statement, athletic The annual II; Wlke ".'0", 14; It. J.hn" (N.Y.). nattonoll totar, offense title with director Al Masters said: presented in ernoon . . 'i Ohio Iht., I; HOUlton. 'L " .... du.l S: C.I.'.... 4; Drlko Ind _"lui, ~ 2,276 yards iJnj1 rllt •• third among Rose Bowl Queen ' Dr. Ar\1l,ur On t~e debit side, the Iowa coach Hch; Irldloy, CI.mson Ind Wlchltl, 2 "ACter conferences with many Hch; It. L.uls. Arllonl and ".pper. pillers. nowned felt : people who are close to the Stan· Nancy Dovi., 20, sophomore it headed the dlno. ,I IKII. Folks in Corvallis, Ore. believe Pasadena (Calif.) City Coli ..., • The team didn't do much to By United Pr... Intern.,... 1 ford alhletic picture. and with thopedics for set up Andy Hankins with scoring Bak!!r is the most exceptional was named Tuesday a. Qut'\! of Cincinnati·s NCAA champion much deliberation, I have decided, I' opportunities. Hankins scored nine Paladena'. Tournament of Ro .... Named a " points. Bcarcats, twice over·looked in ----E-D-IT-6-R-V-O-T-E-S--­ in the best interests of all parties She'. I blu.-ey.d blonde mlljor. sor emeritus" eavor oC Ohlo State, Tuesday were concerned, nol to recommend Jack ing in music. from SUI in • The Hawks failed to show named most likely to emerge as Dally)owan Sports Editor Eric served on the Curtice for reappointment as head agressiveness under the boards the nation's No. 1 major college Zoeclc~r voted in the following pltal until his where they were outrebounded by basketball team in 1962-63 by the order fo~ the Heisman Trophy foolba ll coach. Lion's Share· tor Lyon t~ taller Frosh, 40·31. United Press International Board _ard: Pit Richter, Wisconsin "I have reached this decision ~ad Officiating Bright spots included : lynn ly70n, left, received the big share of awards ner of the Forest EVlshevski and Iowa AWlrds, of Coaches. enfilrst; Terry Baker, Oregon with great regret. All of us at Stan­ • Jimmy Rodgers. In scoring 19 St , qUoirterback, second; and Cause of Ring presented Tuesday night at the annual Davenport are Paul Krau,e, second from left, and Wally Hil­ T~e Bearcats, boastil\g two memo ford wish Jack the very best in the points and coming through with the bers oC the NCAA championship Je, 5""011, LSU halfback, "I" . and Quarterback Club banquet honoring the genberg, who were named co-captains for the "63 winning basket with 20 seconds left teams of the past two seasons in future." Mishaps: Expert Hawkeye football team. Congratulating Lyon, win· season. -Special AP Wirephoto to The Daily lowln "'~d. in the contest, "Jim showed last Tom Thacker and Tony Yates, The 55.year.old Curtice, a dis­ ALBANY N. Y. - Nat Fleischer, night t hat he's going to help," were picked to finish No. 1 this scholar-athlete produced by college appointed man, didn't know what who has been observing bO:l:ing just.; Sharm said. "As a point man, he season by 30 of the 35 coaches who football since Pete Dawkins of that futu,e might hold, uplain­ about as long as any man, told a Lyon Wins Evy, Iowa Award - should give us more punch than comprise the UPI rllting board. Army won the Heisman Trophy in ing, "I can't plan that quickly. legislati ve committee Tuesday in· we've had in recent years." I don't know what to think." * * * J 1958. Baker is 21. stands 6 feet 3 competent officials were the main 8:00 • The efficient manipulations of IOWI'I HIWkoYIl wtil _t oi,hy and weighs 191 pounds. As lhe search started Cor a new 8:04 cause of mishaps in the ring. 8:15 the double and single post oCfenses. or the Top ~ teams in its 24-gam,e Biker caine to Oregon State on cdach for the Big Six Conference "We hive plenty of them in lilt 8:3() Ferguson Named lowa·MVPi ··We started with the single post schedule thiS season. They al~ I I bllkethlll scholarship after club. lhe first name popping up state of New York Ind .... 9:30 9:55 in the second half and it seemed have a c~ance to meet Orelf.n st...... n' In tli,," sports at Jeffer­ unoCficially was Gary Kerkorian, where," the 75-yoar-old IditOl'­ 10:00 to do the trick," Sharm explained,. State (6) m the Ke~tu~ky CI-afBIC son Hi h In Portland Ore. He did quarlerback on the 1951 Rose Bowl of 10:50 publisher Ring Mllgaline tole! 11 :00 per'led' Dec. 21·22 and again ID the Far g , team and now an attorney in Los It wa. durin, thlt w...... t P tl d £I IIot eilen turn out for freshman the Joint Legi.lative Commi .... 11 :15 the uppercll ..men wiped out the We S I Cl• 8881C a or an , ,.re., foothall. Angeles. on Professional BOlling. 11 :55 Krause, Hilgenberg Captains 11 :58 Dec. 26-29. • Fra.hman's lead, which htd ...... " I did the best I could and I'm The committee, created afler the 12 :00 Dllring the campaign, will Passing by the practice field the 12 :30 Hawkeye captain and leCt half­ led the Hawks on kickoff returns tory. 11 points at on. point In the first 101 spring of his freshman year, Baker sorry I didn't measure up," was ring death of Benny Paret last half. meet Kentucky (3); Loyola Chi. 1:00 back Larry Ferguson received with an 1B.7 average. Hilgenberg, [rom Willon Junc­ got a Ylln for Coot ball and decided all Curtice would say. He came to March in Madison Square Garden, 2:00 tion, held a No. 1 position all sea­ Sharm was impressed with the cago (5); Wisc~nsin (9); IIinois Stanford from the University of is c h a r g e d with determining 2:50 lowa's Most Valuable Player Fergy, who received Ali-Ameri­ (13); 'Indiana (201; Ohio Sti¥e (25); to give the college game a try. 4:25 award at the annual Davenport son as a' guard and line-backer. Frosh's "a g res s I v en e s sand Utah. whether professional boxing should 4:3() can honors in 1960 and was named strength" and described their play­ Purdue (27); Clemson (2111; and !fe shared the single wing tail­ 5:15 Quarterback and "I" Club dinner The Forest Evashevski Award, "I think our captain, Ed Cum­ be continued in New York State 5:30 to the All·Big Ten second team received by the letterman with ing style as "tree-lance, the same St. LQuis and Arizona (tie 138), back assignment as a sophomore and, if so, whether additional sa fe· Tuesday ni ght. and last year Coach Tommy Pro­ mings, paid me the greatest com· 6:00 this season, oaught one of Matt the highest grade point average, style we can e?Cpect from Evan~­ ,. guards should be required. Ferguson is now eligible for the Szykowny's passes on an SO-yard thro switched to the T. which he pliment when he said the only was awarded to Lynn Lyon, senior ville Saturday." fault he could find witlT me was But Fleischer told the committee Chicago Tribune's Trophy which t 0 u c h dow n pass play which Celt was better suited to Baker's end from Clinton, who has a 3.23 Since he changed the subject, that I spent too much time try­ it would be a mistake for New York goes to the Big Ten'S most valu­ equalled an Iowa record. The best we were willing to go along. What 3:' SUI,: T~ 'airis many talents. able player. average in pre-med. ing to build men and not enough to outlaw professional boxing. It day of Fergy's career was when The Iowa coaches also honored about this Evansville team? Linemen got their share of rec· would only drive the sport under· lowl COlch Jerry Burns In· he gained 153 yards in 20 carries in winning. That hIS be.n my Lyon by voting him winner of the "Well, acconiin, to on .nlcl. ognition in the balloting, too. Min­ philosophy right along." ground. nounced that Paul Krau.e and in the 2B·14 deCeat of Michigan. Iowa Award as lhe player con­ I've posted on the tOlm bulletill ·Start Attion ntlotl teckle Bobby Bell and Wally Hilgenberg hive b"n Krause, who took over the float· tributing the most to the team. Alablma center Le. Roy Jordan Somc alumni felt strongly that iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii board, their coach (Arid Mc­ the homespun humor of the Ken­ elected cO'oaptalns of the '963 er spot in Burns' new offense this Cutchin) fe,ll thore i.n't on. woro 3-4 in the voting while Wis­ Hawkeya squad. Both will be season, was Iowa's leading pass· con.in end was fifth. tucky native didn't £it with the team on their .chedule ho feel, This ' WeeJ(en·d. S(anford altitude and there was seniors next season. catcher with ]6 catches for 214 * * * his telm can't bOlt," U.S. Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy pressur'e to oust him . He posted I j The Iowa captain from Madison, yards and one touchdown. His punt Fergy on 2nd And that schedule includes Iowa, Three Iowa winter sports teams is scheduled to present the trophy an over-all record of 14-36 in the 111. , was the leading rusher with return of 82 yards for a touchdown Notre Dame, Tennessee, Purdue go into action this weekend. with to Baker at the Downtown Ath· five seasons. 547 yards on 113 carries. He was in the Michigan game is the second and St. Louis, as well as top-rated the basketball team's Satm'day in­ letic Club Dec. 5. also top scorer with IB points and longest punt return in Iowa his- Team AII·Big 10 small colleges. The Aces' goal for vasioll of Evansville' Ond.1 College Curtice sai d he would clean up this season is to win the NCAA topping the list. When told he hid won the Heis· his work at Stanford and fulfill * * * some of his spcaking engagements CHICAGO (A'I - Tackle Bobby small college championship. M~anwhile, two contestants in man Trophy, Baker's first reaction before making plans. He is im­ Reports from the southern In· each oC ten weight will com­ was: "No kidding? That's great. Bell of Minnesota, end Pat Rich­ clbsses mediate past president of the DOING IT THE HARD WAY by ter of Wisconsin and Michigan diana town say that the 13,000 ca· pete as unattached I athletes in an I'm a very lucky boy." Coaches Asso­ (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS.') State's fullback pacity arena where the Hawks and invitation A.A.U. wtestling tourna· His next reaction : "I've got to Aces will play has been sold out ment sponsored by l the University get back to class." ciation and current chairman of and center Dave Behrman are its rules committee. repeaters on the 1962 All-Big Ten for weeks. of Millnesota at MinneapoliS Satur- So Ba~er, an honor studenl in football team named Tuesday by Sheuerman got back to the Hawk- day. iowa's group will inclOOe val" engineering, left the office of Ath- r=:======-====' I ! The Associated Press. eyes. sity and freshmen wrestlers, Coach letic Director Roy S. (SpeC) Keene In addition to Richter, Rose "Although we will be' pllylng Dave ' McCtls\[ey said. who had called him in to tell him A hearty I BOWl-bound and title-winning Wis­ our hordest durin, Dec,mber," T~ ' thf,d-..ont for Hlwkeyes he had won the award given an ·

1 consin also landed quarterback he said, "our bit concem is t. Is t/le In'"fal Mldwlost 0.,... gym· nually by the Downtown Athletic Ron VanderKelen on the first be at our belt by Jln_ 1 when w. nlltlcl ...... t ClllcllI FrldolY Club of New York to the country's - SPECIAL - team while runner-up Minnesota begin concentrating on the con- .nd SaturdolY. CNch Dick Hoi. finest individual football player. 1 'Egg had two more linemen in addition ference schedule." ...pIot salel tholt .I 10-mln t.. m Baker's reaction on gelting back Is tile trademark of Iowa City', 2 Strips Blcon to Bell - guard Julian Hook and In between then and now. the would c~pote In the IHair, seek­ to class was typical. He rarely friendliest ta~ern. Buttered TNst, J.lly end John Campbell. Hawks will do more experimenting Inl points' for tho t... m .tandln,. misses olle. And through the foot­ You're rl,ht, It'l Rounding out the line are on the fast break and the effective- Some &ldditlonal varsity men. ball season. where he led Oregon 29~ ,I gUlrd Jlck Cvercko, Northwest­ ness oC the double post ofCense. plus fl'es~inen, will enter thl: meet State to an B-2 record and a place ! ern, and tackle , Scheuerman said he will not hesi- as unattlched athletes. not figur­ in the Liberty Bowl, he misscd one Purdue. tate using second string men - Ing in 'IDY ~eam scoring, he said. practice a week - sometimes two "Doell ConneD's LUBIN'S With Saimes and VanderKelen including Bill Skea, Mike DeNoma, The me¢'., y.ohich attracts spme of - because of an engineering lab 26 East College lUNCHEONmE in the backfield are Marv Wood­ and Terry Lyon - even "when the best· gymnasts in the area, will class. son of Indiana and Paul Warfield the heat's on " in non-conference give Holi~,pfel a good line on the of Ohio State. games. "It's 0 n I y by watc~lng ability of ~is athlete~. In some respects there was little these men under game conditions Coach stiarm Scheuerman's bas­ easier 3-minute way for men: FITCH to choose between the first and that we can accurately evaluate ketball sql\Sd I(xpects the stiffest second teams. The No. 2 lineup them." I kind of a .tpst by Evansville. The Mcn. gcl rid or cmbnrrassing dandrurr ca~y as 1-2-3 I\ilh lteAwooA , ltO.' FITCH! In just J minulc (onc rubbing. onc J;llhering. one includes, ends Paul FlaUey, North­ Scheuerman- view. the current indiana college annually plays one rinsing). cvery Iracc of dandrufT. grimc, gummy old I",ir western. and Bob Prawdzik, Min­ lAUd .II "more montllly...... of the WOK/lest cards in the nation Ionic goes righl down thc drain! Your hour l oo ~ s hand· nesota ; tackles Carl Eller, Min­ pared" for its flr.t ,.mo, thin for a schoOl of. its sil:e. ~ s?mer. heallh ier. Your sC;llp nesola, and Rogcr PiUath, Wiscon­ list Y.Ir'S sqUId which lett to Iowa wasl ~efeated in the opener tingle s. reel s so rcrreshcd . Usc sin; guards Steve Underwood, EVlnsville. last Deceml)er there. 65-59, but in FtTCH Dand ruff Rcmovcr Wisconsin and Jim Schenk, Wis­ There were no lineup changes 1959 won by \two points and in 1960 rDIMAL IB41 FI"CH S HAM POO evcry wcek ror consin; center Bill Armstrong, announced by lhe coach. Fred Rid- came throug~. , 83·71. Evansville is rhere is a definite long range soving in owning your own LEADING MAN'S /Jo.l/lil·c ll:tndrufT control. . Ohio Stale, and backs Tom Myers. dle, sophomore qual-terbac~ on, the Ia coJ1eg~ o~ ,abo\lt 1,600 but its fonnal wear .. , this saving can b. furth.r r.al/z.d with our Kccr your hair an d sca tp Northwestel'D; Larry Ferguson. football team. has reported to the . basketball te. a~ play in a munici­ special combination offtr. SHAMPOO rcully ckal1, d "ndri"r-rr~c! Iowa; Sherm Lewis. Michigan squad, but Mall Szykowny has not Ipal audltorlu before sell·out State; and Roy Walker. Purdue. reported as yet. crowds QLmor tban 11 ,000. TUXEDO, natural shoulder, satin shawl

feiHer ; I colla" pleatle.. trouse~. Black, 55" Dacron polyelte" 45% COm'lO rayon . $4',95 {XJe tJlGl/1, At APART'l­ NJO I. Ol~j'f eeL/EVE l WAS 10 N0 AR6VHEW1 A SlfJG~E WORO 111/ Formal ShIrt ... ,...... $5.95 WH£tJ ~UO~/.Jl.I.(, 111$[ OPR?tJe/-JT WAS 511-(lkJO. Cummerbund, Tie Set ...... $4.50 WH£~ I WA~ A80Vf W NJO r 1IlOlASHf FVRTHE~ Stud Set ...... , ...... $4.50 APft"f 1~ CR~Il6R NJrJ ! RfALIZ.tO r~T NJO QlXlTfi ~TArISr/CS 1 010/J'1 1l6~1El£ A SUlpenden ...... ,..... ,. .. $1.50 FfWH 1l£ WAU ~TREEr SI!J6~6 AR6UHE/JT 1 Tux HOle ...... ,...... $1.00 ;JCVRIVAI- ~ 1 REALiZEO II!ARO A~~ 6V£~'1.I6 «At> l .. diuidunl itCIlI. to/til '()7.40 J t'IOIJ'I BHI~ve A OR A SIIJ6LE IJEW~pmR ~N6LE 'WORD J {"'fORIAl- ! IW ~cMJ lJJI6 $A41tX;, ItJ MOA'III S. , • ••++ .....~ ••••••O+ ...... i Special I CoulD.lion Offer "Complete outfit described I 1HEij ANOTHeR 1WU;Hi CAH6 [0 @,.. evr N1) WMIJ'r HI( etl.I6F ·10 /':1 above: I MIW- /IX6 I ~ (,c)E~1. I/JF~HEO .:. Acfir 1NIcf mAl' ~VE~THI1J6 WAS A GUIOAllC6. I THA1' I CWL.O /J.ff .,{; accurate. Ex· LrvfNG room turnlture •. dlnln, lable. ROUND Maylall wrln,~r t)'ptl waoher presented in memory of the late Those representing the Central Freshmen, sophomore, and jun· Advertising Rates perlenceJ. Dial 7·2518. 12.JOR chairs. kllchen table, chaIr .• dish" • ,ood condition. Boy's EnllJl h blk .. Dr. Ar(l1.ur Steindler, world·re· Party Committee at the confer· ior men are eligible for the platoon --- silver. antiques. See at 7l~ N, Dod.e. and Lionel eledrlc train. Rea.onable. Places Second JERRY YALL: Electric ffi!.l. TYflng. 1l·28 Call evenln,. 8-1800. 1J.21 nowned orthopedic surgeon who ence wilt be Spence Page. L1. lcaders clas~ . The officel: candi· Three Days ...... 1Sc a Word Phone 8·1330. I ~tR - headed tile SUI Department o[ Or. I. Spencer. presidellt; John Dist<,l· date course IS open to semors and Six Days ...... 19c a Word ::-~------59c sltATIO Eny ale. LfOU'S GUt ~ thopedics for nearly 35 years. MUSIC 11orst. A3. Cedar Rapids ; Dave .e ractuates. TYPING. n~at. accurate. Dial 7-7)98. ShOp. 1000 1I1&lro Ave .• home ot· HOME GROWN I n Contest Tc!n Days ...... 23C a Word 11·2R Bald\1 In orfan ' and Pianos. OpfOn I Benda, A4 , Collins ; ROil Moeller '/ The platoon leaders class reo TYPING. Guar-~n-t-.e-d-.-r-c-ur-a-te-. -2-Dc ovenlnas un U 8 p.m. 12-4 JUICY _ SWeET _ CIUS .. I, Named ' a "distinguished profes· One Month ...... 44<: a Word sor emeritus" upon his retirement Chester Schmits. A4. Indepen· B4. Gladbrook; Rich Edler. A2. quires two six-week summer train­ :,age typewritten ~QPy; ~ pale USED 21·lnch TV for sal . Dial 8-3M2. APPLES Homewood. Ill.; Dick l\lutlarky. A2 . I ing sessions with a commission handwritten. 7·5583. IH J2.S from SUI in 1949. Dr. Ste indler dence, tuba player, won second For Consecutive InseroOIll Charles City; Lana Borin. A4. High- awarded at graduation. An officer NANCY KRUSE IB~[ electric typln, served on the staff o[ Mercy Hos· place Saturday in the instrumental (Minimum Ad, 8 Words) "Iat A ...... With That low. land Park, Ill.; Sandy Ericzon. A3 . candidate attends a ten week service. Dial 8·68M. 12-811 UStD CARS pital until his death in 1959. "I.vor" division of the Seventh Annual Elmhurst, Ill.; Nancy Fredrickson , training session following gradua· CLA~IFIED DISPLAY ADS TYPING. RI'/lsonablc ralCS. Short pa· iating Young Artists Competition spon· 0 ... In ••rtlon I Month .... $1.35· pers and thesis. 7·3843. 12·3011 LOOKING lor a u5Cd car~ - or have A2. Deerfield. Ill.; Mary Bywater. li on and is commissioned upon • car tor .ale? See Andy HaICh Starting at $1.98 bu. sored by the Women's Association A3. Iowa City; and Nan Johnson. successful completion o[ the Five In ..rtlon. I Month .. $1.15" TYPING, electric. experienced. ac· Coralville AUIO Market. Highway ~ T.n Insertions ~ Month . . . . . 1.OS· cu rale. Dial 8·5723. 12·18 Wetit. Coralville. Phone 1·3316. 12-1 Ring of the Minneapolis Symphony Or· A3. Parkridge. Jll. Icourse. PLEASANT VALLEY The adviscrs allcnd ing the con· ----TYPING. E.perlenced In University 1960 1I!.e .A. Good condition. Call Siu l: hestra. ·Rlt•• for E~h Column Inch lhe Is. manu crlpl. elc. Electric Jacobson. 7-4117. 12·5 Expert fcrence wit h the students are Mr. EUROPEANS TO CONGO I Iyp ewrltcr lellte). Dial 7·2244. 12·20R ORCHARDS Schmits was awarded a $100 and Mrs. William L. Ad amson. P- IWSSELS. Belgium IA'I - Three TYPING wanled . Experienced. Low REPOSSES IONS 1301 South linn - Nat Fleiseher, cash prize and a three·fourths Adamson is manager of <' vents and )oung Belgians and a Dutchman Phone 7-4191 1962 Mereu!! Comet 4·door. bO .':( ing just • rates. Di al 645-2315. 12·201\ Let s Trade JUST OFF HIGHWAY NO. , tuition scholarship for four years ,. arrangements at the Union . Al so bave left for the COl1~ O to launch 19C0 Plymouth 2·door. man, lold ,~~~t ALL kinds of typin g. EKperlenced. a . attending are Bob Froeschle, man· a new development project of a Low 1 own Paym lit Call 8·5240. 12·18R FOR .,\LE: 1,lonel trnln, ~ol"pl~Ie; Tuesday in. Wedn ..day . Nov. 28, 1962 to the Manhattan School of MUSIC ager of the recreation area of the Belgian organization similar to and 19jO Ford Vlctolil i·door. I ctrle gullar, AmpUl! r, ph. 8·21151. t~ main 8:00 J:;\lWS TYPING, mlmeognphlng. Notary Pub· No Money Down 11·23 Hendllnes in New York City. Union; Millic LeVois, executive older than the U.S. Peace Corps. IIc. JIIary v. Ulorn~ . 400 Iowa Slate the ring. 8:04 Morning Chapel Bank Bid,. Dial 7·2656. ]2·27 Contact ---:--: 8:15 News Schmits is instructed by William hosless of the Union ; and George They will be joined by other Euro· lntcr\lato Finance Corp. ~ UX 38 10nR. wllh acce sorles, $25 .00. them in III. Phone 8-6470, 1~·11 8:30 NIlSlc ...... Gower, associate professor of F. Slevens. peons and Africans at Luluabourg. TYPING ~" I\' lcc eleclrlc x2!l65 or J24t ~ E. Wuhlnglon and II•. 9:30 Boo)Hr.

I 1~ J~ '.'", . ft. . L ~i A If26 '--~______.. ~-

SAM'S STRIP® By Mort Watlc.r and Jerry Dumas

Shows - 1:30 - 3:20 . 5:20 . 7:25 · 9:15 - " Last Feature 9:30 p.M." --- STARTS

WEK . liHURSDAY .. . ~ ..,' : Er.c1s1 ToCfay! John Wayn~~ "H~t~rr=Alph Nature's Ow-'-n-C-o-Io-rl 1- --..--- ", • . ' ••• ~I ,·. ~ I I ~,•• • r. \~.\ ... " ,): ' I' .. . ., Pege &--THE OAIL Y IOWAN-I_a City, le.-Wednesday, Nov. 21, "62 Seven Germans Creep I Wise. Dean , Campus Notes" ILaw Stude~ts IProbes NeATE; I goods. The sale will continue Fri· To Argue In -Fog to Freedom I Art Show day from 10 until 12 a.m. and fron: The Guild Gallery will hold its 1 until 5 p.m. BERLIN IU Pll - Seven more The seven new escapees brought Innual Christmas show and rccep­ 1M kl C . East Germans, two border guards to 23 the total since Saturday, an Doll of Indi a, silvcr fili grct OC ases Attacks Policy ion Sunday from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. jewelry, jade and turquoise Jewelry among them, crepl through pre­ unusually high number. ·t 130 1, South Clinton St. dalfll darkness and fog to free· West Berlin police said the two By JACQUIE WILSON and hand-carvcd figurine s will be Sixteen of the top-rankin g law dom in West Berlin Tuesday_ Communist border guards crawled Staff Writer The show will feature a group available. students at SUI will participate in ·:..hibit of prints, oaintings, pottcry But others may not have suc­ through strands of bal'bed wire in Dr. Lindley Stiles, dean of thc • the argument of foul' mock court ceeded. West Berlin police report­ the Zehlentlorf district of the ,\m. , !Od drawings. This is the group's Me College of Education at the Univer­ ed firing by East German border erican sector. Eseape points of the hiI'd s,how of the year. Australian Speaks cases before Iowa district court sity of Wisconsin, aUacked the The Guild, now in its third year, judges this week and next week guards three different times last other five were not discloseO . National Council for Accreditation Samuel Ball, G, Belmont, Aus· S~lots was recently reorganized into a 25- night. The shooting was not re­ The police sa;,:; ;our wern of Teacher Education (NCATE ) tralia will speak on various aspects on the SUI campus. lated to the flight of the suecessful heard along with shouts of "stop, mem ber student co-operatlvc. Each of his country at the Optimist Club The first of the two-hour "court Ken Tuesday night in a talk: entitled, member contributes work evcry escapees, the police said, since come back" on the French sector "Countdown [or Education." meeting aL the Jefferson Hotel at none of them was detected. border. hrec wceks. noon today. . sessions" will begin at 7:30 tonight BURBANK Tuesday marked the fourth anni­ In two other incidents the Com­ Said Stiles, "The power struc­ The show will run through Mon­ in the new court room of the Law ternational A versary of an ultimatum by Soviet munist border guards sent up il­ ture of education is changing. With day, Dec. 24. Regular hour for the • CenLel' . Other sessions will be ists (lAM) Itnt these changcs has come a grab Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev to lumination flares and fired sub­ ~allery are 3:30 to 5:30 and 8 to Medical Meet held on the evenings of Nov . 29 Lockheed Air machineguns and pistols. for the power now held by pI'inci­ day I the Western allies to get out of to p.m. on weekdays, 3:30 to 5:30 The Student American Medical and pec. 4-5. They will all be open in a bid West Berlin within six months. The The West Berlin newspaper p a I san d superintendents 0 f and 8 to 12 p m. on Saturdays; and IA few hours schools." A sociation will present a special to thc public. anniversary passed with no major Abend said one of lhe five civilian 2 to 5 p.m. on Sundays. program on diabetcs for SUI pre­ nl!dy took Ite refugees Tuesday swam an icy political development. Sliles's criticism was based on • medical students Thursday at 7: 30 Each "case" will be argued by ,I Hartley Act w Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, Com­ border river and was hospitalized the recent refusal of NCATE to in the medical ampilheater of two tcams of two students each. walkout next w suffering from exposure. Murray Speaks mander of U.S. Forces in Europe, fully accredit the Uni versity of General Hospital. One team will argue for the plain· The unions 'Was in Bcrlin for the anniversary. Wisconsin 's College of Education. James Murray. associate profes­ tiff, and the other will argue for by the Prill He came on a 24-hour visit to "de­ According to his report, the Uni­ ~or of political science, will discuss • • • the defendant. .+ted : "'11,' termine the needs" of the 6,500- versity was told it could not be current events at the Junior Pan­ Gamma Alpha Chi h invoc.tltll man U.S. garrison. His presence Cuban -Crisis accredited unless it changed its hellenic meeting loday at 4: 30 p. m. Gamma Alpha Chi will meet at Tonight's case is "An Action in President T underscored Western determina· entire functional set-up. in Shambaugh Auditorium. a Federal Court to Force Reap­ tion to continue to protect this All pledge classes of the 14 7:30 tonight in the Communication lAM District NCATE criticized f 0 u r major so- Center Lounge. portionment by a State Legisla. ment: outpost·city 110 miles inside Com· areas of Wisconsin 's teacher ed­ rorities are urged to attend. News ·Control A photographer from the Hawk­ ture." Arguing for the plaintiff will "We would h munist territory. Homeward Bound ucation program : 1) the fact that • • • it allowed academic specialists oth­ eye will shoot the picture lor the be John Larson , L2, Iowa City, to ha ve 51 ugg Attends CQnference ycarbook . All members should Stefania Fragogiana, 13, is shown leaving a Chicago hospital Tues­ er than professors of education to and Stuart Webb , L2, Rolfe. De· company witho wear matching sweaters and skirts. ference. When Is Suspended day on her way home after surgary to correct a heart ailment which advise and assist the Education John Schulze, professor of art fense arguments will be presented Department ; 2) the options in cur­ is at ending a conference on the Members who cannot be present ., YOked we wiU Hanna Cites was once considered hopeless, The operation, Nov, 13, connected an leaching of photography at the uni­ are to call Cathy Fi schgrund at by Stephen Turner, L2, Clarinda to obtain the t WASIDNGTON (uPIl - The artery from her arm to a lung artery, adding to her oxygen supply riculum available to students in and Keith Reed . L3, Springville. State Department announced Tues­ education; 3) the opportunity of versity level of Rochester, N. Y., 8-6882 or Nadine Godwin , x3372. we sought In day that it is "suspending" the which she otherwise wouldn't get, After recuperating in the home students to pursue the same degree today through Friday. • Cases to be presentcd at future liations and, il Carelessness regulations instituted during the of her Chicago benefactor, 1M will return to her home on the Grtek by different routes as well as by Prof .. Schulze, who teaches a • " sessions , and students who will we will strike a Cuban crisis which required all island of Zakinthos. -AP Wirephoto testing out of a course; 4) the fact class in creative photography at Council Meets argue each of the cases are: A union spok officials in the department to re­ that Wisconsin does not admit all SUI, will deliver a paper entitled The Council of the Parents' Co· November 29 : Criminal law case out and picketi port on their contacts and , discus­ students to the College of Educa­ "Some Aspects of Teaching Crea ­ nl'Prfltive Pre chool will meet at involving embezzlement and pre· til Taft-Hartl In SUI Thefts tive Photography," and will also rild out_ sions with newsmen . tion at one specific time. 8 tonight in the home of Mrs. Joel trial discovery process. For plain· Assistant Secretary of State for act as moderator of a panel dis- Caplan, 708 Greenwood Drive. tiff - Michael Figenshaw, 12, Lockheed John Hanna, chief of SUI Police, CAB ~xaminer Disapproves Dr. Stiles attacked these criti­ cussion . ment. has tabbed carelessness as the Public Affairs Robert J . Manning cisms as not being a real measure Materials will be distributed to Jefferson and John Shors, L2, said, however. that the department • • • Pocahontas. FOI' defendant - Lar· If the "ove cause of a recent series of billfold of the quality of an educational make and r ~pair toys . New toys II., the Taft· thefts in Hillcrest. would reinstitute the procedures Journalism Panel ry Gutz, L2, Storm Lake, and institution. He and the faculty of and equipment purchased from pro­ onIer f8f' In Hanna was referring to a rash "if it becomes necessary or ad­ Possible Giant Airline Merger Wisconsin felt that these criticisms ceeds of the recent rummage sale Terry Locschen, L2, Iowa City. visable." Leslie G. l\'loeller, director of the period, com~ of lhelts shortly befol'e Thanks­ should be their own local concern. SUI School of Journalism, will par­ will be di scussed along with plans Dec . 4: "Nationalization of a . I giving vacation. Four billfolds and Notice that the procedures were WASHINGTON in part at the Missouri State Peni­ mausoleum c: tentiary in Jefferson City. HOUBe of Ora By Not Advertising In The Daily Iowan Hendrik 's Top Quality Workmanship white, and the SUI Oral Surgeon tlon service Lectures in Chicago Your Store Can Get That "Vacant" Look. would be a cordance wit:.. Dr. Merle L. Hale, professor Of ,' couple made Oral Surgery at University Hos­ WilhelmIna. . pitals. spoke to members of the DON/T LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOUI princess on Ell dental and medical professions at I Dutch peopl~ a special conference on Research thing bilt a q 11 in ' Oral Surgery Tuesday in Chi-\ ADVERTISE NOW IN lng rrom a cago. diabetes for The conference was co·sponsored . - by the American Society of Oral MATH Surgeons and the National Insti· The Matb lute of Dental Research. It was ",m meet at • CQlltiauatioo 'of a program to 8$' ·1 111~1)Q, iJy Iowan 81l of the E= list in forming standards of gradu- OrlandO E. ~ ate education in the specialty. It Convenient, Modern l'/IC only »I (lium to 'reach the entire fawlty, students (lnd nOIl·acadel'lic " erwollnel an address e and senti'8j~ was.the fifth con(erence on .grafju- 01 iT;e~Sf~i"'e U,j{vers,ty of 'lblva. - ale education in oral surgery I Drive-In Office Cofree will "r'nsored br the societ . II!!I"~"~!IIII_IIII!'I~_ !III. ~_IIII!!_!'!I!'!_IiI!'I!!'!!I'-II!I!'~~~~~'!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!II!I.I!IIII!I!~!'I!I!!I!!!!I!'IIII1IIII!I!~"""~1III!III1!II!'!--. •