, Serving the State The Weather University of Iowa Cloudy wHit Upt snow Campus and today. Saturday, doudy ,,1th oeeaslonal snow. Iowa City RI,b today, 25; low, 15; owa:n hi,b 23; 4. al Thursday, low, Est. 1868 - AP Leased Wire - Five Cents Iowa City. [owa, friday, Jan. 30, 1953 - Vol. 97, No. 88, n er rows verl ' "• Dakin Elecfed 'crowd Jams Morse, Wiley Boomtown Blast I Congress Seeks Iowa House Tangle Over IExplanation lor Appointments Korean 'Show' , Governor Of . forOleofighl WASHINGTON (.4') - The sen- ate confirmed two more of Presl- WASHINGTON (.IP) - Congres- DES MOINES (.4') - A jam- dent Eisenhower's state depart- slonal ire exploded Thursday over packed Iowa house of representa-/ment appointments Thursday a - the reported "scenario" staging of tlves chamber heard three hours er a heated word battle betw an ill-fated American combat raid Rotary GrQup of debate Thursday in the oleo- its torelgn relations committee in Korea last Sunday in which in- butter battle. The preUmlnary chairman and Sen. Wayne Morse vited generals watched the attllclr verdict was left with three senate Clnd-Ore.). with the aid of gay-colored pro- Dean Allin W. Dakin, SUI ad- and house committees. Ch . A I grams. minlstrative dean, has been elect- The verbal contest was over . airman lexander W. ~ey (R- Rep. Clare HoHman (R-Mich.) ed district governor of the 19:Jt1 whether the legislature should en- WIS.) ac.cused Morse ot fllJbust~r- angrily compared the incident _ District of Rotary International, act a series of oleo bills. The prin- ing tacti.cs when he temporarllf known as "Operation Smack" _ it was announced Thursday. cipal one would lega1i2:e the sale blocked . one ot the nom[natlons. with historical episodes of glad la- Election results, from the bal- ot colored oleomargarine The Morse, In turn, offered to take tors ((ghUng to the dcath for the loting held at Rotary clubs I'n 46 committees hnve the bills ' under anybody on "In a donnybrook" If I • r I t R 'deratJon and mu"t make tho ey resented his Insistence on full amusemen, o · nne en oman em- cities in southern Iowa, were dis- consJ ., I b I pcrors. closed by the retiring president some recommendations to house Informat on a out appo ntees. Rep. William Bray (R-Ind.)' Clarence Oll of North English. and senate. Morse Lou MeDHoned said he was "mad as " about The announcement took place In addition to the legislative Mentioned during the rlareup It. at the regular Thursday meeting committees, those present Includ- was Morse's loss ot major eom- Military Chiefs Surprised of the club at the Hotel Jefferson. ed other members o! the legisla- mittee assignments as a result of In Korea, U.S. mtlitary authori- The Iowa City Rotary club had ture, legislative employes and hIs bolt from the Republican party tics expressed surprise and dls- nominated him for the olfl·ce. Da- hundreds of Iowans who came to in last faU's presIdential election may over the storm af crJtlclsm kin will take office July I. hear the widely heralded argu- campaign. erupt i ng on the home front. They Dakin, who has been an active ments. The fi reworks began when the denied it was a "show" put on to Rotarian In Iowa City, said he Case Carried by 'I senate confirmed the nomination please top brass, and insisted that Celt It was a great honor to be The case for oleo was carried of Carl W. McCardle, former high-ranking officers frequently elected president. , by seven persons. The butter Washington correspondent for the wllness such attacks to learn com- In 1950-51 Dakin was vice-pres- forces called upon three speakers, Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, to bat lessons. Ident of the local club and was In the main there were about nine be an assistant secretary of state FIREMEN HOOT WATER ON FLAME In ALken, .C., an atomic ite boomtown, rollowtnr an ex- On Capitol HHI, Chairman Dew- president during 1951-52. He has arguments presented by each side. and then took up the nomination plo Ion (lremen said WI. eaused by leakln, ras In an electrical tore. The two-story bulldln, and four ey Short (R-Mo.) of the House worked on many committees. Allin W. Dakin The oleo people argued: of another assistant secretary, other bulldlnp were destroyed. The death toll was at least four persons. Armed Services committee said he Currently Dakin is president of It ls wrong in principle for former Rep. Thruston B. Morton had scnt word through channels the Six-county Hawkeye Area Cains New Honor farmers to attempt to dictat.e of Kentueky. 5 t D d P b SUI G to Gen. J . Lawton Collins, army Council of the Boy Scouts uf which spread shall be used by Demands Reporia en a 0 r s em an roe Foreig n roup chief 01 staff, asking him to ex- America. He has been active in several international organiza- mers; growing of soybeans, Morse demanded committee rea plain to congress just what hap- many phases of Boy Scout work. lions: the Institucion Internacional the from whlch Is ustl(! in oleo ports on boltl McCardle and Mor- 0 f III I Wh t 5 I To Be on WOI.TV pened. Rotary In.ternational has bel'n ldeales Americanlstas Fiestas de ;tl~n i: not harldm'inul 'tto th~ ton. ega eo a es Collins May TesUfy of special Interest to the newly .' ut er s no. t so 1 s na Majority Leader Robert A. Taft Short said he may ask Collins to elected Rotary governor. He has las. A~encas, Foreign ~oll~y as- color l~ut IS ttinted YeldiOtW; (R-Ohio) said it was not custo-I WASHINGTON (lPl S H For Show Tonl·ght testify at an open hearing next attended meetings of Rotary in soclallon and Padua Inslltute, In('. presen t Ive cen a poun ax to h . ted ts n I - en. er- Monday or Tuesday. . I h' h Id bId mary ave prln repor ex- ult re 'It t ted i . . Mexico, Guatemala, Venezuela, Local memberships include the on 0 eo, w IC wou e repea e cept in unusual cases. man Welker (R-ldaho) said cu. comm~ ee s ar. an n-. . "It IS Inconceivable to me that Puerto Rico, Cuba and Ireland. Iowa Chamber of Commerce hav- by o~e of the bJlls, cannot be .. , Thursday that crooks appear to be quiry mto the practice which Foreign students (rom SUI WIll mllltary leaders would uselessly . ' justlfled. It s immaterial to me whether Chairman George Aiken (R-Vt.) be on television tonight at 10'30 sacritlce human lives" Short told He has t raveled throughout Eu- ing served as a director from it's customary or not" Morse de- at work "somewhere along the said is 'holding the US ta payer . , rope, India, southeast Asia, China, 1949-51 ; the Civic Music assocla- C?lalmB MODey Lost clared. He went on to'serve notice line" In bl wheat deals invo!v'n u .. .. x ,p.m. on WOI-TV, Amcs. the House. "In any event, we wilt lapan, Central. and South Amer- tion and the Unitarian church. Iowa 15 lOSIng more than a mll- Wil d II g I gj P··. Entitled "Our Neighbors," the get the true story when Gen. Col- 'd ' At 1 Th r t . lion dollarll- a year In ~/l l s taxes on ey an a other commipee Cal')adlan grain labelled unfit tor W. E. Higman, a U.S. customs I .. .• lIns returns." ea ~an \a~~Q t, \~a. h' e ~ er- Other memberships include and certain grocers are doing ehaiJ'mart chat he was going- "to human consu ("on o!!iclal, ~tlfled that presec~ Inws pro~ram 15 deSIgned to Klv€' vlew- <'ollins is now In the far E~l ::e~~!d a ~:~:ide~a~;:\ lP~un~V ~ Har.vard Club of Eastern low $10,000 a year less business per dem?nd. full Informal'ltm on all S j mp ~ . . JdO not prohibit blending imported ers a beller understanding 'of the on an inspection trip in Korea .....LI .. ~~ his attention m 0 National EducatIonal . grocery because Iowans go to nomtnatlons. ~nate n vestlga tors r~celved wheat classified as "unfit for hu- students' nalive eountrtes. The and northern Japan. Hif is ex- Dakin holds memberships in ~~~ ~:l~:~r~~~haeOIOglcal Instl- neighboring states to buy colored ACter a couple of hours of this, !~s:~m~~~a~~:~ I~~~:at~:~~tie:e:~ man consumpUon" with . high- five students on the program will peeted bac~ Saturday nitht. ______"".~~ and other Items, they addecl. ~orton's nominatton waos con- imported mixed with hi h r de grade graiJ? to produce flow. explain their cultural back- Short saId he doubted seriously The butter forces made these firmed on a voIce vote. . ' . g g a. He said It has long been a mlll- that "Operation Smack" was a .------....,...------.." declarations: Amerlc.an wheat or ml11e~ wlt.h ing practice ~o blend inferior groun~s and tell their reasons for staged show, declaring: · f Butter is the balance wheel of domestIc r10ur and resold In thIS wheal, both foreign and domestic, attendJng SUI.. "! think this was an actual op- the dairy industry; the attempt to Red Platoon W· ed country and. abroa?. with good quality grain to pro- .Kamal Abdul Monelm of ~gyPt era lion, not a circus. When in Wor Id News Brle S legalize the sale of colored oleo is 'P . Although an oUlctal sai~ there duce flour, WIll act. as moderator. tOI the doubt, we should give the benefit A Condensation of Late Developments an indirect attack on soil fertility; 0 t in UN Til t IS nothln~ llle~aL about mixl:"g the But., he added, the customs Bu- shOW, whIch features Julio Queve- of the doubt to the field com- U wh lit WIth high grade gram, the reau is now suggesting that re

PDmlNG lI.EAL COMFORT IN THE UNION nadlue room " FIXING UP A "BOOSTE1\" FOll. QUICK crammlac enern II Rea­ WITH COFFEE AND PLENTY OF BOOlUI to keep her awake, (0&117 I •••• ,b.t•• by Jehll Jaq_1 lAu\M. 'Knox. A3, S\OUlt C\\y. wbo \I bo-plnc Ula" a as" DUnute re­ a\61Jarmuh. AI, Ottumwa. 1\on rUevea \n the theory \ha~ "the Carol Lolchl",er, A:4, Ch\earo, Ill,. a4herea to the end-ol-the­ TAKING TIME OUT FOR A sbort nin&' beween elld-ol-classes and ~ lIIay pay dlv\dends al\et bet t\na\ eltamlna\lontl. Lou\se. \n q"'oea' W&y to a Mlb\ 01 ,tu4,1", I, \\\roup the stomach." And aemesi.er phUOIOphy of "cramml",." C&ntl" one of matly SUI beclnnLn,-ol-finals art Dlek HickeDbottom (len), A4, Clinton. relaxation-but obvious concentralion-la lOme contrut to the ,tudeDt. who Is aacrUlcln& dates, movl" and ,leep In a final play and Jim Boyle (rlgbt), C3, ClIn!oD. Whetber In the atmospbere 01 hyper. nervous coffee-drinkers, but every .&udent to his own cram­ 1r0Jll a ,I&nee at the Clock, II may be a 10", ni(h\-uDleu tile food for aD "A." Final examlnat.1ol1ll ,\an to.}ay a\ a a.m. aDd end Feb, tbe library, Union, "do not dl.turb" rvem. or a bar, niost SUI stu­ m, proeedure. ..vea out of eourit. • a& S p,m, dents are entering a !)ensive and cODSoientloul "final" week. Ya&,e 2-THE DAlLY IOWAl -Jow.. City, [a.-FrI.. Jan. 30. 1953 . . Interlude &. ... Secret Atomic · with Interlandi ...... The Dally Iowan Int~rpreti~g :t 'Lens' May Be the News ~ ~~~~~~~~~J~~UPublished dany exeept Sunda" and ..,orlrd b, .:...... ~~ 'I'h~ P.U3~~, 1~310 ....~~~~ _ ...... ro ....11, r.bU.... I BUlllt lin 1IIIInOIls By J. M. ROBERTS Ja. 'MondaY and lelia! holiday. by Student d ..... U...... rim ... t. I .. ol. r .., of _ PubUcaUons Ine.• 128 low. Ave.• \"",. 01. J ..noallDa balI41 .. " 0 ....\1...... D n,y IOWAN &DI'I'O~L 'I'Arr Assoelated Preu City, Iowa. Entf'Ui!.s IeCOnd cla.u Je .._ .-t "I Is .,,'B Ire...... t. U a .,1Il.. 'Editor William Clabby News Anal,.. mall matter .t tho poslOUlee .t low. • •• trem I 1'.m. t. & ...... n,. Sal- Manactnl relllO. ':. lOIeI'b Keyer I WASHlNG-TO (JP) - There's a ~:~h ~~~, . the oel 01 ~- 01 v •• , ...... : • aa. to I' ...... News J:djlOr • .. • Jim Footer possibility that the atomic energy . ..•• City Eclltor . ' • Ron Butler . I' j I P>&oRU>U'~~.R or ~ ASSOClAT.~~ PR~a~ Aut. CIty Eclltor . • ..• VirIInb Vnr. commlSS on s pro ec t...."'... new p .an t Foreign governments which The AasoeIAItd Pffu IJI entiUed ex- Coll U 91 Irem ••n to ..ldnll~1 SPOrU EcllIO. .. . J.d< Bender in Illinois tor making "more or I, I I Jy 1 th ! .tpublleoUon I...... 1 ...... II...... lD •• ·.,.1O Soelety Editor . S ....h Adams 1 I al" I ' 'll hang on every word uttered about ... ~USo~· the °loea': ;::!.o:rlnted in this lto ....r ...... m ..1 I. '1'''. nlu, Chief PholOcrlpher . John Jaqua ess convent on exp oSlves WI American foreign polley under the n.""' palM'r II weU . a .U AP new. '0 In. E ..II.rtal .111.« ar. I" til. bl.e· tr tum out material for a secret _ ,dbpatcl>8...... 1 .r ...1 UIU. norl" ..,...... DAILY IOWA.!'i' 811 IN.'S 'I'll. atomic bomb process clllled implo- , new admmilstration will do weU to ... , Bualn_ Mana.er. . ~nard Hlppehen I remember, when reading John MENlSta Suhatrlption rat... _ by carrLer In 10"" Aut. Bus. MI" .• ChJ.18 R. OoeldMr sion. Foster Dulles' latest speech, that ! AODIT BuaEAU Cill'. a$ eonlS week ly 0' $8 pet' ye r In ClI ..lJled MAnaaer , Barbara Boyd Thi d r I • . I OF Id \'a n ~; . Lx months. ~.u ; thr~ Promollons lIIa...,e• ..• Vir' lfIl. CoLlIM S process rna e sensa JOna it was directed entirely at the U.s. ClltCULATIOSI m c nl,,". $2:10. By maU In 10 ..... "pe. 11. ..1 . ProducUons Mana,.. .. Mel LewlJl news two years ago when it was public. ~ ur ; , Ix months. ~ ; til..... montha. Produc:Uon Manaaer .•... Bm Jenner mentioned for the first time at the . ::CoU R.~151 II Y'. do ut r ...ln $3 ; AU oth.,. 1IUI1I IUbierlption •. 'lO,oo Even phrases which seemed to yo., Oall, I, .... by ., a .m . ..kf,-ood par y .... r ; , Ix month •• $3.G) ; three DAILY IOWAN ClltC LATlOI( 'I'AF' spy trial of Julius and Eclhel Ro- luylce I ,'.,.~1l.0 aU nr.lce c".-en months. $325, ClreulJlUon Mana,or Robert Cronk senterg. carry a message abroad, such ~.s the one about re-examining 10-:'­ Test mony at tbe Rosenberg trial clgn aid policy if the Europeans 1n the New Cabinet - brought out that Implosion in­ don't get along with the new uni­ volves the use of some kind of a fication treaties, were primarily "lens" made of a hlg/lly explosive for home consumption. The new mntel'ial and that th~ process is secretary of state was trying to ummerfield to Supervise "implicit in the atomic bomb." give the public a simple. explana­ l\lany Lenses Used tion ot world problems. trying tD Vnolficial deductions [rom the reassure them that the govern­ technical testimony went this way: ment is working for them with I,Dne of Largest Public Utilities "enlightened seH-interest," and Al'ound the core of an atomic bomb are a number ot lenses made trying to enlist the support of factions which believe the of some unknown materilli. These U. S. is spending too much on allies who lenses are detonated and the lorce may not prove effective. of the blast is directed inward to­ u 0 ward the core. Hen e implosion Proteci Japan rather than explosion. which In describing America's motivCi means a blast directed outward. in the Far East, for instance, the This Implosion then .helps set off secretary, who ord inarily lays so the explosion, or the atomic blast. much stress on prlnclplt!. 'devoted What causes the Implosion never himself almost entirely to the ma­ was made known. terialistic need of keeping JIlP8l\ No indication was gi\'en at the out of Russian hands. He skippe1 the lesson taught Russia by United trial as to whether the lens is Nations intervention In Korb, made of a conventional explosive, that the world since 1950 has beel\ such as gunpowuer, or that it, like ready to use eolIective security the key material of an A-bomb, is arrangements against aggression made of uranium or plutonium. I anywhere. Dulles probably con­ Unlikely to Be Similar "You mt/st not interpret the term 'sell'ior prioileges' too broadly!" sidered that those angles, para­ It. appears unlikely, however. ------mounted by the Truman adminis­ thaL two processes. which appar- Your Income Tax­ tration, had been sufficient ly en tty ure direct oppos tes of one hashed over. e another, woujci employ the same It- - f D 'd rt ( d He referred to Communist er· implosion in nny way- including emlzlng 0 e U I-On$ ompare forts to stir up the Middle East kind of explosive. and Africa, but not to the !lInda- The AEC deciJnes to talk about mental pToblems there, as in Ma· be";hether made orat not thc the proje materialscted new to W-Ith Standard 10' Per Cent' (red.-t layathe Communi and Indo-China,sts merely which opportun- made plant In Illinois arc In any way .ist workers In an already-existing h h ' foment cneated by nation ali m concerned wit t e process, but (Fourth ot Ix Articles on Row to and short-sighted Western colon. there was some sp;!culation that fake Out Your Federal Income per cent of your income. You don't hospital Insurance and cost of ial practices of the past. Anti- .his might b~ so. . , 'rax Return) , get anything off your tax bill for travel necessary to get medical Wcslernlsm is still a greater prob- The commlss.on, III Its announ- gifta to needv individuals or to care. lh . the e areas than is ~o •• 1\10 r A ILRICASS probably do mort ptl'1lonal bu ine witb the po s ~ office department than with 'ement concerning plans for the By The Associated Prtss ~ ~, "m In s ~ m- '.hI)' other. ~ew $29 million plant in Fulton WASHiNGTON - It may pay polltlcal organlzatlons~ or labot: However. you cannot deduct the munism. • t III 'd I th t th _ you to itemize your non-business unions. or chambers of commerce. cost of travel suggested by a doc~ P1ctUl'ed Trouble SJIOa 'Editor' Note--.-1'bls to the services. ~~~S~:e'5 td' :ealmaonnuIll ct~red ~h~~e deduction on youl' federal income You ~an dlXluot for real estate tor for rest or ch~ge; Or funeral But Dulles' chief aim was to • ot a serle of nine artlcl Nould not be ot a radioactive na- tax return, instead of taKing the and peLSonal property taxes, state ~xpenses, or lIlc lnsurance prem~ give a simple picture of trouble Job Is International t - th t I h ld t b standard 10 per cent allowance income taxes, s tat~ or local sales turns. spots, and that's what he did. entral Press and tIlls newll­ · Id ' ure a s, t ey wou no e taxes state gasoline taxes and Property Losses for S ummert Ie , havmg become uranium, plutonium or tritium. based on your Income. '.' He had one bit which was close· paper. postmaster general now supe I ~ A comparison of the tax com- automobile license fees. If vou itemize your deductions to-news. He said he belleved Pres- , I; n See R-Bomb L Il k N .."-"'-· ... lbl T • tends the complex operations ot . puled under each system certainly on-~ ....". e axeS on long-form 1040, you can take ident Eisenhower was coming up ,WASHINGTON - When your the poSt office department Be- The latter IS II possible compo- is in order It you paid out a lot or But you can't take anythIni off oil your income any pro~rty with more than a vague idea about pO~lIn dl"livers your newspaper, sides executing laws applying to nent or the projected hydrogen Interest on a home mortgage, or for federal income taxes paid, lQsses by tire, storm, flood, etc. ending the war in Korea. Other I ttel" I d other mali, he I~ com­ the postal service, he will neiotJ- 'lomb. incurred heavy medical or hospi- social security taxes, federal ex- Loss su.stained in a car accident sources said a definite plan of p] tin, ttle (inal stage of Ollll of ate postal treaties with foreign The AEC dec~Jned 10 say tal bills. clse taxes such as those on liquor, caused by faulty driving is de- effort was coming up. They didn't t , !ar st btl .:! S nd public go emmcnts in C:9nnection with N.hcther the exploslVC to be man- 'the governm nt neither wants Curs, jewelry and phone calls, or ductlble, but drunken driving is say what. - t llty operations in the woor Id. He tbe international postal service. J!actured in Illinois would be' In- nor expects you to pay more tha foe 'fOcal taxes w.htch tend to in- considered willtul negligence, and Dulles assigned the Amcricarl carryln out the ultimate objec­ These are subject to preslden- ;orporated Into bombs along with the minimum tax due, honestly crease the value ot real estate no deduction is allowed. people to set an example or what r; of tile post oW d partment; tlal approval. He will submit to radioactive substances. figured. . owned. A paving assessment Is a No deduction may be claimed if freedom can do tor a people, that • deliver mail quV;kly, sately and the President names of candidates But U1e very scope of the $29 You can itemize deductions only clIse in point. the loss Is compensated for by in- subjugated peoples might retain a . clently from 'sdnder to recipl- fOr poStmaster at first, second and million project appears to Indi- i! you use 10ng-form 1040. Other- The law sets tight limits on the surancc. If partially covered by goal at which to shoot. It was n third class post offices, and he cate that such may be the Intent. wise you are automatically given amount of medical expenses for Insurance, the amount of the de- v6ry general talk. without any at- • _ About 500,000 persons work for will appoint directly postmasters It is also known that the AEC a credit ot about 10 per cent ot seI! and dependents that may be ductlon is reduced ac<:ordlngly. tempt-wh1ch he said would be at fourth class post offices. has another plant - the Pante:x your income. deducted. First, taxpayers under The law requires you to report premature - to provide the 8n- ~rpo::n~!fi~o~~~ar~~~n\IEv~~ NaUve of Michie-an ,)]hant near Amarlllo, Texas - Principal Deductions 65 can take ot only that portion ot as income any winnings you may swers. More Indication of what volume of mail has increased, de- Swnmerlleld WIIS bprn on March w Ich. is concerned wltil testinll, The principal allowable deduc· such costs which exceeds 5 per have on the races, poker and other the new administration thi~s of si,itc the rapid growth of new 17, 1899, at Pinconning, Mich. explOSives of a conventional na- tjons are state and local taxes; In. cent ot their adjusted gross In- Corms of gambling. But gambling those possibilitIes Is expected Aftcr completing elght grades of ture. 'crest paid; contribUtions to re- come. However, ~f either you ot losses may not be deducted In ex- when Eisenhower addresses COil- II fOl'm s of communication. In 1951 public schools at Pinconning, Bay It would seem unlikely that thc ' Uglous, charllable and educational your wife 15 65 or over, you ml\Y cess of gambling winnings. gress Monday. th United States postal service City and Flint he started to work commission would have at least organizations; property losses by claim the entil"C amount of medl- ______. ______--:- ___ 46 , 90~,4l0,OOO pieces of Arthur E. Summerfield In a Flint fa~tory. Subsequently two separate facilities concern!,~ tire, storm or theft, and - under cal expenses for: your dependents GENER·AL NOTICES tha t weighed ll,982.011,OOO -- • he was in the automobile, real with conventional explosives if the strict llmltations - some medical, which exceeds 5 ~r cent of yO'll' nd each piece was han- mrni . d d 1 abol,lt 10 times in its journey. seope and operations of tbe post estate, and oil dlstr~butlon busl- co s~lon inten e only to use dental, hospita and nursing ex- income. office de artment which Arthur ness. the explosives fOr ordinary con- penses. MedJcal ExpeftSe UmU! GENERAL NOTICES should be deposited with the cit)' editor of 4Z,OOO Pos~ OfCIceli Today p.' . Since 192fl Summerfield llas de- struction and blasting purposes Contributions to religious, char- There are maximum limitations The Dally Iowan In the newsroom In East hall. Notices mUlt be Vllen the office o~ postmaster E. SummerC~eld, of Michlga~, IS ve)oped a large automobile retail unrelated to atomic weapons lltable and educational organlza- on medical expense deductions submJtted by Z p.m. the day precedlne- rlrst publication; they will '\M.J.lIilIlcrat was e ~ tabli hed under thel n~w tile ~ead unde~ ~e:lldent business at runt. During. World U1eroselves. tions arc deductible only up to 20 too. A single person who clalm~ NOT be aceepted by phone. and must be TYPED or LEGIBLY WRITTEN and SIGNED by a responsible person. on tn 1.789, the nati~n EISenhower s admlmstratton, l! War II he headed a Midugan only one 'exemption is entitled to 75 post Offices, and malls you will bear in mind various im- committee that recruited more T' 5 II C . put in for not more than $1250' TJIERE Wn..L BE AN "ONEG follow. At 7 p.m. the Bible study carl'ied over 1,875 miles of portant services that have been than 5,000 skilled ~echanjcs and ' • rYlng to e ommunlsm a married couple filIng a joInt re: Shabbat," this coming Saturday at group, under Dr. Pollock's leader- Today's mail oper~lions In- dd d ' t d t t several hundred officers for tile turn. $2,500; married, three ex- the Hillel Foundation at 3:30 p.m. shiP. will begin a study of Revel- 42,000 post OffiCes, and a e ~lnce he epar men wa~ army ordnance department. emptions $3750' and married No supper this week-end because aHon. States mails carried over originally set up to provide "the , Summerfield became active in. with fo'; or ~or~ exemptions an of tltals. T 9.509 miles of rural routes, best means." o~ establishing posts Mlch1gan RepubltcaJ) politics in overall top of $-5000. Those funlts PERSHING RIFLES WILL NO'l' I 000 miles of domestic air mail fol' conveymg letters a~d inteIlI- 1943, and since 1944 has been the apply regardlesi of age. ' THE IOWA CITY DIETETIC ~:e~IWi~eW;~~;U;~ye l~~~\~~i; ---..• ~- 150,000 miles of railroads, gence through this continent." Republican national eommitlee- Allowable medical expenses in- assoc,iation will have a social In the Armory. every pB;rt 01 tile world by Posta.-e tampS In 18t7 man from Michigan. elude doctor, dentist, hospital and m.ectmg Monday, Feb. 2, at 8 p.m. ane and shIp. In 1847 the first postage stamps NEXT: The Depllrhnen& or nursing binS; drugs and surgical It is to be held in tho Wcstlaw:l NEWMAN CLUB WILL HAVE FrankUn Was Flnt were authorized. Registered mail IDU!rl.r and Doucw i'ieK ..y. appliancCJj; false teeth and eye- RE-creation room. a pick-up supper bei\Ill'ling at 5 ",",'4~erIJ a mia FrankJin was the first began in 1855. ln the second year glasses; X-ray examinations or p,m. Sunday, Feb. 1. The meet- general under the Con- of the ClvU war, 1862, railway Texas Experl'ment treatments; crutches, h~ar.ing aids THE IOWA CITY AMATEUR lng has been po!\tponed becaUse of In 1775. He had mali service started. Postal money and ambulan.ce service; premiums radio clUb will meet Friday at tlnal week. postmaster of Phlla- orders were authorized in 1864, on heal~h, accident, medical or 1:3 0 p.m. III room two of the Phy!- in 17n and then had with foreign money orders fol- Offered as Proof . ics building. A tour of the atom "AN IN D I A N CHRISTIAN 1o- ->liP.'V",rl from 1753 to 1774 as post- lowing three years later. In 1885, MAY SUSPEND YEARBOOK smasher has been planned. Speaks", will be the topic of Mr. general tor the northern special delivery service was add- Of FI 'd VI DES MOINES (~) - Ohe of C. C. 'l'homas' talk to the 'United Colonies of America. AL- Ied. !Ion e aue Iowa's oldest · pubUcaUorls. the FOREIGN .STUDENTS WHO Student Fellowship this Sunday gh the colonies had ?nly 28 ltural delivery began in 1896, state's AJrlcultural YearboOk, havll not received their 1st issue evening, Feb. 1. The cost ~upper offices when Fra~klin ~as postal Savihgs in 1911, and village MARSHALL. Tex. (,JI")-A six- may be $USpended: The printing ~a th~b::::r;oa~:~lt ;:~~e:a~:~~ will begin at 6 in the Btud~nt cen- _ ·.t.,.",,,\pr general, he IS credited deLLvery the next year In 1913 year cV1'\Driment in this east Texas committees are engaged in a drive C 'Y M PM 'ttl ter of the Congregational church. · ' d d! ., -r~ . 1 en t er or r. anor s 0 ceo '."'_;.... tabli s h tog a soun an e - parcel post began, with collect- city Wednesday was offered as to avoid any· state 'print ng costs __ American postal service. \c;m deliv~ry and insurance tea- proof that fluoride in . drinking that can be avoided without real ~ TIURD HILLEL FORUM THE TRADITIONAL COFFEJ can belter understal)d the tures. Air mail was added in 1918 water can drastically reduce den- loss to Ute state. of the year is proud to present hour at the Congrep\ion,l chIIrt:h ...... ,,----' tal cavities. Prot. Nlchol';3 V. Rlasanovsky, or will be heid each Wednesday t!ve- The test was one ot the most the history department, speaking ning from 8:15 until 10:15. All carefully controlled experiment<; WSUI PROGRAM on, "Sol1'\e Notes on Dostoievsky," students are most welcOl;ne ·to In modern dental res.. rch. Both • Friday night, ~an. 30, 8:15 at t he acquaint themselves with the. stu- official daily the American Medical association CALENDAR Hillel Foun,?atlon, 122 E. Market. dent center and enjoy the refresh- and the American Dental associa- Everyone is welcome. Friday night ments and informal recn:aUOJ;l. tion co-operated. Frida". I .....,. lit. 1m services start at 7:30. X-rays of continuous-resident : ~ ~ ~:..~ Chapel ATl'ENTlON GIlADUATlNO BULLETIN 6-year-olds here, co~pared with 8:210 Proteetant ThOUllht GRADUATE STUDENTS: RE- seniors: Graduatjon AnnQUIlCil- those in another Texas commun- ';20 ~rhlB!!,,~frMtry turn or renew books on Thesis ments may now be picked up a: • VOL. lXXIx, NO. tl8 Ity without ftuoride, showed; : ~ : Bake", DoNn toan by January 30th. Cllmpus Stores on presentation of 10 :00 New. receipt. UNIVER$ITY CAL END A R Fewer Cavitlel 10:11 .Here·, lAokln. At You LIBRARY HOURS FOR THE 1<--- ar- Ichedul-d 1. The Marshall children have 10;20 MUlIe You Want inte-'- period for the main llbra- STUDENT_ DESIRING TO U- I~ UNIVERSITY CALEND, AR ",",U_ ~ ~ 57 per cent fewer cavities thlln 11:00 Explorina \be New. '''n in the President s office Old Capitol IWI Millie 110,.- ry: Friday, Feb. 6 - 8;30 a.m.-5 tain their lOCKers the second Ie- • those of the same age group In the 11 :30 Here'. To Veterans th J III T ., .• ~ • ..... nd of ,)IJe=' p.m.; Saturday, Feb. 7 - 8:30 a.m. mester must check their 1D cardS • Tuesday, Feb. :1 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.-Registra- 0 er city - acksonv c, ex., 70 11:51 Pr." ... for PHce 5 p.m.; Sunday, Feb 8-CLOSED; at the athletic equipment room . . . luon, field house. miles away. 12:00 Rhythm Ramliln M d F b 9 830 5 ft t 't ' I U ID' rd .. J. .30 p.m. - . The Unt~erslty 8:00 p.m.-Basketball: Michigan 2. More than ~ per cent ot the 11:30 5N~~ "-'n ~ .bl. on ay, e. -: a.m.- a er 1II Ion s pal.'i ca C~b, Card Party, Iowa Un~on. State here, field house. Marshall 6-year-olds have no cav- 12:.5 Sl\tto~~~I""",~CMb p.m.; Tuesday, Feb. 10 - 8:30 a.m. Is not checked by eb.~, lock .. -. F Id F b 6 l ; ~ .z~.... -5 p.m.; Wednesday, Feb. 11 - will be removed &.,d nnleIttl de- .. r :1f. e ruary Tuesday, Febrwu'Y 1. ities whatever. Only 13 per cent c! 3;10 Late ltth Century lItu Ie . 8;30 a.m.-12 Midnight. stroyed. 5:00 p.m.-Close of first semcs- 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. - Regi s~ Jacksonville's are cavity-tree. ':00 MaaterwOl'Its froo. rrttnce Departmental libraries w III Students not remalnIna for the .1Cl'. tration. field house. 3. The cavity rate. amona Mar- ~::g :::tlme have their hours posted on tha second semester plellte ebecll: in • ..u Saturday, February '7 6:30 p.m.-Triangle club picnic ~hall children ils 'CiecliDinl 'lItead- . :00 GrinnoU Col1<-", doors. your lock and towel not later thaD 1:45 p.m. - Commencement. upper, Iowa Union. lly. 4:10 Tee Ttll\e M~lod le. •• FIn, Cit 5:1'0 ChIldren', Hour Feb. 9. 1\t\d house. Thunday. February 12 y 5:20 N..... THE WESTMINSTER FEL j .•, 81Dl4ay. February 8 12:30 p.m.-The University club, It wu in 1948 that Marshall 5 : ~ !!!'ON Tlnle • - &:00 p.m.-Iowa Mountaineers. luncheon and program, Iowa Un- aareed to beco~ the first city in ~: g:,,:", H~ ' • lowship I1'\Nts for Vesper, at the PRJ BITA KAPPA .....118 ~r . Fabulous Great Lakes," Ion. ~e.. ~uth to serve as a "i\1lnCll TW- '- O~ 'WO ....N MEMB""aS OF 1:00 Conem Ciqelcs presbytena' n church at 3 p.m. ~n flom other chapters who Jam "'" bride. 3:00 p.m. - YWCA Silver tea, PIC 10 the maaa experiment...... , Eo 1:30 w..n. ~ 8lftp Sunday. Charlea Larew and Gloria cently arrived on tampul IIId w\&Ia •• MODday. Fellrllary • President's home. From 1946 until the lut test in CODlIll1mlst) are shown puttlDJ UP a propapnda JIOIter ID Eaat ~ ; : =: ~.::e:..., and Sodety AmalSo will speak on the "Ghrla- to associate thems.lvea with tilt ., 1952. the younpters were care- BerllD ID this photo. ukb at coDliderable rblk b~ a 1I11oioJftilher 1;00 ' CampUl ShOll Itlon tud\!llt in the Church. tl\e Alpha ch,p1e.' of SUI IhOllld COfte __ (For lDf_tiOD reprdjlll' dates be ond Ihls schedule. rully checked tor dental and' lIhys- Pilii' a tiDY eamera. iue.. polite", an v1t1ually ",'eryWhere in thr : ;: ~~':; Rljtldr,bt. . • Unl,~erslty, nnd the World Slru/(- tart Secretary M, t . .Iill''-. 111 !let! reRrvatlOIl8 tD &he ortlcle of the l'l'eCJi, enl, Old Capitol) ical reactions. seetor. trylDl to sell cemmonlim to the people. lO :oo slON OFF gle. Supper lind soclp) hour will UniversIty haU, :12101, . THE DAJLY IOWAN-Jowa City, Ia.-Frl .. Jan. 31, 195~r .... . Marlen Killinger Picked IMary Jo.ne Hinde~mon, Miss Bitke!' Headi~ For Sorority Presidency James Vincent Married Nurse's Associatio '· · Marlene Killinger, A3, Hender- Mr. and Mrs. James B. VincentI I fiss Ruth Bickel, instructor t son. bas been elccted president of are now a~ home at 424 Ctark st., the SUI college of nursing M.s Chi Omega social sorority. i I after a honeymoon in ChJcago. 111' 1 Other new oflicers are Mary- I Mrs. Vincent. Ihe Cormer Miss Nursc's Alumnae association. Shadle, A3, Boone, tidt vice- I Mary Jane Hjnderman, was mar- Other of!;cers are Miss Do president; Mae Percy, A3, Mason I rled to Mr. Vincent at a candle City, second vice _ presidt'nt; light service in the First Congre- meyer, Iirst \'lce-presid Marge Frank, A2, Davenport, as- gational church of Iowa City on Miss Dorothy Smith, second ,,;II - sistant; Ann Harbison, A3, Keo- I Jlln. 17. president; Miss Beth Batscbc~t, sauqua, recording secretary; Judy Mrs. Vincent is the daugbter of head nurse at ~neral hospft,1. Snover, C3, Knoxville, corres- I Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Hinderman secretary, and Miss Marian C~, ponding secretary. of Wapello and Mr. Vincent is the treasurer. These nurses . are '1i!t son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vin- Crom University hospitals. Betsy Crusinberry, A3, Des cent 01 Galena, III. Moines, treasurer; Maurine Hi te" The Rev. John G. Craig offici- The association will meet Al, Oak Park, Ill., assistant treas- ated at the double ring ceremony day at 7:45 p.m. in the parlors llt urer; Patricia Hewins, A2, Free- in the presence of 100 guests. Westlawn. All members are In port, Ill., warden; Priscilla Jew- The bride's wedding gown of ed to come and meet thp r.ew A3, Coon Rapids, social chair- , nylon over blush satin had insets (icers. man; Joann Slager, AI, Iowa City, ot lace. It was fashioned with a assistant; Peg Kimball, A3, Water-I tltted bodice, a net yoke and long, 100, rush chairman; Joy Coble, Marlene Killinger tapered sleeves. Her veil of im- A2, Aurora, Ill., co-rush chairman. ported French lllusion fell from a Marilyn Sires, AI, Tama, activi- P" "T latUced saUn Juliet cap. She ties chairman; Shirley Ouderkirk, .cn.st, rumpeter carried a shower bouquet of white A3, Davenport, judiciary chair- T G" R·t I gardenias. ----- man; Mary Jane Anson, A3, Keo- 0 Ive eCI a Mrs. James L. Butler of Burl- Vincent Jr., brother of tbe brlde- sauqua, house manager; Norma A recital will he given by J. inglon: sister of the bride, wns groom. Ushers were Mr. James L. Hanson. AI , Milwaukee. Wis., a~- Robert Hanson, G. Osakis, Minn., matron ot honor. Her gown was Butler of Burlington and Mr. slstnnt house manager; Che~le trumpet, and Pro!. Norma Gross, pleated, pink nylon net. The Robert McFarland, M3. Ames. Walkup, A3, P rry. publiCity oC the music department, piano, matching veil was caught up Miss Joan Smith of Wapello chairman; Sally Paul, AI, Mt. Saturday at II :30 in Studio E at with flowers. Pink and white car- sang. She was accompanied by Lyre editor. Station wsm nallons made up the colonial nose- Mrs. Gerald Buxton of Iowa City, MIS. GERHARD WOLFF. SEATED, WIFE OF ONE OF UI' forelm student. from Germany, polat. Donna Shrauger, A3, Atlantic, Selections will include "Concerto gay she carried. organist. "' some news about Germany In The Dally Iowan to four German student.. They are Wolff, ct, IscnolarSOllp chairman; Judy Cor Trumpet" by Giannini, "Leg- BlUlkets ot white carnations Mrs. Vincent Is a sophomore In ) (letha. lert; Wolfgang Hermmann, A4, .Plaven, left center; KaI'lhelnz Hecht, G, Munich, ~t center, Brown, A2, GlenwooQ, song le~d- ende" by Enesco, and "concertO /decorated the altar (or the service.plberal. al't~ at SUI. Mr. Vincent Is llIi lelDdarcU Grossman, G, Berlin. The studen&8 arrfOe that the rreatest dancer In Eut German1 II Janet Hall, A2, Iowa City, for Trumpet and Piano" by Bozza. Best man was Mr. Frank R. a seOlOI' 10 the college of law. lite influence of communism on chlldren. in; and Patricia Thomas, Iowa City, historian. 3 of Finalists in Hillcrest Queen Contest SUI's German Students University D~mes • - Schedule Dance, Dietetics Association Worried by Communism Cards, Initiation To Meet Monday (ThJs Is the 12th In a. series of/ Rushing 01 prospective mem- ,.. . . Iowa City Dietetics assocml1on bUervlews with foreign students two zones to become one country " bers, i nslallation of officers, a 111 h . I ,. ,.. , wave a sOCia meerlOg mon- atioeJldlnr SUI). Hermmann said. dance, Initiation and bridge play- day at 8 p.m. in the WestJawn Wouldn't Give Up Freedom ling will be included in the Febru- recreation room. , .' Communism in their country js "Most of the people in 'We~tjary activities of University Dames The gel-acquainted meeting W1l1 1 one 01 the big worries of Germa Germany would not give up their club, a club for wives of SUI stu- centered around a Valentine students attending SUI. freedom to live undel' a commu- Ident$ theme. They will play bridge and "The greatest danger of nist g~)Vernment," he stated. '.. canasta. Committee on arrange- mllIlism is the influen~ on the The students like American Events. Will ~gm Feb.. 5 ments will be Miss Elizabeth Em- . , . glrls, but Hermmann said, "I baby bridge, bndge play 109 mOns, Veterans hospital; Miss Ada elcht and mne-year-old children, would never like to be an Ameli- beginners, on the sun porcb of McClure, Veterans hospital. and Gerhard WolCf, C4, Got~a, said can husband because 1 have seen Iowa Memorial Union at 7:30 p.m. Miss Dorls Olt, Children's "11 the Communists continue so many c7tange dlap~;s, do dlshl!s A rushing tea will be held Feb. pit at Influence the children there wand clean the hou~e. . 12 'at 7'30 pm on the Union sun Members of this association arl' soon be n generation of Germans Wolff, .the married man 10 the porch' ,. eltber registered or interning die- group, said he thought the reason . t!clans who will be Communists," he said. American husbands help morc A dance will be held Feb. 21 a . Wolff, who is from the easterD around the house is because ut the Jefferson hotel. Prospective -----. zone, said that only about 10 the different way oC Ufe In Amer- members will be invited. 2 SUI Mountaineers Shirley Loerke Marcene Ringuette Mickey Mencke cent of the German people in ica. Initiation ot new members and To Speak to Mormons N2, Otttllnwa AI, Clin.ton :\3, Hartley "R'n t d' e tl Upper Classes Have Maid installation of new officers USSI n ~ec or are .Ir r. y "In Germany the higher middle elude the month's activities, Two SUI mountaineers will talk nected With communism and '11 be F b 26 in the Union R II PLU&-COLOR CARTOON WI at fireside gathering of the Mor- WIVE CLUB IUEETS rest of the population would class and the upper class have a e . "BUSY BODY BEAR" willing to pick up arms agains maid so that the wife doesn't have room. mon church Sunday at 8 p.m. They Delta Sigma Delta wives' club 1Il~ C()mmunists at any time. to do all ot that kind ot work," Warren Pagel, E4, Tama, and held a desert-bridge party Thurs- 'PARAMOUNT'S LATE NEWS BelaD,- td Unlo~ WoUl said. Eckey, G, Newton. day at the dental fraternlty chap- - OUR BIG SCREEN - . "In German there is not even a Group ~ostpones The meeting will be in the home ter house, 108 River sl. i PRES. t;1 ENHOWe& ,,\'lZ' i Dh INAUGURAL PAl,lAllE • "Many of the East G word that means date," Hecht t-t Leroy Eyring, 14J6 E. Coil ge Hostesses were Mrs. Geo\'ge Cox hjve to belon~ to ~abor said. "There is an entirely ditter- Tryouts for Play nnd Mrs. Charles Fredericks. Starting' tOpAY!: II/Id tre peopJe s pollee but thi! ent relationship between German , - does not mean that ~ey support young people," Hermmann said. Tryouts for the play that the Ends Tonltel A LIFE OF HER OWN - BEWARE MY LOVELY ~ht Communist p.arty, Wolff said "American students coming Iowa City Woman's club wUl give There is no pnva~e bu sine~,s in from high school to universities at the annual Community Play La~ STARTS . the Russian occupied zone, h are less mature than German stu- festival have been postponed' added. dents starting to universities," til Feb. 6 and 7. s::t SATURDAY , "Be<:a~se Germans kn~w what !,echt said, ':Getting an education The tryouts, open to all Nlte Thru TUESDAY commumsm. means there IS ~ ve~y 10 GermanY"IS more your own re- bers of the club, will be held In Ifeat oPPOsItion , ~o communISm III • he added. the clubrooms of the Community I West Germany, Wolfgang Her- Attendance Not Required b 'ld' mmaann, A4, Plaven, said. "The "In Gern)an uruversiti~ class UI mg. . opposition is greater than in any t d . t . d b t The play festival Will be March ll other European country" he add- ah:ghen anee 1S nO threqUtlred t u t 31 in the University theater. This , I per cen t 0 f e s u en s a -, . III b "Re 1,. ed. tend classes," Hermmann said. A ~ear s I ~,resentat~n b w Ch 'C h - 'the major political parties re- certain number of seminars must earsa, a come y y TIS t op er pn!sented in the West German be attended to earn a degree. Morley. . parliament are the Christian So- "The university system in Ger- Mrs. John E. Schuppert wm di­ c~l Democrats who are joined many is comparable to that of the rect the play. with the Free Liberal party. The University of Chicago," WolfC ------OPPOSition in the ~a:Jjament is SUI Art Graduate made up of the SOCialist party. "I apprediate the personal con- Rearmament Main Issue tact between students and pro- Has Show at Carleton r I "Tbe main issue in Germany to- Cessors here," Hecht concluded. , W It Whit t SUI a er Brn 0 Z, ormer day is rearmament; all but th student now assistant professor of Socialists agree that it is neces- BUDGET APPROVED . "K lh ' H G (/P) lary, ar elllZ ec,ht , M u- NEW YORK -The National MIart at Carletonh college, Northfield,h f nkll, said. "There is also a great Council of Churches of Christ in ."n:, aS a ~ne madn s low 0 Jsocial problem caused by the nine the U.S.A. Wednesday approved a pal~ tI.ngs, d rawlngs an pr n t s on million refugees from the eastern 1953 budget ~f $7,838,044, an in- ~Xhlbl.t at th~ ~arl~ton art bulld­ part of Germany," WolIl added. crease of nearly a quarter million mg. The ex.lllbit Will run tl1rough Hermmann clarified the si dollars over expenditures last March 14. tion in Germany by saying .' :'he council, with. activities war~oltz rece~ved his B.A. de- there are I\qt occupation troops 10 a Wide range of religiOUS fields, gree ~Iom SUI 10 1947 and his In Germany but protection troops. rllpresents 30 Protestant and or- M.A. 10 1949. A native of Sioux "WIth the Iroh Curtain 'so near it thodox denominations with 34 City, he has been at Carleton since is necessary to hav..e million members. 1949. ~ forces in West Germany," W 0 {f ' _iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii said. The students said that the sit­ uation in East Germany can called occupation. ATTRACTION ·'The only hope for the people Pre-Release Engagement - 1st Iowa Showing behind the Iron Curtain is for the ,EXTRAORDI NAR¥I - STARTSr------TODAY-· ---I - I ~~ One of the most fasci- 1 SUNDAY. nating and funniest I· A lOAD SHOW ATTRACTION! shows one could ---"IOW - ENDS hope for!" -NEWSWEEK . SATtlRPAY - '~ nICBS l6e , AnULTS - Matinees CHARLES~ , EVENINGS - 960 I .• ·ChUdreD Anytime 25e I 1 ...... ~!!~S...... I 1 ...... ~ LIMELIGHT...... ~ 1 it: te ,1M"" . '0'+ • 1 CLAIRE BLOOM I I ••• t •• . I S'/DIIff CHAP\.]. • __ Ina . - ~ . IturIat Wr1I1I>\ _ ~ "'..... ~ L ____ ~l~ttWl..! ______.J .JOSEPH lA~FSA , ILiiAMS·U...... ADMISSION THIS INGAGlUIlINT ONLY MARIA MONTEI· PAUL CHRISTIAN MATINEIS 80. - EVENING!! tile Starts Feat.... t 'COTTEN ~.~vruGHT FAYE MARLOWE' MASSIMO SElt\TO 1 :11; 4 :U ' Pr.l. F.B.I,' ... S,ulal Pilol·BiiNf _. - -..... - - -~ - i ~ \I ;~- i I TODAY 1:": ':M ~ C.rl••• . •. La'" He,,, l --.~'"I , 'AGE 4-TJD. DAILY IOWAX-Jowa City, Ia.- n., Jan. SO, 1953 - . . Minnesot~ Thr~dtf}nS Leaders .,~ e h'Fe I 'A· D~ . S I . Joe Stydahar CHICAGO (JP)-Only two Big , Salg urn y galDst Isiress . a.e, Takes Chicago. CHUC:KA1 ENeEL Ten basketball games are achtcl· ~ .01'" IJIIINN'SOr.4 uled Saturday ru,ht, ~ut o;:e may 0/11.)" S-/I !SlIr A I develop a menace to undefeated VeRy' 816 ;It~Aso/i ,Indiana and runnerup Illinois, 771£ 50P1(EItt_ both idle. Officials T(, ' Decide Team Operation Grid Reins "1110(/(5111' 1'1115 . , CHICAGO (JP) - Big Joe Sty­ "#(16111' NAifi' BEeN Third-place Mmnesota, ownln" ---~--~---.....,..----_c:__'------"------'=--- dahar, 40, who directed the Los rile Y&'AR F"OR ~OMI a 6-3 record, visits fourth-spol Will Sever Angeles Rams to a world pro foot­ 816 /0 !lO#QI/tS- Michigan State (5-3) and a vic- ball title in 1951 . Tbursday was -rll~)" ~I4Sr tory could boost the Gophel'l into / .tio named head coach of the Chicago S/lAR'P rll6 th t . t'tl 't' a.Jar All Relations Preps Head Weekend Sports; Cardinals. 7'/7t.e 111193'1 a rea erung I e pasl Ion. Tbu In a comedy of miscalcufaTed AN&> Indiana (8-0) and Illinois (8-2) ST. LOUIS (JP)-Fred M. Salgh announcements, Lbe Cardinals dis­ IIAV,J;t'1" W'aN Ii don't resume conference warfare ~d took a firm stand Thursday closed al a noon press conference Ot/"'~/~lIr S/Na until Feb. 7, although the Hoasiel'l prW Local Teams Play Tonight 1919 / [ace B':ltler and the Illini meet De 3 that Stydahar was given a th~ee­ against a distress sale of the St. bab. • Pauw In home non-loop enpp- Louis Cardinals and disclosed that year contract to succeed Joe Ku­ . f ( harich, fired as Cardinal coach ---=----·Si~ ments Monday night. t the problem or operation ot the In Wednesday. Saturday night's other confer­ Ec club for the present would be puil Stydahar earlier had announced ence game sends ninth-spot Pur· up to top baseball of!icials. due (2-6) to Northwestem, a tom at Los Angeles that he had ac­ 'men Saigh reiterated he intends :0 cepted the Cardinal post. That notch ahead in the standings wlth sever his relations with basebaTI 3-6.· will sent club offitiPls hustling to back uaI now that he ha1 been sentenced to up Joe's statement. In a non-conference twin bill at prison for income tax e\'asion. But the Chicago Stadium Saturday, restr • Walter Woltner, Cardinal man­ cler he left no doubt that h doesn t Louisville meel~ Loyola lind Notrt aging director, contirmed Styda­ ){~x : intend to be pushed around In thel har's appointment, but said a con­ Dame playS' DePlIul. sale it he can help It. He has until , I tract will nol be signed formally May 4 to get his business affairs IOWANS NAMED in order. unUI the 280-pound new coach appeal'S here a week from Thurs­ WICHITA, Kan. (JP) - Three Asked whether he would con­ day. Iowans have been tentatlvel~ tinue to handle contract signing or Woltner said Stydahar would I named to a U.S. squad entered players in the meantime. Saiail In get II 'bigger" salary than K uhar­ explaIned: the first world women's basket. ich, who was paid of! a reported ball tournament at Santlaro. The pattern of operation o( the $14,000 (or the one year leU In his Chile, March 7-22. Cardinals will be pretty well d!- two-year contract. clded after conferences he plans to Stydahor Is an old pro. both as hold In New York Friday with a player and a coach.- H ~ per- baseball Commissioner l!'ord Frick formed as a brilliant National DANCElAND and National League Presldent Football League tackle for the 1" ....'. 8m.Mut. B.l1roem CEDAR· RAPIDS. IOWA Warren Giles. Chicago Bears from 1936 through Thursday Work Day 1946, then took over as head coach TONIGHT slIlgh came down to work uS of the Rams in 1950. The Rams WMT'S TOM OWEN'S usual Thursday. He had a lot .J! won the NFL divisional title In COWBOYS BeHI In We."'" 8wln, personal business to handle. h~ 1950 and 1951. and in 1951 d - said, before beginning his IJ- fealed the Cleveland Browns. 24- SATC.DAY month prison term meted out :1) 17. to win the world pro crown. POLIO BENEnT him Wednesday by U. S. District In the midst of reported dissen- DA.'lfCE Ie SHOW Judge Roy W. Harper. tion, Stydahar quit the Ram or- r ••tll,.ll>, Stan 01 Sbllt Ind n.dl. There was a strange hush about ganlzatlon ~ar1y last (aU and _"..,._____ '- _____...... ______-'-_--'- Danee to the Cardinal office Thursday. Em- hooked up as a scout and part- pJoyes came and wenl but without. time asslstant coach with the t)le usual hustle and bustle, T. PAT'., ONLY ITY TEAM ON TlIE ROAD ionlKht... ets set to Invade t Mary'S ot Waterloo in Green Bay Packers. , 'Dixie' ~aseball ~oop;s ' v~~::~~:~~:!S • The dapper. 48-year-old Cardi- a Northeast 10\\'a Catholic leane game. lIere's the quintet that will .-et the sbrUnr call. From lett to Wolfner said Stydahar would nal owner aldn·t want to talk rlrht: tOM\'ards Art Cano and Jim Callahan, pards l\Uck I10pn and Bob Ve Depo, and cent~r Larry have 1ree rein in selecting three, much. He met a lew old friends. Cahill. lor possibly lour assistant. coaches. To Use Colored Plalx;ers , ~c.~nl'''~I'I''O~VE.~~.'Nl~TE~ one by one in his plush ottiCi'. . -- r Some were sportswriters. He is- WI th semester examinations D II Stili S HI ATLANTA (JP) - White and l sued a ~repared statem~nt. sayi~g cuttl. n~ the Iowa sports pi~ture to ar Ing I e Ing Nerro athletes playing baseball signed two Negroes. One is Flem­ he dldn t wont to get mIxed up In a minImum three Iowa City high Records - For OUels Now together is old stuff in the TexaS\ing (Junior) Reedy. wh& was witti any controversial issues. schools will take the weekend • ___''---'-- ___,...... ____ land Florida lnternational Leagues, Lincoln. Neb.. of the Western sever Relations spotllght with two games on t p BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (JP) - and the trend is spreading to League last year. Salgh's decision to sever his for local courts. F6r a young man just a year out H · T k L d other clubs in the segregation- Last year six of the eight Florl­ ~~~ebal1 connections was volull- Headlining tonight's play will of college Chuck Darling, the aU- arnson a es ea minded South. da International clubs used Ne- be Davenport's In America basketball player from ..y'There is no way I can stay Jil. . , the University of Iowa, has his At Tucson Tourne'y A survey by The Associated groes and at least four ot the six baseball", he told the court alter Ithe cIty thIS season ,atagainst City hletic. and business careers Press showed that at least 11 pro- lined up for the 1953 season ap- he had been sentenced to prison high. Elsewhere Umverslty high f ' I I D1 i I 11 ill hid t and lined $15.000 on two counts of entertains Mt. Vernon in Eastern linked up perfectly. TUCSON. Ariz. OP) - E. J . csslOna eagues across x e p an paren y wave m x~ eams. ,- hI I 11 (D ute h) Hanison, Ardmore, to usc Negroes in 1953, or at least Tampa President Tom Spicola a fe.deral $lingd2igCgtmlnenint. charging It OWa I HaWktehye pIway tanld Stt' ~fat'''1 At et ca y, he's tossing In field Okill., ohe ot the oldest players on give them tryouts. said he believes mixed teams ?V8SIOn o.f come taxes rave s ~or t 0 a er 00 a acelgoals at a record breaking pace th t 'I t k In 1947 .and 1949 . St. Mary s. 'or ihe PhilLI'ps 66ers, world . e ourney tral, 00 a one- The most notable among scveral eventually will be common • . stroke lead in the $10,000 Tucson . , . He rellera d 1.huraday that he Unbeaten by Iowa prep teams in famed Oklahoma AA U basketball Open golf tournament Thursday exceptions to the relaxation or l l hrOUgo~ baseball. but that it WIll me nt exactly \\ bat he aId In 58 games and more than three . . by shooting a six-under-par 64. racial barriers appeared to be the be a slow, gradual prQcess. co urt. seasons Davenport will be out to team. Sale Qu lion bolster its first place hold in thc When he's not playing, the 23- Three or the biggest names 1\\ Class AA Southern Association. "You wlll have to get the right · i ' V I lUll! and a newcomer werc Birmingham, Ala.. a Southern caliber players. and there j\lSt SaJgll aid he hadn·t the sllght- M15S sSlppi . a ley c ~ nferen ce year-old Darling works for the d b h' cst idea whether he would be lib Ie against a LIttle Hawk qumtet that Phillips Petroleum company in !~~Uj~hn o;~I~~rOk~ha~lolt~~ ' Jh~~ men:ber•. has a city ordinance are~'t that m~ny Ne1gl'd 0 players to dispose at his Cardinal holdings currently stands In the number slx· L d I tl d I ' 4 th C" dl 0 ' h' Ji' barrmg mIxed appearances, and at avaIlable now.' he sa . osit! n 1 t s an exp ora on an geo ogl- e .. na an pen camp; m - . befOle May 4. They Include Iran- P 0 • ~a l department. He's well quati- Turnesa, Briarcliff. N, Y., the least one other city in the loop "Negroes should be used If they chises of nine minor league club Three trall"M Titles field for this job, too. He majored reigning PGA champ; Tommy has an unwritten law to the same are the best players ~or the posl- Never before and ball parks in Houston. Tex.. Undefeated since McKinley o f In geology and was a Phi Beta Bolt, Maplewood. N. J., who nev ~ r effect. tion, not just because they wi~ Rochester, N. Y .• Columbus, O. Cedar Rapids did the trick and Kappa at Iowa. ~.. . has won a pro tourney. All havc SIN I d' T play cheaper than white men. The sale of the Cardinals was winner of three straight state Darling decided to cast his lot 65s, evera egroes p aye m ex- said Vernon Eckert, president of in history. ro expected to over-shadow almost tournaments, the Blue Devils Will with Phillips for a 9ing at AAU Chuck Darlinq Forty-four of the field of 135 as and Florid~ last year. the. most the St. Petersburg club. everything else on the program lit swing into ~owa City In searcl\ otlbasketball knowing that more Nearin/!. Kurland's Mark bl'dke par over the flat and easy celebrated bemg Dave Hoskms. a ~;:r.iiZ the major league baseball meet- a repeat wm over the Hawklel.S. than 60 Phillips playC'I's now hold 6,402-yard, par 70 EI Rio Golf and pitcher for Dallas of the Class AA (["" ADVENTURE ¥i'l4 Ings In New York today. Earlier Davenport posted II 62- responsible jobs \.,.Ith the oil firm. , Country Club layout. Ideal goll- Tex\1s League. Not only was he ~ EUIWI'E-~ Dey. '~1' Whlle Saigh's decision was vol- 52 ,win over Coach Howard Mof- As a geologist. Darling figured 25 games ~o equai KUfla~d Sing weather with 70 degree tem- the league's leading pitcher, but i '- j~:~~ii.F;~:'. ~ i~M;~ untary. the baseball commission"f tltt s crew at Davenport. he naturally fitted well into Phll- splurge. Darling needs 220 POints. perat\lres helped knock the score Is its t d."d r to tOI. ~III. 0111.1 too" tl has autho:ity to invoke a rule With Frank Sebolt.. who has UV# lips' program, using basketball as Darling, although a freshman downward. a 0 gre,~ est, I aWing cal. I ~ !~~'~::~r~C:h:~!;r..'·nt . enabUng hIm to bar anybody from eraged 20 . points a game In six 3 gesture of goodwiIJ In its busl- In AAU circle!t. says he is much Lloyd Mangrum, Niles, Ill., pre- The tag SavIor ot the Texas STUDV$E@C...... , = the game "as detrimental to base- league contests. and Bob Groves ness relations. I d' h' th f I tourney favorite. went two over League" has been applIed t:l Hos- ~ .. ball." The National Leo&ue consti- leading the way the Blue Devil3 Da lin ain r ' ht mpresse WIt e type 0 pay. par for a 72. klns. meaning had it not been fo r Fr.r,ce, Germ,.y, Spain, Scandl. tutlon also has a clause which en- have march~d to 12 wins against r g's m concer.n Ig "One big dilference I've noticed his popularity with the ra ::s at- naVII-ART. DAIICE, MUSIC. StUdy now however Is helpIng the.. : abIes its execu.tI es to keep n per- a lone de[eat at the hands of Mo# 66er~ win the National Industrial In AAU basketball, particularly 0 W· F d ten~ance · would hav~ noscdlved. .' ~:r;l!nY:~s~'~t' :~~~~ .::: son from owning a club. line, Ill. basketball league title and re- in league play, is that every team wyer Ins arne As It. was, the league s turnout al- dorful .,,,,rl"CI ,. ~ft WalsIna'ham May Buy After Number 9 : apture the national AAU cham- we've pi aye? has a very ~ood cen# Wanamaker Mile most cqualled that of the prevlo.1S ~;;J~~'i ::~~~:;,~:t~'5"'~::; The name of William Waising- U-high will be out to push its pionship which they have won ter," he saId. Fellows llke Walt year, : 1\ $l50. h am, vice-president of the tar- winning streak to nine games to# eight times in 16 years. Davis, Marcus Freiberger, Jim NEW YORK (JP) _ Fred Dwyer ' Tulsa, Oklahoma City and ~an - dinals. popped up as possibly a night against a Mt. Vernon five The 6-loot 8-lnch center cur- Mc [n tyre and Gerry Wittberger' 1953's invincible miler won th ~ Antonio also have Negroes com- f TRAVEL I: key man In the sale (}[ the club. ·that is running in last place in th~ rently is b~ttllng the equally They can play in anybody's famed Wanamaker Mile in the ing up this season. as do teams in InformallY, off till butln tuck, wll~ W a Ismg, h am, ",'3 Is a neph ew 0 f E as t ern I owa H aw k eye L eague. famed Clyde Lovellctte f

• In DoPe Addicts Routed • Age Doesn't Stop an Education. Ten Iowans are among the con- Donlt Store That Old Furniture-Sell It with an Iowan Classified! • tributors to the latest issue of . rl ___~ ___~~ ____ ~-~--~~~-~~--- ' --__------, ~ Combined Raids - The [owa Transit, a student pub- I WANT AD RATES Rooms for Rent Autos for 'Sale - Used Miscellaneous for Sale LOS ANGEI;ES (IP)-The state's lication of the college of engineer- • ------• ------,-----;------1------, ....mey g en era I and other ing. ODe clay ...... 8e per word SINGLE and dOllble room. ruson.bt~ . 11138 T!'RR LAN'E. $45. Runs lood. has EASY Splndrle" "'ISMr. Uk_ ne .... lawn ~"u Thr d 1.- onI Unena .•tum heat men. dose. Dial ,00<1 Urel. Call 8-0111 before • a.m. mow"r. Iwln beds complete, Dial 343'1. llarm~ ortlclals moved swiftlv Harold Wendler E4 Home- ee ayl ...... "'" per w 1140:). • or betw"en 1::10" p.m. Thursday to root out the tendrils stead, opens the pa:ade ~f Transit Five day'--, ____ . __ . lSe per word CHROME ctlnet~ set. Apartment me ?' d4?PI! which have crept into articles with a story concerning Ten ~ays . __ .. ___ ... 20c per word DOUBLE room ror tu fflt m~n . 21&-221 Lost and found stov ... Maytall ..' sohID, machine. Phone such levels of society here as J. W. Howe, head of the deQart- One ~OD'h ...... __ 3ge Per word Church. Phon" 7400. I -LO-S-T-: -b-I..;.C;;..k~Z'-."Iu..;;,;.;,,:lk;;..o..,;n;...;.K..;oda,;,;.;;Ie;...... -X12--C1I-f l _8_-1_0_11'-· ______prize flghtin&, teaching and even ment of mechanics and hydraulics. Mtnimum eharCe 50c VERY nlee room. Pl\one 8-1518. Y4 ~ compllr lena wltbOllt film pack T1 USED tavatorl~. bathtuba. toilets. ~-b1-slttln". He gives , a brief biogrllphical CLASSIFIED DISPLAY. • SINGLE rOOm. GradllA~ man. 2011 E adapt.r. In brown paper saele. LIberal u~ Mldlators. S.U.I, SllrpiUJ. Larew ...rourteen .. persons WE're arrested sketch of Howe's work in engin- One. inserUo n __ ... ______.98c per m c n F Irehlld, . "'''''.ref. Phone 5171. Company, 127 E. Washlnaton SI:net. in three combihed raids. eering, both in the academic Five insrt1o~.s per ~onth, in h -R-O-O-',-s- r-o-r - 'Ta- d-u-.te--w-om- e-n-.-P-ho-n-" ~,;~ .~~~~ .'~Ia::w~r':i~ · ~~l~!b.on tb~ CANARIES and par.kNts, Dial HIt. Edmund G. Brown, the state at- world and in the field. ~er nser Ion ...... " e per c .816, . . .. Tcn msertions per month ---,------WASIDNG machine. Automallc: timer. !orney general, hete from Sacra- A diSCUSSion of the POSSIbility . tl 81i' ch DOUBLE nnd I1n.l~ room for male . tll- U>ST: Black Labrador doC, Anlwer. to &xeel~nt concUtion. OW .I.T. I t f id h { if ' th .. per Inser on.. ".". c per In delllS 41. S Doda_ nam" or "Lad)'." Leather collar with men 0 or conferences, sa e 0 un, ymg e many engmeenng Daily Insertions dllring month, ,. . !!!. readJn. "Br3lntr ." R"ward. D I wID appeal to U.S. Attorney Gen- societies found In this country Is per insertion .... " .. 70c per inch Rc;?0!G~!,rOr "",n. 831 E, Jetfenon. Phone """'. A.K C. COCKERS. DIal 4800. eral Herbert Brownell for tighter presented by Donold W. Thomas, 1I,la. A."trll ...... I. '- o· .... NEARLY new lundo. 3T .hort. OUI resltlctlons ,at the Mexican bor- E4, Sioux City. Thomas, in his Tbe noll, 10 ..0" B ..I •• " Otrl.o Trailers for Sale 2G88, 1 8a tEl II U SINGLE room for mIn. Near Qwaclrangt". ------der lind fpr ,he assistance of article entitled "Operation Unity," ...... n •• • or f20 . month, Phone '-3304. MODERN 24 tt. tranrr. cheap. re.uon . COMBTNATION radIo phonOlLfaph. 0004 K~xican of1iclaldom. , issues a call for all engineers to CALL 4191 able terml. On rental ~ound. Dia l eondI Uon. Call t226-Mary. Comell from Mexico help unite the vllrious societies ROOMS. 1Ioy •. CIo e. Diol 840!1 . I.H5I. "M'ost l\eroin used here comes representing engineers. PLEASANT It.ht hou!6Hpln, room l -----~In---.------I Houses for Sale Crom Mexico, or from Haly by Can A Machbae Thiuk --T"'r-ans--po-rt-atl-'-o-n-W-a-n-t-e-d-- near camp~,. 1-212' between l-I p.m. 1_____ =8;;.tru:;;.;;;;;;cti.;:.;;o;;;n;.-. ____I, FOR u l" _ new 3 b~droom hoUM!. PI :!wnO•1 !he East coast," said Russell Mattox '52 Waterloo Roo:!.!S. Close In. Boys. Phone 1-261'. BALt'lOOM danc:'\o lessons. Mimi Youd" h~. t . Cull basement. Immediate ~I- T: th ti' "c' , YOUR w.nt ad will aUraet a par."" or ._ W'u lu. Dial 1415. lion. Dial .5588. "The only way to stop it is to poses e ques on an A Ma- llood prospect) and SS$ In proll! for SINGLE. l~ double room for 11r! ItU- ______-','-- ______-:=- __~-___,:_:_- Etop It at Mexico. We must spear- chine Think" in an article entitled you ~au ... everyone In th@ UnIV«lIt.Y! dents. Phone 1513, "Machine Intelligence.' Mattox MJlrkel rud the W.nt Ad. r~,ularly. R-0-0->IIS------.-4-...- te--d-u-d-en-u-.--P-bGne- head a rea I p.rogTam of narcotics - enlorcemen~." points out what he calls the many Apartment for Rent _"_'_4 ______\ Among those arrested was the operations of reasoning WhlCh l ROOM. clOI In. Blllln ...... oman . Dial ,~!'B USIN E S S DIRE CTOR Y · f 81'5. ' . . 14.year-ola dlughter of a musJ- mac hmes can per orm. PHONE 1-3292 De lrable one room Cllrn- -:-__~---_-----_ dan who said she worked a5 a "YOU'RE NEVER TOO OLD TO LEARN," evidently is the phIlo50- In a contribution by James 1~:b';,'!y:,pa~~~~:OekS~~!leb~~~t:~edl:: R~?a~ 4'::a .•raduate or bu.In .... woman .I ----:M~U8l.....,.· C-an-..,dr-o;Hr:'a--.d.,.jo--....;.- ' -..;...... ;.....;.--..Tr-yp.....,i-n-q---~;:.,;..- baby.sitter for two years to feec;i ph" of 83-ye&l'-01. John E. EI" alIown takh1l' flnals a a studertt at Rlchmann,~ , Marion, the new lrlcl $42,00 per month with uUlitlel paid. - t herOin habit. Officers said she lo!m Muir Juruor collen, Pasadena, Calli., and 11m. Iva. HornullC, automotive disk brakes d.esigned TiiR'££ roo;--;;partmtnt. Prlva~ batb 0000 J'OOm . O .... duale wom.n or lUlU. WHENEVER you sen . or vade In GENERAL typl",. notary public. mllllto- IIj 311 N. Copltol. Phon. 'Ill, the Unlve ..lty market you prolll sraphln" Mary V. Bur.,.. eol Jo""a \DId them she smok~ marijuana 60, shown in the tlrs~ crade classroom where she ttaches In Cleve- b y a Iarge ou l omo bl!e f lrm are Slove and re!rl,rrator. Gal heat. throulfh cIlIln, Th. Dally low.n C1au1- State Bank. DI.I 2.56, d ...... ttes to pass the time while land. Ely will enter the VnJvel'l!ltv <:!t California I! Los Aneles disc1Jssed. Richmann caUs the c_o_u_p_te_. _p_h_o_ne_34_08_. ______ROOM ror men, Private entrane •. 82IS. fltd Department IIl'St . .Jot down lhat l ______----,------=:--- ...,~ b k " I tl -.--- ad now. and Dhone 4111. OENERAL and tbeall typln •• Experl- baby-sitting. . ..O~ that he hal a music degree from John Muir. Be played a new ra es revo u ooary, ex- SMALL furni sh." apal"tmenl. Student LARGr room ror r"nl. Dial 3666, ~nc~. '-3377 evenlnp. A onetLn~ champion mortor- French hom in the JunJor R05e Dowl band, panned &,old in Alaska, plainlng that they have more re- be~~:',t~ lor. :'.~.~ p~n , Phon. 86tJ ! Personal services TYPING: thee'.. lenera" Experienced, C)"cle racer, Donald Robert Bech- taul'ht music at Hardin Simmons university, ~Tote four sYmpho- serve, less "lade (loss of eCfec- Loans 8-1333. \Old and his wife were arrested rues and 150 SOngs. J\Irs. Hornung Jus~ cot her B. ~ In edu.caUoD tiveness), and more lining area ~~!'u~Rs~ .P.~~r;;~~"a -~~~ent 104 N. ------,------h th h t b k LOANS on dlamondl. ,unl, lull.. .. PAPERING . palnlln., Dial U41. GENERAL typlnlf. Dlnl 1-283J. OIl check charges. Ottleers said from Wes'erD Ruerve unlverlil!y after 40 yea or teachlnl'. Her t an e s oe- ype ra e. Iypewrl~". pen. .nd pencil lei. ------they uslld the money to buy hero- study was dela1ed by sendll1l' three children to coUeJe and payll1l' Donald R. Baeder, £4, Iowa Wanted to Buv ... at<:hu, IiCKk-Eye Loan. • DAILY Iowan Wanl Ada do the work for EXPERT typlnC, 5713_. ______in. Both said they wahted to stop off i\ home mortrage. City, takes a look into industry's _____ rr:O~~rT~~ t~~d ':~v~e:II;:~ t~~sl~llr~ GENERAL ~ Dial 8-3108. "but don't know how." quality control program in an ar- LET our courteolll Dally Iowan Want - • ..U - and al the same Ume are your l.. W t d "X dR" H Ad ta~(tr help )'ou with your ad. Sh~ Ind-x to Bar •• In. .. OlK an e Teacher Is User \1 cecaI lied. an. e will Ihow ),011 how 10 word an ad th.1 •. I Lee Diamond, a fifth-grade YMCA Has Unusual HI·story,. describes the various methods wlll brln" quick. ""onomlcal relults. Dial / SKATE sharpen In,. ac:lasou. kn lv~l. tXPERT wall wlShln,. paper cl.,.n1n, teacher in jail on a 'charge of pos- used by manufacturers to control 41tl today. Are You Career Bound? While you walt. Hock-!'"" Loan. 73'_' _, ______sessing narcotics, told officers he the quality of thelr products. and KEYS m"de. Gambles. L1GIlT lewlllll and m~ndln., Phone gave himself a Jolt of heroin each I"iii explains why they use these I' Work 'vvanted ' -U67, morning before leaving for class. BGaS IS 3. ~ n Members methods. nvestlgate FURNACE "palr work. Pl\one 5210. Most o~ the 14 arrestep . admit- TV Sirnal, Discus ed B' S h I COMPANION for ~Iderly lad)'. Phone TINY Tot Presehool. Dial '-2712. led they were,\ dope addicts said "The scientific principles ~or • uSlness c 00 3342. orrlcers. Four , were womeb, two A few unusual facis about th(' ------sending television signals soaring ~aby Sitting Insurance of whpm . !'tad small black books YMCA come to light as the '{, tunlty not more than two consec- across me ocean and linking con­ -----;;.;;....;.;;..;..;.;..;,.,;;.....---- DAILY Iowan Wont Adt bTln, the Unl­ contalnlng'."the names of moVie here, and elsewhere throughout utlve prayers 01' exhortaUons. No t1nents are known at the present New Claaae. YIP ·. and aulo InsW'once. Whltlnl-Kcrr veraltv MJlrket 10 your front door. Dlat personalities, the U. 5., c,~lebr~tes "National controverted points discussed." Ume," says Roger W. Sherma'l, Monday, February 9 Co. UtI today. ----~--r_------Arrested last' week were panny YMCA Week, which ends Sun- During the first decade m E4, Clinton. In an article on "TV Stenoqraphlc. Secretarial. Duran, bantamwejght boxer, and day. ,. America there ww; no exact pro- Across the Sea," he foresees the C~nnon Ball Ignition Mrs. Valefie . Moreno, in whose ~he Young Men.s Christian as- g!:!lm formula. Most "Y's" con- future of television as a "picturel--"---:- and Business Administration 011 Company CARBURETORS Couraes. Bpartment officers said they found soclation i.n Amerl~a, now has a ducted Bible classes, lectures ami window with an instantaneous A GOOD JOB' GENERATORS STARTERJ two ounces of heroin and some membership of more than 3,000.- prayer meetings. In addlt.io:1 view of the whole world." Shell Products Also - Individual Subjects ~arijuana. 000 a?~ serves nearly 900 towns others carried on work lor "in- The January Transit contains FOR THE Briggs & Stratton Motors and Cities through 1,726 br&nches. dlgent boys and girls," lought engineering briefs by James Mad- IC~ I . PYRAMID SERVICES • The world founder of the yellow-fever epidemics and COll- ison, E4 Correctionville' alumni RIGHT WOMAN Open 7 A.M.-7 P.M. '&20 S. Clinton Dial 5723 AIr Force Assigns Y~~A movement was .George ducled numerous cnaritable and news by J . D. Miller, 'E3, Fort,. ple.aln, personality and a ear are ",Iso Sunday Wlillams, a drapery clerk In Lon- missionary projects. Madison' engineering news and nee~""'ry, You will have ncxlble work- lIs teig eman don, England. .. I b' Ed Sta h I E4 Dine bours, You n~~d to add ..~ , to .1~ SU S I Outraged by the irreligion ram- Not u~tll the, Civil war were vews y c ov c, , av- every week 10 the fnmlly lneome to KIRWAN'S TWICE-A-YEAR SALE OF REMNANTS To Research Task pant in London in 1884, Wltliams the assoc,lallons In the U. S., unlt- enport, and Walt Jones, E3, Iowa a!:'dr\.. y'~uh:~:u~~ ~~rt~I~! ~~:~a:l~ Jorner Washinrton " Dubuque I to 10 yard lengths and 11 other clerks in the draper ed in a Single effort. This was the City. . advancement. YOIl will be with a nallODnl (Third F1oor) 48 Inches wjde ]o'or cirapes. slip,'overs An sm journalism p:rofess&r'Te· oj' 1 d th YMCA 1'" -y United States Christian commls- The . maga:t1ne also contains a r~ 1\I""l1on In a p'".m.ntnt p Ilion , raue organ ze e u :I l I I r1' 1 j'B dr U R 'II I'i your Incol1lt I. unUn,lted. You wUJ SoUds, I>rl nts, stripes 49c ported to the United States air bedroom prayer meeting slon, forerunner of he Red Cr

J ~I I Aed Ok dB' S ' G Army Sending UN Council Urges Ilow-Down , WI 50n 5 I ~5 aye y enate rOOpr:':~~;;~t In U,S. Loyalty Investigation UNITED NATIONS, N,Y. UP)--I FT. MEADE, Md. ( ~) - SecondlThe staff council I'epresenting all,service commission investigations.' Agree Under Fire l Confused by High Speeds - army headquarters said Thursday UN emploves decided ThursdaYI This process for which coniX'eS! Affection for 'Strong Man a iJ'0up of former deserters alld - ked'· I AWOL' hi d W d d Ito urge a slow-dowll in the mil_lhas been a. to appropnate a To ·'Sell Holdings TI VI t cs. wllSBs ~~ 'd e ~e s ~y lion dollar loyalty investigation of million dollars, Is expected to take in man ISlon, rom amp rec . Ulrl ge, 'I., 0 abOut six weela to complete Defense Plants. Ime Lag l H the west coast bound for Korea. American UN employes. . In . P bl I Pll t I . The soldiers were among the 1 The 40-member international WASHINGTON (.4')- The sen- , ' first su~h jp'oups to be 5en~ to thelcouncil adopl!d two resolutions, ( rea f es ro em or I 0 ate armed services committee ap- I far. east under the army s new I per~ons who were present said. proved two businessmen as seCTe- policy of ordering combat zone They' ---1-5 ot the army and air '-rcA NEW YORK (JP)- You've head ------service for men who run olt, an' . i ... .., IoU .. k id 1. Asked more tune for Amer- Thursday a~r they a----' under how long It takes to stop your car in" tremendous speeds were de_ larmy spo esman sa . . •• ,at high speed if trouble pops up. Thursday to the Institute About 100 men under armed ClaDS t? fIll out. thethlengthY prHllure to dlspose of their~ multi. N . i'l sc~ibed , . d iE t onnalre coverUlg e answerersques~ million oollar holdings in defense ow Imag ne you're PI oUng a of Aeronautical SCIences by Col. guar were put on panes at v- r . 1930 Industries. jet or rocket plane flying 1,80:> Victor A. Byrnes, cbiet"of the clin- «nsville, Ind., Wedne5day. Ives since . Robert T. B. Stevens, ~3, a New : I miles per hour. What do you see'! dcal medicine grOup, Air Force At Chicago, filth army officials 2. Expressed regret t~at Secre- Jeney textile man, won a unani- You come out of a cloud. There School of Medicine, Randolph said the movement probably WolS tary Genera.1 ~rygve Lie had not mous endorsement for the army ~ is an airplane ahead. Field, Tex. the lil'St under the army's "get consu.lted WIth the councll. before job. You travel 264 feet before yo u The time lag in human vision, tough" policy, which callll tor a~ree~ng .to co-operate w1th the Harold E. Talbott, 84, was ap- are aware there's any object at the time it takes ight to rea 'h IShiPment of runaways to Korea U.S. mqulr)j' I • Delicious Food proved for the post of secretary all in the sky. your eyes and register on the when they are caught. This was the lirst rumble of of the air force. He Is a New You've gone 594 feet before you brain is one thing science can't I The policy was designed to curb protest from the UN's lntemation- \ . Reasonably York Industrialist. ' can put your eyes on it. help pilOts on when and if planes a wave of desertions among m('n a1 staff of 3,000 about the ihvesu-I A.DcIeneD aec.auaeaMd Human vision isn't instantan- begin tlying 2 000 miles an hour who, In some cases, were trying gati6n of . Americans. Meanwhile, , ~\ Priced The committee also recom- eous. So you've gone another 443 he said. . ' ' Ito avoid combat service, the army the prograpl went inlo high gear \ \ . Quick and mended aenate confinpatlon Of feet before the object is clearly Creates Compression Wa etI said. with hundreds being tinger- Robert B. Anderson, 42, a Texas signalled in a spilt second to you: , v Maj. Frank G. Fischer, pubLic printed and others bUSily fillingl ,\ courteous rancher and 011 man, as secretar.Y brain..High speed. will ~reate compres· information otficer of the. 10lst out the forms. of the navy. Ande•• ~n's tlnanc'-l Gone 1 042 Feet slon wav s in the air. Those waves airborne division said ot the Li hi hi .I: t b d b th I Service .""". IJI B ' wili beni;! Ilght waves The plane ' e, g y UJS ur eye intensts were not considered to .y now yo~'ve gone 1,042 feet, . , . Evansville soldiers: staft action at this rense time, is- be in conflict with his naval du~ a fifth of a mIle, out of the cloud. thhe Pllhot thse~kswlotnit bTe ~actly "I am not permitted ~ tell you sued the tollowing statement I tl Well what is it? If you're really were e 10 s. h e Image a thing about it. That IS a troop I Coffee Time 2 .. 4 e;ievenl reluctantly told tho good ~t recognizing planes, it will be displaced. The pilot will movement. I can tell you that we ~~r Sday olglrt. . . senators that he would .ell hi, takes another sec(lnd - costing have to learn to make allowances are complying with the army's I have acted In what I believe $1 ~ million j.nterest In J. P. Ste~ 2,640 feet - before you know if for this bendln" depending on his policy, and tllat most of the boys to be the best interests of the UN TRY wins &: Co., Inc:., a family textile it's friend or toe, You've come speed. Crom the stoc/tade are ,lad to get staft. It they had q~estlons, I re- .. I en~prl.&e, II the aenators Insisted S 682 teet, ~ lthS of a mile out of At 100000 feet altitude it will the opportunity to redeem them- gret they did not first dsk them on 1t. the cloud. 'be darke'r than at the gr~und on selves," before passing hasty resolutions Talbott otfered to sell or give el Sorhra It it's a roe, by the quickest a clear day. For thin air won't which indicate a mlsl.l nderstand- awa)' all hiM indllltrlai holdings ,PremIer Gen. Mohammed NlLI'Uib (lett) to kJs h1I hand. and cheek time you can start shooting or ma- scatter as much as visible light. HAS 30.INCH SNOW lng of the situation." except a 61h per cent Interest in when he vIlIlls the to\\n !o survey personally the damare wrourht neuvering, you've gone nearly onl' Instrument panels must be better PULASKI, N, Y. (JP) - A local. UN oltleials expect' the whole the'Talbott corpOration. which he by a disastrous fire. Ten persons were kUled, 208 ramllil!S left m ile rrom th e c Iou d . IIIg' hte. d easIt' er 0 see, crews inS Id e i ze d s to rm d umpe d up .~W' 30 I nc h es rou tl ne a t h ea d qual' t ers w III b e described as 1\ t!1mily hOldln'l_h_om_ e_less_ when flames delltroyed 195 hornes. ntu tnte VisIon, Problem such planes wm need better Jight- of snow on the east-shore section/finished by next Wednesday and RESTAURANT company. ------These figures, illustrating one, ing, and paints that will reflect of Lake Onta\io Wednesday night the resul1s can be forwarded to l GnHtp StudI ftrm Sf I WI I Rlfl C· fl,l problem of human vision at COIO- light. and Thursday. Washington tor FBI or U.S. civilj poI~~~o~~tt~:lts~~ ~:I:n ~i a e In er I e ompe lion ats~:=!~ in companiess ~;I:~ ti~::cla~I~~~~~dolne busI ness To Slart-, . Local Unlll fo Enler with the armed services. Stevens had testifieC\ his com· The Iowa units ot the organized ------­ pany has a~out $11 million in reserve corps, Including the head-Iscore for the fourth match will be contrac; pe:dlD, With the ,overn~ quarters company, ilOth infantry presented an engraved trophy by m(!~.t.J.t ha major supplier of regiment at Iowa City, will soon the state depar~ment Df the Re- e armY tex ' e.s to t Salto '11 'D M begin wipter ririe competition. serve Ofticer.\ association ChBIrman ~ nsta (.,. ass.) . • lUd that un111 Stevens (eta rid or Twenty.two units will b: en- To Give Oold Medal hl$ stock he is to disqualify hlm- i~ed in t~e first series ot mter- A gold medal will be awarded selt w!tll respect to any b~ine.'ls unlt shooting r:natehes ~ver held to each 01 th top Individuals done by the detenie department In the state during the wmler sea- showing the hl,hest number of with the stevens company. son. points tor all matches. The name . Vt4e fa U~ The small bore rifle matches or the donor of these medals will The vote on Steven$ and Ander- will be conducted in 12 Iowa cities be announced at II later dille. son wILt unanimous, ' lind in Rock Island, Ill., between The tirs* three matches will AU three men were pie ked per- Feb, 1 and April 1, consist ot 20 shots each, 10 shots sonally by Charles E. Wilson. th'e To Hold • Ma.tches prone and 10 shots siUlng. There new secfFtary at defense. Presi- Four matches ot target shooting will be 40 shots to the fourth dent ELseilho'fl'er sent their noml- will be held with the results match, I() shots in each of four nations to the senate at noon. He communicated by m II I I and positions. also I t ultomtall a lett~ ap- checked at Iowa military district ------pealinl or qUick act.lon to Wilson h d F De MID- • G CO ttl put his "(uU team" to work. ea quarters, t. sones. .ete'.es roup ka!tonstall indicated hi. corn- Each team will consist of seven cI - mlttee', recommend 110 would tiring members and a coach. Awards Stu ents be con.;\dered by the full senate The team making the highest 4 S h I h - e!'rly ne~t ,weelt. total poin ts for all matches will e 0 ars IPS WiLson ute«i laat wee" to give be awarded an engraved trophy, - . IlP a .$2 ~ million ,!Itake In General and each member will get a gold Recipients of the first foUl' Motors to become secretary of de- medal. These awards will be furn- scholarships awarded by the Iowa f~e. lahed and presented by the state Dietetic association to seniors or department of the Veterans 01 gradUates of an Iowa conege or 1 AHend. Funeral Foreign Wa rs. university Include students at The team winning the hi,hest Clarke college, Iowa State college, - and sur, according to an an- Of Boy Cotted Red or nouru:ement by Mlldred Torrance, LtSKEARD, En,. (.4')- Funeral (If R d Des Moines, president of the asso- ser'vices for the hermit rector of I V ecor clatlon. Warle,,~n, .,..,hQ preached to an L Winners of the ,75 scholarships empty ch~rch tor 22 years, were _ are Ma rgaret Anne Prout, Cedar held Thursday with only a strang- BIRTHS Rapids, senior