Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1952-12-24

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1952-12-24 , , ~ Browns )Be Team ~ilwaukee .Serving the State The Weather " - The otto!'!. University of Iowa Cloudy with little elwlp \ " It Milwaukee will ' In tempera ture toda,.. or league city 1\ . Campus and Ul"hU,. eolder ThUl'llday. )ut again but this JIl&'h today, 28: low. ZO. t. Louis Browns, Iowa City Hl&'h Tuescby, 84; low, 26. lIon Braves, who owan , move into thaI N MUnicipal Sla • • Est. 1868 - AP Leased Wire - Five Cents Iowa City, Iowa. Wednesday. Dec. 24, 1952 - Vol. 97. No. 64 the Braves own ranchise," an in. but the ~rown$ within two-three 11 10 the works, ovon's president) cord tor Milwau- j lIe he can dispose lIe in St. Louis, t, But he has been certain Mllwau. e u se II months now." e• ·w \ agues, at their 1ix, Ariz., recent. I ma.kiog it reJa· switch a major Last Removed Enemy Troops to another oltv. to Mil w ~ ukee , r~q ulre ex Ulnsive From Battered (hopped Up !Ilg huge pa)­ crlca n association , he Braves. French Sh,p BEIRUT, LelJanon (A')--Sklli!ul By Artillery READY Levantine boatmen removed the ( (.4') - Archie last of the passengers and crew of SEOUL ('Wednesday) (JP)- AI­ Monday official. the wrecked French lwer Cham­ By Anna Blake Mezquida Hed artillery, firing in roarinc bar­ State Athl ~tlc pollion Tuesday after 16 or more rages, chop~d up a Chinese Com­ thl\ t the newly had perished in frenzied attempts avyweig/lt cham· I know. For I have seen it in the munist battalion attack on the to ! i g h t their 'Way to shore ~l. N0W fa ith ;s substance 01 the western front In the predawn defend his HUe throu$h raging sur!. ' ) things not seen: \ East- ~r pin if the Bri· Some died in leaps into the sea hours ot the day berore Christ· ~ shot. Manager after hours of horror aboard thlt . The very young know this l And north ond south and mas. \ told Bob Crls­ listing, broken hulk of the 12,546- But before the A llied big guns an of the com· ton vessel and others were lost In 'he very old; west, , mark its beam; ore is willing ' to • routed an estimated 750 Reds, UN the capsizing of a liieboa t before , They grasp ;ntangibility" S pright And in spme ugly spot where I N'ew York next the rescue operations slarted to troops and Communlsts fought [, (Daily Iowan Photo b , Tom Coa_IDS) click. • sheen- think least bloody, hand-to-hand action In the frozen bunker and trench outposts CHRISTMAS COMES BUT ONOE A YEAR but you cl\n stretch it 16 Bodlejl Found The song, the dream, the To find a star, I foflow its ~ a. UUle it you I'd a head start In opening presents. GeUlnl' the Exactly how many died may not Of T-Bone Ridge. Jump on Santa. are Ellen Glasgow, who will be two y.ears old on be known for days, But 16 bodies, miracle Foretold. white gleam. "Reports from the division hold­ New Y'e1Ll"S day. brother Jimmy, 3, and big brot.her Danny, 4. broken by the offshore rocks and ing T-Bone RldiC said our artil­ Their fatheT, Bruce GlasC'DW, graduated from the SUI coUere of lery almost completely destroyed stained by fuel oil (rom the Even to Heartb,,~ak Ridge the If died not on Judea's hills, , HOEK . commerce In lst9 and Mrs. Glasgow from the coUege of liberal liner's ripped tanks, have been the first wave of Chinese," an -:ftll ,ON arts in 1948. GlaSI'OW Is employed In an Iowa City plumbl~ and recovered. Observers on the beach Three Kings tide; know; eighth army slaff offlcer said. ltutl.nl" firm. The family lives at 112 S. Summit st. estimated 3Cl we.l·okilled.-J () irom Artillery Open Dud iliNeNe •• ! e Down years thgi, shadows If did not show me where f1e the overturned lifeboat and 20 The ballle opened with an <lrlll­ AFamiliar Job -- mo ng the swimmers. lengthen on 'he lond; • loy, ,hen dim.­ lery and mortllr duel at. mldnlght. I Harbor craft and sur[ ,boats co- . The song ;s heard, and still a For still on slorless nights I Three hours later the Chinese ! ij;j. stormed tho outlying approaches of Sk in the rescue. -d t A · I , light shall goide, watch its glow, 'I'-Bone Ridjc aod piled into th _ 11:00 A.M. P 5 resl en : urlO , ee t h~ ' ~~;~\ri;O!~\lap~;~iL :~~: And your hil/ the march­ And by its brightness find forward trenches and bunkers. ;MAS SHOW · Champollion, which snapped in on There Alli ed troops fought the stack after ing star will stand. my way to Him! Reds hand-ta-hund. Ne w I Frene h Pre m I er b:~~~d~~r Il~;.g le The staft ofticer said that, 31- . PARIS (JP)- President Vincent --:-. , 328 Persona Aboard thougl1 the Chinese r ached Allied Auriol WBS back at a familiar job stabIllty before, beLI~g brought She broke on sand and rock positions, the UN troops were nol Tuesday night-trying to tind ;l down by converglOg attacks, from miles south of this city at 2 overrun. new premier for Franae. r.lght and left an~ the d.efectlon of Monday with 3ilS persons . part of his coahtlOn majority. of them Christmas Fanatic Char." It was the ~Ird t~me thIS yeu- The franc sagged and the pl'ice Holy Land. The UN eommalld headquart.ers and the 18th lime SlDce the w~r of gold climbed. communique relen cd ln Tokvo that the President of the llepubhc took off 40 persons said "Canatically charging enemy has been called on to perform his It took 415 francs to buy a the liner's master, Capt. troops in estimated baltl\lIon constitutional task of picking a Tuesday on the blac,k through waves that strength tried to punch 0 hole in man commanding evcn a precal'- though 390 were enough across a rocky shoal Allied lines on the western sector ious majority 1n parliament so as most of Pinay's smashed white upon a beach of the Korean tront early today." to give the ~ountry a government, administrati,on. than a quarter mile away. It addcd: , " l'llJay resigned early Tuesday (Picture on Pan 3) , Al1tome Plnay, the conservatlvfe morning when Foreign Minister "UN Lorces stood thelr ground little leather merchant from S_ Rob ert Schuman's Catholic Repub- • and th.rew back the hostile chargc a ftcr a sharp clash." Chamond, Was out. He had gl~en Ii can party (MRP) decided to ab- the nation nine months of relatlve stain on the iirst of three confi- McGranery Orders The aUack was the biggest since ,08 OA_70011 the assault two weeks ago on Blll r UP8 ''II · '' and LHtle Nori Hills, also on the '10 of SUI Faculty ~~~~~ ' s ~~~; b~ndg~~.nnection with FBI to Investigate or UBBaTf . For 15 hours, Auriol refused to western Iront. OIAI/' T-Bone Hill lies northwest of Chorwon, Lbe sector or some of IT N-ZWS - To Attend ~ Meeting ~~eCs ~:~ke~!~~tf~~iI~:aS .Y. Dock Rackets Ten StrI faculty members WIll abandoned hope of bringing , the fiercest <lcUons ot J952 , It lies attend a national speech conven~ waning sections of the majority WASHINGTON (JP) - Atty. Gen. along the ancient invasion route lion in Cincinnati, Ohio, Dec. 29 together and persuadini Pinay ~o ames P. McGranery late T~sday to Seoul. through 31. stay on. order~d the, F~I to make a ~ull Loudlpeaken Used For days, Chinese loudspeakers Representa~ives of the speech MRP members pulled the scale mvestJgatlon ,of racketeenog department are professors Orville from under Pinay by deciding on the New York waterfl:ont. along ihe tront have bl ~red ",ro­ paganda me S sag e s to AlJied Hitchcock, A. Craig Baird, Wen- abstain in a scheduled confidence ~he New York st~te c:lme c?m­ troops sa.ving the Communists .dell Johnson, Carl A. Dallinger, " ole involving transfer of family mission has ,been mqu~r!ng I~to would be in Seoul by Christmas. "Earl D. Schubert, and Hugh F. bonus funds to social security New, York, harb!)r con~ltlons,. 10- But there has been no sign of Seab ury. "I'hich is ahvays running short volvmg UDlon and public offiCIals, the huge troop movements and Also attending the 3-day con- cash. Such a lransfer would have for ma~y weeks., hoL attacks in battalion and relli­ vcntlon will be professors Nor- doomed the MRP's plan for in- The Ulv~ stiga tion has' b~ought ment size which would be re­ man C. Meier of the psychology creasing the bonus money paid sworn testimony a~out . a reIgn of quired to test out defenses beCorc department, Walter S. Dewey of heads of families to en co terror and gangsterISm m the dock 5uch a major attack. the dramatic arts department, them to have children. The area. None took the boast scriously. Thomas Farrell Jr, of the English is the traditional defender of McGranery ISsued thIS state- Everyone thought it was another department and Russell Meyers or family In France, where religion ment: , holiday propaganda stunt. The the neurosurgery department. is sUII a big issue in "The department . of Justice Reds made the same bral be[ore lEI TO,mE -:;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;================..:.:;==!;;;;==.Iwhlch has been watchmg the New .. York waterfront situation tor ThanksglvJng. and nothing hap­ GAUCHO I months, now has sufficient evf.. cened. r ANGEL denee of federal law violation :0 -----------------.:......--------'----....,..-7'-'-:---------------------- 'World News Briefs warrant a full-scale investigation." • ' .
Recommended publications
  • GIRL with a CAMERA a Novel of Margaret Bourke-White
    GIRL WITH A CAMERA A Novel of Margaret Bourke-White, Photographer Commented [CY1]: Add Photographer? By Carolyn Meyer Carolyn Meyer 100 Gold Avenue SW #602 Albuquerque, NM 87102 505-362-6201 [email protected] 2 GIRL WITH A CAMERA Sometime after midnight, a thump—loud and jarring. A torpedo slams into the side of our ship, flinging me out of my bunk. The ship is transporting thousands of troops and hundreds of nurses. It is December 1942, and our country is at war. I am Margaret Bourke-White, the only woman photographer covering this war. The U.S. Army Air Forces has handed me a plum assignment: photographing an Allied attack on the Germans. I wanted to fly in one of our B-17 bombers, but the top brass ordered me to travel instead in the flagship of a huge convoy, headed from England through the Straits of Gibraltar towards the coast of North Africa. It would be safer than flying, the officers argued. As it turns out, they were dead wrong. Beneath the surface of the Mediterranean, German submarines glide, silent and lethal, stalking their prey. One of their torpedoes has found its mark. I grab my camera bag and one camera, leaving everything else behind, and race to the bridge. I hear the order blare: Abandon ship! Abandon ship! There is not enough light and not enough time to take photographs. I head for Lifeboat No. 12 and board with the others assigned to it, mostly nurses. We’ve drilled for it over and over, but this is not a drill.
    [Show full text]
  • Zerohack Zer0pwn Youranonnews Yevgeniy Anikin Yes Men
    Zerohack Zer0Pwn YourAnonNews Yevgeniy Anikin Yes Men YamaTough Xtreme x-Leader xenu xen0nymous www.oem.com.mx www.nytimes.com/pages/world/asia/index.html www.informador.com.mx www.futuregov.asia www.cronica.com.mx www.asiapacificsecuritymagazine.com Worm Wolfy Withdrawal* WillyFoReal Wikileaks IRC 88.80.16.13/9999 IRC Channel WikiLeaks WiiSpellWhy whitekidney Wells Fargo weed WallRoad w0rmware Vulnerability Vladislav Khorokhorin Visa Inc. Virus Virgin Islands "Viewpointe Archive Services, LLC" Versability Verizon Venezuela Vegas Vatican City USB US Trust US Bankcorp Uruguay Uran0n unusedcrayon United Kingdom UnicormCr3w unfittoprint unelected.org UndisclosedAnon Ukraine UGNazi ua_musti_1905 U.S. Bankcorp TYLER Turkey trosec113 Trojan Horse Trojan Trivette TriCk Tribalzer0 Transnistria transaction Traitor traffic court Tradecraft Trade Secrets "Total System Services, Inc." Topiary Top Secret Tom Stracener TibitXimer Thumb Drive Thomson Reuters TheWikiBoat thepeoplescause the_infecti0n The Unknowns The UnderTaker The Syrian electronic army The Jokerhack Thailand ThaCosmo th3j35t3r testeux1 TEST Telecomix TehWongZ Teddy Bigglesworth TeaMp0isoN TeamHav0k Team Ghost Shell Team Digi7al tdl4 taxes TARP tango down Tampa Tammy Shapiro Taiwan Tabu T0x1c t0wN T.A.R.P. Syrian Electronic Army syndiv Symantec Corporation Switzerland Swingers Club SWIFT Sweden Swan SwaggSec Swagg Security "SunGard Data Systems, Inc." Stuxnet Stringer Streamroller Stole* Sterlok SteelAnne st0rm SQLi Spyware Spying Spydevilz Spy Camera Sposed Spook Spoofing Splendide
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 ANNUAL REPORT Building the No-Kill Future
    2016 ANNUAL REPORT Building the No-Kill Future Cover Photo by Ted Lim MISSION, VISION, AND VALUES OUR VISION: A future in which all companion animals find responsible, loving homes where they are free from abuse, hunger, fear, and loneliness and receive the care and respect they deserve. OUR MISSION: Rescue. Nurture. Adopt. Educate. WHAT WE VALUE: › The inherent worth of all companion animals. › The principles and goals of the no-kill movement, which we’ve pioneered since our founding in 1944. › The richness and complexity of the human-animal bond. › The power of humane education, which is the heart of our Mutt-i-grees® Curriculum. A social-emotional learning program developed in collaboration with Yale University’s School of the 21st Century, the Curriculum is the intellectual path to a no-kill future. › Our global network of rescue partners with whom we share our decades of experience and expertise. › Innovation, a hallmark of our more than seven decades of leadership in animal welfare. › The generous support of our friends and donors, and the vital role they play in enriching the lives of companion animals and the people who love them. › Honesty, diversity, integrity, transparency, and sustainability. 1 OVERVIEW: A national and international leader in the no-kill movement, North Shore Animal League America is committed to saving and rehabilitating the lives of homeless companion animals and educating the public about the joys and responsibilities of rescue. Founded in 1944, we’re the largest, most comprehensive no-kill rescue and adoption organization in the world, with more than 2,000 shelter partners across the country and around the globe.
    [Show full text]
  • Oral History Interview with Louis Mueller, 2014 June 24-25
    Oral history interview with Louis Mueller, 2014 June 24-25 Funding for this interview was provided by the Artists' Legacy Foundation. Contact Information Reference Department Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution Washington. D.C. 20560 www.aaa.si.edu/askus Transcript Preface The following oral history transcript is the result of a recorded interview with Louis Mueller on June 24-25, 2014. The interview took place in New York, NY, and was conducted by Mija Riedel for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. This interview is part of the Archives of American Art's Viola Frey Oral History Project funded by the Artists' Legacy Foundation. Louis Mueller, Mija Riedel, and the Artists' Legacy Foundation have reviewed the transcript. Their corrections and emendations appear below in brackets appended by initials. The reader should bear in mind they are reading a transcript of spoken, rather than written, prose. Interview MIJA RIEDEL: This is Mija Riedel with Louis Mueller at the artist's home in New York [City] on June 24, 2014 for the Smithsonian Archives of American Art. This is card number one. Let's get the autobiographical information out of the way and we'll move on from there. LOUIS MUELLER: Okay. MS. RIEDEL: —what year were you born? MR. MUELLER: I was born June 15, 1943 in Paterson, NJ . MS. RIEDEL: And what were your parents' names? MR. MUELLER: My mother's name was Loretta. My father's name was Louis Paul. MS. RIEDEL: And your mother's maiden name? MR. MUELLER: Alfano. MS. RIEDEL: Any siblings? MR. MUELLER: No.
    [Show full text]
  • Early Children's Food Advertising and the Emergence of the Brand-Loyal Child Consumer
    Western University Scholarship@Western Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository December 2011 "Aren't They Keen?" Early Children's Food Advertising and the Emergence of the Brand-loyal Child Consumer Kyle R. Asquith University of Western Ontario Supervisor Dr. Daniel Robinson The University of Western Ontario Graduate Program in Media Studies A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree in Doctor of Philosophy © Kyle R. Asquith 2011 Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd Part of the Public Relations and Advertising Commons Recommended Citation Asquith, Kyle R., ""Aren't They Keen?" Early Children's Food Advertising and the Emergence of the Brand- loyal Child Consumer" (2011). Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. 317. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/317 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “AREN’T THEY KEEN?” EARLY CHILDREN’S FOOD ADVERTISING AND THE EMERGENCE OF THE BRAND-LOYAL CHILD CONSUMER (Spine title: Early Children’s Food Advertising) (Thesis format: Monograph) by Kyle R. AsQuith Graduate Program in Media Studies A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the reQuirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies The University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada © Kyle R. AsQuith 2011 THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies CERTIFICATE OF EXAMINATION Supervisor Examiners ______________________________ ______________________________ Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • 2013 Syndicate Directory
    2013 Syndicate Directory NEW FEATURES CUSTOM SERVICES EDITORIAL COMICS POLITICAL CARTOONS What’s New in 2013 by Norman Feuti Meet Gil. He’s a bit of an underdog. He’s a little on the chubby side. He doesn’t have the newest toys or live in a fancy house. His parents are split up – his single mother supports them with her factory job income and his father isn’t around as often as a father ought to be. Gil is a realistic and funny look at life through the eyes of a young boy growing up under circumstances that are familiar to millions of American families. And cartoonist Norm Feuti expertly crafts Gil’s world in a way that gives us all a good chuckle. D&S From the masterminds behind Mobilewalla, the search, discovery and analytics engine for mobile apps, comes a syndicated weekly column offering readers both ratings and descriptions of highly ranked, similarly themed apps. Each week, news subscribers receive a column titled “Fastest Moving Apps of the Week,” which is the weekly hot list of the apps experiencing the most dramatic increases in popularity. Two additional “Weekly Category” features, pegged to relevant news, events, holidays and calendars, are also available. 3TW Drs. Oz and Roizen give readers quick access to practical advice on how to prevent and combat conditions that affect overall wellness and quality of life. Their robust editorial pack- age, which includes Daily Tips, a Weekly Feature and a Q & A column, covers a wide variety of topics, such as diet, exercise, weight loss, sleep and much more.
    [Show full text]
  • NPRC) VIP List, 2009
    Description of document: National Archives National Personnel Records Center (NPRC) VIP list, 2009 Requested date: December 2007 Released date: March 2008 Posted date: 04-January-2010 Source of document: National Personnel Records Center Military Personnel Records 9700 Page Avenue St. Louis, MO 63132-5100 Note: NPRC staff has compiled a list of prominent persons whose military records files they hold. They call this their VIP Listing. You can ask for a copy of any of these files simply by submitting a Freedom of Information Act request to the address above. The governmentattic.org web site (“the site”) is noncommercial and free to the public. The site and materials made available on the site, such as this file, are for reference only. The governmentattic.org web site and its principals have made every effort to make this information as complete and as accurate as possible, however, there may be mistakes and omissions, both typographical and in content. The governmentattic.org web site and its principals shall have neither liability nor responsibility to any person or entity with respect to any loss or damage caused, or alleged to have been caused, directly or indirectly, by the information provided on the governmentattic.org web site or in this file. The public records published on the site were obtained from government agencies using proper legal channels. Each document is identified as to the source. Any concerns about the contents of the site should be directed to the agency originating the document in question. GovernmentAttic.org is not responsible for the contents of documents published on the website.
    [Show full text]
  • Adventuring with Books: a Booklist for Pre-K-Grade 6. the NCTE Booklist
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 311 453 CS 212 097 AUTHOR Jett-Simpson, Mary, Ed. TITLE Adventuring with Books: A Booklist for Pre-K-Grade 6. Ninth Edition. The NCTE Booklist Series. INSTITUTION National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, Ill. REPORT NO ISBN-0-8141-0078-3 PUB DATE 89 NOTE 570p.; Prepared by the Committee on the Elementary School Booklist of the National Council of Teachers of English. For earlier edition, see ED 264 588. AVAILABLE FROMNational Council of Teachers of English, 1111 Kenyon Rd., Urbana, IL 61801 (Stock No. 00783-3020; $12.95 member, $16.50 nonmember). PUB TYPE Books (010) -- Reference Materials - Bibliographies (131) EDRS PRICE MF02/PC23 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Annotated Bibliographies; Art; Athletics; Biographies; *Books; *Childress Literature; Elementary Education; Fantasy; Fiction; Nonfiction; Poetry; Preschool Education; *Reading Materials; Recreational Reading; Sciences; Social Studies IDENTIFIERS Historical Fiction; *Trade Books ABSTRACT Intended to provide teachers with a list of recently published books recommended for children, this annotated booklist cites titles of children's trade books selected for their literary and artistic quality. The annotations in the booklist include a critical statement about each book as well as a brief description of the content, and--where appropriate--information about quality and composition of illustrations. Some 1,800 titles are included in this publication; they were selected from approximately 8,000 children's books published in the United States between 1985 and 1989 and are divided into the following categories: (1) books for babies and toddlers, (2) basic concept books, (3) wordless picture books, (4) language and reading, (5) poetry. (6) classics, (7) traditional literature, (8) fantasy,(9) science fiction, (10) contemporary realistic fiction, (11) historical fiction, (12) biography, (13) social studies, (14) science and mathematics, (15) fine arts, (16) crafts and hobbies, (17) sports and games, and (18) holidays.
    [Show full text]
  • Entertainment Wednesday, January 6, 2021 • the State Journal
    EntErtainmEnt Wednesday, January 6, 2021 • The State Journal www.state-journal.com GARFIELD DEAR ABBY Wife grapples with family’s history of sexual dysfunction DEAR ABBY: When my husband If your husband wants to talk to and I were first married, I had no his relatives, he’s going to do it re- idea why his mother gardless of whether or not you find BEETLE BAILEY and sisters were so it threatening. My question to you hostile. When they would be, are you willing to toler- started treating our ate it? children the same way, my husband DEAR ABBY: My girlfriend suf- finally addressed fers from depression. She says she the issue. We moved loves me, but there are times she out of town, and he Jeanne won’t contact me for days because finally told me that Phillips of it. During this most recent bout when he was in his Advice of depression, she hasn’t talked to teens and early 20s, columnist me for a month. he had had sex with I finally got fed up. I told her the FOR BETTER OR WORSE all of them, which next time she talks to me it should was why they didn’t like me. either be a breakup call or to give After an estrangement of many me an apology. Was I right to say years, he has now started talking that? I don’t know what to do. to his mother and sisters again. His — Unsure in the East mother is now in her 70s. It breaks my heart that he is talking to people DEAR UNSURE: You say your he had sex with, but he says it is OK girlfriend suffers from depression.
    [Show full text]
  • One Fine Sunday in the Funny Pages” Exhibit
    John Read is the creator and curator of the “One Fine Sunday in the Funny Pages” exhibit. A freelance cartoonist, John also teaches cartooning to children and is the publisher and editor of Stay Tooned! Magazine, considered the trade journal of the craft. The Comic Mode The comic strip provides a colorful and humorous respite from the serious and often tragic news that precedes it. There are many reasons for reading the “funny pages”; from the basic need to be entertained, to the desire to escape for a moment into what seems a playful combination of a joke and a sequence of images that illustrate the nonsense and play that generates it. Yet, what really constitutes the “comic” in a comic strip? Are they simply funny, as in Blondie, Garfield or Hagar the Horrible? Or do we sense underlying tones of irony, satire, political and social commentary as evidenced in Doonesbury, Non Sequitur, and Between Friends? How are we to understand the double entendre, the sting of wit or the twist of the absurd that infuses so many contemporary comic strips? It would seem that as in dreams, there are many levels to the comic mode. On the first take, the superficial or manifest appeal generates a smile or laughter. But as with many dreams and good jokes, there is the second take, a latent need to establish or defy meaning as embedded within the structure of the images themselves. The paradox or playfulness of the comic strip partially lies in discovering the truth in the nonsensical aspects of day-to-day living.
    [Show full text]
  • The Carroll Quarterly, Vol. 19, No. 3 and No. 4
    John Carroll University Carroll Collected The aC rroll Quarterly Student Spring 1966 The aC rroll Quarterly, vol. 19, no. 3 and no. 4 John Carroll University Follow this and additional works at: http://collected.jcu.edu/carrollquarterly Recommended Citation John Carroll University, "The aC rroll Quarterly, vol. 19, no. 3 and no. 4" (1966). The Carroll Quarterly. 55. http://collected.jcu.edu/carrollquarterly/55 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Student at Carroll Collected. It has been accepted for inclusion in The aC rroll Quarterly by an authorized administrator of Carroll Collected. For more information, please contact [email protected]. I I' ... 1 .. •, '• , ., I > •' - I ~ ..·- \_,, L •t· ·• .. ~ I . t I " -. ,, / / t.-' \ 'I ..... r -, ' + ,, .\ r ~ ~• .!"' • -: .,. ,.. I' . "~ ,. I ~ .,, I .... Carroll Quarterly, a literary magazine produced by an undergraduate staff and written by the students, alumni, and fac­ ulty of John Carroll University, Cleveland, Ohio. Volume 19 Spring, 1966 Numbers 3 and 4 Editor-in-Chief TONY KUHN Assistant Editors RICHARD TOMC TIM BURNS LARRY RYAN RODERICK PORTER WILLIAM DeLONG TOM O'CONNOR Managing Editor RODERICK PORTER Editorial Assistant WILLIAM DeLONG Copy Editors LARRY RYAN JOHN SANTORO Faculty Advisor LOUIS G. PECEK Contents A Moment in the Awakening of China Edmund S. Wehrle . 6 Alone, the House on No Hill Gerald FitzGerald . 12 Once a Lover (for G.T.) Gerald FitzGerald . 13 Come Die with Me This Monday Morning Gerald FitzGerald . 14 Rebecca's Drowning in a Country Stream Gerald FitzGerald . 15 See You in the Morning Gerald FitzGerald . 16 A Miniature Portrait Philip Parkhurst .
    [Show full text]
  • Fund-Raiser Makes a Splash
    THREE DAYS A WEEK POST COMMENTS AT CAPE-CORAL-DAILY-BREEZE.COM A happy CAPE CORAL angler Kids All American Fishing Derby held BREEZE — INSIDE EARLY-WEEK EDITION WEATHER: Isolated Storms • Tonight: Mostly Clear • Wednesday: Isolated Storms — 2A cape-coral-daily-breeze.com Vol. 50, No. 74 Tuesday, June 21, 2011 50 cents Krym: Fuel audit report shows flaws within system for Bill Towler’s report on the Towler wrote that fuel usage Findings do not prove or disprove fuel was stolen or missing city’s fuel management proce- in the city increased nearly 100 dures last year, identified the percent after FY 2006, represent- By DREW WINCHESTER has been relying on for over a “We removed the issue of who decade. said what and looked only at con- city’s fuel controls as being sus- ing 360,000 gallons. [email protected] pect. He wrote that security meas- He also wrote that over a mil- City Auditor Margaret Krym The figure of $31,693, as trol over the system and whether identified within the report, does or not it was effective,” Krym ures were easily circumvented, lion dollars can be saved each said the much anticipated fuel deliveries were not monitored and year if the city were to revert to audit report did not prove or dis- not represent missing fuel, only said. “We found there was no the difference between what was control and the system was inef- that management controls are FY 2006 levels, but Krym said prove whether fuel was stolen or “corrupted and ineffective,” as he those were assumptions made by missing, and instead only spoke spent, and what was allocated for fective.” fuel between 2005 – 2010, she The so-called “Towler wrote in the cover letter of his Towler because of “gaps” in the to the inherent flaws within the report.
    [Show full text]