·urbed 1960's University Edition Rea-dy Saturday Ich 38th Annual Special Issue ~. W.lther F_Ht ~ys there will be a trlJll. Show.r, ond thundtrsterms ~. Flags will be run up In northe.at end .xtNmt I empty poles. Traffic wiD .alt todoy. Becoming pertfy The streets will be I Of Daily Iowan; 112 Pages cloudy Wilt oneilOUthcentrol And on the afternoon 0/ todlY, ond cl •• rlng milt p.rts tonl,ht. HI,h, todoy with all the pomp and By MARCtA BOLTON e-lIo.... 01 ~ \ that the Olympics caD a ··won 701 •••t .neI neor ... w.... StaH Wrlt.r Serving The State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City the games of the XVUl ! The Daily Iowan's University Edition, which is thought to be will open before 100 •• AIIodated Preaa Leued Wire ADd WIrepbcKo - Herald Tribune News Service Features Friday, August 19. 1960, Iowa City, Iowa bowl shaped Olympic the largest edition of a college newspaper in the world, will be published Saturday. The 112·page, 14 section issue, aimed at acquainting prospec· * * tive new students with all aspects of SUI, covers every phase of Uni· Way' versity life. Edited by Jim Kadera. Iowa City, and Marcia Boulton, Des Moines, the paper took five months of work by The Daily Iowan reo Events porting and photography staffs to bring to publication. Some 6,000 copies of the edition will be mailed to regula~ sub· Soviets Sa·y Powers ' Knew U.S. duel of the 1952 scribers, prospective students, Iowa high schools and all dally and Helsinki is well possible. weekly newspapers in the state. The paper will be sent to most of record set by the Ja· on that occasion, 3:03.9, the 50 states and to 14 foreign countries. of just under 46 sec· Copies of the University Edition moy ~ ordered by ,.ndtn. man, will be hard to 51 cents to Th. D.ily low.n Businell OHlc., Communlc.tlon, C.n­ a three·way battle untO ltr, Iowa City, or they moy be purchosed on new ..tonels In lowo when Gert Potgieter _II an automobile accident City Soturd.y hlr 2t centl 0 copy. Full Meaning of -· U2 Flight to withdraw from the The history of the University Edition of The Daily Iowan has Germany and Great been traced back through dusty files to Sep. 20, 1923, making the be . the best Euro- 1960 issue the 38th annual edition. New students had not been n glected by The Daily Iowan which became connected with the University in 1916, but the 1923 paper Senate OKs Trial Nears End; * was the first to go beyond a Cew scattered articles directed at the Congolese Riflemen Attack Couples uninitiated. Problems Thot hlr.runn.r of the pres.nt 112·p... edition wa. 0 16-pe •• Wage Bill Leniency Expected "Unlv.r.lty Section" odd.ct to the retul.r n.w. p..... In It w.r. ItOri.. telling n.w stud.ntl obout the COmpUI end whot to 'lIpect Canadian Unit at Airport from collet. life In much the .... vein o. the mocIern edition. In 62-34 Vote MOSCOW (' P) - The Soviet prosecution hammered (.4'1 nadians few more thon a dozen. his rifle butt in delivering thnt per istently Thurs~lay on the theme that Francis Gary Powers The £irst eight pages oC the special paper were called the "SPorts LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo - Congolese army riflemen kicked. Thirty Congolese blocked the blow. knew in advance the full meaning of his U-2 flight over Soviet and Publications Section" and told the lineup of the 1928 Cootball plan"1 takeoff. Ghana U.N . sodliers rushed to Victory for Kennedy; clubbed and robbed a Canadian territory. But elsewhere, hints were dropped that the court team as well as informing the new students that the football seat· U.N. unit at Leopoldville Airport The Canadians. two of whom help the Canadians. Raises Minimum Pay ing system had been changed. No longer would Cans put application Thursday. Protesting sharply, the wore wings and chcvrons Similar Under cover of Lumumba's would deal leniently with the American flier. The trial may end I envelopes in a receptable to have their seats drawn by chance from a U.N. Command cracked down and to the insignia of Belgian para· martial·law declaration, Congo· From $1 to $1.25 today. Time after time in the second day of the trial, technical barrel. Tickets were to be given out on a "[irst come· first served" reclaimed full control over the air· troopers, were robbed of their wal· lese troops movcd in uninvited to WASHINGTON (.4'1 - The Senate witnesses repeated that the May 1 flight was planned and basis. port. lets and some arms. share guard duty at the airport with Ghana troops of Maj. Gen. Thur day night passed Sen. John "premeditated." and attempted to Stories about the new Daily Iowan staff and the sta(f of "Frivol," The savage incident, one of a Their Canadian·French protests I series oC clashes of Premier Pa· Carl von Horn's U.N. forces. F. Kennedy's bill raising the mini· link Powers directly with the V.S. carried out a pollcy which bore a the campus humor magazine, were also features of that section. were shrugged off with a repeated mum wage from $1 to $1.25 an are: Harold V. and trice Lumumba's Negro soldiers charge that they were "Flemish The U.N. Command , concerned military. risk of war. Connolly of Santa The other section was called "Editorial and (:ity" and headlined with U.N. personnel, came as hour and giving about four million Powers disagreed with some of Th. .lIt.nt of po_rs' repent. Belgians." over a clash Wednesday of Congo· mor workers protection of the , and Abraham and a story about workmen finding marble tablets with inscriptions tell· Lumumba himself delivered Capt. Andre Taschereau of Mpn· lese with a Norwegian detachment, the testimony. But once more he ance ...ms to be .n l",.,orlant GrossCeld of Urbana, ing of the layi~g of the cornerstone for Old Capitol, July 4. 1840. pointed snubs to U.S. Ambassador wage·hour act. told the military section of the factor. Hi. Sovl.t dofonN coun· treal, the detachment's command· rushed three additional companies TM roll can 'lot. was 62.34. The stones had been hidden behind cornices built over the doors of Clare H. Timberlake and U.N. er was knocked unconscious by a to thc airport after the aUack on Soviet Supre m e ..I, Mllclwlll I. Grlnlov, telel p_. have this problem at Undersecretary Ralph J . Bunche. The vote marked a victory Cor .rs' family .fter the doY'1 pro. tbe building: rine butt smashed into his right the Canadians. These were two the Democratic presidential nomi· Court he repen ted n1vnnni.·." said Arthur J. Two inside pages were d'evoted to telling the new students about The Coneolese apparently mis· temple. companies of Sudancse and a his flight. The pi· ceoclint thot the fll.,'1 beh.vlor executive direc· took the Canadians, assigned to Th. Congol ..e forced some of Ghana company. nee. on the stlnel lnel hi. rep.. tocf ex· Iowa City:S chtlrches of 10 denominations. He was chief sponsor of the leg· lot. who has plead­ U.S. Olympic Committee. signal duty in the interior. for the Can.dions to lie on the GI\Il. Victor Lund\lla, the ex· ed guilty to spy.""· ...... ~ pr.sslon of r.g,.t .nd repent. are solving it just the $tudents were welcomed to Iowa City by the president of the Belgians. Some were aboard a ground Ind mid. on. .trlp to islation and shephered it through anc. rll," hope th.t the court sergeant commanding the iIl·disc!· the Senate. successfully fighting I ng, said he reo Merchant's Bureau and the president of the Chamber of Commerce. plane and others in jeeps when his shorts. plined Congolese forces, agrecd to gretted "ye r y . would be lenient with him. Mayor Emma J. Harval offered up the "keys to the city." the Congolese struck. The Con· Signalman Jose Mathieu of Que· off nearly all limiting amendments pull most of his men from the air· of a major nature. very much" that Powers' 'spirits seemed to have II special section for n.w students was not the only Innov.tlon golese totaled about 300; the Ca· bec was kicked twice in the face. port, leaving behind a token con· he had made lhe fallen as he finished his second Cpl. Robert Conroy of Kings. However, to win the closest bal· flight. and expres· that year. Th. D.ily lowln hod jUlt be.n .Iected to full member· tingent of 30. The bluc U.N. fiag tle of all during Thursday's ses· day of testimony, but he was chal· ton, Onl., suffered a blow on the was hoisted again on the control ed belief he had lenging some of the prosecution ship in the Allocloted Pr... Wire S.rvlce Ind bet.n usint liP ~ion. he had to agree to cut down back. He said a Congoiese broke tower. :lone his own coun· "~tu,.s in oddltlon to local n.ws produc.d by I .toH of 100 newi' the new coverage In the bill by POWERS witnesses. He had none of his own high, steel.spiked The News try a "very ill service." to testify to his character or to them. Both couples men. Georg. H. G.llup, compul polllt.r, wos edltori.1 lup.rvisor about 900.000 workers. Originally It the tim •• * * * * * * he had sought to bring five million Moscow ,.dlo, str... ing the his purpose in making earlier resigned to their ftler'. 'lIprelllo" of r.gret, told flights along the southern Soviet By September oC 1926, the edition lor the new students had grown under the Fair Labor Standards In Brief Big 4 U.N. G;hiefs Confer Act. its IllteM" this facter pIeced frontiers, nor to his reasons for girl athlete wanled to to 32 pages ~alled "Tbe Opening Fall Edition." A Sports Section The meuur., one of the Item. Po_rs op.rt, ond mode "0 undertaking the III-(ated May 1 husband," said Olga featured stories about former SW football slars and about the pro· B, The AaeeI.ted Pre•• clear dl.tinction between him flight across Soviet territory. "it.·d be impossible pl.ced hl.h on their lilt of mao grams of that year's coaches. SAN JOSE, COlto Rico - Cuban To S,op Congo Collapse jor l.glslltlon, by D.mocrats in .nd those who lent him." Sovi.t The implication being made by " On the front of the Campus and Society section was a picture Foreign Minister Raul Roa Thurs· the .bbrevl.t.d, pr.·... ctio~ Con­ .nthorlti.. h• .,. mode It clelr Soviet authorities is that Powers (.4'1 - officials made no secr t of their of the progress on construction or the Field House. Inside, four day night urged the Organization UNITED NATION, N. Y. gre ..lo".1 se"lon, .till hu I their prlmory Int.rllt II In con· differs Crom his superiors because Dag Hammarskjold called in the vlctlng U.S. polley in the pages were devoted to announcements of engagements and mar· of American States to take punitive concern over such incidents as rocky rood ahead. .Y" they - [ncludine President Eisen· measures against both the Dom· chief U.N. representatives of the Thursday's savage attack by Con· It now goes bock to the House, of world opi"ion. hower - expressed no regret Cor riages of SUI students. Pictures of the new houses for three Greek Big Four powers Thursday lor a inican Republic and the United golese army riflemen on a Cana· which pa sed a much less compre· The prosecution introduced ex· nying the U·2 1,200 miles inside 'organizations, Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi and Kappa Sigma garnish· States. joint conference aimed at keeping pert testimony concerning Pow· Soviet territory May 1. Soviet Pre· ed the section. dian U.N. unit at Leopoidville air· hensive version in June. That Secretary of State Christian A. the Congo from collapsing into measure would boost the wage ers' U-2 plane, its equil'ment, and mier Nikita Khrushchev - now va­ The nearly finished Medical Laboratories and the beginning Herter earlier asked the OAS to chaos. port. A U.N. spokesman comment· floor to $1.15 and cover about 1.4 documents carried by Powers cationing in the Crimea - insists hospital construction were featured on the front of a section called condemn the Dominican Republic Reliable sources said the U.N. ed that directives to U.N. troops million new workers. which the prosecution apparently the incident caused the Paris sum· City and Campus. The paper told of the city construction crews [or aggression but opposed a Vene· secretary·general bluntly toid thrm make clear they have the right to Supporters of the legislation now introduced to link him directly to mit conference to collapse Mny 16. busy at work repairing Iowa City streets and announced the Novem· zuelan demand for immediate that Big Four unanimity was im· shoot in self·defense if attacked. will try to get it into conference the U.S. Air Force. Powers' mother, Ida Ford Pow. penalties against the Caribbean perative in order to avoid a dras· ber opening of the Englert theatre. Summoned for the rare meeting but the conservative House Rules This testimony seemed til be ers. who suffers from a heart con· nation . tic deterioration in the already Committee may prove a hig stUID' leading up to a Soviet argument dition, avoided the morning pro­ The new students received more detailed information by the 1930 He recommend instead the OAS turbulent newborn African repuh· that lasted 45 minutes were U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge. bling block. that the V.S. Government and its ceedings but appeared in the aft· introduction of a special "Freshman Section." set up a special committee to lic. And. If the conference is al. military leadership deliberately ernoon. Powers' wife, Barbara, supervise free elections in the African sources said that Ham· Soviet Deputy Foreign Ministt'r Th. dorl" told the Itud.nts quit • .,.ciflc.lly whet w.. , ex· lowed, the House del\!gates are ex· and his cobbler father, Oliver W. Dominican Republic. marskjold also had warned Afri· Vasily V. Kuznet ov, British Min. Powers of Pound, Va., were in pected of th.m. Retl.tration procedure wos cI.orly outlhtecl I.od· ister Harold Beeley and French pected to be set against taking the Herter told the sixth conference ca's U.N. representative that if broader terms of the Senate bill . their places all day, intently fol· Ing the n.w SUlow.n from M.cbrlde Holl where h. picked up of hemispheric foreign ministers disagreement persists with Pr· Ambassador Armand Berard. 4\ Negroes lowing the trial. They were joined ....Istretlon m.t.rill. to Unlv.rslty Holl to pey fee, ond IInolly to Even If the House .ccede., that if the regime of Rafael Tru· mier Patrice Lumumba's Congo The U.N. secretary·general I\lso Pr.sident Eisenhower might veto by the pilot's young~r sister, Jes· the Iowa Union where h... Iected his cours.l. jillo blocked such a move, the government, the United Nations held another group meeting with sica Hileman of Washington, D.C., the meosur., line. the Admlnll' who just arrived in Moscow. Curriculum requirements and the standard program for the OAS then could consider sanctions would have no alternative but ,0 the ambassadors of Ecuador, Ar· trltlo" .ctvocoted on lnereosect To Get Aid· first year of liberal arts study were listed. Activities open to fresh· - penalties. pull out the more than 11.000 U.N. gentina, Ceylon and Tunisia - all minimum only to the $1.15 1• .,.1 The prosecution c.nt.red It, men were added to the data and the Union's Service Desk was troops in the country. smaller countries on the ll·nation .nd much norrow.r oddltlonel .Hack on Pow.rs' contentl.n thlt Hammarskjold and other U.N. Security Council. recommended for those who were, by that time, bewildered. WASHINGTON* *- Secretary* of cov.rag •. From Group h. wa. not 0 true spy, but roth· State Christian A. Herter was .r iust • pilot octlng under .uper· The 1930 paper also told of the coming Lecture Series speakers The Senate version would bring A group of Iowa City residents asked Thursday night to say important coverage of the act to Wednesday night formed an or· lors' ord.rs. and the fall social activities. whether a campaign aide to Rich· the retail store field for the (irst galii!ation hoping to obtain tempor· The prosecution also paid much A reminder that all was not [unmaking told the new coed that ard M. Nixon Influenced the State time. Not even the largest depart. ary homes here for (our Negro stu· attention to the question of iden· she would have to be in by 10 p.m. on weekdays and by 12:30 a.m. Department's turnabout decision to ment store now is covered. How. dents from Prince Edward County, tification marks on the U-2 plane on weekends. offer funds to transport African ever, the bill applies mainly to Virginia. and enable them to attend itself. Lt. Col. Yuri Tyufilin. tesU· students to this country. chains or very large stores. school here. fifying as an engineer-expert, said The 1!13O paper, though not yet called the University Edition, had Chairman J. William Fulbright an examination of layers oC paint initiated the attempt to let the new student know of as many facet$ Kennedy told the Senate the fi· Heading tbe group, named the (D·Ark.l of the Senate Foreign nal product _is not all he wanted on the wrecked plane proved to of University life as possible. This policy continued to be the main. Relations Committee made the reo Iowa City Sponsors for Equal Ed· but said: "I think this is a good ucation Is Prof. Robert Michael· him the plane never carried iden· stay of the special edition through several years oE gradual change. quest. He wrote Herter he under· bill. " sen, director of SUI's School of tification marks because its mis· Then from the 1958 edition of 48 pages, the paper jumped in size st~ the department had reversed Religion. sion was spying and not scientific to 72 pages in 1957, 80 pages in 1958, 104 pages in 1959 and 112 pages an earlier unfavorable decision be· research. this year. cause oC "intercession" by James Ludwig To Work The group was motivated by the But Powers contended he had Shepley, who is working for plight of some 1.700 Negro young· The purpose of providing new students with information abouf seen the plane at his base prior Nixon's election to the presidency. On Goddard StaH sters in Prince Edward County Who to his flight and had always seeD the university they are entering has carried down through 38 years have not had access to schools for it "with identification marks." The the past year. Public schools in the of special editions under many names. It was even called "The WASHINGTON - The first of· court told him he was entitled to August Special" in the 1940's, just before being named Vniversity * * * Of N.A.S.A. Lab county were closed last year in re­ disagree. ficial report on East·West trade sistance to the U.S. Supreme Court Edition in the early 1950's. since the U2 incident and the sum· Geor«e Ludwig, who designed The prosecution produced what It many of the instruments for Ex· decision requiring integration of called expert witnesses, some sclen· mit conference collapse indicates public schools. those episodes have I)ad no effect plorer satellites while working Cor tiflc, some military. to attack Pow· on American business dealings his Ph.D. degree at SUI, has been The Iowa City group Is cooper at· ers' position that he was just a Discoverer· XIV. 'in Orbit with the Communist bloc. named to the sta Ff of the Goddard in,,! wilh, the Americjln Friends pilot carrying out orders. Much .at· VANDENBERG A I R FORCE data for the Navy's transit navi­ Secretary of Commerce Fred­ Space Flight Center near Washing· Service cOn;n}ittee in its effort. The tention was centered on the .22· BAsE, Call!. IA'I - The satellite gation satellite program. erick H. Muller told Congress ton, D. C. service committee i$ attempting to caliber pistol found among Pow· Di8coverer XIV roared into polar Thursday his department, during Ludwig will become head of the place about 50 of t~e students in ers' equipment. The Air Force hopes today to particles and fields instrumenta· nortl1ern communities where they omit Thursday crammed with sec· accomplish the elusive goal of alt the Aprll·June quarter, approved The presiding judge asked him nearly 90 per cent of all requests tion section at Goddard, one of the may' continue their education. ret skNPY gear. , Discovered .shots - makin& a major laboratories of the Nationat why he carried it. The successful launch in the tricky aerial catch of the falling for permiSSion to sell goods to the Prof. Michaelsen declared that "It is for bunting," said Pow· once·troubled series came but a Soviet Vnion and her European Aeronautics and Space Adminl· the primary goal of the local group capsule. stration. His new duties will begin ers. Week after the Vnited States' The plan: to eject the capsule on satellites. This compared with 83 "is to assist in gai,ning access to "It I. dlfRcult to hunt ot 21,. lpectacular space first with Dis· per cent in the Proceding three Aug. 25. education for any American child the satellite's 17th pass over the He will be responsible for de· mettrs ,...... ) altl"," ~overer XIII recovery of its cap­ Arctic, h a v e Hawail·based e1l9 months. who is deprived of his commonly eommentod the ludge. IUle from orbit. veloping satellite Instruments for recognized right." fiying boxcars try to snag its conducting sciehti(ic investigations Dr. Victor Ilich Prazorovosld, a. The Alr Force said the new sat· parachute as It floats down over CAPI! *CANAVI! * RAL, *FLA. - Those attending the organiza' a medical expert, said the needle ellite is whirling around the globe A space rocket exploded in flight elf space particles and fields. Par· ,ional meeting were: the ocean north of Hawaii. ticle experiments include study of carried a poison of the curare once / every 941A1 minutes in an Thursday about 2~ minutes after The Rev. John G. Craig, the group such .8 used by South it blasted off In an attempt to hurl trapped radiation and cosmic rays orbit ju.t 'about perfect for an· in some ways similar to research Rt. Rev. Msgr. J. D. Conway, the American Indians for blowl\ID other recovery. Its high point is Echo I an experimental military com· Rev. James Foulke, Profs. Aian darts, adding It had killed a do, &02 miles, low point 116. munications satellite into orbit. as currently conducted by the SUI Moonlet 14'8 nose cone was 8y THI AISOCIATID PRESS Physics Department. Fields elt· Christensen, Isaac Alcabes and in three minutes and a mouse Ia ~o. The fiery sky explosion ruined John O'Mara, ProC. and Mrs. loaded with special instruments . Here are the approximate Cen· periments include studies of the 20 seconds. the first step in a long rangll in· Michaelsen, Prof. and Mrs. Philip The protHution al .. hommerecf deai,ned 10- help two upcoming tral Daylight times and locations vestigation of the use of satellites earth's magnetic, gravitational and aeries df surveillance satellites: Cor the Echo J satellite's visible electrical fields. Hubbard, Mrs. W. W. McCrory, ot 1nto ...... 1 ospects of .... as a global communications net· Mrs. Manford Kuhn, Debbie Kuhn, co .., includl", lnvolvemtaf of Samo" to rlldjo back ,pictures of appearances over Iowa as 1Jsted work for aU U.S. mWtary forces. Probably the most notable single Ierrain It passe. over; Midas, to by the National Aeronautics and Holy Smoke (Stack) device designed by Ludwig is a Miss Alice Michener and Milton Palelaton as the 11M of .....,.. The Defense Department an· Powell. takeoff. The Pal.tonl Gov ..... detect enemy missile firings. Ex· Space Administration: nounced half an hour after launch Workmen .... bII.y .t the EnglnHrlng Bulldlnt os they fill·ln hoi .. tiny tape recorder - eight ounces in weight and · two and one·half Mrs. Allyn Lemme, Mr~. R. B. ment h.. IIonled _onco kMwf. let nature of the gear was classi· Tocler tbat the two-ltage Thor·Able rocket In the smoklltlCk ther •• Th.ir work will toke them to the top of the lied. 9:32 p.m. - Hiah above horizon, "apparently exploded shortly after inches across - which made it Michener and Mrs. G. F. Bosel, ed.. of the natu... of Pewon' llD·foot plul Itack. AHer the hoi., 'Ire Riled, the .t.ck will be sport. flltht. " ~parate Instrument package, Crom south travel"" northeut. premature shutdown of the first· possible to report the whole geo­ although not at the Wednesday to belp with optioal and radar 11:38 p.m. - H\Jh above horizon, lItale engine. Cause of the mal· Ing a cut of ,rly paint to p ...fect It from the ol.ment.. graphical coverale 01 some 500 or· night meeting, attended an earlier Concludilll arlUments Ia tbe cUI ttlCklq. WII lncluded to gAther 'rom north travelinl nortbe ..t. function J. beJnJ lnveatJclled." -Dally ',wln Photo by ~ R.hcIor blts DC Explorer Ill. planning meetin,. are npecte4 toclay. , ~I !)All" IOWAN-I .. Converted Fountain-= To Set Up Com rrh~ 1)oily Iowan Antarctica Pact an FRIDAY. AUGUST 19. 1960 Texas U. Fro~~ State ( TM Dally Iowan iI written and edited by ltudent$ and If gooemea liy a board of floe student trust~ elected " .,., rtvdent body tmd four faculty trustea appointed by the president of the University. The Dally Jowmu Nearly 3,Il00 acres in th -"tGrial policy. ,herefore, Y nol an e%pf'eulorl of SUI admlnlmation policy or opllllon, In any particul4r. Outer Space -Assist? eat! of the Coralville flood Have Own Pool men-oir have been turn, By VICTOR WILSON The nub of it was that if the "living resources," and will re­ to the Iowa conservation , Herald TribaDe Ne.. Seryl£e (Editor'. Not.: Th r.II .... I.. ' ar­ good, since the Freshman Swim· degree of cooperation shown hy main in errect 30 years, with a ticle .. reprlnLe.d from the New I sion for development as a ming Pool Board's opinion is that WASHINGTON - Can the the 12 countries on Antarctia con­ withdrawal right four years there. • Students' EdlUon at T b e Dally $lllduary and public huntiJ tinued, then the future looked en­ after. Texan, .'.den' Dew.paper or tbe the pool is too shallow lor any treaty signed by 12 nations, set­ Volv • .,lly 01 T..... Tbl. .dIU ... fancy di ving. For this reason the Col. E. M. Fry, Rock lsi ting aside the huge Antarctica couraging indeed for a future Changes in the treaty within h tbe equivalent 01 The DaUy '0- wao'. Unlver It)" Edition, ",hleb board Ielt the diving boa r d !ricl lingineer, in announl continent for special purposes similar pact on space. the 3O-year span must be by will be publhbed tomorrow. The action explained that the .rtlcle wa. written by Jerr7 Conn, should be leIt off to remove only, serve as the framework [or Of course, no human has reach­ unanimous consent (which gives Dews editor of lhe Texln.) temptation. particularly valuable for a similar agreement on outer ed out there yet, though both the all 12 signatories a veto power): But the freshman pool boasts tory waterfowl managem space? United States and' arc en­ desputes may (but needn't be Hi, war babies. something better tban a diving It's a question that has been gaged in an unadmitled race to taken to the world court for ad­ You are the most fortunate 1'111 3.5'5 acres Includ board. The water pressure 01 the ... aM water areu and intriguing legal and diplomatic "get there fustest" - the moon judication: and aU signers are freshmen lo enter the University former (ountain has been stepped minds since Dec. 1, when signa­ being the most likely target. pledged to 'prevent non-members of , Texas ill quite some time. WItt from Hi.hw.y 21 up, and now out of the moullu milt. up the Iowa riv.r tures were solemnly squiggled on A lot of emphasis has been from violating the treaty's pro­ Neyer have freshmen had a and noses of lhe three large horse the parchment pact here by repre­ placed on the military aspects of visions. (This latter is important rec(eatlnnal facility d e vat c ct The .tat. holds the land I statues that were part of the 2S-yeir I..... sentatives of the dozen countries, being first to land, and then per­ to the West. Romania, for in­ strictly to Iheir own use. Not beautiful Cormer Countain, water including tbe United States and haps develop bases, on celestial stance, or any other Soviet satel­ uQ{il this fall when YQU enter. cascades down to drench the frol. I To be known as tbe I the . planets. But many military men lite, could go ahead and do a For recreation the entire Uni­ licking swimmers in tbe pool be· Wildlife area, the tract The question has assumed new pooh·pooh the idea. Their reason­ 11~t1e n_c1ear testing there jf versity will sing praises in com­ low. center of the urgency since the Senate last ing it that if the objective Is to hit that provision were lacking in mendation of the new, ultra-mod­ "We want all the incoming mission's new Coralville week raUfied the treaty - to the something on earth, with a mis­ the pact.) ern StUdent Union, complete with freshmen to have a great year game management unit, surprise of many - after a two­ sile, say, then the best place to Any United Nations member Bowling Alleys. in swimming at their own pool," unit, to be headed by Tom day debate, hy a 66-21 vote. A do it from is the eath itself, and can join the pact by ratiCying But it is you, new freshmen, H. Z. Fadder, long-time director includes Jones, Linn, ban on nuclear testing there not the moon. After all, the lat­ and obeying it. who get the only outdoor swim­ emcritus of UT Freshman Aquat· Iowa, Benton, Tama, ter never comes closer than 221,- ming pool at the University of could have been the deciding fac­ 3 on Antarctica StaH ic Activities, comments. "The f1arshall and Grundy 463 miles to earth, while the lat­ Texas-and upper classmen can­ tor. Two of the most pleased men weather wlll be scorching when 6 Mor. Ratifications Nee.5Iary ter's circumfrance is only 25,000 not use it. By a special act of they get here to the University, The ~awkeye area here when the Senate ratiIied the Recreational Budget Commit­ the tIood plain of the Five other countries - Bel­ miles. Other planets are even the treaty were George H. Owen and the pool will be theirs as gium, , Norway, Union of farther away. tee last month, the old Littlefield soon as they get out of those hot the reservoir. Water and the United King­ and Wayne Fisher. The former Fountain, beauliIully located in will vary (rom lake Contains 14 Artlcln heads the State Department's registration Jines," he added. dom - have already ratified. The front of the Mall, has been con­ "But we have to set up a few times of high six yet to act the Russia, Argen­ The Antarctica Treaty contains "Antarctica desk," and the lat­ verted into the Freshman Swim. ponds and potholes at ler is his rnly assistant. They rules," Mr. Fadder says. "For -tina, New Zealand, Chile and 14 articles, at least One of which ming Pool - $100,000 worth. one thing, we have to require the army engineers poInt marks a "£irst" for the Soviet are aided at their foggy bottom France. The assumption here is During the budget hearing to bathing caps Cor the women stu· Under normal they will act quickly, noiY that Union. Under the pact, Russia office by one girl cler~. finance the conversion of the dents , and ear plugs for the men granted for the Cirst time, the Owen and Fisher sweated ' out tions, operating pro'ceclurE ,the U.S. Senate, always an un­ fountain into a pool, upperclass­ students. With our 'Lady SaCely' reservoir will predictable body, has ratified. right of other signatory nations the Senate debate and final ratifi­ men charged the hoard with be­ on duty, we won't have to worry to inspect what it is doing in its cation while sitting in the Sen­ conditions fOr the President Eisenhower first sug­ ing pro-freshmen and hung sev­ about drownings. What we have waterfowl habitat in gested that Antarctica, which is Antarctic foothold - by air if ate's diplomatic gallery. As be­ eral of them in effigy. These to watch Cor now is ear infec· one-third again as large as Eu­ necessary. Russia ' has stood lilted a couple oC State Depart­ charges were never proved tra tions. Our watcr is taken from rope, be explored and exploited adamantly against similar inspec­ ment foreign service career men, though, and much to your own 'beauliful Lake Ausin, and there· only for peaceful purposes. He tion tl' insure that any pact it they didn't leap up and yell for good fortune, the money was fore it contains fungus." also has suggested the same for signed barring the testing, or joy when the treaty passed - given Cor the pool. "I think we'll have it lit~eli outer space, a suggestion the So­ possession of nuclear weapons, that's barred by Senate rules, The Freshman Swimming Pool with the bathjng caps and car viets have so far spurned. would be observed. anyway. Instead they exchanged has no diving board and many plugs," he. added, "and we're But the Russians are as unpre­ The treaty also pars military pleased smiles, then quietly re­ criticisms were voiced about this. going to put the freshmen on dictable as the Senate. installations of any sort in the turned to Cogj:y bottom_ But it is Cor the freshmen's own the honor system to USe these Even be Core the Senate vote, Antarctic: freezes (an appropri­ articles. Andrew G. Haley, one of this ate word) the various nations' Fadder, one of the Universi· Engineers' C country's foremost - and ex­ present land claims there: pro­ Should Go on Forever- ty's biggest bODsters of fresh· tremely Cew - experts on space hibits using the area as a dump­ man independence. commented, law, or the lack oC it, was writing ing ground for radioactive waste: "This is one of the first big tests Available on an optimistic article. provides for the protection of IEnjoy, Enjoy!1 for freshmen. Allhough it seems like a small test, if it is carried At SUI This -Virtually Reviews Itself out by the rules and in the proper spirit, it wm stretch, and giVe A !limed engineering 'European University' REVIEWED BY JOHN K. HUTCHENS growth, and mature those stu· signed to teach the Up Uerald Trlbune News ServIce dents by entrusting to them their rithms and the slide from the Jungle own health by the wearing o( ENJOY, ENJOY! by Harry Golden. World. 315 pages, $4.00. available this Call from bathing caps and ear plugs." sion Division of SUI. In Nearing Reality I Now about this Harry Golden - >there's a great man, and let's April-in-Augu5t FI)I)\\ Roscoe Drummond Reports- all hope he keeps writing forever, which, the way things are going Directed by Edward By JAN HASBROU,CK ment, known as the Geiger Re­ SUI instruclor in the lIerald. Tribune New. Service port, went even Curther than the at the moment, it looks as if he might do. Three years, three books: Engineering, the films "Only in America," "For 2c Plain," and now "Enjoy, Enjoy'" AI! PARIS - Neither the treaty report of the Interim Committee. duced by the motion estahlishing the European Eco­ The latter had provided for ap­ pretty much in the same vein and form, and that's all right, too. duction section of the 's Propaganda" Broadcasts nomic Community nor the earlier pointment by the Council of Min­ Mixture as Befqr. or Audiio-Visual one which set up the European isters of the universIty Rector. In fact, for a book reviewer, it's better than all right. Some are suitable for use The Geiger report wanted him junior colleges, and Coal and Steel Community con­ people esteem Golden for the goodness of his heart, others Cor the elected by the professors, and in At 1110 Kiloqdel I classes. tain any mention of a European sharpness of his wit, still others Ior his courage, and, of course, he Have Solidified O~A.S. Unity Vniverslty" 1M Art. , ~, .I ~~C . •~ .or general sought to protect the uni­ I" ,. f ~ I The series consists of •:t·, . I ri I - 1 ., 'bas a good 'matIC fcoming to him on all these counts. Any book re­ the Eurlltom treaty says: "An lO­ .versity from political control. It Six are on the use of WASHINGTON - The United and beamed in Spanish to a wide Eiscnhower put on his." viewer in his right mind would agree, and then he would have to NEW YORK, NEW YORK ... Stales is not the only nation wor­ stitution at university level shall also sought to broaden the scope it's a helluva town; the Bronx is and 15 cover the use df audience inside and outside the But these personal diatribes, add. gratefully, that another Cine -thing about the Golden treasuries ried about the steady slipping of be set up." of the university beyond a purely up and 1 h e Battery's dOVID. rule. Student manuals - count~y . which went so far in an attack European framework. . is that they virtually review themselves. the Castro regime into the grip on Mrs. Eisenhower as to cause This article, which does not ex­ (Guess what today's theme is at Jecture notes on the Already Radio Mambi has aim­ actly cal! for a full-fledged uni­ Last month the Assembly ap­ Well, they really should, since a considerable part of them ap­ problems - are aVi~UclUje of the Communists. ed its attacks upon eight most a leading newspaper in Mexico WSUI.) The New Yorker (both It is especially encouraging versity, was seized on last spring proved unanimously proposals for peared in a newspaper in the first place, that extraordinary publica­ the animal himself and the mag· films, as well as a widely respected fellow LatlD City to brand Radio Mambi as a by the European Assembly, which the university. It was then up to ual. that, apart from American leaders. The characler "sewer equipped with a micro­ tion calJed "The Carolina Israelite," edited and published by Golden azine which purports to serve Fidel Castro's serves all three communities, as the Council of Ministers to gi ve in his Charlotte, N.C., home between visits from friends and admirers him ) are participants in the These films have and range oC these altacks are phone," are not the cause of the an excuse to vote unanimously the green light. But this has not ambassador, th~ day's broadcasting, from 8 a.m. crellit classes at well illustrated Crom the follow­ determination of the American been forthcoming. The nation and lecture engagements afield. You can all but hear him talking other 20 repub­ for establishment of a European to 2: 15 p.m. Listeners who dn't and tests have indicalted! ing extracts (rom the Havana nalions to deC~nd themselves, university. holding back is France. Il does off these short pieces, or pounding them out on a typewriter, short experienced teachers lics of the We,st­ broadcasts: They are only symptoms. or long as space and content require. To read them is a pleasure, get there personally will have to A committee drew up plans for not want the communities to fin­ settle for a radio report on the salisJactory results ern Hemisphere The real cause is the gradual and to borrow them is a labor-saving device. have unanimous­ President Arturo Frondfzi of a sort of post-graduate school ance the project and even objects Statue of Liberty. the Puerto pictures in presenting Argentina is described as "an un­ suffocation by the Communists which would specialize in subjects to the term "European Univer­ Shak.,pe.r.nik material which the ly recorded their of the Cuban revolution and Cas­ Ric a n problem, Exurbanity, anxiety over the happy comedian who believes in which can be taught in a Euro­ sity." It is generally believed that Sometimes he is the old Lower East Side boy remembering Tammany Hall. Broadway and films cover. the democratic Caree maintained tro's own eHorts - as in Arll~n­ Pean context such as fuel' and the real reason is that French trend of affairs tina with the Peronists - to un­ life Qn Eldridge Street with a fond sigh, as when he recalls the a dozen other faccts of contem· ~uch motion nictur,es in Havana. Ac­ by bayonets." power economics, transport, juris­ universities are afraid of a loss lordly titans of the Yiddish theater, Jacob Adler, Boris Thomashev· porary life on and around the than pay Cor dermine the authorily oC lhe prudence, and European history. of students, proCessors and pres­ cordingly, when President Jorge Alessandri of democratically elected govern­ sky, and their curious versions of the English-speakIng classics. Thus: island of Manhattan. liple·seclion courses of Chile is branded as "a man who It provided for departments rath­ tige. The German universities had FRIDA y, AVG. 10. IIHMI to-do·it" variety, Rising the Foreign ments of the other Latin Ameri­ "In a Y-iddish version of Shakespeare's 'Hamlet,' the uncle wa~ is ruling behind the back of his er than faculties in law, econo­ much the same Ceeling, hut were 8:00 News cause several teaching Ministers of the Organization of can countries. won over. Furthermore, the idea a rabbi in a small village in' Russia. He did not poison Hamlet's 8:05 Mo rning Chapel American States WAS) met in people - a corrupter of the mics, social and political science, 8:15 Musle and Featllre. /' - working under surl."'''' EvidenLly the American For­ of an independent center strong­ Cather, but broke the latter's beart by wooing and winning away his 9:00 News Costa Rica in emergency session faith." history, mathematics and theore­ experienced facul ty eign Ministers' meeting in Costa tical physics. Students would have ly promulgating the idea of su­ wife. Hamlet is off somewhere getting educated as a rabbi. While he 9:15 Music and Features (Feature this week, the first item on lhe President Alberto Lleras Ca­ TOPic: New York) present factual material Rica is presenting Castro with a to have completed three or four pranational "Europeanism" does is gone, his father dies. Six weeks later, the son returns in the 12 :00 Rbytbm Rambles and pf(I>I'tlvely to large agenda was to consider Commu­ margo of Colombia is dismissed /iolidarity he didn't expect. not fit in with France's present 12 :15 New. and News Background, nist infiltration into Latin Amcri- years of university level studies midst of the wedding feast, and turns the feast into a funera!. Ter­ 1:00 Music and Feaiures • students., as "a scrvile salellite of the (e) 1960 New York Herald Tribune, elsewhere before entering and concept oC the communities as a 2:10 News ca. United States . - the intimate lnc. rible scenes of sorrow follow ,between mother and son, Ophelia and 2:15 SIGN OFF Educators seeking would be required to know one concert of nations. malion on the -_._,-_._-, This is welcome evidence of friend of exploiting imperialism." IIamlet. While some of the Socialist actors got in a few ad Jibs ------community language besides their should inquire Latin American solidarity. It President Miguel Ydigoras of S. D. Poll Favors own. The university would be at the rabbinate in genera!." shows a gathering awareness Guatemala: "The prisoner of Or he is the philosopher who, out of innate optimism, denounces Audio-Visual 1n.