<<

n e avors I

~ Says Economy Needs ' Needle, Not Checl<.Rein 01 By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL WASlUNGTON (61 - President Eisenhower said Wednesday he Serving The State University of and the People of Iowa City would rather go in for a bit of red ink than hold ru s budget In balance nve t:ents a Copy Memoer 01 Assoclatl.'(f Press AP Leased Wire and photo ser vice Iowa city, Iowa , Thursday, January 16, L958 by boosting taxcs at this time. Thc President's $74-billion spending program and his health were tOPICS at Mr. Eisenhower's fi rst n:lW conference in two and a half dent said he nover had thought of month . Dur,ng this gap, the Including ~ed China in another like Says Own Defense Ideas President sufCp.red a mild stroke meeting ot East-West cruefs of on Nov . 25 that gave him a tern· state- - a topic of an exchan&e of porary speech impediment. lelters between Mr. Ebenhower Mr. Eisenhower saId he is "feel· and Premier Bulganin of Russia. Cannot Be Final Answer ing very well indeed," is optimistic ANNIVERSARY - Monday. is about the Cu ture and is "going to the fifth anniversary of Mr. Eisen­ WASH INGTON IA'I - President termed "my principal military carryon just exactly as I have in Eisenhower backed away Wednes­ consultants" have headed the pres­ hower's tenure, and he said he the past. " didn't think the five years have day from the firm determination ent military command system as As for the bud3et, the man he expressed last week to reorgan­ chairmen of the JoInt Chiefs of been "very much rougher than I who has been proud of his record anticipated." ize the Defense Department swifUy Starr. They are Gtn. Nathan F. of mainta ining • bal.nce ap­ for the spacs era. Twir\lng, Ule present chairman 01 peared to accept the idea that POLITICS - Pronouncing the Mr. Eisenhower told his news the Joint Chiefs, and Gen . Omar the ont he sent Congr ... Monday solidarity or the Republican party conference that his own idea of Bradley and Adm. Arthur Radford, may be tipped Into the red_ lar stronger than It appears at what should be done, "no mailer both reti red. ]n that event, and if income is li mes, Mr. Eisenhower said he how strong, cannot be the final Last week a high administration down, he said, "then it wou ld believes its members as a whole answer. - He said the answer must official said Mr. Eiscnhowcr had seem to me it would be a bad lime still support his political princi. be worked out after "many con· takcn per onal command of moves to r8lse taxes, because you wan t pies and prulosophy. He said that ferences" in which the views or to reorganize the Delense Depart­ that e~nomy to ... ha ve a litlle "those are the kind or people Congress and the three armed ment. McElroy, however, seemed nc:edle; a n ~edlc, rather tnan a which 1 will do my best to help services will be sought. to indicate that he expected to put check rein on it." elect" in the 1958 congressionaj Last Thu rsday, in his State of the plan into shape. I Up until busLOcss slacked off and campaign. tl\e Union message to Congress, defense spending went up in the LITTLE ROCK - Mr. El$enhow­ Mr. Eisenhower said he was study­ The defense secretary empha­ sized that he will make lhe deci- wake of Soviet Spulniks. ~lr. Eis­ or said he hopes the next step in ing defense reorganization. enhower's budget (01' this year was the school desegregation issue ill "Soon my own conclusionS will on on what steps to recommend to Mr. Eis nhower. He said his ad­ belOg ke\Jt in balance - for the Little Rock, Ark ., wlll be an ex­ be finalized," he said. "I shall thIrd year in a row, Now it looks pression by local ofCiciab or "their promptly take such executive ac­ visers won'~ constitute snother study committee but will act as as if it will show a $400 millien confident intention of maintaining tion as is necessary and, in a sep­ dcficit next June 30. order and peace in their town ." arale message, I shall present ap­ individual advisers. Mr. Eisenhower gave no hint in For the new fi scal yeur starting After that, he said, he sees no­ propriate recommendations to the JUly I, Mr . Eisenhower is pre­ reason for keeping the National Congress." rus State of the Union message of any plan he had in mind for bring­ dlcttng a half-billion dollar surplus Guard on duty to enforce racial in­ Secretary of Defense Neil Mc­ and banking on rus advisers to be tegration. Elroy Wednesday gave yct anQther ing greater unity to the often­ I:Hckering ervices. right on predictions that business PENTAGON SHAKEUP - Mf . indication that it may be some soon will be swinging up again Eisenhower showed a decld,ed time before the administration He also kept his news confer­ and tax receipts along with it. cha nge of pace - in fac t, what formulates a reorganization plan. ence Wednesday in the dark, But there are some Indications seemed to be something of an McElroy told newsmen he is though he said, 'It certainly must Ulat Congress may not want to about face - on Ws. Student Solicitors,Meet Death ca lling on three top military men be clear to most of you people that economize on so'me items as much In rus State of the Union mes­ -one each from the three services my own convictions about the as Mr. Eisenhower does and may sage last Thu rsday, Mr. Eisen-. FOUR MASSENA, IA. high school seniors were kil led Wednesday when the c,r in which they were -and an unspecified number of proper organization of the Defense try to increase military spending hower said that whatever the riding colllded with the truck on west of Manena. The students, Sheryl Lary, 18, civilians to advise him on recom­ Department are rather fixed." more. harmful service rivalries are, Lorttfl Denney, Robert Pond and Dennis Morrison, 1111 17, h, d lett the high school only minutes be­ mendations to submit to Mr. Eis­ Mr. Eisenhower said he has Mr. ~i se nhower acknowledged "America wants them stopped ," fore to solicit advertising from the merch,nts in nJa rby towns for the school's yearbook. The truck enhowcr. "given many, many active hours there could b. additional cosh that soo n his own concluslons driver, Harold Riddle, Fort Wayne, Ind., received only minor in iuries. The three officers McElroy to this kind of study," since 1947, a nd that "thingl can happen" in would "be fi nalized," and: "[ shall when he was Army chief of staff. both the financial and political promptly take such executive ac­ * * * "I think my views arc complete­ world in the ntlCt 18 months. Hi s lion as is necessary and. in a sc R" ly objective, and with nothing own feo linll, h. said, II that .ven arate message, I shaU present ap­ 4High School Student Council whatsoev r of personal biaS in If , reasonable amount of e­ propriate recommcndations to the Ii Undecided pendlture doe l upset the pre· Congress. " them," he said. But. he went on. hts term will expire in three years carious budget bal ance, that "' s Wednesday tho Prelldent saId and whatever plan is adopted must be" er than talk ing about a tax he has Itrong bvt what he con- ' Ad Salesmen 0 n extend beyond that lime. bill . t th il time." siders complet.ly unbiased, ... Government · Revamping The defen e organization, he de­ For this first news conference lective views on defense ,..,... clared, "has got to be effective since OCl. 30, 270 newsmen packed g.nbatlon and unlflca~. aut Student Council discussion Wed­ eil and in the proposed judicial for a traffic appeals court, but not after there has passed from the the meeting room in the execu­ he s.ld hll penonal convictions Die in Crash "cannot be tho final anl_r:'- ' nesdlly on details concerning a re­ branch dealing with the inaugura­ for a student sup,eme court. . cene a man who happens to have tive office building across the MASSENA IA'I - Four seniors, vamping of tbe SUI student gov­ tion of a supreme court and a Miss Clark said, "Pan-Hel(enic particular strong convictions In Nathan Twining street f.om the While House-. because h. will be Comrnl/lder In chief no ~ tMn th,.. 141ft· who only minutes before had left ernment's constitution leU two traffic appeals court. Ceels individual housing courts the matter." From the Air Force The news conference skipped Massena High to solicit advertising major points un resolved, but re­ Under the plan, all students can setUe their own inter-organ­ around, touching on such subjecu") tlon.1 y",., .nd "organll.tIon For that reason, he said, "there as : has got to be effective" after 1!e lor the school's yearbook, were sulted in general agreement on would be represented on the coun­ izational disputes." She expressed must be a consensus reached ... cil as they are in the present con­ the fear the supreme court may NATIONAL ECONQMY - Mr. has passed from the lCene. killed in a car-truck collision other poi nts. No council action with the Congress, with lhe people What is needed, he said, is a Wednesday mornlng. was taken. stitution by a percentage method emphasize minor conflicts between Eisenhower said the consensus of that have the job of operating the consensus by Congress and the Several council members ob­ based on dwelling units. Any hous­ student organizations. his advisers is Cor an upswing Killed in Iowa's worst traCfrc services to get th very finest kind rath r than a continued downturn. people who operate thc military accident of the new year were: jected to details in the propo ed ing unit would receive one repre­ The purpose of the supreme of organization we can." legislative branch dealing with sentative Cor each eight per cent of court as proposed is to act as a SUMMIT SESSION - The Pres!· services. ~he ry l Lary, 18, daughter of Mr. McElroy's disclosure that he is student representation on the couri- the student poptl:aUon in tlr.!!. court of original jurisdiction in the aDd Mrs. Orris Lary; Lorctta Den­ taking action toward reorganiza· housing unit. case of inter·organizational dis­ tion brought an expression of ap­ ne;, 17, daughter of Mrs. Mabel Council members Loren Kellar, putes between on-campus grQups . Bicking; Robert Dale Pond, 17, A4, Interfraternity representative, proval from Senate Democratic As outlined in the proposed consti­ Leader Lyndon Johnson of Texas. $5.5 Billion Missile Defense _. SOlI o( Mr. and Mrs. Glen Pond; Mail Delivery anet.. Jack Elkin, A3, Town Men tution, it would act as an appeal and Dennis Earl Morrison, 17, son representative questioned the eight "Somebody has got to take ac­ court from the student housing tion," Johnson said at a public o( Mr. and Mrs . Perry Morrison. per cent method. Kellar said hi5 courts. All except the Morrison youth maln objection to tile plan was hearing of the Senate Prepared­ IBili Passed Swiftly by House . lived on fa rms near Massena. He that it would allow a very small ness subcommittee wruch he Stopped If Do.g heads. WASHINGTON IA'I - A bill car- organizing the defense department. lived in town. unit to have a representative as I Other co nsultants will represent ij ryi ng $549,670,000 to improve the Eisenhower has suggested are­ Cass County Sheriff Kenneth well as a relatively larger one. As Errant Unions an example, he said. "Eight per civilian viewpoi nts, but McElroy ] nation's defenses against missile organization but hadn't given Con­ Jones said the ca r, rcgistered to said he isn't ready to name them. 't attack was swiftly and unan- gress any details on it yet. Pond, started to pass another auto Bites Postman cent oC Ule total enrollment is 820. A unit wilh only 150 persons wo uld To Be Wooed Reorganization of the Defense ''< imously passed by the House Wed- The half-billion-doUar defense and collided headon with a North WASHINGTON IA'I - U your dog Department has been a subj ct of American Van Lines truck on Iowa be enllUed to one representative a~ nesday. authorization bill is part of the biles your postman, you're going well as a unit with 800." KellaD increasing interest since Lt. Gen . The roll call vote, ta en alter $1,260,000,000 Eisenhower has 92 just west' of the Massena junc- to have to pick up your own mail. James Gavin, the Army's missile . tiOll. . . suggested there be a fixed number By AFL-CIO - brief debate, was 374-0. jlSked Congress to add to the de- Delive ry to your homo will be of represcntatives per housi ng boss, told a Senate subcommittee Inserted in the measure was an fense budget for the current fi~lll , Authorities said fog limited . vis­ stopped, at once. unit. WASHINGTON l.-fl - The AFL- last month he believes the Joint amendment giving Secretary o( year. The request came to Co,,: ~ystem Arthur Radford bility in ;tp,e area at tpe time, aI­ Postmaster General Summerfield Elki n's objection to the melhod ClO Wednesday was reported con­ Chi efs of Staff should be Defense McElroy authority to set gres Jan. 7, and co~derable red !hough., the accident occurred on said so Wednesday, in announ cing was that "there is no definition of sidering a pl an to offe r specJal scrapped. From'ltiJ e Navy up lhe advanced research pro- tape was cut to iet the first .part a stral~t stretch of ?ighway. new instructions to post offices how Town Mpn elect student coun- charters in the federation to any jects age ncy he and President of the leiislaUon to the House The truck driver, Harold Riddle over the country to protect letter cil represcntatives, and Ulere is no Teamsters Union locals wanting to Eisenhower have proposed. floor so quickly. 01 ~O\'~ Wa:t ne, Ind., suffcred mi- carriers fl'oql dog bites. central organizalion to present secede Crom their expelled parent There is some doubt that Jircs· Vinson said the bill Induded nor .njur i c~. , ' In the past the department hal student opinions." truck union. O.K.' Two Bond Issues, ent law would permit McElroy to authorization for 1. million dol; Classes were dismissed for t he considered using psychology on Plans arc being made for a Federation sources said the AFL· create the agency, which would do lars lor construction, in certain remainder of the week and the dogs. It even brought a dog psy­ Town Men's Association to repre- CIO has reccived a number of ini tial development work on pro- areas that he could not disclCMle, school went into mourn ing. chologist into high-level confer· sent 2,977 independent students. such requests from Teamsters 10- jects that onl y a few mon ths ago that will permit the installation or' ences in 1956. It has toyed with Elkins said. "Our problem is that ca ls and probably will decide on CommiHee Sugglests All 16 members or the senior class seemed long in the future - space equipment that will detect and the idea of arming postmen with persons in the Tow n Men and stu- the matter at the AFL-CIO Execu­ mittee's proposals furlher and , verucles and weapons and anti· give warning of an attack willi bad started out in four cars Wed­ repellents designed to keep dogs dent organizations are passive. live Council sessions starting Feb. The £i nance committee of the Iowa City School Study Council probably r (::l.omm~n C action at missile missiles. ballistic missiles. nesday morning to visit nearby beyond biting ran .. e, or with They have no time to attend meet- 3 at Miami Beach. towns and get advertisi ng support ings and take a voice in student A move to issue specJaI char- proposed two bond issues to the their next meeU n,g Jan. 22. I Chairman Vinson (O-(;a.), of the He said his committee halt been (or the school's annual, "The goodl" to bribe them into .being Council Wed nesday nig ht to relieve The finance committee said House Armed Services Committee assured there is now equipment man', best friend indeed. government." ters to seceding Teamsters locals Eagle." the classroom shortage of the Io wa ~ig~ r e~ for . the e)(pected increase urged swift action on the bill anq wruch will do exactly this - detect Wednesday's announce men t The second major point queslion- would represent a decision to try The car was knocked over on its ed was by Judy Clark, A2, speak- to take over the Teamsters mem­ Junio r High Sehools. 10 JUnior hIgh, enrollment by 1964 the House Rules Committee clear· a missile as It rises above the didn't even mention psychology or show a need for ei ther a new build- ed the way ror a vote. horizon and will afford a sufficient tap and the four persons were ing for two absent members oC the I bCl'ship piecemeal rather than seek The Council is a citizens' com­ trapped In tbe wreckage for more any of th e rest. • ing or a complete remodeling of t Vinson said that the measure period of time to permit elements "The instructions provide for Pan-Hellenic council. She said this to establish a new AFL-CIO truck mittee st udying Iowa City's public !ban an hou r. All apparently were council would support the proposal drivers union. schools to assist the Boa rd of the two present buildings. carries authority to expand U.S. ol the Strategic Air Command to tIDed outright. automatic discontinuance of de· The present cnrollment of the warn ing systems. build a third become airborne. live ry service whenevcr the car· Edu cation and the administration to improve thc educational pro­ Iowa City J~n i or High School is (launching base for the country's SAC is at present tbe principal rier Is actu ally bitten or his uni· 452. The estlmatcd enrollment in own intercontinental missiles and U.S. retaliatory lorce. form torn by a dog," it said. gram. U.Se Could Have Spy-in-Sky The fin ance co mm ittee recom­ 1964 is 746, ~h ~ c~ mm lltee said. Idi .S. perse aircraCt of the Strategic Vinson disclosed that SAC is to "The clog owner will be advised The Council IS 10 favor of chang- AIr Command more efCeeti vely.' be dispersed soon over 33 dlffer- r "Weather . where his mail may be picked up mended to the School Study Coun­ r·r, \ • cil that: ing the junior high system of div i- While the HouSe worked on the ent bases in this country with not until a' satisfactory IOlution is sion to incl ude grades seven, eight . bill, tw o congressional committees more than one squadron of 15 Partly cloudy skies, and warm­ found, when service will be re­ 1. A BOND ISSUE of at least et temperatures have · been pre­ .By Spring, Says Missile Boss and nine. Currently only grades dug deeper into the problems sur- planes to each base. Oriiinally Inst.ted. In luch cases no initial $160,000, to be retired in five years, seven and eight are Included . If rounding the struggle with Russia SAC had l1 home bases. The bill bd lor Jowa City' today. The IA'I - be notice il required." WASHINGTON The Air Sen, Symington /D-Mo '> , a mem- approved. thi s system were adopted, the 1964 for space age supremacy. provides Cor the di~rsal of ,Ix high ahould I be in the upper This would be only the last, or Force missile boss say that by ber of the subcommittee which is It would fin ance renovation of estimated enroll man.t would be The Senate Preparedness sub- squadrons, he said. IIIIrties. , the spring of next year this coun- inves tigating missile and satellite the heating ana electrical services The fi ve day forecast reports I desperation, measure. Two coop­ l,I07. the report saId. com mittee heard Robert E. Gross, q eration-seeking. letlers are alse. lry could have a spy-in-Ule-sky pr?grams, tho general said: "1 and insta ll ation de "smoke screens" chief executivc oCficer ol the I warming trends in Iowa today, satellite, able to circle the earth tlll.nk t hat we co~l~ have ~ recon- (fire doors) at each door In the liming colder Friday or sat\lf­ planned. ' Loc~hccd Aircrafl Corp ., call ror I Library Cards "The first Jetter will be us~ and return safely with photographs nalssance capabIli ty, U s lO ~ the two Junior High School build'ngs Vanguard Missile a bIgger defen se effort. day, and warming again Sunday. d th d t Thor booster, by the spring of h . I . , Except lor occasional snow where the carrier has report d an 0 er a a. next year with II recoverable cap. T esc Im p.ro ~e m e nt s would m a ~e Gross said President Eisenhow- A StOll MO. . flurries in the northeast, no pre­ trouble in making deli veries at Cl This estimate of U.S. ca pabili- sulc." the .two bUJ.ld.mgs safe and ~e lr Given Static Test er's defense budget "is headed in re I Isslng cipitalion of conscquence is ex· particular house because of a ties was given by Maj. Gen. Ber- The Thor is the 1,500-mile.range s e ~ v l c e s effICIent, the commlt~ee CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. fA'! the right direction, but 1 don't pected. • • threatening dog," the announce­ nard A. Schriever, head of the Air ballistic missile now being dc- saId .. The. present s lu~ ent capacity The Navy conducted a static or think it is going far enough." University Library offlciala said The noon temperature in Iowa ment said. Force BaJJistic Missile Div ision , in \'eloped by the Air Force. The or approxImately 450 IS not chang­ ground test Of its Vanguard space "Moncy has been at thc root or late Wednesday afternoon catalo, ~ty Wednesday was 34 degrees, "The letter will be sent to the much-censored testimony released miss il e has undergone several suc. ed. vehicle Wednesday night. this thing, " he asserted. cards stolen from the main card aompared with an oVernight low dog owner and will request hi s by the Senate Preparedness sub- cessful test firings. 2. A BOND ISSUE oC at least The Dcfense Department des- In response to questions by the file at the University Library were or 25 degrees. cooperation in preventing a recur· commiltee. Schriever also said the Air Force $1 V. million be approved, Cor re- cribed it as a routine static' test. acting chaIrman, Sen. Stennis (D- still missing. renee. Steps that might be sug· This was but one Of a variety of now has equipment able to put an tirement over a 2O-year period, This signifies that an attempt to Miss.> , Gross said "[ think our The cards lrom "Public Rela­ CORRECTION gested, for example, would include pace age projects which the ge n- instrumented satellite into orbit to construct a junior high building launch th e Vanguard satellite economy can handle a bigger ef- Uons" to "Public Schoola" , in tbe - confinement of the dog in the eral discussed. Others included around the earth later this ycar. at he new site in southeast Iowa would be unlikely for more than fort. I think the man in the street card file were reported rru.1.i\g The Information First Commit· a week. Heretofore, It has becn wants it and is even wllllng to pay Tuesday. . lee of AWS has cancelled its RrD­ housc Of on a leash during the round·trip fli ghts to the moon by He said such a development could City. It would be ready for occu­ man and "a sa tellite that would come "as early as July, but more pancy by September, 1959. an average period of 10 days be- more taxes." Dale M. Bentz, actln, direCtor lor the remainder or the usual period of time of delivery. Item it in one place with relation to likely llbout Octoher." He said the The new building would handle tween the final static test and a The House Armed Services Com- of SUI libraries. said stePs are be- 7ear, president Linda Garnble, "If there I. no .vldence .f co· O,.,.ltlon, the second letter m.y the earth." booster rocket (or the Thor would 600 pupils. The prQposed ·amount missile-launching attempt. mittee heard Secretary or Defense ing taken to replace the carda, al- M, Fairfield,· said Wednesday. One or m ore of the rocket en- McElroy at a secret seMOD. Af- tbouih there is atiIl hope Ulat &be II \Vasllncorrectly reported In The ' be sent notifyln, tho dog owner Schriever said that only recently be used. would finance service facilities the Air Force got appro val to try By 1965 I1r 1970, he said, the large e,nough to permit (uture gines in the lluge structure ap- terward McElroy ' told 'newsmen cards will be returned. , tially Iowan ' TUeSday that a that carrier mail service to hli ro~ I. being dilContllWtd, to develop 'satellites for "an ad- United States could have manned expansion to cafe for an additiQDal parently was touched orr, while he la naming threel'milltary meli Thirty of the carda ·were ella­ 1Ilt!eti?, 'Would ~ held at 4 p.m. u""'. authority c.taln04 In long­ \lA nce reconnaissance system." satellites that could carry out 'lall ~ puplJs. the missile remained rastened to and a number of promlneat'ctvtll· covered TueIday 011 • aeeood-floor """, l (! . :t, . . . .tancl'lf poital .... ul.tIOl\l," 1n respo;]s() tu questions 11'0111 / space missiolls," Tbe Cou ncil will disC\lS8 the com u.s l:.IunchiHg pud, {I ns 10 heip him drnft ·pl.u for lN ' ~kshclf t - • q "t. .. , • I • .1' .,. 1· .... 1 I '.11 : : . I _" ~e-1)anyl lowbn i: ' ''', , ,.. DfIIIt lOUlOft It lCrit1en aM edited by rtudtnt, /J1Id 18 gotlemt'd by I. boord of live Mullenl '"W~~ ~I~ct~ l ~neJIe 5a&' " 1M IIiMUnt body and four focully trurttel appolnltd by the presfdtnl of lhe UnJvenlly. Til Dally Iowan', ei(lIcrW policy, thtrefttre. II n~ an erprUlion Of SUI odmlrWlralion policy or opinion In any partlculD,. p ... I THURSDAY, JAN . 1', 1951 1_. City, la. , Professor States View That College Has Small Influence Audience Readion (EQITOR'S NOTE -Dr. Philip politically irresponsible and politi- (Ju('nce upon the students' vaJ- [ A, 1 dig ,b, .. or mail on my~,~gb desk - I find~, mur:~"ch the vaulted ceilings~":::~J of the caLbed­ E. Jacob of the political science cally illiterate. ucs. . . . !:::m department, University of Penn­ They have contradictory atli· S. The method of instruction interest in organ music. This is rals. Sounds unbelievable. ~ sylvania, Philadelphia. published tud s toward international at(airs. seems to have only a minor in· not odd, because the pipe organ AiL (All Mr. Biggs' recordingulIl the article "Does Higher Educa­ They predict another major war fluence on students' value judg­ ha been a favorite hi-fi instrument on Columbia Records), you will tion Influence Student Values?" within a dozen yea rs, yet indicate ments. from the start of the art. It ,en· find an unusual organ sonata by in the January, 1958 issue of the that during tlte immediate future compasses an astonishing variety a Liechtensteinian composer (loot , NEA Journal. This article is con· they cxpect 10 gi';e lillie personal Under special circumstances. of tone colors and effects, right· it up on Lbe map), Rheinber~i 1lltlllliQn to inwrnatiunal prob. '·studt n'·l·l'nlt:red'" teaching re- fully is namcd the King of Instru- An exuberant piece of music thai densed beloW. COmments mad, • portedl.' has resulwd in a more upon It by professors from ot"~ r I ments. Bes ide s • has been I'escued via the LP rl!l.l- schools will appea,. her •• tomor- I ~Ii~ I ~ ~ail~ble data i~cl.lcate th~t si.ltl~laCLOI y student adjustment this, the Ib' bli~s . ord from a musty corner of ,Ihe row. I the 'pr~j le ju t given may broadly :;nJ a more congEnial learning sit­ pipes creat~ \lItra- 19th century, it bears repeateG' ,• Dr. Jaoob feels til at the colleg41 Ch(lflldetize 75 to 80 per c n~ oC u;Jtion. But the weight oC evid nce low sounds all the listening. On the other side II the sfudent.. To Iii remainder, gives little indication that different experience of t~e studen.s 11~ to. way dow!) [p Iii ' Hindcmith's "Concerto {or Orpe , I oln(. or most qC th generaliza- teaching m thods - say the lec­ d.y "ba.. 'y tOllc;h.s their sta~d: cycles ~er ~ed9nd . I and Orchestra." This has a _ I • aflk of behllviqr. qual ity of ludg, t:ions ~ro not applicable. Also, on tur~ system. \ 'e ~ s~s fccit~tion, c~n· (you can't hear tiful integration of organ and or· I I o j~su" such as how much tCrlnce, dlsC:USSlon, 01 tUlQna! ment, Hnse of social re$~'i. tones lower than chestral sound. with lots of willCk l tiility, persllicacity of unders and· gohment the cOlJntry needs methods - greatly aIle. r IltuQents that> and this and brasses. I st4dcnts havo no ~ommon mind: I b lie[s or behavIor. . . . ' ing, and guiding beliefs." T~ ti.c~les the ears of CURRENTl Y RAISING THI I But th dominlmt impre sion is of The essc~ce of a potent I~bora· Daily Iowan feels that views ex­ hi-fi bugs Lo sllch ROOF in hi-fi circles is 8 netl a nalion-wide norm of values II r- lory .prncbce I{I cltlzenslllp, a pressed by Dr. Jacob will be of voding the campus. creatl.ve work ~amp, a. mean!n~ful an exlent . t~at Urania disc of Saint-Saens "Organ interest to many persons connect·, experiment In IIlternatlonal hvmg. they are wllimg SUNIER Symphony No . 3" This orchestral ed with the University whether '1. The main effect of higher a stimulaling work·study curricu· (0 spend hundreds . work employs ~n organ and , in tha role of administrator. in­ education upon student values lum, or even a well conceived fi eld of dollars to get speakers and cabl- piano in various sections oC il. 11Ie structor or student.) is to bring about general accept­ study is this: Each student per­ neLs to r e~ roduce the low sounds. Vienna Philharmusica Symphonyl ance of a body of standards and sonally engages in the action . S~attered m amongst the . goose- conducted by Swarowsky puts in i . . . The pre\'ailing situation con­ attitudes characteristic of col­ Vicariou experience does not pl~lple type of organ musIc con- fine performance. In a constllt cerning the influence of coliege on lege·bred men and women in deliver the same punch. even tho nOisseur. are ~ number 10f people baLlIe for best selling version,-'I contemporary student values is as America. role·playin'" techniques in- the wh? actually hsten to t le musIc. certain works. Columbia reconk follows: There tends to be more homo­ classroom and the analysis of chal­ It IS to thes~ person~ that the new has followed up with their ans­ II· 1. The values of American col­ lenging ca5e studics and problem recordmgs 1 11 menllon today arc wer: The Philadelphia Orchestra ,. II • geneity and greater consistency of of mterest. ' lege students are remarkably values among college seniors than situations do arouse more interest. AL.BERT SCHWEITZER i th conducted by. Or mandy, playi"l homogeneous. considering the among freshmen, indicating that 6. Recent research has identi- s e the same Samt·Saens Symphony. variety of their backgrounds and the senior has ironed out serious fied certain personality charac- ackn.owledged master of the ~rgan Take your choice - both are n· their relatively unrestricted op­ conniets of values or at least teristics of students which filter musIc of Bac~ . But, as WIth a cellent. The Columbia record has h . • . number of artists who are com-· ~ portunities for freedom of thought achieved a workable compromise. t elr educat.onal experiences. pletely 1 l ' the· k h a purty picture on the cover, "'" and personal development. Throughout college, changes arc Some students have a set of . 0 In Ir wor, e some· the Urania is clear red plastiC and rarely dra lic or sudden . Such mind so rigid, an outiook on hu- hmes plilysas ~ou~h he expects you kin see thru it. Don't lau"'; A dominant characteristic oC the man relations so stereotyped, and no one to Ile hstemng. pe.r- you'd be surprised how important current student generation is that changes as do occur tend to Th~ lhe studcnts are glo riously content­ emerge on the periphery of tho a reliance on authority so compul- for~~n~e:l'l trr~ o~t to . ~e mOire little things like that are to raeon! sive that th ey arc incapable of n:tu I a a ySls lan In erpr~ a- sales. ep, both in rl'gard to their present student's character rather than to d• La d' h 1_ tlons. The tempo is often excructat- day·to·day activity and their out· affect his core of va lu es. un ers ~ mg. muc "'ss aceep~- ingly slow. These points are. true ; I FOR GOOD INTERPRETATION$ look for the future. The values oC college graduates !ng, new Ideas. Such stu ~ents quail of Dr.' Schweitzer's performance and gorgeous recorded organ do differ in some ways from lhe In the presence oC con£hct and un· f th th "Ch I .. b C sound try any of the Bach ToccalB The great majority of students certaintv They cravc "r'ght 0 e ree ora es y esar ' rest of society. They arc more con­ .• ;, ' . I. Franck. on Columbia ML 5128. and Fugues played by ,Carl Wern. appear unnbashedty sclf·centered. cerned with status, achievemont, a~swel~, reCOil from creative Al th I't f th dl ' rich on Westminster Records. A They aspire to materinl gratifica­ diSCUSSion. sa. e qua I y a e recor n~ IS .. and prestige. As a whole, they tend U d t dlt" C I bad A belter version on both careful inspection of hundreds tI tions Cor themselves and their fam­ to be more scM.important, more cd ~at~~ mos ~on Ions to renerad cou~ts is the new Angel 35369 European organs finally resulted in ~:di:'::o:"-_~iII"LoMtI!!!!"""~~~"'~"'-~ ilIes. They intend to look . out for conservative. more tol erant, and t ~ch' Ign. w cdrc conbcn an which gives you the "Piece Hero: Westminster selling up Lheir eqw,. themselves first and expect others th I less superstitious and prejudiced Cr 1 ,I~ me dO d' tadve t ecntmothre ique" along with the "Chorales" ment in an unknown lillie ehurca to do likewise. O c~s s t an ar IZC 0 SUI e • . D kid h f than those without coliege . . . . average tudent, fi,e personalities performed by Edouard Commette m enmar a recor t ese l'!f Social harmony. with an easy 3. For the most part, students' just described become d ad wood on th c Cathedral organ oC St. Jean Bach org~n wOI·ks. They are ~vsII. Small -Down Payment tolerance of the dissident and the values do not vary great'y A f . tit t' I ; de Lyon, France. able on eIther regular Westrrunster di[ferent. also pervades the student w. inS u I~n s, lowever, arl! WHIL.E ON THE SUBJECT OF records or on the special LIIll whether they havlt pursued a explOring speciol approaches to . . The Board of Regents hus approved a payment on top or new books, dormitory fees, envi ronment. Conformists Lhem­ conventional liberal·arts p.. o­ general education for this type of FRANCK organ music, we might sefl~s ($7.50): Several compaOl~ me:lsure that ought to prove quite a help to clothes llnd the other unavoidnble co~ts of col­ selves, the American students do gram, an integrated general-edu­ student, with promising results rnention the excellent Ducrelet- are. inaugurating. a more ex~nslve the student who is paying most or all of his lege. " not expect others to conform to the cation curriculum, or a profes­ These students rarely achieve 'fhomson 93071 disc of the "Grande senes of record lOgs on which !he socially accepted standard. . . . own way - payment of fe s over several The new plan might even make college sional-vocational option. the autonomy o[ tho e whose per- Piece Symphonique" and other grooves are s p~ced far~her apart, . Although most students value the The more liberally educated stu­ sonality is freer to start with . But Franck organ works. Organist Jean grealer d~affilc I ~ve l IS allo~e4, months. possibl ) for young people whose parcnts call traditional code of moral virtues, detns may take a somewhat more they have shown striking gains in Langlais turns in a fine perform- and speCIal attenli~n is. pail! 10 As it now stands, fee paYJllent is due in fl1l1 only squeeze out a liltle bit each week to help , lhey are not inclin d to censure active intercst in community re­ critical thinking and developed ance, well·recorded, as are most freedom from distortIOn and sho~tly after the semester begins and some­ tit m - and the days when a stlld('nt can earn those who choo~c to depart ftom it. sponsibilities and keep beller in­ more responsible and sensitive on this label. a subsidiary of Lon- scr~tc h . Urama. record~ c~il~ times the money is hard to get together all at enough in the slimmer to carry 11 im through,j, Nor do they feel personally bound formed , about public arIairs. But social values when tJ;eir general don Records. , thelT the ProfeSSIOnal E.ngmeerlPi . II b : (( to unvarying conformity to the education in social science for in- E. Power Biggs Is about the best- Senes. charges $4.98 mstea~. of h Lbe distinction is not slriking, and once. Veterans going to college on the CI Bill t I1e woeI year a\e a ut Dve~. II code. especially when a lapse is it docs not occur consistently. Ii stancc, has been tailored 'to their represented organist on records $3.98. Gold~n Crest . dubs theiJl wjJl updoubtedly find the new fee payment The new fee payment plan IS bound to be , socially sanctioncd. For instance, does nQt justify the conclusion thot [Jurticular needs. Because the today: His "Art of. the Orgalj." a the Lab serles .too. With the SSI1lt syst m il blessing for the dry period until the a considerable problem for the University - systematic academic cheating is a student acquires a greater ma­ number of students with such pcr- two-dls~ album. wl.th volumnous increase In prlc~. fir t I ,,"ecks begin to roll in SOme two the additional bookkeeping costs alone will be I)J t~c custom at many major lnstitu· turity of judgment on issues oC sonality characteristics is large note~, IS a f~scI~~tmg alb\lm for SPEAKING OF RECO~. social policy or a more sensitive and growing, this type oC experi- reading and lIstenmg. If you read PRICES, most oC them are goili f1onth:; aEter the filII semester b gin . considerable. 1 tlons. • B Students normally express a need regard for human values because mentalion seems unusually import- Cast. you'll just finish about. ~he up a dollar come Februart ~r The par nt helping or senc:ntlg ·ons and ~t a tllne w.hen the trend hos been toward for religion and often attend church he has had more liberal educa­ ant. same lime the music ends. "Music N arly all $3.98 records will be daughters thrclugh school will probably find making college progressively harde r to attcnd , on Sundays. but their religion does tion , .. ' . The points presented he~e imply of Spain and Portugal" is a recent $4.98. so if you've been meanilc it much asier to allocate several compurativ - _ monetarily - this actiou by the·Boarel of He.- not carry over. i~to the secular 4. Quality of teaching has IiHfe th at no speci fic curricular paltern release that caplures all the ex- to add a few things to your c_ of liberal ed ucation. no pedigree oC citement of th~ Spanish organs, tion [or a long lime. beUer do j small amounts of money throughout the gents and the SUl Administration i ' at len t a world. The majority appear to be effect upon the value·outcomes Iy . d' . [ . I . ' li eve that God's place is in chure of studellts' general education. instructor. and no wizardry of in- with their trumpet pipes pointing now. . ~hool year than to make the fairly lnrge initial step In If(;lction 0 easlIlg t 1e Impact. or home. not in business or com~ Students have dcmo,nstrated an struclional method should be pat- I munity. . uncanny capacity to evaluate the ented [or its impact on students' American students are also only performance oC instructors accord· \'alues. the Local Scene - dutiIuJly responsive toward govern­ ing to objective crileria . Yet, by Indeed, the impact of Ameri­ Letter to the Editor ' ment. They expect to obey its law~ and large, the impact of the teach­ can higher education as a whole and pay its taxes - without com· er tlley consider good is indi­ upon the value patterns of col­ In This Corner, Free-Wheeling Pep Sees Tough Going lor 'U.A.W: Demands plaint but without enthusiasm. Ex­ tinguishable from that of tile poor lege youth as a whole seems one - at least in terms of his in- negligible . TO THE EDITOR: humanistic concerns of literat.., By DIETRICH HARTMANN workers will get less tilan they both labor and management kee cept for voting. however, they are Your report of the lecture to and leaves to the attenuated aU..... »oUr r.,.an New. Edllor ask for now." the public and the whole ec onom~ the Humanities Society Monday lion of its etiolated readers only ~ in mind in whatever deal the does scant justice to the superb cross· word puzzle aspect of poetl1 Hard bargaining over lhe United Culley said, however, that Reu- moral enthusiasm of Professor What could the interests of Brookf Auto Workers' m.A.W.) demands ther's proposal psychologically is might agree on. Since the auto workers usually Joseph Baker'S attack on literary and Warren in "Ambiguity, Ad~ thal automobile corporations share quite clever and appealing to all 'General Notices are a pace setter for union de- studies in this country. There is Dimension and Submerged M~ profits with their workers and except for management. 't b t d Cull General Notice. must be receIved at The Dotly Iowan oWee. Room 201, Communlcatlonl Center. by man ds I can e expec e ,ey 8 a.m. [or pubUcaUon \.he followlne mornine. They must be typedtor leelbly written and sJen od; tbey perhaps some excuse for not notic- phor," possibly have to do with. ~mployees is foreseen by the dir- Although the proposals came as said. that other unions come up will n~t be aceeptod by telephone. The Daily Iowan relerv •• the rlebt to odlt all General Notice .. ing the main theme. Cor Professor literary student's Jiving in ~ctor of SUI's Bureau of Labor a surprise, Culley said. they were Baker's talk had little to do with sionate conformity with the and Management, assistant profes- a logical modification of Reuther's with demands similar to those of ORCHESIS _ The Modern Dance DEL. TA PHI ALPHA - The L.IBRARY HOUR S - The gen· the U.A.W. CI b ill h 't I k h j. H G I t 't '11 I I'" b 'Id' . his announced topic. "French and nal verities? Anything at all? lOr Jack F. Culley. basic concern. Lo get more money Although the steel workers fol- u wave I s re~u ar wor. s ol( onorary erman ra erm y WI era lurary UI 109 IS open - American Literary Youth. " it from the metaphor's being , Culley believes that the auto in- for his workers. low actions of the auto workers ho~rs Tuesday at 7.30 p.m; m the meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at 122 Monday througb Friday. 7:30 a.m. would indeed have been satisfy· merged, it is rather the stu dustry can and will not accept the r "It would have been bad public closely it is unlikely that they will Mirror Room of Ihe Women s Gym- Schaeffer Hall. Mr. Dietrich Hart- to 2 a.m.; Saturday, 7:30 a.m. to ing to hear the analysis of one themselves who are being U.A.W.'s demands without touching relations to insist on a shorter ask fOr reopening of negotiations.naslUm. mann will speak on: "The Political 5 p.m.; Sunday, 1:30 p.m. to 2 Situation in West Germany and a.m. The circulation desk is open who has I;IS profound a first·hand merged by an interest in n the basis of the American con- work week for auto workers at this of contracts soon because their RECREATIONAL SWIMMING _ West Germany's Role in Europe - Monday through Thursday. 8 acquaintance with the literary pilors! This formal and effete ept of free enterprise in business. J.'l1oment with efforts to strengthen contracts \~ith Industry will not Monday, Wedne day, Thursday; and the World." Everyone is in- a.m. to 9:50 p.m.; Friday and Sat- youth in France as be has with the cern with rhetorical tricks divo in Culley's 0l;llnion the realization national defenses and in the light run kout until 1959'1 he and Friday at the Women's Gym- vited to attend. urday, 8 a.m. to 4:50 p.m. Sunday. youUj in Lhis country. But the ma- from t)le heat and dust of If U.A.W.'s demands would streng- '} &t the Cact that the auto industry ~~~~ sL~el wor ers ne~er G1e S WI receive nasium from 4:15 until 5:15 p.m. 2 p.m. to 4:50 p.m. The reserve jor point of his talk was an in- jaiJh9use and the sweatshop . !ben trend. to Curther socialize ois laying off workers b~ the thou- an automattc wag. oost of 7 ~o All women students are invited. GERMAN READING EXAM - desk is open - Monday through si~htfu l examinfltion oC the moral Iy deserves the full huma American economy. tands," Culley explained. 11 cents per hOlJ~ 10 June. Their Ph.D. German reading exam, ThUrsday. 8a.m. to 9:50 p.m.; Fri- deficiencies of American litera- scorn of professors like · Jo U.A.W.'s president Walter Reu- 1t had been generally expected ture professors. and as such it B~ker. i ' contracts_L with indusII try call for STUDENT TEACHING IN ' SO • T ues d ay, J an . 2L, from .. ~ to 5 p.m. day, 8 a.m. to 4:50 p.m. and 7 p.m.' ~ had made....public his union's ihat the auto workers would ask suuo·a boost, Cu eY' said. CIAL STUDIES - All students in 1~ SchaeCIer Hall. Register in ~o 9:50 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m. to c~[tainly deServed the close. .. patient and accl,lrate attention of Professor Baker's cas,tigatlo pla~form f.or coming c.ontract n~go - or a shorter work W€ek in \he next planning to do student teaching in 101 SchaeHer if. you wish to take 4:50 p.m.; Sunday. 2 p.m. to 4:50 tlallons With the car Industry 10 a onths. Contracts with the auto in- a college newspaper. May I there. the two demi·devils of the the area of the social studies are exam. p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9:50 p.m. • f t d' Criticism has been long ove . press conference Monday. duslry run out in May some in noti fi ed of a group meeting on ore presen your rea ers wllh a The insiduous Cleanth Brooks, ' Reuther said he would bargain cptember. ' more human accuont of the lec- Thursday, Jan. 23 at 7:30 p.m. in Monday, January 20 ture? the pawky Penn Warren have too for ~ split-up p!an of co~poration's Culley said he was only guessing room 332 of University High profits exceedlRg profits larger hen he said that the auto workers School. Only those in attendance 8 p.m. - Music DepartmE!nt pre­ Your reporter never mentions the long been permitted to hand doWD than 10 per cent of the companies' emands, should they be granted at this meeting will be elillible University sents Everett Helm. Guest Lec­ target of Professor Baker's broad- [rom on high the accepted dogmas net capital before taxes. yo industry, would strengthen in- for student teaching during the turer - Shambaugh Auditorium. side: that formalist literary move. of all the literary instructors in 5:45 p.m. - Phi Beta Kappa In­ ment known , strangely enough to- ollr democracy. They have too lonf According to Reuther's plan 50 ationary tendencies. second semester. Calendar ill' , per cent o( profits left on that Unions have advanced the theory iliation - Pentacrest Room. Iowa day. as the New Criticism. This paralyzed the minds of young men , J Memorial Union . basis would go to shareholders and at more money in the hands of .: YWCA BABY SITTING - A new aesthetic gospel has been pro- and women who itch for knowledge to executives in form of bonuses, -Ioysumers would foster prosperity THURSDAY, JAN. 16, 195. 6:30 p.m. - Phi Beta Kappa claimed in tile almost universally in its humanistic Cullness. Brooq baby-sitting service to the residents ".- I and Warren, who (as ProfCSllill Inter 25 per cent would be split among in general and would compensate Initiation Banquct - River Room. of ]owa City is being offered by 4p.m. - Information First Iowa Memorial Union. accepted Bib e of the formalists. Baker rightly insists) have lockeci the industries' 800,000 workers and much of industry's over-c.apacity. Lhe Personal Service committee of Senate Chamber. Old Capitol. Understanding Poetry by Cleanth . . ,. By the remaining quarter would be Management for years has main- 7:30 p.m. - University Club Brooks and Robert Penn Warren. hterature and. pcp mto two sell' r the Y.W.C.A. Cail x2240 to make 7:30 p.m. - Phi Alpha Theta Bridge - University Newcomers' rebated to auto buyers. tained the stand that higher in- arrangements for transportation As ProCessor Baker rightly points / arate water.tIgh~ compartmepl5, Q. VI This last point of Reuther's pro- come Cor employees would raise MeeLing - Professor R. Kingdon, Club as guests - University Club out, this book sloughs off all the are more. res~nslble f?r the mort! tilled ' .~ and price. "Present Mhtdedness vs. Histori­ Rooms, Iowa Mcmorial Union. swamps 10 which we bve than ~ pouls is meant as 8' suggestion industry's costs, which in lurn ' 'Whlt is cal Mindedness" - Conference other two men of recent histo,T' to the industry. Reuther said he would raise prices...... tIDIIr 8 p.m. - Humanities Society - 'tritici," Room No.2, Iowa Memorial UnioD. Senate Chamber. Old Capitol. would not make this section of his While management is I!nlikely .,i .'1 ' -·a~· ~ C'chedula I challenge anyone to dis8if1!t 8 p.m. T SUI Symphony Band . ) V ' with Professor Baker and me ''QIl 't-. An: . Tuesday, January 21 WSUI more th; program a bargatnlng issu.e with to accept Reulher's demands in its DE"lADAnON Concert .... Iowa Memorial Union. this point. til' Industry. present form, Culley said, - labor ' , " DIIII 4: 10 p.m. - College .of Medicine WSUf - IOWA CJTY 9 10' k/c ' Wholly n a p.m. - University Play-"Epi­ Lecture - Dr. Lester Dragsted\., Thur.day, January HI, If)~ Professor Baker does himself .­ terms _ "In my opinion." Culley said, appears to be prepared to use all taph Cor 'a Bluebird" - University "Reuther does not bave any iOu- its legals powers to push his de­ ProCessor and Head, Departmen~ 8:00 MornIng Cbnpel I disservice when he states ~ BABY SITTING - Mrs. Eric La- Theatre. of Surgery, University of Chicago 4 ;15 News , ~ribe sions about the success of his plat- mands. Strike threats. Culley said, 6:3Q )t.Il~lon In America Tod oy professors don't know exacUy wbal I~ e do form. His proposals ' have to be will definitely be used by Reuther Guardia will Pc in charge of the Friday, January 17 - "The ' Pathogenesis and Surgical '9:15 The Book helt inspires students. He has himself 9:45 ,V lndow on Ihe World I ,Q. Dc taken as a typical bargaining tech- in his negotiations. University Cooperative Baby-Sill· 8 p.m. - Civie Music Association Treatment o[ Gastric and Duo­ 1?:00 New, testified to the inspiration he ltIJ nique that ~ ing League book from Jan. 7 to _ Byron Janis - Macbride Audi- denal Ulcer" - Medical Amphi­ 10: 15 KItchen Concert received in his own life from Ifltion and it appears that the auto Culley expressed the hope •• lliOO Exploring the .News * ----~~--~, --~------21. Telephone her at 8-4867 if a toHum. · . theatre. 11 :15 Kitchen Concert works o[ Ralph Waldo Emeflllll, 1fIv. 1111. 5 p.m .• on Mbndll1. [rom 7 a.m., to S DAILY IOWA1I SDITOarAt. ITArr p.m .• Tuelday lhrouSh Friday and from sitter .or ~formation about the 8 p.m. _ Art Guild Film Series 8 p.m. - University Play - 11 :45 Midland Schools of \.he Air and I. Cor one, sat up in inteaue ~ 1>ally Iowan UJtor ... ., ....•.... Tom Slat1er7 Cor 12 :00 Rh ythm Ramble. j, '~. Mo! ~"- Wtor '" .. .. Don Mitclle11 7 to ':30 a.m., on ' Snlurday. Make-eood group IS deSired. _ "The Medium" and "Gerald "Epitaph a Bluebird" - Uni­ 12:30 News intercst when he read a p~~r. service on mtPrd papen is not possible. ~e. an. City f:dllOr ...... J .... Davies versity Theatre. 12'4~ French P ress Review from "The American .Scholal', ' AMi. City EdJtor ...... lobn Blnkl,. but every er[ort 'WIll be made to cor­ FAMIL. Y-NITES at the Field- McBoing-Boing's Symphony" 1:00 Mostly Music liVed Cail AVDrr...... U...... ~t. rect erron wllh the next Issue. WedneSday, January 22 City Editor ...... Marilyn L3'on I :55 New. Emerson is the rallying point .,£9'i Ne•• house for students. staH. faculty, Shambaugh Auditorium. ~.ves _ or Editor .... DIetrich HartmalUl 8 p.m. - SUI Concert Course. 2:00 Conservation In Hawkeycland all men of pep who refuse to ' ~; CDCULATIONI SocIety EdJIor ...... lane Bubl,. MEMBER of tile A9S00lATED PRESS their spouses and their families 8 p.m. - University Play - 2: 15 Let', Turn A Page B~ Nathan Milstein - ]owa Memorial ~~mcnl Sporlll Editor ...... Alan The ~Ia\ed Preu b entitled ex­ on the second III1d Courth Wed- "Epitaph for a Bluebird" - Uni· 2:30 Moslly Music cept the iron critical disciplltlt Edltortal Pace Wtor .• SulAnne Fone dUllvely to \.he us. for rtDublkaUon 3:35 Now, ..d ity. Iillab.d daIl7 except ...... 7 ad ChJef Pbotoarapher ...... Jerry M0M7 ncsdays of eacb month. Recreation· versity Theatre. Union. forced upon us by Brooks and W'IJ' nco aIIfI Jetal b01l4871J b7 Stu­ of aU the local new. printed In this 4:00 Children's Hour itded \I II ...bUcaUO .... Inc:.. Commwlica­ Review Board ChaIrman newlJ)8per al w.u .. aU A.P newa s p.m. - University Play - 4 :30 Tea Time ren o Students today arc being ~ • • ...... IUcbard Scb..,bner dispatches. • aI swimming and family-type acti- S.turday, January 18 CeIlter. Iowa Cit)'. Iowa. En­ "Epitaph [or a Bluebird" - Uni­ 5:30 New. cified upon a crucifix of critici~i It to i ~ .. -.oS cIaaa ....tter a' the vities will be available from 7:15 12:15 p.m. _ AAUW Luncheon versity Thealre. 5:45 Sportsllme '~ the .... ease. .. lowa Db', UDder .. DAILY IOWAN ADVIi.TIIIDlG ITAn DAILY IOWAN surBaVlsoas r'ROM to 9:15 p.m. _ University Club Roorr.s. Iowa 6:00 Dinner Hour the only answer is the free-w.· , rgy . .. ., c:-..- of w.."", S. 1m. AdvertillDl Msr. _..... Mel AcIarIUI scaOOL or 10U.NALISM rA<.:lILTY Thursday, January 23 6:55 New. ing peppincss o[ Emerson. As "lIf Aalt. MvmtWnS 1IaJr. D. • aramaon Publlllhu ...... John M. Harrison PL.AYNITES (or students. staH Memorial Union. 4 to 5 p.m. - Faculty CoHee 7:00 Current Opinion 1 rns i· CJauitlecI Man ...r •• Bill llcCuMer Editorial .....• Arth.... M . Sa.nderoon 7:ZtJ Student Forum Sage of Concord himself put rIb _ . ' eatti Aut. ClualIled Mar•• . .l,d< ...... r. AdvertlaiJJ, ...... 1 E. lohn Kol .... a:l and faculty an4 their spoUJleS at 7:30 p.m. -. Basketball. Indiana Hour sponsored by AWS - Library 8 :00 MusIc Hour tBand Concert) the very essay Professor Baar ! ~ ~ Clreulallon ...... WUbur P.teUOD 9:.00 Trio PromotiaD . : .• Jobft r the Fieldhouse each Tuesday and vs. Iowa - Fieldhouse. Lounge. 9:45 News and Sports quoted Monday night (it desenes ·JrQ. Wt TaUITIU. =D or nUD'NT Fri~y night Crom 7:30 to 9:30' a p.m. - iJniversi~y Play - 8 p.m. - University Play .!­ 10 :00 SIGN OFF . to be quoted in [ulll : "if the" ,l .,.., 11 • D.,.o.y 10WU Cl)lCVLATlOJf PU CATION' . n .' . Dr. Gearl. I n. nenUotry; DavId p.:hl. A!.'1lission will, b'l by faculty. "Ep~taph for a ~I\lCblfd!' - Uni­ "Epitaph Cor a Bluebird" -: Uni- -cftCJ&lation Manolu .... l'aul ...... 01·1 .. /e mall plant himself indominltlltlr ~I~~·. Mos I'lslliu.nt MaDIIler •• •• MlchMl Da1le7 B. J"itulmmolll, A3; Thoma. S. staff or student ].D. Card. The V~~I~f. Th~atre. versity Theatre. ' , r:L~}l;l8N8g~'!-U'" Bamilton. A4; PrOf. BUlb Kebo. Qn his instiqcts, lind there abl4f. Weight Training Room will be uncia" January 19 --- Friday, January 24 6 :00 Evenlne Serenade' PoUtical Sdeneej Dw~' Lowell 8:55 News In Brl.e! lhe hug~ grease ball world will. DIal 4191 u 10U do IIIIt nc:elve )'010. Math.. , A4; Prof; Le.Ue O. Moeller, at the (ollowin, times: Mondays, 4' ~'Ii ill" --= )ta~ C~ber Mu­ 8 p.m. - University Play - 7:00 FM Concert ~t~ 0.117 Iowan b7 , :••. m. n. J'-Ily l...... u.m; Pro ... .L. A. Van lJyke. ·8:00 Music Hour a mousetrap to his door." Iowan circulation oWce In Communl­ Education; Oary W. Wlill.ma. Aa, to 6 p.m.; Wednesdays, 4 to 6 p.m.; sle Concert·· .=... ··'1WlrCbride Audi- "Epitaph for a Bluebird" - Uni­ 10 :00 SIGN OFF cationa Center Ie _ ~ • ...... 10 TbDmu W. McKa¥. U. and Fridays, 4 to 8 p.m. tori urn. Yersity Theatre. ·Slmulcut Myra Oll'U"" • THE DAILY IOWAN-low. City, I•. -Thundey, Join. 1', ltSI-P... , Paper Gt;>ds Stand 'n Years .in .. Office; , ,_' S_U.J_i~mJ--..Il · SUI DAMES bookclub will (ea; Watch in Macbri.de Mahoney To Retire ture Mrs. Jack Street reviewing the book, "Please Don't Eat the By KAREN CLAUSE Robert Mahoney. emmber of Johnson County Board of Supervisors Daisies," today at 8 p.m. to ' the Dally aowa" S,." Writer for the past 11 years, announced Wednesday he will not seek re­ home o( f,1'rs. Helen Bias, 930' E. 'Jlo' evil spirit dares enter the office of Y. P. Mei, professor of Ori­ election when his term expires Dec. 31. tIIW studies at SUI. For he has two Chinese paper gods hanging on Mahoney was re~lected each term since Jan. 1, 1947, and served Bloomington St. bIB door. as chairman o( the board in 1957. According to Chinese tradition, these two colorful companions. After Mahoney's announcement, SKEPTICS GROUPS will hold {)1ft Chiung and Yu-Chih Kung, Emil Novy, 53, North Liberty. ob- their first meeting today at 7:30 ani "guardians of the gate." With I Fe Aed (I Wild To Speak tained papers from Court Clerk R. p.m. in the Young Women's Chris­ tbtir shining armor and . swords, Irst I ass Neilson Miller to file for the va cat- tion Association (YWCA) Room in they refuse to let any evll ghosts ed position. th I Mil Unl Th entllr a dwelling which they are Novy. in announcing his candida. e o.wa . emor a on. C ,uerding. Mei explained that On African cy for the 3-year term, said his goal group IS ~eSl~ned f?" .students in­ tedturics Ago Chin Chiung and is to utilize taxes for efficient coun- terested LD ,queatiomng human 'i/urChih Kung were sworn broth­ Registration ty government. values and meanIngs. . er and fellow warriors with the Novy, a native of Johnson Coun­ young fouder-emperor of the Tang Race Pro~lem ty. operated a {arm near North CAMBRA Clua will have a "shooting sesSion" today beginnlng dynasty, Tang Tai Tsung. W. MaUJ'ice Wild. admlnistrative Liberty for 20 years before retiring Is Now Open at 7:30 p.m. in the motion picture "Afler Tang Tai Tsung had officer of the city health depart· in 1954. founded his new dynasty, whieh Registration is open for a Novy is Madison township chai!'" laboratory of the Television Center still ment in Port Elizabeth, Union of In the Old Atmpry Building. The bad been won with the help of Red Cross course in standard first man for the Democratic central ~ two companions, he began to South Africa, will speak at an committee and secretary of Madi­ meeting wilt include all three sec~ hive sleepless nights - in fact, aid, scheduled to begin this month inter-city meeting of Iowa City son township school board. tions of the club; color, bla~k and white, and' \;tllreo. Mrs. Fraoces tl'U ghosts and spirits haunted him at the Women's Gymnasium. Rol.ary Club Jan. 30, at the Iowa He Is one of the organizers of the iD his dreams and he had no The revised course will be open Voss, publicity chairman, asks Guardians of the Gate Memorial Union~ Dr. L. E. Stil­ Penn and Madison Township fire members to bring cameras, tilm sleep." free of charge to both men and department, and of the Johnson When the emperor's fellow war­ Y. P. YANG, protestor of Orlent.l .tudi•• , is s'-n with the "IUArdi.ns of the g.te" In his offico .t well, announced Wednesday_ and any available lighting equip­ women 16 years of age and older. County Agricultural ASSOCiation. . ment to the meeting. Students riors heard about the troubles, Macbride Hell . Th. two Chin ... gods kHP out • ..,il spirits accordl", to I.,end. R.pro.. nt.tions of Wild, second vice·president oC Novy is married and has two It will be taught to 2·hour sessions the gods are popular to the 'nine" and .re • tr.dition In Chin. mud! .1 the Americ.n S.nt. CI.uI. houJd use north entrance of Old Wei said, they decided something Rotary International for 1957-58, daughters. He is a past master of Armory to get inside the building. must be done because it wouldn't on five evenings. will speak on the problem of apar­ the Masonic Lodge and an active do for a sworn brother to be under Those wishing to register should theid and the racial situation in the member of the North Liberty Meth· ZOOLOGY SEMINAR will heal" Fe 1 B dele. B · odist Church. such a disadvantage. call the Red Cross office in Iowa Union of South Africa. Mr. William A. Teppert, Sr., Drake They then became guardians of City and indicate the nights pre. Irst owa an In I( eg Ins A second seat on the board oC University, speak on the determina­ the sleeping chamber of their Wild has been a member oC the supervisors, that of 1958 Chairman toin of free amino acids in the de­ Rotary Club oC Port Elizabeth since Oren Alt, also will expire Dec. 31 . veloping grasshopper, "Melano­ 1938 and is a past president oC that Alt has made no announcement of plus dlfferentialis" Friday at 4:20 have:"fi~~~etr~~:f~~:s~ made themselves t!~d(j1~~:popular to what~~::dth~e:!:t;:&n~i:i~:~ nights the. group will meet.n:~~i:~ Today at SU I; Mendez To Play Club. He has served Rotary Inter· his plans for re-election to the coun­ p.m. in Room 201, Zoology Build­ ty governing body. the Chinese as the guardians of The course will stress ways to national as director, district gov­ ing. t~ gate, Mei explained. ernor and committee member. .Representations of the guardians prevent accidents as well as what Band leaders and their students at 8 p.m. following a registration tures and sells musical instru­ MINSKY PLANNED for .'WAY 1t is anticipated that most of the are oCten painted in extra· life size to do in case of emergency. The from all parts oC Iowa are expect- period at 6:30 p.m. ments, and the SUI wind and per­ NEW Y()RJ{ t.1'l - An early pros­ clubs in District 600 of Rotary In­ Defense Contracts 00 governmental gates in China registrants will be taught something ed on the SUI campus today for Those attending the clinic In the cussion staff. pect on IlQXt 'season's , Broadway tC)day, the professor added. These about wounds, bleeding, shock, thc urst Iowa Band Clinic. Jowa Memorial Union will have an ternational, which includes all oC The Marion Junior High and southeastern Iowa, as well as re­ Total 151 in Iowa production sctidule is a musical gods have become a tradition to sprains, artificial respiration, and A concert by the SUI Symphony opportunity to attend concerts and High School Bands will present a comedy about the famous Minsky lor Chinese as ollr Santa Claus has poisons - especially household Band with Rafael Mendez as trum· lectures prescnted by several music presentatives from Dubuquc, Belle concert Friday at 4 p.m. under the Plaine, Cedar Rapids and Mount U.S. Department of Deft:!nse con- brothcrs of burlesque. It is to be ~· _~_m_e_t_o _~_e_c_h_il_d_re_n_o_f_A_m_e_r_k_a_.~po~~_o_n_s_n_o_x_~_u_s_t_o~c_M_·d~r_e_n .~~~p_~_S_O_~_i _~_W_1_'ll_o~pe~n _t_~~~_d_a_y _c_li_oc ~~oriti~ ~ Mti~~ re~~ti~ . direction of Paul Wright ; the Dav­ Vernon will be in attendance at the tracts totaling $79,986.731 were ba,sed on the ~k "1.001 Nights at enport High School Band will per­ . . Mms\CY's, " which Rowland Barber In addition to Mendez, who will meeting, Dr. Stilwell, a director awarded to Iowa compaDles durmg wrote in collabor~tion with Morton conduct a cornel·trumpet sym­ form Friday at 8 p.m. under the of the local Rotary Club, said. direction of F. E. Mortiboy, and 1957, the Iowa Development Com- ·nsky. youngest of thc four im- posium Friday at 10 a.m.. clini­ mission reported Wednesday. presario brothers. cians will include Charlcs Spohn, Paul Kuentzel will conduct the ~ r SUI Physi~ists Plan Three Winterset High School Band in a The commission said the 151 instructor of percu sion at Ohio RUMMAGE SALE performance Saturday at 2 p.m. Students Report contracts awarded lo 48 firms in 21 State University and assistant Sat., J.nu.ry 1. director of the OIilo State Marching The general public wilt be wel­ (ow a towns paid 37 per cent more (arUn, at I •. m. Band; Frederick Wilkins, profes· come at any of the concert pro­ Hu Cap Thefts lhan Iowa firms received in 1956. Nights of Pythl.s H.II Proiects for Near Future sional flutist with the Firestonc grams, according to Frederick C. The Collins Radio Co. of Cedar lIarrllOD 01> CUnl.n 81. . Orchestra heard regularly on tele- Ebbs, director of SUI bands and Hub caps thefts were reporte~ A cosmic ray balloon out of Min· at Fleming Field near Minneapo­ 1~.16 at Fort .ChurchLIl, lantcrnan- vision; NUo Hovey, music educator Tuesday to the police by two SUI Rapids received the largest con· Re.rranl ... or'" Jeo.. Cbrl,l dkapolis next week, four Northern· lis. McDonald said Wednesday. manager of the clinic. The con­ S~::::~'d tional GeophYSical Year . b se .0 who is a representative of the certs will bc prescnted in the main students. Barry D. Maxson, At, tracts - worth $40,415,565. .1 Laller Day Saln" Light·penetrating rockets at Hlld- In this rnght, McDonald will be Hudson ~ay . are four Nlke-CaJu~ Selmer Company which manufae- son Bay next month, and three concentrating on variations at dif rocket flights to penetrate and re- ' . lounge oC the Union. Spirit Lake, told police two hub balloons from Iowa City within the ferent times of the day in the in­ cord the particles which make up -~~--~~----~---~--~~~~--- caps were stolen from hls car nexl two months are near-future tensities and types oC the mysterl· the aurora borealis (Northern while it was parked on the 100 projects of SUI physicists. ous particles which speed toward Lights ). Carl McElwain, G, Hous­ IOWA'S FINEST • • • Frank McDonald, resident asso· Earth's atmosphere from uppe ton, Tex., and Donald EnemarkJ Sunday Music Recitals block of S. Madison. ciale in physics. and Louis Hinton, space. Last October he suspended E2, Princeton, Minn., will have Four hub caps were reported • 20% Mor. Protein I A2, Davenport, hope to loft a 130- his equipment to a similar flight made-in·lowa instruments in the stolen by George W. Lintner, E3, c.w.. MIl Phespherw pbu~d gondola of instruments wit}; in Minnesota but because the In· nose of 2-slage research rockets Davenport. His car was parked in • Vnmins and Mine,.. a Skyhook balloon, 175 feet across '_·.rutn:cnts functioned badly thc totaling 25 feet in length and To Include Trio, Solos the Hydraulics Laboratory parking when fully inflated. The flight i~ dal.a was non·conclusive. capablc of reaching above l()( lot when lhe theft occurred. • T..... Better, Tool .} I set for the first good·weather dawn Scheduled for the week of Feb. miles in altitude. Auroral particles Two recitals by sm faculty the song cycle "On This ]sland" Clayton M. Eden, of Eden Mo­ are thickest in a belt 70-80 mile ~ members and a student will be by Britten. tors, 629 S. Riverside Drive, also up and around 60 degrees in lati· presented Sunday. The final selections will be sung reported four hub caps stolen from . ~~ . in German and are by Strauss. tude .. Three faculty members will pre­ a customer's car while it was McIlwain said he hopes lhe Fulton will be accompanied by SUI's Holmes Named sent a program of chamber music Malcolm WestJy, G, l\1ason City. parked in their parking lot over· ' ... rockets will reach altitudes above at 4 p.m. in Macbride Auditorium, night. ~'"" .ltuuif 70 miles. where the light is bright­ and at 7:30 p.m. Richard Fulton, est. He is aiming for heights where G. Iowa City, will give a vocal re­ Fellowship Recipient the particles are unaltered by the cital in North Music Hall. Two Youths Sentenced atmosphere. Last August hc trieel Admission for both recitals will To 10 Years in Prison One oC four Kenyon Review fel­ two such rockets at Fort Church· be [ree. OPENING TONIGHT lowships has been awarded to ill, but one misfired and the oUler * * * provided limited data on this up­ THE FACUl TV GROUP includes DES MOINES !Nt - Two youths Theodore H. Holm~, a graduate tho University The.tr,'s production of per-air phenomenon because of a Stuart Canin, associate profes~or accused of a $1,300 safe burglary assistant In the SUI Poetry Work- low peak altitude of 64 miles. in music, violin; Hans Koelbel, Oec . 5 at Willard Elementary School , pleaded guilty Wednesday sliop. . Kinsey Anderson, research as· professor in music, violoncello, and EPITAPH FOR A BLUEBIRD Holmes' project as a Kenyon John Simms, associate professor oC breaking Bnd entering and sociate, assisted by John Korns~ were sentenced by District Judge Review fellow is a book-length Ea. Iowa City, will fly 10·pounel in music, piano. • new f.ntasy comedy by poem to be titled "The Changing Canin will open the program Carroll O. Switzer to 10 years in Thudis Shine instrument boxes from 70-Coot Sky­ the men's reformatory. Moment." It will consist of six hooks launched in Iowa City to with Mozart's Sonata in E Minor. - .Iso pteylng - chapters dealing with God. know­ check relationships between mag­ K. 304, for violin. They were Larry L. Agee, 19, January 1" 18, 22, 23, 24, 25 ledge, necessity, sorrow, and love. netic storms and cosmic ray activ­ and Daniel Wcsley Davis, 19, hoth The program will continue with of Des Moines. Curtain 8 p.m_ He has an A.B. degree from ity. The flights will be made as Four Pieces for Violin and Plano, soon as possible in February, when Princeton and has donc graduate Op. 7, by Anton Webern, a 20th NEW MUSICAL work in l!:nglish thcre, at the Uni­ upper·air magnctic storms and century Austrian composer who versity oC Oregon, and at SUI. calm wcaUler ncar the Iowa Sl.adl­ studicd undcr Schoenberg. NEW YORK IA'I - Broadway's um happen to coincide, Anderson The closing selcction will be most ramous tcam o( musical com­ • STUDENTS He is author of "The Harvest and TICKETS I.D. the Scythe: Poems" in Poets of said. I' Schubert's Trio in E Flat Major, edy hit-makers, Hichard Rodgers For a reserved seat ticket, present your Today IV (published in 1957 by Anderson gathcred a lolal of t80 Op. 100. This was the first work and Oscar Hammerstein II, have Card at the Tick-.t Reservation Desk, Ea,t Lob­ Scribners), and other verse in Thc hours of data above 100.000 feet in that Schubert sold to a foreign decided on "The Ftower Drum NOW by, Iowa Memorial Union. Partisan Review, The Kenyon Re­ altitudc last August wllh 14 sucl, publisher. Often described as E Song" as their next enterprise. view, Poetry, The Western Review, balloons at Fort Churchill. La" religious work, it later served as Based on a novel by C. Y. Lee, the • INDIVIDUAL and Paris Review. next summer he plans to launcl. inspiration for some of Schubert'f project Is planned [or arrival in 10 more, wilh each flight to last November. Josej:lh Fields is ex­ ON TICKETS Tickets may be purchc!lsed at the Ticket Reser- Holmes was one of six pocb. bolder compositions. It is particu­ , as long as 35 hours, compared wit~ larly nol.able for its excellent pected to collaborate on the libret­ vation Desk, Iowa Memorial "'nlon, X4432. presenting readings of their selee to with Hammerstein. the 16·24 hour durations of his counterpoint. SALE Office hours: dally 9 ·a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Sa'. lions at SUI's second Poetry Work­ "round the clock" flights of last Rodgers-Hammerstein were last shop series held in December. summer. FULTON, A TENOR, will begin represented on Broadway with urdays 9 a.m. to 12 Noon. Price - $1.25. Each Kenyon Review fellow re­ the program with four songs by "Pipe Dream" two seasons ago. I ceives a ycarly stipend of $2,700 John Dowland: "Awake, Swee~ if single or $4,000 if marripd. He Love, Thou Art Returned," "Flow\ is appointed to pursue a specific Longman Finishes My Tears," "Say, Love. lC Ever literary project. Thou Didst Find," and "Fine Knacks for Ladies." Robie M. Macauley, who received History of College his M.F.A. degrec from SUI and He will continue with an aria Theodore H. Holmes is now a research consultant with Art in Midwest from the opera "Manoq Lescaut" Education Research Council in by Puccini and three songs from KC'nyon Fellow Baltimore, also was awardcd a A history of the Midwestern Col­ fellowship. lege Art Conference has just been completed by ProCessor Lester D. * * * * * * Longman, head of the SUI arl de­ Interview With Holmes- partment and current p~esident of the art organization. By ROBERT MEZEY age; the bulk oC the work is just " waste-matter. Right now, in Am- The history is in pamphlet form. Q. Your g.ner.tion h., be.n erica, we have more than our Copies have been sent to member . tilled "The Silont Gener.tlon." ~ivel . share of what looks to me, institutions, individual members What is your respon" to this • J ... Criticism? lIke flrst·rate talent. and other colleges in the Midwest. It taliel jUlt a call· )),. 'plione or In per- ,;'1 Any criticism which is no Q. Do you .pprove of cre.tive The publication tells of t~ ini- Illore than a label or epithet is writl", workshop$? tial plans made in 1937 for an or- Subscribe NOi IOD • to find out how YOU can budget wholly meaningless. Most or these A. You can't be honest and not ganization to bring together an­ your gal and electric billa through a terms - beat, lo.t, .c.demic - say that iWorkshops have helped to nually the members of art depart­ at Half Price *, ilescrioo as much of you as your develop and bring into being some ment faculties in Iowa colluges and whole year of equal mODt)lIy pay- :rrne does. very worthwhile poets. But there's ~ . a ncgative side - that they tend universities and those in neighbor­ You CDn rood this Worid-famOUl ------., Q. Do you consioer your gon­ meDii! to Icad many untalented people ing states. Organizers of lhe group doily newspaper for the n.lCt ail( 'rltion a palli.." end conwrv.· months for $4.50, jUlt holf the into the "life oC the artist," which were Dr. Longman and Marques E. 1Hv. one? regular IUbscription rat., is not a very happy Ji£e, which Reillel of Rockford College, Rock­ Get top newl cover•. (njay . A. Most of the true poets of our Ioften ~co~cs a liCe of hardship special feotu"s. Clip for ret,,­ CALL 01 STOP IN FOR lime, and really, c,: any time, have and privation, and for ~st of ford, m. ene. work, Ii eel fairly quiet and conservative th~se ~ople an unproductive and AXELROD DUE IN '51 Send your ordor today. Enclose MATE OF YOUR MONTHLY PAY. ~ves - not so much out of tern- unJustifLed life. Unless you have check or money ordor_ Use cou­ ill:rament as out of choice or nec- the vocation, it's not worth it. NEW YORK t.1'l - Playwright pon below. Ceels ~jty. ~oher.ni.ans are too (!on- Q. How would you ch.racter. Gcorge Axelrod sure his next MENTS ON THE BUDGET PLANl ned wllh hvmg .lhe life of the lIe the theme. which cone.rn dramatic offering will arrive on Tho------Chrlstlon Sclenc. Monitor '·CI t One Norwoy St., Bolton IS, MOIl. ~t to get any of It on thc page; you In your .,..ma? ,Broadway this year. The reason: '11~ the page is what counts. The AxelrOd says three is his lucky Send yow MWIIIOPOf' 'Of tho time .rgy that should go Into tho I A. There seems to ~ always and production number. His first com­ checked. ,our'10r ",njt 1i"A, rns is squandercd in drinking O~ly o~e concern LD everything edy hit, "The Seven Ycar ItCh," o 6 mont ... $4.50 0' ~ $9 o Cell. Student 0 Faculty MembIt !, , catting around. I ve wrItten in t~ last few years reached the boards in 1952, and his . - aD attempt to find and deicrlbe second, "Will Success Spoil Rock 10W&.,II.I.INOI. " Q. Wh.t do you think of your man's place in the world and what. Hunter?" in 1955. The writer has , ~ poots? • ever meaning this place can have not yet given a title to the script " GaLOM E"cttic:~GV ~ I:K. Most of the poetry I see in for him. VefY few of the poems upon which he is currently at . ., ,~---- llie "~eran: journals seems to me t~ke off fro~ a p3rticuL'lr situn­ work. It dl'als. he says briefly, City t_ Stat;· IjIil!e poor: But his is tru~ of 8"1 hon or OCCasIOI\, Wi~h a topiC or universal interest. 'TIIls .11 tift .r.- OfII.y II ... " , ~~..".,."'/ Pag, 4-THE DAILY IOWAN-I_a City, 'a.-'thursdow, Jan. 16, 1953 , . Confusion Reign's Af"Tex:as A8l.M .... 8y Alan Maver Alumnus Asks Lack* of* Girls * Laker Oust Five Men on Is the Problem Mikan; Hire Board To Quit Writer Says John Kundla HOUSTON, Tex. tfI - A promi­ MINNEAPOLIS tfI - The Min­ nent Texas A&M alumnus Wednes­ KANS CI:ry I.'! - " What's neapolis Lakers ousted rookie day a ked five members of the the matter with Texas A&:M? Why coach George Mikan in mid·stream Texas A& f board oC directors to can't they get a coach down oC a miserable season Wednesday resign because of what they called thjll'~?" and turned the reins back to John mishandling a search for a new Asst. Sports Editor Bob Busby head fool ball coach. of the Kansas City Star said in his Kundla, one of the old pros oC the Gov. Price Daniel also said in colUMn Wednesday this is the business. AusUn he was asking A&M offi­ question "asked at every turn" Robert Short, Laker president, cials for a full report on the and he proceeded to offer an an­ declared the club is in clear swer based on his various trips danger of losing its National Bas­ BULLETIN into Texas, a recent journey wit'" ketball Assn. franchise and that HOUSTON ~ - The c!NIlrm.n Cormer Aggie Coach Paul !Bear) Wednesday's action was the only of the board of directors of Tex· Bryant who quit the Texas school course open. to take over at Alabama, and on as AIM Coil ... Wecfnetday dl.· Mikan, once the greatest star in lOIyed the board's athletic lub- gossip heard at the recent coaches convention in Philadelphia. the game, turned down a club offer commIttee. I to replace Kundla as general "Thil action !NIs ....n taken to Nayy Coach Eddie Erd.lan withdrew his name Tuesday manager, a post Mikan held for clear Up' the confusion wt'llch h.. two seasons. from consideration for the Ag­ arl ..n concernlll9 the responll­ "Things happen in sports," Mi­ blllti.. .nd authority of all con­ gie yacancy. The day before, Jim Myers of Iowa State did kan said in Cincinnati where the c.rned with the athl.tlc pfogram Lakers play Thursday night. . of A&.M call ...," .ald Chairman likewi ... W. T. Doherty of Hou.ton. The trouble, Busby reported, is: "When a team is not winning, M.mbers of the board's .th­ "College Station, site of A&M, is some one must suffer. It's the I.tlc subcommittee now dlnolY. far from a garden spot. .. . It is same in baseball or anything else. eel are Jack Finney of Green. an all·male school and next year. I plan to return to my law prac­ yill •• chairman; H.nnan HHp all students, including the ath­ tice in Minneapolis." of Austin; L. H. RIMut Jr" Dal­ letes, will be required to take The shift sends Kundla, 41, back lal, and Price Campbell of Abl­ military training. ... The nearest to the helm of a team be cBm- len •• collection oC girls to A&M is Texas manded for 10 years. With Mikall Re State. College for Women at Denton S tt rfe Id Q ·t D search that has seen a parade of which is far away even by Texas ~~::~n!e r:c~~~~m;e~~r~~~ b~~~ a e Ie UI sing ue ., AP Wlrephot. prominent coaches discuss the Ag­ measure. In other words, if you ketbal for most of that period, T p ebl L f gie situation and then withdraw. are at A&M you lead a Spartan winning four NBA titles plus 0 E • ~t G.ne Howard, IMuranc•• xecu­ Object to O'Malley's Plan existence; no midweek proms, no earl.ier championships in the old. OSSI e OSS 0 yesign tlve and 1957 prllident of ·the jellying at the soda fountain with Natlonal League and the Basket- Houlton AIM Club. said he ..nt THE MAN WITH ONE BIG PROBLEM, trying to find a place for his Brooklyn Dodgers to play. looked a dolly. ball Assn. of America. CHICAGO (,f) - Bob Satterfield, fering from a detached retina in tel.graml alkill9 that the five oyer the 100.000 seat Memorial Coliseum again Wednesday. Walter O'Malley, second from right, list­ " All this is not highly conduc­ Mikan's apprenticeship in coach· eighth ranked heavyweight con- his left eye and was told by the board m.mbers rellgn of their .n.d to representatives of football team. who yoiced objection to some aspects of hil propoiition for iva to luring top prospects. • . ing started dismally with seven tender, Wednesday quit a 13·year ' .. own accorel and that anoth.r t.I.· the Dodgers to pl.y baseball there. Left to right: Pete ROlell., general manager of the Los Angele. They s.y Th. Bear (Bryant, saw straight deCeats and never got un- boxing career on the advice of an speCialist ~o u~dergo surgery to gram ..ked Danl.1 to request the Ram.: J ... Hill, athl.tic director at Southern C.I; O'Malley;' and Wilbur Johns. UCLA athl.tlc di. lean times coming. with mat.rial tracked. The Lakers are in last eye specialist that the sight of his save the Sight 10 the eye. r ••ignatlon., rector. They objected to skinning part of the gridiron for the baseball Infield, but O'Malley expr.ssed running low and hard to get.. ' . place of the NBA 's western divi- left eye is threatened. The hard-hitting Chicago Negro The five were identified as Jack hope that the situation could be ironed out. They say that whoen.. takes sion with 9 victories and 30 losses.. Satterfield, 34, was reported suf- was scheduled to meel New York's Finney, athletic committee chair- oyer at A&M II,. two years might Already $120,000 in the red this Wayne Bethea in a TV 10-rounder not be oIIIble to win a game. "Then there is the matter of ad· season, the Lakers are under the Status of Western at the Chicago Stadium Jan. 29. Sanman Antonio,from Greenville; L. H. RideoutPat Zachry, Jr., Gunther Is Fourth Cincinnati Fans NBA 's "strong suggestion" to hit Boxing professionally since 1945, Dallas, and Price Campbell, Abi­ ministration.... There is an ath­ $200,000 in gate receipts or risk Jene, all members of the athletic Assured That the letic council composed of alumni, having the franchise moved. League Unknown Satterfield had 76 bouts, winning (acuity . . . and a board of control The club is averaging $4,000 pcr 49, losing 23 and fighting 4 draws. committee; and Eugene Darby, I B with the final say . .. Apparently home game. Short said it w

DETROIT (,f) - Chuck Spieser, who still thinks "I can beat any­ * * * body my weight iC the desire and determination are there," aban­ $38 $48 $38 $43 $2·3 ~2 , 8 doned boxing and his seventh rank­ ing as a light heavyweight Wed· nesday. "I'll never fight again," said

the 28·year-old former Michi,an ' $58 $68I $48 $58 $33 $43 I State and Olympic athlete in an nouncing he was quitting for the GROUP MEN'S SLACKS 1~ career of a salesman. (Small SII.. ) - Spieser's retirement followed Here'. a group of fine men's wool slac.ks, mostly patterns. PRICE weeks of frustration in attempts Ladies' Sweaters Prices formerly up to $27.50. Mostly in waist sizes 29, 30, 31. 2 to line up a UUe bout with light To close out at only heavyweight champion Archie Ladies' wool and cashmere sweaters in sizes 36 to 42- Moore. Chuck and his brother-man­ novelty and classic styles at Boys' Poplin Parkas ager, Joe, corraled $55,000 of a Men's Sport Shirts Boys' poplin parkas with detachable proposed ~OO,OOO guarantee for' Men's long sleeve washable sport shirts hoods. This i~ a terrific buy in sizes Moore, but couldo't sell television in Ivy and regular styles in light or 1/3 OFF 6·18 at dark patterns. Now rights. I Both blamed the' television faj]­ i $8.88 $3.88 ure to pressure 00 networks and Ladies Skirts sponsors by the International Box­ Ladies' famous brand name skirts in straight Boys' Sport Shirts inl Club. The IBC denied any .Dave Gunther , lind pleated' styles in fille woolens. Sizes 10 Men's Dress Shirts such pressure. Hawks Top Scorer ' to 18 at Boys' long sleeve cotton sport shirts in Men's dress shirts. Well known brands, "Frustration ha4 IOmethiJII to a large selection in checks and Ivy stripes and checks In French and but­ ton curfs. Great buys . . do with it," Spie.er said «If his YOIl JUST CAN'T WIN stripes. Values to $3.98. Now retirement alter six years as a "', pro. "Of course the IBC was be­ LONDON ~ - Champiin JM.r­ $3.59 $1.88 2 for $7.00 hind it ({allure of the Moore [lIht .aret Stafford _'t be defen6- ( to materialize) in my mind. It's I", her titl. In a London fenclll9 Ladies' Blouses a monopoly, but lOU QJ\'t pin it tw1mIMenr.. it weft. She for­ , Ladies' colton and wool blouses in plaid colors Boys' Suburban Cobts Men's Wool Sweaters or patterns. Long or roU up sleeve styles at down to that." got to ent.... "No _ reminded Boys' suburban coaLs, including many Men's all-wool and wool blends in crew "The IBC ought to be real hap. with detaChable hoods and dressy styles neck sweaters. Here are real sweater py about this," joe added, '"Be­ ....," .... .-hi. OFF at large savings. buys at cause when Moore's lODe there ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiii. won't be a light heavywelcht they $10.88 $12.88 $14.88 $6.88 . don 't control." In quitting, Chuck cancelled a Men's Suburban Coats ONE GROUP ¥EN'S scbeduled bout in Detroit Feb. 1 AU Haircuts $1.00 a,ainst Bobby Lane or Miami. SUITS ••• Spieser turned pro in 1952 and At • • • • • • • • • woo 19 nehts, lost ftve aDd drew Here'. a ItOttp of " men's singill-breasted Cine quality suits in broken lots and sizes in ODe. Before that he made the Walt's Barber Shop but all terrlfic' buy§' SoOa formerly told for ., much as ,75. Great buys! U.S. Olympic team twice was a three-tlme NCAA champ• ...... Qaln Te Ienw Y ...... ! Chuck, married last summer N.d Te K_r'. GrKery aDd DOW aD expectant rather, said In CeralyUIe he plaDned to become a AleIman for WJaitaker Paper Co. of De­ Hev": . PillE I a.m.oS:. p.m. PARKING trolt. , •

~ IOWA N- Iowa City. la.-Thur5day, Jan. 16. 19'8-Pege S

NEW YORK I.fI - Oils, chemicals and steels posted some solid gains late Wednesday, putting the stock market firmly on the upside (or the third straight day. Gai ns among some key stocks went (rom (ractions to 1 or 2 points. Aircrafts and coppers were un­ changed to lower. Chamber Head After the close, the Federal Re­ serve Board cut stock margin re­ quirements to 50 pe r cent from 70 Calls City's per cent in a credit~a s ing move which had been hoped {or and anticipated in some quarters. The market was mixed and Future Bright withou t direction early in the ses­ Robert G. Stevenson, RR1, was sion. inaugurated president of the Iowa IT WAS PULLED {rom its lethar­ City Chamber o( Commerce Tues­ gy by President Eisenhower's day night at the annual total mem­ statement that he would prefer a reasonable amount of deficit bership dinner J'{Ieeting in the Iowa spending this year to a tax in­ Memorial Union. crease. The move to the upside Stevenson took over the pos t was petering out late in the after­ from the 1957 president, Keith Wil- noon when the oils came to liCe . I son, 222 Fairview. The steels, chemicals and other British Troops at Nassau The new president called the selected issues then accompanied immediate and long-range future the oils to sizable gains with trad· BRITISH TROOPS from Jamaica. British West In dies. arrive at Nassau's Inte rnetional Airport just ing was more active than prior in efter midnight Wednesday. The armed forces wer e brought in to pre5erve law and order in NelSau'. AP WI,tpbolo of Iowa City bright. He asked that the session. current labor dispute. About 4,000 strikers have been out since last Sunday. progress and the future be the CONGRESSIONAL PASSAGE of Freedom Kisses For Kryst-y Chamber's theme. $549.7 million for a stepped up mis­ Two aspects of Iowa City - SUI Iowa Farm Wage PARENTAL KI SSES ARE BESTOW ED on Kry5tyna Nowinski. 7-year-old deughter of a Polish mathe­ sile program apparently was well­ Supt. Garner Sees City High anticipated. Stocks af[ect~ d by the r mltici.n who used a lectu re-tour ruse to gain iIIylum in this country, Tuesday night in Baltimore at and the in troduction of national a reunion of the femily_ Mrs_ Nowinski end Krystyna errived in the United Statu from Engl end_ The Industry - arc developing without boost in spending were laggard. Increase Reported The Associated Press average Enrollment Doubling by 166 Now lnskis said their daug hter's future led -them to fl.. their native land. changing the nature of the com­ DES MOINES IA'! - Average munity, Stevenson said. of 60 stocks rose $1.20 to $ t59.40 with the IndustrIals up $2.00, the [arm wage rates in Iowa are Buford W. Garnt'r, Iowa City m('nt estimates for the next three Chaplin's Leading The principal speaker, Dwight rails up $1.00 and the utilities up slightly higher lhan they were a superintendent of schools, predict- years: 1958-59 school year, 4,175; Havens, Washington , D.C., mana­ 20 cents. ed enrollment at Iowa City High 1959-60, 4,705; 1960-61. 5,100. Conclude.I€G: Hearing,s year ago, the Iowa Crop and Live­ School will double in the next nine He said he expects high school ger of tl1e Service Department of Lady Died Monday Of 1,149 issues traded, new stock R~porting Services says. years, enroilment, including freshmen, to the United States Chamber of highs lor 1957-58 totaled 23 and The service reports that as of Uarner 01 a said Jowa City risc from the present 845 to 1,660 new lows 7. Fourteen of the 16 After Long Illness Commerce, attacked the attitude Jan. I, low; farm workers were school enrollmenl should be up 30 by 1966. This amount is in line Gln Freight Increases of "let George do it," calling It most active slocks rose and two per cent in four years. with his predicted 100 per cent in- (ell . receiving an average reported in HOLLYWOOD (.4'1 - The death of "moral irresponsibility." The increase in junior hig and crease during the next nine years. DES MOINES {,fl - liearings on I ing when the ICC granted an in­ Volume totaled 2,080,000 shares wage of $144 a month with board the a petition by Iowa railroads for a crease in interstate freight rates. Edna Purviance, Charlie Chap- The Service Department aids high school will be gradual ' until compared with 2,010.000 Tuesday. and room, and $171 a month with IOWA SHEEP to 12 per cent increase in freight The ca):riers then filed an amended it reaches 5,100 by 1960. he said. lin's golden-haired leading lady and advises local Chamber BASED ON THE rise in the AP house. This compares with $136 a Present enrollment is 3,912. I DES MOINES IA'! - There were rates on shipments within the state pelition asking for the larger in- in his early film comedies, was were concluded by the Iowa Com- crease_ . . groups. average, the quoted value of stocks month plus board and room or The superintendenl sl,lld hi s pre­ 430,000 sheep and lambs on feed merce Commission Wednesday. Don McDevill and John Ii. Mar- disclosed Wednesday. Havens described this as the listed on the New York Stock Ex­ $168 a month plus hou e a ycar dictions did nol take into con$ider. fo r market on Iowa farms as of The commission did not rule im- tin, attorneys for the Rock Island The actress. widow of aviator view that nallonal or local ills may change rose an estimated $1'h bil­ ago. ation possible mergers that would Jan. ], the Crop and Li vestock mediately on the rate increases railroad, argued the case for the John P. SqUire, died Monday at be cured by appropriations or leg­ lion_ Latest average figures (or (arm create II larger district, continued Reporting Service says. but sa id it would issue a decision carriers before the commission a hospital after a long illness. A islation. American Stock Exchange worker day wages. as listed by the growth oC lhe dty, or \()SS ()( tll­ This \S a 5 ~t <:,cml dt()~ (Nm in the near future after study of Wednesday. native o{ Paradise Valley, Nev., "The quality of government is In prices were higher on volume of service, are $7.40 with board and dents to the new Regina High the 453,000 head on feed in the all the testimony. Opposition was prescnted by 14 she came to California during the direct proportion to your interest 540,000 shares compared with 480,- room or $9.20 without board or School. stat a year earlier but is nearly The petition {or a hike in rates persons representing various com­ days to study plano. in government," he said. 000 Tuesday . room. Garner set the following enroll- th!' same as the ]952-56 average fo r shipments within the state was modities, inciuding grain, sugar She was the simple little girl Havens called the Chamber a filed by Iowa rail carriers after an beets. scrap Iron, cement, sand who befriended the baggy·pants vehicle for the expression of ideas Interstate Commerce Commission and gravel, gypsum rock , brick vagabond in his early two-reelers, and communi~y needs and the order last August granted a simi- and liIe, coal and livestock . and later starred with Chaplin in means f channeling efforts. .1Ie lar boost on interstate freight. Jn each case those opposing the such features as "" asked for support of Chamber pro­ The request includes a five per increase argued that the full 12 and "The Kid ." She retired in the grams and acceptance of respon­ cent emergency increase asked by per cent boost was not justified for early '20s, but Chaplin kept her sibility for community betterment. the lowa railroads last February. intl'aslate freight and that dealers on his studio payroll until he RobertF. Ray. Professor and The temporary boost was not in the various commodities could ceased his operations in Hollywood head of the [nstitute of Public Af­ granted because it was still pend- not absorb so large an increase. four years ago. Cairs, was master of ceremonies.

Classified Trailer for Rent Work Wanted Trailer for Sale Advertising Rates FOR RENT- D"luxe Iraller, 1958. B-4408. WASHING I\ND IRONING. Pick UP :J5 POOT trailer. Phone 7002 . 1-29 ______._.. and delivery . Phone 8-5010. 2-4 1956 TRAILER , 30 loot. Priced rid Icu- Word Adl 10u$ly low. 8,4409. 2-9 Child Care Personal l oans One Day ...... 8C a Word Help '.,va nted Two Days ...... lOC a Word CHILD cDte In my home. 2084 . 1-29 PERSONAL LOANS on typewrite ... ,FOR ·FAST) RE·SULTS Thre-a Days .. . . _.. 12c a Word phonoKtlphs, IporlS equJpmenl. FOR our employment pro blems cDIl WILL ea,e {or a child {or a worklns HOCK-EYE-LOAN Co .. 719 Ronald.. lowl City Employm.nl Service. , , Four Days ...... 14c a Word 'mother. 2990. 1-21 1-27r 8-0211 Iowa Slate Bank Bull dlns. 2-14 Five Days ...... 15c a Word TeD Days ...... 20c a Word SOMEONE 10 walch 5-year-old chll.d lost and Found Ty ping In my home afternoons. Will pro .. ODe Month ...... S9c a Word vld" noon lunch. Call 8-0187 arter 5 TRY A DAILY IOW,AN WANT AD p.m. 1-18 ELGIN watch with Initialed band. TYPING. 5169. 2-11' (Minimum Charie SOC) x3578. 1-17 TYPING. 8-0437. B-16 Pets EXPER- --IENCED------Iyplns. 8-5246. 2- 16 Dilplay Adl Miscellaneous for Sale ODe Insertion ...... _.. . BUY quality Cockers. Dial 4600. 2-8 TYPING. 3174. 2- 10 5-P IECE chrome dinette set, like new; $1.20 a Column Inch SALE Chihuahua ond Collie pup- holf price. Di al 7779 aner 5:00 p.m.1-%4 THESISwriter. 8-2442.and others. Electric type-2·9 Five Insertions a Month, Chlhauh ua and'Toy Fox-Terrier - ______Each Insertion ...... ___u_ rv_l_ce_._D_I_al_8-_02_4_3.__ _ _ 2_- D SINGER ."wlng machJne with aulomatlc EXPERT typlns: 20e. 8-.0004. 1-2~ zll-Z.g. New machln" (Uarpntec. TYPING _ 8: I87Y. ---2--4 $1.00 a Column Inch Rooms for Re nt Take over 7 monlhly payment. of $&.00. can be 6een In Iowa City. Write f eD Insertions a Month. Mr. Roae's. 608 Unlver Ity. Des Moine.. Typlns. 8-0129. 10-27t Each Insertion ...... I COMFORTABLE Ileepln, roonu for 1-18 rYPlNG, IBM - noS. 1-24-11 -I 90c a Column Inch ______m .. n. 8-3901 0' 38'1S. 1-24 21-INCH Console TV, $80.00. Phone DOUBLE room for men_ Opposite Wool- 8-383;5 . 1-16 • Th. DaHy Iowan reserves worth's. S78? 1~21 1958 SET Encyc:lop~dla B~;; WANT AN EXTRA TV SET? the right to reJect any ad­ waterfall de.k and !lourellCenl desk ROOM for two men. Close In. 2872. 1-18 lamp; wroulht-lron bookcase. Can MONEY IN USED APP.lIANCES vertlsln, copy, You can pick up a fine extra TV for the 2 NIcE' room •. Men atudwll. 4346. 2-15 8-1334 aller 1:60 P·IO· 1·18 Got an old range, refrigerator, washer or, MEN stud.nb. Phone 8-2298. 2-7 OFFICE desk $45.00. Phone 8-32GS. 1-2.1 children's room at less cost than you DIAL dryer? You can sell it for CASH feist just by' COMFORTABLE sleepl.n, ---rooms (or ROCK-EYE Loan mo,w 10 719 Rqnllds thought possible! How? Place an ad in The men. 8-31101 or 3875. l-15RC SI. Plenty of evuythlnl. Phon" calling 4191 and running a Y'ant ~~ jn 4535. lJ-' .Daily lowanl MEN STtTDENTS. Dial 8-1218. 2-4r I I The Daily Iowan. 4191 NICE ROOM. 8-2518. 1-2eR Want To Buy ~ room foro men. Op",,:,~~~ WANTED- to buy PolaroId carner!\- Can Apartment for Rent Woolworth' •. 5787. 3257 alter 4 p.m. 1-21 FOR RENT, Phone 8-3292, one room ------Pe ts for Sale 19nitio.l furniShed apartment, wllh private Corb uretors balh. One blo~ from buslne .. dl strld. FOR SAL~(U . rantftd canary Ilnler •. sell slide-rules, Hi-Fi ..ta, $5~ . 00 per monlh wl lh utilities paid . 2662. 12-29rc GENERATORS STARTE~S 2-14 Briggs & Stratton Moto ~s binoculars and typewrlt. Instruction TWO room furnished apartment. Pri- er •. Just cell 4191 now end .. II vate bath. CJo5e In. For graduate - • Pyramid Services men or couple. A vallable Feb. 81h . BALLROOM dance lesson.. Special Dial 11681 . 1-18 rate. Mlml Youde Wurlu. DIal 9485. 621 S. Dubuque Dial 5723 your god. for cesh. WANT TO BUY A SPORTS CAR? WANT EXPERT HELP? Quickest way to locate any good used You can hire expert help in a hurry just cars for sale is through the Want Ads, , by doing as thousands do: run a Want Ad

Phone 4191 and place your ad todayl _.' I in The Daity Iowan.

, .,'

Whatever You're Looking For. • • WANT TO SELL YOUR HOME , , " your best bet is a want ad in The Daily .... FAST? Iowan. Whatever you're looking for, a pet, Sell your house for your asking price with a baby-sitter, roommate or renter, .•• have something to sell or need to buy • • • you no commission to payl How? With a Want ~an save time and money with a want ad ' Ad in The Daily Iowan. in The Daily Iowan. ... •

, I Con-fra'clots H.~a~ ' 1st tJ.S. Moon' M~y : Be . Female Says Van Allen i~~a Road' R~p~~t I A lady satellite might make the tional Working Group on Internal I first U.S. "beep" in space. James Instrumentation for the artificial DES MOl; ES 1.4'1 - A progress Van Allen, head of the SUI phYSics moons. report on the Iowa IntersLBte High­ department. suggested Wednesday way System was given paving He said that the oCficial panel INTENSIVE WORKOUT contractors Wedn sday at the an­ I Unemployment of the U.S. earth satellite program NEW YORK L4'I - Actor Si.rIlon nual meeting of the A sociated Oa kland is gelling an inlensive G neral Contraclors of Iowa. I h as just c h anged the name for the workout in dramalizatlOns of lhe W. E . Reed of Ames, Iowa dis­ I"moon"-carrier system from Jupi- Russian classic, "The Brothers trict en::ineer for lhe U.S. Bureau In Canada Hits ter-C to Juno I, to avoid confusion Karamazov." A slage version 01 of Roads. said that under coelract with the Army's Jupiter missile were 60 miles oC 4-lane grading program. the novel entitlcd "The Trial of and pavement, another 63 miles of Dmitri Karamazov" is coming into 2S-Ye~r High Dr. Van Allen said that he gave 4-lane grading alon~. and 92 major an off-Broadway lheater with the Juno [ - named for the god­ structures. TORONTO 1.4'1 - Unemployment Oakland cast in the titie role. He "By this time next year, we hope dess helpmate of the mythological is also set to play in MGM's movie in Canada is al its worst since the Jupiter - a 50 per cent chance of to have approximately 100 miles hungry depression years. But the version - but as one of the prostl· success of orbiting ita payload with­ of completed work open to YOIl," Government's .labor chief says it . cuting' attorneys, in the near future. He said that said Reed. may be leveling off, J"!"I"!_",..ct • ," • . . I AP W the Vanguard vehicle is now esti­ Reed added thal a tolal of 258 There were indications the roll mated to have about 30 per cent miles oC the 730 miles of the Inter­ of jobless has more lhan doubled cha~ce of putling a ball into space TO 'DA Y" S,. state System in Iowa has had pre­ since mid· November. There are: Swedes-And Not Blonde? within the next few days. liminary engineering and 179 miles no Ilfricial figures, but the best I A member of the National Sci­ of right-oC-way has been secured. estimates put the number out 01 PROVING ONCE AND ·FOR··AI:.L th.t .11 Swede. are not blonde, ence Foundation's technical panei He said that some $50 million work at aboul 625,000. tho .. two Swedlth princes.... 110 live .n hi.. of that country's TOP RECORDS b.. utie. - IonYle, th.t i •• Prlnc... Do.iree, 19, left, and her older (or the earth satellite program, Van AP Wirephoto worth of work was under contract Labor Minister Michael Starr and that another $32 million had .I,"r, Prlncn. 1I,.lttl, ••t for tholr portrait. recently. Birgitta Allen is also chairma9 of the na· 45 78 told the House oC Commons thlf RPM 89' RPM.$115 ' been "programmed" in the ap­ week the average rate o( increase marte. her 211t bfrthcll., Sund.y. Driver Unhurt in Crash proximately $120 million available in lhe number of persons looking OFF-BROADWAY GUIDE for the work in the first three (or work seemed to be leveling NEW YORK L4'I - The growing "AT THE HOP"- A WOMAN CLAMBERED to .efoty elon, the rail of this broken years. boom in olf-Broadway theatrical Danny & Juniors. IlI'idto Wednoadey Ifter her clr plun,ed, up.lde down, onto the ice oCf. In the week ending Jan. 2, he "I say that $85 millions of $120 said, the increase was 56,487, con­ Red Tape Interferes With activities has prompted the Ameri· "OH JULIE"-Crescendos. ., the Cottonwood River in MlnnelOte. Mr.. CliH.rd Schumacher, millions in years is excellent can National Theatre and Acade· "STOOD UP"-Ricky Nelson. '22, of SIH,y Eye, Minn., we. unhurt eft.r her car had .me.hed 1'; trasted to a weekly average 0 progress," said Reed. in answer my to issue a guidebook on the "APRIL LOVE"-Pat Boone. into an .butment of til. brid,•• 65,900 since Dec. 1. to criticism the Iowa program has subject. The book, "How to Organ­ "'YOU SEND ME"-Sam Cooke. Starr said these omces hand lea ize an Off-Broadway Theatre not proceeded as fast as other 352,044 new job applications in No­ Missiles, Navy Man Says "ALL THE WAY"-Frank Sinatra. slates. Group," was compiled by Ira J . vember. OC these, 292,000 wert. Bilowit and takes up such prob· "PEGGY SUE"-Buddy Holly. Reed said lhat Iowa's interstate (rom unemployed persons. As 0 DE'),'ROIT IRl - Rcar Admical until the last day of the year. He "WHY DON'T THEY UNDER· Hea~t forum To,Be trleld system, while only .006 of the lotal lcms as finding space for. staging Jan. 2, the employment oCrices h F. S. Withi'1"t'ln said ~'edeesday shid this interfered with the con- experimentai productions, comply. STAND"-George Hamilton. • 113,000 miles of roads in the stale, 74,640 applications, he added. The tilat som;;tim;;s be (celli hc is tinuity of the missile program. ing with building r~gulations, get­ "KISSES SWEETER THAN would carry 14 per cent of the number of unemployed among noL chief of lhe Na"y's ' Bureau He said valuable time h~d been WINE"-Jimmie Rodgers. total traffic road. ting publicity, and. kcepi(\g finan­ In Iowa City Feb. 19 these was not disclosed. of Ordn.:mce, "but rather lhat ~O . l\C lost' because workers on some ces balanced. "RAUNCHY"-Bill Justis. The system includes an ea t· , If lhe proportion was the same clerk in the Budget Bureau is." "SAIL ALONG SILVRY MOON" Withington r,pd..! lhe remar:, al projects had to be laid of( and A frcc public heart forum, to west route from Davenport around EdT .t;;] , .-Billy Vaughn. Des Moines to Council Bluffs; a as in November, Canada had at " stre information concerning high least 625,000 jobless at the start 0 a nows conference when .asked tben rehired because money was . 'SHORTclJT orO' 'HELL' "GREAT BALLS. OF FIRE"- north-south route paraileling ap­ the now year. This is 3.7 per cen what hc considered the biggest held up. A d Jerry Lee LeWIS. blood pressure and strokes. will Final Theses proximately the present U.S. 69. o! a population o( about 17 million. problem in his job of developing In Washington, a Budget Bureau 'STOWA';'AY GIRL' "JAIl;HOUSE ROCK"- be conducted in Iowa Cily ~9. and a north-soulh road near the and bu~dlng new missiles tor the spokesman said the recent holdup ElVIS Presley. The heart forum, which \s to be present U.S. 275 and U.S. 75. The Salvation Army and otl)cr Navy. of military (unds was a joint dc- r: "OH BOY"-Crickets. pre~atIted at 8 p.m. in Iver A. welfare organizations have report· "It is not moncy," he said, "but cision made at the highest level. "CHANCES ARE"-Johnny Mathia. Opstad auditorium of Iowa City cd Increases in the number of re- control of the money." • Withington was in Detroit to at- \\\'&1; tJ , 4'ul "PUT A LIGHT IN THE WIN. Qije, Jan. 30, quests for aid. Mission houses arc "w d ' f"1 High School , will be sponsored by Group. Offers (ull in many cities, The lines are e on t ~ee any o. It ~nh tend the first public showing o( DOW"-Four Lads. the Johnson County Medical So· we have justified every Item. the Navy's Mark 43 anti-subma- "STORY OF MY LIFE"- Starting FRIDAY! Marty Robbins. eiety, the Johnson County Heart longer at the employment offices. CJ'itlcizing red l~pe in th~ Bud- rlne torpedo. The weapon, which A~ the peak depression year of get Bureau, Wlth.lngton saId the seeks out its target underwater, "CATCH A FALLING STAR"­ Grads Warned Committee and the Prtss-Citizen. Belgian Study Perry Como, These groups sponsored the forum 193~ unemployment in Canada bureau impounded money appro- can be launched from both sur­ RaftClolpk .. . "BONIE MORONIE"­ SUI graduate students who plan held here last year. stood at 817,000 or 7.8 per cent ot priated by Congress and in some face vessels and aircraft. It is Larry Williams. a Feb. 8 graduation are warned a population of 11.4 million. instances wouldn't turn.it loose now operational equipment with Members of the panel include Scholarship "I'M AVAILABLE"- thal final deposit or all post-grad­ Winter in Canada is generally a £Ieet units. Margie Rayburn. Dr. James W. Culbertson, profes­ A full $1,750 scholarship will be SCOT[ uate the es is due before Jan. 30, "GET A JOB"-Silhouettes. Gra