Seroing The State University of IowtJ and tJ.e People of Iowa rity t.1"UlOUtil~ m '!loll l'we Cents a 0epy Member of ASSOCtated PJOeliS AP Leased Wife ana PlIOlo servl~ *,a.. Cit)'. la .• saturday, Sf ra; 30, I!I;); · Gen. reported ' D~i;;;;iVF~;Beck's Suspension Ike Asks Amendment· Iy DAIL V IOWAN STAFF the union, interviewed FridaY' j Ave .. also of Thompson Transfer [ ,,"" pI.n. They ...·t hAw: The suspension Friday of Team· were all critical of the high com· and lorag: peMioft pI~ ... Ieftt .... For D Ie S a bled Pre S Ie den t Mers President Dave Beck from mand in the lnternational Brother· "I never saw anythinl like this. \ ThrIft tel .- mIlCh -., they die AFL·ClO Executive Council hood of Teamsters. . Beck bas too much 'POw r . It seems (",,*, efficlat$) ...·t ,,_ wI\at lIrout!lt comments of satisfaction Ed Hucr. Lone Tree. who drives to me he's moking more money te ... --"" It .". Friday from at least five local for Thompson Transfer and Stor· than the president of the U.S. If he "Beck ha hurt the unian.. But\, .,. h l n\ * * * * * * Teamsters union members. age. sot S. Gilbert Sl.: slays In. it will be a blow to aU \ Beck \ just one gu • the otheT"t nit" 0 One of the two Iowa City Team· "Ir. • teM thi",. Some - elf us Teamsters members." are g tting it too. This union i ~ , Rep.~rt rs . Md.. tlult Iwo \>ahe orrlcers In a county Th PI' Sldent laid hi \"i IA 011 "Thi. uftlen·. dll" .re ... Beck' pe ion alt r on of squod cor plc.ked up tlw c .. lea th n caught up WIUl lIon th' 4·1 ne Ihe lin at a White Hou. conh'r. Both organizations contended Friday that they contribute to the Uni· damn high. AncI p.y $4.SO. Ih m rrmtlrked: S.. IJItury Macmill.n In • w. t.... hlahway Ie dlDe to Fred rlclt. I nc with COllar lonol I ad rs or versity and both had previously the I.tter he ha, .... n ..ctl.turbe4" by week fer I",,,,,.nee .nd pen- ")'U be lik fk>ck. I won't lal~." Th{'y pullt'(! along Id n. WS1l}l'n a~d phot~lrapherl In trailin, both partles. conducled campus solicitations. the tied,,*, .. f,... MM..rieI. cars and told them tilt' tx't'd hmlt 55 c\· n II t y w r followll\l Unde hi. pi n th chi { t'l(t'cu. Under a new Board or Regents whe WIS ..I!eeI .. the Seyc:hell •• 1 the .Pre Id n of the' Unlled Stitt' and supposed to keep hi Iln\OO!tIe Uve could rellnqul. h hi dUtl S policy President Virgil M. Hancher * * * * * * ' ...ncls • y ••r .... Hungarian in Igh~ , The pa~e.> had bet:n I , te d.Y 79 to 75 mil ,~n hour. tt>mporarlly to the vic pr idenl. can permit or deny on-campus H. Uli4 the actlen will ""ult solicitation for the Communjty Union Lays Beck in • ".word ef Damoclu ha",l.,. 'Why don t Y'" t.1I .... p,.."tlent to ,,- up? • rwperter.....,.· bot If he w re unable.> or unlA'llllD/l Chest. Prohibition of other cam· .v.r eur he.d... • ed. "H.', got leur 1tacIy.'I8 ...... WIS the .n._r. to mak the d(lC1 lon , tht.'n the Cab- Tells of Life paigns includes any other organl:ta· SlIlillbury. a former for Ign v· "Somt'bo oWc r ilK't could do it Cor him by major. lion. r tllry and member of on oC Brit· yelled. "and it won't be the Pre Id nl. U's up In the fir l c r, You ify ~~~ S..ale.,. S.m R.yburn The ruling was adopted In the Off To Check Case aln's cr at I ar tocratic farnlUe , wer doln. 60 in a 25-mile zon In Rockvill ." ,.....- March meeting of the Regents two ha long bt>cn con idered ont' of th Th squad cor turn d back at the Monl(omery.Fr d rick Coull) (D.T.Il.)..... dim vl.w of .ny In Red Prison weeks ago. mo t innu 'nUal behlnd·th· ne lin. Ne.>w mt'n caught up with th Pr i nt by h.iltin, It up to chan .., ..yl.. "W.'.,. got • Johnson County Red Cross chap.. pohtJclan in th ruling Con. rva· and 100. .-..v ..... Conttftvtion • tfti. WASHINGTON III - A Hungarl· ter chairman, Emil G. Trott, said tiv/, parly. TIl Pre.ldent. pi to return to Wa hin:lon Sunday venin, r .t the "...-nt." R.yburn ..Id an refugee lold Senate Investiga· the charily will ask the Regents to An announcemtnl from Primc Mondoy mornlnll. Mr. llaenhew.r'. p,.. po •• t rors Friday that in 10 years spent reconsider their action. Red Cross Min ister Macmilloo' oWc said In Chic.... he~u.rters ef the N.tionaI S.fetV COVncIl, whl4t ...... ·t h • .,. mIlCh help out If In Russian prison camps he saw solicitations have already be1ln Qu n Elizabeth II had acc pted I. Ktive.v p.rtlcipati ... in ttt. PrKklMt'. (em",i"- fw Tr.Mc me." men and women political prisoners made on campus this year. Lord Salisbury's r signat/on as S.fety, ~ told of .... Incident 4ec11M4 .. male. 'fIY ~em_nt. n. Lyndon B. Johnson or Tel(- herded together and living like Red Cross officials pointed out lord pre Id nt of th council. Friday's PI' dy trip was no IsolalL>d ca • aUboullh it WaJ DI. th Sen te Democratic I ader. beasts. that their local service includes The anoune m nt from No. 10 !ir t lim Ihat pollet' opped any part of th motorcad . said the propoJaI would be glli n The witness, using the assumed supplying blood to UniversJty Hos· Downing St t said th Earl of It Is u5ual lor th President's party to hit • fa t clip on "r peclful consideration." Home. Commonwealth r lalion name of George Batori lest rela· pltals. Cancer Sociey contributed trip , Th r ha be n peculation that the seer t 5ervlc ,which Se~W~:~ K~:~:~~cs:r 6a~~0~: Uves behind the Iron Curtain suf· $717,000 for research at SUI In th S4'cr tary. wlU succeed SaiL bury chareed with the Pre ' d nr (If ty. like to him pend as Ii fer retaliation for his testimony, period of 1946-56 and $120.000 sloce. as lord pre I&nt of th council tim on thl" road as tea Ibl. HowevfT. a crel Service Ig nt SIIId nla. &aId tho subj l il of "surn· told his story through an Inter- OfCIcials say that this is a local and lacmill himself will take Frldoy night there was no particular rea on for Frid y's ~peed. cl nt Importance that th Coneres preter at a Senate Internal Secur· service and to keep them from ()n. ov 'r the atomIc energy 0 ign­ cept thai the duol Ian roa w r pr tty clt'ar, may very well act thl year on it." Ity sube()rnmi~ hearing. campus drives II discriminatory. m nt. "It is not som thina that could Batori said he served I.n 80 Rus· Policy of the regents allows S.lIsbvry·, NIl.nation breutht be done In a week or two," h sian prison camps during his In- worthy organlullons to use Inter· Into the open • .., spilt in the added. carceration 81 a convicted enemy campus mails on • "cost" basis Cabinet over Macmlll.n·. decl. White House pr ecr tory of Communism whose death sen- once a year, .Ion te "'" M.6c ...... ,... ,. .. Jam's C. Ha,erty reported tht're • (ellc~, he said. was commuted to Regents explained the number of GreaIc.cypri... In .... rebelliev, wa "collsi~rable dl u sIon" setvlce at slave labor. charity campal,"s is il"owlng and colony. from ...ntlon on the ". about theae poirms : He said in some camps the ratio creating=roblem for starf and meN Sey"",,," 1,1." In .... 1. Whether the vlc...-.~ aJ· was SO per cent women and 70 per 'faculty rs. Iowa Cllians are G ge Me Z Dave Beck IncI.n Oce.n, ready has authority under the Con· cent men, lind that the women contactelif a ir homes ror dona. ear an At Mahe In th SeycheJlel. Ma· Budget for GSP . stlluUon 10 take Over. This :IOS were encouraged to bear as many (lons. Orten they ar ~ontacted Beck To Answer "for ctions" "Nothing To Say" Yet karlo aid he would reruse to en· ay TOM sunlttv ,. . n v r n tried. children . as possible with fellow twice and asked to ,Ive - once at ter any negotiations with the Brit· 00111 I.".. latt Wril.,' , 2. Whether Mr'f ch.... hould be WASHINGTON Io4'I-T amsters bo s Davc Beck, a Fifth Amendment political prisoners and guards. the Uni~ereity and once at home. Ish to etll U rebellion on Cyprus lowo', budi t "too proir I\'e" (or many .legislators, ~pecla1ly effl'Cted through a constftutional witness before Senate rackets probers, was su pend d from hi high The object, he said, was "the unUl he was allowed to return R publicans. said SUl', Economl l Robert JohntlOn , I)dmlnislratl"e om ndmenl or Il slmpl congr s­ AFL-CJO po ts Friday pending th outcome or charg s to be filed by hi * hope that population losses in the th r . I tantto Gov rnor Her ch I Lovel 5S. in a peeeb to county Democrats sonal law. war would be repaired." Jet Crash Kills fellow labor leaders. Although he Is Cr to I ave the at the Hotel JeeCer n Friday niehl. S. Whether the .ci.1on Cor an He said the practice was for the The AFL·CIO Executive Council Scych 11 . life archbishop WI I Johnson told his aud! nc at n DemocraUc fund raisin, dinn r thnt "acting pre Id nt" should be Il'ft Government 10 seize the InCants Two, Two Iniured unanlmou ly suspend dthe chubby barr d by B11t.ain from returning much of th r lit nce tQ Governor to the Cabinet or to a peelal com. and send them to institutions for Hoffa 62·year-old self·t>roclalmed nnan.. to the MedltelTBnean I land that is Lovele • tax change propo als mi ion or Cabinet members. con­ ultimate trainln, in Communism. TULSA, Oltla. til - A B·52 jet suo Pleads ciaJ tycoon as on AFL-CIO vice· hi hom . stems (rom th Republican pr dl· Boy Injured it lonal lead rs alld po ibly He said the practice was more per(ortress exploded in n\iht and president and on Executive CouncJl He called the Brili h Gov rn· lectlon towards "r~re Ive or poor others, common before 1950 but stili ex· crashed about 15 miles north of Not Guilty member. m nt intransicent and said peace man'S taxes" rather than high in· Hagerty told reporters that Mr . ists. The council, top commond or the cannot be r tlllrcd until lhe colonial come' or corpclfate taxcs. By Explosion Ei nhow r f Is "v ry trongly Speaking of both hunger and sex here Friday, killing at least two ond deeply" that aom thing should WASHINGTON 1.4'1 - James R. 15-mllllon·m mber federation, also government bolishe emergency .. Altout the enly ttll", most .. Explo lOll of • homemad practices in the camps. he said crewmen. be don . The Pr Id nt made no Horra, his usual bouncy manner ordered a broad investlgaUon of I'egulatlon a~ frees th thousands the R.publlc.n ",1.1 ...rs will "bomb" sent 14-year-old Jerry ]('el· "one almost becomes an animal." Two others parachuted to safety. alleged corruption in the Tearn· of Cyprio It aid are held on mention at Friday's confer .IC of Batorl said he testiCied in a trial sheriff's officer reported. They gone. stood belore a Fed rat judg sters Union organlzation. a probe do .. "..vl. t.x ... venue I... ley. 442 Grand Ave .• to Unlver.UY pOlitical charce . the .. t.x to ...... his own two major ilIn s In oC· In which thrce fellow prisoners ad· were hospitalized here. One was Friday and pleaded "not guilty, that could pur the ouster of Beck I"',... .. I.. Hospital with • severely Inj~ fice, Hagerty said. Gov. Sir Jehn Harding. r turn· 3 per cent:' Jolin"" ..Id. rll mitted having practiced cannibal- not seriously hurt; the other's con· your honor" to charge of bribery from the teamsters presidency. ing to Cyprus from London. said no and three badly cut fiflle Hagerty added that no deci ions Governor Lovel i re I LIlli on bis rillht hand at about 6 p.m. Ism. He said he ha,q wondered ditlon was "quesUonable," hospital he would take whatever measures ~ere reached or ought at Friday's and conspiracy. In Seattle. Beck told a reporter this, Johnson IBid. both bt!cause it why they suddenly c~aACd to be personnel said. need d to maintain order In Cy· Friday. conrerence. His attorDe". Edward Bennett hI' has "nothing to say" regardlng is a regre sive Hospital otrlcial said he was in ravenous and gave !lIm their Tulsa County sheriff's officers iT the aclion. pru In the wake of J\1akarlo ' reo , share of the thin soup ~r\'ed in said they fuund two bodies In the Williams. promptly ser\'ed notic Beck invoked the Fifth Amend· lase. tax and becall6e fair condtloa at 10 p.m, bord T..wwn mer· Jerry', brother. James. A2, of camp. r plane near ' Skiatook. a small town he Intends to raise "some very ment in rerusing to tell senators in Tear (as and clubs were used to 1~t Convoy Sails The trial provided the answer, itt northeastern Oldahomjl. The chants are com· the .me address, ..Id that J~rtY complex le,al qucstions" in de. • 1hearings Tuesday and Wednesday break up Greek Cypriot demonstra· plaining that they he said: "They had..abl1n an elder- plane left the Boeing aircraft plant tlons celebrating the archbishop's and 8 group of frlendl were pI"­ IntQ Suez Canal {ense of the Midwest boss o[ the about his admilled use of $300,000 are 10 ing custom· Iy Jewilh prisoner," then "cooked at Wichita: Kan .• early Friday On to $400,000 of tearnste.r·s funds. Hc freedom but thcre were no casual· Jng wlth a carbon dioxide cart· 'L.'.. ers to surrounding ridge which had been drUled at ,I PORT SAID. Egypt ~ - The him and ate him, and · what they an experimental flight with four Teamsters Union. has claimed to reporters he has re- II B or arrests. .•. ..' w;; ... couldn't eat they hid under the civilians aboard. all Boeing per· slates due to the one end and ftlled with black first convoy since Novcmber sailed Willlams gave no hint as to paid the money. but refused to say Hanllng's Government made no . --' ground." I sonnel. f2 tax. gun powder. He said the boys 8p.. into the Suez Canal Friday and I Ho(fa's defense to an indjctment so under oath. mention of the po sibility of endin, " ...f The "Use Tax," was stalled by a heavy sandstorm. accusing him of cOllspiring and Beck, staying at his home In the emergency regulations im· parenUy believed the po"der would bribing to get secrets of the Sen- Seattie. complained that he'd reo designed to pre- "flu" when lit, and had made The convoy that Jined up at Suez posed to combat the Cypriot vio­ vent this, Is inef· ate's rackets probers. ceived only two days' noUce of Fri- lence. \ several unsuccessful attempts to at the southern entrance was a JOHN~ fecUve except (or small one compared with those be· Iran Promises Amnesty HOrra's co~efendant, Hyman I. day's Council meeting. Cyprus is an important NATO light It before the explosion. autos, he added. Fischbach. Miami attorney. also George lIfeany. AFlrCIO presi· military base. The Greek Govern· James Kelley said that Jerry was fore the British·Fr.ncb attack. But the convoy marked a big entered a plea of innocent berore dent, said the Council bas summon· ment, supporting the Greek Cypri. Compromise will probably be ne· holding the cartTII:(e In his r1Iht step in getting the l03-mlle water· U.S. Dist. Judge Richmond B. ed Beck to a hearing here May 20 ot~ who make up lour·fifths of the cessary to get anythina done at all hand when it went ofC. A Iragrfttnt To Woman's Kidnapers Keech. to answer "for his actions in bring· island' 500,000 population, hailed to solve tax revenue problems. of the cartridge Iodled in Jel'l"S"s way back to normal, possibly by and so Governor Loveless is tudy· mid·April. _ The Judge set their trial for Ing the labor movement into disre­ Brltain's action as a "decisive nose. TEHRAN. Iran til - The Shah's Imperial Government Friday of· log proposals to exclude food from rered to lilt tbe bandit kidnapers o( Mrs. Anita Carroll go unpunished May' '1:1. but there were indica- pute and his failing to explain tep" toward a solution. But Tur· If they will return her unharmed. tions it might be delayed. The many charges against him with key, which fears for the future of the sales tax. Johnson said. C· ... , (d' lB' ) judge said the date was contino regard to misuse of union funds." 100,000 Turks on Cyprus, greeted The lax connict partly grew out This was coupled with a U.S. Embassy offer of ransom In any of. and hal centered on Governor annIe Ir on us gent on preliminary motions being Beck's suspension from his AFL· it icily. I amount of money for her safe return. Loveless' recommendations to low· Both desperate Inducements are being broadcast hour after hour disposed of by that time. CIO offices is eHective pending out- J er the sales tax, lubsUtuting alter· on the Iranian state radio. Williams said he already has come of the May 20 hearings. Franke Named nate tax revenues to make up the Clal·ms A rman's Note '1:1. iC The pretty 35-year-old Amerfan woman was captured last Sunday commitmenl.l for May and sug. Incidentally, Beck shows up at approximate $.6 million lOllS. John- -,." gested the first week of June. that hearing. he likely will have a by southeastern desert thugs after tlley killed ber husband and another son said. Iy ~ JANSSON American aid official and two [ranian. traveling with them. Keech told him he'd have to see "judicial atmosphere" - including Johnson sald many legisaltOl's .. "iss "'-R*" baDs~~r" Wrtt ...... the proml.- ef • ...... , .wu ...... police ..... Army the court'. assignment commi$. right of cross~xamiJUltion and pre. would not or c:ouId not 8ifee It was ... """DR' """,.. - hact saW the aWuctws weuI4 lie Ceurt-mar1fMtl ..... Met on sioner about that. sentation o( char,es - which he possible to lower the sales tax Last week .1ette' to ..... Connie; Iowa City University; Iowa the .,...... m"'*" MMf lei...... If the, ..... c...... , Hoffa. vice·president of tbe said was absent at his Senate com· without voting in IlJIOther tax. City. 10_." was deIf\oete6 to the oITIee or the Reeistrar. With only A massive police and Army .searcb ,for Mrs. CerroU In the deso­ leallllters, was arrested March 14. millee appearances. ''The Governor has Included sev~ the additional notatioll "(The Cal on the Greyhound bus.l" on the late mountains and de~rt has failed to produce- .allY trace of her or Fischbach was arrested in Florida. Meany told a DeWS conference he eral sound proposals to make wp .Ulce perMllDel Bet find proper SUI student. ordered Friday's extraordinary eavelope. out to the her-captors. , - . the $16 million revenue drop In Monday. Connie Picture P. 51, AI. LaMotte, Executive Council session to con· Bechan, ,s.. AuthoriUes belJeve she may JIe ~ in a cave Iomewbere ill the his recommendation:' Johnson claimed the 1eUer, rnm. A~ !lc. Jack J. Stein oC Philadelphia. barren mountalDl near ~ PIiItIs\ab bonier. . sider actioD against Beck "only 10 Weather said, listiDl them U: Penn .• after one 01 her IirUriIIMII told her of an article in The Dally A U.S. Embassy spokesman said. "If ,we have.oy fjrm offer. we Th. seconds" after Beck fint invoked 1. 1-.... Itt ,.,...... Iowan about the letter. "" are prepared 10 pay any amouat lor \he r~aae 01 Anita Carroll." the Fifth Amendment on Tuesday Officials in Washlni\On said they bad no information that the morning. tax for the higher brackets. At . ComUe met the ~ on her way to SUI for September bandits had yet demanded ransom. but if thtre were any need for the Beck received disapproval from present \be JU is lower for Iowa's reptraUon last fall. Coming to Iowa City from Maquoketa, sbe had 10 participate in supplyiq it, the money could be made Fair still another quarter In the labor high income groups than any of tile just changed busea at Davenport. wben be in~ himseJf available from the International 'Cooperation Administration which runs movement Friday. John English. 32 states that have income tax. "There were several ..-.as and three or four marines' on the the U.s. aid program in Iran. and general secretary-treasurer of the 2. R.. I_ ef the ear..., ... Net bus." Coanle ...id. She admitted aile didn't know the dilfereace be­ ..... All ...... GoIpIri. _tMaaI pol. ~. said D.. Teamsters. and a popular oldtimer Income Tax to Include out-of·state tweeD a martfte « an air force uniform. ''Then an Airman sat ...... eutt.w. 1M the NM lINt ...... C...... I .. Mild with the union', rank·and·me. re­ laIes. Iowa II the only one of U ..... next 10 me and offered me iome of his chocolate candy .. a...... A. WI ...... 31, MCI the ... I,...... buffed Beck's plan for a million· states with corporate taxes that stein was travel..., from PhiJadeJphla to San Fr~ to be '-'Ice NIcI Dadahah'l ...... a .,ec:\aIIy " 1dCIUttI ... ,Iril dollar union publicity campalp in does not include out-of·state sales tranlferred cmrseaa. He Is now In Korea. CoMJe said. Sbe _,---.I ...... , ..... Mill .. 'them t ...... on the cults ef .... Mostly fair with highs in the Beck'. behalf . losing about ts mUlJoa a year ~ lie wu about D. ..""'_ P...... Gulf ..... the GuN " Om-. SO's is the Iowa City forecast for Where Beck had sald the team· the state in taxes. although firms Wbat did ConDie's roonunate think about the letter' An authoritative source said the Sb8h', Government, whUe willing today. the Weather Bureau re­ sters organization has already bad WILLIAM I. FRANKE " New =~ enjoy atale-supported "She tbooIbt it WAI JlftttJ fUMJ" CoDIlie said ."She te ransom Mrs. Carroll. is fearfdl of the eftect this might have on other ported. oltayed the publicity campaigo, Veri! Friday w.. nomInafM by 3 T talk 10 blm, too." • lidded. When ~ reached 'Iowa Citygot~ outlaw tribe. ib lOuthem Iran. Other i\mericaJII III'e working In the Sbowel'l and thundenlorms are Eng1isb said 81 a member of the ...... "' ••• r .... _ the· ,...... " $1' mllI_...... called her roommate from 'the bus sta"- and let Stein tal" to ber road fundi. nus would not ..I. the -"-_ '"-' • U.S. ald program there. .., ...: . ..,. , . 'I ~pected In IIOUtheast Iowa by union'. Executi\'e Board. be never 1Ior-.w.,y " the N-.y. He feet IIDt road constructi ." ner ...... Government experts believe that bec:.~, IJM ~b want.loreip klnlJhi. The further 0I,I1l00k is had been conaulted. will ~ n.m. s. G-.. would' ~I" re'- Io._~~ ~ COlIJue dido t say what the aItrnau wrote ...... it was currency to bll1 arma ~ otlIer .. IUlavaUable ·1a Iran the,.may . cloudy Swlday ~ M'itb chancei-· of Beck . 8IIIIOIUICed. the caqMIip Jr,..... ~ w.. nem04 were ~' IAlCq aowua ' UIIR aiJbI!d, "AI..,.; Jar. . ., . . ---' - P.M. IOOD make • nuom propoeaJ. ." raiD ...... Ill" 'I' , Tburldll in Cbap.'" N.vy ltCNIery. fllDda in lMI~...:e road ' '- The l-pep ... baIn~t ~ ~ Jet. "['ve been too busy , with mid-tenns." CODIIie _ "Ihaap I've been tbiokInc about it... P.M. PAge 2-THE DAILY IOWAN-I_a City, I .... -Saturday, M.rch ., 1957 ---The Daily Iowan -- I ~ me t~e Bac~~ -:2Oth Century ,S,tyle r---""--.II..4~----_ ... The Daily Cowan is writ­ pointed by the pr68idenl of ten and edited by Itudent8 the university. The lowan'3 and is governed by a boord editorial poUcy, the1-ef01'e, is of five atudt1l1t trt/stees elect­ -not an expression of SUI ad­ ed by the student hody and ministration fX>licy or opin­ four faculty trustee, ap- ion in any parlic1dDr. By TOM SLATTERY We now choose representative This is not to sny the opposite.l. Dally IOWIB Sla(( \\rlt.. items for our "markcl basket," in that inflation is nothing to worry "The dollar is only worth 52 t Ike cents." order that we might compare their about. On the contrary, we mus A Good Job, Well Done That phrase is thrown about with prices in the base period with U,eir be constantly alert to prevent or No Fr•• The "'.... l1li1011 P ••, In three month, the people of America have taken into their both conviction and dark prophe. prices in a later year, say 1954. control innation, but def1ation is cies of impending disaster by (lCo· When we have arrived at the not the answer. homes, their factories and offices, their churches and their com­ pic completely unaware of its sig. price we pay for the "market bas· . d To munity activities more than 27,000 refugees from the communist nificance. It's almost in variably ket" items in 1054 we sec that it I An economIst has compare a AT S used as "prooC" that things arc in takrs ~1.91 to buy' what $1 would country suCfering from in[\ation to terror in Hungary. I LfI-P n bad way and somehow we mu l have bol~hl in L935-39. Hence, our IB man run dOll'n by an auto, You Thursda With few exceptions, tJ,ese people came here with nothing I, get back to a dollar that's worth I~ doUar is only "worth 52 don't restore him LO ileallh by run- the gull than the clothing they wore. Th y came unable to speak I • a dollar. Cents." nil1g the car backwards over him. ' berra a They don't stop tu wonder why Howcver. had we taken Lhe base Worlhy of mention, although not old corn English and with no advance notion of how or where they ,we shOuld be satisfied with a dollar in usc now. 1947-49. our; 1954. dollar necessary to a simple understand· The- w would talce up life again in a strange land. that's worth a dollar when we would \Xl "worth 85 cents," Sq we ing of why prices should not be de· might obtain a doll~ worth doUar see that our results vary with the prC);sed, is the ratio of domestic me-n to< Yet so fully and rapidly have they become a part of this the Pr and a half or even two dol/ars. base cho~n. and s~ arc only mean· prices to foreign prices. Large li:mtly nation that few of us are conscious of the truly amazing dimen­ The dol/ar a!ways contains a spe· ingful in rclation to that base. price changes in either direction p.m. lie sions and unusual a pccts of this tremendous resettlement ef­ cified number of sub·units, i.e. 100 U the. change in dollar vaiue is )vould menn a corre 'ponding shill mom(nl pennies. If it is found to be worth not th crucial point, what. 'is? in foreign trade. Falling prices fort. more or less, t1ll'n its value in There is no 15imple answer. bul we would make home products more on th(' 1 There is no need to a sign "credit" for the success of this terms of what it con buy must ' can try to examine lhe over·aU !ltlroCtive. Thus an allcmptto de. thl'n hl't vary. Iprobtem. flate prices would have to consider (IU:lrter,! venture. Many could have prevented it,.or seriously compli­ If we wish to determine how lhe We must first ask the important all possible ehange~, Prior t cated the task. None did, American immibrration laws were ilI­ dollar's purchasing power has de· quesUon : "Have incomes risen as In reg~rd to foreIgn trade, lower , m~t at C\ined, then we must compare the much as prices?" The answer is home prices ~outd !lIean 0 flow of· Comman suited to the unexpected n cd, but tllCr have been made to prices of items from previous years that fur lhe most part they have I~ old ~o America which would ex~rt folk with serve. wilh the priCes of similar items risen more than prices. Illthough mflahonarr pressures, upsetting now. not L'QualJy for everyone, Income our deflatIOnary program. . " nited S The two dozen religiou and other private agencies which tions . Say we select the fOllr year I) 'r· distortion always goes with a price . No. wheD people start complam· He PI have found the homes and the jobs and guided the refug es to iod 1935-39 for our "base period." level change, slow or fast, infla. mg about the .52-<:cnt dollar. ask comman( Any period would do, buL we select tionary or deflationary. lhem h.ow Lhey d like to ha~e the them were 1I0t equipped for so gargantuan an effort, but they this period because it was the orn· Criticism of the lowered purchas. lower mcome that goes WIth it. aro doinl have brought it off in a Jleartcning display of (.'()operative, cial base until 1953, ing value of th present dol/ar sug. That $lOO-a-weok , salary check nations voluntary endeavor. gests a desire to return lhe dol/ar would be only $52 If tbe dollar was world in to ils base period value. worUI a 1927 ~oUar, tal Atlall The employers who have provided the work, the covntles Wt":/t'r11 Those who advocate the "100· JUST ONE REGRET rt ronl'." private citizens who have opened their homes and their hearts Cyprus c(· nts·valuc" dollar probably envis· The only regrettable aSJ)Cct IIi rl' to these folk might have easily found reasons to evade the op­ ion a prict· reduction without the about Pl'esidenll£isenhower's DIII,lbuI.d by King F.atu,," Syndlco~ No Hopes for Settlement income reduction, transfer of Uarold Stassen and his sion. w portunity, but tl, y did not. corrc s ~nding hy Whit British Stay Firm otherWise there would be no adyan-: disarmamcnl activities into lhe James C The Pr sid nt's Committee for Hungarian Rcfugee Relief, tage to the ~hahge : But drashcal· State Department's jurisdiction is which under direction of Tracy Voorhees has helped to coordin­ By J. M. ROBERTS Iy lowe,r pnces ,Without lower Ln· .1that it didn·t happen a long lime Mr. Ei lBBB T,eaty Gives A .ellted '·,eu Nt"'. lualy. i comes liS ll'r)p<>sslble, ago, _ SIOUX CITY JOURNAL. Washin'lt ate the resettlcment, might hav given in to early fears that Thus to dH\le' down pricrs il; l~ ___...... ' -"""-_------The Pr Privileged Driv~r Conditions attached by both sides Egypt Suez Rights drive down incol11es, and oven if I \ cruise 10 thou 'ands of the refugees would be 1 ft stranded at Camp Kil· to a resul11ption of neglltialions lhat were d slrable. 110 way is I ...,~fJISI1F improving mer and might have called for a slow-uown of the whole pro­ A clause in the Anglo·Ameriean over lhe future of Cyprus have He e I ' dashed the very short·lived hopes known to do this without causing a ~M' 0 ICla Doth('red gram, argeement of 1954 says the Suez general depression, '1 " ~ DAIL Y , stubborn Obiectof Wrath engendered by Archbishop Makari· Canal is an integral part of Egypt. developed But it did not, and a mere ha(ldluJ remain at the reception os' release rrom the Seychelles Is· ~ . ~ The Treaty o( 1888, 50 often re­ lands, inClammal center awaiting settlement. By GEORGE DIXON and Silln('rs. lhe members and General ~.,~~ BULLETIN' tube in hi Kln( I·.alur.. yndln,le gUt. l ~ ar(' requi red 10 stand with ferred to in Ule current controversy The British have refused to lift This as Herbert Hoover qas noted, the third wave of emergency rules against the pro· The pIt is, WASIIlNGTON, D. C. - Wash· bowl'd h('a ct a nd take oath to look oY('r Suez, reportedly contains SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1957 Hungarian immigrants to orne to this country in 25 years. First Greece Cypriots I and Makarios re· 10 cruise ingtonialls arc constantly lX'ing after th e old clowns. whLlt is called and escape clause fu ses to negotiaLe as long as he is I stream I Notices UNIVERSITY CALENDAR to escape IIitler's t rcor, tl,en Stalin's, thousands from Hungary stirred to varying degrees of ind1g I lllwllYS join in saying "we which gives Egypt emergency pow· ex ilcd from yprus. evt'll though soak up t ers over the canal for se/f-dcfensc, have turned to America for Haven and a new life. nation by stories ot COJ:cign diplo· Will ," hul J fet'l like a hypocrite, his prison is now the r e~ t of the Gen

By GENE PLOWDEN Thi ..inter there ban~ bN'D 0() "Good. thAnk you. Going oul Schedule Film OKU PRESIDENT - Dr. Erling Itopic of his talk will be "Why SARASOTA. Fla. ~Many old ~ agons and cars to paint. no ~ain. I hope:''' The Mountaineers Tra\'eJ Ad- ~n. SUI Dental pro(essor. w Do We Do it:' - An Anah' of bands are waili.of. ta expectant to repair. DO can.... to mall: . Jttb 'Y. sure; bope so. anyway." installed as tile President of Orni- fpti\' for tudying ledicine and falbers. ~ at wintl'T quarters for lIorkingmen 'tit re f and far d Hke. " l I venture Film·Lect~ will bring cron Kappa Upsilon. 'ational Jotive for pecialization." "'here the Ringliag Bro • and Bar. bet een. So they w nt el where. I ' ·bat J mean!" _ like said Earl B. Brink: lo SUI April 7 to Honorary [)(>ntaJ i y at t num I: Bailey combined circus or they stayed around the 101. aft r the man bad left. '·That·s p£e nt two color films, "Tahiti meeting of that organiution at At· CHILD DEVELOP MEN T has been in cotUlllt'tneni since last! One of the laller is Mik.e /JOj'fe.-- sholl" bu iDe. l'OU 'l't' got to fAke and the 1 lands Und r the Wind" lantic City. .J.• this week. An· Scientists trom aU part of lbe July. "Walring -'lue" they call him- it He ne~er saw me last year-I other SUI pro(essor. Dr. Leland D. United tates wiU come to SUI What the oils' ill be who's pushing 65. WMlJ't here. rou'I't' got to pMIJi'Y at 2:30 p.m. and "Ireland in Blos- Anderson. rYe as reta.ry. / Cor the bi onial lDffling of 1M PrtnZ . ' ?o. . it up for 'i'm. som Time" at a p.m .• boLh in ac· treasurer. Society tor R arch in Child De- o~ ~ws,. but an bope !~ .... Ill Mike play. the c~llJope . ~ndJY5 "Going out~ ljke all the F1 t I \'l.lopment April 4~. 1000 Wce Its daddy and Inc.> as be rolls the wbeezing old groan 00"'" so." ' bride Auditorium. DELTA PHI ALPH~ _ There loog. Likewise. most or their! hope box" or "~81')' c.>\ ·iJ" • bund...... "paAdms:rti~n orwi~y being~y l~=. will be a meeting Thursday at 8 DAICHES lECTURE - David ~y'U ,~ thal~ng .... ~'! ~_ ~w ~ yartb or ~ 0thel'er the open la.~------. .... p.m. in Room 122. Schaeffer Kall. Daicbes. Brilisb author ot "The Jr." aL~. 15 ID?nuI ,or J... e~' aIr arenJJ to gIVe perfotmtJllCl'to which may be obtained at the Prof. F. L. Fehlin ..... ilI discuss Nov I and the jod.ern World" and York ope~ April 3. .They woo t atmo pbere-w:atch the Jep/lants ' Dry Cleaning Auditorium at 50 cents for childr n Herman Broch's boole, ''11le Death some 15 other boac in the tJeld of know until Its almost time for the .nd 60 "boom. boom" wben the,)· and /10 cents [or adults. of Virgil." Public is imited. literary criticism. will speak al show 10 leav~. luinber along; If tM ho prllllCl' -- SUI April 8. For if "new sta.rt" thls year. playa fast l4·altz• . Br~ has a foot of ,COlOred rno- I OPHTHALMOLOGY MEETING H15 public lecture. "Myth and t.bt circus done away with i . "Ev Ij'body stop to look and ,... 1I-eut., ...... tion picture film for e\ery mile he _ Some 80 to 100 pel'6ODS from M tapbor." will be ponsored by traditional "big top" tent. Instead list ~ when ) pJ y," 11k has traveled. In the last 20 years nine states are expected til attend the SUI HumanitiH Society In It will be n in indoor arena pAusln to nod and mil We .lh1rta.' he has paced off more than 450.000 a meeting of the Midwestern As· Shambaugh lecture room of the and outdoor ball parks and Cair Idddi • mjl sand vsited 104 countri s and sociation for R arch in Ophthal. Unjversity library at 8 p.rn. emun throughout the country. A w lIo(jr sed g nUeman stopped Va rsity Clea ners . I d · molog~' today and Sunday at th Patrons will a remodeled and hook lik '5 band affably. IS an . g~ups. . SUI College o( ledicine. TEXT BOOK PUBLISH£D - circus. o~ that is tuned to the "Haven't n you since last year AcntSl From the Cam,.. BeItevtng that hard ..... ork IS ~he " International Politics," a col- changi g times The ch n ge · ha ' -how'\'e you bcen~" h ked. de I secret of camera ucce . Brrnk NURSES CONFER EN C E I g textbooks by Prof. Vernon ellmlO:ted a Idt of job. II \~! "Fin." said Mike. "Fine. and F .... pick-up and I very :I:f~t ~y~a~~~f:r ~.:~~~ Problems or setting up n w school Van Dyke. I bein, published to- The few o~ timt'r who ha\'e ,bo:w~ar~~you~~iii.. _iiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_~~DI~a~1 ~4~lSl;:=~1~7~&:. ~w~a~ahi~"'~""~~ hundreds of film he selects the of practical nur ing were con id· day by Appleton-Century-Crof, been ~round sm.ce the show folded ~' shots h wants (or his film.lectures. ered at the lhlrd annual confer· inc" tre In& ...... hy.. leaders of at PlltsburCh J~ mldscason and I CDC or the Iowa Board of ur lat beha\' a they do with cam home. \'Irtually bankrupt. Several ye.ars ago Brink sailed Examiners and faculty of the four leader of olh rate. ay it h been "rough." Young r I through the I lands of the Pacific. practical nur school in lowi. -- workingm n from the how found filming Bora Bora. Ball Ra. mystic which closed Friday at the lo\\a SPEECH CONSULTANT - Wen- job around lown or nearby but Moorea. lhe Cook Islands and Ta· Center for Continuation Study. dell A. Johnson. Profe sor of older one tayed on. " just 'walt- hlU. George Pi rrot, director of the S ch Pathology nd ~sychoIOiY. In,." Detroit Inslltut of Arts, said of JOINT PARLEY - Nine sur r\'ed 8.. a con ultantl" the U.S. There has been a performance !be re ultant film. "It far sur· faculty member are attending Office of Education in W hington. each Sunday afternoon. with 12 10 passes any other South Seas color th fir L annual joint m ling of ~.C .. ~hursday • .M rch 28. He as· 14 acl., but ticket 11 rand o!l\- naUy 1."'all Photo liT I.,rr, G.I~lte'D footage thot I have ever seen," the Iowa Home Economics A· I. t.ed In prepa,.ng a report of a ers ay busin\! hasn't been THREE FRESHMEN women inspect P!'OIre" at Bur,e Hall con­ " Ireland In Blo om Time" pre- ocialion and the Iowa DI tetlc As- nationwld tU.dY or public school &ood as In other seasons. struction, North Clinton St., where they may live In the futvre. From sents lh gathering o( the O'Oon- socia lion beini held today and pecch corr cuon. I.ft. Jan Cooper, A1, West 0 .. Moines; Mary Jane Coffman, A1 . D.. ahue Clan. th Dublin Spring Show. unday In Fort Dodge. Plaines, III " and Kathy Galt, A1, Manhattan, III. the pageant of SI. PatrIck. shark What They're ----_. _------{Ishing scqu nc 5, lace and glass­ MEDICAL LECTURE - Dr. WiI· Play Festival Will making. castles Larg and small. Iiam B. Bean. prof or and head land and seascapes, nowers of oC int mal medicin Dt SUI i Do;ng Met's Tucker to Sing every varl ty and people in color. sch duled to peak berort' the aAMMA DEL Wlii dl ross (ul costum . Camorola Academy or I dicln rX - DRIVE-IN eral public will have an opportun· toni&ht in an Fran co. Th final plans for th prin, work hop F~!!~!!n!~!~~! ~~~ .l April and 7. upper wlll be at ed by Iowa community nd high ity to buy any undistributed tickets USE C d·f 5:30 p.m. and \ pers at 6 :30 p.m. school drama directors will be pr • Monday. • • ases re I 1,600 Preps Take The executh board will m t at nted at the 29th annua.l Iowa Tucker has record d many com· I 4 p.m. In th church ba ment. Ploy production F stl\'al. April 5- NOW OPEN ~Iete arias ~or C~lumbla Record.s I For Home Buyers Scholarship Tests 13 at SUI. m coJlaboration WIth the MetropolJ· Approximately 1.600 Iowa high FIRESIDE CLUB-Will m t at Th playwrights ar(l Alma lion· CONES SUNDAES MAt TS tan Opera Company. His solos may school I.'nlors took coli ge cholar- lh hom or Prof. Alma Ho\'ey. 1. "The Twlg's Inclinl'd." to be ROOT BEER ICY ORANGE also be heard on an LP r cord WASHINGTON IA'! - The Govern. hip t ts from three Iowa colleg \ hown by the Manche r Com. BARBECUEO BEEF H~8URGERS cnlled "Grcat 'renol' Aria ." ment Friday ea. d credil terms testing ervlces Ihis week NEWMAN CLUB-Will continll munlty Player.; Ruth B rn~t in. I SANDWICHES for pro pecUve home buyers with , Each colleie grades lh t(lst it I' mnrrllll! lI.'Ctur(l . rl(lS "Sanc. "The Out Id r," 0 aloo a Woo thc Dim oC spurring home construc· gives and end the re ults La Lhe lity of larriage" with a talk by man's Club. 10nt,y Pitn r, "Look W. '"vit You to Stop and S.. U. - SUI's Hig hI an ders tion. oth r two. ]n Lhat way. the stu· . L gr. 1aurlc J . Dingman of the to Lhe Blowing Ro ," Harlan IIIgh hool. lind MDry Gunn tt. Th. TrulCaw's The White Hou e announced d nt's choice of college. can be hanc ry office in Da\' nport. Cars (I "Leg nd Ih Hill ," Stuart Higb 30 Travel to Chicago these steps: honored if he is awardl'd on of will I 8\e Currl r Hall at 5: 15 p.m. or City Edit· 1. A drott of two ptrcent.. e th cholarship. St lion. will begin at 5:30 p.m. School I' Chamber, SUI's globe·trotting Scottish points In Lh r('(Juired down pay. The S I L('sling rvlcl.' gave Supper will (011 ow. All (our of th authors dir cl IHighlanders arc in Chicago to men I on homes purchas d with tests to 531 students from 14 South· lh ir plays and Mrs. Honsel and l!:nscmblc help perpetuate an old Scottish FHA·ln ured loons. This r turns ern Iowa high chool.. FRIENOS-WiU m t Sunday at 1rs. B rn I In aloha\' acUng 11 011. tradition-the sport of "curUng." the minimum down payment to 7:45 (or a discussion. "The Mean· ports in th Ir producUon . Thl Is th Lhlrd succ s I ve year that lot rI. Richard Tucker The Highlanders left Iowa City what is required by law. In, or f tlng," at the Nor\' 1 Tuck r hom. 1022 Hud on Ave. Bernstein ha written a play for Camso Quality Wednesday (Or Chicago. wh r 2. Immadi.te modification of City Record the ( stlval. while Mrs. Han I nnd they are performing at the First Federal Hom(l Lonn Bank Board fiilt'iit UNITED STUDENT FELLOW. Pitn r al a created aD ·acl ploys Tickets for the conccrt of Rich· U.S. Men's National Curling Cham· regulation. This change enobl 8 HURLEY. Ir and 1'01 ... Franrl •. 329 SHIP-Will begin Its r ,ul r pro. lor lh University Th Iltr I t ard Tucker. (amed lenor of the pionship held in Chicago Stadium. insured saving. nnd loan a ocia. s. Clinton St .•• boy. Friday .•1 Muc)' HOf1)II.I. gram 31 5:30 p.m. at the Congre- /iPring. Metropolitan Opera Company, are Sixty·two members performed lions to buy a participabng Int r· LINDEN. 1'01 • • • nd Mn. p . R . ConI. gaUonnl Church. Following a COSl . vent n c0f!1munily . available today [rom 1 p.m. lo 5 Wednesday evening. the opening esl in nny mortgag originated by ~\I:'I~ Ifrl. Thunday. al .Im), rAsrlER MADE rHE upper. fls Ma~1 Banderm rwe Will perform dunn a Ih r 'lival!l p.m. at the main desk of Iowa nighl of the lournam nl. and thlr· nnoth r In ur d a oclaUon, pro- MA~ESS . Mr. and M.... Maynard. (rom South AlriOD will peak on first t~o days. April 5-6 and 61 Memorial Union. Disiriblltilln of ty of the kilted lassies remained in vid d that at I a 1 50 per cent in. ~~~~I. boy. Thul"OdDl', .t Mer. "Racial Ten ion in South Africa school ea ",III har SUIII' 'lim I tick 1 will conlmuc Monday (rom Chicago to pedorm Thur day. Fri· t.ereSI Is relain d by lh origlnat- \ NOEL. Mr. and Mrt. Norton K .• l~a S. Today" April 8-13. The 1957 presentation HI·WAY , WEST WAYI 8 a.m. until concert time. day and this ev ning. ing institutlon. g~~'~ISt .• boy. Frtd.)' ••t M~n:y . lotal t7 mor than last year. _~~---~~~~----~~~-~~~"!!!~~~~~ Tuckcr's concert. sponsored by While in Chicago. the Highlandcrs A White House statement said DAVIS M 'WI~TII 4S If kl t CHRISTIAN SCIENCE STU· "---' the University Concert Course. will will make a television appearance the minimum down payment under TIIu..td,y~'!l Un~:r.lty· lloo~I I:.. ~n. DENT ORGANIATION-Wlll m t ••• t ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••• " •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. bfC thPl'cSucn.ted in 8the MBMin Ldou nge/ Ion WTTW.TV·hiTheYhwiJI. alSso pek' r- the FHtA pr[h0graC.m n$ogwOOOwil(1 hbe 5 JArl.~~~~. 1t!rLlunlv5:r.ll~o rkOll~~; ~ Tuesday al 6:30 p.m. in the Me­ o e Dlon a t p.m. on ay. orm at a ras on 8 ow In k0 Ie. per cen on Irs.L 0 ou MILER. Frank. n. 0 <'01&. ThurOCl.y. morial nion East Lobby CoDl r· I J Students and st.aIf must presenl 111.. and will return La Iowa City value. and 25 per c nt on Ihe W~d!E:t~~'y ~r P6ta::.,., TIl cnct' Room. lheir ID cards for tickets. The gen· Sunday. amount in exce s of $9.000. day. at' u~i':~roli ;:O';:;I'I~' u .... ~ WESLEY FOUNDATION-Grad· We'd like to explain the uate and single tud nts wUl meet Sunday at 5 p.m for a discu ion engineering career advantages: on "Marriage" lead by Rev. Rob· bert R. Sanks. upper will be at to YOU in becoming a WII '/joU . 6 p.m. Marrl d tudents will meet (or upper at 5 p.m. followed by a AGnDAS ACRlM CONGRZOADON I'RIIT CRlI.OB or CRauT. OUCIt ITED MISSrOll'llI IT. WINCISLAUI OHvao . discu slon on 'The Unfolding Ora· 602 E. W.lhlolloo 8 •• lOON'll IT CII aCII Ut I. D.YeD".rl •• 1ft It. OaU ...... I'" M ....U ... A ... ma of the Biblc" at 6:15 p.m. Rabbi Stanl.y Berm•• 1'''••••. E.war' W. H ...... r S •• b, lIob ..l . .:n •.•. Tile a u. No ..... B ...... p_, • ..... , ••••••••:at ...... , CONVAIR 'rlday S .... I••• , p.m. h •••, SorTlo.. 11 • .•• Blbl. SI •• y ••: tG a .... It ...... U .tO • ••• Sabbath worablp. 8alurdlr, • a.1'Il. Sermo,,: ·'Jt.e.allt," Woroblp .rvl... I.:." ..... D.U, 11_, , ..... f , ..... erM,n: "TrlalUti Ab... Ca'".r,'· AS81!MBLI or OOD I'RIIT INGLlSB LnTBlaAX Inlnlr.lI.o u. BlbleUmc. ~:1It p.lII. 432-8. OllnloD S" OaV.CR Ev&-n,elJltlc SermeD, A ... Ift. T&DnTT BPI CO I'AL cacaOll The Rev. n an Ml11er, Pa.t.r D"aq... ". Marbl II&. r.t I. C.II_.. .. SMORGAASBORD MISSILES .. Mo.oID' WoroblP. 11 . .... lteY. a.y Wlo.ate, , ....bl ••• ,..OVAB·. WITKIII •• William Me.r•• lI, S,nl.r War••• , 0b.I.'·. Amb ....a .... 6:'" J." 1II ...ln, W.H.I,. S: ••.•••a. U . ... tin B S .. Ada Ill.,. Alii ... C.U., W.rke. h ••,.I .. lIo S.rvlce. 1 . .... S..... ,. B•••• I •• :.., . .... ConeDU.n. lIaebri'. ".11 "." C ...... n, . .... L.lber Le•••• , , , ...... theakf•• '. 1:11 a.m. 1I1~N1TI CRUae...... U, ."1•••• :IS • .•. BETHANY BAPTIST CHUaCB nalT PaUIIYTlalAN O.u.c. .If CI ••k ." C."ee H •• " It . ..., EVERY SUNDAY B I'trlb A ...n .. Til..... VIr,U Bn ...... , M.rlllnr PnI, ••• \I . .... MAN 8tr.et .. It ...... , II. Leonard D. Goranlon, , ••,.r D •. P. a.".... P.II•• k. IIlal"., Moralar W,n.I,. 11:"a .... lnq.lnr. CI • .,. .. p ..... Mornln, Wo ... hlp, ':45 • .m . Tbe an. , ...... I . V.lwofilly s,.. 'u : tk.. P ..I B. III. r.~ •• 11 ...1_. PH)e •. I ,.m. t1 Lt"" NOON & SUPPER Sermon: "Seek'", But. Not Sa.e4 Pa, t., . . . C •• ltrbor,. lub, G:1It p ...... , Slud.nt .' .lIo",.blp Suppe'. 5:118 ... m . Cb ••ell 5 ....1, e:M ' .m. I.' 11 ...... loaOoUllZ.D CBtJ1l0B OW 'IIIC' Ol'F .nd Sha.n& T ••loln, UDI .....:lIt Mor-nlill Wenbt,. I:M • •m • ••• II • .• . CIIA1IT or LATTCa DAI '-'INTI p.m. errn41l: " A. Parabl • • , a ••tllee .ltt e.a.lereaee. .... 1 ZION LUTBBIlAH cllvae. tvenln, Oo.pel S •• vle•• 1:SO ,.m. laril•• HI CI." .• ,.m. I.". 1I .... rlal Val." I ...... III' III ...... lit.. JeHerson Hotel Sermon: "l\toUve Supreme" G ...... I. 1'.11 ....blp . 4 • •m. ru. h .. C. S.Uu•• ". MI... Ie. r .. tk•• A . O. P ••d.1, P ...., . Slu'.,,' SaPP". 5 ,.m. G ...... I W ...... , •• : ...... •• Ill •• W.nlll, ••••••••• 11:.... CONYAU.-~MONA in Southern Cali· ...... , ... . I;venlnl 11.110 ...bl, . • , ..... CI ...... ':40 • .•• At.ll 81". C ...... :1It .._ . .. BITBEL APalOAN MITBODIIT S.rm ...: "Slroo,11I t.r Ih. D.lly .era.~ 1'~" & •._ 4. fornia is the first fu lIy.integrated mis· CRVlleR TullO' til S. Go ... rno. 1&. I1IABON BVANGBLlOAL sile plant in the U.S. Here the Navy's Hilb S ....I W.F.• 8:SO , •• • VNlTI!D lIaI!TH.IN OBl1ac8 Mn. O. R. MeD'Dlll, P ..... 01 ...... 00. ?:IS p .... Tl1l1\lJ:l\ supersonic mi ile is de igned PERSONAL De ••Uoa a'. a It •• • KaI ••• W••• blp, 4 p .... T" •••. a. c. P,.lh,..,.. P_. I'D.ST METHODIST CHVaC. San,",. 8 ....1. " • .• • - and buUt. You, as a graduate engineer, ,.U..... OD~ D...... a... 11".1., 11' ....1". U .... can build an outstanding career In elec­ INTERVIEWS TRE CHVRCR 01' CR.IIT D •. L L . D... lnJ".' .I.tate, Serm.n: '~ Tbe Pr•• I,.. Sea " 1828 Klr"",o.d An. Ohroll loh •• I. ':80 ••• II .... Eve.I •• W.nbl" 1 :11t , ••• tronics and missiles systems at CO;-iY AlJI • I!Yen PI." ••tl, 1;""., ..... M.rDla, "'.rahl", 8:81 • . m .••tI II . .... (F•• tran.,.rillI.n •••U 1·"". l-41lS APRIL 2 Bible CIoM ••• » •. m. , Se.mon: "GOd I. LI". Th.t" or 1·4!U .• PO}"ONA. You will work with the most Motnlne Wonhlp. 10 ' . nl~ University of California modem electronic equipment known. U lhon: "'fh e GOlptl Received From I'RST UNJTlllAN 100nTY IT. IIlll'" cauae. Please conl~ct your Placement Officer j O.~ .. I.". A.... a •• 011 ..... lit. J.tt...... a' LI •• 811, You will work with the kind of menelly. Eveninr Worship Service. n p.m. Tile a ... AU..,. I . N . B ...... ~. tk... C. B . • ' •• 'erl, PutH tl for an appointment Sermon: "The Facti o f lhe Go, pel PloSe. a••• a, Mane., ••.•., 1:...... __ Radiation Laboratory Informed engineer·scientist groups that Chard. S .....I. 1.:t5 ..... 11:11 a._;, 11:31 ~ .. are pacing the adva~e into outer with t-epresentatives (rom CHUltCD OF JE8UII CHarft Serm.n: "Primm .. Trail. I. M ..... OF LATTEa-DAY IlAlNTI ReUr'en" '1'. 'AftlCK'S CIIUae8 8Iu~.D' Flr.. I~. CI.... 5:. , .... 1%4 •• O •• rt ... PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS .pace. And you will li ve where the 819 E. FalrcbU' ... 1I.,r. Pal.le" I. o ·a,III,.. r ..... CONVAIR POMONA • .teethod Me.Uo" 8 •••• • La" ...... :M . ':U. U .... climate and opportunities lor spacious IUluta, Scbeol. 10 a.m. nil .ITaODIST CIlAP&L .. HI ..h " .... I:I~ ...... country living are unsurp assed in , ' ..ram •• 1 ...ell.,. ':81 J ... 111 till" An. a.ly D'r"' $:U, 1...... ,:. , ... Monday, 'April 1 . . Th_ .... I ...u W. a ...... uIer • • • America...... ~...... oan.ca TBE sa."1 8.... 1 • • t .... II'. PAI1L'1 LtrrnUN CBl1ac. a.rll.0l'o"d. and O,ltat..NAZ"".'" 1&8. ..o.aln.. W..... I'. II •••• 1I1_.rt Iy." Tb. tk •. G. M. FI,ld. lIlI.I... , Serm.n: " ILeU,I •• aa. Eternal Ule" I." ..... ••• 011 .." .... Ele~nic Engl....,. • Mechanical ERst ...... 1 . eb.ol. t:'" ...... Sen Ie. 1I(ar, 00" ... tkol ••••• S:. n. Be... Ie.. C ..... 'le. , ..... lI.r.I •• Woroblp. 10:40 ...... 1I0.al.. W..... I' ...... 11 ..... Metallurgists • Physicists Brts•• Fellowship, 6 p, ... W ...hlp. T:1It , ••• V,.,.H, 1 . ... Y•• I~ aoa., ':10 p .... S.rman: "Tb. CII.II•• ,e .r lb. Chetnists and Ch ...lcal EnginHrl PH_I.. e" 11'. 1'IIOIIAI .oaa CBAPa. Till! CONG.EOATIONAL OBuaoB •• III 1I0Lea8 ... Math,.aticlans Cllnloo and ,.rr.r.o. 81 ..... ""ND' 1II1TDfO Til. tk• • A. A. 11...... 11 ...... Th. a ... J.hn O. Ora.!J ...... Ie. YWCA ..... I." ...... f1a\ II--, . :'" ., '. u!" "a.nllli WOHblp. 1':43 . .... • 1_•• 1 P. U.,... OIerk 1l... •••••. ..., I" ... Contad Wayne Deegan - Engineering Plac.ment ~ 11_ .I.d.nl ~1I ....bIJ. • .... W.nll••• 1 .:••. _~ I ••••' r •• 1•••••• _ ...... DI.oaul.a. 1:.5 p .... (F•• Tr..... rta- ., t •• ".,rel.U", . loday for .,olnhMnt · IV ANOI!LIOAL ... 81 CIIl1RC. lI.n ••11 !816.) I DaII1 ._, .:•• •••• 1 _" ,:..... · Coralville \ ·• Tb a.... Bru.. L. SIIoU., • lal•• lm·p,..l .. At UCRL, there are W1ique opportunities to work ·• • '.!I'a, Seboo.. 8:46 a.m. with some of America's outstanding leaders in nuclear • • ".raln, W.,.ltl,. 11 . .... Is Your Husband an • S.rmon: " T~. BI ...ln, and Ih. 01· research and to utilize the most expansive facilitiel AlYAIICO I£IIED call be earned 'IGFUSIIIIAL UYI.OIIIIEIiT CALtFO.'UA LtV/II. close to • It-Me" WIVES .. Engineer or Draftsman? - CONVAla POMON" is housed mountains. desert. seuhore. • F.C. !'ollth Fellowship SlJppe.r. 5 p .lII. in this field. Here, new ideas and techniques are wblle I full-time :&':;ee of • Club F.C. Youth Fellow.hip Ser"lce, • p.m. traditional and there is the opportwlity to do what CO/IIV AfII POMONA. •es IJId In the newest kind of alr- Modern homes with I1fimmIng • huln, Wo •• hlp. 1:SO , .... benefit. compare with the Clu~ S.rmon: " Looln, AU I. O.ln M.n" Would you like to live has never been done before. condHioned plant. Research • pools are within euy price hl&hest 10 priYlte Industry .nd Development facilities ~ raoge. Year-'round outdoer Union. Plan now to meet with UCRL's representatives. Q Forensic WRIT 01J1118TlAIf CBtJ1lCII anywhere ill the country. manned by top-level people. sports and recreation. '. In1 10"" A ••• in San Jose, California? They will give you fuD details on opportunities in • Senate and I Th...... A. C. "ofcl.hler I •. , Pad.. Ob ..11 8.bool ••: 15 your 8eld and discuss future openings the Labora­ • Capitol. I, '.m. ' ..ar San FrMClaco} .t • lK.ral., Wonblp, 9\15 ••• ":l1li ..... tory's Livermore and Berkeley sites in Northena • 12 s...... : "Wltb C~.I.I In • Mldnl.b~ • Forensd: Ca,tare" California's San Francisco Bay Area. • DI.. I,I.. IIt.denl 3,11.", . bl.. 5 ,.m. See our Ad In Clastlfled , • Senate • Cbl ah ••lId CYF. ::10 p.m . I • c.y CONVAIR GO Capitol. . . . tv".... UCIL .-Jects Indud., ~-; . • .'. POMONA , miT BA"~T cavao. • ~ CD X ••III CUnton • .d falrobUd 81L Food Machinery and Nuclear W...... Nllciew locbt ',.,111..... • '11 n ...... O. T...... fat ...... • POtoIONA, CALlroaNlA. ... club ,!, C •••oll leb ••I. ':10 ..... c.nt"..... n.r...uclHr 1M"" Particle Anll. __ • • II...... 1I' .....lp. I '41 . ... • each Speaker: ..... Bn .l Wllb •• Chemical Corporation; ~SpeM ...... c..,uten. CffIiaII AI~I~~, • • 'an.lllS A IIIJI'" " ,iniAL mtAIIfCS .c~.uno. ..,1Jat 1' ••1. r.uo •• Ip, .:1It p ... • • • • ...... --~~ UL!.!..!.!~..!.!...'...!..·.... ! .• !.!.-t..!...!..!.-!! ~..!...!!' ~!.! .!..~ •••••• ,. '.."-.!, ••••••••••••••••• .!!...u •••••• ~! '~~! _'. ~ ..'.! , .. P.,. 4-THE DAILY IOWAN-low. City, I•• -btv ... v , #lUrch,., "57

,

A big Brave on the firing line, Gene Conley of the Milwaukee . get a lot more use out of the tall right.hander this year than majors, is 27, 6-8 and 225 pounds. He won 8 and 10lt 9 last joy to the hearts of Haney and Milwaukee followers. Conley Braves, fires a fast one aeroll the plate during a warmup he did last season, when a lore arm kept Conley on the bench year with an earned·run averag3 of 3.13. Conley says the is a former collegiat. basketball player who played for 0 session in Florida. Milwaukee Manager Fted Haney hop.s to most of the time. Conley, just about the tallest man in the injured wing is healed this year. (I fact which should bring time with the Boston Cellies in the NBA. . • OFF , t'on~. Mo'r Takes Second, Third· In NCAA Mee Ifp rls PI THE omman( I nrc doln nations CUFF Quick Sixth world in tal AHa By Larry Dennis Indiana High School Mig W('~/t'rn I rol'l'. " J In One-Met er llls rt' I· , sion, w by Whil Let s Wake Up ID- - F- I Hire Negro As Cage CQach J3mes C Racial tolerance and all ils IVlng Ina Mr. Ei1 implications is undergoing a test Wa hinl{t1 in Lebanon, Ind., currently, and CHAP EL HILL, N.C. (A'I - Gary Tolerance I the thought cros e my mind - Morris of Iowa placed third Fri· Is I The Pr, cruis{' to w~en is racial t~lerance as such day rltght in thc finals of the SO· No Certificate imorovina ~oJng to ~ease bemg an ISStH', par· yard freestyle at the National CoI­ Big Issue In lIcularly In the sports world. I lIiate swimming championships. both red N stubborn The school board at Lebanon is Bob Keller of Amherst won in Of Birth ,For dl'vclopcd considering hiring a basketball ,ll mcet·equalling time of 22.1 see­ Lebanon Job innamma coach - not at all an unusual Ionds. Henry Dycr of Harvard was tube in hi ituation and one which ordinarily second. LEDANON, Ind., 1m - Racial Boxer Dupas The pic would not rate . more than an inch I The Iowa Cree styler also finished tolerance underwcnt a tc t Friday to crui or so of ~p~ce 10 the .news~a[IC r . second in thc 2oo.yard individual in lhls central Indiana county NEW ORLEANS iA'I - Atlornry stn'am F! But thIS I; somethmg dlffcrent. I medley, trailing Tim Jecko of Yale. scat town of 9,000 wilen the gen. Sam Monk Zelden Friday said be soak up I ~nder consld ratIon for ~he post Jecko's lime was 2:09.4. eral public learned that Lebanon had birth certificates proving four IS a Nt'gro, a fellow With dark some . hi~ skin. This situation strains Ule Jake Quick of Iowa placed Ixth chool Board is considering hir. full brothcrs and sisters of light. skect h ing a Negro baskelball coach. weight contender Ralph Dupes are Jl I~nty of ( equilibrium even of Lebanon, a in the low board ~iv!ng after being town which supposedly prides itself IourUl In t~e qualIfYing. Dick Kim­ Thl' city has less than 50 Negro white but had none for the boxer sell fi hin~ Mr. EL on Its tolerance. People just don.t ! b~1I of Mlchi~an won the event residents. himself. know what to think. WIth 401.65 pomts. Ca ncellation of the scheduled arril'e lit . I Lebanon, a predominanlly Carm· April 8 bout between Dupas and afternoon. R i diculolls! A :·· Yale's Tim Jccko and Rex Aub· lng community with a bucket fac· Paterson, N. J., welterweigbt town which is pos· rey staged a couple oC come·from commenc LOI y "nd a lew other small indus· Vi nce Martincz has been lhreal. Brlti.h P ses ('d of true tol- behind performances to win the lries. had a mixed reaction to the cned. crance would nol last two events on the program Macmill n llo~sib le hiring of Ray Crowe, The Louisiana State Athlclk give such a Uling and give Yale a slender lead OVtf such prob! orother of infield!.'r George Crowe, Commission is considering a w0- die Ea~t 81 a second thought. Michigan in the team race in the even though in 34th national collegiate champion· of the Cincinnati Redlegs. Ray Crowe mans' slatement that Dupas is Nt, of North Hay is ackow)cdged one of the N gro. Louisiana law forbids sports this day and age ships. , >~ l t oacll s'n sl ltd First euro Coach? th at might be ask- Aubrey. llnchoring thl' Yale free .r .. c c e l a a e no c t'1 events that include both Negro ~ ) ing too much. styl r lay t(>am to an excilinl'( lS a nursery for college basketball white contenders. The man under victory over Michigan State, had ,alent. His leams at the all-Negro Cle W- A hearing has been schedulcdby consideration. Ray to toke up a lot of distance on Crispus Attucks High School in In· Inton Ins the commission Tuesday ni ght II Crowe, is a coach DENNIS the final loo·yard leg to beat dianapolis have won 177 of 199 could be called oIf. who Ilt Crispus Atlucks High Schoo) MichIgan Stale. But he did it, games in the seven years hehas City Judge Rene A. Viosea will (an all-Negro Institution) in In- overtaking Michigan State's Frank oeen head coach. V liT' (' k hold a hearing Tuesday morning dJanapolis has won 177 of 199 Parrish, jllst 8 the youthful His Attucks Tigers won thc slate a ey rac on 1:\ request by promoter Heard gam~s in his seven years as head Jeeko had cut down Gary Morris ~hampions hip in 1955 and 1956, had Ragas for an injunction. Ragas coach ther . Hi teams won two of Iowa on the lost leg of the 200- 3 string of 45 straight victories 'asked that the commissioh be $top- Indi ana tate championsblps and individual medley previou Iy. ~oing into this season, and were HOW THEY FINtSHED ped from discussing 1I1e Dupal 45 straight contests before ending Those two victories, coming of· runnersup for the lIoosier title this 1. Clinton 71 case further and be prevented up as runners·up for the UUe this ler Michigan had swept three of the {ear. Ray con1ribu1ed Hallie Bry· 2. Davenport 46 from withdrawing its approval 01 year. six place in the low board div· Jnt to Indiana University's Big Ten 3. Iowa City 341/2 the fight. It seems he mi/Zht havc somo ing tinal, put the Elis out in front ~o·champion~ and 0 car Robertson 4. Cedar Rapids Roosevelt 28 Mrs. Lucrella Gravolet, 74·Ycz'· I qualifications for the job. If he with 45 points after nine of the 16 o the t:niversity of Cincinnati's s. Cedar Rapids McKinley 23 old re Ident oC Davant in Plaq iIC- were white, he undoubtedly would events in 1he three-day meet. Jreat freshman tcam. 6. Cedar Rapids Wilson 18 mines Parish Icounty ), made ~ be hired on the SI}Ot. Michigan, with no relay entry, had Lebanon, with only two Negro 7. Dubuque 8112 claim that Dupa.'i is a Negro . ~'t> When will people come to undcr- 134. A f' Wlrt'phnln ~'a milies in ils schools, has prided 8. Cedar Ra ids Franklin 4 Gl'avolet said Dupas was born Ltself on its tolerancc. A Negro p "Ralph Duplessis" in Plaque mlntl stand lhat it is not the color of I Jecko, who earlier had set 0 Pl.EASE LORD seems to be what Cal Fowler (left) and Wilbur Matthews (right) of Oliver High skin which makes a man? When meet record in winning the 200· School are saying as they anume a prayedul pose during a Pennsylvania high $cho~1 Cl aGs A western boy was pl'es'dcnt of a high school Parish, Oct. 15, 1935. will this naUon he rid of the long- yard butterfly stroke race, ac­ rEgional fin al. The two Oliver cagers apparently are prayin~ that Mike Matta of Sharon High drops ~Iass last year and a Negro girl j Clint?n · ~. Riverk~ngs captu r ~d Zelden, altorney for Dupas, saJd standing prejudice against the counted for a big 14 points. The the ball after he took a rebounll from Oliver's backboard in the second half of their contest, won by .vas queen of a school festival. three lOdlvldual wms, shared III the boxer had a baptismal certifi· colorcd man which currently hangs ,clay victory also was good for Sharon 49.38. Others .re John Fridley (S) and Carl Nelhhaft (24) of Sharon. There Dever has been a Negro I another, and. ~cored one first in cate that Dupas was born in NC'II like a cloud over our society? '1.4 - since the relays cou nt double coach in an Indiana high school team ~ol~petltlon .to. r~m~ to an Orleans. The certificate, issued of mixed races but Crowe's name easy Win In the MISSISSIPPI Valley by tho Roman Catholic St. Pelfr SomethinJ;( aki n to this arises in Lhe individual scores in NCAA :amc up autol;1alically when the Confe.rence indoor. traCk. meet at and st. Paul Church, did not n\eII. the New Orleans investigation to competition. Otherwise Yale did Lebanon School Board decided it Ule field house Fnday night. lion race. fnld out whether Ralph Dupas, not do too well. weltel'weit!ht boxer, is white or Three meet records were set Pitt, Sooner Wrestling Champs needed a new coach to go with a Iowa City fi nished third in the Zelden said he has I:)ccn u~ planned new gymnasium. meet with. 3'11,. points, far behind to find any cily or slate record of Negro. Wha'- di fference does it and another lied in eight final s. Lebanon had won th e slate Cli nto n's winning tota l of 71. Dav· .Dupas ' birth. make? The man undoubtedly bash addition to Jecko's 2:09.5 for three times but the cnport was second with 46. " I ' m white and don't know es1ablished himself as a compelent the 2oo·yard butterfly, Indiana's ~ha mpiollship ~ performer in the ring. Tbe color Bill Woolsey smashed the meet - .as1 was in I~18. II won on ly four Tom Hertzberg led Clinton by I have to prove it," the 2l·year-old of hi skin should ha ve no bear- bUl not the NCAA - standard for of 20 games In the 1956-57 season. selling a new meet record in the Dupas, sixth·ranked IighlwcJ&lit Gain In NCAA Prelimin'aries The school board's consideration pole vault, 12 ' H4". The old mark challenger, told reportcrs later. in$( on it. But. in the Sc,luth , i~ d !>\1~. the 22O-yard freestyle with a PITTSBURGH 1m - Three de· Boxing would have been robbe 2:0tS lime 'that actually bellered vorite Oklahoma on the right foot favorites advanced by falls. Jf Crowe came out Thursday of 12' 1',' was set by Schiebel of fending champions - Pitt's Ed .vllen Ule Lebanon Kiwanis Club Davcnport in 1934. of so In:! of its greatest champions he accepted world record, and Perry and Oklahoma's Dan ]lodge by pinning Richard Garretson of Mi ke Rodriguez of Michigan, the bad Negrocs been barred from Julian Dyason ot Oklahoma set Rutgers. Roesler scored a head took a scctet bailot, reported over· The only other record broken Id Keeps and Gene Roesler - breezed Big 'ren champion, pinned Bob .vhelmlng in favor of hiring came in the final event of lhe meet ~ompetilion . up a m~et and NCAA mark of through their opening matchl)S and arm body press at 7:30 over Malcolm of Mankato wilh a cradle Lead On 70 Perhaps this outburst is out of 1 :03 In winning the 100-yard breast· Miami's Dick Bruneman. Crowe. when Iowa City 'won the mile med- at 3:40, and Doug Blubaugh oJ! Friday there was talk or little ley 'relay in 3:45.9, bettering the place here in Iowa , where there is stroke - a new NCAA event this r"Tt~", "I\T , N. C. (Nl - ()of NO RESULTS ON HAWKS Perry squeaked Ray Haney on Oklahoma A.&M., the Big Sevcn else it;! Lebanon. Nobody wanted old mark of 3.47 .2, set by Daven­ no flagrant intolerance of the year. Bob Kelter of Amherst tied Maryland wilh a 4·0 decision· in titleholder, pinned Alan Gibbons upiter, Fla., profes· Ncgro (although if the same situa· the meet record of 22.1 seconds Results of bouts involving Uni· to b~ quote~ b~t there scemed to port in 1935. versity of Iowa wrestlers in the the I23-pound class. of Carleton at 8: 26. be !tttle obJectIOn to Crowe pcr· Individual winncrs for Clinton is lead cut to orre tion occurring in Lebanon took or the 5O-yard frestyle. The big action in an extra pre· Dave Johnso n of Pitt, the East­ second-round 70 Ffi. place In spme Iowa town. I wonder Although Woolsey's 220 time NCAA meet at Pittsburgh were on3I1y-o.nly to the possibilit~ . of we re Larry Judd, high hurdles; not available to The Daily Iowan liminary round to cut down the ern champ, also advanced with ::l a heavy mflux oC Negro famIlies Dean Piepcr second section of the Azalea 0ptII what would happen.) Fortunately, bettered the world and American heavy entry list focused bn the 5-2 decision over Arnold Brandt of gave hint a J- the Negro here is considered on mark of 2:03 .4 heljl by Jack War· at press time Friday night. from Indian~polis wanting Crowe 880 yard run'; Hertzberg; and Ken 157·pound bracket where both co· Wartburg. to coach their boys. Mcyer who tied for first in the an equal planc with the white man drop of Michigan. it probably never over 'par on tile - and there is no reason he should will be regarded as a record except F iday in the NCAA Wrestling "There has been reactions both higb jump. In tea m competition Championships at the pm Fic1d ways," said Dclu!! Akerman, see· Clinton won the mile relay. for a two undtt not be. for th,s meet. Fdr one thing, it sh one stroke I'd hate to think what might was set in a 25·yard pool instead House. retary of the School Board. "It's ahcJd bave happened to Iowa athletic of the international SO·meter Both Hodge, two·time 177·pound Outsider Wins Gran~ National loo early to tell wich way most mer, Latrobe, P'·, of Ule sentiment lies." National AmateIJC teams the last few years without course. wi~ner, ~ nd R~esler, th ~ heavy- AINTREE England (A'I _ sun~ ing ridden by Britain's champion Clarinda Rated Favorite the' Cal Jones', 't.he Carl 'Cains, Oie lO'Wa 's only bUfet entrant, diver wClghl king, pmned theIr oppo· ' . .. . . The secretary added that Crowe 67 was the daY~ Ted Wheelers and Deacon Jones'. Estel Mills, did not place in Sat· nents to give Oklahoma the team dew, a 20·l outsIder but the bIggest Jockey Fred Wmter, fo rged to the has applied for the job-along with In Prep Indoor Track Maybe sorooday the population urday's one-meter final. lead midway through lhe first and stoutest of 35 starters, made 1ront at th e second jump'- weath· 53 other coaches. of Indianapo!ll Clarinda's defending indoor Class of this country will begin to absorb Morris is entcred in today's 100· round with 14 points. Pitt was almost every jump a winning one ered a near·spill Ulree fences from Crowe admitted interest in the place at 140 , A track champions get the "nod" one of the basic tenets of our so- yard freestyle event. Quick and second wilh nine and Oklahoma IFrid ay in cap.t\lri'ng the Ulth home and then dro ve to an eight· post but said it depends on a Jot clety - that aU men are created Mills will compete in three·meter A.&M . was lhird with seven. Grand NaOonal Steeplechase. I . of things, "salary, what Uley ex­ from the exPerts again today when place at 14l '1, ~ual. diving. Hodge started tournam:!nt.(a- The strapping, ll-year-ola geld. length vIctory over Wyndburgh. pect, facili ties and so forth ." more than 1,000 of the s~ate ' s track Harrison of St. It will be a better place in which --- performers descend on the Uni­ of St. Andrews, , to live when they do. verlsty of Towa Fieldhouse. of Bismarck, J. • • • Preliminaries in the Class A and for sec;oDd p'" Class B competition will start at observed • Divots 12 noon with the linals set to begin by HERB KLONTZ, former Iowa Chicago Won't GO'F'lcede to Yanks at 6:30 p.m. Amateur champion and current member of the Iowa golf team, By JACK HAND isky that the club can do belte;. "In our pitching staff, the man I Lollar 1.293) will do the heavy Hatfield C.261 ) will be reserves. Thursday was blessed with that TAMPA, Fla. (JI - If the Chi· He refuses to concede tile pennant I expect 10 show the most im· catching work with BaUey 1.178 at Minnie Minoso (. 316) came back most singular of golCing events - eago White Sox impre5sed any'body to the Yankees. provement is Jack Harshman. He I Toronto ) as his chief assistant. strong last year after a mediocre Engineers a bole-in-one. last year it should have been their "We've got a good chance if should be a 2O-game 'winner, like ILes 1\10ss [.244 } will be the third 1955. At 33, he is the left field Klontz parked one in the cup new manager, Al Lopez, because Larry Doby has a good year and Billy Pierce." man. regular. Doby 1. 268 ) was handi· Draftsmen on the No. 3 hole .on the lower nine they beat his Cleveland Indians in we can get some imf,rovement . Th~ way Lopez line's up bis f':Iellie F~x. (.296) at seco nd al~d capped last spring by a hand in- o( tbe old Finkbine course. It was 150('22 games. (rom a couple of guys, ' said La- pltchmg staff. ~Ierce (20·9 ), Harsh· LUIS Aparl~~o 1.266), the "rookie I fection but finished with 24 home bis first ace. "Chicago has a lot more speed pez. man !lS·lJ I, DIck Donovan (12-10), of the year at shortstop, are set runs and 102 runs batted in . Flank- Checkers "I never thought I'd get one," than Cleveland. a better defense "The big surprises of our spring Jim Wilson {J3·14j, Bob Keegan in the infield. Third base probably ing Doby in right wll\ be either Herb said afterwards, "but there it and hit better for average," said training have been Jim Land{$, (5-7) and Gerry Staley 18-3 r will will go to Bubba Phillips 1.2731. Landis (,257 at Memphis ). or Jim Would you lik. to IIv. was. Just a hop, skip and plop - Lopez. "Cleveland'S pitching was Earl Batley, Jim Derrington, 0 r be starters. Howard, an ex-service· a converted outfielder who is a Rivera (. 255 ). Dave Philley (.247) In San Jose, California? dght in the cup. . better and they used to ha ve more 17-yea r·old bonus pitcher, and Ro~. man who won't Fount under lhe righthonded hitter. Altholl "h firRt handy switch hitter, wi11 be avail­ (near San Francisco) • "I always thought a hole·in-one. home run power. But I don't knower Howard, a pitcher just out of player limit. will stick if he keeps base !lull is a ballle. Walt Dropo able as will Ron Northey (,354), the would be a big thrill," Klontz said, !lOw with AI Rosen retired it ClImes service." up the good work. D rrington rO-H, ( 286) Is lhe likely survivor. Ron 36-year-o)d pinch hitter. S•• our Ad In ClassIfied "but It happened so fast I wa. down to Vic Wertz and Rocky Co- "Landi5 was hittini .ver 1.400 must s~ay as a bonus moo and may Jatkson 1.304 at Vancouver), With the exception of Landis, dumbfounded. Tb~e was no tbrUI lavito." earlier but he ,has dropped off 'a be more h,!lp than expected. N.arm Larjl.!.:!', 309 a~ St. Paul> a.nd Battey andijf.Wafd, thi, If! "retty 1ft·IlK!'· , . • .•.•••• - .•••.•.•. , • -Aftrr · fiYe ·strRi"ht · third·plaeo j 1t1111' and, Bailey, LoolCs ·lilin he · can, For relipf. Lopez ha~ Ellis l;I

\ - DOORS OPEN 1:15 P.M.­ , NOW "OVER THE BEST ACTRESS Of The YEAR WEEK·END" AWARD WlNMER for "Best Actor" ) The mo.t Imlzlng conspiracy the world YUL BRYNNER For ha. ever known, .. Ind love •• It never "KING AND I" ned to. man and woman beforel IJOWS - 1 :30 '3:~G h li:!!il-7 ;~.'H)::!O " LA T F EATURE 9:3n" Magnificent as Sister Angel. INGRID and • marine called Allison, , . • rooned on a war-torn BERGMAN Pacific Island I YUL PRICES-THIS AnRACTION Weekday Matinee, - 6Sc Nitll - All Day Sund.y - 7Sc BRYNNER Children - 25c HELEN HAYES

"BUM STI:£R" P .. .,. &-THE DAILY 'IOWAN-Iowa CIty, la.-Saturday, March 30, US7 In Spring ... A pies Cify Council Sefs UN,f~~~W,2ri~~Al I B d SET FOR MONDAY Fruit Fly ,Possibte KeV to Space Problem S ecla· . on Sa'. e The United Jewish Appeal • SUI will open Monday and ~ By MILES TURNBULL \ is not know, It would be expected I means less energy rem8lDlng {or in the and' eventual site P o~ or kowa CoUllcil wU\ sen ~,- tinue through April 6, T~ Hul. Dany lowaa st.tf Writer that they would be very similar." the proce ses o[ growth to pursue the organism. At slower spe4kls tlfe city Some tiny (ruit fly larvae, spin­ 63a042 wOrlh o( speoal assessment witt, A2, Newlon, Mass., co-cllq. What eC[eet the increased gravity a normal course. Thus, the fruit larvae 'grow [aster and larger than paving and sewage bonds at "p.m. man of the drive, said Friday. ning in an SOl laboratory centri­ of another planet would have on fly larvae's growth i slowed and under conditions of higher speed Monday. Ten persons will contact Je .... fuge at pressures up to 5,000 times succeeding generations of men is a eventually stunted. and increased pressure. The paving bonds amounting to students on campus in an efCGIt that of normal earth gravity, may matter of conjecture, but Wund r "Jt would be possible," Wunder I Similar experiments have been $14,491.38 and the sewage bonds to raise funds [or the campalp, provide some of the answers to the said that Darwin's Theory of a- said ... to increase tbe force field qonducted in England using rats totaling $11,172.04 wHl cover pav- Need for a special fund was Cet problems facing man when space tural Selection would point to a to the extent that the animal would as subjects. Rats subjected to only Ing and sewage improvements last November. Hurwitz said wI-. travel becomes a reality. smaller. sturdier individual better starve for lack of sufficient re- three times normal earth gravity completed in Iowa City during the the situation in the mJddle-e1lt, Und r the watchful eye of adapted to living under pressure. maining energy to secure food ." for a period of two or three years summer and faU of 1956_ the situation in the Middle·Eaat Charles C. Wunder, associate in the Gravity is a force field and the Wunder cited the whale as an ex- did not grow as large as normal The $14,491.38 sum represents are spent, , became crilica~. Department of Physiology, larvae force varies among the different ample of lbe handicap of great rats. part o( the cost of paving three "iiii;;;;;__ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_. subjected to increased gravitation­ pounds on earth would weigh about weight. The whale is so heavy Wunder uses fruit ny larvae blocks of Highland Ave. which $$ SAVE $$ al force have exhibited a slower planets of our solar system. For that it requires the buoyancy of in his experiments because of their has not been covered by assess­ growth rate and eventuaUy a example, a man weighing 200 water to help support its weight rapid rate of growth. This permits ments. $1.00 HAIRCUTS ' smaller size than those not sub­ 6 tons on the sur (ace of the Sun, and spare enough energy for other a frequent assessment of the ef­ The $11,112.04 figure represents jected to such pressures. cIO pounds on Mercury and about activity. lect of the experimental conditions. part of the cost of constructing WALTS Speaking on the "Gravitational 40 pounds on the Moon. Diversion of energy thus presents These larvae increase in size one· sanitary sewer . lines in the Plum Aspects o( Growth" at Friday's In proposing an explanation for a major survival prob em under hundredfold in a period of five or Grove addition, also not covered by Zoology Scminar. Wunder said the slower growth rate and small- conditions such as those which six days. assesllments. BARBER SHOP "The effects of increased gravity er size of the centrifuged larvae, might confront man on another Cost is also a facwr. Wunder Ttfe cost or pavtng' lind !lewage On the Corner Next .. must be considered if man is to Wunder Pointed out that when the planet, or under conditions of pointed out that buyini 20 or 30 projects are covered fully by as­ Tho "W,,"I" In Coralvilio live extend d period's of time un­ force oC gravity is increased, the Corce-producing acceleration. dogs with Ule same amount of sessments, but these levies are 3 Borbers ot your ..,.,Ice der gravitational conditions differ­ animal must expend more energy When the speed of the centriCuge. money spent on the smaller larvae paya~le.. over ~ period of time. Hours. lI.m .• tilt.7 p.m. IXcopt ent from those of earth:' merely to keep from collap ing and thus the pressure on the would mean quite a dif{erence in The paving and sewage bonds Wod"..ct.y till Wunder said, "Whil e the effects from its own weight. larvae, is varied in Wunder's e,,- the amount oC e"perimentation that to be sold Monday will be paid _n au SliturdllY till 5:31 p.m. 011 man under similar conditions More energy used in this manner perlments. the change is reflected could be done. in------. a lO-year period. Today'~ .' . SUI's Engle Says FOR LA'E INFORMATION ON BIG OPEN HOUSE IN THE BEAUTIFUL Poets Have Their Troubles AVAILABILITY OF TICKETS TOWNCREST ADDITION SUI's poet-teacher, Paul Engle, "that the Shakespearean poets were •• WlreJlhoto THIS PEACH IN AN APPLE ORCHARD is the pert and shapely Red­ believes that poetrY' writing is not so immersed in the world's SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1 P.M. to 9 P.M • more difficult today than in the news." FOR RICHARD TUCKER wood Empire Anociation theme girl, Roberta Brown, who i. calling lime of England's classical poets. attention to the Sebutopol Apple Blossom Time in Sebastopol, Calif. He was interviewed Friday after "More language is used today," 2600 Bradford Dr. presenting his ideas in panel dis· he said. Language was kept much Drivi .lIst on HlghWIlY 6 to M.mory LI...L.Io.l.n'41. riG.. ~'" cussion Thursday at Coo College's more pure in the Elizabethan era. MONDAY, APRIL 1, 1957 Gord.ns. Turn south lind follow signs. Fine Arts festival. Some words today have been de- Frosh Law Students "Someone writing poetry In the bauched - literature, for example. THE HOME THAT IS PLANNED lime of Shakespeare didn't know The o!.her day an insurance sales­ Apply Ticket Desk - Iowa Union last Lobby WITH YOU IN MIND what was going on In the rest or rnan told me he was going to send I, the world,'! Engle said. me 'the literature,' This is not what Telephone 8-0511 - Extension 2280 Begin Mock Trials There is much greater pressure the word means in the real sense." on today's writer because he is Engle made it clear he did not Concert will begin promptly at ':00 p.m, Birchwood Builders, Inc: By BILL McGRANE teams will try their "cases" before informed. nlere are many more think poetry writing today has no .·0845 or 4472 0.11, JOM'." St,," 'WrUer a "court" composed of one eastern distractions today," chance of survival. SUI freshmen law students will Iowa attorney and two SUI senior ~ngle, biographer Catherine "I'm not giving up. I have hope," begin mock trial competition al _I Drmker Bow~n, who spoke at sur he 8al<\. But he pointed out thai !.he 7:30 p.m. Monday in the SUI Law law students. Thursday mght, Norman Delio modern poetry will be much dif- Building. The 3-man "court" will select Joio, composer. and Daniel Long- fereht than the traditional. A realistic court setting, re­ the two ,outstanding freshmen stu- well, art collector, discussed "The Engle is embarking on a new I'l'mbli ng a state court of appeals, dents in each mock tria). Creative Arts in America," venture wllh Prof Phill.ip Bcz· 12,000 Readers!! bas been arranged for the 102 .. "There is going to be a restora- anson, SUI School o{ MUSIC. They pllrticipants. Wmners. will(. ..be chosen on the t'lon of art , not in traditional art are combining talents to write an (Based on-circulation figures of Oct. 1, 1956) The studenls are divid(>d into two baSIS of pro IClency III courtroom forms, but in the human and com- opera with Engle writing the groups: "appellants:' those ap­ procedure and oral presentation. I municable," Engle predicted. words and Bezanson composing pealing a mythical cas(> to the Research done on "case brieCs"l He pointed out that the changes music. It will be one of the few "court," and "appellees," lhosc also will be a judging faclor. in thinking from the provincial to American o~ras - and one of the contending that the appealed case . . national and international has few In Enghsh. was lried lairly in the "lower Mock cascs Will b(' held mghtly made the artist "re-define aU his Engle leaves the campus next court. .. at 7:30 p.m. Monday through Fri- media." week to make a speech in Minne- HERE'S WHERE• I THE For one mock trial at a time day, April 1-17. All sessions will "My point is," Engle explained, sota. the students on each side are divid­ be held in the Law Building. ed into 2-man teams. The opposing The two winners in each case argument will be considered for Couple Seeks particiupation in the junior law student arguments ne"t year. or CHICAGO "" - An immJgrant "is in seeing that the children have DAILY rOWAN GOES Top Scientists the 50 winers, 16 will ventually be couple seeking to' return to Russia proper care. Our information is chosen for the junior competition. t .. . '# , " ; ,. has asked the Soviel Embassy's that the parents cannot yet give Following the competition among help to regain custody of three sons that care." Will Begin' the 10 juniors, four outstandin~ stu­ placed under court supervl~l on . Every issue' ,ol;'fTlre Daily Iowan d nts are finally chosen to argue Edw¥rd J . Nerad, chief Cook Nerad said Solomalin reported cases at Supreme Court Day pro· County probation officer, said the May 11, 1956 that !.he Soviet govern­ ceedings during their senior year. children of George and Nabejda ment had made arrangements for is distributed as follows: Space Probe The cases to be argued by the Kozmln have been in foster homes the K'Ozmins to leave for Russia fresbman will parallel cases taken since 1953. BALTIMORE IA'I - About 5{) of June 10, 1956. Nerad said the Rus­ TO EACH ROOM IN EVERY DORMITORY \ from court files during recent Nerad told newsmen FrIday tbe sian oflicial demanded immediate \ the nation's top space scientists years. agreed Friday to combine their childr n w,re made wards o( the release of the children but the plea Currier • Hi"crest • Quadrar.ag'e Westlawn South Quad Common. Monday night's first case wiJI • • • talents On a project to explore Family Court when the parents was denied by JUQge Clayton. Co-op Dorms • Cottages space at unprecedented altitudes be concerned with a compulsory suffered mental breakdowns in Kozmin was described by Neralf with a reco vcrable research ve­ blood test taken from a person 1953. as embittered wiijl America. He charged with operating a motor hicl e. Mrs. Kozmin, 35, was released said the family now is on relief. 1,321 Room. , 3;320 Students Among the visiting scientists vehicle while into"icated. from aD institution in 1954. Kozmin, Another hearing Is scheduled be­ were Dr. Frank B. McDonald of The program of freshman com­ 54, received a conditional release ror Judge Clayton April S or 10, SUI; and Cmdr. R. O. Cochran, petition is under the direction of in 1955 . They have one other son, Nerad said. cosmic ray coordinator, University Prof. Alan Vestal of the sur Col­ an infant, who lives with them. TO EVERY COUPLE ' IN MARRIED STUDENT HOUSING of Minnesota. lege o[ Law. N rad said the KOl.mlns are Finlcbine • Stadium Park • Templin • River$ide • Cen'ra\ Park • The proposal, already announced seeki ng to return to Russia but Destitute Vet Leaps by the Martin Co. where it was are waiting for l/le court to rule Quonset Park • Westlawn • Parklawn • North Park conceived, was explained in detail them cO]Tlpctent parents so they Friday to distinguished leaders in 9 Enter Semi-Finals can take their children. He said 17 ,Floors 10 Death the fields of cosmic ray and nu­ Judge H. Clayton Jr., turned down 728 Aportm.nts 7,4 56 Adults clear emulsion research and rocket Of Speech Contes't their last appeal for custody in NEW YORK IN! - A destitute 6J­ specialists. December 1956. year-old World War I veteran They agreed to form a commit­ Nine students will continue Mon­ Following lhat hearing, Nerad tee, membership of which will be said, !.he Zozmins asked the Rus· plunged 17 stories to his death. TO EVERY 3 STUDENTS IN GREEK -LETTER · f:fOUSES day in the semi-finals of the 1957 Friday before hundreds of horri­ t • announced laLer, to work together Hancher Public Speaking Contest sian Embassy in Washington to 19 Fraternities • 13 Sororities on advancing the plan to the held this week at SUI, Prof. Orville take action. Both the parents and fied spectators. A patrolman "hardware" stage. A. Hitchcock, of the SUI Speech the three sons under court super­ pleaded with him in vain for 20 .. . .. Raymond T. Paterson, Martin Department said Friday. vision are aliens. The infant son minutes. . 32 House. , ,151 ,St"dtnk. advanced design engineer, and was born in this country and is "Nobody wants to help me," Dr. Gerhart Groetzinger of Mar­ Still in the contest after th semi­ automatically an American citizen. said the man, identified as Julio tin 's Research institute [or Ad­ finals held Friday afternoon' are: The Kozmlns came to this coun­ Centino. He related that he was vanced Study, Inc., gave these Robert E. Cahalan, A2, Mason try in 1950 as displaced persons. broke, couldn't pay his room rent FOR ' EVERY STUDENT-OCCUPIED ROQM liN' IOWA CITY .• pertinent details based on prelimi­ City; Charles D. Hartqui t, A3, Dcs Kozmin worked as a railroad me­ and couldn't get help from weI­ In every section of the city • On nearly every street nary design studies : Moines; Stanley E. Jones, A4, Keo­ {are authorities or the Veterans kuk; Kalhleen Kelly, AI , Newton; chanic for a time. He bow is unem­ The research vehicle, weighing ployed. Administr ation. about 153 pounds, would have an Phillip W. Lawson, A4, Elburn, He recounted his troubles at 01. ; Larry E. Mart, A3, Walcott; The three sons, Richard, 10; 2,958 Room. 3,849 Students over-all length of about 106 inches George, 8; and Paul, 7, live at length to Patrolman Harold Sie­ and a hcmispherical nose between Melvin L. Popofsky, A3, Oskaloo­ gel as he perched on a parajX't sa; Stephen P. Shadle, A3, Esther­ Central Baptist Children's Home in one and two feel in diameter. Ac­ suburban Lake Villa. atop the Veterans Administration tually, Patterson explained, the ville; and Elaine Wong, A2, Mason building at 252 7th Ave. in IIIan· TO EACH STUDENT COMMUTING FROM NEIGHBORING TOWNS City. Nerad said a representative of e"act aerodynamical configura­ . the Russian Embassy in Washing- hattan. TiHin • Oxford • North Liberty • Kalona • tion o( the afterbody has not been The (mai of the conl.e t are set ton , Fedor Solomalin, contended The patrolman sought to assure West Branch • Solon • and decided upon, although presumab­ fo[, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday I? the Sen- , the court has no jurisdiction over him that help could be obtained. Others • Coral and Forest View Trailer Camps ly Lhe vehicle would be cylinder­ ate ~hambcr of Old Capitol.. I Russian citizens and lias demanded Emergency police raced to thl' ical in shape rather than shperieal. . ':Vll'ners of lh~ contest Will par- release of the children. 16th noor to extend nets beneath It would be rocketed to an alti­ IClp~te May 3, In the Northern O~- " 0 hief interest" Nerad said the distraught man . Other officers 462 Addr..... ,462 Students tude of 2,050 miles - more than atoncal League Contest at the Um- ur c , , sought to ease up behind the para­ three times higber than man has versity of Minnesota in Minneapo- pet in order to grab him. ever before projected a missile - lis. • Suddenly as policemen crept by a multiple-stage rocket, com­ Other universities scheduled to Phi Eta Sigma nearer, the man puUed off his top­ TO ALL FACULTY MEMBERS AND DEPARTMENT OFFICES ponents of which now exist. take part in the NOL contest are coat and jacket, threw them at In every tollege • In every building Read by faculty and staH Patterson said the three-stage Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Siegel and shouted, "Leave me Vanguard rocket which Martin Is Northwestern, and Western Re- Pledges J5 alone!" building, would not be capable of serve. With that, he leaped, missing . . projecting a 153-pound research Fifteen freshmen with the high. the net stretched underneath, and vehicle this high. But- presumably est grade point averages In the plunged to his death. variations of the rockets to be A VA of(jcial said records class of the College of Liberal Arts I used in Vanguard could do the job. Home Constructio.n showed Centino served as a pri­ MISCELLANEOUS DISTRIBUTION I Of the total 153-pound weight of have been invited to join Phi Eta vate in !.he 374m Infantry during Non-student subscribers • FOrmer st"dents • 'StaH members the vehicle, about one-third of it, Down in Iowa City Sigma, national schOlastic honor· the last six months of 1918 but did • would return to earth In the (orm , , The valuation of building permits ary society for freshman men. not have enough time in service Conference visitors of an 8t-Inch-long vertical cylinder to qualify for VA bene£its. which would contain 6J6 nuclear Issued by City. Engineer Fred E. The following beeame eligible fOr The oCCicial said CenUno, parUy " emulsion pellicles, or film sheets, Gartzke during. the first quarter of Phi Eta Sigma by maintaining a paralyzed, Had no famlly. on which the bombardment o( cos­ 1957 show.& a decrease of nearly $400,000 from the corresponding 13.5 average o~ better Cor their first mic particles would be recorded. Attached to this cylinder would period in 1956. semester or (lrsl two semesters: be a Iii-inch long, 42-pound aIter­ DJlring the (Irst three months or Larry Fruehllng, BurUncton; ~ TIRES The Daily Iowan is Read by . body containing a parachute and 1957, Gartzke issued 43 permits Charles Day, Des Moines; Richard • • radio-beacon transmitter and an­ authorizing construction work Bobenhouse, Earlham; Louis CHECK OUR USED tenna needed to recover the cylin­ totaling $302,243. This compares Frank, Ft. Madison; Stephen Cur­ 9,742 ShHMnts • 872 FllCUlty • J,2 00 It'" der. with 61 permits issued during the tis, Holstein; William De~ock, Er­ TIRE BARGAINSI • The total time from launching first quarter of 1956 totaling $69'1,- nest Marsolais. and William Vox- uunu to landing would be approximately 870 worth of home construction man, all of Iowa City. The lie.. b", In t.wn ••• 45 minutes, including 36 minutes and (epair. Kenneth Gerwin. Marshalltown; Factory New Treada during which the vehicle would be March of 1957 showed a decrease EU Glatstein. Muscatine; Bruce above the earth's atmosphere in­ I A GRAND, TOTAL, of nearly '190,000 Crom March o[ Thorburn, Sigourney; Donald Bas- OF tercepting cosmic particles and 1956. Gartzke Issued 11 permits cbky, ,OlU\ard, Calif.; Everett H. magnetic fields of which man has this March valued at $52,483. Last IGordoil, ~ereU, Ml&I.: Dona1o only indirect and very meager Mardi, 21 permits were Issued with ~e~f rrmcel0t1?; Eric 12·()OO READE·RS! ,! kDowledje. a total valuatioa of f240,200, ' ~ i per"', . , -, 'j~;" I' ~ , aM ~j 1 ,\ ... J 1f • j ~t~ ) • ." I r. . : ) ' . .