On the Inside Weather I Cloub and eolder toda1 Hawks and Iriah - loth DisquWd with hia"h 41-45: low to· ... Paqe • nJ,b,- 2%-35.. M.aIIa1 JUlaoia ShoeD Ohio sta ... 14-1 eloudy with oc:euIonal .•. Paqe • now nurriea and colder. rorre.tal 'Prisoner Before Death· owan Bkh Saturday. 60; low• • . . Paqe 6 at 25. Est. 1868 - Aj) Leased Wire, Aj) Wirephoto. UP Leased Wire - Five Cents Iowa City, Iowa, Sunday, November 19, 1950 - Vol 85, No. 40 Hew Grand Jury E~rly I wa-Scores Convenes Monday To Hear Lons Case ·Not Enough; Irish An open murder charre against James Lons will be brought be­ fore the Johnson county grand jury when it convenes [or Its November term Monday. Move't ·14-14 Tie Lons, who Is out on $~,ooo By ftdBERT DUNCAN bond, was bound over to the jury Dally towan Sport. Editor on an open charle ot murder by Ground Attack Iowa's Hawkeyes stung Notre Dame with two quick touch· County Atty. Jack C. White. He in the first quarter Saturday and then had to fight for Is accmed of the fatal stabbing downs Oct. 12 of Andrew Dave1is, an em­ their Jives for a 14-14 tie b efore a capacity crowd of 52,863 1n ploye of Lons' Princess cafe. In Snowstorm Iowa stadium. Beu.ue of the opets eha,.e, The Iri h swarmed back with harp thnlsts both in the air tile Jur, will h.ve the opilon of deridlnr the derree of ...... er Led ~y Tanks And On the ground to equal mMters in the third period. From with wbleh Lona Is &. be ebarr· that time on, the Ha\~eye5 , ed, or of declarlnr that the evl· BULLETIN their offense numbed by !Ill ag- the Iowa offense wos on the de- denee dOClo't warrant 'aa1 TOKYO (SlJNDAY) (!PI­ I . J h j' 1 cline after the first Quarter. char,e. United State. 7th cUvltioll gressLVe ris me, seeme( con- .rlsh Drive Also before the grand jury is troo,. overran the North Ko. tent to hold f;lVored l oIre Notre· Dame ground 80 ynrds a charge ot assault lod,ed a,a1nst rean to",n of KaPUJl today to Dame to a tie. in 20 plays In the day's only Georre Baculis, Lons' brother, In drive within 20 mllCl of the march not seriously interrupted connection with the slabblni. Manchurian Iroatier. The game ended with Iowa in If Lons comes to trial before poSSe!sion of the ball on the Notre by fumbles, pass interceptions or penalties. Williams went over for February, he will appear before SEOUL (SUNDAY) (A')-Tank Dame 40 yard line when the Judge Har( Id D. Evans. Judre Hawks took an abnormally long the touchdown (rom the one toot led U.s. Infantry In northeast line. Again Meschievltz convert.ed. Gaffney closed out the September Korea attacked tcday in sub·zero huddle to run out the clock. term of the court Friday and Iowa S\JU"t8 Early That made It 14-14 and was the weather toward KOPBtlll, 21 miles scoring for the day. Evnns will open the November In Saturday's game it was Iowa tcrm Monday. CAP Wire,,,,., from the Manchurian frontier and Iowa clime near wlnnin, the expected to reach the rubbled city and not the opposition who took The term be(fnl with 15 crim· game with five minutes, two sec· by nllhtfall. the early Initiative. inal Usetl and 38 civil .ul" ,tUl Their Son-in-Law Massacred Them onds left in ·the fourth quarter. The 17th regiment oC the sev­ Notre Dame grew stronfer as untried. enth division had only two miles the ball game went alon,. tts Swartzendruber pushed Notre The grand jury will be Impan­ SLAI~ IN TllEIR HOME in Vineland, N.J., Friday nl,ht. Michael Dame's Bill Barrett into the end eled at 2 p.m. Monday, but be­ Ma.. oU anel bls wife Pearl were lbot to death by their lon-in·law to go before enterinl the alr­ ottack was totalled by the hard zone for an apparent safety and blasted town. New Intelll,ence re­ charging Iowans in the opening caus of the Thankselvlng holiday after he had askeel to tee bll tw. children, Son-ln-Iaw Eroetlt Ill· two points but the otfJcials ruled probably wlU not report its find­ 'e ...... lIew three more of his wile's reldivCl, and wounded ports said Koreao Reds were dug Quarter but the Irish mustered in on high ground just south ot enough strength to come back. that forward motion had been Ings until omeUme the lollowinr four othen In addition to his wife. stopped on the one foot line. week. Kapsan. The Irlah looked well on the On the next play, the Iowa line The Infantry phtn,ed folll' war to their fourth 10M this Ollmost pushed Landry into the mllea Saturday throu,h a 'talOn when the Hawks capItal. end zone but the fullback clawed lIftow·.torm and minor Red reo Ileel on two Intercepted passes his way to the one from where Hilliard Denies Veto Shot 5, S9}:,S .'/, Don't .lttanee to within two miles of withhi the Notre Dame 30-yard Williams kicked out of trouble. Papsan. The tempenture plum· II~ 40 l(Ior. twice. That was the last serIous threat meted 34 defte.. In 'OUl' hotU1l. made by either team. Of No-Cut PetHion Want to "Ente,' No Plea' Behind the seventh division lee Jowa ,0& 1t8 first scorlnr break on the second play 01 tbe VINELAND, N. J. (AP) - A mild-looking stocky little man and snowdrifts blocked the main ,ame. Bobby Williams' pass Circulation at Ouad · f h' 'f •. d l f UN supply route in northeastern * * * who $ Iaug h tered ftve 0 IS WI e s relatives and woun ec Oll! Korea Saturday night but traffic t1rtbbled off the flnrer tiPS of Individual Statistics The Game Ended the Same ... Robert B. HilUard, Quadrangle (Jhet OI$,oWSkl Illto the cllltch­ president, den led Saturday that other persons in a wild shooting spree Friday night was jailed 00 was moving a,aln today. Rushin, In, hand. of Bob La,e on the FIGHTING FOil. A LOO E FOOTBALL, Hawkeye t.ackle Hubert he blocked the circulation ot the murder charges Saturday. To the northeast the South IrUb 22. Five playS later Don l.wa Johnson (S7) and Notre Dame captaln Jerry Groom (50) Indicated "J ., . 't wrist se\:eral times with a razor. Korean capital division renewed All. Ne. studenL council's anti-no-cut pe­ h" T d Commack burst otf tackle from Dral>n ...... , ...... 5 early In the ,arne how Satllrclay's atruffle was to enel - with no tition in the Quadran,le. am t saymg not 111. on 'But his injuries were not serious. Its march up the coast toward the l2 urclll out for the first Iowa Bennett ...... 6 "1. decision. Johnson became eJl&1ble to receive a pus for one pia, want to enter no plea," muttt'red It was the second mass slaugh- Soviet Siberian border. ShelUng R"lchardt ...... 11 S. 10 Th fact that a booth for the IICOre. Wilson ...... a 3\ when an end shifted Into t.he backfield. The play tfkln't work at­ circulation ot the petition on Mon_ five.foot. ven Eme t lngenito leI' in south Jersey In little more by the U.S. crulaer SL Poul was On the play before, FUllback Fa.ke ...... 5 1 utday a8 It dill a,aht t Purdue wht'n John!!on leored the onl,. COInm.ck ...•...••... • ,., day haa been provided lor. com­ S -t-. when he k be- than a. .rear, On Sept. 6, J949, an- clearing the way. Bill ReichardF had picked up a Nto4i. D"",. touchdown of 1IIs oollerlate .career. refutes the charge thllt , atum.. , was ta en ottll't ex.GI, Howard Unruh, In the norlhwest, 100,000 Chi. cl'Wllal lirst down on the 12 after WIIII.mA .. ".... ". 4 22 --~----~~,~--,---- for n ~~. stalked River road in Camden nese lrlnd Korean Communists Petllbon .. " ...... 11 89 the clrctllatlon of th e petillon 1 t1\t~e ,running plays had od,vanced Landry •... . .•...... 15 84 being obstructed in the Quad. O\lJt lh Hand dealing death to 13 persons, some were reported diggini In. on a 60- \t)~ 'ball frpm tM 22 to the 15. M ..azLir .•.••••••• "" 1 I rangle," he said. Tllut Wa. 10 hours lifter the 25- of them unknown to him, In one mile front below the great hydro­ Cotter ...... 11 , Crowd Roars Paolon. . ... " .... ". 1 1. Asian Woman to Be Hilliard said any decision on year-old applIance salesman and ot the worst IItTeet slaughters in electric plants on the Yaillriver B.rr~tt ...... Il 15 Santa Claus Reichard~'s flood the door-to· door circulation of ex·G[ .talked In{o his wife's history, border between Korea and Man- conversion was Panl... nnd the Hawks led 7-0. The crowd the petition would have to be made hOU5e, 0 cun in each .band, and de- churla. J ••• Second Speaker for Coming to Town manded to see his children. These preoccupied Reds otfered ~k Its Clle from the play of the AI\. C.mp. VI •. by the Quad council, whIch has aroused Hawkeyes and roared ap­ Drahn ...... 16 4 S3 In Two Weeks called a special meeUni Monday "Be . wasn'~ aUowe4 lb." hiI only light resistance to patrols Falke ... , ...... 1 0 o wile uJd from a. bOl.ltal bed rllnging cight miles or more north proval when Austin Turner chok­ Notre nam, SUI Religion-in-Life A special communique received night to consider the question. WIlliam...... , .. 18 aturela" "He seemed crallY. He of Allied lines. t:d otl an rri ~ h counter-attack with 54 Ma Aye (Mrs. Hla Thurir), [rom the North Pole Saturday Saturday morning Hllllard was Mazur ...... S II told the dormitory omce would said: 'You don't ",apt to ~et ~ ------,.- a 'Pass Interception on the Iowa 49. Petllbon . . . . • ... I 0 o Asian vice-president of the World stated that "SANTA CLAUS IS WIUlams was rushed by towa's Pass Recelvln, Student Christian federation, will not interfere In any decision the .ee the kla. Here'. what 10U re COM[NG TO TOWN IN TWO ,0Lne if ,et'." charging ends on the play and Jo,.,. be the second in the series ot WEEKS." council mlllht make regarding the thtew the ball more in de!>"pl:ra­ VI •• speakers in SUI's year-long Reli­ petition. Then 11)ienito opened llre. West Germans ReIchardt ., ...... Santa will appear on the west ~:. :n gion·in-Life program. Friday, a Quadrangle resident When the shootin, spree stOp· tion that at the Intended receiver. Wtl!on ...... 11 21 side roof ot the Whetslone buUd­ Drahn ...... , I 4 When the program began two was told by President Hancher's Ped 20 minutes later, about 9:20 TUrner tOok oft down the left side N.tre Dame Ing about 11 o.m. Dec. 2, the com· weeks ago, it [eOltured the Rev. office that It had no- objection p.m., five members of his wife's Hnes to thc Irish 21 whcre he Ostrow. kl ..•.•...... 4 :w. munlque said. The local fire de· Vote Today was dumped from behind. Barrell ...... •...• .• 1 -8 Francis McPeek, industrial reh­ to the circulation, ruling that the family had been slai." and three PeUtbon .. , ...... •. 3 33 partment will be called to use j l.f Turner had a little more Mut8eheller ...... 1 tions secretary lor the council of petition circulation was not a "so­ o~hen wounded critically. Ingeni­ FRANKFURT, GERMANY OP) 8 aerial1adder in rescuing him from 23, speed. he would have gone ..tor a PunUne social aclion of the Congregational licitation." to's wife, TeretlB, from' whom - Five million voters in the U.S. churches. the top ot the building. Later Friday, the dormitory of. he was ..parated, was , wounded tone of Germany may answer touchdown. As it was, a pas~ inter­ Iowa No. The Religion·in-Life program is Santa Welcomed flee countered that It was. after less seriously. today the question whether the ception by No~re Dame ended this Drahn ...... 8 Then Mayor Preston Koser Noire D_. sponsoreo by the Student Chris' all, a "solicitation." RiU'" Mother·ln·Law West German people favor the IoWa challenle. I offiCially will welcome Santa to He had pursued his mother-in­ creation of a German armed force The drlvin, Hawk. couJdn't Williams ...... •.... 7 tian council. SUI regulations require the ap­ Ma Aye was president of the town. law to a closet where she was to help defend West Europe. be held the next time they rot proval of the president's office for Student Christian movement in Santa will supervise distribution a "solicitation." hidin" yanked open the door, and Voters in Hesse and Wuertt~m­ the ball tbe¥.h. * * * Burma lor three years. She helpeoi of candy sticks, and he'll be on riddled her with bullets. He had bera·Baden wm elect new state Again a pass In terception led to Game Statistics In li,ht of this, Hilliard said, the Burmetle Student Chrisllan hand to find out what the children "I was debatlni in my mind shot down her uncle who was pur­ parliaments after campaigns based the tcore. This time it, was, Joe N.D • .. ,.,. movement after World War II. wOlnt for Christmas. whether I had the authority to suin, him with a knite. He had < largely on the rearmament Issue. Paulsen who took Willial1lli' pass First downs ...... t n Rusbln& ...... •...•.. .. 133 221 One of two WSCF speakers in By a week from today 65 llght approve Its distribution." critically wounded a nine-year­ MRS. INGENITO The results also are expected to the Notre Dame 37 yard line P.,..ln, yarda,e '., .... , 53 on .. the United States, she is a gradu­ pCles in downtown Iowa City will No other Quad oUicer, be said, old nieee. answer these quesllons: and ran laterally across the field Pa.... attempted ...... 11 20 Passes completed ...... 4 ale of the UniversIty of Rangoon, have balsam roping and red metal had been consulted about the pe. lD(enlto ned after the lut 1. Is Commam.m ,alnfne or Pa5SeJ Intercepted ...... 1 3• to the 27. where she majored in English. loil wrapped around them, and titlon, or had held up ill circu­ k1UJn&' and beeame dae obJee~ 01 losinl strength among the Ger­ Punls ...... 8 1 2 Game Spectators mans? 'Arter five plays, Glenn Drahn PunUne .ve.... 'e ...... 34 40 Ma Aye will speak at a lunch­ rour main Intersections will be lation. the treatMt manhut Muth Jer· arched a tbrow to "Chug" Wilson Fumbl.. 10lt ...... 1 2 eon in the Firs~ Christian church, decorated with colored ligbts and ..y baa Men Ja IIIaIlJ' Jean. Z. How Itron, polltleallr ue the Yards penalized .' ...... 25 11 who made a senutlonal stu~b\ing 217 Iowa aven'e, Monday. at bells. State policemen armed with Die of Heart AHack dispossessed refuiee, from Com­ catch. The Iowa City halfback 12:30 p.m. Her topic will be "Situ· The work will be done by local submochlnecuns caught him in his munist Eastern Europe? They are Sex Education Hit Two spectators at the Iowa-No­ regarded by Allied observen as the rllhted himtell and ran into the *Lineups * * atlon in Southeast Asia as Seen chamber of commerce members car and he surrendered meekly, tre Dame football game Saturday end :toile for Iowa's second 'score, by a Christian." and helpers. sayin,: most fiercely na ionalistic element As Parents' Right "I'm the man you're looking died of heart attacks within a in western Germany. Re1chardt's eonvetalon was true I • .".. Ma Aye will hold an Informal Shoppln, Houn 45-minute period. for a 14-0 lead. Lett Ends - Lon,. Swartzendruber discussion period at the First The chamber of commerce an­ for." The election finds four major Left Tackle - John. ton. Woodhouse, WAS H I N G TON «PI - The Mrs. Anleline Gerwe, 48, Dav­ parties stru,gling for power alonl Another Scorin, Chanee Paulsen Presbyterian church, 26 E. Market be Itliclde Attempt nounced that l tores will open Catholic bishops of the United enport, was pronounced dead at with the refugees. The lour es­ Iowa had still another chance Left Guards - Turner. Perrin street, at 3:30 p.m. Then she will until 9 p.m. on these nl,hts: He had made a haU-hearted at­ Center - Towner States Saturday denounced RX tempt .t suicide, cutlin, his left 3:34 p.m. by University hospit­ tablished parties are the riCh tilt to score in the quarter. Don Rtlht Guards-Lae•• ClnBber,. Fairchild attend the YMCA and YWCA Wednesday, Dec. 6; Wednesday, education In the silhools as an In­ RII/ht Tackiel - Bradley. Spanje .. cabinet meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the als. Her body was taken immed­ Christian Democrats and Free ·Swartzendruber, who was almost Riehl End - Hoff. Cap"'". Ruck Dec. 13, Wednesday, Dec. 20; vasion of rights vested exclmively iately to the Halligan Funeral Democrats, the leftist Socialists II flfth man In the Notre Dame Quarterbac"," - Drahn. Sanpter Iowa Union. Thursday, Dec. 21 , and Friday, in fathers and mother•. Left. Halfback. - Commack, Benn;! ttt Parlay Cards Seized home, Davenport. and the Communists. back,tield, chased Williams back to Bristol Dec. 22. They also took issue with thoae Dr. E;ft.l E. Morgan, Sioux City, The new refuree party is the Notre Dame three yard line RI'hL Halfbacka - Faske. Wilson. Stores will close at 5 p.m. Sat· who would put all orphan care In 3 Dubuque Raids a 1920 graduate of the SUI medi­ I.beled. the DG-BHE. This Is a Gre.ne. Brandt Flanagan Tickets DUBUQUE (A")-Attomey ~n­ where the lrish quarterback in­ Fullback. - Relchlnll. JUley. Dennin, urday dec. 23 -and Saturday Dec. under iovemment alencies and cal colle,e, was pronounced dead merler of the Deutsche Gemeln­ tentionally ,rounded the ball. M.tre 0 .... 30. c41led on jhe states to provide eral Robert L. LusOn's anti­ on arrival at univetsity hospital. schalt (German Society), a small LeCL End. - Oslrowskl, Kapl. h. Kelly, The subsequent 15 yard penalty Available Monday "released t£me" religious Ill8truc­ pmblln, c:ampalll1 moved in a at 4:15 p.m. Dr. Morgan was at rilhtlst grouP. and the relu,ee Helwl, new direction Saturday when from the Hne' f scrimmage moved L4!Ct Tackle. - B. Flynn. Barda. h. Tickets lor the Winter party INDIAN WARS AGAIN' tions for children otherwise de­ the ,arne with bis wile. "block of expellees and war vlc- the ball bac to the two from Zambroskl SALT LAKE CITY «PI A re­ prived ot It. seven state agentl and four Dubu­ His body was taken to McGov­ tims." Left Guards - Burns. SfIlm.n Dec. 1 will iO on slile at 8 p.m. que offleers seized quantity of where Williodul kicked to Joe Centers - Groom. Hartlett Monday at tbe main desk of the newal of Indian ranee wars sim· In conclusion, they propo.ed a ern Funeral home, 506 E. CoUe,e Bristol. Tbe daiensive halfback re­ Rl'hl Gbard. - WaUner, AUHUndrl_"I, ilar to those of fifty years ago, this two-fola antldote for child footbaU parlay c:an)j. street, and will be tent to Sious Stroud. Epst.Jn Iowa Union. The tatder. struck umultane­ t~rped the ball to ·the 27. Rla hL Tackles - Murphy. Ton"el', Five hundred tickets will be appeared possible Saturday in an delinquency: "Make the chnd re­ City tod.y. Dr. Morlan, 57, was On the next play, Reichardt Wellhmlnn. DOnllY isolated section of southern Utah alize his time and talents belonl ously about noon at three Dutiuque born in Iowa City and was grlrld­ Picketing Continues RlChl End. - Mutsch.Uer, Muchl.Vitl available in the morning and 300 taverna and teized a quantity of fumbled with Notre Dame re­ Quarterbacko - William •• Mazur at 3 p.m. with a red man "lnvaslon" of San to God" and "provide him with uat.ed from City high school In Left HaJlbac"," - PeUtbon, Cay, Bush. adequate recreational facilities." parlay e.nts and llquor. covering to kill the drive. McKillip Ralph Flanagan's orchestra will Juan county sheep country. 1913. In Telephone Strike Notre Dame's first touchdown Rlrht HaUback. - lIureU. Cotter, • Paolone. Flood play for the semi-formal dance came with nearly six minut.!s left Fullback. - Landry. Cander from 8 to 12 p.m. In the main NEW YORK (M - Scattered in the second period. 1I ••t. '" ct ..rt.r. lounge of the Union. Sponsors ot picketin6 inarked the lenth day of No.re D.m...... , , • - 14 a nation-wide strIke by 33,000 FuUbaek John Landry Rt UP ...... H • • • - U the dance have requested that cor­ Moser Says Rent Controls Will Stay Vi.hins~ De~anCi. the toachdoWil with the 10liCeat Notre Dame ""orin,: Touchdownl. Pet· sa,es not be worn. . UN Admit China telephone worken Saturday liS ~~ni. WIIUamA. Converslona. Me""hl.,. JalUlt of 'the da" an expkl)llve Ticket prices are $f a couple. Mayor Preston Koser Satur- Ole eli7 attorney," It..... ~. "lilted, IUch an intention was Lederal mediator. continued el~ ., ,&tel dhh lnalde tbe Iowa Iowa scorln,: Touchdown•• Commack...... he ..I. 01. elteUeD re- stated neither on the ballot nor NEW YORK (.4') - Rus.ia' An- forts to end the dispute. Wilson. Converwlonl . lIdehardl 2. day issued a' proclamation that rllbt end down to tbe Hal'Mle1e rent controls will continue in Iowa &ul'llt wUl eovern (&lie Iuu). in the cow\ell's resolution. drei Y. Vlshlnsky declared satur- Mediators spent the alternc»n %t. The Iowa line braced l'-elf N.Y.-Bound China Reds City until June 30, 1951. N. f1U'ther &eden wiD be takea The counc1l .'met Monday pre- day there can be no lastin, world in joint or Rparate meetlnp 'l.jlth " the enDelL" sumably til take definite action on peace until the United Nations repreaentativel o( the CIO com­ for. the tuk aDd forced ~e Jr1tIh Big *Ten *Standings * Land 'in Moscow: Tass Koser's decision was bued on to . lISe six play' and all 'their LONDON (SUNDAY) (.4')-The the wue .inee councilmen thouJht admits the Chinese Communll" IYumicatiolll workers and the W L T Pet. City Atty. William H. BartIey'. Koser also laid he will lorward they had the authority to make and adopts a lon, list of other 'l:allable ~ to Icore. Communist Chinese dele,ation to Western Electric: company, neh Ohio state .. ~ ...... 5 1 .III Interpretation ot the results of the John petllbon finally scored on the United Nations Security coun­ a copy of the election relUJII, de· the tlnal declsion. RUIIlan proposals. .)'Stem ml\nufaclurllll .pbsl~ary IUlnoll ...... • 1 • .... public referendum Nov. 7, in clarin, that rent conwoll have But, • they .talled aotlon until Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala), which emplo,. the striking In­ /I' sweep '. end run from the four Michl.an • cil's talk on Formosa have arrived which Iowa Citlans voted 5,060 to yard line. · Vincent Mesclilevitz ...... 1 1 1 .., .. been extended in Iowa City, to their next meetln, Dec. 11. United States dele.ate, accused .tallers and plant workers. W.oolllin ...... • 2 .In in Moscow en route to New York, 2,650 to keep controls. eonverted to make the halftime the Moscow radio said early to • the national housi"l expediter in Uaau ...... 7 ...... , tile Russia of tryin, to bulldoze the The union Is seeklh, a 15-cent NorthwNtern .... 1 J • .... WID Continue Washington, D.C. . eeuehIMa ...... , ..,.._ uK and' ..1d the free world could b()urly Increase and wanll a one· lClOre 14-7. -[owa ...... 2 • .III day. 'The Irish lot a sustained march Iowa City voters, therefore, Crus ., DedIIea ...... Ia glle .. &lie.... not jlCCept such a "barterln, pf year Instead 01 a two-7ftr con- M!nneso&a ._ ...... 1 •I •1 A Tass dilpatch, rel.yed by the underway late In the third Quart­ .1" radio, said the deleptes are bead­ have been assured that rent re­ The crux of BarUey'. decllion 1Iate ~ ,.... Ute ,._ . peace." tract. ' Ind'ana ...... 1 3 .11\1 er lor the lame's fourth alld last ed by Wu Hslu·Chuan. Wu is ac­ strictions will continue, although was t)tat, althouJh the ,eouncll OIIly Aldermen . Frank lTyaur He .said Viahinslcy had now A spokesman for Ibe American Pardue ...... • • Telephone and Te1eerapb com­ \ouchdown. When it was ~eored, • • .... companied by his adviser, Chiao the city council bad declared the intended the pubUc re1uendum to Jt.. and eba.,la T • . SrhlUi :_ald made it c:lear that RUllia wculd however, the crowd sensed more -Bi, Ten schedule completed Kuan-Hua, and stalf. His group official decision rested with it­ be only an adviaory vote with the they wtluJct follow the ,withal of accept no proanun for world peace pany said traffic wu normal apin I _ leorln" lor Jthe tempo o( the Notre (Ties count one halt ,,,,,...... won, reached the Ru!sian capital Sat­ not with the voters. council reservin, the riCht to In~ the peaple. Alderman 0.". ' Mi,- which did not comply entirely Saturda, throulhout the COJll­ De.ne awac~ wu plckin, up whlle one ball game lOll) urday. "I aaked for an oploion .IrelD terpret the election results .. it hell wu .DOn-Committal . . with Soviet dema~s. pany's 14 lon, lint!! cent~fI, PAGE TWO _ Tit. DAILY IOWAN,SIJNqAY. NOVEMBD II, 185' Intervention Capital Moved to Wash~gton 150 Years Ago WASHINGTON (11") - Congress l ,~essmen I'rumbled at havla~ Ie ~Dai,iowan started dOing business in the " wH- .Iyve comfortable fallaloJaaIlle Of Red China demes! city" that was Washing- · Hlladelphla for wba' one c:aIJ­ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER- 19, 1950 ton 150 years ago next Wednes- ~ "this miserable .wa.. pla .... ~ day. Philadelph' (pop. 41,000) wit Test For U.S. The seat of the II-year-old ,011- othe largest Itbd wealthiest city in ernment had just been moved fram tho United States. Pittsburgh wu Intervention of Red China in Philadelphia. An upcoming young a log house settlement in " the Korea will be the real test of U.S. fellow named Napoleon Bonaparte far west." The vast Louisiana ter­ diplomacy. If the U.S. shows the was first consul of France, and rltdry was owned by France, and F.~.. II ...... u. ft...... diplomatic leader.hip needed by the United States was negotiat- California and Florida were Span­ PAILY 10".uI aDrroUAL aTAI" a number rne nation, the tense­ ing war-threatening maritime dis~ W\((:olonies. ~lIor ...... 1000b V. BroWD ness of the world situation will putes with him and the British. In his address President Adallll MIII"""U acU\Ol' ...... 0-" C. UrbaD be eased. On Nov. 22, 1800, senators and e9Qgratulated the people at the :-I.". EdItor ...... lle)tnold JIeotel Tuesday's election has indicated representatives from the 16 states assembling of tbeir congress at the Aul.tanl New_ EdItor •• .. Kart JIalIe7 that ' the people are not over­ in the union assembled to hear an permanent seat of governmedt. 'UIia1.att1 New. ~tor .,.,.. ft'Il BrlDk whelmingly impressed by the ad­ .;lt1 Editor ... • ...... Barba.. BlOJCOIft address by President John Adams. -He Jpraised the exploits of !be ill' CALL 1-2111 II ,...... , ....,. UIt. City Edl\Ol' ...... Bame,. SeIbert ministration's foreign policy. The It was the second session of the lant navy in mauling French pr!­ 8pOr\& Editor ...... Hollen Dun.... Jr, question is do the American peo­ aixth congress. Previous meetings va-teers but expressed hope for , .... D&U, ~••• , ,;...... ""let Ie ,I... •• .11 ,.""'a::. 'Iodet1 Ultor ...... Ann RlaMb ple believe that theIr so called of congress wcre held in New amity with aU European pbwers, ,. :hIef I'bo&oIrppb.. .• . • • • Tom Cowd.u ...... , .: ..... "hand out" foreign policy has York and Philadelphia. ) hot JY'Utical issue of the time DaU, ...... 'A ...... , ..I!ltealau::.&:a;_ 0 .. ' ...... " failed . /III. D.nt.. ••• IMrII Ie OAJLI' 10WAlt ADva.TIIINO aTAn' The still unflaJsbed capitOl wa! the imprisonment under the ...... ,. La. t. II ,...... __ 14An... r ..•.... , Robert bepew The Allied powers with their bulldiD~ wall bordered b)' for- sJdltion law of some editors who he. ~:.. t,a, I. Ij. .,.. 1&11, oa· AU't. Bu., Manuel' ,M8HhaU B. European backgrrund apparently ...... , ...... , ....., ••It . ... N.taon ests and swam",. Many COD- supported Jef1erson, ClaulJltd Manaaer .... Ed H~ Jr. have not been successful in seU­ N.tlon,.t Advertfs!n. M,.. Stan glntber. ztf " It...... ' ing Asia democracy, Our dollars au...... t~r ca~ la 10"" DAU.T 10WAH CIBOULATIOH ITAt't' have bought Chinese accusations CIt" .. _ Wef'1I17 Of " per 7UJ' 111 CJn:UlaUOD .... n •••r ...... Hick Win• .,. ot imperialistic intent rather than ed_: ala _11th., N ,N: Ib... _Ill.. ASI't. Clf. lIan... !' .", Cbarle, Dorrob cooperation. The most $tarIIiD~ develop­ ment on the interDaUonal scene Mines and Monsters - ID the last century has 1I0t been the UN nor Ihe emerfence of A Reprint from Use 8l Loui, 8tar-Tlmes the U.S.A. as a J'l'cat power, They're at It again, the debunkers, and this time it's Loch ~ess' but the "present Sta~U8 of Ihese SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 19. 195d VOL. XXVU, 1'l0. 41 fine old monster they're tryIng to explain. Plugue take 'em for mucky eountrles of Asia which border ______~ft~------~------~ mcddlers, say we. on .. the Pacific and Indian These particular detractors happen to be torpedo and pUlling Ocean•. " U N I V E· R 5 I T Y iC ALE N DAR ClCl)CrU at a Royal Navy school In Plymouth - Enillshmen, of course, Rt. Hon . Lord Pclhwick-Law­ l.!1·' CALEND~* .1\e11l!J what else? They say 320 dummy mines in slrings of eieht each were rence believes that Asia has l10t UNIVER lTV are scheduled In the President's of~fl1e, Old Capitol moored to the bottom of ~h Ness in 1918 as an experiment. Since yet made up its mind betw<1Cn then - so they say - the strings have tom looso at intervals and totalitarian Co m m u n ism alld SUlldllY, November 10 Literature," Senate chumber, OLd bobbed to the surface, and there's your monster. Western Democracy. "When men 8:00 p.m. - Iowa Mounta ineers, Oa)1lto\. WeU, il's not Ule flnt time meanderin, akepUcs hav. tried and ~omen arc secure in at least "Expioring the Southwest," Mac- I 1 Tuesday, November 21 d~vo"ID~ Ule 1D0na~r wiUa loric. Una"" Ute Ikeptics ba~e hid a moderately good standard of bridc Auditorium. 4130 p.m. - YMCA - YWCA life, they have no personal intel'­ be w.. beat leen Ulrou~b a base of pea' 1IID0ke, preferably peat Monday, November 20 Thanksgiving service, speakf!r: cst in disrupting theil' existing Ql'­ tilllOke wapped br &be poll&llts m Sco&e.h wlllsk)'. 7:30 p.m, - Newcomers club Fernando Luxamana. River room, dcr (f society and attempting to bridge, Iowa Union. Iowa Union. But Lhe true Scot has never been impressed by these snide sug­ substitulc another in its stead, , , 8:00 p.m. - Meeting of t.he Wednesday, November 22 gestions that the monster is only a 90 proof thing, No mo.t·e will the It follows that the prime duty of Amel'icall Association of Petl'oip- 12:20 p.m. - Beginning Tlianlu- true Scot be Imprel8ed by this fantastje story about dummy mines. everyone who wishes to prevent um Geologists, speaker: MI'. Lew·. ~villg R~cess. Why the mjnes weren't even laid until 1918, and everyone knows the Asia from becoming Communist is B, Weeks, "Sedimentary Basin ) I'" Sunda)', November 26 mo lIter's been seen - not close up, mind, but seen - for a hundred is to do everything pOssible to Dcvelopment," Geology Lecture \1;00 p,m. - Iowa Mountaineers, years and more. improve the lot of tile people." room, "Hunting on Polar Ice," Macbride No, tbe Loeh Ness mon ieI' Is real, and the mere fact that For lin intrnning article by n 8:00 p.m. - Humanities socicty, auaitorium. 110 one .... been able to deJcrlbe It accuratel" Is only proof of man who understands the Orien­ speaker: Prof. Judah GoldIn, ' Monday, November '27 how !DODltnua a mOb,ler It Is. 11 now I..d then one' mUlt take a ,Chinese Red Soldier lal mind read Pethwick-Low­ "Some Aspects of Tradition ane! ' 1'30 a.m, - R c sum p t i 0 t:I of rencc's "Asian Renaissance" in the Contemporary Intellectual III (:la ~es. wee dr&' 0' 8eoklh to help brln~ him clear to Ule sl,bt, wb)' the latest issuc of Contemponlry thl'l olllr prool 01 bow fine 8coleh Is for Ule vision. Review, (FOr Informallon re~ardint dates beyond this schedule, ror thcre shoUld be some things In the world that are past man's Well Disciplined, ee reservations In the office of-the President, Old Capitol.) D, JoJIJ) VMrll_ , r Part Company Pllt little explanations about floating mines and the like. And if Another expert on Asiatic ar­ rII 1915 "Selltimellfal Journey" was s)'1l0nYI.nous witb Lcs Ihe"e's to be a choice balween the monslel' and ((ying saucers, we'll Commands Respect Cah's, John K. Fairbanks with G ENE R A L' • (. ~ O.T ICE 5 takl' the sel'pent of Loch Ness every time. BrowlI and Doris Day fqr th' thrc ' of th,clh virtually bCC1t1\1C. th scvell years experience in China, - ! ) I )' f I Th 1 ~ By FRED IIAMrSON wriles "It is on the score 01 clo­ GENERAL NOTICES fihould bl! deJ)OlIlted with the elty edlto, ., song, t I1C b11m I nil d t Ie v ea 1St 0 t 1C year, ' .. C1 YO years n~o HONG KONG ('/p)-The Chinese mestic reform in China that we The Dally Iowan In tbe newsroom In East Hall. Notices must be Lcs scored Another hit \vlth the old Bertin tunc,' I ve'Cot ~Iy Love Communi. t soldier, now added to parted company with Chinese pub­ submitted by B p,m, the day precedlnt f;rst publleatfon: the, will To Keep ~le Wlltm," mAking it more pqp~l)ar than when it was the Kore n war pictuJ'e, is a good lic opinion for we (thinking of NOT be accepted by phone, and must be TYPED OR LEGIBLY UnS. Mal Combine MilitarY'l' written. " soldJ r-in some wnys great. ourselves first?) considered that WRITTEN and SIONED by a respenslble penon, Today the renowned Brown and rullda, ,ew 0' US wJU malle It BlIt he hasn't been tested much the evil of Russian imperialism MIXED RECREATIONAL AC- Friday, Nov. ~4, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; his band are synohymoUs with the to N_w York' to caieh him this against good mechanirod forces, wowd outweigh the benefit or the best in popular mU1ic, a!> these se.. On, hili '''aed all LP alb1ll/l and he hasn't been through the reforms promised by Chinese TIVITIES will be available at the Sa!~rday , Nov. 25 - 9 a.m. to 12 tJeldhouse each Tuesday and FrI- nolln; Sunday, Nov. 26 - clo~ed; Economic Aid to Britain who attended the "Spinster's e'atled "Piano Moods ~y Joe crucible ot a losing batUe. So no- Communism: and too many of th~ Chinese people did not agree with day from 1:30 to 9:30 p,m. i! rio ah~ Monday, Nov. 27, 8 a.m. to LONDON (t\P)-The end of heavy 3'ld regular farshall Spree" will undoubtedly tell you, BIISbkl • . " realllY he will J b~l k~ow~ , tow us." The November Atlantic home varsity games are schedui ' tb p.m. ~eserve books l1'\ay be , , , , . . . But for those who didn't atten~ It'll casy to understand his pop- p r orm Q a ver.1 y. ed. Tuesdays there wi'Il be bad- charged for the v8cation begInning aid payments to "rllihn Al1pears to be III sight-nnd the Bntlsh take the dance, Les on wax will havc uJllrlt~""Or he mol-I} Ulan. oapa~. '1/ 4ll Aroerlean nUl. . iUry .. attache Monthly carries Fairbanks' arti­ I cle entitled "Ohina," minton, tencing, handball, gym- at JO a.m. Wednesdlly, Nov. ' 22. 0"1 ,, cold comfort irolll this result of their progress townrd pros· to do. ". 'httndl~ ~V'ety sf)rle tr9ln 80~d -saw the Chinese 'Commurfists t~ke nastics, swimming, table tenni.! 1'J1~se books will be due 9 a.m. crity Les, playing it cool, never Bold rhythm 'to , j~zi .abstHcljons, lTIak- ~anklng calls the R~ soldier, Why have the Western Democ­ racies lost China's favOI'? One an­ and tennis. Friday's program is Monday, Nov. 27 . One copy ot p, , . . out completely to bop; \'~ther he Irlg \hl!m all" SOlln'd ne\v .and un- rough" tough and nasty.' the same with the addition ot each reserve book will be held Dollars WIll cUIUmuc to nm , however, III a IitrC3111 regulated adapted some of the IMre ac- hatltJlc,Ycq .. Whl1~ , his irrproviSlt- A French expert was more cau- swer given in the November For­ tune is that C mmunism hilS of­ basketball and volleyball. -:tori use in the' reading room dur­ 10 the ups and dowll of British needs. Help likely will contiJl~e c~ptable tricks to hill satisfying, tl011$ 8ubm¢"e th.e m~lody at tlous: he Js good, .but hc has his ing ~ the vacation. Departmental 11. tered land reform. Quoting from , •, also to BritaIn RIO the ~~~t ot rhythmic style. This kept Ute band t mes"tbe pa~tC!rn' he dcwises arc weaknesses, _ this article, "An lilly in Asia: land RECREATIONAL SWIMMING brary hours will be posted at those t Ell '11 th b lid' made towa~d recovery that she up to date and acceptable to the lascloatinJ 'JJs\enin, In them- I have heard many people in relorm", we read "We need not Cor all women students at the li"~ries, we ern ro~() I • t IIIg now Is havin~ the American more advanced music fans, ~ne selves. (tpd China say, "the best thing usc our influence to confirm ijle pool in the women's gym ort Mon· of t efenaes agaUlS~ COlilmUnlsm. crutch slowly taken a'Vay? the other hand, not totally rl!- Th~ tunes he l1as cholen arc about Chinese Communi:im Is H9 specific redistribution of Korean day, Wednesday, Thursday and UNIVERSITY WOMBN'S ASSO· There are i indications that Production is nearly 50 perc~nt ;",.t1n~ the melody .served to varied as tJ1S IItyles,' ranging from army-the army i~ fine, the rest land carried out by the Commu­ Friday from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. and CIATJON announces that applica­ American aid tOI' ccbnbmJc re- aboVe 19411. It has increased about keep from alienating tho$e who "Ha)lell)jah" to GCl'lhwin's sentl- of It is awfu!." nist invaders, still less need we Saturday mornings from 10:30 to tions for the 1951 University cal- covcry and for mlHtlt~ preparld- 10 percent this year-an increase SUli wa01.ed to know to which mental' I've Got A, Cruch on ~ou," The Chinese Red soldier ~ot sanction the crude and brutal 11;30. Clinic 01'1 Saturday morn- Ihl'IDlr are available in the office ness-now dispensed frOm twc) tar above what was expected, song they wcre llstening apd from a,Jazz versloh o!."'l'he:t Say I. ..lIod press durin&' his con­ methods by which the job was ings from 9:30 to 10:30 w1ll be J~tudent affairs, Applications seperate 'poekets- SOOn may be Most 01 It Is due to increased dancing. ,It's W~~e,rfUI" ~o.- a flashy in- ~uest \It Cbina In 19.9, Maybe done, But we must not seem t( for those who need special help mail be made for both the art and put in a slil,le ppt. output per man, The lirst Of. Co:J lumbla s ballQ~ ter"retatiop of . "The La4y ~s a · too ..ood a press, The coUaPll- say to Asia: the Communists arc and practice to meet 8 swimming ,;et~e work. They nre due Nov. 29, , .~ s.- to be recorded III the "Dance Date' '.Tr' a' m" .. ' .' . . The Atlantic pact d~f~l1ao ,al- Expor", to the United .... tes and sel'ies Brown's album immedJ8,te- ... Rlft.'IY a.. m, Natlonl.lls&5 did not oppose for land reform, therefore the U.S. requirement. l\'VDlTJONSFoR CONCERT hance, tor orle thin" JS uSlhg Cahada - the big dollar-earninll) 1 ' d' to "'_ t s Jl I ~a _k hlpl very deteJ'nllnedly. is against it." E ,.... h 11 lid rio IZ8 mlllrkets-bave nearly doubled in y cape \0 a ""S - e er ))OS - A frl\1n~lv st~r who hBli receot- HUMANITIES SOCIETY will BAND and varsity band may be .ul'opeths O;;~Ca I a 0 .an th - volume and have risen 50 percent tion and now most 01 tbe ~ongll Iy ' spen~ ~ m~r~ time 'n the hoad- 'l'he Chinese Red soldier con- present a lecture by Prot Judah made by appointment at the band tlon-mie, t- Of d8ssCSS .. de have been issued ' sinllly. Gcrsh· lines thanl'in ,the' l'CC!ordittg 8t~"lo tributes two new qualities to the econo e Impac 0 e fellse .. n in dollar value since the pound was In' "'S W de f I" P rtc ' l 'i ,. t 'I' Asiatic military character: Goldin of SUI's school of religion, office, ror m 15, Music Studio hell) it dklde how to sharc costs deValuated 14 months ago. ;: s on .. r u, 0 ,:S, is Framt Sinatra, his hils been Financial Problems Monday, Nov, 20, at 8 p.m. In the builtiing, beginning Wednesday, ami help. SUlI A Dell It DEaks~ },OC bLoV~ , thandSk ~,erneJl partially, rl!n)Qdlcd. by.. a ' nl!l¥ • a1- First, he is II spIdleI' with some lIenate chamber of Old Capitol. His Nov, 15, Instniments needed in­ . ' cuesa m III y , CA- bum that t"rned up.thts week call- polith;al indoctrination: he knows topIc will be "Some Aspects of ,elude flutes, oboe, bassoon, clarl~ . ~ he lSli~perate eCOrlomllC IItnd mthll- The country still has a dell cit cellentI~ done, are the best of this cd "Sinll 3I)d Dance Wltb ,rank wllat he's li,ghting for, or he thinks Face New Governor Tradition and the Contemporary net,r saxophone and bass" ltaty a aneB are mov nJ' Ole er between what it buys and sells group 01 Les Brown recQrds t~at Slnatn", The crcbc:wa is dlrected he docs. He feels he hilS a stake to,,,ard a clOIC iQ1lt or,amution In dollar markets-but salcs of will be favorites in anybody's cot- b G S' d' tb l~ in the game. , Intellectual in Literature." " ~IRESIDE CLUB, Unitarian Ulat can IUHd the old country hil~ priced products like woo), lectlon for some time. I • y, eor.e I;UVO an e t' um Second, he' is the only Asiatic Of North Dakota 0\' to the rouah ,pots, as It BtruII\es rub.... r and Un from the rest of So mucb for oJd ravoHtcs, The 18 an answer to my ree4)n com- 'SENIORS may obtain annoUnce­ stURpnt group. Frank Coburn, ;'f "" plaInt about the abs"nee, of com soldier in modern history who has ments nnd application blanks for to complete ~conomie recovet'Y thfl sterling area arc more than new lavorne to be "taken lJP" ," , . .. I. - b I BISMARCK, N.D. (/P)-Norman the psychopathic hospital, will wJ1Ue donnlng the burd~ of hlah- making up the gap, by New York's ".m~l't set" Ie blnatlol'~ 9t good VOCJl~s. i'n~ Of- een , treated with real di,gn\ty Brunsdale will go into office as the Lydia C. Roberts Fellowship di~c\.lsS "The Problem of Psycho­ Cl' arms spendin" I'l I 1st J ....-h...,. !" ehestrations, , a nd esteem. This is reflected in at Columbia in the Graduafe therapy" Sunday at 7 p.m. in the to' , In the lirst s x months of lIle p an Of! - ..n. Columblf, WillI Sinalra has been in bel- his pride and his truly remart- North Dakota's governor Jan. 2 College [I)ce, room 4, Old Capi­ BrttaJn, all tbe blne- reel,,- year, Britain and thc rest of the " I with a weather eye on state o Fireside room of the Unitarian It'.& of eeen.mJe be', ..4 one sterling area earned a lurplus of • ter ·totm, ,!e A6~s k~p the vocal able discipline. He Is not a coo 'e spending. to!. Ii c}lur h. The book, "Dianetics," will (1 ~ &lie maJor facton In Ule $220-mJUion which helped the vHal Experts Combtn.e trlC~kS to a mjntm,!m, ~d ,t1~es(' 'oldier, like so many Chinese The 59-year-old tal' mer "nr! also be discussed...... _ I ~on ' an> 115 Iin a ' collection ot NutionaUsts, mistreated ilnd des- u . GRADUATE STUDENTS may f _Uc: • uaa~~\ rearmament "old and dollar resCTVCI! held in • • M 'U b k . t L " FAd BI II st;lDdard' --.-r""thm tunes.' as , one piscd. He also is not the underling ayvi e an dlrec or says hc is obtain in [ormation about Fellow­ I'Ntram .. Iii a tt 111101, London under government con- I ·' S , •..,. . I d \T\VA annpunces applications ' • , orelgn ( f'0llld ' .want. "Ws Oply :It. Raper of his officers,' like the Japanese etermincd to look after North ships and grants. from the socia) There Is no sioLl~t the BrltJah trol. In the lirlli sir months trc . , Mt)o\'l',', "Lqver", and "l;jhOUll;i 'r' sOldier of World War II. Dakota's business as carefully as ftn'the 1951 orientation council are science research council at tlfe flo~ ' available at the Qttice , of w'll be sotry to *e big lumps hOf year be!~re, the wh~e a.r~a hod WASHINGTON (,/P) - , ~Inan~s · 4I11! pro"/lbf~ fhe' ·. tiast 19 this ~I_ He was fairly good with aIt- he does his own and to keep 011 csur J!raduale college office, room 4, StUdent Affairs . . American dol.l~t8 ctlt o~t, ag l e gone "'_-million in eJlo e. on t,he part of a !, l'l'ot Re- ~Ilm ' wlilch ; allo\ inc1l1des -"The iIIefY and, to a cert.ain extent, wi'th apPr<'ximately thc same track as Old Capitol. ,-' ECA and Pt)Jrte . MlTllster Altlee In rU40, Marshall ald was bare- publican pllrty have «J~e~dy . ~lId Continental" aDd .. W'.... _ 19 '1 u e '" his predecessor, Gov. Fred A, hwe revealed ~ , I. lkely, Bllt Brit- Iy kcc~ng them alloa\, .In 1960 an ?C1ect on Iidthm1Stl'~(\On He n,',' ) • ", ' iJ .!', tall!<'s during the last two years ,ot Aimdahl. • " COM M IT TEE ON RAC£\L v ,:,y STUDENTS INTEREST~D ainis relie)'~ l i"'e doRariJ .are not things have improved so much plannmg for aid La b,*u~t ' natJ0J?-s . \I t . . ~ '., .;. , .', inc Chinesc"civil war, but his ex- In EQUALITY (CORE) of 'the being cut · oft "-hh!tely • add that America's dollars, in . eJfeet, Foreign aid ' expe.rtll are now ' .. perience w~th mechanical maieriel Both Brunsdale and Aandanl applying for admission to the cot­ YMCA will meet SUnday, NoV, 10, fd':-': ." th ' k g ~ a' I I I P k" " '. ·t ...... I!~C nas been limited. As a rifleman are members of the RepubUcnn lelle of dentistry for. September., in::eonferencC' room 1 of me -Un­ suddenly BI - I ,n ,,4elll. e . ~s in are ,oinIn, inB~ ' .,e resel'Y1es. war in ., oU ~, ~ t'li nJ... :t a~ age . : I: I I EK,. . ,I j., . ' he is exceUe"t. and he could keep organization committee faction of 1951, are urged to call at tbe of~ 1!l45. - . :'.,. - strengthe ng ntams linllncal presentat.on ....q, · ~n,:" C$?ngress I ,. tl'4 .· ftiE ' Wow.. ,f'fta,",· '" . flee of thl! registrar Immediately ion, Film program and campalJDI So far Britain hllll~2 71111 31 position whil~ Ilh~ paYI ~r . own "'thich' V(fll ,sho'l(, '.lIt · ~e dance' "" ,.ry ." """ Up 'fith 'Stonewall Jackson's foot the North Dakota GOP andl are doo to obtain an al'plication form. It will be disc\lslicd. All studcnbi i ll MarshaJ). &ld, A1I01.I (..~~1Uon way In the world. .. . both. thfl!',mitl J ~ , al. ~ ~lid the ec- ',a,. ...;; ".;1~'IJ"" : I.'~ :;;"~' •• '.;. , cavalrY any day. - , personal friends. As majority invited. .' I .., 1t was , na1" . ~ ll", ~,l flacal The gold l:eSefVes ~ave monre onomi , hcJp· ~ropos... • ed l' fpr .each Ql I"",,, ",! \ ~I_ , ~. III. ~l"t. ' lLu ,.,: . . Military SP&ln leader in thc state senate, Bruns- will be ve,ry helpful to. the admis~ ~ ...-." I,I"~ J!#I , • .".. -. nJ.. t 'er.' ..,.... I... '.h · ...... ,ue. ..'t· - . H" 'l't ' t h' d 1 h b h I fl ' P d' ,Iims committee of the college of :'nr endin, lu1 Jan, . Trlis than d014bled since Scp . 18, 1949, the western J>u~..-'~FESSlONAL '" 0 M i N'II convention which will nominate a rcshUffllnl, while Pennsylvania in World Wa~ U" )Ie says "but ifOllpl, etc, saw in World War.Il would have match federal hilhway \lid grants. It is desirable truit they m~intain . ~at we live in a 'OOWltrY . in been around and behind them 'in The 1I0vernor-elect was born PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM Tues­ C"'~B . will meet Monday, Nov, presidential candidate. His elec- loses three and New , Y.ork ty.ro, day, Nov. 21,' at 4:30 p.m. in room 21nt 6:15 p.m. at. the Iowa Union. tion to the senale completed the will be on equal lcoting with a slteleton pl'QgraJ1l. during the whiCh all are comine to T!!al~e five hours. It took. the. Chiflese July 9, 1891, at Sherbrook, N.D., sum~er months," tha~ only torc~ can. be e,feetlve Reds 50 hours, However, that's where his father was county 301, PhYsics building. Prof. P. 'rh'1? program is in charge of ~~ rout the state's so-called "old Pe'nnsylvanla in voline o~ tbe .01 . ' agamst mllitansm III other coun- only one calC, and it really was treasurer. When his father wound Ooester will speak on "Turbulen~e e(il\i!ation and· vocation conurpt- guard" GOP machine. , ciao ice Of ,a . nominee. , DesPite IOvernment assur:,nc~ tries, , • ' command failure. up his term that fall he moved In Plasma:" tj!le , . • • To c:omplete a double hold ~n DUffs control over !be Pennsyl­ to .the contrary, · col\~ otfJqals, , That ~oudspeak~ra tell u."': The C~nese Rpd staft work was the tamily to a farm. After the the- slate's delegation, Dufrs vania bloc of deleeat" yet to be look for a .peed-uP' th ' lhe draft · even if we are in class or in the excellent during final phases of elder Brunsdale died in 1899, his NAACP will have a member- UNIVERSITY THANKS,GIV· hand-picked candidate, John S. dlo.. could only equal that of oi st14dents next year. 1 I IIbrar1 .'7 wh'ere fo ral1y 0/ to the e,ivil war but was 1acktng in widow continued the management ship meeting on Tuesday, Nov.~, 1Nj} service will be given on Tues- l1ne, ;rin step in January II 10v- Goy,Thomll .E, Q.ewey over New . v~te for whalever we are supposed formal milHary educktio'n, a I.aek 01 extensive land holdings her at 7:30 $I,m. in the Union, day, November 21, at 4:30 p.m, in emor 01 Pennsylvania. ;York', IlI;r,er delegaliol\'.'. . ISC PflBSIBENT . to vot~ for. .. ' . which may have been eorreeted husband had acquired and was -- t River room of the Iowa tin- In fi4I, Penlll)'lvanla Cllt 73 ' DiuiOl-1Ua .• ui:leu1Ul campaign DES 1oI00NEs, (~Dr. Charles That there i. DO shop in 16wa since then. From battalion on abl. 1-0 add to them. After his "IIlAOBRlDI JlALL reading room n. Fernando Luxamana 11l out CJt · the 1,084 I:Onvention nom- lor, rMledIon to 'a ,third &enru as E. J'riley, prealdlftt _f I)owa, state City where old secohdhand cHeap down, the Reds aJ:'e rated liS In the IJ'IIduation from Luther college and serial-reserve readine room ak on "T han k s g i v i n it Is JoatUw vote.. It WII second 01111 IOveriaor, Dewey came . oul for Collqe, laid SaturdaT that ~ boOlu 'are sold, . "do ' or die" school but poor on at Decorah, la" in 11113, Norman Thankseiving recess hours: Wed- Thankslivinl." Music will be fur­ to New YcrrIt witb .., votes, Gen.,Dwilht D, &llenhowfr a. the are .'!'LtJllimlted ponibiUtlC!l" ' for William StQ(ftlt'd, G tactics, But n~:lln this mr.ty lltlV(l. returned, to mnnn~e the [nmily's nesdtly, Nov. 22 - elosecl at !\ nlshl'd by ' thl' YWCA chorJI".;;..nd .,.,... . popullltion switches 1952 ·GOP. "..utenUA nominee. Ulin, telllvlI10n ,in. e4ueaUOA. ... _ -.~ .. -.DuAdelJ. . . • beon-eGft.eded._.· &a1Mll. p.m.~'ri\t.tSday, Nov, ZS - closed, MeA quartct. ~ -- --- , - THE DAILY IOWAN, SUNDAY, NOV. n. 1951 - PAGE TURD Propei Table Settings Enhance FeaSTS Missionar~ Saw Doolittle ' Bomb Japan - ~ . . ., JERRY COPE~ND Thirty-live years of m ~ionary I . I work in Japan - years o~ earth- quakes, fires and Lt. Gen. James Doolittle's raid - have not dulled the missionary devotion of Lena D3uaherty, J. Miss Daugherty, Parsol\S college .Cive the small foiL: II part in th holiday planning, a child uaduate and native 10WSD, re­ expert advises. They'll probably get in the way. but they'll have cently visited SUI la~guage Prot. aM Mrs. E. K. Mapes. ' fun. Children can fotd paper napkin , pick nutmeat , cut dried With humor In her votee, Miss fmits, help set the table. beat egg, cream sugar and butter, pop DaUlherty talked of three serious corn, string cranberries and popcorn, and lick (rosting bowl~ l'l\uakes" during her last stay In ofcour e. J.pan. , • • • These designs make ankles look "Tl)e best protection from them . Are y.... ".PNlaI" "Uda~ slimmer, too. i • .the door jam," she said "Houses table linens yellowish from stor­ • • • seem to dance, and the ped jig­ are? Launder them in hot soap­ ne.tcners have eome liP with aU Jles. It's safer under a d90r jam suds, then hanr in the bria-ht sorts of pint-size furniture lor ilIan it Is to stay in bl!c;I, even sunshine to bleach aa they dry. the younge set. Thete's a metal lhollett It Is Inconvenlent'l' • • • table with a removable tray top Seven years is the us~a1 term A navy .-, wit...... Iie caU lor cleaning alter a session with HERE'S THE RESULT of perfecl preparation - a toe and thin navy stripes across stick clay. And a miniature card ot Japanese service f( r MIss a"pet1lllq properties of food, but Immediately er~& tes Daugherty, but she came home to the instep is beln, shown for table and folding chairs. And Vic­ tures Amulea'. newe,i eholce - Irl_ "bleware. Iowa after three years ~ Au­ sprin,. torlan or Early American maple I.\Ist, ''mainly because olll age Is • • • chairs of authentic design . creeping uP." Wbe. ~ a _e, talle tl" out ot the refriaerator about She was in Japan during the three-quarters ot an hour before outbreak ot both world ~rs. Tri Delts to Hold you use them. They beat to :l LIfe in Japan was u~eventful large volume faster at room tem­ In World War I, but in World perature. Founders' Celebration War II Japan and the United • • • States were enemies. Neverthe­ When lrOlIin&' .,. "U... , \&Ie Iowa c.ty aJliance and active )ess, Miss Daugherty said she ex.­ a sli,htly damp press cloth. chapter ot Delta Delta Delta, soc­ perienced humane treatment from Ial sorority. w1l1 have a Found­ the Japanese, and hln;.sUment ers' day banquet at 6 p.m. Mon­ from her fellow AmericliH Doo­ day in the river room 01 the Iowa little. Union. Doolittle's raid came as Japan­ Mrs. James Dickens will be ese friends were putfing Miss toast mistre s. "Founders Day TO PROPULY FOLD naDkln • WATER key­ Daugherty aboard the first evacu­ Proclamation" will be read by do not crease dOWD the center. tu.mblers or temware, shollid note & mart decoraUoD. And ation ship to leave Japan. The Mrs. George Scanlon, president The fold alway. should faee be directly at the top 01 the there I no need for centerDleces raid, thOUgh It surprised the Ja­ 01 the Alliance. Mrs. Phillip West the piau. Thll permits the &'Ues& knife. 11 wine Irla are used, to be expensive. Common panese, did little damage, she will give "Lighting the First Can­ to map the edte wHh the Idt the e should stt. to the rllrht of nowers - even field plant. - said. dle." hand and eonvenlently open It. the water rIa ,8UrhUy toward arnnred with "steful care. the edr" of the table. provide Interestlnl' fOCiI points. Though. not all Americans were Marilyn Horstmen, A3, Ode­ interned, Miss Daugherty said "I bolt, accompanied by Mrs. James Nv~r saw my Japahese friends on Schneider, will sin,. Anne How­ thq street so ttl'ey wouldn't have Waab tile I....,· .,.' • IHkeW.e ard, A3, Masontown, Pa., will ~Ive ISC Woman Chosen 3 to Attend Pennsylvania Pre-Med Meetinr to speak to me." "How Far the Candle Throws Its often to prevent mineral depositl Three SUI statt members Bre (I) university portlcJpalin,. · . After the' Doolittle bo'mbing from accumulatin,. To remoyO! Ut­ Beam." "The Light of the Future ' attend a workshop conference on The conference will be spon­ Tllld, Miss Daugherty sailed to posits, boil a mixture of equal will be given by Elaine Hynde­ 'Popular' Engineer pre-mediclII education ot Buckhill sored by the sub-committee on n of Portuguese East Africa, where Ja­ parts vlnelor an(l wa'ter In the man, AI, Davenport. AMES (.4') - Jane F r u d den, Foils, Pa., Nov. 26 throulh 28. pre-professional education ot the panese and U.S. naturals were ex- kettle, cool, and let stand several A candlelight service will be Greene, the only girl among the Representini SUI will be Prot. Survey of Medical Education, chan led In 1942. ." " hours. Scrape of! the scales with presented by Connie Hamilton, ei,ht candidates for the honor, H . Clay HOTshbarger, executlve formed joinUy by the American A2, Iowa City, and Mono McCor­ The Japanese think the·'{]I.S. is a wooden spoon. was presented Saturday night as secretary of the liberal arts ad­ Medical association's council on mick, A3, Cleveland, Ohio. the most popular engineering .stu­ doing a good job In the occupa­ • • • visory committee; W. W. Morris, medical education and the AI!.­ tion of Japan, Miss D,.ugherty BOMBS, EARTHQUAKE , AND TYPHOONS have broadeDed the With .ulta, wool drflIH, and dent at Iowa State coUere. as istaht dean for student affairs .,,('lnUon of American Medical It Colleges. t .found III her last stay In Japan. travels of Len3 Daulrherty. She has experienced all of them a ... almost any dressy outfit, the latest Prof. Ojemann to Speak marked the first time a coed In the colJege of medicine, and R has won the honor. The presen­ H. Ojemann, a sociale professor of "They feel that Jt is a gQQd thing Presbyterian missionary In Japan. Doolittle dropped the bombl, and (ashion is a latticework heel or Take a Refresher Course mother nature provided the rest J\.liss Daulrheriy has been a JIliI­ flower desirn outlining the heel. On Mental Hygiene tation was made at the annual educo tion psycholOgy. be0' that we arq there." I .. Engineers' carnival. Representatives of 30 United - learn omethJnl' new. slollary In Japan for 35 years, with a vacation In the U.S. every H. lJuddhism is still "the" religion Prof. Ralph Ojemann, ot the Miss Frudden, dauihter of Mr. Stntes colleges and universities seven years. She recently visited SUI P1'01. and Mrs. E. K. Mapel. SU I child welfare research sta­ of Japan and the Japanese are Record Manufacturing and Mrs. C'M' Frudden, WIlS cho­ will study pre-medical advis01Y -DANCING IS FUN slow In adopting Christiamty, "but tion, wlU give two addresses on sen by popular vote in a Friday systems, the role of science in In my new studio once it's In It stays," she said. Described in Transit mental hygiene in Chicago, Nov. The 36 steps in manufacturing balloting In which 2,300 students preparation lor medical school, 2() and Dec. 7. and balanced education lor pre­ BALLROOM DANCING The .;Japanese are wak. weary. 61's 'Layer' Clothes Keep Them Warm the average phonograph record His rirst speech will be given took part. she said. ','They feel that They will She is a junior in arcbitectural medical students. WASHINGTON ~The army is The GI's outer wrap is a water- are described In an article in the to the City Club lorum, a group of Berlnners and Advanced Lessons be In the center it any war breaks engineering, Is a member of thl' Problems discussed at the work­ displaying winter clothing is~ued resistant field jacket with a hood. November Issue of Iowa Transit, civic leaders interested In es­ MIMI YOU DE WURlU out. They are afraid thl\t ,\( aqy to Gl's lighting in Korea's sub- Wool trousers are worn inside colleie chapter ot the American shop will be outlined and used as publillhe(l Saturday tablishing, a mental health pro­ n guide by the committee. The ~mbs , are dropped, they will fall zero weather. high-topped shoes. Foot,eat .also The arUole wa. wrltteu by Ro­ gram,ln the oity's public sch.ools. Institute of Architects, and be­ Dial 9485 in :Tapan. Nevertheless, I the y longs to Delta Delta Delta soror­ committee will conduct an exten­ Uniforms worn by U.S. and includes two pairs of heavy wool bert Van Olst,' E3. Da.venport. Ojemann . will spend Dec. 7 sive surveyor each college and flcicked to ' the blood banl\ ~ 'when Communist North Korean troops socks tlnd a pair of thick toit inner TraMlt 1s II. monthly publica­ with 201) adjustment teachers of ity. 'he KDrealt war broke out." ,...... employed the "layer principle" to soles. tion Product!d by students ot the the Chi~ago public school system. Mif,S Daugher~y is to go back keep the wearer warm in the "wet They keep snug inside by a wool coJle,e 9f ehilneerlng. He will describe lI'esearch in Ruth Vornholt, Jean Wail School Reorganization ~ Illpan In . the sumtner to, work cold" climate. But the GI's out- undershirt, wool flannel shirt, Other UlI,turell In th.ia issue ate teac;hlng human relations and To Give Piano Recital To Be Discussed jn the Josbi Gaa Kuin, a , Tokyo a cover picture. and picture fea­ mental hygiene at SUI's labora­ fit is more modern. high-neck sweater, pile jacket, Two SUI women will pr sent a DES MOINES 01') - A discus­ 'glrls' school. , The idea of the unitorms is to wool underdrawers and wool serge ture on thy year's Homecoming tory schools and the Tipton and piano recital at 7:30 p.m. today corn monument, and an article on Cedar Rapids public schools. sion 01 scho'l district reorganiza­ "I'll be going back to Japan In keep the wearer warm by making trouFers. His head is protected by in north music hall tion will be given at II meeting low octane autQinobile tll.. 1 hv He will also discuss the train­ tile summer it there is anything full use of his body heat and con- . a cotton cap with a wool lined bar Ruth Vornholt, A4, Cedar of the Iowa council for better David Jacobs. !if, cedar Rapids. ing of mental hygiene teachers. 'left," she ' said. • I trolling perspiration. I dap. . Rapids, will play "Toccata in C education here Monday. • J \ minor" by Bach and "Concerto In A group of ]owa ed ucators who C minor, Opus 37" by Beethoven. recently visited a newly-reorgan­ .Mrs. Houg,hton to Talk to Local Kiwanis .: Jean Walt, A4, Reynolds, IlL, Ized school district )n TIlinois will ' wlll perform "Second Sonata" by . Pinned,. and Engaged tell of progress made there. lwIrs. Hiran C. Houghton, Red Women's club. She served as pres­ Hindemlth and "Three Bagatelles" Oak: president of the General ident of the Iowa Federation of by Bartok. The concert wm be the third rMeration of Women's cNbs, will Women's club from 1935 to 37. PINNED - Jerri Bti"s, A3, A3, Chicago, Delta Delta Delta, to ~ak at the Kiwanis dub meeting Four years later she wa elected MichaeL Trueblood, C4, Sioux in a series of a student recitals Edward S. Rose .,~ education chairman of the fed­ Des Moines, Delta Delta Delta, to sponsored by the SUI music de­ Remains supreme we think - 12;15 p.m. Tuesday at HQi.el Jef- Charles McLau.ghlin. A3, Burling­ Falls, S.D., Sigma Alpha Epsilon. I«!(,son. • ' eration. partment. our SUPERB CREME SHAM­ ton, Phi Kappa Pai. POO - pric d low but none • She will discuss her r~ent 6- From 1944 to 1947 she was sec­ ENGAGED - Mildred Casey, week tour of Europe. ond vice-president of the federa­ C4 , LaPorte City, Delto Zeta, to liz Safe in Crash better - also our HAND tion, and In 1947 she became tirst CHAlNm - Donna "ering, Al­ LONG BEACH, CALIF. IIl'I - A CREAM, it rubs in, and our ~fI-. Houghton was in charge of Ensign G. D. Love, Iowa State vice-president. Mrs. Houghton was pha Phi at the University or MIn­ college alumnus, Pi Kappa Phi. New York _ bound TWA Con.- BRUSHLESS SHAVE - larae 1A7l..._ 1.. a aroup ot 40 American women eleeled pretident of the federa­ nesota, to John ;rOlSe, A2, Minnea­ stellatlon carryIng Elizabeth Tay- jars priced to give you greater rJIm you (}W' )Vhb toured England, F'rancl~ tion in June of this year. polis, Phi :Dell.B 'mIetll. lor and 54 other passengers and value - you wiLl lind our Italy. Holland. Denmark,lKorway, PINNED - Jean Brannan, A2, :J J She was graduated from Welles­ " .--'-'- Sioux City, Della Delta Delta, to Sweden, Switzerland, arid Bel­ crewmen made an emergency store a FRIENDLY place to RCA ley college in 1912, is married and PINNED - Elizabeth Metcalf, _'s) Harold Reister, A2, Sioux City, landing here Saturday and erash- trade. ;ium. tbe mother of four children. Her AS, Des Moines, .belta DeJta Del­ Phi Gamma Delta. ed through a wooden fence at the I , She Is serving her seJond six­ husband is president of . the ta, to Joseph Van H'oKen, Alpha end of a rain-slicked runway. DR.U G SHOP ,.e~r term on the Iowa State Board Houghton State Bank of Red Oak. Tau Omela at the uIllverslty of ·PINNED - Ann Townsend, A3, An airUne spokesman said there B. ~5 1 of EducatJon, and is a former dir­ A son, H. Clark Hought~n, is Cincinnati. Sac City, Delta Delta Delta, to ...... J ... lOuUi o. Je' \Ill ktor or the Iowa Hl ~ torical asshtant cashier of the. First Nat­ Ted Davidson, Alpba Tau Omega ene. AT_~~l~~' ,II DO Inj..... , .1 sOciety. W~ J-:!u,1fI1I. ional Bank of Iowa City. PINNED - Phyll at.JJrake university. .. · In ' 1949 she represe~~ the Wbmen's clubs at a confetence of th~ Pan-Pa"Wc Women's ,a~socla­ The tion held in Hot)olulu, Ha:-vaii. UNIVERSITY THEATRE 30th Season • Women 'from New Zealand, To Speak Here Austtalia, China, Japaq, Korea, State Univenity of low~ 1950-1951 P~Uppjne islands and the United Mrs. Houghton started her club Iowa City, Iowa ·i States attended the confen:nce. career as president ot the Red Oak - " .. , . . pr~ntl " . " Beautiful Timing "GOODBY'. .. , :M¥ '< FANCY" /. Fuiks Jewelry store has a wonder­ by ful display of gift watches . .. Kay Kanin- known for dependability, long life, and beauty. Let a jewelry store NOV. 29, 30; DEC. ( 2,.· 3, .4, S, 6, 7, 8, 9 with years of experience help you I , if • • to make your selection from a wide RESERVATIONS ·OPEN MONDAY, NOV. 20 . .. ~ .- range of nationally advertised <,A' , ( .1 , accurate timekeepers. Make Your R.I.rv43tion~ Early TROUSERS. , . Box Office Office Hours H_', opportunity cratImIg through -Are You Thin~ing of Rings? Room 8A ... " OaIJy., 8;30 0.m.-12 noon you; ciMr I ... the all.pIoy and no-woric f' I' f PLAIN SKIRT OR REG. flCOrd-.yalelll PLUS 6 of the latnt hh '( H ~ Schaeffer Hall t1 ''100 p.,n.-4;30 p.m. Diamond soljtaires and matching tunes ... ot. ",.cord"iow price, $12.95. You'll get the RCA Vlctcir'1 _ ··~eQ.dlng bands • . . the first step Ext: 2215 . so.~urdciy: 8:30 a.m.-12 noon 554 .' • , " " -I' .... , SWEATER' "Victrol." -45 ottachm.nt. You'll ptyaur . ;10 e.very bridal p1an' l ~riceless dia- Single Adm, ••" CASH &. CARRY choice of. MncH!tw RCA VIdor "-45" m.Ql]ds set in jndividdahnountings, ·.... c pric.·. : ... $ record, f_ the Iotnt teut to accentuate tW~fr brilliance ... toe WHEN BROUGHT IN WITH lIIonlhly 'In,l. f'· FeCi.ral Tax ..• .. 1.0 ..', ..." ..onlh ",to the utmost. Chooae yours with .Ie ANY. SUIT COAT OR DRESS Totat : .," . .. •. $1.20 fw 15 IIIOIIffu.. C­ cqmplete assurance from the dia­ AT OUR REGULAR LOW PRICE nowl This ofer 1IOOd ·,mond collection at Fuiks Jewelry. STUDENTS: Your StwleDt IUDIikadoD Caftl ~ your ..-aD ticket. You DUlY' filii, fOf a limited ; ~- , - I obtain MGt ,.1 uvallolla wltIaoUt c:Iaarve br prIlW''''' your IJ). Card at WAy Ai1 MoI"e 1 $tlti$ftldion GUQrtlllt•• d tl~ . ~ ., I BOOID 8A. 8chcIdIr HaIL ; .' ~ ~ ' I Buy OIl 'Our New Layaway Plcm Vlalt Our Com.... 1 So. Dubuque Reeer4 DepartMeat:J , SPECIAl~ 'tik:$tlCE! SPENCER'S 0, l. :,;~'FUIKS DUE TO TH6 ' ~ HOUDAY 218 E. Wa.hington BOX OmCE CLOBiE 'tAT l2iOO WEDNEIDAY. NOV. 22 112 Eo WaahiDqtoD Wn.L d .'~ . ~d ~tllat WILL B£.OPEN MOlf1)AY. N01,== 1:30 A.M. , ' j If."" • • • I Rose 10 tate; * * * * * * * * * . Strike Through Airto Hand Wolves Keep Bowl HopesAlive ~ip Cats 34·2·] ANN ARBOR, MICH. UP) -1 Northwestern's Flowers set up the yardage recOrd set in 1949 by Bucks First Big Ten Defeat Michigan'S pair of blond work- a new season pass completion Jack Dittmer of Iowa. horses, Chuck Ortmann and Don mark of 56 to surpass the mark But ' the crowd's acclaim stiu ellA IPAtG " ILL. (AP) -lUinois, the great runnin team, Dufek, chipped holes in the went l'lo Ortmann and Dufek. :.prung two aerial touchdowns off trick plays in the second Northwestern defenses here Sat- of 53 shared by otto Graham of urday in a 34-23 Big Ten victory N~rthwestern and Pcrry Moss of Duj~'k. Michigan's rugged lin~. period to urprise mighty Ohio tatc, 14-7, aturday and shoot that kept nlive Michigan's mathe- llhn'-l . smaShing tutlback, carried the bali 15 times and mape 110 yards: Jfe aheud in the Big Ten Hose bowl race. matical Rose bowl chances. Northwc.;tern's giant end, Don for A crowd of 78,201 fans saw the Stonesifer, who already holds the scored two touchdowns and stt It wa the fint Big Ten loss for Ohio tute, ranked last week up aP9ther. 51 two Wolverines rip through the Big Ten individual game and of 1 as the nation's top t~am in the AP poll. Northwestern line Irr two touch- season receiving records, brOke ------. /lOll Muffled on the ground as never ------~ downs apiece in a conquest that Oklahoma Aggies Fall l' belore this season, the lIlini on I found Michigan at its old _ time Befqre Detroit, 2~13 ' pecked at the Buckeyes' weakest strength. Varied Spartan Attack had spot, pass defense, al)d clicked Northwestern's Dick Flowers S~J.LLWATER, OKLA. (JP)~" superbly be for e a capacity College~ Grid cut loose with a last - minute 42-yard sprint by Jim O'Leary in throng of 71,119 wild fans. passing barrage thot pulled the Chills Pittsbu rgh, 19-0 Courth quarter broke up a tie The win, the lIIini's f urth in visitors within threatening elis­ tootba)l game to give Detroit 'unl· five league games, shoved them Results lance - but then time ran out. PITTSBURGH lIP) - Michigan versity a 20-13 victory over Ok. ahead of Wisconsin In their torrid Et3tl! unveiled a sparkling and el­ lahoma A&M here Saturday. EA T Michigan End Harry Alli$ con­ duel for the bowl bid. Each has Cedive passing attack Saturday to Thc victory puts Detroit 14I .b. '!IJ. a.lton IIly~r It, 19 verted all but the second touch­ mto one more game to play. William. '!'). ,nhen' lit h,lmmer uut a 19-0 victorY over a second place in the Missouri Val­ down kick and scored 'one tOll('h­ Major To es for m', Cer" .. 11 ~ I , Oartm •• U•• Pittliburllh football leam which ley <:op (erence and drops the Ag. VIII •••1 'llI. B. to. COn_Ie ] down himself. Little Fred Major, wearing a Nu, '!I/, C.I ...bl. 7 was stopped cold on tbe ground gies c#'wn to fourth. chin ma k to protect a broken 7.'" r. Ma acllu eU. n For Michigan it was th~ third and bottlcd up in the air. a ••", et.",n 't l, 1I0ly ra I. jaw bone, faked a jump pass in .lan.,. '1, Browa 13 Big Ten win against a lie anel a Tlle visiting Spartans closed the first two minutes of the sec­ IAbllh l1li. L". y~lt. 0 loss. Northwestern salvagcd s'me their 1950 sea~OIl with the migh ty ew "amp hire LI. Ken' tlte '7 ~nd quartee and tinalJy fired the r ... n. lv,,,'a ":., Wi eon In U glory by setting a pair of Wcste1'll Sunny Grandelius showing 26,- SPECIAU ·. ' ball to Don Stevens. AtI".lo :U . Jhnl daer 11 , conference pass records. 679 fans his sileed and prowcss. ~ . UnJnua d, 8ulquebanna U (Ue) Stevens, snared It on the Ohio e.I •• ie 1ft ,.,ae. e J I Althcu!:h Grandellus flashcd thc State 28 and, as defender Fred renn ,.te lA, Butren I. Spartans' running attack he left Mlchi"•• S" 'e 18, PJUabur.. b • 'unday Dinner Bruney lunged at bis heels, skip­ P.rdham ~8. Temple '! I llll the Michigan State scoring to ped loose to flee for a touchdown. V ••",onl ·lI. IIII.dl.bu,,. 7 his t('am mates. ~ 11 a.m. - ' Z ~.m, Trinity ~ '. Wesleyan .,. Penn Crushes The play was good for 52 yards. Prine-eili n 17 . 'l '.le t'! Thc Spartans' AI Doro\v showed New 8rUain Tcaaher. U Roast Young Turkey Six minutes later the 1I11nl Spr'nCnelll '!I. merlun 1"1er1'l I\lo,,.' 7 the Panthers th.lt the newest eptry thrust again throuih the air to CII,. COn ... ", L ....n Te.me • in the Western conference could • W.,ner ;tUn,. Po",t ,; (ban,. 1 ••a" Phol.) Dressinr Cranberry Saute what became the clinching mark­ Itt, Badgers" 20-0 tA ke to the air laMS wilh good I, Atbrllhi ~t Muhlenb~r( 0 , Whipped Potatoes er. The drive was touched off by lI.clknllU t'I, Delaware' RUNNING LIKE A IIALFBA K Tackle Joe Paul en stlff·armed Notre Dame's Bill Barrett .ft~r iDter· PHlLADELPHIA (IP) '-'FranCiS eHect. Carnerlc Tetb ':0. We tmlnllitt 0 lIUni Joe Hnll's recovery of Chuck I 011 .• Creamed Fresh Peas l\lIDWE T ceptlnr pass Saturday. Plul en caucht the pas the Iri 11 31 and ran laterall1 aero the flelll to the (Reds) Bagnell, Pcnn's brilliant He outshonc Pitt's quarterback Gandee's bobble on the illinois 47 . 27 before belnc dowDed. Guard "Junebuc" Perrin, co-captain of the Hawk Sltul"da y, Is shown eomlnc halfback, gave a magnificent per­ and pussing stur, BobbY Bestwick. OofCee Rolls Milk Cln,lnnall S3. Xnl., (Oble ) ~u With hobbled Johnny Karas JllInol • • t, OblO ,.l. 7 UP to lend support. Carrylnl' the ball wasn't entirely torellll to Paulsen who wat a. backfield man formance Saturday in leading th' streaking 12 yard.!, the IIlini 1"411.. ,. ' • • MarqlleH-e t In his hl,b school dan, The Ha.wks baUled Notre Dame to II. 14-14 tie. IIARVARD GETS 1 l' WIN I.WIl II. Natre I)ame U CUe) rugged Quakers to a crushing 20-0 covered the dlstance gOlllwnrd in Mlchl,an AI. Nlrthwt tern ~3 victory over the Wisconsin Dad­ CAMBRIDGE, MASS. (A»- Lit­ seven plays with Malor finally Dtlnll '!O. O.'ahoma A & Mia gers from the Big Ten conference. tle Carroll Lowenstein completed Otterbetn !!O, t\lu k'n,am 13 pitching the last five yards to Mlnnuot. '!;. Purdue .. Cal Natrowly An elusive runner and II Sharp­ two touchdown passes, a 65·yard­ Stevens in the end zone. DenlAon 40, C.plt__ 1 • shooting passer, the redhead from er to winger Fred Ravreby ancl Va'p".' 0 I! O. WIUenbtr,. ,- Gophers Win f~ BeJnie~ 27·14 lanoMes cores for Ohio Jlbn CarroU ~.. , Baldwln .. \\Ta1fa lle '3 Escapes, 13-7 the sidewalks of Philadelphia a two-yarder to Gil O'Neil, to With three and one half mln­ Neb", •• '!o. towl late IS give Harvard a 14-13 victory over Kan.. 11 , KanNJI •• BERKELEY, CALIF. (IP) - Tbe MINNEAPOLIS (.4') - Minn/!- yards on a punt return to cross sparked the winners on three long ules left In the explosive second t., Brown and its first win in seven Qn,. lhe Corner Aeros. Ohio nlvuJilty UI , 1Vt lern Mlthlran ..,. sota's Gophers, fired by the an- accounted for three points with scoring marches of 68, 62 and 49 :J:! , Cllnlon Miami COhlo) 6•• " tc lttn Bucrve 1<4 great equaliJ:er - mud - and a perled, Ohio State becatne the yards through the outcla~scd gamcs this season Saturday. T~I.. 4K. Wi chita V rugged University ot San Fran­ nounced resignation of their coach, kicks after the scores. first team of Nle season to seoTe Bradley ~O. Ntw lexlf'o lit cisco defense, gave California all put on their finest exhibition of .. Purduc's ace fullback, Johnny visitors and smashed UcrOl;S him­ on the ground against HUnols' .rUon In, Grinnell '1 1 self tor two touchdowns. ~"Urr 8'J. Indiana State 0 it bargained for before the Bears football this ycar to come from Keresles, tallied both times tor steeled defense. Oberlin GtJ. Woolter , took a slim 13-7 decision Saturda y behind nnd whip Purdue, 27-14, the Bollerrriakers, once In the first Playing in his next to last col­ Ohio State's Vic Janow ic~, ev­ W.b ...... , Depauw '!O Ohio North,r" :U, .hl.. ,. t'! before 14,000 rain sodden fans. in Q Western conference game period and again in the second. lege game, Bagnell ran through ery bit an atl-Amerlean Saturday, Elmb.,.t. t.), ROle Pol, "!I The California team salvaged Saturday. and around the harried 13adgers and Tony CurcHlo, the injured OUTH the win in the final period when The Goph rs spotted Purdue's tor 164 yards on 28 rushes Ilnd hit Buckeye quarterback who played Cltm•• n 1\,. Furman '! I d" S l t his receivers on eight of 14 paSses Ddlr.e n . Vlrrlnl. Tt:~h tI Jim Monachino went around his Boilermakers two touchdowns - n lana cores a e, brilliantly, used End Tom Wat­ ~U. II IIIlaml (florid a) "lo,lda own right end [or seven yards l ne each in the first and second for another 65 yards. son as their passing target on Oe-orrl. " ~, Auburn 10 notherJ ' FirstlI.. and the winning touchdown. The V1'l1 I ~, Tho Clladol 1 periods nrd then put together its Tops Marquette, 18-7 Through 811 this, the Wisconsin , three plays that gained 59 yards. Tenn.uee an, Mlnllllp,l 0 teams, stru.::~J:!l~ i.1 ~jo')py mud, !irst victory of the yenr. team wns able to offer only teeble Janowicz eventually slammed N.r.h Carolina II. ~ .. uth Carolina '2 f).vld on ~ It, Itltbmontl (I had bogged dowil In a 7-7 tie up And In so doing, they uncovered BLOOMlNGTON, IND. (.4» - resistance against Penn's sl" hing over from the 4 10 end an 83 t Walle Fon U. N'orth Car.UnA State 0 to that point. a new potential star in Hallback Indiana bad to score a couple of single-wing attack, and on only yard surge In 10 plays. lie also M.ryland U . We. t Vlrllnla U Ql.lantlu ~'~rlne. 'R. Tampa II The Bent'S put together eight Kerm Klefsaas, who scored the quick touc)ldowns in the ,final one occasion was able to put to- Genuine Valcuna converted. Alaba ...... '\04 , Oeor,l. Terh IU plays for a 35 yard scoring drive, tirst three Minnesota touchdowns. quarter Satm-day to beat a Mar­ er a sizeable march of its own Va"dubUt ~!J. Mcmtthl. S.att ,:, --- W •• hln,t"n /I. t.te :ali. 14nulIVIlle '!8 highliihted by Quarlerback Jim In addition, he sparked most oC quette team it h<\d pushed around on Johnny Coattn's passing. The WAKE FOREST-Nes TIE \\'f'l-tern 1a",'land t., John. lIopkJn. fI Marinos' only pass of thJ! day­ Badgers came closest to scoring in Tulane 4 ~, VIr,Jnf. ,A the Gopher's drives downCield into most of the afternoon, 18.7. WAKE FOREST, N.C, (IP) - Un­ a 12-ynrd completion to Fullback scnrlng territory. The crowd of 30,000 included the final quarter when they derdog North Carolina State scor­ OUTHWE T SWEATERS R ift '!I , Texu A Ii. AI III J ohn Olszewski. It was Kle! aas who, early in members of 112 high school bands. reached the Penn two yard line. Tex •• '!J. ~f' I(.' Ctul.Uan '7 ed on a sensational pass in the the fourth period, put the Go- Marquette gained only 16 yards Possibly the midwest te;.>m WII~ last two minutes Saturday, but ft.u hn : It, ":::;' .,' Ii ~I.r )' 18 W. Ten SI.I. 17. " ' ,dln Simmon. ~ ( CORNELL DIP DARTMOUTlI phers ahead with a driving, pun- net In the first half while Indi. sufferjng a letdown aHer its finc foiled to convert the extra point, FAR WE T ITHACA, N.Y. (.4>J - Cornell ishing run around his own right ana was taking a 6-0 lead. stand a week ago against OhIO and tied Wake .Forest's Demoll . ~~~, ~.,~t:"s'~'dN.o.ad ' .: ' smothered Dartmouth's Johnny end to put the ball across despite Then Marquette's oitense click- State. Wh atever the cause, it nev­ Deacons, 6-6. A crowd of 18,000 California 13, u "ran<1 <0 7 Clayton Saturday to score an im- the ertorts of three Boilermakers ed with a 68-Yard tcuehdown er belonged on the same field with saw State's Ed Mooney pitch out C.lo ..... 21. Or'lOn 1 pressive 24-0 victory in its hom p. on the goa l line. march in 11 plays and Indiana the big Quakers Saturday. M.ntana ItJ. Utah late j Th ' h t I i to Jim O'Rourke who passed to C.I.'.... C.llo,. ~v. Idaho St.l_ 1 finale be for/! 28,000 fans. e WID- Ten, 0 nsure the v clory, had to lorllet about saving Jtsclf wingback Jim Smtth for a touch­ W. hln~lon Htal. ~I. O'.~.n Sial., ners did all their scoring in the Halfback Bob Thompson ran 70. " or the Ol'" """'-e" Bu"ke' classic Hoi, Scl,.tlsl. Who Flrsl I"lrodu'ced Tex. Tec.h t'B. Arlaona ,. h 11' C k ' . ,LI y,.. Va.A.,.. ~, , .. s..... dowll. ""hln~l.n US. oulh.'n Call1o,nl .. 13 first half. t e goa me. aptnin Dave S rlen with Purdue next Saturday. the H..... r...... 1 WI.. KII HlYe Ju.1 ------~----:----~~~~------.--- DISCOVERED NEW SHAMPOO Different, Typel of Emotion in Iowa, Notre Dame Dressing Room, - DON'} GAt!1BtE! CURLS AND WAVES HAIR Both Disgusted - Hawks Vehemently, Irish Mildly By DICK JAOKMAN Over in the Notre Dame room, ac.customed to it. I'm very proud were undecided about prOfession­ There werc two different types the scnlal master of fine footbaU of the way the boys came back al football next year. Currently, of emftion in the drc sing room~ teams and careful conversations, and tied the game. They are they're sufCering from the com­ here Saturday aner NoIre DllryJc Coach , was in good wonderful gn up of young men." mon worry o( college mon - the 311d Iowa stalled each othcr to rJ spirits. His v t l~e was as cheerful " lookC'd nicc.. at thfeat of being druIted next J unc. 14-14 tic. One lockcr room fea­ as his bright bow tic as he said quarterbaok while . he was in Groom and John Towner, for· tured tpild disgust ~ the other, that both Iowa and Notre Dame there. ae will probabJy be our mer high school rivals in Des not so mild. had played weU in a game where first string signal-caller next sea­ Moines and opposing centers in I~mllg Shml1jJ&o opportunitles were frequent. Marltll e's Hai r Crealll But both the Irish and Hawk­ son, Williams called a Line game Saturday's game, praised each I. IIACIINEIY ... NO IAITi"; ... MOT A!lAVE SET! eyes were agreed on one thIng. "We were about up to par to­ and is an cxcellent football play­ other alter the game. GI'oom said 'tllll (,Jllllnl', n .. ,,', en)' ~11.\lrt'oo _ '\11.11).' Illr. They had played 80 minutes of day after we got out of that first er. Our ca.ptain, Jerry Groom or that it felt like "old home week" ~kt '::IWII;I;:~:~i ;:~~ III! I~I~';, I.U~~~I.IO~illl~II~O~ II.. n JI)tJO Olll :.111"1. tllI~1 '-'!'l'U "II. \l1i'1 h .... ,." ,h;1J. good hard footbatl with ~t provo quarter," Leahy said. "No, I didn't Des Moines, has played fjne ball playing against Towner, Bill "nlr(. rnu ,hllnIP,lu·lu 11fl·I\II"III:,.1 \l,,\( ~II,I lUll. thlt .\11" ~'I-'j t.rH .• , • 11.1', 1'1 ",It 11I1~I .. H Cit • Ing much of anything to ellon want Bob (Williams)" to punt for us all year." ReIchardt and Chug Wilson whom Take Your Cloth.. to 1".'h.fI , ne hlllil- IO"Ikt n.- 1'._HAl '1'0_\', '1,,'It'I"" 111111 . other. The Notre Dame playors out ot danger in the firsl period. Leahy named Michigan S~t c \\ .,In, I'Oh.,upoo II An (',)lIllh 1l""IIlflllrlpll"' th.~·. he played against in high school. " '.'Y 111)d '1,,,",,,lr .a. ~h,lU'I'CIt'lrllC \I"I~ h;alr. 1,111 "'f were Quietly sad, figuring they I was hopin, he would pass. as the toughest team they had "'H'" ,ii'I flVlf ~.I\ In U ~\Iotft AIJOU' rpicl fll'r., The dressing rooms were simi­ no dlf. brUtlt, [111.(..'" h.lf. ItO tuIHit'linlltl.1IO ~n~i;ll should have won the game b, at Iowa's rushing was very impres­ .hlnllKJC'. 1" ••11 in f.ne .. fliP Ill''' ... ,~ klnll n( met all year. He also said that lar jn one respect - both tcam ~ Rongner' s Clean~rs h,lr .hl"lJl(1fl W'Tr~ 1•• lr ,n: II ~t..n'l"'ti' r"'I"'''!! hrt4r least a touchdown Or two. , sive and they seemed well-pre­ qespite Notre Dame's so-so recr td figured they should have won. IMt au" luau.!, \&hl .. , ,,,,h'\ ,In'\in \, ul1 l\fllo litf pared for the game." and l u ht ... IHI" ,"Ir jn Ri\fII ~1'U 1111,1 lullr rlillillr Quarterback Bobby Williams tnis fall, every team is still very Notre Dame quietly blamed them­ .'\cro~s frolll WOD[worth'$ .. n1l n, II' li ,Ihllill)no! ,,\n ,1 Ih" Drlf •• , , onlr $1 whose right arm ' was the chief pll'. tn. ~h rhlM"" ~"l" 11 .lr "'lutA t'l1lmrnn I. Asked whether he was nervous much "up" for them and out to selves while the Hawks weren't or IOJd on the warunly or rull ..,IH.nlon 6r ",Ol1l'y ll'Hk. Irish shillelagh in their seconp w)lim .Iowa jUlJlped into a two­ "get the irish." He then added, so quiet about placing the blame. hall comeback said, "We lost ('If touchdown lead ",nd kept the Irish "I don't see why they're in a In general, neither team went Dial own ball game. Iown hll6 a good In a hole early in the game, Leahy hurry. Tpey'U have' the same team and their line char,es hard, home sa istied Saturday and both joked,'· "No, I would have been chance next year." are still convinced they can beat but we made too many mistaklls last year, btlt I guess I'm getllng Groom and W i~iams $aid they early, in the game." the other. Iowa's disgust was of a stronger I '1;0:01 nature and most of It was cen­ ,.: ~I tere

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5"Y " !-lOW DID "IOU MY l4"IR BECAME SO OItV ST"R.T T~E "NO UNRULY FI/.CW. 'TilE 3 BR.EIo.KERS ROLLING T·V SHM\l'OO OEMONS'TIl/'.­ ON YOUR, H"'R.. ? TIONS I. GIVE ~ a,..-r; IT THE W"Y IT STOOD H.>.O 10 BE CON~ED UP LAST WEEK, '(()U'O IN ~ W,Io.Y·",Io.NO SOMY 14,1o.VE TO GE.T IT CUT I-I"IR IS W~to! "· YE.S, WITI-I " S\Cj(LE!- " WITH PLAIN w~T HAPP~NED '1 , FURNITURE WA'X.! PAGE SIX - T1IE DAILY IOWAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBE1l 18, USI - I -Down':"" but Not for long Broadway Comedy Local UWF To Sponsor Freedom ' Booth Fun rat Service. Mon~ Forrestal Hospital Prisoner For Frank Reddick, 7 ,.. To Open Nov. 29 SUI United World Federalists nsylvania; Phillip Murray, pres­ Funeral services for Frank ' will sponsor a "Crmade for Free- I ident of the CIO; Sen. Hubert Reddick, 76, who died Frfda,' ttl; • dom" booth Tue!day and Wednes- Humphrey. (D-Minn.), and Eddie Before Death, Article (Iaims At SUI Theater day to get signatures on the De- . . or a lingering Illness, will bt~ c!aration of Freedom school. I Rlckenbacker, preSident ot Ea:.lero 2:30 p.m. Monday at the Ho_ "Goodbye, My Fancy." a comedy Jean Stanley, A3, Iowa City. ex- Airlines have endorsed the De­ , A HINGTON (UP) - A new contro\'ersy over James that starred Madeleine Carroll on chuh funeral home. The Bt4 ecutive director of the SUI United claraIJon ot Freedom scroll. Forrestal's death was stirred up Saturday by a magazine article Broadway. will open Univerdty John G. Craig, minlsl8 ot theater Nov. 29 Cor a run ot 10 World Federalists. called the na- SUI United World Federalisls Congregational church, will charging he was held "a irturu pri oner" in Bethesda, ~Id., Naval days. lion wide petition which the gToup will send the petitions to New ate. hospital for more than a moqth before hi suicide and was pre­ It is the story of a liberal Is spomoring here "an answer to York headquarters of the Crusade vented from rejoining the Catholic church. congTesswoman who returns to her the peace petitions allegedly spon- for Freedom and from there they old school to be awarded an hon­ sored by Communists which were will be , ent to Berlin. wher\) they The article, written b ,,'ill inm Aradford Hule, editor of the orary degTee. Since her wartime circulated throug.ho u t the nation will be enshrined in the Freedom SHE'LL THINK IT'5 A N('w mericun \Iercllrv, ~viIJ h<­ experiences in Europe, she has de­ this summer." Bell there along with other such publislwd Tuesday in 'tht' mng­ \L~ bnthe:': care unless Mrs. For­ voted herseU to the ta! k oC acqu­ Booths will be set up in the petition . Mrs. Stanley said. NEW SHIRT IF e tal authorized them to do so. ainting people with the actual rowa Union and at the Clinton azine' first is lIC. :he Secret~ry's wife was in France horrors of war. l treet entrance to the campus. he IT'S DONE THE It drew immediate denialS h-om .t the time and presumably did She brings a documentary said. The booths will be open all Auto Crash Causes the navy and corroboration in not wish him transferred from the movie to be shown to the girls. day Tuesday and Wednesday mor­ NEW PROCESS WAY some essential detalh from a num­ Naval hospital The trustees, however, feel that ning. $500 Damages ber of persons named as principals 3. TW Forr_'-I'•• ald'e wu the film is harsh and improper, Gen. Lucius D. Clay, national in the affair. the dlrect result ot a long cam­ and the congresswoman finds she chairman ot the Crusade for Free­ Damages estimated at $500 re­ Our Truck. Pa.. Forresta \. the naUon's fl1\st paign 01 vllitlcation waged against ""... y ...... -au, .. 1 has a fight on her hands. dom, said "The crusade is a spirit­ sulted [rom a two-car collision at Your Door Dally the intersection of Riverside drive J Se ~ retary of Defense, plun(ed to him by unnamed persons who "Goodbye. My Fancy" was ual uplift. By working together we WOMEN SHIlIEKED A8 1'R1S BAT tared power dives throurh and Benton street at noon Satur­ hl ~ death Crom Ihe ) 8th floor of wanted Louis Johnson to become written by Fay KanIa It opeaed can IIll jtelp to put freedom and 313 Dial East ball eorrklors Frida". Aller hla eapture b broom-wleldlnr day. the hospital in May, 1949. He had Secretary of Delerise. janitors, t,be bat had to be held down to permit his picture to be In New York la I .... the free world on the offensive." S. Dubuque 41'7'7 been undergoing treatment there '-ken. Latest reportIJ IIY women are shrJeklnc ~&'aln. for the aharp­ The cast of 20 characters includ­ "The Crulade tor Freedom is Drivers of the cars, reported to for physical and mental exhaus­ toothe4 creature Jaaa _ped aD' J, once more dlvln& throu&'b es a physics professor who is being not an endorsement of world gov­ police, were Reidon Wocd, Lenox, tion brought on by tbe atrain 01. Michigan Looks for baUwa)'s emitUna' hIrIa-,Ucbed bat-lauch at his former captor. muzzled for expressing his opin­ ernment," Mrs. Stanley declared. and James Swearingen, Burling­ office. • ions on world problems; an alumni "UWF is sponsoring the petition ton. secretary who has been around as Feela Ce1l&T- WID PNIIe on campus because we believe RicQard P. Mattes, Al, Iowa The Mereu!,), editors clalmed­ BuYers of Diseased Professor Granted long as anyone can remember, every student should have a City, reported a hit and run driver and congressional sources denled Iowa Firms Hire and II bevy of colll!ge giris who chance to stand up and be counted to Iowa City police Saturday. -that they had reason to believe amuse tbemselve~ by rolllng hoops for freedom and against Com­ Mattes reporled light damage Permit to Build on the lawn. • the article would be the basis for Ho!idlY Turkeys More Engineers munlt m or any other kind of when his car was struck at 5:15 an Investigation by congress "un­ DETROIT lUI - Health author­ Five permits for building total­ The performance at SUI will tyranny." p.m. Friday by an unidentified less the admlnlttratlon can prevent ities hunted markets Saturday for ling 14,200 were issued in the be directed by 'Prot. Lewin Gotf, President Truman, Dwight D. vehicle. it." 2,000 tQ 3,000 disease - ridden At Iowa Schools past four days by City Engineer SUI dramatic art department. Eisenhower, president of Colum­ The accident occurred on Clin­ ThankslPvlng turkeys that could Goff aid that the play hu bLa university; Harold E. Stassen, The 3rtic1e ott.-ed thetle alleca­ Fred E. Gartzke - Including one ton street between College and tions as part of Its "untold story cause death If improperly COOked. Iowa Industry Is hiring twice as .. "rM touch th&i Doubt maIIe president of the University of Pen- Washington streets. The dressed blrds came from many engineering fl'aduates from to Prot. Paul E. Hu~ton, sur dell it Ideal for Ule Chrlt&mal .pot of the Forrestal case": partment ot psychiatry. I. That Capt. Geor.. e H. a.u.. the Gold Crest farm where thou­ Iowa Stale college at Ames as it In the conrmullily terlea. the naval psychlatrlLt In charge of sands of birds have died in a did five years ago, the Iowa Deve­ Huston, now living at 445 Prof. Gregory Foley, business THRU cholera epidemic. The farm was lopm~nt commission has announc­ Grand avenue, plans to build a manager of University thealer, Forrestal's case, reLused on six TUESDAY occasions to let Forrestal see a Quarentlned but tram 3,000 to ed. $12,000 residence and garage on said tickets for the show will be ~e HELD OVER, Catholic priest. 4,000 turkeys had gone to whoi,e­ "Thoughtful Iowans have long Lucon drive. available starting Monday at 8:30 • 2. That Forres'-l'. older brother sale markets. been concerned about the 'export' Other permits were Issued to: a.m. Henry tried unsuccessfully to gel State agriculture inspectors. of talented university graduates," Phillip W. Willis, 619 E. Mar­ It IS .The Best Movie of 19S0! the ailing Secretary ou~ ot the warned by Assistant State Vet­ the commission said. ket street, :for a $700 ga rage at Iowan Attends Warsaw Naval hospital to a pr~vate 41~tate erinarian John Groves that the "They felt Iowa suffered a real 2002 Muscatine avenue and disease could cause severe diar­ 822 - where he would be frel! to ~1k loss when its young people were another at Fourth avenue. World Peace Congress THE BEST FILM ACTOR to a priest. rhea and po sible death, made a educated In tax-supporled colleges, Mrs. Glady$ Oatnout, 627 Brad­ WARSAW. POLAND (A» - An IN THE LAST HALF-CENTURY Navy sources pointed out that pubUc appeal to help find the and then went outside the state to ley street. for a $600 garage at Iowan, Charles P. Howard of Des they could not release Forrestal to birds. put their ability 10 work," the her home. Moines, was one of 12 persons By Saturday, about 1,100 ot the In The commission said. Stanley Cross for $200 in alter­ from the United States elected to turkeys had been recovered. But the lOl-member presidium of the Statistics compJied by the com­ ations to an apartment at BIB S. 2 Aviators Killed Assl9tllllt Oakl3nd County Prose­ Dubuque street. World Peace conrerence here FUNNIEST COMEDY cutor Georic Taylor said he was mission show a deClnlte increase In Saturday. getting a "steady stream" oC caUs the number ot Iowa graduates Howard, a Nerro attorney, Is 'Buzzing' Houses employed by Iowa industry, how­ OF THIS OR ANY from wholesalers who bought Funeral Rites Today among the eight Americans pres­ ever. Graduates who accepled turkeys from the Gold Crest farm. ent at the congress. He is active In LA 'PORTE, IND. (11'1 - Two Iowa jobs represented H percent For Former Professor YEAR! Most of the turkeys were pur­ Progressive party circles in the -, men were killed Saturday when oC Iowa State's 1949-50 gTaduates. their rented light plane crashed chased a week ago and were be­ Funeral services for Dr. Avery United Slates. In Pine .lake near here tollowing Ing held tor Thanksgiving sale Placement figures show 99 per­ E. Lam bert, 77, instructor and housetop "buzzing" and minor this weekend. Taylor said he had cent or the last graduating class professor emeritus of the sur col­ IIEDGES ELECTED aerobatics. no way of knowing how many had had jobs by October. Practically lege of medicine, who died Thurs­ John Hedges, assistant dlrector Ed Butcher, 47, formerly of reached retail markets or consum­ all of them found jobs before re­ day, will be held at the Congre­ ot the SUI audio vl!i\lal depart­ Oshkcsh, Wis., died in a hospital ers. ceiving degrees. gational church at 3:30 p.m. today. ment, was elected second vice­ The Important thing, the com­ Doors shortly after he was pulled un­ He knew "detinilely" of one re­ Lambert received his Ph.D. de­ president elf the Iowa Congress of mission says. Is "Iowa's expand­ the Iowa Congress of Parents Open \ conscious from the wreckage. A tail buyer-an unsuspecting deer gree from Dartmouth in 1906. He ing Industry Is keeping more or Parents and Teachers at their 1:15 P.l\-f second man, Walter Menzel, La hunter who had taken the bird came to SUI in 1935 as professor our university rraduates inside convention In Des Moines, Friday. Porte, still was held in the plane north with him on a hunting trip. of histology and microsopical anat­ the slate." by a safety belt. The plane was State police were asked to help omy, and retired Jast year. submerged In eight to 10 teet ot tind him. Burial services will be private water. at the Oakland cemetery. Pollce fastened Unes from a DIVOROE SUIT FILED Police Court Fines wrecker to the plane In an effort A divol'ce suit charging that her to get it out of the water and husband Gilbert Moore, refused to release Menzel's body. Uve with. her was filed Friday in Total $262 Saturday Witnesses told autborlties the Johnson county district court by Wl1liam Luxford, Coralville, Ends Tuesday! plane started up in a power staH Wilma Moore, Iowa City. Mrs. was fined $105 on two charges NOW at full throttle, tell over on one • • • M90re l$ks that she be given the by Judge Emil G. Trott in police wing and spun into the lake. At boutehold goods, her equity in the court Saturday. least five persons saw the mis­ real estate, and that Moore be re­ Doors Open 12:(5 p.m. hap, police said. quired to pay the tamily debts. Luxford, a former Golden hows At 1:00, 3:00. Gloves boxer, was fined $7'1.50 on 5:10, 1:10 & 9:15 p.m. a charge of resisting arrest. Twen­ ty-five dollars was suspended on THE TOP CONTENDER condition that Luxford pay officer FOR THIS YEAR'S Herman Parrott $9 for damages Try and Stop Me ACADEMY AWARD I incurred, In the fight to arrest Luxford. - ...... - ..y IENNETT CER ...... -- ...... -~ Parrott's glasses were reported CCORDING to a . London rumor, the Duchess oC Windsor broken and his blouse damaged. In a separate charge I.uxtord A inadvertentiy let the cat out of the bag about Edward's was fined $27.50 tor disturbing the abdication two full day. before the story was otftcially released. peace. The charlie was Iiled by She was engaged in a hi,h-atake bridge lame. At the conclusion E.R. Klpne'y, operator of the of one hand, her partner Brown Derby tavern, who said asked "Whatever happened Luxford was f1ihtlng there. to the kin,?" The Duchess ' Five other persons were fined absent - mindedly remarked, $12.50 each on charges of Intoxi­ cation. "Hadn't you hearet! lie', '0- They were Richard Morr, AI, in, to abdrcatel" Odebolt; James Osborne, Davelj­ • • • portj Harry C. Hunt; Rock Island. Lana Turner appeve4 for a Ill; Joe G. Treanor. Goodhue, dinner one evenln.- at Roman- Minn., and James P. Riley, Le oI('. in a darlll&', ' Iow-c:ut .".- Sueur, M nn. nln.. ,own. Attadlad ' .. • The flaes against Treanor and "Doors Open 1:00-10:00 fra,-lle chain around .r peek RUey were suspended. wu a ,old~r. repUc:a 01 an air- . plane - an exqul.. t. piece of YOUNKEaS nilE workman,hlp w h I c h ncatled . .I I ~Il~l~:j i the r e provocaUvely. "PI1ncc 1""~ Iowa City firemen extinguished Mike" Romanolr ..ked Qlarlea a 9:15 p.m. fire Friday at Younk­ ' -END "Brackett, "What dO you think 01 Lula'. alrpl&r\e ,.. "Lovely," ers department store: 115 E. Wash­ NOW TUESDAY- breathed Brackett eat&Uc:aIJ,.., "and what, -.ndlnr 1.ld!" ington street. No damage was re­ WHAT • • • • ported. , I 11k. the .tory that'. 00tM doW{' from line 8ln,-ot .th, con­ MR. aao demned man walkin.- to UM electric 4'&ir, 0lil1,,10111 to the altenan" "Doors Open 1:"-11:1' .urroundln, him, readin. a corr 01 ''Qulc:ll''! . . , «:01')',111>1, 1_, _ ~ c.t...... , DIe rlat_ "...: . DOES TO SHOWS . 1 : ~U. - :i:ae .::Ill . 7:st ~,~[D THEIR LOVE 9:SO STAaTS List Feat.f. featuring LIFE .• SHOULD O:,)J • TODAY TODAY r::7 " - . • fill" rlUII4 Hlf! • HAPPEN TO II BIIT RALPH FLANAGAN LANCASTER ..I and • THY McGUIRE AMERICA'S, TOP BAND

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