~------~------owan Serving The State University of Iowa and the People. of Iowa City

I({' a series lti6 I~ Tuesdays Member 01 Associated Press AP Leased Wire and' Wtrepholo ser ice Iowa clfy. Iowa, weanesaay, Mardi 7, larch begin- 'ip to Reli- "hich has U.S.', Russia campus, : I~ visiting .'. ill include a IProtestaDt Blamed for Bulganin Speeds 'Reply ~Ic church, , II$pol\tatlvn I~ the, Iowa Possible War fp.m .. each ' JERUSALEM t4'I-lsraeli Pre­ II the First , mier David Ben-Gurion tol~ his Parliament Tuesday that chances eiierson and , To Ike~s 'Di.sarm' Plea .~ "f,preventing a second Arab-Isracli tev, L, L. ~ . Ilhe church war are becoming smaller. He ~, doctrine~ charged that if bloodshed comes, Ike Proposes :M lice in the tbe United States and Russia wlli B~gan Claims Politicians _. share the moral responsibility. I~mas More Rain Ben·Gurion blamed the possibil­ " 1St. will be Ity of a "second round" on the A-Weapon ~. Msgr. J. ' Soviet government because of a Interfere with Road.building continued flow of Red weapons to & d!r will ad- .' Egypt and also on the U. S. be­ By BILL KNOWLES cause of its continued refusal of I II Lutheran . When politicians ceasc to interfere with engineers' plans for road­ Supply Freeze: Irrington St. Israel's request for 50 million dol­ Cold lars worth of arms for defense . )ullding. Iowa roads will how a definite improveme.nt, Gerald Bogan. WASHlNGTON III-President EI­ ~xecut i ve secretary of the Iowa Good Roads ASsociation told a mceting senhower urled Soviet Premier ~1l be con- "Israel will not start a war," he x the Iowa City Junior Chamber of Commerce Tuesday evening. Ivisit to the said. "But if it should break out The colder weather which hit Bulganln Tuesday to join hlm 10 Politics and good ,road building do not mix. in Iowa or anywhere else, the IlJe, 606' E. we will meet it with strength and efforts to end atom Ie arms Bogan declared. If the cngineering Iowa City Tuesday'is expc.ct.ed to race by freezing stockpiles 0( 1:. Stamm confidence ... if war should br.eak ideas developed immediately after continue with below normal tem­ out against our will, 1 have not the atomic weapons under a "SlIfe· I~ the war were placed into effect. peratures for the season for lhe auarded" dlaannament system, Ilattcnd ~ slightest doubt that we will stand Iowans would now be enjoying Tearn Debates up and win." next five or six days. the Weath­ He made I1is appeal In a lette{' tials said roads with greater sight distance, , # rei eased by the White House Tue," 1l was his first statement since fewer entrances, and in som" er Bureau reported. day afternoon and BulaaDin react­ British Lt. Gen. John Bagot Glubb areas, four lanes, he continucd. U.S. Policy Snow and freezing drizzle ror ed in a friendly manner with ex­ was removed last Thursday as the Bogan noted the controlled ac­ southern, central and easlern traordinary speed. commander of Jordan's Arab Le­ cess of eastern tollroads and Cali­ sections of the slDte Tuesday Even before Bulganin expressed Club (Din low&n Ph.t~ ) , gl.on. fornia freeway which have cut tbis view the Soviet ,ovcrnment Meanwhile. government chiefs o[ FIVE FEET OF FOAM almost hides the spillway of the dam nur the Burlin!\ton Street brldgo. The In 'Far East night should make drivIng condi­ lor "suds" is caused each spring by tho combination of vtgetation in tho wa1er runninq into the river from the accident rates decisively. had distributed Eisenhower' 8 letter Saudi Arabia, Syria and Egypt A team of two Scandinavian tions hazardous. to Russian newspapers and the land and the preak-up of ice. Clouds of foam sometille& float ov.r the SUI power plant wh.re the picture Lone Trle Corner mbers will were meeting in an Arab summit debaters argued the subject " Re­ Skies will begin to clear in text was broadcast on the Moscow . conference in Cairo hoping for a was taken . Iowa City by late Wednesday radio. bhbarier, ! Bogan pOinted out the Lone Tree solved, That the Far Eastern Pol­ I~azine, de- deal to bring Jordon's Arab Legion • corner on Highway 22 : extensive afternoon though fractional mea­ RKenI Spee4 IllY at 7:00 ullder their unified military com· icy of the U,S. is Deplorable," with surings of freezing drizzle arc ex· Washln,ton offieiais DOted the business establishments at the pected earlier. ~oom 311, mand. Council Filing two SUI students at the annual speed of Soviet action. It departed Electric Str,ik-ers corner increases the acceSSes to International Debate Tuesday The high Tuesday in Iowa City from the practice there a month , . the highway, making that point the was 39 degrees at noon ; expected ago of delaying publication of an " IW illustrate night. high Wednesday will be about 30 Eisenhower letter until Ule Russian ~ slides of most dangerous highway corner in Poul Svanbolm, o( Denmark. and alaken. p~/les Urges Ends Today degrees. answer had beeD prepared. Iowa. Herald Uncas Serner, of Sweden "My ultimate hope," Eisenhow· ilo the -p~~: Mum; Still , O~t Filing deadline fOr all.campus U.S. 30 west of Marshalltown - look the aflirmative side of the er wrote BlIlganln, "Is that all pro­ Jeen request· elections is 5 p.m. today in tho a new and beautiful stretch of road question. Debating the negative duction of fissionable materials I in meeting :4rrned Force Student Council office at the Iowa were David Foster, L2. Sheffield, WASHINGTON UP! - The International Union of Electrical Workers - has been ruined by the presenec Claims Ike anywhere In the world will be de­ l~on. ' Memorial Union. ClUE ) Tuesday night withheld an answer to a government plan to set­ and Sandra Swengel, A2, Mus· voted exclusively Lo peaceful pur· All . groups selling up their own of motels and gas' stations which catine. poses." tle the 14Z-day Weslin~louse strike. The compllny accepted it. slates and individual candidates congest the rond," Bogan also For SEATO James B. Carey. IUE president, told reporters the union was in no Speaking of the Communist gov· Preper "fetuanl. from groups not setting u~ slatell noted. ernment in China, Svanholm sald Asked Nixon 11 0 aiso Lold Bullanin that thouab ;: KARACHI, Pakistan !A') _ The hurry to accept the plan. must We at this time. , "The number of typical suburban that it has furthered social pro­ it 1ll&Y be difficult In the absence thrs creation of a standing military It woulp give the company a 5- F· ' S. No students from Town Women gress. oC "real peace in the Far East" to roadside business - service 5ta- force is needed to protect vulner- year contract and the UI\ion a I rms ay have filed nomination papers for No C.rteinty To Withdraw agrce on cutting the size of armies. able SEATO l\.\\tions from Com· minimum five cent hourly annual ' , Student Council positions to be tions, cafes, motels. drive-in thea­ FosLer replied that no one could NEW YORK !.fI-Newsweek mag- na vies and air forces just now, it munist aggression, U. S. Secretary wage boost, plus pension, insure , filled in the elections March 21, tres - must bE' curtailed so that should be possible to agree on lim­ Council President Mark Putney. be certain if the Chinese people azlDe said Tuesday that President State John Fos- ance and other gains. 'N ' t U · the highway drh'er may progress wanted Communism. Eiscnhower sug,estcd t9 Vice Iting "under proper safcguards" t~r Dulles. told for· Two-Sid.d Plan L3, Gladbrook, said Tuesday. on the highway without the chance major types of we~pons, such as elgn mlDlsters of 0 0 nlon Town Women will vote [or one Serner jokingly reassured the President Richard M. Nlxln "that of a car entel'ing [rom a side road audience that Svanholm and he be consider wltlldtawma .. a caD­ bombers, mis ~ i1cs, 'tanks aDd the the Southeast Asia A three·man panel of the Fed· repre~entative to the council. at a slow speed," he added. Ilke. Treaty Organiza- eral Mediation and Conciliation Representatives trom Central Only two applicants from both were not'" Communists. "We are dldate for re~lectlon ." both on the right Hide of Ule de- In Its current Issue, New,weck The Eisenhower lettcr was de­ tion Tuesday. Service said that the setUement Ready Mixed Concrete Co. and Town Men and married student Short·Slghted Planning livered In Moscow Monday throu,h Dulles saId that plan sought terms fair to both Johnson County Reijuy Mix cement housing ha ve been Ciled, Putney marcation line ," he said. says the President approached Nbc- Bogan stated that Iowa has been Arguing on another point Foster on the day before he announced his the American Embassy there. despite shilts in Sides, company fefused 'l'uesday to meet said. guilty of short·sighted road plan­ The Premier told reporters who Soviet policy, the David L. Cole, Paterson, N.J., with officials of the union picketing Married stu dents and Town Men said that the U.S. should not give own candidacy lor reelection. The ning "since the years when roads the Red Chinese diplomatic rec- magazine adds : met hIm at a Moscow reception W~st has no evi- attorney, one of the panel memo the plants, Mervin J. Smith. busi­ each elect two representatives. were built for Model-T's." Sight ognilion lInless the U.S. received "He offered Nixon a place in the tllat he considered the P{ealdent's dence that Mos- bers. said a great' many of the set­ ness representaUve for the union, Application papers can be pick· distances, hills, sharp curves, and message a "very interesting let­ , ~ somethi ng in return Cabinet. ',' cow actually is tlement proposals were based on said Tuesday. ed up at the Student Coun~il of­ other important road,building fact­ ter and a good one," thou,h It DULLES abandoning force. what the union had suggested as a The two plants have been pick­ fice. ors were ignored in those days, Bo­ R.cognltion to R.d. "The President didn't ask Nixon would require much study. There has been no minimum basis for a new agree· eted since Monday by members of Individual candidates for Stu­ gan declared. Foster pointed out that Great to withdraw-only to consider it. Britain gave the Chinese dlplD- And the White House let it be Back to DI'armament real reduction in the rate of soviet ment. Local 238 of the AFL Teamsters dent Council seats from Town Men, Pointing out a situation in In­ The President's immediate pur. ",, 'military preparation, he declared. Carey said the union 's negoti- Union with headquarters in Cedar Town Women and married student matic recognitibn In 1950 but that known that Nixon could have the pose appeared to be to shift the diana which is also often true in the Comtn\lnist allilude has re- vice presidential nomination if he Conceding there is "less danger ating committee and its 75-man ~apids. housing, Union Board and student Iowa, Bogan said that on an aver­ focus of his corerspondence away of war than when violence and Westinghouse conference board About 5 of the 7 or 8 truck driv­ Publications, Inc. also must file mained unfriendly. wanted it. from Bulganin's repeated Insist· campaign platforms in the offiec age stretch of suburban highway in Serner, 24, has a law degree "The circumstances indicated, ) tnreats were being utilized, " Dul- may not dccide until today or later ers employed bY' the companies Indiana, there is one entrance for ence on a Soviet-American frlerid­ ,, les told the first c10sejl session of on whether to accept or reject the are union members. Employment by 5 p.m. from the UniVersity of Stockholm; however. that the President, while ship treaty and back to the dis· each 150 feet of highway - result: Svanholm has been studying law reluctant to force Nixon's with­ " tbe eight-nation SEATO conference peace pact. varies seasonally. numerous broadside collisions. armament issue. The truck drivers are crossing at the University of Copenhagen. drawal, nevertheless wanted a thcre is, however, "a need for Minor Points "In many instances it has been free hand to choose his running Eisenhower had exchanged let· (orces in be!i.g in countries which the picket Jines to work. 24 Students Make ters with Bulganin on disarma­ Smith said that the drivers had necessarj to build a bypass to by- J k 8. W·" Be 32 mate-Nixon or somebody else- a,re subject to the possibility of Cole said two relatively minor pass a highway that was originally I , later on, when the political situa. ment last fall and had rejected the attack so they can be assured an points were particularly "trouble­ "wanted the contract and said they ac nny a bypass because of uncontrolled Court Records Reveal lion clarified." friendship treaty proposition in aggressor would" not march in and some" for the union. One concerns would sUJ)port us. " He said the 4-Point Average January only to have Bulganin de­ pick them up for nothing. " the p.... el's recommendation that pickets "mtght be from Iowa City access)o that original bypass. Thc , In Washington, the White House Twenty-four of 4.846 studellts en­ influx of business onto new high- WAUKEGAN, Ill. IA'I- Jack Ben- refused to confirm or deny the cline to take no for an answer_ The American secretary ob- the matter of reinstating 36 strike or Cedar Rapids.'" "I think, the strike is primarily rolled in the SUI College of Liberal way roadsides means an increased ny will be 32 years old Wednesday Newsweek account. served that Russia has added tac- ers fired for alleged violence Arts received straight "A" gradcs number of entrances," Bogall said. - but there's a catch. Ne\tlsweek claims its Information tics of economic penctration to its should go to arbitration. a money matter," Smith said. during the preceding semester Build Safety ·F.atures It was on March 7, 1924, that 3 came {rom "friends of both the maneuvers and "a campaign of Carey insisted they be reinstated "The bIg Ilisue is wages." Sa ngster Pulls Out "Also we want the union recog­ They have received letters of circuit court in Waukqgan granted President and the vice president" "ttemptlng to turn free nations without arbitration, as the panel commendation from liberal arts "Safety features must be built Ben Kubelsky's petition to change . nized as a bafl~aining agent." .against one another by stirring up had recommended for 57 other dis- Dean Dewey B. Stuit. into roads," Bogan told the Jay- his name to Jack Benny for the- Of Education Race historic grievances." charged workers. . He exp1alned that there is a 44 Cees. " We can't blame excessive Dtrlcal purposes. . ISc STUDENT FINED cent difference between average They arc: Pakistan's Forei"n Secretary I' A company statement said- that Carolyn Henderoon. A2, Arne.; Ell­ speed for all accidents." . Waukegan court records show AMES IA'I - An Iowa Stat~ Col­ Earl y, Sangster, one of five wages paId in Cedar Rapids and ,l!ene Frmh.. February grHduate. Cedar lege freshman was £ined $100 and candidates in the Iowa City Board M. S. Baig told the conference. if the union accepted the proposed those paid In Iowa City. "With Rapl!!.; Sandra J ohnson. A2. Council Bogan said after the meeting that that the famous comedian-who for that "Russia desires to destroy settlement, stri~er.s could be~in Blufe.: Jane RIchter. "3. Davenport; only 10 per cent of Iowa 's 1955 auto Iyears has claimed to be 3S-was 30 costs Tuesday after he pleaded of Education eleetion withdrew rringe benefits like paid holidays Allan Wa&'!1er, now a graduale n ude"t. guilty in Municipal court on a lar­ from the race Tuesday. Pakistan 8S a center of resistance returmng to their Jobs almost 1m­ and hellltl1 and welfare benefits, DavenpOrt; and Charles SwaIn. Al. accidents occurred at speeds ove r ~ at the time he legally changed to commllnism in this area. pak- I mediately. Des MoJnes. 60 miles per hour. his name. ceny charge. Sangster was one of four candi. the Cedar Rapids drivers get up to MnrJorle AUWaertcr. Febl'Uo,'Y gradu· dates nominated by a bi-partlsan islan docs not have the means of The walkout has developed into 75 cents more per hour." ate. FI. Madison; J ames J<: noll. A2. In­ ------warding off Communist aggres- Ule longest major strike the nation dependence: Till'. E"an •. "'2. I ow~ Clly: school candidate selection commit­ "Yet prices of concrete produced Canna M_cGivern, A2. Marengo; Thomas sian." has experienced in two decades. Strike, "3, Osceola; Robert Van Scoy, 'Moose' and 'Gator Match Mouths tee. The filth candidate, Edward Westinghouse said workers have 4n Ce~al" Rapids are about the AI, OsccolAl : and J anis Slroumanis, A3, M. Baker, +42 Grand Ave., filed Ii same," Smith said. Riverside. lost wages exceeding $85 million Mervin McClenalufl, now Mt. S ig­ petition to have his naffie placed and the company has lost $250 mii~ ourney; John Bergeson. "2, Sioux City; on the ballot. Lois Fritz, A2, Slou.I( Rapld-; Ca rol Argentina Alarmed lion worth of potential sales. SlIenljes. AI. Sioux City; Donna Jo San,.ter, a retired businessm8ll, Workman. A4 . Sprlngvllle; Robert Ber­ served on the school" board from Carlsten' Elected do, A4, Washlngtllll: Jim Young. A2. Watcrloq ; Lloyd King, A3, Wlnter•• t; 1939 to IH6. He said WOOD nom­ At pono Oulbrea k Robert Eriksen. A3. 10 • City; Judy iuted he was not certain he wOlllcl J ack~on f A2. \Ve~'tchester. 111 ./ and John Young -Demo Head McCammond. A3. Iowa City. run. BUENOS AIRES (11'1 - Tile pro­ Girl~Hater! The remaining candidates for the visional government of President Paul Carlsten, G, Charlestown, tWo three-year terms are Buer; Pedro Aramburu issued a decree Lion 'Kisses' Man, Ind., 'was elect~ president of the Desegregation Foe Mrs. Stephen G. Darling. 431 SUm" Tuesday appropriating 10 1') illion .~, mit St.; PaW J. Frank. 5ZO CI.,. pesos ($250,000) to fight an all1rm- ~ . But Bites WOfl1an SUI Young Democrats Tuesday Sees Negro Group St.; and John A. Nash, 504 Gr.... after an hollr-Iong debate. Ave. . ing po~iO outbr~k. : . LOS ANGELES (A'l--l\n African WASHINGTON (A'l-Two Negroes Prcsldcn~ Al'ambu~u vI~lted a lion stalked into the' City Hall Carlst!ln's opponent was Sam Board members whose terms aI'2 who called on Sen. James O. East­ expiring this year, 1\1r8. Irvbl P. B~enos . AIres. hospItal er~wded Tuesday, leaped atop a desk and Pes~s, C3, Bettendorf, who was land (D-Miss,) reported Tuesday , ~vlth poho victuns - both children licked the face 'of the animal com- Irwin and Atty. Robert 0smW)d· later eleet~d secretary. he was "very cordial" to them and son, arc not seeking re-dec:tloo. and adults. missioner. Carlst~n hps headed the group's spoke out against violence in the , As the United States was' rush- Richard Bonner ' mopped his membership committee for the South 's race uneasiness, ing iron, lungs and medici.1 teams brow. , The visitors were delegates from Riots Break Out to Argentina to aid in too right, It seemed for a moment that past ye~r. He is an SUI graduate in a Civil Rights Assembly of tile Na­ ~c Health Ministry blanned to use King, 56·pound, 5-montll-old pet of political sciel1ce and is now doing tional Assn. for the Advancement In Finnish Stdk. Its new funds to Institute sanitary a gas &latlon attendant, might be graduate work In economics. of Colored People, which has made measures and buy needed hospital winning his point that he's tame Barbara Crutchfield, 1;2, Boyd· Eastland one of its favorite tar­ HELSINKI, FinlaDd III - Riotl equipment. enough to live uncagcd around hu- broke out in several FlmUah cltJes ton, Val. was unanimously elected gets. The number of cases was mount- mans . They said Eastland told them TueIda" Through them Commu· ing by 40 a day as Argenlina swel- But then a woman employo, Syl· first vi~ president. the federal government has ' con­ nists apparently were startiDi a tered In the Southern Hemis- via Thorne, walked by, King b~ew Jack Chrls~anson, A4, Iowa City siderable powers to enforce the drive to take over the .eaeral sphere's late summer season. hi~ hopes sky high by nipping her was elected sellOnd vice president civil rights of all citizMs in federal strike th.t baa _Iated Flnlbd There have been 1,173 cases re- on the leg, inflicting a minor and Richard Rausch, A2, Carrol elections. 1rom the rest or the world. POrted since Jan 7 nnd of these wound. They said he suggested that III a JlatJonwide broadtast. tbe was elect~ treasurer. Both elec­ as proved fatal. In the last four Commissioner Bonner Immedi­ "what we would have to do in the newly appointed Premier, K. A. days 163 cases have been reported. ately upheld an earlier rullng that tions were by unanimous ballot. future was to elect a president who Fagerholm. appealed for callO - Of these 11 victims died. King ~ust vacate the ,City within Precedlttg the election, plans for would act in case of disorder." warDed that hiI JOvemmeat wul TWenty-one iron lungs were en- 15 days. the ~ote canvassing In Cedar Rap­ The 3-day NAACP meeting has DOt tolerate 1111 unlawful bella""". route to Buenos Aires Tuesday King was brought to the City ids Saturday were announced. heard frequent denunciations of (DaII, , ...... , Riots were reported iD HelaiDld. niaht, two Massachusetts firms Hllll by his master, John Shinners, Christlabson announced that Eastland, new chairman of the OPEN WIDE fella say. Dick (Moo .. ) M.. n., C4, D.. Meln ••, to AI I, G.,...... m ...... 'lema Phi Lahti, Turtu. JyVasbia. Kuopio .tI~ving worked feverishlY 'atl "\lay ~, who hb~~ m~t 1a perstSfiAI .p~ Lummot\l Wilcox, Jefferson will Senate Judiciary Committee. Easl­ Ip,i1on fraternity. All (a. the ,at.r II ulletllince DI;k I",'t ' .. whether It ...... lie .. w Alice) ••1 and V~, FinlaDcI', chief ma~ trial At 1_ perIOIII to prcpiirc the Ilfe Savihg I devices ~al n1\~t Ut(Sb "ffte ~ l:otti'ml&JSfoh- speak to the club Monday on the land is a declared foe of race lote­ llroutht back by Mean' and Den V.rhlll.,· C~, Ottum",a, after • rptIt .,. Ie .... MaftR Gras " .... Or· towns. » for air ,q hipmcnt. . ' cI',10 have a change of heart, rarm problem. gration in public schools, lean., were arrated,

J doodles by d~an f? ' ) .1J) " n!J j~I" . poison Ex The Daily Iowan , ... f !' yene.ra{ ~' OltCed I . , - I ,1 ~ . I The parly Iowan If an Irukpe~ ,.,~.ttion PI stit ctdmirdstrNlon policy or I . , J ' • . o~et., Notlcc~ mllst ~ Itft at The Dally 10 1m oUlce. Room 20t Col!\IIIqJ. daily newtpaper, written and edlfed b~ o~lnlon, caUonl Center. b:v 8 a.nl . Monday lor publication III The Dally Iowan on TUesd17. HURRAH F()~ FREE Vollce. (or other week da ys mUI! be In by a p .m . two days prior 10 pu /lc.aon. TeetE tNrEl, Telephone her at 6486 if a sitter or school of journalism. 205 Commu· I The expert AU 'student groups on campus (political, information about joining the nications Center, prior to 5 p.m., ~y the dean hel state schools 'are needed. SUI has a Deed group is desir<¥!. March 9. Applications must include for more funds that is as great (and prob· religious, scholastic and student.elected) a written summary of publicatiolW rn t~~ their u xperience, an outline of a sugges(. ably greater) than that )1' r~c. would Have to get into such group, send BADMINTON CLUB - The Bad­ • re' was in representative , and elect officers. They will minton Club is meeting at the ed program, and be accompanied ncer at all. The ISC students who nre behind the by a letter from the registrar cer­ E h.we to prove to legislators that they repre. Women's Gym every Monday and e health of movement say that the primary problems at Wednesday from 4:15 p.m. to 5:30 tifying good scholastic standinc The Baker sent so.many.ihousand students and are and giving cumulative grade point their school are loss of faculty members due p.m. Instruction and competition several 3peaking for them. arc offered. average through the first semester. t e dean to lo\~ salaries. the resulting shortage ol Applicants need not be journalism ince bec:om,inl! The legislators wUl have to be impressed GUARD UNIT FOKMING-Com. student s, nor have had experience i focnlty members and overcrowded classes. ih 1903. Teeters with the fact that these students will soon pany A. 224 Engineer Aviation Bat· 'on SUI publications. Interviews thals concerning The same can be said for SUI. Anyone talion. Iowa National Guard. is and election by the Board of Trus­ be tbe leaders'of Iowa in all fields, as well onious poisoning. who has been here two or more years can now being organized in Iowa City. tees of Student Publications. Inc., It·s his duty as voters. This unit will hold 48 weekly eve. will take place on March 15. think of teachers who have been lost' /n to whether a Hert' is where the alumni groups of all ning drills and a 2·week summer poisoned but to their field of study. The same students can camp a year. Members rece ivc SUI DAMES - The SUI Dames the poison he testify to the increasing number of students three schools 'Should come ill. 'A lobbyist one days regular army pay plus annual dinner dance will be held been given. in th ir classes. They can see how this cuts backed by a student-alumni group would '. allowances for suml{ler camp. Vet­ Saturday. March 17 at the May· have an even erans are invited to join at the flower. Tickets are $3.75 per cou· down discllssion and prevents a close better effect lIpon legislators. grade they held when discharged. pIe and will be available at the t«:acher. pupil contact. The alumni organizations of SUI, ISC Company officers for the proposed regular business meeting, March and ISTC include the cream of Iowa's lead­ unit are students at SUI. Interested 8. or through the treasurer, Mrs. The rsc students said they would like ''I'm Sl/re 1I0'/1e of yOIl sophisticated students will misco nstrue persons arc askcd to contact: Richard Shapiro. 1208 Franklin. ~rsbip In all walks of life. They can swing to see a . similar group fonned at SU I 'Ilnd what I ha ve to say about free enterprise:' James Richmann. 8·4245 ; Thom. how can stalem~nt Sa.turday,.in the cours~ Herbert A. Rowen - "Arnould de tol. The Midwest Conference on we afterwards deCend our work? oC an which ObV,l- - 'The Perfect Ambas- Wi ves meeting, Wednesday. 8 p.m. legislature. Most of them ate lawxel)l '\,Vhg hQst'ite; W education. IIlt~r v lew. wa~ Pompon~e Friday night services at 7:30. Theoretical Physics is March 9 and Klgh.er Let us raise a standard to which ou~I'y . deSigned to soften. Pmeau ~ sador. , 10. At 4 p.m . Tuesday. March 13 in work at lobbying only duririg anQ labor the wise and honest can repair" critiCism of Anglo·Amerlcan poh- Tuesday, March 13 Dt!adline for Sedar tickets is tb~ ' le~t8 ~ 'f .. !rr~~ " ~o~ps, ~usinessmen March 14 . The College Zionist room 301. Physics building, Pro!. tive sessions. . . .'" . . Iv. if " hl;\-'d b 1 • • • . cy. or what he called lack of poli- 6: 30 p.m.-Triangle Club Picnic Fred L. Rlber of SUI and Los Ala· .....t!' .p~r~~e • 'Y obbying ~n recent years. cy. Supper. Iowa Memorial Union . group is sponsoring a dinner dance mos Scientific Laboratory. will Any college student wj)l go Into'l~giSl~. ' 1M), ~~y more weight with legislators . WOODROW WILSO~- " It i~ dif· . The incident looks very much 8 p.m. - sur presents a recoid in Des Moines March 17. There is no charge and reservations must speak on "Fast Neutron Studies of tive lobbying as an amateur In ijoa,d Regents or college flcult (or people to thmk logically like another of those occasions program of Dylan Thomas. Sham. Energy Level~ in Light Nucle!." It field of, ~~: ~? :the ' ?f when the I r sympathies are when France. feeling her inter- baugh Auditorium. be made this week. profeSSions. . • P.l~~~.~ lor one reasOn: they have inter· aroused." ests ignored. makes a fuss in order 4:30 p.m. - University Faculty CATHOLIC NURSES - The An· • •• ested . ~rsong behind them and votes to 10 call attention to herself. Council. House Chamber. Old Capi. YOUNG REPUBLICANS - The sur Yo ung Republicans .iIl hear nual Day of Recollection will be Pineau knows that Britain and tol. held Sunday, March 11 at Mercy Student lohbvists will have to be cluCt'ui of~er. " ,.~. ." the United States are working on Wednesday, March 14 National Committeeman Robert Goodwin speak on Thursday. Hospital. Registration will be at of the impressio'n they make .upon ' l~gU~a~ . :; ,.:' .' i' •• . • . • policy not only for the Middle East. 3 p.m.-Panhellenic Survey Com· 9:30 a.m. and Mass at 10 but for the whole world In the {ace March 8. at 7:30 p.m. in the River a.m. tors. If they go into the aClair wl~ ·.dle ·.; ··~rb~~ ·~ is .·. ~~tlii'llg evil about lobbying mittee, Board Room, Old Capitol. Reservations for the luncheon can of the new Russian emphasis on 8 p.m.-V. Concert Course. Lcon· Room of lhe Union . "dabbling.in-PQlitics-rlizzamataz • aut • .for~ ~e5Pi.ft~ ~, i~pres~ions rt:cently by the be made by calJing Pauline Suep­ lett economic warfare. tyne Price. Iowa Memorial Vnion. pel , 2486. before Friday. March 9. college-fun" air they won't get any*ber.;e, g;i$ ,. ;\Q~<· :<>-,lI · i~ter~sts . Lobbying is not all He knows that Britain is anxious Thunday, Much 15 TWIN CLUB - There will be a (or a united Allied front when vis­ 2 p.m.-The University Club Tea meeting of the Twin ClUb. Tues­ And the antagonism they will caulle I\tno~g pr~$sh're '~Jl~jIllonC)y offers. Lobbyists sup- LUTHERAN GRADS-The LutlJ. ited by Bulganin and Khrushchev & Style Show, University Club day, March 13 at 7:30 p.m. in room RACR of the Union. eran Grad Club will meet Thurt­ legislators wi)! injure the cause they .are pIYJ.eplat9rs· with' vital informatioll that next month, as well as when he Rooms. day. March 8. at 7 p.m. at the stu· supporting. ,', '. ~ey ,~'t ·~.o,r~on't) dig up'from any other and Mollet go to Moscow a· little 4 p.m.-Information First. Sen· later. INTERNATIONAL CLUB-There dent house. Dr. William Bockhoven ate Chamber. Old Capitol. will lead the discussion on the topic Many legislators will be perturbed diat ~~~_ Lobby ~ng has educational vall;le for BUCKY O'CONNOR "They Against that background. he 8 p.m.-University Pia , "Fam· will be a meeting on Saturday. March to. at 7:30 p.m. at the Pres­ from Bonhoelfet's "Cost of Disci· college "kids" are trying to influence: them. the, .~~kers. . . laughed and joked all week in would like to bargain for greater i1y Portrait" -University Theatre. pleship. " British support of France in Al­ S p.m.-Lecture by Kenneth Me· byterian Church. Second semester They will look for any flaw in the ~~cmjs: ..'. St,.~nt ~d6rs can aid higher education practice. and it was the most lack· dues will be collected. adaisical week I've ever spent as geria. Donald. co,s)1Onsored by Graduate __ ENGINEERING WIVES - The behavior. That's why studerlt, chQ~ri ;£or . ~ ; ~9~a ,,,,ltP ~ lobbying program. Because- a coach. But when it came time to Part of his speech indicated sus· College and School of Journalism­ picion of American motives in Viet COMMERCE WIVES-The regu. Engi neering Wives will meet .1obbying will have to be extremely capahlf.. . studel{ts will be involved it 'will be under do . the job. they Hh Hawks) did Senate Chamber. Old Capitol. lar business mceting of the Com. Tbursday. March 8 at 7:30 p.rn. In it." , Nam and British motives in AI· =:', A. ·student lobbyist can't go to the· i~s. ~ \ ~¥.~ap. : fr~~ the' start: Therefore, it will' I geria. (For In!onnatlon re~r(!lnr date! be. merce Wives will be held today at Studlb E oC the Engineering Build· • • .. Mollet merely said he hoped the yond thJI Ichedule. see ruervotlonl In 8 p.m. in Conference Room 2 oC Ing. Mr. William Nusser will talk :ature w(th just a "w~.neec:l.mo/e~wol)ey" nave '· tb ~ ~s goOd or better than profes- :r':;'lt~t~lce a' the Preeldent, Old the Union . on jewelry and jewelry setting •. THE ARCHBISHop' OF CAN· two big allies would give France __~______---- J ~~, ~e'U have to. show facts andc.figu.tt!' ~\a! j~~l)~g progralJls. It will have to be TERBURY-"We need America to greater moral support on Algeria. )nd. give some ideao£ wher~ the , ~'rley . '!s' . " ~"~~r ~¥~d - and . smoothly executed. keep us moving. eager and young He denied France was moving SANXAY PRIZE-Students who for our years and still adventurous. are Interested in entering competi· Midillg to come (rmil. ,'. ,; 0;< \ ~.. d~em... · ~:i~ wi)) do ,more harm than good. away from her North Atlantic al· tion for the Sanxay Prize should W' ' tor I ,. " I • . America needs us to keep her pa­ lies. • He'll have to show why the inOney.·:ii - • J '. ~l ~ ,: . , ;. * '; -* .* tient. sensitive' and aware that if To Britain and the United States. see their department heads at ,. . ,.-I': • .. ,. l' "·.. ,l'f ~ ,f ;a'" ~ her size often shows on a great on~e . The Sanxay Prize .Is a CIIh d d d h ha i. " ft however. the situation in the Mid· Allee e , an w at rm is bemg .aM.~.~,y. " :.:~: y\ ',:i~ ~ Le Y . scale the splendors of God, His award of $500 to the Liberal Arta Lck 'of funds,' Hell have, conv~~ the'" ,.....t c a,.. ear .. , dI~ East was far more pressing senior. a native or resident 01 to deepest secrets are to be found in than anything else at the moment. ;awmt\kers 'that he is co~med ~lth·: t~ ;' ..~ .!: · ~,JS .I~~~ leap yenr.· ~omen are \radi~ the small, the simple and the do· Iowa, who giILes the highest prolll' Pineau. by his timing, got only ise of achievement in gradu81e ~Lltllre 'of Iowa and the educatjon '; ~l ' ttoJ,\fl:nr,;s~klilg a . husban~ at the sam{l'.'timt mestic. And the world for its pre· leftover attention. hiS'::' . servation degperately needs what work at SUI or any other stand~ :~udren, not just wIth . hjm~f. I", '" ~ .:: ' · t~e" Dilt~'· is ' ~eeking a pres~ent. Xn both The Jordanian situation left Bri· university during the coming year. wholehearted trust and cooperation tain without a friend south of the I : !, • ~ . " -;···.1· '.' . ~~r q(;~ tb~ , potential victims we've between us can bring to it." Baghdad pact states. and opened ZOOLOGY SEMINAR-The Z0- • ~ Mo,St im~rtant of lilt, stUdent' lo~~~-; .:. ,..Cn~ffJ ~eemB! very .reluctant to get caught • •• the way for full cooperation be· ology Seminar will meet Frldt1. • f . :1 t ) , ','t 4 :, 1" )) \.0", / It. ~ / ALICE HAINES (authorl-"Pigs tw~en Jordan, Syria and Egypt. Marc}) 9, at 4130 p.m. In room IDr. ~ . , : W.E~ESbAy, ~u tt:' 1956 " ,.. . are the most maligned oC all barn· the major antagonists of Israel. .. • • ' . _ ) • 'II j " , .. . _' f; 'I', t .... " .• ft .. . .. or ZoololY Building. Stuart D. Me­ Ii' y .. •• j ~I '" ' yard animals. Tradition says they There was opeQ talk among for· Donald. SUI student fro/11 Ott.,a, Q~~I~~~-!n:~:::'I~'i:~'1*. ~ . • .1 .,. ;,' .': ." .' ~1I~'tf.\.~ . 0... '419. h~ • ...!. ,•• 101.1, ... t. are stupid, boorish. dirty and glut- eign diplomats in the Middle East Canada. will speak on "Blrdi. "'P'Ibllc:ltUonl. JlIe., ~~ - ";., '. ," • ." ., I. N ...... II .....• ._...... ,. tonous. I have known several of that Israel might launch a "pre· Mammals and Plants of the JUab ~C.n~r, 10"'• • CJty, Jow,...... • ~. ?':.-.j '.' , D~t.Ano'" . " ...... 1 II ...... Til. "all, them intimatelY over the years ventive" .war before the Arabs NCOnd dan matter .t u.. . 0 ~ .. , . - . u r . I I .. '7 I~,*. 1'!lerIa' .m... an I. u.. Arctic." - a' low' CII,/, un"£r !be lICIt at ..-. -rtr.:.t: e:::t. I, • fl_.·I-II... e ..·-, and have found them instinctively could make Cull usc of the arms ",ire•• oj Warch 2;'11'1', ; ~ J " ,":;' .~~ . ~.' ,~,UA.ttIiT - ~ - . clean, natively intelligent, temper· ~ing sent them from the Commu· ..BPi ••• of .... AI,IOCI4'~D ...~ ~ . .li ~ .:,~ r~'::"~kII.~. ',' DO"aD or STUDINT ate at the trough, dignified In nist sphere. UNIVERSITV SC"'OL'AItIHII'I • Th. 'Auoclated Pre" la t1\,tJed .:... .' !:~ : ':;. ;" ' " ~, . puaUCATIONlI, IHC, courtship and marriage." France still feels that Britain -Students Interested In unlvml\f. • elu.I. to Ih. u", for repabllcal .. _ ••••.:. \. .' e:"!rt J • ...... •• Dr • of .11.,.,I" the Joe.1 neft "'!m" ~ 11I I. '" ".\:. .' . ~' ...... , .....-.,..; . t earle S. ft .. .. . I ~Il. o,ntlltr:v: Her... rt H-.l,e. . • did .her dirt over the liberation of scholarships ror 1956-57 Ire ~ ,\n"",p!lJler. u wtll.. \. ~ Il ". ' .• t i - 'I t: D>: Dwl*fll E. J_n, 0.: ~' . HUllh REV, E. N. RENCH (one oC the Syria during World War II, and mlnded thal the application de ;.t'fP'ltlifl.. : • ~ • I / • •• ,. i ,..... E . . l\:ellOl "Political 8clence'l In Ma- • 'F ; J ~ ' l ..· ·;'!...; · *' Lad ... t.aWI ' Prof. LeAl. O. M.,.,· leaders of th~ Nei~ boycott of the ~ears London has ulterior motives line Is June 5, 1956. Infonna DAU.~ IOWAN IllPJ:.V1I~J. noM. ; 1iIt:.. ' ~:\'. \ ;'. ~.~ ~.' . ~' 1~llamt Rlc:harct, 1), Wolf•• ICI(OOL or '?UUAUI.. ACtJ"~1' ;;1"7:,~~: : .: ..., ;::... . ; Charlet WIllie, Ill. 'l'n:a.urer: tr 't b . M'" I m Algeria. and application blanks (or uncW" Publl~r ....•...•.•.•. ~ p, ~ . - .. .. " ':. ,-- WIll T. IbIUUt'. Unlverslt)' Bu.lne.. ansi uses In ontgvmery ~ A a.l Britain smarts over advances graduates are available In the EdII

" . ' • . . .. ~ '" .' , I " . I , ' - __ . I~ . ~ - , foison Expert Hefe Since 1895-', Rac'hmaninoH ~SymRh9ny... or -• Indiana Professor " :· ::.~ - I ' • . . S'ymphony Band Offers Lecture Here . '; oom ~t ' CO"'-alo Second Concert ~oday On fhe·Record$ '0 Iowan on 'ruOl4lJ', State j' Prof. Clifford Truesdell of In- ,rlor 10 pu I1C.~on, Jeeters, 89, Serving SUI, • By BILL DONALDSON 111 not be ~cc ...t.d .!.. The Capitol Version diana UniversiLy' Graduate In· , elOl' 10 the e.. nl, stitute for ~athematics and M4!Ch· • BV JOHN STEGMAN University Symphony Band, with its conductor, Prof. Frederick Ebbs, * * * anies will speak here today NING - 'the has written several articles on tlle and its soloist, saKollhonist Sigurd Rascher, will give its second concert al 8 p.m. in Old Capitol. topic . .' The courtroom was crowded. It * * * . h n I .. ill ' R . aI M banirus 1'- Room, located subject. of the season at 8 p.m. today in the fowa Memorial Union. By BILL DONALDSON However, er aw ess VOIce IS one w be ' allon ec CI, _ •• ~ ing pool of tile "ofaSFethber"I~:yrn, 1~:32~ak;~elibepl~i~ii~: Although TeeLers i 89 now. he FeaLured selcctions will be icolai's Overture to "The Merry \ h'es . of the most beautiful we may bear 1788" and wiIJ describe primarily, . e open on Mon. I r shows no desire Lo quit his work in The sur Orchestra's presentatIOn today, and in this case pure beauty Ute work of the eighteenth ceo- I and Fridays ~. was Norman Baker .of Muscatine: toxicology for Ule SUI College of of Windsor ;" \!Ie first perform· of Rachmaninoff's Second Sym· outweighs vocal-dramatic tech. lury Swiss sclenust Leonhard E;w . •' ~( 3: 30 p.m. and the defendant. the American Medi· Pharmacy. He is the oldest active ance of "Portraits from the Bible" phony the otber nighL was a won· nique. r. Truesdell recently baa edited lable for use II, cal Association. member oC the SUI faculty. by Julian Work ; "Siegfried's Rhine derful one, and ever !'inee J heard Oi Stelano sings with hi usual four volumes of Euler's coUect,ed • during :hese A thin, distinguished looking man The dean was born in Alliance, Journey" from Wagner' "Die Got· it I've been searching Cor a com· excellence and provides his aua. wo~ks of 73 volume.. for the Sww • " [IS took the stand for the defense. He Ohio , where he attended Mt. Union terdammerung;" and Brant's Con· parably satisfying performance on ience with a sound and powerful, Society of Natural Science. ~as there to tell the court what College and received a B.S. in 1893. certo for Saxophone. records. tbcrefore believable. officer. The lecture IS sponc;ored by the I The North Gym. tjte Norman Baker cure [or cancer In 1895. Teeters receivcd a degree Has c her, an internationally. The one which pleased me most Gobbi is not one to be mentioned GraduaLe College and bv lhe De- ldhouse will be was composed of. in Pharmaceutical Chemistry from known artisL, will perform lhe was the Capitol version, with Wil· last, but here he i~ a victim of partments of Physics, Mathematic. ay be1WellD the His name was Wilbur J. Teeters the University o[ Mi<;higan. saxophone concerto. which was liam SLeinberg conducting thl' oPeratic plot. He sings the rat.her and lrchanics and Hydraulics. , f5 p.m. for the and aside from being t.he Dean of Taught in Medicine • dedicated Lo him by its Canadian· Pittsburjh Symphony Orchestra. small part for all its worth and He also will sllt'a" Wcdnesdar ,t all University the Coliege of Pharmacy at SUI.. Shortly after his graduation from born composer, Henry Brant. The sol1bd is good, and the full for that reastn)le s the alblUll' a l\llldleon mceUni at the College admittance flu. he had the title, State Toxicologist. Michigan, he came to Iowa City A former professor of saxophone sweeps and dramatic effects are ;;;;Jt diitinfJUs1iId Ilrtis ol tr(ijneering faculty and to a to present their Ingredients of 'Cure' to join the SUI facully. His [irst at the Danish Royal Academy and all thcre. graduate seminar In hydraulics s at the North ~ears at Iowa were spent with a graduaLe bC the State Academy One of the album's best qualities U,.... Purcha.. and mechanics during the after- "The 'cure', developed by Mr. tne SUI College of Mcdicine where of Music, Stuttgart, Germany. IS' the conductor's treatment of the l ·th $ 98 ( • I d t Apy opera· over WI 11 . or noon. Baker," Dean Teeters re ate 0 he held the title: .. demonstrator 0f Rascher is the first saxophonist to second movement. SLeinberg has lesS. if he Collows 'pecial sale) is ______-:- UIC court, "is composed of glycer· 1 chemistry." In this capacity hc increase thll range of the saxo· the artislic discretion to avoid syr· urged to purchase this opera, tSITlONS-APPil' ine, carbolic acid. and alcohol in taught toxicology and chemistry. phone [rom Lwo and one·half La up and sugar, and at the same RCA VI'cIAr has also issucd r anli business eq Jeweler To Ten Work 1957 Hawkeye ual amounts. with a Lrace of oil He later was translerred to the four octaves. Ume he gives a llvl'ng presence to ,.., 'A' of peppermint added. Carbolic W'lbI ur J • Teeters College of Pharmacy where he was Written in 1941 the lyrical passages cilausson's "P.. me," Salnt,SHnl' the office of the acid is a deadly poison ." M Y f S ' appointed dean in 1909. . "Introduction and Rondo Capric' To Engineering Wive. ~ m, 205 Commu· The expert evidence presented ony ears 0 • ervlce TeeLers remained Dean of Pharo The concerto was wrilLen with Appeal1"1 Cover cIOlO," and orchestral excerpts Engineering Wive Club will hear prior to 5 p.m., y the dean helped sew up the case . __.--- macy until his aclive retirement in orchestral accompaniment in 1941, The album costs $3.98 and has from BerLiot "Rom" and Jull.t." William G. NlIJSCr of Rands Jewel. ons must ioclude ~y of publicatiolll r the American Medical Associa· with" her policeman husband by 1937. He has since served the and in 1950 Brant made the lrans· one of the lew photo-covers that is, Violinist Da vid Oistrakh joins ry Store diseu jew Iry aod ~t. ine of a suggest· on in their claims that Baker's such a rm:thod . universiLy under a pension . cription Cor wind ensemble which at least, appealing. • Ch~rles Munch and th Boston Ling aL their meeting 7:30, Thurs- be accompanied , ure' was in reality no cute {or Suicides, however , rcsort mainly Beginning in 1905, Teeters served we hear today. h Another "M.dam. Blltttrfly," Symphony for the first two selec· day in Studio E of the Engineering he registrar cer· ncer at all, but a deLriment to to strychnine. "I can 't understand on the Board in Control of Ath· "The M~rry Wi ves of Windsor" Sigurd Rasc er Lhis one for RCA Victor with Vic. tions, and thl: Berlioz work fea· Building. olastic standing e health of anyone who took it. why they should want Lo use letics and was presidenL of the is Nicolai's only popular opera, Concert Soloist toria De Los Angeles in the title tures the orchestra alone. A special Invitation is extended tive grade poin! The Baker libel Lrial is only one strychnine," Teeters says. "Strych· board when it eleated Howard though he wrote several. The over· role. Giuseppe Di Stefano as B. F. Nice work If you can get it - to new engineering wives. e first semester. several court actions in which nine poisoning is one of the most Jones as head football coach. Jones ture, like the opera. is a vital and Pinkerton, the American lieutenant listening to such a fine recording ~~~~~~~~~~~~; fot be Jou~nalism t e dean has presented evidence. horrible deaths imaginable. Ar· went on to build some o[ the fin est humorous work. Nicolai, who died Prof To Discuss who loves and leaves her, and Tlto as' this. Oistrakh treats "P_me" ;::. had experience ince becoming state toxicologist senic is an irritant, but strychnine football teams Iowa has ever seen. when he was 39, heard this now· Gobbl as the American conSUl, anjl. "Introduction" delicately and MUSIC FROM Ions. Interviews i 1903. Teeters has sat in on many works 'directly and swifUy on the On City Council famous work only four times. H B h. Sharpless. The orchestra and cho- with tenderness. The reading is e Board of Trus· t ials concerning accidental 0 fel· nervous system.. The dean also has been acLive in Work's "Portraits from the Bi. uma n e aVlor rus are Osted by the '56 Hawks is identical to their For many tramp stronlest scoring potential in con· cause of humor and absurdity they season records of both '54 and '55. ference history. By IVARS LIEPINS ing tunnels provil Dally Iowan Sp.rl. Edll., G~ge Meets lend to an otherwise nerve·t\yist. Iowa, oy virtue oE winning the CourUl in the NCAA flnals, after bed, and 18 or 20 Heading the honor lineup, which ing game. conference championship goes di­ beating 'Penn State and Marquette , olten slept in vari( includes six players for the second All's well that ends well, as far Class A Take the Iowa-Indiana contest rectly into regional play without in the regionals. tunnels at one tim, straight year, are AU-America as SI. Mary's of Iowa City was Monday night. The Hawks were going through the sectionals which In the finals held at Kansas City, The tunnels, whi Robin Freeman of Ohio State and Bloomflel" 4G, B,.olllyn t! nursing an 8 to 10 point lead late begin over the nation March 12. concerned Tuesday night when Ba,..larl •• fo6, Cbarllon ~ (overUale) Iowa lost the opening ~amc to La­ . ror heating to all S Julius McCoy of Michigan State. O.. r,oll At, Alrona G4 in the game when a fan behind me Kentucky, second place finisher , tend an estimated Freeman shattered Big Ten scor­ they defeated Keystone, 72-63, in Cod.r Fall. 7a, Aplln,lon 4' Salle, and 'rom Gola, 76-73. In the Cllarles Clly .8, Bolmond 4t decided to insert himself as a self­ in the Southeast Conference, won consolation game the Hawkeycs the campus. ing records with a 32.5 average the first round distric tournament Olae",ko. 4~, Doni,." 4S \ ...,IIDle) appointed coach, thinking, per­ the nod for a second such bid to One branch of .tI with McCoy his closest rival CU"Ion .., Ce •• r II&pld. (Franklin) .~ lost to Colorado, 75-54. battle here. Dayeopu" Uil. MarluD 06 haps, he was doing Bucky a fa,vor. through the powel throUlhout the campaign. McCoy's Ou.II.lo e.nler U ,J 1I1 ••• t Ayr •• Thjs year's lluintet is composed "Hold that baH, Billy," he cried lJ buildings west of sharpshooting clip was 27.2. The [ourth quarter surge, when 10 .... FlU. 66, Cr.... 45 Plenty of tickets - both re­ of four of the same regulars, plus L~M .. ' .. 97, OraD,. Clly (\8 as Seaberg came over the time­ The other branch the Ramblers outs cored the Key­ served seats and general admis­ n e ar-r~gular .Bill Schoof ,~ho took Illwa placed Bjll Logan, it's top Marsball'-wn III, Jolln.lon 44 line. "Freeze it ... Stall it-out ... j ings east oC the I'i scorer, and Carl Cain, rebounding ~ooe fiR, W~~ PR ~m the New "am.' ... &ti, Vent..ra ~1 Don't shoot . . .'at a way, hang sion-remain for the NCAA reo over completely for McKinley (Dea­ I. . aed Oak 49, Oakland 41 gional playoffs' opening round on demon. ffiinois is represented by margin of victory. Tama G~, Tlplo. 49 onto it ..." By now he was plead­ con) Davis. Davis js now .with the 1" SO Per Cent Bill Ridley, ball-hawking, play· \Veb.ler CUy 72. SpfJlCrr ~~ ing. Friday, March 16. Harlem Globetrotters. From 10 to 12 m In the first three quarters Key­ However, all reserved seats j makirig guard, and its captain, stone handed the Ramblers the Suddenly, Scheuerman passed to The Hawks wiil go into tourna· east tunnel each y clutch'shooting Paul Judson. Class B Logan, who drove past Dees to are sold out for the final round ment play with a better conference 1 ing the depression, scare of their lives as their stub· on Saturday night. There still are Band.rant 68. Garden, Gron 4. score. record than last year. Last season I~: ,ll'ho worked near I Freeman was the only unani­ born club did not want to stay be­ 5,000 general admission tickets mous choice (or the llIythical team Elwo•• ~t Oanroy '"' "Darn good thing they took the they put together an 11 won, tHree , entrance. He reCu! hind in the manner most of the orand Moado .. (Washta) ~, Danbury left . for the Saturday night chosen by 12 AP sports writers previous Ramblers' opponcftts 110 guy's advice," cracked a man sit­ lost record, against a 13-1 showing ned. He said about 1.,.. Clly (Sl. Mary'.) ~~, Kerolo.e US games, business manager Fran­ -Who cover Big Ten games. McCoy ha e. LlotvUle 63, Melb•• rne l2 ting to my left. this season. . ing there were tra ~ cis Graham said Tuesday. missed onll (irst team vote. Traey 71. Wit,: : .. ld i ..~ • • Iowa was orten criticized this were Iowa Citians Trail by Two Wllulla •• 47, 8bell.burr ~, Logan was a .holdover [rom the • TYPICAL FAN B.S., being ·typi­ season jor "just winning." The "Most nights the 1955 team as was Freeman, who Keystone trailed only by two cally fickle, was down on the play in the regional here. Alabama Hawks, however, won their tough "five men in the w, points at the halftime, 34-32, and Hawkeyes after they lost four was the conference champion, but assignments by larger margins Grand Avenue," d also repeated on the AP All-Ameri­ straight games early in the season. I J. Parker, sub·forl ca first team. were able to cut this margin down was refused a bid by a vote in than their so-called 'breathers." still further as the whistle sounded "I've said all along this team " steamfitters. He p Iilinois' 6-8 centerj George Bon· Baseball,Lady tho conference .. Ohio State and Southern Metho­ ending the third quarter. At this would go stale this year," B.S. ,r nels daiJy during t , Salle, barely missed the tirst team. NCAA rules ban four-year men dist lVere both rated high nation­ point the score stood 54-53 in favor omnisciently stated after Iowa lost from competition in the event, and ally when they met the Hawkeyes. I Transients usua With him on the No. 2 lineup were of St. Mary's. ' Professor Will Teach - its Big Ten opener to Michigan ~ one to three night Wally Choice, Indiana; Joe Sex· all Alabama regulars played as In fael they were even rated high. It was mostly through the efforts Braves' Players State. freshmen . The conference decided ly after their respective losses to on, Parker said. 'I son, Purdue; Ron Kramer, Miehi­ Thirteen wins and two months )1 Iowa City during tl 'gan, and Dick MUler, Wisconsin. of Dennis· Walljasper that the Tuesday that Kentucky would be the Hawks, due principally to the , Ramblers were able to remain in MILWAUKEE IA'I - A pretty later, fan B.S. was still popping­ a better representative than Ala· west coast trip on which Iowa lost No one slept in competition during the first three lady professor leaves lor the off, but in a different vein. bama's second team. three straight. ing the summer. ~ Leaving the Illinois game after .j in when the outd, quarters. HI! c~me off the floor as South Wednesday to teach Mil­ NCAA finals this year wi!l be Winois was considered unbeat· the Hawks' murderous assault, 'If began biting lhroul the high scorer for both teams with waukee Braves farm club play­ held in Evanston, Il1. , in North­ able, rated second nationally. The MajOr 37 points, most of them obtained B.S. was on the verge of hysteria. Ihinned coats and . , ~eagu~,... ers to keep tlielr eyes on the ball. western's McGaw Fieldhouse. nation saw what "second·place" by tip·ins . "Didn't I tell you all along they'd 'Fame' 5 do it? Wasn't I right? Wasn't I?" Last year the Hawks finished Iowa thought of the rating. Dan Lumsden was second in the Mrs. Alice Richardson, a pro­ (essor at the University of Wis­ No one bothered to answer him. Fame of the we Delegates:: To Ramblers' scoring column with 21 c· • as far as New markers. I consin's Milwaukee campus, is THIS COMES by the grapevine, heard that tramps Carry Scoring Load !l specialist in teaching people to but from a reliable source: Tama; Clinfon, Davenpqrf ror others to (01101 mum and present unlimited maxi­ "old,' ...... 1 2 I ie expected camp game debut today. State's Wildcats. down by 10 points Jack Christy, I filled. There was no word given Les Stevans, CO-l0I Id er 0 f th e lIfcCorml., f ...... IV ~ Ii ':,t mum are equitable with salaries early in the second half, put on a, said that those st on the April quota. • conference high jump title, high IUI.rho •.• ...... ~ " I " Mllrion is satisfied that Keegan, paid to men in comparable careers. '"e s 1 000 yard O.hl •• lob, r ...... 4 ~.I 4 IG furious scoring finish Tuesday tunnels were mos "I was expecting the call," said h dl J k MatII who had only a 2-5 record in limp­ The committee, however, is not ur er ac W, .' Mollralb, r ...... 0 it ~ night to defeat the Kansas Jay· dents there. the miner's son, who beat the New runner Murray Ke

" , I I,' Gets an 'A' in Diapering Kefauver Police Foil ( Sheriffs Disc:uss 'Kill and Be Blasts GOP Nebergall 'Statu5,: I, ~ Farm Slate Six Iowa sheriffs paid a Des UP! - WASHINGTON ~n . Walter George -En: Governor Hoegh's Indian Affairs said. day drive for the state's 30 votes , Memorial Union "A perfect example of the gov­ cause "arrogant" tactics were couraged by the reception to his Committee. The Governor an- Detective Edward Witherspoon at {he Democratic National con- I lion is $1.25 pen nounced the Cormatioh of the 21 and the priest tried to talk him venUon. o/nment as a creator of monopoly used in its behalf. Minnesota campaigning, Adlai Ste­ In ~ hopes is the impending giveaway of atom­ George said that while these op­ ~~~~~M~Q. ' ~~~q~~~h~~'~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~iiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sludent · interes venson said Tuesday he believes Ed May of Shenandoah is chair- ores. Madara agreed. • ic energy to a handful of giant erations in!\,jcated a pattern of ef­ • I the council cl corpo'rations," Gray asserted. his prospects are good for defeat­ man and Bert Stolpe of Des Moines When they arrived at Madara's forts to win sentiment among sena­ secretary. house, Witherspoon leaned in to the THEATE~I bas decided to "In addition to giving away the tors for the gas bill, "actually qo ing Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn,) Startmg TODAY at ENGLERT candidates ha v The group was slated to hold its switch off the ignition and grabbed reS9Ufce itself, the federal gov­ sena~or took any money so far as in the state's March 20 presidential first mceting in the governor's of- Madara's right arm, swinging the era and platfo ~rnincrlt contemplates subsidizing the evidence shows_" primary. flee on Monday. pistol h igh ~ Other police swarmed ments~' ve b tbe ~e(jciaries of its largesse by 'No Leval Offen,,' As he neared lhe end oC his 5-day Union ard , Ilbplying them with fi$sionable ma­ In announcin g the committee, I_·n;. ;;I ;W;:::;;;:;;;::;;:;P;;;~:;~ require nts { campaign through western Min· terjal at les than cost, buying back "So far as I know." George said, Hoegh cQmmented thal there had , aDd in the fac plutonium at premium prices, £i­ "there was no legal offense com­ nesota, Stevenson said "this has been increased interest in recent r-E:;i&I (-I','f I'! • ministration op nanei"g resarch for their benefit, mitted. ] don't know what the de­ been a heartening experience." months in the problems of the lnd- -- campaig'1ing. and' granting them tax Immunity partment of justice will (ind." The former Illinois governor duro ians in Tama County. THRU Candidates m Neff had acknowledged Monday "I am hopeful," Hoegh said, TODAY FRIDAY in the form or accelerated amorti­ ing his lour has placed restoration "Ulat our committee can cooperato ot campaign r z,atloil, Gray said. that he discussed with Edson mak­ HIS BIG, NEW ROLE Council office i ing a contribution to Hickenloop­ of farm income to "fair" levels at with federal and state officials to . . , Rev.,.. Role CINlMAScoPe permit campaig er's funds . the top of the list of things rle says wor~ out a realistic and ~ong-range bousing units a , .:Herolc laQars by reguiatory com­ Meanwhile Sen. Patrick McNa­ the Democrats wlll do if elected. program which will benefit thQ nussiOllS on behalf of monopoly" mara