• In, The News U.S. ' Deo~ares l'Sir Winston 1Honor.o~y Giti~en' 7:oday; IS ~ THIS WASHINGTON I.fI - In pomp and ceremony, they will declare There were those who said we wanted no part of Europe's quarrels; chairman now o~ Senate and House Armed Service committee; Sir Winston Churchill an honorary U.S. citi~en today. who for months had viewed hurchlll as a sly fellow seducing Presi· Texas' Sam Rayburn, Kentucky's Alben Barkley, Ohio's Bob TalL, And your mind flicks back over the World War 11 years when the dent Roosevelt inlo that lend-lease stufC. and a bouncy senaLor from Missouri, Harry S. Truman, dcstincO, MORNING Old Boy qualified for thls liUe. And suddenly there was Pearl Harbor: Out of a morning my, before the war's end 10 become president and commander in chler You remember his repeated trips here. His pudgy figure, his 180 Japanese planes swooped In on the U.S. naval base in Jlawaii on and be confronted with problems as tough and decisions as hard as big cIgdr, and the slories of his liking for brandy. Dec. 7, 1941. any man or his generation. ON CAMPUS- When they left, every U.S. battleship in the Paciric-there wero It was against Il1ch a bac l ground that Winston Churchill came As one peer reputedly put it: "Winslon's tastes are very simple : IOWA'S HAWKEYES won their eight of them-was knocked out together with to lesser vessels and a winging in on his lirst post· Pearl Harbor visit to America, and to e courth straight victory All he wants Is the be9." You remember his air raid suil-a sort drydock. such an audience that he spoke on Dec. 26, 1941. from Western lUinois by beating of coverall. such as a filling slation attendant wears, with a zipper It was so bad that the full extent of the disaster was kept offi· Rocking on his heels, clutching lhe lapels o[ his jacket with both the Leathernecks, 11-6, in Macomb, up the front. Very handy when you must leap from your bed and clally secret [or a veal'. But it was known to high officials 01 the hands, Churchill ~wept away the gloom and gave La the answering Ill., Monday. Details, page 4. lor an all' raid shelter. Particularly if you sleep raw, as some government, to leading members of Congress and to a number of hearts 01 the U.S. Congress mel1lbers what they had really known said Churchill did. • • • newspaper men. all alung-lbat in the end the Western Allies would surely prevail THE MAIN LIBRARY wiu be But what you never will forgel are those glimpses oC the spirit Thero was a very deep concern in high places that the Japanese over the evil men in Berlin. Rome and Tokyo. open today from 7:30 a.m. to 5 of the man. p.m. could - and might - take lIawaii and strike at the Pacific U.S. As for the Japanese, Churchil gave them short shrift: Who that heard him will ever Iorget Winston Churchill's speeclI coast. "What kind of people do they think we are?" he asked. "00 they • •• I to a joint Senate·House session in December of 1941. There was gloom in Congre s, though there were stout men THE UNION will be open Crom 81 not realize that we shall never cease to persevere against them until a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 p.m. It was a dark hour. This country wasn't ready for war. In Octo· there- they have been taught a lesson which they and the world will never today. The Television Theater will ber, the House had only agreed by one vote to continue the draft. Gcorgia's Richard R Russell and Carl Vinson. still around and forget?" be available until midnight. IN THE CITY- THE CITY SCHOOL Board will Thunderstorms meet tonight at 7: 30 in the Board Mostly cloudy tod.y .nd tonight with sc.»-red of Education Office, 104 S. Linn St. showers .nd thund.rstorm. in the south .nd • • • east portions. Today's high. from the upper 40s IOWA CITY'S Public schools will In the extr.m. northeast to near 70 In the ••• Iowan tr.m. southwest. Consid.r.blt cloudln ..s with close Wednesday for Easter. They SfJrfi1l1 U. tIlt: ..., tate University of Iowa and the People of lowfl Cittl will reopen next Tuesday, accord· se.ttered show.rs Wedn.sd.y. Ing to Buford W. Garner, superin· Eltabllabed ill 1868 teDdent of the district. Ua1Ied Pteas Internlilionailloo Auociated Preu Leased Wirea aDd Wirepboto Iowa City, Iowa, Tuesday, April 9, 1s6s IN THE STATE- Best Movie: 'Arabia'- Pearson Prime Minister?- lANKER DIES. John E. Hansen, 74, a retired Eagle Grove banker and a former state representalivc died In his home at Eagle Grove Anne Bancroft, Snead, a Monday. Canadian Liberals, event, Hansen, a Democrat, served as , former a Carroll County representative in a second the 1947. 1949 and 1951 sessions of Gregory Peck Win Il, whose the Legislature. I Win But Commons' score DC eagle on IN THE NATION- where he BIRTH CONTROL. The Attorney I Aco'demy Awards, , 10 feet Maiority 'Unlikely: Gknera) of llIinois was accused in Chicago Monday o[ blocking a pub· (Combined from Leased Wires) lie aid birth control plan for rea· (Combined from Lea5ed Wires) sons of religious bias. SANTA MO rCA, Calif. - Anne Bancroft, rejected by MO TREAL - Lester n. PeHrson's Liberal Party, pledged Thomas C. McConnell, an allor· Hollywood early in her career, won the best actress award to nuclear arms and the "closest pOSSible' 'relations with tlte ney for the Illinois Public Air Com· of 1962 Tuesday night for her role in "The Mimcle Worker" mission, told a court hearing that United States, Monday night win one of the most critical na· Ally. Gen. William G. Clark's ac· while Cergory Peck won best actor honors for "To Kill A Mock­ tiunal elections in Canadian histury. tions concerning the controversial ingbird." It appeared, however, that the Pearson force would fatl birth control plan "are not based "Lawrence of Arabia," an epic film of a controversial Eng­ upon law but are based upon the short of tll e clear majority in the 265·scat House of Commons dogmas of his church." Clark is a - .- ---- !ish le;Jder in the Arab war against which according to many experts * * * Roman Catholic. ls the Turks, won the best picture will be required to meet the major Art Teacher Oscar and six other awards. problems confronting the new Gov· • • • Miss Bancroft in the role of An· ernment. VIOLENT RAGE. A husky. blond 5 nie Sullivan, the Irish girl who first This means another minority gov. factory worker in New Rochelle, Arrest et communicated with Helen Keller, N.Y., nursed a violent rage over recreated her broadway perform. ernment for Canada - the second the weekend, then exploded with a ance in the movie version, attain. in to months. gun Monday, killing his estranged OXFORD, Miss. 1m - A wanant ing heights previously denied her Pearson, 65 , is ell:pected to be· wile, his small son and three·in· for the arrest of G. Ray Kerciu, in a series oC mediocre Hollywood come prime minister, but he will laws. He walked into a Episcopal University of Mississippi art teach. pictures. need the support of at least one 01 Church later and gave himself up. er, was issued laic Monday after She was not present to accept the the three opposition parties to "There's a madman in the house a sludenl complained that slate award . carryon. Prime Minister John - slop him:" cried onc of two laws had been violated in his con· Peck won his fir t 0 car aCter Diclenbaker formed a similar Gov· brothers·J·n·law who esc B p e d troversial paintings. f"our prevIous nomma t'Ions pI aymg' ernment after last June's election, wounded Irom the scene of the The complaint was r i led by a valiant Southern lawyer and but his Con ervalives were toppled , slayingS - two adjacent family - Charles G. Blackwell, 24 , a senior lather fighting bigotry in the film Feb. 5 when the other partie who had the biggest and most riot· oWned ' home~ inneatby Mount law s~udent from Ellisville. Justice version of Harper Lee's best sell. j6lned in a vote o[ no-conCidence. Ou' meetings of the canipaign, Vernon. 01 the Peace W. H. Jones, 73, said ing "To Kill A Mockingbird." THE LIBERALS made substan. promised to "keep our commit· Held on first-degree murder he had issued the warrant and add· Visibly moved, Peck, wearing tial gains in the East, but the West ments" and acquire nuclear war· charges was ex·convict Charles ed that the papers probably would glasses, told 2,500 celebrities in remained loyal to the Conserva· heads. He pledged that a Liberal Hansen, 32, a 6·foot·2, 220·pound be served today. civic auditorium and a nationwide lives as many had expected. Government would bc "pro-Cana· transformer assembler in an clec· Blackwell actcd after a small television audience : "Thank you. As returns from the late.report. dl~n w~~hout sniping at our best tronlcs plant. He had a record of band of art students - some wear· Thank you Harper Lee, Allan Pa' ing West trickled In, tile Liberals friend s. short·tempered violence, and was ing painl·smeared smocks - pick. cula, Robert Mulligan (his produc. had won 12L seats to 9t Cor the Can· under mental observation brie£Jy Ieted the Ole Miss Fine Arts Cen· er and director) , all my good servatives. Sociat Cr dit had 21 and last summer after he was found ter protesting an order removing friends and associates ... who lent and the New Democratic party 14. roaming the streets with a shot· live paintings from Lhe exhibition me affection." 3 Physicians gun. by Kerciu. British director David Lean was IN TAKING ALL seven scats in • •• The paintings, each using the awarded the Oscar for best direc· Newfoundland, the Liberals gained SUI Well Drilling Drones On one seat. They also gained in Debate Issues PLAY BAN TIFF. A high school Confederate flag as a background, lion of 1962 for his handling of Prince Edward Island and Nova drama teacher in Rockford, Ill., symbolized the desegregation cri· "Lawrence of Arabia ." DES MOINES IA'I - Three phy· said Monday she and her student sis touched of( by the enrollment Diminuitive Palty Duke made By BOB NANDELL which uses 24·inch iron bits to crunch through deep Scolia. Staff Wrlt.r In Quebec they cut into the sicians told the convention oC the actors would present a dramaliza· of James H. Meredith as the (irst academy award history by becom· rock layers. Although rock crevices have already Iowa Medicol Society Monday that tion of the 1925 Scopes evolution known Negro student last fall. ing the first child star to win a A 26·inch hole is being punched 1500 leel Into caused minor drilling delays, ere w s have en· strength of both Conservativcs and Social Credit pa rlies. doctors must solve problems 01 trial despite a ban by school of- "I was shocked to learn that such major award - as best supporting the ground on the construction site (picture above) countered no water seepage inlo the shaft from the better medical care for patients ficials. objects could be shown at an insti, actress in "The Miracle Worker." of SUI's new water and sewerage treatment plants ncarby river. The two figures who dominated lhe winter campaign differ in al· without continually rising costs or The play, "Inherit the Wind," tution supported by taxpayers of Character Actor Ed Begley, 62, near the University Power Plant on Burlington The shaft is enca ed in a 52 loot iron casing expect intervention by the Federal was a success in New York and on Mississippi," Blackwell said. was voted best supporting actor for most every aspect except their de· Street. extending down to solid rock. The i!'On drilling bits sire to lead the nation : Government. the road a few seasons ago. Jl had Kerciu, 29, said he had talked his role as a ruthless politician In When drilling is finished, the Univcrsity will are lowered by a one·inch steel cable. AJl 80 horse Expressing concern about social· been selected by Miss Ruth Ann to his attorney about Blackwell's "Sweet Bird or Youth." • Dlefenbaker, a 67·year old have a deep well in addition to Iowa River water gas engine supplies the unit's power. prairie lawyer shoaling to become ized medicine were Dr. Gcorge Jj, Johnston, drama leaCiler at Hal" complaint but would not comment. Even Shirley Temple during her Scanlon 01 Iowa City, president of lem High Sehool, as the 1963 junior long career failed to win a major for its new facilities. Crews from the Hoeg and , SUIowans unaccustomed Lo Lhe metallic thuds the first prime minister ever to win class play. At a night meeting of the Ole award although she was given an Ames Co., Lincoln , have been running 12·hour shilts issuing from the 15·ton rig will have plenty of time four con ecutive elections, relied the society; Dr. Kenneth C. Saw· Protests by a minister aud sev· Miss Faculty Club, university pro. bonorary Oscar in 1935 fN "mak. since drilling started three weeks aso. Thus far to grow accllstomed to them , according to one crew. on his almost evangelic campaign yer of Denver. Colo. and Dr. eral residents 01 the Sehool District vost Charles Noyes said he did not in~ the greatesl contribution to the sbaft extends 82 (eet below surface. style to mount a highly personal Charles W. Baugh of Saskatoon, man who said even he gets "plenty tIred of it. " Canada. Dr, Baugh comes from the prompled Principal Harold Moore order Kerciu 10 remove the paint· motion pictures in [034 ." According to crcw members. it will take four "We'll be hammering awhile to get that far down campaign. lie minimized a revolt v.ithin bis own cabinet and all·out al'ea where the Saskatchewan Gov· to ban performance of the work iugs. BEST SOUIoID - "Lowren,·" or months to reach the 1500 foot level with the rig, (1500 leell," he added . ernment already has installed so· ""der school auspices and on Instead he said, Ule IJainlinss I Arabia," Shepperlon Etlgla"d StudIo criticism from sevcral traditional. .... 'I .o un~ drpartmrnf _ cialilcd medicine. school property. were removed by mutua consent. SPECIAL EFFECTS - '''flte I.ongcst Iy conservative newspapers with Day." Robert Mat Donald, visual and other octivitics which are spread. ! professor of Homance languages: THE DOCTORS SHARED the Jacques Naumont, audible. thl' declaralion that "only the peo· .d ing through the South lIy which the J Jamc~ ~.urra~, a~s~i~te professor ul(' are with me." speakers platform with three ijS' IN THE WORLD- IPeace Corps AI e A:"~~" ~1::N~08 ~. "Lawrence of Facuity Letter Negroes hope to finally achieve o[ pohtl~al SCience, James Jakob· He charged that acccptance of tiona lly·known leaders in business . DOCUMENTARY I' ROO UC TtON, . . . . . sen, assistant professor of mathe· and politics, Roger M. Bough, ARAB UNION. PreSident Gamul A . ' H FEATURES - "Black YaK," Louis full citizenshiP With dignity. matics and Wilmer Miller, assist. nuclear warheads in Canada , e · Abdel Nasser and representatives rrlves ere Clyde Stoumen. pecially for Bomarc anti·aircraft chairman of the board of U.S . SHORT SUIJECTS - "Dylan Thorn· aI Syr j a an d Iraq forma II y agree d as" .Jack Howells. prpdllccr. From SARE "We hope to involve as many ant professor of chemistry. missiles, would make this country, Steel Corp.; Sen . Thruston 8. ~or· in Cairo Monday - on ali prin· Joop Ave of Indonesia's Del)8I't· MUSIC SCORI! ORIGINAL - "Law· people as possible," the letter went ••• a "burnt olCering" in any alomlc ton (R·Ky. ) and Jenkins L. Jones, ciples of a so-called unionist state ment of Foreign Affairs has ar- re~cSsf~ ~~-J>~~~GM~cr~~/:V.~N _ The SUI Student Association for on, "and thereby boo t the morale LEAVE FOR TRIAL war, and he climaxed a subtlely· editor 01 lhe Tulsa (Okla.) Tribune . and turned ov.cr to a subcommittee rived on campus to start iJriefing "Music Ma~," Ray Helndorf. Racial Equality (SARE ) sent a let· of our Southern friends as we Three SUlowans, Ross Daniel. worded anti·American campaign by In the president's repll(t, 01' . the tas k 0 f wfltmg. . a natlOna. 1 c har . th e 21 PCeace orps recrUils' wh a "TheCARTOO.. Hole" JohnSHOIIT and SUBJECTSFaith Huble -y hasten the demise of a system o[ son. A3, BUI'linglon; Don Flock. Seanlon said the two serious proh· leI' to 1,100 SUI faculty members, saying the main election issue is ter for it. are undertaking a 12·week training producers.' , discrimination which has long hart, M. Boone and John Goulet, whether "Canada's future will be lems facing the medical ~ profession . . . I S b f h SUI LIVE ACTION SHORT SUBJECTS asking contributions for Negro P rime Mmlster A y a ry 0 t e program at . _ "Happy Anniversary." Pierre Elalx enough been a blight on American A3 , Cedat· Rapids, will Icave late decided by Canadians." are "the supply of general prae· sharecl'oppers in the Clarksdale, United Arab Republic announced Ave, an aide to Indonesian Pres. and J. C. Carriere, producers. democracy." today for Clarksdale, Miss., where titioners and the ever·rising costs COSTUME DIS ON BLACt( AND Miss., area. • Pearson, a 65-year old diplo· rorma I agreemen t a t th e en d 0f t he Irlent Sukarno, is assigned to give WHIT! _ "Wllet Ever 'Happened to The letter was sponsored by the they are scheduled to appear ill mat·turned·polilician who won the of health care." . . second session of the unity talks, the volunteers a rirst.hand picture Baby Jane?", Norma Koch . "These people h!! vo recently SUI Student Senate, and co·signed court on Thursday. . , . COSTUME DillON COLOR - "Bro- 1957 Nobel Peace Prize for his work "We arc very concerned about Whi Ch resum ed Sun d ay. of IndoneSia s everyday hfe. !hers Grimm," Mary Will s. been the target of economic repris­ by Robert Turnbull, professor of The three were arrcsted last as external alCairs minister, stress· rising health care costs," he said. • • The trainees who will work pri. ' FOREIGN FILM - "Sundavs and Cy· als," the letter stated, "because philosophy; Anthony Constantino, month while delivering SUI conll·i· ed the Liberal "team" in a cam· "When people fel they can'l af(ord GL..AMOR PARTY. Tho leCt.lean. man' 1y In ph' YSlca· I ed IIca tlOll,' arc beleFranco," .Terra, Fidei, Orsay·Trocadero. many of them have been involved professor of general business ; Dav' l butions to Negro sharecroppers in paign appeal for the "strong and prepayment health insurance pro· ing Christian Democrats emerged scheduled to leave for Indonesia ART DIRECTION BLACK AND in voter registration drives, rail· id Gold, associate pro lessor of soci, the area. They are charged with stable" Government he claimed tection. they will turn to other ~Ionday as the glamor party of . M I WHITE - "To Kill a Mocklnllblrd," " In ay. Oliver Emert, set deeorallon. road and bus terminal sit· ins, and ology; Alfredo Roggiano, associate minor traffic violations. only his party could give. Pearson, sources of relief, and, in the abo Chilean politics - wooed by Pres· sence of a better .solution, the ident Jorge Alessandri's pro·West· Government mllY be a likely ern coalition and the Costro admlr. choice." ers on the far lell, Greenwood, Mississippi-' "MEDICAL SCHOOL facullies The Rcq-dominated Popular Ac· and administration must abandon ti!)n Front was snowed under by their holier-than·Ulou' atlitudes " Alessandr.i·s mld·road ruJJng bloc toward the rest of the profession, In Sunday's municipal elections and this is especially Jrue with I watched CIS a warmup (or the 1964 reference to the gcn\!ral practi· presidentlal campaign. lioner. He isn't a has· been Bnd be • • • ;rhe Case History of a isn 't extinct." CRISIS OVER. Rear Adm. Car· Crisis Dr. Baugh said, "If we arc to los Kolungla was sworn in Monday as Navy Minister, ending Argen· GHEENWOOD, Miss. IUPIl - . Della. Cntton is still kln" in th~se ' The city of Greenwood, Miss., a thriving agriculture center, and ment. as Car as the registration of s tau n c h segregationists, brand achieve a s)'stem of health insur· tina's late~t politicaL crisis. Al some minute between the hours I parts. the ar.. around It han bun the tllr~'t of an Intensive campaign Negroes is concerned: this is, to Moses and his followers "agita. ance that allows us complete pro· President Jose M. Guido, mean· of 10 and 11 on the morning of I Instead it was the start - and to r.gist,r Negro vote,.. Following I. Grttnwood', story of 10 diy, specd it up," Negro Robert Moses torS." fessional freedom, we mustn't con· while, set about to form a Cabinet March 27, 1963 this cily looked considered by many as the most of ten. ion. said. " If we continue to ignore their fine our eflol'ts to an attempt. to that will see the country through down the barrel of a loaded and crucial point - o( 10 days of ten· Moses is Crom New York and he efforts to create strife and vio, manipulate govel·nment." - the controversial elections, sched· cocked cannon. sion . There were daily di sper als back in his cramped o[fice al city loved Greenwood, " he said. ' emerged (rom jail after eight days lence ~bey will quietly sliP . ~war, "It wi.lI. be necessw:~ to. haVe uled for June 23. Those who lived thc momcnt can of marching Negroes by police, hall, waved An unlighted cigar at A few hOllrs earlier one of lhr 1 bdlind bar with seven other Ne. searching for other commUnities In ~oth political a~d medical reform Kolungia was the flfty·first Cabl· not put their Cinger on the precise nearly 30 arrests, . charges and the high ceiling and talked about "outsiders" ~alked o~t of a jail i groe. They wero arrested 00 which to spread their poison," If .we are to achieve OW' 8111111,:' he net member to take office in Ar· lime Ule c~nnon could have ex· counter charges. I the future . cl'lI 52 mUes to the we t, in Green-I March 27, the day the cannon al' l Sampson says. 'I said. . lIentina in the past 12 months, a pioded but did not. As last week drew to a clo e. the I "We expecttd the continued co· ' ville, MI., blinked at the hot sun most exploded. Moses smiles and cboo es an. At a ceremony Monday mghl. symptom 01 the continual crisis It. could have resulted in a violent tension su.bsided. City authoriLi.es operation 01 our white and colored and vowed that the fight had just ••• other description for the work that I Dr . Scanlo~ .was pregented .lho into which the country has fallen raCial clash that would have left were conlldent they would mam· citizens. These outsiders will soon begun. 1 MAYOR SAMPSON Mississippi he and other civil rights workers I~:a ;s ~Iat:o~ O~t P~~010gI8tS~ sllice the ouster 01 President Arturo bloud on the stree. ts of Ihis city of tain law and order and the Negro move au' and we call retu l'o to Ollr "0 . t f II I d' G R B tt 'd 'I t t ' -- I war or el'l , \lWIl~ " lIr purpo CIS 0 orce Ie 1110 ' ov. os arne !In .le sa e GREENWOOD Iwas "iv.ell fnr "nutstaodin" "nattl . . I:Frnl'll1t1.i 'b little mllre thnll II year 20.436 located in the lusbllarming leaders pondered Iheir next move .. llsual roull'ne and work togethe·r lor f tl t t f U' I " d I t". US S t J " '0 E L - • \ .. , , ... r T .-., .- fl l. 'd n' I ~ I If~ 0 Ie s a e 0 "II IPPI an ",0 . . ena 01'5. ames . as,· hut ions to medical education and RI, . , region known (Ill Iho Mi sissll)l)i . Moyor Charles IL. S(lIllPSUII ~nt Itile ruturc orlv/lncemcnt 01 ollr bc· V. 11 're pos~ihle, the ,Justice D~pm· t J InIl{l lind ,Tohn . Stennis, nil (Oolllirtued on Page 0) mediClI1 service in Iowa.'" .. , - . Duily Iowan Roscoe I)rulllmoHd RePe!;' , The D~cli~~ i Sen. For , Assa Of State Government Eurocrats By ROSCOE DRUMMOND Coni TUESDAY, APRIL', 1963 I_a City, Iowa WASHfNGTON - In his new book. "The Coming World Transfor­ By JOSEPH ALSOP mation,'- Prof. Ferdinand Lundberg of New York University. makes DES Mt BRUSSELS - There Is some­ a forecast which will startle and dismay' most people. Schroeder Two, to One, thing very slrange. and one must He sees lhe total disappearance of state government. proponent add, something almost (righten· "Government in the United States," he says, "will be completely Senate, ~ ing, about the spectacle now pre­ centralized at the expense of local and state governments; each state an Implie( n of will become an administrative de- - --­ price to I Favor Black sented by the European Common partment of Washington·s." Market headquarlers here in statewide Democratic primaries. drink. Racbl1 friction of one ort or another festered in the Ouch ! Elections or primaries, the prin. Schroedl Brussels. We knoW , of course, that for the ou'tIiJand'last we k and over th weekend. ciple is the same. The right to dieiary II This ostentatiously international pa ~t 30 years - from F.D.R. to vote carries with it the right to reported ;;.lil:.'Creenwood, MiSs., for th past dozen days the e tablishment on the Avenue of J.F.K. - there has been a mas­ have your vote count equally with olliquor-b sive [Jow oC political power lo the every other vote. When it takes 8nd count. Negro populati9D (Dutnulllbering th whites in the area Ihe JOYOUS Entrance - glorious Federal Government. But Prof. address! - once seemed to hold ten times as many voters to nomi· to limit tt nearly twe to one) has been pressing an inten ive cam­ Lundberg is the first to foresee nate or elect a candidate in Atlan· their area. the whole secret complete federalization, though ta as it does in one of the rural Implied paign. to register Negro vo ters. There were protest marches of the European most of us will not be around to Georgia counties, that is denying future. Here a check up on him. He gives his been filed and ((;r' st '- a faAlUiar pattern in the South. new Europe was the right to vote by diluting it. Or liquor bill. predictions a time spa n of 25 to take the little town of Stratton. A ' lings immered down in Greenwood, the spot­ bel n g briskly 150 years to mature. constructed by a Vt.-too tiny to have a postoffice, light shifted TT\omentarily back to Oxford , 1iss. The new new sort of Euro­ Prof. Lundberg may not be but its 38 citizens have the voting wrong. The trend, which began power oC 35,531 citizens of Burl­ cJuabble there was ov r a professor's right to display a pean. Then De by popular demand in lhe terrible inglon. Each elects a member of painting that dealt with th problem - discrimination. G a u II e utter­ years oC lhe depression. has con­ the Vermont House of Representa­ ed his resound­ tinued almost unabated under tives. The effect is that tbe voters But a the new week started, Birmingham Ala., be­ ing "no," not both Democratic and Republican in the city of Burlington have ALSOP just to President Presidents. 1/937th of the voting power of the came the place to watch. There, snarling police dogs broke It has continued for two rea­ Kennedy's "grand design" for the 38 voters in Stratton. up a riot Sunday after 23 praying Negroes were arrested sons: IN VARYING DEGREES this Western Alliance, but also 10 the Because in our complex indus· -stultifying condition has prevailed as Ihey marched on City Hall. Eurocrats' design for the Euro· trial society many new social and in every state for many years. For Birmi ngham, it was the fifth straight day of de­ pean future. eco nomic problems have arisen Most state constitutions provide It cannot be too ollen empha­ which could only be met on a na­ for redistricting the legislature segregation demonstrations which began the day after tional basis. every ten years in order to reflect th I ction of a n w mayor and nine councilm n. sized that the exclusion of Britair. Because Ihe slate governments changes in population and its dis· from Europe was not the most failed to perform needed and tribution. Most of the legislatures The story r main d the same, however, in the nort]l. important aspect of this "no" of popularly demanded public serv­ have ignored this requiremcnt. The best northE'rners could do was sm ugly unfold their the General's. The most imporl­ ices, and the voters lurned to Politicians just don't like to vote n wspapers and read the accounts. ant aspecl was, rather, De Washington . themselves out of a seat in the Gaulle's brutal assertion of super­ • • • legislature. They ignore the law. But lhe battle go s on h re just the sam • In Iowa THE FIRST CAUSE for the de· How can thc citizens of Burl­ City it isn't a matter of police dogs. Or voter registration. heated, glory-intoxicated French cline oC state government is a ington or Atlanta , or Los Angeles nationalism in the bosom of a Or marches on City Hall. The matter here is one for com· valid one. The second is repar­ or Newark or St. Louis, or any European community dedicated able. big city refrain from turning to mitt es. An'd the committ s concern themselves with prob­ lo and dependent on the sub· I suggest that iC there is to be Washington for some recognition lems that are just as real - although cerlainl y not as spec­ mergence of nntlonailsm·. - "I thought you were bringing the matches." any fair chance oC averting Prof. of their needs when lheir stote tacular - as anything happening to the SOHth . Here it is Lundberg's forecast, the govern­ legi slatures are stacked against The conlradition, as the soviets ments of our 50 states must put them? job bias, renting discrimination and gentlemen's agreements. would describe it, had always themselves in a better posilion to The state wrong of unfa ir dis· The villain of the South is the militant enforcement been there. On taking power, De The Ralph McGill Column - perform better services to their tricling has been one or the main people than they are now doing. reasons for the erosion of states' officer; the villain of the ortll is the citizen who can't or Gaulle accorded a single, intense­ ly disagreeable interview to the Fortunately, the foremost in­ rights. refuses to ee our own discrimination problem. leading French Eurocral, Robert gredient lor creating animate, ac­ Through the impact of the Suo Marjolin. In the course of it, the tivist. responsive slate govern­ preme Court decision, 15 state Would' things b so peaceful here if the hlack out· 'AII All, legislatures have been reappor­ in ments is at hand - and already General discribed the Treaty of numbered the white two to one? -Gary Gerlach Rome with supreme disdain as at work. This ingredient is the tioned in one year: 17 others are "your litUe commercial treaty." accelerated rc·districting of the at the point of reapportionment. I - state legislatures to remove the When state legislatures again BUT DE GAULLE did nothing become responsi ve instruments of to disturb the Eurocrals unduly It for Mystery' grievous discrimination against A Cause Mak~s urban voters. This was required government, there will be a de· so long as he regarded their ac· by a Supreme Court decision lit· clining incentive - and need - tlvities· as mere "intendance" - By RALPH McGILL house. Others have gone visiting. for voters to turn to Washington \Vashlngton Notes: Publication by the Soviets oC two related In the end he has only seven tie more than a year ago and ,L/',For Economic Alarm one of Ihose special Gaullist recently reaffirmed in a ruling because their votes aren't being usages with strong overtones of stories on agriculture, revealing the debacle of planning and the dis­ young milkmaids, but recently counted in their own states. persuaded 10 quit school and be­ upsetting the county-unit system A ratller vivid demonstration of how the space age is the old French monarchy which content oC collective farmers, interesls Kremlinologists here. They of counting votes in Georgia in Copyright 1963: means, approximately, petty fi­ had been smiling at Mr. Khrushchev's almosl plaintive endorsement come members of the collective New York Herald Tribune Inc. pnmng the Midwest by came Sunday in a Chicago news­ family. Needless to say, the pea nancial and economic administra· of potato chips and cheese dips. Now the brows of specialists are fur­ paper:' tion. The "no" was spoken, and vines are not harvested in quan­ rowed as they try to extract meaning from the latest items from tity. The animals are not su~­ - hereport quoted E. T. Weiler, a Purdue University thus the contradiction became Moscow. Alliance lor Progress Goes flagrant, whea the labors of the tained. c6.nmnist, assaying. Eurocrats seemed about to pass One of these was the unvarnished account of life on a collective The writer makes very clear 'farm. ' lis reveal a ...'''------,-;Q..£3he 750 Ph.D.s produced in the Middle West in the limits oC simple "intendance:"" pa~~habh; that the rank-and·file collective On,Despite Military Coups life oC stark, unrelieved monotony, not merely to all the tables oC the farmel' is pretly much a clod - a 1961; apprOximately 500 stayed in universities. Squarely faced with this con­ tradiction, as they now are, what discontent, misery and want. The U.S.S.R. but to the feed bi ns as dispirited, apathetic fellow at the By MARGUERITE HIGGINS liberalization. "Of the 250 who went into industrial work, only two are lhe Eurocrals going to do? second was the publication by well. That the record is shabby mercy of parasitic petty officials. Herald Tribune New'$ Service The speed with which Washing­ The dialogue between Mysovsky WASHINGTON - The United ton follows through on assistance stayed in the Midwest. The other 248 left to go into research The answer, crudely speaking, Pravda of a report by the Com- and inadequate is not just an af­ is that they are going 10 attempt munist Party chief on the virgin front to the chairman. It also un­ and three peasant women found States is embarrassed at the mili­ commitments is, however, a lever and development work in other parts of the country." a holding operation, which may lands of the Kazakhstan Republic. dermines him politically. picking mushrooms in the forest tary coups - attempted and ac­ that can have some effect in per· when they should have been at complished - taking place in suading military dictatorships to He goes ,on to say that five Midwestern states received lead to some forward movement It says that widespread lheft, cor- It is,However. the story, "round in a year or two. ruption, and inefficiency have ac· and about" that most intrigues work in the fields, is a piece of Latin America, but it considers move - even if slowly - in a about one-third of the World War II production contracts, cumulated "staggering" losses to the studenls of the Soviet mind writing that communicates mood them far short of a mortal blow democratic direction. THERE ARE THREE main and character. They are gather­ to the Alliance for Progreso In most military takeovers, in­ only slightly more than one-fourth of the Korean War con­ factors involved in this holding the Government. lncompetent and shifts of policy. The story is party hac k s, by a writer said to be little known ing mushrooms to sell so as to be Officials here point out that the cluding those in Argentina, an tracts and on e-eight~ of the 1961 space contracts. operation. First of all, the French able to buy in the village. Their Alliance has three parts: social effort is made to keep the trap· very much want the completion corrupt p r a c- - F. Abramov. It was published Another prominent gentleman has pointed to the same tices , and exces- in a Leningrad literary monthly children lack shoes and clothes. justice, economic growth - and pings of constitutionality. The of the Common Market's common One woman says, after speaking freedom . promise oC eventual elections is problem. agricultural policy b e c a use sive red tap e magazine "N eva." Ahramov's have mad e l! story is set in 1962. It does not, bitterly of her children's needs : In the case of military take­ usually forthco ming, with the France has far the best land in "And what about us ? We don 't overs such as in Guatemala, con­ military conceding at least the "We have the knowledge and the faCilities," says Dr. Europe. A common agricultural mess of the re- therefore, deal with the evils of pub I i c ' s Stalin's time, and the terrible bru- need to eat at all, I suppose. Over tinuance of the Alliance for Prog­ merits of the democratic principle J. Roscoe Miller, president of Northwestern University, policy will help France import· a year now and I've been with­ ress will depe nd mostly on wheth­ and excusing dictatorships by anUy, while conferring little bene· economy. talities practiced on the collec- "but if we don't cooperate in their use we will miss t1le In a sense the tives, but with the present. His out a cow, and pretty bad it's er the Governmenls show signs pleas of emergency. fit on the olher Europeans and ac­ been." ship - the space ship." rep 0 r t [r a m character is Yegorovich Mysov- o[ following through on the eco· With the history of dictatorships tually calling for politically pain­ MYSOVSKY, DEFEATED and nomic and social reCorms which in Latin America, the Alliance ful sacri£ices by the Germans. Kazakhstan i s sky, chairman oC the collective One can hardly estabUsh a trend on two statements. lhe replay of an farm "New Life" and what he frustrated, bites his lip and says are prerequisites to qualifying for Cor Progress would be limited at There is, however, ample cause for alarm. Second, all the other Europeans old record. Mr. encounters, hour by hour, in one to himself, "Yes, the war has any such assistance. the outset if it were to demand are eager, in varying degrees, Khrushchev himself ha s made day of management. been over for 17 years, but it's Even in the temporary absence American style democracy as a In a day and age when federal contracts go a long for an outward-looking approach similar crilicism of other Soviet MYSOVSK'( HAS been given a still going on in agdculture." of freedom in the parliamentary qualification for aid. This would way in making or breaking the economic future of a state, to the "Kennedy round" of trade republics devoted to agriculture. stern command to put his peas­ This hleak picture oC life in an sense in Latin-America, Washing­ be a greater evil, in Washington's bargaining with Ihe u.s. Here, ton thinks it best to proceed present view, than attempting to Midwestern entrepreneurs might well heed the signs and The latest confession of failure ants on a c r ash program to average collective follows a re­ the French attitude is doubtful. of man and methods is important gather pea vines for silage. There cent story about one day in the where possible with social and reach economic stability in spite pay closer attention to the economic space trends. But it is thought that Factor chiefly because it· concerts the is a desperate need for silage to life of a political prisoner in one economic measures leading to of pOlitical defects. The feeling -Gary Gerlach One can be played off against virgin lands that Chairman K. sustain hungry llvestock. Mysov­ of Stalin's slave camps. But, this stability and progre s on the is thal it is better to do a little, Factor Two. In other words, it is himself ordered to the plow. At sky's day begins with a futile ef­ one differs in that il describes theory that this in itselC will hel p under less than ideal conditions' thought that a package deal can lhe time he pledged that the har- fort lo round up his work force. present day conditions. to creale lhe climate for political lhan to do nothing. Downright Alarming be bargained out in the next year vest thereof would bring plenty He finds some busy at the bath. Students of Soviet affairs spec­ or so. providing both the needed ------~~~------ulate that perhaps this story is OPflCIAL DAILY ~Uu.m.. the last of a s e r i e s plan­ The Naval Observatory says the Earth is now 34 arrangements to complete Ihe common agricultural policy and ned as part of a Ion g pro­ seconds behind in its rotation as compared with 1900. That's the preparations for the right kind University Bulletin Board gram of dow n g r ad i n g Sta­ University Calendar lin. It appeared in a magazine downright alarming. If it continues to slow down at this of approach to the "Kennedy Un:ftnlty lulle'ln ....rd not lei' mutt be _ ..... et """ Dilly Iowa. round." ...... , ROOM 201, Comm:lnlcltlonl Clnter, by noon of 'hi dlY before pub­ pro d u c e d by assoclates and rate, it will stop rotating in only 156,302 years. l!ce'lon. TlMy mutt be typed .nd ",nld bT In .dvl.. r or offlelr of Ihl DI' fri ends of T1ya Ehrenburg, who Tuosdav. April 16 Wednesday, April 24 AS CAN BE SEEN, at least two ..nlutlon belnl ""bllelzltl. 'ur.ly IOcta funetlo,.. .re not 11I.lbla tot 3:30 p.m. - Baseball with Brad­ 8 p.m. - Iowa String Quartet -COVington (Tenn.) Leader , .... IOCtlon. has been one oC the leading writ­ years will be required to com· ley. THE LOW DIN 'RIZE examlnaUon S .. IEDED READING CLASSES be· ers in proclaiming the new free­ Concert. Macbride Auditorium. plete the initial inter·European In mathemaUcs wUl be given In 26 gan Monday In 38 OAT. Classes meet dom . Only a week before publica. Wednesday, April 17 S p.m. - Humanities Society, chaffering about lhe package Physics Building on Thursday. April for one hour a day,Jour day. a week ~L from 3:10 to 5 p.m. The prtze of (Monday through Thursaay) for six lion oC the long hard day oC Yeg· 3:30 p.m. - Baseball with Brad­ Graduale College, anti History '11l& 1)oily Iowan deal, plus the subsequent chaffer­ $:<:> Is open to all sophomores who weeks. Four secllons .re avaUable: orovich Mysovsky, which is an ley Department Lecture: "Progress ing of the "Kennedy round" Jl­ are about to complete the work of 1:30. 2:30. 3;30. 4:30 p.m. Interested amazing example of the liberty 4:10 p.m. - College of Medi­ and the Historians," Professor selI. In the end, the Eurocrats the freshman and sophomore years person. may .Ign the list outside I'M DGIly wrltUn and Bd#ed by IfudmU and " goomtMl "., • In mathematlCJI. Candidates should S8 OAT to assure a seat In the to criticize, Mr. K. publicly had cine Alcock Lecture: "The Dif· J. U. Plumb, Christ's College, 'moan" hope for mutual American·Euro· leave their names In the General course. For additional Information '-cl of flo- Ifudent tnutea ,lected by tM ItudenI body and f;'" Office, 110 Physics BuUdln,. Ques­ call Ibe Re.dlng Laboralory•• x227f. denounced Ehrenburg for going ferentiation and Localization of Cambridge. Shambaugh Audi· pean tarU! cuts averaging about Uons concernln, the exaIDlnaUon trU.ItUI appoImed by tM pruldenl of ,he Unlon8/ty, The Dolly Iowan', too far and had ordered a slow· Adrenal Disorders," Dr. Frank lorium. 30 per cent - which means that should be directed to Prof. J . F. INTII·VARSITY CHRISTIAN FI, down. The Mysovsky story may Kinman Jr., University of Cali­ ""'anal policy" not an espI'emon of SUI admlnlllratiora polq Of they no longer have such high Jakobaen, 213A, Pbyslcs BuUdln,. LOWSH", an InterdenomlnationA. 8 p.m. - Tbe Probablp. Acts of group 0 student. meets every have been in the publication pipe­ fornia Medical Cllnter. Medical Man Lecture Series: "Mass '1pInIon, In em" parUcular. alms as they cherishtll a little JUNI G .... DUATlS: Students .n· Tuesday evenlnl! at ~ : 30 In the East ticlpaUng graduation In June and Lobby Conle,.oee Room. lMU to line and forgotten. Amphitheatre. Acts, ' Stuart C. Dodd, University while ago. who ma)' not have submitted an ap­ "on.lder var10ul toulc·. of ItPnpl'a) All in all, it makes for mystery. Thursday, April 18 MIMIIR Publlah.r. . .Edward P. Ba_tt plication for graduation are remind· Inlererl. All are eo,dlaUy invited to of Washington. Senate Chamber, 4UDIT IUItiAU Editor . , " ...... Gary Gerlaeb Then, third and Cinally, De ed that the deadline for lubmlsslon attend And one surmises that even for 8 p.m. - Writers' Workshop: Old Capitol. 01' lIanarln, ~ '" .Dour CarllOn Is Tuesday, even though that date New. Kellton. ErIe Zoeclll.r and Gaulle will lose i1l~ veto power, Mr. Khrushchev there must be "Greek Plays on lhe Motlern CIICULATIONS lalla durin' Easter Vacallon. IAIYSlTTERS may be obtained days when life seems hard and 8 p.m. - Sludio Tbeatre pr0- ______. .... CIty EdItor. Mobammadloan AncIenoa Idree. under the terms of the Treaty of during the week by callinll the Stage," Philip Vellacott, British duction, "La Fiesta Brava," StIJ' YWCA office, IMl1, at ht. u.o dur­ Edftorlal AIIOdat...... TIm Rome, just about when the above­ PARENn COO ...... TIVI IAIY· unrewarding, Scholar. Senate Chamber, Old c;:.uan SITTING LIEAGUE. Member. desir­ In. • .....-<1.,. .rt.t...... no. DIslrlb61ed IDa d io Thea Ireo ....lIII8bed by Student PubUcaUolII, Spqnl Edlt~ ...... JlIll Pemble described processe~ are complete . Ing sitters call Mrs, Dausch, 8-0680. by The Hall Syndlcale, Ine. Capitol. Inc.,• CommllJllcaUoDi Center, lo.. a SOciIety EdItor .. 1.._•• • •• ••• SIUUl ArtI ThOle Interested In membership caU Friday, April 26 . Beginning in 1966, in fact, the CHRISTIAN SCIENCI ORGAN· (All Rights Reserved) City, Iowa, dally .xC:lll.~undaY and Chief Pbo!.~IJ'II'pner .. . Ioe LIP~ lin. Vln Ala, 7·sm. ItATION holdo I lelUmony meetln, 8:30 p.m. - College of Law 3:30 p.m. - Basehall with Min· IlClJlday, and Ie,al b I. Entered AISlstan t ~ EdItor. .. KatbM Swift Common Market can take deci· e.ch Thurlday afternoon In tbe East John F. Murray Memorial Lec­ u IICOnd~tau m.tter .t Ibe polt Aul.atant VITIIANI: E.ch student under nesota. t tIftce .t Iowa City under \be Aei Sportl EdItor .. .. Harriett IIladIDuI sions binding on all its members, Conference Room, Eaat Lobby, low. PL 550 or PL 634 ml'lt .I,n a form lie mortal Union, .t .:15. All are wel­ ture, Anthony Lewis, N. Y. Times ., eon.n .. ofllareh 2, 1171. A ..Istant Pbotorrapber .. Bob Nandd including political decisions, by to cover bls aUendanee 'rom March 8 p.m. - Studio Theatre pro­ Adve~ Dtnctor .. . 1rf G_ come 1'1 .ttend. Or So correspondent fOI the Supreme Adverfu\n, ...... r . . . . DIck Papke weighled majority votes. 1-31. The Form Is available In B16 Court. Union. duction, "La Fiesta Brava," Stu· CIaSllfled Unlvenlty HaU . Holtrs are 8:30 a.m. APPLICATIONS for undergradu· dio Theatre. .... 7-41'1 from nOOD to m1clntPt to WHEN DE GAULLE'S veto is to noon and 1 to 4:30 p.m. ate student ..,bolarshlp. for the fall Friday, April 19 _>port ne.a Item., wom.D'. p,,' semelter .re 8vallable In III VnI· ...... and announeementl to TIl. A~ ' COii&Ui~B:C:= thus annUlled, the Eurocrats think They Say Saturday, April 27 DennII BlnnlJll THI IWIMMING I'OOL In the WOo verslty HaU. 3:30 p.m. - Baseball wit h DaII7 lowan. EdItorial offtce. are .. they will be able to go forward Gym for all SUI eoeda will two National Defen.. Education Act 8 p.m. - Studio Thea tre pro­ \be Communleatlona Center. Clrcul.UOD Kanapl' ...... 11m c.wer _P'. Luther. more briskly. They do not be· opeJI for nrlmmini from 4:15 p.m. (NDEAl loan 'ppllcaUonl .re allO The guy who doesn't know the duction, "La Fiesta Brava," Stu· to 5:15 p.m. Monaav throu.h Fri· available. Office hOUri are from meaning of the word "fear" Saturday, April 20 IulllcrlpHon .....: By carrier .. Tru...... IN"' .. Student ""III. Iieve that De Gaulle will wish to day. SwImmIn, aultl .nd towell 8 a.m. to 12 noon and from 1 to a 1:00 p.m. - Baseball double­ dio 1'healre. .... City, ,10 per year .. advaMt); tlon.",. Inc.: 1Ae Tbelaen, ~.i Lan7 break up the Common Market. will be provtaed by the Women'. p.m. Present holden of NDEA lo.n. probably doesn't know very I'r7DU.l G; N.nq ShII!'!. JUI; Prot. PbnIeal Education Department. need not plclc up appUc.Uons In header with Luther College. 1:00 p.m. - Baseball double­ a .oa\bl, SUO; Ibree mon\bl, N. Dale !Mnt&, Unlval'lltY ...... r...,; Prof. Ihus isolating France and creat­ perlOn '1 appllcatioDi ,wID be maUed many other words eilher. 87 ..u In low., " per y.ar; obi Sunday, ;'prll ~l header with Minnesota. ....n\bl, .,; three monlb., P. All LeslJe G. Koeller, Scllool oflournat. ing the condition~ for a trans­ TO CANDIDATI. for derreel In 14 Ibem. -EI Reno (Okla.) American otber mall aublCrlptioDl, ,to per !!mi JUcn ..1 llaauU, Ll, Dr. Geort. June: Orders for officiAl ,raduaUon 8 p.m. - Hillel Foundation ben· 8 a.m. - Golf with Minnesota £Ulon Colle,e of Dentiltry; JllcbanI formed Common Market including announcements are now beln, taken. lUI OIURVATORY will be Opell • • • ~... mOD\bI, .,.110; Ibree IIlOn\bl, A. IoIII\er. Ll; Dr. Laurell A. Vall the other five European states, Place your order before 5 p.m. Wed· tor the pubUe every clear Monday One trouble with portable TV efit concert, Charles Treger. and Wisconsin, two dual meets, Dyke, Colle., of Education. n.Iday, AprU 24, at the Alumni between 7;30 and ' :SO p.m. through. Union. on Finkbine Golf Course. Britain, and some of the other HOUle,. ISO N. Madtaon St., aerou out the sprln, aeme.ter except is that you can take it with you. 'nile AIIodatecl Pre. II 'Iltltled _ Dial 7-4191 II fr do not reeelft:J~ free trade area countries. from lII. Union. Price per Innounce­ durin, University bollday •. Any per­ The Hlal.ah·Miaml (Fla.) Tuesday, April 23 Monda~, April 29 ~ to lb. _ for repubUoatlGa Dally lO.an 7:10 .... TIle I1aIIJ meot II U centl, pay.ble when son Interested In ytewlni wlth th. Iowan clreula On oUIce .. tbe CcIIIl­ ordered. telescope may \'bit Ibe oblerv.tory Hom.·N,ws 2:30 p.m. - University Concert 4:10 p,m. - College of Medicine ., aU the local a.•• prlnt.cl In Ibll In some degree, In fact, they Course: MinneapOlis Symphony ~per .. ..u u all AP ne.. munlcatlou Cent.,. .. O~fl'Ollll• hope they can eventually impose du~ these bours without reMrv.· • • • Lecture : "High Pressure - a UId .u.pAtcbu. • .m. to 5 p.a. l(oncIaJ :b "'" CHILDIIN'S ART CLAII (Ale. I \lor\. J'rlday nlghtl are felerved lor Taxes-a fine you pay for reck· Orche.stra. Union. day and from • to 10 a.m. Sa . their will on De Gaulle. It is a 14 V) S.tll1'd.y. from • to 10:30 lI'oIIp, of I()hoot children or ""opl. Tool in M I c rob i 0 logical Re­ ldalI..,oocr ..nice on IIlu.cI papa .. 1.111. In tbe Guild G.Uery. For fur· In other publlo or,anIDUonl. ThOll less thriving. S P.TU. - University Conce~t search," ProCessor ,C. G, H., II notPl*lble, but eYery .uort WID bold hope. Ib.r 1IIIormalloo .... Pa' D"lh On who WISIi to obtaln • rele1'Vlltlon -The Franklin (N, Y.) Sentln.l· be ..de to oorrec$ _ wItII .... New York Herald Tribune Inc. S.turdll morninl III tbe Guild Gal- for a p ••: Ucu!ar .roup IDlY call Cours~.:. ... Mlnneapolis SYlDllbony ..Karoll~6ka InsUtute •• Sl.Qckl1Olm. .... ~ Copyrllbt lea; .J 1erJ. .... • t4II. Pre .. Orchestra. Union. Medical Amphitheatre. ".

( ..., • THE DAILY IOW~I_. City, I• .-,!,uesd~, AJtriI " 'HJ.-P~ , Sen. Schroeder , Big 3 Seek ReCls-tiain Stronghold Assails Liquor Unified Action In Laotian Cam'paign -Ir VIENTIANE, Laos IA'I - Pathet Lao battle groups battered neutralist In Laos Affa troops on the Plaine des Jarres Monday in a campaign apparently aimed fansfor. Control Idea Lo give the Communists undisputed control of alJ northern Laos. The PARIS IA'I - UnGer the threat of neutralists adandoned strategic Xieng Khouang. ( nakes DES MOINES IA'I - Sen. Jack a Communist lakeover in Laos, the Neutralist Gen. Kong Le, a U.S .·trained paratrooper who lought Schroeder lR·Bettendorfl, a chief Uniled States, Britain and France proponent of a liquor bill in the strol'e Monday night 10 adju t their along ide Pathet Lao rebels in the Laotian civil war, announced his Senate, said Monday he considers differences in Asia and Europe . men suffered a heavy attack after the retreat (rom Xieng Khouang, an implied consent law too high a President Charles de Gaulle's Gov­ llO miles northeast of Vientiane. price to pay for liquor·by·the. ernment exhibited a new spirit of Informed sources said the garrison fell back 28 miles to the Plaine drink, cooperation. des Jarres, pre umably to join the Schroeder heads the Senate Ju­ The French leader personally re­ bulk of Kong Le's forces based on Britain and the Soviet Union, as diciary 11 Committee, which has ceived U.S. Secretary of State Dean that plateau land adjoining Com· co-chairmen of the Geneva confer· reported out a bill to legalize sale Rusk at Elysee Palace in the £ir t munist North Viet Nam . ence, to take prompt action to stop of Ilquor·by.the-drink and give city high level American·f'rencn en­ THESE IN FOR M A NTS said the shooting . and county governments authority counter since De Gaulle turned his North Vietname e troops were reo ported fighting against the neulral. Diplomatic circles in Vientiane, to limit the number of licenses in back last January on a U.S. plan the administrative capital, con· HARRIET STEVENS their areas. {or a multi·nation nuclear force in ists, though Laos has been official· ly off·limits for all foreign troops sidered the Pathet Lao's Xieng Ovtst.ndinl Servic. Implied consent legislation has thE' North Atlantic Treaty Organiza· Khouang victory the most im· tion. since last fall. Sharing the north· been filed as amendments to the ern frontier is Red China, which portant change in the stat us quo liquor bill . AMERICAN SOURCES said both since the northwestern city of Nam Prof. Stevens men expres ed concern over the has blamed current disorders on There was speculation that Lt. Jaynie, Jimmie and Janice U.S. imperialism. fell to the Communists in May, d~terioraling ituation in Laos , 1962. Gov. William Mooty might rule the Jaynle and Jimmie Mill,r snap pictures of their cess Janice L.. MiII.r, and Janic"1 escort, Lt. Neutralist Premier Prince Sou· Implied consent amendments out which Rusk had introduced at a SOUVANNA HAD bid vainly for Gets Award ' par.ntl, Senator and Mrs. Jack Miller (R·lowa), Paul Lechner, during Festival activities in Wash. minislerial meeting of the South· vanna Phouma, confirming the set· of order as not germane to lhe back, appealed for an end to "trag· dispatch of a truce team of the bill. However, Schroeder said there their sister, Iowa Cherry Blossom Festival prjn. ington. Janice il II fr.shman at SUI. east Asia Trealy Organi~ation ear· International Control Commission The Order of the Golden Hawk Iier in the day. ically useless partisan passions" was conferred on Harriet Stevens, might be a move to include them and for unity of all Laotians. to halt the fighting . The idea was by amending the title of the meas· The 70·minule De Gaulle·Rusk The premier spoke at the funeral vetoed by his pro.communist half· SUI assistant professor of home ure. 'Political Sex Appeal'- meeting was described as relaxed brother, Deputy Premier Prince economics last weekend by Loren and friendly. Their wide·ranging of Foreign Minister Quinlm Phol· Implied consent legislation gen· sena, a neutralist with Pathet Lao Souphanouvong, head of the Pathet Hickerson, executive director of the discussions, informanls said, also Lao. Unanimity is required among erally would pI'ovide that a person leanings who was assassinated last Alumni Association. signing his driver's license would touched on such questions as Cuba week by a neutralist soldier. The rightist, neutralist and leftist fac­ be deemed to have given implied and the NATO nuclear force , now soldier said he was suspicious of tions for government decisions. The engraved certificates of tho consent for chemical tests of his 'Draft Barry' Committee attracting some f'rench interest. the foreign minister's political in· The control commission - made alumni Order was presented at the breath or body fluids · to test the British Foreign Secretary Lord tentions. up of Indians, Canadians and Poles 50th Anniversary Banquet of the alcohol content. 1I0me and French Foreign Minister THE SPRtNG REVIVAL of war· - is little more than a figurehead Hom e Economics Department. Couve de Murville met for the first fare pointed up warnings by Con· agency. The Pathet Lao has never Schroeder is a dedicaled oppo· Given for outstanding service to nent of implied consent legislation. Formed by GOP in Texes time since Paris·London relations servative spokesmen last year that permitted on· site inspection of its He said Sen. Richard Turner, (R­ were slrained severely last Jan· the Communists would never be field forces. the Alumni Association and the Council Bluffs) and Sen .D. C. No· WASHINGTON IA'I- A Texas Republican leader announced Monday uary by f'rance'& veto of Britain's content with their role as a junior Souvanna addressed about 5,000 University, the award was designed Ian (R.lowa City) could be ex­ the formation of a national committee to draft Sen. Barry Goldwater bid for membership in the Euro· partner in affairs of this drowsy, persons at Quinim's funeral. His for alumni who have done exten· peeled to vote against a liquor.by. as the 1964 GOP preSidential candidate. pean Common Market. The meet· landlocked Southeast Asian king· audience included both Souphanou· sive work in an area which reflects the.(Jrink bill If it contained implied The movement is headed by Peter O'Donnell Jr., Texas Republicart ing itself was considered signifi· dom. vong and the rightist deputy pre· favorably on the association and the University. consent provisions. state chairman, who called a news conference to announce a national cant. The Pathet Lao offen ive came mier, Gen. Phoumi Nosavan . The And De Gaulle's pre m i e r, Jess than nine months after a 14- service capped the first of two days Twenty-one of the awards have Schroeder's committee is to meet headquarters will be set up here soon to coordinate what he called "the nation conference in Geneva loday for what may be the final Georges Pompidou, pleased both of Buddist funeral rites at Vien· been given in the three yean since tremendous, spontaneous en t h u· the Americans and British by open· agreed on a treaty pled~ing Laos tiane's Talluang Temple grounds the Order of the Goiden Hawk was discussIon of the bill before It siasm for Sen. Goldwater that is 4 to boom him for the presidential Independence and neutrality. The reaches the Senate floor . Majority ing the three-day SEATO meeting that will end with interment of established. Miss Stevens Is the sweeping the country." nomination. with a pledge of France's "full co­ Red guerrillas turned on the neu· Quinlm's ashes. first SUI faculty member to re­ Lea d e r Roberl Rigler (R·New He announced these olher of. tralists they had tolerated in a Hamplon) urged other senators He described the Arizona con· operation" in SEATO's peace·keep· ceive it. The recipIent of both B.A . servative as a man wilh "political ficers of the commiltee : ing endeavors. joint occupation oC part of the and M.S. (jegrees from SUI, she Monday to file any amendments by 60,000 square miles or so of terri· lhis afternoon. They thus could be sex appeal" who can win the South Cochairman, lone F. Harrington, NO SIGN EMERGED of any bas· Another Access has been an assistant professor away from the Democrats and help Indiana Republican national com· ic change In French foreign policy tory they wrested from a pro· of home economics here since 19:il. printed tonight and be distributed Western government in the civil WedneSday morning when Rigler the Republicans win control of mitteewoman; - a polJcy that has increasingly Bill Is Reported She served as general chair/lUln Congress next year. Secretary, Judy Fernald, Upper isolated France from its friends. war. of arrangemenls for the 50th 'An· said he hopes the liquor bill will be Some such nutbreak had been niversary Program of the Home debated. There vias no immediate com· Montclair, N.J., immediate past But the Americans and British DES MOrNES IA'I - With one ment from Goldwater, who has in· cochairman of the Young Repub· feared by rightist Prince Boun highway access control bill vetoed Economics Department last week· formed the definite impression that Oum, who surrendered the pre· end. JUDGE FINED sisted that the only thing he is Ilcan Federation; De Gaulle was trying to be friendly, miership Jast June only under dip· by Gov. Harold Hughes, the Sen· HALIFAX, Va.

Historian Toynbee To L~cture • "' . _ 004. At Grinnell College Tonight .' 1. With gradualion coming u.p, lookl I. ThoL'. fine when you bave no like we'll have La start thinkin" reBponsibililie8. BuL chanre. Dr. Arnold J . Toynbee is scheduled lo deliver 1) public lectUl'e on about the fuLure. are YOII'II have .. wife to I hinle "The Problem of Race Feeling," in Herrick Chapel on the Grinnell Col· .. bout !lOOn. lege campU9 tonight. My philOiOphy ia 10 Ii... 110m daJ to day, J may just deride to 1Mcl The British historian who is serving as a John R. Heath Visiting .,1'" • the bachelor life. Professor oC History throughout the second semester of the current • J- academic year, will be making the second in a series of three evcning speaking appearances on the Grin· r nell campus. Association for the United Nations. Toynbee will open a series of Toynbee will talk on "A Historian .1' four morning lectures on the Philo· Looks at the World Today." sophy oC Hi tory April 15 when he Three panel discussions will be • speaks on "The Indivisibility and held Saturday in connectiun with (,.~" , Unpredictability oC Human Af· the state· wide conference. I fairs." This lecture, also open to A discussion on arms control will .. fT be lead by Robert Blakely, dean of ~he pub~ic, is scheduled for 11 a.m. the SUI extension division, and to Herrick Chapel. WSW program director Larry Bar. The historian will make his final Irelt . evening appearance in Grinnell on May 13 when he discusses "World· CHAPIN EXPIRES Wide Social Jusllce - Demands ATLANTA (UPll - Lloyp W. and Possibilities" at 8 p.m. in the Chapin , 60 , associate director of •. ...., likely, lince" per cent t. Ye., indeed. What'. more, you'll chapel. This will also mark his the Southern Regional Educational ., aD lMIIlIJId _ tel ...,.w. have chil

LAWRENCE T. WADE, General Agent IUTLE BAILEY By Mort Walk.,

1M S.vlngl & LHn Bid,. lowl City, 'OWl

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How to spend a wtlkelKl "LITTLE" FACTS YOU FORGET MAKE in Chicago for $15 TOM CHE,"" BIG-DIFFERENCES IN YOUR GRADES! U. of Kentucky L •• lnaton , Ky, THE PROBLEMa core of each subject to give you a Say., "Any student, "'an Few students can remember every permanent, portable reference that or woman. c.. name, date, formula, conjugation, can be used from term ... to term .tayat theorem, definition, principle, de- ... to term-throughout your en­ Chlc"O'S WAS YMCA Hotel manded by a 4·year program. Edu. tire school career, Thus in spite of and enjoy a Kenn~ cators know that through the "ex- I~st notes, surrendered te.ts, a dif· week.nd fOf tinction process" you will forget flcult program, and an overbur­ $15.00. Hore Is Palm ~ many of the facts taught last week, dened memO!)', with DATA-GUIDE how I did It." spend til last month, last terml last year, solid-plastic charts, you will al­ House Thus a "Memory Gap" aevelops be- ways have the facts you need. fyi, P.M.. Dinner 01 YMCA Hotel $t.1S tween the facts you are required Authored by leadln, educatm, the C.I"'90 5y",pItofty 2.JO LlElJTENANT BOB AKAll, B.S, IN AVl4TION ADMINISTRATION to remember and the facts yOU do subject matter on each DATA­ .10 IN T~ remember. The smaller you can ;UIDE solid-plastic chart is im8l­ C.... make your "Memory Gap" the inatively written and uniquely or- 1001II ot Y Holt! 1.71 PAR,I ~ higher your irlIda wi II be. pnized tot rapid fact location and A·bom Sat ...... kfo., ot Y H...... 51 by SePtl THE SOLUTION memory strengthening. Students Art In.lltul. T"", .... I . throu~hout the U,S, are using all- I1lent so Ulf I had it to do over again, lunc. ot .....jMIo I... 1.~ Only DATA-GUtD~ solJd pl8~~lc pl~stlc DATA-GUIDES to Insure They loose-leaf summaries are specIfiC- success ill school REMEMBER, ally des'lned to close the "Mem- Today's lessons are based on yes: Sat. P.M. Nat. Hi ... M... _ T_ .... menls ory Gap. DATA·GUIDES preserve, terday's fachl HOW IS YOUR Dinn .. at T HMoI I,U Gaulle's would I take Army R. O. T. C.? on solid plastic, the essential fact· MEMORY? Sat. nil. donee, Y HoI.. .10 n~lear Cok. dot. .45 said, h Look at it this wa,. I like the idea of doing challenging 100'" at Y Hotool, 2.71 atomic log out work. That's why I volunteered for Speeial Forces. So Sun. A.M. ••oklo.' at Y Hotel ..51 you can see why I felt pretty good when the Army assigned W.rs~ip at C..If.! Clulfch l"ftch ot Y Hotol loJ5 IUIN me to Europe! Here I really feel I'm doing something for Gen. E the cause of my country in these important times. How de.. ell Sun. PoM. lac. ,. ca",,.,. terior M many jobs can you. think of that start you off with this to roun T.... $14,97 GUIdo's 0( gUides kind responsibility? My wife's here, too, and she loves MEN • WOMEN ••AMllIES Rodolfo it. We get a chance to travel. We meet the people, learn PLASTIC SUBJECT SUMMARIES . Stay at ChicCJ#lo', the heiel new languages, cllStoms. And there's a pretty active The one lotion that's cool, exciting cris~. soeiallife on post, too. But above all, I'm an officer with YMCA HOTEL "7 brisk as an ocean breeze I a job to do and with responsibilities to shoulder. I like 826 South Wobash The one·and·only Old Spice exh ilarates .. . gives you that grea t·to·be. it that way, and I have a hunch that my leadership train­ at the ed,t! of the Loop alive feeling ... refreshes after eve ry shave .. , adds to your assurance ... ini and experience will help me out whatever I do. Take --"'~ .. I~ • .." SI.It 1M If and wins fem inine approval eve~ time, Old Spice After Shave Lot io n, Wri .. f ...... lion. or CIt" WA2·311J ,/ljJ -.fi j 1.2~ and 2.00 plus tax . SHU L TO N it from me, i[ you're already halI-way towards your I. ~ro~Qn, see it ~brough. H'~ a ,,00<1 deal. 1 know." J q I ",'1 ( cJ1tI.l?f.k:-.lhf , ~have IQ~~n-P1~n recQl1]mend to o~/ler. men I • • •