1 BUOKY IS PROUD , .' "I'm proud of everyone of my kids ... You never er HW a team with more guts," iays Hawkeye coac·h. t I lu8Sia'l OWUM ur OIiIro rS that Serving The State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City faclllt1 F,;_~.;.;IU;;;;U.;.;";;;.SI;.;.;IC;;;;· U;;..;.;lr;..1..;;.ltAA1;;;;;;;._-_I:...,II:...'v..;.e_C,;.;·e;.;.;n;.;.;ts:....:;;a_C.:,.o;..:p:.::,y ______'-- ____...... ,... ______,;.;M ;.;;e.;.;m,;.;be;.;;•.;..r ...:O.:,.I.;.;A.;.;s;.;;so.;;.c;;;;l;;;.at;.;;e.;;;d...;P:...r_e.;;;s~;:...~A.;.;p:...... ;te=:I.;;;se;;..;d;:.....;w.;.;i.;;.re;.....;;a.;.;n.;;;d...;P:...h.;.;o;.;;to;.....;;se;.;;.;;.rv.;.;i..;;.ce;.-. _____-:- ______lo_ w_3_C_II.:;.Y;..,. _Io_\\'a. Sa turd y. Ma~!:..~ lit)' for ~ meet t meet. ~catioa

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11''' Just lVantil\ I. lI) »er. sse , - means : those * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ~ * * * * * * * * * Itutlona te!ueate '~ ' IM Hom~ as ~her 6-10 Bill Knocks 26 'Frisco Spills·PigHting Hawks :he :So­ ~easln, After the Ballgame Is Over ~iOD 10 i)eadly Don Shooting !On for educa. ~9\Vl1 lterped Dips Early Iowa Lead .f 1lIIS- By IVARS LIEPINS D.II, 1...... one lUI"" EVANSTO~, m. - Iowa went down to an 83-71 def at In the NCAA championship i=3mc herc Friday night to a San Francisco team that was I~are'. truly a champion. • in U.S. The Hawkeyes !lul on a full court !'ress and great effort in the last ~r. rive minutes of the contest. but that was not quite enouih to overcome a 17·polnl lead built up by the de- ______tending nalional champions. SAS ra"l'/crsco - The capacity crowd of 10,653 rans o .. r T &.1.1, I ...... , t·~ 4 In watched the Hawkeyes have their Pa'lIIer. I ..... ,., t • ups and downs in the NCAA champ­ Prt&I~ ••• f •.••.• S l"' ~ 3 "I ...... 11. • • ...... 11 ••~ ! ZIl Ionship rin:ds. Nel.. n, ...... -1 • • Per .. ". r ., ...••.. It ft·, tJ ., They played a brilliant first six Br..... , ...... 3 .... • 18 Ba.. , ... , ...• : . t '·0 • • minutes, were able to kC'ep up with B. b. , .• ,... . 0.' • • ".,•• , r . . . . 0 ••, • • tbe San Francisco five during th(' T.tal . I~·I~ I ~ 13 first haIr, lost ground heavily in 10WA_ H Cain. I ...... 7 l·. , I~ the openina minutes of the second 8 ..... , . I ...... G ,., S H haiI, came up, put on a terrific la I ....11. , .. , .... 0 .... • , lArlUll t C . •. •• a 2·;t I I ': minute finish. but still walked orr a ••r, •. 0 ...... D .... • 0 Saeuer,".... • .. 4 Jt.. ~ • I' lhe £Ioor as runners:up to the Dons' S.ab.", ...... G '·1. I 17 Manti. , ...... , •.• • 0 five. MCCOnBOII. , .... ,.,. 8 1I ... ~b.,ao. r .. . • ,., • • RusHIl Too Much To,al...... IP·'U 18 7' The brilliant defensive play of 8 ... FraDcll.. . .. !II San Francisco's all·America Bill 10 •• •.. . •..... 31 Rus eLL was too much ror the Hawkeycs and Ule Dons extended their string of victori s to 55. followed Seaoorg with (leld gO:lls Nothing, however. could be taken and the Dons found themselves in away from the Iowa Hawkeyes. trouble leading by only seven They fought a better team al\ the ! P '~I'fpb.lO) way down to lhe wire. and not un. points with 2:06 lell. 76-69. GENE BROWN, San Francisco guard, com •• down with a rebound 1iI the nnal minutes could Ihe The rather parUsan crowd went after an Iowa ahot III first half action Friday nl!lht, Bill s.abe"" Dons be positive of a victory. Wild. but the Haw~ were not able Hawk guard, qets one hand on the ball as e.nter Bill Logan (left) Hawks To Get Cold NIght to caITY through their threat. watche •• San Francisco spilled the Hawk., 13 ·11, to win It. Hcond It was a cold night for the Russell made (ive eonseeutiv Itralpht NCAA title. Hawks. They missed a great Dum. points and, Iowa was at the $hort C~ampion~~ip ber of lay.ups and s t shots. end ~r . t~c ~pUY. 83-69, ~'ith I: 16 'rhe usual Iowa scoring balance remaUli . . was eqoslJed by San Francisco. Start Fa.t tiHle Pitchers, Big Errs We/comeHere which was able to put four Inen In The flAwkeYes started tbe hall double figurC1;. game plaYiDa slowly bllt spectacu· 15-4 Furniture Dealer Won't Salute His Wine • ~ I The Iowa Hawkeyes will arrive Russell was high for the nIght larly, and galloped to a lead home at about 1:45 p.m. today ana dropping (literally dropping) in 26 with less than six minutes gone in Wiih Macaroni Nowl go straight to a welcoming party points. He was followed by Gene the firsl hall. at the Iowa Memorial Union. Brown and Carl Boldt with 16 each, .Baskets by Cain, SclIooC. and Lo. STONEHAM. Mass. "" - A each pitch r was the word: "SA· The tRean:dwj! al;~'ive by plane at and ijarold Perry wiUI 14. gan gave Iowa this advantage, and local furnitur deal r Friday L TE." Cedar apl s ear leI' and drive to High men for Iowa were Carl the DonI! seemed to be much both. night pondered what to do with a Convinced the pitchers without lowNa City by dChabertered bhUS. d Cain and Bill Seaberg with 17 ered by lhis unexpected turn of shipment from Italy or little advertising would make beauti- o motorca e tween ere an points each. events. pitchers with big errs. (ul gifts, the furniture dealer Cedar Rapids is planned. Fall Apar1 Sixteen crates o[ pitchers of :lS' ord r d hundreds o[ lh~m. with Traffic Problems Trailing by only (ive points as .Then Iowa hn a dry streak and sorted slz s. valued at $2 ,()()() , th('se cabl d instruchons: Mark Putney, L2. Gladbrook, the tirst hal( ended, the Hawkeyes jump shots ~y San Franeisco's were ordered rrom a Rome con· "Le:lve ou~ word 'salute' and Brown and Russell chopped the C Student Council president. said a (eLI apart in the opening minutes Hawk lead to 19.18 with 7:40 lert In cern a ter the (urnitur dealcr leave out the words, 'Enjoy your motorcade might cause road prob· oC ijJe second halC, and the Dons the half. noted the distinctive quality or ine with . . .mac:lroni.' " Iems. . built up a 17·point lead, 74-57, pottery pitchers' being di tribut· Now he hos Ule pitchers. On '. Iowa City was set to return to with 4:47 left in the game. A set shot by Boldt with 6:02 left ed by a Massachusetts macaroni th spout of each one arc these normal today after a hectic week It was Perry and Brown who gave ' the Dons a one· point lead, company. words: that started when the Hawks de· gave the Hawks trouble with spec· 24·23, and from there on the Dons Printed on the sid of U1e nor· "Leave out the word salute:' Ceated Morehead State Teachers I • tacular outside set shots in this kept tIleir advanwge ending C'I\l ally desIgn d pitchers wa th' On the other sid ' o[ ellch is and Kentucky to enter the NCAA ~ . period. They hit often, and if one half with a 38·33 Mad. message: this message: {inals. m. lo"'an Pbolo) of their shots went astray. there Iowa had 8 cold .325 field goal "Enjoy your wine with . .. "Leave out lhe words enjoy Thousands of students, faculty THE HAWKS !l0 behind early in the first half, never to ..,et ahead again, and four Iowa fans suffer with was always $.10 Russell to extend pereen~ie. The Dons hit .402 per macaroni." Across the spout oC your wine with ... macaroni." and townspeople huddled about th ~ m in the Union TV loun~e. his hands far above the rim and cent' of their shots. • ------,------their television sets Friday night, tip the shot in. Russell collected 27 rebounds (or leaving Iowa City streets deserted. or chance to return to lhe class B.·lly Graham Gets Pakl"stan Becomes The Dons tightened their de· San Francisco and tumed in defen. Iowa City AHorney The Weather , Proud of Hawks .work. Babe Hawthorne. Scheuer. fense In the second haIr and Iowa sive play which could not be equal· They were denated by the great man and Schoof will leave Iowa W kl NBC Sh was not able to penetrate instde led by any other player. play of San Francisco's all·Amer· City by airplane tonight for Tue· ee y OW Moslem Republl"c tbe free throw zone with the ease For Iowa, Logan collected IS and Seeks State Office Cloudy jean cenler Bill Russell but proud son, Ariz., where they will help they had in the opening minutes of Cain' 12 rebounds. o( an Iowa team that refused to the Hawkeye baseball team open IA'l-Evangelist Billy the tilt. W. H. Bartley. Iowa City attor· quit ev\)n after defeat was cerlain. its season against Arizona. Graham and his evangelical group KARACHI, Pakistan IA'l-Pakis· No Runell Ar.abs Ask Delay ney. Friday entered the race for and About l,()()() persons watched the The pressure ended Friday night will appear on the NBC radio net· tan. a stout Asian ally o[ lhe Unit· Long set shots by BUI Seaberg lhe Democralic nomination for game over four TV sets at the for all Hawks save one - reserve work as a sponsored program be. d S t d B 'ta' F'd "A and Sharm Scbeuerman kept the In Peace Meet.·ng lieutenant governor in the June 4 Union, . most oC tMm sLaying and center Bob George. e ta es an rl tn, rJ ay u.;' Hawkeyes within a respectable dis. primary. Rain . h H k ' h r I ginning April 22, a network vice· came a republic within the British Itance of the Dons. UNl1ED NATIONS. N. Y. (,fI - c heertng t e aw s mto t e 103 His wiCe has been expecting a d Ch C Two Arab diplomats asked Friday Bartley obtained nomination pa· minute of play. baby to arrive for the past week. presi ent, aries T. Ayres, an· ommonwealth. It had been a do- But the Iowa guards missed night (or postponement of a Se. pers Crom tl1J! secretary of stale in When Iowa's :l1l·senior first team nounced Friday. minion with self·rule since Britain more than they made and there • Des Moines to le(t tbe game with 30 seconds re· withdrew from overlordship of the was 110 Russell under the boards curity Council meeting set for 'ppose State Sen. Weather conditions in Iowa will The group will be heard on a I Monday at U S request on the change rapidly today as north maining. the Union crowd broke C (ndian subcontinent Aug. 15. 1947 .• to tip the stray shots in [or Iowa. . . , George E. O·Mal· . 0""ISmlSSeS 2 ases Sunday evening program series TI" r d I I F bo t th . t . t be Palestine border crises. winds bringing warm weathel' Into cheers. 1e uay 0 pageantry an ce e· or a u ree mmu es JUS • i ley o( Des Moines. and south wind bringing cold· E.eryone Watched I from 9 to 9:30 p.m. CST. It will b(' bra lion was marred by the death (ore the game ended, tbe Hawks Western diplomats feared that be ollly previous. er weather move across the Other SUI supporters watch dOL I FI sponsored by the Walter F. Ben· or 31 per~ons and injury of 60 in a caught fire. the surprise move might have an Iy announced can- state. the game from sets in fl·aterllities. n a ,ega raw nett Co., a Chicago agency t~at stampede on an overpass bridge The Hawks full court press im· adverse effect on an American· didate for the De· Iowa City c:m expect cloudy sororities, dormitories, taverns and at Rawalpindi, in the far northern mobilized the San Francisco of· sponsored plan to send Secretary mocratic nomina· sides aDd rainy w('ather Cor Sal· homes throughout Iowa City and Police Judge Roger H. Ivie. fol· handles religious IIccounts. Punjab. The cause or the stampede fense and Iowa obtained the ball by General Dog Hammarskjold on a Lion. urday with a high temperature the state of Iowa . lowing a precedent he established The announcement marks a was not known immediately. i intercepting passes with ease. peac:e mission to the Middle East. Bartley is. a f of about 40 degrees. Three Iowa television stations earlier this week, Thursday dis· change in. poliCy for NBC. Hereto. The first president o[ this mos· Seaberg hit a set shot with 3:12 The request for delay came (rom member of we Light snow was reported in and two more stations on the Iowa missed two charges of failing to lem nation of 80 million, MaJ'. Gen. lert on the game as the Hawkeyes Rank Ash. 'of Syria and Edward law firm of Barl· fore all religiOUS programs have RI··" o· f Lebanon. They conferred northern Iowa t:ridaY while the border made the game available have a vehicle under control. Iskander Mirza, was sworn in here cut the Dons' lead down to 13 N\ ley and Williams. southern part of the state l1ad to fans throughout Hawkeye·land. He dismissed charges T~ursday been sustained on the nlltwork on at ceremonies watched by the en. points, 76-63. on it Informa1ty with Sir Pierson He was a member or deCense cooo· generally rainy weather. Iowa Citians took advantage of against William F. VeDepo or West a noncommercial basis. voys of 50 foreign nations. • Schoof, Scheuerman and Lo,an Dixon of Britain, this month's sci in the Robert Bednasek murder this chaQJ:c to sec Carl Cailj, Bill Branch and Leonard A. Hitchcock , Council president, and Hammar· {rial heTe in 1951 and later in the Schoof, BI1i Logan, Sharm Scheu. 419 Beldon Ave. skjold at a Pakistani Re'public Day Jim Lons murder trial. Defendants erman and BUI Seaberg in Iowa Earlier this )Yeek, Judge Ivie dis- Egypth;ans at Polish Base, British Claim- ~e~t!t1:;~b ~plOm(lts had no spe. in both cases were acquitted. Senate Group' OKs uniforms for tho last lime. missed a similar charge on the cific in$tructions, they said, other Bartley obtained his law degree Extra Chairs grounds that the code section lin· ' !rom the State University of Iowa A Tax Extension Iowa City taverns added extra der which the charge was filed is S R T·· E 't' A . than to ask (or a IIOlItponement. in. 1939. He was in government chairs and booths for lhe overfiow a civil and nola criminal section. ay','" uss raining gy"'p . rm·y'. th~~~I::~e~~~~~':f~I:ili~v~:; service ror three years and after WASHINGTON (,fI - Another crowds. L. G. Klein, VeDepo's attorney, three years in the Navy was dis· year's extension o( business and prestige reasons they sbould be L_ 1 TclexisiOn renlal st6res reported used the same argument in Thurs· invited to sit at the Council table charged with t •..., rank of ieuten· excise taxes at their present rates 'he heaviest business in years. day's case. He sllid the code sec· LONDON 1.4'1 _ Britain disclosed even If they did not participate in ant. was voted unanimously Friday by There were numerous calls all da'y tion is designed merely to serve as Friday it has received secret in· learned from a secret source that Egypt jet lighting planes, bombers. the discuasion. Bartley served as city attorney the Senate Fina.nee Committee. Friday for TV repairmen. a guide in civil actions. formation that 1<1gyptian Army of. for (our years and is now counsel · d' I d th H't h k I-' Egyptians are being trained in Po· tanks and submarines in an arms· for Solon w"-re he II'ves He I'e The aclion is expected to be Jack Culoy I , dIrector of t II e SUI 1vie Ism sse e I C coc flcers and men are being trained bEl d uc... 13ureau of Labor and Management, charge on his own motion . by Russian military experts in land was made by a Foreign Office for-cotton deal which the Egyptians Bom I Xp 0 e in married and the father of three concurred in by the Senate next spokesman at a news conference. all d .. I . I children . . aho rtened his talk at Hillcl Foun· Communist Poland. c e a DOrma commercIa d 24 I • eel . . Monday or Tuesday, 10 tune to pre· dation on discrimination in em· PEDESTRIAN KILLED A Foreign OCfic.e spokesman said He would give no hint of the transaction." The Egyptians said Para e; IIlur vent an automatic drop in the tax I 1 t f h t t source. But in other quarters it .. AI £ ALY BACK HOME P oymen 0 a ow s or com men s. CHARLE S ClTV 1.4'1 - Dean L. the information must be considered they needed the arms for defense GUATE,...... ,. (,fI - Two bombs t bed led fAilPr 1 .. ~..a... "I'm 6ure," he said, "you want Hamilton, 26, Charles City, was m determining British Middle East was slaid ~at tBg~ish. sailo~sht:ose against a tbr.(!at of agJression from exploded Friday in a crowd watch· NICE, France (,fI' _ Prince Aly ra.e:msc I u ,,: H .. to watch TV as badly as J do." killed Friday night when struck by policy. . vesse s ea . a ?ma, mig ave inI the univenrity students' annual Khan is back on the Riviera after eII)S g aw, ouse ~= Tim. OH a car as he walked along' Highway The Egyptian Embassy here had seen Egy,pban orflc?rs an~ men in Israel. parade lampooning the govern· a wide swing around the religious the bill March 13. Everything stood still . The Doily I 18 abolA 4 mUes cast o[ here. no comment. 'that port of Poland s BaIlie coast. Israel mai-,ins the threat comea ment. At least 24 persons were In· realm he expects to inherit (rom The Senate committee acted alter Iowan editorial Ilnd composing Highway Patrolmen said the car .At the Foreign OUice it also was These. quarters s~id ab?ut 2?0 (rom the Arab side. An Israeli jured. his lather, the Aga Kahn. He vis· bearing Secretary of the Treasury .ataffs stopped work for 00 minutes was driven by Clarence W, Becker, said that Czechoslovakia has set Egyptians are .tx:mg tr~med 10 request for $&0 milUon worth of Ten were reported in ~ serious lted .Ieaders of the Ismalll Moslem Humphrey say the government to watch the tltlo game on telo· 34, Bassett. Iowa, Who was travcl· up a training center for Egyptian ~n~. t s:a and al~:~ratlOns at a Anlerlcan arms for defense baa condition suffering from bj1!1ls. A sect in Egypt. Pakistan and India needs the $31116 8QO,000 extra rev . vision. • . ing west with his family to Charles pilots near Alexandria, Egypt. VIC ase near yma. . been .pending several weeu In spectat(lt iald he· saw two ,bombs and next will go to East Africa enue to a~ve ~ ~anced budget Three Hawks wllJ set little rest City. I The statement that Britain bas Czechoslovakia is supplymg I Washington. .' ~ ftom a rooftop. and Madasascar. I in the flacal )'ear ending June 30. Pa .. 2-THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, la.-Saturday, March 24, 1956 ~ , doodles by dean I I ' ,I ~. ,If(! (t!' ~~!'\ ' I'~, rJJ. ' II~lteJ , ~ 1 'r • . The Daily Iowan PEORIA ,'LL. I I ~ •I ,; j ~ ' I I I I I ' " \, acneral Not.ces must be left at The 0 81 '/ Iowan o/flce'. hoom 201 Comm~nt . ••Itolll Center. by 8 a.m. Monday lor publlc,,\lon In The DaUy lowlln on TUesday ity The Daily Iowan is an independent pression of SUI administrl'tion policy or 'Iotlce. lor other", cek ..,.y. must be In by 5 p.m. two days prior to publlcaUon. ~~- . ffn- They !nust be typed 0' legibly wrlltcn .... d aimed. They will not ' be accepted Most of 11 by phone. rhey will not be .pubUshed more th.n one wep.k prior to the event. daily newspaper, written and edited by opinion . . Th. Dally Iowan re•• fI · ~. the rli ht to ed It notices. wUl participli ices beginniq rtudents. It is governed by a board 0/ The Iowan, in the terms of a policy ORDER OF ARTUS - A meet­ LAW WIVES - Law Wives will • t ...... t • • statement adopted by trustees In 1946, ing of the Order of Artus will be meet on Tuesda y, March 27 at 7:30 Special mw /ivf' student trustees elected by the stu­ communion I "will try to act as a good citizen of the held at noon, Tuesday, March 27, p.m. in the Law Student Lounge. dent in the middle alcove of the Union ..d receptio~ body and four faculty trustees ap­ planned by II SUI community and the community of Cafeteria. Hugh G. Hansen, of the COMMUNITY R ACE RELA· ~nted by the president of the uni­ Iowa City . ... 2'he Daily Iowan con­ Department of Economics, will TIONS - On Wednesday. April The Rev. I, liiy. ceives its owners to be the whole con­ speak on "The Market Mechanism 4, at 7:30 p.m., a meeting of those Hesston Colk students, faculty and townspeople .,UI be guest The Iowan editorial staff writes its stituency 0/ the University, past, present and Water Resource Planning City Mennonll An Example from Ca1ifo~·ria ." interested in the improvement of editorials without censorship by adminis­ and future. It will endeavor to hold the ., , race relations will be held on the Beginning 8 tration or faculty. The Iowan's editorWl good of the University in trust for these ;;econd floor of the Congregational Sunday meeti SECONDARY TEA<;HER STU· Church. . ' . etch evening policy, therefore, is not necessarily an cx- owners ...... DENTS - All seniors a~d graduate .,111 end with students who plan to talte Educa· iees. tion 7:39, Observation and Labora­ : STUDENTS r:=OR STEVENSON­ tory Practice (Practice Teaching ), A mceting will be held Monday, Sn during the first semester of the March 26, at 7 p.m. in 12'iA, Schaef· The od 1. The Stude'nt COt/llcil president should tion of the student body, this year more I ~e wlU be co gines were not available. With the didn't get the bid. IBoard is sponsoring a series of ily Portrait"-Univtrsity Theatre nesdny. than ever before. As the problems of SUI Flnl BI pili be elected by the student body at large. advance of technical improvements Poliljcal wiseacres are saying weekly bridge lessons Saturday Group Show. Student Art Gallery. ~unday seT,,1 farm machinery was tailored to the that this is very likely to hap. mornings at 10. a.m. on the sun Sunday, March 25 At present he is electcd by the council increase with the hulgwg enrollment of the f~o~ . 1~~ n1~ coming years, student leadership will be· size of the existing farms. pen again. They recall the barriers porch of the Umon. 3 p.m. - Dedication of War Me· It will be sup membership. This would be equivalent to For the most efficient use of at least as important as concrete against nomination of a Southern. -- morial to University of Iowa War narrative of 1 come more important. l Flnt EnrU• the president of the Unitcd States being farm machinery it should be de· engineering formula s. er as well as the opposition of the BOOK EXCHANGE _ BOO1Cr will be ened Hubbard, _ retiry; and Gordon iees beginning Palm Sunday. Major chan~es in the lIoly Week I familiar tory o( Hol~' Week in at ~ p.m . ILind r. I . Port \\'a hin!!t.on, .\' .• Special music, visiting speakers, liturgy of the Roman Catholic crip~ure and son" at 6 p.n:: Sun· UNITED STUDENT FELLOWSHIP trt' urer. ~r wlll u~ ofIice ~.... ' e 'ces confi m tlO' n cnurch will go into eff I Sunday day In the . tud nt j:enter From " h d " al rou. annual prIng ban· unlon s rVI , r a beginning with Palm unday Triumph to Victory" is Ih titl of Til(! Church Loo . a , an , £juel. aidcouu rec .. eption ol new members arc ('fI", I t l tlK d elopmenl PlaMed by various churches. iees. the production. A cost upper will i (>lCp ana Ion 0 . .. ,CI • DISCIPLES STUDENT Published by the Sacred Congrl" n 'M .:It 5 p.m. , ~Ians of th 10\\., Cltl Congr .ga FELLOWSH IP The Rev. Roy Roth. president o( gation of Rit in Rome last o. GAMMA OELTA bonal Church, WlI! be lhe ub}pct Th Di iplp Iud nt F l1o\li hiD Kesslon College, Hesston, Kan., vember 16 and approved by Pope Students oC SI. Paul's Lulheran 01 t lJ:ti 'at th~ OIled tU':'<-'nt F el· will discu_' " The L<>rd' upper" "ill be guest speaker at the Iowa Piu XU, lhe changes are de igned Church « 1i ouri ynodl will par. lowshlp r:neehng unday nl ht. Th Sunday. t 5 p.m . t the Fir t City Mennonite Church. to renew the ancient a pects of the ' ticipate in a study on "The Lord 's .:,roup Will m t at the Congr " 11' Christian Church. Beginning at 10 :45 a.m. on Palm I liturgy and to increase parlicipa- I Supper" at 6:30 p.m. unday lol. Ilonal Church at 5:30 p.m. for . up- andra Bailey, A2, Eldora; Bob Sunday meetings are scheduled (or lion o( the laity in the solemn rites 10\ ing a cost upper at 5:30 p.m. per. GI rk ,A2. tount A)r; Jal' Allen. et ch evening next week at 7:30 and of the season. WESLEY Speakers will be the R v. Jolm . \l8"On City; Bt.lt Tubaugh. will end with Easter Sunday serv- Extend Lenten Fast ndergraduate, graduale and Craig. pa tor. and Dr. Adolph ~m . A2. BE'II Plaute. and Phvllis PIp. ices. Among the ehangcs is the Palm Imarried (ethodi. I tUdents will 3 m rnber of th church board o( pat, AI, Littlp Sioux. will discuss. S.ven Church.. Sunday proce5Sional which nolY join togeth r in a n 'ire o( Hoi)" tlU . th fl)(' nin of t1 Lord's pper The Evangelical Free Church of will ~al'e both clerg~ a.nd laymen Communion at 6 p.m. unday alJ Virginia Swihart, C3, Ba ter. ha to ~ J?i eipl and tJ.'e i)'mbolism Coralville will hear the Rev. Scuce carrYlDg palms and singing hymns., Wt'sley Hou fl'atuTE'd prellld been elt'Ct d USF pr ident (or ,,-hlch IS pr durlDl the com· Shelley, a graduate student in the Previou Iy palms wert' carried to this . ervlce will be an intcrpr t· 1956-57. Other ne\\ officer re: he SUI School o( Religion, who will only by the clergy. -- - __ ...... ---'--.:.------~-;-O'______ill m. speak nt pre·Easter services a t Times oC serl'ices on Holy Thur '1B· bI E I I . TO- 7 ::~h: · ~ ~:,u~::r;:r~ ~hc~~1::~ ' a ~~~;~t}y~tEi~~y~:~:i~~Sa~~~ 1 I e xperl 'I ergy' . 0 I reet . Canadian linguist and Bible trans· C 1 lnior will speak at 7:30 p.m. Sun· been chang d (rpm morning to k H I of S day in the Bethany Baptist Church. night. The chang s were mad so on I pea sere . R I- - C ' ch Seven Iowa City Protestant ~:~e~~d;~~~~;:~I~~ h;r~h:i\~~;~ I e I 9 IOU 5 ens u S churches will participate in Holy The Lenten Fast has been (' x. . . . ic Week ser vices at 7:30 p.m. Mon· tended from noon Holy aturday to . Cana~la~ mln~ter Ft'pre!ll'tlt· ng day, Tuesday and Wednesday in midnight on that day so that the 109 .the '~y~hffe Bibl: Tran lal~rs A religious prefer nCt' c n us ' 1I1e Congregational Church. The , solemn mas or the Easter igil I W) BTl will speak lD Iowa City WIll be taken in Johnson ounty will be tabulnted by Prolestant Rbv. Dr. Edwin T. Dahlberg, of ' can begin about midnight. Sunday a~d .Iond Y. . . .' next fall in a combined effort o( II church member on Oct. 29. Then he St'. Louis, Mo., will speak. I Recite Responses WYBT IS on ~rgan .llatlon \\11Ich Prole_lanl church 10 d terminl'l the re pecti\e church will t~ke es The churches participating are All Catholics can now, ror tht' l lranslates th BIble mto many of lhe dt'nomln, lions of county re. i· th!.' name or their pref r nc 's and the First Presbyterian, Firsl Bap· t in 400 yeal'S, th known lang- ci· Ifir time recci\"(~ denls. Ix'''in calling on them. e tist, First Enl(lish Lutheran, First Holy Communion on Good Friday. uages of the world Th Rev. J. O. 1.'1 on. exe=utiv(' AI 0 scheduled for Mi ion Tach· Methodist, First Christian, Can· Befora this only lhe dying wert' a~d whlch ha d .· secretary of the Iowa oun it of Iin W ~ k i. a sell study of each grcgational and Nazarene. able to receiv th sacram nt on I VI d writ! n lang· Churche, oullin d th purpo. ('s church. The theme, " Your Evan· Special Servic.. mall, I.".n Ph. I.) that day. ua~t'~ . Cor some and plan: of the c 'nslts to miniS.\ gelistic Potential." is d signed LO These churehes will also partiei. TWELVE LUTHER LEAGUE youths of the First English Luthera ... Church form a living cross be- The new liturgy also recom. j l)rlmltlve p<.'Oplc ter and repr ntaU\"c of local appraise the church' program, I pate in the tra~itional Good Friday neath a crude wooden cross . s others kneel be'- the altar in II special service of devotion Thurs· mends that on Holy Tllur day lhe who formerly had churches Tu . daY' night. : apaclti ., r ourc s nnd r ponsl· Service of music . and meditation day evenin, in the church. Th. service of music and devotion was directed by the Rev. George Ipastor wash the (t'Ct of 12 men none Outlines Program . bilitie . _ In memory of the death of Christ T. L. Jacobsen, pastor of the church and Mrs. Ge .. rude Schoenbohm, a member of the church. . aCter th go pel oC Ih mao in imi. , The Re\'. Geor~e Th c nsus will tx> conciuct('d " E eh o( you will in vit a ,ue t from noon to 3 p.m . Friday at the . talion of Christ washing th 01' l r. Cowan will durIng 1ission Tenching We k, Ie d r who i a promin nt m mbcr First P resby,terian Church. This a solemn mass will b~ sung at 5 p.m .. , G t P t T S k ciples' fe t on lhQ c\'(~ning of the . peak at the B tho Oct. 25 to cII·. 1. in your denominntion to valuate service is pla nned and conducted and Adoration before the allnr or Re· ues as' or 0 I pea La t Sup""r. I any B a p Ii s t "Th purpo e oC tPlc w k. pon· your church and give you hi cri· pose Is scheduled (rom 6 to 10 p.m. ..~ CI h 8 t d by lhe Iowa Cj ty Ministerial As· A Solemn Llturalcnl service wtll be , Certain respon es now will ~ lure " . an or'd by th Joinl Depnrtm nl of ticilim oC it," the Re\,. Mr. Nelson soeiation. . held at 3 p.m Good Friday tn memOry D . H I W k reeited by the congregation in l Fiflh A,e. at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. F;vangelism o( the alional oun· r commended. h h ill be of · lb. passion lind deaU, of chrtst. f th '1 R ' d . 1\1 d h III I Many c urc es w remem r Und"r the new condition, of last. Ca h. urlng 0 y ee some 0 e rl C . CVISC mls, At 7 :30 p.m. on ay e w cil or Church s of hrist in Am ri· "A f lIow hlp cultivation plan to " \,,~ Lal)t SU\lper and the wash.ing 0( oltes must (ast from so(fd (ood th"ee sa Is containing these response ' speak In the Pentacresl Room of ca. is six fOld ," th R ·V. Mr, N I bring ev('ry IX'rson on its r spon· , the disciples' feet on Maundy or hOll .. before the service. Irom liquid. Ilave been published in English by the Iowa Memorial nion undel' r. q.l one hour before nnd fro III alcoholic h h R Ed T Dill.- on ~ald. sibillty li st inlo some fellowship f· Holy Thursday with special com· bcveraj[e. from the previous mldnl~ht . Special Holy Week services wit t I.' ev. win . a I ""rg, pastor about:io publi hing hou es in the· the sponsorship of the Tnt rvarsity 1. AI rt ev('ry person and orgnn. irouP of the church. and an cn· munion ser vices. The annual Ea'ter. viI/II service wJil of the Delmar Ba!ltist Church of St. ouis, Mo .• as scheduled speaker United State and now tlrc avail./ Christian Fellowship. be held at II p.m . Holy Saturdsy. '11 '-- d b U I C't C'I f Ch h "1 d lzalion in Ih(' church 10 Cull v n· Inr 't'm nt plan (or th vangelis. The day gets its name Crom the 81. W.. ...I .u"' The Palm Sunday WI u<; soonsore y 1C owa I y area ounci 0 urc es " on ay, able in the 101V3 City slhollc Hi topic Monday, "Are Chri Ii n ieli tic potentIailty nnd re pon 1- tic nd ducational progr m to Latin " dies ma ndate" or " day ol procession wlrh blesslnlr of the palm. Tuesday and Wednesday. churches. fis ion. L' senlially Elhnoc nlric bilfly. cart' for it re ultant incr aRed ec Is scheduled Jor the 10 ... m. service. '11 b I Id' th C t' I Ch h CI' t d <;. !be mandate" which relers to Evening devotions will be held aL 7:45 The services WI e 1e In e ongrega lona urc, iD on an and Western?" will de I with hi 2. Bring ali people und('f th con. titu ncy," wt're Ii. led as oth r Christ's words " A new command- p rn . Wednesday. Jefferson Streets at 7:30 each nighl. / --- feelings on the criptural outlook A low rna!, will be said at 5:15 p.m. R I' I R ' I Ch I d th C t' 1ST 0 influence of th£' Christia n gosp<'1. plnn for the we k by the Rev. Mr. ment I give unto you - tha t ye 011 Holy Thursda y. and a hJa-h mass and e III aus eVlva urCl an I.' ongrega lana upper 0 pen on rac(', religion and mora lily. 3. Surround every ullchurch('d I. on. love one a nother ," (John 13 :S4). procession Iw scheduled lor 8 p.m. Ador· The Rev. Mr. Dahlberg will Church. The Rev. Ir. Cowan received hi perl;on with th warmth of • r • i Select Chairman Ql. Holy Weelr ser vices other t"an aU3~ . ~~~Jo~fd~~ tl~1 ~t~dtl'~~~\f the ' speak on "Conditions of Religious \ The Rev. Mr. Dahlberg is the Passover Service B .A. degr('e from McMa tt' r Uni. reo deming fellowship. I The Rt'\. P IIl'wison Pollock, t ose regularly scheduled as listed Cross service Is scheduled for 3 p.m. Revival in America" on Monday. aathor of lwo books, " Youlhs and "ersity. Ontario. anada. lhrough 4. In truct a\l who art' r ached. mini. t r of the Fir l Pr bylcrl n i· by churches are: . ~r,::r~~ ~mt~':;.!to"~ ...~r5~~5e PrcsancU· The Rev. G. Thomas Faltaruso/ the Home of Tomorrow" and About 80 SUI Jewish studcnt!! the affiliated Brando~ Collegt'. lie 5. Bring all La a definite com· hurch, wa 1.'1 cl('d chairman of ",a Ftr.1 l'ru byt. rla n: A 'peelol mwical On Holy Saturday an Easler Vigil pastor of the flrsl Baptisl Church I "Which Way for a Christian?" and friends are exp cted to attend gainec\ his M.TI1. degrc from 00\' edltation on Roly Week will be of· !lervlce ts J(:heduled for 11 p.m, lot· . I C't '11 b' h r H h tid d L d' d mitml'nt to Chri t as aviour nnd Ihe cxccutlV\' commitl c. Th" red .t both Palm Sunday serVice... lowed b y mldnl,hl m ••, 10 owa I y, WI I.' 10 C arge 0 e as rave e an S u IC the Passover Sed I' worship upper las Theological Seminary. Tex. Lord and into a vital member hlp commitl e, which will appoint the :10 and II a.m. A rervlce of Holy Com· . Sl . patrlelt·., A hlgh mo •• and ble ..• the service. Special music will be abroad in such co~ntrles as Ger· at. 6:30 p.m. Tue day. The supper Aftcr spending three years as in Ili. chur h. Ct'n u , finan and publicity com· ,c~~~~eda"r~r I~~:~r~~::... °4h:;;.~~r. Is ~~f5 O:nJh!1 P:.~\.~ ~:i!Chi~~J~~ ~~~s!~:. presented by the Farm Bureau many, Poland, IndIO , Burma and , will open the eight.day Pas over pastor oC the Hitchcock Union 6. Provide the church s with II mllte . i compo d of Ih Rev. Fin' ~"Ib.dlst: The annllnl canrlle. A high M.ss will be sun. at 7:30 p.m. Women's Chorus directed by Mrs. Ceylon. celebration commemoraUng the Church, in ., he joined WY. ng l.ight communion ..rviee and recepU. n WedMsday. W W M . M J R ' h d community-wide strat('gy ror un. G ThOma. Fattoru o. Fir I Bop­ of new members I. acheduled for 8 p.m. The schedule lor Holy Thursday tn· . . orris. rs.. IC ar ('xodus of the Hebrews from EgYP!. 1BT branch in 1\1 xico in 1942. lie .ry. dcrtakinl{ their va t cv ngt'lisUl'l Ii . t Church; the R('\'. Vir,1I Bren­ 'l'hursday. eludes a low Ma.. altd communl~n at Wilmeth will be the oTf.(anist. F d D. The Sed r will be conduct d in was director Of the branch from r ~oonsibilily. n('mon. Iowa City M, Monlte ~;~. ~~~~n·~llC b~.. ~~~n ~011~:~ ~~l;c:':'~~n a~~tph~h mo .. and ,olemn On Tuesday evening the Rev. Mr. un , rive. the social rooms of the Agudas 195O.]953. Each church partioipating in lh(' Church; th Ht'I'. Richard }o'alz· cr· p.m. Wednesday altd speCIal Good Frl- II. Mass of thl! P .... """cllrt.tI and com· Dahlberg will talk on "What the. Achim Synagogue, 602 E. Washing· I In 1944 he directed the Canadian pi· ~.v se.-vlc •• are schedulcd lot 7:30 p.m. mG~o!:\.rlldSay'C. hedlllod for 5:15 p.m. on Church Means to Me." Mrs. G. W. S . week will provide 15 per c nt or .l(raf, Sharon Evang Iicnl nit d iprldav. The relliliall, mm "Blbl. on The ~. ton. by Eddie Scidenfeld. A'}. . Des ummel' Institut, of LingUistics, its member hlp to tak part in lak· Brethren Church, the Rev. Edward 'Igble" Will be shown. A hJlh , Moo. Is ICheduled rOt 10:45 Buxton will be the organist and Moine; Gerald Siegel, G, Iowa and in 1954 he was director of the m· . I Fre• ~I""odl lt Cbap.l: A prayer sery· p.m. on Holy Satu,..;ny. St h H b . th I ' ti En d S day log Ih census on Sunday, Oct. 28. Phillip . as, i t mini I 'r or Fir t be I Mary'" 0 sun lite wiU conducted at 7:30 p.m. Wed· Blessing and dlslribullan ep en son IS e so OIS . n City, and Prof. Frederick Barge. WyciiCfe Language Course in Eng. The cburch prefer ncl' of each \(.' thodist Church; and r pr nta· tre JU!sdny. of the palms nre !lCheduled for 10 ' .m. charge of tbis service is the Rev. buhr, director or Hill I Foundation. Jand. Flul B.ptl. l: At the 10:45 0 m. Palm Pnnadlmt ~eunMdn'.Ys . louowed by the proceUlon George T. L . Jacobs n, pastor of ______£omlly and per on in the county live of olher Protestant church ry. Jlllnday service. special music ~y the ..

.f holr will be "The Pa5!Jon Acc:mling c On Wednesday services will be held the First English Lutheran Church The Congregational Church has P to St. Johnl' by Thomas L. de Viloria. at 2: 45 eamndn· 7:3ig0 L Mm~IS follQwed by. of Iowa City. reccived contributions totaling $60,.1 e· 'It will be mpplementt.'d with 0 Biblical A Sol H .. ., ar narl1lltlvc of the Passjon story. procession Is scheduled lor 5 D.m. H~ly Wrote Two Books 708 in its Centennial fund drive lo FIrat Enrlilh Lathen.n: At 8:30 a.m. Thursday. Adoration w!l\ conUnue l1'om " . h' h "'11 ' $150 000 r . d nd ~~IO"Suon,d.t ?:.thJerl':IO~llcl ,!>eolr•. PADtlmthePro1'1 the end ot the mass unut J : JU p .m . How IS C rIst t e Answer? WI raise , or an expansIOn an gc, ,--- ,. .. , .. Friday. , be the Rev. Mr. Dahlberg's topic remodelin~ program, Ellis H. New· 1 • •m. I ...vice the choir. directed by Sue Good ·Frlday services .... e schedulea ( II W d d .. I . f th d' id voneoo". A3. Reinbeck, wUl present a lor 3::10 p.m.. and a Way of the Cross or 11.' e Des ay evcDlng service. I some, c 1alrman 0 C rive, sa aI· con tata "The Seven La.t Worcts:l by Service 'wlll be held at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. A. C. Hofrichter Jr., pas· Friday. • :J C. F. Du bql.. , On Holy Saturday a Mass will be held t f Ih F ' t Ch . t' Ch h Th . h' h t t d , Sen'lces of Holy Communi.)!) ar. ot midnight. In ~driltlon 811 (our of or 0 e Irs riS Ian urc, e campaign, W IC S ar e scheduled lor 7: 45 p.m Wedne·day. and Ic.wa City'. Catholic churches have will be in charge of this service. March 11, is scheduled to , close Thursdll6', antl a Go<>

ny D. ( :/ Where WII You' WorJhip? . II al· ' AGUDA 8 A!IM !NGa~GATION . FIRST C!R-I S T~N C! UR-Cl[ IOWA C ITY~lE N : N IT: CII URCII T. T.:MA '!:.OR : CIfAPEI. \ 00't E. W.. . IlI",,,,. 81 . ~n I.w. Av.. t;l4 Clark SI. 10K M.L.. n SI. ai· , R.. b ~ 1 E. SI.mm C ..... r Tile R .... A. C. Bofrl.bter, Pa.t. r Tho Roy. Vlrr li Brrnoam.n. 1' •• t. r " . ry R.v. ~", r . J . n. C• • ",.,. P•• I . r lI·bb.lb ....h lp, S.tur... " I ".m. SoU, A. SmIth. Mlnl ...r 01 Ed.callen Su nd ay Sch•• I. 9: 1:\ '.m. Th. Ro•. 1'. J. Bu el r• • u, ond Cb.rcll 8eh ool, O: I ~ a.m. Sunday Wo rsh ip, IU:4a m, m . T he Rev. A. R. B n rd erklrcher, ...t ttan1 ell C hll'Cl~ Worship, IO :HO a. M. peak er: Rev. Ray ft . th. P ruident 0' Sunday Maut , ll:~~, K, 0, 10, a nd 11 :31 I BETHANY ftAPTI8T CHU.. C H . M .....'.: "O,orall.n Cru . llhel. n," II ...ton C.il·r·. II ...t on, "K...... a. m. to . II B 8 t. an.. FlIt~ AYe. (Nurser y lL nd Crib Room ) Evtn'nr Ser vice, 7:30 p.m. T he 10 a.m . m ass Is a Hlr b M Ull /lUD( l T he Ite • . Lee na f. D. Gor•• • e., Pu,., DI. clplli StulieRt Fellow.hlp, Ii p.m . b y ' b e conlre,I. lon. II t :U 6:4.\ P.nt. ii ·l. 'nltl.. M.nllnr Wo n bl. S.nlee, Cbrl. 'lan Y.ulll F. il ..... blp. New man Club, p.m. a , ' .ID . HRST BAPTIST CII UR II D.. lI y M...... t1:80 a.m •• 1 • •m •• 7:S0 . .... M ....' e: "a.yaIl7 a eeo,al •• d." FlR8T UNrrARIAN SOCIETY Th. ReY. G Thom .. f·.II.ru 0, ~1I11 is t . r t "'''e,,1 t'.U . .... blp 8.,... , 5:10 •. m...... Ave. and GUb erl SI. Norlh Cilnt.n and r.lrcbll d St•. f ;Y.F. au. Biud . nl F.U ..... IlI •. 8 :1lt , .m. Tb. a.v. Alrr.d J . N. lI. nrl kl.. , Church Scbool. ":JlO •. m. ST. PA L'S LU'nn:RAN Cn URCD pell pe. 8ervlCle, T:lW , .m. Pastor !tol ornlnr WorshiP. W :4a a.m . Missouri Sy nod . O •• l l I ,ea.ke,: a ·e \'. O.,r,. Ct.an. Church Sehool, 10 :4.\ :l.In. Serm. n: " Love'lJ La.t Word." J eff ertlon An d Gilbert. SI . Il Ctlarch S er\'t ~e. IU :46 •. m Choir to pre-te nt. " The Panlon." Tbe Rev. Elmer II . Vohr. Pa t or Sermon: "Tb. M. anln r .r Ih. Dead Ro,er WlUlaln. f"otlo ",.hlp dlnner.1 M. rn ln.- W.rshlp, 9 a m ••nel II •. m. CHURCH OF JI!8 U8 CHanT 8 •• 8~roll •." Part. S. "John. Je. UI Slud. nl C.nt.r, ~:lI6 p.m. Sund ay Scho ol, 10 :l.m. al. OF ~T:E:~~~~ldS1~~T S .n. lb. T.uber 01 allhl •• u• • u.:' ' ~rl •• lb •• d M•• lin" 9 . .... Fireside C I ~ b , 3:110 . p.m. RE ORGAN1ZE O Cll RCH OF .I ES STil E CII URCII OF CHR-I ST \ ...... y Be h• • I, 10 a·III. F1ll8T CHlJ ltCII OF CIIRIST, CIIR-IST OF LATTER D.. H ' SAINTS I ~'!U Klrkw• • d Av •. • l,aeramen\ Muttar. 6,30 ,.m. SCIENTI ST l.cWo.. nl ~lr ••, ...n < •• rIR. loomn loln Ev.n,.II ., Everl PI.karla, r •• tor In 1:!'! E. ColI •• _ SI. .. Bibl. CiUllo., 10 a.m. , 111 " ~ .n •• f 8.h.. l . 9:4~ ' .m. D.. n e. Wail e. p ..t. r ~Ior oln r W.r hlP . II ".m. FRIEND8 ME l TING ' lornl", Servlc., II R. m. Gen.ral W. ..hll >. 0:l1li •. m . S.rmon : "Th. Chur. b Family." l ow. Mem.rlal V.l.n L . ... p Ser.,.n: "aeallty," Clal.tI, !1:4i'i •• m . Evenln J" Sen -Ice, ,:!\. p.m . t Willi.,.. C.nuer, VI.rk Sla.,nt. Or,anll.ll,n, II : •.; , .m . Tue-. day Sermon, IO:tiO a.m. Sermon : " The OUler A,'ltles,'· I ~ ...klp al ':119 ...... 8" •••,. 1ft tb~ LIm. Cbapel .f th. Con,re, •. I ~~r~:~ ~ "Urrh , C l i n ~ on . nd Jof/e.. "n SBARON EVA NGE LICAl, TilE CONG R.EG ATIO NAL CHUIlCIl I EVANGELICAL FRill CRuaCR UNITE D IlRETIIR EN CII URCII Clinton . nd Jen ...on Sh. I , ied Coralvl\le . CHURCH OF TIlE NAZARENE .K alona Th. Rev. J.hn G. Cr.I" annln.r " Thl al\l'. J. 8. P.lmer, PaN,r a.rllD,lon .nd Cllnto. SlI. T h . Rev. R. (; Plalll, rafl , p ..lor !\lorn In , Wo n hlp, 10 ;4:\ a.m . thB hD.a,. 8eb.ol, 8, ~ ~ I.m. Tko !lev. Ir .. J. Ho.ver. Mlahl. r Sund.y Scbo.l. 10 a.m. UnUed Stude nt Fellowil blp, a:ltO p.m. , rnla, W• .,bl" II . .... Oraham e nw, Mlnl. ter Music Mornln J" Worship. II a.m . HE'S BURNING THE MIDNIGHT OIL TOO " Thll. Til, bl, ." 0' \r 8erlD.,a: Sund.y S"hool. 9: 4 ~ . 1014.' •. m YF VI. lt. lion, I :SO p.m . .r.o.Y .r . Su.per ... I.U... . "., 3 , ID . JUDt, r Chureh, ' !4li a ,m . Evenln, W.rs hlp . ~ :~O p.m. TRIN IT\' EPISCO PAL CII UllCR t .C.Y.F. Blbl. 81•• r , ~ : U p.m. 1'1 ...1., W:ra I1I P, 10:4G •• m. IFor transportation to all services, call :1'!l1 E. Coile,e t. ('heIr R.hu• • I, H: 4~ p .... Br •••• roll ... hlp. ~ p.m. 8-4115 Or 8·4241.j Th. R-n. lI.rold F Mc G••. ".ctor Exam comi ng up? Then if you h aven't iced tha t 'W' ale Helping machines move mountains is just one example E.. nln, 10.. 1 ... , ,~ . .... V.ulh H•• r, H: U p. m. 1Ioly Communion, " a.m . I k _Je. t l I' ~harade, I. C,I,I.:' 1 .... '.U.ll. Servl •• , ' : 1IO p.m. DI&lrlbuUon 0 1 Palm., 8:4. a .... read y, m aybe you'U be gulpi ng black colfee and burnj ng of how the Timken Compa ny works ha nd·in·hllnd with S.eak .. : It •• . Bn.. n . n.,. , . . . ASSEM BLY 0 1' GOD Bre.k r .... II;".) a.m. aU industry to keep America on the go-by pioneering rREI ~I E TUODI ST CIIAPE L ~a~ S. Clinl.n SI. N u rser )" 9 •. m. the midnight oil But consjder the modern roa dbuiIder! fiRST INGLISH LUT.nAN 8~ 1 Third Au. The Rev, Da n n,'lIlt r, P a.t or FA mil y W ...h l" ': I ~ '.m. He works on around the clock, cOllIpleting as much in improvements in machines a nd m achine r y, i ncreui.l;lg , CHURCH ,Th. a ••. Jam .. P. M•••• y, p •• I. r Sunday Seh.,ol, I • •• 111 . . Coffee Hour, t • •. m. h n"', 8eb'-l, Ie •. m. I\lor nlnr WOfshl p, II •. m . Mornln, Prayer . II • . m . one night shift as he did working two 8 ·hour days in 1940. speed and precision, decreas ing w ear and maintenance. n D •• ~~ ••••• Market BI• . Childr. n·. Cllur_h. II a-. m an. O•• r •• T. L J ...ba .. , •••tar W. ...hlr. Ii • . m. Inquirers' C ia , I p.m . What's his secret? The pioneering' spirit has he lped make UJ the world'. "Ii. h ."!,,,, l a ll ~ S.,nl ••; 1:11t p.'!'. ChrJ. ,'. Amb.... dO' " ,I:.U p.m . C.. nt.rbny Cla b. iI ::W p.m. MaU • • ""Iee, M:lIII a.... ' E\,lI nleUsUe SerY' Cl e, , p.m. • largest m.anufacturer of ta pered rol ler pearings and remov· ...... , 841 ".1, ".3• .m . Machines are the road builder's special magic. Machines lVen.,l. 10,.I.e. II a.m. ., • Hn.LiL FO UNDATIO N able rock bits, and a leading producer of fine alloy steel . 11.,onlH. Nuraer, rrevl.e.) I I ~~ E. Ma,lIel St. ST. MARV 'S Cn URC.. F IJ'Sr PR ESBYTERIAN CII URC. Pro/. 're4.rl.1t P . Bar •• buhr. nlreelar ~ II £. Markel St.. that ncver tire. Machines that do twice the work of 15 'L.lheran IIl.dent A.. ..III1 .....al a.p. J elten ou a nd Linn 8 l ~. Bea.use the best place to keep going-and keep go­ , . . . Or. P. lI. wl. on l'oll.eil, IIl1nl. le. years ago, I .h a ...... Un'. 4 p ..., Rt. Rev. O. H. Melnb. r, .•••Ior " ZION LUTHERAN CHUROn Sunday MalStI, U a.m., 7:!JG a.m., f) I.m., Th. R.y. J. rom e L .... , Mlnlo'.r .. ing up-is wilh a company that's on the go, you may be \ . . . JolI_o •• e1 BI •• mln,ton Sta. Slud .... e I~ : I~ •. m .• 1I :~ ft • m. And Timken tapered roller bearings have made tbese BETHEL A'.ICAN MITHODIST Tb. Itev. A. C. Proebl, P• • tor Char. " S.bool, fI: lIO . nd II • . 111. interested in whal lies ahead at [be Timken Company '\ OHURCH lIfo.ralD, w." r.IP , " ...... nd IO :RO •. m. Mornln, W.rs blp, 11::10 . nd II •. m. macbi.nes practical. Despite beavy loads and rugged go­ for promising college graduate •. For detaill, wrile for , 411 S. Oo,ern.r II. b illa, Soko,. 0: I ~ • . m. ST. PA rRICK'S CIIURCl[ Muslnl M. dll.tlon .n 1I0ly W• • k lIIn. C. • . 1II0Don.ld. r ....r " •• u Blbl ~ CIa.. , ~ 'li4I • •m . • ~ '!. E. (l.. rt St. p .. lor'. Communl,.a n .. CIUI, 1i:l«t p .• • ing. T~ rnken bearings avoid breakdowns, keep wbeeJs our booklet "This Is Dh.II.,,&I, ij •• m. f The Rev. P. J . O' Reilly, P • .tor J"nlor HI CI.b, 'lI.m. and shafts turning smoothly. Without them. a bulldozer is Timken". The Timken ! ... ,,1., ' ..... ; G~OE MI8 SIONAIlY ClIURCH • Th. Rev. H. F. P.eh•.• nd Student. Ve. pe rlll. A p.m . . , I"'~ M ....Un . AYe. Th. a ey. William F. Daw.en , ."I.t.anh "Fram Triumph 10 Vlotery." robbed-1 of its muscle. a power sbovel'. teeth lose their Roller Bearing Com· MITRODI8T CaU.eK Th .... .Norm •• H.~~. , P.. t.r Sunday Mauel. tf :lW I.m .. K:31 I.m ., HI Cl ab , 11:118 p.m. ""1...... D.It.... lie. Blkl ....." .:n •.m. l:oI (j ' .81 ., 11 am. bite, a scraper grinds to a balt. pany, Canlon 6, Ohio. Dr. I .. L. 0 ...111,1 .., JU.I.t.r " .rm~n .1 W... hlp , 1I : 4 ~ • m. W eek'a, M . ...., 11:-4 5 a. m., 1":"" I.m. • I ...., ••IIUUp., AMtel.ta HI"laler , •• Ill r.lla.aIIl., 6:lI4I • •m . , UNITED MISS IONAIn' CHURCII T~ ..... "~.rl 'uko, CIe.lb, S,.rll ee: •••. H.oII'no, 1 : ~. P,III. ST. WENCESLA US Cn URll/( I !I.' ~ II"sc.UD o Ave. Mlnilier I. 8ta"." . . . , t ~'" E. n.v.llport III. N orman Hobb., r'l tor lim ken· bearings keep America on the G.O ••• and you k~ep going . I.,. .. 81 ..t ..., er, 81." " ...elala 1 . .IIHOVAH-S WITN E88 ~ 8 t , Th atv. Uward W. N. ..II , Pu tor Bible SI.dy CI.. . .., b:U '.m. ell.rell le... I, . :" • __ It •.•. KINGDOM }fALl, Tr.e ae •. Oeor.e Blehman, alll. tant Sermon or Wonhl.. II • m. lI"n'a, Wonlllp, '11It • ••••11' II . .... '. KIV Rfy tinld. Drlye , , Snaday Ma.. e l , fl:l14' a,III •• , a.m., " 11 VJewl ., the C r.1 ,'. , M.r... 1 " Til. DI.I.o Alii..... " hbIt, T.III, I ,.ID. I, ...... , 11 : 4 ~ a m. Youth F. noW. blp meetln" RI~n ".m. -1IJI .!hen you 90W~ the [n~!l (ompany-- .. :~, . ", ..I., H.... 1I••• al ,.".r, • , .ID. W.I,bl."., 81ady, • p.m. " b.Uy MOl'.', r •.m ., 1,30 a.m. , Sermon Evanlell. II. , 1::Ie ,.m.

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- -~ ------• 1 lt~,~ 4-THE DAILY IOWAN-low., City, la.-Saturday, March 24, '956 -~ -- - GRAPEFRUIT From ~ LEAGUE 'rm p'roud of Kids, I!edlegs 2, Braves 1 Au; Clnelnn"U ...... OOU 2110 OOO-'! S I XII,...uk...... 000 UIU 000-1 ~ U Students Black, Kllpp.leln 14). Freeman (71 nnd Billies; Buhl, Trowbridge '9) Dnd tries, from • Rice, Crandall (81 . W- Black. L-Buhl. By LARRY DENNIS and from, The Hawkeye baseball team Thursday. On Friday the Hawks The remainder of each morning arc taking Chisox 4, Phils 3 takes off for the sunny South today will be taken on a GO-mile tour to until about 1l:15 will be spent " from SUI l Nogales, Mexico, as guests of Ute working on relays and pickoff and The corr 'Says Te,a .. .,U.... lpbl. (N) .010 100 001-3 ~ 1 at 3:30 p.m. Cor a 6-game, week­ rful Bu"cky Obi_ace (A) ...... 1 O·!.~ 7 0 • • I OIU long series with the University of University of Arizona. cutoff plays. eau, part o( , Roberts, Simmons (71 and Lonnett, offers cour BY JIM NEY Nlarho. (8): Donova, Fischer (7) and Arizona at Tucson. The series wUl wind up next Sat- Games Start at 3 p.m. Battey. W-Flsc!>e•. L-Slmmons. nallv Iowan SI,orb Wrller This is the fifth year in a row urday with a double-header at The team will be on the field of five uni ' guard was still all over the floor. on," said Wool pert, who often talks planned anything special for Iowa, Home runs: PhllRctelphla - Lopata, ing liberal EVANSTON-Everyone of the Hnm~r 2. Chicago-Battey. Iowa has traveled to Arizona. Scotsdale, Ariz., spring training each afternoon at L: 30 for another five Iowa Hawkeyes had tears in The Hawks, to Ule finish, refused to newsmen with tongue in cheek. even after center Bill Logan came Coach Otto Vogel will take a camp for the Baltimore Orioles. half hour of hitting practice. The ., tion, engine his eyes as he left the playing to admit that they had met more "That seems like the best idea IIU'ough with 36 points in an 83-76 squad of 22 men on the trip. The While in Arizona the team will games will begin eac h day at 3 Most COUI than their match in a gangling, 6- 'Cards 9, Red Sox 2 floor, beaten by San Francisco, right now.: ' victory over Temple Thursday. team will travel by bus from Iowa begin practice each morning at p.m. eral studen 83-71, in the NCAA finals here Fri­ 10 demon whose arms were just too 'Very, Very Fine' "I would have guaranteed Logan 80.10D (AI .. Ollft lito II~'! 7 4 City to Columbus Junction, where 9 a.m" Vogel said. The fi[st 20 Following each game, Vogel re­ pondence sl long. wouldn't have another 36-point 8t Leul. CN) .. 002 007 OO,,-!I 10 ~ b ery county day night. Woolpert lhen shifted into a ser­ Porterfield, Parnell (6). Henr:.' m and they will entrain for Tucson. minutes will be spent on slidIng ported, the team will meet and game tonight," hc saId. W)tlte; Pohol,ky. Collwn (1), F. Smith iJ son County Buck¥ O'Connor did, too .. ious vein to praise the Hawks. (9) and H . Smith. W-Poholsky. L­ 6O-Mile Tour practlce. followed by an hour at discuss the. contest. Mistakes and K.y Factor jr ing home s But he met each of them wiUl * * * Iowa, Woolpert said, "has a very, Porter{Jeld. The two clubs wUl playa single the batting cage. Fifteen minutes corre~tion~ will be go~e over at Brown on Cain Home run: 51. Louls-Mu$lal. a warm handshake and a slap on very fine ball club." What was the key factor in the 'game each day Monday through of flelding practice will follow this. pr~t~ce the next mornmg. . F the back. "I hate to compare teams," he game that brought the Dons up Was Key Factor with Oklahoma A and M (1945-46) Vogel plans to stress the pitch. .( With tlle ! 'More Guts' said to questioners who asked for Tigers 3, Pirates 2 'ers' work with the first baseman in and Kentucky (J948-49) as two-time , ware, each O'Connor tqjd newsmen as the a comparison or Iowa with other Pi'tlburrh (N) .. OO'.! 000 t)OO.-:!. ~ 2 covering the bag, pivot plays at By GEORGE WINE NCAA tiUeholders? Starts at 2 p.m. - II correspondE first and second place trophies OaUy Iowan Sports W.lter Don opponents. "Everyone we've Do ••olI CA) .... 110 000 IO"- ~ 9 2 second base and pickoffs at all Most of the 10,800 fans at McGaw Trimble, Murray C4" Garber (7~ and II derstandabl were being handed out, "I'm proud played has been tough. " Waten (S) and Hall: Trucks, Marlowe bases during the week-long session . EVANSTON, Ill. - How docs Hall and the thousands in the tele­ } r her of enrl oC everyone of my kids. San Francisco plan to keep its 55- Was he scared when the Hawks (6) and Hou... StreuB (6). W-Mar­ The team is expected to arrive vision audience would prQbably say lowe. L-Garbcr. I 1 The bou "You'll never see a team with jumped to a 15-4 lead early in the Home runs: Pittsburgh- Long. DetroIt back in Iowa City April 2. game winning streak alive next not the more guts than they showed to­ game? it was the defensive play, rebound­ -Delsillg. House. April 6 Opener season? study ing and "dunking" rebound shots of AAU "~Swim , , night-even when they were down "Naturally, I was concerned when The Hawks will open their 16- The Dons, who were being called tate J" 6-10 Bill Russell. countries as much as L7 points at one time." we were down 11 points. However, Athletics 9, Yanks 3 game non-conference slate WiUl n college basketball's greatest team That wasn't what Woolpert said. enrolled; "No-we don't have to alibi about of all time late J<'riday night night, I'ye seen these guys down before New York "'" OttO oto 000-4) ~ 0 single game April 6 and a double· ' He thought it Was Ule manner in J; three, this one," he added. will lose all-American center Bill and sure enough they always come Xan... City . . ~OO 200 ;;Os -9 5 0 header April 7. All will be against O'Connor praised his team (as through." which Don · guard Gene Brown Griln, Konstanty (4). Freeman (5). Mee'f in .Iowa ,Pool Western Michigan . They will play 'I. land: Russell and other starters by grad­ Co.tes (8) and Berr., Silvera (4). Cec­ .1 MeXICO,. they were being seated in a row handled Hawk Carl Cain. Cail), the carelU. Harr1n3tor;; (51 and A,troth. W­ 11 hOme games in succession, in- \ uation, Once Before Iowa sparkplug throughout the Ceccarelli. L-Grlm. I By FRED MIL~ER eluding the Big Ten opener against at the side of the floor' with gen­ Don coach Phil WoolDe/'t h'ld it .,,11 Home runs: Kansas City-Simpson 2. uine pride as he blinked bark Only one other tcam ever had later stage.s of the ~easo,!, score~ style ,and the 220-yar111 , ­ as Hawkeye heaE! coach. He came "Scheuerman impressed me more L, A. 11, Cubs lQ Hawkeye varsity and freshmen Cl1nton, Coles is a 5-time undefeat­ b one asked Bucky if the I-lJw!(S swimmers. The frosh have had no to Iowa in 1925 and has missed tonight than he did while watchinq Cl>lo.. ,o (~) .... 010 103 14~IO I~ I only the 1943-L944-1945 war years. were nervous. Los Anr. (peL) :1411 03U 011-11 14 0 meets but did swim in an intra­ ed winner in dual meets in the him play agaiolst other clubs, If Not Nervous M~yer . Plktu.ls Ie" Valenrln~tt1 (9) squad meet at the beginning of the event. Wolpert said. and Hannah, Fanning (6); Ande"on, "Naw! These kids aren't I:::e Cohen f81 ~nd Mauney. W-Coben. L­ season. Hawaiians fntered that - they just didn't have a b_Jd "That boy's il real scrapper." V&lentlnettl. Wool pert said his boys played a HQme runs: Los Angeles-Bolge,', Tune-up Meet Also battling (or positions in the shooting night." Mn\lch. The varsity men have been out lOO will be varsity tankers Bob Logan, limited to 12 points by (' ., good game Friday night - but !lot of competition for three weeks Reed and Harold Begel. estounding arms of Russell J, their best of the season. Dodgers 9, Nats 5 sa "We've had better games,", he when they com- Tops in the 220-yard freestyle is "Russell is amazing. Never befo. ~ W... hllllton ... :iIIO 010 001-;; 9:1 said "but I was well satisfiel1 with peted in the Big ~ rreshman George Bailey, a Hawai- in my life have I had one of m Br.okh·D .. " a~1 001 20x-f) 13 '! the team's showing tonight.' ,. Abermithy. Ramos 141 artd FitzGera14. Ten meet at La- ian. Bailey will be shooting for tHe jump shots from as far as ten fet t Couri'1ey (61; Lehman. Drysdale 161 ~ayette, Ind . Mar. 2: 10.2 record in the event, which away blocked like I did tonight. .. Russell, who played Friday nigbt and Gonnpanell., Thompson 171 . w­ like the all-American he is, said Lehman. L-AbernRthv. 1-3. The varsity, 6 was set by Michigan's Jack Ward- O'Connor agreed with other ob­ ROJne fun S: Brooklyn - Campanella. however, will use A6 rop. he wasn't as confident as his coach Q rY~da l..c~ ______servers that "Russell was the key when Iowa raced to an a-point the meet as a Another Hawaiian freshman, to the game." lead. tNucnAe-AuP mfOeret tIale Kim Austin, will battle varsity Defense Hurts t A&¥ "I was just plain scared when 9?- swimmer Glenn Johnston in the "He kills you under thc basket - I. . we got 11 points behind," he said. State A, B Yale, New Haven, . 200-yard breaststroke, both butter- it's his defense that hurts you the • Conn., next weekend. fly and orthodox. Ron Johnson, most:" Bucky said. "Iowa really showed us something tonight." I Entries for the meet closed at 5 who swam in the Pan American Pro O'Connor shook his head and "We didn't change our' style, p.m. Friday' with little response games in South America last sum­ • said, " We missed seven or eight T:rack Meet I ~ hough. We always try to make (rom out-state competitors. Invita- mer, is also entered in the breast­ lay ups in the first haIr that tions were sent to YWCA's, high stroke. I Gel .!le pther team adopt our styl~. " would have made a lot of differ­ schools and colleges in the state. New Zealanders ence." Here Today The meet may turn out to be an In the first nine minutes of the * * * Iowa varsity-freshman clash, but Lincoln Hurring junior captain PE second half, Iowa hit only 3 of 20 Five champions will defcnd their Coach Allen is still in favor of this from New Zealand, will be ehal- Art Andrews shots. '~ ear -:- 4_, titles ih the state high school Class plan. lehged in the backstroke by Ross - O'Connor said, "You can't beat A and B indoor track and field Shooting for Records (Buddy ) Lucas, a fellow New Zea- this team with a .325 shooting av- meet here today. He said Thursday, "In any event lander. Andrews Selected for 11 erage." . Clarinda's defending team cham­ we are going to hold the meet and Lucas is the first and only Iowa 'Never Gave Up' Mates~A2; , ­ pion$ wm have Ralph Taylor en­ are going after some of the rec- swimmer to win five varsity let­ "But that Scheuerman played tered in the Class A pole vault in ords." I. ters. He completed varsity compe- Tryouts one of his best games. ' Just like wllic~ he holds the record of 11 He predicted Thursday that the tition at the end of the first semes­ NEW YORK IA'I - Art Andrews, the other four, he never gave up." SMU - 8'1' I " feet, 11 inches. best races will be the lOO-yard free- . ter. Iowa freshman, was selected Fri­ Scheuerman characterized the (AP Wirephoto) EVANSTON, TIL - Hal fKing) Clarinda contenders arc IOWA FORWARD BILL SCHOOF comes down with a rebound off the Ot~ei' Fllncy diving from the 3-meter day as one of the memb'ers o( the ) Hawks with a tenacious "never say Lear scored 48 points Lo rack up a Bill Wray, quartermiler, and John die" desire to win. San Francisco backboard earl:' in the NCAA title 9ame Friday night. board will pit Estell Mills, fresh­ J2-man squad which will tryout for '1 Carl Cain (left) is also away up in the air as Don forward Tom Farm­ new single game mark and also 'an W~lson, half-miier, who also was man ,against varsity high divers With 30 seconds left and down by all-time tournament series record Wheeler, Deacon the U.S. Davis Cup team. er and Hawk center Bill Logan watch Schoof. San Francisco won its in the medley relay and two-mile Jake Quick and Ken Miner. Quick 12 pOints, the blond Rock Island as he paced Temple's Owls to a M- relay events last year. . Andrews was selected earlier second straight NCAA title, 83-71. is undefeated in dual meets. this year as the top junior boys 81 consolatioft victory ovcr South­ Bloomfield's Scott Wagler, a ern Methodist for third place in the Jones Listed in In the distance events, 220 and sing~s players, but because he 3-spQrts star, will defend his Class has turned 18 years old he is ineli­ NCAA basketball ' tourney Friday A shotput title against his 1955 440 freestyles, sophpmore Earl El­ In NCAA Tournaments- night. ' Daily News Meet lis and Tom Jacobson are entered. gible for junior boys competition. Coaches OK runner-up, Hampton's' Jim Donhow. WilJiam (Billy) Talbert was San Francisco's defending cham­ Three returning Class B winners Both have been consistant point pion DonS met Iowa for. the cham· (Speolal to 'rbe Dally 10 ...... ) winners throughout the varsity sea­ named captain o( the lcam for a are Adel's Gary Belgrade, shot fourth consecutive year and was pionship in the Cinal g8f)1e before put; Postville's Gary HaItmeyer, CHiCAGO - Former Olympic soil . Rule (hanges Hawks Place 6' in ·Fi,nals a capacity 10,653 . at McGaw Me- given lhe 12-man squad from which 88O-yard run and Tama's Gene champions and a group of colle­ Oth!;r swimmers showing great morial Hall. i to select and develop play/rs. CH ICAGO IA'I - The nation's bas­ Zhorne, 60-yard high hurdles. gians eager to bid for 1956 Olym­ promise are Sherm Nelson, var$ily The 5-11 Lear, senior from Over· backstroker, Cylde Logan, sprinter, Included on the squall' besides keiball coaches Friday recom­ Gymnastics- their 19th NCAA championship, led ALso appeari{lg in. the meet will pic berths will compete tonight brook, Pa., received a terrific ova­ be Tama's La Vern Zobel who did at Chicago Stadium in the 20th Jim Davidson, sprints, Jack McBal­ Andrews are: Vic Seixas, Phila· mended lour proposed rule changes CHAPEL HILL, N.C. IA'I - Sam the field by getting nine men tion at the game's end and was delphia ; Art Larsen, San Leandro, - mainly aimed at tile extremely Bailie and Staffan Carisson of thc the high jump in six feet, 3 inches Chicago Daily News Relays, last sky, backstroke, and Carl Kay, through the preliminary events and e~rried off the fl.oor .on the should­ Calif.; Gil Shea, Los Angeles ; in the Iowa AAU junior meet at major indoor track meet of th~ freeslyle and backstroke. tall player - and rejected two Iowa gymnastics t£'am won first into the quarter£inal round Friday ers of his jubilant mates after his Hamilton Richardson, Westfield, other proposals. places in Ihe preliminary events night. The semi-final and finnls will Des Moines last week. season. A se l~ct ed group o[ varsity sensational performance in which Class C high schools throughout Among the foremost athletes en­ swimmers will leave Wednesday N.J.; Herb Flam, Beverly Hills, The action, which came at the Friday to qualify for the fin ais to­ be held today . he scored 17 field gQals and 14 of Calif. :; Sam Giammalva, ; day of the National Collegiate the state will also be competing tered are the Rev. Robert Rich­ for -New Haven, Conn., and the fin­ 30th annual convention\ of the Na­ ,First round events inl'olving 17 free throws. . Ronald Holmberg, Brooklyn; Bar· tional Assn . of Basketball Coach­ gymnastics championships. along with the Class AA schools ards, pole vaulter, distance run­ al fling before the OlympiC trials Hawkeyes : That broke the 1953 siqgle-gam'e next weekend. ry McKay, Dayton , Ohio, and Eal1 es, mllst be approved by the Na­ Defending champion Illinois set 12~ lb •. - Dick Govtg. Iowa. decls- reeord of 45 points set by Bob Hou­ ner Horace Ashenfelter, and hur­ later this year. tional Basketl1all Committee, the the pace bt sending 11 men into 10nOO Ed Corr. Oklahoma 5-3. dler Harrison Dillard - all former Baumgardner, Oakland, Calif. nn Ibs. - Simon Roberts, lown, de­ bregs of Washington. Australia won the cup from the group which shapes the collegiate the finals. c1slonOO Bob Majors. Cornell. 2-1. Lear scored L9 points in the first Olympic medal winners - and col- • and prep playing code. The com­ Bailie wQn first and collected 278 1·17 IbM. - Joon SfOTZO, Ohio State. U.S. at Forest Hills, N.Y., last decl-lonOO Gary Mayer, Iowa, 8-2. half which was 'dominated by Mo: VQlley Meets lege stars Ernie Shelton and Tect. HOOSIer Banned September. mittee meets here today and Sun­ points in the side horse. Carlsson 1~7 Ibs. - Jnhn Wind." " Iowa, referee Wheeler. ' ' . Southern Methodist until late in the "[ do not take a defeatist atti· day. too)< first and 261 points in the (ret' decision over Dave Johnson, Pittsburg. Whecler of Iowa won the Big Hi; Ibs. - HarLan .Jenkinson. Iowa, period when a free throw by Lear In Davenport from FlOrida Play tilde," said Renville l\'IcMan~, 'Goal Dunking' exercise event. decislonOO Phil Skattern, Luther, 3-0. moved the Owls ahead for the first Ten indoor mile ana 880 and wiU . By an 85-2L vote, the coaches ap­ Bailie was awarded the highest 177 lb. - Don Hodge. Oklahomtl Ide­ president oC the U.S. Lawn Tenl\ls fendJng champion) pinned Jerry Onan. time at 37-36. Temple led at Ithe . Iowa City High will be repre­ try [or his first Bankers mile . GAINESVILLE, Fla IA'l-Alhletic Assn. "I think we will win back proved a proposal against "goal total points in any event and aver­ Cornell, 1:15; Gary Kurdehneter, Iowa, sented at the Missouri Valley Con­ declsloned Gene Frank. Iowa Stale, 6-1. half 41-38. champion~hip. He stepped. the authorities at the University of the Davis Cup this year, by a score dunking." The rule which now pro­ aged 94 out of 100 points with his ference meeting at Davenport to- I.JI I.JI Hell\'ywtdrhl - G ordon Roesler , Ok­ With 6-8 Jim Krebs, who led distance an easy 4:11.2 a FI 'd d FI 'd St t l.lIl' • of ~ to 2." hibits any defensivc player from side horse competition. lahoma. decisioned Baron Bremer, Southern Methodist with 29 points, day by ~ead coach Frank Bates .. recent meet. . 01'1 a an . orl a . a e Un Iver- The junior Hawkeye captain from Iowa, 9·3. Dillard .. has a mee~ winning ~~ty have. advlse~ I~dlana nlvcr­ touching the ball on or over the QUARTERFINAl,S hitting frequently the MU$tangs Th.e flr~t par~ of the meet Will hoop or c~linder would also apply Sl. Petersburg, Fla., was compet­ 111\ lbs. - Terry McCanl1, Iowa, de­ made a battle of it until five min- . e~nslst. of the pr~sent members streak of 12 hurdles titles and Slty agamst brl.Jlgm~ a Nc~ro to the offensive player. • ing with a double strength cast on feated Charles Prunty, Minnesota, 6-0. will receive his main challenge basllbaU player on a tflP to londa Sports Scores l~a lb•. - Don Siroud, Michigan. de­ utes were left in the .game. dl~cussmg the admittance of three This hits at such tOWering per­ his hroken left ankle. As he left cl.loned Dick Govlg, Iowa, 2'(). '1' hen with Lear's withering t(!ems to the valley.conference. from Illinois" Abe Woodson. Other ne~ week. NATIONAl, JU(' O TOURNAMIINT the side horse, he was given e I:ll Ibs. - John Pepe, Penn St(lte, (consolation, 8l"mtrlnlls) . fonners as San Francisco's Bill won referee's decision over Simon. Rob­ marksmanship still effective the Rock I~land, Moline, and East threats arc Willard Thomson, form- In~iana is scheduled to play the Jacksonville, Fill" 83, Eastern Adv.n. Russell and Wilt (The Stilt) Cham­ standing ovation from the fans, erts. rowa. cr, NcAA champion froin lllinois: Florida State baseball team in Tal­ .r Tbatrts, 'Mikqafl Pesliak, vlce-prMi- "It · was a· good leam ~rcort. ,. delegates on Friday and asked for been used to advantage by tall dent of the Russian Olympics Com- Lear added. I '. regional level tournaments only. 9 players. Penalty for violation would To Second Team mittee, said Friday. Lear /icored 48 points and did not be loss o[ the ball. . Australia has allocated only six take a shot ih the closing seconds of 8 The coaches also voted, 34-6, to S1. Mary's 6'5" junior cen~er, million Austntlian pounds :<$13,· the game. Asked about this he 'YISIT OUR Jlrevent a free throw shooter from Dennis Walljasper, was name~ to 440,000> for the whole Olympic co.~mented: . I the all-state second team by the games. Five million are Cor new . I •could h~ve ,~ade It 50, but, OPEN HOUSE stepping over the line until the . at ball hits the basket or backboard, ,Iowa Daily Press Assn. Friday. stadiums and one ' million for ad- ·what s two pomts. Eight boys were selected on both ministration costs. Guy Rodgers, teammate guard, -429 0011,1 .. Court This is aimed at preventing a big In Southwest Iowa City. player from lunging in for a the first and second teams, and ~ The chain-smoking Pesliak ·to· said, "W~ would have won (beat Walljaspcr was the only B gether witli Vladimol' Smirnov and Iowa) if we lIad aye\! like this' Opon Todav and • "dunk" shot on a rebound. A viOla­ Clas~ pi SUMIIY from 1 to 9 P.M. tion would nullify a resulting score. player on either squad , He was Leonid Khomenkov, comPose the against -Iowa. Iowa .was the best olle of three underclassmen on the 3-man Russian Olympic delegation team we played In thjl tournament. two teams, visiting Melbourne to look over Besides, third 's better than nOHAl HOMES Today (Saturday) 3 to 5 larry lar· Spo.rts Scores D~ve Ma her, S1. Mary's guard, games preparations and . report fourth." . , ~ow in Cosy- f rers CORlbo and Vocalist lobby ALL SER.VICE OLYMPIC was givbn an honorable mention back lo Moscow. . Temple Coach ..... Harry Litwack BASKETBALL TR.IAI.S berth by the IDPA. . "An athletic stadium to held 100,- said or his team: '" C_"or I" our lath.kenor, N. covor Al LeullYllle-heoad ....d . J:lIgh In Value or .dmia,ion chargo, M.rI ... 1111, Navy II.l Mahel' and Walljasper were the 000 people - 70,000 under cover - . "I was. afraid rtly boys would let " . oaM big guns throughout the district Is being blJ,ilt plus a s.wimming pool ~own ~fter lostng to Iowa, but ~y Phon. 14145 or' 4472 and Iltate basketball meets held witli accommodation (or IS,boo . . A slIspictbnR not c.o.nflrmed. We NATIONAL .,\AU RAMKETRALI. d d w~rer L.. L~t f th BIRCHWOOO/ i TOURNAMENT twp and three weeks ago. St, basketball c;ourt for 15,000 an an- playe On(' 0 tm::...", games 0 e ScaUI. "".b~'~:'~~~~:IIW&uli •• Allon . MarY' calli home (rOl;1 DeS. ollwr COI'el'ed ' stadium to hold 15 ,- Yl.'3r against S~fU." ', aUi~DERS, INC. D ...ley. 1l ~.[o l nes with tl\e first Class B, title 000," Pcsliak ~aid, .. • J..ear til C"!lSldcred by so.me as "W, lIulid our futuro NUAI'LA·"O ...· S t.l) bc aworc\('d. ', ' Pc~liak nddcd thal lhe S6viet rhe Robin I"l"Cl,-",un of the East. Hd , ~nmltlt\ll III • '"Uod,lph''' 1011 , 8r ...... H, iii 1'1'1'1;1111'; ~I' . II ~, clilly 1111<- : l ~ lir.iiiiTii.s ilin !lot , 1I ~ lI,'!~ly ii,,' (1,(,:II') _ IIlI~1 HUI1 ;! t'I'!:, ~VIlI'I~t'l ~ik(' 1'IIUadolphl. ,~oo . I -0 In "".t of 3 'erIc. chanlpion W(llj crowned. I dll'C:!t:~ grallts tlf aelual sporls. OliO man wlt,li II ll'l'l'Ific r,,~{ brcuk . , \ . • THE DAILY IOWAN-lewa City, la.-5.tunlay, Merch H, lt56-P.,. • .. --<-~-- (ily Record a

BlllTH , GREEN. Mr. and Mrs. Norman. SolOn, ~ a boy Thursda), .t 111,,",.1' Hospital. Studcnts from 14 [oreign coun­ GROUT. Mr. and lilt.... Edwin, Rtv",­ tries, from 41 states in the U.S., lid .. , • boy Tbllrsday at lucy HOI­ Australia, and tbe Canal Zone one dents take correspondence cours· "llal. and from all 99 counties in Iowa each, for a total of 24 (rom for· es," said John L. Davies, director OAKS. Mr. ~nd Mrs. Pheron, R.R. I , a boy Thursday .t Me",y Hospital. Imorning are taking correspondence courses eign countries. 'of correspondence study at SUI, SHEA. Mr. and M... Gene R.. 529 N. Care ~ spent ,r from SUI this year. Students who have been here as "are to meet degree requireIPenls, Dubuque St., a boy Thursday .t Mer­ Instruction Worle; Wonted Ch:(d cy Hor"UIlI. Classified I The correspondence study bur- exchanges often continue their SUI to complete teacher certificate re­ /Iff and MAlUtt"'OJ; UCESSE Smd your .. Id to our home wbUe RALLROO!ot dance 1 ns. Mimi Youd.e BABY ..ttln, Phon~ llta'!. 3-24. )·ou ...· ork. Plr'lty or room. larp )-.1'<1. eau, part oC the Extension Division, education by corrspondonce after quirements , and for self-improve- DEAVER,. David 1... 11, COrydon, and Advertising Rates Wurlu. Dial 148). 4-llR ______--,'-___ ....reened·ln porch and beat of .... re offers courses in 22 departments returning to their own country. ment." EU ...beUl Ann KELLEY, 23, Norlh J..EA-=-D-:::-:ce:-:-:.TO:-p:-b-:~:-n~-N-;'-:~:-.-Ge-. -rr-Y'-:--,-:-c:-b,)O-~-_'k-:r ~'ANTE.D : lronl.,.•• 1323. J.n Phone lou.. 3-24 t field o[ five uni versity colleges includ­ TJlach by Mail No maximum age limit is sel on EngIWt. Word Ads DIVOllC£ APPLlCATIONS JACK and 1lLL NuIVry School ~ID­ r ~noth er ing liberal arts, graduate, educa· Sixty-five regular sur ins true· study at SUI by mail. The largest One Da! " .. _ ... ". lit a Word ploy" quaUfled l"achPn 10 pro, Ide an LANE. Linda from D"AI1 lOt ~oonls for Rent tion, engineering and commerce. tors teach courses by mail in chern· concentration of students is in the MILLER. Evelyn a. from Joseph J . 'l"t.Io Days ... __ .... a Word Personal Loans "xeen"nl pre-.... bool procrl'" £Or your The hlld. Phone ___ OJ' '-2157. 3-~ 1 islry, child wellare, classics, com- age interval of 20-24, with 25-29 the DISTIt,JCT C OVItT Three DayS ... _".12¢ a Word at 3 Most counties in Iowa have sev­ PERSONAL lo.n~ on typewriters. ph.,.. . ROOM (or men. Dial 1485. "%2 a CARTE1I, Edward N. and Lol. Mae Four Days _ ...... l4¢ a Word eral students enrolled in corres­ merce, drawing, education, Eng· second age interval most freq uent­ nOJ;taph.. port' .,qulpment. and ,ew­ Trailers Sale (lied petJtJon . to quIet a1le~ed cJalms ROOM for r .... t "or "d . Plume 8·2t13 for pondence study froln SUI, and ev· lish, geography, German, history, 1y reported. on real estale h old In,. made by Jo· Five DaYIi ...... _ 15¢ a Word ell')'. BOCR·EYE LOAN CO.. %21 S b ery county has at least one. John· library training, mathematics and A record is held by Miss Julia seph arid Ellt.abelh MASTNY, Frank Ten Days ...... 20; a Word Capitol. 3-I5R _____-:- __~~--- 4--S 1"1 mol! m hou... tnO... Pr,red (or A. MEZIK or .ny olber unknown FOR RENT, IuIIf or doubl~ room...... Immedla\e . I lIone eeeo. 3-JI J SQ n County leads with 235 now tak· astronomy, romance languages, so· Miller, a correspondent from Dav· cliamnnts. ODe Month ...... 39¢ a Word Miscellaneous for SCJle - 3·U TRAVELO. ~ fecI. Ilke new. S~ It ing home ,study courses. • ciology and speech. . enport who will be 90 years old in MEMLER. ELdon A.. M"rlon A. and (Minimum Char,e 5o¢) Lydia G. MILLER. War",n H. and COLD SPOT ~(tl' rator. $40.: Speed -Y-O-R-RENT---: -R:-oo-m-n~-ar-boIp~-I-U1-1-L-:$-I-$. (our. aUto. ~ 1101. ~-11 Of all fields, education courses August. She has been taking home Myrtle T. MEEl-!:::( tabl ... : I."'~; b&by tend ; babY beds. HOCK-EYE LOAN, 221 " WHY PAY RENT WHEN YOU 'For SUI Delayed Again Capaol. 4-3 CAN OWN YOUR OWN ­ DES MOINES (!PI - The legislative intcrim commitlee Friday failed Autos for Sola MOBILE HOME? to act on a request of the State Board of Regents for authority to \ 1.31 Buick (Ot ole. Perfect condltJon. 10 Lines, SO Model. award a contract for a new turbo·generator at SUI. ~~ -_I Three ballots wcre t::lken by Lhe committee without a decision being 11151 No h : run •• hooks '0<><1. N~w tub<"­ To Choose from. At 910 Kilocycles I., IIr.. . Two b<"d> 23 M.P.G 13l. made on the request. The Com· P"one 8010. 3,2. mittee will meet again here April TODAY'S !leU!::D U: WOLLENSEN 'S, INC. 17. PHONE 4191 FOR SALt:: 18tB Lincoln dan. n~W 8:00 Mornlnll' cllapel mol or. ~. 3-21 Quali!y Since 1936 Bids were opened on ihe turbo· Robert' B. King 8:15 Newl 8:30 Mo~"ln' Seren.de Ba!>y Silting FOREIGN 4-dMr v-a .edan. :14.000 Phone 1210 generator Jan. 19. The new gen­ 9:15 Th., Book hell tntll!l, ,~ year. olt!, n. II '. rland­ Obj.,ctlv(! erator would be added to the three 9:"5 Wanted: .Baby 8lttlnJ; In my home. "rri Ford "nl:in.. Beat of{er. Ph"n. Running for Sheriff 10:00 Chnlkdu3' • already in use at the SUI power 10:15 Kllcll"n Cone.l·t 8-082'1 . 3-14 8-0410. 3·24 11:00 Surety Speaks U~""D ""t" o.."lrt TOI) prlcf' (or junk plant. The present generators arc Robert B. King, 1314 Yewell St .. 11: 15 10wo Sltl'r n.pl. of Heallh BABV .lllIn.ll In my home. Dial 3388. or w.".ked ea.- Coral"lII" Sal"a" operating on an overload. Friday announced his candidacy 11:30 Reell.,1 H"ll 3-28 01.1 8-18:\\. 4· 1 12:00 Rllvlhm fI.n.bles Disregard Engi""rs for nomination on the Democratic 12:30 N.,,! BABV slttln,. !A05 4·! I BUY JUNKERS. Phone:lOl2 4-1R election slate for sheriff of JolU1· 12 :~5 Onr Mon'~ Opinion Engineers recommended the 1:00 Our lTnflnlshNl Bu'ln •• ----~S~a~le-s-m--a-n-~~a-n-t-e-d~---- hoard accept the second low bid son County. 1:30 Eo" on U.e Midwest 4.panmem tor Renl of $270,435 by the Elliott Co. of A photographic salesman, King 2:00 lItuolc tor Llst"nlnJ; REPRJ:SENTA1'l'V'E wanted: 11 you can Prof. C. H. McCloy 2:30 A1{rtrN'ork& (rom rrnncc sell to larmers .... " can offer you an Four-rooln a~tm"1 (or .. r\l wllh Jeann ette, Pa. has worked as a newspaper circu­ 3:00 Evolution 01 Ja .. aUracth'e propeJ ltJtlon 81 our repre e.nta· re(:ll!er.tor .nd Ifts .tov.,. Inql1l .... • IIonored for Work ':00 Tea TIme SII<'Clal II"" tn • pro\eeled terrItor},. Finn I In. Grant, 229 South Summll. 3-29 The board, however. di sregarded lation supervisor, an Iowa City po. Chndr~ n's Hour 5:00 .... ·.11 e.f.&bU.hed. Over 35 yearr mAnu­ ----- ~ the engineers' recommendation lice officer and the manager of a 5:~5 Sporhtlme racturlng IIv ... to

. I • A ... ew low price on the I THIS IS TH~ world's most popular movie maker - IROWNIE MQVIE ? toll ~ IO~2 CAMERA with f2.7 lens, 9 ? ~3 TIME OF YEAR $29.95. (, 0 8 .. '0"'0"'0' . , • 765 when you can use Here'l tbe comera that n1akes n1o ... le, IIn1pll o. Inapahot, ot thil lower·thon· one of our electric eVIr pric. that e ... lry fomlly can offord. Coml ... how II.y It III You IUlt olm Ind '. , alarm clocks. M~ke a .....t fOf' reolly wonderful full-c:olor movl .. indoo" and out. I call and look over our line of clo •• The Camera Shop 0, I. FUlKS 2~O .t;. 'rou, Jcrcc/or fo Oc (! r 50 rcars , t, Jt, ' • • . • • ,( I (I f" I. J." , ~... '-THE DAILY IOWAN-lowl City, I •.-S.furd.y, March 24, 19U • - .- ,..-- -. ~ '\ Blast evels Des Moine'sAonlo Cites .One Consistency Order orm I Will Dedicate . • Ie . I , In U.S. Foreign Po/icy , In Algeria .. : War Memorial PHYSICAL EDUCATION-Thir- The one cOllsistent theme in Am- erican foreign policy has been the "lJlainly a device to shore up an ALGIERS IA'I - The French gOY. teen faculty members of the SUI protection of foreign export mar- export trade to that country whi ch ernment Friday ordered economic Department of Physical Education . kets fot American goods, Pl·Of. bad declined 80 pel' cent since and social reforms for restive AI. ( Here Sunday for Women will attend the national Thomas LeDuc of Oberlin College 1930." . • biennial convention of the Ameri- Claimed here Fr·iday. Trade Fac:tor Decl'ded gena. A Memorial Honor Roll bearing LeDuc addressed the 34th an· Private correspondence of 1933, . ~he measures are aimed to raise the names oC SUI students and al­ can Association for HealUl, Physi­ nual conference of Teachers of His- which has just been made avail- IIvmg standards of the Algerian umni who were killed in World cal Education and Recreation Sun­ tory and Social Scienccs. able to historians shows "not the Arabs and thus ease some of the tstabbshed War I and II and the Korean War "So dependent has our economy slightest evidence' that Hull and pressure behind a nationalist rc­ will be unveiled in the Terrace day through Thursday in Chicago. become on government subsidies Roosevelt were thinking then of volt against French rule. Lounge of the Iowa Memorial Un­ ion Sunday. PRESS PANEL _ Prof. Leslie to production, labelea loreign aid, th e power structure in either ElIr- Thcy were adoptcd by Premier SUI President Virgil Hancher Moeller, director of the sur School that we have reached a point ope or Asia," LeDuc said. "Ru s· Guy Mollet's Cabinet, sitting in will deliver the dedication address of Journalism, is a paneliSt where we cannot afford to believc sian imports were increasing but Paris. For one thing, the Cabinet Nail , at the formal dedication at S p.m. at a 4-day conference on "Prob- in peace," LeDuc stated. In 1949- we were losing out in the race, empowered Resident Minister 'Ro­ • in the Union main lounge. Follow­ lems of Communication in a Plu_ l so we relaxed foreign aid and al- mainly to 'Germany," bert Lacoste to distribute untilled ing the dedication he will accom· ralistic Society" at MarQuette Un i- lowed our exports to drop. Reccs- The basic impulse for the recog- land to jobless farmhands. pany an ROTC color guard into versity, this weekend. Moeller is sion struck rapidly and we reCover- nition of Russia came from busi- Other decrees will increase the I the adjoining Terrace Lounge. one of the 38 journalists who are cd only with the Korean War nessmen interested in export trade, number of native Algerians em· ToC \ discussing the communication boom." LeQuc said. ployed by businesses receiving stilte TV-Cov.red problems of censorship, the role 'Crises Sustain Prosperity' Except Cor its consistency in sup- aid anI! provide loa,,~ \ to Carmers Three SUI The unveiling ceremonies will be ~ of .the press, the right to know "Those who condemn American porting U.S. export trade, Ameri- and farm cooperattVcs in this County Den I carried by closed circuit televis­ government business and language policy in the 20th century fail to can foreign policy has been " il1- North African territory which the cuses Mond: ( ion to the audience in the main barriers. see that crises sustain prosperity." consistent," he said. French r(lgard as legally a part Jack Chri! lounge. I ::~ur experl~nce; ' he continued, . Our policie~ o~ gl'ant!ng recogni- of ~rance . . were nomin The Honor Roll, to be located at (AP Wlrot>holo) CELLO RECITAL-Barbara Da- I 10 t~e 1930 s suggests that lhe lion to new foreign reglO1es, .on 10- FlghtlOg went on 10 both Algeria ward, first the north · end of the Terrace THIS IS ALL THAT'S LEFT of the hom. of Mr. and Mrs. AII.n Nail in lOuthwest Des Moines following . . . Amencan people will not tolerate Itervening in foreign wars, on immi- and in Tunisia, the protectorate ericlt, A3, Lounge, will list the names or 495 .n explosion. Officials said th. blast w.s from a new g", line In the hous.. In addition to destroying thl VIS, A3, Ce~ar Rapids, Will present a volume of government spending gration and asylums for refugees. to th e east which France promised lbe third wa war dead. The names will be in­ hom. two power .nd light comp.ny employ" ware injured and thousllnds of dollars of d • .,Iagl was done a cello reCital at 7:30 p.m. SundAy for domestic purposes - roads, on international monetary stabili- Tuesday will be given autonomy. Carlsten i! to n.arby buildings. TIM Nalls wIre not home .t the time. scribed on bronze plaque and in North Music Hall. She will be ~ehools, hospitals - sufficien~ to I zation, . on protecting sources of Sketchy reports from the s~uth· Yaullg Oem mounled on a red Celt background. ------~------:----- accompanied by Susan Elwell, A2, mduce recov~ry from d~presslOn . I strategic raw mater!als abroad .- crn Tunisian desert indie_ted 8 former . c Eight lines from the sonnet. "For Garwin, at the piano. '!Vha.t tt~f~YdWIlI dtoflcrat~, IS spend- afll ~bf th~se hthave varied to ~,hehPomt French troo.ps. still w.ere pursuing second vice· the University of Iowa Dead," by 10g JUS I Ie as e ense. 0 oxmg e compass, e re- a band oC diSSident trIbesmen esU· 80th are pe Prof. Paul Engle, head of the sur Plan Service "If politicians have taken us to marked. mated to total as higb as 3,000. Oelerich i Writer's Workshop, have been in­ Hoegh Takes Part CAREER DAY-Three SUI' staH the brmk of war, and even over the About 175 educators Crom Iowa Without revealing their own IG8Se8 of SUI You scribed on bronze and will be member.s will be speakers at the brink, who can dispute that foreign and neighboring states are attend- I the French said 86 rebels ar~ majoring in mounted in the case with the At Sunrise WaMae Conference career day policy has brought us unparalleled Ing the conference Friday and to- kl10wn to have been killed since studies mint names. April 3 at Cornell College, Mt. Ver­ prosperity?" day. Wednesday. ' with the clu A collection of 22 sonnets en­ The annual i~terdcnominalional non. Those attending are: Prof. "The one consistent theme in In' Probe,of Bureau Palm Sunday Sunrise Service and . Nom" titled "For the Iowa Dead," writ­ Woodrow W. Morris, assistant dean Oem< breakfast sponsored by the SUI the history of American foreign re- M.Otropoul'os WI"II Come He're Sunday ' . The ten by Prof. Engle especially fol' of student affairs in the SUI Col­ lations is the policy of fo stering, Gov. Leo Hoegh conferred pri· Student Christian ;Council (SCC) lates to the the dedication service, will be lege of Medicine; Prof. Jean Baer developing and protecting markets Dimitri Mitropoulos, conductor . dentia1 and vat~ly for more than an hour Fri­ will be held at 7 a.m. in the Can· of the College of Nursing, and Ray­ for our experts," he said. of the New York Philharmonic 1 of the SUI orchestra, IS a protege printed as a separate addition to day with six agents of the State gregational Church, Clinton and the statutOI the program. Prof. Engle will read I- It HapPtn:d In mond E. Keller, coordinator of QlHIst tQ Pros!lerity Symphony Orchestra, is expected of Mitropoulos. Dixon co~duded cl1lldldates I Bureau of Crimi1\al Investigation Jefferson streets. four sonnets during the service. in DII Moinll. high school services. LeDuc said "Our quest for pros- to arrive in Iowa City Sunday to the SUI orchestra ~hen Mlt~O~. In township 'R.qui.m' Composition Afterwards he told newsmen he The worship service wiLl be con­ perity via foreign policy did not complete preparations for 1I1e SUI los appeared as plano solOist IB ' dates for 0 "Requiem," composed by Prof. had discussed with the agents re­ f lOWA ~ ducted by students except for a DENTAL SOCIETY-Andrew T. begin with our recent programs of Easter concert at 8 p.m. Wednes- 1951 an~ 19!'2. mltteemen. Philip Bezanson of the SUI music strmon, "Christ the King," to be Morstad, SUI instructor in prosthe- dumping surpluses abroad and day in the Iowa Memorial Union. All tIckets for the Wednesday ' Precincts cent complaints made to him by (Compll •• from faculty and based on four of Prof. ~ dellvered by the Rev. Jerome Lek­ . d' d h' calling it foreign aid ," LeDuc said. Mj'tropoulos wI'II dt'rect the SUI evening concert hav~ been distri· to serve 01 six county sherj(fs against the bu­ ~ D ..p ...... es) tlC entlstry, ad ressed t. e Wmne- LeDuc traced the U.S. foreign b t d S f t k t f the Engle's sonnets, will be presented reau and its chIef, R. W. Neben: sa, minister to students of th'e First Symphony Orchestra and Chorus u e . ome ree IC e s or ] partisan sci by the SUI symphonic choir. gall. \ • . Presbyterian Church. ' shlek County Dental Society meet- policy and its protection of foreign in Albert . Roussel's "Psalm SO" 7 p.m. T~esday re~carsal of ~ committee. Representatives of the Catholic, Hoegh refused to reveal details ' The breakfast will be held in the ing Friday in Decorah on "Partial 'markets up to 1933. a nd William Walton 's " Belshaz. pro~ram 10 the ~mon ~ere .till Following Jcwish and Protestal1t faiths from dining rooms of the church immedi­ Dentures." Tracinlf the "consistent thread" available at the mformatIon desk , of the conference. He said he hoped ( t t further, he explained Lhat the rcc- znr's Feast. " of the Union. The concert will be three Oem~ thc SUI School of Religion will par­ D ately following the worship service. to complete his investigation of the oun y emocra s ognition of Russia in 1933 was James Dixon , present conductor broadcast by WSUI. offices addr ticipate in the religious sorvices. bureau and announce his findings T ( M d Cost of the breakfast has not yet BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE­ , C." been decided, David Howard, P4, The ~owa sectioQ of the Soclety for The Rev. Robert J . Welch will by Wednesdar· 0 William B offer the invocation. Frederick aucus on ,ay Lewis, chairman of the service, Experimental Biology and Medi­ dldate ror n. Bargebuhr will read "David's La­ said. cine will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tues­ ENGLERT ALDO RAY • PHIL CAREY 8 DICK YORK -Raid Clinton Thirty-two of 33 Johnson County tenant-govel ment for Saul and Jonathal1," from The Palm Sunday service will be day in room 179 of the SUI Medi­ The Sunil ocratic viet. Sam. II, 1: 17-27. Robert S. Mich­ State agents raided two down- Democra.tic precinct caucuses will the last e vent sponsored by th(' cal Laboratories Building. LAST DAY "Three Stripes In lIenry M. aelsen, director of the SUI School town taverns in Clinton late Thurs- convene 10 the courthouse at 8 p.m. SCC this yenr for SUI students, candldate fc day night while Gov. Leo Hoegh Monday to ?elegates to of Religion, will lead the audience se~ect ~he Howard said. Palm Sunday was DENTAL AWARD - A cash ination for was addressing a mpeling in the cou~ty preSidential convenbon "DOORS , SUNDAY in a reading of the Twenty-third I chosen instead of Easter Sunday award ot $300 will be presented man, said I Psalm and will give the benedic­ Clinton Methodist Church. The Apnl 6. . . because of SUI's Easter recess. Wednesday to Charles Bolender, OPEN SOc agents said they seized nine bottles The~ Coralville caucus Will be 1:00" 'TIL 2:00 Dot be alle\ tion. Advisor to the committee in D4, Primg~ar . T~e award is one of I miii it I of agriculb of liquor at Red's Steak House and held m the Town Hall. 1310 Mil:t More Ulan 200 relatives o[ the charge or Ule service is 1I1e Rev. two top p~lzes given each ~ear by I farm proble SUI war dead are expected to at­ the 620 Club. Hoegh denied any Ja.ck C,. White. .county Demo- Horbert Gesaert, minister to sta- the AmerIcan Dent~re SOC.l~ty for tend the service. knowledge of the raids. cl:atlc chaIrman, said each caucu.s COMPLETE NEW SHOW Dale J. 11 . Will select a member of the fi­ dents of the Congregatiopal Church . resea~ch and techmcal wntIng by didate {or l II The service will be recorded and and the ,united Student P"ellowship. a semor de~dent . broadcast on WSUI at 8 p.m. Mon­ nance committee and the resolu­ lion for firs day. Davenport Forger tions corqmittee for the county Chairmen of the worship service /! ealled hims. convention'. Iowa City precincts "to-morrow Police at Davenport FrIday said are Elaine Bright, NI , Norwalk, crat." He u will name members of the non­ and Wendel Stevens, 1\14, Mason NOWI a well-dressed, smooth-talking for­ VARSlTY lEnd. Montt.y' Hartley La· partisan school selection commit­ City. Faye Stites, A3, Chicago, is SUNDAY for univers SUSPENSE • .• ger has bilked three Davenport tee. Rural prccincts will nominate • ehairm;m of the breakfast com­ • • advocated S banks of more than $800. .. Show Public township oUice personnel. mittee. Cuts Like A Chief Harvey A. Smith said the Resolutions to be referred to the yet he changed C.mmlt1 man opened accounts in the names Whip! He n!ver existed' Nominatic resolutions committee may also be YUGOSLAV PAR.LIAMENT N'ew Missile of prominent Dovenport people by adopted by the precinct caucuses. the course of the world! SHOWS AT-l :30-3:lO-S:30 'cinct ' comn depesiting false checks and then BELGRADE, Yugoslavia IA'I­ G: Ilrott II White said he does not expect Parliament reconvened for its He never commanded, yet 7:30-9:30-"LAST FEATURE 9:40" FT. MEADE, Md . IA'I - The old withd~awing cash sums. The same many resolutions to be presented firlit ' ward, ruse was used by a man, la~er spring session Friday and unani­ he led the enemy into Mlch;ielsen soldier with the Held glasses who from the floor. mously passed a $700 million bud. told machinegunners where to aim caught', in bilking Quad-City bal'lks second' war get for 1956. More than 70 per cent disaster. Here is the for an enemy plane is gone for­ of several hundred dollars a few was earmarked for military ex­ E. B9rchar ever. months ago. amazing story of the Ta ber Tells Use penditures. thii'd ward, He has been ousted by the strangest deception Ross' Livl Army's "Missile ' Master." It can Arabs To SeHle fourt!} Will" see 200 miles with its radar eyes, Mrs. Dorothy Houghton of Red Of Dried Arteries in the onnals of ~. Trot . '1 figure five control mathematics In Oak, a former Eisenhower admin­ An SUI surgeon explained Fri­ liam Jacka a fraction of a second and send istration refugee relief official, day how obstructions or ruptures naval espionage! R. . S<:hmid Nlke guided missiles screaming at said Friday two Arabs will setUe in the main artery of the human Middlebrool supersonic speed toward the invad­ soon in the Red Oak community body sometimes arc located and and ing aerial enemy. cinct: . under the congressional relicf act. then repaired with scction~ of ar­ The Army showed newsmen Fri­ I ahd L9tbe teries which have been freeze­ liTHE and precinc day its Missile Master, under de­ Tonllo RICHARD WIDMARK J I dried and stored. First war velopment for six years, but only Appoint Chief Dr. Rodman E. Taber, professor "OUTSTANDING BAND of '56" I DONNA REED now brought to public view. second W31 Ea~l Brown, 26, was appointed of surgery at SUI, described pro­ Secretary Wiloer M. Brucker said JACK PAYNE/S PLUS ... WALT DISNEY CARTOON were not Co chief of police of the Grinnell po­ cedures for the operation during a in a statement that the system can MAN . The Cora lice department to succeed Waldo postgraduate conference at SUI on 14 AMBASSADORS 14 detect "enemy aircraft and mis­ FTank FrYI A. Johnson, who resigned. diseases of the heart, lungs and , •• lurlnr siles" and then coordina te the (ire "Boon OpeD 1:16 P. M." committeer blood vessels. of batteries of Nikes on the invad­ Lovely Patti Vernard maD. ' ers. osher H.oll If either the obstruction or rup­ WHO . Udlverslt: ture type condition is found, its Army spokesmen, in answer to DoMo Publ. commltteer exact location can be spotled by questions, made It apparent that SPECIAL STUDENT (lfiI$~rw and Lois T Brucker. didn't mean that even the Name d Army Ai de X-ray procedures. • Caucus r The surgeon is then able to re- RATES I,500-mile-per-hour Nike, with the TO-DAY NEVER~ partisan 5e DES MOINES IA'I - Appointment move that section of the artery and llte 1111 10:00 electronic brain of the Missile Mas­ wllb I.D. Card "ENDS MONDAY" committee of Luther L. HUI, publishcr of the replace it with a healthy section. ter could cope with hypersonic R. P o' Whil Des Moines. Register and Tribune, These liJe-sa ving operations are weapons like the ballistic missile. I Next Wed. I Ruthless Criminal Lawyer ... Sl.aI'lley ):II as civilian aide to the secretary made possible by techniques which Over "2~-NITE" WAS" That missile travels at speeds up Mrs. Tom of the Army for Iowa' was an- permit the use of arterial sections 1 to 8,000 miles per hour. the Underworld Was His Client! Hays. nounced Friday by Secretary of ~aken, with the permission of sur- EDDIE ALLEN 'S the Army Wilber M. Brucker. vivors, from other 'persons shortly FAMOUS BAND "FJRST TIME IN CINEMASCOPE . DI M . I M an Acqu' I"ffed He succeeds Robert K. Goodwin after their death. IOWA CITY" ol\De~ Moines. The removed sections can be Con. I I Ch An Army second lieutenant dur- frozen in a dry ice-and-aICOhOlll)iX- \ i EDWARD G. n rlvmg ar,ges .lng World War r, Hill was recalled ture and preserved in vacuum Vlffflr .. , 1_!'ofL...... (~.~ I - O D to active dutX in 1942 and, as a tubes {or long. periods before being rJ~~. J _ ~ "Beg; Thomas L. Blakely, 329 First St., brigadier general, was director of used. ROBINSON was found innocent Thursday by the bureau of public relations for About 75 doctors from all parts WINNER OF Police Judge Roger Ivie on two t~e War Department in 1945. of Iowa attended the conference. 8;//1 charges of reckless driving, re- ':;~~iiiii~.,liiiiiiiij;;;;;ji"~.~._•• ;-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-' WASHlN sultjng from arrests on Feb. 19 and r House cor Best modeling j F~~n~id James Brenneman, 933 T~~~E f [ I }, AZ JA , ·TNuTE~SRDYfAY· * * e dllY and r. Webster St., was 'also found inno- SHOW ~ _ _ - ~ picture alter a S·h cent of the same charge. doqrs. Blakely was arrested Feb. 19 i2 -df- , of , The big A.I AT I.AST IT CAN IE must be'tl along with James R. Mathies, 422 . D.~. ~, ~ I Grant St., for alleged reckless I 1l_. 1. the TOLD' fOR '0 YEAts bottom to driving on Highway 6 west of Iowa'· f4.~. Year tween the Year rHE \fORLD'S Irsr laSt year, City. Mathies had been fined $100 t;. GUARDED SECRET' SeIlOite • , with $75 suspended prior to Thurs- ,. "I am ' day's court action. ' "The most outrageous, can nnl$h Blakely was also arrested Feb. 28 * nl,lIt 10 I on South Riverside Drive, this * preposterous, barboric bOthhoulI time on a reckless driving charge ideo in my 30 yeors J. Ellende involvJng Brenneman. ' tlIe confer Blakely was also found guilty of Naval Intel/ir/encel" meeting. Thursday on an illegal muffler £Uendcl charge. arou~ dis. 811eS In tli fell a me British Op~n Hong Kong brOlllht £1 To British Travelers R~p. HI leader of HONK KONG iA'l-British immi­ laId be e gration authorities Friday extended fin8I ' agr~ "until further notice" the lifting of He said travel barriers on Chinese enter­ the key II Ing Hong Kong from the Red main­ l'Ortlnc c land. f II - : • ,( • ,..ity - Restrictions were relaxed early ~ . . ~ ~ ... '" ' t Dresen!s promise I - s" .. in February to ..allow Chinese from ~ . CLIFTON WEBB LORIA GRAHAME l~vellor I neighboring Kwangtung province ...;IOrl" ...... ", . of ,h. ",h"", o,''/J! ftMAaTY Sen . . GI to visJt, relatives here during Ule '--'.0 •. WAltHIIt !lItO.. ~ ADDED - IN CINEMASCOPE "LAND OF THE GOLDEN DOQII' ~nf~r n. New Year holiday!. The old quota RICHARD CON E ...... ERNEST BORG NINE ----.WORLD'S LATIST NEWI---- enee 104 system was to have gone back into ,_;"·~··::--~~~~~T~~~~~~~~C~AS~n~E~-=-_ ... BETSY BLAIR •.traUon ~I elfect ~edne~da~" , " ~ • X T R A • ~·The ~DI , " ,tupportl