Serving the State t Th. Weatt..' University of Iowa Campus and Iowa City owan Est. 1868 - AP LeoY'd Wire, Wirephoto - Five Cents lowo City, lowo, Tuesdoy, Jonuory 19, 1954 ~~------~------~~~------~------

I e e awe. es as lnOIS •

. '11 oJ' Of -I ~ Lost Indian Treaty Comes Home W P I . The original Black Ha.wk Indian war treaty was scheduled to . arrlve In Davenport by tram Mooday night under the care of Clyde U eS ar n S er I C. Walton, curator ot r/lre books at SUI. - The 1832 treaty had been 10 t tor a century 01' longer. A Chicago book dejller discovered it and plpced a $3.850 price tag on it. - UN Ch Walton and ReD. Fred SchwengeJ, Davenport, announced a dive lo raise funds to purchase the Healy. Prof. Ralph E. Ellsworth, di­ rector' of SUI Jlbraries, said Sawrday a donation of $25 had been [ OS I received from an anonymous Iowan. CHAMPAlGN, I1J. - IoWa's g youn, Hawkeyes broke the n r r moat a te Walton and Schwengel, both ofCicer of the Iowa Book Collectors' club, have a three-month option to purcha 'e Ule document. Plans persistent jinx in IU, Ten hurtll~1. WASHINGTON (A» - Secretary , have been made to place it in II Dave-nport muscum. here Monday nlibt bt pus,hnij State John Foster Du\Jcs said Under the treaty, the Sac and Fox Indians ceded about six mil­ past lliinob!, 79-70; and iD dol .Ion,day the United Nation's chart­ lion acres of eastern Iowa land to the whites. The Indians got about so stayed hl the chase for tHe.:81 Id stand changing, but that nine cen~.p_e_,_'_a ~jr_e_. ______~ ______Ten title. r - , 'i '. Itrowing It away to start afresh Not slncl! 182.; b¢fort. an.r ' M Id be opening "a Pandora's the present Hawkey" ~ert bGrtit had an IoW'a t~am:~ete.t,.c!d . ~lllItola The way Dulles put it, to a sen­ Ike Asks fat.. Support In Georle Hutt D.mnastUIJ\·. Tl\~t foreign relations subcommittee, span or 28 years tt\c1ud~d ~ 11 was a delicate problem. He said siralght losses to the 111Ini on t)leIl! UN charter is far Irom perfect, Of Private Health Plan home,1\oor. th at it is better than nothing The llist loW' \\'in tbere "a~ a must not be killed by any WASHINGTON WI- Pre Ident H-27 victory on Feb. 24, J921. 1 e. EI enhower asked eongre Mon-Iand localities In building hospitals It "'8$ the Hawks' first ccln.t~7 Then, In reply to questions t1'om day to Pllt limited jfovernment for the chronically ill, plus ex- • \. Jen. John Sparkman (D-Ala.), he support behind private health in- panslon ot the program to PI'ol'lde Box Score cited the myth in which over­ surance plans so lhey cun protect for constrLlction of nonprofit elin- 10"" 0 F . 1 .i.a.~OI8 r r. tcu.rlous Pandorll lifted the lid of a American families against the "ca- ics. rehabilitation centers lor the Dnl•. t ,. r.. I" C~I. . , •• .''''4'.'''''',1•• mllgic box tor a peck insidc and tastrophc" ot prolonged major III- disabled and nursing and conva- u,... e .: 4 "'i~.rt.Ia.... ,,., ••• • let loose all the evils of the world. nesses. lesccnt homes. • ...., .. "I ".""""', •• Qt"r... ! ~ ~ ! ""I ~ •• i'''' ., I Opens liearines Eisenhower pro po cd crea tion or 4. Continuing prc~ent activities lIi.h'r. r ' . • • !hr.. ~ I' " 1 a 25-mlllion-dollar fund to rc- ot Ihe public health service. I·... r. .... 1t Z. ! Sparkman's questions came atter '~~r~·.~ - ,.r. I I".r.; ' ~'1~'J,~ i1. 6,.' .. ulles read a prepared statement insu:CI s ~c:. t1 Pla~s t~a,l.nst t "the 5. Simplifying the complex. ~~""I.~:t. r. ~ i ~ ! ~.':~tt;r' t i : the subcommittee, which opened specla a I ona r s S 0 ex- pAtch-worl< formula tor grants of .....III.'iIt, " .....Ie .... r . , I • Illic hearings on proposed re- pandlng benerits for their mem- government money tor health, ~ 1 • =-;-- Ion of the UN' charter. Changes bers. child welfare and other programs (AI' WIre ,Joel.) !:::I·I.,;j,~~;/i ·th~:~r~·~,~.~_~ He didn't Indicate how much to makCllt "more responsive to the IOWA' DEACON DAVI slips pa t an unidenUfied defender to 6. ",,6arte. U •• tn..,. ~ J~'''''' / Q- authorized In the charter itself th . I I hl h titII1I ItCh I 1\1 d I ht J h K ''i '!. .. th UN I bl h e Insurance pan m, ave 0 needs or the states and their cit!- score ara. n8 no s a ampB rll on ay n, a 0 nny err J",1l"1_6.~... it.!!I'!,. ar. I "It.... "rI.'. So ~I ' d e ge~era assem y as boost tees for subseribers to Civil! zern ." (22) looks on. The Hawk won their fir t at Champalrn since 1921, d to hold a ~harter review con- them extra PI'otection against dis 79-70. ence rolld trip. of th4! dsoli .\llt nee in 1956. Ilstrous medical and hospital bilIS. . -- - kept ihem In ~ootl1l' tll,tan~ 6~ n c;a~:~e t~l)~n~:.n!~~ic~P:~~: ~~~e e:::~1 s~~lnak~!~rm;~~\::'I~;' 1 Moral-Don'l Use Re p a tr Ie a tie 0 n 's DI' s' P u t,~e ~ohCheIAolS~tta;d,s:!~ •.d. 7i2::;~to·M.ned;c,,~~';I:lt could not with a veto? Neither did thc Prcsldent sa), ""." M II 'I lies said yes, depending upon exactly how the re-Insurance PI'O- Car as a Slellgh" B" E h D I wllh bii Don Schlu-ftctt '.ettln • orld opinion, to which, he added, 'AI' "'Ire,".'e) Id I P e bl ·t rings nge new con1F~le:~ ;:~~IDN'I... #.~i»-4. ~. Ie Russ!'ans rire mO"e sensitive SECRETARY OF STATE John Foster Dulle is a th u.-btl I "It- cram wou wor<. ~ suma Y I , XC a e a.y .... ,.,.. """ ... " • 0.. u wo uld operate something like gov- than the free world may realize. nus ~Ionday, tet!ltlfyln, before enate forell'll relations subeom- emment Insura ce of bank de os- Lesson Costs S2 5 The victory followed :on tlM . New Cbarter Idea mlnee on pro))Olled revisions of the United Nation harter. Be- it' 11 P PANMUNJOM, Tuesday 01')-' heels bt the H~wks' cQlcI~st ni'~t . What IIbout writing an entirely hind him Is David Key, as I,eant secretary of state in charle of S:'The best way for most of our " Incjla 's decision to start tu~nin " (celing the commission had U1 clof the s~asdl1 In losi!ll to Nl~~~- w charter? UN affairs. , people to ... obtain good mecjical Two SUr students deCIded to back 22.388 dIsputed war prtson- ':,solemn obligation" under the sota at Kome SUurdaYI 5a-51!. '\ d "You'd be opening a Pandora's - " "" . h .. 1.10 "I t have some Jun, Monday afternoon ers to the two commands wus aJmi~licc to koep the prison'rs , B4t It wa, a dUCClJ'eO{ s(~I'Y MI'. , .. .. ,, ~ . . ~ . Jcare, ",I en OWl'. sa... S 0 par- 'th th . th I . . " . j M d ' I" • ill- itilll, " , ~llu-&aid, and) he ex~ try pl'ofits fro~ trN mernber~hip. c 's Facirittl;ant line might have1licipate in voluntary health. in- WI ~Ir cal' - on e 0" II nvo!. thrcatened ~vltn. ?el~y Tu d y by untll Ja~ .. 23 and then declare OD ay .. '.l as 8opliom ~~ D.-!u ~sed doubt that all the present While not comp1etely satisfied been push~ back a:> far as her pa-/suranee plans." Bob Blokman, .Pl, Underwood, ~ed China s f:1I1ule to send .. a them civlhans. LO,an and Carl 9al.1 I qe,u~(~.ci members could be brought with thc efforts of other UN na- ciflc seabO\lrd Further be said owner ot the CIII, and Dick Wood. I cply here over the controvctsl.lI The Reds while teUing India illinois wltb a lourtll,lI\1l\rter ,bii'· .. k into whatever successor or- tions in checking Red aggression Britain and France alr~ady wer~ DI'II~e. Sodall.aUen AI, Albuquerque, N. M., ~rivel' of Iis sue. in u note to' New Delhi they "in. a,c that pushed the U...... kB HG~~ ization might be created. in Korea, Dulles said the U.S. making sacrifices in lighting the In a speCial message to the la,,:,- the car, spied two coeds ICC skat- A new Indian stalement was tensely disliked" the deCision, Irt {root. , _ j • .. Dulles and Sen. Fulbright (0- would have had to oppose com- Reds in Malaya and Indoct.lna l makers-one Qr CI sel'les filling In Ing on the ~owa rivet' ncat' . the expected Tuesday. possibly put- have yel 10 reply to Thimaytu IlIIools held a o~~. 1ea,d , in a question-and-answel' munist aggression in any event _ and, J! they had put aU their details of thc lcgilllative program Park road brldgc, parallel to hlgh- ling off the operation a day lJr saying whether they would tllke 38·37, OIL h;llftlnle aD~ ~is . U~ti agreed not cnough Ameri- with or without allies. Istrength into Korea, wOl1ld have he outlined to congress :2 days way 218. two. • back the 21 Americans, olle BritOn with the youthful Haw~e,es it lize how much their coun- Otherwise, he testified, Ameri- played into the communists' hands. ago - :he .:resldent ag;lIn ~pokc Wood d,'ove the cllr to the edge Nonetheless, the U. N. Com- and 327 South Koreans in tho 52-52 just after th~ start of tke ___ • lout a~~anst g?v~rnment reglmen-Io! the river and tested the icc with mand wcnt ahead with plans 10 prO-Red camp. [\nal per~. ..' • t~tion or SOCIalization of mod~ his lert tront wheel. Nothing hap- Crce 22,039 Chinese and North! LOUn SC)OreI ...u ! \' ... And Then There Was None cIMe... pened. He drove the two front Korean as civilians Saturday re- But thetl Lo,an, who I\lId sat Q,';It B~t . he also said no naUOll or wheels onto the icc. Still nothing gurdless ot when it gets them 2 Iowa Citians Charged much of the .am~ aft~ dra"1'iI admll1lstratlon cun be complacent happened. fl'om an anti-Red camp. Allied . •• lour early touls. WilS sent, ~ad\l: about the heafth Of Its pcople. And So hc stepped on the gas and Isoldiers held drills on handlillg With Gas Siphoning Into the ball (apu!. III an ,rIVe - with the naUonal medical bill run- dl'ove out on the ice to the girls. the prIsoners. I powerlhr clpslng surlie, he atl,d nlng up to $9 billion a year and The skating duo joined in the fun The command stood firm in the Two Iow11 City men arc sched- Cain accounted foI' 13 pblnts' b~· ~till riSing, Ei~,enbO\\1er urged con- and hitched a ride by gl'abblng Irace ot a new letter Monday [rom Iuled to appeal' In Iowa City police tween them and the lIawltS,plllied gres.:' to give" early and favorable the rear fender. Ll. Gcn. K. S. ThlmYYll , India's court Wednesday on charges of well ~head anq stayed ~"ere. I ~ . conSideration to recommenda- For a few precarious moments, chairman ot the Neutral Nations . h I Lo,an .scored seven of his I'l- l lions for: the car pulled UIC girls along the Repatriation CommiSSion, reltel'- gas , Ip on ng. . point total in that {Ibal period anil I. The re-insurance system. icc. Iating his views that such a 1'e-1 Marcelo Rodriquez, 710 S. 01.1- Cain added six of his 24·polnt to. 1 2. A ' five-year plan to restore Then Wood and Brokma9 decld- lease would violate the armistice. buquc st., ~nd Emil Gomez, 23, Of tal. _ 680.000 disabled persons to pro- ed thcy had better not stretch their Thimayya wrole both sides Jan. 709 S. Malden Lane, will lace a Tht! game was l'ouih IfI s,po\.t, ductive work. The President said luck. so they drove off the Ice, but 14 that since they could not agl" ~e eJ1arge of committing larceny in with Iowa's ace torwarci, Deaeoh "we are 10 Ing ,round at a dis- not before Patrolman Joc Smith on disposition of the prisoners the nlghllime at the 8 a.m. court Davis, tanJUn, at ditti!t~t times tressfng rate" in this field because caught sight of the adventure. he had dcclded on his own to turn hearing. They werc arrested about with Illinois' Jim Dutcher attd £d 250,000 persons are disabled every Wood said Mondoy night that them back, starting this Wednes- 2 a.m. Sunday in thc 10 block or Makovsky. None was banblhM year and only 80.000 are retul11ed "we knew we were taking a day, and asked tor replies bY IW' Washington st. alter police from the .,lIme, althou,h ofllclllls to tully productive lives. Yet. he chance. We wcre just fooling Jan. 18. • said they were seen siphoning gos twice IIl1lted play to \\lun pl.leis said, It costs more to care for the around." On lhat date, Gen. John E. from a car. on both aides. _ • disabled than to rehabilitate them' Authorities didn't get the joke. Hull. UN Far Ea sl commandrl', Both men are being held in thl! ' KHr G~ II , Wants More AI. l• though. Police court fined Wood replied. saying his command Johnson county jail in lieu oC Illinois' Jolumy Ket'!', the :lU. 3. Greater federal aid Cor states $25 plus costs for reckless driving. would accept custody IIlthough bonds of $500 each. Ten's leadlnr scorer with • 2" IOWAN PHOTOGRAPHER Arlo Jacobson recorded then ,Iceuret!l of the total eclipse of the point averl,e, topped poiot, m.k· Monday nlrht. The ecll.,.e beran at 6:5' p. m. The exposul'fll were taken at lO-mlnute Inter­ Inl tor tbe nl,ht ,,'Ith 2. points, atartln&, lot ':05. The six Ilta"et!I would have been In I ,tralrhter line, but If ehlldr4ln, who "ald­ • Kerr's stori~, output ",.sn't Ute photo&,ra,ber, wanted to look throurh the view-tinder and moved the camera. The one-Iee­ 4 SUI Musicians In enou,h to etfset tlJe HawkHea CXllOlure on the last stlfe shows the mbveme nt ot the moon, rhrlnr Ii an eloneated shape. Ae- To Play Chicago balanced attack thlt hit for be,~ It was only a tiny sliver, beine near the total eclipse. Prof. C. C. Wylie of the astronomy de­ Four members of the SUI music than 40 per cent from tile n~r. ~ artm4l.nt. said the moon moves Its own width every two minutes. Followin, Cliin in the faculty will participate in a con­ lCotIilf' were Davis aDd Lo.ao -w1t", 11 I cert tonight at 8:30 in Chicago's each, BtU Schoo! 'with 7 am ~It Orchestra hal\. Scheuerma n with ,- ill.of wb1cn World News Briefs ISales Tax Issue The concert will Cea ture Eugene eaml! On tree throw, late in , tlii ,tme. . . List, pianist, and Prot. Stuart Can­ cau 6C Fe.ai in of the SUI music dep~rtment In A Oonclensqtion of Late Oevelopments IMay Effect Rates In all Iii rbuls were caUed In tile 'Of Student Boarders a performance of Haydn's 'ICon- contest with only ooe man, Iowa', N • I. certo for Plano, Violin and Bill Seaber,. leaviD, the lime vIA. . avy N Ixes 5egregaflon- N Ixon / . Strings." the .foul route. WASHINGTON (JP) - Vice-Prcsident Nixon reportcd Monday d The qhu~dllOI\ Of WI hether stu- Pvot. Hans Koelbel, cello; Claude Iowa led at tbe first quarter I*- t he navy has complcted a program of eliminating racial segl'e- en. t s s ou . pay. sa es t axes on ' . ' 17 berore filling behind at the at its shipyards. Nixon, presiding over the monthly meeting theIr meals IS being discu~sed by Carlson, VIola, James NI~loCk, vlo­ half. Iowa led 52-49 at the tht~e President's committee on government contracts,' quoted Secre- the state boar.d .of education and lin, all of the SUI musIc depart- quarlm mark and went on ,to win

or the Navy Anderson os saying the installations at Norfoll" the lax commISSIon. mcnt, and David Montagu, violin, with the last quarter splur,e. . I and Charleston, S.C., arc now being operated on a completely Al present the tax is not being, are members 01 a string quartet It was a sweet bomeeomin, tOIi basis. collccted, but ~f It should be put which w'm acc;ompany List and the II Hawlu as they biiL fi-om o 0 0 • Inlo eftect stullents would be as- IllIDola towns, . sessed about $8.00 a year. ICanln. Three starters, Calo and Davis La bor Leo d er A pproved Sales tax is collected at open The six musicians met in Iowa from Freeport and luard Bul Sei­ WASHINGTON (JP) - James P. Mitchell was endorsed, un ani- cafeterias at SUI, Iowa State City Saturday 10 rehearse tor the ber, of Moline headed the 1111.11ol,s· as s~creta~y of labor MondR.l:' by t.he senate labor committee. college and Iowa State Teacners conceri. List came to Iowa City dele,aUoD in the reveD,e wili. aenate Itsell IS expected to eonflfl11 ~Im in short order. college. Open cafeterias arc tho~~ r B I it K h h h d ~ o. . rom co, an., were e a . open to the publJc as well as the f d t h hi i I students. per orme w t 8 W fe, Carrol Solved: Ca.. Of .. Ita Iy 5ets Up Government In boarding dormitorIes how- Glen, at a rccital Friday nlght. ltOME (If» ~ Italy p!ltched tOlether a ncw Christian Democrat ever, such as Currier hall ann Monta,u came to Iowa City .from Unwanted CrO".y : Monday, but it had litlle hope of enough strens;:th to Hillcrest. meals arc provided ou New York city One Daily lowlUl read,r li,;d a­ with the nation's long-range problems. Amintore Fanfani, a a room plus board basis, and the' . . problem .. She had • C;rosle1 T~':'" Dealer" within. his pro-American, middle-road party, an- dining rOoms arC not open to the Can~n of the music department ~ator abe dlcln't need. 10 Itct, " . n?uneed a cabinet which left out tormQr premiers Alcide de Gasperl public. . and LlIlt played before President I w.. In ber way. Sbe .dY~ the Ind Giuseppe Pella. It is Italy's third governmcnt In six months. &tudents' meals are set by the Truman, Prlmc Minister Church1l1 refriatrator ID o~r medii ~ • •• Institutions ~t about $l.50 to $l.80land Premier Stalin ot the Bi, lot no TeI.Ponse. Thep Ib~ thoUjlit of the lowaD. she called, esp~ Coed Dump.. d From Car/Dies ~erye~~ ;~~h :re~ta~~~:s $::~ Three ~nrercnce at Potsdam, Ger- ner problem aDd III Iowan ~~~:; . • SALT LAJ'E CITY (.4» - A 22-year-old senior at University of would mean the additional $8.0Q. 1many, 10 July, 1945. Both men tentaUve bel..eel her writ~ a .en. Utah died Monday a few hours after she was dumped trom a car onto Students whQ eat in open ca!c- I were in the army's special services SUI MUSIC ·DEPUTM£NT fae\llb members 10 over \he score of "Cenc:erio lor Plauo. VieU. ad in, ad, CaUs ltartC\i comilli iii ~ Irounds ot the Salt Lake County hospital, police repqrted. Officers terlas ' pay th~ sale. tax. Such ~ at the time. Strtnr." wltb lureae Lilt, pianist, leated at the plano. Frbm lell to rlrbt are Prof. Hanl X.IIlet. very lirst ~ay and the . un","'t Identified her as Joanne Howald, daughter of Mrs. C. W. Howald of student is at a disadvantage :lM ! Tonight's performance .,111 'de Prof. Stuart Canln, Jam" Nlbh~ek and ClaUde Carlson, Llllt a.nd CaDln are feat.red In a C).neeft .. be re.riterator w~ sold , tb~ tll1rcs cl :r. amlnls, Mont. Police said an attendant at the hospital ~aw n 0111' compRren to the others who pay thcir second public appearance to- performed tonlrht In Chlea,o'l Orebe.lra han. The otber faeuU, member. wUl plaJ in all acee.- the ad I'In. Over 20 Jltrsorl3 r~flU" e in all. COlt •.• oDly $1.0*. _,.. drive, onto the groundS an(l the .• 11'1 dumped OU\. 110 taxes, the o!Ilclals sal, ,ether. pa!lyID, .tria, quart ,. : .. ~ . r n %-'I"IIE DAn; lOW . -10 AND SCREAM T~e Daio/ lowan GENERAL NOTIGE' GENERAL NOTICES shollld be deposited wltli the Cit;' A If , The DaJly Iowan In the newsroom In the Communlcatlo", C,-, Notices must be 8ubmlUed bf Z,p.m. the da, precedlur tim,.. Published dany px~Pt Sundl" .nd ..... r.rncr ,~ ,iyen an .11 .~r.I~t' TJ't'd t. P~ll.ll. Publisher Jlcatlon; they will NOT be accepted by phone, and mliBt be ~ll'ED I' Monetay and I pi hohday. by Slud nt err.r•• r ..aid s.b erlbtr If rep. tied Charles E. Barnum. A ~!aIo1 Publl.h~r or LEGIBLY WRITTEN and SIGNED by responsible ,.,. P"hlk:at_. Inc.. tB towa Aft.• 10.... b,. •• -'rD. The DaU7 lew-an t!\rc._ ~II.D a City. Jo..... Ent~red II s«ond cIa 4ep.rhnrn_. In tb~l't.r ., Old Jour.. I DAlLY IOWA N DITORJ L STAFF I maU mattpr III the poll OHLoe at Iowa Mil In lII.n4Inc. D.ba,.e and •• ,,'. 8 I G MAD E L T A PI WILL PROF. G. KITSON ~ the acl Dr .Ye .. I.J eptD frem .. a.m. t. I! no.n EdHor Oa\:.. Petl!rson CIty. unel@r ot have a dinner meeting Tuesday, Trinity collegE!, Cambridll~" unj. I larch 1, 1879. T •• ''''.'' tlll•• ,b .,artl81;' a.lD. ,. It lanaclnc Editor . Vordi. flIlpu II wen a aU AP newl Edltortal .rn•••• r. In tbe CommoDI- Asst. CII. Edltot Phil O·Co .•nor Mallo on the conventions of the ito!. The sponsors are the &rtPlIItj d iNn Conler. ~tche.. A"It. Sports Edllor . Ho ..... le Gr~~nwald AATSP and MLA respectively. A college and Humanities IIcleIJ Chid Photocrapber . . B.1l Williamion ! ' IIEMBE. s _ by carrier in Iowa SUbscri-Pt-lo-n-r-.-t Wirephoto TeChnici an . . • Jay By tone report on the Sigma Delta Pi Public invited. :ri. At:DIT BUIEAU City. 25 .,,"11 WH'kl" or $8 ~r year In I convention will also be given. OF ad"ance: .Ix manU,.. l4.!~; U\ru DAILY lOW ':<; ADVEllTIMISG Ii'T FP CIIICULATIOS montla. $2:10. By mall In Iowa. f9 peT Buolne , "'anal" Ch~rlc. Goeldn.r -- PH.D. FRENCH READ~ II T, ______...... __~- -I y~ar: .1" month •. $!S . thrH' month •. Asst. BWllnu. ~!cr ... Jim Sommerville INTER NAT ION A L CLUB: amination will be given ra Classified lana,.> , . lI~x Nebrl he $3; .u other mall uhscrlpUon . liD party in honor of our February Jan. 21 , from 3 to 5 p.m., C a II 8 -2151 u ,.. •• a"" t. tin per year: Ihc n10nth, $!S.IO; three DArLY IOlfA 'ClR l.ATION STAFF fl M graduates will be held on Thurs- 221A, Schaeffer hall. Onjt:thdr! '''r Da'il I.... loy , :. I • •• 1&",- montla. $3.25. ClrculatJon M,r. . ... _ Robrrl Cronk M ------~~--- . ----. day, Jan. 21 , at 7:30 p.m. in the who sign the sheet posted ,clLlII4. nil ,River room or the Iowa Memorial room 307, Schaeffer hall b~ trl Union. A program of music of day, Jan. 19, will be admitted many lands, a brief business the examination. Next examirll.' .11'1 meeting, refreshmet:Jts and danc- tion the end of the secon,\ liliiii- ]5 OF:fiICIAL DAILY BULLETIN- in,g will be included. tel'. , " b4l -- . A CLASSICS DEP.u..... lea ALL FOREIGN STU 0 E N T S coffee hour will be held 01, who have. not. as y~t .completuJ e. a year, if it is a two person con- The comprehe, ive plan is ' , meet at 4:45 p.m. in the IlOI That the lIuh Cl'sity plans tlot 10 gc't caught bhort 011 fadlities, ab~ut·· melHods:"ot"'tjPl1roaC'It-' fontl· · .In volin' 00 the, I ~l!~E!f\ ' :~1 pos.ed tract; 'Ifnd e two' ~rsons make availal:1le to large g ·oups. All full- group. ___ chamber for instruc~i?ns. A iii ' 1 . , . . attitudes. chang, the Blue Cross compl e- less than $3000 a year or if it time employes ate ' eligible. This quet honoring the imtJates \'IIh, was eVI( ent III thl' plans snhlllllted to tht, bO6 . l't out, b ut t hey can be ('xpectrCt to c sizahle, a 1 o. ernment decide whether and how Heavy Vote N\'ces ary 'SU I" Fa 'r moo. Bit e discussion group Thursday, Jan. 19 announces compe In . of t .. . 1 ~ I . . . t I . 1 t "1 tl to hold a general election. The Al- A 75 per cent favorable vote \ year feJlowshl ps. StipendS "" Illce a 0t 0 mon. IS go.mg 0 )e r qUll' ( 0 pi OVll e le Jies, determined that Communists from all participating members is at 8 p.m. at the Catholic Student 800 are awarded for study lr1" wherewithal to educate increasing numb rs of ~tudents, it is good shall have no !Told on any new necessary to make any change in center. Refreshments and social chology, sociology and anlbrOlt . I Th Repo' rts Job Trends hour will follow. ogy to those who did 001' QOIIII to k'now t hat VI 0 fficinls ar on the job planning for the futl.1re. government. want to start with ateh program now m ef ect. e trate in the areas as underP . . . .' . ' . . . general election, internationally Blue Cross-Blue Shield represen- T And Ifdollf ofacldals run IIlto unexpected dlfflclilty 111 obtaJll· supervised, in which., they believp. tatiXes arc making an effort to With Iowa's noo-agricultural .- c1U:!illS~!f!t~~!!!U2~6 ~~~i~~ ~:;~~tto~Pl~~~liO~v:g~: s:: ~. • ing the bn Iy ncedc fUlIelS, we sligge t they present the com- that Ea~~ German hatred for it~ contac~ tveryone to gd his vole. Employment up 1.9 pel' cent for bel' to mid-October. On the other eering building at 7:15 p.m., Wed- graduate office, room 4, Old CIi parutive figures on money spent in Iowa fol' liqullI', co;metics, Communist ruler{j would close the Each staff'member was scot an the llrst 10 months o( 1953 over hand, farm machinery businesses nesday, J an. 20. itoI. The deadllne IS April 1. . tt tIl t ' door on them fOl'good. explanatory booklet and a card to the' l}me period of 1952, "]owa cut 1 150 workers from their pa y- cigarc e, amusemen anc. ec ura Ion. Th All' o· . t t . f'll out bef re th t t f the T d" f th lB' : th . • ... . e les are ~ In e~ on glv- I o. e s ar a . :e~ s 0 e new owa uSIn.ess rolls lD . e monthly period. Em- YOUNG RE;PUBLICArNS WJLL LYDIA C. ROBERTS G.....,. 109 no form of r\-,cognitlOn to the current.campalgn. About 1,000 of Dlgclst reports that comparative Jlloyment in retail trades, mining have a meetlJ1g Thursday at 7:30 ate fellowships of $12~ I East German Communist govern-. the 4,000 eligible persons ha~e re- figures show "a strong 1953 posi- and quarrying remained steady p.m. in room 221A Schaeffer hall. awarded to native Iow'anl' 1l)ent that tbey ~vouldn't ~ven turnec;l vole~ and the rest WIll be lion," whHe construction. transportation There will be a short business have been graduated from , . rp uses an agree to hold par.t of the meetings conta(!ted thIS week. However, the SUI mOllthly pub- and public utilities counted fewer meeting. Plans for next semester Iown university or coIle,e. New Farm r Su I PI at the Soviet EmQassy in East The proposed plan would ndd lication notes two weaknesses workers in October, the public In- will be discussed. plication forms are avallabll .' T E S ( Berlin. That... would have been a Blue" Shield and the "comprehen- which may be more than seasonal formation organ of the SUI 'bureau the Graduate oUice, room" C f 0 ase en' ale rl·"ICI·sm tiny recognition of a German gov- sive 70" Blue Cross plan. The in nalure appearing in the Octo- or business and economic research CONCERT BAND WILL GIVE Capitol. The deadline is Feb.I, Fal S ernment in East Berlin to which current university plan is the bel' labor market. The month had l'~porls. a concert Wednesday, Jan. 20, :1t ___ other countries sent ambassador. standard plan with no surgical fewer job openings than Septem- Observing that the Iowa meat B p.m. in the Iowa Memorial Un- DUP~lCATE BRIDGI 11, WASHINGTON (IP)- The Ei-. Ins tead, ~heyagl'eed 10 meet part benefits. Elth l' one or bot~ of the bel' in non-larm e?'lpl~yment, and production. trend closely parallels ion. Free tickets are available at be played every Su'nday .. senhower adminisltation offered a Bens?n sru~ the present pro- of th.e tll:ne 111 the. ~ome .of the proposed changes may go mto er- the number of active Job seekers, that in the nation as a whole, the the ' union lobby desk and at noon from 2 to 5:30 p.m, ~r plan Monday to use a billion dol- gram, if contmued, would cost so RUSSian high eOmtlllsslOner In East tect. • as well as workers filing their fh'st Digest points out that Iowa beef Whetstolles. For ad~ance reserva- River room of the Iowa MeIfI/I lars worth of {arm surpluses for ?'Iuc.h lhat taxpa?,c1'S would rebel Berlin. The h.igh commissioner is Woul~ Begin March 1. clait:ns for unemployment insur- production for the first 10 months tions call x2322. Union. Jorelgn aid, but the oUer did not In lune and posslbly .end all farm al.so the R,usslan ambassador, and. 1f voted ''In, th~ program wIn go ance, lncre~sed; of 1953 was 33.3 per cent greater ______----- ____-,- ___ ~ soften senate critics of the Presi- aid ;>rograrns. FlexJble supports. hls home IS also the embassy. Into effect MaDcn I, and all bene- Raise In Workers than in the same period of 1952. dent's proposal for flexible larm ?etween ~5 and 90 per cent of par- The ',RUSSians, for theil: part, fits will be availabl~ immediately Meat packing indus~jes adc;led On the other hand, pork produc- SUI's Hardware SGhool price supports. . Ity. he srud, WOUld. ! uture wouldn t agree to mee.t .m exc.ept for. care 1,100 workers from mld-Sepiem- lion in the state dropped 8.3 per Ia" prev~nt t~e mate~lllty ~or Opening the administration's s~rpluses by Jo.'~enng ~l'Jce Jncen~ four - powe~ control bUJldmg In which t~ere IS a filne-month walt- cent for the period. drive to get· a new farm program lives to productlon ~1. times of su:- We~t Berhn, lour-po.wer control ~n? perIOd. If members do not TV 6 'd Sh 5.3 per cent from the 1952 period. S Dat through congress, Secretary oj Ag- ~luses and ~Y raISI ng them III havmg broken down' m 1948. But Jom now they will not have an- (II anee OW Comparative 10-months rigurC.'j atur~ay Ir Ma,·ntenance _,' riculture Ezra Talt Benson tofd the lImes of scarcity. th~Y . did" agree t~. mcet in the other chan.ce until ,?ct. I, 1954. for the two years 'show alsO that a _ s~nate agriculture eo~ittee. lhat In ~O minutes of iI!!e~se and bUlldmg formerly used as con- ::'Ilue Shield proVlde~ Cor ~D to To Deserl'be Way' s Iowa department store sales rose EJsenhower ha.d a~o[lzed him to somellm~s ho We questionmg, Ihe trol headquarters. . . $200 toward lhe surgIcal Qill of slightly in 1953-up 0.3 pel' cent. Six reasons whY ' Satu~day is in- say the administration \~~uld pro- I secreto~) was challenged by three Thus be~an .t~~ word-SPhtltn.g. Ot Meet,'ng Cont':cf Electric powpr output went up 4.1 creasingly becothing Home Main- they spend more po;:e use of surplu~es to .str~Dgth- Republicans and three Demcorats The ?bJectJve of both Sides WSUI P"ROGRAM u per cent arid cement production tenance day for Amreican house- sa id. en t~c e.conomlcs of fnendly ~ut wns supported by two Repu~- eems to be to go. to the confer- rose 3.1 pel' cent, the Digest re- holders' were discussed Monda¥ at And increased ease of t countries.. hcans and one Dem~cl·at . ,?t.her ence on the defenSive, taking ca:-e ports. the Mid-Winter Hardware Man- tation has resu lted in JIIOI'I! Benson also disclosed that Jatest members of the committee w111 be not to lose f:round rather than In CALENDAR Two ways of meeting conflict ag nl ho 1 t SUI urban living in the natl()n!S tabulations showed his department given a chance to quiz the secre- any hope of gaining some. and how either approach may lead Farm Inc9me Up eme sc 0 a. urban areas. People te~d til has a record $5t~ billion invested lary Tuesday. Public Opinion a FacWIj to undesirable personality traits . Cash (arm income in Iowa ex-- A~lyzin g the: "do-it-yourself" suburban homes. and tlieiffDlt in surpluses under price su,pport Republican Sens. Millon Young The Allies hav~ been particu- Tu ..day. Jon •• r)' J9. 10M will be shown on a television guid- ceeded the tot;ll fQr the fil'st 10 trends' influence on the nation's take pride in tneir ap~aJKft programs. of North Dakota, Karl Mundt oj larly nervous Ie t Russia spring :;~g ~:~~'ni Cnap@L "'ance show, produced and kine- months of the preceding year by hardware business, PrOf. Wendell ol:fservep. • ":J To FereJp Aid outh Dakotll and Edward Thye of some proposal, whjcl'L would unset- 8:30 Reli.lou •. OrouP' at America scoped at SUI to be telecast Wed- 1.3 per cent while In the nation as • Smith, SUI marketing head, told Lastly, the increased t;I The billion surpluses would be Minnesota, and Democratic Sens. tIe publi~ opinion in West Ger- :;~ ~~~::~.• cF:~~;e nesd!ly at 10 a.m. over WOI-TV, a whole cash receipts from U,e 40 Iowa retailers that one ptinci- of recent years has made f disbursed in fOJ'eiao aid pro,rams Allen Ellender of Louisiana, Olin many, which so -far has displayed 10:00 Ne", . " Ames. sale of farm products declined pal reason is ' the shorter wor'k larger, thus inc1'easin, th,e during the next three years. Sup- Johnston of South Carolina a!1d great commOi. fp.Dse against th~ :~;~~ b~:r.B~~~:~~ Appearing in the show, which is Lead article in the January is- week of many Americans. home maintenance ' plies for,. the' propam would be Clyde Hoey of North Carolina told trick blandishments ol Russin's 11 :00 The Dl,lant LandY one of the current "Guideposts" sue of the Digest is "A Road to "Because of the wideipread 40- With his larger Ur'ken ftom Stl ! billion of surplus- ~en£On they did not believe llex- talk ~bout unification. Encourage- :: ~ ~g ~~::" J:rE~I~~r'. Desk ~er le s being p10duced at SUI. will Economic Disaster?", written by hour week you can see heads of often- has more es w.Q.ic h . Eisenbp').V er last week Ible supports would work. They ment on this point, however has II :45 The Slory 01 Surgery be Bemice Suskj, AI, CiCCI'O, .111. ; Lewis E. Wagner, research assis- households doing remodeling jobs house to do the work, r\r8lCut:J"ll . prOpOsed be scaleH off from com- said lower price supports would come both (rom the German ~re.ss g;~g- ~~~it~m lO~a~~~~: Allce Kemp, girls' counselor at tant in the bureau. and making repairs almost every- "captive labor supply mercial markets Jor suc.h uses as tend to drive farmers to produce and through the statement last 12 :30 N£wI Iowa City high school; and the The Iowa Business Digest is where you go on Saturdays," home," Smith remarked, the school lunch pl'oeram, disaster more rather than less in order to week by Bonn's minister of In- I~:~~ ~t;!te:c,;,e~~~n~. Rev. Alfred J. N. Henriksen, pastor mailed monthly to a list of Iowa Smith observed. Other trends to be dl6cUl... relief, aid to trienqly people and maintain a level of income. terior that Russia has made no 2:10 Let's Sing of the Unitarian church in Iow<\ businessmen. Other Interested per- Another reason lor the added the third annual • emerge.ncy sto::kpillng. J'.fonday's Favor RI&,Jd Controls proposal acceptable to any Ger- i;~ &.~·.e~:~~,'~ o~o~h~ Air City. Prnicipal juvenile roles in the sons can eet on the mailin, list activities in home worltshops is the in the Iowa Center fo, statement had the effect of iur- The Democratic critics contend- mans except the Communists. 3:00 Radio Child Study Club show are playcd by Univel slty simply by writing to the Univer- rising cost of labor. A third is the tion Study includ~ the ther clarlryj ng presidential Plpns ed there was onJ y one way to keep Alter that, t~,e hopelessness of ng ~~!".t Slar hlgb-schoo1 students Don Stillwell sity's Bureau of ~usiness and Eco- increased number ot sim,plified numbors of \Vome.n tor use of sealo!d of! surpluses. farmers prosperous and prevent been demonstrated, the Western 3:45 Serenade [n Blue and Jack Schwank, and Bill Vox- nomic Research in Iowa City, bw- 'pirodUlJts, "paints, for instance, creasing mechanization .Benson said ~ull detllils would be new surpluses - and that was by agreement witll' {'. Russia having fro ~e'::· TV~~n Rad.lo Hour man from Iowa City high schOOl. reau dlreetol' C. Woody Thompsoh that even I can apply without and home, the " buyers' laid before congress lat~r. adding rieid production controls to AUies can get ,.JleaCt with their 5:00 Children'. Hour The show, entitled "Two De- cxplained. making ser~us mistakes," Smith situation of 1954, artct The G'lP ~arm chief teed, off .Q n present high s~pports. defense knitting _ esp~cially the g;:g ~;;~ fenses.- Run or Fight," is dil'ect- • ~a id . ments in security h",~Q'«"'. the present farm program whIch But Sens. Clinton Anderson (D- establishment of the European De- ft :OO Din ner Hour ed by Lewin Go~f, assistant pl'O- ROOSEVELT SBEJ(S DIVOR,CE A more subtle development in protection of persons and ' features mandatory 90 per cent NMJ, former secretary of agricul-' tense Communttt arid other su- ~:~ r'~':':."or8ble Voice s and Events lessor in the university's television SANTI\ MONICA. CALIr.(JP)- recent years, he continued, is tile SUI faculty, Iowa parity price supports lor major ture; cdmmittee chairman Geor~e pranational agcncies in Europ2 7;30 New England Rennls •• nce teaching division. The scl'ipt was James Roosevelt sued Monday for effect of telev,ision- wlth more' leaders and eastern crops. Parity is a. standard for Aiken (R-Vt.) and B. B. Hic.ken- which have now been stall ed byf t:: ~~~~~·~o~al~~ant written by Berkley Forsythe, a decree of separate maintenance people staying home for lheir en- representatives measuring farm prICes, declOlred looper (R-[owa) lold Benson th,y last ditch hopes for some setlie- 9:3G B~hlnd the Headl ines G, Omaha, Neb., and R.obert Oes- from his ¥cQPd wi!-e, I\Q,?,ellc tcrtalnment and bccomlna more .I,ng the 25 Sessions , by la w to be fair to farmers in re- Iagreed with the president's pro- ment. : : :~ New. terling, G, Zelienople, Pa., is as- S c nne Ide r Roosevelt, ~ot'm er concerned about the comfort and schedule leading to MI,'UlIIJ"I' llQhlS lation to prices they pay. gram. 10:00 ~l'GNts o'i!r sistant director. nurse. appearance of their homes because iraduatlon Friday even1llf.

I • I Clij.:'.. : ()" ~e j m" ~ '.', . ~I~ Internalion,1 Center Shirley · Borgelt ToWed .J _ ~ 1-1 J ~ , _ Fetes Representatives Gerard Francis Engeimann I i i Of SUI Hous"lng Un"lts ~. and Mrs. Louis B. Borgelt, - , dill'S RUS H WEB. It SET TO RAVE COtTEE BOlla Da,venport, a~nounce the eng~ge- .' . All SU[ men students lnte~sted ~taff and (acuity md;ben in . ment oC thelr daughter, ~hlrley in joining a social fraternlty maY the d~p8rtments of IlpeeCb pathol- r Intemahonal Center entertained , to Mr. Gerard Francls En- "I t f th in! I b pe OJ)' audlolo... • zooloGV and w()oo epresentatives from SUI housln, ,elmann, son of' Mr. and Mrs. re .. 5 er or e orma rus - , 6.J, ow units at inf ItS d '" . I En I Da t riod in the fraternity af!alU of- men's physical education will be an orma ea un aJ Char es ge mann, venpor . fice at the office of student aUairs honored at a student- faculty coffee trom 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the The wedding will take place Men may register anytime for In~ today at. t p.m. in the Uni- center. This is thc second in a se- Feb. 27 at 10 a.m. at st. Joseph's formal rushin, the remainder or verli '1 library lounge. ~Ies of smaJl Informal teas to ,be Catholic church in Davenport. the semester abd for next semlS- -- eld this year for representa~l\'e Miss Borgelt attended Mar)'- ter. Second semester InfQrmal fUl!b Q""AaTET GIVES CONCEllT ~embers of tudenl Orgil!1fzatiOM crest collc,e, DaviCnport, and SUI week wlll be rrom Feb. '1 - 11. The Budapest Strinl Quartet dO get acquainted with foreIgn stu- 9plc of u 1 • 'repor~ from committee chairml'n Mrs. Ralph Shriner ill be in Radio stallon WSUI will present F F • T HUo, Hawall; Munlr AUabwerdl, speech by Mrs. MarcUS Bach at ~ t01 be ,given at the annual busin"ss charge of refreshments ~~ be serv- the program "Build, Therefore, or ore.gn ,wn Ba,dad, Iraq; William Ditta, !neeting of the National, Secre- " , , - ed at the close of the session. Your Own Wor.ldl" tonight at 7:30. " " Punjab, India; John Sirevaag, tary's club tonight at 7 in the main !. m"Ung of Cardinal counCil o( The program 15 the second in a Seeds for SaJonlka is th~ new Stavanger Norway and Hugo dinIng room of the Iowa Memotldl . , I 8~tt . Scouts today at 8 p.m. in Th~ a nginua 1 :;eeu'\t ~ °6?~ sCTies of 13 entitled "The New proj.cet ot the Younl Women's M U'fI 0 z, 0, Colum'bla, South Union, Colored sUdes on tlIe sub- , I:.qngJeliow SCRool gymnasium, ae- to a re stere adu n lr Englaud Renaissance." ChTistian association a d v I • 0 r Y America ' J' ect wl11 be shown ..Ii g t MG' C Scouting nnd to any other adults. board TI' ~h the pro'·e.... vc-- . . ' ~ n~ n 0 rs. enevleve arson., d' th This evenmg's program Is the . ,ro '.I ". a- ' Meml1crsbip 10 the Internatlon- A' dance Will be given lIy S.ra Ii~ ~4iive director of Cardinal mtereste m e program. story of the slavery question and table seeds II be coll~cted to ~ ~l club Is not limited to forelll: Dever , _No~th Liberty; Mr~. thy' " Co~c1I. the educational conflicts in 1~30- sent to SaJonlka, a small town 10 stJ1deots. .\ny Interested student Kabela Will play the , :rh~ camp will run five weeks, 18<10. cated In eastern Greece nea.r Com- may join by contacting the fo rei8'l1 . Committee "members t b~, )onge.$t period yet scheduled Professor Family The series was written and pro- munist torritory. stu

For this final clearance, all sales will be cosh and ollsal.s will DRYER be final. Charge accounh may be used for merchandise at regular prices. . ..

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• Michigan Stat snapped ]owa's / wrestling victory string at two here Monday night by edging the Hawkeyes, 15-14. Coach Dave McCuskey'S Hnwk­ ·Schlundt S~ores 47, eyes won four of eight matches and earned a draw in a fifth butl It wasn't enough as Michigan state, No.2 team In the Big Ten Breaks Ives' Re.cord ------.- and eiibth pla~ \ inner In the • NCAA tournamnet In 1953, picked BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (JP)-Don l------Haw kS SII IP InI Wee ken dS "0 n • up two falls for the mar,ln. Schlundt, Indiana university's 6- minutes during the game although ' , I 11 The Spartans, beaded by an toot-tO scoring machine, Monday coach Branch McCracke~ used 12 ' ) 1 • NAAU and two Ifig Ten cham- night snapped a Big Ten rccord 1. U. players. Bobby Leonard was Iowa's Hawkeyes didn't fare too-:------:-:- f pions, pulled off to a 1Ii-5 lead and wl1h a whopping 47 .points as ~he the Hoosiers' second-high scorer well in weekend sports activities Minnesota and ahead ot IndW!: • npgeared to be an easy winner Hoosiers downed OhlO State With with 16 points. -winning one wr.estling match, Iowa's Jim Norman won the tr~. when the Iowans ralUed to take ease 94-72. losing two fencing meets and one poline event and Bob Hazlett ,~ the last three matches. Iowa's Dick Ives set lhe old basketball game. ished first in tumbling. Winder Pulls Upaet Western conierel1ce s tan dar d Russ/·an Skate However, the Haw~ gymnas- Ferguson covered the two.lIII1 John Winder or Waterloo. 167- against Chicago In 1943 with 11 43- tics team finished second in a 9:15,6 but he trailed HOhll pound sophomore, turned in the point pecformance. T·tl D · t d triangular meet at Bloomington, Ashenfelder lind Charlie CallOZlG, • upset of the evening to start the In addition, Schlundt broke the I e ISpU e Ind., Iowa swimmers Buddy Lu- both of the New York Athldl: Hawks on their uphill battle when Indiana field house record of 36 .. cas and Lincoln HutTing grabbed clUb. ~ I he dumped the defending Big Ten points set by Purdue's Carl Mc- JAMESTOWN, N, Y.(JP}-The firsts in the AAU swimming meet . The fencers lost a pair of b king, Vito Perrone, 6-2. Nulty it! February 1952. On that president of the Amateur Skating and ,trackman Rich Ferguson fin- meets to Ohio State and 1~ WEnder trailed 2-0 In the early same ni.ght Schlundt scored 35 union of the United States said ished third in the Boston Knights here Saturday. The Q going but picked up a reversal late against the PW'due center. Monday Russia would not have of Columbus meet. topped Iowa, 14-13 and in the tirst period and another in Schlundt hit 16 field goals in 27 won the world speed skatiJlg , Coach Dave McCuskey's wrestl- won, 17-10. Ohio ?tate won - the second to forge ahead. shots Monday night and missed championships in J apan if Ameri- ers stopped Indiana, 20-8, for'their angular. mee~ WIth a 14-13 · It was Winder's third collegiate only two of ]7 free throWs. cans had competed. second win. John Winder posted over WLsconslll. v'ctory Wlthbut a defeat and the After he poured in 19 points in Richard T. Sherman of James- the Hawks' only fall In the 167- The Hawk ca"ers dropped a filth loss in two seatonS for Per- the fir,st quarter, Indiana had afttown told newspapermen the pound class. • 5.5 deciBTl.sio n to Minnesota fqr rone \1I/ho also took fourth place in 27-15 advantage, and Ohio State Americans may not have won the Lucas set a new AAU record in Lrs Ig en ass. the NCAA tournamel\t a year ago. wasn't in the ball game. It was championships themselves, but the 440 as he covered the distance I riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Leuer, Shlnl... Win (Dally Iowan Pboto by Jaok ,Davll) the sixth straight Big Ten victory hdidn't think, ththe jtussians would I1l 4:57.9, eeliosing- thc old mark of Travel RAPIDLYI , Another Hawkeye sophomore, IOWA'S JOHN WINDER, Waterloo sophomore, beats Mlchll'an s tate's Vito Perrone, Big Ten cham- for the defending champions, who ave. won CL. er, 4:58.7 set by Roger Wahs ot Iowa SAFELY I ECONOMICAWr.I Ken 4cuer at 177-pounds, and jun- pion, 6-2, In the 16'7-pound class aUhoua11 the Spartans won a 15·14 decision. Referee Paul Cameron are ranked No.3 nationally. Shll sm~rtmg under the State in 1950. Hurring, like Lucas RIDE THE 16r hlavyweight Streeter Shining loob on. Paul Ebert, Ohio State's star department s refusal to allow a New Zealander, won the 200- " fpllowed Winder's win with deci- --- center who is six Inches shorter and three skaters to fly to yard breaststroke in 2:13.3. II oro, Japan. at reducl{d ra~es In the gymnastics meet the sons to keep their individual rec- than Schlundt, missed 11 of]9 Iree the ~vents, Sherman said Hawks finished one point behind ords unblemished but neither throws and wound up with 20 Amencans could have taken . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ could gain the needed 1all to pro- points. His teammate John Miller 500 meter event in one, two, vide an Iowa victory. \ as hlgb 5corer for the losers with order. A fourth Hawkeye, Dick Govig, . 25 pOints. Boris Shilkov, who won the i 123-pound sophomore trom Britt Another heavy Saturday through !!ichiul1dt rested bnJy a couple of dividual championship in t where he won two p~cp titles be- Monday period, with four home basketball. ' nce of the Hawkeyes. Iowa, led four-race competition with Stephens (ore coming to Iowa, also stayed events and one away, faces Iowa Io wa's hasketball team is in ac- NCAA champion trampoliner . • d ff .463 pOints, raced the 500 meter I!!I unbeaten by easily decl~ioning IIthleUc ~eams. tlon in. the on}y road co~test Bob Hazlett, defeated Indiana and Wisconsin Hoi S0 in 45.4 seconds. "'on 'Phillips of Michigan ~tate Here IS the homc schedule: the perIod - the game With PIIl"-. Oth R . f" b d d ~LO-2 ;:, , Saturday, 2 p.m.: Chicago fenc- due at Lafayette Saturday, second lost II close one to Mmnesota last S'· t er USSlBns m1S e secon, ,. . T~ other Iowa 50 homores Ing and Michigan State g~mna s!ics successive game on t?e opponents' ,,:,ee,k. , ,. par ans 57 .53 ~~~~~. fifth an~ eighth in total - JANUARY SPECIAL tosted their first deteafs of the Satur~ay, .7:30 p.m.: Michigan court after fou: straight at home. LikeWIse the sW lmmmg team ' She r man pointed out that dual campaign. State sWlmmmg. . The gy~nastlc.s meet with ~he will open its home Big Ten dual EA$T LANSING, Mich. (,4» Olympic champ Ken Henry of Reduced up to Jenkinson TaIte Defeat Monday, 8 p.m.. Northwestern Spartans IS the first home appear- meet schedule against powerful Wisconsin took an early lead, then Ohlcago skated the 500 meter SPORT , Harlan Jenkinson, also a Water. 2:04 of the Iirst perIod. DeMarco Beats WI'lson Michigan State. The Spartans lought qff a Michiagn State come- course in 43.2 seconds in 1952 and 11)0 sophomore, dropped a tough Sinatiinos captured the NAAU have beaten Illinois, 61-32, and back drive to win a low-scoring has bettered Shilkov's mark sev- COATS 50cro 6-2 decision to Bob Hoke, who won 136-pound title last year as a In Welterweight ~ut Wisconsin, 66-27. Big Ten basketball game Monday eral times since. the Big Ten title a year ago and freshman and is rated one of the . Iowa swimmers competed un- night, 57-53, John We.rket an~ Pat cbpped the NAAU 145-poun(l top sophomores in the nation. BOSTON (,4>}-Tough Tony attached 1'n the Iowa A.A.U. meet Wiscohsin now has a 3-3 c:onfer- mara of Mmneapoils both excel- crown In 1951. Jenkinson had pre- Marco scored his ninth last Saturday and placed well. ence record. It w~s the third loss lent at 500 meters and could have viously scored impressIve wins MSC Fall t:iumph in ~. cam.paign for na- Ross Lucas set a new record In l/-galnst only one conference vic- taken. the number two and th~ee over Wisconsin's undefellted cap- That faU plus a second by Ed tlonal recogOitlon 10 the welter- the 440-yard freestyle and Bill tory forrMichigan State. spots 10 the event, Sherman said. tain, Jerry Seebcr of Osage, and C.as.alicchio.at l.37-pounds gave thc weight boxing ranks Monday night Kieck won the d.i ving while P 1M' th 6 r t 711 McNamara, Sherman said, has to th t · ' au orL ow, e - 00, 12- k t d th I 500 t f t the 147-pound Big Ten champ, VIS I rs elr VIC ory. WIth an unanimous 10-round de- Iowans won three second plaocs In h Wi . n t umpe d' 5 q e e, me ers as as Ch I P k f lndi n C li hi d L R H cision over leiiow Bostonian WiJ- and fourteen lesser spots I laC . ts$COt nSllD deeth erB, Pd In Shilkov's 2:22.3. TheM~ olher an~o Hawk soph toaa. taste his his vic~~o~e im in five minutes e~ even.an~ bur Wllson.. In . Bo~ton Garden. The fencers will try to. get in ing.p~ o~ e a~~~~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~r~~~~~~~~~~~~' ~irst defeat was Wenceslaus Pec- Iowan Laurence Gertsma and DeMarco had LO protect a bad wltl column by beating Chi- Guard Ron Weisner, who made ~ ~ ,I movsky, Cresco 130.pound~r, who Bill rambo fought to a scoreless er.e cut for the last five rounds to cago. The Hawkeyes have lost 10 of his points on free throws, STARTS TODAY ~ I' J:'i. L. ~ .] ON WIDE SCREEN ~ was thrown by Jim Sinadmos In draw at 147 pounds, Wln. fairly close ones to Notre Dame, contribllted 11\ to the Wisconsin .. I l. , . --. Ohio State and Wisconsin. cause. The basketball game with Forward Julius McCoy and A ONE WAY TRIP FROM HERE HILARITY! .' ·Iowa Against Minnesota-Basketball Expressions Northwestern at home Monday ,ual'd Al Ferrari both made 16 ,,' TO . ~ close tirst:sffim! r play. ~F:ldJFN¥.~!l !?tate .• " • ' ~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~",--~ ; 11 ~ W"isconsm had a comfortable ~ " , nine-poin~ cusl\ion at the half, Hel' boiler's fUll of whiskey, Cage Scores leading 32-23. In the third quarter, and lzer·whistle's (llways wet, MSC made 12 points to 1Ive for the as she takes you on the wildest ri..1 low" Te,eh ... 73. Nortll Dakota Slate 6~ Badgers and cut the Wisconsin u,e Davld lon 87. Vlr,lnla Toob 6~ , lead to 37-35. you've ever taken yet! Tul.ne fiR, o"nu.to 6L Michigan State took command " ' WI •• onlln ~7, Mlcbl,an State [,3 briefly by a 40-39 margin midway 1 points on free Cornell n, Grtnnell Ii6 throws until time ran out.

-DOORS OPEN l :lr...- "POSITIVELY ENDS I ~ i ~ ~ N0Yf WEDNESDAY cience. t.d iii I Ansco Colorl tes at WIDE SCREEN Musical Spedade wit~ atural .. M-G·M's )} 4

(Dan,. Jowan Pholo by Bob Ito.en.) , , . OF THE VARIED EXPRESSIONS, evIdent In tbe above photocraph, Chuck JarDAcfn's appears to to., i be tbe rla'hl ODe for the Hawk!! dropped their first game of the conference season to Minnesota Sat­ Extra La_ urda, DIeM, 59-55. Also pictured are Minnesota's Dick Garmaker, riCbt, and Bill S~Dovtch and Red Incllll Iowa'. 8lll Lo,an. • Lucky 1

"Doors 9pen 'I:15-9:45"

Keenan WYN N • Bobby VAN ~l~[P James WHITMORE· Kurt KASZNAR -ENDS COLE PORTER N1!lW YORK (Al') - Michigan • mURSDAV" State and Kansas have completed Most recent visitor to Ames, to lOW SONGS ~han,es in foo tball's annual mld- talk about the IQwa State position t FIRST RUN HITf • winter shuffle but there are stlli vacated by Emmett (Abe) Stuber almost a dozen colleges in the was Forest W. England, head market for a head coach. coach at Arkansas State college. There ar~ jobs open at Pennsyl- Others jnterviewed in recent days vania, Minnesota, Texas A&M, were Charles Purvis, backfield , Iowa State; MMquette, Idaho, coach at IIlinoLs, Trevor Rees, , North Carolina Stllte, Toledo East bead coach and athletic dirfctor ENDS : ,TeXas State and William Pe~n of at Kent State in . Ohio, and Vic MERLE OBERON TONITE 10wa. Defrancesca 01 , Western Illinois • AFFAIR IN MoNTE CARLO A shitt at Michigan State was In addition, Indiana aide Bob CO"lpleted when "'Hugh (Duff) Fitch, Tem)fle s Al KawaI, Lloyd paugherty was promoted from an Holllnlsworth of ~u sta vu s 1\do)­ Ustatant 10 head ,coach when P?US ~nd form~r Mlnneso ~an Ber­ 'Clarence (Blggle) Munn advanced r-le J'lIerllHln ~eportedJy are 'bt!~nr in t~e athletic dlrectorsblp. e ed by the Iowa, S,ate . ~elechon Charles V. ',:ather, who hadn't committee, evell ai»Plied for the job, WU -.-JE-.-'C-E- SI-G-N- S- ~lred by Kansas to succeed Jules CHICAGO (A:» I~ '.BUly V. -SIkes, who resigaed. slined fils 1954 contract Monday Th~ Ieadin, candidate at Mln- and general n!~n ager Frank Lane !i~ta , appears" to be c;;eor,e of the Chicl1go White -Sol' "aid ~he (Butch) lfash. an usiftant at littJe--fl!tty "betomes on e of the' - MinnelOta stn~ 11147. ' Michiptr ighestJlaid pitchers in the club's Slate end coal$ Earle Edwards; IUalorf." John RonlJlg( Utah State coach -r---:--".....------L---.!....-, and former director of the Minne­ ,ota backfield; ,and 14iIt 'Bruhn, ,Jlne coaen at Waconain,)a!e the others most frequently mentioned. I, " LIsle. Blackbqrn's departure . ,from Marquette hu left backfield .' eoaeh George Terlep .. his 10111. I ~al sui~uor. However! the word ~ that Notre Dame alSJBtant Ter­ IT_;...~ ... ~~~~~ _PLUS -I ,ry brenllan, a bIeh·.tepplng back 'NOSTRADAMUS ~the Irlsb and successful scho­ n WAS IRUTAL ••• , c coach in the Chicago area, SAYS SO' .. ~d Kebosha. Wis., high school ••'_nt ... ~ach Chuck Jack which also are ~1n1 coDJ1dered. I . ::::~~~ , LOmoy WElDoN r I . . frRE DAILY IOWAN-IClwa ell , Ia.-Tad.,. Jan. {9. 195'-P~e , n Triplets To Celebrate $th Birthday 1Educafion Boar'd Defers ' ~E~ !~~~) ~~r~~. !u~~c;eS Gi~en Cor_n_ M_is_"- Users · Piers who operate the Fazel Bro... The three were eommHted to F. Riley set appeal bonds at r y a ns jgrain warehouse at Perry rcceiv-Ithe custody of U.S. Marshal Ro- 5.000 lor cach o{ the brothers . S U I DO r m I t O • i • ed prison sentences of two years land Waltel' pending an eflort ll..'V 1 . Unable to 1urnish the higher and fines of $5.000 each in Ied- their attorney. L. H. Doran 01 bonds imml"diately. the brothers The state board of education, ------eral court here Monday on chargef!; Boone to raise an appcal boOd. ,· w e being held at a late hour which last weekend heard a re- wouJd eventually pay for lhem- of converting government-owned Federal judge William F. RlIe¥. in' the U.S. mars{lal's otfice here. view of the present and future selves. However, increased enroll- corn to their own use. In addition who imposed sentence, fixed the boran indicated he plarl.lled to dormitory needs of SUI, has tem- ment will also mean blg expendi- their company was [ined 15,000. bond at $20.000, the total of the appeal their conviction . and sen- "tl .Eight straight years of straight porarily deferred action on three tures for classroom buildings and The Fazel brothers are Ro.v. fines agai!Ult the defendants an? tences to the U.S. circuit court .~ - "A" grades - such is the scholas- proposed dormitorY projects here. equipment. 42, Dwight, 41, and Earl. 39. their fIrm. Federal Judge William Qt ap'pc¥I.s. I t(c recotp of ~ohn C. Fenton, SUI. The board. meetlng in Ames Ir;:===:.:z::======;.:=;:;:;=====::;..;:..:.======::....:======::;::=?====:::==;- M~, Iowa City, who will lJlake the Friday, decided to give further respohs{l for the 21 new members consideration to the proposed pro- 0'( Phi .Beta Kappa \It the scholas- jects at its February.. meeting. tic honorary society's iniUatlon SUI seeks appro\'al> for an addi- l,n baTjquel'tonight. ' tion to Hillcrest d01"mitory with ~m 'To 'find a mark lower than "A" 250 beds at an estimated cost ot _('I on ~hi's stud~nt's record, one must $875,000, a new dormitory for wo- go ' ~Qclt, to Iowa Cit~ JunJor high men with 600 bells and dining fa- '" where renton received t.wo "G's" ciJifies at an estimated cost of nile . If. "':"'the equivalent of "B's" 1n the $2.900,000, and remodeling and rIce ,1 eighth fJ'ade. modernizing Quadrangle dormi- DIll, "I' • Thou,h' he led his Iowa City tory at an estimated cost of $204.-I';::;;;:;;::;;:::::;::;:=:;;;;;;:;::;:======::;==~:::======:::;=:::~j::=;;::;::::;;:::;::;:==;;:::;;:::.. letlc 1 hleh school classmates in a tie 000. Sewing · Instruction "~to. For sole - Us~ 11;" with three oLAer bQys (June. 1949 The report pointed out that Ij",.------....J,1 ------"";;;"'---- WA:NTf.P: IMw wrew an. Junk&. PbClne I I-til}. :: n~~r ;c~~l~.s_~~s~~gl~;;:-;' ~:a~~~ ~~~~~.s~:~~~~~~.a~fe~O~c:nI~~~e!~ ~.. ~;;-::.:·.-.1:: ::~: SEW1NC. Dial '04281. ~.:~c:z !eAoni. Mlm1 Ym& = I.,. iiHCX .-door. Good condiUon. Coil t !Tis • nalph ASch!l"br~nner, the seh~ol'!' and that there is "incrcasing pres- FI Ila 15(1 rd Wonted RidmWonted ~ aft.e~ S. osin I -I I\~mln~tratlve' assistant) J 0 h n sure from parents Cor housing their v. " ••... -•• - pel' wo _,;..-____ 'tri- FeJlton was qot a booll:worm. sons and da-I"'hters jn university ~ Ila:,. .... _._. 21(1 per word LET us TrIM« your fumltW', ..,.,17 R1PER want.ed: Leavln, about Feb. 1. Apartment For Rent win 1 ,. r ...an n.t. b Ja." D ..... ) .... Ou MOD&h SIc per wor4 with our modem equlpJMnI 10 you lor callfornl~ via Soutbern fOllte. __..;.._;.;;.;..;.;..;=...;.....;;..;;.;....;.=-=- __ ,3-S..-,. AWMe A THREE WAY BIRTHDAY celebration Is In store today tor tile operated dormitories." lIIlalm -'-"ba 51c n"w home. Moher Brol. Trander. Dial Shiite d.rlvinc and ,8' ex_so Reler- 3 ROOl\1 furni shed a",rlmenl PrivalAl - '. He went out for basketball. trlflets or Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Brecht, 317 S. Doell'e 8t. The ebU- SUI o!I.icials estimated that 2,367 1IJII C rce 86M. .nee. bc-han~. Call 1·3514. ' wih and en!ranee. Phon. ft02 . .~~ " baseball and fOlltb;lll, capll\inlng tlren (lett to rlcht) PauUne, Ka1hJene and Mlcbul, were born in addlti.onal bed s in university 0 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY Baby Sitting Help Won--d oil.wuATE .Iu~t and wife wante.tt.; his school's eleven in his !enior Mercy hospital In 1949. dormItories wllJ be needed by 1956 De insertion._._ .. _..... 98c per -- 'w lJve In furnJ.1Iect apartment hi bdme -''''0-. A"tive also ill' ot"er school ___ IlIId 3,107 by 1970. The university Five insertions per month. rAKE C"JU: of ehUd.ren In my home. and tlz mew for home - ~t and , -- ' J,,"' .,. .. ""'r insertion 8Bc per lncb 318 S Jo~n son DIal 1-11$1 SIVUAL board job openln .. be,lnnm. board P'RU - wonderful f.cUIU~ and organizations and president of hi.s TId would need to spend about S13 - a-- .•• - .•. ' .• Meond ~m .._. Apply now. Relc\l'a con4l"onl. call },frl. Miller. '-171' for \lith school sophomore class, he ".p ets Turn 5 To oy. "5,000 on dormitories and dlnl~g Ten insertions .per month, and Jill PlaytcbDol. Dial 1-lIII0. Cale. - further informaUon. was chosen as a Nlle ~innick , lacilities by 196~. per inIIertion ...... 80c per ' Robin Nunery IIchoIIL NUOWI Man or 'Woman lit on .. to tau ------scholar at SUI _ an annual "in ' Ted McCarrell. SUI's registrar. Daily insertions durin, month, Phone II-nl2 clayl,.. cate of ~8Ub1lohed cUltomera In ~ Wl)o D~ It memorl'am" award made on the lorecast a sharp increase in enroJl- per insertlon ...... 7Oc per inch )/ !~~ Sl~~lnfor~!!..mo\a ~~~I~,"..: M T II Ab t T · . v"r ...... ~ • ... ~'"'u. uvuu ....._- RADIO AND TV ... 1". and utvlee J'{clt basis 'o~ athletic achieVement, om e S ment in the next few years. He 4191 .llUnC 1a my home. Pbone ImmecllateJy. No Inve5tl1\.nt. Wrtte J. .. up.,.11 delivery. Woodbum Radio. scholarship and social responsibil- au "0 predicted that the number of slu- Watkins Co .• D-K. Winona. Minn. I.:.'_~_~~_I_. ______ilr: By DICit SOLOWA"J . -- dents would rise from lfle 7.641 Milcellaneoul For Sal. IKtaTl:!l lharacd - H~Ir-lYe Loan - tot the university he added Uni- Celebrating birthdays is an tor hl91 including speaking. she studenUi !registered last fall to .10.- Rooms For Rent 1 8~ S . Du u~ . ' ? v~rslty Merit scholarships to hi~ everyday occurence in American said. 300 by 1956 and 12 ,000 by 1970. PARAKEETS. Dial 8-~7. ELECTROLUX c'eaner .. )eo and III!rVlce . . achievement awards d\1rin, his homes, but tor Mr. and Mrs. WIl- On the other hand the boy The proposed dormitories y.rould ROOM: Graduate 0. bu.lne.. woman. . ' L . H . Ebel. bondecl tepre.enl,atlve. i. sophOmore 8J111 junior year/!. won Uam Brecht, 317 S' " Dodge st.. isn·t completely disassociated with be built with revenue bonds Md ~k::~~nl~~m~peo:~.. e ~I 8821. • ~~~l~~:'rT e~~~ l'fr'ee :::!~:: p 9ne 7SSt. • is trosh, numeral in basketball this custom takes on a threcloJ6 female gender for he has named Buecble at 1101. ROOMS with board - on b ... line. Bo)'"l . • lne only 80 per cot'. Publl.her bills you wWNG. appUonee repalrtn,. tete\'\llon and became active in 'Phi Kappa p' urpose. his tropical fish after his "h'~ M. I --- - Dlnl 8203 . diet lubKdpUon I rU. Call Nick Nlcho- and radio len'lce. Jackson (,Ieettlc. ~ .. Pamme I 10 Union laS. ellt. u.. after' p.m. ~\ .,PSi ~ocial fraternity. Today is the fifth birthday of friend, IzabeJle. ISS S Call MDry P~i~ANT ROOM-W~.t tide. Phone l~ REMlNOTON P~rt.ible Typewriter. , H1S straight "A" 'wOjk as a uni- the Brecht's triplets, Kathlene, Claimed Brother Tied Him S · u ' ,D1al 1-38eO-Betly Norman . Ignition ' versity freshman brought young Pauline and Michael. The Brecht's "In a doctors office one day," .erv.ce manager ROOMS tor ..... duate women. Phone BUmS. DIal 2"2-.------C~RBURETORS Fenton the John H. &,igg~Phi Eta also have artother child. Dennis. Mrs. Brecht recalled, "talkativt! . R~~~is . 214 N. CopIlOI. GENERATORS STARTERS l(i ~Sigma bronze ,Plaque, awarded by 10. The triplets were born in Michael proceeded to tell people Miss Violet Pammel, formerlY O- OUBLE - f I hed '1 V T:~rf.~ . ~~~::f~~t:l~!r:-H~n ~~:. Briggs & Stratton Motors ~\\: the national honorary soci,ety for Mercy hospital in 1949 and at the in the crowded waiting room that 01 Ames. has succeeded Mrs. Nell Typing room. urn s ... en. e:ry lee. Phone SeG3. ~ \ sophomo e st\.u:\ents in m~mory of time weighed a total of J 1 pounds his older brother Dennis lies and Alderman as manager oC the Iowa clore In. DIal 8-Zm. ____=-::-::--:__--- __----- 'YWAMID SEWVICES '~ Professor Bdggs. whO taught po- 4 ollnces. gags him to keep him Quiet. W , Memorial Uti ion clining service. fYPING. '.~.tI_ ROOM tor und"rll".duate man. Close In. PARAKEETS. Dial '~M3. 621 S. Dubuque Dial 5723 !,l..litical science at Iowa from 1918 to Mrs. Brecht &ald they have been of coul-se laughed at thIs," she Miss Pammel .was manager ot l'RESIS and manus~rlpt typlnl. _p_)I_on_c_8-_2_~tI_.______1952. quite fortunate as the children, said, "until one nIght we went up the Chilton Lndles club. Boston, eneed. accurate. and fast service. ROOM for r"nt. 123 N. DII~~ . 8-2475. I: Seldom Octurs unlike the pt'overbial intant to the boy's room and sure enough ,Mass .• for the past 25 years and 8.15jl2. __ ROOMS _ rrnduate llud"nta. Phone . According to university officials, siept d~ring the night. and hRv~ there he was all bouna up." prior to that was connected wUh THESIS - Manuscript t)lpln,. 9202. ~574. MAN OVER 40 TYPEWRITERS a ,four-year straight "N' ret!ord is never all taken HI at the same For his birthday Michael said Ihe Cosmos club. Washln4lton• D.C 'n'l'lNG. 'l'M.1s and manuaerlpl. Work __ • Rentals 1IIAke ~.OOO and more In the next 5 , . Repairs achieved at SUI on ah average ot time. he wanted a blue summer cap in She retired from club fllllranteosor- . IN MINUTES Paid VaeaUons. This Is' a per­ ~Jlhhe' ...'l,.ibi:~al ; ~arning .and£'q- S'ugge Ie· wants h,l.s , own clothe~ and de- ed by the Johnson cou t.;y' "''''1''';< manent position. JrticIWReSPQnslbilit,:':' · ',. "', S ompromlse mands that they be dl!terent from of Americans tor Democratic FEDERJ\lJ J1jeW /m.itiJl~ii .t'ill' n;I~et at, 4:45 , th~ others," ~he said. . tion, to be held at the Elk!! dub, ,DISCOUNT CORP. ELDON MILLER, INC, P;TI): tn: tile ho~e . eh~m.~r Of Old To' If they wlSh to discuss somc- Jan. 3,0. '. 130t,'. B. CUnton Dial 8·3661 Iowa City, lows ~~llltol,;· tor ~~ucti9ri.9 , prior to 8rl·cker Proposal ~hmg. among themselves and keee Nathan, wno Is chairman ot the th~ , jhi.tjlitlon at 6.• ElecUbns ill to It from Mr. Brecht and myself, executive committee ot ADA wa.s l------·------·...,.... ~( " Beta Kappa ~re ' lieI'd ' t~' ice 'WASHI'N(}TON (JP)-Sen. Wi:- she e:cplained. "They attempt to wartime planning chief of ih~ war y.. aJ:ly , ..", Ham F. Knowland eR-Calif.) sald spell It out. :rhls, ot course. they d r b d At ent he is 1", ,, ' Liat of 'Na:mu Monday senate GOP leaders have picked up from adults attempting PhfOductlontj. oar : . prlteisng ,.,.. 0 ti, f C ....,·'. Other' iniUates ' include:. Fred E. work ed" out a newapproac h" h eo.t k eep thOtngs f rom th"em, sh e ea . t 0 a rm 0 on~u e",vn. - M;rJ~l)au, M31 :Jirkon;' VirJi"llia M. hopes ·may compromise the (lght said. mtl~kets lor the dinru!r . COlt '2 Nilderson A4 Bu. rlin"'on' John S over a proposal by Sen. John W. Anythjng purchased for O:'le d 'I bl f ADA ..... - , , ' lI", • \ t b h d t U Mr an are avru a e. rom ...em- t. lIIi'Tnt""" Cedat Rapieaqlle alternattve preViously suggested to German rearmament into the Big l&ems lor h,o~hol..... C#t L2,' :'relleve the concern of a good Four foreign ministers conference In and allow us to .rn 1M­ Furniture? ~, many people that there ~ught be openJ.ng n.ext Monday. Ney.r propa- we are a FrJendly Pharma.cy­ ~atlcy A. Ryden, A:4, a loop-hole whereby treabes might gands posters went up in Soviet- Son~a L. Goering. A4, amend the Constitution." run Efst Berlin demanding that DRUG guOp John B. Imh, M2. Wasb.- ~ "Thl.s formula closes that door," the fowlIlI ministers "put an end m For these and dozeni ' D,. C.; .and ~ames H. Van he declared. "If It wefe adopted to the re-mllitarization" of the . ~wan.ee, .Ill. ttJere no ~onger cou,ld be any ~oubt B... on~"6~ed~er~al~R~e~p~I~lb~I~.lc:._ --: __-...!~~~~!!!"'.!!!!~~~~~~ of other bargains, r~ad '. ---' that the ConstitutIOn is supreme _ ~bh.· . PjR~I,.ms ~;~~em~~." tr~aty or executive 'i ~'''f Bricker has s'Qught to push DAltlY ,", 1 •- I:~'t:ri'., ,.. T qlcl through congress . an amendment Pu ,,"trO , . wblch. would declare that no " .. J.,: . " StJ~ . Ptol~iO', treaty can overripe the Constitu- , tlon or d9mestic law. In addition. CLASSIFJEPS "': . !hp'~'r~ '.st~.r~ \e.ft - o·V e r ~t woulg provide that congrl)ss &loi! is Idn~Ior; 'Problem .for pub- could "regulate" executive agree- ~ ',!latin, --t'staWi'shme'nts, .. ·>pto!. ments. ' "'ax~_u,4' It' .Pow.e)t· ot : ~e ~ygiene Eisephower qall said that he is .• ~ ' preventative , ~~Udne ¥- opposed to any' amendment whicb . J:I't,f.tn~bI, \O~ . m~s of the would hamper his condu.ct o~ for- TELL DA(;WCX)[) I'M Shi1~p-., ~lub iM~ntiay night ·at e~.n alfairs. : HaME WITH A CO.LD, #ill" : J~rf.~~n .:, h~t~. ~..... " ~ t<:.nowl~nd said the proposed TOO, BUT ~E~S lD..tfPP}:.nI -'· p\~at" '. o~t~ , store,~ ' .s.ubstltute w1l1 be laid before the WORK TO B.E DONE' 1il,O~ " ft:~h v!,.~ab!~: : m~y be st;Jlale Repuplican policy commlt­ . ..., ;tl. uiicooJt~ t~ ·. paV.6hs, Po.w- lee today. He said. however, tha ell, -sa4t " .' , • it would not be the "last word" in .; ~ 'said- Pl:l~c: ' ~a)'n, 'Pla~B attempts to com~romise with I\.I'~ 'j"ontrol1~~ "by" the "t4,!,e I de- Brlclrer and others who hold like pa~in~Jii' Df airltultur~ whlen' is vjews. ' ~\tl~~g . dp, ftt ~ ~~r80nneI" to jive .'The Cali torn ian said that ex- 1Sit~,r i!lB,P.e«t1ons," . {. ecutive departments are study~ng .~~., R.em,~,rkS , by , cu~tC?mer~ ,abont lh~ proposal "and I believe they , ublle- eating elttl\b1i~bmenta are are giving it favorable considera­ ~n " bas¢. on ,service, appear- tion." ~ce :Q.t :. ~alt6t,~. , ~d lo.oks _of ~' l Powell slid. .· .' ~"' ~arkl ' .WHO ol~ .: b,ade,' ~ he ht, National Bank .~\d; , on th," basipnatead CIt gen- nil' 'I R- r. d d WITH OLD.FASHIONED. I era~ .'~~i'ttli . atarld_rd.. ,-. ~I .Icla I , .-.:we e I :", 1l6w~veTi ,"lIealth edU~Uoll is I . DRYCLfAN/NG ONLY thel 1,1(. btoblen( to'd;y" he said. All of!lcers and <;ilrllttors ot the SURFACE DUST IS IfMOVED (,·.lrtl~ Publ,IC . health , ofUQbl First National bank were re-elect­ Ia , -.h~:JC~ ihe' {lty:c:oifncll better ed. at the annual stockbolders . "MUIIOl'S th!l,.",h It"a ..ft''' · ;~~~trred. _.ida health n~; Ppw~ meeti!l. held by the bank. • actl ... a..vo. ),our ,4, ...,. .. wit'h " · .It - ~aid~ Ite ,liJoli6 ' ~ikM' 1ar 'edu- ' WUlls W. Mercer will continue • coshmt,. .• nt ..ih '11I.,h Oll.t!.· _ ~;I~~ m.w.,etnent ,and la~nr 'to be chairrhan Of. the board. Nor- ,lIlono, thon nor It.fo,. , ...IIt" , to them to under.tand mati B. ShaIfer wlll aga'n serve as , , .' oJ, h,alth problems. pres4dent, Other oUicers to .be re­ anho~rte~ il,iat " repre- elected were Thomas Farrell, ex- DAVIS ~ ..hlt.tit;.. froin th~ Ebalneer'l, ecut).ve vlce·presldent, H. Clark 1 ,5. Dubuque Be ,.• P~ted to sup. Houahton, vice-president, David L. - _. (!/('avrcl,: Cjll w'omen Voter< Stachl, cashier. Lester Bock, trust 218 Washington to attain a city Qlficer. and Thomas J. O'Brien, as- E. council. .. slatant cllhier.

, I " ". , I I ~ Pan &-TII1t DAlLY IOWAN-lo- City, Ia_TuH., Jaa. tt, 185( • Music Warms ~ew Hos Board- Sees SUI, Audio.;Visual Panel Ro.sf City's Purchasing Plan /IS~ as Section Scives Citizens $4,OOQ Of Atomic Proiect Members of tbe state board of lowa City's eentralil.ed purchas------­ education Sunday gave indications Prot. John Ross Winnie, chief, ' : ing program, begun in AUfust' lbusy at least one full day a week. lhat SUI and Iowa State college of television ,production at SUI, involving work beiog d ~ n e ~Y J951, has sa'"ed local taxpayers Now only one day a month is re­ would eventually receive permis- has been namcd chairman of a those seh~ols which h~ve pIOneered about $4,000 during the past twO qulred to send out payments, ·Mey- I . . panel discussion at the annual eon~ ill educational televiSIon. These lni years, a research report by an SUI /ers' report showed. sion to take part In a seven-uOi- vention of the departments of elude Western Reserve univel;sjtY,i student shows.. All requests for new tires are lIersity "eosmotr on" construction audio-visual instruction oC the Na~ Cleveland; Michigan State college, Under the plan, gasoline, 011 and now brought to Roan. who asks and research project. tional Education association, to be University of Michigan, SUI, 101'{8 tires .are purchased in wholesale jdealers for bids. Formerly, the quantities. The report was com- city council approved the pur­ Scientists and administrative of- held in Chicago, Mar. 2 through 6. State college and Iowa St ~te plied by Robert E. Meyers, 24, a chascs. The city-manager form of ficials from the universities fcel The panel, on "Using 'relevision 'reac?el'S college; The latter t~ree · t tl · for Systematic Instruction" will are lI1eluded In the Iowa Joint graduate student in public admin- Igovernment was approved by vot­ t h a t b y b and 109 age 1cr In a non- . .' . t Ed t' a1 T I' istration. City Manager Peter Roan ers in April, 1951. , . .' . discuss the possibihhes of devcI~ Commit ee on uca Ion e e- plac~d the pv.rchaslng plan in op-, No additional help was required profit orgamzatlOn they Will be oping television instructton for usc vision. . erahon. 10 carry ollt the centralized plan. eligible to receive Atomic Energy by elementar,y and secondary Other panel me\TIbers scheduled Meyel'S said buying in Quanti- The city weigh mast serves as al­ commission funds to build the schools a nd adult education to appear wit h Winnie Incl~de tics. saved the city five cents a Itendant at the city stalion. giant atom smasher. groups, Winnie says. "The aims in Lawrence McCune, Michigan State gallon on gasoline, 10 per Quart on Board members favor thl! pro- television," he says, "do not differ ollege; Hazen Schumather, Uoi­ oil and 31 per cent on tires. Beforc jcct but took no ' action at their substantially from those in any versity at Michigan; Richard -11. the plan went into effect, city de­ County Polio Drive meeting in Ames last week because othel· aspect of educational pro~ Bell, Arizona State college; BlIr­ partment heads p~d busincss state Officials want to be sure that grams and services. clay Leathem, Wes tern Reserve ol·ound to as many as 10 local ser­ Nets $717; 1954 no "state money" will be used in "Through televisioll, universities university, and William H. King:ol vice stations per month. the"initial $~,OOO contribution from and colleges hope to bring ,their the New Jersey state department Now all city departments g e 1 GoaJ Is $10,000 . each sc'l'ipol.' This 'money will be respu~es vlv.ldly, uSeful~y to the of education. their· gasoline and oil from a mu­ used to promote the project. attention of the community. They niclpally-owned gasoline pump .The Johnsoll c.ol,lnty March o~ The electro-magnet, w h i c h also aim to train students who and oll storage "station" buBt for plme~ h.as rccelved $717.67 in would resemble a doughnut in will .be skilled i~ video techni~ues IOWAN KILLED $624.77. Stores lor the stallon arc contrlbuhon~, about on~-tenth of shape', would cost the government and In the,appralsal o.f the ~~dlUm MARYVIL1.E, Mo. (JP)- E, J, purchased through compcutlvc j the 195~ . goal of $10,000, accord- between $5 and $20 million. The as profe~lOn a ls or. vl~wers. Freed, 72, Larrabpe, Iowa, farmeJl, bidding. ing to Mrs. J. K. Schaaf, county I' . chairman. machine would not be built in Accord ng to Wmnte, the pro- was klJled la te Monday and , his Gasoline tor cIty use, which us- Veterans Administration bas- Iowa, but graduate students from gr.am at the. C.hicago ~onve~tlon ~ife was i.njured.in a highw ll..x.~c­ ed to cost. 25.13 cents per gal/on, pital collected $196.91 of this to­ the two state institutions would WIll deal prmclpally WIth klOes- cldent wblie en loute to a Floll?a Is now belllg purchased tor 20.01 tal and about $513 at the totnl (Pbeto by InIOf.a".n Sen'lee) hav~ the use of its facilities for cope presentations and discussions vacation. ,/ CLA SES ST.4.RTED IN THE NEW Iowa 1I0spltal-School for Severely Handicapped Children Mon­ cents and oil tor 19.07 cents per has been received from 231 mail­ research. day. Located 011 tJle wcst edre of the medical center on the SUI campus, the hospital-school fea­ quart. City governments ore ex- ing cards, from a total of 7,500 The other universities promoting tures spacious classrooms flooded with plenty at na.tural U,-ht. MUlllc teacher Allen Myers playll a empt Cram Cederal gasoline taxes. coin cards that wcre senl out. In the "cosmotron's" construction are: ,-uUa.r for this &'roup's first music class In the new buUdlnl', Lett to rl.ht, the stUdent-patients are The street department used to addition, 350 letters have been Minnesota, Illinois, Wisconsin, In­ Beverly OI ~on , H , Fairfield; Sandra Loutzenhiser, 9. ~lockton; TWflla Schroeder, 9, Tipton; Pat Mc­ make as mony as 60 pUI·chase~ II sent out at business finns and or- diana and Michigan. week and the pollee departm nt ganizalions. • Ginnis, 13, ~Iuscatlne, and Pat Kensinger, 12, Davenport. 25. Outgoing payments ranged The contributions for the cam- from $1,27 to $98 nad kept a sec- paigning, which ends Jan. 31 , arc P" 't t ' t Jaycees To ,Give 3 retary at the city clerk's ottiee about ~lOrmal for this lime of the Sf Ud en f - -a t len· ' S·S or. Classes c~mpalgn, Mrs. Schaaf said. ' Top Serv·ice Awards log"lst In additIon to thc-cards and let-/ . Three young men-one from New SUI Geo • ters, a door-to-door ' porchlight N I H·I to ''· 1 Sc ' h 0 I Iowa City and one from rural We're now open at " Gla" s. ~:~p~~g~y w~~ou~e 6~0~~:~~~s ~f new 0 wa 0 sp - 0 Johnsop county-will receive di ~": Sf Ud, es cler , the Iowa City Junior Chamber l>f tinguished service awards tonight 4 p.m. in the afternoon Commerce, who will try lo car.- Student-patients in the Iowa -- ...... ,_-- at the annual Junior Chamber tlf I: th t' ·t Th ' Co m.m ere e awards banquet. Drop out and warm -up 'or'the Onee Was ,armer vass. c en I.'·e CI y. e canvass- Hospital-Schoo] (or Severely Han- children are available at the Hos- sp~ech therapists medical 'stu-' Names will be announced tOhlght -"I cho.~ to '''ark fOI. Ing Will be.gl.n at 7 aLnd. endG8.~ !l dicapped Children felt lutlty in pitaL-School, where therapists in dents occupational therapists, psy- The banqUct' will be held a~ , intramu!als. .. w SUI br- p.m., accoldlOg to Olen 11:1- many ways Monday when they the various fields work together in ' ...... , cause Iowa is the best place in stead, J ayCee porchllghl cam- started attending classes in the I I' . g. . t h I h chologlsts and phYSical therapIsts. the. Mayflower lOn begll1nmg at . " . h . ( eve opmg pi 0 lams 0 e p eac . , 6·30 pm the U. S . to .stu d y p Iclstocene, palgn c ~Irman. school's new building at the west child since thel·e is some over lap- Ulllversity classes in these fields ' .. said too new Iowa geologist from , ACC~rdlng to plans, the ~ayCees edge of SUI's mediclll center. ping 'and carryover from one type will observe teachit?g methods. at Frank Nyc, a;;sociate editor ?f Floydada, Tex., Dr. Charles E. WIll a.' ran~e to have. the fire sta- All living, therapy and cbss- of therapy to another, Dr. Rembolt the school from speCial observa.tlOll the . Cedar Rapids Gazette, w!ll Cor.a.1 Brown, . ti?n sirens In Iowa CIty and OJral- room (acilities are located 011 one says. rou,o~m~s~w:h~i~c~h~a~d~j~o~in~cl~a~ss~I~·o~o~m~s~._..;s~p:e::a.:k.. .____ _-..,;--_---:- ___~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Brown came to lo·..,a CIty Dec. VIlle sounded and the SUI steam n (th b 'Id ' th t the - 1~, 1953 as an employe .in Geolo- whistle blown to signal the b~gin- ~,~r r~n ca~ m~~e 1~.~~Oone ~cuv- M1r~ors ~vallable . gltal survey. He speclallzcs 1I1 ning 01 the canvass. ~t ) ~ th ·1 ·bI Rooms wllh mllTors are avail- \ll~hll(lc~ne, l~e slu<;ty (If gtacict"~. The campaign o((\ciats hope to, I y 0 ano. er as .easl. y as POSS I c. able for both individual and group HlIving studlep at Texas Tech- rcpeal the 1953 donations when . Two eluldl:en live 10 each ot the speech therapy, with special noJogical college in Lubbock, Tex., thl' goal of $10,000 was surpassed !Ight, atlrac~ lve 1y d.e~oraled rooms equipment provided to help ·the "1 smoke REGULAR and Texas university, Austin, by about $1,000. I~ the dOl'mltory wlllg, where fur- chilc\ visuuliz!! the l1eeded · movb- Tcx., Brown received his Ph.D. ______mture, from beds and chairs to ments of to ngue and lips. Chesterfield," says from the 'Univcrsity of Chicago P f H , dr~sser.s and clothes racks, is all Physical therapists helP . the Mary Healy in 1953. ro essor e PS chi ld-SIZe. Each room has a lava- children improve muscle control While hc was in Texas, Brown T W. M - , tory at just the right height (or the by heat, massage, exercise and "1 like KING-SIZE was n part-time wheat tarmer. 0 rIte anua children. baths. Chesterfield," says lie and his two brothers owned Brill&, Dolls ment such as specially made tri- Peler lind Hayes a form ncar Floydada. ~1·0f. Clayton d'A. Gerken, as- Upon their retu:·n Sunday from cycl~s and walking bars. Brown's hobby is lapidary, soclate professor of the department an ~xtendcd Chnstmas vacation, Occupational therapists concen- which Is cutting a rock into thin of psychology and personne~ coun- the small patients broul(ht with trate on developing better control sections for study purposes. selor in the student counscllng of- them fa vonte dolls, teddy bears of fhe muscles in the hands and At pre1len: Brown is complet- tice at SUI, is o~e of the autho~s and other. toys, which .were al- arms, helping the child to manip­ ing sOme private studies on loess, of a newly publtshed manual lU ready addmg that homelike touch ulate games and master such ae- wind deposited dust. the field of counseling and guilt- to beds and dressers Monday. , tivities as lacing and tying shoes. Brown was mar.ried in M~ y, oce. A nurses' station located mid- Muslo Aids Therapy 1951. He and. his Wife I.i ve at 230 Entitled "Revised Minnesota way on the dormitory wing pro- Music classes give not only gen- Marietta, Umverslty Heights. Occupational Riting Scales," the vides the help of any aile of sev- eral music education but also re­ manual provides information about eral nurses anv time a child needs inforce therapy being ,vorked out more than 400 different jobs and it, 01". R. R. Rembolt, director of in other fields. Rhythmic games, the abilities they require. Other the . . Iowa HosP.ital-School, ex- (or example, de.velop muscle CO Il­ writers who collltborated on the plams. The dormltOI·y sectIOn also trol as well as a feeling for pamphlet arc Donald G: Pat.erson, has examining r.ooms. for t~e use rhythm. a member of the Un~verslty of doctors and an Jsolatlo!,\ sUILs for The whole education program Minnesota faculty, and Milton ~. those .cases. of measles aT mumps at t~e schoo~ serves also as a train­ Hahn, dean of studenls at the Um- that mten.up t the best-planned ing gTound for teachers, nurses, versity of California. school routme. Gerken, who came to Iowa in Subjects taught in' classes at the 1943 CO llaborated on the original Hospital-School lire much the edition of the manual 'wl1ile he same as lhosein l'.egular schools Chicago CoDege of was a member .of the University throughout the state. But much of Minnesota faculty. Th~ ~amph- special equipment is used in the OPTOMETRY let was issued by the University classroom to mal(e it,easier f.or the ".117 A ...... , of Minnesota Press. phYSically handlCapped child to work at desk, blackboard and Aa oa_dine....~ ...... table. a epIendid pro . . Journalism Instructor Children who arc physically Doctm of Optometry ...... th.- yean for atudeata ___ SMOKE REGULAR OR KING-SIZE CHESTERFIELD ••• Given Fraternity Post handicapped may ha.ve ass~ciated in, with .ixtyor more __ Chal'les E. Barnum, instructor defects such as emotlO.nal dlStUl b­ credi ta in 8P,8Ci6ed Libetal ArtII of editorial journalism in the SUI a.nce, speech. and hearll1g dlfflCUI­ cou,... school of joumalism, has been ap- ties. Fac~litles for all types of REGISTRATION FElL • pointed to the national Under- therapy likely to be needed by the , AMERICA'S MOST 5tudenu are ~ftted pro.... 'POPUlAR Charles E. Brown graduate Program commitlee o( - .. aional recopitioe by the U. S. Will Study Gillciers Sigma Delta Chi , national pro- DepartmeDt of D.'ea. &ad ______1 fessional journalism fraternity. SelKtift Service. The committee advises local chap­ EllcelleBt clinical faeiIiti_ · 2~WAY · CIGAREnE~ ters in an eUort to improve their Athletic aad recr. tiaDa1 aetm­ . . . :3-Year-Old Girl aeti vities. tiea. DomUtoriea OIl the ~ Before com ing to SUI in 1919, CHICAGO COLLEGE or t· ,. ~ :To Lose Eyesight Barnum held many professional OPTOMETRY positions including managing ed­ USt-C Larrabee StrMt itor of the Peori'a (Illinois) Star Chicqo 14, IIUnot. THE QUill', YO~ WANT THE LOW IIICOTIIiE YOU WANT THE PRocn tou OUGHT .TO I.VI ,. In Operation Today and editor of the Princeton Hlli­ . . ~~ \ Three-year-old Judy Brisbane nois) Bureau County Republlcu n. No matter which size Chestet1ield ' Before we buy tobaccos for Chester­ A group of Chesterfield smokers have betn ~~ t ' . will lose her sight today after Uni- Y9u buy you g.et the sallle p'remlum fields, our laboratories take samples amined by a dpctor every two months for a~ • verslty hospital surgeons remove quality cigarette, and all the ftavor from all over the tobacco country two yea'rs. 45% of them - on the average - ha.~ her remaining eye in order to save ' lind mildness that Ices with it! You and analyze them for low ' nicotine been smokini Chesterfield for well over 10 ie~ her life. get the world's best tobaccos, selected The doctor's examinations show. . . ~: A cancerous growth In her right content. The extra care pays off! In eye, medically described as "retina by Chesterfield buyers with the help recent "tobacco tests," the six leading . . no at/vcr••• ff.ct. tO I blastoma" (eye tumor) is the cause of our research chemists, . , and brands of cigarettes were chemically th. no•• , throat ani .. of her operation. Surgeons re­ proven, by actual tobacco teAts, to be analyzed, The findings: of them all, .in"... from .molt;", moved her left eye one year ago laiwh ..t in quality. Chesterfield is highest in quality­ Ch.".rfi.lt/. . because of the growth. Consider Chesterfield', The daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. loUJ in nicotine. r~ JErnest Brisballe, formerly of ord wi th these smokl'ts'" • Adair. knows what the operation with millions of otbe • today will mean. . smokers throughou~ Amg· "We decided it would be best to ica. Chan,'e to Chesttrfie I tell Judy that aIter tbis operation she wouldn't aee any more," Mrs. and enjoy the taste and mildness you want Brisbane said. "She realizes it hi,hest in quality-low in nicotine-best. for y0t4 now, and the other day she said . 'my eye won't hurt any more after it'!, out, will It?'" Two other children are in th~ Brisbane family which makes it. home in a trailer park in Coral­ v\lle. Arter coming to Iowa City from an Adair farm, in order to be near Judy, Mr. Brisbane is now workilli as a service man in a local hardware store. STUDBNT WINS CONTEST Howie Greenwald, G, New York city, won a ease of motor oU Mon­ day in a drawinl by the American Petroleum company. Greenwald's number was qne of nine pulled from 41,000 pouiblllUes, Tbe first nUlTlber drawn won mobile. The holder M·ped "f. l .