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Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-01-28

Apr 25, 2023

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Page 1: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-01-28

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Stu'dent Council Reiects Discrimination Act t ,

01 Servin~ Ths State University of Iowa

owan and the People of Iowa CUll

Weather Forecast Moltfy cloudy ..... y with • few scattered light snows mostly northeast half. Turning colder to­night. High today 26 to 34. Outlook for Friday­Mostly cloudy and colder.

Members Give Many Reasons For Reiection

• Also Pass Motioh Ending Recognition Of Card Section

Established In 1868 Associated Press Leased Wire And Wirephoto - Herald Tribune News Service Leased Wire Iowa City, Iowa, Thursday, January 28, 1960

By NEOMA HAGGE Staff Writer

II a mended re olu tion ct>Ll­

ccrn ing discriminatory clauses of studen t .organizations was def a ted by the sur Student Cou nci l at its mee t ing W ed­nesday night.

The COli n ciJ also passed a motion removing a ll recogni­lion of the present Care Section and extending an invitation to the Pep Club to submit a new plan to the Council.

The original resolution con­cerning discriminatory clauses was introduced by Myrna Balk, A3, University City, Mo., at the Jan. 13 meeti ng of the Council. It would have recommended to the Office of Student Affairs that organizations having discrimina­tory clauses and not having defi­nite plans to remove the clauses by 1964 would be banned by the University. The resolution was amended

Wednesday flight by Allen Bren­necke, L2, Marshalltown, to read, "that the Student Council recom­mend to the Office of Student Af­fairs that those student organiza­titlns who havc restrictive clauses report ycarly on any or all plans on lhe national and local levels to the Office of Student Affairs and to the Student Council."

During the discussion of the resolution, Richard Runke, Ll, Palos Heights, Ill., said, "We, as the Student Council. cannot make value jUdgments and ban organi­zations because we don't agree with them.

" I don't think this Council should tell any man what he should believe or who he sho\lld associate with," Runke said. Brennecke said, "If we're really

interested in removing these claus­es. I think we'd be belter off if we didn·t have a deadline in the reso­lution.

"The deadline," Brennecke said, "creates a bad taste at the na­tional level of fraternities and that's where the change has to be made."

In answering Brennecke, MilS Balk said, "When you remove the date, you remove the force behind It. Without the date, it would be a nice gesture, but it would have no power behind it," she said. Lloyd Humphreys, A4, Chicago,

said, " If it comes to something like this resol ullon, there are other methods the organizations can use to restrict memberShip.

"All we would be doing by pass­ing this," he said, "would be caus­ing a lot of harsh feelings."

Carl Frederici, A4, Sioux City, president of SIgma Chi fratern­ity, said, "You are trying, by means of this resolution, to force your opinions upon a private or·

Council-(Co ntinued 0 11 Page 8)

A lone French paratrooper in the foreg round and Algiers insurgents stend at attention Wednesday as the French tr icolor is ra ised over the paving· block ba rr icade on Rue Michelet, one of the main avenues of Algiers. The deadlock between De

• Ixon

Gau lle's government and the insurgtnh who want Algeria to rema in in French hands went into its fourth day with a growing threat of renewed violence. - AP Wirephoto

* * * * * * * * * Reports on Algerian Fighting-

pen ace Quad Proposal U.S., Russia End Draws Memo Lend-Lease Talks

Administration Credited ' for . UeS. Strength· F rom Rehder . WASHI NGTON I.fI - The United U.S. ; tatement said.

States Wednesday broke off lend- The breakdown after only four lease talks wi th thc Soviet Unio n. meetings. appeared to demon' It accused the Soviets of tryi ng to strate a tough U.S. negotiating at­bring trade matter into talks titude in advance of thc East-West which had been cheduled to cover sunimit meeting set for Paris May only Russia's World War n lend· 15.

It will take a minimum of sever­al weeks to completely study the proposal to cut hours for board­joblx'rs, according to a memoran· dum released by the Director of Dormitories and Dining Services to dining erl'ice managers and supcrvisors.

T. M. Rehder, director, makes four major points in his memoran­dum.

1. The basic scale for stud. nt board jobs In SUI dorms Is thrn hours of work for three meals, with any overtime work being compensated et a minimum rate of $1 !)er hour in cash. 2. Since board is the compensa­

tion for a board job, the board-job workers' pay has automatically kept pace as I he costs of board have risen during recent years.

3. There have been no changes in working conditions, quality, quantity or price of food provided sincr current board-jobbers were offcred their prescnt jobs and ac-cepted them last spring or last fall.

4_ Any change which would raise the costs of food service by rfquirlng more employ"s to accomplish tt.. same amount of work would inevitably result in a substanti al budget acliustment or SUbstantial changes in em·

lease debt. The l.nd·I .... talks had b"n

revived in Wuhington Jan. 11 as an outgrowth of the Camp David meeting last Sept.mber between Pr.sident Eisenhower and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. But at the fourth meeting

among the Russian and U.S. Ne­gotiators Wednesday, Soviet Am­bassador Mikhail Menshi kov and his aides strodc out unsmilingly and without comment after a 30-minute session. \

Promptly afler'fard, the State Department accused the Soviets of having tried to lie a U.S.-Sovi­et trade agreement and an exten­lion of American credit to Russia into the lend-lease settlement.

" In view of the absence of agreement between the two Gov­ernments concerning the terms of reference of these negotia­tions, there would appear to be no common ground for their continuance et this time," the

Top officials sought to dis­count the importance of the d.­velopment in the cold war pic. ture. They delmed to be mo,.. punled than worried by Russia' s effort to demand trade and fi­nancial concessions as the price for a lend-lease settlement. The State Department, in r -

porting the collapse or the talks, said the Soviets would be welcome to resume talks any time Ihey de­cide to lick strictly to lend-lease "as a separatc and independent question."

Labor Head To Address Railroaders'

President Speaks In LA at $100 Plate Dinner, Veep ' in Chi.

WA TIl CTON ( P )­H alf a continen t ap a rt, Dwight Ei enhower and Richard Nix­on launch ed the COP politica l campaign Wednesday night wit h the Presidenl chlil11 ing his Administration has made

mel'ica the world's strongest mi li tary and economic power,

For his part. Vice President Nixon promised to defend the Ei­senhower record with al l his strength, alUlough he refused to sland pat on it through years in which hc, himself, hopes to occupy the White House.

The President in Los Angeles and Nixon in Chicago spoke at $loo·aoplat. dinners staged by the Republican party to raise cam­paign cash and pour out tributes to the chief executive. Other

James P. Mitchell, U.S. Secre- "Dinner. with Ike" called out th& tary of Labor will address a Rail- party faithful in more than 80 way Operating Brothcrhoods' In- cities In 43 states and the District stilute to be held at sm Apr. 7-9. of Columbia.

Mitchell ' came into national Eisenhower steered clear In his

De Gaulle Fall Warned • ployment pollclu.

The memorandum further states that student board jobs have been and llrc subject to continuous . cruliny tQ assure that compen- . sation is "in line" wi til other em­ployment in the community and with University minimum wage policies.

promfno~'e most rec ntly by par. prepared speech of attacking by licipallng in negotiations that led name either the Democratic party to the settlement en the steel or Democratic critics who have strike. He was appoined Secretary lit into his leadership in both the of Labor in 1953 by President Ei- defense and domestic arenas. But senhower. Mitchell has also served there \VIIs no mistaking th3t he on the Joint Army-Navy Person- was swinging hard at both.

By B. J . CUTLER Iferal, Tribune 1'1..... .rvl ••

PARIS - Paul Delouvrier, dele­gate-general in Algeria, Wednes­day warned that the armed right­ist insurrection In Algiers cOl1ld lead to AJgeriil's secession from France and the fall of President De Gaulle's regime.

His alarming wor c:;S reached Paris as De Gaulle met for three hours in emergency session with his cabinet. After the meeting an apprehensive French public was not told how the General pro. posed to meet the extremist ris­ing against his Algerian policies, Simultaneously, Gen. Maurice

Challe, commander-in-chief in Al­geria, broadcast assurances to the embattled European settlers that the Army will fight to see thal Al­geria wlll " definitively r emain a Frencb territory."

To commentators in Paris the

words of Delouvrier and Chane seemed closer to Ihe position of the settlers than to Oe Gaulle's. De Gaulle's pledge o[ "selC-determin­allon" meant that Algeria, which is predominantly Moslem, would decide freely whether it wante1 to "remain French."

The seeming divergenci" add· ed 10 unrest in some circles when they were added to the fact, re­ported in the press Tuesday, that the Government did not dare order the Army to fire on the in­surgents because the Army had let it be known It would not obey. The Socialist party, technically

in the opposition, Wednesday de­clared its full support for De Gaulle's poliCies and called upon him to hold a referendum in France as soon as possible on the issue of "self-determination."

De Gaulle was reported to be consideril)g such a referendum .

The strategic thinking is that the President's policy would be ovcr­whelmingly approved. Thcn, it is thought, the Army would recognize tbe will of the nalion and would cease its tacit support of the anti­Government extremists of Algiers.

Friday Exams FRIDAY, JAN. 29

8 a.m. : All ections of Bus. Ad. 6M:35, 31; Educ. 7:74; Psych. 31 :1.

10 a.m. : Classes which meet first on Monday at 11:30; aU sections of P.E.M. 27:11.

1 p.m.: All sections of M and H 59:44, 43; H. Ec. 17:23; Bus. Ad. 6G: 149, 148, 47; Bus. Ad. 6E-156.

3 p.m.: All sections of 1\1 and H 59:39; P.E.M. 27:8, 7, 6, 5; Core 11 :15, 6; Bus. Ad. 61\01:162.

7 p.m.: Classes which meet first on Monday at 2:30; all sections of Bus . Ad. 6L:56.

Defense' Loans at Student Affairs

Students receiving National De­fense Loans may pick up the sec­ond half of their loans starting this week at the Offi ce o[ Student Affairs. University Hall . Il was incorrectly stated in the Daily Iowan Wcdnesday that the loans may be picked up at the Cashier 's Office, Uni versity Hall .

The loan schedule is as follows: students with last names begin­ning with A through H, today; I through P, F riday; and Q through Z, Monday. The office is open [rom 9 a. m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

DES M01NES fA'! - An Iowa manufacturer Wednesday night labeled the Democratic Party as an anti-business. tax and spend party.

Fred May tag II, pres ident or the l\1aytag Co. o[ Newton, told a Polk County Republican Party fund-raising dinner :

"The Democrats have a tenden­cy to offer voters 'pie in the sky' - Government handouts without regard to the inevitable higher taxes, growi ng deficits and ru in­ous inflation ."

" On the other hand," he added in prepared remarks, "we havc the Republican Party with its stand [or sound fiscal policies, for maintenance of an economic cli­mate f a v 0 r a b I e for business growth, and for the holding of Government expendltures to a lev­el which the economy can support without ruinous inflation."

nel Board. the Personnel Advisory "Because of our insistence on Board. the Hoover Commission, adeQuacy and efficiency," he sa id. and the Employee Relations Com- "militarily and economically our mission. country Is, over-all, the strongest

Mitchell is scheduled to speak power 0 11 earth, both mili tarily to some 350 local and regional offi- and economically." cers of five national railway brotherhood in seven Mid-west- As did Nixon and other party ern tates expected to attend the orators across the nation. Ellen· Apr il meeting at SUI. The Secre- hower lay str.1I on the peace and tary of Labor will speak at a gen- prosperity theme - a the",. the eral assembly session of the in- Republicans intend to $tund over stitute at 7:30 p. m. Apri. 8 in Mac- again in an attempt to make Nix. bride Auditorium, with a limited on his successor. number of seats to be available to Twice Eisenhower took aim at the public. what he termed extremists.

The theme of the institute, which "Republicans," he said, "have is • being sponsored by the five faith in America, her strength, her railway brotherhoods and will be desll ny. Yet in late years, the ten­conducted by ' the SUI Bureau of dency to disparage the unmatched Labor and Management, wm be power and \m~r,t,ge \){ \)l:It ~\)l\\i'j "Railway Labor Problems in has become an obsession with 1960." noisy extremists."

It's ' Even Better 'than Pound.ing· a B'e,at! .

"Meowl This. lur. il a lot different than the 1_. City all.ys wher. I 1/" •• I've re.eI a lot of Dally lowanl lying on the ground, but !tal, I, the first .tim. I'". ever seen a real n.wspaper oHice. Those men lookinll .t th. ,"cture boob must be .dm.n. Wonder if they ha"e any catnip ad.?"

"They NY • kitten should neve" stick his h.ael in, Ide a hole If hll whisk." rub allalnst the .,lInll. I think I'll play It Nf •• ncI lu.t t •• a lim. peek. Journ.lIsm ,,"pie c.n thil controption a "mill." Ordinary peopl. cell It • typewriter. G .. , there' •• black ribbon Mld 1Otn. lette" on .tlcks In th.re - but no c.tnlpl"

, I

''Those teletyPes ...... mak. • funny souncli", net... Click, click, click - It klncla drives ",,·cruy. And what .re .11 ., thoM humans .tarlng .t m. for? I can't help ·It If th.y left the door open. A kitten Ilk" to 11-' In .H the Ie., tool"

"This plan Is fin. - for a ch ..... - !MIt I thl'* I p ..... r "" ..... qul.t alley •• aut .ach kitten to his own oplnlOll, I alwoy • •• y. I .... pe .. th.... are .. m. feUnes who would IIh thl. kind ., life. • .. ~ , "cub" reporter mlllht ... kind. fun after alii" - Daily I.w.n , ......

• by aoris Y.r.

Page 2: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-01-28

'Snow White and the Seven Astronauts'

Henry £ang·on Music-"

, ,

Emotion Isn/t Essence Of Tchaikovsky/s Art

By PAUL HENRY LANG Herald Tribune Ntw. 8trvlte

NEW YORK - 1l came as a to us to learn that lhe

Moscow State Symphony was persuaded by Sol importing impre ario,

seven of its nine New exclusivel to

Since Mr. Burok is CIIIIKI'Lt:"CU manager who eyen

"risky," 1.7" ~sot­arq tic vent4res, his insisl­on this overdo~ of Tcha,i­

, is puzzling. What ever him 10 take Lhls action',

I a theory behind this type program making thaI bears

ring. Tchaikov ky is a compo er who,

the exception of Mussorgsky, above the first generation

composers generally to the West. Yet his innu-

upon our musical public has had adverse effects,

in turn has refleeled ad­on Tchaikovsky's art.

this composer's music ap­ot be conveying the pri­most direct emotions of the

soul, it became dogma this type is the only true,

and sincere music of bv,>r ... d.>n. able to reach all men

aLleled intensity, and to be preferred to the

1''', .. r~'br''I ' music of most com­of the 18th or 20th cen­But aren'l we doing an

lnJUSI~ce to Tchai)covsky as well to the "cercbral" composer? Fr .. ly flowing. uncontrolled

r.n~otionali,sm is neith.r the n­.ven the most im­

in Tchaikov­though it Is usually

lconsid.I,.d hit most charact.r­I used to share this

I.arn.d my LTc:haiko,vslcv from the juicy and ' ... ,n •• i .. performance which our

virtuoso conducto~s, such or Stokowski,

the followed by cally all conductors on

American sc.ne. But I have since heard Tehai­

played by French or­' h .. ,dr.,. In their lfght and ele­

fonnances lhe emotional ~tlrlPr"h.'rg,"r was absent, and all

of , unnoticed and unsus­nl.ceties came to light.

The course bedlam of lhe B minor concerto, or of the finale of the Fourth 'Symphony are not the most (and po sibly are the lea tl characteristic music of Lhe man considered the champion heart wrencher of them aU. Much of his music is quite inferior and needs virtuoso, though not necessarily sentimental , performance to satis­fy to any degree, but the Tchai­kovsky, of the "Nutcracker" mu­sic is a wholly de~ighlful. accom­plished. and ensitive co'mposer, and perhaps if lhe flow of iJdren­alin is ~educed in his sYmp'hontes, a measure of this delight may be found in them. 100.

However, that would destroy the dogma, now firmly estab­lished In Lhe public's mind and supported by managers and or­chestra boards, teachers and writers on music. that learning and cluture in a composer choke his instincts and cause a lessen­ing of direct communication.

Composers whose work rests on carefully constructed forms, inlaid and polished with all the marv.lous r.sourc.s of their craft, come under suspicion of artificiality and lack of feeling. More than that. certain gen~es that habitually call for refined and sophisticated music mak­ing, such as chamber music, both vocal and instrumental, are relegated to the background. "Chamber music is poison," Is the managers' motto. The creative artist's communi­

cation, the ides he expresses or­iginate from a state of mind. If this state of mind is coml>li­cated by many laycrs, it is only natural that the manner in which the composer' communicates the ideas will be complicated. Culli­vation widens and deepens a man's awareness, carrying it to plans and depths heretofore not H1uminaLed . But it is empbati­cally not lrue that arlistic in­stincts are thereby beclouded.

The lundamental instincts re­main constant, and since the point of departure in creative work is always instinctive and as yet free of the directing force of will, a wide and deep culture does not separate the composer Crom his native instincts: on the contrary, it permits a richer pos­sibility of their exploitation. The

great composer' doe not only feel, he thinks, 100. Or perhaps wc should say, he feels the idea. too. It follows that artistic form and elaboration is not a garment draped over what the composer wants lo communicale. but the very visage by which we recog­nize it.

The notion that opPMes the frigidity of thought to the warmth of feeling is largely superstitution, for the ideas that origi,tlate from within a man, from his experlenclls. from his conflicts, are always warm and filled with feeling and passion. Nor does "cerebral" music fail

to affect listeners of all walks of life - if it is permitted to be heard . It is a bit hard to believe that in the year of grace, t960, the receptive o[ our public should be gauged 10 be so narrow as 10 virtually restrict the visiting or­chestra to Tchaikovsky. Jf Mr. Hurok wanted us to hear how the Russians play Tchailtovsky, a plausible surmise, surely a couple of concerts presenting his best works would have taken care of that. Perhap the managers have their own box office intelligence service and it was this thiij, sug­gested the magic name of Tchai­kovsky. Judging by the attend­ance observed at an absorbing a few days ago, Mr. Hurok's sIring quartct concert reviewed agents may be right at that.

Red Diplomats Boycott Dinner

For West German CAIRO mTNS) - SovieL diplo­

mats here Wednesday night boy­cotted a dinner given by West German Ambassa!lor Walter Weber in honor of visiting West German Economics Minister Lud­wig Erhard.

It was understood the Soviets returned lheir invitatiol\S because they used the words "the German Ambassador" without specifying Weber is West German. There is no Ea t German ambassador but last year consular relations were established between the UAR and the East Get'man regime.

.11l~'Daily lowQn THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1960 1_. City, low.

writfen end ed,," by ~ and .. gooemed by a boorcf of fltle student trusteu elected by bodlJ tmd fOlW faculttj fruIUa appointed by lias pre&idenl of the Unlcerlity. The Daily Iowan',

poUcy. tlulre(or, ... ftOf on ~euicn of SUI tulmlnistrlJtlcn policy or opinion, In any particular. ...... AVDlr JluauD

or ClIIIClVLA'I'IO ••

aD4 Stu-

DAlLY IOWAN .DITOUAL ITAn • Ultor ................ _.. Ron Weber Manallnr EdItor ••.• .... BlIckstoc:l< Ne .... Edltor . ........... Mlck Holme. Editorial AII·t. . . carol CoWou Cooper City Edltor .. Marlene Jor,eDIeD Perrin Sports Editor ......... _ DoD J'onythe 8ocle17 Editor ..... _ .... ADn.e Warner ChJef Photo .... pller ..... Jf!n7 Smlth

DAlLY IO"AN A.DV.aTUDfG ITU.

BUllno.. Manall8r ..a4 Ad vel'l1l1nc Direetor ... _ IIeJ Ada. Advertlalnr Maoarer .... la, WU-RetaU Adv. M ...... Gordoo ADtIIoa7 Cla .. Uled Adv. JIi,. . Lan7 a.u..q Aubtant CIahUIed AdvertWllr Mer ..... lOc:llq PuJwtler Promotion IlilaDarer . _. _ Da .. orren Adv. Sal ... CoordJDator LJ'nw1 Ka1Ier

D AlLY IOWAN ClIaClJIA nON ClrculaU,OII Manaltl' •••• Robert BeD

Dial 41'1 11 J'Ou do Dot nceJve ,oar D~n, IoWaD b, 7:30 •. m. TIle o.u. low .. okculau.. oaIot Ie eo..~

callonl Center Is open from • a .m. to 5 p.m., Monday throu,b Frida, and from • U> to a .m. OD Saturda,. Mak .... eoad Im'Vlce on mJssed pa~ Is Dot ""salble. bul every effort ... m be made to correct erran with u.. DeJrt lsIue.

IUIIIBER ot ~. ASSOCIATED raEI. Tbe Anoclated Pre •• I. entitled ex­clu.lvel, to tbe use for republlcltion of III the local new. printed III Iht. newtpaper .. well .. all AP news dJapatcllei.

DAlLY IOWAN IIUPEltVlSOall P.oM 8CHOOL or JOURNALISM PACULTY Publlsher ...... .. JOM M. HarrilOft E4llOrlal ...... Arthur M. Sandeflon Advertl.lnl ...••• . .•. JOM Koltm~ Clrculallon •.•...•. Wilbur Petel'lOD

\ '1auerns. BOARD or STUDENT PUBLICATIONS

Waller Barbee, At; Dr. Goor .. Ea.ton, Collelle of DenUst1'Y; Jane Gilchrist. A3; Paul E. HallensoD, D3; Judith Jones. A4 : Prot. Hugh KellO, Department of PoUtlcal Science; Prof. Le.lle G. Moeller. Scbool 01 Journal. lim; Sara D. SChindler, At; Prof. L. ... V .. D711t. ~It ..... _u...

,

LETTERS - British and American Universities-

Letter on Plagiarism 'Stretched the T ruth'

Education for the·.Able; To the Editor: '

AlUlOugh the teaching profes­ion - like any other profession

- has a few charlatans. I believe that the letter in last Saturday', Daily Iowan stretched the truth by seeming 10 imply that many professors have published, over their own name , material writ­ten by gho t writers. I hope most readers of the letter noted that the implication was made in the form of a question: the writer offered no statements about how frequently such ghost writing occurs, nor did he cite even one example.

knows enough about the use of source material to be held fully responsibl. ,we ",commend to the Dean of the C,lIege of L.ib­eral Arts that he be failed for the entire course and placed on disciplinary probation for a year. Within my ellperi.nce as Writing Supervisor, the Dean has sustained our recommenda· tion il' each case we hay. sub­mi"ed to him.

Not Just the Willing

In twelve years of college teaching, I have n.ver known of a profeSlor who used a ghost writ.r. About .ight years ago I heard of a professor who was discovered to have plagiarized his doctoral dissertation thr.a years previously. The story was that, upon discovery and veri­fication, he was summarily dis­missed from his academic posi­tion for unprofessiona I conduct. I have no knowledge of the truth of that story. The writer of la t Saturday's

letler, of course, touched on a more frequent occurrence when he referred to professors who fail to cite the source~ of their lecture material. I agree that this prac­tice sometimes is used to cOver up a lecturer's mistaken feeling that he must always be prescnt­ing brilliantly original ideas. In my opinion, matur teachers de­mand less originality and morc honesty of themselves.

Such recommendations ate not lightly made. however. ln Com­munication Skills, they are made by Dr. Carl Dallinger, Coordina­tor of the Program, only after a conference in which the student, his instructor, Dr. Dallinger, and I take part. Dean Stuit and Dr. Dallinger both insist (a do II on positive proof before undertak­ing disciplinary action. (For further detailS, one may con ul t lhe Code of Student Life.l

Although the student body in­cludes some young people who plagiarize, it is not our impres­sion that may do succumb lo that practice. Just before Christmas we checked 250 research papers to sec how many were substan­tially identical. We are pleased to report that of the 250 students in­volved, only two had submitted papers copied from fel\ow stu­dents. These two students, and one who willingly permitted llis paper to be copied, are being fa iled [or the course and placed on disciplinary probation. Only two olher cases have come up since then. both being dealt with in the same fashion .

By DINAH BURFORD Written for the 01

(Editor'. Note: " This Is tht Jut or tbree .rtldes on life In Great Br1t.~ .In. 'Miss Burford, whOle bome l. Wim bledon , En,.alld, 15 a I'raduate of Cambrld,e Unl'Vr.rslty. She Is studyl.n, Amulcan blstory and Jll .. eralur, al S I Ibll yo.r On a Ito­lary fellowship.)

Oxford and Cambridge are the two oldest uniVersities in Greal Britain. They date from the 12th and 13th centuries. Cambridge, and particularly Emmanuel Col­lege at Cambridge, was the in­spiration for Harvard which is the oldest university in the Unit· ed Slates. Apart from Oxford and Cambridge there are 14 uni­versities in England, four in ScoUand and one in Ireland.

It is difficult to compare the \British and AmericanOniver­sity systems. It has been said that universities and colleges in the United Stales have had to do much work which in other coun­tries is done by the secondary school. This would, in general, be true vis-a-vis of British sec­ondary schools.

The main difference between British and American Univers­ity systems comes from a dif­ference in theory: the Ameri­can would seem to believe in the very democratic principle that everyone has the right to a university education if he or she wanh it, but the British

Muni Helps Make-

would add the proviso: if he or she has the ability. While rec­ognizing t}le high standards of, for ellample, the Harvar.d Grad­uate school. the corallary of this principle of mass univer­sity education still remains true: it means a general low­ering of the standard. " you are giving university educa· tion to millions, the standard is obviously not going to be <the same as when you are giving it to hundreds of thousands on Iy. (Now in the United' States there are just under three million col­lege students. Soon there wi II be five million_ In Great Brit­ain and Northern Ireland in 1957-58 there were 97,500 uni­versity students. By 1970 it Is estimated that there will be 136,400, two·thirds of the addi· tional places being for students of science and technology.) "Marking on a curve" and the necessity of teaching "Comm Skills" at State Universities are both, in their different ways, illustrations of this point. Far fewer go to universities in

Great Britain. Competition is keen, entrance is by examination and selection, and standards can therefore be' kept very high. The fael that so many Cewer go to a university in Great Britairt does not in the least mean · that they are being deprived of an education at, say, the American

state university level : a nwnber achieve this in secondary schools.

A further difference is that in Great Britain, there are far stricter views about what should constitute a degree subject. De­grees are not awarded, to give • random instances, in nursing and cosmelology. This does not mean taught; they arc. Technical col­leges (some 500 in England and Wales alone), domestic science colleges, agricultural colleges, the Royal College of Music, the Royal College of Art', the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art all, for example, give training in sub­jects which would be degree sub­jects in the United States. Neith· er is there anything like the proliferation of subjects that one finds at Amedcan Universities. A man who claimed to have a Ph.D. in " driver education" or II woman who said that she had got hers from a thesis on "Bak· ing Pic Meringues" would both be laughed out of court.

There is another very distinct fact about British Universities: the State (I.e. the government) provides 70 per cent of their in­come, and a further 3 per cent is provided by local authorities. But neither the state nor local authorities has any jurisdiction at allover the universities.

Surely most professors make clear the origin of controversial opinions which stem from sources unique enough to be identified. If we neglect to make our sources clear on a matter about which there is a difference of opinion, our students certainly have the right - qven the responsibility - to request the omitted infor­mation when the sources seem significant.

ln our opinion, most of the two thousand students taking Com­munication Skills realize that they can be taught how to im­prove their writing only when they submit their own writing to us - even when they arc having St!rious difficulty with the course_ We respect the integrity of the usual student in Communication Skills, and we wish to protect the value of his diploma from the few students who - through insecur­ity or laziness - occasionally at­

' tempt to demean it.

IThe Last Angr,y Man"

About 75 per cent of univer­sity students in Great Britlin are aided from public Dr pri­vate funds. It is not possible to work your way through coll.ge. Yau would not have the ti.".. It is discouraged because it is known that it would be virtua(ly i~posslble for the parf.titl,e worker to maintain the academ· ic level. Similarly, there are no student marriages as such. If a university girl marries she "goes down." This is presum­

,ably on the same principle that if you have to spend time on something else, your academic work suffers. But such lecture practices

should not be confused with stu­dent plagiarism. When a student writes a theme or term paper, he does it for a particular pur­pose: he is showing the professor how much he lrnows, how well he can tbink, and bow well he can write, s6 lhal the professor can evaluate his work and instruct him in what he I ~till needs to know'. If the studenl's work is not his own evalua\ion and instruc­tion are fareia!.

To prevent eveluiltion alld in­struction from becoming a farce in the Communication Skills courses, we will continue to deal severely with proven plagiarism. In fact. when the student who has plagiarized

I

Richard Braddock Writing Supervisor Communication Skills

Program

) Reader. are Invited to exprU8 opinion. In Irtter. to the Editor. All

I leUen m.st have bandwritten I &1,­I Dafuttl .nd add .... o. whIch will 'b.

prloted - t),pewrttten sl,nature. are I not. acceptable . Letters b~com~ the

ptoopertJ of The Dalty Iowan. The D.lly Iowan r ••• r... lb. rlrbl tn .horien. select reDresentative letters when many on the •• me subJect are

Irec::elved, or with bold leUera, Con­tributors are llmtied to not nlore tba.n two lettera In any M-d., period. Opinion. expressed do noi neeelSarlly regreseDt Lbos. Of The Dall, lowaD.

By ROBERT B. KREIS Daily Iowan Reviewer

Doctor Samuel Abelman, 68 years old, practices in a Brook­lyn slum dislrict and shakes his fisL at the "galoots" in the world - the "get-something-for-noth­ing boys." Along comes a hanied TV producer who needs a "gim­mick" to pacify his irate sponsdr and save his own job. His gim· miek: to present Dr. Abeltna n Js the first subject ina new TV series called "Real ~eople, U.S.A .... a progralh devoted to showing the way ordinary citi zens work, live, and think.

This is the setting of "The Last Angry Man," and the ensuing colimct of ideals. personalities, and goals, makes it one of the best films o[ the year.

:Labelse/Frogsl Immensely Interesting and Funny

Behind James Wong Howe's superlative camera, director Daniel Mann has moved the slory simply and evenly toward its climax, faltering only in the final few minutes, -but having a continuous and acute awareness and sensitivity to his script and his cast. And what a cast!

To the Editor:

Richard Patrick's vitriolic, contemptuous appraisal <Daily

• Iowan, Jan. 26) of the University Theatre's "Frogs" as translated and directed under Professor Peter D. Arnott should not go unchallenged.

Mr. Patrick thinks the play was "supel1bly boring," on the "level o[ an Ed Snlli van variety show and the worst of the movie cailoo6i," lhat the chorus was, tiring, moreover, he was cha­grinc<f to find that "the student audidce should applaud and en­JOY."

On the contrary, I found the p I a y irnrnen~ly interesting throughout, even though 1 have taught it in the Rogers transla­tion Cor thirty years. And a com· edy has to be pretty funny to seem funny to me at my age. So I say Professor Arnott's transla­tion was funny.

1 think the reason why the Ar­nott "Frogs" entertained me was that I knew wbat the translator had in mind in presenting such n version and Mr. Patrick, intelli­gent graduate studenl that he may be, did not.

Aristophanes, as every college sludent certainly knows, depend­ed for the humor of his plays upon wisecracks directed at popular and · unpopular public men of his day. If the play is played straight to a modern audience, much of the humor is lost. I think that Prof. Arnott had a clear vision as to how to adapt this ldnd of play to an audience that is not supposed to know much about Greek comedy_ He reduced the -obscenity to a toler­able level and jazzed up the

OFFICIAL DAILY' BULLETIN

Univenity

Calendar

January 29-February 5 FINAL EXAMINATIONS

TUHdIy. Feilruary 9 6 p.m. - Triangle Club - Sup­

per.

Thursdav. February 11 8 p.m . - IMU - Ahmad Ja·

, mal Trio.

, Aeschylus-Euripides debate suf­ficiently to excite the risibililies of .an audience that doesn't know OJ' care whal the differences be­tween an Aeschylean and a Euri­pidean tragedy are.

Dorrance S_ Whit. Professor Emeritus Department of Clusics

Stock Market Down Moderately

NEW YORK IA'I - The stock rnarket relapsed into its old hab­its Wednesday, declining moder­ately in sluggish trading.

Turnover of 2,460,000 shares compared with 3,060,000 Tuesday and was the lightest since Dec. 24 when 2,320,000 shares changed hands.

Losses of fractions to a point among key stocks were the gen­eral rule. The average was saved [rom a worse loss by advances in the same range by several piv­otal issues.

The Dow Jones industrial aver­age fell 2.17 cents to $637.67.

'HEAT IN AUSTRAL.IA SYDNEY, Australia IA'I -Searing

heat has caused the death of at least 13 persons in Sydney in the past few days. The temperatures soared to 108.3 Wednesday in the worst heat wave in this city's his­tory.

David Wayne, the T.V. pro­ducer, and Betsy Palmer (his wife) arc totally credible, Luther Adler (as Dr. Abelman's wealthy fellow M.D.l is nothing short of superb, and in the title role Paul Muni gives a performance for the ages.

Mr. Muni has long been a highly distinguished actor in both £ilms ("Scarface," "Thc Good Earth," "Comma'lidos Strike At Dawn") and the legiti­mate stage ("Inherit the Wind"), and here adds perhaps the crowning touch to hili fine career. The depth, and perception, an~ style that he brings lo Dr. Abel­man gives this character dimen·

WHITMAN LETTERS ST. LOUIS (1M) - The Missouri

Historical Society has acquired )7 letters poeL Walt Whitman wrote to members of his family. Also acquired were various other letters and documents of

the Whitman family, pliotographs and other mementos. ln one of the letters, Whitman describes St. Louis and com-

ments favorably on its "tine, comfortable, well-built brick or stone houses."

But in his day, as occasionally in the present, the atmosphere left something to be des iretl.

Whitman said the air " is al­ways tainted with coal smoke and pungent gas." .

University Bulletin Board Valv.nll, B.n,u. ".r ••• nO" .... ~. r ••• I .... t Th6 Dall, I ..... om ... .... III C. ...... I •• U ••• C •• I.r, ~, D ••• of Ibe ta, ber ... pabU •• lloD. Tbo, ....... ,... • •• 14.'. " ..... 11.. or .Weor .t lb. orru',.",. '.Iea , •• U.tu ...... I' ..... , ' .. eU ... ar ..... 00Ibl. 'or Ua10 .. et ••••

JUNE AND AUGUST GRADUATES: 5 p.m.: Sunday. 1:30 p.m .-2 I.m. Serv-l! you are pla"nlng to take Inter- Ice desk&: Monday-Thursday, 8 a.m.-views through the Bustne.s and In- 10 p.m.: FrIday and Saturday. 8 a.m.-dustrial Plscement OUic. thll spring. 6 p .m.; Sunday. 2 p.m.-S p.m. Reserv. II II imperative thaI your papers be Desk: Regular bours plua Friday aDd compleled ond returned Immedl.tely. Sunday, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. },urther Information may be obtained 1n 10'1 University HaU. RECaEATIONAL SWIMMING for aU

STUDENTS may plck up the second halves of their National Defense lonns accordlne to the following .. bedu)e: Thursday. A-H: Friday. I-P ; and Mondoy. Q-Z. Loans may be picked up III Ihe Office of Student Affairs. University ·"all. (rom 9-12 3,m. and 1-4 p,m.

,CANDIDATES FOR 1>EOREES 1~ FEBRUARl': Commencement An-

ouncements have arrived . Orders may be picked up at the Alumni 'House, across (rom the Memorial Union.

URURY HOUri!! : Mon~ay.Frlday, 1;30 a.IU.-a I .m.; Saturday, 7:30 a.m.-

women'students will be on Monday, Wednuday. Tburaday, and Friday, from 4:15 to D:15 at the Women" Gym. 4, NORTH GYMNASIUM of tbe FI.ld­house win be opened for student use hom J :30 p.m. to 5 p.m. on all Satur­days on which there are no home games. Student. must present their 1.0 . cards al the cage door In order to lIaln admittance. The Nortb' Gym wlll be opened tor student use e.cb Friday from 1 :30-3:30 p.m.

WEIGUT TRAINING ROOM will be opened for u e by students on Mon' days. WedneJld'YI and Frlfa,s be­tween 3:30 and 6;aO P II).

-One of Year's Best

on the scrN'n. and doubt that eight

now the Moliol). Pic­ture Academy will bestow its highest honor upon Mf. Muni [or this performance.

So, while there arc profound truths in this slory, many finely drawn characterizations, and much legitimate drama, Paul Muni, alone, is worth the price of admission, and after witnessing his performance, one cannot help but feel that here, indeed, is an artist.

Oxford and Cambridge tend to be the aim of the greater num· ber of uni versity students. At Oxford and Cambridge the pivot of the system is the tutorial. An

, undergraduate will spend perhaps an hour a week alone with a pro. fessOlI }9~O I may I;>~ the greatest autHority irI the world in his ~ar­ticular field. There would be no question 0 f gradllate~ beihg among groups of first and sec· ond Year students. The tutorial system is one w\lich is being adopted in other universities of Britain. There is no majoring. DO mi,noring, no quizzes, no student number , no marking by machine, no gradings, no semester hours, and nothing is compulsory. Pre· sumably it is a system which works only when the ablest are selected [or a university educa­tion. It would 'hot work so well in a system which epitomized the belief in mass university educa· tion, dealing as it does with the a ble and the not so able.

I It would not perhaps be irrele· vant to wonder at this point what theory of education produced Sputnik I.

Mexico Asks No More North Korea Reports 'High Hog Count ,

'Damaging' Crime Films TOKYO CIA'll Red North Korea MEXICO CITY (IA'I) The Mexi- coosted its hog population to morc

can Legion for Decency has asked than 1,610,000 during 1959, a 12 per Hollywood to stop sending gang- cent Increase over the previous ster films to Mexico which "dam- y.ear or enough to furnish eadt age the minds of our youth," the North Korean peasant family with newspaper Excelsior reports. ·1.6 hogs, Pyongyang Radio reports.

I

Good Listening- -,

Today On rY/SOI MORE MARK TWAIN, in addi­

tion to daily readings on The Bookshelf (9:30 a.m.), will be heard as tonight's Evening-at-the­Theatre presentation at 8 p.m. The popularil~ of recent recitals of Twain on <the COllcert stage has led to the selection of lhis program: The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, two episodes from "Hdckleberry Finn," and Jim Baker's Bluejay Yarn from "A Tramp Abroad" read by Walter Brennan and young Bran­don de Wilde.

BEFORE THE TWAIN IS MET, music of the slighUy East <Russia) and the West will ' be !blended into an Evening Concert <coDsisting of SLenka Razin by Glazounov, String Quartet No. 1 by Borodin, Trio in G Major by Mozart, and the Seventh Sym­phony of Beethoven. From 6 p.m. to 8.

LA'l'ER THlS WEEK: The Magic Flute (Die Zauberflote) wll be the opera presented at 7:30 p.m. Friday. A new record­ing o[ Mozart's masterpiece in­cludes Rita Streich as The Queen of the Night, Ernst HBfliger as Tamino and Dietrich Fischer­Dieskau as Papageno. The entire performance is conducted by Ferenc Fricsay. The musical comedy Oklahoma , Rodgers and Bammersteill's first great hit, will be heard a~ 9 a.m. Saturday. And there will not be a basket­ball game Saturday, either In tho afternoon or evening.

A PROGRAM OF MUSIC, l(lkcll fl'om

,Festival of last year, may be heard at 2:30 p.m. tomorroW. The organist, Alois Forer, 'per· forming in Vienna on June 12,

.1959. drew principally upon the

. works of Bach, Mozart, Schmidt, David and Marckhl.

'l'HE INFLUENCE OF MAlL, upon a radio station no less than upon a newspaper or a Congress' man , can have far greater effect than anyone who "has never written a letter in my life" real· izes. There are many facets of WSUl-KSUI programming which have never drawn audience com· ment in writing. The Stereo Hour, begun in October last year and heard every Wednesday for nearly four months, is one such.

TONIGHT ON FM, in the three . hours beLween 7 p.m. and 10, the featured work will be the Roussel Third Symphony.

Thun •• y, Janu.ry ~8, lHO

8:00 Mornlni Chapel 8:15 New. 8:30 Religion In Human culture 9:15 Morning MUsic 9:30 Bookshell

10:00 News 10 :06 Music 11 :00 Exploring the New. 11 :15 Music 11 :59 New. Headlines 12 :00 Rhythm Rambles

112:30 New. -12:45 French Pres. Review J :00 MoSlly Muslo ~:OO FrIend. of Other LandI 2:1' Let'. Turn a Pa,e 2:30 Mo.tly Music 3:M News 4:00 Teo Time 5:00 Preview 5 :15 Sporls TIme .5 :30 New. S:4~ Canadian Pre •• Review 6:00 Evening Concerl

41 :00 O" oma 9:00 TrJo ~ : .~ N.w &'1n~1

10:00 SIGN OFi'

l.

[,

, i

Chinese Student

Unique A Chinese coed will join

450 graduates in lhe S 1 mencement procession Feb. 6, climax for her of three years study for a rna tel' of science gree in stomatology. lhe dentistry dealing with diseases Ihe mouth.

Mrs. Wen-Shui Shih known 10 her SUI friends and leagues by her maiden surna Dr. Shih, ha earned her a profession unusual for women. but nol at all u for Chine_ e women sincc the dentists in her homeland women. The petite coed traces intere I in denti lry back to undergraduate training at Cenlral University, con Isting of "juSl studies lillie time tor political or activity.'

After graduation in 1942 joined her family in where she continued her studi in oral pathology and taught the National Defense Center there. She also met other ,tudent pathologist, Hwang, whom sh. married August of 1958. Dr. Hwang receive his Ph.D. degree In mal pathology at Cornell U slty, Ithaca. N.Y .• in June. In 1957 Dr. Shih came to

United States and SUI under lnternalional Scholarship.

,he not only was what she describes as the mechul1Ized American way of bul to Iowa weather "many colder than Formo a's." a "I'ery rriendly Amel'lcan

The political and turbanccs and ex pertences World War 11 which are lights of her background uncommon for lIlany of the studl'nts who attend SUI. un ique position lie in her f('~sion - common for women many foreign countries but usual in the United Staies. only a smatlering of coeds fi cld Dt'an William J . Simon

UeS. Charges 2 Drug Firms· With Monopo

W ASHlNGTON IA'! -cOlTlpanie · undl'f fire ~I 'nate antitrust ,1",,,,,,,,,.1 WHC chargNi by the Go Wedn sday with unlawfully spiring to monopolize the in mil e tranquilizers.

Jlery H. Hoyt, president of tel' Products, In(. was t before the group. pricing practices. when the cil'i1 suit in U.S. Dist in New York was announced Atty. Gen. William P. Rogers.

Committee Chairman E Kefauver (D-Tenn.), said It II

peared to him that Hoyt's piny appeared to be saying will charge what the traHic bear" In this country. Hoyt plied that there was no such tention . Witncsses for the other

involved in the suit. A Home Products, also of New arc to follow the Carter man in the Senate inquiry dt:ug prices .

Carter produces l\liItown (luUizer 11ills, and American Products markels Equanil quilizer pills . Both are m~nrnhl

.mate, on which Carter patent.

order designed to fl'f' and unfettered in the sale of all drugs in meprobamate ~ used as ingredient." The Justice Department

such an order could require Cm tel' to make its lileprobamate P1 tent available to anyone desirin to us'e it without charge, or set u a Iicensfg system involving r~ sonable royallies.

The suit charged that Carte and American Home Products ha forced the public to pay arlifie. ally high and noncompetitiv prices for tranquilizers and ha discourased development of proc ucls in which meprobamate migr be useful as an Ingredient.

The suit said sal85 of Miltown and Equani had totaled 40 mil· lion dollars in 1958. Robert A. Bicks, in charge of Justice D.· partment anti-trust prosecutions said the suit haa resulted from an investigation started in 1958.

Thcre wa no 'immediate indica tion what effect, if any, the GOI ernrnenl's suit would have on tit Senate investigation of th e tWI companies . Thi wa the seconl day of Quizzing Carter offiCi I .

~++++++++*+++++++++~ ON FEB. 1 0 E OF THE'

WORI.D·S LARGEST ,; SELECTIONS ~ OF' QUALITY 01

PAPERBACK BOOKS W1LL BE OFFERED AT

the pap r

* place l 130 SO. CL1NTdN S'J'. .r++++f++++++++++++++++

Page 3: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-01-28

~ ,-

a number ary schools.

e is that in are far

hat should ubject. De-eu, to give nursing and es not mean

hnical col. ngland and tic science I colleges Music, th~

". the ROyal IC Art all ning in su~ degree sub­ales. Neith. g like the ts that one niversities. to have a cation" or at she had

is on "Bak. would both urt. ery distinct niversities: overnment) of their in. per cent is authorities.

nor local isdicUon at

ies. of univer. at Bri',in lie or pri. possible to gh colle,e.

the time. caust It il e virtually

part.ti"" e academ. ere are ne s such. If arritl she

I,; s presum· inciplt that d time on

academic

dge tend to eater num·

tudents. At e the pivot tutorial. An nd perhaps with a pro.

he gffatest in his par· ould be no te being t and sec· he tutorial

is being versities of ajoring. no no student y machine, ster hours. Isory. Pre· tem which ablest are

sity educI· Sl) well in

omized the sity eduea· s with the

ble. s be irrele· point what

produced

eports unt '

orth Korea ion to more 9. a 12 per c previous rnish eacb

family with dio reports,

may be tomorrow. orer, per·

June 12, y upon the t, Schmidt,

OF MAlL, o less than a Congress' eater effect 'has never

life" real· ~ facets, of tning which <lienee com'

he Stereo r last year nesday fof one such.

in the three and 10, the the Roussel

Cullure

tW

anda

,vieW

I '

• I I

e

I I •

.'

"

l.

Chinese Student To Get-

Unique Degree-for Coed! A Chinese coed will join some

450 graduates in the SUI Com­m ncemeot procession Feb. 6, the climax for her of three years oC tudy for a ma ter of science de·

gree in stomatology, the branch of dentistry dealing with diseases o[ the moutJl.

1111'S. Wen-Shui Shih J [wang, known to her SUI Criends and col· leagues by her malden s urname. Dr. Shih, has earned her degl'ee in a profe ion unu ual for American women, but not at all uncommon for Chine e women since mo I of the denti Is in her borne land are women. The petite coed Iraces her interest in dent I. try back to her undergraduate training at NatiONal Centrai University, Chungking, consisting of "just studies with liIUe time for political or social acth'ily.'

After graduation in 1942 she joined her family in Formosa, where she continued her studies In oral pathology and taught at the National Defense Medica[ , Center there. She also mel an· other student pathologist, Jen Hwang, whom she married in . August of 19S8. Dr. Hwang will re~eive his Ph,D. degree in ani· mal pathology at Cornell Univer­sity, Ithaca, N,Y., in June, In 1957 Dr. Shih came to the

United States and SUl under an Jnternational Scholar hip. Here

,

Dentistry for Formosan

Explosion Reponed Cause ,Of January Plane Crash

WASHINGTO t ruT SI _ Pre­liminary laboratory report re­ceived by the Civil Aeronautics Board indicate that an ('xplosion

! caused the cra h of a aUonal :urliner J an. 6 in which Julian An· drew Frank and 33 other per',on

I aboard dil'd, it wa learn~ Wed· ne day.

Although both the CAB. and the F .B.I. remained Hent on the in· I'e ligation, informed ource said that "preliminary report sholY a low grade e:l.-plo ion" took place aboard the plane. Frank, 32 year old attorney in financial trouble at the lime of his death, is su peeted of blowing up the plane with a bomb 0 his wife would coli ct

I $887,500 in insw'ance he can ied. The preliminary laboralory re­

ports, it wu reliably learned, indicate that the explosion took place inside the cabin of the air­liner. Both the C,A.B. and the F.B.I. declined comment pending the completion of their probes, O. car Bakken, CAB. safety di·

rector, fir I centered altention on Frank in pub'ie testimony before n Senate subcommittee Jan. 14. but he topped short of stating the cause of the c'ra h, lIol\ ever, Sen, A. S. Mike l\1ol1roney, who henrd Bakke in clo ed ession. aid "il eem clear from the tJstimony

thaI a bomb exploded on Ihe plane." .

after the crash, by Hall and Rob· ert Watters, brothers who run a charter service in the area. The brothers fly Piper Cubs from which they spot schools of men· haden fish for fishermen working the coastal waters, I The body was spotted lying Cace

up. deeply embedded in mud on the west bank of the Cape F ear , River, in a swampy area south of Wilmington, .C., and not far from the South Carolina border: I A five·b¥·thrl'C-and-one·haIHoot ecUon of the right fuselage of the

plane, which included two cabin wi ndows, was found acro the river along with other debri on Kure Beach, a 200·foot wide sand pit separating t he river from the

sea, The olher debris Inclllded a three unit·airplane seat. a portion of a hat rack, pillows, and a man 's coat.

A coa t guardsman in a mall boat removed U1C body to an open area, where it was picked up by helicopter and removed to the ho . pital at Wilmington, N,C., where a CA B. doctor performed an aut­opsy. •

THE DAn. Y IOWAN-Iowa CTty, la.-Thursclay, Jan. 21, " __ Pa .. t

.. '

Hicklin Resigns As South Iowa

I Federal Judge WAPELLO til - Edwin R,

I Hicklin. 64. has retired as federal judge ror Iowa's southern district.

President Ei enhower Wednes· day approved Hicklin 's retire • ment, effectll'e immediately.

Hicklin, in ill health since 1958, ad\'i cd the President he was phy ically unable to perform his dutie and asked to be reliev~ a soon a possible. He had ser\'~ ince hi 1957 appointment by Ei­enllower. The Pre ident, ill a letter, ex­

pre sed hi appreciation for the judge's service .

Hicklin has .... n abient from the bench fr.quently in recent months and Federal Judge Rob. ert Van Pelt of Lincoln, Neb" sat in for him in the southern district. Judg. Van Pelt' •• s­signment in De. Moine. is ex· pected to end Sunday, unle .. Ihe assignment is extended. Only recently Hicklin said he

flxpect.ed to return to active court work. He suffcreli a stroke in 1958 and had a econd one In t ovem· bel'.

He aid it affected his rIght side con iderably and it is a struggle even to write a lette.r,

Hicklin sa id he retired volun· tarily because he would he 65 on March 1, His reti rement pay will be 511 ,250, one·half oC hi regular salary.

• he not only wa introducid to what he describe ' as Ule fast, mechanized American way of life, but to Iowa weaUl('r " many limes colder than Formo~a ' ," and a "very friendly American people."

A car.er In dentistry awaits Mrs. Wen·Shui Shih Hwang, G, Formosa. She is completing relearch for her muter of science degree in dentis· try, which she will rec.ive at Commencement Feb. 6. Although her profession is an unusual one for women in America, many of the dentists in her homeland are women, she says, Daily Iowa photo by SU I Photo Service

I\leantime, a more complete ac· count of the finding of Frank 's body and the development of the cae WJ made available Wedne • day.

Frank's body was spotted from the air on Jan. 9, three days

The body had an open wound around the heart. One leg was sever.d above the ankle, the other leg at the knee. X·rays showed bits of metal and olher foreign malter in the body. These were extracted, and stnt to the F.B.I. for analysiJ. Other laboratory work is being per· formed by the National Bureau of Standards and the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. The laboratory tests include ex- Lamb Goes to School

A native of Wapello, Judg. Hicklin practiced law he,. since his graduation from the SU I Law College in 1917, with Ihe excep· tion of his service in World Wars

The political and ('conomic dis­turbances and experiences ciuring World War 11 which are high· lights of her background are not uncommon for many of the fOl'eign students who attend SUI. Her lIIlique position lies in her pro· fession - c6mmon for women in many foreign countries but un· usual in the United StaM!s. where only a smattering of coeds enter a field Dean William J . Simon of the

SUI College of Dentistry terms "a phasizing theoretical training in marvelous field for a woman." the genenal sciences.

According to Simon, a number l\Iany of tbese students coming

Heiress, 19, Charged As

amination of pathological . amples taken frolll Frank 's body, as well a examination of the foreign par­hclcs and of lhe interior oC th' plane, One purpo e 01 tht'se tests is to dlitennine whether the parti· cI found in the body came lI'om

Debbie Kupper gets a friendly nuule from Twinkle, her 12 day old lamb, as classmates in her south Minneapolis kindergarten class look on. Mary's little lamb, of nursery rhyme fame, followed her mistress to school, but Debbie said she had to carry Twinkle. AP Wirephoto

I and II and during his term on the bench. He sen'ed two se. ions in the

lown Senate from 1931 to 1935 and

u.s. Charges 2 Drug Firms With Monopoly

of foreign women student attend to the UllIted tate' must normal· the SUI College of Denli try each ly complete from two to three year, but 110 American coed has years study in pre·elinien\. basic W d worked on a degrec in dentislry at sciences and elini al tehniques Ix'- I aywa r SUI fOl' the past two years. "We fort' they qualify for theil' doclor have had ' only five American of dental urgery degn'l·. NEW YORK INt - Runaway women working on their degree in The growth of preventive den· heiress Gamble Benedict Wednes· dentistry in the past to years," he tistry - an area unique to the day was macle tht' ward of a court cont inued, United States - and the subse· Ihnt is invesli/.!oting wayward girl

The dean noted that the sci· quent need for a wide /lack. chargl's agninst her. In another ences a,.. attracting a large per· ground knowledge necessary to court. hl'l' lawy<,1' mOl I'd to free centage of serious female stu· locate mouth disorders before a the J9··yenr·old girl from Ihe dents. "Any girl who can handle d isease becomes widespread clutches of her family. the sciences well is likely to make this added training neces· In thl' buckground during heclic have many of the aptitudes ne· ury, Dean Simon continued, An· legal pl'ocecdings lurked Andre Clssary for dentistry," he added, olher factor to be considered Porumueanu, 35. the married 'X' "But for some unaccountable here is the emphasis in America chauffeur with whom lIliss Bene· ruson, the field of dentistry just on diagnosis, the SU I dean said . dict ran off to Paris sevenIl wet'ks hasn 't caught on with , women " Wl' welconl(' IOI'Cign student~ ago,

WASHINGTO~ 1.4'1 - Two drug I here in America - evert though of the caliber o[ Dr, Shih. " Deal! II was this runaway romance companies undrr firt' from. the j in J:urope SO per cent of (he den. Sin~on c,o/l1~ent('d, ."and there i~ ~hal I '<1 to the girl's beilll( t,akcl1 ~I natl' antillust subcomnullee tists are women." \ satlsfu lion III knowlJIg that man) Into court III .Brooklyn , charged as \\ere dlarg!'d by the Government Simon noted Ula~ the training of I 0{ thcm llill retul'll to. ~hl!lr homl" n waY~"'i1l'd gu·1. . , Wednesday with unlall'[ul1y ton· dentists in the UllIted Stales does lands to t{'nelung posItIOn., work. Magistrate Cornlllg G. McRcn· spiring to monopolize the market differ from dental educbtion in I ing under tht' high idealism o[ I nee made her a ward of the COlll'l,

In mile tranquilizers. mnny foreign countries , For exam· Am<'rican delJli '\I'y. \~ naturally w~ill' Ill: !11\,t,~tigates the charges. !lery H, lIoyt , president o[ Car· pie, in many E uropean and A ian hope thal more American co d llls de ISlon IS not expected for

tel' Products, Inc .. was testifying countries a dentist obtains a will follow in the loot~lel)s of IIwir pcrhaps IQrel' we ks. before the group, defending his bachelor of cience degree in den · sistcl s from otlwr count ric ,and McKennc ' Ihen paroled the girl pricing practices. when filing of tistry after n regular four·year col· that in Ihe future we'll sec morl in custody o[ her grandmotlwr, the civil suit in U.S. DisC Court lege curriculum containing some of them studying dentistry hel'l' at I Mrs. K(ltlll'l'Inc Geddes ~enedicl , in New York was announced by Jimited eliniear experience but em, SUI as far a faeilitie permit." who has fought to eud MISS Bellc·

dict's romanc(' with Porumbacnu. Atty. Gen . William P . Rogers. l\1ennwhile, in Manhattan, Statt!

CommiHee Chairman Estes SU Iowan's Wlofe Named Supremt' Court Ju ·tice Samuel 11 . Kefauver (O·renn,), said it ap' 1 . Hofstadt I' directed the grandmolh. peared to him that Hoyt's com· er nnd Gamble's brother, Douglas,

pany appeared to be saying "we To GI·rl Scout Comm' I·ttee ttod0 aPyr.oduce the girl in his court will charge what the traffic will bear" in this country, Hoyt re· Ill' acted on petition of Philip plied that there was no such in· Mrs. Merle. Hale, whose husband pacily for Girl Scout Councils in Handelman, Gamble's attornl'Y, lention. is head oC the SUI Hospital Den- eastern Tow a. who charged , he was being illegal· Witnesses for the other company tal Depaltment and professor of Regional commillee members are Iy detained by ~er grandmother

involved in the suit, American and brother. The lawyer sought a Home Products. also of New York. OI'af surgery, has been named to selected by the regional member· writ which would give the girl her are to follow the Carler spokes. serve on the Regional Committee hip·nominating committee and freedom from her family. man in the Senate inquiry into for RegjO)l VJH oC the Girl Scouts recommended by the regional com: Mi s Benedict is heiress to the

th~ aircraft - or fI'omollle othet' 34 St d t The inll'rloT 01 the plane is be·

obJecl such as a bomb i u ens ing ('xamincd for posslbll' trace~ I .. d I 01 nftrat('~ - an explOSive - el'en nltlate nto though till' main 1\Teckagl'. (ound 20 mile. west Iwal' Bolh'in, N,C.,

was exposed to a sevcn·hollr rain R·lfle Group ' allel' tilt, crash. '

The C.A.B. hopes to establish th. cause of the crash from a Thirtv-folll' men WQrl' inltiatl'd cor.;!;ination of severa l factors - mto COlllpnny B·2 of the notional the mock.up of the plane, the fl' a tl'rnIly of Pershing Rifles (01. laboratory reports, and the con· 10winR a banquet held aturday dition of Frank's body. The in the Hin'r Room o[ the Iowa wreckage is being assembled ~ll'mol'ial Union . and attached to a wooden fram e The Inlllal," Me: AIIt'n B.I<hrn<h. , h 'W'I' Th L. 'Va~hlnKlOll, 0 C Alt'x Bmbou!' . In a angar In I mlngton. e \1 , K'H" III,': John ""ltv , AI Ro<k. C,A,B, has compl\ted the assem· lord . Ill .: ,'""k Ba u,,~. A L r'ur t bl f h ' 1 bl k lid ,,)1,.. Va.: Juck B,'Dndl11l l1 . El, y 0 t e aval a e wrec age, !'Ima: Paul a .... nnl. A I .. tetlb!"l\'III~. but is continuing to search for Ohio . Pllul Cnrl on. AI, DIIH·npolt. missing pieCH of Ihe aircraft. Jail,.. D. "~'IIl. A2. T,,\\ n Clt~: Ro"

Du1t ~. AI. Ely. eh.l.lt's Etlw.url • AI. Thl' <lgcncy will hold a Iwaring Cod. , a Dllld.: I.yl. I::dw,"d •. AI, Rt-d

arollnd "~l'b, 2.1, probably at WiI- O"k; \1'1111,,", EIII .. AI , f'Orl O"dM" : T illl Fl.'h., £1. :\fJnclt. ND,~ Jaml'tol

mington, and alll'r thaI, the C.A.B. Fow l,·r. AI 10". Clt~. Ch,,,I..,. Good<l'. will issue a report on the crash , HAl . r .yeltr; Robert 1I,,,·t"O, AI. Clln· . . . . Ion: Alb .... ' Jaco bI. AI. Clinton: ROber, It IS cunclu 1\'l'ly established that K~~.el, AI, D c Moine': Ro""rt Klr·

. . roun t Pica. 'm t ; j(>n~' u\.cnth.nl. Al an explosion cau!;Cd tIl(' crash, the I khaeftor. AI , Ai kin •. John K in. AI F.B !. would still be faced Illth the 0. . \10111"'; G. Nelli M~Kre, PI. "-a· task of pro\'ing whe!ht'r Fl'ank Wa~ comb. III. : lIeM.1 \Toron, AI. Mol"

I ' t ' th I t f" on, 111. ; t Ie \'Ie lin or e perpe ra 01' 0 John P m k.1. AI. 10" ,I Cit). Rob"rt that t'xplu, ion, or whellwr he had Rud",.n. A I. Nichol ROMrt Sec,,)'

, 'tl ' 1 II ,\I , D CA \10111 '.; John Siunn , AI. any conneclton WI 1 It 11 a . Aledo, III .: C.r,~r Smith. AI, Iowa

County Medical Society Will Meet Wednesday

The monthly meeting ot the

elt~,: Oarell Veren. AJ. Union; O{llom ", Vokul~k . AI. C,'d".. R.pld, . R G Wolker. A I. Fort Dod~. : Roboor! Sire -IlInn. AI. Dc ~loi ne:l: Nor man Work ­IlMn. At. Cednr Raptd ~; and K.nne-t h Wd~ht, AI . Codro r Rapids,

Johnson County Medical Society 1 GAITSKELL'S TROUBLES will be held Wednesday, Feb, 3, LO DON IA'I - Are the London at 6 p.m. in the Mayflower Inn. 1 pollet' gunning for Labor party 1100 N. Dubuque Sl. Leader Hugh Gaitskell? Gait·

A scientific program, "Bateriai skell may think so. Police im­and Viral DI~easl;' and Their l)Qundcd his car Wedne day night Treatment," will be given by Ian for improper parking for the sec· 11.1. Smith. assistant proCessor in ond lime in three month . He le[t th ' S 1 ColIl'ge of Medicine. it outside a meting hall . drug prices . o[ the United States. 'mitLee to the national president Remington typewriter fortune .

~~~~Mil~~ ~~~~~~oo~~a~~~ -i~~~~~~~~~.~~~ •• ~~.~~.~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~-quilizer pills, and Anwrican Home gion, the area takes in lown, Colo· Mrs. Hale 'recently completed Products markets Equanil tran· rado, Klmsas, Missouri , Nebraska. serving two years as second vice. quilizer pills. Both are meproba·

.male, on which Carter holds the and Wyoming . Mrs. Hale will at- president of Cardin"ll Council. At patent . tend meetings twice a year at various limes in the last 11 years,

The Government's suit asked which the committee works with she ha been a troop leader, vol· the court in New York for an members of lhe national staIf who unteer trainer of troop leaders' l order designed to "ealablish serve the region , . president of Cardinal Council Lead. free and unfettered competition The committee's responsibilities ers Association and secretal'y of in the sale of all drugs in which include building plans for couting the CouDcil's Wider Jurisdiction meprobamate ~ used 8$ an in the whole lIrea; relaying idea Study Committee. ingredient." and needs of councils in the area The Justice Department said to council advisers and lhe regional

such an order could require Car· chairman ; interpreting national Find Bearded Bandit ter to make its Iheprobamate pa· standards, policies and plans to • d tent availabie to anyone desiring councils in lhe region, and adl'is· Is DisgUise Woman to u e it without charge, or sct up ing on regional , national and intre· d

, national events, CARlO lA'I - Police arreste a licensj1g system involving rea- In addition to taking on these a bearded bandit ib Beheka whose sonable royalti es. ·\ I·t we r MI tho ghout region·wide dutIes, each committee exp 01 s re ear"" ,,,ou

The suit charged that Carter member seleets a specific geo· that region on the :\lediterranean, and American Home Products had graphic area in the region in which ' They discovered the bandit is a forced the public to pay artifici· he works closely with council ad· woman. E\'en the black beard and ally high and noncompetitive visers from the nalional field staff mustache were r<,al, snid the prices for tranquilizers and had in helping develop Girl Scouting. newspaper AI Akhbar. The gang discouraged development of prod· Mrs. Hale will serve in this c~· did not know its chief's secret. ucts in Which mepro ba mate migh t fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii __ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitl be u eful as an Ingredient.

The suit said sales of Miltown and Equani had totaled 40 mil· lion dollars in . 1958, Robert A, Sicks, in charge of Justice De­partment anti·trust prosecutions said the suit haa resulted from an investigation started in 1951.

There was no immediate indica· tion what effect, if any, th<' Gov· ernment' sui t would have on the Senale investi gntion or the two companies. Thi was the second ~ay of quizz!ng Carter o[fiCif~

"++++++++++++++++++++ .... ON FEB, lONE OF THE

WORLD'S LARGEST SELECTIONS OF' QUAL1TY

PAPERBACK BOOKS WILL BE OFFEHED AT

the , paper

t place I i 130 SO. eLl TdN ST. I '~ffff+f++f+++++++++++,

Chit·Chat from the Laund,.omalo

"lf you're careless enough, your

car will last you ~a lifetime.(1 , '

Free Parl<ing Areas

320 E. Burlington 316 'E: Bloomington

f

S ·INGER' DAYS

Floor Samples, Demonstrators, Sewing Machines and Vacuum Cleaners

THIS IS OUR ONCE-A-YEAR JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ONLY Your chance to buy a Singer Sewing Machine at a tremendous savings. .AII of these machines carry a brand new machin. guarant .. 1 -

Save $50 or M 'ore on Sewing' Room Machines

A small deposit during 'his lale will hold the machine of yowr choice.

DOWNTOWN STORE OPEN MONDAY EVENINGS 'TIL 9

7

Semester In Public

was Louia County attorney from 1922·26.

The judge formerly was a mcm· b l' of the RepublJcan State Cen­I ral Committe(',

The Pre idcnL will name another judge to sel've in the southern dis· t riel. 'fhe appointmenl is subject

'fhis week is the la . t seme.ter to Senate confirmatiol1 .

Ends Schools;

Dismiss Early To [or student in Iowa City public The choice is usually made aft·

er recommendations f t' 0 m the state's U.S. senator~now Bourke Hickenlooper and Thomas Marlin,

schools, Elementary schools wilt close at

noon Friday, \lhile the Junior lllgh School will close at the regular dismissal today.

High school students who arc not rl'C(uirl?d to take final examination, will have a foul'·day vacation, but those requircd to tak the exams will ml'et according to the l'xam schedule Tucsday, Wednesday, and Thursday. Report cards will be C1istributed at ity 1Iigh School CI'OIll 2:30 to 2:45 pill, Friday.

lasses in all schools will reo sume at the Ilsual tillle Monday, Feb. 1.

Edward S. Rose slys We are a Pharmac;y Snd deal in DRUGS and MEDICINES - I.t us fill your PRESCRIPTIONS and file away for future refer­ence-we are in the center of the business district, easy to reach at any time-YOU are always welcome al-

DRUG SHOP 109 S. Dubuque St,

• How many

fingers -

to count your

gas and electric

appliances?

Your gos and electric appliances are on index 10

your family's standard of living, Add them up and

compare them with your 1949 total. Most families

have more than doubled the amount of electficity

used during the past ten years ••• and they're

using lots more ga~, too. But what, besides your

gas and electric service does so much ••• for sa

little?

yours for beUer living

'IOWA .,ILLINOIS· C~~ _and Electric Company

.,

. ,

Page 4: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-01-28

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Page 5: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-01-28

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Scanning 5~e

SpOI.lj Scene By DON FORSYTHE

Sports Editor

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G i\'en a tremendous boo t by Monday night's .723 shooting against Iowa, Minnesota has In­creased its field goal percentage mark to a phenomenal .506 for six Big Ten contests.

The Gophers can well afford to drop off of their accurate shooting and still walk away with a new Big Ten accuracy record for the season.

Ohio State set the current mark of .431 during the 1956·57 campaign. Incidentally. the Buckeyes them­selves are running well ahead of lhe record this year, Ciring at 3 respectable .472 pace.

Iowa, having ~xperienced a shooting dry-spell, has a .389 per­centage in Big Ten play, ranking ahead of only Michigan and Wis­consin, both winless in conference competition.

* * * The high jump bar in the Iowa Fieldhouse was raised to a new high last week in a Freshman· Vanity 'rack meet as Felton Rogen, a freshman from Detroit, cleared Ihe bar at 6-7V4 - a half· inch better than the Iowa indoor record held by Les Stevens.

• J

"oil :2sij (Ins ·ni· 2i JI .2SU Is!lO Is ~

A similar jump in last year's Big Ten Indoor Championships would have been good enouvh

.,. to take the title. "Ii

* * * ·i'll 01 I The name of Mike McCoy may .tV jump back into the national !Jm -.~ light in the near fuLure. McCoy. II I you might remember. was a sensa· ~III tional high sCi!ool basketball play­en er in Indianapolis, Ind., and was ./11 courted by many colleg~s and tmi· 011 versities. " The 7 ft. 1 in. lad enrolled at elf Northwestern and was expected to ./Ii lead coach BiLl Rohr's squad to '.1 the top of tne big Ten pack. Dur­n~ jng the 1958 Holiday season Mike ~I~ ventured south 'and wound up In

Miami, Fla ., where he jOined oj Miami University coach Bruce ·ml Hale's yearling cagcrs. lA McCoy is now eligible to com· lo~ pete. but Hale feels hesitant about nA using him for the six games that eqe remain on the Hurricanes' sched­,ol'ule. ApparenUy McCoy will sit out 12sIthe rest of the year unless Miami

"1Sgets a I'{ational Invitational Tour-011 nament bid. ~rtl The Hurrrcanes, storming along "sat an 87-points a game offensive Isipace, are doing Clui1e well without iU~fCCoy, who George .Mikan re-10 cenlly called a better rebounder onthan Wilt Chamberlain. Hale's lniteam currently 'sports a 15-2 r c· ,Stord and could very well get the ,21NIT bid that would put McCoy in ·s'lt.he lineun. di .,

91\ * * * '~i The Chicago Cubs won one title m Wednesday, perhaps the only sri claim '0 fame they'll have this ·s: year, as they became the fint ad team to sign all its players

for the 1960 season. -91 The Cubs edged the Clevel,nd l~ Indians, and their General Man· bs ager Frank Lane, as the Indians

are having trouble c:oming to terms with Roc:ky Colavito. Rocky is holding out for a boost to $40,000.

* * * s! What had been termed the "fast-91'& track in America" is to be ra-1enoved from Chicago's Soldier e{ield_ III Constructed of a mixture of clay, d:,rick dust and burnt peat imported . arom the British En-Tout-Cas Com-.any the track was built expre §ly or the 1959 Pan-American Games It a cost of $100,000.

When the surface is removed it ,ill be replaced by an asphalt ~vering designed for auto rllcing. I Officials in charg>ll of Soldier 'ield, concerned with the revenue ~ be raised by the use of the ·~ack, made the decision to put ')1; running surface up for sale. ~ Only the Big Ten had ex.press~d ony desire to use the facilities ,:0 any reglliar basis - hoping to ain use of Soldier Field. for its

,utdoor championships. ~ Reports indicate that Notre '/ame will purchase the Sllrface l,d remodel its track facilities. ,

* * * ~ Pete Elliott, new Illinois foot· ,all coach, has a golfing back· )round in addition to his foot­'Iall prowess. In 1946 he won a ;'CAA golf match against Harvie '/tard, who later bec:ame the Jnlted States amateur champion. ~ I \ .

See Russia in 1960

:onomy StudentlTeacher IaIDJller Ill's, American conducted, from $495-RIU,;a by Mo'ort:oat:Io. 17-<1.y. ,m Warsaw or Hel~inki. Visit rural ml plus major cilies. D/alJlond Crand T_r. RUSl!ia, land, Czeoboslovakia, Scandinavia. " lern Europe highlights. 'Colle.ia,. Circle. Black Se.tI lise. RU8lIia. Poland, Czecboslo· ~Scandinavia,Beneluz, W.Europe. ~·,,'er .. E.,.o/HI .4d .... 'ure. Fint e available. Bulger:.. Roun\ania. Nli .. Poland, Czec:boslovakla, West· Europe etenic route.

. ia:upi~t~~;~ .M.diIon A .. ew Yor I Y.

Constitution .Amended- Hill To Run

NFL A'pproaches' Ex~ansion In ~anad;an . ~ l-Mlle Race

MIA H BEACH IA'l - The Na----------------~------­tional Football League took the first slep toward expansion Wed· nesday, making it necessary for only to of the 12 owners to approve a new franchise . Previously a unanimous vote was needed.

The motion c:hanglng the con· stitution was passed by the same margin now necessary for ex­pansion, 10·2. The motion was presented by

Edwin Anderson of the Detroit Lions and seconded by Joe Donog­hue of the Philadelphia Eagles. George Halas of the Chicago Bears, chairman of the expansion committee. drafted the amend· ment.

Scuttlebutt making rounds at the meeting was that Dallas would hi admitted this year and Minneapo­lis·St. Paul in ]961. Acceptance of the amendment was described in some quarters as the most im· portant change in the NFL in 25 years.

The rule change specifies that the NFL "shall be limited to 12 teams unless enlarged by a vote of 1O·12lh of the members of the league."

It was passed on the eighth day of the annual winter meeting and was the Cirst important aclion taken under the new commission-er, Pete Rozelle. '

The amendment was .fought by George Preston Marshall, owner of the Washington Redsklns, and Walt.r Wolfn.r of the Chic:ago Cardinals. Marshall, arm.d with • 14·page brief, challenged the legality of the ",.,ve. However. league counsel said the amend· ment was on solid ground. Rozelle said the parliamentary

maneuver did not necessarily mean lhe league would expand, but asserted it certainly strengthened the possibilily of admitting new clubs. He reiterated a previous statement that the chances of in­creasing to 13, 14, 15 or 16 teams depended on three things: align­ment of the league's two conCer­ences, an agreeable schedule, and method of player allotment.

If only Olle team is admitted it would have to playa swing sched­ule, the commissioner surmised. The Baltimore Colts did that in 1950.

Rozelle, the Los Angeles Rams' gene~al manager, who was elected to a three-year. $50,000 contract Tuesday night, said discussion was favorable to admiWng new teams.

"The question," said the 33-year­<lId NFL bo , "is IWheIl" how man! and hOw!'

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SUI Profs' Track Manual Now in Its 51th Printing

• The publishers of "Track and men and head track coach at SUI.

Field Athletics," a book co- The book first came out in 1937 allthored by threc SUI proCessors, and has attained great popularity recently released this book in its as a textbook in nwnerous col­fifth edition. leges and universities throughout

Authors oC the book are George the United States. One of the pre­T_ Bresnahan, associate professor vious editions was translated into emeritus of physical education for Spanish for use in South Americah men; W. W. Tuttie, professor countries. Of the book's total copies emeritus of physiology, and Fran· in the English language, one-sixth cis X. Cretzmeyer, assistant pro· have been distributed outside the fessoc or physical education Ior United States.

Mertes Mentioned As Candidate for Drake Position

M y ePlap Minneapolls·St. Pali1, Dallas, St. Louis and Mlamij have ap­plied for adm lsalon to the 12 team league. Representatives of each presented their PQlgram '¥rre Jan. 24. They have waited around through the seven days of debate over a commissioner to hear the league's expansion DES MOTNES (All - Bus Mertes,

edition have been re~ised wen­sively, including the newest 'il­lustrations and techniques of such field events as the r\lnnJng broad jllmp and the javelin throw. train­ing methods employed by Russian distance runners and high jwnpers are also included.

dec;ision, Kansas State football coach for five Rozelle said lhal none of the years, Wednesday was' mentioned

owners, including George Marshall as a candidate for the vacant of Washington, was against ex-pansion. There is a difference of Drake coaching post.

Basketba II Scores

* * * Jack Hill, Iowa dislance run-MIA!.H BEACH IHT S) - Pete ner, will compete in the Interna­

RozeUe must be regarded as lional ieet of Champions in Wln­compromise Commissioner of the nipeg, Canada. Saturday. entered National Football League. in the one mile run.

The tendency of the 12 club own- Coach Francis Cretzmeyer. who ers here assembled is to play down will fly to Canada that angle as "unfair" to the slim Friday with Hill, young public relations expert who said that ~be got a 3-year crack at the job at an ftaw~eye semor annual salary of $50,000. I now IS capable of

R II ' --,.. "It about a 4:15 race. oz. e IS . more ,:-,Isti~." His be t time,

W1IUId be ludicnlUS, he said, to made in 1959, is consider m~self os. an,~hing but 4: 12. Crelzmeyer • compromise chellce. said that the meet His election, after six days of in- is a new one and

effectual Wrangling, almost im· that Hill 's oppan-mediately cleared away the smoke ents ate not HILL of battle and both sides expressed known to him. The Iowan probably satisfaction in the way the argu- will run against at least two mem­ment was resolved. bers of the Canadian team which

The solid even, otherwise known competed in the Pan-AmerIcan as the young turks, obtain atis- Game last September. faction in the knowledge that they are the ones who brought Rozelle out of deep Inftiield and into the center of the picture.

George Preston Marshall of the Washington Red kins is the spokes· man of the old guard. Asked his opinion of the winner of the fight, Marshall answered. "the National Football League, ' of course."

The fact that Rozelle was hircd at $50,000 while Marshall Leahy, San Francisco altorney upported by the solid seven' through 22 bal­lots, asked $75,000 did not hurt the chances of the younger man, to be sure. But one mu t believe that .money was a negligible factor.

What sold the old guard II that whil. Rozelle Is a Californian he Isn't 0 fanatic: about it. Leahy had insisted that the office be moved to San Francisco and for a week MarJhAll had thundered, "No on. can convince me that our operation cen function properly with headquarten on lhe Pacific: Coalt." When Rozelle stated his willing­

ness to move into the Philadelphia offices of the late Bert Bell and reo tain the personnel that had been gathered by Bell he was eleeled pronto. The new Commissioner said that he might move the head­quarters to New York, but not im­mediately.

. \ Varsity .. Baseball

I

i-iltY' IMIM6eH .. ,..ft .... are asked to report for II meeting Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in the arm· ory sec:tIon of the Fieldhouse, Coach Otto Vogel will outline plalK for th& Mason. including informati.. about the pradiu sessions and the schedule. Open· Inv game is April 1.

Feb. 20 Schedu Ie Conflicts Eased With Time Switch

A time change for the Northwest­ern-Iowa dual swimming m~ has cased some of the conflicts for the crowded Saturday. Feb. 20 when basketball, swimming, wrestling. fencing and gymnastics teams have home events.

The Northwestern swimming meet will start at 1 p.m., instead of the original time of 2:30. other afternoon contests are fencing with Illinois and Wayne State at 1 p.m., gymnastics wilh IUinols, 2 p.m. A basketball game with In­diana is at 7:30 p.m .• followed at 9:30 p.m. by the Michigan State Wrestling meet.

Iowa's other winter sports team, track. has a triangular meet wiUI Michigan State and Northwestern Friday evening, Feb. 19, with field events starting at 7:30 and runnJng events "t 8 o'clock.

Intramurals Enlries for Intramural VoIl • .,.

ball and Bowling are due at the Intramural Offlc. (Room 213 Field House) Friday, January 29.

Your Feet don't ask'

for much - Jult good shoesl

Try a pair of EndicoH-Johnson Guid~tep

Shoes 8.95 to 1 i. 95

SimpJo~ SHOE STORE 113 Iowa Ave.

McDonald/s All American Meal 45' opinion, however, on how many The Des Moines Tribune said a Mlnne.poUo ll:'B~ClnNU 112

teams should be accepted and reliable source indicated that ~~~~~~~hi:4,12~e~;1~ y~k J17 Hamburgers _ all beef _ 1Sc when, 1960 or 1961. Mertes, former Iowa football star, KentuckY 114, Geora'a 60 Triple Thick Milk Shakes _ 20c

The clubs voted at Philadelphia was receiving favorable consldera- ~C;:l~ V~;:;:rn:6'grt}:nTll.l1 81 Golden Brown Idaho French Frle. - 1 Dc last October h-l to expand. Meet- tion. ~;::~Qc~hl~r. ~rr~lna:io:/~[f~r 63 FREE DELIVERY on purchase of $20r more ing on l the basis of that vQt,e, Jack McClelland, Drake athletic Clark Colle,e 67. Mil •• Colle,. IBlrm. DIAL 1-1146 George Halas of the Chicago director. would not confirm this, lnaham, Ala. 5Z MOld I ..... h . f th . Dayton 77, Vlrlllnia Tech 58 nears, C airman 0 e expansion however. He said about 8() per- WI..,onJln 82. l'forth Dakota • committee, promised Minneapolis- sons have expressed an interest Su.ubenvllle 78. Geneva 67 C on . S St. Paul and Dallas franchises in in the Drake job. 1960. Mertes resigned as K-State GOMES TO DEFEND

Clint Mllrchison Jr., aId Bedford coach last fall. His Wildcats fin. NEW YORK (All - Harold Gomes Wynne, would-be Dallas owners, ished last in the Big Eight. of Providence, R.I ., the world the drive· in with the archB$ are here, and say they have an or- Drake Coach Tommy O'Connell junior lightweight champion, will ganization all reacjy to go if the recently resigned and signed as defend his title against Flash South on 211 owners will say yes to their ap· quarterback ot the Buffalo protes- Elorde of Manila March 16 at the On the Way to the Airport I· . OPEN TILL 11:00 P.M • p Ication. siona! team in the new American Araneto Coliseum in nearby Que- D Y & SATURDAY

Max Winter, 55-year-old former ~~oo~tb~al~I~Lea~g~u~e'i-iiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~zo~n~Ci~"ty~,~a~s~ub~ur~b~O~C.M~an~il~a~. ~~~~~0~P~E~N~T~IL~L~1~2:~00~P~""5' ~O~N~F~R~I ~A~~~~~~~~~ owner of the Minneapolis Lakers' , basketball team. is sitting it out for the Minneapolis-St. Paul inter­ests. He says if the league gives him the okay he has a general manager picked out and several coaches in mind.

Holding the fort for St. Louis is Ed Hagan, public relations diredor for the brewing com­pany in bac:k of the mound city application. Sev.ral owners said the St. Louis present.tlon by brewery executive Joseph Grles­edieck was _ of the best sub­mitted. St. Louis would play in Busch

Stadium, has predicted a 25,000 season ticket sale. and plans to build a 55,000 seat stadium.

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'My Infield Wasn't Unitous' Says Casey of 1959 'Yankees

NEW YORK "" - Casey Sten­gel is getling coy in his old age and won't make a pennant predic· tion for 1960.

''I'm not going to say I'm go­ing to win the pennant like 1 did • last year," the New Work mana­ger said Wednesday. " I made a mistake. But that's the way I relt. The playe~s felt that way, too. I guess we were all hepped up be· cause we had won the World Se· ries."

The Yankees rinished third, 15 games behind the champion Chi­cago White Sox and 10 back of Cleveland. Stengel blamed not only the players but himself for the team's worst finish in more than a itecade. • h.

"Any time you finish third ," he said, "you got to blame some part of it on the manager. You can't run around the corner and CASEY STENGEL hide from it. I should have seen to ---- -----0--­it that there was more spirit on wish they had taken one on the the club. My Infield, especially , elbow or something. Nobody ever had no liCe. The players had the kill d f d ' th .. ability, IMtt they looked shaky. got e rom olllg at. They weren't 'unltous.' They did- The trade. with Kansas City for n't have a take charge guy out right fielder Roger Maris, Casey there.'" said gives the Yankees three out-

Stengel said his team will be fielders who drove in 74 or more stronger. but admitted Chicago and Cleveland might be even tougher to beat than last year.

"Both clubs improved them­selves by trades this winter." he said. " I'm more worried about Cleveland .They·ve got a good in· field now with Johnny Temple from Cincinnati. They've got some

runs, la t season. Th others are MicJCey Mantle in center, and Hec­tor Lopez in left.

"We didn't have enough runs balted in last year." Casey said. "Players who should have driven in 100, drove in only 75 and those who should have driven in 75 drove in 30 or 35." good young pitchers, too.

"Chicago helped itself by get· ting Minnie Minso. He drove , in a lot of runs and he got hit 16 or 18 times, didn·t he? That shows he'd do anything to get On base. That was the trouble with my fel ­lers. They didn't get conked enough. Many's the time. with the bases full and the score tied , I

Stengel also put some blame on the pitchers. He cited Bob Turley who won only eight games after winning 21 in 1958.

He listed Whitey Ford, who signcd Wednesday, Art Ditmar, Jim Coates, and rookie Bill Short, in addition to Turley, a his big five.

••

(AlAIMr of "I Was a Teen-Goe Dwarf", "The Many LoIIU of Dollie Gillis", etc.)

APPAREL OF!' PROCLAIMS THE MAN

The hounds or sprinj!; Are on ",inter's trace~. Soon wo will be I!hedding our mukluks Rnd union suits und putlin~ on our spring finery. And what doe Dame Fa~hion decree fOT the com· ing IIeIIIIOn?

(~ttple~' M9n, incidentally, iA ot, as many pwplc beli vc, a. fiotitiou8 character. he waR It relll EllJl:li~h\\'ollinn \\'ho lived in Elizabethan times and , indeed, Engltmd iR greally in hcr debt. During the invasion of the Sj)llnl~b Armada, Dame Fasl1ion­not yet a. Dame but a mere, unlettered country la~ named Becky Sharp-during the il1vll~ion, I llllY, of the "pan.ish Armada, this dauntlC8S girl stood on the white clifT of Dover and turned the tide of battle by rallying the Fnggin~ morole of the British fleet with this stirri,," JlQtm of hir 0\\ tl compo-itiQn :

Don't be guile". Men oj Brilain. Swil1flllour cullo$3, We ain'l quitlin' .

S1IIQfh Ihe Spanish, Sink Ihtir OOau, },{ aU 'em t'O.nilh, LiM a horae makea 00('.

For Good Q1A«n Be". Good N., you ,otta MaUGmtM OJ that Armada.

Yau won't Jail! Knock 'emf/all TIIm we'll drink ale .4 nil rtullike that.

Aa a reward Cor theee inspirational verses Queen Elizobeth dubbed her a Dame, made her poet laureate, and gave her the Western Hemisphere except Duluth. But this was not the ex­tent oC Dame Fashion's services to queen and country. In f589 Ihe invented the egg. In 1590, alas, she was arrested for poach­ing and impriaoned for thirty years in a butt of malmsey. This later became known 88 Guy Fawkes Day).

But I digreee. Let U8 get back to spring fashions. Certain to be popular again this year is the cardigan (which,

curioualy enough. was named after 'Lord Cardigan, who com­manded the Engll8h fleet against the Spanish Annada.. The Iweater is only one product of this fertile Briton's imagina.tion. He also invented the ball-peen hammer, the gerund, and the molar, without which chewing, 88 we know it today, would not be po8IIible).

But I digreee. The cardigan, I say, will be back, which is eauee for rejoicing. Why? Because the cardigan has nice big pocket. in which to carry your Marlboro Cigarettes-and that, good buddies, is ample reason for celebration. Do you think Bavor went out when filters came in? If so, you've got another unoke oominl. I mean Morlboros-all the rieh, smooth flavor of prime tobaecoi pillS a fiI\4)r that really filtel'll. So slip into your cardigan and hie youl'llClf to your tobacconist (or some pod Marlbol'Ol. They come in IiCft pack or flip-top box. Cardi­PIlI come ill pink for girls and blue for boys. C IllO U .. 8h_

r • • • " ...... ,. -.".r .molter, Ir, Marlbpro.. If I/OU',. _ non • Iller alnOUr, tr, rhlllp Morr(" If rou',. 4 t.'.III.'on _'ch.r 'rr lIa .11.,""_n'. "Tla. AI_", Lo"., o( Dobl. GlllI,"-"...... .. ",.,~ q~" , , r J ~ , ~

Page 6: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-01-28

I

, Pig. '-THE DAILY IOWAN-low. City, 1 •. - Thursday, Jln. 21, tHO

its of Final ' Ti

Quite a View of Final Week Do you feel shaky, bewild.red, and a little out of focus? Mayb. final week makes you f .. 1 about like the book looks in this pictur •• If 10, you are

probably not alon •. Th. r.flection in this coffee pot reflects SU I's .mphasis now on books, coHee, and thai alHoo-precious tim •.

ps Thos'e Who Know Skim and Scan, Follow a Plan

By JUDY KLEMESRUD

Assistant City Editor

Final week begins Friday. And mo t of

SUr's to!> students have the same bit of adviee for this grueling week : Get Plenty

of Sleep! Sara Schindler, A4, Albia, is an excep­

lion to the rule. President or Della Zeta sorority, a Mortar Board member, and a past president of YWCA, Sara said she didn't believe in a lot of sleep during final week. "Three or (our hours are plenty," she said, "because finals are an abnorma l situation, and you have to adjust to them somehow."

Sara is also a member of Student Pub­lications, Ine., and owns a 3.25 grade point average (G.P.A. l. "Drink lots of coffee, but don't take any pills," advised Sara, "and if coHee can't do 'il, don't bother." Sara said students should devote most of their study time to learning , minute details, as they should already know the main ideas of the course.

Dean Otto, A3, Gladbrook, would pl'ob-

ably disagree wiLh Sara. "Get lols of sleep," he advised. Dean has this to say about final week studying: "Have a good set of notes, and if you don't. try to obtain some. Spend your final week skimming everything, and try to get the main pal­terns and ideas of the course. Study your notes and text together in order to have one big picture of the eourse instead of two divided ones."

Dean, who has a 3.69, said that students

should form possible test questions in their minds as Lhey are studying. " And don't

study for more than two Qr three hours at a time," he warned. "Alternation is besl." •

A form.r pr.sident of Alpha Lambda

D.lta, freshmen women's honorary,

Barb Biornstad, A3, Spencer, said she wears one particular outfit every day during final week. "Every time I put the outfit on, I feel like I hav.- to study," she said_ Barb, II form.r Central Partv Commi"ee ""ember and noW on Union Board, said that a study schedule is a good idea - if you don't spend too much time making it out. Bilrb, who has above a 3.S (including two semesters of 4.0), said that short studv breaks are vital, She and a group of. sorority sisters plav a few hands of bridge betwee" every two or three hours of study.

Walt Barbee, A4, Spirit Lake, president

I -\

All Kinds of Studying The pressur. is on. F inal exams start this week and study is the

first order of business lIS the scarcity of study splice in Univ rsity Library testifies . The nooks and cranni.s are being flll.d with study weary students.

of Delta Chi fraternity and a member or Omicron Delta Kappa, men's leadership fraternily, said: ''It helps to cram, but get it during the semester; for no malleI' bow hard you cram at the end, you won 't get it - I've tried!"

StudenL Council President Judy Clark,

A4, Cedar Falls, always makes a study

schedule (or [inal week, including breaks,

starling at 8 in the morning to ] 1 at rlight.

Judy has had only two hours of " B" dul'­ing her college career, and has the hi ghest

grade average of any coed in the senior

class. She is also a member of Mortar

Board and head drummer of the Scottish Highlanders . She advises plenty of sleep and a eomfortable place for sludying.

Judy said she always reviews each sub­jeel al the end_ of the day. "It really helps

when final week roils around," she com­mented .

- "I always study for a certain number or hours rather than by chapters or sec­tions," said Marcia Fellllema, A3, Mount Ayr. Marcia also finds time to be a dancer for the Scottish Highlan~ers , president of Burge Bali's Beth Wellman house, and ac­companist [or the Old Gold Singers. Her G.P.A. is 3.7. Marcia said she studies in her room at the dormitory because she fcels lhe library is "distracting ." She also advises lO-minute breaks for every hour of study. "You learn'" more that way," she added.

"There is nothing that beats good old­fashioned studving," said Jay Wilson, A4, Creston. Jay, winner of tte ~7S0 Fairall Scholarship in adverti4ing, had a 4.0 one semester, and has an overall G.P_A_ of 3_15. "1 always do a lot of underlining, and then review that care­fully," he said. Jay said he studies for about an hour, and then takes a 5 or 10-minute break. No DOl.? " 1 won't touch the stuff," Jay said.

Sandy McMahon, A4, Sioux City, said th,al "memorize like heck" is the best policy for final week. "If you don 't know it before, you can't learn it in a week and a half," she said. Sandy 's G.P.A. is 3.9.

A3, Clinton. advises SUlowans to sludy all year, so they won't have to read lhe ma­terial for the first time during final week. "Take notes on the r eading in your texts so you won 't have to read it more than once, " she recommended, "and take lime to do something besides study."

Becky . is the new co-edilor of The Iowa Defender. As a freshman, she was presi­dent of Junior Panheiienic Council, and was chairman of SUI's Orientation pro­gram last fall. She has earned a 4.0 for lhree semesters, and has a G.P .A. of 3.S. Becky added thesJ! two tipS for students: "Never take any artificial stimulants, and never study all night!"

Lloyd Humphreys , A4, Chicago, presi· dent of Omicron Delta Kappa, said cram­ming can 't replace conscientious studying dW'ing the semester. "A lot of people study too long, when a few hours of concenlraled study would give beller results ," he said. Lloyd is also president o[ the 1960 senior class, and played center on the Hawkeye football team. He said lhat preparation throughout lhe semester is the best policy. "And be sure to rest whcn you're tired," he added .

If the advice given by some of SUI's leading students has given you an inreri­ority complex , here arc some commenls thal may cheer you up:

A coed with a 3.3 said: "1 let every, thing go until the last minute and then cram. It works for me because I learn better when I know there is no time to waste. Last final week I was 1,500 pages behind In one subied. I believe in cram· ming, and th .. only thing I have agllinst it is that it is tiring."

An eX-honor student had two sugges· tions: i1l "Buy lhe books and study;" and (2) "Canccl your registration Thursday."

Phi Beta Kappas seem to have their

problems, 100 . Charlie Day, A4, Des Moines, member o[ lhe national scholas­

tic fraternity, said: "To be asked how to

study for finals reminds me of what Louis (Satchmo l Armslrong said when

asked the question "Wha~ is jazz? " -"Man, if you ha ve to ask that al a time

Former CPC member Becky Carnes, like this, I can't answer it!"

Daily Iowan Photo Feature

By Jerry Smith and Boris Yaro I I

.;-Here an industrious coed hits th. books with th. Iy before her. The clock? Another reminder that

she only has eight hours and 20 minutes of studying before her last day of classes this sem.ster b."ins.

necessary tools of the t rade - coff •• pot, No· Dale, cigarets, and that sullen reminder that finals "egin Jan. 29, Friday - placed conv.nient-

Only No-Doze Has Failed-Sq 'for Pop Corn ,Break rime No-DOle seems to have failed for this SUI coed. She is lynn Anderson, A1, Boon., a perf.ct e'xam. pie of the adage that too much "booklng it" can mako ono pretty tired. Lynn is just one of tho

-----.~ . - -----

manv SUlowans who will find thev jUlt can't keep those peepers open aft.r studying for about fltree or four hours consecutivelv at the Library. The quietness, warmth and solemn "tmosphcre is

..

just too much, in most CIS", and lynn II no exception. Maybe II cup of coffee will have more bentficial eHect but th.r. Hem. to be no sub­stitute for II good night'. sleep.

\

+- -~

Theso three coeds are studying for their finals und.r the old adage that "all work lind no play maku Jack (Jill) a dull boy (girl)" I. thty pre· pare for thllt big week beginning Friday. Here,

from left, Sue Nelson, A2, Rockford, ilL, Tuck Reln.rt, N2, Park .Ridge, III ., and Kirst.n Win· ne"torm, A2, Sweden, wh ip up I fresh poll"tr of corn to take the edge off the s/udylng grind.

I'

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·1

"

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• •

..•

e

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Firms Using Non-Iowa Goods Boom

Iowa firms using non-Iowa ma­p terials to produce products for sale

outside the state employ almost half of Iowa's manufacturing work-

• er , an SUI economics professor points out in the December issue oC the Iowa Business Digest.

Copies of the issue, which dis-• cusses changes in the Iowa econ­

omy, are- available free for use in Iowa clas rooms.

A large portion of increases in Iowa manufacturing employment i. also provided by these firnu, adds Clark Bloom, professor of ec~i~ and assistant director of the SU I Bureau of Business and Economic Research. These industries, which have no con­nection with the state other than the fact that their plants are lo­cated in Iowa, employ 47.5 per tint of Iowa's manufacturing worllers.

• ~ .

Some of these firms cfln be thought of as decentra lized, as hbving "spiiled-out" from the Great Lakes industrial area, Pro­fessor Bloom explains. These in­dustries locate in Iowa only be­cause total costs of serving their customers arc lower Ulan else­where, however, Professor Bloom emphasizes.

I \ ,

.,

· ' e

Iowa's farm-bred, traditionally literate work (orce is frequently held to be more dependable, hard· er working, and willing to work for less money. Wage rates tend to be lower since Iowa is a labor-surplus area, Professor Bloom says.

Iowa ', smaller communities offer lower tax burdens and site COlts than do large centers in the industrial bolt_ Fortunatelv, transport technology has made Iowa's lower wage, site, and lax costs more accessible to firms desiring to reach them, he adds. Professor Bloom divides UICSC

Iowa firms into four elltegories: (ll firms producing for n regional market, which employ 8.6 per cent of Iowa's manufacturing workers ; (2) firms u ing inputs from the West and South, 7 per ccnt of workers; (3) firms uSlllg inputs from Greal Lakes area, 13.1 per cent of workers; (4) firms both buying inputs and selling products in Grcat Lakes area, 18.8 per cent of workers.

Dean SUI

2 Alumni, Named to Planning Group

Two SUI alumni and an SUI dean have becn named members of the Council of the Old Gold De­velopment Fund IOGDFI . is the voluntary fund-raising ganization of SUI alumni.

Named to two-year melml)er,shipsl on the council were Mrs. J. Day, Washington; Mrs. Collins, Cedar Rapids; and F. Loehwing, dean of the Graduate College.

During the past four years the Fund has made allocations totalling $161,317 to support research and special projects at SUI.

Prof To Attend Youth Conference

Gladys Benz, SUI associate pro· fessor of nursing, has been invited 10 participate in tht Golden Anni­versary White House on Children and Youth, to be held in Washington, D.C., March 27 to April 2.

The purpose of the conference is to promote opportunities for chil­dren and youlh to realize Lheir full potential for a creative me in freedom and dignity.

Miss Benz will represent the Iowa Nurses' Association at the colliel'ence .

ANGELS LA PORTE CITY, Iowa (tiPIl -

The "Heavenly Corner" here has lost its Angels.

Mr. and Mrs. John Angel, who operated Angels' Cafe for 11 years have sold out and moved away. Their cafe was across the street from Bible's Barber Shop. Hence the unusual name for the corner .

I ['W~l NOW Thru FRIDAY

The True Story of N_V.'s

Savage Waterfront Wan

Page 7: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-01-28

a time

Tuck Win.

o!

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l'

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II ., , ~ . , ,

I.

e

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Firms Using Non-Iowa

Goods Boom l Iowa firm using non-Iowa ma­

terials to produce products for sale outside the state employ almost half of Iowa's manufacturing work.

• ar, an SUI economics professor points out in the December issue of the Iowa Business Digest.

Copies of the issue, which dis­cusses changes in the Iowa econ­omy, arc. available free for use in Iowa classrooms.

A large portion of increases in Iowa manufacturing employment II also provided by these firms, .dds Clark Bloom, professor of economics and assistant director of the SUI Bureau of Busine5$ and Economic Research. These industries, which have no con­nection with the state other than the fact that their plants are lo­cated in Iowa, employ 47.5 per cent of Iowa's manufacturing workers. Some of thcse firms c,m be

thought of as decentralized, as having "spilled-out" from the Great Lakes industrial area, Pro­fessor Bloom explains. These in· dustries locale in Iowa only bc-

~ cause total costs of serving their customers are lower lhan else-

• where, however, Professor Bloom emphasizes.

Iowa's farm·bred, traditionally literate work force is frequently held to be more dependable. hard· er working, and willing to work for Ie money. Wage rate tend to be lower inee Iowa is II labor-surplus area, Professor Bloom says.

Iowa's smaller communities offer lower tax burdens and site costs than do large centers in the industrial bolt. Fortunately, transport technology has made Iowa's lower wage, site, and tax costs more accessibl. to firms d15irin9 to reach them, he adds. Professor Bloom divides Uleso

Iowa firms into four clltcgorics: (J I firms producing for a regional markel, which employ 8,6 per cent of Iowa's manufaclUflng workers; (2) firms u ing inputs Irom the West and South. 7 per cent of workers; (3) fi rms uSing Inputs from Great Lakes area, 13.1 per cent of workers; (4) Iirrns both buying inputs and selling products in Great Lakes area, 18.8 per cent of workers.

2 Alumni, Dean Named to SUI Planning Group

Two SUI alumni and an SUI dean have been named members 01 the Council of the Old Gold De­velopmenl Fund (OGDF). OGDF is the voluntary fund-raising or­ganization of SUI alumni.

Named to two-year memberships on the council were Mrs. Robert J. Da , Washington; Mrs. Arlhur Collins, Cedar Rapids; and Walter F, Loehwing, dean of the SUI Graduate College.

During the past four years the Fund has made allocations totalling $161,317 to support research and special projects at SUI.

P, of To Attend Youth Conference

Gladys Benz, SUI associate pro­lessor of nursing, has been invited to participate in the Golden Anni· versary White House Conference on Children and Youth, to be held in Washington, D.C., March 27 to April 2.

The pUl'pose of the confercnce is 10 promote opportunities {or chilo dren and youth to realize their full potential for a creative life in freedom and dignity.

Miss Benz will represent the Iowa Nurses' Association at the conference.

ANGELS LA PORTE CITY, Iowa (lA'Il -

The "Heavenly Corner" here has lost its Angels.

Mr. and Mrs, John Angel, who operated Angels' Cafe for 11 years ha ve sold out and moved away. Their cafe was across the street from Bible's Barber Shop. Hence the unusual name for the Corner.

I r·w!] NOW Thru FRIDAY

The True Story of N.Yo's

I THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, la.-Thursday, Jan. 21, lHt-P ... ~

St~dy Cites Habits Bids for 2 TOPS In SERVICE Aged Show in Interests Proiects Open It's Artistic Cleaners

While it may be possible to pro­vide counseling for the aged through television programs, mo t people over 60 contacted in a SUI study would not watch such pro­grams. Instead they probably would continue to walch their fa­vorites - Perry Como, Ed Sulli­van, and What's My Line - Jere R. Hoar, G, Oxford, Miss .. found .

However, the mass media's role in counseling need not include only lhe life-sized face on the screen or the signed column, Hoar re­ports in a Ph.D. disserlation sub­mitted this month at SUI. " Drama can provide counsel, as can fiction, fact articles, radio documentaries, quizzes, panels, and almost any other format suggestible," Hoar explains.

If radio and television were to oHer prOframs designed to coun­sel older people, the bulk of the audience might well be made up of persons who would need it least, he says. These persons would ~ most likely to expose themselves -to similar content in newspaper5, magazines or books. The SUI survey also shows that

counseling concerning aging might be more effective for persons not yet 60 since they wi ll read and watch TV less as they get older.

During 1957 Hoar interviewed 200 people over 60 years of age in Oxford. Miss .. in making the study of reading, listening and viewing habits of the aged.

If forced to give up four o~ the [jve major media. 72 of the 200 in­terviflwed said they would retain televi ion, The numbers prefering the other media were; 63, news­papers; 38, radio; 19, books, and 8, magazines.

Newspapers were believed the most unbiased by 41 per cent of the old people. Television was named by 30 per cent, and radio by 2S per cent. However, 30 per cent said they had the most faith in TV when faced with two contradictory stories, with 20 per cent naming daily newspapers. The sur survey showed 94 per

cent of these aged read a daily newspaper. Seventy-seven per cent

ond. religiOUS programs third. The prevalence of daytime radio listen­ing decreased with age, Boar adds,

Television was far the mOlt used of the media, Hoar says. The aged lpent an average of 141 minutes a day watching TV, SO minutel listening to radio, 48 minutes reading a neWIpaper, 29 minutes reading magazines, and 21 minut.. reading books. On the average weekday the 200

old people surveyed pent nearly five hours reading, listening and viewing Ihe mass media. Persons who had atl~nded college spent more time than others, Hoar re­ports. but increa ing age brought decreasing exposure to these media.

Adlai's Barber Just Won't Give Him Up

SPRINGFIELD, lit. 1*1 - Ad­lai E. Stevenson has advised his former barber, Jim Drew, to give up trying to elect him president.

Drew last week filed his peti­tions al a candidat. for Demo­cratic National Convention dele­gate and said he would support the former Illinois governor.

Tuesday, Drew received a note from Stevenson.

"I hear you are still for me for president," it said.

" Bless you, my dear friend, but you have suHered enough, and I release you herewith."

SAY FIELDS RAIDED HAVANA IA'I - A light plane

lried to set fire to cane fields lakcn over by the Institute of Agrarian Reform near Santa Clara in central Cuba Tuesday night, of­ficial sources said here Wednes­day. They reported an army de­tachment opened up with machine guns but failed to hit the low-nying intruder. The plane dropped narcs, but they failed to ignite the damp cane. the sources added. The gov­ernment blames these nocturnal (lights on anti-government· Cubans based in Florida.

Until Feb. 17 Bids will be received unlil Feb.

17 by SUI on construction of Law Annex services and Pharmacy Building site clearance.

Bids will be accepted until 1; 30 p.m. Feb. 17 at the SUI Office of Planning an Construction and will be opened and read at 2 p.m. the same day.

The Law Annex project involves installing outside connections for utilities, including electricity and plumbing. I

The Pharmacy Building project includes clearing underground util­ities such as water and sewer fa­cilities. This will involve laying new pipe around the building si te. The project does not include clear­ing away structures on the site or relocating S. Grand Ave. in front of the Dew building.

The new four-floor Pharmacy Building will be located south of the Medical Laboratories and Medical Research Center.

Iowa n To Atte.,d Michigan Meeting

Dr. Franklin H. Top, director of th SUI In titute of Agricultural Medicine, will attend the 15th Na­tional Conference on Rural Health at Grand Rapids, Micb., Feb. 25, 26, and 27.

The conference is sponsored by the Council on Rural Health of the American Medical Association.

IT PAYS TO SHOP

Classified

Advertising Rata

Olle Da1 .......... 8¢ a Word

Two Days ......... 1()¢ a Word

Three Days .. . .. 12¢ a Word

Four Days ... . , ... l';¢ a Word

Five Days ....... .. 15¢ a Word

Ten Days ......... ~ a Word

One Month ........ ~ a Word (Minimum Charge sot)

DISPLAY ADS

One insertion: $1.26 a Column Inch

NIKITA TO VISIT INDIA Five Insertions a Month: MOSCOW (.4'! - Premier Nikita Each Insertion: $1. a Column Incb

Khrushchev will spend Fllb. 11-16' in [ndia while en roule to Burma Ten In~ertlons a Month: and Indone ia for visits. The dates Each Insertion : 90c la Column Inc!: were announced by Tass Wednes­day. rHE DAILY IOWAN RESERVES

rHE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY ADVERTISING COPY.

IN IOWA CITY

1 HOUR DRY CLEANING SERVICE 2 HOUR SHIRT SERVICE 4 HOUR FLUFF & DRY SERVICE

SHIRTS Laundered

25¢ -.Artidtlc

CLEANERS 211 IOWA AVENUE

10 Roommate Wonted 3" Who Does It? 6 Rooms For Rent ~~~~~-----------\fOVING _ one piece or a house lull. ROOM tor craduote male Iludenl5. 1I1ale roommate to .hare nice aparl-

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HAGEN'S TV. Guaranteed Telovl.lon SINGLE ROOM tor craduale womcn. Roommate to ohare nttmcllve apart. Servldn, by certlJled ",rvlce man. WIS. 2-20 ment. Call 8-2375 aller ~:OO p.m. 1.29

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Apartments For Rent ,12

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lowl Ave. Phone 8-3234. 2-4 APARTMENT available February 151h.

WANTED AT ONCE - Man or Woman to .upply fnmlll.. with Rawlelcb

Produrts In Iowa City. <;onsumers write u. for productl. Many dealcl'l earn ,,0 wHkly part time - '100 and up tull time. Write Rawlel~h·.. Dept. IAA -640 - I. Fr~.port. Illinois. 1-28

Two dormltorv rooms [or mcn. Slnlll,' 702 Iowa Ave. , 1-29 Good Boord Job open (or . Iuden!. 7:S{) or double occupancy wllh adJolnlnll TWO BEDROOM furnished apottmenl. to IO:~O ~v .. nlnl" Jock', care, June-

• End, Tonite e "BATTLE of the CORAL SEA"

"30 FOOT BRIDE" of them spent 16 minutes to 2 1jljjjiiji!!==~i hours daily rcnding a paper. The I 'p;iiiiii~iiii"'--=s front page was the preferred sec­tion and the obituary section was the item most widely read.

slUdY and " bath. ['Inen., lamie, type· m.OO. Available Feb. 1>t. Ln •• reo tion Hlahway I and 218 South. 2-8 wrller fuml.hed Clo.. In. 7426 2-2 ~~~:-"~~n ~.:'nddrl. fa.lIltle.. DIal ~~~ MEN-WOMEN. $20 Dally, Seu Lumln-,~ DOUBLE ROOM for undergradunl. OUI Nam plates. Write Reeves Co"

If only two sections oC a paper could be retained, 171 of the 200 interviewees chose the front page and gcneral news section. The second most popular was the edi­torial page, follQwed by th~ church page. woman's page, and comic s~etion.

Wilh the exception br ~en in theh- 80's, the percentage of peo­ple in the survey reading a )news­paper cover-lo·covcr increased as their age inereased, Hoar says.

Suggestions for makIng dailies "better - more interesting or valuable" were mild. by 60 per ct'l1t of those interviewed by Hoar. The most freqUllnt request for improving newspapers was for larger, plainer type. Other suggestion for improving news· papers were: include more ptc· tures, provide more comple,e news, fewer ads, more first reo ports by reporters, less society and more farm news, and fewer gimmicks. Hoar also repor~ 60 per cent of

the aged did not read books, but 71 per cent read magazines.

The fact that 57 per cent of those surveyed listen to radio 110 min­utes daily conforms to national figures for radio listeners of all ag~s, Hoar says. According to na­tio}1al figures, 56 per cent of a\l people over 12 listen 132 minutes daily.

However, whlle 53 per cent of the aged listen to radio during the day, only 29 per cent listen after 6 p.m. ijews was most often listed as the (<Wf)fitc program , music was sec-,.

STRAND-LAST DAY! - In Color -

"DAMN YANKEES" - and­

"GUNS, GIRLS AND GANGSTERS"

"Doors open 1:15 P.M."

mj;b'~II~ STARTS FRIDAY

2 - ALL TIME BIG TIME HITS -

and in Colorl

KARL SCHELL • MALDEN~\

a:;..,.: 'TECHMCOLOR" IIIOIIWARNER BRos.

(OMPANION naTURE M·G·M PAHft'a

"CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF"

srA""IHQ

ELIZABETH TAYLOR PAUL' NEWMAN •

BURllVES JACK CARSON.

~".- '". JUDITH ANDERSON . L-""NC~~:~ --- , 'r-"';i~,

. ~ .' .;;J/III"' . ""> .. J. , ... 4(

, .

girl. Cooklnll and .. frlaeralor prlvl- F R Alleboro. Mo",. 1-28 leie" Dial 4672. 1-28 Apartments or ent 12 60

Help Wonted, Men '." DOUB['E ROOM. Man .tuden\. Two furnlsi,ed room. for ,radualo boYI.

Phone 8-2298. 2- 26 Avall,ble Feb. 1st New bulldlni. Call PART TIME MAN _ 15 hours per 5223 before 5 p.m.; or 2533 altcr 5 p.m, week $2 15 pet hour. Car neceuary.

STUDENT or wo~ni man. _54_80_,_1_-3_o 2-14 Phone Room 303. Jefferlon Hotel. 4:s{)

ROOM for male .,Iudenl .• ""ond ICm .. '- APARTMENT for rent. Adult. Dial 04" . to 6:~ p,m, 1-28 tel', 7485. 2-28 2-4

SINGLE ROOM man .Iuden\. 8-0613. b I H F S I - Babysitter Wonted , 2-21 Mo i e om. or a e 1 8 n~glslercd Nun.e WaJ,ta baby .llter In

61

Room tor .tud~nl IIlrb. Gamma Phi HOUSE TRAILERS for ""I" New and her home weei(-cJay., 8-5762. 2-3 Miscellaneous for Sdl. 2 ~ta Annex. 3Ha. 1-28 u_ed, Alway. the be,t ..,Iectlon In ....;.~....;.....;..;;.,;;..;;.,;;. _____ ...;", ___ ~ _____ "",",,,~~"L.o..L---,_~ lawn. Quality mobile h~me •.•• 1"" ond k W d 64 Ba.IQa colored tllaltk covered armchairs, Slnlll.. room Mole .Iudnn!. Kllch~n ;t;rv~eep~:;.al:~80a~~~~~~ View Tr~~ _W_o ...... ~ __ p_h_l_e_~ _____ _

P"lne condition. $7.60 each. UH<lfJOOI .~~;~~r~'l\~:l;;~tMln"". AV·i~; -------.. -- - CHILD CAl'tE In my home. Convenl. lamPJ". ' .00. 8-3801 or see at Hawk"y~ 19W 45)(10 foot General. Like new, ently locnled nenr campus. Phone [.odi'" . 1-30 Room for graduA'p or working plrl. Many extra •. 7081. 1-28 2380. 1-29 24 I!"cb electric stove. retrllerotor, 8 .3 1 ..!.'l:!r. Currier. :1193. I' 1-3tl For enl:;' or r nt-195a::::4~ foot Cbam- 66

cuPle teet. 8-6180. 2-. Double rooms lor m~n studenls, 809 pIon labile Jiome. 2 bedroom. 8-6160, Autos For Sole -- - -- Iowa. 8-16117. 2.6 1-20 --~----------FOR SALE: Speed Queen wringer ' 1~ Buick Special. 4 door Hardtop. w~.her. Good condition. Call 8-476L. Single and double room for men. CI.,· p '56 - 44 fool Pucemak .. r Troller. Car- Eel' oUer Over ,700,00. 8-39$7. 1-29

1-29 In. Call 8-5Ml . , 2-3 peled, .. ~cencnl condition. 8-3235'1_28 -- --

BOYS ICE SKATES. sl.e 8; Indle. Ice Room for rent-Gr>d ."'rlent or work-.ka"' ... sbe 5, Dial 3411. I-S{) Inll gentleman. D,al 417$. 2-2 1949 Schult. 27 It.; ':. bath. rent laVer

for married couple or liludcnu. FOR SALE: Bendix automatic w.,her, Nice double room for men student. $550.00. SP5t. 2-4

PKOTOFINlSKlNG SAVE lOe

llood condition, Bolt down Iype. UntvenUy undera:Taduale npprovpd ~ial 8-0919. i-3D .s~ col~tlloln~~~,5j~!' ,-.eo, h~. ~xcejl~~D

LNTERNATIONAL TRUCK - Metro. Sinale and <'ouble room •• araduate m~n Four ,peed tran.mlsaJon. EquIpped or over 23, Noar (jpln house ""d hn"- 19S~ MERCURY traUer IV III •• crillce.

2-6 1~!!i~;~~~~;~;~!W!~~~~~!~~~~~- $20.00. 610 E. Church. I-SO 10 pull houooe trailer. 7014. 2-3 pita I. FIve block. to Library. 0013. 2-D Phone 2G!19.

• :II : 1..IllI • -Ill • , I Underwood typewriter. $30,00 .• 093. 1-~a Comlortable doub~'= lor men . .,..R-id.,..e-r-s..,W-a-n-t-e-d.,..------'"'3=2

IN BY 11, OUT BY 5 Done in our Own Darkroom YOUNG/S STUDIO

8 So. DlItJaqufl

.111 -1111 I • lin 111111 ... 111 • --_.. Tan, pll.-lIn~d. double-breaSled car $1~.00. ~939. 1-20 Ooln, to New Jer""y by the turnpikes, coat, Site n. EXt. 3571. 1-28 ROOM tor student IIlrls. Cooklni prlvl- Leave Jan . 30 or 31. :e;"t, ::441. 1-28

Wrecks Rebuilt Glass Replaced Painting Custom Work

ONE BIG WEEK • TO-DAY •

STARTS "DOORS

OPEN 1:15 P.M."

SHOWS: 1:30. 4:00 - 6:40 - 8:45 - "Feature 9:15"

The MOST Fun in 'Town! SUBMERGED WITH 5 GIRLS • •• NO WONDER

THE 5.5. SEA TIGER TURNED A SHOCKING PINKI

·~CARY GRANT ~u~~~ TONY CURTIS UNDER

ADMISSION

MATINEES ~ 7Sc

'OPERATION ~i r-"i'''I''"~r-l n PETTICOAT" ~~~ ....... - LO--~

CI·slI«lIC IN £ ... ST ..... N C 0 ~ -.,;0

JtWt O'BRIEN· DINA MERRilL· GENE EVANS iii 11K SAlCEMJ

.. ARTHUR O'CONNHl PLUS - COLOR CARTOON "PANHANDLE SPECIAL"

AND - IN COLOR -"FABULOUS LAND"

• e8es. 8-2265. 1-30 Instruction.. Ride Wanted -~:.:..:.~~-------- D~lJBLE ROOM for boys. close In. 33

BALLROOM Dance Le.oo.... MImi DI~I 8-0842. 1-28 Need ride to Madison. WI.coniiln, Inter-Youde WOOu. Dial 9485. 1-' Double room. 584<1. 1-29 ""s.loll. Phone 8-6508. 1-28

FREE ESTIMATE Who Does In 6 DQuble rooml lor men Itudenta. 809 ..;..~;:..;;;,.:,;:;,:;,..,;.;,.;, _______ ~ ; .. wa. 8.4687, 1-30 Ignitio;t

Ccrbul'etofS DeFrance and Smith HAWKEYE TRANSFER - The careful Double room lor two student boy.. GENERATORS STARTERS movers. one piece or houseful!. Call Reasonable, 6682. 2-22 B d Sh

8-5707 anYtime. 2-23 ROOMS for men< .tudenls. 221 Melro. e Briggs & Stratton Molora 0 y Op MAKE covered belts. buckle. and but- Ave. 5444. 2-21 P °d S °

tonI, Sewln, maehlnes for rent. yraml ervlces 1221 S. Riversid. Drive Slnler Sewlni Center, 125 S. Dubuque. ROOM tor man student. 2814, 1-28 Phone 8-6604

~p~h~on~e~24~1~3 ............... ~2~-1~2R~~~~~~;:;;::::::~;:~r l ~~62~.~1~S~. ~D~U~b:u~q~U~e~ .... ~D:ia~I.5:7~23:.~:::::::::;~~~~~~~~

WANTED

Woman For Drapery Department Experience preferred , but wlll teach procedures to

one who likes to work with color and fabrics. Good salary and commission. 40 hour week, vacation, elc.

Phone for appointment.

KIRWAN FURNITURE

WANTED - COLLEGE MEN FOR 8 MONTH PERIOD Earn $6.000 between February and September. If you arc tempo­rarily discontinuing your education until ~tember , we have op­portunities availabJe in our Davenport offIce which will enable you to carn in excess of $125.00 per week and quali fy you for our Scholarship Awards. Transportation and lraining\e):penses will be assumed by the Company. Do not apply if you cannot moot these basic require­ments :

1 - 19 to 25 years of age. 2 - 1 semester of College. 3 - Neat appearance. 4 - Above average in aggressiveness.

Starling salary wlll be $100.00 per week. For a personal interview call Mr. Wright at Davenport 3-2937 betwoon 9 a.m. and 2 p.m.

8 y WALKER

MY BONO ISSUE HAS FALLE I

MY GROWTH STOCK HAS DROPPED OFF, ANO MY CHEMICALS ARE "--'''--- I

VERY LOW!

"

.. ,. " .

'.

" " ,

, "

",

" , .. '.

;.. •

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Page 8: Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-01-28

fk:

Pap '-THE DAILY IOWAN-low, City, 1,.-ThurM.y, J.n. 21, lHO

Precise Ensemble-Symington Says 'Government Union Fined SUI Dean, Prof

! To Attend Meet

STRIKE ON OOCKS D J!;NOS I H~S. i\r"cutma '.f' ....

1)0 'k work 'rs In Buenos Aires aJld other Argentine ports began a U.

D('ull It<'lI'Y Kelly Mllliane of sur hout' str'ike Wednesduy in a de-College of Nur~ing and Ella Ras- !nand for higher wages. Exciting Concert

Juggling Intelligence Data lin Wilson Strike Case \\ ASHINGTON It! - Sen. Stum t III this ,uUl1l'ctioll, he 'aid he

yminglon. I D-Mo ), Wcdue. da~' "<l.~ awart' hI' \\"/luld he accused I mus 'en, associ ute professor in the • --~ Colll·ge of Nur~ing. will a ttend a :I • meeting at the Utll\"crsity of Colo- • For •

-Season's Best By JAMES EllIS and strings written upon the death chestra, and there were naturally

Daily low.n Reviewer of George V a nd aptly titled a few joints that creaked, es· La t night the Univer ity Sym- "Music of Mourning," litUe need pecially among the woodwinds, but

phony Orchestra and the Un/ver- be said. William PreucU did all he these are to be excused in what sity String Ohamber Society pre- could witl\ this ser ies of chord was other""i e a most creditable scnled what was clearly the most progressions, but the effect wa performance. substantial and be t performed still more like a movie score for Shostakovitc:h keeps almost program of the eason. At a time a p ychological "thriller" than erttirely to ratMr simple folk of the year when most of US a re anything more seriou . Slow tempi melodies, orche5tratill1l them in too tired to move lor to aUend and everything in minor can make a purely 20th century famion concerts. as was indicated by the thl.llgs lugubrious as well as which gives them sparkle and paltry attendance ) these groups fu nereal. emotional variety. Constructed in showed a vigorous, precise en- typical four·movemont form, but

Th. ch.mber orchelfra WIIS with the slow movement third semble plauing that surpassed the wh t I 'th M ' some • e$5 sure WI 0 - rilther than second, the sym. orchestra's endeavors of earlier in rt' "0' rtI t N 15' I' S Ive men 0 o. In phony is rich in tunes .nd bril-

the year. B.FI.t" (K. 287) thlln with the liant orchestration. p.rtial credit goes to Stuart other piece.. An e.rly.nd 'Except for a few thin spots, the

Canin lind the chamber orchestra sprightly work in .he' r.ther orchestra played witH preci ion . he has orglniud lind prl9ared. lengthy movements, the di"erti- Mr. Gigante maneuvered over th.:! Composed of a mixture of stu- mento is h.rdlly MOlart at his tlimsy junctures between themes dents lind fac:ulty which tends to best. TM light touch used in the with remarkable ea e. Tempi were

accu~ed the Ei enhower Admin- of pOlitical moti\C~ in hi, crit i- CEDAR HAPJDS IA'I - United istration of judging intelligence ci~m 01 the Pl'ntflgon and the Patkinghousc Workers UniQn Lo. data "so the budget books may While House . uch a :cu~alions, he cal 3 and six of its members be balanced." said. would be made by .. those were convicted in District Court

" Tne racts are that a very sub- who prefer to concral thl.' [act~, Wedn(' day in conneclion with stantial missile gap docs exist. and by othl'l"s II ho do nol know I pick~t-line violence at the strike­and the Administration apparently the facts." bound \Vil.son and Company plant i ~oing to permit this gap to in- Symington fired his broadside I h~~1! Dec. 14. crea e." he declared. - a 2.000-word ~ I atement. at a I Judge Floyd Philbricll convicled

Symington. a former Air Force news confe l"lllce and in the l'nate lhe union 10caJ of contempt and ecretary and longtime fot of ad- _ only a day aftl'r Presid~nt Ei· violating a court injunction against

mini tration mlli- . enhower and Central Intelligence c rtain picket line practices at the tary polky. COIl- Agency Director Allen W. Dullt'S plant. lended the U.S. had de(cndrd the n('1V estimates I The local was fined $500, but deficit in irtter- of relative U.S.-Soliet,. trl'ngth. Judge Philbrick uspended all but continental mis- Thr Prcsidl'nt and Dulle . aid I $100. siles has widened th new el'aluations are based on Six members of the local, to more than the~ • •.. .,..._ ... ".;, better information than wa. ,avail- charged with contempt of court, 3-l edge he able about the So\"j(\ military pro- were given jail terms, which were defense gram in the Pi1-t. suspended on condition they show conceded to Soviet Union Democrats ill Congress have good behavior. yea r. Counting been on the attack since last week The six, a ll from Cedar Rapids, shorter I' a n g e wh n Secretary of Dt'fenSl.' Thom- are Leonard Sipe and Don Hapker, rockets, he said, "the Soviet ad- as S. Gatl's Jr. d isclosed the re- local vice president, given 6O-day vanlage would be greater." vis('d estimates which he said terms; and Albert Stewart. Floyd

rado, F(;b 8 to 10. • DELICIOUS Food I They will repre - ' nl SUI at the :I I

Council of :'.Iember AgenCies of the • at • Department or BaCC:llaureate and = REASONABLE Prices. Higher Degrees, National Leagu() • Eat at the I for ursing . • MAID RITE' Dean Mullane will participate in = - • a panel wh~ch will discuss "cradu- I . I ate Education in Nut·sing." =_ Ac:ross from Sc:haeffer HIli.

-I --24

IOWA'S FINEST e ••

• . 20% More Protein Cal~lum .no PhosphClrll'

• Vitamins and Mineral. • :rastes BeHer, Tool

live it art un,v,n b lance of ex- monueHi was proper, but • more bri k and exciting. The strings de-cell ' nl prin; ipals on ~ nolic: all bly intense .pproac:h to the otMr serve special praise for their best weaker "uc:onds," the group mo"ementa might ha"e mllde the ensemble playing of the season, still showed fine mullcl.nslllp wont more "ibr.nt. All in .11, sustaining the driving qualities of .nd a thorough underst.ndl", of howe"er, the Society ,.ve an ell- the second and fourth movements.

"I charge thl Adminislration showed the United States was not Hill, Donald Gatewood and Leo

with ~~ in~li~oce in~m. ~S~~~~~r~in~g~f~ro~m~~u~y~o~v~e:~~al:I~~~P~W~hi~~~,~wihio~reiciciivi~~OO~~iaiY~~in~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tion in such a manner that the in pow~ ~_dc_t_er a Soviet attack. tences. American people hllve been given an inaccurate picture of what is necessary fo r our national de­fe nse," the Missouri sena tor said.

both the Handel and the Mozart. c:enent pertornwance .nd is to be The brass were a lso given ample In the Handel "Concerto GroMO pr.lsed for oHerl/ltl this type of opportunity to shine. perhaps do-in A Minor" (No. 4 of Opus 6), music to the tempul .nd com· ing so a little too brightly. Eight Although not an avowed candi­

date ,Symington is available lor the Democratic presidential nom­

FINAL EXAM ther plaved with II c:lmty which munity. horns and six trombones would carefully delineated the tradition· The second half of the concer t serve better in "The Music Man" al polvphonlc: .nd the newer frH was devoted entirely to Shosta. than in Shostakovitch, but perhap­constructions whic:h the piece koviteh 's "Symphony No.5," a Mr. Gigante is forced to let all contains. Tlte 10rgMHo was pot. huge, lush work to which lhe 01'- and any brass players In. siblr • bit ponderou., but the chestra responded most whole- If nexl semester's concerts con­two IIl1egro movements - heartedly under the able guld. Linue at the pitch of this one, it IUperb. • ance or Charles Gigante. The piece I should be an exciting and success­or Hindemith's piece for vi~la exercises every part of an 0 1'- ful musical schedule.

~--------------------------------~)--~

1 Iniury, 18 Accidents-

Storm 'Gone; /o,wa Cold The weather system lhat frosted

fowa with a layer of ice, moved on to the east Wedne day. but left leaden skies and a few snow Ourries behind.

The fo ecast said continued cloudiness and light snow or snoW flUrries will hang around through Thursday.

llilst one Injury in , the Iowa City .rea Wedneiday. Roger Bliss, ~, of 343 Beldon Ave., lufferod • broken j • ., .bout 10 :45 a .m. Wednesday in a two-c:ar, head­on collision in the 1400 block of E. College Street. Three persons in the other car

were uninjured . They were E lwin R . Annis, 18, of L025 E. w ashing· ton St., driver of the car; Clarissa Miller, 16, of 620 Kirkwood Ave .. and J ulie Garwood, 16, of 900 N. Do~e Street.

forming on Iowa City streets around 3 p.m. TttC~d3y resulted in 18 traffic accid nls in Iowa City, two in Coralville. and one in Uni­versity Heights by late Wednesday afternoon .

IIighways in the Iowa City area were 50 per cent ice·covered Wed­nesday afternoon. They had re­ceived salt applications Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morn­ing. Highway crews spread cin­ders on all main-traveled routes Wednesday afternoon.

ination this year .

Link Grudge Motive with . . Slaying of 4

NORTH BRUNSWICK, N.J. IA'l -The chief investigator said Wed· nesday a grudge appears the most _ _ ~'" likely motive in the mass murder of a doctor's wife, two servants .~~:-(i!:!"~ and a cab driver.

"It looked like the work of an executioner," said Warren Wilentz, . ... -=!?~~ Middlesex Co un t y prosecutor, about the shootings Tuesday in the home of Dr .Francis M. Clarke, a prominent surgeon.

Wil ntz's investigation broad­ened out in include the Elizebeth area Wednesday with the discov­ery of the taxicab used as the getaway car aCter the crime.

All-METAL INDEXED

PORT FILE

J~~5E$1 77 NOW

ONLY Temperatures rose little in Iowa Wednesday from their early morn­ing low which ranged from 10 de· grees at Spencer to 25 at Burling; ton and Davenport. By late after­noon the mercury tood in the low 20 in the northwe t to the upper 205 in the southeast.

Ic:y st reets, sidewalks and highways were blamed for at

,--

Annis wi's charged with failing to yield hal l the street. Police said his westbound car skidded 150 fee~ befq e th impact,

The treezlng drizz~e that began

Iowa City streets were gener­ally clear of ic:e Wednesday aft­ernoon due to a salt and sand millture applied by city crews In tlte morning.

Student 'Council-Discrim~nqtior:t Resolution-

The red and black cab was found before dawn abandoned in Eliza­beth , 25 miles from the Clarke's large white home. ,

The Clarke's gardener, Daniel Ploranski, 65. saw the ca b pull up , to the house Tuesday with two men in it and saw It leave with

CANDY BARS

(Contilltt(,{/ /I'om 1Joge 1) one man .

The eoh'un'lttee. comjJosed of I'ellt,ng M off·campus hollsing. The four victims, each bo\1nd about 20 lJ1embers divided their "Evidence o( dIscrimination in and shot through the head wr~'e

ganilation_ Men should have tM study intQ three fieldS: the history off-campus housing will be cause Dr. Cll\rke's invalid wife. Edith, r ight to organile groups on any of similar ' <;ommittees at SUI, the for the Office to remove the house. 50; Miss Dorothy Moore. 66, a basis tlt.t they wish. sf(uation at tbat time on other from the list of available approved housekeeper and companion to "If your idea is to remove these campu~s and a question and re- housing," M. L. Huit, dean of Mrs. Clarke; Mrs. Cora Thaddies,

clauses," Frederici said. "don't search c~mmittee. students and director of the Office 29, a maid, and Morris Michaels, pass this motion." Among the recommendations of of Student Affairs, said. 56, a Newark cab driver.

The motion removing r ecognition the committee were: abolition of -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; __ iiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ of lhe present Card Section grew f out of concern over the conduct of discrimination In University em- Sh".rts and Dry Clean."ng

ployment, professiona l fraternities, the section at the final two games and social sororities and frate rni-of the 1959 Cootball season. tics, with consideration Cor national IN BY 9 a.m.

In other business, the Student charters; and integration of hous­Employment CommlttH, he.ded ing, both on and ofC campus, by Kay Ackerman, A2, low. wI'tnt'n fl've years OUT BY 4' p.m. Falls, returned • report on Itl . study of wage r.tes, recommend. At a later meeting that month, Ing a 15 per cent sal,ry Increa.. the Counci l accepted the com- LAUNDRY AND for a ll part-time, hourly employ. mit tee's recommendations. es at SUI. The racommend.tlon Tt.. Council, on Feb. 25, 1959, DRY CLEANING will be considered .t the next voted to recommend a plan to Open 7 •• m. to • p.m. Council mHting on Fab. 11. the SHflce of Student Aff.irs to "Acro .. from Pearsons" • 315 E. M.rk.t T~Coo~l ~w~~~re~ n~~I!p~e~d~d~IK~ri~~~'~~~t~~~n~~~the~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

nations from Nancy Schneider, AS, -Wyandotte, Mich., executive sec­retar y of the Council ; Paul Sch­lachtenha ulen, A4, Des Moines. student body vice-president; and Don Lindholm, A3, BuNington, stu­dent a ffai rs commissioner.

* * * Prev;pus Actions On Discrimination

Studies and proposals to elimin­a te d iscrimina tory practices on the SUI cam pus have been undertaken on sever al occasions in recent years .

At t~e March 26, 1958. meeting oI the SUI Student Council , Dave DuUon. Ll , Iowa City, then pres!­d~llt of the Inter-Fraternity Coun­cil , explained to the Council that l~ !FC was gOing on record that any new fraternities wishing to be admitted to campus rid themselves of a ll discriminatory clauses.

During May of 1.se. the Stu· dent Council M.rd • report from Its Minority Groups Sub-Commlt­tN reg.rding their studies in the .N. of dilcrimin.tion.

Do Your laundry While you '

Shop H,-Yee Iowa City'.

Newest mad Finne 24 HOUR COIN

OPERATED LAUNDRY

NOW OPEN Across from Hy.V. Grocery

.t

'Kirkwood "

Kwik Kleen ' ,,~ A STA·NU nORa

. ~ " .~ . q: ~ -±,,~~,, ~ c 'j

- ~

..

r.,'

;

.

• I

SAVINGS ON

I .

C·LOSEOUTS OF THESE 1959 APPLIANCES

AUTOMATIC GAS CLOTHES DRYERS!

GAS RANGES! A. variety of m\ldels and sizes by Roper, RCA Whirlpool and Hardwick 'with new automatic features!

Save now on models by !'hilco·Bendix

and enjoy years of sunny wasndays!

. REFRIGERATORS! Hanli80me 1959 deslgm by General Elec·

tric and Philco at Bavingst

ELECTRIC RANGES! Hurry and chooae from General Electric ranges I

FOOD FREEZERS! Save year 'round with • freezer by General Electric.

CONVINIINT TlIMS EASILY ARRANGED ON THESE FIN. APPUANCU. ~URIY AND SAVE" " " SUPPLY IS UMITID

"our. for ".Uer li"in, IOWA _, 1r.I.INOIS • Gat' _d Elce'tic COmpGA,

ASPIRIN

COOKI

BATTER BOOSTE

CABLE 8 FEET LONG

$2.00 $14 VALUE

Woodbury HAND

AND

BODY LOTION

$1.0050 Siza.

NQ-DOZ TABLETS

SANDWICH CREME

REG.49c

UES

MAN TAN LOTION

AT 05eO

QUART BOTTLE

BUBBLE BATH

OS co lOW PRICE

Box Of 400

Reg" 65c Cans

Room Size APPROX. 9x12

COTTON

LOOP, RUGS

Quae Dining ServiCE Will Receive Report Today

Workers Ask Fewer Hours; Would Aid In New Program In • spec ill I rele... t. Th

Dilly Iowan lah Thursct. night, the ,..., ..... nt.tlves of th Quacfrangle bo.rd-Iobbers 0\11 lined tM proposal ttl be pr ... n eel to the Dormitories ancr Din.i", Services offic. this morning ' :30

TM ,roup proposal the Int .ction to remedy the lnees prevIously ,I"an to Uftl"~:

1. Hours be reduced '01»1'0:1(1

maltly 2S per cent. Thl. full·board from 20 to 15 half·boanl from 11 to • Inc! other "odd·hours" tlonlltely.

2. They ask • definite IIy Monday, Feb. I, so tha ... t workers may Kheciule second·semester cour .. s ingly.

3. In answer to the UIM".,..I" cllim th.t bGard·joDbers -" a two-hour shift Into schedule, a plur.,ity of the jobbers have shown 100 per willingness to make every sible tHort to k.ep open pri.te times_

4. If the plan for hour tion is found to be Iml~aalDle I svstem-wlde balis, recommends that the Quad,'anDIf be used soc:ond se."e.ter "proving1lround" for tion of a later chllnge.

The Quadrangle board· in a meeting Wednesday agreed they will go on strike day, Feb. 8, if Dormitories Dining Services does not them satisfactory COlISICIP.r~I[1

a proposal to be deli vered morning.

Fifty Qu.d workers SU~'IIOI'-ted the Idea of • strike as they in the Quad I.undry r~ to fulu re .ction, A committee was named to

a proposal stating what the wanted from the what they would do if their was denied.

The committee will pres~t proposal ~o thQ. Il(lrmilofY Dining Sevices ' offl<;e this morn for study.

The propo.al is expected cont.in tM request for a tion in hour. that hps H.n core of the group'l with the University. Also to included will probably be somo ,..sons for the suggested chango and some a"urances tlwrt tho QUid worke .. s would try to aid in the or9ilnll.tlon of a new pro. gr.m besed on shorter hours. The committee was

on a representative basis , each segment of the Quad Service a voice in the making of the group ~s a

Two workers from South raigle dormitory were the committee to represent Interests.

Members of lhe committee Dave Morse, Al, Arlington, Frazier CQffie, MI, Altoona ; Mitchell, A2, Des Moines ;

, Pugh, El, Cedar Rapids. and Evans, B3, Clarion. rep,re!ICnting:] Quadrangle dormitory, and Trenary, A2, Ro\Ie, and Kuetbe. /11.2, Sumner, from Quadrangle.

Morse was named chairman the board-jobbers.

* * * ,Coeds Join Quad Dispu

The board-jobbers at Ourrier Hall are circulating <II petition similar to the one that culminated in the Quadrangle proposal for a cut in working hours.

Pat Ballard. A2, Altoona, and Merie Thompson, A2, Grand Junction, are the originators of the Currier petition.

According to Miss Ballard, the coeds at CurrIer seem to be in· terested in the movement. AI· thclugh the petition was started Thursday evenln, at supper, there are already several names on the Ust, she said .

Miss Thompaon said that the Quad group has a good argument and she hopes that Currier Hall will be able to come out in sup. port of the movement.

Honeymoon Bliss': Virus, No Smokes?

LONDON !.fI - Lord Beatty, 54, ... 110 returned two weeks ago from hi, 'fourth honeymoon, is 111 with a virus infection nf the chest. The "ealthy grandaon of the late Mar· lhail Field of Chicago is in a Lon· don clinic. His IB-year-old bride, !he former Diane Kirk, &aId he i~ quite comfortable. But he baa had to ~ivo up .moking.