daily iowan (iowa city, iowa), 1965-10-07

10
. Badge Sales DeIt. Upsilon rtlmlln. In "rtt pilei In the Homecoming ..... ... cont,.. but Slgm. Nu hal tuIpIced L.mbd. Chi Alph. for ""'"' placD, D .. n Dee ... ", AS, ........ , IN ... I" _halnn.n, NpOtIod WedlIDICIay night. Elllablished In 1868 BECKY BEHRENS Delt. Gamm. Seroing the State University of Iowa 10 cent. per copy Associated PI't'III Leased Wire and Wirephoto -Photo, by T. Wong Iowan and the People of Iowa City Iowa City. low_Thursday, October 7, 1965 Communist ,Rebels Crushed By Indo , nesia" Force Seesaw Fightirag In Central' Java ! Soukup Wants NSA Decision - Registration . Certificate Needed at 7 Voting Sites The outcome of the Miss U of I contest is in the handa of the campus males after vigorous campaigning by housing unit! of the candidates Wednesday. Polls are open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Chemistry Building, Macbride Hall, Schaeffer Hall, the Union, the Television Center, the Medical Laboratories and the College of Law. Candidatei for Miss U of I are Sheila Bauer. A3. Livingston, N.J., AlPha Della PI; Becky Bebrens. N4, Cedar Falls, Delta Gamma; Sally Hildreth, A3, Des Moines, Alpha Phi; Mary Joan Schaetzel. A3, Denver, Colo., Kappa Kappa Gamma; and LInda Weis. A4. Muscatine, Alpha Gamma Delta. THE DIRECTOR of the Pageant Board, Jim Carlton, .\3. Davenport, warned that DO campaigning Is to be conducted IIbd no lags or buttons may be worn today. Possible disqualiflcatlon could result lor the candidate if this rule is violated. Polling places will be manned by representatives of various housing unit!. A number will be punched on each voter's reglstra· tion certificate to prevent duplicate voting. The 1965 Homecoming Queen will be crowned by Carlton Frida, night at a pep rally on the steps of Old Capitol after the parade at, 7 p.m. Nancy Laugblin, Miss U of I in 1964, would traditionally de the crowning, but she is now in Europe. . THE QUEEN will receive several gilt! including a two-piece wool suit, checked wool slacks, a sweater, a pair of elbow length black leather gloves, high heels, earring and necklace set and large silver Paul Revere bowl. A three-foot traveling trophy will go to the housing unit of the queen. The four runnersup will receive silver bowls. The candidates and the activities they have participated In at Iowa are: SHEILA BAUER - Union Board, chairman of the Book Re- views Committee, 1964, and director of the Literary Area, 1965; Alpha Lambda Delta, vice president, 1964 ; Hawkeye editor of fine arts section, 1964 ; Alpha Della Pi , pledge class president, 1963 ; rush chairman. 1965 ; Junior PanheUenlc Council, executive commlttee, 1963 ; the Lay Theological Studies group; Associated Women Stu· dents , AWS; member of personnel board. BECKY BEHRENS - President of the junior and senior nurs· ing classes; Student Nurses Organization (SNO), president; Della Gamma, scholarship chairman, 1964, and rush chairman, 1965. SALLY HILDRETH - Central Party Committee, publicity committee member; Union Board. chairman of Artlst·at-Work Committee, 1964; Homecoming, member of Exhibit! and Display. subcommittee; Big Sister program; AWS, pUblicity committee member {or Mother's Day Week End, 1964; Alpha Phi, social chair· man, activities chairman, 1965, and scholarship chairman of pledge class; Dolphin Queen semi·finalist; 1963; finalist for Inter·Frater· nlty Pledge Council Queen, 1964; Mia, January of 1965 In ''TJ'anslt'' magazine. I MARY JOAN SCHAETZEL - first runnerup in 1963 Miss Per· fect Profile Contest and chairman of the Hostess Committee for JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Loyal troops of the Dipo- F S t this year's contest; vice president of SNO, 1963; Kappa Kappa negoro Division, battling Communist-backed rebels in central rom ena e Gamma, co·cbairman of social committee; and Little Sister ot Java, have crushed the insurgency within Jogjakarta, Radio Minerva. Jakarta announced Wednesday night. Student Senator George Soukup, LINDA WEIS - Scottish Highlanders., snare drum player for About 2,000 members of "Com •. ':: . B3 , Sioux City, said in an Interview I two years; Homecoming, co-chairman of Alumni Coffee Houi's mUll ist paramilitary units" were the mllilary district based on Jog. • Wednesday tbat the Student Sen· Committee; AWS, publicity chairman of International Festival, reported captured in various ac. jakarta, slew bis wife and eight . ate wou ld have to decide whether 1965; Kaleido, opening and closing acts; Angel Flight, materials lions. children when they were unable to or not to become permanently af- officer; Alpha Gamma Delta, dlarter member, social chairman, Jogjakarala is a former capital find him. This WI'S one in a series filiated with the National Student preSident; Mecca Queen seml·finalist, and Mortar Board. 250 miles souhteast of Jakarta, of atrocity reports. lAssociation (NSA). * * * * * * which is under army control tot. MlIltilry newspapers here com· Student Senate Tuesday night ', __ -,-_,--________________ _ 10wing an attempted coup and a pared the lebel activities with defeated a proposal to send Souk· , l tOIIlltercoup last weekend. the' 1148 Communist revolt at up to a convention of Associated I Hom ' ecom.-ng Schedule Troops, lanks anG armored cars Madiun, in central Java, wben Student Governments, another na- were said to be locked in combat tbousands were reported slaugbt· tlonal student government organi. with irregulars of the Communist ered. zation. The senators then decided Youth Front in the Tjlrehon region, RADIO JAKARTA announced the to study furth er the merits of NSA, about 100 miles east of Jakarta S-year-old daUghter of Gen. Abdul the body which the Senate tenla- THE BA TTL!! repo" whlch Nasution, the defen.se m.in. tively joined last spring. , ISler and armed forces chlef, died S uk th S NSA d' a!ter .accounta of _w In a hospilal Wednesday night of 0 up, e enate coor fightmg m which a bullet wound in the spine, " nator, did not attend a convention eli hands three tLmes, left undis· The girl, whose name was not of NSA at Madison, Wis. , late th is the fate of two key figures given, was shot by rebels who summer to which the Senate had m the rebel camp. attempted to wipe out Nasution and plaMed to send him. These were Col. Suberman, a hia family in their home last He said that was because be was Diponegoro Division officer who led Thursday night, the broadcast said. working. Senate President Bilt the Jogjakarta uprising, and Lt. Nasutlon also was wounded. Parisi also had planned to attend, Homecoming 1965 kick. off today under the general theme of "And Thereby Hangs the Tale." The Dolphin show, "A Dip in IW DlI!W!s" at 8 p.m. will be the firsl event of the weekend. The group's queen will be named at the show. Finalist! for the title are Cher,l Ames, Al, Cedar Rapids; Ginnie Hans, AI, Chi· cago; Sara Horstman, A2, Britt; Judy Allen, Al, Burlington; and Barb Shafer, Ai, Davenport. Today's Homecoming events are: 8 a.m.·5 p.m.-Voting for Miss U of I, Chemistry Building, Macbride Hall, Schaeffer HaD, the Union. the TeJevilion Center, the Medical Laboratories, College of Law. 8 p.m.-Dolphin Show, Field House PooL Col. Untung, a balallon command· 'The Jakarta station which Is but was unable to, Soukup added. er of President SukarnO'1 euard Ullder army control said Sukarno'l He explained be lalked to regiment. Untung was reported to cabinet condemned' Untung's coup sons who bad attended the conven· Ad H H A' k bave fled to that city after the Ittempt in a meeting with the and read convention informa· amson as eart ttac I 1 C?llapse of the revolt he at 64-year-old chief executive at his Two In,·ured nghtist generals of the high com- IIl11IJJler palace in Bogor, 40 miles Soukup said he was attending aDd S - mand bere last weekend. IOUth of Jakartll. and directed the Two perlOM we,.. Inlured 1m Wednnclay whDn when It struck the car In thD INcklrovnd travel· banquet and could not go to this Llste In erDlous (0 dDt· n Diplomatic sources said rebels army to take action against those Senate meeting. He is pre- n I 10 hunting Col. Karim, commari'der of "who are responsible." th"D two c.r. collided CHI Hlghw.y 211, two Ing IOUth. The lDuth bound car WI. driven by parmg a report on NSA for prob- mil" north of the Holiday Inn. ThD I.t. model Mr.. Gladys Mcintosh, 412 Ronald., who suf. able. delivery at the next Senale Bill Adamson, 57, long·time dI- the rehabllilatlon unit said Adam- meeting.. . . rector of the Highlanders, was re- son, who enlered the hospital .Men- 2 N E · car in tIM foretrovnd, drlv.n by H.rl.n E. Z.m· fered te.lp l.cDretions. Z.mzow sustained minor Belongmg to a nahonal t-" . - nd" Wedn day, suffered a serious heart at- eg roes n I oy zallon is expensive, he said, especi. por 10 serious co ltion es· . lOW of Omlha w .. penlng • truck going north cutl .nd brull". Photo by Mlk. T_r ,. ...... - nlly it a group participates active· day night in University Hospilal. Adamson was In Madison Wia. ----------------------------------- 1:;. He said criteria tor judging Dr. w.illiam D. Paul, professor, of Saturday with the .• Iowa Greek System Snow Blasts Editor'. Note: This I. the thlnlln ... "" of .rtlel" prompted U.S_ Policy by the .tudent o".nlutlon .ntI ...... rule which went I .... effect I ... wtDlc. I Of the more than 2,000 Univerlity sorority and fraternity memo bers, one is Negro. Another Negro went through f.raternlty rush this fait but did not pledge. Both Negroes have good opinlons 01 IOI'OIities and fraternities. George Peeples, A3, Ecorse, Mich., a Negro and pledge of Alpha Epsilon PI fraternity, aald In an interview Wednesday, "At first I was rather skeptical of 'pledging. When I came here I had the imprealon that all that frllternities and sororities did was to In Dominica Dr. Peter Snow, assislant pr0- fessor of political science, leveled a blistering atlack on U.S. foreign policy in the Dominican Republic. In a speech Wednesday night de- livered belore the Political Science have a gala time. " Th h I In th fr t Discussion Club, Dr. Snow traced en w en got e a emlty I found I had a place to go events in our relationa with the where everyone was treated as brother.. It was a place to feel Dominican Republic through the at home. I got to know a lot more people and I didn't feel any most recent criils In Santo Domin. bias." go. PEEPLES IS a liar balketbaJI player. He expecta to be acti· He labeled the late Dominican vated into fuD fraternity memberlhip thia semester. Republic president Rafael Trujillo He explained that he thought at fint that the fraternity might as "one of the most barbaric dlc- want to pledge him becalJltl of Unlvenly force. But once he was a tIItors tbat Latin America haa ever member, he said, he no longer thought the Idea wa. true. known," who, according to Snow, Bernie Johnson, .\3, Mempbia, Tenn., a Negro, went through had the full blesslngl of every U.S. fraternity rush thla fall and II8ld If be had It to do over again,' he admlnistrltion until his death. would still go through ruab. Dr. Snow had three observations "I believe you should ex))OIe VftI' ..... 1f to as many areas of concerning U.S. Intervention In ,-- Santo Domingo: University life as pouible," he II8ld. "The way to ex))Ole your· That the United States had a Ielf to fraternities II to go through 1'uIh. chance to negotiate a settlement 'I'D HATE TO SII aomeone 'anti' something because be two days before It intervened. The doesn't know anythln& about It, juIt as much as I'd hate to aee reason It did not was that the IOmeone IOIIIethin& because he deJan't know anything else." United States waa sure the rebell BecaIJltl JohIIIOII tbInkI that people lhouJcl expoae themselves would win; to many areaa, be thInb that belongInJ to a fraternity wouJd help That when Waahington inter· to make a well·rounded perIOII. Johnson saId fraterniUeI oflered vened It did 10 not to protect DlaIlY good tblnp to the Unlveralty, American livea, but to prevent the Johnson, a clauICI major, II reglstered for Informal 1'UIh. BUccaa of a revolutionary move- DAVID McKINNIY, fraternity affalra advilor, II8ld "Johnson ment which It deemed Communist dominated; told me he bad heeD a atudent here but be just wun't getting out That Communilts will be present at tbe UnlveraltJ wbat he Ihould and tbiI, he laid, ml8ht have In every Latin American country been becalJltl he .. un·t a member of the Greek ')'Item. and that If our government auto- Concernlng rush, McKinney aaid, "It the memberl are selec· matlcally labels every movement Ive, all they are II a reflection ol aodety. The fact that lOI'orities al communI.t dominated, "We'll and fratemltl. are open to the pubUc: makes them eaay largeta." lose any chance we may have of •••• IIU.I .. course of demo- Prepare Monument Final touc.... WOR eddecI to the Homecoming monu"*,, W" _dlY .tt,rnoon In front of Old C.pltol when It will be onctod thl. momlng at 7 •. m. Ingl,...rlng who _riled on the mCIIIUmont Dstlmllted evor _ houri of .. rIl wont I .... Ita _. structlon . - Photo by P.ul ".ver Ingl,..."ng ...... 1IIocbcI tnffIc with ...... the Hom.comlng 1NftIIfIIont, "G .... ey .. Yk> tory:' ., till trudc with ttvcIentl hoIcIng till ..... INcIIId lIP W ........................... .. crat W ..... y de, ...... Itv40nta ....... : ..... ,... the fIMt In front of 014 Clfltll ........ It will III r.l .... Hrty thl' mornl",. -Atote lIy PHI ....

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. Badge Sales DeIt. Upsilon rtlmlln. In "rtt

pilei In the Homecoming ..... ... cont,.. but Slgm. Nu hal tuIpIced L.mbd. Chi Alph. for ""'"' placD, D .. n Dee ... ", AS, ........ , IN ... I" _halnn.n, NpOtIod WedlIDICIay night.

Elllablished In 1868

BECKY BEHRENS Delt. Gamm.

Seroing the State University of Iowa

10 cent. per copy Associated PI't'III Leased Wire and Wirephoto

-Photo, by T. Wong

Iowan and the People of Iowa City

Iowa City. low_Thursday, October 7, 1965

Communist ,Rebels Crushed By ~oya' i Indo,nesia" Force Seesaw Fightirag In Central ' Java

!Soukup Wants

NSA Decision

-Registration . Certificate Needed at 7 Voting Sites

The outcome of the Miss U of I contest is in the handa of the campus males after vigorous campaigning by housing unit! of the candidates Wednesday.

Polls are open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Chemistry Building, Macbride Hall, Schaeffer Hall, the Union, the Television Center, the Medical Laboratories and the College of Law.

Candidatei for Miss U of I are Sheila Bauer. A3. Livingston, N.J., AlPha Della PI; Becky Bebrens. N4, Cedar Falls, Delta Gamma; Sally Hildreth, A3, Des Moines, Alpha Phi; Mary Joan Schaetzel. A3, Denver, Colo., Kappa Kappa Gamma; and LInda Weis. A4. Muscatine, Alpha Gamma Delta.

THE DIRECTOR of the Pageant Board, Jim Carlton, .\3. Davenport, warned that DO campaigning Is to be conducted IIbd no lags or buttons may be worn today. Possible disqualiflcatlon could result lor the candidate if this rule is violated.

Polling places will be manned by representatives of various housing unit!. A number will be punched on each voter's reglstra· tion certificate to prevent duplicate voting .

The 1965 Homecoming Queen will be crowned by Carlton Frida, night at a pep rally on the steps of Old Capitol after the parade at, 7 p.m. Nancy Laugblin, Miss U of I in 1964, would traditionally de the crowning, but she is now in Europe. .

THE QUEEN will receive several gilt! including a two-piece wool suit, checked wool slacks, a sweater, a pair of elbow length black leather gloves, high heels, earring and necklace set and large silver Paul Revere bowl. A three-foot traveling trophy will go to the housing unit of the queen.

The four runnersup will receive silver bowls. The candidates and the activities they have participated In at

Iowa are:

SHEILA BAUER - Union Board, chairman of the Book Re­views Committee, 1964, and director of the Literary Area, 1965; Alpha Lambda Delta, vice president, 1964 ; Hawkeye editor of fine arts section, 1964 ; Alpha Della Pi , pledge class president, 1963; rush chairman. 1965; Junior PanheUenlc Council, executive commlttee, 1963 ; the Lay Theological Studies group; Associated Women Stu· dents, AWS; member of personnel board.

BECKY BEHRENS - President of the junior and senior nurs· ing classes; Student Nurses Organization (SNO), president; Della Gamma, scholarship chairman, 1964, and rush chairman, 1965.

SALLY HILDRETH - Central Party Committee, publicity committee member; Union Board. chairman of Artlst·at-Work Committee, 1964; Homecoming, member of Exhibit! and Display. subcommittee; Big Sister program ; AWS, pUblicity committee member {or Mother's Day Week End, 1964; Alpha Phi, social chair· man, activities chairman, 1965, and scholarship chairman of pledge class; Dolphin Queen semi·finalist; 1963; finalist for Inter·Frater· nlty Pledge Council Queen, 1964; Mia, January of 1965 In ''TJ'anslt'' magazine. I

MARY JOAN SCHAETZEL - first runnerup in 1963 Miss Per· fect Profile Contest and chairman of the Hostess Committee for

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Loyal troops of the Dipo- F S t this year's contest; vice president of SNO, 1963; Kappa Kappa negoro Division, battling Communist-backed rebels in central rom ena e Gamma, co·cbairman of social committee; and Little Sister ot Java, have crushed the insurgency within Jogjakarta, Radio Minerva. Jakarta announced Wednesday night. ~~_.. Student Senator George Soukup, LINDA WEIS - Scottish Highlanders., snare drum player for

About 2,000 members of "Com •. ~----------I ':: . B3, Sioux City, said in an Interview I two years; Homecoming, co-chairman of Alumni Coffee Houi's mUllist paramilitary units" were the mllilary district based on Jog. • Wednesday tbat the Student Sen· Committee; AWS, publicity chairman of International Festival, reported captured in various ac. jakarta, slew bis wife and eight . ate would have to decide whether 1965; Kaleido, opening and closing acts; Angel Flight, materials lions. children when they were unable to or not to become permanently af- officer; Alpha Gamma Delta, dlarter member, social chairman,

Jogjakarala is a former capital find him. This WI'S one in a series filiated with the National Student preSident; Mecca Queen seml·finalist, and Mortar Board. 250 miles souhteast of Jakarta, of atrocity reports. lAssociation (NSA). * * * * * * which is under army control tot. MlIltilry newspapers here com· Student Senate Tuesday night ' , __ -,-_,--________________ _ 10wing an attempted coup and a pared the lebel activities with defeated a proposal to send Souk· , l tOIIlltercoup last weekend. the' 1148 Communist revolt at up to a convention of Associated I Hom' ecom.-ng Schedule

Troops, lanks anG armored cars Madiun, in central Java, wben Student Governments, another na-were said to be locked in combat tbousands were reported slaugbt· tlonal student government organi. with irregulars of the Communist ered. zation. The senators then decided Youth Front in the Tjlrehon region, RADIO JAKARTA announced the to study further the merits of NSA, about 100 miles east of Jakarta S-year-old daUghter of Gen. Abdul the body which the Senate tenla-

THE BA TTL!! repo" whlch ~aris Nasution, the defen.se m.in. tively joined last spring. , ISler and armed forces chlef, died S uk th S NSA d' ~m~ a!ter .accounta of _w In a hospilal Wednesday night of 0 up, e enate coor I·

fightmg m which ~ogjakarta cha~g. a bullet wound in the spine, " nator, did not attend a convention eli hands three tLmes, left undis· The girl, whose name was not of NSA at Madison, Wis. , late this ~Iosed the fate of two key figures given, was shot by rebels who summer to which the Senate had m the rebel camp. attempted to wipe out Nasution and plaMed to send him.

These were Col. Suberman, a hia family in their home last He said that was because be was Diponegoro Division officer who led Thursday night, the broadcast said. working. Senate President Bilt the Jogjakarta uprising, and Lt. Nasutlon also was wounded. Parisi also had planned to attend,

Homecoming 1965 kick. off today under the general theme of "And Thereby Hangs the Tale." The Dolphin show, "A Dip in IW DlI!W!s" at 8 p.m. will be the firsl event of the weekend.

The group's queen will be named at the show. Finalist! for the title are Cher,l Ames, Al, Cedar Rapids; Ginnie Hans, AI, Chi· cago; Sara Horstman, A2, Britt; Judy Allen, Al, Burlington; and Barb Shafer, Ai, Davenport.

Today's Homecoming events are: 8 a.m.·5 p.m.-Voting for Miss U of I, Chemistry Building,

Macbride Hall, Schaeffer HaD, the Union. the TeJevilion Center, the Medical Laboratories, College of Law.

8 p.m.-Dolphin Show, Field House PooL Col. Untung, a balallon command· 'The Jakarta station which Is but was unable to, Soukup added. er of President SukarnO'1 euard Ullder army control said Sukarno'l He explained be lalked to per.I-----------------.:..!;..-.:.:~--'.~.:... regiment. Untung was reported to cabinet condemned' Untung's coup sons who bad attended the conven· Ad H H A' k bave fled to that city after the Ittempt in a meeting with the ttll~oOnn . and read convention informa· amson as eart ttac I 1

C?llapse of the revolt he ~ at 64-year-old chief executive at his Two In,·ured nghtist generals of the high com- IIl11IJJler palace in Bogor, 40 miles Soukup said he was attending aDd • S -mand bere last weekend. IOUth of Jakartll. and directed the Two perlOM we,.. Inlured 1m Wednnclay whDn when It struck the car In thD INcklrovnd travel· banquet and could not go to this Llste In erDlous (0 dDt· n

Diplomatic sources said rebels army to take action against those we~k's Senate meeting. He is pre- n I 10 hunting Col. Karim, commari'der of "who are responsible." th"D two c.r. collided CHI Hlghw.y 211, two Ing IOUth. The lDuth bound car WI. driven by parmg a report on NSA for prob-

lillllmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~IIIIIW~IIWII11I11II1~IMIH~I~lmlllllllllll~mlllmllllllllmIIIWllllllllmlillIIIIWIIII mil" north of the Holiday Inn. ThD I.t. model Mr.. Gladys Mcintosh, 412 Ronald., who suf. able. delivery at the next Senale Bill Adamson, 57, long·time dI- the rehabllilatlon unit said Adam-meeting.. . . rector of the Highlanders, was re- son, who enlered the hospital .Men-

2 N E · car in tIM foretrovnd, drlv.n by H.rl.n E. Z.m· fered te.lp l.cDretions. Z.mzow sustained minor Belongmg to a nahonal or~am- t-" . - nd" Wedn day , suffered a serious heart at-

eg roes n I oy zallon is expensive, he said, especi. por ~'U 10 serious co ltion es· .-~ . lOW of Omlha w .. penlng • truck going north cutl .nd brull". Photo by Mlk. T_r , . ......

- nlly it a group participates active· day night in University Hospilal. Adamson was In Madison Wia. ----------------------------------- 1:;. He said criteria tor judging Dr. w.illiam D. Paul, professor , of Saturday with the Highland~n .•

Iowa Greek System Snow Blasts Editor'. Note: This I. the thlnlln ... "" of .rtlel" prompted U.S_ Policy

by the .tudent o".nlutlon .ntI ...... rule which went I.... effect I ... wtDlc. I

Of the more than 2,000 Univerlity sorority and fraternity memo bers, one is Negro. Another Negro went through f.raternlty rush this fait but did not pledge. Both Negroes have good opinlons 01 IOI'OIities and fraternities.

George Peeples, A3, Ecorse, Mich., a Negro and pledge of Alpha Epsilon PI fraternity, aald In an interview Wednesday, "At first I was rather skeptical of 'pledging. When I came here I had the imprealon that all that frllternities and sororities did was to

In Dominica Dr. Peter Snow, assislant pr0-

fessor of political science, leveled a blistering atlack on U.S. foreign policy in the Dominican Republic.

In a speech Wednesday night de­livered belore the Political Science

have a gala time. "Th h I In th fr t Discussion Club, Dr. Snow traced

en w en got e a emlty I found I had a place to go events in our relationa with the where everyone was treated as brother.. It was a place to feel Dominican Republic through the at home. I got to know a lot more people and I didn't feel any most recent criils In Santo Domin. bias." go.

PEEPLES IS a liar balketbaJI player. He expecta to be acti· He labeled the late Dominican vated into fuD fraternity memberlhip thia semester. Republic president Rafael Trujillo

He explained that he thought at fint that the fraternity might as "one of the most barbaric dlc­want to pledge him becalJltl of Unlvenly force. But once he was a tIItors tbat Latin America haa ever member, he said, he no longer thought the Idea wa. true. known," who, according to Snow,

Bernie Johnson, .\3, Mempbia, Tenn., a Negro, went through had the full blesslngl of every U.S. fraternity rush thla fall and II8ld If be had It to do over again, ' he admlnistrltion until his death. would still go through ruab. Dr. Snow had three observations

"I believe you should ex))OIe VftI' ..... 1f to as many areas of concerning U.S. Intervention In ,--~ Santo Domingo:

University life as pouible," he II8ld. "The ~ way to ex))Ole your· That the United States had a Ielf to fraternities II to go through 1'uIh. chance to negotiate a settlement

'I'D HATE TO SII aomeone 'anti' something because be two days before It intervened. The doesn't know anythln& about It, juIt as much as I'd hate to aee reason It did not was that the IOmeone '~to' IOIIIethin& because he deJan't know anything else." United States waa sure the rebell

BecaIJltl JohIIIOII tbInkI that people lhouJcl expoae themselves would win; to many areaa, be thInb that belongInJ to a fraternity wouJd help That when Waahington inter· to make a well·rounded perIOII. Johnson saId fraterniUeI oflered vened It did 10 not to protect DlaIlY good tblnp to the Unlveralty, American livea, but to prevent the

Johnson, a clauICI major, II reglstered for Informal 1'UIh. BUccaa of a revolutionary move-DAVID McKINNIY, fraternity affalra advilor, II8ld "Johnson ment which It deemed Communist

dominated; told me he bad heeD a atudent here but be just wun't getting out That Communilts will be present at tbe UnlveraltJ wbat he Ihould and tbiI, he laid, ml8ht have In every Latin American country been becalJltl he .. un·t a member of the Greek ')'Item. and that If our government auto-

Concernlng rush, McKinney aaid, "It the memberl are selec· matlcally labels every movement Ive, all they are II a reflection ol aodety. The fact that lOI'orities al communI.t dominated, "We'll and fratemltl. are open to the pubUc: makes them eaay largeta." lose any chance we may have of

• ~IIIIIII~IIWII~~II •••• IIU.I .. ~.IUI~IIII~IWI.~IIII~IIUIIIIIII~IIIII ~~~~~~~~m~'~ course of demo-

Prepare Monument Final touc.... WOR eddecI to the Homecoming monu"*,, W"

_dlY .tt,rnoon In front of Old C.pltol when It will be onctod

thl. momlng at 7 •. m. Ingl,...rlng ~ who _riled on the

mCIIIUmont Dstlmllted evor _ houri of .. rIl wont I .... Ita _.

structlon . - Photo by P.ul ".ver

Ingl,..."ng ...... 1IIocbcI tnffIc with ...... the Hom.comlng 1NftIIfIIont, "G .... ey .. Yk> tory:' ., till trudc with ttvcIentl hoIcIng till ..... INcIIId lIP W ........................... ..

crat W ..... y de, ...... Itv40nta ....... : .....,... the fIMt In front of 014 Clfltll ........ It will III r.l .... Hrty thl' mornl",.

-Atote lIy PHI ....

Ie T

00 ratJ ftr1 Sat

'I Ito! qw Fe. au gar

j P84 fat leO ferl I~

N

-

aasE~vATIO~S A. AND COMMENT JDD.

'AOI t THURSDAY, OCT. " INS IOWA CITY. IOWA

Bravo, Senate IOWA'S STUDENT SENATE is out for a new "rm­

age· among students, and they have made at least one step in the direction of earning it.

We refer to the Senate's Tuesday resolution which lib that plans for the University's proposed $8 million auditorium (part of the planned Fine Arts Center) be reviewed and the size be increased

We have favored an ina-ease in seating capacity since last spring, and find most students agree with us. The Senate'. UDaDimous decision to talce up the student fight for the increase b an appropriate and Imaginative one.

For those students who may wonder what the audi­torium is and what the issues are regarding its size, let us recap for a moment the history of this question.

In the early spring of 1964, then University Pres. Virgil Hancher asked the Board of Regents to increase tuition and fees for University students. The tuition in· crease was to finance bonds for construction of an all­purpose auditorium in the Fine Arts Center along the Iowa River_

After much debate by the Regents, the increases were passed by a vote of 5-4. Seating capacity of the audito· rium was not discussed at length. but the figiJres of 2,800 to 3,400 were estimated.

After the method of financing the auditorium was passed upon, a University auditorium committee. con­sisting primarily of staff and some students from fine arts departments. was appointed to make recommenda­tions regarding the auditorium.

When the recommendations were made last year. the size the committee decided upon was 2.200 to 2.500.

Last spring. after several editorials in The Iowan. • meeting between "student leaders" and auditorium com­mIttee members was arranged. The committee's view, It was explained, is that the all-purpose auditorium should be used primarily for local events produced and presented on campus which generally appeal to limited audiences.

Outside programs such as ballets. orchestra concerts, lectures or .pop" concerts are the big crowd-drawers. The committee's view is that these events should be held in the Field House. which is designed for big crowds.

We have said in the past and still thlnlc that this view is not In appropriate one.

Ceneral student fees are not used for any construc­tion projects on this campus except the Union. which is In all-purpose building serving all students equally. Oonnitory students must pay for the bonds which finance their housing; this is done through fees for room and board. The Parking Ramp is paid for through parking meter fees.

Ceneral classrooms are usually financed with state appropriations. gifts, grants or money nom the Federal Government. Since every student in the University pays equally ($20 a year) for the proposed auditorium. it should be designed to accommodate as many students as possible and to attract programs of the widest possible interest.

The Senate and its president. Bill Parisi. share this view. as do most students who are financing the audio torium.

By going on record in favor of an auditorium which would seat 3.200 to 3,700, the Senate has done much to further the interests of the student body and to represent student opinion to University officials.

The Senate's officers have prepared a letter to the auditorium committee which outlines the arguments for • larger auditorium and for accepting the will of the stu­dents as significant in this matter. Copies of this letter will go to Pres. Bowen and the Board of Regents.

Tuesday night's action Is the sort of thing we ho~ to lee more of from the Senate. Although that body Is still engaged too much in petty politica] wrangling and wind­baggery, It has taken a step in the right direction by con­cerning ftsell with the general student's interest and has moved politically to do something about It.

If anything will Improve Senate's "image." this act .hould.

-Ion Van

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Observer finds Senate bogged by small politics

By MAGGII FONES Ant ...... 141ter

Student Senate held tt. IeCOIId meeting of the rear Tueaday nIlht amIcIIt lIurry ........, I !'be two and one ball hour meeUng WIll I mae ef parliamentary intricacies and political comp1lca· tiona. Somehow the bulinell as set forth 011 the arenda wu carried out, and the minutes caD only Ibow that the meetin, accomplished some thlnaI.

But to an obIerver. the lengthy meetiDg could only seem chaotic and without purpose.

As the roU was IUd, the lack of attendance of leveral senators was notea. TIlls was more DOtJce. able when the Senate was debating whether to send Sen. George Soukup to the Associated Student Government Conference and Soukup was not there to defend this action.

UNDER OLD BUSINIIS, Resolution 14 to re­

-In ,hart, men, we're going to be'more business-like"

vise the Student traffic Court was to be discuaaed. ----------------­Sen. Dick Pundt instead p~oposed to discuss a total revision of the judicial system of the Univer' sity. Sheets were passed out I to the senators. and they were flIIked to make suggestions for improve­ments on this plan for revision.

There was not adequate time for senators to do 10, however, u the plan was three ~es 10lIl. Pundt then asked for suggestions after the reading of only the section numbers of the plan. This proved to be a farce. since debate had to be limited by time. and the senators could not judge the plan intelligently because they had little knowledge of the subject.

A better procedure might have been to pus out the plan to the senators and let them read it over before the next meeting and make suggestions for improvements.

Under new business, the Senate suddenly found Itself barraged with pleas from a group of students to recognize on orllanlzation to be called Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) . John Barrett, a former senator, spoke {or the IlrouP asking that the rules be suspended so tbat SDS could be recognized at that meeting since it had already made plans {or various activities. Ordinarily. request for recog· nition must pass through Office of Student Affairs and a Senate sub-commlttee before the Senate can vote on it.

THE NEXT HOUR W81 devoted largely to debat­Ing the parliamentary procedure and the merits of this group. The debate was lively, and the action of some persons was at times slapstick as they ran from senator to senator trying to Iin~ up votes for one Iide or the other of the lasue.

The motion under debate was so complicated some senators voted opposite to the way they meant to vote. After a recess and much hasty politicking, a recount wa, called.

At this point the need for a parllamentarian to be present was made evident. Vice Pres. John Platt was not alone when he misunderstood the lact that a recount, not a revote was to be taken. After some minutes, this was carried out, and the Senate voted to sUlpend the rules and allow the group to be considered for recognition at thai meeting.

Debate then continued on the merits of the or· ganization, and the meeting was so confused that at one point a motion for adjournment was made and Platt called the m~ting adjourned on an aye and nay vote. When a recount of this was taken. only a minority of senators voted for adjourn· ment.

And 10 the meeting continued. A propoaal was made to put SDS, a liberal group, under the aus· pices of the Student Senate temporarily. this Barrett turned down, and tbe Issue waa clOlled for the evening.

BUT THE EFFECTS of it remained and wiD remain with the Senate. The opposing camps of senators, liberal and moderate, were plainly vis­ible to the observer. And so were the politicians, who were seen racing between the two camps during recess, and who voted with different sides on votes about the issue.

Senate, being a political body, will of course have member. with Ilberal and moderate lean­Inga. But the Student Senate is not the place for struggling campus politicians who are trying to gain a political backing. If these students are not sincere about working for the betterment of the University and the student body through Student Senate. they mlcht at least pretend that they are. Then such a comedy of errors as this meeting proved to be will not be repeated.

During the Iaat few minutes of the meeting im' portant buainesa was carried out. A resolution was paued asking the' members of the University auditorium committee to review Its study of the size of the proposed auditorium. This reaolut.ioo, In the form of a letter, 11'81 read to the IeIIIltorl by Pres. Bill Parisi. aDd wu pused without either debate or ~ting YOleI.

This obIerver recognlza the fact that a point of parliamentary procedure IhouJd not be dis· rnlued from Inlereat of members of a . legislative body, but that It IbouJd take up nearly half the time of the meeting and drain the attention of lenators to the point that remaining bulineas is made a mere formality II carryiua order too far.

TIle Senate Deedl a parliamentarian in attend­ance and interest of Iel'llIon on isaueI more .. tal thaD the trivia with wllicb they often seem to CCIIICel1I tbemIelvea. ,'

Reader differs with reviewer on 'Collector'

T, "" Editor: I write with a great sense of concern for Nick

Meyer, which can be phrased in two questions. The first: what haa bappened to his usually scalpel-like perception 7

In his review of "The Collector." Meyer says that "no comment has been made . . . no point of view has been taken." On the contrary, at least two very pertinent things were presented, and commented upon, with great cogency.

The first, perhaps the leaaer, point. is the theory of obsession and Its effect. Not only the unbalanced collector, but the apparently aane citl, becomes so addicted to a goal (his: keeping; hers : escaping) that it amounts to a mania which eventually destroys them. Seemingly, this should be relevant in our society of excesses.

THE SECOND potent comment is even more per­tinent and strongly drawn. Did Mr. Meyer not see the intent o! Ille movie to exp\<)re the e.1l'J1I1I that extats between the souis? The entire produc· tion begs us to understand the inadequacies and frustrations of a sensitive, inarticulate person.

It presents a' bJindingly sharp, anguished portrait of the kinds of personal fears and failures that haunt out "lost" leneration, our "affluent," "status· seekina," adults; indeed, our entire society which searches so desperately for any kind ' of communi­cation at all.

My second question to Mr. Meyer also concerns him personally. Has too much clinical reviewing paralyzed his emotional responses? "One does not sympathize. empathize, or in any other way feel for ellller of the characters . .. . "

Anyone who could prevent himself from emotional Involvement must possess superhuman control. Every scene was taut with enough sense of Iden­tification to exhaust the audience. It is difficult to believe that the reviewer sat coolly and sclen· tifically detached dUring the boy's ecstacy In the rain and his vague, adolescent delight in his captive.

Did Mr. Meyer have no sensation of wanting to retcb with the girl's fear and disgust?

HOyt COULD anyone fail to feel the cold sweat and paralyzing constriction of the captive's blind terror, her fighting for the self control not to scream?

Mr. Meyer, did you feel nothing of the boy's terrible loneliness and inadequacy, his pathos during the dlnner·table scene? Surely, even you felt a corresponding rush of adrenalln as the girl hacks at him with the spade?

If you missed ail these, were you not at all moved as she aaid: "I don't want to die yet ... there's a picUire I want to paint ... creen meadow, ' filled with golden buttercups . . . so quiet, peace­ful. •.. "

For atrophy of the perceptive faculties and the emotions our corner physician suggests an extended vacation. No movies for a full six months, certain­ly no reviewing for at leaat a year.

SANDEE BROADFOOT Cu"l.r H.n

Urban renewal oHicials to offend division meet Top officiaia of Federal agencies concerned with

housing and urban renewal will address a general meeting of the Urban Redevelopment Divlalon of the ACTION Council for Better Cities in Washing-ton, D.C., Oct. 21-12. .

The two-day meeting will bring together business and civic leaden vitally interested in the private building phase of \U'ban redevelopment. The Ur· ban Redevelopment Division, headquartered in Washington, worka prirnarily to belp create effee­tive liaison among the Federal agencies, local pub­lic agencies and redevelopers themselves.

In addition to the speakers, the meeting will feature an opening-day seminar on Market Analy­sea, whicb will explore the techniques for determin­ina in advance the economic feasibWty of a .... dneloprnent project.

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TH. IW.MMI ... POOL In the Wo­men'. G)'IIlIIAlium will be open for nnutIoUl ..... 1Nr MOIICIQ IIIna FrlcIaJ, 4:11 to .:15. ThIa I. opon to ,,_ Ita_to, ~. faeuJty .nd

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TH. ."nll.YAIlI.TY Qutatian hOc ..... "... .n Inlerdea...,Uonll ,roup of IIndenu, m .. ,- .. ery ,.r1. cIaJ at 7:08 p... n the IInlon ladl· ana Room. All Inte_led penonl ani we'-.

'Rip' in Alabama-' By ART BUCHWALD

After reading the accounts of the recent trial in HayaeviJle. Ala., where a jury found a socially prominent citizen "not guilty" 0( killing a civil richta seminary student, one wonders how Jack the Ripper would have fared if he had been a titizea of Alabama IIId bad beeII CAUibt IDd triIcl ........ CNlt'.

It miaht have gone IIOII1etblng lJke this. First, the grand jury would indict bim for man­

alaqbter Instead of murder on the Irouncb that. altboUlb he killed five women, it ~u doDe without malice.

'I'IIen the trial takes place. aU·white jury made up of of the Ripper family Ia IleIC~Q. and the judge. who Ia IIDCle. wlt1ll the prosecution to brief and !'Ilfrain from calling many wltne:r.ses.

The munt:y prosecutor rel1:JCtllDt-. Iy charges that Jack killed five ' women by slitting their throats and spreading their innards about. The people in the courtroom chuckle and several of Jack's cousins wave to him. The prosecutor produces the knife aa evidence and then rests his case.

The defenee attorney for Jack does not deny the charges, which causes members of the KKK in the courtroom to applaud. But he maintains Jack W81 acting in self-defense.

HI CALLS HIS first witness . "Did you see the defendant stab his first victim?"

"Yes, sir. I did. Rip was walking down the street late at night when thls here woman pulls a switchblade on him, and he had no choice but to slash out at ber first. It was quick thinking on hla part, because that woman meant to do him harm."

The II8COI1d witness, Zeke Ripper, is called. "Zeke, eight day. after Rip defended himself.

he ran into another woman on the Itreet. What was her name?"

"Dark Annie Chapman." "Would you repeat that again?"

"Dark Annie Chapman." "What happened, Zeke7" "Wal, Rip is just strolling along and audited,

Dark Annie comes up to him with a platol in her ' hand like she's going to kill him, 10 , Jack puIlI 4IIIt his kniCe and slits her throat."

"Where', the pistol DOW. Zeke?" "Some nigra rushed up and took It .".y 'fO!!

Ite police came." "THANK yOU, Zeke. Now. ladies and gentJt.

men of the jury, l',m not even going to calI 1111 witnesses in regards to the killings of 'Long LII' Stride and Kate Edowes, because there Ia DO need to. Jack saw both /.hese women kissing nlgraa l1li he went up to them and told them to stop It l1li when they didn't Jack did what any Haynevillt gentleman would do and stabbed them both in .tIIe abdomen.

"As for the killing of Blac;': Mary Kelly, rd like to call Jefferson Lingo Ripper. Jeffertaa, what happened, in your own words?"

"This here Black Mary. sh~ come up to Rip IIId she said something to him that I can't repeat bert in court and poor Rip followed her to her 1'001II

and cut her up. I've known Rip since he was a boJ and he wouldn't hurt a fly, but that woman pro voked him something awful."

Laughter from the court. "Are these Black Mary's clothes?" ··Yes, sir." "Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I ask you,

what kind of woman would wear clothes like !hi and bring shame and worldwide publlcity to tile gOOd people of I.owndes County. No white I1I1II

will be safe on the streeta of Hayneville if you find Jack the Ripper guilty of defending himself. Put yourself in his place. Wouldn't you have done tile aame thing?"

The judge asks the jury to file out and decide a verdict.

The foreman says. "No need for that, judge. We find the defendant not guilty and we wish 10 take this opportunity to nominate Jack the Ripper lor sheriff of thls God-fearing community."

(c) 1965, Publishers Newspaper Syndlcale

Debts - the American way FROM THE NATION

Most Americans nowadays are in debt, some of them up to their necks. Banks. loaR companies and loan sharks, dealers in consumer goods. col· lection agencies, sheriffs, and lawyers prowl on the fringes of the Affluent Society.

Their prey is not the desperately poor, because they have no credit, nor the well-to-do who, when they borrow, are able to repay. The least reputa· ble elementa of the loan industry batten on the lower middle class, and particularly that seg­ment which has recently risen from the working class and wanta to Jive It up on an inadequate income. In this group bankruptcies are on the rise.

The loan industry - or, as It is more accurately termed in some of its activities, the loan racket - ia one of the heaviest 01 the heavy advertisers. An American cannot step into a raIlroad or sub­way train, or a bus, or wallt past a bank. or open a newspape .. , or turn on a radlo set, without be· ing importuned to borrow.

HE BORROWS for vacations, for higher educa­tion, for horne appliances, for clothes. and of course for bis automobile. His home is mortgaged, and al soon as be accumulates an equity he is reminded that he can refinance and be in hock once more. Anyone who fails to borrow to the limit of his credit is regarded as a square.

In one of its brilliant roundups, Consumer Re­ports (September, 1965) delves, once more into the intricacies of the keep-them·in-debt business which has become a major industry since World War n.

Mortgage debt for nonfarm homes then stood at $1D billion; It is now close to $200 billion. Short­term debt (up to five years) bal risen In 20 years from $5.5 billion to $80 billion - 8 ratio of nearly 15 to I, aa against something on the order of 3 to 1 for gr088 national product and for disposable income~

Most of this consumer debt is little more than an un.secured promise to pay, lince, except for automObiles. the goods purchased have little re­sille value or, as when the proceeds of the loan were !lied for • funeral or vacation trip, none at all.

THE BORROWER COUNTS on future earnings to keep up with the rat race. According to the

Federal 'Reserve 'Doarcl, lit per cen~ oi aispoaa'D)e income is now tied up in short-term debt rep4Y' • ments. This does not sound too serious, but about half the ' nation's families are estimated to owe it aU , hence it averages about 28 per cent of their disposable income, which is quite a different, mil· I

, ter. Moreover, when the economic quietists point '"

growing volume of savings and assure us that H more than covers the growing volume of debt. they do not take into account that the people who • have big savings_ are not the ones who have bur· densome consumer debts. So far , the st.ructutt has not begun to totter, but with Increased borrow· ing concentrated in the most vuinerable sector tI .. the population, sooner or later something wiD give.

Whatever built-in safeguards against massl" over-commitment once existed are now being Usoned in the rush to sell and buy, lend and row.

IF THE WOULD-BE borrnwer has a job, is not officially bankrupt. be is .utomatically sWed as a worthy credit risk. The trouble this criterion is that the people who buy on easiest (and most expensive) terms are the with the least job security - eve.. without tiD" threatening them. And, of course, In a talist economy, they have no capital.

The lenders and seile\'l take care of themseivel. When merehants sell on time, they job the c0n­

tracts to banks or sales finance companies, whld hold the bulk of consumer paper. This system p~ • tects the seller and lender against the imprudence, miscalculation of hard luck 0' the buyer-bClrrower.

The dealer may write a contract for, A, 18 er 24 per cent true annual interest on an _.IMIIIe! loan, on which the bank expects a 'return of per cent true annual interest. The difference the dealer's reserve, a nice term for kickback.

THE DEALER has every incentive to pack he can into this fund, out of which losses due default are paid.

All of which gives added point and reV,el8llicei to the Truth-in.-Lending legislation jointly sored by Senators Paul Douglaa and PhJlip This legialation would simply require the to infofm the borrower of the interest rate the total amount of the carrying charges.

University C~lendar CONnRINCl1

Oct. 7 - Diet 'I1Ierapy. Con­ference Three. "Whole Language Do You Speak?". Union Michigan Room.

Oct. 7-8 - Tax and Accounting Seminar. Union nlinoia and Northweatertl Roollll .

Oct. 8-9 - Dental Alumni Con· ference, Union.

Oct. 7-8 - Blilinell and Indus· trial Placement lectures: KeIth AdamIOII. U.S.I.A., Deputy Di­rector of The Voice of America, will give four talka - 102 Old Dental Building.

Oct. 14 - BuIinea and Indlll­trial Plaeemeat OffIce. Genetal meetInI to explain aervlcea -Chemistry Auditorium. ':30-4:30 p.m.

LlCTUItIS Oct. U - College of Medicine

Lecture: Dr. Thornaa E. StarzI. chief of Surgical Service. Veter· aM AdmiDistraUon HoIpltal. Den· ver. Medical Ampbltlleatre. 4: 10 p.~.

Oct. U - \Jnlverslty Lecture SerIeI: Prof. Arthur Laraon, Duke University. "An Audacloua A_I for America," Union MaID LouD .... p.m.

Oct. 14 - Chinese and Oriental Studles Lecture: Dr. Y. P. Chao. University of California. "Expres. IlV eElelllellll fa SlIOkeu Chi-

nese." Old Capitol Senate Cham· ber, 8 p.m.

Oct. 26-28 - Shambaugh Lec­tures: Prof. Karl W. Deutsch, Po­litical Science Department, Yale University, "Nationalism and In­ternaUonalism: Some Recent De­velopments," Old Capitol Senate Chamber, 8 p.m.

Oct. 'rl - University Lecture Serie.: AssocIate Justice William O. Douglas, "The Supreme Court in Amerjcan History," - Union Main Lounge, 8 p.m.

Thunday, OctoMr 7 I 7:30 p.m, - Chine8jl Films:

"Chinese Painting Through the Ages," ''1bree Days on the Is­land Beautiful," "A City of Cath­ay," "A Night at the Peking Opera" - Macbride Auditorium.

Hem.c.mlnt Ivlflfl Thured.y, 0cteIMt 7

8 p.m. Dolp4in Show - Field HOUle Pool.

FrW.y, Oct,"'r • Noon - Alumni Registration

Opens - Union South Lobby. 12: 20 - Classes 8USpended. 7 p.m. - Homecoming Parade. e p.m. - Pep rally .nd pres·

entation of Homecoming Queen, Old Capitol Campul.

8:30 p.m. - Dolphin Show -FIeld Houle Pool.

8 to 11 p.m. - Union Open House.

I""rday,~' 11:30 a.m. - Omicron Delta

Kappa Alumni Breakfast - Union Lucaa·Doclire Room.

9 a.m. Alumni coffee bOIIn. Noon - Alumni regiatratioli

closes. 1: 30 p.m. - Football, Purdue· 8 p.m. - Homecoming Dlnee,

Ray McKinley and the Glenn Mil· ler Orchestra - Union MaiD Lounge.

SPORTS Oct. 9 - Crosa Country:

nell . South Finkbine Goif eou ..... l. 10:30 a.m.

Oct. 16 - Football, MinMl!j.~ • 1:30 p.m.

Oct. 29 - Cr088 Country: MiD­neaota, Sou t h Finkbine Golf Course. 4 p.m.

IXHIBITS ThrOUjh October - Unl,NniIt1

Library Exhibit: "Boou Prairie Press: A 3O-Year ord."

Throuah October - Se1ectIOIII from the University', Collection, Main GallerY, Building. .

MUSICAL IVINTS Oct. 15 - Friends of Millie

Concert, Brahms Quartet, M,ac­bride Auditorium. 8 p.m.

Oct. 20 - University SympbCXIY Orchestra Concert, Union Maid Lounge, 8 p.m.

Oct. 22 - FlCIIity Recital: BIt· ty Bang. flute, North Reb ..... Hall. 8 p.m .

Oct. 29 - Faculty Recital: .. ert Eckert, tenor, Macbrldl A .... toriurn, 8 p.m.

1 f

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J ferI IIfl inl Gir

G tile we( pari pen eou tire

1uage Gaffney, Retiring, Honored By Colleagues

U. Heights Mayor Ross Will Not Seek Reeledion

Russell Ross, University Heilhts , mayor for 10 yeara, bas not fUed Ti bet

to run for re-election Nov. 2.

Iy K. S. ROYCE Steff Writer

'"!bey're the forgotten boys and girls."

Judge James P. Gaffney was reo ferrlng to the juvenile offenders Uvlng in the State School for Boys In Eldora and the State School for Girls in Mitchellville.

Gaffney talked of his concern for 1111 welfare of young delinquenta Wedoeaday after emerging from a party given in his bonor by the personnel of the Johnson County eourt House. It was the day he re­tired from his sa-year career as District Court Judge.

"THESE DELINQUENT youths . in Iowa aren't getting proper train- . 101," be said. ''Their names are branded, they can't get jobs, and tile)' aren't even proficient in thing."

In the past few days Gaffney bas been publicly critical of the del of the Iowa Board of which has authority over the correctional schools.

''They don't keep them lonI enough to do anything berm," be sald. "A few years ago 1 was the chairman of the Judges' Committee whicb made a study on the situation. We that they keep the boys longer. cate them, and teach them a trade.

. Chan ~. Coulter, former Unlver- Scene Of Indian sity Helghts mayor. is the unop- ,

posed candidate for the of~iee. Ross Chl'ne.. Sk.'rm'.lh was Coulter's successor In 1954.

The deadline for filing for the post was Tuesday. Only one can- NEW DELHI, India lit - Iudla didate filed for eacb post of mayor, SlId CommUDl.t arlDa ,8CCIIIed five council seats, and city tress- each other Wectae.day 01 DeW in. urer. trillions 011 the TIbet.sJtkim border

Dvid C. Armstrong, James T. tbroUgb the Yak 'PUI Bradbury (both incumbents), WU· . . Ham J. Hausler Jr .• George W. AD Indian note banded to the Larsen and Joseph Noone are the Chinese Embauy in New Deihl five council candidates. "ud ChineIe troops In platooo

Incumbent M. E. Taylor is the.t.reDgth Monday made an ''UDIue. candidate for city treasurer. ceafuI attempt to eGdrcle IDdian

The councHmen who did not fUe for re-election are Coulter Vernon defense pel'lOllllel well within Sit· Van Dyke and David Can~. kim."

Other than saying "ten years Is Silddm is an Indian protectorate long enough," Ross made no com· and Tibet is controlled by Peking. ment on his withdrawal from the A spokesman fO!' the Indian De­office. fenae MinIItry uId the CbiDeIe

intruded 100 yarda inside SIkktm. DE GAULLE WISHES LBJ WILL The Indian note uId it 11'11 the

PARIS LfI - President Charla eeccmd PekinJ intrusion in the area de Gaulle sent a message of good in three day. and that 011 Saturday wishes Wednesday to President 20 Chinese troopa croued the pan Johnson as he prepared to under· and fired at a t.bree-man Indian go surgery (or gall bladder reo border post. mova!.

But they c\aIm they don't have --------------------.11 enough funds."

He bas suggested that auUlority I over the schools be turned over the State Board of Regents.

''THE REGENTS deal with edu-catiow problems," be said, "and they can get the money needed from the state. Why is Boys' Town (Neb'> so successful? Iowa should

~ bave a place like that. .. Boy's Town. sponsored by tbe

Catholic Churcb. trains orphans and young offenders to adjust to lIOCiety.

The Iowa code dictates that )'OIIDg delinquents can be COlllmU:' 1 ted to state correctional UIllil they reach the age of 21. a provision allows the Board

• Control to release an offender after he bas reached 18.

"Tbe purpose of a juvenile court Is to help, and this is a laudable

• purpose," he said. A RECENT Associated Press

patch quoted him as saying, "In my long experience in the bench I have never had a 16-year-old boy

• plead guilty to an offense that war­rants penitentiary sentence."

Gaffney was honored Tuesday night in a meeting sponsored by tbe Johnson and Iowa County Bar

e Associations. He and his wife were presented with round· trip plane tickets to California.

He was made an honorary mem­ber of the National, Iowa State,

• and Iowa County Sheriff's Associ­ation and was given gold stars

The Young Man in the Know know. "Dacron" 4.llCl "OrIon" • Counts on slim-cut slack, of 50% Dacron· polyester. 50% OrIon· acrylic to fight wrinkles, hold a crease through lots of hard wear. In all the best colors at fine stores everywhere. *Du Pont', re,i,tered trademark.

~ a.ue~ n~~. 'Of Better Lavin. ••• rIt .... qh eh.m' ......

UllacioU6

At The Piano Bar

SPECIAL MABRIAL Former Conover Model

The

..Airliner 22 S. Clinton

aplaq~. ..:.~~~::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::==::::::::========::::::::::~::::::::::~ At that meeting Gaffney swore in the new District Court judge,

• Paul Naughton of Marengo. ALTHOUGH GAFFNEY will be

76 today, he has still not corn· pletely called it quits. He wlU con­tinue II a temporary judge. This

• means that the State Supreme Court can send him on assignments throughout the state. He has al· ready been sent on 14 outside as· si~ments.

" His plans for the future? "I don't know. But I'm returning

to my home in Marengo and the first thing next week I'll take down

• and scrub the storm windows."

U.S. Planes Pound Again

, At Viet Cong SAIGON, South Viet Nam LfI -

U.S. planes mounted new attacks over North Viet Nam Wednesday

• after Communist gunners knock· ed down three American aircraft there Tuesday a U.S. military spokesman reported.

• U:~ S~i.~, th;i/o;~r~e~~;n: !~: Jisted as missing in Communist territory. The Communists have declared they will try as war

• criminals U.S. and South Vietna· mese pilota captured in North Viet Nam.

In the ground war, the Vietna· mese army claimed it had killed

• 260 Viet Cong this week. In one part of Wednesday's

air offensive, 30 American planes hit bridges, trucks and military staging areas in the North and in

• one strike, against a rnllltary sup­ply camp about 40 miles south of Vinh. pilots reported 85 per cent of the target destroyed, spokesmen said.

Two F105 Thunderchiefs and four F4C Phantoms, the types of planes abot down Tuesday. new six mis­lions against seven targets in the North. Spokesmen sald light flak

, was reported but all aircraft reo turned safely.

The most significant raid was said to bave been against a mili· tary area 50 miles southeast of Dien Bien Phu, wbere 11 build· ings were reported destroyed and 10 others damaged.

LUNA 1 TO LAND TODAY -MOSCOW (II - Impact time for

Luna 7, tbe latest Soviet moon ~ot, Is 5 p.m .• EST. Thursday, the soviet news agency Tau says.

Luna 7 wu launched Monday. Tan did not say wbether In at· tempt would be made for a 10ft Iandinl preparatory step toward JJl8IIJIeclllJiht to tile mooa.

Engineers and Scientists: .

Let's talk about a career at Boeing ..• 50-year leader in aerospace technolo.gy

'.

Campus Interviews Thursday and Friday, October 21 and 22

DIVI. lon. : COmmerCial AI,plan. •

Th. most tfftctlvt WlY to mlulta I IXIIII­PIny In tem. of its pottntlll far dynImic career lI'owtII II to IXIIIIint its put. ree· «d, Its current ItItus, .... its praspects .nd pilnnl", for the future. tq.ther with the professlonel dimat. It offers for the cltYelopm.nt of your Indlv\cIuIl caplbllitles. BOline. which In 1966 compItt .. 50 1'Irs of unmatchtcl .mltt inl1llYltion Ind pro­duction. olers you cartII' opportunltl .... diverse IS its extensiv. Inc! Vlritd back· loa. Whether your InterlSts II, In the field of commercill jet Ilrtlntrs of tilt future « In splC8-fllaht ttehnololY, you can Ind .t Bo.lnlln openl", which combintl prof. stan.1 chll ...... Ind 1onI-rInc' 1tIb1l1ty. Th. IIIItI of Iotlnl If. todIIy JIIonttrlnl twlutionary lCIvInces In both cMliIn IIICI milltlry .ircrlft, IS Win IS In IpICI pro­.,.. of IUCh historic ImportInce .. Amtllca's tIrst 1IlOOII IIndlnl. MissI .... IpICt vellldts, PI turbine '"lintS, trIllS­port htlicopters, IIIIrint vellicl .. tnd bIsIc -..ch 1ft other ... of BoIInllctlvlty. Thtr"s I spot wIItrt your tIItnts can /lllturt tnd pow It loti.... III mtIrdI, dtsIlJI, tilt, IIIIIIIfIcturIn. or Idmlnistrl­tioa. lilt ~s posItIOn IS world .. In jet IrIasportatlon pmIdts I IIIIISUC' of tilt CIIIbr, of peopI. with whom you would wort In IddItion, BolIn. people wort In IIIIIIIIfII4II, whir. JIIitIa. tIvt tnd IIIIIItJ ... IIIIXknIIn aposur •. Botq IIICGInIII perticIpItIon In tilt ~ GrIduIIt _ Propn It teedl", col"", .. _1I1ItIea .... camPlny inIIIllItionI. W,'r, IOoWnI fIwwInI to ~ _ nterInt. ntIIemItics ... tcitnCllllllors ..t pIuttt atudtnts ..nn, .. ¥IsIt to 'JW CIIIIpIIL .... 1ft tppoIntIIIIIIt ' now It your pIICImtIIt atIIce. .... II III eq. opparfIIIItr tIIIpIoytr.

THE DAILY lOWAN-I_. City, I •• ,-Thurlllly, Oct. '7, , .........

Do you know food prices1i

The lowest food prices in town are at BENNER, Check and compare these BENNER prices with adual local supermarket prices listed belowl Compare with the prices you have been paying.

BENNER STORE STORI LOW "X" ''Y''

PRICES PRICES PRICES

Gerber Baby food .... . ....... strained .OS Jello all flovors . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 oz. pkg. .OS Philadelphia Cream Ch .. se . . . 3 oz. pkg. .10 Meat Pies . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . . 8 oz. pkg. .15 Kraft Miracle Whip ....... . . . . .. quart .39 Kotex regular size ................ 48's 1.35 Black Pepper .......•....••.. 8 oz. can .72 Crisco ............••...•.•• 3 lb. can .S9 Orange Juice, Frozen . . . . . . • . . 6 oz. co n .15 Vets Dog Food .. , ........... 16 oz. can .08 Oleomargarine, store label . . . . . . . . 1 lb. .15 Kellogg Rice Krispies . . . . . . .. 13 oz. box .39 Campbell Tomato Soup .... 10% oz. can .10 Downey Fabric Softener . . . . . . . king size 1.45 French Apple Pie Mix ........ 21 oz. can .29 Veg All Mixed Vegetables . . .. 16 oz. can .17 Hunt Tomato Sauce . . . . . . . . . . 8 oz. can .10 Pet Dry Milk ................. qt. box .91 Realemon Juice . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 oz. btl. .49 A·1 Steak Sauce .. . . . . . . . . . 4% oz. btl. .33 Crest Toothpaste ........... family size .59 Perfex Cleaner ........... 15% oz. box .27 Whole Chicken, Canned ... .. ... 31,4 lb. .79 Meat Dinners .............. . .. 11 oz. .39 Canada Dry Pop .... . ....... 12 oz. can .08 Ice Milk . ....... . ........... Y2 gallon .39 Pledge Aerosol . . .......... 14 oz. can 1.19 Oven Custard . ..... . . . . . ... 2 oz. pkg. .27 Gaines Dog Meal ....... . ...... 25 lb. 2.97 Pillsbury Biscuits .. .. .. . .... . 8 oz. tube .OS Skim Milk . ................... % gal. .29 Crackers, store label . . . . . . . . . . . lb. box .23 Bayer Aspirin ... .. .. . ..... i 00 ct. btl. .55 Charcoal .......... . ........ . . 20 lb. .S9 Frozen French Fries .......... 9 oz. pkg. .10 Joh"son Glocoat ..... . . . . . . . .. 46 oz. 1.33 Chef Spa9hetti with Meatballs ..• 40 oz. .55 Gillette Super Blue Blades . . . . . . . .. 15's .69

.10

.10

.15

.20

.49 1.62

.89

.99

.18

.10

.19

.47

.12 1.69 .34 .20 .12

1.05 .55 .39 .75 .31 .89 .49 .10 .59

1.39 .35

3.29 .09 .40 ,25

.59 1.29 .17

1.55 .59

1.00

.10

.12

.17

.20

.59 1.63 .89 .95 .20 .12 .20 .47 .13

1.69 .39 .22 .13

1.05 .55 .41 .89 .33 .89 .49 .10 .59

1.39 .33

3.25 .10 .4Q' .25 .89

1.19 .15

1.79 \

.79 1.00

Total Cost , • , . , 20.02 24.03 25.03

YOU SAVE $4.01

YOU SAVE $5,01

When you shop at your IENNER Itore for this list instead of Store "x"

When you shop at your BENNER Itore for thll lill instead of Store "Y"

When You Shop, Count the Total THE TOTAL COUNTS

THESE ARE BENNER EVERYDAY LOW PRICEs-NOT SPECIALS S&H GREEN STAMPS GIVEN WITH EVERY PURCHASEI

FREE100S&H GRE~N STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON rli---~--· .. -----·-·;·· AND A $5.00 ORDER I FREE 1004"­

I . . GREEN STAMPS . EXCLUDING CIGAR· ~ WITH ORDER OF is OR MORE I' UCLUDIWCi tIG"'\tlTl$ '.

EnES HIS (OUPOH GOOD THJ.U , I~ -LIMI T '~l UU~ON PI~ ''''''llT . ~

~------____ ._~---~J Two Benner Stores In Iowa City To Serve You

Town Crest Shopping Center 2527 MUSCATINE AVE.

1029 S. Riverside

Open 1:15 P.M.

-START$-

TODAY "ONE WEEK MORE"

Two Parties

File For Race In Coralville Two full slates of candidates

filed nomination papers before the 5 p.m. deadline Tuesday for the

ov. 2 Coralville municipal elec· tion.

Included on the Progressive Pea-

\

1 pie' Party slate are : incumbent Mayor Clarence H. Wilson and

councilmen James M. Bigelow. Michael Kattcbee. Virgil G. Mor· tensen. Robert Rogers and John F. Simpson.

_~~~~~~~g~~~~~~;~?l~!:""-' Candidates on tbe Citizens for Co-operation ticket. all newcomers to politics. are : for Mayor. Roy M. Ferguson. and for councilmen: THE DAILY IOWAN IS YOUR NEWSPAPER­

SHOP D.I. ADVERTISERS I Gene P. Helt. Gene V. Denham.

IArden E. Svoboda. Elaine I. Munn and W. A. Lee Jr.

STARTING

TODAY! "ONI IIG WEEK"

tHE WOM.O ;A.MCM GLENN MILi£R

. ORCHESTRA UliljOU r .. IWfC11Cfil 0'­. I.W '''I'f'MlMTHl MOOfrijUQHl WlllWXJtS

GREAT SONGS

OFTHE 60'S GLENN MIU£R

llME,-_-""

~ Open 1:15 P.M.-

dtlaUa) STARTING

TODAY! -71.G DAYS-

Now the screen blazes with the story . based on the blistering best-seller!

111. darling of lint night partin and thinl-rate hotels, fallout

far tight dresses, loose Oling, and quick trips to thellottoll betw_ plctul1l1

:.;'''' ... .,.. .... .. ... BALSAM BUTTONS CONNMS lANS8URY LAWfORD VALlONE -If -.. - ..... JOSEPH E.lEVINE GORDON DOUGLAS JOHN MICHAEl HAYES NEAlHEFT1

r--."""'D88-'-=", -'1-="'=011---' siIip tile TlIenIt 110m ... ""

("lonely Gkn an ~c R_n PI_ I COLOR CARTOON

""- Bust.r"

-AND­COLOR CARTOON

"Crews Fete" I Add-COLOR CARTOON

"RelsI", T.I."

_ PIt.4-THE DAILY IOWAN-lowl City, ll.,-ThursAy, Oct. 7,'"

II I Annexation of Oakdale and u-I Nursing Co ege Johnson County Home was ~

~1'~~m~mlm."""'~lmmrn~~rulrnlloommllmlr 0 kd I A d C t H-' -- · PT"~ .~ T ff· St d a a e noun y ome

UH ~ays ra Ie u y Proposed As Ie Additions •

DangefOUS· Waste Of Time posed at the Iowa City City eou... l·

The fate of the children of Iowa City may be normally fut·movinI .... YJ traffic. Plans First Tea cil meeting in late aclion Tu~ ill tbe bendi of a committee. according to the " It'. the feeUDp III the eouDCil PTA preaidentl nigbt. A public hearing on the _ President 01 the 10wa City Parent·Teacher's As- repraeatIn, each Ichool. that IOIIMIthlnI hu ,ot F H • nexation was set for Nov. 16. sociation (PTA ), to be done." Mn. GrUm Mid. or omecomlng T ul

PTA Pretliilertt Mrs. Richard Grahm. 1225 S. ALTHOUGH THI aewl1.formecI committee hu he annexation wo d add iii Riverside Dr .• said Wednesday. "Iowa City child- not had an opportuDIt, to meet, it appears there A tea in honor of alumnae and and a half square miles of lIIIII ren cannol wait anotber year for another study will be • dllfereaee 01 apiIIion amoDl the mem- seniora IJlQnsored annually by tfie south and west of Coralvill. .. ... we've already sat through three safety studies bers on how the eommittee can 1M6t the dernandl faculty of the College of Nursing along the present west city ~ and we cannot risk Ute possible loss of a child's of Iowa City pareata wbo are eoncerned about will be gjven for the ftral time of Iowa City. life while the city conducts more traUlc studies." Ute pfaty of their cbiIdren. d uri n g homecoming festivities City Manager Carsten D. w.1

Mrs. Grahm's comments concerned the or· The new commlUee it enpowered to collect raUter than at graduation. void said there have been teQIIeIIa ganization of II special committee of seven city information. CODduct atudIeI, BDd make recorn· Laura C. DlIStan. dean. will be for annexation from property """1' and school officials by Ihe lo\\'a City City Council mendations l1li bow to improve acbool way con· b f h be Tuesday night to plan improvements in trafflc dilions to the city coundl. The committee i. com. oaless 0 t e tea to ers whose land is not in the cit1. lifeguards for the city's school children. posed of Superintendent III Sc:boolJ. Buford W. the from ~:~o o~\~ ~e University o[ Iowa. Leikvold

THE NEW COMMITTEE, according to city Garner; the ICbool boInI "",,dent. O. D. Bar. Shirley Graffam and Mary said. has made a verbal reqllelt officials. was established to help insure Ute beat Iholow; Mra. Graiun; CIt, M .... '. Canten D. , both members of the College to annex Ute Oakdale area. possible school traffic safety conditions. The re- Leikvold; CIty Traffic EqiDeer Lawrence Sieck ; of Nurling faculty and Becky Leikvold stated the annexatkit qUellt for these condition came from a number of ChIef of PoUce Joim J. Ruppert and City Attorney Behrens of Cedar Falls. president area could be drained by Ute ~ parents along Friendship Street who demanded Jay HlIIIOh.n. of the senior class of tbe College ent city sewer system . • top sign, to insure afe crossing for school child· On Sept. 21. Leibold reported the dea!rabiJity of Nursing. are In charge of ar- ----------reno of a pro,ram to promote edlJC8tion pedeltrian life- rangements.

According to city omelals, state regulations ty and recommend improvementa where needed. I f (. "" .. ., '. • caution against the use 01 stop signs on a busy Lellcvold wu unavallable for comment Wed· D CI b To Meet ...;A .. '-..l atreet Ilke Friendship because it would slow down neaday. ame. uNO W ENDS

"III~III"mll""lllIIllllIlml"lmIII/iIlUII""II~III\!imllllli!li'l!II~IIII.'·' ~II~'''I!UI n'IlU!~'!:IIIIIIIIIIIIIII!llIIml"IIIII~""l11lmm"mm~mIllMm.wmm"I~II""'~m"llml"'I~IIII""~~"I"I~ a ~: for o~~o~=~!eC~~:~r~o~~ ~ _:RI. 8 p.m. Thursday in the New Ball· "FOP ANYONE room of the Union.

Entertainment will consist of a WHO DOES" : ]' fashion show by Seifferts and Ma· WANT TO WEAR ternily Fashions.

More than 100 alumni of the at 8 a .m. Friday with an open lmeetinl will be • two-part dis· ---- BLiNDERS."-cu.",o8 College of Dentistry are expected house in the College of Dentistry', cusslon of "Occlusion: Its 1m­to attend Ute 48th annual Alumni clinic and laboratories. which will portance to the General Practltion· TMTW To Hear Yocum "A FILM EVERY Association meeling on campus be in operation throuchout tbe er" by Dr. Robert E. Moyers. a AMERICAN this weekend. morning. U of I craduale who Is currently Councilman Max Yocum will

The two-day program .,.,ill open A special feature of Friday's director of the Center for Human speak on the effects of urban reo SHOULD SEE!'!c .•. s. Growth and Development at Ute newal on off·campus housing at IY

Dental ~Iumni To Gather •

University of Michl"n. the Town Men·Town Women meet· "OUTSTANDING!" , • Starts SATURDA YI All afternoon lellion will include ing at 8 tonight in the Union nli·

While the characters and events In th iS story are based on

actual characters and events. certam liberties have been

taken with Cleopatra.

SUN. OCT. 31st 2 1.1 510WS

IN PERSON ----.;...- ALSO FEATURING -----

.IICII 'MI. lAXIi. , .. ,QUIT ........ 111 ClICU tl." fAMILY C.ICLI .... fS &$4.000ULC •• a.so.ta. .... , ... P..... I" M ••• er 1v •• Ih_ .....

MAIL ORDER. NOW .... , ............ c,. 1"0 ~'HIUM WII •• - & --.. ••• .... 'IIYUII DlWl-UIIUg lS,.ZlnC

GMT BOX-OFFICE atRK NOW'OPEN!

a buslneaa meetlna and Ute nols Room. • "VISUAL-LNy'" York '0" ductlon of Icholanhlp 1-----------

I by Dean Geor,e S. Easton. IMPRESSIVE I" of Dentiltry. and Dr. John • 4-~ 1 ~ land. low. City dentist. ••. ,. . - , ~

Thu- Fri' & Sat - Nt.",. Yo,," Tim., ~~ ~-.!..,

, Saturday's morning session "AN EPIC!" . ::f'~~.' . fe.ture an "E.t and Learn" THE SAINTS -Chr;d;o. Sc;.nco lut at which breakfa.t tables in It dental area will be set uP. wiUt Coll'ae of o.tlatry faculty AT ben lea4ln' .pactal dlsclIS,lon.

Dr. M. R. Kadeaky. Dubuque. is praident of the U, of I dental allln1Jlj. Other ofIIcen include Dr. W. B. HoUBDder, SIoux City. vice· praldent; Dr. M. D. Bean. Des Moines. secretary; BDd Dr. E. C. PraU, Mt. V .... treasurer.

THE HAWK Highway 6 We ..

McDonal

'life! (I' 'lislt SANDWICH

IXCII'INGLY NIW -INVITINGLY YOURS ..... 0CICIaI"-"-" _ ........... ,.. ........ . Me " ............ ---'--............... .-•• _ ..... _ ..... Id ...................... ... .......-................................ ..,.whIIo ~ ........................ --. ... .. ...... _ ...... _w

.... let ... IOIde .. arc .... • I 8

McDonald •

OPIN

01:'

• , = -

(COL ?RJ "" lH( mlHI IYM~HOMY O.CHIST!A

ENDS TONIT& . TERENCE STRMP 'n

I'THE COLLECTOR"

STARTS FRI. FOR 5 DAYS

VISIT OUR SNACK BAR

FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY!

(SEX) and the Single Girl

I •

I •

• •

'University Drive Expected To Aid Community Givers

lFire Prevention Campaign ,

THI DAILY IOWAN-lowl City, 1 •• ,-Thu",lI.y, Oct. J, lMJ..-P ... 1

Extremist Club Organizes; Forum For Left, Right

USIA Aide Arrives Today Keitb AdamIon, deputy director Dec. 4 are available at the place,

of the U.S. Information Aiency'a ment Office, and must be com The University wiu probably raise one·fourth to one-third of Formation of the Young Ex. take DO atands on 81'1)1thin,. I USIA) Voice of America, will ar. pleted and returned by Oct. 15.

the $108.096 loal of the Community Givers campaign. estimated tremista, ". forum for all C2:treme "There is no ~n~lty except Irive bere today for two days of

Prompts Warning On Burns NormlD R. Holzaepffi. gymnastic coacb and chairman. Improved tr~tm~n~ does not negate ~e fact that burns points of view. " bas been an that we are ex~emlsts, Katz wd. talks with faculty and student. and Bus Boardin. 9 Try Fail!1

The University will follow the campaign policy of soliciting are the most senous Injury man can receIve, according to a nounced by its presideot, Bob The ~trerrus~ .now bave a fac· vialting communication. f.cillties conlrlbutions from all salaried University employees at their jobs. University doctor. K tz A3 I C't ulty adVISer, Wilhal!l Erbe, auis· CRAWFORDVILLE, Ga. L9I ~

The bonorary committee in charge of tbe Univerlity drive . '. . OWl I y- tant professor of Sociology, and are on campUs. Negroes made anotber futile error consists of Leonard R. Brcka , busineu ollice ; Kenneth D. Donel· This week, Sunday through Sat· . . . . Kltz. who calls himself a left· awaiting Stu4ent Senate approval AdallllOn will talk to student. in. , IOn, coordinator of'lbe Unlversity Information Service; Fred H. urday, is Nalional Fire Prevention suit in hlp mortahty and diaabil· lwinl IUlBrchist .... ys only two ad- before SOliciting members. Katz .tereat.ed in tbe foreign &ervice and to board school buses Wednesda'i Doderer, director of tbe personnel office ; Robert V. Hogg. profes· Week. But, says Dr. David Furnas, ity ratll •. be said. ... Ivocate. of extreme pbU~opby have said he expected about 40 memo the USIA. He bas &erved with both as Gov. Carl E. Sanders met ~tI sor of matbematics ; Robert A. Rasley, business office; and Charles auoclate in lurpry at University Furna. rule for burDl. " a 50 vllited the campus In the I~st bers when the group gets started.. agencies in his tours of foreign state and county officials and Clv! B. Righter, administrative assistant to the President. Hospital. every week sbould be per cent ~lInce of SUrviVal for a years . They were Daniel ' duty. Those wiahing to bear one of rights workers in Atlanta In an el

EACH EMPLOYEE will be asked to contribute .5 per cent of F' P don Ilk ~n ,~verlDg 50 per cent of the editor of the D.ily Worker, 14B F',l',buster Vote Set his SO-mlnute talks may call the fort to balt racial demonstrations biJ salary. Ho\zaepfell8ld. Ire reven W • y. Gov. Ross Barnett. Business and Industrial Placement Sanders issued a brief statem~

Eacb of tbe 143 departments of the University bas appointed II To avoid prolonged, ~penslve Major burns coverin, more than WASHINGTON, LfI _ Still Office, 353-3147, or may go to the after the meeting ended Wednea captain to direct Its drive, Hoizaepfel said. hospital treatment, he said. every· 10 per cent of the skill . area and articles in The Daily inll for a way oul of a Senate to sign up. day night saying he hoped "a cea

The campaign was begun Monday with a letter from President one sbould be careful with fire 8JId leu th.n ~ per cent Will and Arena, and to p~esent bUlter, Democratic leader Mike Applications to take tbia year's salion of problems" would Howard R. Bowen to all faculty and staff members asking for flammable materials. ~~tatt SIX ~onths 10f. cd Bill as George Ltncol~ Mansfield of Montana Wednesday Foreign Service Examinations on (rom this session. their cooperation. • The University Hospital faelli· f PI care, e exp aID. 5 chairman of the Amerl· set 1 p.m. Friday for tbe iirst test l .. iiiiiioooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:

ties usually care for six to twelve or this care are $50 to $UlO a day . Nazi party; Gu. HaD. chair- vole on a law jiving the slates I A H ? George Nagle, Sr., general cbairman of the campaign, said burn case. at a time the doctor BurDi coveriOi 80 per cent 01 of the American Communist authority to ban the union shop. n urry

Community Givers supports 17 agencies in Iowa City. These qen· said ' bod,y or more are usually fatal be· Party; and athicst Walter Kauf· Mansfield announced he '!'(.ill • des include tbe Arthritis and Rheumatism Foundation, tbe Red "Despite better forms of treat. cause of pin infection, .. Jd Fur· m8D. . . ~ove then to table and thlls ~l Cross, the United Service Organizations, and the Traveler's Aid ment," he continued, "burns of the naa. The group. whIch Katz saId In· IbIS o~n mob~n to call up II bill B ff D' Association. race and hand. rllUlt In terrible John Birch Society mem- repealing Seclion aB of the Taft· U et Inner

HoizaepCel asked aU department captains who have not already deformations that are practicaDy Doctor Studying School well as Socialists, wlll lHartley Law. done so to pick up their pledge cards and otber materials from impoSlible to erase. F H I h 0 't' Righter at 103 Univer.ity Hall, between 9 a.m. and IIOOn or be· Scarl and contractions of skin or ea t rgan,za Ion tween 1 and 4 p.m. grafts may create problems that The Hospital School I. being --------'--------------- will take years oC reconstructive studied by Dr. Benjamin V. Tame­

George" Gourmet',

Combiruztion For Better Serotc8

Before the

PARADE ... $100 Pollock Scholarships Given To 2 Sophomores

treatment. he said. Full thickneu sis, a World Health Or,anization burns, which destroy both layers of lfellow from Quezon City, Philippi· skin. are the worst. nes. • 7 NIW TRUCKS _ Get your d.n".,., .. you hot and fl"

"The .kin i. the bi,,.. 0I'J8D in Dr. Tamem II .pendlng this the body. When it II disrupted. its week in Iowa City to study the reo important function is disrupted." quirements in the construction

From 5 P,M, To 7 P,M. • in ROSE ROOM

• ROTARY PHONES - KHP lin .. open to take your ord.r GOOD FOOD

Sharon M. Baker, A2, Northboro, majoring in Chinese language Furnas said. a bospital school for crippled cbil· • 20 MINUTE SERVICE - On III clrry .. ut order. PROMPT SIRVICE REASONABLE PRICI . . and Raymond D. Lum, A2, '-'11'.11. ,- .. - civilization were eligible to ap· Infection can then occur. The pe. dren . He will also be studying the

for the annual stipend. Selec· riod of infection followin, the inl· relation of out·patient treatment DIAL 338"7801-George'. Gourmet Restaurant go, have been awarded the of the winners. both sopbo- tial pbase of burn treatment Is the centers, lCbool campi. and the

, I Jefferson Hotel OPIN 4 p,m. - 1 •. m. lun.-Thun.; Fri. I Sat. 'til 2:30 ' .m. $100 George Lauman and was based on scholastic ex- most critical lime. early vocational tralning of crtp-

~~~ ~~~~a~~~~~~~~~M~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!=::::~::::=::::~:~,~ available this year at the faculty members. tlon in the opened blll'lled areas reo hood. I_ . ~ The scholarShip fund was estab- ~/ IDS'!]

lished in 1963 by Mrs. Whitfield

Cobb of Roanoke, Va .. as a memo She'U Remember 4NNIVBltS4K! Drill to her parents, Mr. and Ms. Geroge Pollock. The Pollocks wanted to You Always studies amonll undlergi"edl~ate dent •. Funds are contributed Iy by individuals. When You Gioe Her

All freshmen and sopbomore hooon atudents witb the intention

City Helps Dorms Get Water Again

Iowa Clly bas belped the sity to resume water service to the wom~n's dormitories and the Pentacrest area by opening four interconnecting water mains.

The mains were opened Tuesday morning.

A leak Monday in a University pipe crossing the Iowa River caused a pressure drop and a oC water to the two areas. City of· ficials IIY tbey will continue to supply tbe water until tbe leak repaired. .

A Mum

From Sweeting's

$1.25 - $1,50 - $2.00

Sweeting's Flowers

127 E. College

Phone 337·3153 • ~---

Central Party Committee presents

"And Thereby Hangs a Tale"

fe~turing THE GLENN MILLER ORCHESTRA directed by Ray McKinley

Saturday Night - 8:00 ~.M. ~ IMU Main Lounge

* Special Added Attradion '* Baby Huey & The Babysitters Saturday Night-8:00 P.M. -IMU New Ballr~

Whetstone's; Campus Record Shop; Iowa Memorial UAion

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~1H. DAILY IOWAN-I_ CIty, I •• ,...".....,~o.t. '.1"

Discrimination Probe parked By Woman Prof

City Teacher Will Inspect

Iowa Chooses New Site For Tracking Station

I Ca ·bbea Plans to relocate the University satellite tracking station n rl n from its site 11 miles south of Iowa City to a location north-Iy JOYCE OLSON f be' d din JC. IoreDseD. I City east 0 town are now mg rna e, aecor . g to Wayne D.

Staff Writer Robert fA .-mary e:~ation, Spire, electronics technician with the Physics Department. He Disaimination against women faculty members through fat CUba aDd Puerto spoke Wednesday to the Optimist Club.

salary and committee appointments wiD be investigated OIl aD Inspection tour The tracking station is part of -----------1. the University Faculty Council this fall, said Robert P. military dependent a research program to study puler system, presently located In

Iidllovlnton. political science associate professor and chairman of trip is sponsored by charged particles of matter in the the old Physics building. One sends F culty Co •• _A:1 '''I dn da of Defense and the earth's atmosphere, Spire said. data about conditions aboard the

a """"'"" e es y. Ceatral AuociatiOD of Col- This research has grown from the ~paceshj~ ; the other sends back The blue was brought to the IqeI ad f!econdary Schools. discovery of the Van Allen radia- mformation stored on a tape re-

~OUIIIill last spring by Mrs. Mabel Is a private club for male f.ac:ult1 'l'be DefeDIe DepartmeIIt span- tion belt, ODe of the foremost corder. Panoos, home ecooomics as- members. the bItDDIaJ. trip to make space discoveries made at the Uni· Sixteen different commands con·

felililtaillt professor who wrote a let- "I am in favor of a faculty ita tdIoolJ meet the standards versity. he said. trolling the processes aboard the pro t est I ~ , which include. women 10 we Iebool lIIOciation. Sorensen The research is presently COD- sa~elite . can be sent to the ship,

feel more a part of the pleteel .. Inspector because of cerDed with data from Explorer 24 SpIre said. --",0--- WOJnea fac~ty members. i .. 'uperieJIee In the field . . satellite. better known to Univer- Spire began work at the Univer-

ParIOI1I said abe wrote the 5 Iy, ~d Mrs. Panona. SoreMeIl IJId Don Varcoe, pr.m- sity scientists as Injun 4. Injun 4 slty in May 1964 and has seen the beca\llle there was DO pro- She s8Jd IUch a club would dpaI of the Rapid City, S.D., ~Igh was sent into orbit Nov. 1, 1964. tracking station grow from a bar-eoveriog sex in the Board vide a better means of IICIIool, wI11 be briefed in Washmg- and is the fourth in a series of ren piece of land to a functloning

f Recent's Statement on Human cation among the facuJty In all loll, D.C .• _~_wIJ1 .!!!_~~ tt:,ere satellites built at the University on scientific tool. He was previously departments for tile ~. fi""""",,oo ur, contract with the National Aero- associated with Collins Radio in

ibts. The statement covered..' SoreDMII is lCbeduled to return to nautics and Space Administration Cedar Rapids. ace. religion and natural origin. ~ a member of an all-womeD CII, Oct. 24. (NASA ). ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill "There was no statement of pol· department," Mrs. P81'IO!II aaid. Injun 4 orbits in a norlh-sooth or-~ for women," sald Mrs. Parsons "it Is difficult to let other people ftOItiCAST- bital pattern and can be tracked

WeIgh TOO Much FAT

TalMUDEX WITH VITALON TAIILETS uring an interview Tuesday. know that we do more thaD MINNEAPOLJS.ST. PAUL III _ when it passe~ over Iowa City by

eel women faculty mem"'- and sew. Practical Ik.Ill Is 1m- _tber forecast for the sec· the 28-£oot, dlsh·type antenna at Guarant .. d, Safe, Harmla" .,.,n, the tracking station No 're .. rlpllon N .. ded ibose education, publications, portant. but more important are oncl lame of the World Serje~ ' . LUIIIN'S aUF IlaVICI DRUG earch and teaching are . the reasons for doing thin&1... Thursday w.. "occasional cloudl- Two transmitters aboard Injun 41 ,Ie to men'. deserve equal oppor- She said that with the n_ wltII a hltb of 70 degrees." send data Lo the University com-

junltles. number of girls on Mrs. Parsons said her major important that the women

Dint of contention was not ~embers contribute to the Unl1'81'-1

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.nd aaJary but a concern with rep- 8lty In every poulble way. eaeatatlon of faculty women on Boynton laid there Is alW81l ODe ommltteea and in appointments. woman on the Faculty CounclI .be thought the lack of representa- from the Cotlege of Nurain,. He 100 was due to women's limited sald women faculty members have ;t>portunity to exchange Ideas and been reaaooabty rigOl'Olll In de­nformatlon with other University manda for representation.

hers The Faculty Council II ptber-,ePll1'tlrlent mem. ing information and ltatiatlca on

O· r~&' ...... . .... . . . ........ :::.~~ ....... \~ • • e. • • : • •••••• • •• Triaollle Club, she explained, rank, salary and committee ap­

pointments of women faculty mem-

d fo h bers. Boynton said the repreaeo-laun ry r t • busy student tation of women 011 commlttlN!a

at do-It-yourself prlc •••

W.th, .., and fold . .... 13c lb.

will be compared to the percenta,e of female faculty members.

CYCLONI! PRACTICI-w.th, .., and not fold llc Ib. AMES III - Iowa State', f0ot­

ball team held a routine workout Wednesday, continuin, prepara­tions for a Big Eight game at Kansas next Saturday.

WEE WASH IT 2U S. Clinton St. The Cyclones will be lookinI

their first Conference victory since beating Oklahoma State Nov. 2, 1963.

Phane 337-90"

Have Camera - Will Shoot Candlds, Portraits, W.ddlng., Campus Actfvttf ..

Professional Experience:

Newspapers and Magazines

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338·7073

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• Conf~rence lS-Year-Old Boy Rescued Membership Drive l

gins Third Day I To Begin Season

-!:th~~d~!ri~~o;:~:~y~~r~ II'After 26 Hours In C:ave For Music Group ~ . _ ... ' .S.A.," a program for dietitians, The Friends of Music, Inc.. a

_.~ be h~dth!~~i~~in;:~:~ MEDINA, Obio "" _ A sleepy. appeared to be in good physiclal a few incbes at a time until his!cilY group that s~nsors chamber ~a a:morial union~ :hungry lS.year-old boy was tugged lconditiOn. "A whole lot bette~ than body cleared !he bottom of the music concerts, will open its sea·

W'U' ped' Ir' . to safety Wednesday from a foot· I would be under the circum· V'shape [ormation. son with the annual membership .~ores 1.lam~n, . la ~c wide crevice which had imprisoned stances," he added. THE TUNNEL is about a foot I e . I " •

.tiet!Uan al UDlverslty Hospitals, IS him face down [or 26 [ours in a Baeuold said be had been told wide and 31,.. feet high. It slopes driv . . , : I .wrman of th,: program. T~~ Cave that once hid fugitive Negro the boy would be fed intravenously to a dead end just a few feet from The orgamzation.s concerts are ~ r ",' , ~shopf session I~v°tilyes thbeetPrlD slaves. while he is UDder sedation. where Morris was trapped. at 8 p.m. in MacbrIde Hall. Season I' .J ,.. ).. l.~ -...i ClP"", 0 commuDlca on ween .. f I' t for d d the ell tit' d th h i i a· The Uo-pound boy. Moms Baet- Pollce preventeit newsmen rom He didn't have much to saYl Icke s are $5 stu ents an .. "1ient en::! anstud:nf ~~rcs:n, :nd zold, was taken immediately to talking to Morris wblle he was car· wbile Peck and Ulricb worked to $7.50 (or others. They are avail. . FAIR FORCE ROTC. IbllSllleSS fralerruty, held a pledge ALPHA PHI I Phi

Clployee. rest since Tuesday wben he [rom which dozens o( rescuers . . able at the Campus Record Shop. in tbe Homecoming Parade should pledges. Special guests included pledge cia.. officers for the fall " 'a hospital for the (irst food and ried on a streicher from the cave tug him free Air orce ROTC cadeta Involved hanquet Tuesday for their 'Z1 new l The recently elected A pba

Program partiCipants will be crawled into a nar~w slanting struggled to puU or pry bim free. ~~~ he kep~ ~lm~nd In good Eble Music Company and West attend a final organizational brief- Lawrence A. Cox, buainess profes- semester are: Cathy LeRoy. AI. :DuIne Thompson, program direc· passageway and became wedged When one attempt to put a rope SP~;I. most 0 e e. Music Company. ing at 8 p.m .. Tb.ursday in the lOr, University of Nebraska •. Lin.IGlenview, m., president; Jani~ 1« of !be Bureau of Labor and between solid sandstone rocks. round his body failed, Morris 1 ve nev~r seen !l ~y ~th .50 As in the past, guarantors will Pharmacy AudilofJum. The Air coin, and Bryon Veneer, presIdent Weaver, AI, Wapello, vice-prell' ::JIanaaement; Wanda Cbenoweth' He appeared exhausted but in broke into tears. much guts In my life. said Jim h I f th ts Tb IScience (AS) Irs who volunteered of Nebraska's Delta Sigma PI dent· Karen Kemp. AI. Chicago. dIieI therapeutic dieti.ti.an in the good condition. ' "Is there anything I can do 10 Lea. one of the rescue party. e P ~y or e concer. e plus all AS Ill's and AS IV'a are chapter. aecr~-treuurer; Mary Conn, ])epIrtment o[ Nutr~hon ;. ~.rs . Dr. A. J. Karson, a Medina help you?" he asked Jerry Ulricb, THE BOY couldn't be (ed be· group IS also seeking patrons and required to attend. • •• AI. Des Moines, standards; Marcia :DanIana Mason, te~cbmg dletihan physician who had kept a cheek 12, who snaiJed into the tiny tun· cause h~ h~d was lower than. his sustaining members who will con· ••• ALPHA KAPPA PSI Hudson. AI, Des Moines, echolar-It University Hospltal~, an~ ~.rs. on the boy during the ordeal, told nel . "Oh, please. i! there anything feet , said BIU Karas of Washing- tribute funds to tbe budget. A pa. ~WS INTERVIEWS Alpha Kappa Psi, profeaalonal ahip; Ann Linquist, AI, Park lIAIberta McHenry, chIef dleliltan Inewsmen following an examination I can do'" ton, D.C., leader of a cave rescue. . . IntervIews for the AiIocIated business fraternity will hold their Ridge III lOCial chairman' and .. St. Luke's Hos~ital , Davenport' lat the hospitai that the young- RESCU'E WORKERS deUberate- team which ~ew in to help. It was tron WIU make ~ contr~bulJOn of Women's ~ude~ts (AWS) will be first pledge meeli~g at 7:30 p.m. Nancy SchUlenburg. AI, Chlcago. Mn. Mary M. Collins of Cedar Ra· ster's injuries were mil\>lr. He said Iy badgered and taunted the trap. feared he nught choke. at .Ieast $50 and Will receive a sea- Thursday night m the Union Lucall- Thursday in the Union Kirkwood lOng leader. pidl wiD lummarize the meeting. the boy would be kept under seda· ped boy to keep him from falling Morris' father and brother kept son ticket for himself and guests. Dodge r?Om. This meeting is for Room. AU business or pre.business •••

The nutrillon con!ere~ce~ are lion for a while and thai no one a~leep so he could not h~lp f~ee a vigil outside the cave. A sustaining member will contrib. those ~Is . who .a1ready bave students who bave expressed inter- BRADDOCK APPOINTED spGIIIOI'ed by. t~e Umverslty s Col· but me~bers or the family would , hJmseIC. Someone was WIth hun ute $25 and wiU receive two regu. turned ID ~helr a~Plicati!,na. est in becoming members should Richard Braddock. 8S8OCiate pro-lep 01 Medicme, Department of be permItted to see him at least ,almost constantly. . I attend. Members should be dressed fcssor of rhetoric bas been ap. IIItenIII Medicine, the University until Thursday. Finally, he was incbed loose OPTIMIST MEETING l ar season tickets. YWCA for float building activities foUow- POinted a member' of the National HoIpita1I. and the Department of MORRIS'S FATHER. Raymond after Mike Ulrich, IS. of North Phil E. Connell o( Iowa City. as· Tbis yea~'8 performers are : the I .The YWCA Executive C~blnel ing the meeting. Council of Teachers of English Nutrition. Cl!"sponsors are the Iowa Baetzold of Cleveland, said his Roy~lton. Jerry's brother. and listant to President H?war.d R. Brahms Pla.no Qua.rte~, Oct. 15; WIll m~t a~ 4:.30 ThurS<!ay In the ••• (NCTE) CommiUee on Research. Medical Society. tbe Iowa Hospital son greeted him with a big smile Curbs Peck, 26, of Akron got Bowen. attended a meetmg m SI. Rey de la Torre. gUitarist, Nov . 5; YWCA s o[{lce ID the Union. RESEARCH GRANT The purpose of the committee is to AIIoc~tJon, the Iowa Dietetic As· and "hOw are yoU, Dad?" straps a~oUDd his slender ~y. ILoUiS o[ th~ Constituti?n .and By- the Concentus Musicus, Jan. 22 ; ••• Dr. Francois M. Abboud of the expand NCTE interests in reo IOCiahon, and the State Depart· Baetzold said the boy had a Then It was a tortuous Job of laws Comlnlttee of Optilnlst Inter· and Tamas Vasary, pianist, Feb. DE~ TA SI~MA Pt University Cardiovascular Re. search to sponsor programs and _t of Health. bruise on the head, but otherwise hoisting the S.foot 7-inch boy up National. 12. I Della Sigma PI, professional search laboratory haa received a confer~nces concerning research,

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$31,518 researeh grant from the and to prepare a series of annual National Heart Institute for his reo bibliographies . search in the field of vaacular reo ••• ac~ivlty. NBWCOMERS CLUB

• '. The Newcomers Club. an organlo SUNDAY BUFFET Zlltion of women faculty and wivel,

An after·game buffet from 5 to will hold a tea at 1:30 p.rn. .... 7 p.m. Saturday will officially open day in the Union Big Ten LoaBII the Union State Room. A Sunday and Yale Room. WiUard L. Bo,.s. buffet will also be held from 11 vice president for instruction lIIId a.m. to 7 p.m. The buffets are open dean of faculties. wiU deUver • to the public at a cost o[ $2.50 per welcome. The program topic wID person. be "The Union-Activities CeIIter

The state Room wiJI now have of the University of Iowa." featur· buffets every Sunday. ing a talk and tour by Roger Munn.

The only room not omcially assistant director of the UniOIL opened in the new Union addition •• • is the Craft Shop. I PEP CLUB

• •• Pep Club cheering block ticketa DENTISTRY MeETING Iwi! be available from 9 a.m. to 6

All Iowa dentists are invited to l p.m. Thursday at tbe Union South attend the 48th annual meeting of Lobby. Two ID cards plus two the College of Dentistry Friday yellow Pep Club cards must be pre-and Saturday. sented to receive the tickets.

A business meeling and election and installa.lion of new oEficers will Band Formations be beld Friday. "Eat and Learn" discussion groupe wlll be held dur- B· P • d ing breakfast Saturday on the elng rachce Union Sunporch.

• •• The fOOtball leam il not the only EQUIPMENT AWARDED group practicing formations for

The Iowa Division of the Ameri· the Saturday game. The Hawkeye can Cancer Society made several lMarching Band, under the direc­awards to the University in the ' tion of Frederick C. Ebbs. i5 also 1964-65 fiscal year. The Unlversiwl going through its paces. received a Neutron Acceleratorl The theme for the Homecoming and allied equipment worth $50" Game half· lime show is "Iowans 000; and a Cryostat Machine worth lof Note." Included In the routines $3.800 for surgery. will be tbe formation of a horse

In addition, $5,000 was granted and a covered wagon. honoring for support of the Central Tumor Buffalo Bill ; of a globe with cir­Registry and $60.000 towards the1cling radiation belts, honoring purchase of a Betatron radiaUon \PhYSiCist James Van Allen; and of instrument. which is DOW being a shield, hQnoriDg the late Herbert installed at University Hospitals. Hoover. - ' -

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DocIe r pitcher Don Dry.I. throw, te first frem • lift.,. posit"", .... r fleldl,. • iNlll off the Nt .. Twin,' hu ...... JIm Gr.nt In the thin! 1nnI,. of

WecInud.y', world .. rles ... me. Gr.nt w., rul", .... on thl. pI.y. Twin. won the , .. m., 1-2.

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lO-Hit Twin Attack Beats Dodgers, 8-2

Iy JACK HAND AllOClateci P,. .. Spor1S Writer

MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (AP) - The Minnesota Twins. stung by Dodger talk of a four-straight sweep. knocked out Don Drysdale in a six-run third inning Wednesday and rode to an 8-2 opening World Series victory over Los Angeles on Jim Grant's steady pitching.

Zoilo Versalles. a wiry 155-pound Cuban. stunned the fa­vored Dodgers with a three-run homer off Drysdale. drove in a fourth run with a single in the sixth and stole second base on a pitchout.

A standing room crowd of 47,- . . m, a record for Metropolitan Sta- Jlmmy .Hall but ~aJked Mmcher on dium, watched quietly while Ron a 3-1 pitch, loadmg the bases. Fairly's bomer gave the Dodgers Earl Battey dtm!ted a two-run

. . • . , . an early lead in the second and sin~!e. into short r~ght ~, when 'f t . " ~ '\ \ ';1 . hummed when Don Mincher tied it Q.UilICI .followed With his ~econd •• ' 1,. i \ I .. '.1j4 in the same inning with a homer hit, a smgle that scored Mmcher,

,". j. i, . J ". > off Drysdale. Drysdale was done. Only two of the ! " t .,,, . . . . runs were earned but they all

.. *} , ).,t,l "·W 1. The big crowd went mto a spm counted EARL BATTEY in the third when Drysdale, the . . .

2-Run sln,l. towering 23-game winner, was With no pressure o~ hiS back Winnln, Pitcher iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiii driven to cover. Before Howie Grant rolled home eaSily although -----------

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men hail batted. ~mgles, except ~alrly. home run Alston brought in Reed, Jim Brew. FRANK QUILICI a 208 hitter :to the r~ght ri:e!d bleacher~ k~ er and finally Ron Perranoski, but

brought up from ~ De~ver farm etchlleced°nb · M' a h ~as .~~CteY the damage had been done. Brew· . rna y mc er S 'IVV"'OO rift th! th

club m July ~o fill an aching sec- deep into the same section in the er, ~ eth

y, ~athve up e on y 0 er 1 ond base VOId, stroked a double . . Th th b' run 10 e SIX . I

. . bi" Th same mrung. en came e Ig A1th hOI' th A . and a smgle m the e mrune. e thlrd and it was all over oug Iva, e mencaJI feat tied a Series record tbat had MINNESOTA picked up its exlra Lea~e batting . champ, went. bi~ been shared by 12 others. run in the sixth on Grant's double les~ 10 four trips, ~e did tie I

With room to breathe and enjoy down the third base line to the left Serl~ re~ord b?, making seven pul· , the clear sunshine, Grant marched field corner and Versalles' single outs 10 right field. along steadily as he had done aU to center. Versalles was his usual brilliant year while piling up 21 victories for The bunt, peck and scramble self in the field, roving the short· the American League champions. Dodgers got a run in the ninth on stop position with abandon. He

Grant kept Maury Wills, the singles by Lefebvre and Wes Par- went to his left to make a line ' Dodgers ' big running threat off ker and Wills' safe bunt up the play on a grounder by Drysdale the bases until he singled fu the first Imse line. in the third and grabbed a 'slakin, seventh. The man who stole M Leading 1-0 on the home lItounds, liner by Lefebvre with two mel bases in the season was complete- Manager Sam Mele planned to on in lhe sixth. Iy stymied because there already come right back with Jim Kaat, In the dressing room Mele said, • was a runner on second. WllIs fi· the 18-game winning southpaw "n's always nice to win the firs!." nally did drive in a run with a who was the second-best perform- Asked about reports that tel" bunl single in the ninth. er on his staff. vision viewers had the impressioD

Versalles, who had vowed to run Sandy Koufax, the 26-game Dod- Grant was spitting on the baJJ, I on Dodger pitching,. got his chance ger ace who missed the opener Mele said, "Well, we got the im­in the sixth after he had driven in becau&e he was observing Yom pression that 'Drysdale was usinC his fourth run with a single. AI- Kippur, the most solemn day of a 'spitler.' If they can get awaT though the Dodgers called a pitch- the Jewish calendar, will be back with it, what's the difference?" out, catcher John Roseboro's to try to square matters for Mana- Alston said he didn't notice an! , throw was on the wrong side of ger Walter Alston. "spilters. " second, and Zoilo slid in safely.

Drysdale and Grant were locked at 1-1 when Quilici rapped a double past third base down the left field line leading off the big third. Then came a bad break for Drysdale and the Dodgers.

GRANT BUNTED back to the box and Drysdale slipped and fell. He threw to first from a sitting

Mixed Emotions 'In Locker Rooms * * * * * * 1507 C STREET, S.W. position but Jim Lefebvre, cover-

CEDAR RAPIDS, tOWA ing the bag, juggled the throw for Twins j Dodgers JI~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~!!"'!!!!!"'!!!~!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ l an error.

~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The pal·'Y Iowan Versalles rifled a homer into the Iy LEW ~ERGUSON MrNNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL ItI - ' lower left field stands, breaking Auocl.tH Pre.. Sports Writ.r Th tm h ctl the game wide open. e a osp ere was not exa 1

I YOUR 'h Sandy Valdespino doubled to MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL iA'I - bubbling with joy but there was no

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5 raper - right and, after Tony Oliva, the ZoiJo Versanes, who proclaimed air of despair In the Los AIlgeles

Sh D I Ad I only hitless Twin, grounded out, himself lucky to drive in four runs Dodgers' dressing room following'

Op vert,·sets Harmon Killebrew singled to left. in Minnesota's 8-2 opening World . . . • • • Drysdale recovered and struck out Series victory Wednesday, sounded their 8·2 World Series loss to Mm·

-,---,-----------=;----------------------- the keynote of the Twins restrain- nesota Wednesday.

LORENZ BOOTI SHOP ed dressing room. "We got 10 hits, they got 10 hits,

"We have to keep going," the but theirs came in a bunch and I

wiry shortstop saId. "There can dO' d'd 't" 'd be seven games. We all know that scorf) runs. ur S in, sal a we've got to play hard,." quiet~jng Dodger manager, Wal·

Manager Sam Mele contained ter Alston . Ph. 337.382:5 112 E. Washington his optimism just as much as did Did he think the Twins' pitcher,

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"Y al lik to . th t Jun Mu cat rant, was trow-ou ways e wm a .. first one and get the momentum," mg the spitball? Mele said. "It's like when 31011 go "I never noticed," Alston lold into any series during the season. newsmen gathered around him aft· You want the first one badly. er the game. •

"It's the same old story. We'll. . go one at a time. That Los An- Alston said perhaps. he left hIS geles is a good club. You can't re- starter, Don Drysdale, m the game lax with those guys. We'll keep too long - or at least longer than playing the way we have all year." he would some of his other pitch·

There was no Whooping it up. ers. The sober faces trooping in left " I thoug~t Drysdale ~ad good one wondering who won the game. stuff, but ~IS co!11mand was not so

"We just play our game and good, which 18 understandable we're okay," V e r saIl e s said. since he hadn't pitched since last "There are seven games." Thursday."

Jim (Mudca!) Grant, who went Had he "given up" when he the distance and scattered 10 hits, brought in his ace relief hurler, • said: "1 didn't have my curve ball Ron Perranoski, in the seventh and all day. 1 didn't throw over 15 the Dodgers trailing, 8-1? curves, and I didn't throw a good "I never give up," he said cold-one untn the ninth inning. Iy . . •

"I had a fast ball today. I think '" thoughl the hit that really 1 threw real good, but I didn't killed us, even after Zollo Ver· haV(\ as eood a fast ball as I had salles' home run was Earl Bat­during the teason. Most of the tey's single into short right field. game, I bad control trouble. 1 was "We were trailing, 4-1, and Bat- • 2-2 and 3-2 on most of the hitters. tey's little hit made it 6-1." Most of the time I get ahead of "I'd just as soon Drysdale pitch the hitters." to Battey, the seventh place hit­

Veraalles, shunnine the bero's ter, as anyone," Alston said. label when pressed by newsmen, Drysdale took the loss calmly. said, "I was pretty lucky to hit "I knew as soon as we won the the home run, and I wal lucky to pennant and were ready to play get the other base hit." Minnesota that 1 couldn't afford to LOW. II TOUGH- make any mistakes or we'd gel

I A healthy Paul Lowe is a tough killed," the big fellow said. man to stop. The Houston Oilers Drysdale said his trick knee learned that IeuoD again Sunday slipped out of gear as be fielded when the SaD Dieeo halfback gain· Grant's bunt. He fell but managed ed 157 yards on ZO carries and to get the throw to Jim Lefebvre .trenethened his position as the top covering first. But the rookie jue- • ruaber iD the AmerIcan Football gled the ball. Grant was safe II1d League. the dam broke for Los Angeles.

Lowe wu named tile offensive "Don't blame Jimmy," Dryldale player of the Week in tbe AFL for said. "I had to throw (rpm a bad • SUndaY'I effort that booeted hit pclIition and I short-hopped tbe eesson total to 40S yards. throw. "

Intramural -Action Intramural touch footbaU belins EpsUon - field 6.

today for teal1\l iD the Social Fra- Pi Kappa Alpha VI. Sigma Pi _ I

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Tough loyia Defense Contains Opponents

THI DAILY 'OWA~I"I city. II.,-ltturtlley, Oct, 7,~ ... ,1 William'. Tell I ~ I

... ,,:,;"i;~TM~"';:;~:.1. D __ A_I_L_Y __ ~_O_"_·_W_A __ N __ "_¥ __ A_N __ T ....... __ !4-.... \ .... D ........ S ........ day nilbt at I: 15.

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comina for their fourth straigbt 1'll37' General Del ...... hnUoIIt eo ... W A.NT!1)....4 acIJolnllll tlcketa to CLOSE IN room wtlh Itaely ~. I Iy STEU ImEITON

Staff Writer

What a difference a year makes.

Is this saying without 'meaning? Not in the case of the Iowa defensive football team. Last year at this time the Hawkeyes had not exact­ly established themselves as a sterling defensive squad. After three games in 1965 sta­tistics show a tremendous improvement, a fact that has surprised many skeptics.

If statistics mean nothing to you then maybe you sbould ask Washington State, Orellon State, and Wisconsin about how tough the Hawks are. Not one of theae teama was able to score a touch· down on the ground. and only two have been scored through the air . Tbis doesn't account for the other two TD's scored against Iowa, but give the olf ensi ve unit credit for the run back of an intercepted paSi and a punt return.

'Ibis defensive tum about baa been accomplished by people who either played regularly last year, or who waited In the wings and saw limited action. However. only two of the defensive unit are com· pletely newcomers, sophomores Terry Huff (linebacker) and Tony Williams Ihalfbaekl. You can't IIY that this is a new group that is just better; it must be consid· ered a vastly Improved eleven.

THE NUMBER of touchdowns that have been scored against the Hawks is plenty of evidence

for the average 100tbaU fan. Last year in three games oppooentl bad acored ,Ix times on the ground and twice through the air. Thill year the record is two passes and no more.

According to Wayne Robinson, Iowa's delensive coach, there are BOrne other atatistiCi which are much more meaningful from the coaches' view. For example. the number of yards gained, or may· be even more hnportant, how many plays the .opponents have been allowed to run.

In tbis area the Hawks defend· ers bave clearly shown the dif· ference a year can make. After three games In 1964 Iowa foes had picked up 964 yards on 223 plays : tbis year only 570 yards have been allowed on 176 plays. Another indication of how stingy Iowa has been is a comparison of first downs allOWed. Last year il was 51, now it is 30.

THE 0 B V IOU S importance here is keeping the ball away from tbe opponents , which in turn is supposed to keep them from scoring. which logically leads to the theory that your chances of wiuning are improved. Certainly there has been a dimin· Ishing number of points scored against Iowa this season.

From the statistical standpoint tbe nod for most improvement would go to the line. Besides dis· tinguisbing themselves with three sbut-outs on the around, they add· ed a new chapter to the come· back by allowing only 24 yards to Wisconsin last Saturday. Last year 550 yards bad been ground out for an average of 3.3 yardS/ per carry; this year the total is less than half of the '64 yardage, with 2S5 for a 2.2 average. .

History 01 Foot&o/l-

Harvard Beat Yale In First Meeting

Iy ION IliSS

Staff Writer

) (S.cond In a •• rl ••. ) I After Harvard and McGill University had played their

historic games in 1874, the popularity of the rugby game caught on. Harvard liked the rugby game so much that it adopted its rules. Yale and Princeton also liked it and followed suit.

So. alas the battle was won -rugby and not soccer emerged as This defeat convinced Yale once the favorite in those early days and for all that rugby was the and let th. pattern for a gradual game to play. The next year they step by step evolution to what is made a complete conversion to the now our modem game of football. rugby rules and came back to de·

As the enthusiasm for the game feat Harvard 1 goal to O. grew. Harvard was awakened with The other Ivy League schools I desire to play Yale. Plana for also became i!lterested In the luch a contest were finally made game and on Nov. 23. 1876. Yale, and on Oct. 16, 1875 representa· Harvard . Rutgers and Columbia lives of the two colleges met in sent representatives to Springfield, I Springfield, Mass., to establish Mass., at the invitation of prince., "concessionary rules." Thus. Har· ton, to hold a conference with the vard and Yale played their first hopes of establishiflg a rugby code game of a great series on Nov. and a new Intercollegiate Footballi 13, 1875. The game was mostly Association. The meeting was a rugby, but Harvard conceded to a success and as a result, the first few changes of the soccer nature. Intercollegiate Football 'Association l Yale conceded to the use of 15 was formed. I men, rather than the l1·man team So the die was cast for rugby wbich they had advocated. rather than soccer and shortly I

HARVARD DREW first blood, thereafter the evolution from rug· I coming out a 4 goal to 0 victor In by to the American game of foot· the first game. ball got under way.

All-America Prospects Will Be Watched Closely Saturday

By JERRY LISKA OHIO STATE'S Van Horo, 2$-

A.socl ..... . Sport. Writer . pound senior tackle. Is one of this A flock of MIdwest AU·Amerlea year's platooning rarities an ex.

This defensive learn know. wbal victory. 21-6. The classy Comet.a Ad •• R dItI01l »7-4018 1 .. 1.. tow.Mb lib ,lDIe. T_#li~ Uc1ft s ~.II':tde:!~ci. Re~~r.~ it bas accompliabed. and it ia have won the Eutero Iowa Hlwk- verhSlng ates MUST BELL I"' Ubem IftW " Call aftv 1:80 1' .... ....., .. all del lWouG lit the job belnl doGe. '1bia. CGnference the put three looci condition. f1700.00 ~ WANftDt.e -It:rt n;: fr U of 1 1aturda1. D-OI21 11-7 pride bas sbown IlIeU in wbal,..... but tllia year _'ft been 11Irae Dan ... . .... 15c • W.rd Cedar "plda. 1 .. 1. I=.u- n n. ~ ZNTIJtE TRIltD FLOOR a"alltlble. may be called a refusal to be OIMlaued in four starta. .1. D.y • .... ...... . 1tc I Word "!~I.-= u.:,=.ue h_ - -= WAN'BD: J foolball tleketa w an7 tv~-:;' rlef=~ ... ee:~ :~ scored upon . Friday. U·Hlgh coach Ed Burk· Ten Day. . .. ....... lac • Werd 1---______ ------ ~ ..... DIal 1IHI2I. IN itol.

OREGON STATE bad a firat lbardt wiD try stopping West One Monttt ........ 44C • Word I~""~~"" wl~!'lr ~r:a ~= alNQU aoo. _ 0b1 _ ao. Ia. down on the Iowa two and euded lBranch's Bear., the lealUe IeadiIII tlonalJ . ,..2015 alter 5:00. 1 .. 21 WANTED No -oIlIJIt or drt.oIIIat. JlI-G1f.., up with a fourth down on the 15. ,offeuive tmlt with tile loop'l top Mllllmum Ad 1t Wenl. Even more 1Il8&Dific:eat, .. &lie defease. The winner wiU lit atop ~., ClIIIOevtiV. Insartitln. M~~p:O':,,:ell~.=· =~ =: TWO IOYS TO SHAU word Is approprlBte, was tilt! loa! the coaIerence wIUI undefeated Iq. lIon.·Tbun. 1N ~URNIIHID APT. line sland made last Saturday in Mount Vernon. ~'.sTItIIT 'ARKING Madison. For 11 plays the Badg. Pat Luther, a ISO-pound aenior CLASSUIIED DISPLAY ADS AUTOS, CYCLIS FOR SALE DIAL 337-4401 er pounded at the Hawkeye pi :me.abacker! le~: ~': :.!:i1au: One Insart .... I Menth . SUS· Q~~~~II=, ~1~1IIe.J=i! line. marcbin, back and fourth en ve UDlt WIt c. • Flv. 11tMrlIen, • Menth SUS· lJ5I VOLKSWAGEN led.n. J n.w 131.... u· between the two and the 15 but bardt also credits tackle. John Ten IRMrtIons • Menth . '1.15' ~ ifrel. RebuUt enllne. R.dlo. III- SPORTING GOODS Il00... _ _Ie ...... "a4e!lta er they were not able to CCOSl ' that Ellis and Glenn Sider, for b.rd • R ....... <- lach Column Inch 3185 Iller •. 11-5 OYer 21. IIIlehen prlvlle... - I

k th t h lted I "'vi" , .. .-- block from baalneu dlJtrtCt.l ...... last line. It was aa if WiacoIIIin wor a a~ rea.u n It' n. 1HS YAMAHA 8OCC. EXCILLENT CANOU/ C- _ Old Towa lleW Dial J38.1.1I or ....... 11.1 was finally given a break when up .only Z4 POll.' . m four outlnp. Condition, Just broken Ia. 'l7i~ MoItIor lIadeI Sport CanCMI DeLln ..... .--........... ...... _ _~ they 10 t the ball Llltle Ron Ellis, a 14S-poUnd h "- _ ef\«>all ..... raI ethen. .................... ..-. v •• r ..... -

8 . '. scooter, has picked up 648 of lhe Pone 337-4191 lHO TR-3 N.w tire .. J topa. _1141. carllO~'" Albl~ Road, Ottw ... ·•4 of~. m-2fOlS. _ 11·2 The goal hne stand 18 the blood team', 141 yards I'IIIIIinI The 10.13 I_a. catalo.. 11).1 J VUY NICE r_ wltb beth-New

and guts of a defensive unit, and aenior halfback baa an 8.2 a~erlge Inaertloft ...... lin. _ en de, 1953 MERCURY _ ~.oo or -.II. WHO DOtS m bltlldIn • • fIIO.OO •• ch. 111-"" 10.11 coach Jerry Burns bas aPPlJ'e!ll· per carry in leading the squad with "'1 bll tIon oller. 33U52e Il00 .. FOa R&NT. I. We. BIlrllnl' Iy found 11 ~en who. seem to nat five touchdowlII and a point'after. IINC '" PI! CI • • 1 • ton. Dial 131-2183 alter 3:00 11.' to the on But It tak CIllCelIatten, mutt lie recolv'" 1953 FORD v ... GOO<I condition. New &LECTJUC lHA VEIl repair M-boar

occaal . es more Quarterbackini from the I·forma· IIy _ ...,.,.. publlc"lon. Ure.. 151-3221 liter 7 ,... I~' .. me.. lleyen Barber 1IHip. nec ___ = _____ -----than spirit and determination to lion will be Steve Andrew, and 1962 VOLKSWAGE/'I, _ ...... er. New lmollllNG _ .tude .. , bon ..... 111'10. AJIPIOVID lOOMS stop an opponent, ~ bow do you Steve Koch , a pair 01 limber jun. battery. f •• OOO DIU I3UIt2 10.13 / lOll Roche.er J1~ ___________ _

accou."t for the SWItch that bas iora. IA VI:: use uoubl. lo.d wuben wltb OOUBLZ II DIal surprl~ ~ many people? . In other city action. City High, lHO PLYMOUTH 4-door v ... Keith extn .... cyelel .1 Towncrell ~"'I -, en. I~

Making It sound relatively sun· st' II looki g f It fJ'" triumph Richardson. 338-3«1. 5JO E. Bloom- ..... uaderelle. 1030 WIWIID.. INRC . . . I I n or s .r.... .: Inrton. 10-8 DiAi'J:RE~ Dllper -Rental Service qUltl' room for mil, tr.du.te lIu.

pie, B~ lSys that the big. d f· travels to Clinton for a MiulAlppl KARMANN GHIA convertible 1863 by New Procell ..... undry. 31J S. dent. Clo .. to hoopltaL ,....58. 10-8 ference thIS year can be attrlbut· Valley Conference game starting at CHILD CARE Excellent condlUon . • '::!i1: extral: Dubuque. Pbone a7._. 10-~ ..,..---- --ed to better .peed and a more 7'30 Regina because of Iowa's WIU .cce'l: belt off.r. rr .t 212 PRINTING, edlUna, proof .... dInr. NICS _.Ie room - .... ItlHlenj thorough knowledge of what the h~m'ecoming.' haa moved It, game CHILD CARE durin. footbIIJ .ame •. W. Psrk oad. . __ . _ ~ ~~par.uon. 131-11130, Even~'f!:i linens furnished. JI7-4m. I .. defense is supposed to do and a to tonight at 8 p.m. agmlllt Cedar Dial 3374411. 10.14 ~ VOLKSWAGEN IUnroof. bllck 1Ol1ll DIAPJ:RENEiiiiii-;dIaiii'ai~Nrr-; ... ;;;;;nt;;IIr;";;rYI:;r.;ce~b:;li"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij bett ti n f thl defe ' . red Interior. Excellent condition. N P r.--~ 113 S I'Y

er execu 0 o. s nse. Rapids RegIS. COMPANION for 2 year old. 112! 33S-MZ3. 27E DennJ. Mobile Home P .. t e"" roc ........ u . ou h Whether you attrIbute the fine Quonset. Experienced, reference.. .lter 5:00. 10-' Dubuque. Pb_ 137·. 10.21AR

d~fensive play shown by Iowa MciNTIRE HOLDS RICORD- »&.4171. 10-Z3 18511 MG. ean .1olM3 aller ' :00. IN HRP WANTID-MALE thll season to laater players, . WILL b.byllt by hour. day or week. - . ___________ _ smarter players or nn··ibly in a Barbara Mclntlce. 1964 USGA U7-67,.. 10·28 FOR SALE or trade 11161 Sprite. Nlee IOON'T WISH ACT' --- bow t

• t H r--:"'" H • If b io paint and Interior - mechlnkalJy - • ...-p • romantic way to guttIer play· Women s Amateur go camp n, CHILD CAR. my bome L f II C4ertecl Belt ofler Tom Samuell 35~ .. rn ,oocI •• fIY me- _rotln.

. th Itt .- I th ~ - . on, e ow 85 ' . '10-12 7011r owo ........ eu In I."a City. No ers. Burll6 POlDted out something was e as ama eur w ga n e ..... '15.00. References. experl· . _ experience or aplill needed. Write that can not be overlooked, "This rulVlerup spot in the Women's e""ed 337·84M. 10·30 I~ PLYMOUTH herd.lop. WW, radl01 Ra."~ o.pt. 1AH-14N12 ....... ~ week we find out how good we Open. She waa beaten by Mrs. WILL CARl: FOR pre.school cb1ldren. ~~ Good condition. 337-40&4. lo-t~ m::::,· _________ --C:::..:::II really are" Kathy Cornelilll In the 1956 pllyoff. 1117 hom •. Pre·school .ctlyill., In· 1964 YAMAHA 80cc .xcen.nt condl. PART.TID momln .. ' :00 a.m.·I:OI

. - dudad. 131·8420. 10.. Uon. '275. 353.1108.' 10." P.DI.. or afternoons 1:~:80 p.m. - . and WMIIetIdI. Al'ply In ""non. 1I1n· WILL lMlI1a1l. lIy IIome. Expertenc •. 19\10 FORD RanchwlRon .-door. I- ate Car Wub. 10. Iouth Riverside

Plum Grove Ar ... 131-7724. 10-15 cylInder, body excellent condillon. DrI~.. 10-Z2 .1----rt'nl'2:"'-r.~ ...... TT=--- 1S5O.00. 337-3277. 1'" ExPnmNCJ:D wllter or "".Ilrelll

WANTED Pock.,. - ht & 2nd Shift

$1.40 per hour

Apply Iowa State

Employm.nt Service

22 I.tt ClUrt

An Equm Opportunity Erllployer

MISC. FOI SALE 1963 CITROEN 2.CV. ,"pa_naer, d~~e~:~J!. .veDln," - w~1~i rugred. amIable. 50 mpc. Cherie. --- I~;;;;;;~~~~;;;;~~~ Ebel. RI~rllde. 10WI. Wrlle or c.U ,STtlD&N1' ~Ith f.na lIack.round to

IIPEED QUDN Washer-dryer .-bln. ' fter 5 pm 648-3881 won part u.. on tarm. J3I.8Ot6 .IJon. GOO<I condition. ~70 .lIer . . . ___ .ve",". 1 .. 7

COLUMBIA RECORDS~

f... ,.... ....-.l "a...... • lif' liyin, . , . ..lect the -..rdi.... IJf Iin,er . ...." writer Bob Dylan!

mono •...•.••.•••• " 2.'1' • ttreo .•.. •• .. •• .... • 3.811

Bob Dylan Highway 61 Subterranean Homesick Blues Another Side of Bob Dylan The Times They Are A.Changln' The Freewheeling Bob Dylan Bob Dylan

Records - Down Stairs Store SHOP DOWNTOWN MONDAY NI.HT TILL ,

5 p.m. 10·18 'S7 FORD .t.tlon wI,on ~lInder. IlAWLKJQU buIiDeM _v.n.bl. In BAIlY FURN1TtJRE cbe.p. C.lI 338. .00<1 condlUoo, re.so ... ble. 338-7111 '1 S.W. Johnson Co. or low. CIty. 51.rt

'1M liter "00 p'.m 10-8 10-13 immediately. S.lIIn, ex~rlence belp. . . ful but not re'l!'lred. Full er pan

BAIlY I'UIlNITURI: equipment lum 1855 MERCURY Montcl.Ir, 2-door ' time. "wlellb. PepC. IA I ItO '2111 .. er eIre_ ..... 10.12. exceUent con: bardtop. .11'-condIUoned. .1 •• n. · ~pert. tU. Ulo

dlUon .... 172 10-8 Make ofler. 337·7824. JCJ.1S STUDENT willi farm bacllCroUnd to --- help on f.rm. 131'-' I ...

2 DRESSES. 2 booubeIYes,_.!. chaI rs, 1961 RENAULT. 8ell ofler tak,". J37., ___ ~=~~=~ _-:-__ ........ 1 IIIII.U t.bl,". 337·_. 10... $420. IN" -PING SEItYIC=E

GIBSON Gurl'AR. model LGO. Con.I- ------------1 "

WANTED -Electronic

Servlcem.n & lnatatle,.

U )'OU b.y. .pJior uperl."" • .rvlclna redl'!...TY, "onOi. tape reeorders. or TV IhtetIfta Instill •• tiona .nd c.n worll • hours par we.k or more. C01ltact:

WOOO.UIIN IOUfIO 'e"lce tact Jim '.rlulon·Hillcrelt 85S-1131 1958 VOLKSWAGEN bu •. Good con· -----------­

===.,-;==-==--=:-:-=:=1.:.0'.:;12 dIllon. Blu./G .... y. ,014 cltltalna. WANTED _ TYPING ler.

COUNTRY J'r .... Ec' ... Two do ... n A 33I-t368. 10-8 ~~Ih~CIl't~~pape~~r~ •• ~.~te~. ~m~~"~.7~"~"~1r'~:Stl~~"~"~"'~"~_~7~14~7~"~~.~ .... ~a~h~II~R~I""~~ Jar.. 8Ie. lobn·. Grocery 401 E. lIarket. ' 10.28 11115 PEUGEOT. Excellent condilion . NANCY KRUSE: mil .Ieetrtc typln. JlVST llell now. Aqua.lan, .nd recu. Musl sell. Clil 338-4898. 10-12 oervlce. ~ I .. lt

Ialor. 33f.IOeI. 10-'. 1850 DODGE fluid drive. &xeelJeal.lEllaY NYALL - EIectrIe mil tntnc SALT AND PEPPER tweed cerpetlnl. bodY condItion. Rldlo, Mlt.r - _lid lbIlIaeo.npblq. ~1331.

1""12'. SJI.I37t. 10.8 $100.00. 338-4*. I .. IIAR 21" WESTINGHOUSE 145.00. Ir CLASSIC IIN8 WIllYI Convertible ELECTRIC IBM I~pln,. Tetnl p.per ••

1Il0toroia table .. odel. '10.00. 3311- Jeepster. Complel.ely restored. MUlt "'ort papen. 338-f241 all.r 5:00. 0311 liter 5:30. 10-1. Ie. 10 'ppreclale. sas-.. 7 all.er 8:00 11-28

Perfect for An Students

I-A - M-SO 2 DRESSERS, I book "'elv •• , 2 chura,; p.m. - - - . . ~ TYPING SERVICE thell. ~k r ..

Mverll II1II111 tables. 337.2688 10., 1951 CHEVROLET. mecb.nlc.lIy .x. -, uvv $ . ...:::;..;;:,..;~ .. :.;:::..,: --- --- cellenl. Good tlrel. body tllr. 338. porta, etc. Dill 1aH858. 10-28 225 f.O.I.

amLS 28 blcyelc. GOO<I . nlnnln, 4101 10-12 ----$S.OO down

$4.00 per wk. condltlo~.OO. 13% Wuhlnrton - . . - ELECTRIC tYliAiwrtter. Th.... .nd S38-$S88 10.. 1885 YAIIAHA - Cetallu - 1M.. aIlort pepen. 131...,. l .. tIAJI

C111 351·2422 liter ':00. 10.. -FOR SALE-two UD.U dell<l • • 00<1 - -- - --- -- JIAJlY V. BUIINI: Tn .......... ~

condition. CUI U7~ 10.. 1153 CHEVROLET Uoor, 1lacIIO~3~m' ,.,phln,. nolary publlc 400 lowe PINE COMMODE ... lce Cream tables. tire.. runl rood. $100.09 10-1: State Bank. DI.I 337-28511.' n.IRC

BDlwn rocker, ... lnut furniture I.· 1964 TRTUMPH- TRT5 _ mile. Good DPERlENCD> ..... tartel dellre typo eluding droplUf Din.lnr Table Hom~ . ,-- . ' In, of papen ... ateaeUa. DIal S3'1. _de b.nlln. eupboerd Bllnket box, condition. DeYer ....... d. 33804195 '7S24 l..a bed., dre .... with Marble lop I .... l. ».!' . 111-2285 10-. 18SS BSA Il1O cc. 1 •. 00 ... but ofler. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 'OR SALE-Four lood low. v.~ Pur.. 138·2130. 4:~30~ 10·12 IGNITION

due tlckell. C.II 33S-30:W 10-1 'S8 VOLKSWAGEN. Blick: R.dlo, CARBURETORS Helter. Rebuilt Motor. 1400.00. Cln GENERATORS STARTERS be ... en alter 5:(10 p.m. 518 N. Vln

Buren No.5. 10-15 Britl' " StratNn MoterI APARTMENT FOil RENT

1980- CHEVROLETTmPlla. Two door P ·d Se . ONE MAN to shere new, Coralville hardtop. Black willi red interior. 283 yra m I rvlces 110 mil., per lal. 0".

hand .hilt ancl clutch. All-.p.rtlnent . 351.41. 10.1. va with ""ndud transmJulon. • . NEW two bedroom unfurnJshed duo Cill MAl-4387 Oxford, low. 10.1 621 S. ~ DIal UJ-5m .... I ruillecl, .afe.

plex. Call 33S-tI22 or JI8·8Z55. 10-7 ------------ I~Z:!lZ:!lIll==III=::;=~:11 IGIRL TO SHARE- Modern luxury IPl. __ HEL __ P_W_A_N_T_ED-__ F_EMA __ L_E_li

willi two other ,tria. 212 E. Fair. M 0 N E Y LOA NED ehlld .pt . • 8 .ner 5:30 10.IS SALAD GIRL wanted .pply In per.

LOST N FO Ion. UnlveraltJ AllIletic Club. lIel·

A D UND rose AYe. W .. t. 10·' KITCHEN HELP w.nted .ppJ,y In per·

LOST _ mono.rammed Iterllnc ZIp po .on, Uolverslly AthleUc Club. Me/· lI,hler .t Jflduate mixer. Much rose Ave. West. 10-8

llen{lm.ntal vue. Rew .. d tor It. reo STUDENT •• nted for pert.1Ime hOUM'1 lurn. CUI 137...08. 10-7 bold belp. 337·2618 10-14

MOOSE

Dlarnends, Camer." Typewriters, W.tches, L .....

Gunl, Muslc.1 Inttrvments

HOCK-EYI LOAH Dill mot ..

CRAWfOlD'S

...... a -SALES & SERVICI fa rR .. r) Ma .... L ...

lew. City, ... .

by lob w'"

prospects is due for sharp screen· ' Ing In three Big Ten football games c:.:e:pti::o:.:n:al:...:.:tw::.:Oo:...w::.:a:y . ..:PI:.:a:yer:.:... _-:-....!]I!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Saturday.

For instance. Purdue's Bob Griese and Iowa's Gary Snook · match heralded throwing arms in the Boilermaker conference debut at Iowa City.

Michigan State, only Big Ten team with a perfect record 3.IJ, lends a surprisingly large number of All·America nominees against delendlng champion Michigan ' whicb features two great tackles. I Bill Yearby and Tom Mack. I'

At Ohio state, Illinois fullback • Jim Grabowski-drawing a bead

on Red Grange's Jllini career ~ record·runs into web

'. Buckeye standouts as tackle Doug Van Hom, linebacker Ike KeUey

• Ind fullback Tom Barrington. LATEST REPORT of tbe AI.oci·

ated Prell All·America board cit· I eli Van Hom, Kelley and Barring·

1Ga, along wilb Notre Dame wety • Hick Raaaas, defensive end Eric

RIce of Wisconsin, and two giant IrIichigan State linemen 81 DeW All· America aominees.

, Bebemotb Harold LuCia, 286-IIOUnd middle guard, and Bubba Smith, 288-pound defensive end. JoiD sucb other previously lauded Spartans on tbe board's checklist

, II quarterback Steve Juday, offen· live end Gene Wuhington. half· back Clint J one. and fullback Bob Apiaa. Michigan, however, IIIll will Ibow up In Its big bowl Saturday

• to launeh Its Utle defenae In a , lime rated a loaBup ~ the odds­lIIIker.. • r::eDllvl tackle Y .. rby IDd of·

ve tackle Mack of Miebigan drew pralse from board member lob PUle of the Detroit Free Pre ...

So what else is new? ~le.em to ~t tiled to modero mir· 1ICl. pnUy quickly. A lltellite that would have beeD bI. DeWS a couple of YMl'I aao is routine .tuff today. 80 you may not be 100 IUrprieed to hear that 127 of the nation·s inveetor· owned, ~m.na1l8d electric com· panies have 25 nuclear electric projects completed or under way-about a billion-dollar pfOll'lll1J to benefit you and all America.

~ theIe jecta is the :Bnric»­Fermi AtomIc eer Plant 'project near Detroit in which lowa·Il\inoi. i •• participant.

To help keep electric terVice ever plen­tiful aDd low in price, the inYelltor­owned oom))lDiel alIo have more thaa 1800 -mt and development projecta in the worb. In .bout ten YMl'I, the eJectrjc IUpply 'will be doubled!

Yea, thanb to plan-aheed inveetor own­el'llhip, _'II ao riabt on IUpplyin, you with all the helpful elec:trlcity IDd IU you need ••• low in price. biIh in value, Illwaya dependable.

,..r./., ....... .... Icnra ......... O_

. ,; ... ,.~ ........ c..,..),

>,

1;1 ........ .1

.... ------...--__ ..1.

~ ... 'I-THI DAILY IOWAN-l_. City, l •• r-TllvnMy, Oct. J, ,,.,

II Former Director Of USIA L~GTO~i~!!~ J~~~ J~~I!d~ ~~ _ Will Open Lecture Series nature Wednesday laid the foundation for launch­ing a major attack on three of manIrind's most

murderous aliments - heart disease, cancer and stroke.

In signing into law a $34O-mllliOD, three-year program of grants, the President made no mention of the gaD bladder operation be faces Friday. But be had a warm, friendly exchange with Vice Pres!· dent Hubert H. Humpbrey, the man wbo will act in his stead during the hospilal stay if the need arises.

Johnson spoke witb feeling of the work of a commission under Dr. Michael Debakey of HOUlton, Tex., whose recommendations led to the Dew law. And be praised highly what he called the fabulous 89th Congress which be said bas demonstrated there is no partisanship in matters of bealth and education.

IN THE AUDIENCE was Dr. Howard Rusk, wbom Johnson introduced. And while the President was signing the bill, Rusk announced a program to rehabilitate paralyzed Vietnamese servicemen.

cer and flroke will claim seven of every 10 cans who die this year "are Dot dry statistics," These, he IBid, "are deadly facta whose anguish toucbea every IiDgie family in this land of ours."

Tickets for the Arthur Larson LARSON, A FILLOW of Pem­first of the 1965-66 Uni· broke CoUege, attended Oxford Lecture Series, will be University as I Rhodes Scholar

to students and faculty and holds four degreea from Ox. Iml~mboers at noon. Friday at the ford. After practicing law in MIl.

Th mllli will 'd ...... n·· to launch lobby ticket desk. e $S4O- 00 prOVI e ... _ut director of the World waukee, he taught at Cornell Un/·

regional programs among medical schools and clin- Law Center at Duke Uni- veraity, the Univeraity of Tennes· ieal research inltitutlOOl: The measure ~ and former director of the see and the University of Pitts-vldes for Improving training of specialist. .S. Information Agency, will burgh where he was dean of the making available to victima of the three kllIer dis· speak on "An Audacious Agenda Ia .dwol - better medical facllities and equipment to for Am.erica" .at 8 p.m. Oct. 13 in ie aJso'serves as COD8Ultant to treat them. the Uruon MalD Lounge. . . the State Department on United

RUS" DIRECTOR of the Institute of P'hY9'lcaJl ldeRnO,N ZOBEL, A2, Oelwem, presl· Nations matters and was a special ... of the .campus chapter of assistant to President Dwight D.

Medicine and Rehabllitatioo of the New York UIIIP" IV'non,O A~erlcans for. Freedom Eisenhower. veraity Medical Center, told of his trip to Viet said that YAF mtends to His books include "When Nations to set up the program for Vietnamese Larson a~ut several of Disagree," "What We Are For," who have lost use of their legS through statcme~ts ~gamsl the YAF "Know Your Social Security," of their spinal corda. other ngbtwmg gr?UP5: . ''The Law of Workmen's Compen • .

He IBid Jobnson is sendin8 a plane to bring this country 60 of these paralyzed servicemen, will be treated and rebablUtated and sent bac:k l"18n,

w~ose group IS distrlb!l' sation," "A Republican Looks at . arbcle about u;.rson, wr!t. His Party," and "A Warless

former Y AF national chror· W td" Robert Bauman said he or .

to ask Larson about the home to help train hundreds of others with same disabiUty. relationship of tbe now-de. GROMYKO, U THANT CONFER-I

National Council for Civil UNITED NATIONS (.f! - Soviet IRl!SP<>DSllbitilty (NCCR) and its use Foreign Minister Andrei Gromy·

Whe1'eve1· you are, you'U look good in

NATURAL SHOULDER TROUSERse

"'""UlI.'" D1emocr.atic Committee ko conferred privately Wednes· funds . Larson was national cbair· ay with Secretary·General U man of the NCCR during the 1965 Thant. The subject of their talk campaign. was not disclosed.

Our Natural Shoulder cut, always correct. fits an men eom· fortably. Choice fabrics and colors .ra In abundance. Own one. They're the best Ask for CorbIn .t)'OUr fawrite store, or write: CORBIN LTD. 385 Fifth Ave., New York, N,Y. 10016,

TROUSERED BY CORBI N Exclusive with

Stefhen~o S. Clinton

Men's Clothing Furnishings

Shoes

UITY ULUB . STIT(JUERS kl Sew what's new: the handsewn slipon. All leather outsole with a foam fined inside. Keep In stilchers. Hand stained hickory or black or ivy. City Club Shoes $11.95 to $20.95.

; ,~ . "'"",,,, ll, Budget not up to City Club, young min? A&k ror W .. boro Shoo. 51.!t! In, 1101.'5. Wouldn 'I you Ilk. to b.'n our shoesl Mo.t of Am"l .. Is, Intern.tlon.1 Shot Co., St. Loul., Mo. A vail able at Ihese fine slores: I

Reddi~k Shoes - 126 East Washington

Tamms Shoe Store - Mt. P1.asant. Iowa

Rou Dry Good. Store - Columbus Junction, Iowa

Campaign Nets Over $70,000 for Art Fund

More than $700,000 hal heel ., given and pledge<! tOw a, ... L.. . '" ciog the art gallery in the Fh·

Arts Center, according to Lorell Hickerson, director of the Univer·

,. sity of Iowa Foundation.

Highlander Assistant New .. slst.nt dlroctor of tho University's Scottish HIghl.nders this year II John Stew.rt of BI/I)ngl, Mont, He tr.nsferred hero from tho University of Mont.n. .s .n ... I_rtng m.lor. Tho

Hlghl.nders' .. slst.nt director, In .delltion to wwklng with tho full m.rchllllll group on bturd.ys, .. sis" In .ctlvltl.s r.nglng from rep.lrllllll the Instrument. to Instructing tho girls In tho' unit. Stew.rt h •• been skirlllllll on tho 'pipes since hi wu 12.

E-~- WEST SIDE BEAUTY

STUDIO

OPEN 9 til 9

107 - 2nd Ave.

CORALVILLE

JUST SOUTH OF RANDALL'S SUPER VALU PLENTY OF FREE PARKfNG I

Expert - Ha{rst/jling Bleaching

Color , Permanent Waving

- 4 Experienced BeauUcians -

Hickerson said that the Founda. tion hoped to complete the carn· paign in early 1966.

"Wonderfui help for the gal­lery fund is now coming in from every part of Iowa and from a1wn­ni throughout the country," ~ , continued.

"IT IS BECOMING clearer It Iowans that the art gaLJel'y and the entire Fine Arts Center, will have a tremendous cultural in­fluence throughout the state," be said. "This growing awar'" ." 1 nelp to finisb the campaign 11» cessfully."

The Foundation, which is seekinl • to raise more than $1 million for the gallery, has received the money from alumni and other In· dividuals , businesses, industries, and organizations.

University faculty and stall members have pledged more t.hIu! $178,000, which is 78 per cent over tbeir $100,000 goal, Hickerson said. The Iowa City business commllD­ity bas pledged $178,000 toward its $200,000 goal.

PLANS NOW financed wiu cover more than $8 million in construc· tion to begin next year, said Hick· • erson.

The Foundation's fund· raising campaign for the gallery began last fall. •

All alumni of the University are being urged to make special COlI­tributions to the gallery fund in tbis fall's OLd Gold Development Fund campaign.

Detector Causes Kate Daum Alarm •

A heat detector caused a false alarm at Kate Daum dormitory Wednesday afternoon.

Firemen were called at 1:3S' p.m. and found tbat the automatic heat detector bead iD the celliDg of the incinerator room had caused the false alarm. Burning trash set J

of[ the ~ .. ' ·",·sensitive heat bead, firemen said .

POPE PLEADS FOR PEACE-VATICAN CITY IA'I - Pope Paul II

VI caUed Wednesday for all In­dividuals to make ther own con· tributions to peace just as he call· ed on all nations to do their I share in his United Natios speech . •

Peace is everybody's duty, he told bis Cirst general audience since returning from New York.

STARTS ' TONIGHT! 1965 Dolphin Fr.aternity Show

n e

Performances by graceful gymnasts, n'>

daring acrobats, hilarious clowns, • • •• as well as excIting sWimming

and diving acts; all performed by members of the Dolphin fraternity

The Crowning Of

:lhe 1965

unes" Tickets~ $1.50 EACH

available at

WHETSTONE/S ,

FIELD HOUSE PENTACREST

INFORMATION BOOTH

Tonight-8:00 P.M.

Tomorrow-8:30 P.M • .

Saturday-Two Big Shows 7 :00 P .M~ and '9:00 P.M.

All shows presened at ',the

Field' House· -Pool

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