National Churches Texas Atty. General Start Rights Fight...
Transcript of National Churches Texas Atty. General Start Rights Fight...
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l.od,tect Pt..-lAMId 1nNI_ ft S'.tl Iowa City, Iowa - Saturday, December 7, JJII
National Churches Iowa Citians Start Rights Fight Enioy Spring
Temperatures Texas Atty. General
PHILADELPHIA IA'I - The National Council oC Churches Friday launched a broad attack on every kind of racial, religious and economic discrimination. Its 40 million members were urged to give wbolehearted support in a crusade for justice.
Motorcycles, bicycles and Ught. weight jackets made a sprlng·IUce appearance Friday as Iowa Citians experienced a case of unseasonably warm weather, Under clear skies temperatures soared to the 60s, the snow melted, and ponds became ice Cree.
Halts Kennedy Probe [n a lengthy resolution, passed overwhelmingly after two hours oC
NASA To Get Space Center Bid from SUI sur will present a bid to locate
a proposed $61 million federal elec· tronic research center in the Iowa City·Cedar Rapids area.
James A. Van Allen, chairman of the physics department. will present the University's bid to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) in Wash· ington, D. C., Wednesday. accord· ing to President Virgil M. Han· cher.
The center, planned by NASA, is expected to employ 2,100 people. It would complement pre sen t NASA installations at Houston, Texas; Huntsville, Ala.; and Cape Kennedy, Fla.
THE PRESENTATION will not specify a cite within the Eastern Iowa area because NASA's survey committee selects "the geographl· cal area offering greatest promise."
Location proposals are being reviewed by the Senate committee on aeronautical and space sciences. Sen. Bourke B. Hlckenlooper (RIowa) is a member of tbat committee.
NASA will recommend sites to Congress in January.
"THE UNIVERSITY of Iowa has been extensively involved In space research work under Profes· sor Van Allen's direction for some years, and Iowa physicists bave compiled an impressive record of contributions to the national effort in this field," President Hancher said in citing reasons Iowa would be a good location.
President Hancher also mentioned NASA iUP~ of the UDiversity's space research program and its contribution to Ibe new Physics Research Center being built at SUI.
Otber areas submitting proposals include Columbus, Ohio, St. Paul, Minn., and Miami, Fla. Other bids are expected.
debate and amendments, delegates called upon the 31 church denom· inations comprising the council "to be willing to pay whatever price of unpopularity or sacrUlce these acts for racial justice may entail."
The delegates demanded that cburches unite In support of fed· eral. state and local laws that guarantee, wlihOllt racial or reJj· gious discrimination:
• The right to vote and equa I protection of the law.
• Equal access to education. • Equal opportunity for jobs,
union membership and promotion. • The right to rent or buy and
occupy housing everywhere. • Access to aU public accom·
modations. The resolution also called on all
churches to open membersbip and places of worship "without regard to race or color," and to permit aU qualilled ministers equal access to their pulpits.
It suggested, too, an interchange oC white and Negro memb\;rs be· tween congregations 00 grounds "that racial pluralism anricbes the experience of the Christian com· munity."
Businessmen were very pleased with the weather. Younkers manager Donald Winner reported, "We had the best afternoon traffic so far this season." Even with Christmas near, he attributed at least part or the increased business to the wea ther.
A clerk at Sears said the crllwd was larger Friday night than on other pre..chrlstmas evenings at the store this season. She also said, "They're nicer tonight," which she attributed to comfortable weather.
Unfortunately, skies will become cloudy today, accompanied by strong northwesterly winds and possible scattered ,howers. It will be colder, with highs from the 40s in Ibe north to the 50s in the soutb.
It wiU be mostly cloudy and cold· er tonight with some snow aurrles in the eastern counties. Sunday's oullook is for decreasing cloudl· ness. cooler temperatures and rather windy.
Taft Plans 4 Transferred T C t J 'I To Campaign o oun y al For Shotgun Theft For Senate
Four persons (rom St. Louis, CLEVELAND fA'! - Republican Mo. who were charged In connec- Robert Tan Jr .• declaring hlmsel! . ' • a candidate (or the U.S. Senate
bon With the taking of two shot- Friday, sald a national GOP tick-guns, were transferred to the et headed by Sen. Barry Goldwater Johnson County jail from Jowa City "would make it difficult" for his city jail Friday. senatorial campaign in Ohio.
Those charged Thursday night The congressman-at·large from were Porter Gordon, 25, Frank De· Cincinnati, fourth generation of his Manuele, 25, Andrew J. Novak, Jr., famlty in Ohio politlCl, said be 36, and Sandra Lee Ritchie, 17. thinks Goldwater'S chanCel for the
They were arraigned Friday by GOP presidential namlnaUon have Carl J. Goetz. acting police court been burt by the assassination of judge. who set bond at ,1,500 each. PC8iideot Kennedy. The four have requ.ted prelimi- Taft, 46, will seek the Senate nary hearings. seat now held by Democratic Sen.
'Oh Please Dear Page' "Amahl and tht Night VI.lto"," • one-act opera, will be pr ... nhtd by the Opere Workshop today In Macbrldt Auditorium. Anoth.r optra, "Shtrllnllman," will be prttt"ttd on tht $Bmt program. The "Amahl" cast includtl, from Itft, Sheila Houst. G, Colovls, N.M .• .. Mettltr; WilYne Lindtr, Al, C",'.rvillt, II Pagti and Rachel Stock. A4, Early, IS Amahl. - Photo b'f Ja. LlpplntOtt
They were picked up after being Stephen M. Young. Young, 73, is , M b °d T d seen by a group of high school expected to announce soon that he n ac rI e 0 ay-students in Solon while they were will seck re-election.
LBJ Honors Federal Committee Late President Continues Inquiry And Pope John WASHINGTON til - Texas Atty. Gen. Waggoner Carr 8JIIIIIUIICeIf
, Friday that he has called of I a state court oJ inquiry toto ctrcumataDce.
WASHINGTON IA'I - Pr dent Johnson on Friday wr tied with problema centering around Ibe Atlantic alliance and military spendin, and awarded the Medal of Freedom to John F. Kennedy as a "pioneer for peace."
Jobnson made another unannounced posthumous award of the medal, the nation's high t c:lvlllan honor tor peacetime servIce. II went to the late Pope John xxm.
Johnson covered the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, a projected A llJed nuclear foree, and military spending In an hour-lone conference with Defense snd State Department advisers, Includln. the two secretaries.
He also devoted a Jot of time duro Ina the day to routine desk work. conferring with membera of the White House staCf.
The medal ceremony, at noon in the White House proper, was a Collow-through on the late PresIdent Kennedy's selection of 31 American citizens and foreign nations who have marked up notable achi vements in many field , from public affairs to the performi", arts and science.
Some of those honored were un· able to attend. Two of the recipients had died since Kennedy selected them for the awards last July.
Olh 1'8, with fri ods and offlelals looking on, crowded into the slate dining room for the ceremony. They included persons such as singer Marian Anderson, French stat man Jean Monnet, Navajo Indian health worker Annie Waunaka. educator James B. Conant, and Felix Frankfurter, Cormer Supreme Court justice.
surrounding the lnation of President Kennedy. 'Ibe Texas state official, maldng the announcement [rom the JUltice
Department. said he acted In compliance with a lugg Uon by Chief Justice Earl Warren, who heads th commission appointed by President Johnson to conduct , similar Inquiry.
This tum in the investigative aftermath of the Nov. 22 wasslnation came some hours after a
Jackie Bids White House Goodbye
report that Lee Harvey Oswald, the WASHINGTON III - Neighbors accused killer, told his wife be and passersby looked on Friday tried to shoot Gen. Edwin A. Walt- while Mrs. John F. Kennedy, recent er eight months aio. occupant of the White House,
A bullet fired through a window moved Into a borrowed George. Into the right-wi", ,eneral', Dallas town home. home on April 10 narrowly rnlssed The Cormer First Lady ''now Walker and he was ,Ughtly cut by looks forward to many quiet da)'l aying glass. there with her faml~," preas sec-
THE EPISODE r pOrtedly Is part retary Pamela Turnure said ill , at the FBI's mas Ive report on statement authorized by Mrs. Kentbe assassination. dellvered Thurs· nedy. day to the Justlce Department and An array or personal beIoacfDp, shortly to go to the White House. including French wine. toya and
FBI agents recently picked up two pet paralteetll in plnt-eoRJ'ed the Dallas PoUce Department ra- cages, preceded Mrs. Kennedy and POrt 00 the assault on WaUcer, Dal- her two children to the ll-room, 5-las omelals disclosed. bath. 3.story red brick home.
Both the Cbicago Suo·Times and A half hour after her arrival, the Washington Evening Star broke Mrs. Kennedy .mllingly laid farestories Friday of eVI nee that Os- well at the wblte front door to the wald (ired the shot at Wslker. The late president's brother, Atty. Gen, Associated Pr obtained con- Robert F. Kennedy, and hll wife. firmaUon of the .tory mm two Elbel, who had ridden over from o£Ciclal sources. the White House.
The Sun-Tim did not refer to Then she appeared with ber lOll, Oswald'. reported boast to his wiLe, John Jr., I, In a secood Jtory bedbut carried Ibis quotation {rom Ibe room window and waved to thoee 53-year-old gencral who resigned gatbered outside. from the Army In 1961 aCter belng The (irst Kennedy visitor was a rell ved of bIs command In Ger- cousin, Sydney LawConl, 7, daugb. many' ter of Kennedy'. sister, Mrs. Patri-
"I DIDN'T KNOW anything about ela Lawlord, who came fit play Oswald unlll he was arrested for with Caroline Kennedy, 8.
carrying a shotgun out of the Tart is the son of the late Sen. Western AU~O Store, Highway Pa- Robert A. Taft, who once headed trolman Bla.1n Goff said. the Republican party in the Senate.
-----.------------------ Goldwater, a Republican lrom Ari Workshop To Give 2 One-Act Operas
The ceremony had been set up in advance, but Johnson', award of the medal to Kennedy and Pope John came as a surprise.
the assa ination of the president." Before leaving the White Rouse The Star's story said ballistic on ber last day, Mrs. Kennedy said
tests apparently have been Incon- farewell to members of the atafl elusive on whether the same rifle in her second aoor living room and fired the shot at Kennedy and then went to say goodby to White
Commission Hears Zoning Complaint
zona, is the leading SIK:8Ued con· servative spokesman today and a top contender for his party's presidential nomination. The elder Taft usually was identified witb the "conservative" faction . By JUDY HOBART
Taft hasn't got a clear road to StaH Writer the Republican nomination (or the The Opera Work hop will pre nl two one·act operas today II their Senate job. In tbe May 5 primary parlin the Chrlstma program being prescnled by the SUI Department he wiU have to battle Secretary of of Fine Arts.
Mrs. Kennedy was behind a screen and heard Johnson read tbe citation for her husband -"Soldier, scholar. statesman, defender oC freedom, pioneer for peace, author of hope - combining courage with rea on, and combatting hate with compassion, he led the land he loved toward new frontiers of oppOrtunity for all men and peace for all time."
Walker. House telephone operatofl.
The FBI report Is undentood to d Id have established that Oswald Union Boar To Ho bought th. ltalian·made. bolt·acllon 'Messiah' Seminar assas inatioD weapon Crom a Chi-
The Iowa City Human Relations Commission Thursday night took up a zoning problem wbich involves a Negro who says he is unable to find a location Cor bis trailer.
State Ted W. Brown. who an· There will be a malinM performance at 2 p.m. aDd an evening nounced bis candidacy for the Sen· performance at 8. both in Macbride
cago mail order firm on March Union Board wlll present a semi-20, having it delivered to a DaUas nar deaUng with Handel', ")lespost o[£ice box rented in the name siah" on Wednesday at 4 p.m. ill
Mrs. Allyn Lemme, a member of the commission, IIIld Junlous A. ate last month. No other Demo- L d I I Auditorium. The operas are "Ster-cratic hopefuls have appeared in T ni, Po io C ink Iingman," by Kiause George Roy, the picture yet. d and "Amahl and the Night Vlsi·
of "A. Hidell." the Music Room of the Unloa. Tate. speaking through his lawyer, told the Iowa City City Council Tuesday night that because of zoning regulations he was forced to relocate his trailer home.
According to Mrs. Lemme, Tate's lawyer said relocation bad not been accomplished after contacting most of the trailer courts in and around Iowa City.
The Council directed tbat the zoning ordinances be enforced and turned the matter over the Human Relations Commission.
Richard Sidwell and Simeon Strauss. members of the Commis· sian, were asked to In'olestigate the case and help Tate find a place for his trailer.
The Rev. L. D. Soens, cbairman of t~e commission. said the com· mission might survey attitudes of trailer court operators on their willingness to rent space to minor· ity groups.
Also Thursday night, a report 'Was received followin. the investigation of another complaint. The complainant had said he believed he was discriminated against heclluse . a trailer court operator thought:he was a Negro. He is not.
Father Soens empbasi~ that complaints of dlscrimillation should he referred to him or to «her members of the commission -Mrs .. Lemme, Mra. A. Mori Costantino: Mrs. John E. Kenney, Sid· well, Strauss. and Emil Trott - or to city administrative offices.
U.C.C.F. To Decorate Lounge Christmas Tree
U.C.C.F. will meet In the Con. gregational Church at 5 p. m. Sunday for worship service and sup. per. A Cbristmas tree in the Con· gregational Lounge will be decorated.
The meeti", will adjourn in time to atlen~' "Ditle, Child of Man," n filPl tl1r~l\I!nted at '1:90 in Sham· bnll8.'l:r A~19r\ll1l\ At ' 1be ·,LlbrMY.
f' • . ,
Thompson Convicted Of Murder
MINNEAPOLIS IA'I - T. Eugene Thompson was convicted of murder by a slx-man·six woman jury Friday night after deliberating 26 hours and was immediately sentenced to a Ufe term in prison.
The verdict came nine months to the day after the bludgeon·knife slaying oC Thompson's wife. Carol, which the jurors decided had been engineered by tbe defendant.
Judge Rolf Fosseen commended jurors, saying: "Your responsibilIty has been tremendous. I am satisfied you have done the job seriously and conscientiously without fear or favor."
Prosecutor William Ran d a I I moved for imposition oC sentence and Thompson was calied beCore the bench.
Thompson was asked by the judge if he had anything to tell the court.
"No," answered the defendant, and sentence was then imposed. There was no indication when the term might be started.
Conviction of first degree mur· der carries a mandatory life prison term. Time off for good behavior and parole can result in a lifer's release after 17 years.
Taft criticized the Democratic Schedule Sunday tors," by Oian·Cario Menotti. administration In Washington for not pushing harder to get a civil Sunday is the Cinal day for reo This will be the first year that
Swedish Prints Exhibition Opens rn Union Toc/oy
b• I f h H uI the Opera Workshop has hired rights II out 0 t e ouse R es celvlng Sabin oral polio vaccine someone from the Department of C~mmlttee .for a ~oor vote. He said at Johnson County clinles. As be· Dramatic Arts to help with the hiS campaIgn WIll be keyed to ... federal spending and forei~ poli- fore. climcs Will be open from noon staging and acting in an opera. He cy, especially dealing with "Com-' until 4 p.m. is Kent Gravett, G, Lexington, KY. Prints by 20 contemporary Swed-munist encroachment" in the Persons who mis ed previous ~~y~n~a;:h~r~t~Uj~~ ~~rll(O: isb artists will be on exhibition be· Western Hemisphere and Cuba. clinics can take advantage of this this program. ginning today in the Terrace
Questions, Yes, But Kinsey, No On SUI Phones
clinic. Dosages missed can then "St r ..' te Lounge of the Union. The 52 bJack be administered by the family rary ~~~~~~itte~ .: 1=' ~ and white and COIO~ints will be doctor at one month Intervals. All on a short story by the Russian shown there until . 20.
th d ti humorist Ark a d y Averchenko. Organized through Joint efCorts ree osages are essen al to com- Gravett described the play as "A of E. Maurice Blocb of the UCLA
plete protection. satire on givers and receivers." Art Galleries. the National Museum Nearly 50,000 do es of vaccine MUSIC FOR BOTH operas is be- of S~holm and ~e GaJI~i Bri~-
They're at it again. bave been given in the two clinics ing provided by the Opera Orches- en,. CO.n tern p . r a r y S~edish . . PrlDts" IS being crrculated 1JI the
Students are calling other stu- that have been held. This vaccine, tra. directed ~y James DIXon, pro- United States by the Smithsonian dents and asking personal ques- nearly tasteless, is taken on a fessor of musIc. Traveling Exhibition Service and II tions. And those pranksters like sugar cube. "Amabl and the Night Visitors," sponsored by the Embassy of to dignify their calla by claiming I' planned to ont t directly W\·th Distribution centers are the Iowa s c ras Sweden. they're conducling a study Cor the spirit of the first opera. Where .. somebody. City Civic Center, City High "Sterlingman" depicts the false At SUI, the .exhibllton Is span·
The FB( flndlngs will Indicate Dr. Daniel Moe. director of the that Oswald planned and executed University chOirs, will IeId tile his assassination alone, it has been disctlSllon. learned, and will show no connec· This seminar Is being held Ia tlon betwecn him and Jack Ruby, conjunction with the "Measlah" 52, the Dallas night club owner concert alated for two performeae. who silenced Oswald Corever with a es in the Main Lounge of the Uaioa pistol shot Nov. 24. at 8 p.m. Dec. 17-18.
Todays News Briefly TIPPIT ,.UND NEARS $211.- - Funds for the famiJy rJI slain
Dallas poJJceman J . D_ Tippit soared put 1175,000 FrIday. Police bed counted $125,777 coming Into the DaUas Pollee Station for the widow and three chlldren of Tippit. About $50,000 baa been collected by otben. In Fort Worth, Mrs. Sblrley WllliamSOll said COUectJOOI [or the famlly of Mrs. Marina Oswald, Russian-bom widow of IICCIIIed asIUIiD Lee Harvey Oswald, total about $7,700.
• • • POPE PAUL TO MEET ORTHODOX UADIRS - Pope Paul VI
set Jan. 4-6 jor biJ Holy Land plJgrlmage, wItlch one prelate saidlaclimes plans for an historic meeting with Orthodox leaders. AD 0rthodox patriarch even <8Uggested a summit meeting of all major CbriJtIu faiths while the pontlH is in Jerusalem.
• • • A Quadrangle resident told The Scbool. and the SUI Fieldhouse. In spirit of giving, this opera COlI- sofredth byu t;he FinB e d~~Cob mpD1lfelfttee
I ursda 'bl' I th ' I tht 0 e nlon oar . uv er Dally Iowan ate Th y lUg t Hills, Cosgrove. Lone Tree, So on, cerns e .mrrac e a occurs B3 Seneca ro. and Sharon Bauer' FOUR AMERICANS KILLED _ Four Americana airmen and , that he had been called by stUdents Oxford Tif£in and West Branch when a crippled. boy ?Uers his A4 IJvin,,~ton' N J are ClH:hair: Vietnamese -"'--rver were ~med Friday wh- their ...Iu.t .. -_.-who claimed to be conducting a I '.' . . . 'crutch to the ChrISt CbIld as his ' --- , '." UUlIC ~ ..... I"""'" """""""'"" Kinsey.type survey {or a sociology the vaCClOe w~1 be a~lst.ered only gift. "Amahl" is more dra- men of the comllUttee. sance aircraft crashed into the Mekong River 35 mne. IOUth of Salp. professor. in the commUDlty school buildings. ,matJc because MenoW bas kept Included in the prints are etch- The RB26 aircraft p1UDged Into .five feet of water, an American IPOMI-
However, no sociology professor dd h d I his dialogue and lyrics closely Ie- inga. woodcuts, copper engtavings man said. A °t 0 F 0 0 • lated. and lllbographs. Subject matter •••
or any other is conducting a Kin- I Ion .n.s e I THE RELATIVELY SMALL 8;'. varies from 1andscape and city sey study at SUI. And no student I "'" LBJ TO WHITE HOUSE MONDAY - The family of President JoIIII-is part oC a scientifically selected Librarian Resigns ~r tbe .stage .made el~borate s,et- scenes to abstract designs. son will not move Into the White Howe for a Cew dIY', poaibIy Mon-cross-section for the study of any- hngs ImpoSSible. This explains day. a WhIte House source said Friday night Various belOllginp of the thing. The woman who played a large what first appears to be a rather Christmas Card Sale Johnsons have been taten to the White House durin, the last lew dI1I.
sketchy and Impressionistic stage So when you get your anonymous
call, if you baven't already, you are not obligated to answer any questions. In fact, you don't even have to be pollte.
role in planning the S330,000 Ii. setting. The back of Amahl's hut To Begin on Monday and more will be moved in over the weelleod. brary addition here has submitted has no walls, merely the outlines " ••• ber resignation as public librarian. of a window and a door hanging . Student Sen~te • Collegtate Coun· JREPUBLICANS MUST MOVE' _ state Rep. Leonard ADdenea
Joyce Nienstedt. who has worked by fine wire Crom the ceiling. cil of the UDited Nations (CCUN) (R-Sioux City', called upoa the Republican Party Friday to tate the here for 17 years, submitted her 0 a tt lained that this al will begin its sale of UNICEF lead "at once and without hesitation" to achieve fair 1eaIaIatift re-
10wedr vethe exaPudience to see Ibe- Christmas Cards on Monday at Ib.e Mountaineer's Film resignation to the library board Gold F th Roo tr apportionment. In a letter to Robert TyIOll, executive eecreIaI7 01 tbe
saying, "With the completion of chorus of shepherds outside the ea er m en ance In Republican State Central Committee. Andersen Ii1ld the eomml.tiee Jr. Panhellenic To Meet The Iowa Mountaineer's film- our building program here, the hut and. later, the beginning of the Union. -inl --'-
I'zed r should urge Democratic Gov. Harold Hughes to call a ............ -The Junior PanheUenic will meet iecture Sunday will be "Rural Eng- last in the series oE goals [ had set Amah!'s journey to see the Christ All money rea J rom the Thursday at 4 p.m. in Sbambaugh land." narrated by Alfred WoUe. up when I came here has been Child. sales will go to the United Nations as soon as possible. Auditorium at Ibe IJbrary. It will be presented at 2:30 p.m. acbieved." The Women's Physical Educa- International Children's Emergen· •••
Tbe program will consist of a in Macbride Auditorium. She asked that her resignation tion Department has supplied dane- cy FuJ.Id and wi.U help provi~e food. CHRISTINE TO JAIL - Play, girl Christine Keeler went. ID priIoD panel of sororlty·Craternity hO\l8e Admission will be by season take eff~ Jan. 18. She plans to ers COl' "Amabl and the Night medlc~, clothing to Iboie ID OCher Friday night and started servifIJ a nlne-moath IMIIIeoce. 8M ..... mother;!!. passport or sln.le admission. Tick- accept a position as library direc. Visitors." Their choreography was COuntries. , guilty earUer ·1II the day to ~ of perJuo and tOGiIPIr8e7 to lUI).
All sorority pledp,l's lI(C required II't,q for adults are 00 cenls Ilnli 50 tor for tho Tl'mpc, Miz., rublic rion!' by Marcia Thayer. instruclor The cards will be on Allie until vert justice and was lakeD to London's priJoG for womea to Ien'I _ to attedd. cents for cblldren. • Library. in women's physical educatioa. IFriday, Dec. 13. time. Sbe could be L~ io lib monthl.
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l - AND COMMENT SATURDAY, DEC. 7, 1963 Iowa City. lowl
JFK Memorial to be living remembrance
IT ~ BEEN proposed the money collected for the
JFK Mel1!Orial Fund be used to prOVide a "living" remem
brance of the late president. The money may be used in
two ways. First. it can be used to provide loans for University students; this will mean the Fund will be continuous and will serve to aid those who will be expected to take up the leadership of the nation in the future.
A second, more concrete, use of the money would be to provide a Kennedy Reading Room in the Union. Here a plaque or portrait of the late president could be placed with some books about his accomplishments and his Administration.
This proposed two-fold memorial to President Kennedy is an appropriate and fitting remembrance. It is worthy of the support of all SUlowans. -Jon Vall
Forwarding' fortunes
Latin America • In THE VOTERS of Venezuela have put on record the
most emphatic and courageous trouncing of Castro ism that reasonable people in Ule United States and other non-Communist countries could wish.
Faced with warnings that any who went to the polls would be in danger of snipers' bullets, Illey stood in patient queues and marked their choices among a multipliCity of candidates to succeed moderate President Betancourt.
The fact that six party nominees and an independent were permitted to campaign and be voted for is a step in advance of one-party governments which have bridged a way out of a dictatorship in some countries. The fact that the elections were held, and not disrupted by the terrorism and vandalism of sympathizers with Cuban l)resident Castro, is a triumph of Dr. Betancourt; the result is a mandate to him and his stlccessor to stamp out the vestiges of that lawlessness.
Every vote cast in this election for whatever candidate, can be. counted as a vote against Castro-type communism. And the total count of Venezuelans who voted is expectcd to amount !o about 95 per cent of the electorate.
The success Qf a stand for democratic and responsible self-rule in Venezuela does not necessarily signify, of course, that the fight for stability has been won in all of Latin America. But it sets up an important beacon, and in an area where governments such as MexiCO, Costa Rica -and even Brazil and Argentina - have been achieving an improved pattem of orderly succession.
For this pattern to be strengthened and extended ca1ls for continued gains in the spread of literacy as the requisite fot an informed oitizenry. It calls also for a spread of economic as well as political democracy. These processes are gradual but essential.
Bath the campaign to reduce illiteracy and the effort to develop economic resources are at present foot races against a rapid rate of population increase. If these races are to be won, there has to be assistance through the making available of birth control information.
Economic aid from the United States through the Alliance for Progress can be only one relatively small factor in Latin-America development; for the main impetus and direction must come from the Latin countries themselves. But such aid can be important in the encouragement it glVes. .
Venezuela has begun with a significant advantage through the income from its petroleum resources developed with North American capital. If with this start the administration of President-elect Raul Leoni can give Venezuelans an enduring sense of partiCipation in their government, it will have forwarded enormously the fortunes of all Latin America.
- The Christian Science Monitor
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PIdIIIIIIed ", '1IIednt PublleatlOlll, Il10.. C-unkatiODl Center, Jowa 0Ib', 10.', dally except 8unctat and IIoDcIa)'. and Ie,al bolldaya. Zlltered "_~~d~ malter .t til. poat eIIIee 1\ 10" CltT uder the Aft .. ~ oIl1arC1i' " ~
DIal "'''1 froIII _ to mkInIIbt It ~rt De'" ltema, WomeD·. J!g. ..... and eIInolplcemenlt to TIle QeII7. Iowan. ~tOrI&I oUlce. are In .... CoauaunJeatlOna Center.
P"blllll.r ........ IdW.rd P. I •• sett Idllor .......... ...... ... ONn Mill. Ma .... 11II Id"er .... eery lpurg.on City Idllor ............ . C, .. '.met N,w. I!dltor .. .. .. . , .. Irlc %oeckl,r lport. IdHor .... Harriett Hl/ICIn\an Idltorl" Pa .. Idltor ... " ... Jon V.n hcllfY Idllor ... ..... .... ,.,. Procter Chl.f Photogra"".r .. Joe LIJIII'ncMt A"I. City Idltorl
John L.,qrn •• nd N .. IM Oodwln Aut .• ports Editor ....... Jim Piper A .... PlIOtotIraph,r .... lob Hand.1I AliI. locl.ty Idltor .... Phylllt Cr.WI Adv.rtlsln, Director .. Irv Oro.lll\.ln A""rtlillll Mena .. r ... Dick IbIIn Clailifl.d M,r . ... C.lhy Plschlrund A .... CI.,,\fled Mlr . .. .. Atan Kotolc Nal'l. Adv. MIIr . ... { Gary apv ....... Adv. c.onlultant .... Dannl. Ilnllllll Adv. ~lIol .. raphtr .. _. lion Slechta Clrculall." Mfr . .. ...... Jim C ..... r
Trult ... , loard of Ituclen, Pultllcatlona, Inc.: Nancy C. Shinn, Af: Marilee R. Teellen'rAS; Le. 8. Th," "n Ll; Alln J. ouch A4; Lan7 D. 'rr.,.II, AB' Prot. Dil. II. Bentl, Unlverllty Ubrary; Dr. Oeor,e 8. Kilton. CoUe,e ot Oenllatryl l'roI. Lellle O. MoeUer. School of Jourlllllam: Prot. Lauren A. Van Dyke, Co!lere of EduClllQD. _
". AIIoeIate4 PraM It .ntltled g.
Ft:"b to the . UM lor -pu~ DI.I 7-4ltl 11 YOIl 40 not reNl .. your ... III tile ~_ ,.-i? ~ted DeIly IO\IVan by 7:10 a.m. Th. DaIIr .... -.:lw..z:r: t': ... ..- aU U
e
,. ~~~a~~ag.o:~~~ 0~ih1~mi ~ ' .m. to 5 P,lll . .. on day tbrou,h hi
.do alld fl'Om • to 10 I.m. IIturd87. lIi,t.,ood lervlce on ml~ papera
MIIInI 1cIItoIW. o\rtlllit II. ...... II nol poalble, but .very effort wUl trWDl A~~~"'~'ohn Kott- be _~ to eomel _ wtUl aM .... (I::wI,u., ~ __ ...... .. .....
'On other campuses " r
Exhibitionists display I'
reckless By JON VAN
lidi .... i.i Pete lid' .... Coeds at the University oC Colorado are finding it diCCtcult to
even walk around campus without being embarrassed anymore. The Colorado Daily reported last month that "exhibitionists" were apparently stalk1ng the UC campus with recklel!fl abandon last month.
"An exhibitionist has appeared twice on campus. police reported. University coeds reported seeing an exhibitionist about 19-years-old wearing a light blue sweat shirt." the Daily writes.
"The youth. they said. aproached them and dropped his pants. The coeds fled .
"Police said that this youth is not the exhibitionist who was reported earlier this month or the one who was reported in October.
"LAST WEEK COEDS reported that a man about 25-years-old. after gathering laundry from a laundromat near the campus. exhibited himself and fled.
"In October a nude man was sighted by Un i- VAN versity women near the Women's Gym."
It sounds as though the campus is being overrun by fugitives from a nudist camp. or maybe Boulder is just suffering a severe shortage of belts.
• • • The Student Legislature at West Virginia University is in the
midst of reapportioning itself. The student body constitution states that the number of student representatives from each district must be determined for the next school year by the last day of Novem-
A phony cadence and pitch-
ber. The LeglsSature has decided to overlook the constitution and bas pcWponed reapportionment until sometime in December.
Too bad for Sen. Shaff that the Iowa Legislature didn't do something like that - if they'd waited to vote on the Shaff Plan until after Christmas, Santa might have brought enough "Yes" ballots to save the election. It is doubtful. though, if eight tiny reindeer could ever have managed to deliver such a hea\'y load of paper 8S a "Yes" victory would have required.
• • • BUT MAYBE IT would be best if Santa sent any extra paper
he might have to the University of Colorado for women students to use in applying to live in an orr-campus apartment. At least if the A WS hL~ its way. the apartment seekers would need about six pounds of paper to complete all the necessary applications.
The A WS recently passed a resolution favoring off-campus housing for women students under 21. The A WS resolution opposes simply letting the coeds produce parental approval as a requirement for getting an apartment. A WS recommends that women seeking apartment approval should apply to an AWS approval committee.
All applications would have to present the committee a letter of application stating why she wants to live in an apartment; have a letter of parental consent; have a letter of recommendation from a housemother, resident adviser. or residence ball counselor in her living unit; find housing in a University-approved apartment by the time oC occupancy, and notify the A WS commitee immediately upon selection of this apartment.
Tbe applicants must also have a female roommate at the time oC octupancy.
The AWS president said that if students are to be given the
Hamlet.: good, baH, indifferent effects Occuring on different quality levels
By JOE KIRKISH 01 Reviewer
The following pantomime oc· curred after last night's performance of HAMLET: two learnedappearing gentlemen. leaving the theatre: they turn to one another. each quizzically searching out the other. One beams with immense approval. noddIng enthusiastically. The other reacts by drawing up to full height. glancing down his nose with a coup d'oeil guaranteed to shatter any opposition to pure contempt. Exeunt into the cold night.
And so it will go for SUI theatregoers, A play with as monumental and significant a background a s this can evoke nothing but di· verse reactions. and when the production is a 3·hour amalga· mation of good. bad and indifferent e £ f ects, sometimes spor- KIRK ISH adlcally alternating. some occurring simultaneously on different quality levels, the effect is apt to produce even more con· flicting feelings. For that rea· son. qualifications are in order if ohe wishes to comment on this prodUction. .
Generally speaking, the play can be thoroughly enjoyed if one has never seen a better production in receht memory, if one is willing to accept this production on the stUdent level (that is. replete with amateurs struggling earnestly with something quite prodigious for them), if one can accept the tampering with the bard's immortal lines via cuttings. if (conversely) one has the patience to sit through more than three hours of it, and if one can enter into it with a tabula rasa, with no preconceptions.
A LONG LIST of qualifications. to be sure. but necessary - and. strangely enough, not at all difficult to accept.
Preconceptions of this masterpiece of enigmas can be helpful. but they can also build up a confusion for the theatre dillitante and do more harm than good. It is unfair. for example,
to feeJ that the characterization of Polonius is here wrong because the man is seen as a roly·poly. meddling but funny, old fool if one had been formerly treated to a more soberly, sympathetically handled interpretation. And so. too, providing of course that the present interpretaUon can hold water (and it largely does), it would be equally wrong to throw cutting glances and cry "lnCidelity!"
This production actually hit me somewhere between the reactions of the two learned gentlemen. It was good and bad. but more good than bad. It was. objectively speaking. the best college performance of HAMLET this reviewer has seen. and in light of past SUI Shakespearean fiascoes, notably MACBETH and MUCH ADO, it represents a ray o( hope ror coming productions of similar nature.
DIRECTOR WOODBURY had a number of choices from which to interpret his production, ranging (rom a totally 19th century Romantic one (replete with a frail Hamlet shrouded in mysterious gloom) to a relatively modern and Freudian approach of depth probes and symbols. But he only glanced in both directions. holding rather to what might be considered a third avenue. that of a rather exciting melodrama which tells a story of ambitious intrigues, nobly and ignobly laid traps. eavesdropping. swordplay, incest. possible rape. suicides, and a host of murders - a moderli delight in this age of TV violence and crime.
Next. with the director's earlier plea in mind - to accept the production as it was presented. as something to be just watched and enjoyed ror the entertainment therein contained - the most important hinge of the play. that of Hamlet characterization, came into interest. There again the choice out of the past could have been that of a melancholy Dane. a hesitant prince, a roistering and pragmatic playboy whose ambitions included Ophelia and the throne, a Oedipal pawn of an unfortunate childhood, or an im· potent and passive creature upon whom the destinies' worked; and there again Director Woodbury chose none, but rather a virile
. young man, heavily burdened by --------------------~------
OFFICIAL DAIL Y BULLETIN
UniversitY Calendar Saturday, Dec.mber 7
10 a.m. - Daniel X. Freedman, M.D., Yale University, "LSD-2S Studies." Psychopathic Hospital.
7 p.m. - Swimming: indiana. 2 and 8 p.m. - Opera Work-
• shop. "Amahl and the Night VisItors" and ''The Stir1ingman," Macbride Auditorium.
8 p.m. - Unlverslty Theatre Production: "Hamlet."
Suncley, December I 2:30 p.m. - Iowa Mountaineera
Travelogue, "Rural England,'· Alfred Wolle, Macbride Auditor· ium.
7:30 p.m. - Danish Film: "Dltte. Child of Man," Shamballgh Auditorium.
S p.m. - University Choir Concert, Main Lounge. Union.
Mend.y, December , 7:30 p.m. - Basketball: St.
Louis, Field House. 8 p.m. - University Theatre
Production: "Hamlet." T..-tHy, December ,.
8 p.m. - Human Rights Decla· ration - 15th Anniversary, Dr. Anna Hawks. Cottey College, Mo .• "TomorrOw Is Now." Macbride Auditorium .
8 p.m. - University Theatre Production: "Hamlet."
Wednesct.y, Dtcembtr 11 8 p.m. - Ulliversity Lecture
Series : Sen. A. S. (Mike) Monroney, "Wanted: New Machinery for Congress." Main Lounge, Union.
8 p.m. - University Theatre Production: "Hamlet."
8:15 p.m. - Organ Concert. Heinrich FJeischer, University of Minnesota. Fir s t Methodist Church.
Thurtday, December 12 7:00 p.m. - Basketball: South
ern Methodist, Field House. 8 p.m. - University Theatre
Production: "Hamlet." Frlelay, Decemll.r 13
Gymnastics: Iowa Federation Opert Meet, Field House.
8 p.m. - University Theatre Preduction: "Hamlet."
s.turdly, December ,. Gymnutics: Iowa FederaUoD
Open Meet, Field House. 7:30 p.m. - Swimtnln,: Ne
braska. Field House. 8 p.m. - University TheatN
Production: "HlIIIIlet." T.-
a succession of vl7erwhelming griefs and whose impulsiveness and flaire for the theatrical sustain him in working toward his goal of revenge, but whose ability for more error than trial carries him to his ultimate demise. And so. here again, the pure but lofty melodrama.
EXAMINATION of the play on this level reveals it to be quite plausible. And 90 it is also possible to accept the motivations of the principle characters - a motivation which is clearly un· derlined by carefully presented interpretations in delivery and glance - each of which seems to cry out. Look, see. here it is. right here in this line (or gesture ) to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt . . . .. Still, though it was possible to suspect card stacking In the cutting of controversial passages (including those preceding the Gonzaga play and others belonging to minor but still controversial characters), the play could be accepted as presented.
THE STAGING OF THIS production followed a sorl of privately conceived mixture of the traditional and modern. The costumes. designed by Margaret Hall. were traditional and certainly impressive. though it seemed that every attempt was made to counteract their total effect by throwing them against an uncomfortable background color.
The set was neither here nor there - not quite abstract, not quite real - and thus hard to conceived as sometimes a specific place, sometimes not. Particularly hard to accept was the ghost
movement with Hamlet around the parapets. However. expert management of lights helped conceal the worst and bring out the best in it.
Musical background was handled intelligently and with restraint. Make-up was unobtrusively good in the "normal" char· acters, but generally lacking in conviction in the others.
MOST IMPORTANT was the Dcling style present. Ever since Elizabethan language became history. tragedians have labored with techniques of presentation of tbe Shakesperean line, and the one here presented comes under severe criticism. particularly in the first half of the production. With the exception of Hamlet. and occasionally Polonius and the queen. everyone delivered lines in that act with a phony cadence and pitch that wQrked successfully to destroy any feeling or meaning that might originally have been there. Still worse, a few of the actors. obviously not heeding Hamlet's advice to the players, mouthed their lines like afficiandoes of a Demosthenes school of diction.
MENTION of Richard Douglass in the lead role is necessary; he met a formidable task with rewarding results. While his portrayal had some defects (a bouncy mannerism, an occasional mouthing from excessive resonance. plus a stronger concentration on moment-by-moment illuminations rather than on an overall characterization), it was still admirable for its excellence of interpretation as well as its overall consistency.
University Bulletin Board Unlvtr.lty lull.tin IOtrd notlc .. mUll be rec.'vad at Th. Dally Iowan offlc" Room 201 Communlcallonl C.nt.r by noon 0' Ih. day before publication. Th.y mu.1 be Iyp.d and Iltln.d by an ad.lser or oHICtr of Iha o .... "lollon being publlclud. Pur.ly loclal functions .ra not .lIllble for Ihl. Hcllon.
ALL PICTURES which appeared In the 1963 Hawkeye are for sale at the Hawkeye OWce Room 2LO, Communications CenCer. Pictures may be purchased from 1:30-4:30 p.m. dally, except Saturday and Sunday. The sale ends Thursday, Dec. 19.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION EXEMP· TION TESTS: Male students wishing to take the exemption tests for Physical Education Skills must register to talle their tests by Wednesday, Jan. 8 In 122 Field House, where additional Inlormatlon concernlni these tests may be obtained. Stu· dents who have not registered by Jan. 8 will not be permitted to tlke the exemption tests durlnl the (Irs! semester of tile 1963·64 school year.
DR. SJOERD L. 10NTING oC the National Institute 01 Neurological Diseases and BUndneAS wlJl present a special semInar In the Department of PhysIolOgy at 11 a.m., Friday. Dec . 6, In room 179 In the Medlcal Lab· oratories.
VETERANS. Each student under PL 550 or PL 634 must SIgn a form to cover hlB attendance durlni the month of November. The (orm wlJl be avaUable In B·6, University HaU beginning Dee. 2. Hours are 8:30 •. m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
TO C"NDIDATII FOR DEGREES In February: Ordors lor off Icial Iraduation announcements of the February. 1964 commencement arQ now being token. Place your order before noon Wednsday. Dec. '¥I. at the Alumni Houoc. 130 N. Madl. IOn St., acroll (rom the Union. PrIce per announcement iI .12 cenla, payable when ordered.
PLAYNIGHTI 01 mlIed recre" tIonal actlvillfl. 10" audentl. .Iall, faculty and their IJIOII.... are held .t Ihe Fteldhouae each ll'ueadaY ~d Friday lliaht from 1;30 p.m. to 1:10 p.m. provlded no home va~t7 conte.t II scheduled. (Adm1lIIOD b7 .tudul or ttafl m card.)
'AMIL Y NIT.. at the Fteldhou.. for the flnt _1Il .. ter .. ill be beld from 7:1& p.m. to ' :15 p.m. Oct. II. Nov. IS, Dec. 11 Ind Jan. 8 and 22. StUdeDtI, atatt and laculty are lIIv1te4 to brln, their 11'011"8 aDd famllle. en the.. dale. lor reore. tlonal ... ~ and famUy-Iype IP9rt acUvltIH. llhUclren may 'come onJ.y wIth tIlelr OWD " parent. and mult leave with them. (Ac:Iat.IaJon b7 .udelll or ltatf m card.)
CHIUITIAN .CIINCa OROANIIA TION IIP.lda a teat!mony mee~~ ~ry 'J'ue.iln In OR 1. Rift' Rnn" \llIlon .... t 7:15 p.m. Studenta, facult7. Ind 'nlDde U'I oord.lal17 IIIYlwd to .IWAd, •
ART SHOW al the GuUd Gallery, lSO'Aa S Clinton: Opening Group Show 01 palntln., prints, oculplure, cerami. and enamell. Hour. are 3:30 p.m. to 5:30p.m. and 8 p.m.-10 p.m. Monday throu,b Saturday.
,NTlR·VARIITY CH R II T I A H FELLOWSH I p. an interdenominational ,roup of atbdenta. meet.! every Tuesday In the East Lobby Conference Room of the Union to consIder varioul topIc. 01 ,entral Intere.t. All are COl'dIalIy InYlt.e4 to attend.
COMPLAINTS. Student. wIah~ to tUe UnIversity complalnta can now pick up their forms at the Information Desk of the Union and turn them In at the Student Senate Office.
FOLK DANC. CLUI meeta every Monday at 7:30 p.m. In the Women'. G)'1II. Everyone welcome.
WOMEN" IIICRIATIONAL IWIMMlNG will be available U:15_p.m. Monday througb rrlday at th. Women'l Gym pool for ..tu~nta. Iteff and faculty wlvea.
l"IYSlTTIIlI may be obtained by caUtnll the YWCA oUlce durlnl tU atternooD at 12240.
IUNDAY RECREATION HOUIlI The Fleldhou!18 wUI be open for mJxed recreational activities lrorp 1 p.m. to & p.m. each Sunday atternoon. Admlsslon to the buUdlnl wlJl be by ID card throulh the northeut door. All lacUllIee will be available _pt the I/ymnaitlc ......
PARENTI CooPIRATI". IAIYSITTING LEAGUI. Those Intereated In membershIp mould call MrI. Van AUa at 7-5346. Tho8e dea\rlnr "alt-
te .. should call Mrs. Chandler at 8-11885.
UNIVERSITY LIBIIARY HOUIlII Monday.Frlday: 7:30-1 a.m~' Saturday: 7:30 a.m.-IO p.m.; Sun : ):10 1!.m.·2 a.m. Service Desk&: on day· Thurlday; 8 a.m.-l0 p.m.; J'rIday and Siturday: 8 a.m.-& p.IIl., 7-10 p.m. (Reserve on,y); Sunday: 2-~ pm., 7-10 p.m. (Reserve only). PhotodupU. elUon: Monday-Friday; 8 a.m.-& p.m.l Monday·Thuraday; &-10 p.m.: satur· day: 10 a.m. unW DooD, 1-6 pa.j SundaY; Sol p ....
IOWA MIMORIAL UNION HOUIIII Cafeteria OpeD 11:30 a.m.·1 .1I.m. lIondaY-Saturday; U;45 p.m.. MODday·hldIY; 11;30 a.m.-l:3O p.m .• SuDday. Gold Feather RO\lIll .pen , a.m.·l0:45 p.m., Monday·Thuraday; , • .111.-11:45 p.dl., FrIday; 1 a.m .• ll :4I pm. SaturdaY; 1-10:46 ,.m. Sund87. aeereltlon area open : am.-lI p.JIII. lIonlla¥-Thurl4ay; I • .111.·11 iIUdDlabl. J'rIjIq ~ 114urw. WI . ... ....., . . "
privilege of choosing their places o( living. they should also have the responsibility for their actions. It looks as thollih they would also do well to have a lawyer to handle the AWS committee appli. cation requirernents.
• • • Roommates have a substantial influence on a student's aca
demic performance in college; these are the results of a pilot study at Michigan State University.
A trend showed that students ot less ability tended to make beUer marks when rooming with a student of high ability than when rooming with another student of lesser ability. •
So if you want to raise your grades, the perfect solution would be to rent a quiet room In the business offices of the University. Imagine how well a person could do with five IBM computers for roommates.
THOUGH THIS computer-roommate idea may soon be outdated, as far as grades are concerned; it seems even the computers are becoming social.
The control and Informations system laboratory of the school of electrical engineering at Purdue has invented a computer that can play bridge without making the same mistake twice. The machine has already learned to draw trumps at the beginning and not to lead from kings.
Although this development in qampUters may distract from their value as grade boosting roommates, it certainly does offer a great many ClPportunities in socializing. Imagine being able to "table talk" with your partner sfmp~ by punching a few IBM cards and slipping them under the table to it
After the computers have learned bridge, new games can be mastered. Poker. for example, could be an excellent undertaking for the machine with the perfect memory and the built-in poker face - as long as it didn't light up or blow a fuse when dealt a pat hand.
• • • Psychologists at Columbia University have found that chronic
daydreamers have a deep insight into their own personalities. This means if you have trouble studying for your tests because
you daydream too much. you can feel better. You may never know anything about your courses. but at least you will know yourself. The question is: do you want to be so well acqUainted with such a poor student?
AGUDAACHIM ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH SYNAGOGUE Johnson" Bloomington Streett
803 E. WashlnJlon St. Sunday, 8 and 10:30 a.m .• Servleu 9:15 a.m~ Sundab School -<>- ,1;30 a.m., Adult Ible CI ..
ASSEMBLY OF GOD --1330 Keokuk St. CHURCH OF CHRIST Sunday. 10 a.m .. Sunday Sch.,q (Meetln~ In the 4·H BuU<lJJI~ 11 a.m .• Momlnl/ Worship One Mile outh on HIghway 2 8)
-<>- Sunday, 9 a.m., Mornlnl/ Wonhlp BETltANY BAPTIST CHURCH 10 a.m., Cburch School --B 5t. " F1lt.l1 Ave. GRACE UNITED Sunday, 9:45 a.m., Sunday School MISSIONARY CHURCH 10:45 a.m .. Mor~ Worahlp
7 p.m., Evening orablp IBM Muscatine Ave. -0- SDlldaY. 9145 l.m., Sunday SChool
BETHEL AFRICAN 10:45 a.m., WorshIp ServIce --METHODIST CHURCH IOWA CITY
411 S. Governor St. BAMlsT CHAPEL Rev. Fred L. pe~ 412 SOQth '(lIInlon Sunday. 10 a.m .• Sunday 001 (Affiliated with the
11 a.m .. Cburch ServIce Southern Baptist conventl:l -<>- Sun~, ':45 a.m., Sunday SCb
TRINITY CHRISTIAN 10:45 a.m .• Momln, Worlhlp 8 p.m., Tralnlnll UiiIon
REFORMED CHURCH 7 p.m., Evenlnl/ Worah1p E. Court " Kenwood Dr. -<>-
Sunaay. 9:30 a.m., Church SChool JEHOV ~'S WITNESSES 10:30 a.m., Mornlnl Worahlp 21"H St. 7 p.m., E\'enlng ServIce Sunday, 3 p.m'l ubUc Addrell
-<>- (;15 p.m. Wa chtower Sludy THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
-0-MENNONITE CHURCH
1318 Kirkwood 614 Clark St. Sunday. g a.m., BIble SludJ Sunda~ 8:30 and 10:45 a.m., lIornInC 10 a.m .• Wurshlp Wo Ip 7 p.m .• ~enlnl Wo1'8llJp 8:45 a.m .. Sunday School -0- 7:30 p.m., Evenlilg Servlc,
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIS'l' -0-VETERAN'S HOSPITAL OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS CHAPEL 910 E. FalrchUd St.
sunda~, 9 a.mg Priesthood Sunday, 9 a.m .• Worsh~ 10:30. unday chool • a.m., Communion - Sun_ a p.m .• SacrameDt MeetlnJ -0-
-<>- OUR REDEEMER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE LUTHERAN CHURCH
1035 Wade St. 2301 E. Court Sunday, 9 :4~ Sunday Scbool 8:SO. 10:45 a.m., Servlcel 10:45 p.m., orlhlp 9:45 a.m .• Sunday SChool 7:30 p.m., EvenIDl SerYlel -0-
-0- REORGANIZED CHURCH THE CONGREGATIONAl.. OF JESUS CHRIST
CHURCH OF LATl'ER DAY SAtNTS CllntOD " JefferlOn Stnetl 221 MelrOl8 An. R"v. John G. Cr~ SIUIday, ':80 a.m .• Cburch SChool 10:45 a.m., Wonblp an CburclJ 10:30 a.m., Mornlnl Worship School -0-a:30 p.m., PU,rIm FeUowlhlp
ST.PAUL'6 -<>-EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHAPEL FREE CHURCH (¥ltBourl Syllod)
404 E. Jefferson OF CORALVILLE ServIce. at 9 I.m. and 11 a.m.
Sunday, 9:45 a.m.~undaY Scbool Runday School at 10 a.m. 11 a.lIl. Mornlnr orshl~ 7:45 p.m. Siudellt Vespers
Mr. Vernon Schrocl!:, pealdnl ~ 7 p.m., EveniDI Service SHARON EVANGELICAL -0-
FAITH UNITED CHURCH UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH (Evan~ellcal and Reformed) Kalona
18 7 Klrllwood Ave. Sunday. 9:30 a.m .• Sun~ School Sunday, 9;15 a.m .• Sunday School 10:30 •. m., Divine Worsh p 10:30 a.m .• MorniDI Worah1p -0-
-0- ST. ANDREW FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
North OIlnton " FaJrehlJd Street.! Sunset" Metro .. Ave. Sunday. 8:30 and 11 a.m., WorshIp Unlverllty Hellhtt 8:45 a.m .• Cburch School Sunday, 9:30 a.m. Worship. Cburcll
-<>- School FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 11 a.m .• Worship. Churcll SC/lool
217 E. Iowa Ave. -()-
Sunday. 9;15 a .m~ Elhurclo Icbool LUTHERAN CHURCH 10;30 a.m., Worsh p . OF CHRIST THE KING
-0- Comer of IWV Road FmSTCHURCR and CoralvUle Road
OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Sund.y, 9:30 a.m .• WOrsbir 10:30 •. m., S)lnda¥ SChoo
722 E. Colle,e St. -()-SUnday!; 11 a.mS LeIlOD-5eraoli FIRST UNITARIAN SOCIETY and unday cbool
-0- Iowa Ave ... GUbert St. ST. PATRICK'S CHURCH KIIoren Arillan Jr., :IIlnllter
10 a.m.. Church School .nd Adult Uf E. Court SI . .locl1BllQn
Sunda!,. 8:30. 8:15. ';4$ and 11 a.lll .. 11 a.m., Church Service Sun ay Masoc. -0-
6;45 and 8:15 a.m., DaUy MallBe. ST. MARK'S -0-
METHODIST CHURCH GLORIA DEI 21110 MUIe.t1ne Ave. LUTHERAN CHURCH SundlY, 8:30 " 11 a.lIl . worlhW (Meetln, at the En,len Theatre) 9:45 a.m., Church SChooY, Adult I.-
Sunday. 9 and 11 a .m.~ Sel'Vlce. cUlllon Oroup 10 a.m., Sunday SCboo ----0- ST. mOMAS MORE CHAPEL FIRST PRESBYTERIAN 105 N. Rlverllde Dr.
CHURCH 8und'~' 8:30, 10, 11:30 • .m. and S p ... 18 1:. Market St. Sun ay M_ •. TIl. 10 a.m. 11_ It
Sunday, 11;30 and 11 a.m., Church a Hlah lfa ... UDI/ by the CODlfe,., School and WorshIp t1on. --- ' :SO and 7 a.m .• 5 ~.m .• Dally __ FIRST METHODIST CHURCH . CoDle.slonl on Sa urday from U :IO
p.m.; H :3O pa. Jelfenon " Dubuque Streett --' :SO and 11 a.m. - Churcb S~OOI ST. WENCESLAUS CHURCH 9:30 and 11 ,.01. - Worshlp rvlce.
-0- 81. E. Davenrlrt SI. FRIENDS Sunaal', 8:30. I, 10 an 11:4$ .... SUllo-Phone 8-2571 day' :IIa_.
towa Memorial UniOD 7 and 7;30 l.m .• Dally MuaI Sunday, 10 a.m., MeeUq tOI wonblp ~
-0- TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH FAITH BAPTIST Robert E. Holmammer
l BIe_
310 E. Colle\e S . FELLOWSHIP Sunday, 8 a.m. Holy ucbartri
TImothy R. B.rrett Pulor ' :15 a.m .• Fami\, Service .nd Cbureb 1I0nt,omery Hall, 4-H FaJrIToun411 School
Sunday. II:SO • . m .• BIble ScbOol. 11 a.m .• Choral Eu~lIarilt 10;30 a.m .. Momln. Wormlp 3:15 P.M. Evenlol\f 7 P.lll., &velllq service -<I- . -- RILLEL FOUNDATION "
ONlVEJUiITY JrOSPlTAL 122 E. lIarllet st. SERVICES '1:10 P .... Frtday, Sabbatll 11m.
..:.0-401 Unlvenl~ HOIpIW , ST. MARY'S CHURCH IuDcia)', ' :30 a.m., orlhlP II""*' Jefferson • LInn Sl,,"~ --FREE METHODIST CHAPEL lundal,' 8', 7;10. t. 10:1' and 11: .....
liun !r. ~a ~ Gil I. 1114 ,: 1;11 .. D ......
( R.
publiC ment ~ in Corl
The the Co rnee1inl told th JobnStc -I Wa
At Drur
sor of
It
present College Tuesd ing
r School Board Answ ,
Campus~ Notes State .. rowqs"Dn Newman Club
I S~~~!~~~~Wnt~~~~~ .. ~ Public Instruction, told the Coralville School Board in a signed statement lbat the state board does not favor a new secondary school system in Coralville.
Sunday activities at the Newman Club will ~Iude a coffee hour alter the 10 a.m. Mass and a supper prepared by the Graduate Chapter at 6 p.m. Father Boniface Meyer, O.S.B., Sl Leo's Abbey. Fla., will speak on ''The Signifi· cance of Vatlcan Council n" at 6:45 p.m. Followi", th speech, preparations will be made [or Christmas caroling scheduled [or later in the week.
The statement wa handed to the Coralville board at a special meeting Thursday noon. Van Dyke told the members that Paul F. JohnstOJl, s tat e superintendent.
concurred In the statement which began, "The stale board is not anxious to add to the number oC mediocre high schools, those which meet only the minimum stand· ards."
• • People.to-People
I Wall To Lecture At Wis. College
Drury W. Wall, associate professor of mathematics at SUI, will
The statement said further that The University People-to-PeopJe a proposed Coralville high school Club will meet at 7: 15 p.m. Tues· would be reviewed during the first day in Conference Room 203 in two weeks o[ the next school term the Union. A progress report and and if it dld not meet all state general orientation of the Univer. standards, it would be removed sily People-Io-People program ""ill from the approved list immedlate- be presented. All executive council Iy. members and sub-committee memo present three lectures at Milton
College. Milton, Wis., Monday and Tuesday while serving as a visit· ing lecturer for the Mathematical Association o[ America.
This is the third year Wall bas participated in the visiting lecturer program sponsored by the Mathematical Association of Amer· ica through a grant from the Na· tional Science Foundation.
Grobe - PI.to'. Thought
Miller - Orlhodoxr In Missac.hu •• ttl, 1630-1650
Pollard - Flclon In Modorn HIstory
H.ndlln - Th. Am.rlcan ' eopl. In tho Twentlelh Centu,y
Found In the P .... rb.ck
l ook Dep.rlm.nl on Second Floo,
Arthur Cutler, Coralville board bers are required to attend. president. said in another state- *.. ment, "r believe Mr. Van Dyke's School Board inference that a Coralville high school would be medlocre and would only meet the minimum standards is premature and un· called for."
Cutler said that the Coralville board had been told by persons in the state department that a new school's activities are revIewed at the end of the first year of opera· tion and if deCiciencies are found. a reasonable period of time is given to correct tbem.
Van Dyke said that he was sorry that his statement had not been made prior to the Nov. 19 reorgan· ization election in which Coralville voters rejected consolidation of that district with the Iowa City schools. Iowa City voters approved the merger.
He said he believed lbe outcome might have been diCIerent had bis tatemcnt been made prior to the
vote. The Iowa City board has an·
nounced lbat it would no longer accept tuition pupils after this school year.
The Board of Directors of the Iowa City Community sChool Dis· trict \fill hold their regular meet· ing Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Board of Education OCfice, 104 S. Linn Sl. Reports will be heard from the Physical Plant Commit· tee, the Faculty Committee, and Superintendent of School Buford W. Gamer. Payroll dedUction and naming of Penn Town hlp School will be taken under consideration.
• • • Radio Club
Amateur Radio Club WOIO will hold its regular monthly meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. in 107 Elec· trical Engineerinll BuJldJng. The purchase of new equipment will be discussed.
• • • Physics Colloquium
1-The Coralville board will meet
with the Clear Creek board next Friday to discuss pas ible reorgan· ization with that di.~trict.
"Recent Experimental Results Concerning the Earth's Magnet· osphere" will be the subject of a physics colloquium to be held at 4 p.m. Tuesday In 311 Physics Building. Louis A. Frank, SUI research associate in physics will speak.
• * • Poetry Readings
Union Boord will present read· ings by Clark Griffith, associate professor oC English and Frederick McDowell , professor aC English on Friday ot 4 p.m. In the Union Library.
. 1
II
FAST DEPENDABLE SERVICE
IN BY 9 A.M.
OUT BY 4 P.M,
SHIRTS AND
DRY CLEANING
315 E. Market Across from Pearson's
GriHith will be readlng from the works oC Emily Dickinson and McDowell will be readine (rom the works of Georee Bernard Shaw.
• • • Play Tickets Available Tickets for the play "Half a
Pound of Tea" may be ob~ined Monday !It the ticket de k in the
TICKETS ON SALE MONDAY!! THE STUDIO THEATRE PRESENTS
December 16, 17, 18, 19 TICKETS $1.00 or STUDENT 10. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
THEATRE TICKET DESK, EAST LOBBY, IMU TICKET DESK HOURS: Daily, 9 a .m .• 4:30 p.m.
Saturday, 9 a .m. - noon
PHONE RESERVATIONS: X4432
DRY CLEANING S,PECIAL
Monday, Dec. 9 - Tuesday, Dec. 10 - Wednesday, Dec. 11
TROUSERS, SLACKS LADIES' or MEN'S SWEATERS
PLAIN SKIRTS
... for ... $1 25
HOU~JIr~J.rJZ7AftjCLEANERS 10 SOUTH DUBUQUE
~~N~~o _Extr.a Charge For , 1 Hour Sevice
East lobby of the Union OJ' by call· ing ext. 4432. 'Ib.8 play will be per· Cormed between ~. 16 and Dec. 19 in the Studio Theater. It was written by Jerry L. Crawford as part of his Ph D. ~rtation hen!.
• • • Wives To Meet
Wesley Wives, the 1ethodiJt stu· dent wive ' groUp. will m~ Tues· day at 8 p.rn. in the North Lounge of Wesley House.
Dr. :[arvin Thostensen \I ill speak on traditional Christmas music. All members are invited.
• • Monday Meeting
The Juuior PanheUenic Colmcil will meet Jonday at 4: 15 p.m. in the Board of Directors Room of the Union.
Mondlly, Pte.mM, t, 1m S:OO Momll\ll how B'O\ New. 8:30 BooUbell . :~ New,
10:00 Amerlean Political Tbourht 10:50 MUlle 11 : 15 New Recordlnr. 11:~ C.lendar of Ev nil 11 :51 New. Heldlln • 12:00 Rhythm RambIn 12:30 Newl 12:.' Newl B.elliround 1:00 Mum 2:00 Alternoon Feltu ... 2:30 Mullc . :2:1 N .... 4:S0 Tel nm. 5:15 DPOrtJ TIm, 5:30 Ne .. 5:.5 Nelllt. Bleklround 8:00 £I·.nln, Con~" 7:25 Ball<elb.U
fowl v.. t. Loul. U. 9:00 • pp. II ulle tTtlol 9:.5 New. f"Inal
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8tUlISE kilt ..... DIal 7..... u.t
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TUX ... reru1ar. a ~ltI, IOrI",. ,". 1·135t. 12-,
BLACK lUX, .... W44I after • , •• 12-14 --------------._------MIDNIGHT blu. tu, .. .. rel\llar.
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ered before 1*. t . Pickard lletu. .. Co. 7-4%22. 1101
l'Oa lerrUic 10)1 ... " ... _ n... .l~ tlon II ~l price _ W . ..
tOIl. 1).7
\JNl)!JlWOOD t,pewrlter, ladle. "'. UN! Ice ak.!", aIJe '. Uie new.
a.~'l . 1S-14
BLACK TUX aI .. ,. 10111. US8'1. 12-14
WOIJC WANTED
IRONINGS. Stulkol bo7I ucI .... t .. 101. Roelleit r. ,.... IUtAR
CHILD CAlI
leel VOI.KSWAGE. .... for 1&1 • whll. WILL Mb, Ill. M,~ . .. 1 ... U U .unroof I1Idlo. 0 rh.uled tnalne. LET JACK AND JILL N" .... ,., kbool
Frem •• .m. IV 4:" p.m. weftclay., Clowd Slturd.YI. All experllnc.d Ad Taller Will Hllp Veu With Veur Ad.
In •• rthIn d..dUne 1 p.m. on clay prectdl", publlc.tlon.
rhon .. ~!50 .lter I. 12-11 l<II,e ),our chUd c .... problell1l I l DORl DI;LANEY Typlllr <vI e. aff ....... ... 0 •• ~._
Mlm olraphln., :-IotaI}' Public. 114 1t55 CllEVROLF.T BelAir V.a , (:I .. n. rat •• you CAli -_ ..... ........ . E. M.rk ·t. DI.I 137-4," or J3a.S23t.. W1I4. 202 Park Jload 12-14 1S-IIR
TYPING 1-t415 11·28AR NEED MOil I Ulan I Ilttert Gly. you r
thUd • ,"u.llie lIurae". achooJ u· perf nce, plul penonallMcl . 111 ~ ....
d.n. B.rliln. Little H rlllt)' NUIWf)I' 1tdHIeI • ...,,0
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FOR RENT
ROOMS fOR RENT
--------------------HOUSE FOR SALE
BUNGALOW 3 bld.rOOJlU. one p.nelrd; t.rpeilld 1I.ln. room, din.
In, '''''1: wllk·out b ... · .... nt co""ln· Inl ..,cond balhroom plu {.mll,. or Jrlra bedrooJD. P.1I0t 'ene d ~ard -
nl Iy lanel .~d 17.000. 33&-04$3. 722 12lh AYe .• Co 111 lvI Ie IUt
ROOMS tor ar.duata men ntlr camp- _~ ........... -:, ..... '"""'": u •. Cookln,./:rlvle,e.< Ii E. BurUn¥:. MOBILE HOMES Fl.)R SAlE ton. Phone 288 or 7-5341. 12. 2 ___________ _
ftIAJ,E .rad'. 420 E. J err~,.,,,,". 1-5 -- ~ \ f I>i DOUlIU: 1I~~plnll room . ale du·
d ht JI or OVer. llcfrl.et~lar. No eooklnl. Clo In . 8'()12fJ ).4
~ DOUBLE room for men. 1 block to EI l 11.11. a-851JV. 1:1.12
5. Phon. 12·12
NEW Ind u d muLlIe homel r .rk. In" lowln. .nd plrts D nnl.
MobUe 110""' C(turl. Ul2 lIu ·.lIn A'· •.• 10'" Clly 137-1781. 12-24 1\
iir."MoNAR lJ. O'08;;-~0' l/C'droom;' 2 LARGE In,le rOomo. L1.ht cooklllr Mlyl., lilt. h.r. Ion ... " yord. 8'xll
allowed. P5 each. II-71GG an .. r 7 p.m nnl.lled InllU 338-1IS90. Jllll top Trill. !Z .. )4 er Park. 12·]1
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
FURNlSIlED S rooml, prlvlte b.th. lU~ S. Clinton. '-8587. 12-10
SPACIOU APARTMJ:NT furnl hed In
ON}; tholc. pice a".II.bl •• Il ... kty. ! Tr.U r Court. po. UIlII 1-48011 Iller
5. 1-4
1858 I\OLLOIIOME 45'08'. };xceUent condItion. »8·0230 .tttr 6, 12-18
Cor.lvUl .. "0·11 mW1~h p,!1II ·VUlllle •
' ·11161. . 12·11 ;:==========;;~'I HOME fOR RENT
S BEDROOM partl.lly rurnlsl! d f.mur. 18 MINUTE WASH J II 0 u . e ntar Unl~etalty 110 plla .
Down, t.lr. e.rpetlnr.lJAllie study Ind DOWNTOWN LAUNDERmE yard. No pel .. '135. rholl' 7·7611.
12-11
12-11 or 7-3_. jJ·1I ."....--.,.;.------~~.
FOR • I.: I Ir n Tn.,. now U..... radiO. Will no.ne;,. $1.00.
.2738 8 10 5 p.m l2-it
YOLK WAG£!'l TRADES leel Yolk "·ea. n unroof '149~ 1835 Thulld "bird - two lop •. . 229~ 19;G )'ord U pa nl r "'"'011 .. 345 11$4 C:h~v' vl·t I dr. tle.n •.• I~
hawkeye Iml)ort 1018 Wah,ut DIlII 337.2115
12-10
AUTOMOTrVE
IGNITION CARBURETORS
GENERATORS STARTERS BRIGGS' STRATTON MOTORS
Pyramid Services 421 S. DubuClUI DI.I7-5'122
• VOLKSWAGEN SERVICE - SALES
HAWKEYE IMPO RTS INC.
WHO DOES m ALTERAnONS I n' .. 1riar. 1-7114 ••
IlolUll
DIAPERJ: Pllper JlenW Service by New PrOClM Laundr)'. 113 8.
Dubuque. Phone 7.*4. I SOW 1\
Fr.tvnlty XMAS .... wlty Cm ttd Gifts
L. G. BAlFOUR..=!~ the lower Ioytl of STEPHINS
Young's Studio QUALITY SELECTION FRAMES AND MATS v.,.,.
St, 7·'151
Moving'? S, SummIt It W.lnut 337·2115
COMPLETELY furnl&hed t bedroom 22' S, Clinton ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii home near . 'Itld Hou.e, Jan. 1.
Ne!18 or 7~JO. l ·S, ~~ __ "'!"'_~_~ __ -' DIAL 7·9696 and use the compl'"
modem equlpm .... ., the 2 BEDROOM t;;;:;;W;~d home. ~
.nd dryer, '11$ month. 8·1238. 12-13
WANTED
JROI'llNOS. ' ·1828.
WANTED - bab)' Illl. r my home, I-S Monday thru Frld.y. 7·5150. 12-7 --.--
WANTED to . h.re aparlm nl down· town. My awn or aomeone .1 ... • •.
Female. 7-492:1 lIter 11 p.m. 12·10
WANTED - b.by altter lIlY home, ':30 to 10:30 p.m. 3 evenln,. • .. eek.
Flnl<blne Park. S3II-e957. 12.7
POSONAL
MONEY LOANED Dllmonds, Com. rll,
TypewrIters, W.lt h •• , Lugga,l, Gun •• Musica l Instruments
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FOREIGN CAR SNOW TIRES & BATTERIES
by DUNLOP Fosler Imported Auto Parts
.24 Mlldln Li nt ~l
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DEWEY'S AUTO SALES
Wist on HlghwI) 6, Coralville Dl wt y p. t.rson, Owner
337·9211
Maher .ros. Transfer io- ___ --;
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H~wks SeeK 2hd ,Cage Win At 'Evansville (2-0) Tonight
Iowa's Hawkeyes travel to the basketball country of Indiana tonight to meet unbeaten Evansville College, who holds victories over New Mexico State and Arizona this season. Game time is 7:30 p.m.
year, and Ed Coleman, a good I ousness which was apparent in the jumper [or his size who can shoot South Dakota opener will have with anyone. worn off.
st. Louis University invades the Sl. Louis is rebuilding after los· Iowa Field House court Monday ing its three high scorers of 1962-night at 7:30 for the first oC three 63 but Coach John Benington has home games for the Hawkeyes experienced former reserves plus within one week. st. Louis has several good sophomores to make bealen Illinois, 81·78, and meels his task earlier. The BilJikens have Kansas State tonight. The BiUi. three juniol's, a senior and one kens also whipped Iowa's opening sophomore, Sam Ulrich, in the
Co a c h Sharm Scheuerman's starting lineup will be the same five who took the floor for Iowa's opener against South Dakota last Monday, which the Hawks won, 85-66. opponent, South Dakota, 1()()..70. starting lineup. ,
Senior Dave Roach and co-cap- It will take all of Iowa's shooting They lost Don Dee, a star for-tain Andy Hankins will be at the skill and rebounding aggressive. ward, with a knee injury aga~ forward positions with 6-10 sopho- ness to stay close to St. Louis_ The South Dakota, but he was replaced more George Peeples at center, visitors have a 6.10 center, Gil by Luechtefeld - and the ex-reand junior Jimmy Rodgers and Beckemeier, who scored 15 points serve became the team's bigh sophomore Dennis Pauling at the against Illinois ; and a 6-5 forward, scorer. guard spots. Stan Luechtefeld, who chipped in
Evansville has live seniors and with 18. Sam Ulrich bit for 10 and two-year lettermen to form the Garry Garrison, a star center who nucleus of this year's squad_ Har- now is testing his condition after old "Buster" Briley, the leading a knee operation, also made 10 scorer for the Aces the last two points.
2 Gridders Place High In Fencing
seasons, returns at one forward More determination in going aftspot. Jerry Sloan, an all-America er rebounds and possibly more as a sophomore last year returns shot attempts will be needed by the to lead the squad in rebounding. Hawkeyes Scheuerman bell'eves , . Two Iowa gridders who joined
Also returning as veterans are Iowa has the height to contend the fencing team for the intersquad Wayne Boultinghouse, who turned with the big St. Louis front line meet Friday finished first and secin several good performances as a but must battle (or position. ond, respectively, in their divisions reserve last year, Paul Bullard, Since this will be Game No. 3 and drew the praise of coach Jim touted as , the Indiana Collegiate of the 23-game schedule, Scheuer- White (or their efforts. Conference s best sixth man last man thinks that some of the nerv-I H Ifb k 0 '11 T d ____________________ a ae rVI e ownsen was
first in the (oil and end Ivory Mc-
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
CARRY OUT SPECIALS
25" OFF REGULAR PRICE
ON THE FOLLOWING CARRY
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I Dowell was second in the epee.
White said McDowell was "very good which is truly amazing when you realize a guy came in here and picked up a weapon and defeated some of our best fencers."
I White said the thing about the
epee is that the squad will have
I four of five men who will average 6-4 or 6-5.
"If we could get two or three (taller men), we could win some I meets this year," White said.
He said the gridders have a lot to learn, but they learn easily. .
He said they were better than , some of last year's squad who were poor athletes.
,
Leading Tanker LARGE SAUSAGE PIZZA
SPAGHETTI & MEAT BALLS HICKORY SMOKED BARBECUED RIBS
White said he had questioned whether the gridders were true athletes and had been lucky in their first practices. He said he felt the gridders had done "a pretty good job."
Pictured is R.lph Llughlin, A4, Roanoke, VI., which meets powerful Indilna in its first meet of BROASTED CHICKEN
DIAL 8·7545
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114 S. DUBUQUE
_ of six returning I.ttermen who will form the the season at 7:30 tonight in the Field House pool, nucleus of the 196"'4 Hawkeye swimming team, -Photo by Jot L.ippincott
City High Falls An athlete is ~n athlete . ~nd the To East Moline
best come out m competition, he I a~~~~.Sults: By 78-66 Count
Epee: Bill Tucker (1); Ivory McDowell (2);, and John Bryan. The powerful East Moline Pan-
roll: OrvWe Townsend (1)' Ed Cole ., (2); and Al Hostetler. (Freshmen Jim thers Friday mght defeated the
~ ~ ~ * * * Open at Home Tonight-
Tankers To Test Powerful Hoosiers
Liston-Clay -Title Fight Set For Feb. 26 MIAMI IA'I - The worid heavy
weight title fight between "The Big ;Bear," champion Sonny Lislon, and ''The Louisville Lip," Cassius Clay. finally was set Friday for Feb. 26 in the Miami Beach Convention HaU.
After keeping newsmen waiting almosl two hours beyond the time of a scheduled new conferencewhile final details were ironed out - millionaire sportsman Bill MacDonald of Miami and Jick Nilon, Liston's adviser, announced that II-p agreement was complete.
MacDonald, treasurer of Tropical Park Race Track, will guarantee $625,000 from the live gate for the lighters' purses, with $400,000 going to Liston and $225,000 to Clay. He will have no interest in the closedcircuit theater television.
Television and other ancillary rights will be handled by Liston's organization, Intercontinental Promotions, Inc. The contract must be approved by William Faversham, the Louisville executive who heads the syndicate which handles Clay.
Open Sunday And Ev.ry Ev.nlng
KESSLER1S "Th. Tend., Crusr'
PIZZA Also Shrimp, Steale, Chlck.n, Sp.ghettl FREE DELIVERY
This is the second Liston tiUe match slated (or lIJiami Beacb. He was 10 ha~e had his second fight with Patterson here earlier this year, but after monumental mixups over contracts, postponements and a knee injury to tbe champion, the bOut eventually was beld in Las Vegas July 22. Liston scored another one-round knockout over Patterson.
Actually, this Lislon-Clay night was thought to have been set for Las Vegas - but the Nevada resort lost out.
Duke Nips Bucks, 76-75 MORGANTOWN, W.Va. l4'I -
Fourth·ranked Duke fought orf repeated rallies and defeated Ohio State 76-75 in Lhe opening game Friday of the West Virginia Ceniennial Classic basketball tournament.
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Recording Artist TROY
SHONDELL
THE HAWK
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Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday
SUITS •
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• Recently Remodeled • Orders To Go
M~lt::n! f'::~t_) B II (1) KI (2)' Iowa City Little Hawks, 78-66, in a and" Ji':i An!:r~n. ~::'hmen ~~: MIl: Mississippi Vall e y Conference ler, firs!.) game here.
Regina Tops Regis, 60-48
A! Knott, the Panther's all-conference center, scored 18 points in the first half to give the Illinois team a 10-point lead at the half, 42-32. The Little Hawks controlled him in the second half and be finished with 22 points.
Six returning lettermen will lead I around the return of such proven ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the Iowa swimming team when it performers as Ted Stickles, Big -opens the 1963-64 season against I Ten champion and world record powerful Indiana in the Field holder in the 200 and 400-yard inHouse pool at 7: 30 tonight. dividual medleys; Tom Stock, Big
Saturdays at Smith'. Chuck Wagon . __
ALL YOU CAN EAT - $1.96 Serving from 5·7:30 P.M.
TONIGHT'S MENU- SATURDAY, DEC. 7 e N.Y. Sirloin Steak
e Fried Young Chicken e Roast Prime Ribs of Beef
e Baked Halibut Steak
11 S, Dubuque Smith's Restaurant
tor Class or Christmas
. Egg Nog
you will be well suited after making your selection from Stephens' Christmas wares naturally tailored by:
from 6995
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Ir Clinton
Regina's Regals basketball team held visiting Regis Lo 18 points in
I the second half as they went on to win 60 to 48 here Friday night,
After holding a one-point lead at halftime, 31-30, the RegaJs, led by center John Miller's 29 points, broke through the visitor's pressing defense midway through the tbird quarter and held a substantial lead the rest of the game.
Fouls were costly for Regis as they outscored the vIctor's from tire field, 19 field goals to 18, but lost at the charity line. 24 to 10. Three Regis players fouled out iD the second half.
Forward Frank Lundon was high scorer for the visitors with 11 points. This ' was the first defeat for Regis in three games as they had previously defeated Anamosa and highly-ranked Marsballtown.
This was Regina's third victory in tbree games as they had beaten LaSalle and Prairie, both Cedar Rapids teams. Forward Dan Delaney scored 15 points and Steve Hanlon and Tom Rios had 9 and 7 points, respectively, 10 round out the Regals' scoring_
The Little Hawks led or trailed by a close margin during most of the first quarter but Knott and Ray Mueller, who came o(f the bench to start the second quarter, pushed the Panthers to their half-time lead_
John Gough, the other Iowa City forward, led the Hawklets in rebOunding and added 16 points,
East Moline is now 3-0. The Little Hawks are 1-2.
3 Gridders Are Granted Extra Year of Eligibility
Three Hawkeye grldders who suffered injuries and did not play the 1963 season, were granted an additional year of eligibility by the Big Ten Conference at its annual meeting.
Granted the extra year were halfback Bob LeZotte of Royal Oak, Mich., who was injured in a sandlot game before practice began; Terry Ferry of Boone, a halfback who bad a knee operation ; and Jim Wagner of Cedar Rapids who missed his sophomore year because of a broken ankle.
41 ('l~t~ NOW! NOW! ENDS
TUESDAY I
It's Paris . .. U's Irwin Shaw, , , It's in the Bold
Fre'lch Stylell
Highest Rating! The Bedroom Scelle
is so P oignallt it Becomes a Triumph! !
.Y. Daily News
iN TIiE FRENCH STylE
- SHOWS: 1:30 3:25 5:20 7:25 9:20-
• COMING SOON II
• December 11·13 ''THIS SPORTING I \
• Pecember 14·17 "HA~l~T".
Top performances are expected Ten winner in the 200-yard backfrom Jim Cook in the backstrOke, stroke; Gary Verhoeven, 200 and Bill Sjostrom and John Jones in the butterfly, Gary Grey in the in- SOO-yard Big Ten freestyle cham-dividual medley, Ralph Laughlin in pion; Rick Gilbert, one-meter divthe distance crawl and Michael Le- ing titlist and second in the threeVois, last year's outstanding sopho- meter; and Fred Schmidt and Lary more, in the diving competition. S c h u 1 h 0 f, versatile performers
COACH BOB Allen also expects whose main slrength is in the butsophomores Ron Berry, Ralph Bex- terfly. tine. Mike Petersen, Phil Miller ---and John Matson to score some points for the Hawkeyes.
Indiana, winner of three consecutive Big Ten championships and 31 consecutive dual meets, will be trying to re·establish its ranking as the most powerful collegiale team in the nation in lhe face of I some who say the Hoosiers' string has run out.
ANY PESSIMISTIC 0 u I look stems from critical personnel loss-es through graduation, foremost among these Chet Jastremski. who rewrote the record book in the breaststroke and paced the Hoosiers to national prominence.
COUStLMAN'S reasonIng is built
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Handsome Young TV & Recording Star
TOMMY ROB
"Everybody" "Shella"
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ROSCOE & HIS LITTLI GREEN MEN
Adm. $1.50 -I Student Rates $1.00 with
10 Card
TODAY! ENDS MONDAY!
l@lHU:@lwllllll~). ROO lAURfN'MOllHf{'GfNf WOAHIElS 1~:I!llllijijm:1 m:l~nH1i :1'1 JA~K lA~~ON .lH[ SHfRWOOD SINGfRS
CONTINUOUS SHOWS EVERY DAY FROM 1:30
pI!,: It. i'J Starts TUESDAY I Pat Boone in "Main AHraction"
SHRIMP or CHICKEN SNACK includes French Fries & Garlic Toast
ONLY 69" Just Pick up at Drive·in Window
LASSIE'S RED BARN 715 S. Rlvenide Drive
DOORS OPEN 1:15
NOW -ENDS WEDNESDAY -
ABOUNDING TN HUMOR _, .
Rough and Tumble Comedy Is
Opened W Lclel
In IlEJID LIMIII BUYI
.HI lUIIIDII
_EO. '1taDIOC11"
all! ~~oGlO~[Jmg T[CHNlCOlOR- f'ANAVISION·
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Plus - Color c.rtoon "HOBO'S HOLIDAY"
Speci.1 I n Color "ATOMIC LADY"
Dial 8·7533
- DOORS OPEN 1 :15-
I~il~~~:ji NOW -ENDS
WEDNESDAY-"Contlnuous Shows"
Shows -1:30,3:25,5:30,7: 25, 9:20 - Last F.ature 9:35 P,M.
There comes a time in every father's life ••.
when his baby becomes
a IIbabe" • . .
Is," HE&, ShES MiNE'
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