ited en. Bulganin Calls Letter 'Good' MOSCOW (U.P.)-Premier Nikolai Bulgain told Western correspondents last night he thought President Eisenhower's letter asking Russia to freeze nuclear arms was "good and very interesting." The Moscow Home Service broadcast the text of the Eisenhower letter and it was carried in all morning newspapers today. Premier Bulganin, speaking to correspondents at a Kremlin reception for Danish Premier H. C. Hanson, smiled when first asked about the letter and said "it requires much study." When Mr. Molotov nodded approval the Soviet Premier said, "It's good and very interesting letter." He added, "I hope to reply as soon as possible and hope this correspondence will continue a long time." Asked by a reporter whether he would like to visit the United States, the Premier jokingly said he would welcome such a visit though he would be unable to go "so long as they require Soviet citizens to be fingerprinted." Bulgain knows, of course, that official visitors do not need fingerprinting, but he did not pass up an opportunity for a bantering dig at the McCarran Act. 1 Dead,25 Hurt In Indiana Wind MARION, Ind. (UP)—A killer tornado ripped a mile long trough through the heart of Marion's residential district Tuesday killing a young woman and injuring 25 others. The twister struck the city of 30,000 residents (about 9 p.m. Kansas time) flattening scores of homes, damaging two schools and toppling bricks and siding from many other buildings. The city was plunged into darkness when the storm downed power and telephone lines. General Hospital was without lights for more than an hour and physicians used flashlights and portable lanterns to care for the wounded. Red Cross facilities were set up to feed and shelter the homeless. City and state police and volunteer National Guardsmen directed rescue operations, traffic and anti-looting measures. The body of Mrs. Floyd Dove was found in the ruins of her home.Her two sons, Carson and Randy, were among those seriously injured. Her husband suffered a broken left arm. An expectant mother, Mrs. Cain Baker, and her year old child were reported missing for hours after the twister struck but they were found uninjured after a night long search. Forty parents were practicing for a ministrel show at Washington Junior High School when the tornado knocked a chimney through the roof and into the room where they were gathered. Bricks and debris showered into the school but no one was seriously injured. Aw, Let Us Sleep, KU Women Plead College dorms often present a variety of problems to their residents. Two of the women at Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall tried to solve one of their problems recently by posting the following notice on their door. "Fine! Well! Good! "We are happy that you had a good time or we are very sad that you did not have a good time. But, please, although we will be glad to lend our ears to your joys or troubles at almost any time, right now we are going to sleep. Please do not open the door, walk in, shake us, and ask us if we are asleep. "Believe us—we were!" The Chevrolet Motor Car Co. was formed at Detroit in 1911 and moved to Flint, Mich., in 1913. Put Your Pants On, Nudism Is Illegal COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP)—The Ohio Supreme Court today upheld the constitutionality of state laws prohibiting the practice of nudism. The court also refused to permit the filing of articles of incorporation for the National Nudist Council. Byrd: Pole Not 'Cold War' Spot MIAMI (UP)-Adm. Richard E. Byrd, returning from Antarctica Tuesday, reported there is no "cold war" between Americans conducting "Operation Deep Freeze" and Russian explorers. Adm. Byrd said, however, that he plans to talk over the "delicate matter of claims" with the U.S. State Department. Adm. Byrd arrived by plane from Panama and plans to leave for Washington Friday. The U.S. and Russia are setting up scientific bases in south polar regions as part of the 40-nation observance of the geophysical year. The operations will extend through 1959. The American group, including 72 men at Little America and 90 men at McMurdo Sound 400 miles to the east, have been in touch with the Russian expedition by radio. Iceland's capital, Reykjavik, is 1,700 miles closer to the North Pole than is New York City but has an average January temperature only one degree lower than that of the United States metropolis, thanks to the warming influence of the Gulf Stream. Jute, East Pakistan's chief export crop, whose fiber makes cloth and burlap bags, grows 8 to 10 feet tall. It is planted in water, usually in small jungle patches, and harvested with long knives. WASHINGTON (UP)—President Eisenhower told his news conference that he has no criticism of Vice President Nixon as a man, an associate or a running mate on the Republican ticket. But he said he has not presumed to tell Mr. Nixon what he should do about the campaign this year. Ike Won't Push Nixon Into Race The President also said that if his general physical fitness to conduct the burdens of hard work in the presidency showed signs of definite deterioration, he would then step aside and put the matter before the American people. He said he was not speaking of a brief illness such as a one week attack of influenza, but basic Inability to perform his job as he sees it. Other highlights of Mr. Eisenhower's news conference: He regarded as favorable the immediate reaction of Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin to his March 1 proposal for an eventual ban on production of nuclear weapons. He said this country, in its relations with Russia, should be alert to follow up any opening that looks as if it might lead to lessening of international tensions. He said he believes the United Nations should take urgent and early action on the tense situation in the Middle East, with Israel and the Arab world agreeing to abide by U.N. armistice terms. He disclosed that Mr. Bulganin at the Geneva "summit" meeting last July discussed one or two moves Russia was making in the Middle East. He added that Mr. Bulganin in effect described these moves as purely commercial. Ribe, Denmark, was famed in medieval times for its "code of justice," says the National Geographic Society. Under the code women were given preferential treatment. One ruling was, "a woman who has stolen and is subject to be hanged, shall, instead, be buried alive because she is a woman." Look how much Our Compare these Spun-Soft® cottonts with any other low-price argyll. 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