| OCR Text |
Show INTELLIGENCE co SC IflOl FOR STRIPTEASE tL" & monopoly of professional iqWBTS teasers. Mrs. Gieske Kop, 31, otherwise known as Cocco Maruu, "international star re- of the striptease," her cently decided to offer Dutch skills to any needy housewife. A veteran ("I've undressed myself from Tokyo to Damascus"), Mrs. Kop decided that "most men would not go to strip joints if their wives knew how to put on or take off a good show." well-travel- When Mrs. Kop ed first broadcast her pitch ("a strip now and then brings new excitement into marital ht relations") over late-nig-hunshe received radio, dreds of letters in response. She set up school in Amsterdam's Hotel Porte d'Or, charging 5 gulden (same as the price of admission to most strip shows in Amsterdam) for a full course in the art of erotic undressing. Some testimonials from satisfied students: "This will be a lot of fun for my husband." "My husband likes erotic play and before I had little w, am r f nr inTiir f f STAGE: GERTRUDE LAWRENCE AND YUL BRYNNER IN THE KING AND I to offer him." "I QUOTE TO rrn in in III In 1956, still coining A...II1 Ltll money on a good tury-Fo- x Til Til thing, 20th Century a IIimI lU IB produced replaced Gertrude Lawrence "Anna and the with Deborah Kerr and rf King film, Siam" which proved a presented the film version n ,F l"h in 1946 20th Cen- - box-offi- ce Irene success. It starred of Dunne and Rex Ha- rrison, one of the great lovers of our time. A film few years was later the musicalized on Broadway with Yul Brynner and the late Gertrude "The King and I." 20th Century is pre teleparing a half-ho- ur vision series of Anna, the Now, English schoolteacher, and the King of Siam. Television is so devoid of original ideas that Lawrence under the title every studio is poring "The King and I," music and industriously over its lyrics provided by Richard backlog searching for any Rodgers and Oscar property capable of Hammerstein. t revival. "Indeed it is R-maUlII part of the general pattern of misguided policy that our country is now geared to an arms economy which was bred in an now stale, iicl v c imji u confidence in myself." m West TJg needs Germany teachers, and the U.S. EACI1ERS has them to spare. So why not get together? Last spring German ed- ucation authorities began unemployed recruiting American teachers and sc- ientists to serve as math and science teachers in Hamburg's city high schools. received The Germans 500 applications from American M.A. s and Ph.D.'s, of whom 65 were selected to sign two-ye- teaching ar a contracTts at $530-$8month. The higher purchasing power of the German mark makes this roughly equivalent to American 00 teaching salaries. If all goes well in the first year of the experiment, the Germans expect to hire increasing numbers of U.S. teachers. The city of Hamburg alone will need 160 new teachers this year just to cover retirements, and an additional 410 to cover expanded enrollment. Only a small part rt this need can be universities. met by German May 15, 1952, before the of the joint session gan State Michi- Legislature, Lansing, Mich. induced artificially of war psychosis hysteria and nurtured upon an incessant propaganda of fear. While such an economy may produce a sense of seeming prosperity for the moment, it rests on an illusionary foundation of complete unreliability and renders our political leaders almost a among greater fear of peace than is their fear of war." Douglas MacArthur, PARADE OCTOBER ID 1'H |