On 'the Inside , I, . The Weather LocCl1 Conatructioft • , • PaQe 2 Part.,. e.... ,. wI&b I6t· Hoqan Wins Open tered thow"" ....,. aDd S , .• Paqe 4 MODtl.,., Hlp toU,. '/5: New Heart Dru~ low, U. Hl8b hlrQ,. • • • PaQe 5 e al owan 'I: low, 57 . Est. 1868 - AP Leased Wire. AP Wirephoto. UP Leased Wire - Five Cents Iowa City. Iowa. Sunday. Tune 17. 1951 - Vol. 85. No. 215 i UN Jroop's Continue Advance Seven Gl's D,ie Eccles Reports Bank Forced Cain Charges,Truman Sen George irhlenks ON ' .> R d B 'Id A In Red Atro(lty , D' h H' Betrayed Soldier Dead •• , ~~~ .. ~ , . L~P UI ;~'L~a Near Hwa(hon ~~~~!O Nt~ ) _Is~" i ~rg:". m~~' ODd B~~!~G!!!a~Bans," Truce at Parallel 38 '> .' •• • ..r~u~ · ;:. . :. it _~..,ju"" -."":.. 1 "-' CEN'I RAL FRONT. KOREA lPI fonner cnamnan of the federal reserve board. aid in a book pub- Harry Cain (R-Wash.) charged 1: 1(""",,,,, ,/ ' .,H.J~: .' flJ ' .).. {,.:" ,. ~ , .';~".-/ <' ":.::, ., -Retreating Communists shot Iishecl Saturday that Pre ident Truman demoted him from the Saturday that President Truman . \,

. 1"-'''' ·: I ,r-" • ,; ., ' ~ i- ~.• .c. H... ,O""'. w.. . .. , Munclunt ~, such. a.troclt reported since the St. Le. uis, said he had "no com- refuse to grant any Bank of Amer- o ·"f''-""~.''::':' . ~ b f publican aUack on White House Holding Jet Pilots ,.' ,.: • ""'."""!, • .. ,lIr1J.., :~. '.'.' _. ~<," ~ ~ eglnnmg 0 the year. , Many Iment.· lca applications to absorb addi- .. :,j '.' . ~~.-' . .>.I'~r.;:;' r'· ;- IF" L", < , r;;:. prisoners were brutally slain dur- The reserve board and th. e jus- lional banks as branches. foreign policies. He added: '" ' ,. " r (" ...... " '<' .~ - ..... <- F. t' ~ . d . In N be 1947 E I "Such ad· · Is th . "I I ~w(.' ~ I{. ... J .~~, ~ ;' \.:. < " , , J ing the headlong retreat of the Ilce epartmcnt stduled at various . ovem r. • cc es con· eclSlon e 10.. ca For Investigation <. ~.. IJ(,.... '.~ - ..... ;. ~ --': '- " A~ . H... .t.on . (g\\:1 'K C .... - I ts I f II Itimes during the L940's how .it tlnued. the reserve board an- consequence of a 10·year period , ~ I!:' " "'.'~ •. ' .. ..,;. •.• '. ~ : It.,.. " ~. '. orean oliUliun s ast a · ed th t ·t k· WIESBADEN GERMANY·· .• ~. . ... Ii. J _"t' T···" '0. , . ". ,. "'~ . , :" r . , . could legally restrain the Trans· nounc a I was ma 109 a ot appeasement and cowardly , .... - ~ :i ~. I · " .0 "'';'', , c:to.Iil ( .;. ~~~'- -;'. '.' Y_II~ The Victims were identified as America corporation, frOm acquir- study to see if it could file a com- surrender of American intere.ts Czecho lovakla Is holding for fur- ~f ~~ tcuched off the tragic fire in the • y. , . ISaturday fired assistant physics before hostilities. Communl-'i 'lI'ftectin .. vltal .ea. 55·year-old Hospice de Sainte City Recreation 'Needs Go Ids b 0 rOil g h , 73, was they had Ignored order~ requirmg Prof. Joseph W. Weinberg. named FI" Arts Festl·val Asked If he was leanlne toward ea,e routes bUrIed 'rtllJery fire Cunegonde. stricken with a heart attack them to cancel coal strLkcs. "Scientist X" during a congres- ne the pro· MacArthur camp. Georg 1 told reportera: .t Allied units north and north· Firemen had to shore up the while at the horne of his daugh- Both times Ihe judge said he si~na aton! spy probe. and gave '1 W mi 01 Yanl'lu at attacklnr UN wobbly walls of the burned-out Wh at Iowa City wants and til M T Al G ld thought Lewis ought to go to pri- him a year s pay, about $6.000. The 13th annual SUI tine arts I· alwaya thoqbt Utai II we fomes. building before thet could con- needs in the way of recreational er- n- aw. rs. . an () s· . The board of regents adopted festival ofCicially open at 4 p.m. can't brln, thl. war &0 a con· An eighth ' army communique tinue searching through the rubble facilities will be discussed Monday borough Jr. The U.S. district judge son but h~ wou.ld YLeid to ~e unanimously a recommendation today, with ceremonies In the eh."en lOon. we're fOln .. &0 ,et reported a "limited objective" at- for more bodies, Some of the inside at a workshop sponsored by the also was celebrating .his 42nd government s adVice and only fine made by university President J. L. Iowa Memorial Union inaugur- Into a world confllct ,"ner or tack on the central front to "Im- walls of the sprawling six·story Iowa City League of Women wedding anniversary him. Morrill woo suspended Weln"erll alin, the exhibition ot "Six Cen. later. As &0 wbote etr.ten I prove a local position." but the structure c?llapsed during the Voters. The conference will be . In the J 946 trial he lined Lewis May 16 atter the physicist refused turle! of Master Drawings." ~ t. It:. till a QV '''D,'' ellaC! area was not jipecified. three-hour fire.. held in the YWCA offices of the Before he was appointed to the $LO,OOO and the union $3 .5 million. to answer four questions m3de by It will c{)ntlnue through Aug. 1. He Indicated, however. that he . .' ' A 73·year-old reSident of the Iowa Memorial Union. court here In 1939, Goldsborough a federal grand jury In Washlng- Winslow Ames. nationally known was not sold by the admll1lstratlon N~wspapermen In TOKYO w~re Roman Catholic home blamed his Mrs. Allyn Lemme. director of was a member of congress from The sULlreme court later upheld ton d . argument thnt expandln, the war adv s d Sunday t re th t . rawlOg expert. will speak on the ' alA K I Ie . , 0 noon a, new opening of a chapel door for fan. the workshop, said Saturday alt Maryland for 18 years. Lewis' personal fine but reduced In a ltatemeot aUer the reo signiticance of the show as it ap. ou_e orea would r k involve- CC ntsorsh~IPh rfesttrhlctlon&,r wedre In et- niog the fire into life. sessions are open to the public. The judge had worked a hall the union's fine to $700,000. . ,ents' dec ..lon late Saturday. Mor- pears to the outsider. ment in war with RussIa. f ec w IC ur er s owe report- One session will be from 3 to 5 . ' I d "The, tall! aboui r"II." he said. In, of the Allie.' a .. gre· pa ·· day In court Saturday hearing In the J 948 trial. Judge Golds- r II lal , "The re,ents. on mr rec· Prof. Earl E. Har ..... r. director '''l'h., ...... r .... in J ••• - w ..... n p .. sSlve - T d FO I D p.m., and the second from 7:30 routine cases, e daU. 1m I .. ~ ~ - Wl~ • ,,_,,0; trOlling lies ay Ina ay t 10 borough flned Lewis $20000 and omm n n. unan OUS y .p. ot the SChool ot fine urts. Prof. Ii wall deelded '- ,0 In'· K.orea." • 0 p.m. There was no indication during • proved 'the discontinuance of Prof. .., ... Along most of the. battlefront Included on the program will be the time he was on the bench that the union $1.4 million. Joseph W. Welnber,'s duties. In Lester D. LonfllUln. head of the George agreed that the war Saturday the Allied patrols art department. and Prof. WIl- ho Id be b h' ... bl • t in f t t h · li or ass anges the presentation of a survey by he was feeling ill. court officials The fines against the union were ieaehln, and research. effective )jam S. Hecksher, art department. s u roui • .0 a reasona e f anne d ou ron 0 t elr nes F CI Ch Prof. Elizabeth Halsey. head of sal·d. among lhe largest in American June I" 19", b t i'" la a conclusion al soon as possible." ·th rttl ~ t t ii, '" U w ..'.a ry Uf· will also speak briefly. WI I e enemy on ac. _ Tuesday is the last day sluden'ls the women's physical education He was born at Greensboro, Md., legal history. Inr the academic v ... ,. 'Q~'.~. But, When a ked If a settlement at Allied cunoa. "1tb Ule aid of can make registration changes department. on what Iowa City Sept. L6, 1877. He began his legal In May 1945, Judge Golds. The university president ~ . Dwight KJrsch, director ot the the 3Sth parallel would be a "rea- ,lant aearchllcMI, hammered at widlOut approval of the deans, wants in the way of recreation. career in Denton, Md ., in 1901. He borough signed a court order that out that the regents' aclivu W

UNIVERSITY CALENDAR DAILY IOWAN PUOTOS UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Items are scheduled BY In the President's office, Old Capitol JOHN DURNIAK

~inistars," • SundaYI June 17 ture series, "The Eng- The $10 million Veteran's hos­ 7:00 p.m. - Sunday Evening lish puppet dancers and musicians. pital is progresSing nearly on Vespers, Rabbi Morris N. Kertzer, Macbride auditorium. schedule, G. L. Miller, resident West Approach to Old Capitol (or Saturday, June 23 engineer for the project said Sat­ Senate Chamber in case of rain). -- Labor-~anagement confcr- urday. Monda)", June 18 ence, house chamber, Old Capitol. Sunday. June 24 Miller said the l3-story building 8:00 p.m . .:.. Square dancing and 7;00 p.m. - Sunday evening should be completed by Sept. 26. folk dancing, Iowa Union. vespers, Dr. Morris Kcrtzcr, "Our He added that it would be 60 to 8:00 p.m. -- Graduate college Twentieth Century Values; Whith­ 90 days after that before the 489 lecture, Prof. Ira De A. Reid, Ha- cr Are They Leading Us," West Qed hospital will receive patients. veriord college, "Leadership In the Approach to Old Capitol (In 'Case Approximately 1.3 million bricks Urban Community," senate cham- of rain, senate chamber). have gone into the structure. The ber, Old Capitol. Monday, June 25 whole building is reinforced with Tuesday, June 19 8:00 p.m. - Graduate collegt! 1,279 tons ot steel. 9:45 a.m., 2:00 and 8:00 p.m. - lecture, Prof. Paul Oskar Kristel­ An apartment building with liv­ Chlld Welfare Conference, Senate ler, Columbia university, "Ficlno ing quarters for the manager, four Chamber, Old Capitol. and Renaissance Platoism," senate staff officers, 31 interns and 13 Wednesday, June 20 chamber, Old Capitol. lJurses is located to the east of the 9:45 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. - Child 8:00 p.m. - Square dancing and hospital. Welfare Con fer en c e, Senate folk dancing program, roof deck, Construction on the Coralville Chamber. Old Capitol. Iowa Union. dam, four milcs south of Iowa Friday, June 2Z Tuesday, June 26 City's 'city limits, is in the second - Labor-Management confcr- 3:00 p.m. - The University club, phase of a three· phase project. ence,. house chamber, Old Capitol. guest tea and musical program, When the second phase is com­ 8:00 p.m. - Summer session lec-Iowa Union. pleted, three outiet works at the east side of the dam, three emer­ (For Information re,ardlnr dates beyon" this schedule. gency gates, electrical installations 'lee retervatlons in the oftlcc of the President, Old Capitol.) for operating the gates, a control --_._------house and an emergency generator will be finished. PLASTERING ON INSIDE WALLS at the new Veteran's hos­ A 23-fOOT TUNNEL, one of three outlet works at the cast ellu of Ule Corah,l.lle U III, will probably The Texas Construction com­ pital has begun. The , 10 million hospital is scheduled for com­ b(' finished this year. The hllge concrete tunnels wi 11 carry the waters of the I'pwa river past the dllll GENERAL NOTICES pany, Dallas, expects to finish the pi·~t! on by Srpt. 26 but will probably not have any patients for when the project is completed. The Texas Construvlion c()mpany. Dallas, Tex., also expects to finish second phase of the dam this year. 60-90 days after that. An apartmcnt building next to the hospital three cmcrgenfY I:'ates, electdcal installations for operating the gates. a control house and an emer. GENERAL NOTICES Ihould be deposited wUh 'he city etJlwr 01 When completed, possibly )n late tor staff members and nurses is also nearing I'dlnpletlOn. gency generator. Company englncers expect the dam to be completely (inished by 1954. The Dally Iowan ~n 'he newsroom In East' hall. Noticea mUlt be 1953 or early 1954, the earth dam submitted b)" 2 ,. m. 'he day preceding tlrst publlcation; they will ~ wUlbe J,fQO ieet wide at the base NOT be accepted by "bOD~, a~d must be TYPED OR LEGIBLY ana '~2 feet wide at the top. , . . , Workmen are working on the , WRITTEN and SIGNED by a fetlPonslble petson. footings of the hospital school for , ", , COMMERCE CRiER staff appll- annex, and graduate students may I severely . handicapped children, \ eat/ons may b.e obtained in the be reached by telephoning ext. ISUI architect Ge~rge L. Horner brary in 2560 said Saturday. It IS scheduled to :on'lmerce deal)'s officc, 104 Unl- . be completed sometime next sum- rt ,erSity haU, mer. TUE LOST and Fou .. d. run by Alpha Phi Omega, has closed for The $750,000 bu.ilding, located STUDENTS REGISTERED with the SUl.."!mer. west of the University General the educational placement office, hospital, was started on April 10. East hall, fl)om C-I03, arc re~ W. B. Schoenbohm, director of qUl!sted to notify the office ot UNIVERSITY VESPERS will be the hospital school for severely anr change ih their address be­ held on the west approach to Old handicapped children, said the fore they ~eave the'campus for the Capitol Sunday evening, June 17 lirst part of the construction would lummer. at 7 p.m. If the weather is un­ include one dormitory, clallsrooms, favorable, the program will be in treatment rooms and offices. FOREIGN STUDIES students the senate chamber. ~orris N. Shortage of materials and brick­ expecting certificates by the end Kertzer, former professor in the layers has delayed.the completion ot the semester should immediate­ schol of religion and now the di­ of the addition to the women's ly submit lists of foreign studies rector of inter-religious activities gym until late fall, SUI architect courses (with grades and prob­ of the American Jewish commit­ George Horner said. able grades) to Prot. Funke, 106 tee, will speak on the topic, "Our Prof. Elizabeth Halsey, head of Schaeffer hall. 20th Century Values: Whither the women's physical education They Are Leading Us." department, said many original SIX WOMEN and three men are plans have been dropped because needed to perform incidental TOURS OF THE main library the funds appropriated in 1943 are dances in the second act of the will be held daily at 10:30 a.m. insufficient now. opera, "Die Fledermaus," \July 31 , and 3:30 p.m. through Wed., June The $300,000 addition to the wo­ Aug. I and 2. No ballet experience 20, for graduate students and men's gym, begun In October, 1950, I~ required, but a good sense of others who are interested. acijoins the west side of the old rhY'hm is necessary. Those in­ gym and extends down the hill terested please contact Prof. PH.D. FRENCH READING ex- along Jefferson st. to Madison st. J.. ewln Goff, dramatic arts bldg., or amination will be given Friday. The part to be finished will tfI­ Prof. Dudley Ashton, department June 22 from 7-9 a.m., room 224 1clude research rooms, enclosed of women's physical education: Schaeffer hall. No one will be ad- areas for individual study, dress­ mltted to the examination unless Jng room, dass rooms, camping TilE MAIN LIBRARY regulljr application has been made by \laboratofr, a new correctives unit summer session hours will be 8:30 signing, before Thursday, June 21, and office space. a.m. to J2 midnight " ~onday the sheet posted outside room 307 A temporary roof wl11 be built throuflh Thursday. 8:30 a.m. to 5 Schaeffer hall. The next examina- ' over the addition so that the third p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. tion will be given Friday, July 27, floor may be built as soon as the to 5 p.m. Sunday. Hours for de­ at the same hour, same room. money ls available. It will include partmental 110rarles "';\11 be posted a large gym, crafts room, movie on the door of each library. nRST STUTTERERS GROUP room and offices. Estimated cost meeting will be ~onday, June will be $150,000. , ; GEOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT 18, at 9 a.m. Report to room E-16 The construction of an apart- , has moved from temporary quar- East hall at that time lor details. ment.unit dwelling In the southern A DOOR ON THE \VEST SIDE of the natlo"",' ruard armory wtI t@1'II In the ann@x ot the old L!- lIart of Unlvel'llity Heilhts may widened durin, • remodeling Job r cc4!I1t1~· ,., '&0 permit rU&~ brary to otllces on the 'third floor GERMAN PH.D. READING ex- be completed by November, builder AN ADDITION TO TUE WOMEN'S GYMNASIUl\f that will include rcsearch rooms, enclosed areas members to drivc medium Lanks Into thc ~MI',tJI~. A UO,OOO I.· of the ~p.st wing of the new Li- aminaUons will be given Friday. George Nagle said Saturday. for Individual study, dressing rooms, class room, camping laboratory, and office spacc, will prob. provement project on the building, IOClltll~ 01\ S. Dubuque .... brary. The telephone number re- June 22, 1-3 p.m. in room 104, Nagle laid the first dwellings abl)" be completed In October. The $300,000 project bas been delayed rccently by makrlal and labor Is sct,~duled to be complet. d In August. Two guard unlb, thl! S41l mains the same, ext. 2400. The Schaeffer hall. Register In room Iin the 92-unil project may be Ihort.a~I'R. A temporary roof w I be bllllt over the addition liD a. third floor 1'311 be bunt III 800b •• reconnaissance company and the 100th (mrP'I)q.I) baUalion cl~ar· graduate study room, however, Is 101 Schaeffer hall by noon ThW'll-lcomPleted by AUllust. Construction tunds lire available. inlf ('omltllny, will Uqll the remOdeled ~ l r u r'l!rc. sUll located in the temporary day. June 21. was starteq July, 1950. , . , THE DAILY IOWA.~, UNDAY, J UN"! 17. 1951 - P GE Tm EE ~ ' u I (Iarice Hickman, 'Three Workshop To Open Arts, Crafts Offered'Latin Workshop d I ~aul O. Herrmann Good Summer Fabri cs On Adult Education To Open Monday Wed in New York, At Lake Okoboji At Summer PI aygroun dS "Latin and th~ od m World~ Miss Clarice Delores Hickman, will be the theme of the third an­ Six SUI Caculty members will Four, lllllln 'r playground will open for Iowa it) yOlln ters nual 10\l,a Latin workshop, 'hich jJugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel 1 y J. Hickman of Carmel. :N".Y., mar­ leave for Lake Okoboji today to ~ I ondo). witb evel) allivit~ trom arts and emft to sports alld opens at SUI fOn?a . ried Paul Oscar Herrmann, son l'omPlete arrangemen!s for an freeplu\'inl1 a\ ailahlc to ever\, t....id. The pla'ground will b open Teach~ from hleb schools and ~ Oscar Henmann of Dubuqul', Adult Education workshop, whleh . ~ " lcolleg throuchout Iowa and at 5 p.m. Wednesday. lopens Monday at the Iowa Lake­ through ug. 24. other tates will study lor three The double ring service was held ~ide laboratory and will continue I Marl"on Plavground are locateu at weeks how L tin can be of re31 III Mount Carmel Bap.tist church, i through Saturday. Jo k er Te I.s )' " I,d I I ~24 \\' use to students for modern living. carmel, N.Y. The Rev. H. Pierce The six are Prof. Hew Roberts l.00SeH'1 gr•• e 100. I · IFo.-ot. Gerald F. E e, head of the Simpson and Dr. Philip S. Waters and Prof. Roy Minnis, college of '! B ntoD Sl.; Longfellow school, classics department, is director ~fic i at ed . Cochran. extension diviSion, Wal­ Woman Her Husban U 1130 Seymour ve.; Brown st. ot the workshop. The bride was given in mar­ education; Jobn Davies and Lee ill d' J playground. corner of Governor Besides a required basic course rille by her father. Cochran. extension division; Wll­ Was KI e In apan and Brown sts.• and Benton st. In the Latlo lanauage, th work­ !t\iss Adele F. Herrmann, Cedar ~ ~r Dewe.\' ,and Prof. Gladys playground, on Dubuque and Ben- hop comprises a number of elee­ IJPids, was maid of hpnor. Brides­ Lynch. dramatic arts depar!ment. ton su. tlves, ot which ea-ch member may ,.Ids were Misses Natalie A. Purpo, e Qf the workshop is to MARION. IOWA (.IPI - II was, The playgrounds will be open choose two. The workshop carries Townsend and Jean D. Simpson, help adult aducation leaders dis­ "a very cheap trick," ays lI1 Sgt. Monday through Frl&ay from 1 to three mester-hours of graduate bOth of Carmel, N.Y. cover a better approach to their Thomas V. Maher who was re- 8 p.m., with the exception ot Mon- C!'edit i:l eithe& classics or educa­ Best man was Richard C. Herr­ teaching problems. About 30 educ­ ported to his wiCe as a war j day evening, when the area wHl hon. JDJn n, Chicago, Ill. Usheri were ational and non-academic leaders casualy by an unknown person. close at 5 p.m. for staU meeting. In addition to ElSe, the work- Robert N. Hoffman and Hfford are rej!istered tor the day sessions. Sergeant Maher a edi~ I Any chUd ot school age will be $t.op taU Includes Prot. Dorrance A. Ho ffman, Pelham, N.Y.; Evening sessions will begin at . ' m a admitted to the playgrounds. A S. Whit~. classics depamnent; Francis W. Kieper, ,Chappaqua, 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday eOl' ~5m~n s!ntlo,ned at the . Camp man and woman director will be Prof. Agnes K. L. Mi chels, Latin N.Y. , and Charles J, Caggiano J r., ,. 8 p,m., Monday through Thursday Om ya ospltal In .J~pan, sal~ Sat- In charge or each playground. d partment. Bryn Mawr colleee, Brew ster, N.Y, in Gull Pain state park. These ~rday ~e has been 10 no aCCident, Adults are alsO ureed to attend and Waldo E. Sweet. LaUn Inp . FollOWIng a reccption at the sessions are open to the public and IS ~ot Ill, ~a .been ,on duty and land take part In the many activi- structor, Wllliam Penn Charter Drew School for Girls, the couple will include unusual demonstra­ wntes to hIS Wile datly. ties. Ther will be arts and crafts, school nd istant editor, Classl- telt on a wedding trip to the Adi­ tions of successful adult education ~ rs . Ma~er, mOI~er oC three ,roup games, story telling, equlp- cal Weekly. lIIodack mountains. problems. ch ll ~ren, said a lew Oleht ngo she ment eames, all types of sporlS, The bride is a graduate of Car­ Spon!:ors 0( the workshop are received a telephone call Crom an special events and freeplaying. JIltI high school and Russell Sage SUI, Iowa Slate colle~e and the unknown man who told her Sgt. CIIJ1ege. She attended Columbia Iowa department of public instruc­ Maher was killed in an accident SUI June Grad Ordered university. tion, • abou' June I. Korean Missionary To Adive Duty in Army The bridegroom is a graduate of Mrs. Maher said she checked Dubuque Senior high school. He with the war department in Wash­ To Be on Chapel William H. 01 on Jr., son ot Mr. attend ed the Untversity of Du­ 4-Yea r-Old Rides Car ington and was advised there was and MrJ. William Olson, 41$ Ron­ buque and SUI, where he is now ro record of h r husband's death, The Rev. Henry W. Lampe, re- aIds st.. has been ordered to duty a senior medical student. He is a Later Mrs. Maher received l eUer~ tired Korean missionary, will be lit Ft. Belbolr, Va., U a second l!embe r of Alpha Kappa Kappa, Bumper 10 Miles which had been written June 4 ~pE'Dk"l' on the WSUI morning hputenant in the army engineer medical fraternity. and 5. chap!!\ proll"ams this week to be corps. At 60 MPH; Unhurt Editor Ralph Young ot the broadcast at 8 a.m. His topic tor A graduate of City hlllh school, Merion Sentinel who Iirst reported the week is "Love God and Love 01 on r c ived his commission and Newcomers Club JOLIET, ILL. (IP)-A four-year- the incident called i "the cruelest, Your Neighbor." IB.S. dl'lIree In fnglneerln. at SUI old girl went tor a 10-mlle, 60- meanest hoax" ver perpetrated. The Rev. Mr. Lampe and hIs Ibis spra ne. mile-an-hour ride perllhed on the Mrs, John W. Weiland oC Cedar wife were missionaries In Korea ______--:-_ Jo Meet Monday \ tront bumger of an automobile Rapids, said she had received a from 1908 to 1948. His brother Is Take a Ten Les. on Course 3nturda). Later she told her sister let er frOm her husband, Cpl. Prof. M. Willard Lampe. director - in Four Le ons - University Newcomers club will , , ~ COMPANIONS IN PIQUE - HALF "no more rides," John W. Weiland, who al~o is of the school of reIJglon. meet to play bridge at 7:30 p.m, She is Patricia Frazer, of Plain- station d at Camp Omiya. Included in the Rev. Mr. BALLROOM DANCING This dress and coat junior cos­ ING - is this dress of black Y neckline front and brief Monday at the University club tume combines plain white pique fitld, lll., whose sister, Helen, 17, The letter contained OJ money Lnmpe's programs this week wlll Bellnner's lind Advanced Le ons marquisette and taffeta. Bone in-one sleeves distinguish this loom in the Iowa Memorial witb black "tweed piqua," told newsmen how it happened: order which Cpl. Weiland said be illustrations trOm his many MIMI YOUDE WURIU Union. butt'o/ls fasten the dresS all the summer dress of ,moke gray Ed Bond, 25, at Plainfield, and Sgt. Maher had given him so Mrs. 'ears' x pcrienc!! In r liSClous named for the pattern of the Dlnl 94B:I All faculty wives are invited to weave. The sleeveless dress has way. The double collar of cream­ silk hantung. J ewel1 .. d buttons Helen got into his car to make Weiland could buy n surprisc work. sltend and any other members a fast tri to nearb Joliet before bouquet of roseS to be presented. to a shallow U -sbaped neckline and colored taffeta has s mall red continue past the waistline Into p y Mrs. Moh r today On the occasslon should, feel free to come if they deep patch pockets. roses in between. the side. wrapped skirt. wish, the committee in charge a dl y ele?~lng store closed at 510t the Maher's wedding annivers­ said. p.m. PatrICIa ~sked to go al~,ng ary, Weiland's leller WRS mailed Lut .W?S told ~o, not today. only last week. Chairman of the committee is Fashion Expert Says MISS Frazer sa,d she and Bond Mrs, William R. Pissany. Assist­ got into the C:lr thinking. the Ilttle ing her are Mrs. Arthur D. Carroll, I " Mrs. Robert E. Evans, Mrs. LeRoy lirl had gone Into the house. First Square LAUNDROMAT · On the trip into Joliet on route Dance fI, Zell and Mrs. Charles Phillips. Black, Wh ite Smart Summ er Twosome 30, Bond said he drove at 60- The Newcomers club meet once summer wardrobe, pointed up by nylon and rayon marquisette dress, a month to play bridge and get Black and white have come I mile-an-hour clip on some stretch­ soot-black accessories. The stark glimmers beneath a black mar­ To Be He~d Monday acq uainted, The next meeting will into their own this summer, ac­ es. Nearing Joliet, he and Miss For a Thirty Minute Wash Day black linen sheath takes be- lqUiSette duster. be in July. cording to one prominent fashion ~over frazer noticed" that approaching expert who says the two colors neath a white linen jacket, worn Black and while add new zest cal honked horns and flashed On Union Roo f Deck which are not colors have become with chalk-white jewelry. A big to beach wear. White denim, the their I ghls but the couple paid no 'I Boy Scouts Leave the smartest combination for black cartwheel defines the white fabric nelVs of this summer, makes aHE'n·jon. An informal square donee will HOURS summer. pique dress beneath it. n mandarin jacket, halter and Finally an au. ! " lie driven by be held from 8 to 10 p.m. Monday I Combination Seen Black, White Dramatic shorts. Skip Russ 11 , 1 , a Plainfield night on the roof deck of the SUI On Camping Trip Memorial Union. Mon. Thru Thurs. With no intermediate color to This summer's most dramatic hows Ofr 'ran high school athlek, overtook the Two hundred Boy Scouts from relieve their starkness, black and evening dresses repeat the biack An all-White combination, which Bonk c r and called him to a halt. The fil'st of a eries or free sum­ OPEN 7:30 A.M. LAST WASH 7:30 P,M. lohnson, Iowa and Washington "no you know thut u child is mer tolk and square dances spon­ white, alone and in combinations, oDd white of a man's tuxedo. A gets its effect from the depth of CLOSE AT 9:00 P.M. ,~ ~ntles will leave today for the will be seen in duster and dress. black silk pongee halter is the your tan, uses fish-net fOr a cover­ riding on your front b li mp('r?" sored by the Union board, will be I \E~k-long wilderness camp near dress and jacket, hat and dress, exclamation point above a white liP shirt, cotton gabardine bra and Russell aSked. 'lirected especially toward begin­ Homestead, evening skirt and blouse and silk organdy skirt. shorts lor serious swimming. FI­ Patricia was unhurt, but she nC.rs in square danciniC, the boarel I The scouts will cook their own shorts and shirts. Tn a more romantic interpreta- n:dly, drawstring pantaloons in told her sist(.r, "I'm not go.n:: on ~ald. Fri. and Sat. ~als, sleep in tents and work on A white pique sleeveless duster tion of the same color scheme, white sailcloth are worn with a any more auto rides." Mickey Thomas. Iowa City, thp Ijvancements and merit badges. blankets any black dress in YOUI'- black lace winds through a white black trainman's jacket. I ;ljuare dance caller, said "a lot nt OPEN 7:30 A.M. !.AST WASH 3:45 P.M. Holding the camp staff is ac­ ------~ood old-tashi:med hoe down CLOSE AT 5:00 P.M. livities director Jerry Feblowitz, Engineers Needed n':J~ip will await tho~e who at­ I recent SUI graduate, Scout ex­ Newsome to Address tend," Live music, In Ibe form of ecutive Martin L. Hunter will King George Leaves London for ARest Davenport Realtors Iacc ordion, fiddle and banJO. plus handle administrative matters. For Overseas D ~ty some recorded liluslc will be fur­ FOR APPOINTMENTS LONDON Ill') - King George got influC!lza, followed by in!lam- . . SU. nished. VI, wrapped in blankets on one of mation in the lung. Ellis H. Newsome, I l,n- The corps oC engJneel·s. Rock POPE EXPRESSES HOPE [sland district, Is recruiting addi­ Decorations will Include colored " VATICAN CITY (lI') - Pope the year's warmest days, left "The King has been able in the ~tructor and hc~d of the advert,s­ tion I personnel for overseat lia:'t and tabl('s with b Dch um- . DIAL 8-0291 g Pius XII expressed hope Saturday Buckingham palace by auto Sat- last two days to take a short wa lk I:n se~uenc . In the school of employment. brellas. for a quick peaee in Korea and an urday for the royal lodge in Wind- in the gardens of Buckingham pal- Journalism, Will address the Dav­ Applications are desired from In elise of rain. the dance wlll , tarly deliverance of the Chinese EOI' for the "essential prolongei;! I cnport real estate board Monday individuals quaJjfled as engineers, be moved to the Union river room. , 24 So. Van Buren IIld Korean people from the cunvalescence" ordered by his ace and has saturday left tho ir. the Davenport chamber of com- ~onstruction and shop superin'en­ All stud nts are lnvited to at­ , dutches of communism. The doctors. palace for Royal Lodge, Windsor,lnterce offi~es. dents, construction and building tend. PootiU's views were expressed in It was the first time the 55- where His Majesty will continue , Newsome will di~cuss ways of inspectors, draftsmen, engineering a IO,OOO -word encycli~al addressed year-old monarch has leCt the pal- his convalescence," a palace state- 1making real estate advertising aids, clerical workers, mechanics to "preachers of the gospel." ace grounds since May 24, when he ment said. 1T.0re effective. and laborers. -----~------Salaries range from $2,650 to .$8,BOO a year, plus allowances, depending on lhe type of position For Fashionable, Personali~ed and location 01 employment. Non­ SUI Rare Book CQllection Now Available veteran male applicants between the ages of 18-26 will not be con­ One of th!! finest rare book .idered for overseas employment. Hair Styling collections in any collegiate li­ Housing and subsistence for brary in the United States is now employes are made available by the government. Employment Ii­ ava ilable in SUI's new central agreements for one or two years. This Sum01er ... Visit The br~ry, depending upon the location, are , Rare books from American and required. English authors, volumes on print­ Further information may be obtained from Le"Ster J . Parizek. .Blackstone Beauty Shop ing and railroading and an ex­ local civil service secretary, at tensive Lincoln collect:on are ,he post office. "Iowa City's Largest BE! auty Solon" includ ed in the new addition to SUI libraries. Yellow, Checker 'l'hll Is the first time that such tare book collections have been Ca b Fi rms Merged lIIde available to SUI students 1114 faculty. The Yellow and Checker Cab companies ot Iowa City have been Clyde Walton, director qf the cold to John M. Stevens, Iowa look your loveliest this summer with a rare books library, expects to "it". and William R. Luckey, rornplete the job ot moving tHe Columbus Junction, owner Earl personalized hair style by Van of T~e hooks Into the first floor of the Sangster said Saturday. central l.brary this week. Sanqsler said the sale involved Blacktone. Van's clever fingers with A collection of books by Leigh 15 cabs. A new trade name, Yel­ the scissors will give you the hair style Hunt, English author of the Ro­ low-Checker Cab company, was IIlintle perlodo and leader in the filed in Johnson county recorder's that :t is right for you. Make an appoint· circle iCf English poets o[ that office Friday. Uir\e, is one at the llloSt valuable Sangster had operated the com­ ment tomorrow at the Blackstone Beauty in the llbrary. pany here In Iowa City for 13 'l'he Hunt collectlon,( considered vea rs. Shop and you will bf.: assured of an at­ ~ flne. t collection of Its kind It the world, w as c :ven to tbe tract'"e appearance. "IversU,. by Luther Brewer of ~ Cedar Rapids Torch Pre.e. The Bollinger-Lincoln library. HEY. .. LOOK! I silt to sur from the late J udge James W. Boll inger or Davenport, These Operators Offer You Complete Beau~y Service is part of the .collections. STUDENT BREAKFAST Bollinger willed the $50,000 li­ Virginia Dahn bra~y to the univel'slty eight fears ago with the stipulation • Eggs any style Clara Harrison Myrtle Morgan Jean Brennan that SUI continue to a(,id to t he COllection . • Buttered Toas' Gerry Stimmel Wanda Kuchel May Poland ODe arca ot the library II de­ (naUT I • .,an Ph. I • . ) Clem Hughes Roselle Andregg Inez Kimm "fed to Uncoln curlol, t.atutel, ------~------~------JleAaI'el and letters. The entire ore discussed in books in thi' Horace, is bound in a beautiful been removed and Pasted on fine • CoHe or Milk ItIlecUon Is coneldered one of collection. gold and blue and red cover. All pl per stoc:k and placed in 'b~~ ~ feur finest In tile " a &loll' An extensive collection of wOI'ks illust"ations In the bOGk are bound volumes. • .... only 3Sc Anyone' with a ' crush on rall­ pertaining to printing has also painted by hand. Other less extensive collections "ad, will enjoy lhe books which been Included in the library. An Illustrated b'or ra phy of Na­ in the rore book li brary are the BLACKSTONE BEAUTY' SHOP tile library has on ra ilroadi ng, Examples of fine printing and poleon in 12 volumes In one of Currier colle ~tion , composed of Orielnal documents or early Rock binding are in evidonce in evel'Y the fin est books in the Ranney elll'ly SUI publicat ions, the In­ Reich's'Cafe 123 S. Dubuque . Phone 5825 I&land line survey ~ rews and the one of the collections, One volume, memorial collection. 'rbe pages graham Indian collection and the development ot western railroads a collection of the Inic poems of trom original lDanuscripts have Talbot collection. r4Qf,: 10UR TO P4lJ-Y IOWAN, &JTN}1&Y, JUNE 17, 1951 Hoga'o Roars Back With 67 On Firial R~und To Win Open AT By WILL GRIMSLEY Up to this point, the trap- freshman professional from South- , Saturday's 287. four championships back in the After going one over par when the crowd yelled wildly. left him tat ba'ck at 296. The Open drug ~ infested, 6,927 - yard monster ern Pines, N. C., just a year out of He missed the 1949 tournament early 1900's and the matchless he was trapped on the par-three The 3S-year-old champion was jinx 'prevailed again for him ana • BIRMINGHAM, MICH. (A'}--' known as Oakland Hills had the amateur ranks. because of a near-fatal automobile Bobby Jones bracketed as many third, Hogan nailed the first of just as hot for most of the morn­ Sam .SnellCj\, the West Vlrglala ~ bring . Goll's mighty little "comeback sneered back at the greatest stars In effect, the victory was accident Irom which it was feared during the decade o[ the roaring five birdies on the seventh by ing round, carrying a three-under­ hillbilly, who after leading the sequel man," Ben Hogan, staged another of the game. Its par 35-35-70 had Dogan's third In a row since tie he might never recover. twenties. laying an iron shot within three par scOre to the 14th. There he first dlly, tilltered to finish wlth Th. of hIs incredible finishes Satur- remained unsullied in face of some triumphed In 1948 at Los An,eles' He becomes the third man in "Under the circums"tances it was feet of the pin. lost a stroke to par when he 295. He had rounds of 72-74 Sat· day to win his third National 350 rounds. Riviera club, settln, an all-Ume history to score as many as three the grea lest round of gol! I ever On the tenth he re,lstered his missed a four-foot putt and then urda;y. • used a Open championship in as many Hogan finished two strokes bet­ record or 276, and In 1950 at Iopen conquests and he is the first played," Hogan commented afler second birdie after strokln, what dropped two more on the night­ Heafner, the 35-year-old Ryder blood ( tries with a 72-hole score of 287. ter than Clayton Heafner, the Merion. in Philadelphia, where h'o! repeater since Ralph Guldahl in his big 67 had gone on the score­ h'~ described as his best shot ot marish 16th where he had this Cup veterlin, provided one of the coronal Five strokes back of South bull-shouldered professional from "'on by a score identical wIth 1937-38. Willie Anderson won board. the tournament, a two-Iron that sequence of shots - fough, rough, sparkling surprises of the IOIlJ ' big kill Alrlca's Bobby Locke going into Charlotte, N.C., who later came in rifled the ball wlthla live feel of trap, short and two putts - for day, although he played in almost If· A te the final day, the wiry shotmaster with his own par-wrecking 69 tor the cup. a big, fat six. He took a 7l. co mplet~prlvacy. At the ninth hole from Fort Worth, Tex., climaxed a 289. On the 13th Hogan sank a i4- That left him two strokes back Ot the a~iCFnoon round he had a Un Iv en his victory with a three-under- Locke-old muffin face, the footer for a birdie deuce, He was of the 54-hole leaders, Locke and gallery of ~O people. annual par 67, sinking a birdie 14-foot golfing gol! prospector from the slowed on the 14th when he ..Timmy Demaret of Ojai, CaIiL, Hq baored out a 73 In lhe morD. Medica: putt on the final green. diamond mine district around Jo- pitched over the green but re- entering the last round. ing, which left him two .&rokes ., alsO ha Mos& of a reoord crowd of hanne.sburg-Iost his famous putt- covered quickly by sinking a six- Then he started cornia, back in back I of the luders, and tllell human 17,500-&earlng and tunin, at the ing touch in the pressure of the foot budge for a birdie three on the af&C rnoon while the words "tbe fashiopeli ,, ~ 35·34-69 in 'he 111- the nU l ropes-were bunched around the last day grind and registered with the 15th. little maa is movin, up" echoed ernoon. in the I. final hole when Hogan boldly 291. He had I.nal rounds of 74-74. Then came the rousing 18th around the aprawiln, meadow. Thi~ excellen t finish earned him that n stroked the ball home. A deafen- Bracketed at 293 were Lloyd when he laced a drive straight Ifemaret, who had equalled par $2,OOIl, half of what Hogan pock. bril1g a II:,. roar rocked houses for blocks Mangrum, the 1946 champion from down the middle and pegged his in the morning, folded completely eted'lfor winning the champion­ arteries around. Niles, Jll., and Julius Boros, a t, approach straight at the pin, while in the afternoon with a 78 that ship.; - ~ II 1,1

Edwards' Homer Beals Bums; "' .. A's Dump Chisox I • 1 in ':;, H 6-5;\ Cards,' Gianlsl Braves Win Tig rs' Cain Blanks Yanks, 4-0 EHICAGO (AP) - The Chicago Cubs drew first blood Sat­ , o 1"1.,1 urday in their astounding eight-man player swap with Brooklyn PHILADELPHIA (IP) - The Ted iWilUams aboard· and two out Philadelphia Athletics made it in the fifth inning, It broke a 4-4 as Bruce Edwards blasted a three-run seventh inning homer to Tigers* 4,* Yanks * 0 t&ee in a row over the American Itie. ~ . . spark the Cubs to a 6-4 victory over his former Dodget mates. NEW YORK (IP) - Lefty Bob Williams had singled to lcft ~_ League leading Chicago White Cain, extremely effective against fore Stephens homered in the sec. Edwards, who came to the * * * Sox with a 6-5 eleven inning vic­ the Yankees, turned in his best ond. Vollmer found both IW i~i8l/ls Cubs Friday along with infield- Giants 6, Pirates 1 tory Saturday. blasted performance of the season Sat- and Stpph ns aboard when he bU er Ed Miksis, Joe Hatten PI'ITSBURGH (IP) Sal a g~me winning triple and two urday as he pitched the Detroit for the circuit in the seventh. . and outfielder Gene Hermanski, Maglie turned back his Pittsburgh lNSHIP home runs. Tigers to a 4-0, five-hit triumph Sl. Loul. .., 100 I~O Olll-" 8 ' over the New Yorkers. Bo,l.n '" '" os. 130 RQa-l. I , unloaded off Clari Erskine. The Pirates "cousins," 6-1, Saturday to ~ Garver, alea-~er (8) an' Lollar; Me .. . The loss left the Sox still three Cain. who beat the Yanks four Dermoll 'N-Ill .nd LP·Omlr homer was his second of the year post his tenth victory of the sea­ games ahead of the New York M.... times last year as a member of (9-4). "IW!- .~benl , 12-8lh " Mil). ' and it snapped a 3-3 tie. Miksis son for the New York Giants. Yankees, who lost to Detroit. V.llm •• (Srd). Wood \4\h\. also played but failed to hit in Maglie allowed only three hits. the , was in * * * three official trips. He also made He blanked the Pirates on one hit Joost's triple on a 3 and 1 trouble in the third and ninth an error that led to the Dodgers' until the seventh when they scored off relief pitcher innings only. drove in the winning run with two Eddie Lopat, who went down to ' ~ a t 4, In ~i ans 3 final run in the ninth. their lone run after two were out out. Pierce opened Philadelphia's Andy Palko, who came to the on a single and three walks. Blll his fourth defeat, was the victim of W ~~HINboN (/f') - Julio Mo! eleventh by walking Pete Suder. shoddy fielding. The Tigers scored reno and Mlckey Harris combined Dodgers in the deal along with Howerton, acquired in the seven Then after catcher Ray Murray catcher Rube Walker, infielder player deal with St. Louis Friday, in the first with the aid oJ an to limit Cleveland to five bitW. had flied out, Pierce got Suder at error and wrapped it up with including home runs by Lulul . Wayne Terwilliger and pitcher walked to force in the lone run, second on an attempted bunt by Johnny Schmitz, socked a home The Giants jumped on rookie three in the ninth with the help Easter and Larry Doby-Saturda~ relief pitcher Morris Martin. of miscues. run in lour officiaL trips. Ter- Lefthander Paul LaPalme for three (AP Wlrepbolo) night liS Washington defeated williger got into the game as a runs in the third inning to clinch However, he met his Waterloo Vic Wertz socked his 11 th homer Cleveland, 4-3. i pinch-runner and scored in thc the decision. Two walks, Bob in' Joost as the latter beLted the to open the Tiger ninth. The Sen'ato:s 'spurted into . The victory was Cain's fifth and a 2.q , ninth. Thomson's single, a fly out and a Bantam Ben Do es It ·Again fifth pitch to right-center. As .lim lead .against Mike Garcia ' bu.t Busby chased the ball, Martin his second complete game of the Preacher Roc. gunning for his single by Willie Mays figured in LITTLE BEN lIOGAN huned his caddy, Dave Press after he carded a three-under-par 67 for the Easter bl~ted a homer after Dob~ 10th straight victory. started for the scoring, raced home. season. walked in the sixth inning to tie final 18 holes to win the Na&lonal Open Golf tournament Saturday. Hogan's total score was 287 over Joost's homers, his seventh and n,lr.11 .. 1M 0410 I OO!l-4 Il Il Brooklyn but he didn't have it. Maglie homered in the fourth 000 000 O~ ~ 3 the score. ; the rugged Oakland Hills course In Birmingham, Mich. eighth ot the year, came earlier In N... York He left in the second inning trail- and the Giants added single runs Cain 15·4) and Roblnl.n, Swlfl rn: Washington nicked Garcia I~ the game. All told, he had five Lopal (O-~) an~ Bcrra. JlR ·Werlz (11111), ing, 3-0. in the eighth and ninth innings another run in the sixth, and the ' RBI's to his credit. The Cubs scored twice in the to compLete the scoring. Ed Stanky senaJ,0rs moved into a 4-2 lead in first Roe forced home lhe first singled home the eighth inning Penn Won't Allow Doubles by Wally Moses and Red So*x 10 *, Browns * 5 the s venth. ; run by walking Ransom Jackson run and Mays singled in the tally usc Win's NCAA Title; Hank Majeski gave Philadelphia BOSTON (/f') - Two homers by Cleve and .. 000 1lO2 GIG-a I I a run in the fourth. Zarilla hit his Wasbln,t.n . 1111 001 10.-4 1 • with the bases loaded. Edwards in the ninth. Vern Stephens and another by Garcia. Lemon (7) and Ile,ln; M.t~ • drove in the second with a fly New York .. COla IOU Oll-ll II 0 NCAA to Dictate, homer to open Chicago's fifth Clyde Vollmer made up half of the eno, Barris (8) and Kluttl. WP·M.,. ... . '-:::::~ ball. The tapped Pillabur,b . OltO 000 104)-1 a 1 Hurdles , ',~ Record Falls frame, making it a 1-1 game. LP .. Garci.a, HaS: Cit· Easter, D... ,. ' - Cubs Roc for M_,II" (1'\·" lind We.t.. In : , •• ralnu', Boston Red Sox' six hits against three singles and another run in Werle ( 7) Wal.h (0) and McC ull.ub. Stassen Declares Joost's first round tripper in ace Ned Garver Saturday as they the second before Erv PaLica took Fllarerald (7). LP -LaPalme ( 1-8). BIt­ SEATTLE (AP) - The flying spikes of jumping Jack Davis Philadelphia's half of the fifth re­ Marlle (hU. whaled the St Louis Browns, over. PHILADELPHIA (IP) - The scratched a high hurdle record into the books Saturday and gained the lead for the A's, but 10-5. Chicago bounced back to score Lefty Bob Schultz opened for * * -i.' University of Pennsylvania wl\l marked the trail to the 15th ational Collegiate Athletic associa­ Those three circuit blows ac­ the Cubs and limited the Dodgers Braves 3, Reds 0 once in the sixth on hits by Bob counted for ehiht of the Boston Authentic Chipese not permit any national organi­ I to two hits, including Gil Hodge~' CINCINNATI (/f') - With War­ tion track cbampionship for the University of Southern California, Dillinger and Orestos Minoso plus runs against Garver, who was 21st homer, until the seventh fen Spahn pitching brllliant four­ zation to dicta torially say it can­ For a while USC, which a fielder's choice, seeking his 10th win while duelling when he faltered. hit ball, Boston finally broke the not televise college footban games Chic.,. , 000 011 O~I 1/)-,6 11 I with lefty Maury McDermott. Dinners wound up with 56 pointS, was Phlla. ". 000 110 SOD 01-6 12 1 Brpo.l,n ' " 010 000 201-t 7 1 Cincinnati jinx Saturday to defeat Stephens' second homer of the .. Chlca,. _ ... , !JO 000 :Wx-6 U J or any other university activity, challenged by Morgan State, but * Judson. Pleree (9) an. Ma.l. £r&llU Ree, PaliGa (I), Itrlklne (7) .nd Cam­ the Reds, 3-0. (9) ;Fowl.r, Xue." (8). Marlin (10) and game and his ninth of the season paneUai Reh.It•. Lponard ('7) .nd Ed­ President Harold E. Stassen, said the little Baltimore college ran Murray, ilKS! Chl-Zullia; Pha-Ie •• I. %, The Braves Ijad been beaten by WP .. Martin. LP .. Pleree. came with Billy Goodman and ward •• HRS: Bkn.llodrell. Palk'. ; Chi .. Saturday. £.",.'.11. WP-Leonard. LP·Ersklne. C!ncinnati eight consecutive times out of manpower and finished prepared 15'1 until the star southpaw turned Stassen told the university's tlTird with 38. Closing with a rush, * * * them back. It was Spahn's seventh alumni reunion that the universi­ Cornell tallied 40 points to take Cards 6, Phils 5 victory against five losses this ties and colleges of America must City High Downs Muscatine, 7-3; Moore Stars second. Occidental was fourth and ST. LOUIS (/P)-Wally Westlake season. be lIPermitted to decide for them­ Chineje Cite! As a result of Saturday's game, selves whether they wish indivi­ City high's baseball team won times at bat. playing his first .:.ame for St. its fourth game in five starts Sat-I Eddie Morgan again pitched for Cincinnati and Boston went into it dually to televise or not to tele­ Louis, lined a three-run homer in­ Scott Fa ils urday, defeating Muscatine, 7-3. City high, winning his third start tie for fourth place in the Na­ I to the left field bleachers Sa t­ vise. tional League, Gary ScoU, Iowa-'s lone quali­ J ',le game was played at Musca- against one loss. Morgan allowed I urday night to give the Cardi­ Penn has been listed as "IIOt in tine. seven hits and struck out five. Bo,lon . . "' 000 010 002-3 6 1 fier In Saturday's NCAA finals, nals a 6-5 triumph over the Cinclnn.1I 000 ('lI) IHlIJ-O 4 • l"ood standing" by the Na&lonal Mickey Moore, the Hawklets' The Hawklets' reserves topped Philadelphia Phils before 12,932 Spahn and M.eller: Rafrensberrer and Collegiate Athletic assocla&lon failed to place among- the first six Reifh'sCa Pr.m.... 11K: ».,-1;111.11. in the 220-dash. Scott, Len Sykes catcher, was his team's hitting Muscatine's reserves in the first, lans. Del Ennis hit a three-run since announcement 10 days ago star, getting three singles in four game of the day, 8-1. homer for the Phils, and Enos of a decision lIot to comply with and Jack' Weik will compete next SLaughter and hit Big Ten, pee the NCAA television ban. in the BII" Ten-Paclflo Coast Coa­ homers with none on for the ference meet Tuesday at EUgene, • Stasse n said: Ore. Cards. Agree on Pact "The UniverSity of Pennsylvania The score was tied 3-3 when will modify its television program, SEATTLE (/f') - The Big Ten Michigan State fifth. Westlake, acquired from Pitts­ it will limit it, it will report on and the Pacific Coast Conference Thrills piled on thrills for the burgh In a trade Friday, ..mmed it, it will change it, but the Uni­ agreed' orally Saturday on details shirtsleeved crowd of 9,500 from his homer, versity of Pennsylvania will not The ball bounced from the for a three-year renewal of the the moment Warren Druetzler of Rose Bowl football pact. permit any national organization Michigan State scored a surprise Warren Drue ~z l er bleachers back onto the playing to dictatorially ·say, 'television is fie ld and the Phils argued that One effect of the agreement victory in the mile, until Don La:z I • • banned-and you must stop what Surprise MUe Winn er hit the bleacher wall. They were was to assure that neither Cali­ of Illinois closed out the 1951 it you have been dOing'." overruled by the umpires. [ornia nor Michigan, the 1951 meet with a record-breaking The blow was of! relief pitcher New Year's Day rivals, would be Stassen, making his first offi­ vault. State, the day's only double win­ J 'm Konstanty, who had walked eligible to compete in the 1952 cial statement since the football The iron-muscled Laz trieq ner, ret.ained his NCAA 440 cham­ Stan Musial to get Westlake. Red classic. television flared into the open twice to give the crowd a glimpse pionship and added an0lher crown in the 220. D{lO McEwen of $choendienst had doubl~d home The Coast Conference agreed said flatly that the NCAA plan of a 15-100t vault, but had to set­ Stan Roje)< with the tying run. o[f with the Big Ten that no team is "illegal." He backed the chal­ tle for a high of 14 feet, 9% in­ Michigan, the two-mile champion, tOok off to an earLy lead in his Jocko Thompson, who- wp'S c arg­ tan compete in the Rose BowL two lenge of Notre Dame President ches. That was enough to wipe specialty and never 100k1'!d br.c k, cd with ttle defeat. successi ve years. John J. Cavanaugh that thcre was out the NCAA record set at 14 winning in !i:()3.2. Phllad.l.hla . 000 003 OO%~ 0 0 Representatives of the two con­ no authority in the NCAA consti­ feet, 8 7Js inches by William Sef­ 81. L...... ,qoo 000 24,,-6 7 I ferences also said agreement had tution granting it the power to ton of USC in 1937. Druetzler scored the surprise of Tbomp.oDt K on .... n.y (I) an~ 8~ml. nl.lt; Stale1, Bratl. (7). P."0Iok1 (9) been reached on ticket allotments, :ontrol television. . Davis of USC took off like a the day with his victory il) the a n ' R ille. )¥P - Braale. L P .Thomp•• n . startled kangaroo in the high stick mile. The Michigan Sta'.er, who HRS: BtL-SI •• rblor, Jobn.on. Welliah. student admission prices, and Plla-Enall. radio and television phases. event and ied all the way .for a rated only third in the Big Ten clocking of 13,7, It beat by two­ this year, finished six yards ahead Badgers Get Win ' tenths of a second the mark held of favored Bob MCMiJlen of Occi­ Hogan in a Hole jointly by Edward Dugger of dental. Tufts, Craig Dixon of UCLA, and The Druetzler time was 4:08.8, In Rowing Meet Dick Attlesey of USC. only haH a second off t~je meet George Rhoden of Morgan record. .. MARIETTA, OHIO (IP) - An ------SO I CAN underdog Wisconsin rowing crew ------flashed into the east-west struggle fer rowing dominance Sa.turday and won the varsity Intercolle­ KEEP MY YOUTHI" giate Rowing association Mariet­ STANDINGS. 1'\ . _ I ta Regatta by more than a length. ------~ . - The Wisconsin Badgers not only , I upset a pack of powerful East NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN. LEAGUE w L PCT au w L, POT GB Your shirts can look sparkling c ean without hard wash:ng. and West coast rivals, but took ID Braokl,n lIlI .IU" Chlca~. ". lIIl 17 .619 the first national college rowing New Yor k . . lre lie .M~ 3 No", York lIS 20 .'2~ S rhe modern equipment at New Process is gen~.e with your crown for the Midwest. Sl. Loul. .. 118 27 ,501) 7\~ Cleveland !9 211 .537 '\~ Cl nolnnall 2e 37 .40 1 81~ Delrolt 26 2,~ .31D 0 The powerfuL Washington Husk­ Ues\on .. , .. 27 28 ,1Ul 8\~ W.shln ,lon 29 82 .!IIIA 15 ', ~ ~ hirt . . . yet Hard on the dirt. Far fresh crisp-shirts with- Plolla, , ze 2U .413 D\~ 81. l,oall S5 .N41i' 18 .. ies, who swept the river at last .. .. . "' IK ~~ 28 ,40 1 Pblla, 18 Clole.,. , "' IO\~ .,." . 85 .340 18 out hard laundering . . . bring your sh ~ rts to New Process. year's Regatta, had to settle lor Pllllbu r,h :0 38 .377 J4'~ second in Saturday's varsity SATURDAY'S RESULTS , evenl-a length and a quartel' be­ SATURDAY'S RESULTS Phlla'ol.hJ. 6. Chico •• A For free pick up and delivery . . . Phone 4177. . ,."lr.1t 4. Ne", Y.r ... hind Wisconsin. PrinCeton's east­ 8t. L •• ls •. PIoII.dol,hl. ~ CIoI"ro e. Brookl,n 4 BOllon I~ , St. Loal. 0 ern favorites 8truggled for the Ne .. Yor" 6. Pllllbar,h 1 Washl •• I.n 4. Clevel.nd 3 OUR TRUCKS PASS YOUR DOOR lead all the way and took third Bo•• on 8, Clncln •• 11 0 TODAY'S PITCHfJRS five feet behind t,he Huskies. Dolroll II No", York-Gr.l' (2-8) ... TODA Y'S ae1n.ldl (0-4) California got off to a poor start, New Y.r" al Pltt.bar,h-(l)-J.n.. C lfOv .. land Jilt Wa!lhlnrion-Cb ••• lel but edged up to take fourth. (1-4, .n. 011101 (I-I, or B ...... n (I-I) u, Morono (1·4) . (~-S) .... Po lI .1 (O·S) and Q•• e n (S·8). Chloa.. .1 Phlladol,hla-(2)-Gam. Because of a strong Ohio river B•• ln at Cln.'n ..I1 -(~)-8.ln (4-(1) ~ pert (0·0) and Alom. (A-6) vo. flood current, the course for the and BI.U.r' (8-.) n. BI ...... II Scllol b (1.5) an d Ko llnor r4-4). 313 11-5) .nd Pox (A-S) or P..... wlkl St.. (,.,811'1 a t Rn,ton-on-K~ n ne d , ( 1- varsity and jayvee races was cut (0- 1), . ' in . nd Widmar (11-4) or Saoheokl from. three to two miles. Br •• kl,n al CMeara-P.dbl. lan (0.0) 10·I) n. P. rnell (,-4) . nd lIo. rb.r­ ft. Low. Wisconsin's wi nning time was (,.a, nIh (i!-~). S. D!Jbuque (AP Wlre ....t.) PI...... I,h l. at 81. ~.. I I-R.berll (7·0) 7:50.5, approximately 17 seconds YI, Broo lo •• n (4-f) THREE·I LEAGtJF. B EN HOGAN BLASTED his way ou& of a !and trap on ahe 15th faster thlm that turned in I Il~t Cedar 1I.,ld. U . Qulne1 ~ hole and took & double bol'ey 6 00 the par four hole. IJIs 100ro on year by Washington over the NCAA BASEBALL To rre n.. le ~ . Walerl.o 4 Wnl) Tenne .... 0, Utah .. T,rr. n.. le 8, W. lerl•• I t (Ie ••nd) .lb.• .&NnI H l 01 elfh.&eu Iaol.. wa.. & 71. .ame two-mile coune, '.nn...... , Uee , Q"~ CIII" 1\ ',annllle· (ra In) • • no DAILY IOWAN, SUNDAY. lUNE 17. IN I - ~"G& FIVE

. '. i 1 l AMA ;fold' of New Drug, Like a Coiled Spring. • • n{I May Gut Heart Deaths ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (UP ) - A powerful anti-coagulant ~rug known as heparin was put in a new role that may ultimately TURN YOUR ''EXTRA'' BELONGINGS INTO DASH - TODAY , bring a successful treatment of hardening of the arteries and sub­ sequently cut down on the number of heart disease deaths. WITH All ECONOMICAL DAILY 10WAI WAIT AD! DIAL 4111 The drug already has been after experiments on animals and ------• pre Ve Jl t . used as a substance Autos For Sala - Used Rooms for Renl (0 more than a year's research in WANT AD RATES , blood clotting In , t1"\e treatment of testing some 2().0()Q blood speci­ ------. • I... PLYMO\M'R "'""tal. d~lux.. ­ 1.. 1 FORD conv...-ubl~ . PhonIrll. t'oralVwe Selvu. Co, 01.1 8-1121. as it has again and again and (AP Wlr•• b.~ol GAS ,tove•• partll> nl • l • almon new. Bob Double bed and prlna•. Dr. r. Com- again in the past - that "in the WANTED: Old ca for lunk. mode, Phone 8-1"2. A YANK SOLDIER HOLDS hI s bayonet-Upped rifle ready as he moves ca.ullou Iy into a wrecked G<>ody'. A~lo PArIS. DI., 8-1755, case of a high aerial burst ot an house In the center of Chol'won as Allied troops advanee. The Reds withdrew all alone the west-centra.l FULUR Bru.• hes-Deb\llllnie t"""'tllo.. NATIONAL atomic weapon there would be no Korean fronl and pul up little resistance to the lowly advandng UN offensive. Riders Wanted Phone 4318. residual radiation." ------PAS ENOE/lS wanled to Vtrmont or LOOK In )lour .IUtl Thou... n". or peo. LEAD The reason for all this repetition In~rmoolale polnll. t.e.lvlnll June U pie rudin, the low.n ell \fled • ..,tlon ..... In~ ted In Whal 70U ha. to "J~ "Taking care of patients Sheriffs Toss Gas Bombs Call 8-2417. Iowan ada .~t reouill. Call .UI lOd.yl ~~~~;Oa t~ ~ i ;!~~ac~~~~~es~~:d~;~ Record N:1mber File Income Tax Returns Help Wa_n_te_d_ _ _ COMPANY all day requires a lot of erations afterward. Pamc co uld r • • • At Women, Child Pickets Typing energy That's why I klil where ethe A-bomb hadn't, DES MOINES Ill'! - E. H. Fair- April 30, Fairburn saId, an JI1crease SILVER CITY, N.M. llPI- Dep­ PART 11m .bor\h.nd InltrUttor Mr. TYPINO. mlm"".rophln., sal repre. nlalive to and foo lish fears of non-existent !burn, director of the Iowa tax of 9,149 over the 1950 figure. Me>CAbt'. low. Clly Commerclll Coli Ie. 'v.nlna. 7642, Phone &113: Il Dutch Boy paints to and have to eat good . . . so uty sh rifts hurled two tear gas Phone 7644. ~ radiation hazards could delay res- 'Commission income tax division, He said ail returns have not bomb into a group of womcn and through deniers In estubLiBh d I eat at Renaldo's." CASHIER wanted. ApJ)ly Capitol Tllea­ Instruction territori ~, Salary, commission, cue of injured persons who might said Saturday more Iowans filed been.process.ed yet, but state ~eve­ children pickets blocking a road ~r . car, exp n. , and other ad­ be saved if promptly helped.. , nue IS runnmg almost $2 mllUon to the Empire zinc mines Satur­ ' I h fit d sthte lI1come tax returns m 1951 ahead of 1950 figures The April WANTED .... dy (or oullidc 181.,. work. SUMMER Dance Lenon.. Mimi 'lIoud. von tace.. Only applications by S o 0 fflcIa save ormu a e a ,. I , . day and jailed about 40 women. Larew Company. Wurlu. DIAl 114M letter will be considered. All rough "law" which says: It tl)<' than ever before m hIstory. 30 collectIOns totalled $12,792,097. The women, wives and mothers MAN (or oullicle ..Ie, work. Apply I" repli s will be considered con­ bomb's blast heat and "initial Fairburn said early figures also Processing will be completed of striking zinc miners, defied the »Croon only. Larew Company. fidentia l. Addres replle to: Authorized Agency .Renaldo's radiation" d~n't get you you're lindicated collections might set 3 next month, Fairburn said, Corpo­ deputies and refused to clear the Rus. 11 C. Ston • 722 Ch tnut, APPLY now for Board Job•• t R leh', 121 JOWA AYE. okay. Unless, of course, the house new ma,rk. The division processed ration returns also were running road. The tear gas bombs were Caf . St. Louis 1 Mi souri, .falls on you. 243,934 mcome tax returns through ahead of 1950 fIgures. thrown into a circle of the women Underwood and childt'en while some 100 other Loans PORTABLE TYPEWRlTEIl CARL ANDERSON women and 'Children stood on a • I.OANED on run., tAmen., dia­ hillside and jeered. The pickell; mond •. clothlnll. ct.:. REL.LABU: L.OAN Ries Iowa Book SlaTe made no errort to retaliate with Co. 109 E... ------I Durli"!:!,,". -- # fone. There were no reports of QUICK LOANS on Jewelry. doth Ina. injuries. rad lol , ot.:. HOCK. EYE LOAN. 128 ~ Keuffel & Esser ~~ir ,~ ,®~®~I .... ., DubUQue. _---- log log Decitrig ~~©~~I§ ~~@[f.21~~ Six Months Ago-Death SLIDE RULES CLOSEO (jONf: ALSO FOR f!JYE ­ Remember Carolyn Purcell! All other popular makes ~E DAV BYE- $1 .00 up Today- Life and a Pony RIES IOWA ATLANTA* (* P) - *SOtn(' of lh country's* rno * t polished * riders will appear in a fashionable horse show h ce Wednesday but its BOOK STORE star will b a brown·llaircd little girl who six months ago could hal relly e a horst'. T OM SI M S has almost re!

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" DOORS OPEN I : 13·16:00" (!¢f:tttfJ "ENDS The Daily Iowan Arlvertis ing TODAY MONDAY" .. THE LAUGH SURPRISE OF TilE YEAR!

IT'S A THERE IS NO DETOUR TO VERY THE DRIVE-IN •.• ':Eo'r JUST COME THROUGH Briogs Buying News' Wise FUNNY ".: • ! ~ PICTURE CORALVILLE AS USUAL '1"<1" .. .• ·The tlb l,", Season·- a Hotly· wood wedd lft, you can lauah . ,th Insltad 01 at. Slickest fl icker SInce 'FATHER OF•... THE - BRI- D-f." ! HI,hway 6 " 'est of Cor.lyllle BOXOFFICE OPENS 7:00 AD LTS .r.o - CIJlLDREN FREE Parllmo.nt. ~ . Plduret TONIGHT qnd MO ~A11NG SEASON II.fIftC GEN E JOHN TIERNEY aM LUND .,1, MIRIAM "rnELMA HOPKINS· RITTER ~~ JAN STERLING I:' -PLUS­ ~~~I~ COLOR CARTOON .• ~. $ • ~,J~ "Putty Tat Trouble" ,m !II1Al .~ 'fU. iiiiii':~1 Ii" P1SIft PLUS COLOR CARTOON - .SPO~TS Rex W. WeitzeU World's Late News James SommervUla . Business Manarer . . Dick Hummel Sob AID .. Assistant Business Manarer ~at\onal AllvuU5ln, 1\{a.na.,er ·claum-.l Mvel'tlalnc '! , . SEE IT Cooled by NOW Refrlreration '1

Ed Huntin9 Werner Snow

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• j Every semester The Daily Iowan brings you advertising meJs- IQW~~~: ~~fertjsing Staff. This staff is in co~.tant c~nt,,~t ""it~ _ agel for wiser buying, more convenie .. t ancl economical liv~,,~ a~v}erJi'e;s, 9iving them efficient and c~mpetent tervicJ ' ~Jtat. We know that mOlt of you have read and acted upon these­ their, sales. messages will get to you in, t~e pro~; for~. i:~ many advertisements without a thought to the individual~ re­ . Pi~tured h're on this page are the peOj;I~ who wll~ , ~ ~•• sponsible for their appearance, There are two factors involved hin~ ·the .e..... In bringing you advertiling m.ssa~. tn T~, in bringing you these sales messages; First, the wise merchan!,f ~ally I I~wa". i . ,.I . I. , .

I I . ' " who choose to send you their advertising messages through Tb-_. f I · R~AD Dqily Iowan advertising. , , ACT upo~ Da~ .. Dally Iowan and second, the , 'fficient members of Tile Dail* adyertillng , , . It's I BUYING NEWS FOR WISE aUYER~. I I I w I I ac , I tal :,,!, '00: 1.~ .... I ,

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