Serving the State The Weather University of Iowa Campus and Fair a" wal1ller toU, and WedDHda,. Hii'll teo Iowa City da,. H: 10.... 1%. Web owu.n WedDts4a,. H: ""'. "' f:.t 1868 - AP Leased Wlllt - fiv. Cents Iowa City. Iowa. Tuesday. Augwal 18. 1953 - Vol 9'1. No. 229 3 SUI Physicists Take Part I Celebrate Korean Independence

I In Test Phase at North Pole I More• American POW"S ,.. The navy announced MOnday l • lIIat one phase of high altitude ob. James A. Van Allen, head of the suvations of cosmic radiation andl SUI physics department and tested tests of !lressure, tempera ure and in a simiwr mission in the density in the upper atmosphere Summer of 1952. near the North Pole, in which Data Obtained and three SUI physicists took part, had Measuremcnts oC cosmic ray In- Freed By Reds ~n completed. tensity and pressure, tempera lure However, the navy plans to con. and density were then obtained by tinue this research in which Prof. means of instruments carried in ;AF Contingent Is La rgest Melvin B. Gottlelb, physics de. the rockets. }Ii Perm,·ts parlment, and twp physics re- The navy re~rted tbat the first F th St d Group To Be Liberated starch a sistants, Lcsli.e Meredith test mission returned from its Ur e r u Y and Raymond B. Ellis participated. journey to ncar thc North Pole PANMUNJOM (Tuesday) (JP) Part of the operation consisted after all test rockets had been F G d t -One hundred twenty·flve AI· In the launching of specialized fired. More than half ot the rocket or ra ua es lied prisoners _ Including 25 ~ets from balloons floating at launchin.::s were successful. smillng and apparently healthy an altitude of about 70,000 feet. Specific plans for continuing the Graduate study during the Americans - returned to freedom The Balloon Assisted Take.Offl scientific tests should be Issued coming .. chool year Instead ot ac·1 today in the first of four groups (BATO) was developed by Pro!.i soon, the navy advised. U e duty with the United States totaling 450. aUed from BOlIton air force will be possible Cor a It was the largest group The SUI physicists left Boston number ot university graduates I of prisoners thus far liberated by Austrian Pact on Julv 18 in the navy icebreaker. who were commissioned lp the the Communlsta In two weeks of USS Staten Island, along with alr force in June. according to in- exchanllng prisoners under termq other civilian and naval ~ cientists. tormation received this week by of the Korean armistice. Bid by Reds The project was named MU'SH- SUI rrom the National Research The Americans and 25 Brill h RAT by the navy. council. prisoners In the first contintent Assisting the otllce ot naval re- June ROTC graduates nt the were IIccompanled by truck loads Gets U.S. OK search In the trip was the bureau PRE WENT YNGMAN aHEE, (left) watehes happily as lOO,O. universlty Included 94 students ot shouting South Koreans wl1!) of aeronautics. The project was South Korean. wildly cheer him lJI coulon the el,.hth allll1verurr who were commis ioned In the hc.d stripped away despiscd Com. WASHINGTON (JP)-The Unit· part of the ONR.atomlc energy of Korea'. Independence. Rhee told the enthu.llutlc crowd the air force. Approximately 9,500 munist prison I8rb. ed States agreerc ror.slderation of an abbreviated the ONR laboratory program ot Austrian-born wife and elrhth arlllY cOlllllllDder Gen. Maxwell D. throughout the country during the Bllpll ¥ ..Grauer, Hal1lboro, N.C.; Srt. Thoma. Elchom. MUwau. white headbands scrawled in treaty for Austria be shelved and upper atmosphere research. Taylor. Isame month. kee, Ore.; Cpl. Carlton G. Mormlln, Potlrand. Ark.: Cpl. JOHpb blood with the Korean charac- 5 the more complete pact. argued Director 01 the projeet group A new air torce policy delaying Tlm,.nard, L,.adhunl, N.J. Tbe bU1SIul lutramenta were brourM ters: "Destroy communism." tor so long, be taken up again. was Lt. Malcolm S. Jones Jr., CEO, 2 Iowan s R t .11 active duty for some of the new from prIJon camp b,. the GJ> . Goln, north through this West- The U.S. oCter was hinged on USN, of the nuclear physics e urn eO ollleers will permit those whose ern Korun neutral zone were ~~~ C:x~~t~~~u:~:su~~~SI: n ~al~~! branch. physical sciences division, , ~~!k rr:~k~l:tl~h~~iO;n y~~~ o~p~; St t .D rt t Aft k R d ~~:p~nll::g:~~~~~r~o~~~ f~::S~ prepared to condude. a treaty" re- ONR, Washington,Rockets FiredD.C. I p. E h one·fourth of their class to com· a e epa men ac s e Although toduy's Quota ot florl.ng Austrian mdependence. During the tests made on the n r ISO n er X cange ~~~~: gt~:~gye:~ ~tc~~~d~~~eyS~~~ I I I 450 wa~ the lariest since the ex- Similar .notes were sent to the So- trip, the SUI physiCists measured .". PI f G U f t change began, the percentage o( viet Unton by France and Br~laln. cosmic ray intensity by means of MUNSAN, Korea (Tuesday) (IP) the air torce. an or erman nl Ica Ion Americans returned 8tJll was far Th. AmE'rlcan note was dehver- geiger cdunters and ionization - Two more Iowans were re- him two days before he was re- edP, eUrmndlseSrions'pemCalaYl aclslrocubmestgarnacnest., behlnd other major Allied na· ed to the Soviet Foreign Olfice In h b Th I tit d t tr d M d 1 w d tlonals. There were 75 Americans c am ers. ese ns rumen s were urne 0 ec om on ay, 0 a porte miSSing. to others with lower academic WASHINGTON (JP) _ The and 75 British in today's de. MO~W by the ;;.S. Embassy. carried .in "~eacon" rockets which time. in the 14th day. of the prison- l\1r. and Mrs. Rund first got a rank. according. to National Re- state department Monduy at- consultation on the answer and liveries. Short For~ Drop Asked were first hfted to altitudes ?t or of war exchange In Korea. letter from ~elr so?, in December, scarch council intormatlon. tacked Russia's latest plan for the state department s~ld this Red Cron Iidercedes The Kremlin has asked the about 70.000 teet by 55-foot dt- They were Sgt. l I e Gordon L , 1951. He saId he was fine and New officers who signed up for unl!ying Germany declarinl it would continue. Monda'y s reo Many of the 73 Americans who Western Powers in a July 30 note ameter SKYHOOK ball.oons. Madson. 26, son of Mr. and Mrs. was treated well by We Chinese." lIliht training will be called to w~ aimed at delaying a Big FOur marks were called interim ob- returned In Monday's exchange to drop the so·called "short torm" When pro per altitude was Oscar W. Madson, Gowrie. and Rund entered the service In 1950 active duty tirst with otherll to mccUn, and at postponing ere<> ervations. sold the Chinese at Camp No. L treaty they had proposed and re- reached. the ro.ckets .were fired .In Cpl. Louis L. Rund, 28, son ot Mr. and went to Korea in February. be called In app~Ox:lmatelY eqUal leleetlons throughout German te~' - The state department based in North Korea had planned to turn to negotiations on the detailed on almo~t vertical dIrection. WIth and Mrs. Joseph J . R\IlId, Clutier, 1951. He has two brothers and a groups on Oct. I, Feb. I and May rltory. port of Its objection to the Soviet hold bock 200 men, but the Red dratt long discussed by deputy for- thetrlctJon drag of lower nltitudes They were the 25th and 26th 10- sister. 1. Applications for permiSSion to A similar accuslltlon was made plan for unifying Germany on Cross Interceded at the last min· ~18n ministers. There have already eliminated, the rockets achieve an wans released by the Communists do graduate work at Instltutlon$ In Paris by the French foreian 0:- ~ounds that it would put the Rus- ute and the 200 were shipped to been more than 200 meetings of almost perfect .vacuum trajectory In the exchanae. It is believed of their choice may be mode by lice, which said the plan was a slan·controlled East Ger!11an reo the PanmunJom exchange point. too this group in an unsuccessful at- and greater Illtltudes. about 70 Iowans were held by the F SUI Ed"f the offlccrs even thoulh they have Soviet effort to upset the Atlantic l ime on the same poUllcal and A hllh ottklal of the American tempt to reach an agreement that A rocket fired In the, summer of Communists when the exchanfe ormer I or expressed preference tor a call Pact and delay e German settJe- moral level as the West German Red C;roSl laid Monday no word could be presented to the foreign 1952 under Van Allen s direction began. ( • before May 1. ment. government. . has come from United Nations /' ministers. reached a peak altitude of ap· Madson was serving with Co. To Enfer olumbla OffIcers desiring admission to Chancellor Konrad ~denauer M The

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.. ..are 2-TBE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, Ia.-TlI~., All&". 18, 195' Eisenhower. Warns Against WASHINGTON (JPi-Presidentl , TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 Eisenhower Monpay warned con- I But. the report also called on' "The S<1Yiet Union retains the be allo\\·ed to die next year. purpose." . gress against a fixed date for end-\AmeriCa,s partners for greater capacity for aggression," it noted. However, congress did vote · to The President SlUd measures ..!':~ 1::1 =;IS;.s;~~ =:I-:.~!~~;:~I ·I~ ~~.:~.... ;~r:~ D~Y;O;:~;.!r·o~ww:;AIf ing foreign aid '3l1d at 1.he same self-help in the drive for coll.ctive "and it has demonstrated aggres- permii spending on economic aid necessary to buttress the mutual Pullllceaon., Int., 111 Iowa AYe~ Iowa n. D.II, t ...... et.nlall... 0,&61- time told the free world American security, and suggested some spe- sive intentions on numerous oc- to continue to mid-1956 and on securi~y program included: Cll>". low.. '.ntcnd .. _d dau •••t. I. 1Ia. n •••, 01• .I..... u.. Editor ...... lama r.w I" t d th . f mall mIIlter at tlie poatOfOee at I_a ...n.I." D...... I..... •.. .,.. M.w.,1nJ Editor ...... J_b .,. he p canno 0 e whole lob" citlc steps lhey could take. cas ions in the recenL past. It's fu- military goods to mid-1957. This ). A Greater degree 0 coopera- CIl>". \Inder tile ad of ~ of .pe. 'ro•••.•. '- 1: •••• T ..... ' New.. Editor ...... Sarab ..w.. ot providing security. "While it is clear thai the ture intentions remain an uncer- would be under contracts written tion among Western European na- JIIQdI 2, Int. liar..... 1.'.' •• ,1 ••.•• t. 11 •••• CI .~, D __ D __ "":"" , t ------1 II.... '. ty __ tor ...... Den - ( He sent congress a report re- s~rength needed by other tree na- tain quantity:,' . before ('Ilid-l.954. ., tions, including early ratifica ion au:KB&R OP TID ASSOCIATED PRDSI------I Aut. CJl>" EdItor ..•... WVP ~ viewing the mutual security pro- hons cannot be developed and J,'he authorlty to wnte new con- On thJS POint, the PresJdent s re- of the 6-natlon joint army treaty. The A.....,.. tecI Preal .. enUUed ex- Call 4191 , ...... ,•• ltal ••• I. Sporta EdJto •...... _ .. . Fred on- gram for the first half of this year. maintainEd without substantial tracts for foreign aid ilems ex- port declared the security of the So far only Western Germany has ~WlI~'lr.. to 1M - '0. repu"~IeII= ro,... nowl It...... w.m ..• • ,.,. 1_-. Society Editor ...... Kathy Hurta The report denied lhat the over- American assistance," the report pir s June 30, 1954, under the Mu- free world cannot be geared to "a ratHied. n.':.p.lS>e~ :-~!U-:. p~tedAP nDe.... ~~I:~:~~~~':::~r:~.n~. ~-:!!.:~::~ Editorial A ..~nt ...... ~1 CJOII seas grants are a "give-away prO- said, "it is equally clear that the tual Security act. (ixed target by a fixed date." 2. Trade expansion to build up dl ....~bea . "," C.. 'e •. gram," as some lawmakers con- \mUiual security program alone The recent congress reIused to The potential threat to demo- the economic health of free world IIslOla -!!-U-a.ttI--ptl-on-r.-tc-I---b-y-ear;r--le""~:"in-lo-w-.-1 DAILY ~OWAN .VIINESII .TAFf tend. cannot do the whole job." \extend this for four years, as ask- cratic nations is both immediate naUonJI. • AUDIT auauo CJ\T, 25 ~nta weekly or fI! per year In BU5loe•• ... . Chari... 00e1clJw Ratl,ler, Eisenhower said, they The report left no doubt as to ed by the administration, leaving and long-term, it said, and Am~r- 3. Increased investment of pri- I I or =:;;;::$2 . :O~ B::'.~·1n f!!.:.~: Aut. Bus. Mlr...... John T.bpoa are a "sound and.high-yielding in- the reason for the free world's se- the problem for the next session. ica must "move forward with flex- vate capital abroad, especially in ClaCULATIOI(. ,ear; &IX montm, ~; three montha, ClauWed. Manalef .... JUrtb.a .._ vestment In.. national safety." curlty effort. Some lawmakers asserted it should it.ility of action and continuity of underdevelope41 countries. c::au 8-2151 It , ...... N...... ::. a;~a~~~~·~o~,::::rl~~~. ~= DAILY IOWAN ClaCULATION STArr , ••• Dan, I ....a. h 1;...... ko ...' monu... S3.J5. ClrcuJaUon M&r ...... Robart Cr_ Survivors of Greek Quakes Await Evacuation GENERAL NOTICES Interpreting GENERAL NOTICES should be depollited with the eU, editor ., The Dally Iowan In thl' De_room In the CommunlcatioDl Ce.", NotieH must be submitted by 2 p.m. the day preeedlD&" tlrst pubU- e ews cation; they will NOT be accepted by phone, and mus~ be TYPO th N or' LEGWLY WmrrEN and SIGNED by a responalble ~rsoD. In SUI Slu dY By J. II. aOBUTS Jil. THE' UNIVERSITY COOPER- ~y, physiology, chemistry, zoolo. INDIANAPOLIS (IP) _ Gov. "Remarkable uniformity" in re-II ~Ia&ecl rre- ative Baby-Silting league book gy and pharmacy as related to . George N. Craig acted Monday to tail ~ales gains in most Iowa toun- New. Au"'st will be in charge of Betty Wahlel arthritis are being oUered by the halt outbreaks of violence in the ties from 1939 to 1951 is noted in Russia has now made her long- from Aug. 1.. Telephon? No. Arthritis and Rh~umatism Foun- C 10 _ communIcation workers a new research study by Dick Lea- expected' big effort to cause the 8-3958. InCormatJon abo~t Joining dation. The deadline for appUcl- •. tbe gro p may be obtamed from tions is Nov. I, 1953. tl.pplicatlo:!! , statewide strike ag nst the Indi- bo, Iowa Business Digest editor. fall of IDe Adenauer government this member will be reviewed and awards ana Bell Telephone Co. This .. uniformi...... reflects eco- in Wesi Germany and kill the . . .~ made by Feb. IS, 1954. Applica- He ordered St.te PoUcc Supt. .nomic stablllty better than farm European Defense Community. 0 N tion blanks are available in t~ Frank A. Jessup to send statc I price trends, he observes. " At first gJance, against the back- THE COM MIT TEE gradlltte college, 4 Old Capitol pOlice troopers to Clinton (Indl- Eighty of the state's 99 counties ground of the plain view recently Growth of the National Research For fu~ther information address ana) to reopen the exchange In registered gains within a range of ogiven West Germans of the wide.. council, acting for the American the Medical Director, Th~ Arthri- that city, which was closed for 290 to 305 pet cent while Iowa as spread unrest in Germany, the Ca~cer society, is a~cell~in~ appli- tis and Rheumatism Foundiltio:l, a secpnd time SUndllY after a mob a whole recorded an increase ot Russilln proposals do not seem to cations for grants-in-aid 10 sup- 23 W. 45th St. New Yorlc 36, N.Y. besieged it for Illore Ulan live 264 per cent during the l3-year carry the impact which had been port ot growth and cancer re- hours. interval, Leabo reports in his re- feared. The real reaction antong search. Applications {or new Within less tban tbree hours af- searcft for a doctor of philosophy Germans, however, il; yet to ap- grants received before Oct. 1 will A N OPPORTUNITY F 0 I tel' Gov. Craig's actlon Indianrl degree, 1twarded him last week at pear, and may not be tully ap- become effective July 1, 1954. Ad- gradu~te. study . AFROTC Be~l omcials reported that both SUI. parent until the West German dltlonal information may be ob- commIsSioned officers. OPP?rtunl- local and long distance service UIIlforml&1 Not.eworlh1 elections three weeks irom now'ltained from the Executive Secre- ties for graduat~ study dU~l/lg the had becn resumed at Clinton. "Considering the time period There is one thing sure, how- tary, ·CommlUee on Growth, Na- co~jng academiC year Will be Guard A~er&ecl concerned, differences in incomos ever. The proposals contain no tional Research Council, 2101 Con- available ito dsome o~ t~e st~~et"hts The governor also told newsmen and war-caused changes in pat- solid meeting ground for actual IItitution Ave., Washington, D.C. ~hof rece Vi e J comm ss 0ns dU ' he he ha' d alert--' the Indiana Na- Wh t It Blf orce n une 1953 an w 0 uu terns. of living, the degree of uni- ellectlveness: a ever . :C;8u i)1 their senior year ra~ked in the 1I0nal Guard and, aU other law fOl'mliY in the growth of the coun- they have Will be purely pohllea1. HOURS FOR THE 25 t f th I 1 A entorce91eni agencfes to prepare h "h INTERIM PERIOD upper percen 0 e r c ass. for immediate action if there is ties Is notewort y, e says. Repeatlnr ADrles full year of graduate study in a "a.lJy' turther discontinuance of Noting. the ciJiferen<:es ~n retail The Russians are largely rcpeat_ MAIN LWRARY . broad range of subjects at insti. service or violence" in the strike sales gains d?"pend con~dera~IY Ing in a lump the various angles Thursday, Aug. 13-Wednesday, tutions of their choice is permit- that has been in progress since ~pon the 10catlO~ oC retaIl c.entcrs they have worked for a year or Sept. 23. . ted. Applications for such study. Jul>, 22. In nearby countles, Leabo lists as more - a peace conference sup- Mondily-Fnday - 8.30 a.m.-4 regardless of previous ""pressed Shortly befor& the governor took th.e two e)(tr~mes Cass county, ervised by Germans rather than p.m.. . preference for an earlier call, action PI.·ckets Ji.icl. siege to the With retail gains of 364 per cent under international auspices. They Satulday-8.30 a.m.-12 Noon s hould be made by the comrnis- Kokomo exchdnJ~. The attached in the period, and Boone county, would sei up a coalition over and Sunday-CLOSED sioned oUlcer through the appro- challiS that would prevent the with 185 per cent. Pottawattamie's above the East and West German All libraries closed Mbnday, priate Air Force Delay Board uf opening of tlje Iront door and figure was identical to· that of the govcrnments to handle the ar- Sept. 7-LABOR. DA~. the Continental Air Command. barricaded a rear entrance with whole state, 264 per ce,nt. rangements. Departmental libraries will have Guidance can be obtained by re- pll\nks. i'A Statistical Analysis o~ Some Right there is where the pro- their hours posted on the dbors. ferring to Air Force Re~ulatiop s After cbainlng .tbe [ront door Recent Business Patterns for Iowa posal comes apart for all pract!- 35-83. An approved applicanl pickets set uti a sign in front of and Selected Counties" traces im- cal purposes, and the RUssians BASIC SCtENCE RESEARCn should alSo apply at once tO , hls Ii reading: "Closed by Strike." portant economic shifts in twenty know it. The last thing the Allies fellOwships in bacteriologt, bio- chosen institution for admLssfon Pho&ocra et Pelted Iowa counties .and analyzes are ever going to agree to again- chemistry, nutrition, pharmacol:>- to graduate study. . Harold Swope, Koko\;lO pho- changes In n i n e major industry in Korea, Germany or anywhere --- , tographer, repo d pickets pelted groups for the state as a whole. else - is the coalition govern- POST·DOCTORAL FELLOW· him wlt!1 tomaiP~ when hc at- The study is designed to ser\'e per- ment which includes eQmmun- WSUI PROGRAM ships. National JnstituLeS of teml?ted to take a picture_ AMONG THE THOUSANDS rendered homeless by the devastatln&" series of earibguakes ja: the sons who are planning advertising ists. The Russian coup in Czech- Health. New deadlines of Feb. Indiana Bell oCflclals said the Ionian Islands, these reful'ees find shelter on a boal or-Ithaca, Greece, The other Islands vtllited b1 and sales campaigns and to pro- oslovakla drove all the cobwebs 15 and Oct. IS, 1954 have been sel chains and the.- barricades were destruction and death were Cephalonla and Zante. At least l,~OO are believed dead and 4,000 InJUed. vide indloal.ors ot the stability of out of the Allied mind on that . CALENDAR for receipt of completed I1PpJica­ removed trom the Kokomo ex- Relief Is belDr flown and shJpped to the swlcken a-eas. troQl HIe United States and Great Britain: the et;onomy of the stllte. It should subject five years ago. tions for Postdoctorate· and Spe­ chl\nge about .the time service was also be 'Useful to market resE:arch- Reds UIJe Sys~ms TlIe.da7. AUIUd HI, 19:".3 cial Research Fellowships in, the Monlh'lI Chopel Medical Sciences and Rel led re$tored at Clinton. Seventeen ...... " .. • ers and certain governmental Thc Communists use two sys- :;~ News non-striking employes had con- PrOcluction Ccedit T '~ agencies, Leabo observes. tems to exploit coalitions. ThbY 8:30 Summer Stren.de Fields offered by the Depar\menl tinUed working in the bllrricadcd Reds Salld V Wanf" RUSSI-a,' Gal.nl Listed use one 'Yhere there is a con- ::~ Je,ferso'1'an Heritage of Health, Education, and WeI· London Forum fare Public Health Service. Slip· butjding. Groups To Retire "Generally the largest gains in trollable predominating party and 10 :,0 New~ Bakers Dozen end, $3400 per year plus $350 retail sales were made in the coun- a lot of splinter parties which JO :15 Proudly We Hall br;~eO~~r:le~~~O ar~~~~~s BOe~td G t St '- Indl1a a't UN Peace Talks ties normally referred to as eitber be kept apart. for each. dependent. For further overnmen O~I{ ~: ~ ~ Advent\lres In Research and numerous picket line s1!:.il'm- tho state's western or eastern meat To make the'll proposal sound 11 :4S Iowa Slate MedJcaJ Society information and application I ishes at other. ciUes. OMAHA (IP) - Presidents of UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (IP)- arcas. Average or slightly-above- betl?r to Germans, they offer ~21;ro Prayer for PeRce blanks write to: National Insp­ !touth Bend Cut Off 8 Pdt' C d·t . t· . d t th bal of at Rhythm Rambles tutes of HQalth, Division 01 Re­ SouU~ Bend was virt4,.ally cut 1 ro uc Ion .re I assocla IOns The Soviet bloc favors a Korean the armistice. average gams were rna e in the reml e ance repar 12:30 New. Sports Time search G~ants, Research Fellow­ off from long distance communiea- In the 40-BBsoclation Iowa, Ne- peace conference which wouJd in- The Iron Curtain diplomat, who northeastern dairy area and in the cdlaimethd !rom Ger~any atsnd l~:~ ?,iuslc.1 Chats ships BranCh, Bethesda 14, Mary­ t· lth th ·t· I t F'd y b k S th D k t d W soutl1ern pasture region The in... uce ell' occupatIOn cos 2'00 News Ion W .0 erbclles as rl .da ras a, ou a 0 a an yo- clude some countries that did not would not be identified, said Mos- e es '--10 tbe state nv'era"e 0 be [ore the election could be held 2:j5 SIGN OFF land. aftor a mght t rioting OUtSI e mlng group which still have gov-. . cr as U<' w "" c-. . ' its two buildings in that city. ~ rnment-owned capital stock, an- take part In the Korean conflict, cow teels the conference should be cured in the north-north central These pomts alone make It cle ______....,.-....,.-______: Union oflicials said they objec- nounced Monday it will be retired a Red bloc diplomat said Monday. "roundtable ratber than ano~her cash grain area," the analysis re- that Moscow expects no tcd to ihe importation of workers by the end of the year. This would include India and the Panmunjom." He was referring to ponts. ahnce by htht e West;. and SUkggdes~ l h Hoegh To Investigate Council J.. th T th I .,[939 im t I th' d s e m g even ue s oc e a f rvm 0 er CI ICS to man e ong The announcements were made Soviet Union. the, system at Panmunjom. in n 1 approx a e y one- Ir they did so distance lines t th 20th I ! of the gross Iarm in{:1me In the' DES MOtNES (IP)-Atty. Gen. Leo A. Hoegh Monday said he as- .':ference wl'th Mayor a e . ann versary con er- This also coulo Include some which UN command representa- t d' 20 ti died .bkeci German Neut.rallzaUon After a copo !nce Ilf directors and officers of . $ u Y s coun es was er v. sured members of a Laurens citizens committee that he will invest\· John Scott the company agreed the PCA groups in the four states. Moscow sateilltes. It would broad- tlv~s sat across the table from from the sale of crops. In 19H the The SOVIet alsi 'col)lml te bag' recomm nded. con- I t.o· d °t "lnlouncCmtoCllht dldthllOt 1'0 a In It M- °d,erO 'a eCk'l I. ot Hungary The ambassador told. . "e a s as ow e p an w scour on ay n r ess ;~~=:;;~;;;~;;;;;;~~~~ l her "he (D~blj Is the only person sidel'ation of a two-pnc system Yoo..\ld ()~rat • P~es!lmnbV, ht'w- driving charf~e. His defense wa In our country who has the right tor wheol ever, II wheat farmer would be that he kidded his car and END8 TODAY TOO MASY oraL to free Mr. Sanders." Tl)e commitlee recommended a sl"ned a q UO ~Q tor domestic lood l reeched his brake to awaken I.OOK wno' LAUGHING I The ambassador Ielt London'l th t the two-pl'ice pltln be eircu-!con 'umPtlon, baed on Urn ted hl8 girl tfl nd. Tratflc reter Aug. I J. , IlItcq to Intcr S.t grou.p s uch as reqUirements (or the nation as a John M. WI e tl",ed Jill I $50, sus- WrQ.t.e 10 Ambullador Ifarm crganlzatlon, I h d u s try wllOJ e. Fur this Q1Jot.'l h'! would ~ pended'llis drIver 8 lIeen e tor two I Mrs. Sanders h.ad Written to Kr~ups pnd qommlttees of congress assured lull parity, but any wbeat. years and advl'lled him to get his the ambassador tor help In ob- for ,tl'\elr study and comment, Iprodu cd In xces at quotas Ilrl an alann clock: __ _ lailling release ot her huspanci. T~e dcp.rt'tm n t's brlet . an- would not r cel\'e any price $up- L t T';" HOrvath Invited, her to see hlm. nottncement said ~hat the .dVlsory PQrt. I 01 • • Last March Hungary ollered 10 cQI,nmlttee 1a t Friday held eXPlor-! Export PriCe Below Partly "Ton free Sanders jn exchange lor :t at.pry dJscu ions of various pro- The cjfecl ot thl ~ would be tha !hat Dluy Pric:I. 01 St, - •• "-"'. Chinese Communist girl (Ue~rillR po al~ lhat have os their objec· wheat In exee s of quota ould Q\tY' Scor.. AQGin •• I "~'''''"'''; ''U 10 dealh In Malaya, HetltlVC th tree market operations s 11 at whal vcr the market would ''''~..:I. sentence was commuted to lite and tree mark t prices In t il a , d but Britain rejected the proposui way as to assure wheat producers OCM . Thl pre s\; m ~ bI Y \\0\11 when Prime Mlnl!tter Churchill o~ 100 per cent of parily prices on wheat [Ivallablc for exl>OrL Isaid In Parliament: "There clln be aU wheat consumed domestically pri. c~ t>~low pnrlt.v. ClAS a-IIIIIB no que,tlon of parterlng a human as tood \lnd al the same time as- Wh al !'lOW Is supporled at lite by dJverting the course of sure consumers of wheat and per cent of parity. I .TypiDq justice or metcy In Malaya for wheat products of prognm costs I Parity ilS u, Co In ilmn p ogram. the same Of obtaining tbe releose no greater than . und r cftectlve!i. Q price d slimed ·to be faJr to -....,..... _­ O.e d81 ...... _.. Ic )ler word TYPINO - ~. of a British. subject Unjustly im- opcratil)fI of existing price support tarmers In relation 10 prices they Three daYI ...... 120 per word • prisoned in Hungary. programs." Ipa y for thlngs they buy. Five day•...... 150 Per word WE 1I10VE • houle(ul or one piece 01 /umlhue with our mOdem equlp.n""I. Wbeat To Move Freely Wheat Carmen voted 1(l5t week i' 'Ten daYI ...... _ .. .2.0 per word Maher Bro •. Transfer. Dial 1616, Oue MODth ...... 3ge per word The'". '-,. ~o~l~ market, "thus eliminatinglStewardess InJ'ured Five insertions per month, 1 --Mia~-c-e-:l~lan-eo-us--:-for-~Sa~..-- ' • 'f ~ Esfranged d the need for costly export pay- • per insertlon ...... 88<: per lnch l ------.....;;-~- HUSH REMINGTON portable. I'xc.,Uenl condl· ~ . n !!,$!~ts for exccsslve govetnmentl l B t" "d' t Ten insertlo S pe 0 th At n r m n , tlOII. $$22,50, Call 4535. MIAMI, Fla. V1')-The 17-year- ~~~~~!S~l! ~I)~;k~a~~I~I!h: n 01 mg CI en , per Insertion ...... 8Oc per lnch LOOK In Y-ou-r-al-tIc-I-"'T-ho-u-.a-"-d-'-"-'-pe-o' olt! husband ot "coma mother" ... . ,.. lIorllY rC't-Lirn t.o. prod l\cer~ on .1 DaHl" .nsertions during month pI .. read.lnl the Iowan Cia .Wed oec· R rt d RII ., ,.r . .. ' U,," are Inlert.l~ In what you ha"e \0 Janice Cubbedge was arrested Ihat ' part , o~ the wheat crop which epo e 1 Ylng ,let lJUlertlon ...... 70c per Inch ...11 . Iowan a~ ,et reault.. CaH 41'1 Monday on. a peace wanant 101- , uv.... U')to QomeStic (pod con-I LAKE ARROWHEAD. ClIlft. (iP) IOd.y. Jowlng a dispute with his ailing J • _ A pretty alrllne . h6st~$S • Who 1111.1 Ah.rlh•• e.h .. LET tiS Trail r.r your (urnlture IIIlely with our mOd ern equlpmenl 10 YO\l~ wUe. . Youth ' Killed in Tractor hoped to trash the movies rldlied ,... U.II,. r...... Ott/ •• new home. Maher Bro , Tran.fer. Dial The husband, Ronald. was taken , MondllY from the effects ' de a a._•• 1 h.1 R.II O. 16M. Into custody by Constable Newt Acclde'ftt Neor Fry to"," speedboat tall that co t he an A. K . C. COCKERS. Dial MOO. Hudson who said be Jould bel . " Iarm and a ~eg. •...... ' held until be posted $500 peace fo A tractor accident at tbe Joe B I t:I hi 23 I ,,- 't. ~ ", : If Call 4191 Apartment tor Rel/.t bond IB : Mi11er farm brought death to on .,ql\e cr. ,0 ~o "'":'u , . E,'vin p., ~ilIer , I., Arcola, Ill., Neb .• -teU Sunday from a 8~- 1 ----,P~--.,l..,.I!!:::L:r---·,.----- WANTED: Girl to oh.re apartm""t 19r er.ona O'III ...... M loll I"lne er. R"" son_ble, Phone '·27~ . Hudson said Ronald, . accompan- at 12:20 p.m. S;lturday. I boat owned by hotelman ~nrad I led by hls lather, a~pea:ed at tbe The i youth, son of Mr. and MI',J HUton. She ~as sucked into the CAT_INO In weddln, and blrthda, MOVING Into An Ap8rtment? !Aavo the I cak ... Specially bilk In •. Phqne T•• t, r,,"ponllbIUly or makin, lon, or Illort house where his Wile IS stayinglDaniel B. lv,tiller, Arcola, was vi,- prope1lor, which severed her left PIII1r'7. sm, I\.ul. wIth yo ur (urnll ...... to our mOdern· and threatened to take their ~ild Itlng his uncle'S farm ncar Fry- arm at the shoulder and so man- Iy equipped Trans/er ServIce. Dial MM. by torce if necessary back to the town, about 10 miles southwest ot gled her left lell thht It had ·to be mals t)'llln • • DIal "3101. ----'-,---- I PHONE e·S2t2. D..olrable 2 room lurnlohed young couple's home at Labelle, Iowa City. amputated. ALTERATION. repair on men' •. women'. aparunent {or married couple or oW­ Fla. . lleputy .sheriff Donald L. Wi!- Santa Anita hospltaJ repox:ted elothlnl. The Family Tailor 8hoppe. dent. Clot" In $60.00 per month, Ulilftte. U'llo I. COU .... Dial '''011. paid. The constable's deputies were IIdn exp1ained that Ervin Miller Monday that her condition , was Help Want8d ROOMS Jor , men, Student k1lcl1en an- waillng and took him lnto custody. apparently becllme confused as h "excellent considering the extent 1____ ;;.;.;;.;10;. __ ...;;,;,.;.;.;,.,;;.____ cluded, re ..onabl& Call 1·1JC11. II. S. They were sent to the house after Was- ' d~lvl~g a. tractor in the yard ot 'her injuries." :' "MAKE po dally. BeU lumina ... name l0bn00n. D~W U.s. envoy to an earlier. squabble 'whicb result. ot the. Miller hOJ.Tle and tbe ma- Only to the laket his oath of offtce ID' wltne~s "cc,ld~l)t:wa. plateL Write Reev .. Co .. Attleboro. U-N-FU--D-~lS--urD-.----.-Ba-.-~.-.-_'L-. ed in county poUce, being caUed. chini! strutk ' a buildin!t, tben ov- Geary Steffan, ex-husband of ac­ MaA. F .... umple and deLilIis." cUn"'.;:" ~ ,roouu...... _70 • Nte department. • , Patrolman Dick Gladwell and ettprned backwards, pInning him \r~s Jane PowelL , 'P~s - ~a.ter lIe A man (or oalOtl work. alo" a lady or BACHELOR aPQlmenllL Ik N. DubuqlHl. • • .. . ,' [.,10 d Sexton rewrted'Ronaid de- b~eath It. skIIng behind the tast-mav.m, m.n (or oain clerk. apply In peNOn, Dhu l ..2I6II. Y d tady of th' 3- k- ·A · cousin of Ervin Miller os- craft. Steffan pulled Miss B~hler Larew Co. E . Wasb/nlt0n. ---:--:--~:-:-""'"l"!":"-....,i-- man d e , .cus elr wee ca!)e

5 Acc:used Reds ROO'" - ....duale ltuclento. PIIaM 151 •. you can RENT Plead Innocent LAROE room for pia Oft bull lID.. Call GIl. TQCODt IOOIU or apartmall ST. LOUIS (.4") -Five alJeaed Roolll9> for "..dll&le worn.. .. Pho". 4111. Communlst Jeaders charged with consjliring to advocate overthrow of the iovernment by force plead­ you can ed innocent Monday at their ar­ SEll railDment. articIea you en not ulfag Their trial was reset for Jan. 4 Ignition ' by. Feaeral1Jt8trict, Judge Roy W. Harper. 'Mts. Mary Kaufman ot CA8Bt1Rl.iORS New York, who haa entered the GENERATORS STARTERS you · can HIRE , case a • detense attorney, saId BrkJqa & Stratton Motor. . . qUILT!' 01 ~ul~~) 14 she +.o6uld need, addJUona I time to PYBAMJJ) SERVICES , hi ~ l7-IbODtb Peii~, prepne for the trial, which' had .' part orclin·time·employ .. • 'J' Benard Lamateln, 38. wIIo 111&&. been schedUled tor Sept. 14. 621 S. Dubuque Dial 5723 with Daily Jowan WdDt Ada -tea' 20 houari In BreioklYll ' tOr The defenda1Wl are William We WIll PaY you caah hll tatller.ln-Iaw, 11 ftnecl ,I". Sentner, Jamea t. FOrelt, Robert ... and .rdered &0 relW1l $1,,- Ma~~whz, Mra. Dotothy Forest, lor . yow. UMCI Cad ' All makes and models •..- &0 ~e te_p~ ~¥bIJ abd Mareua Murphy. Sentner was iliaD), farmer " servlt!emelt.- Il :\ ct'nt+nl flgure In' ttl!!' ~ ~trllt(l . IEHMmY AUTO ~RT ', 4191 ' t, three-,ear prllen ter.... -wu .U/I­ at- the Meytlttl ' pleM in Newton, 708 Riv.~l>rive .,- I • pellaed' by the court. Iowa. DJa17373

'. • / pace.. f-'rRE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa Cit,., b .-Tues., u&,. 18, 1953 NCAA Censures ·N .otre. Dame,; Michigan State lthlete Tryouts . Moving a Bit of 'Real Estate' Spartans on Probation,1 Sch~ol; Voice Must Explain 'Funds' Quick Answers CHICAGO (Al) - Notre Darne l T Ch Iand Michigan State received II ing talented and worthy young 0 arges <;harp slap tor violations of t~e person to attend Michigan State athletic code Monday and liltle college." Commenting on the NCAA It­ Arizona State at Tempe was plac- The report added that these tior., a Notre Dame olficlsl said t'd on two' ycars' probatioo by the funds were not administered by coaches had used a "modified type powerful policy-making group Of the college and that evidence be­ of tryout" but that the universlb stopped the !lractice on learnin( III the nation's colleges. 1fore the council was that the The National Collegiate A1hletic-monies raised by these organiza­ it last January and invoked "dis­ lssociation's 17-man counell met- tions were used to aid athletes. \ ciplinary measures" against the led out out no specific punishment The council asked Michigan Slate coaches. o the two larger universities but, authorities to provide a complete Added a statement by the Rev. in effect, warned 'them to be good accounting of the funds not laler Edmund P. Jt1yce, CSC, executive henceforth, or else. than Feb. 22, 1954, the terminal vice-president: Notre Dame was "severely cen- date or the conference's action. "It is ironic to be subjected to sured and reprimanded" for per- In the case ot Arizona Slate, the public opprobrium tor a minor of­ mitting tryouts of prospective council also cited a foundation fense deCisively handled on the rootball and basketball players. known as the Sun Angel Founda­ unIversity level. There are many This is in violation of the NCAA tion, a non-pro!ll corporation with Ift .. "I'" n' rpa ll y serious abuses in consiticrtion. offices in Phoenix, Ariz. This , the world toward which the NCAA Follows Blc Ten group was said to be made up of . "uIO nave much more profitably As for Michigan State, the coun- friends and alumni of lhe college · turned Its attention." cil said it supported the action of living in Phoenix and the sur­ the Big Ten conference. wnich rounding area. Michigan State athletic director placed the Spartans on probation. The QOunci! said that this foun­ Ralph JaJ. Young said the NCAA MSC had the nation's No.1 foot- dation collected a considerable action "appears to be a reite11l' ball team last fall. sum of money from 1949 through tion of the probation placed upon The Spartans, also charged with 1952 tor the purpose of providing us by the Big Ten." giving tryouts to three basketball financial aid to athletes enrolled AMERICA'S INTEREST IN FOOTBALL came to ure acain thl. weekend wUh the All Star came at Young said NCAA officials told players not named. were given un- a.t the college. Of this, the council Chicaco'! Soldier'S field. More than 94,000 rans watched Bob Hoerl\5Chemeyer. star halfback of 'h~ him before the Chicago Illcelln, til next Feb. 22d to explain oper- said, approximately $79,600 was world's champion Detroit Lion., plunce acro.1 the coal line til .core th~ first touchdown of the con- that it was customary to . uppor! ations of a so -called Spartan contributed to the college. test, and ,Ive the Lions the beclnnln&' of a 2~ to 10 Victory. the action or Individual coDler­ Foundation, which the coupcil ..:.'------....:.--....:.--.------~-__:,._------ences. He said all matters referred charges has been giving aid to Y k to by the NCAA happened before the Westerfl conference probation EISENHOWER SHOT, taking a little too turf. athletes. was imposed. . the way the President described this elcht-Iron performance at The ~CAA constitution states an ee I, that athletic aid must be admin­ be 'Homers "We're hoping thnt the Big Ten &he Oheery HUll Country olub, Denver, Corbo The ball can seen istered by the college. bJ trout 01 hI. left- .houlder. probation will be litted soon,· It Michigan State fails to meet PHILADELPHIA (If»-The New NEW YORK (If» - The New Young sa id. "We are observin, I these demands before the dead- York Yankees hammered home York Giants earned a split in their all Big Ten and NOAA rules in line, the college then would be five runs in the first against with Philadelphia every way, shape and manner." 'Stone Wall' Stops Middlecoff . subject to more severe punish- the groggy Philadelphia Athletics Monday, winning the second game FT. WAYNE, Ind. (/P)-Art (Stone) Wall Jr. of Pocono Manor, ment. The council can forbid oth- Monday nigh.t to win the second 6-0 behind the eight-hit pitching Pa., ,chipped and' putted a 'I-stroke lead over Dr. Cary Middleco{f of er colleges to playa member not game 01 a tWl-night doubleheader, of AI Corwin after lhe Phillies had Iowan Shoots 78 Memphis and held on for a 72~70 victory Monday in a playoff for the in good standing, as in the recent 9-0. captured the opener 5-2. Ft: Wayne Open's top mone~. casc ot the University of Ken- In the opener, the American Relief specialist Andy Hansen I J T . ' WaH's check for $2 400 was the first winner}s prize he had picked tucky's basketball team. league leaders came from behinq NATIONAL LttAO E made his first start in three years n aycee ourney up In two years in (be'pro circuit. Middlecoff wop $1,800. ~rlzon's Fate 'Roughest' wlt~ a relentl~ss attack. to give Br ..klr n .,. , . . 1': a~ ~~!. OJS W L . Pel. 08 with tbe Phillies and was charged ANN ARBOR MI ~ (A>}-D' k ; They tied with 265s Sunday for the 72-hole distance, breaking Arizona State got the roughest Whitey Ford hiS 15th wm of the Mllwauke • •... 1l 47 .rt02 ~1, . New York .. , 79 H1 .681 with the second game defeat. He ' C. IC Jim Ferl"ier's 1951 record lor the. meet by Cour strokes. treatment, bei ng placed on proba- season, 10-3. t. Loul l .... 6t ~~ .!I.U lO lt Cblc.'• . ... . - 70 ~n .003 9 yielded a in the fifth inning Chase, a classy 18-year-old golfer I . , • t' t th t b i . g Phlla,elphla . , 6S 113 .MS I.\i ClevelaDd . ,. VI oe .iWl. 14 b Th d bl d trom Oakmont Pa stepped out 1 Wall's sharp iron pia), repeatedly gave him easy putts on the Ion or e wo years, eg nom Joe Col1l~s started the second Ne.., York _ .. G7 ~7 .Il00 %O'.k Bo.'on , U ~ .M~ .6 when Bob y ompson ou e . I"h 223 Pfir-72 Elks Country club COUl·se. He used only 27 putts to Middle- se. pI. I. Also Arizona State's ath- game scoring with his lO th home ClntlnnaU .... ill! u.; .U9 ~ 8 'i IV. lh.n,lon . 511 nn .• 9~ .,., and scored on a single by Wes I~ front ear y as. a uge man cpfr.s 32. letes were ruled ineligible for run of the season. Hank Bauer ~~:~~,o b . ~ !~ .3811 !!''z ~::~~~,'Iphla . :: ~= .410 ~~:! Westrum. The Giants knocked l'lim field ,began qualtfYin~ here Mon- CAA championihip events tor lined a to center and Yogi s ar, Mo~d~l'" R ..au~S09 SI. Lou •• , . . 41 17 :;:':~ SH out of the box in the sixth when day in the International Jaycee · S t 5 d the colh;ge year ot 1953-54. Ari- Berra walked. Bill Renna smashed B ...kI 111 5. PllI,bur,h 2 Monday 'l ae ..U . Hank Thompson slammed his 23d go lf tournament. zona SUIte can con. tinue to play the f st C I 't h t 1 ft Ne ... York 10,9 PhiladelphIa 3, • NOW York t, R Pblladolpbla 5,0 , Don Mueller tripled Ghased toured the rolling 6,660- . Ir 0 em an PI c 0 e Toda,'. pUeb... I Today'a Pllcho.. h' Memp hIS ta e , tu en t football, flele! for two bases, scoring Bauer New York at Br.okl,n (nl,btl-Worlh. 8 1. Loul. al Cbl.a,o (%. lwl."lrhtl _ and came home on a single by yard University of Mic Igan course I A ' The Arizona institution was and Berra. Bllly Martin then lnrlon (%·4) v•• 1, 001 (12-3). Pal,. (2-M) an4 Krello .. (I.:) Y . Truckl Dusty Rhodes. with a snappy 36-38 for a two·' ha ged w'th pe m 'tfng pa to b ht R h lth h' 4 h PIli bar,h at Pblladolpbla .nl,bH - (1 3·0) and Funlele (1.". over par 74 in the first of two 18 ' c r 1 r I I Y roug enna orne w IS 1 t l.a,ahn.e (6.1S) ••• Simmo.s (18· 10 1. Clev eland ,1001 ..11 (nl,hl) - Oa rda Jim Konstanty, who snuffed out - . Leo d S Wes f ern rna teur athletes and transportang prospec- home run of the year. Jl(Jlw ..k •• at O.n olonall (nlrbl) - AD' 114 -(i) VI. Gr, ... e.. (8-8). a belated Giant ninth inning rally hole qualitYlOg round~. live players to the campus tor Collins hit h's second home run lonem (9,8) VI. Nuball (U·S) or Ba ..... • W ••b lnl'ton • at Now York (nl,hl) - in the opener held the New York J ack Rule of WaterlOO was only · h (.oj l'h NCA ' d • .kI n.t). chmlls 1!-11 VI. MIII.r ( ~·H. , - . .GRAND RAPIDS ' MlC. ff" -: tr,YouU, e A s amateur ce· P of the night and 11th of the sea- Cbl .. ,o al 81. Loall (nl,bl) -llaekor Pblla'elphla at Bo Ion (nl,bt) - Byrd ers in check for two . four strokes ott the first ound Hillman Robbins Jr. of MemPhIS / It gave Robbins a I-stroke edge forbids payment to athletes above son in the second to make it 6-0 IT·Ul . 1. SIal07 (t~·61 . (10·13) VI. McDermou m·8). A f . hth' i pace with a 4i-37-78. holed chip shots of 50 and 90 teet over favorite Harvie Ward Jr of tuition llnd reasonable board. In the seventh the world cham~ I b t o~~~run elg t~ ng ~ut- each, the latter for a sl>ec tacula~ I At1anta Ga. who carded 35~3g . The council said NoIre Dame, pions who have now beaten the rocked Marion Fricano for two son and had a 3-1 coqnt on Hodges I urs a tb e pehxPilentshe 0 a~e ~s- Thf! top 100 qualifiers after Mon· I th t t k Ii t d " " . . 0 gave e s e openmg VIC· day's and today's 18~hole round eag e ree, 0 a ears -roun 69. one at the natJon's football pow- Athletics 13 times in 17 meetings ID the fifth Ilnd seventh. In the. when the big flrst baseman con- tory Stan Lo t' bId d will enter the 72-hole medal play qualifying lead in' ~he ~e stern Lloyd Martz of Detroit blew a ers, condllcted tryouts fo r prospec- picked up th ree more. 'ninth they gave reliefer Morrie nected. singie was the P;i a ~Io~ses- oa e tournament. Amllte,ur Golf ChampIOnshIp l'10n- brJlijant chance to take over the !lve athletes m both football and The two wins pushed the Yan- Martin a four-run going over, g . day WIth 4-under-oar 68. lead, He was five under par going basketball over an extended per- kees nine games ahead 01 the idle based mainly on Phil Rizzu The 21 -year-old student at into the last [our holes but bogied io~ of time. . The Yankees three-run double. YEaRS AH E.a' Memphis state college holed his everyone to finish with a 71. hoot Baskets have 38 games left to play, the * * * amazing eagle on a par five, 490- Bracketed at I-under-par 71 Thcse tryouts, the oouncil added. White Sox the same number. 0 d W· 5 2 yard Sixth bole and that set the with Martz were Tom Draper Jr. consisted 01 wind sprints, calis- Ford, who entered the first game 0 gers In,- tempo for his 33-35-68 over the of Birmingham, Mich., and John [henies, reflex tests, running and with a four-game winning streak BROOKL YN (If» - Gil Hodges , > '. scenic Blythetield Country club Barton of Davenport, ]owa. passing in football and basket and 17 scoreless innings behind hit his 26th home Tun of the sea~ course which plays to a par of 37- The field will shoot IS more ,hooting in basketball. him, was lifted in lavor of Tom son with two on In the I Uh 35-72. holes of qua1i1ying play today. The action by the council tailed Gorman in the seventh inning as Monday night to give Brooklyn OF TH E 1.1 I' ' to mention the case of Charlie th punchy A's tried to stage a 16th. victory in 17 meetings with Sticka, a standout Trinity college comeback. the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-2. ing freshman who showed up on the accounted for three Johnny Lindell had a shutou , IS( ,Wresil I Irish campus but later left when 01 the Yankees' tallies in the first going for Pittsburgh until the Iowan To Coach Trinity officials raised a furor. game wi th his 21st homer of the of the ninth wilen Bobby ~ .... ~ft'ft_ ------ITrlnity is in Hartford, Conn. year in the seventh aDd a long :fly singled and Duke Snider hit Harold J . Nic~l~ has b eqn /)on't you want to flY named wrestling coach at Iowa Alkansas State where his wrest- The powerful 17-man council to score the New Yorker's fir~t 'l8th homer to tie the score. a cigarette with a State college, it was confirmed )jng teams have compiled good said Michigan State held tryoutsltallY In the fourth. In the 11th Lindell's control Monday by Pres. James H. Hilton. records against opposition which for three prospective basketball The A's rapped Ford for two perfcct through the [irst eight in recore/like this? b - - '-Iuded not only nearby col- player~ one In 1951 and two in runs In the second but the Yankeesinings, deserted him entirely. Nichols, 36, has been teaching legl's but such wresUmg powers as 1952. The players were not named. ~tBrted rolUng 1:1 the fourtn and Iwalked Snider and Jackie Robl n- aod coaching at Arkansas Slate Cornel! college, Kansas State, Ok- The council also found that ------'------:------fL..l~/~ college, Jonesboro, Ark. His ap- lahoma, Oklahoma A&M and the there existed in Lansing, Mich. p6lntment to succeed the late University of Illinois. from Sept. 1949..Nov. 1952, an in­ Otopalik at Iowa State was made In addition to coaching wrest- corporated organiEl;ltion known as t on the recom~endation of AthLe.tic ling he has at various times serv- tbe Spartan Foundation and an­ ChesterfMld QUIIIty HI..... t Director Lows Me.nze, a~d Wltn ed as track coach, swimming other organization known as the the 'approval of the Athlehc Coun- cooch and director of intramurals. Century club. 15% higher -than its neue.t (om­ cll .ot the college. He organized a new currJculum for Collected ',AId' petitor and 31% higher th.n tb. A native of Cresco, Nichols was majors and minors in physical These organizatipns, the council average of the five otber le.din, graduated from high school there education, and has taught physl- added, collected funds in the in Ig34, received the B.S. degree cal education as a regular staff amount of at least $55,000, "OS­ brand•... based on recent cb.mical in physical education from the member. tensibly tor the purpose of assist­ analyses giving an index of good University of Michigan in 1940 and .ix the M.S. degree in physical educa­ quality for the country's leadin, tIon from the University of Illinois cigarette brands. Th, i"tlu ./,..tt in \948. 'fulilJ uik-tl rtlli• •/ h/III IMI.r Since that ·time he has been at DAVIS 10 low "itoli", - sh.wl ClJuttrfI#IJ ADvEaTISEMENT ~(!LeaHe.w NOTICE or ASSESSMENTS-­ Ifutllily bir'JIII. To Whom It May Concern : NoUce Is hereby liven that an assess· meni hal been prepared for Ihe eMt a nd eXpen.", 01 Improvlnl UN/TID TIME ONLV! .\n , Alii Stree' from Hll hland Str"et 10 clilled FrlenellY A ven ue • 2 " 8 '· Sireet from W" tLlne 01 Garden UNr Streel to 1:8., LIl\e of Fifth t ractory' Fifth A""nue from uB" SIreet Norlh No advene effects to - 12\1 feet more or 10 .. nOle, th ....t and slnu... from Clark Street from KIrkwood Avenue 10 - Walnut Street ~~ AUTO RACES ..oIda. Chesterfteld. l'rlencbhlp StrHt from Garden Stnot 10 AFTERNOONS-AUG. '0, SEPT. 4 Third Avenue I NiGHT-SEPT. 7 Frain the report of a medical.'pe­ Trlencllhlp Street belween Garden Street and Seventh Avenue Thunder ing speed. Toaring artion. cialist w"o has bee~ ,ivi",. IrouP Orove Street from Reld!lll t~ ' ..... on Amrricn's most fnmous spcedway Holt· A""nue from Oak lUcile Avenue to Qf Chesterfield amok.u ,e,ula, Gould Street. aces bnttling for huge purses, BUllion Avenue from Benton to No. I ex.mination. every two mouth. Hllh",ay rx--- LucSl StrHt [rom Pale to Walnut for well ave, • year. . Mtl.aln Slr",,1 [rom Fenon Avenue to Ter",.lIn .Hoed Irom Park Road to oak ! Hld_ , Ma.owan Avenue 'l'blrd Avenue from E to r 1hlrlut ' Str_ from SummIt Street to Clark Str""L Wl!t.m Street from Pale Itreet froln CIRCUS _ World .,r;. Rnt with ...... qu.1ltJ In )4 Kirkwood Avenue. AIi.ta. r. StnRattonal c bampionshl ps ... lOa lap for", lng ,,,Imnls. Twlc .....Iy OQ f ~ aluro. A ... 29. Gruelling l ~$ mile ~:v oUlng the Arne. r both npIar and klnl-sln. 'that AId ._ment I. now on file In Ihe ..ig.ntie .... tdoo .t...... ,.. ce p s tak c~ , Sept. t. office ,,' \he undo.nllned, and o""n 10 Much Milderwith an extraordinarily JlubUe InapecUon. T .... t an objections to ..Id proposed ••- =US~CAL REVUE ;1(-"'*-*-*-*-* '* good taste. _menU mUI' be made In wrltlnl ~nd flied wlth the uncienllP>ed b y lh" 14th M"'hjl~ ' "~!"'O~~h! L 4IiIf!IIG ~ \\Ij/;)~ , Clllh\:).7 JII( DE D ,.." 01 September .. A,D. It5S ot 7:30 P .M .• . ~ 1 y,.,.r. or n "~, u '" .taTI, Brol",IW" , ~ .' Y-": iit wbleb Ume th~ Clt~· Counr nf ""ld !D ..IIft. IIlli"1t mOl, Aftllr••••• , S.,t. I ••4 7 ~ ::-=-- e\t7 ...ul .."'" to h..,. .nd con.IeI". any , .Ie. I hou.. of NI,lIh, S.. t. 4. 5 ••4 , =--- .ueh objection•. .",rI