,I

"ortinv Thp Stnfp Ul1ir'prsifll nf Tnll'fl flnrl th" P"on/p of TOlen Cit" ,Established in l8G8-Fi ve Cents a Copy MenJl)er c~ As!'Ociatcd PI' ~s Lea<;"d Wire an:! Photo Service Iowa City. 101..... Friday. September U. 195> o ppeasement' n or ast '£ I· R I · 'PI . Eisenhower High Court Hears vo ut,on ,or evo ut,on eas Extends Hope - u.s. Awaits Of Cease-Fire Hawkeye Bids New U. S. Budget Says Situation Serious Decision On But War Not Lileely Be Opelte In Bright Red Ink \VASII[~CTO . (AP ) ro Prl'~it1(']\t Ei ('nhower pl~'dl{t'(l Integration Thur'day night there would bt- got the Word By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL Here Oct. 28 no appt'a I'lnent in the F:u E_ &t Walt Alston Icrisis becaml' hl' s.li I that who was an All. WASIIINCTO\l (A P) - Mal ried l.o:')C'inc lI~"s might Ie-ael to !l major war. as Itar ' Conflicting c( ntt'ntions ran g May Be !le' d~ C 195'" At the suml' time', \II'. Eisen· 5t the Phl"'e~ cut befort, the Supl\'mc COllrt P'd~ nn thl' rlrOi'O :cd l02-un '! i om£' Thursday that delaying school howe-r sn id , Wthl're !lawl ey~ Arnrl!l1(nl ~ fcr mnt spoke oulln a rna· LEAGUE Sl'1 Dus' n~ ' Oll.ce 11'.11 OJ': lor Far Eastern policy pet'Ch l ,. Pel. Gil 55 .607 law of tire lanel. recommcndation~ lor oward rr.h 40 .. ::: carried to the peopl on television 65 .529 11 A decision may come today. con:racls and the Bonrd oC RtJ( 11 • IBnd radio and beamed abroad. 67 .5 11 13' , C 70 .489 16', In 3~ hours ol arguments lrom is l'X~('t· d In 1111'-e Ihl' ron r1 rt Mr. Ei5enbower described Ow 71 .482 11'. :\wards at their 'ovcmber meet- present Far Ea t ten ion .. 72 .482 11', opposing lawyers. the court came in~. Hay Mor~n -' lD a '~,Sla" J1 . seriou but he nld: 73 .471 19 to grips with racial integration of , 79 .428 25 public schools, perhaps the grav­ I '.l-roity . (cn-Iary, expla'n~d Th,lrs- , .". 53 I .ellev. "H. Wllr" RESULTS 3. est domestic issue of the day. day. FllfQI hors "I beli VI' that ther iR nol p- It held its second session of a spe­ t The order of th,. :t' 'o r(l " .v ":"', Ine to be any war." - cio\ term - only the [i[th such will include contracts for can· ' Pr ldent EIsenhower aid Ole term in nearly [our decades. truction, utility s('rvie!'. s!'wa~c. THIS FEDE~AL EXP ENDITURES and recei pts chllrt Is bllsed on Unltt'd tatl's wouH neither be 112-61 Today it will hold another ses­ ('Icelrlcal and mechnn,cal worx. d,'. role.nd rhursd.JY. A prolpectl .. 4r!flc:t of $12.223.000,010 II "lured or {rl,ht n':!d into a,JpeIlSe+ sion at noon, when the great deci­ l and the kind of wintl'r wl's:her we expect,d 10 s.'.ld public debt 10 S2a3 billion by next Jun, 30 _ a ment" ix.>cau e or Red China's sion on a crucial issue is expected. hale, will determine how fo . t r!cord for any filcal yur.end during peace or war. -AP' Wlrepttete. mas Ive bo",bardments and Wide Repercussions ('clI ,· tr:Jction coin be started, ~Ios~· threat, to in ade QlIemoy and The ruling, when it comes, will man said. I * * * * * * other Nntion jist·held Ishmds, He have repercussions rar beyond the Occupancy in 19S9 added: borders of Litlle Rock, Ark. It If som(' of the war:1 can be don' WASHINGTON IA'I The Go\'('rnrn('nt ThurSday nnnounc d the "Now I cnn a ure you that no will ripple on through the South­ J. lee I

r I' • Ut # ...... •• :'I'd":" ., 1'1H ~~ .. ,..... 1:~1 1 1;.1 11~lfi . • I LAFF.A.DAY for BUI '"g ~p iTC)ungsters~ .! , · 11" .. I:' I. :H' I 11l~ 1)oily low~'1 In I H Uf' I a H '~ 't \. FRIDAY. SEPT. 12, "Sl . I rhere's I Nothin~ ·' Llke·~~tj The Daily Iowan Lv written and edited by studenlS and Is goveNied by a board of fille studCllt trustees clected by the udent body and lour faculty trustee, a1Jpointed by ril e ,)resident of tile nlversiry. Tile Daily lowall's B RTHUR ED SO Talking wltll an old cham- made it in an hour and 19 min­ ediWrial policy. therefore, if not an expression of SUl adrnlni trot Ion policy or opillion, ill any particular. W SHl GTO (A P) pion of any kind 1I 'ually is fun. utes. Why, I couldn't have The President's Committee on For as the talk drifts along you done it much better when I the Fitness of American Youth get insights into the tremend- 'Maybe We Should Just Sit and Waitl' has an <'nthusiastic mcmber Ous determination that has was at my peak." An • • • with a one-word answer to the helped separate the champ Or take her hearing. Each T ~ problem of building up young­ from those who never could week she teaches children in 'r. and l " lng I • sters. (Illite reach the top. New York's Lexington School 'II pri~c "Swimming:' says the sturdy, This is particularly true o~ for the Deaf how to SWill~. ",It 4 II vocal middle-~ged, gra ing .. oman. Gortrude : Ederle, who ·hasn·t takes ~ let of pqtience si,nee ,IJ the! Well "It's the best exerci e there is." fO\llld life a n~at sucJs'slOQ off ' O~ ' have ,to 'aCt everythiD~ put " T~ placid waters:. • • I • t d~, then~. ~~l~ .si,nce I can'n nr , And when you look closely, Ingl , sure enough, it's Gertrud Ed­ For one thing,: she ha~ rost either, t!~ ~y feel · ~j.ke I'm o~e hope erle, air ad a veteran in 1926 hcr hearing. Sh!,! blames. exc'es- of them. .' . ' thelll cat« when, at the age of 19, she be­ sive chlorine .in, the water. fur IJiss Ederie tapped ~he hear­ I~ came the first girl to swim the another she siipped, hurt her ing aid ~n her chest. ",Without fruil " \ English Channel. spine ~n/] SPf?t 4~ yeflrs it;l a this, she said, "I canlt bear a I' the It can't b provl'd, of coursc, ca t. It Jookd as if she n ver thing, When I get ready to go I Pakt , would swim again. to bed, I yell out to my sister, •. I bor~ but undoubtedly many a fish Be: •, has lived to a resp ctable old Yet look at what has happen- 'I'm shutting this thing off. the \ age without swimming as far ed. Anybody tllat's got anything to I. anY I were a Gertrude Ederl . Certainly She had been trying the say, say it now or forever hold II no fi 'h has come out as whole­ water tentatively again, when your peace:" l'~ heartedly for swimming as she someone pointed out an impos- Her laugh boomed out, the "Man! A day like this makes you feel glad to be has. sible goal four miles away. true champ who looks on hand· alive!" me l I" the Hight now, 1Iliss Ederle has "You know how it is when icaps merely as obstacJ.l;s that Ka~ a financial reason for pushing anyone dares me," she said. "1 must be overcome. at~ a swimming. She's representa­ P3 ' tive of a firm which aims to mill put a swimming hole in every­ New Adventure Book Unravels- Lher one's back yard. cau to P Miss Edcrle thinks this is Sovi one .S. craw - last year tlte agaU sales of pools went up from The Mysteries of Easter Island $350 to $500 million - that can't help hut be beneficial. AKU-AKU, by Thor Heyerdaill. Rand Mc ally. $6.95. to the first explorers more than 200 years ago. r..lagazine writers She has the vision of hordes oJ: The Kon-Tiki man, Thor HeyerdahI, has done it again. have been speculating about them ever since. 2- and 3-year-olds descending Crossing tlle Pacific on a raft in 1947, he convinced him- Heyerdahl brought with him to tl1e task a crew of trained .i.i. happily into pools all over tlle f:.· I) self and half the rest of us that Pol),nesians reached the South archaeologists who did more actual spadework on the island ... ~ land-and swimming like Ger­ Sea isles from South America rather than from Asia, as generally than had ever been done before. Patching together excavated trude Ederles forevermore. supposed. evidence with that of old tmdition, Heyerdahl decided that Well, it was different when Now he has written another fascinating book about a 1955 « s11e was a gjrl. expedition, by modern trawler this time, to solve the mysteries long-eared white men sailed to Easter Island from Peru early She was raised in ew York of Easter Island. Not only has he settled, to his own satisfaction, in t.he Christian era and constructed there the same type of Cit)', far from any beckoning the question of who erected Easter Island's 50-ton statues and technically astounding stone walls that they had buHt in Peru pool. So, when sho was 8 or 9, how, but he has dug up a whole new series of mysteries, and • FederalI AiCl to ' Students before they were driven Ollt by the Incas. 'The U.S. Officc' of Education is hustling materials: $359,799. her father took her to High­ pl'Ovided the solutions for tllem too. Centuries afterwards, a later generation repaired the walls to get the n w feder'll aid-to-education law For guidance counseling and testing, with lands, .J., and obligingly Thb island's Polynesian natives gave few tips. on the statues clumsily and erected on them the giant statues with curious, op rating before th sl)hool year gets too far special mphasis on the identification and en­ plopped her into the Shrews­ along. Last week, 12 eNd state school offi­ couragement of the abler students: $86,873. bury River. Current Best Sellers elongated heads that may be seen to tllis day. cers (including State Superintendent J. C. For establishment of "area" vocational It doesn't sound scien tific, Finally, tribes of PolyneSians sailed in, came at last to Wl1ght of Iowa ) met in Washington with schools: $86,362. but it worked. "r was pretty FICTION NONFICTION blows with tlle long ears, and exterminated them with the ex­ Federal officials to tudy the law and deter­ These programs can get underway as soon mu('b a natural," she says. ANATOMY OF A. MURDER, INSIDE RUSSIA TODAY, Gun­ ception of one man. mine what steps thc states will have to take to as the state departments of puhlic instrue­ It' often forgotten now, but Traver. ther. ONL. Y IN AMERICA, Golden. From the rcd-haired descendants of this lone survivor, qua iEy for federal aid. lion sets lip machinery to administer them long befor Trudy swam the THE ENEMY CA.MP, Weid· man. THE AFFL.UENT SOCIETY, Heyerdahllearned much more. Under their glaze of civilization, (The aid-to-education bill authorizes the which meets tHe approval of tIle U.S. Office Cha~nel, she was recognized TltHEo(KING M~Sr Ole, . ~e.n. Galbraitll. au . PL.EASE ' ' '' ~AT . THE he fOlmd, they cal'l'ied racial memories of how the statues were expenditUre of some $900 million in Federal of Education. a ~e of the world's Bnest corn swi mel's. "I held 29 world AROUND THE WORL.D WITH DAISIES, Kerr. ' , , chipped out of solid rock, how they were dragged along the funds over the next four fiscal years. Congress o state enabling legislation will be neces­ AUNTIE MAMIE, Dennis. BAA BAA BL.ACK SHEEP, appropriated $40 million to get the program sary at the olltset. The money already appro­ recotds," she says. THE IMAGE MAKERS, Dryer. Boyington. ground for miles by plain strength, and how they were tilted statted. Of this starting appropriation, $647,- printed by Congress, is in the form of an out­ upright by the use of levers and little stones. In fact tlley dem­ 00

THE DAilY IOWAN- low. City, low_Friday, Sept. 12. 19S1-P~e 3 I. )1' I India Debates Democrats Border Issues Meet; Plan

\ With Pakistan Farm Tactics By J. M, ROBERTS OMAHA 11\ - A food stamp plan, , Alloci.ted Prell Newl AnalYlt ~xpansion of the school lunch pr0- gram and plans for exporting more The prime ministers of Pakistan I food surpluses drew favorable at­ Ie and India have just been conduct­ tention Thursday as midwest Dem- '1\ ing border negotiations under a 1. Lo~', L sEvery ay q principle which has long been ad­ ocrats went to work on farm pro- I rI vocated and sometimes applied in posals_ I ,IJ the search for peace between the 2.S 'I West aDd the Communist sphere. Several members of the Demo- , cratlc Midwest Conference Farm Til Great !t. mp PI,," in Americ. That is the principle of separat­ Comm.iltee recommended these ing issues for which there is some measures as the committee began hope of agreemcnt and working on discussions aimed at a (arm POI. , them, leaving aside more compli­ icy statement which will help cap­ cated matters for future reference. ture votes (or Democrats this year. L In that fashion , after years of 'CANA'DA ~ ' WIlS 11 , .:Y';''''. . The Farm Committee sessIon I rruitless effort and pressure by I. the first In a 3-day meeting of I' the United Nations, India and JQ~r (ltORDilli. the l3-state Democratic Midwest I Pakistan have now settled 8 of 15 ~:-:';d ,- ~~:,;: . • B Conference. combined with a cam. , J border issues. ~:}:-i:.'; paign school for congressional can­ Beyond that, they agreed to ban didates conducted by the national BLIMP'S POLAR ROUTE of the U.S. Navy blimp II shown en .... I' the use of force in connection with committee. i 011 S its any of the remaining issues which map above. Th. btimp took off from Fort Churchill, Manltob. Former President Harry Tru­ were on the agenda of this mect­ research flight of the north pol.r regions with • crew of ICltfltlltS. man. National Chairman Paul But­ A Terrific 40c Savings with Order! Giant 2 ~ ing. -AP Wirephoto. ler, and Senators John F. Kennedy Kuhmir Dispute of Massachusetts and Estes Ke­ Un(ortunately, this latter agree­ fauver of Tennessee are among .1 ment does not seem to apply to For Polar Region Touring the headliners. Truman will ad­ the one great dispute. involving dress a banquet audience tonight. Kashmir. That topic was avoided 13 St.te. at the conference. There's Nothing Like a Blimp The conference member states Kashmir has kept India and are Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Mis- Pakistan spending resources on By HUGH MULLIGAN on the deck of his little schooner souri, Minnesota, Wisconsin, rIIi- military preparcdness which ne i'­ OVER THE ARCTIC IA'I - For and Byrd in the cockpit of his trio nois, Indiana, Michlfan, Ohio, ther of thcm can afford. And be­ a poiar sightseeing bus, airborne motor plane conjure up a vision Oklahoma , North and South Da· cause United States military aid IElboratory and overhead hotel, of the fur-clad explorer courage. kola . Texas, .L?uis!ana. and Arksn­ to Pakistan as aD ally against the there is nothing like a bUmp. 10uslY thrusting a frozen beard into sas are partlclpatmg m the cam­ Soviet Union al so builds her up Its speed of 55 ' milcs an hour the howling face of nature. Aloft paifn school. against India, this dispute has had might not be breathtaking, but the in a Navy blimp an excellent heat· Hervey Hazen of Des Moines, an extremely unfavorable effect view is, especially in the arctic Ing system keeps icicles of( the ; member of the Farm Committee, on relations between the United summer when old man sun reck· modern explorers' chin growth' l predicted "some form of food States and India. iessiy runs up his light bill. and stainless steel sinks and elee· stamp plan will gain Bpproval" I Any sign that the two govern­ The blimp flies low enough and I tric razorS stand ready to rob him and said the school lunch pro­ ments, created in the partition slow enough to let you study the of that time honored facial charac· gram should be extended to ev· which accompanied liberation from ice pack, if you're a glaciologist, teristic. ery school In the nation. or just count caribou, if you're a Of the 19 scientists and Navy G,..t Wilpon 011 British rule, can begin to agree is therefore doubly welcome in the tundra tourist. The ride is smooth- men who made the 1,700 mile hop "The greatest weapon we have United States. er than a ship and less noisy over the Arctic Circle from Fort today against communism is the than an airplane. Churchill , Manitoba, to the noat· extra food we produce," he said. Work of UN And there's lots of room to move ing ice island called T-3, not one so Frank Reed of Lincoln, chair. It is also a mark of the quiet around, fore and aft, up and down much as nursed the stUbble of an man of the Farm Committee drew work being done in many fields the gangways, even up into the inclpent beard. Clean shaves, bi· considerable support for a i-point by the United Nations, since the helium bag if you feel the need for noculars and khaki flight suits were plan "diJferent from anything we meeting presumably resulted from a nap. The bunk room with its the uniform of the day. have had up to this time." It the mission to the two governments decker hammocks actually Ie. C,..m called (or a defense stockpile of carried out by Frank P. Graham juts into the envelope, although And as jf to lay to rest all food supplies _ one billion bushels in January. separated from it by bulkheads. jokes about peddllng refrigerators each in the case oi corn aDd wheat: The analogy between the limited Rubber Rocket to the Eskimos the blimp carried control of production on a bushel agreements reached by Pakistan Affectionately called the Rubber a well stocked freezer Into the rather than an acre basis and a and India and the idea of using Rocket, the blimp is a blOCk-long heart of the frozen North and even graduated system of subsidy pay­ similar agreements as an approach bundle of schizophrenic contradic· had ice cream on the supper menu. ments based on production. to a broader peace is extremely tions. It takes off like an airplane, When Gen. Umberto Nobile flew NO. 303 tenuous. dumps ballast like a submarine, over the North Pole in the Italian INCRIASE FOOD PRICES At one time the United States works its rudders like a sailboat, zeppelin Norge in 1926, a rright· CAN was more or less wedded to this rides the air like a free balloon ened Eskimo hurled a harpoon REYKJAVIK IA'I - The Icelandic philosophy Several things have ' and tosses and pitches in heavy and almost ended the expedition government ordered a wide In­ served to' cool her off winds like a destroyer. before it began. Although airships crease in retail food prices Thurs­ . But over the Arctic Ocean, re- haven't visited the arctic In more day. Bre.k Agreements puted to be one of the world's than 25 years, the Eskimos have The government's price control For one, the Soviet Union has calmest, it causes no more heart tonquered their aggtes;sive ten­ office hiked over-all prices of fish established a record of violating palpitations than a romp up the dencles and now merely wave. bf an averalle 29 per cent Some even the most routine and Ilmited escalator in Macy's. Polar bears, howj!ver/ have hot brands of salted fish were in­ agreements whenever she wishes, Peary on his dogsled, Amundsen acquired the knack for hospi~allty. as witness especially those affect- creased as much as 65 per cent. ing 4-power operations in Berlin and Germany. Also, where India and Pakistan have designs on Kashmir but not directly against each other, there is a declared enmity between the Communist sphere and the West. !l's as though India proclaimed, whlch she certainly does not, that lB. while she may agree to settlements Some with Pakistan now, they can be only temporary because in the end SA& she intends to take over ahd oper­ ate the whole works. 'People Can't Women To ho, • • • Meet Here For Study a Techniques for making group discussions "come alive" and ways to develop organization leaders 1/ will hold the attention of Iowa's I League o( Women Voters in two­ new People day workshop to open Thursday at SUI's Center for Continuation Study_ The sessions will be open to Can! members of Iowa's 22 local Leagues of Women Voters, located Ii in Algona, Ames, Belmond Bur­ lington, Cedar Rapids, Ciinton, Davenport, Des Moines, Dubuque, , Grinnell , Iowa City, Keokuk, Mar­ shalltown, Mason City, Monticello, e Mt. Pleasant, Mt. Vernon, Newton, Oelwein Oskaloosa, Sioux City and Waterloo. Opening address of the meeting: BENNER CR.ISPY FRESH POTATO the first League state workshop of The ,. its type, will be given at 10:30 a.m. Thursday by Loren Hicker­ c::::--::::J son, director of the sur Alumni Association. His topic will he "The M GIANT Future of Iowa ." The Skeedle i. the cl ...ic Capuio Orville HitchcOCk, SUI professor Skeedle EeON.BAG with it. toe newly pointed like I needle. of speech, will lecture and direct SYMPHONY FROZEN JONATHON demonstrations of group manage· It's mad enough to 10 with your .hortest dresses. ment at 1:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. ,0.0z. the same day. Mrs. Leslie Moeller, And the Skeedle does 'the maximum ..., .. ~100 APPLES Iowa City, will sorve as moderator STRAWBERRIES 5 to slim your (oot to the minimum. or a ponel di ussion at 8:30 a.m. IIRDSEYE FROZEN COLORADO Friday on "ApProaching the Pub­ In red, ""'", Wack ,...... " Ind lII.cIc ..... IIc," Panel· members will Include 10·0z. two state representatives - Scott o0 Swisher, Iowa City, and Jack Mil· PEAS ...... 6For Sl PEACHES 2 lbs. roy, Vinton - Fronk T, Nye, gen­ eral monager of KCRG-TV and radio slation KORG, Cedar Rapids; 'I William E. Porter, associate pro­ It r fessor of journalism, and Mrs. E. T. Hubbard, rowa City. YOUNKIERS I that If the EXPLODE BOM8 stickler theY "Satisfaction· Alwa,s" LONDON IA't - Britain explod­ a hlnle 110 • halvel ,. ed a nuclear device Thursday in , PAINION SHOt. - IT.IIT PLOOIl BENNER claim this , the central Paci£ic, the DeCense nothin, Ministry announced. SHOPPING CENTER 80 much" Britain haa exploded two other nuclear bomb. ,jn the past three bbttonl· f • hin'!! weeks in the teSting ,rounds around Chrlltn'uls Island In the Pacific. IL...... :,...... ;.;...... ___ ---..:..;...... ;;....;....;...;;.;,...;..;;..;.;.;....i.;;,....;!-.-.~~~--~-~ ~--'

'" '" . ------.. - ... ..

page 4-THE DAILY 10WAN-lowa City, low_Prlday, hpt. 12, IHI Frick (l)Ks Buhl for ~dward S. RoSe ..,. .. (al NEW YORK (,fI - The Mil-Ily four months because of an ail- waukee Braves' request to make ing shoulder, was not restored to I,lse r'lullrly our own mlk. 0' MULTIPLE VITAMINS - eltn· Bob Buh!, their strong-armed the active list until Sept. 1, one day taln all the vitamins and liver aCter the deadline for World Series _letract of High Potency, Proper· Me Dar'k M~y ' Replace' H righthander, eligible for World Iy Compound.d and Prle.d low p.I Series competition was approved eligibility. Frick, as expected, - use them - I ruled favorably beeause the play­ Thursday by Commissioner Ford er had been a bona fide member If : New Cardinal Frick. oC the club all season. Reserve DRUG SHOP VET Chicago Downs Boston Again; Approval was necessary because infielder Joc Knappe was dropped lOt $. Dubuque St. and th Skipper Seems Buhl, on the disabled list for near- to make rOOm for Buhl. agreed . " lIould Williams Ties for Bat Lead and CI voluntl CHICAGO IA'I - The second-place Philley's single to left. Philley was stri~e Certain Now hammered Ike out on a try for second. Ford ST. LOUI l.4'I-Alvin Dark, an Deloek for four runs in the fifth Los Anlfelo •...... 000 020 100-- 3 B 1 Bugas Thursday to defeat the Bos­ Phlladelphl...... 000 100 03x- 4 12 1 n aging pro with a flair for leader­ Poclre., Labine (8) and Plgn."'no; agree ton Red Sox 4-1 for a sweep of Conley. Farrell (8l and Coker, He,an FOR THE PERFECT for SUI ship, emerged Tbursday as the 191. W - Farren. L - Podre•. No. ] candidate to replace Fred their series and a 3 \~ game lead But Hitchinson who is on shaky ground over the Red Sox. A's 7, Orioles 1 lie ge as St. Louis Cardinal manager. The victory went to Dick Dono­ it II'OU Bug1 Hutchinson eemed certain to be van with help from Turk Lawn KANSAS CITY LfI - Ned Gar­ carom l fired by the end of the season, after he developed a wild streak ver's miserly 4-hit pitching was BREAKFAST in the eighth. It was the big right lion b: barring a change oC heart by Card­ too much for Baltimore and south­ Reuthc inal president president August A. hander's 13th of the year and paw Billy O'Dell Thursday and the evened his season's record. shutdd Busch Jr., or a last-minute surge Kansas City Athletics scuttled the moral to third place or better by the Red­ Ted Williams had two hits Orioles 7-1. econon birds. and baLted in the Boston , The A's ganged up on O'Dell in (UP OF Dark, veteran shortstop-third raising his batting average to .320 the eighth inning for five runs be"ou in l and tying his teammate, Pete baseman traded by the Cardinals topped off by Bob Cerv's 33rd ther S to Chicago earlier in the sea on, Runnels, for the American League that brought in three of Bot will be 36 in January. He has been lead. Runnels had one hit in three the tallies. theY a perennial team captain and con­ times . Garver notched his 12th victory COFFEE reach sidered a natural leader since his Donovan had no trouble until compared wtlli 10 loses and 0'­ strike. one out in the eighth. Then he il GM college days at Louisiana State. DelJ's record read 14-11 after his IJ He has been Crequently men­ issued his first walks of the game, deCeat. Serve Me Too to Don Buddin and Runnels. Wil­ tioned as managerial timber si nce There was little startling in the " liams' single scored Buddin and he Lcd the then-New York Giants first seven Cor the 4,527 Every Morning brought Turk Lown to the rescue. to pennants in 1951 and 1954. Coot Didn't Scoot customers except an innovation by Boston ...... 000 '000 010- 1 8 0 Several others have been men­ Chicago ...... 000 040 00)(- 4 9 0 Paul Richards, the Baltimore COOT VEAL OF THE TIGERS was nipped at the plate by Clint Delock, Fornleles (61, Kiely (7', manager and great experimenter. tioned for the Cardinal job-Birdie flverlv 181 And White; Donovan. Lown FULL. IODIED FLAVOR TO SATISFY EVEN THE Tebbetts, Solly Hemus, Red Scho­ Courtney of the Senators in the third innin9 at Detroit Thursday. (8) and Lollar. W - Donovan. L - Richards put three pitchers in endienst, Johnny Keane and Har­ The play began when Gail Harris grounded to Washington's Norm .LIclock. the opening batting order, listing MOST PARTICULAR COFFEE·DRINKER. ry Walker - but Dark appears Zauchin at fint base. Zauchin's throw to the plate got Veal. -AP left handed Jack Harshman as the to be on top at tbe moment. Wirephoto. Senators 7, Tigers 6 centerfielder, batting fifth; Milt Pappas, a righthander, as second IN VAPOR· SEALED lAGS. GROUND ESPECIALLY Tebbetts, who quit recently as 1m - • DETROIT A ninth inning baseman and batting seventh, and TO YOUR ORDER. TO INSURE PERFECT FRESHMESS. Cincinnati manager, talked with Detroit rally fell short and the Billy O'Dell, the actual hurler Dick Meyer, executive vice-presi­ Washington Senators edged the Ti· batting last. dent of the Cardinals, Wednesday Oldis Named Iowa Drills gers 7-6 Thursday in the final con­ NEW. LOWER P RIC E MAKES ME TOO EXTRA· in New York. But bOUl insisted It was the Baltimore skipper's • test of the season between the two idea to substitute pinch hitters for he was o!Cered an administrative clubs. ECONOMICAL each if they came to bat in the job. Four of the seven Washington Most Popular On All Phases first inning, then substitute his I "I've been offered jobs of that runs were unearned as Tiger field­ regulars when Baltimore went in­ nature by several clubs," Birdie ers commitLed three errors. • to the field. Only Harshman's turn 1 lfaid, "but not a single one has The Hawkeyes continued their Righthander John Romonosky, At Richmond came up and was oCfert~d me a managerial job." aU-pha e drills Thursday with a a veteran who has kicked around sent to bat, flying to rightfield for (The following is an excerpt the minor leagues for a decade, The delay by the Cardinals in pair oC long workouts when Coach the final out. making' public a decision on HuLch­ from a column by Laurence Forest Evashevski had his first pitched near perfect relief ball and got credit for his second major BalUmore ...... 001 000 000- 1 4 1 inson, with the close of the sea­ Leonard in the Richmond News two teams alternating defense and K ansas City ...... 000 110 05)(- 7 9 2 league triumph. O'Dell. Zuvorink (8) and Triandos; FINER LOWER son near, indicates the present Leader concerning Bob Oldis, an offense against the reserves. Garver and Cltili. L - O'Dell. I j Taking over for starter Camilo Home run - Kans.s City, Cerv (33) . lowe City native. who was a Mitchell Ogiego, the sophomore Pascual, who was drive n out in FOODS PRICES for the Richmond Vir­ quarLerback from Gary, Ind. who the third inning, Romonosky re­ YAOITA WINS ginians in the Triple-A Interna­ received a slight ankle sprain Fri­ tired the first 17 batters he faced. TKYO (,fI - Sadao Yaoita of He gave up an eighth inning run tional League this year, Rich­ day, returned to limited action Japan won the vacant Orient fly­ on a walk and Gail Harris' triple, weight crown by a unanimous 12- mond finished sixth in the and shared the No.2 signal calling duties with Olen Treadway. The then was taken out in the ninth round decision over Leo Zulueta IOWA CITY'S CONVENIENT SUPER MARKET league.) offensive drills were light contact when he yielded a walk and an of the Philippines Thursday night. infield single. For the Virginians the baseball and Ogiego was limping slightly as Yaoita, Japan's flyweight cham­ Washlntlon ...... 101 200 201- 7 It 1 pion, weighed 110 pounds and Zu­ season ended as it started - on a he got back into the battle for the Detroit ...... 002 000 013- 6 9 3 No.2 spot behind Randy Duncan. P 3Scunl, Romonsky 13), Clevenger lueta, Philippine No. 2 flyweight noLe of defe:lt. (9) and Courlney; MaIOI'd. Clcolle (3). 112. There were no knockdowns. Duncan hit his receivers with "TheY'l'e not any betLer than Susce '51 And Wlt""n. W - Romon­ regularity Thursday - both short oskyl L - Cicott•. when they opened, " an old-timer and long range. Evy worked in remarked. "They're a lillie beL· some new faces - new so far this 'Phils 4, Dodgers 3 11 ter," a die-hard returned, aware Call - in the backfield on the PHILADELPHIA 1m - The Phil­ that Bob Oldis had sLrengthened first two teams when Bill Gravel, adelphia Phillies jumped on Los the catching and Bobby Del Greco Gena Sessi, John Brown and Jerry Angeles' veteran Johnny Podres in Mauren alternated with the first had greatly improved the play in the eighth inning and collected I cenLer field. Lwo teams' halfbacks. three runs Lo eke out a 4-3 victory Colorful Player On deCense, the Hawks stopped over the Dodgers Thursday night. You've Probably Heard Perhaps Bob Oldis, the most col­ the charges of the reserves in good Pod res gave up nine hits in the orful and the most popular of the fashion. "l'he enLire fir st team line first seven innings but the Phils players summed things up when sLood out in the drills Thursday only scored one run. Then Wally he said, "We made a million mis­ with Hugh Drake, BlII Lapham, Post singled in the eighth, Frank Fred Hutchinson Lakcs iL seems. A lot oC us didn't John Burroughs, Gary Grouwinkel, Herrera got on base after Pod res I That University People Don Norton, Mac Lewis and Curt On Way Olll ill SI. LOllis playas well as we should. There hit him wiLh a pitched ball, and are so many ways we mighL have Merz halting the runners consist­ both advanced on a wild pitch. cies ently. No. 1 choice is a player. The only done belter. But we didn 't." Chico Fernandez singled both of an s way the Cards could obtain a play­ One now departed player who Ernest Mielke, who was former­ them home, and that was all for churia er before Sept. 29, the day after may be forgotten by some, reliev­ ly a tackle, saw action at the Padres. Dave Philley batted for Are Funny ... right guard slot with the second catcher Jim Coker, Fernandez Mr. the season ends, would be on er "Sonny" Dixon, goes down as ., waivers. the prophet of the year. team. stelle second, and came home on Hemus, 34, at Philadelphia , and A Crowd Pluser Schoendeinsl, 35, at Milwaukee, On the day Oldis was obtained both arc Cormer Cardinal players from Denver, Dixon said, "If he now late in their careers. plays - and of course he will - Keane, manager at Omaha, has Bob Oldis will be the most popular They are ••• they eat, they wear clothes, they walk in gress been passed over repeatedly, and play r on this team. He'll prohably quer Walker, at Houston, was given a be the most lively plaLer and he'll shoes, they drive automobiles, they plant gardens and mow Mr. brief trial as Cardinal manager win the fans to him. I played with China replacing Eddie Stanky in 1955. bim on several teams and, believe should Dark, eonsistenLly around .300 me, . he's a good catcher and a lawns, they tell time by watches, they like entertainment, ist 0 as a hitter, is a great clutch play­ crowd pleaser." added er. A quiet, religious rpan , he has Oldis was picked by the custom­ they enioy recreation, they raise children, they even build Munic gained a reputation as a good ers as the Virginian 's most popu ~ securi teacher of young players. lar player. Oh, if Dixon had only houses. MI'. pitched this year like he predicted! outrig Hutchin on was hired by former armed General Manager Frank Lane. Oldis' contributions to the Vir­ Quem Busch has a. strong feeling against ginians were many, but there were beat Lane because Lane jumped to not enough Oldieses around. So But Cleveland without consulting him. this year ended up a losing one. • from This tag as a Lane man is said to ... .yes, University people are resolu have hurt Hutch. C c1 if he oe A vane,s ,In La ck i funny ... funny like all other caplu MAJORS'SCOREBOARD Nationa I Meet ROUND TABLE, left, one of the top money winner. in horse race lionali hi.tory, and Clem, the horse that kept him from breakinll tha all Kai-sh SAN FRANCISCO (,fI - Lean people. W. L. ret. GD time money winning records In a recent race, met in the .tabl•• at Milwaukee .. .. 8.'1 57 .593 Charlie Coc, tired and drawn but Plttsburah . • .. 77 64 .1146 6.." playing like a man with a mis­ the Atlantic City, N.J, track, fbe two hors.. m.. t in the $100,000 Son Frandleo .. 71 6. .501 12 United Nation. Saturday. Dr, John Peter. brou9ht Round Tlble to ClnclnnaU ...... 70 72 .493 14 sion won his way into the semi­ SL Loull ...... 68 70 .493 14 finals oC the 58th N"ational Amateur Clem' ••tall. -AP Wirephoto. Los Angel .. ... 65 75 .4M 18 Chlea,o ...... 64 76 .457 II Golf Championship Thursday along Philadelphia .... 62 77 .447 2W.. with two c911ege boys and a vir­ THURSDAY'S RESULTS PhiladelphIa 4, Los Angeles 3. tually unknown salesman-golfer. THERE ARE MORE THAN 20,000 ·OF THESE Only 8ame scheduled. Coe, the 34-year-old Oklahoman TODAV'S PITCHERS who won the title in 1949, fired SI. LouIs ot Milwaukee ,N) - Mobe two par rounds Thursday over the 12-5, V8 Spahn .19-10' . ALWAYS PEOPLE IN THE SUI UNIVERSITY FAMILY! Lo. Angeles at Plltsburgh INI - rugged, hilly Olympic Club lake Craig 10-01 or M a"rl~ll o 10-0) vs Xllnc course and struggled in with a Ask for and 1i2-14\ or Law 112-11,. pair of l-up victories over Dan Chicago at Cincinnati 'NI - DroU year 17-11) or Brlus 15-31 vs NuxhaU \l2- Morgan of Bakersfield, Calif. , and 10,. Deane Beman of Bethesda, Md. Insist on in the San Francisco 01 Philadelphia r2- ed to twl-nl,htl - Gome~ 18-121 and An­ Joining him In the semifinals " lonelll fl4- \21 vs Cardwell (2-4) and What about all these needs? Ate YOU fulfilling part of thoH Semproch 113-.). Friday, where trying 36-hole matches are in order, were Tom­ AMERICAN LRAG E my Aaron, 2-time Southeastern needs , • • in other words, are you getting your full shari W. L. Pel. GD Conference champion from G.aines­ New York .. ... 85 55 .Rm ville, Ga. , and the University of Chlc"Iro ...... 74 65 .532 10 Va of the business? To do that, you must lit thlSI people know Boslon ...... 70 68 .507 14 Florida; Dick Foote, a UCLA sen­ Rich Brand Detroit ...... 67 71 .486 17 ior from Santa Ana, Calif., and Cleveland .... . 67 , 72 .482 171. Baltimore .....66 72 .478 18 woolen salesman from Cincinnati MEAT PRODUCTS what you can do for them - and the way to let them know KaM.. Dty .. 66 73 .475 18 '" who never got past the fourth per ce Wuhln,lon . . . 80 79 .4:12 24 1> round In three previous appear­ pal'aly TH RSDAV' S RESULTS alarmi ChlcOIO 4, BaSion 1. loees in the amateur. at Your Favorite Food Store if by a.dvlrtising in the newspaper ,hat thesl people read. , Waahln.ton 7. Detroit O. Sent to the sidelines Thursday Of t K.nsa. City 7. Baltimore 1. 128 h Only 11m•• ocheduled. were 2-time champion Harvie That paper of course is THE DAILY IOWAN! 8110l.$ 1'OOAV'S PITCHERS Ward, San Francisco's ravorite \ . only' New York oi Chicago IN) - Turley ~on: his conqueror, Ward Wett­ Ee RICHARD & SONS (:IO-8! VI Moore \9-6'. c. I laufer and three players who have dcvelo Boston at C'eveland IN' - Bow.­ MEAT ' PACKERS , I that .i field (3-0 I VI Bell (9-8), been 'finalists in. the amateur Baltimore at Delrolt IN) - Wilhelm championship - John Dawson. ONLY THE DAILY IOWAN REACHES ALL OF THE UNIVERSITY MARKET I had I'e ,,.,, ". Laf'Y. ~1"14', Chuck KoestR nnd Dr'. Frank (Bud) MUlCatine, Iowa ed ,h WMhlnntnn at !Chrisns City IN ) - mllll, _ Ramo. (1 11-13, Vi IIrrlJl'H \6 'Ii. 'raylor, /

THE [)AlLY IOWAN-Iowa City, low.-Fri.y, Sept. 12, l' SI-P... S , Officials Talk, Food Can Get Women Anything JA S ,I\'ILLE, F 111- rand EI~beth , 19. i a Ii t Ihink· the door, bul topped Of 3 States er and a ptlrsuasi~e talker bim d . id · "Lea~e the gun he,. Wednesday night a "'a so you won't gel into any trouble." 'aLking home. h lold police. He put the gun into her hand and I fl. WASHINGTON t.fI - No serio I riculture c.p.rtment gr.in offi­ young man poked B gun in her cials .nd an advilOry ccmmittee To Meet .. e.~s problems were foreseen at a back and aid : "Come "ilh me, ANOTHER SCHOOL CLOS ES ..... DETROIT IA'I - Ford Motor Co. m.de up of repre ..nt.tivu of or I'll kill you." and the United Auto Workers dis· ,overnment - Industry conference The gO\'ernor of Ihr 1i_ !'Ouri .- the storage industry. "j don't h8\'e any money," hi, RICH\IO. '0, a IA'\--The only agreed Thursday over whether it Thursday on finding storage fa­ Sn in tate, f!'deral official , bu i· The conference looked ahead told him, and was urpri. ed to high school in WalTt'n County. a lIould be legal for General Motors cilities for the nation's mountin" to next year wilen the govern­ ne executiv and university I' • • and Chrysler to close their plants surph,ses of grains. find he was only \'Cry hungry. So whi school faCt'd IUth , 1\ inte­ ment may h.ve to take over - . earchers will participate in the he invited him home for food . \ gration oro ronda,·. will close \'oluntarily if the UAW calls a under pric. support p,ograms - Sharp elCpansions In building of annual Missouri Basin Research he filled eoLf • ham. ond ,III the end 01 el today. Supt. slrike a~a i n s t Ford Wednesday. commercial Itor.ge were report· large quantities of wheat, cern Ford Vice President John S. and Devc\op/ll{'nl C 0 u n c I I th n told him it w lime to be Q. D. G ue confirmed Thursday .d keeping p.ce with Inc:ruMd .nd other grains from this 'lie.,', on hi way, night. Dugas said his comp3ny has no needs. record production. Th. govern­ I fBRDCI met'ting at Bisnurck, agreement with Chrysler and GM The matter was discussed at a ment wants to make sure it will .D. • Oct. 14-16. C. Woody Thomp­ for su$ ~ shutdown. 'I I day-long conference between AII- have a pl.ee to put this grain. on_ SUI prof _<;or of bu ines and But be dded : "The best advicr we get I;·bm our lawyers is that chairman of the council, nnounced I it would tic lega 1." Two Negroes Defeat Friday. Bugas, ,'Ford's top negotiator, • Go\'ernors Her ch I C. Lo\' Ie commented following a declara White Incumbents in South of 10\\8 and Joe Fo of South tion by UAW President Walter P. ATLANTA. Ga I.fI - Two egroe unseated White incumbent Dakota will peak on "The ceo Reulhet that an industrywide Cor DOslS on the Fulton County Democratic Executive Committee for an Integrated Research Pro­ shutdown would be illegal 'and im in Wednesday's primary. gram in the Bo in" on Oct. 15. , moral and "would precivliatc an Gov. John E. Davis. 'orth Da­ economic crisis." They scor d their victories in th(' Srd Ward, in which regi tered kola , will speak to the group al "Our lawyers tell us they wO' lh:' egro volers outnumber ",hile volers 10,504 to 8,071. th clo ing luncheon the following be in viOlation of the law" ~eu C. A. Bacote. profe~sor of hi tory at Atlanta University, un­ day. lher said. ' seated George T. Johnson 4.832 10 3,478. Attorney J. C. Daugherty Thompson, head of the SUI Bu· ousted John F. Cloud 5,361 to 3,308. "'J Both Reuther and Bugas said reau or Busin and .Economic lhey will do their level b st to Research and chairman of th FUNERAL HOME reach a settlement witho:Jt D Chi nese Friendship Stronger, MBROC since its beginning in 1954, strike. wit! report on economic Te arch I GM officials dcclined comment Khrushchev Tells Crowd projects or colleges and unlver­ 507 E. COLLEGE ST. after a . morning negotiating ses· Itles in the ba in area. sion Thursday. Leonard Woodcock, LONDON IA" - Soviet Premier ikita Khru h­ Th MBRDC serv s to coordin· UAW vice presiden t and head of chev told a crowd in Sialingrad Thursday night So­ ate rc carch among related tatl' I the union 's bargaining team said viet-Chinese fri ndship is now stronger than evcr. and fed ral ag nci concerned PHONE 3240 the company had made no ncw pro· . Moscow radio said the crowd of 100,000 with the to·stat basin area which posals. their approval when the Soviet leader asked stretche we t (rom D Moin. "We're hopeful we can reach a "Was lhe U.S.S.R. government ri ght in Iowa, to the Rocky Mountain . teltlemcnt at GM, possibly even Deslgncd to promote th d velop. before the Wednesday strike dca d­ the U.S.A. lhat an allack on Peoples China be regardcd as an attack on the U.S.S.R.?" m nt of human and material re­ line at Ford, but all we have is ources within the tates of th hopes" Woodcock declarcd. Khrushchcv said the kind of warning note he sent Missouri 8a in, th council will Chrysler negotiations resumed to President Eisenhower over the China crisis EIGHT·YEAR- OLD Melvin Hlmer, J r., who authorities said told them hear um'elled a new program 01 Thursday afternoon after a 2·day be written only when a slate was strong, when the regional re earch to be und rt k n h~ Khrushch,v recess. , killod his mother and f. ther with. kitchen knife in their Staten people were united and when power was stable. in the northern states of the basin. The UA W executive board Wed­ Island home Sept. 2, entered Bellevue Hospital in New York Thurs­ nesday picked Ford and named To be held at the 1unicipal day for psychiatric exam:nation. A detective's hand is on the boy's Country lub in BI marek, the Wednesday as the strike deadline. shoulder. -AP Wirephoto. Missing Minister Reportedly In the same announcement it ex· meeting is open to at! tho lnt r­ Registered in Omaha- Hotel ested in regional development, 1 pressed . hope no stri ke would be neces,sary. Thomp on said, l * * * * * * OMAHA IN! - An Omaha hotel Monday night and h. reportedly clerk Thurlday identified the was seen there Monday night. -- Confessed Slayer of Parents Rev. John A. Reger, 30, as a Marg.r.t Duggett the hotel , Eisenhower- clerk, told police the' man check­ , man who registered at the hot.l ed In alone and I,ft the follow· (Continued frolll page 1) Monday afternoon. ing morning. She .aid h' did not To Have Mental Examinations Rev. Reger, 30, has been miss­ use the name of the Rev. R.ger , I voy which sought to land supplies ing from his home at Stella, Neb., wh.n he regilter.d but sh. could CLASSIFIED ADS for the defenders. NEW YORK IA'! - A smiling, 8·year·old boy who said he knifed since Wednesday of last week. not recall with certainty the ~lr . -Eisenhower described the ( to dealh his mother and Cather was sent to Bellevue Hospital Thurs· His ear wal found in Des Moines name the man used. • situation as serious but by "no day for mental tests. His stark, almost incredible confession raised a Classified , means desperate or hopeless." myriad of questions, including the big one - why? Trailer Space Trailer Home For Sale 'No Appeil5ement' "He told oC certain incidents which had taken place between his Dog Suggest Ban It Advertising Rates "There. is not going to bc any Word Ads NEW IOBILE HOM!!: PARK. MEA. 48 ft.. 2-I.H'd rool1\ Ir.lI., hOUIe . ~: appeasement," he declared. parents and himself which he gave DOW BROOK COt1RT. O/(I~ - 13M Arl Diamond. HIawatha Trailer as a reason for his actions," said On Claims fo r , I One Day U a Word Mu..,oUnc A\"nue. Dial 0lOa - 58Cl4. Courl. Hlawa lha. low.. I - II "I believe that there is not go· Two Days 10e a Word i -SIRC ing to be any war. Staten Island Di t. Atty. John M_ FOR SALE or ren\, iI3 It trall ~ r wllh UoS., Britain Braistad of the boy, Melvin Nimcr Space Bodies Three Days 121' a Word lelra room. '-3001. 1·12 "But there must be sobcr reali· Apo, tment for Rent Jr. Four Days 141' a Word zation by tbe American people UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. IA'l - Work Warted To reporters, Braistcd said the Five Days 15 a Word LARGE n~wl v drroralt'd opt. clo... In. ----- that our legitimate purposes are OK Meeting Secretary General Dag Hammars­ "8e., In W u t.UIJ win," Ten Days 20 a Word $JOO. Dial ~ 518 . 10-12 CHILO ( 8"" we k dl)! and dud", fOOl - again being tested by those who crime was attributed by the boy kjold has called Cor an intern.,. The "'.11 Kno" n One 1\Ionth 391' a Word BACHELORS apt fo r ,rad~'le alu- ball , .mr• . n.f.r.nee •. Mil. 10- 11 threaten peace and freedom evcry· tiona I agreement banning possible to "an attitude toward his par­ CADY BROS. (1\Iinimum Charge 50¢) d enl.. 2681. ' g. 2J BABY IItIln, In my horne alarUn, s ; p! where." national claims to the moon or dm. fme On A-Ban ents." 'Iove ImllIft". 8 ~n ..te- -~ · Mr. ~isenhower likened Red de· "Generally speaking, I'd be in­ other outer space bodies. -Sat. - Display Ads 8-3001. mands that tbe United States force WASHINGTON 1A'l - The United The suggestio n was set forth :RIO It •• k 'N Itoll One 1n crlion 10- 11 Stotisticol Analysis the Chinese Nationalists to sur­ clined to say they were strict," Oaneln, Parly States and Britain agreed Thurs· Thursday in the introduction to DALE THOMAS $1.20 a Column lncb FOB RENT: Al r-eondlUonll. BALLROOM dance leo' on.. Specl.1 ROOMS. men o_or 23. \Vert Side. China would not be satisfied if she proposal that the Geneva talks be The boy could be committed to For R. rvallons Call: rale. Mimi Voud.e Wurlu. Dial Sl4I\S. . - ~eol. 10- 5 g-2 0R ~ DIAL should just capture thc National· limited to three weeks. Thc U.S. an institution if round insane. Gilbert 5-%77% or Gilbert 5-%60 1 ROO~lS (or men 01.1 74~ . 0-%1 ist outpost of Qucmoy, and he note said, "Their importance reo Danel", from 8:811 to 1:00 a.m. The Nimer boy's parents, Dr. TypinQ room. tor men. 123 N Ou- 7221 added that : "A western Pacific quires the expenditure of what· Melvin Nimer and his wife. Lore ~~;:I :;~;:~;;;;;;;;;;~ buque. ..21 Munich would nol buy us peace or ever time may mutually be deem­ Jean, both 31, were stabbed to ;'1LE~· AND TYPING 6110. '-12 NIC! room. 8.2311. ' -18 security." ed necessary Cor their successful death in their Staten Island home I ["'lL.',•• ..•~~ GUINNESS!! TvP-IN-G-.- 31-74-.------g·-24 li1 Mr. Eisenhowcr avoided saying conclusion. " Sept. 2. The ~oy said they were ... A RIOT iN u or . . . sla in when they came to his aid outright that he would order U.::'. HIS LATEST Personal S. ~ •• I upp'" 01 Clo .-Oul Prl ••• armcd forces to go to the aid of after an intruder in a white mask NOW SHOWING COMEDY HIT! ~.le- IOO-. h •• 1 ..ani nol."o •• ,ap... Quemoy's garrison to help it to had appearcd beside hi s bed and PERSONAL loan. on l)IpewrllerJ. at It. no.l specialist ~.n--.t.Uft., matll"l e:a el at 'I . )~ Jim Wilson Loses tried to choke him . M-G-M presents phonoAraphs, sport. equlpmenl, " __rlnl 101"" ....t DIe beat off any major Red invasion. ""GAY AND SAUCY HOCK-EYE LOAN CO. Burkele), But he noted he has authorily Other Chil dren Holel Building. Phone 4535. 10-6R 5c: & IOc ero""'a a' 10 ior 2Jc in Second Life Appeal GALLIC fRANKNESS 13e .. _.iil! rep.rt e01lera ., g '.r tJc packingl rrom Congress undcr a 1955 joint Two other ehildrcn in the house, :ALEC GUlNNfSS We rep.rt CO",,. at "atf pr'ce. I'csolution Lo make such a decision ABOUT LIGHT· IN Miseeli aneoul for Sal. For $1.95 Robbery Gregory Nimer, 2, and a sister, TOY CENTER , ~ . 1!f'I"T"JUUED if he believes any such Red at­ Jennifer, 5 months, slept through HEARTED SEX ••• the BUY your beddln. direct from thO , I" , .• UlU._ lack is directed against eventual MONTGOMERY, Ala. IA'I - Jim­ the tragedy unharmed. • r1l1l8 dtfiaace .f movie ifllATSEA" lactory and SAVE. Plcklrt Mati"'" ..______~II!'II I .. capture of Formo a, the mai n Na· Iil,hway 6 We.L ~%l ~ my Wilson losl a second appea l Last Saturday, Brai ted said, m,raI. will stir prot •• ts but tionalist i land and scat oC Chiang Thursday to the Alabama Supreme 'hey will hllve to be loutl ones Kai·shek's government. the boy changed hi s story and told Court that the condemned Negro of stabbing his parents wilh a to drown out the l,ught"l- was convicted of robbery and not kitchen knife as they slept. _"I r WOI'. f.r.,. •", Polio Epidemic tbe mere theft of $1.95. In his recital, Melvin told oC The 55·year·old illiterate handy­ lying awake until his parents slept, BLONDIE man 's petition for rehearing was of creeping downstairs to procure HAS BEEN In Detroit Alarms COMPLAINING turned down by thc state's high­ a kitchen knife. of returning to ABOUT THE City Commissioner est court which had upheld the the ma tel' bedroom to plunge it WAY I KISS death sentence last June 12. His again and again into the prostrate HER GOODBYE DETROIT 1A'l - Dr. Joseph G. once-postponed execution was re­ bodies of his Cather and mother. IN THE Molner, hea lth commissioner, said set for Oct. 24 . D. d First MORNING Thursday Detroil is having a Wilson was convicted of robbing "[ stabbed Dad first, then poliomyelitis epidemic and "I'm an 82·yeai··o ld white widow of Mom," Melvin was quoted. "Then .. scared." $1.95 at her home at Marion, Ala., 1 ran. I went down the stairs and Dr. Molner sa id thai so far this July 27, 1957. The widow told the washed the knife in the kitchen. year Ulere ha ve been 301 cases trial jury the Negro also choked It \Vas from a drawer there." in the city and 10 deaths attribut­ her, tried to rape her and ~hl'eat­ ed to polio, compared with 132 ened her liCc . Melvin, ~112 feet . taU. weighing ca es and two deaths to the same Robbery is a capital offense. in but 60 pounds, would have 'it ap· time a year ago. Alabama, punishable by death in pear lhat he pitted his ' puny !IIeM"" II.RTlIt Eleven new cases were reported the electric chair. Wilson was not strength against two adults. How· TODD· CAROL Thursday. indicted for attempted rape, which ever, police said it was possible, vmowlO DAWN since both parents could have suf­ The health commissioner said carries II maximum oC 20 years in DeSICA • ADDAMS pr iso n. Cered fatal wounds before they that about 60 per cent of this were fully awake. year's polio victims have a severe Barring on altogel her now ap­ form of paralysis, while only 11 peal, the req uest for rehearing, Sta,gered Downstairs per cenL oC la't year's cases were was Wilson's last chance to get ~ The boy's father, a government pO I'alytic. ITo described this as reversal of his conviction Crom the doctor at a Staten Island U.S. alarming. state's highest court. But his life Public Health Service hospital, •• or this year's C3SCS, he aid could be spared by the governor. staggered downstairs aCter the FIRE , l28 had received one 01' more slabbing and there collapsed and _.. shoLs oC Salk voccine, but that ATTEMPTS RECORD died. HER only 25 p r eent of this grou p YOKOTA, Japan 1.4'1 - Gen. Cur­ The mother. howcver, lived for I developed pamlysis. lIe added tis LeMay, vic chieC of staff ot 3\l hours. Police, who asked her AT SKIN that in cn es where U\C paUenlA UI(' Lf,S. Air Jjorpe, loo~ ,fir ~y \I 'd . bc hcr ,dssallan , said she l ~ JS . had received all three r~ mmehd: bit n unolClclar attempt fa BeY made no mention of her son. In­ 4: 55 - Giiih toymoncl cd JhOIS pllrA lysis has be('n very nonstop speed rrcord sh'ad, she gasped, "I II' look('(\ likr 8: 15 PASCAL· PIUIOIIN mil ~ Jq Wj.l l~ll~D I I .-_ ; busb Lith" •.• .... . t ...... _II ' .... - ...... •.. ~. • P a g ~ 6-THE DAi lY IOWAN- Iowa City, lowa- F'riday, Sept. 12, 1958 The Eternal Triangle • 'This ek Picture Made fne Headlines By BOB THOMAS

Hollywood IA'I - Liz: "Eddie is not in love with ) cbbi \ and never has been." Debbie: "We have never been happier than we !lave in the past year." Liz "What am I supposed to do, ask him to go bac:< to her ,md try? He can'L. Jf he did , (hey'd destroy each othel'." Debbie: "I don't want this marrige to break up. There are our lovely children and a beautiful life ahead of u ." Thus, two of (he screen's most popular young beautie~, Elizabeth Taylor and Debbie Reynolds, unloaded verbal barrages Thursday via the press. Theil' exchange was the latest development in Hollywood's most sensational triangle story in

E d l!i~' s Not Talki"J While the girls talked. the lhird member of the trIO, golden. voiced Eddie Fisher, kept silent. After he and Debbie announced Wednesday night Ithp y're splitting, he moved out and reportedly is 1hunti ng for an apartment.

II Filmland was piecing together the bac\{ground of the aflair. From words of the priniepals and repo rts o( closp friends, th is sequence can be s~{etc h c d : Edd ie hcr u-wol' ~h irpcd Mi:

SHOP HY-VEE AND SAVE DAILY 3- n FRYING CHICK ENS Ib·29c lb. U.S. CHOICE lb. SWISS STEAK 69¢ ROUND STEAK 79¢ ., SNOWY WHITE Hd. un te

of ju MICHACE B Cauliflower la An Approaching Ma rriage and' A Birthday st

THIS WEEK WAS A HAPPY ONE FOR at least three peopl~. Ern· (right abov e) previewed his 70th birthday anniversary cake. C', ­ valier's birthday is today. He became a star at 16 as a- song and u.s. No.1 WHITE 101bs. ~ s t Borgoin!!, Oscer,w;l1ning actor, and Mexican actress Katy Jurado OLEO dance m t '., i" burlesque, then played debonair Gall ic lover roles ¢ arrived i" Guallalajara, Mexico, Tuesday and relatives in Mexico duri ng his younger and middle-age periods. Today, film fans know City said they inlend to marry. Under terms of a California divorce him for rol ~s as a father and uncle. He says he's been asked several recentl y granted Borgnine's wif~, however, he can'l1ot re-marry for ti mes to apflear in the Comedie Francaise, France's great classic C a yea r. And i" Paris, French film and stage star Maurice Chevalier theatre. Ib·15 POTATOE ju COLORADO FANCY 17 lb. Lug $ 59 pr HEINZ of it :TO MATO PEACHES 5)/

BROWN or POWDERED w SOUP ,anI o( the Ad BOX V 10 i 8th r LOt ca r Hal whl NEW HY-VEE RI)( 21~ lb. turl ICrackers box 19~ . \I flrn cou lanl ROYAL cou 3 c mel boxes oph Gelatin koy 19 '" 10 1 HY-VEE ~U b prol 10 r I Shortening ~~~. ~OUI p~ Happy After Heart Surgery Wo 10 I 227 Kirkwood or~ KIDS WERE HAPPY, TOO, THIS WE EK. Ricky, 4, left, and Howard, j Be thesda, Md., " ear Washington. 0" Sept. 2, Ricky had the leme .h\1 5, IO"S of Mr. end Mrs. Be" Schwa rn of Morni"Sl Side, Md., were operalio". Both bOYI wert well enough to play with their 6-gu", when 0"," WeekdlV' ' .•~I,I both born wit h holes in their hearts. Last October, Howard had his o{ . ~ Howard visited Ricky at the hospital Tunday. , A.M, to , P,M. heart repaired in an operation at the National Institute of Health at "'~1