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F OJ. owo, "n Serving The State University a/Iowa and the People of Iowa City

Established In 1868-Five Cents A Copy Associated Press Leased Wire And Wirephoto Iowa City, Iowa Saturday, August 15, 1959 Dominican. Plane u.s. ~Ba " lIoon' "Satell ite a Trapped By"Cubans CIENFUEGOS, Cub a I.fI - ed to join the conspiracy, sent plane went to Ll. Col. Antonio Some of Fidel Castro's troops out an appeal for arms. Soto, who ferried ex-Dictator Ful· lured an arms.Jaden plane from [n response, a high Dominican gencio Batista into exile in the the Dominican Republic to land official flew to Trinidad Wednes· Dominican Republic last New Fail~ "To Achi"eve "Orbit .t Trinidad by posing as anti· day from Ciudad Trujillo, the seat Year's Day. Castro conspirators and then trap· of Dominican Dictator Generalis· Morgan's men, still playing the ped It with gunfire, military au· simo Rafael L. Trujillo. thorltles said Friday. role oC conspirators, were ready 'The Cuban·manned twin·engine Morgan told the visitor his men and waiting. The plane's oc· All 3 Stages C46 and Its cargo ot weapons and held the airfield and the town of cupants accepted them at face ammunition were seized in a bat· Trinidad, a farming and commer· va lue and helped them to remove de Thursday night that saw two cial center. The show was so con· the cargo. meIl killed on each side and all vincing the Dominican officer reo But then, for an unexplained Fire; Failure the plane's nine surviving crew· turned and arranged to send the rea on, some of the invaders be· men , captured. arms plane. came suspicious. They sounded an Castro saw the trap sprung. A lot of other people seem to alarm and attempted to reboard have been taken in by the play· the plane and take of. That set Unexplained HAVANA ~ - Promlor Fidei acting. A spokesman for anti· of( the shooting. Would Have Measured C...... ,..eI the Cublln peopIo Fri· Castro groups in Miami reported Soto was wounded severely . • y nIfht, "If wo coulel have kept Thursday that counter.revolution· His co'pilot, Capt. Carlos Valls, Atmospheric Density lUI' pllItIl ..alnlt .... conlplr. ary forces had 'captured Trinidad and Capt. Francisco Betancourt. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. IA'I - '*' IK.... for anothor 15 claYI and were receiving reinforcement who served in Batista's army, .. wwhl MV, Cllptvred not only The United States falled Friday and supplies by air. were kllLed. The others were cap· night in an effort to put a 12·foot all tho wllr criminal I bvt Trvllllo The job of flying in the arms tured unhurt. .... hli army al _II." balloon satellite in orbit around the earth. .,.0 _arlly .fter II C...... A 76-(oot Juno II rocket carry· ... of fi,htl.,. II conaplr.cy ing the compressed balloon was ..alnat . hll IOvomm.nt cllmaxeel House formally Approves shot into space at 7:30 p.m. EST. ThuracIIIy nl,ht by the capture All three stages of the rocket fired tI In Irml.Jacion pliina from tho but something went wrong. Deminlcan Republic. Three hours later the National I Clltro .,.nocI a 10""lIwalted Labor Reform Measure Aeronautics and Space Adminis· stlftfnant On raello and TV with WASHINGTON I'" -'- The House, In an atmosphere oC anli­ tration said thl\ orbit effort had I IIItter attack on Dominican failed and that It was presumed otnorall"lmo Raf.. 1 Trv\lIlo. climax, did the expected Friday and formaliy passed the labor con· the satellite had burned up in the Ho CIUtci the Domlnlelln rvlor trois bill endorsed by President Eisenhower. earth's atmosphere. "!lie flnlnclal 'bo" of an thOM A roll cali vote oC 303-125 sent the bill to the Senate, which has The giant rocket on which sci­ who Ire plottt." .,alnlt us. " I passed an anticorruption bili of entists had pinned their hopes of I its own but with considerably less putllng the balloon into orbit rose He returned to Havana to teft stringent prOvisions. from the launching pad In a mass the nation more about the con· App Iau dS Ik e S The action was pretty much au· of boiling flamc. It climbed spiracy FridaY night by radio and . to malic, since the issue was de- straight into the darkening sky for television. c1ded Thursday night. That was nearly a minute before curving to· An army anllOuncement in Ha· when the House, by a 229·201 vote, vana and Ijtatemenls by oUicials ward the northeast. Eff or t T0 Ease substituted the Eisenhower-backed It rapidly lost itsclf among the I in Cicnfuegos, a south coast naval bill for a mUder measure sup· stars. beadquarters 40 miles west oC e ported by Democratic leaders. TrInidad, gave this account of the Tbe Senate was in recess Fri· There were reports the balloon operation : Wor Id Tenslons day, So it cannot act at least un· had been sigbted but these proved Castro's followers had put on a til Monday. The probablltty Is that mistaken, SEATTLE, Wash. (/PI - Presi· fantastic show to convince ad· the two versions will be sent to a The intended job of the balloon dent Eisenhower is making one Senate·House conference where satellite was to measure the dens· vance scouts that Trinidad air· more major effort to lessen world field was In the hands oC partici· efforts would be made to work .. ity of the atmosphere oul to Mout pants in a vast conspiracy against tensions, a noted Washington cor· out a compromise. After passing 1,460 milcs. the Prime Minister. respondent said Friday, Its bill Friday, the House asked BALLOON SATELLITE- A tw.lve·foot inflatlbl•• pho,., Ilmila,. loct B,acon and i. do.lgn.d to .tudy the dlnsity of til. Ii,. lurround· But the effort came to naught. Maj. William Morgan of Toledo. "The Pre sid e n t has come for such a conference. to this ono, WI. launched by II Juno /I rock.t Fridav ni,ht from' tho in, the outor ed,o of tho earth's atmo.pho,.•• Tho sph.r. i. made of The space agency said in an II of Ollie, a ~ QQ'iQer Who pr.etend·. througb three major illnesses." What may hoppen in conference Atlantic Missile Rang. at Ca,. CanIlY.ral, Fla. Tho balloon wa. tough plllStic with thin coat aluminum on the in.ida and out· announcement three hours after said James B. Reston of The New is anybody's gum, Opponents oC ,.Idlll I" th. nos. of the rvr;kff. It ",a. to be ./IOt ~ ~ ;I)fllted sjde._AP Wirophq'o. the rocket was fired: York Times. "He is beginning to the House bill have suggested the wh.n it r.ached orbital speod. Th ••xperiment h.. boon labelod p,.o· "The Causc of lhe failure Is Centennia, Bridge see the end oC the tunnel now . possibility of a deadlock and no uride,r stuliy. r (:l . ') He is concerned to see that he bill at all this session. • t ·'P'reliminary dllta a alli!Dle in· Toll Collectors makes one more general effort to Sen , John F. Kennedy, (D· Would Have Killed More­ dic.les.that too first ~pjter stage bring about some ort of accom· Mass. ), chief sponsor oC the Sen· Find 'Realtors worked okay, but after s~paration ate's bill, said Thursday night Ii Indided Friday modation in the world ." of the Jupiter guidance.. ~otnpart­ compromise might be diflicult but mcnt, the aititude control system That is one reason, Reston said. that "our responsibility now is to SPRINGFIELD, Ill. I.ft - Twelve Cor Eisenhower's recent use of Guilty Of '.. erred, pointing the cluster down· tell collectors on Centennial try to reach agreement . . • to ward and to the left. " Bridge linking Rock Island, m, private conferences with groups of get legislation this year." If He'd Had More Bullets reporters to give them back· Sen. Karl E. Mundt, eR·S .OJ. "Thus, although the second and aDd Davenport, Iowa, were in­ third stages tired, it is presumed dicted Friday on cbarges of con· ground on his plans and hopes. urged the Senale to accept the ISLIP, N.Y. IA'I - A hulking ex· my mother and my baby." up, sonny.' And with that I just FHA Violation that the satclllte burned up in the splracy to defraud the U.S. gov· Reston, head of the Times' stricter House bill without send. convict. confe ed holdup slayer Even Bloeth's lawyer, Sidney B. shot him." ernment. Washington bureau, addressed 250 ing it to a conference which he of . thrc~ per~?ns in eight days, Siben, who will atlempt to save from Hachman's body, Bloeth DUBUQUE I.fI - A Federal atmosphcre." [ A federal grand jury charged news executives, here for The AS· said would only weaken its ef. said Fnday, If I had had more his life with an insanity plea, was took a wallet containing $100. Court jury Friday found three real "The location oC !inal destruc- sociated Press Managing Editors fectiveness and delay action. II .bullets} would have shot more aghast at the brutal tone oC his tion is not yet determined." the 12 with stealing. toll money on Next, Lawrence Kircher, 55, of e tate developers guilty on charg· The first.stage Jupiter inter. Assn. convention. the Senate did take the House people. confessions. Smithtown. shot to death Aug. 5 the huge span across the Mississip­ es of violating Federal Housing mediate range ballistic missile pi River . Bridge commission Reston made these other points: bill in place of its own, the me as· He Is 27·year-old Francis H. '''rhe man must be insane. No while working as 8 counterman at Administration regulations. appeared to perform perfeclly. olficlals have estimated as much as "I believe we have the finest TO' ure would go right to the White Bloeth, described as cold , hard normal person could klll and talk an alI·nlght diner. Recited Bloeth: $750,000 was stolen. porting in the world today" but House. and merciless, a sadist who strano about it that way. He shows ab­ "He didn't hear me coming in Eugene K. Kibbee and John Twenty minutes aft e r the U.S. Dist. Atty. Harlington Wood the "pace of our history is so im· Leaders of organized labor, who gled cats for a thrill in his child­ solutely no remorse. This was a and didn't even know I had come Gordon Gillette, former partners launching the signals indicating uid he does not .know how much mensely swift that the need for regard the House bill as a threat hood and who gave his human new kind of expre slon for him. up to him. [ wasn't about to waste :in the defunct Kibbee.GlIlette O)at the second and third stages was stole. He said the toll collect· accurate and perceptive report· to legitimate unions, are pinning victims no ghost of a Chance be· If he'd had more ammunition, he any time. So 1 rested the muzzle had tired were accepted as Curth· Realty Co. of Waterloo, each W8$ cr indication that an orbit was in ors each face five years in prison ing is greater than the progress their hopes on the Senate·House fore finishing them ofC. wouldn't have stopped," Siben at the base of his neck - and pul· found guilty on three counts. dcvelopement. and a fl0,OOO fine If convicted. made." conference. They are rooting Cor "It was just another murder," said. led the trigger. That guy never a compromise that will eliminate even knew 1 was in there." Francis J. Schons, 40, Hudson The rocket apparently flew for The 12 are John C. Kaiser, At the Nixon·Khrushchev pub· he said of his third killing a week "As far as we're concerned," chief collector; Thomas M. Downs, provisions objectionable to them. ago, that of the woman owner o[ said Suffolk County Dist. Atty. That murder netted Bloeth $125. builder, was found guilty' on two 11 minutes before the error in Iic debate in Moscow the confu­ On final passage, 156 Democrats Finally, Mrs. Irene Currier, 50, counts. altltude control developed. alSt. chief collector, Paul N. sion and language difficulties were an eastern Long Island diner. He John P. Cohalan Jr., "Bloeth is Crawford, Clair R. Hamburg, Gord· and 147 Republicans voted for the tried to strangie hcr and be­ legally sane. He knew the nature of West Yaphank, shot to death Radar tracking information and so great that 50 reporters had to Crawford, Clalr R. Hamburg, Gord· coalition bill which was sponsored moaned his Cailure because he and quality of his acts." in thc Wcsthampton diner she and The defendants had been indiel· some radio tracking information pool their acounts to put together by Reps. Phil M. Landrum, (D. ed in connection willi appUcaUons showed that the cluster of three OQ E. Brach, Ernest Woodward, had to use his last bullet on her. Blocth told a reporter: "I don 't her husband oWlled. Said Bloeth: what happened. Ga '), and Robert P. Griffin, CR· "I just pushed her into the wash· Cor FHA insured loans on houses rockets in the stage had Guy E. Sherman, Herman Duy· M' h ) "Is there anybody you wouldn't care if I go to the choir. I'd rath· up~r vejonck and .Edgar A. McDonald, "Sloppy reporting could have room. Inside there, [ grabbed her in developments at Hudson in 1957. turned earthward and angled orc against It were 125 Demo. kill?" Bloeth was asked. er go to the chair than to jail." 1 all of Rock Island. caused an international incident," ~oti~g apron, took it off and tied her to U1e left. he said. crats and 3 Republicans. "Sure," he replied. "My wife, Blocth' who served a prison hands behind her. But she gave The .government claimed that NASA scientists said that pre. Also named are Ralph W. Devine term for auto theft, has a psychi­ Davenport, Charles F. Thorpe, Tay· me a hard time. The way I fig· the prices hod been overstated liminary data indicated that the atric record dating back to child· ured it, I'd u e the towel to on five houses listed Cor F1:IA instruments aboard the rocket lor Ridge, Ill., and John D. Wilson hood . and Coyne Center, both of Milan, strangle her and save the bullet insurance loans. vehicle were performing but that ID. The director o[ a correctional (or my next job. But I couldn't Kibbee and Gillettc had denied they never had a chance to pro· do anything with her. I had no The alleged cqnspiracy was de­ Institute where he once was con· being guilty of any intentional law ducc results. fined told o[ his penchant for choice, I had to give it to her with violations and said they thought If the balloon satellite had sue. fined as a confederation to obslruct the gun. I aimed it right at her Ihe Intention oC Congress to au· strangling cats and added : "It the houses had an actual . higher cccded, it would have been the was impossible to do anylhing head. I took my time. Then 1 let ma,rket value that the prIce for third satellite sent aloft by this thorize a bridge which eventually ber have it in the head." would be fret' to traffic. with him. He once told us, '1 get which they were sold. country in eight days. I I It was Bloeth's last bullet. He The court withheld sentencing a thrill out of killing. love to strangle: " apparently was afraid to buy and allowed the defendants 15 days ...... Report Invasion Yet Bloeth was released from more lest be be traccd. to file motions for ncw trials. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. U1'I - From Mrs. Currier's till, Bloeth The jury had been out since The explosion oC a giant Titan confinement, not once but sev­ By Haitian Exiles eral times. ApparenUy authorities took $160. about 10 a.m. Thursday and did on its launching pad marred a could not envision the monstrous Grand total (or three holdups not return its verdict until S:3O spectacular triple missile show PoRT AU PRINCE, Haiti, I.fI - capabilities attributed to him by and three human lives - $385. p.m. Friday. Friday that also fealured the Po· Seventy comjJat troops were air- the authorities who charged him ------laris and Thor. 1ifted to south Haiti Friday after with the. murders. The 91·foot Titan, potentially the , , an invallon force of 30 Haitian most deadiy weapon in this na· exiles was reported to have land­ Bloeth was arrested Monday aft­ LiHle Rock Scene .Calm • I tion's arsenal was attempting to ed there. er another Long Island ex-con· blast 0(£ on its first Cull·power test Authoritative sources said a vict tipped police he had sold a night when it blew apart. There landing was made Thursday morn· .32-caliber revol ver and a .32· On 3rCl Day. 0·f Integrati'on were no injuries. In, at the isolated village of Les caliber automatic to the accused The Thor was the first to be ltiOl. There was no report on slayer. All . three holdup victims, LITl'LE ROCK, Ark. lit - Four The situation was the same at fired. It carried a movie camera whether the ,ovemment troops slain between July 31 and Aug. 7 Negroes strolled calmly to and Central. where 16-year-old Jeffer· that was to photograph the earth and the invaders had made con- in a 3O·mile triangle on eastern Crom classes at two high schoois son ThO}Tl8S is the only Negro rrom a height of more than 300 Long Island. were shot down with tact. _ Friday as Little Roc.k ended its student. Miles. However, the capsule car· .32's as they worked at night in The source aaid the khaki·clad third day of integration. Faubus told a nelVS conference rying the camera still eluded reo bavaders. equipped with modern food·dispensing establishments. Police kept an eye on the situa­ he had been prepared to send Bloeth told authorities of the covery ships late Friday. Weapons, drove the 300 resldenta tion, but 00 protests were beard, state police and Arkansas Nation­ The launching of the 28-foot Po· three slayings: no taunts or lnsults directed at 0( Lea lrois out of town, taking al Guardsmen into action Wednes­ laris from an underground ship's Over without firing a shot. Two First, Hans Hachman, 52, of Is­ the Negroes. day if local authorities had been lip, ilhot in his delicatessen July motion simulator wound up the "eI8elB also were reported seen Gov. Orval E. Faubus indicated unable to quell a segregationist 31 •. Said Bloeth: daylight firin,. Compressed air near the town of Dame M.. rie; 15 Fridar., for the fira time, that demonstration. Il\Iles north of Le. Iroil. "I said to him, -rhis is a stick- he might use state police and shot the sieck submarine missile Tber6 was no indication of troops If there are further inte· About 200 foes of racial mixinl out of the subterranean simulator Where the invader. came from . RED POWER STATION graion disorders. Previously, the advanced on Central behind flags ship and ita fu-st stage ignited MOSCOW I.fI - Construction is gover\lor said emphatically be that day but police broke up the some eo feet above ground. well under way on an experimen­ would never use his powers to march. Officers used billy clubs The missile arched high in the tal atomic power station at Voron' enforce integration. on the paraders and turned flte sky and beaded down the Atlantic hoses on them. More than a score miuile r8Die, trailing a long trail Weather ARRAIGNED IN SLAYING5-Franels H. Blooth II pictureel in Justico of tho P ..eo c:ourt in Illip, N.V-. ezh on the Don River, the Soviet At Hall High School, in a fash· press reported Friday. The report ionable residentlal area. three Ne· o( arrests were made. Qf white smoke. Frlelay where ho wII,arralgntci In th .... brut.1 Lin. 111_ robbery .'ayin,•• H. w•• lat.r takon to Scattered said lhe statlon's capacity will be gro girls entered and left willlout Faublll did nol say what ldnd The last two Polaris rockets Sutt.lk County lail at Riv.rhead, N.Y. Police ••leI IIHth, 27, tclmlttod hlYi", killeel throe peopIo, _ 210,000 kilowatts. There were no a sign of reseotment. Elfie Jones, oC Mure trouble might spur bim fizzled ·shortly alter they were Showers a woman, within a ,.,.1ocI of .i,ht deYI botlnnl." July 31 ••IMth WI. tak.n into cUltody Monoy in con· hints of when it wouid start o}X'r· Estella Thol'(lPson and Elsie Rob­ into ordering out soldiers and Itate launched' from a coDveaUoual land L~w80', n.ctl,n with an .arlier robbery.-AP Wlrtptt .... aling. inson were hardly noticed. troopers. pad.

... ·f Semi Truck Lasansky And Pupils 10 Have ~ Model Planes Enter Air Events Damaged Art" Displayed Below' Border The Iowa City Mod!!l Airplane Club had a chance to show off An exhibitio\l of intaglio prints by Mauricio Lasansky and 37 artist­ it .hobbie" and thl' ~ kill of it. planes last unday at the ]owa In Accident teachers who received their training under Lasansky at SUI wUl be C"I}' Airport. A semi-trailer truck was badly shown in Latin American countrie during the next two years under Al.out 50 p('clalo~ Wl're there to watch the exhibitions on a damaged in an accident early spon orship oC the United States Information Agency (USIA I, work· ('.aIm. unny day. Among Ihl' air e\'ents were tunts. combat, dis· Friday morning. but its driver ing in cooperation with the State Department' cultura l prOffam ploy. and balloon bu ting. escaped with only a slight cut. abroad. l To prepare the exhibition of works by the Iowa Print Group, tbe Tn combat competition. each plane has a streamer lied on it~ The truck. loaded with 13 to ns tail. Two pl:mes go up at thl' me time and the object j to cut UISA has made a grant of money of tires and heavy air bags used to Lhe Albright Art Gallery, Buf­ YUill opponl'lll'S streamer or force him aown. as an inside fo rm [or molding falo, N.Y .• and has askcd Will iam SUI Botanists, 4 The old'r fo lk as well as the kids had a good lime watching large tractor Ures. crashed lnto Friedman. visiting curator at the Ih,· tiny plant·s "do Iheir stuff." the ditch fro m the intersection of gallery, to organize the art show. Out Of 6,000 At Highways 6 an d 218 west of Coral­ Friedman produced the exhibi­ liontion "A New Direction In In­ World Congress ville at about 5: 30 a. m. taglio." which was made up oC The driver. Andrew Livingston, prints by the SUI artists and Four su r bota ny profe sors will 32. Baxter, told authorities the air shown in the Walker Art Center, be among 6000 botanists who wiU brakes on his truck suddenly Minneapolis. in 1949. attend the Ninth Intern ational The current exhibition will begin Botanical Congres in Montreal. stopped operating as he ap­ its two-year tour of Latin America Canada, beginning next week. proached the intersection on the in Buenos Aires, Argentina. in Oc­ Professors Constantine J . Al exo­ I hilll from the north. tober. Lasansky is a native of poulos . G.W. Martin. Robert L. Livingston said he had intended Buenos Aires. He came to the U.S. Hulbary, and Robert A. Davidson to turn west on Highway 6 en in 1943 under a Guggenheim Fel­ will be at the meeting. which llliU lowship and is now a U.S. citizen. route to Des Moines. bu t when his open Wednesday ana close Au" In 1945 he came Lo SUI as a visit­ 29. brakes failed. he attempted to ing professor. He was named a Alexopoulos. head of the SUI make the less abrupt turn toward full professor in 1948. Botany Department. is presidettt Iowa City. The trailer of the truck The exhibition for Latin America of the Mycologica l Society 01 will contain 33 prints and two America. He will preside at lhe hit a dividing median and tipped plates by Lasansky and 44 prints the trailer. he said. council meeting of the Society in by his students. Most of the prints conjunction with the Congress. The truck dropped on its side in will come from the SUI colIec­ Martin. a member of the Special the ditch between the highway and tion. although some will be loaned Committee on Fungi, wiil pre ide railroad tracks. The load of ti rl'S by the artists themselves. An il­ was scottered over the ditch and lustrated catalog with texL in Span· at a Mycology section. into a small creek. but most of the ish. Portugue e and English will Robert F. Thorn e. associate pro­ cargo was salvageable. The creek accompany the exhibition. Cessor now on leave from SUI, had First, I'd Better Tig hten This, Let's See - Stunt, Display, And . •• was covered with a layer oC gaso· been invited to deliver a paper on line from the truck's tanks. CHINESE LOCU Sl PLAUGUE plant classification and phylogeny TOYKO IA'I - Parts of north- at the Congress. but is in Australia r ern and eastern China are plagued on a Fulbright Research Fellow· with locusts that have damaged ship and will be unable to atteqd. Sound And Sight more than two million acres of Davidson is taking his pl ace 8t farmlands, Peiping radio said Fri- SUI while he is on leave flom the Sava nts To Meet y At Lake Okoboii ;:d:B:Y:. ======u=nl:·Y:er:s:lt::. ======' :'-._ I Nearly 70 educators represent­ ing 26 states, the District of Co­ W!.",.e Wilt Wor6Lipl lumbia. Canada and 16 coun tries yo~ of Western Europe will attend the , ' AGUDAS ACRIM CONGR EOATION F. XE METHO'oII T ~ArIL I , fifth annual Audio-V isual Leader­ en E. Waoblnet oo St. 931 Tblrd A ••. ship Conference Aug. 22-26 at the R abbi S.oker Tb. Re ... Ja m e. W. Ba... ., 1'.. .., Friday Servlc.e. 8 I) .m . 10 ".m. Sanby S.IIo.I. Lakeside Laboratory 0 n West Alternatea wUh BllIel Roa •• II a.m. Mernln, Wor. bJ, Okoboji in northwest Iowa . Sabbath worthJ,. Sat.urda,...... ' :80 p.m . S unday EYeDla, len_ TII.,rs., 7:S0 p.m., Midweek Player a" The specialists attending thc con­ Bible Les Ott ference will discuss "Research in A SSEMBLY OF GOD FRJBNDI tit e Audio - Visual, Television 43~ S. Clinton St. , oC Thill R.ev. nan Miller, P • • t., Nor v,, ) T a cker. Clerk Field," in five days workshop­ Mp r nlo, Wo .. hl p. Jl a .m. P hone 8-2800 type sessions. Recommendations Ev.n,ell,Uc Suvloe, 7 p.m. Y.W.C.A. Itoom. low. M.m.r,.. 1 0 .... o:ao a .m. M.etl n ~ ' or ... ors ~lp Cor aclion in problem areas will ulpended b~rln n l n r Au,. 1ft . Ae· be adopted at the conference. a.U med Se pt. l:t. 9 :33 A.m . I Representing the European BETHANY BAPTIST CIIUROIf B SI. &. Flrtb Ave., Iowa City GRACE UNIT!!D Audio-Visual Groups of 10 toun­ U nIfied Morn'ol Wonblp S er .... of' " .,.1" MISSIONARY CBURCa tries will be Arthur A. Vesselo oC a.m. 1854 Museathu A... . the Films Division of the British E""lnlo.' O Olil1pf'l l Service. 7:8. , .• . R e ... R.ymond G. S.lImel ...... , H a .m. Rel'uiar CbllfCb lVorsb'p 8e,vlc. Blbl. Siady CI""." tor ..II ., ••. I:".,. Central Office of Information in Comm uDI. o 00 rtr.d Sundar of • • er,. Ser vlee 10:45 •. m . London. Vesselo has been a film meD&h. 7 p.m. Cllolr PraotiM 1:30 p .m . Even'., SU'Ylce I critic. and is the second foreign 7:30 p .m •• ",ed,,"•• ' 1'ra yer oa. 10.. . I Study delegate to attend the five-year­ B ETHEL AFRWAN METHO DIIT a old conference by invitation. CHURCH • • 411 S. Oovernor 8t. B ILLB' . F OUNDATI0& • The conference is sponsored by T h e Ilev. Fred L . Penn,. P ader 1'/! E ..I Mor ••t s t. . _ the SUI Extension Division and 10 a.m. SIlnd.y Scbool Fr Ida, 7:a. ,.m. Sa bb.l~ .enu. the Department of Audio-Visual • ' . . ' I . I J, ,I , .11' SEHOVAR'S WJTNB..... ~ i" Instruction mAVI, of the ~at i or\a l 1120 H st. Th e Model Is The One With Its Wheels Up. Education Association. Several CHRISTI AN REFORMED CUCIlCH a p.m. P u b li c I\ddrOS11 " W~.t Co. Conference R oom No. 1, Pr.yu Do For You 1·' I I members from the DAVI national l o wa Mem orial UDloD <\r DailY low .n by 7:30 a.m. T he D ....y Judith SOlle. AS: Pmf. Hu,h Xello. p.m. 12:30 New. Sund.y 8 eb .... ':11 .... yeo r, In ad\t:lnc~; 51x months, Jowan circulation oLrlee In Communi­ Department ~ POlitical Selenee; Prof . 11;45 Ne_ Baek,round J1.IIT UNIT""IA" 80CRTW Adult Blbl. CI ... . :11 • .•• 5:; 511; i.hre.o month •. $3 00. By mall In cations Ce: nte..r 1I open from a a.m. r..:. lle O . MoeU .... School oC Journal­ LlB.AItY AO lUI: Monday-Friday, IOWA M EM01l.JAL NION IIO UItS : 1:!I'.l Mostly Mu. lo I.wa Ave .• nd Gilbo .. lit. · . . IOwa. $V .,.,r }e r: '" monlh • $5: 10 5 p.m., Monday throulh Friday ism: Sara D. Schindler. A3: P rot. L . 7 :30 a .m. to 5 p .m .: Saturd ay. 7:30 Monday-Frlelay. 8 a.m. 10 noon, 1 p.m. 2:00 New. Final ra.ler .... Kbere. ArWaa VETERANS HOSPITAL C ...... Un e. munths, $3; aU olher maU .",b .. a nd from 8 to 10 a.1n. on Satu rday A. Van Dylte. Colle&e of EducaUoD. B.m. to noon. Service desk _: M'ondny- to 5 p.m. No food service. 2: 15 SIGN OFF I.; ...... C"u.. " .Inl .., • •10, 18 a ...... Civil Rights Nixon Welcomes Peaceful I Funeral Services Held Friday Strike Month U.S., U.S.S.R. Competition Fight Goes For Paul OSayre , SUI Professor Old Now, Still CHICAGO LfI - Vice President Richard M. Nixon Friday w lcoml'd the idea of peaceful competition with the Soviet Union, but he aid. To Senate FURl'ral service (or Paul Sayre, ag ravated by a diabetic condition. Bogged Down HU the competilion is to remain peaceful there mu!;t be rules ind the SUI profe . or law. ~ere held Fri· Profe or ayre, beloved [or hi glme must be [air." W SHI GTON t.fI - enate ad- day morning. Relath·e' and friends annual Christma readings [nce EW YORK !A'I - A nation· vocate of ci"i\ right legi lation gathered to pay tribute to the di . "The compelition must take place at both ends of the field, and not 1949, taught cour in procedure. wide trike of 500,000 Steelworkers gave up hope Friday o[ br aking tinguished (acuIty member. was a month old Friday, with no 111 at the Communist end," , he Ithrough Southern oppo ilion in th Prores or ayre had been a pleading, family relatio/lii, muni­ said, Sen Ie Judiciary Committee. They member of the faculty ince -1930. visible ign of a break in the bit­ The vice president expressed his cipal corporations and JurIs­ ter d adlock. Production and views in a conference with news­ aid they will carry their (lght to H died Monday afternoon at Uni- prud nec. Founder of the National 21st Fine A~s the Senate floor . I ver ity 11 0 pital of a heart ailment wage 10 es neared the l lh·billion· men at Midway Airport and later Conference on Family Relation , dollar mark. in an informal talk to the Foo­ Arter a five·houf committee seSe sian behind cia rd door, $(on. Ev­ he wa it fir t pre idenl from 1937 "Z ro this week (or sure," was bali Writers Assn. He came to th report on negotiations from Chicago as a football fan to attend Festival Ends erett M. Dirk en of Illinois, the Barbara Lauder, to 1939. Senate Republican leader, told The editor and author of many Joseph F. Finnegan, chief federal the all·star game at Soldier Field mediator who has kept peace Friday night between the College After a summer·long emphasis newsm n "we are accompli. hing Kenneth Brown, law publications, Professor Sayre on bolh creativity and major prob­ exactly nothing." wa reporter at Ule International talks going all week. A11·stars and the 1958 profes lonal He added the enlire week was champion Baltimore Colts. lems in American society. t~ 21st Similarly, Sen. Thoma C. Hen­ To Be Married Congre. s on Comparative Law, annual Fine Arts Festival at Ul nin/!s Jr. (D-Mo.), said civil right The Hague, in 1947. He was an SUI devoted to working through the Nixon said a position of strength contract, clause by clause, para· offers America's greatest hope for clo ed here this week. Icg! lation is hopele. ~Iy talemated delegate to the International Con­ ~lr. and Mr . . Fred C. Lauder an­ graph by paragraph, getting the reaching agreements WiUl the So· Highlighting the 1959 summer of­ in the judiciary committee, headed nounce the engagement or their e renee on Hi gher Education that 10· wording in order. But as yet un· viet Union. ferings at SU [ were premieres of by Sen. Jame O. Ea lIand daughter, Barbara Dale oC Ocala, sam year. "When one side ha more two American works, the tOpera 1iss . I, a foe of uch bill . Hen­ Fla., to Kenneth Brown, on of The SUI law faculty pa ed a touched were the real factors in ning 'aid he will attempt next the trike-wages and fringe ben­ strength than the other, you get "Western Child" by Philip eezan­ Mr. and Mr . Henry A Brown of rc olution honoring their late col ultimatums that could lead to week to attach a weeping civil Council Blulfs. league. It read: efits demanded by th United son with libretlo by Paul Engle, right bill to ome other measurE! Steclworkers. war," he said. and an original play, "The Trial o[ "Re oh'cd, that the faculty of the called up (or action in the Senate, College of Law by thi re olution Negotiations are schedu led to The vice president was asked if, Captain John Brown ," by Richard thus bype ing th committee. upon reflection, he felt he did the exprc ~ our keen • n. e of los at re ume Monday. F. Stockton, an sur graduate stu· Dirksen al 0 said he now feel More than 107,000 employes oC right thi ng in debating free world dent. the pa sing or our e teemed col· free to follow this cour e, adding league, Paul Sayre, who e renown a II i e d companie - railroads, vs. Communist issues with Soviet Q ~ her theater productions in­ he is hopeful he can initiate such Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the broughl much crl'

/ P ••• 4-THE DAILY IOWAN- l_. City, 1.-5.rvruy, A.... U, 195' Unitas Passes For 3 Touchdowns- Moore's' Manager Plans Trip' To Sweden For Johansson Bid MONTREAL I!'I - Fast·talking draw at I.. st $3,OOO,OOt-maybe [ Jack ~Doc) Kearns said Friday owen $5,000,000 countl"9 .vtry­ Colts Jolt AII~Stars 29-0 he plans to go to Sweden soon thing. They're the two most HICAGO I!'I - The cunning Stars in po ession of the ball on and personally make Ws $1,000,000 colorful tighte" in boxing. pa ing arm of Iheir 20 .. Iwo of Lee Grosscup' offer to heavyweight champion Kearns made and tossed away and the massive power of the passes failed and center Dan Ingemar Joh.[\~sson for a title de· millions as manager of Jack Baltimore Colt overwhelmed the James passed over the head of fense against Archie Moore. Dempsey, Mickey Walker and College AU·Slars 29.0 in the 26th , who was back to The 77-y .....d manater of other champions. annual football gam Friday night. punt. The ball sailed through the Moon, the light Mavyweight "1 expect to wind up the finan· A crowd of 70,000 that included end zone for a safety. kin., wid "thla would 1M tM Nt· cial details of the Yvon Durelle Vice Pre ident Richard M. Nixon The Colts' first touchdown was tie of the c.ntury_ It would fight h.ere today and then Archie sat in awe at the mid a on form fa hioned on four plays. Ta e[f and I will head for New York," shown by the Colts, the 1958 a· returned the All-Star k.ickoff 42 said the old pitchman. "As soon tional Football League ehampion . yards 10 the All·Star 38. Unitas Nocera To Start a I get some things straighlened Unit as fur w three touchdown promptly passed to Jim Mutschel· out I'll leave for Sweden. That pa. e . all in the first half. They ler who wa down on the five. L. 1st Eagle Game may be in a (ew days. were for 3 yard to Raymond Ber· G. Dupre made two and Unitas "My backt" .re moro int.r· ry, for 13 to L. G. Dupre, and 29 to then pas ed to , HERSHEY. Pa. IA'I - Philadel. e,ted th.n ev~r. I w.nt to t.lk to Jim lulsch lIer. who was alone in the end zone. phia Eagle coach Buck Shaw has Joh.nuon .nd Edwin Alquist Nick Pietro~anle, the turdy Billy Stacy of tis is ippi State included five rookies. including (Job.nnon's .dvis.rj and find otre Dame fullback, gave the fumbled Raymond Brown's punt John Nocera of Iowa, among his out wh.t th.lr pl.n...... " I All-Star th ir only real ex~u e in the second quarter and if was probable offensive and defensive After Moore knocked out Durelle for ~heering . At the tart of the recovered by Tommy Addison on starting lineups for 3 game with in a title fight here last Wednps· econd half, he look a screen pass the All-Star 22. That set the stage the here today. day. Kearns said he cabled the from Buddy Humphrey of Baylor for the Colts' econd TD. Unites Nocera will start at a left line· million dollar offer to Johansson. and galloped 5t yards to the Colt' pas ed to Berry on the 14, Alan backer position. The other rookies The Swede l,as been busy tour· 29. Ameche carried to the 10, and are Darrell Aschbacker, Oregon, ing through Scanadinavia and The game was marked by two then, when a noiding penalty set left guard; J .D. Smith, Rice, cleaning up in exhibitions and ap· , injuries. Don Brown oC Houston the Colts back to the 29, Unita right tackle ; Alan Miller, Boslon pearances. was hit hard in lhe first quarter pa sed to Mutscheller in the end College. left defensive halfback In Sweden, Johansson said he and sufCered a concu sion. Brown zone. and Art Powell, San Jose State. was interested in the fabulous bid ' wa hospitalized. He wa reported The Colts scored a pair oC touch· left safety. but had not received any word in fair condition. Dick Schafrath downs in quick succession as the Shaw emphasized that "while we yet from Moore or Kearns. of Ohio State also suffered a Ie s second period drew to a close. are putting together the two best "If this really is .erious, , erious concussion. The first of these was on a 81- teams at the moment, no position An:hit Moore is wolcome Mre," \ I A Cumbie gave the All· tars yard march with Unitas passing is clinched." Joh.nllon •• id. "But of course, their onl~ real scoring chance. 13 yards to Dupre who caught the Another rookie from Iowa, John IIOt befort I h.vt m.t P.Horson l Near th end oC the third quarter, ball on the two and ran over. 1m· Burroughs, is slated to see reserve in • return fi,ht." lAw Shucks/ Mom Jackie Simpson of the Colts drop· mediately afterwards, Mill Davis action as an oCfensive guard. Kearns said he had two monied ped a punt and Bob Coronado oC intercepted a pass by Humphrey. Canadian groups and one in Cali· MRS. JAMES COOK give. a congratulatory kill to h.r .on, Jimmy, College oC The Pacific recovered tbe third All·Star quarterback, and (ornia ready to bacok him aU the 11, afttr ~Is Tuscon teem won the Arizon. LiHle Le.gue baselNlI on the Colts 16. Three plays failed galloped 38 yards to score. Footbtd' Scribes way and at any possible site. championship in a playoH .t Phoenix. Th. kin was lM.towed .. but on the Courth, pass interfer· The victory was the 16th for the He said he also planned to soo fana and Jimmy's teamm.te. 'Iooked on; and judgin, fnHn tilt ence was call d against the Colts professionals in the series. The RAY BERRY ,a2), B.ltimore end, gives it the old college tryon Choose Bisher British promoter Jack Solomons look on th. young shortstop's f.ce, h. didn't appreciate It in the and the All-Stars advanced to the All-Stars have won eight and two and other boxing figures in CHICAGO LfI - Furman Bish· It ..t.-AP W1rephoto. 8, Bob Ptacek oC Michigan lhen gam~s were tied. a first period pan play in the Colt.Coliege AII·St ... game at Chic.go Europe. passed to Boyd Dowler on the 3 AII.SlAln ...... 0 0 0 0- 0 er, sports editor of the Atlanta Col...... 8 21 0 0-211 Friday night. The pass eluded Berry. Bob Ptacek, defensive buk of but on the next play Col.. leorln,: Touchdowns, Berry. 3. Journal, Friday was elected pres· intercept d another pass and the pa. from Unlla.; Musche\ler 2g. paD from Unlt.s; Dupre 13, pass from the Stilrs, is rudy to stop the attempted pass, The Colts trounc.d ident of the Football Writers As· Miteff Tekes Ulnenimous Colts took over. Unllal; Davis 36, Inlerceptlon runblock Elks Golf Meet A saCety in the ilr t period open· Conversion., .Rechtchllr 3. the Stilrs 29·0.-AP Wirephoto. soci!\tion of America, succeeding . Safely, Sherer Icenter .nap out ot cd the floodgates. With the All· end 7.Ollel . Paul Zimmerman, sports editor of To Be Held Here the Los Angeles Times. Decision From Johnson Murray Olderman, Newspaper Today, Sunday NEW YORK IN! - Argentina's rising Braddock, Pa., contender, Enterprise Association, New York, About 315 entrants are scbeduled Alex Miteff snapped Alonzo John· had cut open the left eye in the became first vice'president; Jerry son's 13·£ight winning streak by sixth. Liska, the Associated Press, Chi· to tee oCf here this morning in the cago, second vice·president; Bert state Elk's golf tournament to be bombing away to the body Cor an MilefC took the lead from the Cubs Cuff Giants Again, held today and Sunday at the unanimous decision Friday night opening bell, scoring with his 7-5 McGrane, Des Moines Register, third vice·president; and Maurice South Finkbine course. after 10 gruelling rounds. slamming left hook to the body White, Des Moines Tribune, secre· Dr. Charles Updegraff, Boone, Johnson weighed 185~ Miteff and banging away to the body tary. will defend his title against many 208. when tl ey clinch~d. Johnson, who The Statistics and Classification other top amateurs from the state. The hulking Argentine nailed cQunts on speed and slashing I -Banks; Moryn·Hoiner Committee of the association rais· Qualifyihg rounds will be played down the verdict by sweeping the punches, was off his target and Long~ today to determine Sunday'S con· final round on all three official missing badly in the early rounds. ed New Mexico State and The Cit· adel to major college rank, and testants in the 32·man cbampion· cards. It was simply a matter oC Arter making a sland in the CIIlCAGO tm - The roUicklng ~ave up only seven hits befoN dropped Drake to minor classifi. ship flight. All lower flights will too much body punching by Miteff third. Johnson agaih succumbe4 Chicago Cubs stayed on their reo 28,198 fans at Briggs Stadium. cation because oC it's schedule. be 16·man afCairs. against 'a faster, lighter man who to MiteH's power and was maul. cent power binge and subdued lhe Only Tito Francona's towering The committee also ruled that Twenty teams are entered Cor gave away 22~2 pounds and could ed inside through the middl~' league-leading San Francisco Gl· homer with one out in the ninlh field g9Als will be measured from the team championship to be de­ not tie up his man inside. rounds. Johnson shook . up Mi!c!( ants 7-5 Friday on the strength prevented Lary from gaining his the !,>Oint .of the klckto the goal cided with the low four scores of Both Referee Mark Conn and' witli hooks (0 the head in the of three two·run homers. fourth shutout. Yost was the big po ts. each six man team, Judge Phil Botwinik scored it 6-4 sixth, but the Argentine landed a Walt Moryn, Dale Long and Er· gun, driving in two runs and scor· The following stadia were ciled During the two days the tourna· and Judge Leo Birnbaum had it crushing right that made Alonw nie Banks contributed the circuit AMERICAN I,RAGUK NATIONAL LEAGUE ing two others. for their prees box facilities: ment is in progress, the' South 7-3 all for MiteH. The AP card grab. ' G.H. l,vcnl~ W. L. Pet. towa, Brigham Young, Clemson, Finkbine course will be closed to was 5·3·2 for MiteH. T b ere There were no knockdowns in drives in th sixlh and in· W. L. Pel. G.II. San Frnnel",,(J .. 65 49 .570 The Tigers drove lhe Indians' ning to hulp the Cubs ring up chlcngo , ..... , ... 6g 4~ .6 16 Lo. Anl(ele. " . 03 62 .548 2'. ace, Cal l\1cLish, from the mound Texas Christian, Miami o( Ohio, the public. The facilities of North. was an ugly egg·sized lump under the scrap which closed Madison their fourth consl'cutive victory .... 61 43 ,683 3". Milwaukee ...... 61 51 .545 3 in the third with a four·run out. Notre Dame, and Youngstown Finkbine will be available, how· MileCf's left eye during the final Square . Garden to boxing fOr l. ld New yo.'1e; .. 57 57 .560 13 Chlca,o ...... 36 57 .49\l 8', and sl'cond straighl over tho Baltimore ..... 56 57 .498 l,3"a Plus burgh .... 56 ~8 0491 g burst. Harvey Kuenn ha~ rocked 10hio) High School. ever. rounds of the brawl. Johnson, fasl. weeks or until October 23. " Detroit •• . . , .. $8 GO .483 1$ Clno;il1"aU .... 55 60 .4'8 lOI~ the Indian hurler for a homer ~~iiiiijiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii __iiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ___ iiiiii ___iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;; __iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_~ Giants. 1 Kan ... City .. , \ 53 62 .411t 11', St. Louis .. .!14 63 .462 12 " The three home run gave the Do,ton ., ...... 2 82 .458 18 "Philadelphia . .47 67 .412 L8 with Yost aboard in the first and Cubs total of 15 in their Ja s~ WnshlnJllOn . '" .• 1 63 .408 23', • I a FRIJ)AV'S RESULTS the Tigers picked up an unearned succe ses, lwo of which came .at FRIOA V'S aE Ul.TS Chicago 7. San Francisco 5 'un in the second. the expen c of Los Angeles. Detroit 11 .Clevellnd I Pittsburgh 2. MJlwaukee 1 leveland .. , .. , 000 000 00]- I 1 , Chleaco 5. Knnsa* City 1 SI. Loul. 2. Los Angel.s 1 \11 In· Detroit .. .214 000 04x-1 I 14 J Trailing 3·J in the heth innin~ Boston II. New york 6 nlngsl McLish. Locke 131. Smith 181 and th(' Cub lied it up wh n Moryn Wnshlncton '7, Baltimore 3 Clnclnnnll 15-5. Philadelphia 13-4. Nixon; Lary and Berberet. W - Lary • TOO 1"S I'ITCIIERS 115 -71. L !.1cLI.h 114-61 . . bla ted his lOth home run with TODAY'@ PITCHERS San Frn nclsco ~l Chlc.co - Snnford Hom~ runs - Cleveland, Francona one on. Chl~a,o 91 Kanalll City INI - Pleret 111-91 vs. Hillman 15·91 or Drabow· 1131 . Detroit, KUl!nn 171. 112-12. VI. Daley 113-7 •• sky '5-81. In the seventh Rookie Witlie Mc· Cleveland At DetroIt - Score 1.-91 v •. Los Angeles at Sl. Loul. - Podr•• • •• serving the university. community Covey put the Giant ahead with a Bunnlnll 110·101. Ig·" vs. Bro,1I0 16-71 . • Mjlw9ukee at Pittsburgh - Burd.tt. BoSox 11, Yanks 6 single after Willie Mays had singled Boston ot New York - S'Ililvan 16-1) VI. Grbn 11-31- (l6-lll VB. Kline 17-111. NEW YORK IN! - The Boslon and stolen second base. Wa.hlngton at :a.11t1more INI - CincInnati nl PhiladelphIa - O·Tool. Stobbs 11-51 VI. Pnpp•• 112-51 . 12-61 " •. Sell1proch 13-71. Red Sox erupted (01' nine runs in Alvin Dark walked in the Cubs the eighth inning, overcoming a seventh and Long batted for starter four·run deficit, to defeat lhe New Glenn Hoffie and poled his 14th Both San Francisco and Milwauke(' and hit a key double in a four· lost Friday. run first inning in lhe second con· York Yankecs ll-6 Friday night. with these features: homer. Vic Wertz slammed a ba es·loaded Giants tarter Sam Jones, who Joe Cunningham blasted hi fifth lest. home run of the season in the HRST GA~H~ home run as a pinch hitter to uCCered his 11th defeat againsl 15 Cincinnati .. ., .003 3ID 305- 15 23 5 feature Boston' biggest attack of • Official Daily Bulletin , t victories, was lifted in favor of ninth inning off Don Drysdale, to Philadelphia .. 083 000 002- 13 16 0 send the game into overtime. Duke Newcombe, Acker 121. Pen. 141, the season. • famous comics - "Blondie" "Beetle Bailey" Bud Byerly, and Banks got his "Lawrence ,8'. Brosnan ,9. and Bailey, Ryne Duren was the victim of 35th homer. Snider had accounted for the Conley. Phillips 151. Farrell (71. RobIn· lone Dodger run with Ws eight~nth .an tat. Gomez (91. and LonncU, Wertz' ~rand slammer. The relief an Fra.ncilleo '. 002 010 101- 5 12 0 Thoma. 18 •. W - Lawrence (7-10). • Jim' Berryman's Washington, D.C., Star Editorial Chlcol!o ...... 010 002 40x- ' 8 2 homer, a drive to the opposite L - Farrell 11-41. ace was summoned to face Don S. Jone.. Byerly 171, G . Jones (8) , Home runs - ClnclnnaU. Robinson Buddin after the Red Sox bad And Landdtb, Schmidt 181; Hobble. rield in the sixth inning oU rookie Cartoon 1211. Phllad~lphln. Froese 1171. loaded lhe bases against Whitey IIcnry 181. and S. Taylor. A"e~J11 131- Bob Gibson. I!:COND GAME \ . W - Hobble 112·91 . L - S. Jones Cincinnati ' ... , .. 400 000 010- 5 7 I Ford. (15-111. Grammas, a righthanded bat· • Laff-a-day cartoon . " Phllad~lph(a .. .. 101 200 000- 'l 9 0 Wertz balted for Buddin and tied Home rull! - San Yrancl"Co, Me· ter, was inserted as a pinch·hit· SchmIdt, Newcombe 19. and Dol· " Covey 1$'. Chlcalo, Moryn 1101 , Lon, ter with the count two strikes, no terer, Bailey 19t; Owens and Thomas. the score 6·6 with his base·clearing 1141, :a.,nk. 1351. W - 5ctunldt (:l-2 •• L - Owen. • editorial page commentary, baUs on George Clawe, a left· (8-10). wallop. Gary Geiger followed with handed balter. Grammas Wt the ::mother home run one out later both local and national Pirates 2, Braves 1 first pitch Crom southpaw Danny to put the Red Sox ahead. Duren ChiSox 5, A's 1 walked Pele Runnels and gave a PI'ITSBURGH IA'I - The Pilts· McDevitt and lined a single to • articles by top-notch AP staff writers KANSAS CITY IA'I - Sherm Lol· run·scoring single to Frank Mal· burgh Pirates scored two runs in left-center. lar Wt two home runs Friday night. zone. the first inning Friday night then The victory ended a 5-game Card • classified and 'display advertising each with a man on base. that Boston ...... OW 010 09fl-1l a 2 losing Jltreak. New York ..... 204 000 000- 6 10 0 held on to their lead behind the gave the league leading Chicago five·hit pitching of Vernon Law Lo. Alllele... .. 000 001 000 00- 1 11 \ Brewer. Chittum .3), Baumann (6!. SL Loul ...... 000 000 OOt 01- 2 12 q White Sox a 5-1 victory over the Fornleles 18) and While. Ford. Duren 181, Shanu 18). Coates (9) and as they edged · the Milwaukee (II Innin,.) Berra. Kansas City Athletics. W - Baumann (4-21 . L - Duren (2·5). Braves 2-1. . Drysdale, Labine (8). McDevitt (tIl Shaw had an able opponent for Home runs - Boston. We.rU l", Roseboro. Pllnatano 18); Glbson. Stone Geleer (101. The loss left the third·place (al. McDaniel (8) and Smith. W - the first six innings in Johnny with .these services: Braves still 21,1 games behind the McDanIel Ill· Ill. L - Labine 18-11. ve Home rUM - Lo. Miele.. Snld· Kucks as neither team scored. til league leading San Francisco Gi· er III). St. Lout', Cunnln.bam (5). In the seventh, however, Jim Senators 7, Orioles 3 ants, who lost to Chicago 7-5. • leased wires of the Associated Press and U Landis singled, stole second and BALTIMORE IN! - A pop fly s[ Law fanned five and walked took third on an inCield out. Then double by Harmon Killebrew, only one. record now is 13·7. Reds 15-5, Phils 13-4 cc His the game WBS delayed when a foul home run leader of the major United Press The Brave ' only run off Law PHILADELPHIA I!'I The tip from Earl Torgeson's bat struck leagues, drove in the tie·breaking came in the fourth when Hak Cincinnati Reds, led by Frank • receiving and tranmission of AP wirephotos v Kansas City's Harry C\1itl Oll run' Friday nigbt as t.he Washing· re Aaron singled, advanced to sec· Robinson, Vada Pinson and WiUie the throwing band. Chili wa taken ton Senators defeated lhe Balti· ond on a grounder and scored on a Jones, Friday night pounded out to a hospital where an early an· more Orioles 7·3. • local photographic coverage m single by Lee Maye. 30 hits to sweep a twl·night double­ nouncement indicated he had suf· Killebrew, who knocked in t[ Joey Jay started on the mound header from PhlJadelphia. 15-13 fered a Cractured finger. Washington's first two runs with 8 for the Brave and gav~ up sile and 5-4. ACtar Frank House had taken his 36th homer in the fourth in· DC hils in seven innings before he The Reds pushed ' across lhe Chifj's place behind the bat, Lollar ning. snapped the tie in the eighth n. was relieved for a pinchhltter winning run in the eighth inning rode one of Kuck's pitches over the when Oriole right [ielder AI PH· r in the eighth. Charged with the of the nightcap orr loser Jim Owens news coverage of:. left {jeld fence, scoring Landis. .with arcik couldn't reach his short fly. II 10 ,Jay's record now is 4-10. when Johnny Temple doubled. In the eighth a single ~y Nellie Bob Allison, who reached base II The Pirates scored in the first moved to third on a fielder's Fox and a triple by Torgeson gave on an error by third baseman • The University pi on single by Bob Skinner, Roberto choice and scored on Gus Bell's the Sox their third run and sent Brooks Robinson: scored all the CIl'mente and Smoky Burgess. .. infield single. Willard Schmidt Kucks to the showers. The veteran way from first on the two-out A stolen ba e by Clemente and a • Iowa City hi was the winner. Murry Dickson came in and Lollar play. riI bobbled ball by leCt fielder Maye In the opener the Reds bombed greeted him with his second 4- Washiptgon scored three more un· contributed to the Pirate scoring. five Philadelphia pitchers for 23 bagger, and nth of the season. • State and Nation MiI .... aukee ...... 000 100 __ I 5 2 earned runs in the ninth. Left field· hits and pulled the game out of Chicago . . . " .. 000 000 230- 5 9 0 II PIUabur,h .•..•. 200 000 OOx - 2 1 0 Xan.... CI~y .. , • • ,0011 000010- I ~ 0 er Gene Woodling dropped a two· . ~ Jay, McMahon 18, and Crandall; Law lhe the fire with a five-run rally Shaw and LoII~r ; Kuekl. Dlekson (81. out fly for one run and after and Buries• . W - Law (13-7). L - Ja)'" in the ninth. The PhilLies had taken GrIm (g. and Chili. House 171. W - (4-10). . Shaw 112-3' . L - Xu,,].. : 15-91 . O'Dell'S second walk of the inning, • an 8-0 lead in th~ second inning. Home rUlio - ChlcA,o. Lollar 2 (171. Allison tripled for two more runs. • Cards 2, Dodgers 1 Philadelphia banged out 16 hits O'Dell. Baltimore's fourth pitch· in the first game, selting a new Tigers Tt, Indians 1 er, suHered his lOth loss in 16 " ST. LOUIS (.f) - Alex Gram· National League higb this year of decisions. Dick Hyde. Washington's 111 DETROIT (AI - Eddie Yost mas' pinch single with the bases 39 total hits for two teams. The third pitcher, upped Ws record 111 banged ' out five straight singles filled in the eleventh inning Friday previouS higb was 36 set by the Los to 2-3 while hurling three hitless IE and helped Frank Lary to his 15th -m~1)aily Iowan night gave the St. Louis Cardinals Angeles Dodgers and st. Louis innings. a 2·1 victory over the Los Angeles Cardinals on April 26. victory Friday night as lhe Detroit Walhlngton ...... 000 200 lIS-- T • I •It! Tigers crushed the Cleveland In· Baltimore ., .. , 200 001 QOO.... S 8 2 Dodgers. Robinson belted a three·run Ir dians 11-1. Fischer. Woodelhlck t3., Hyde ," The Only Medium That Reaches The ENTIRE University Family The Dodgers remained 2\it homer, his 27th, a double and three and Courtney; Brown. Portoearre-ro pC games behind the National League· singles in six trips in the open· Lary was given a 7-0 lead in the IT •• Locs (7). O'Dell and Glnsller,. ,Vi. Cirst three innings. W - Hydp 12-31 . L - O'DeIl (5- 101 . (A $25,000,000.00 Market) leading Gianls and half a game er. Pinson collecled two doubles HOllie run - WRsI'Jnlfton. Killebrew pc ah~Ad oC the third-place Braves. and lhree singles in the first game Lary did 1I0t permit a walk and 1381. ilk