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./ Serving the State The Weather University of lotta I'a,rIb ~"'" a .. _Ua- 11M _na .... ,.. HM a" Campus and I It..... 8 ....,...... h ..- ..,.. '3: I.". 7(. W.h Iowa City rn"" '5; 1ew,7'. Eat. 1868 - AP Leased Wire - Fj.ve Cents lOWQ City. Iowa. Saturday. June 13, 1953 - VoL 97, No. 184 e

eun-I AS.

Plans Made Ike Voices Missing IlIi~ois SUI's 1,065, Graduates Get Warm Reception Hundreds of ola Graas Plan To Rearrange PeOGe Hope (lass Gatherings on Cilnpus I. . fo Nehru ., GOP Legislator Hundreds of sm alumni will bold reunions today as part of the Alumni day acUvities. rary " CUSTER STATE PARK, S.D. (JP) The c1a.u of 1943 will have 118 lOth anniversary lunch on 1n SUI Lib - President Eisenhower said FrI­ Feared 51ain Currier hall today at 12 :30 p.m. Robert Noble, execuUve assilllant In day he earnestly hopes the prls- Steps w111 be taken this summer oner ot war agreement reached at CHICAGO (.4") - A "pleasant, the SUI alUmni otflce, will be master of ceremonies. to reorganize the University li- Panmunjom "will speedily lead to good-natured" state legJslator, kld­ Prot. LesHe Moeller, director of the SUI school of journ 11 m. brary, Prot. Ralph E. Ellsworth, an armistice and just peace In Ko- naped near his home whlle his • will speak on the topic, "Makin, * * * director ot IIbr\lrle., said In a letter rea and to a relaxing of world wile watched helplessly was mlss- ' tensions." , ~ro~~~~erslty That Lives and Collee Hours, ~ent to faculty members this week. Thc President made the state- ing without a trace FrIday and First steps will be taken after ment in a letter to Prime Minister police expressed tears he may Robert Pfellfer, who was prc.,I- L h S Commencement. the lettCT said, so Nehru of India. have been slain. dent of the Uberal arts c1a53 of unc eons et that the tirst ant! second reading 1943, wlll attend the luncheon, - rooms can be u.e~ to house the Nehru said in a letter, he ear- The victim is Clem Craver, 53- Plc1tter is a former proaram dl- Alumni eyent. al a ,laac_ new books that will be added in nestly trusted the yow agreement year-oid Republican state repre- rector at WSUI and Is now an COfree hour ., &he tefu)ol 0' the next four to five years. "will lcad to sentative. He was seized at 10 JeDrnaUII.. rr... 1..... &0 aoon d announcer lor CBS television. "Because no appropriation was peace, not only In p.m. Thursday night while return- lire CommunJeaU .... C~n$for, 1IOf'- made at this session of the general t~e F~r E~~t, but lng trom a routine meeting of the Haadler tVm Speak Der .. Collen aael Maclltoa ... assembly for the second unit of the ~ se;~reh ' 21st ward regular Republican or- SUI President Virgil M. Hancher central library, because the stack I enI owderts ganization. will speak at the Sliver Jubilee Teallt anlllnrufJ IUKbeon or • ~~~~ 0 • the ,l... ot .,., at U;IO p ..... ID !Ioor of th.e building will be com- Nehru in London A terse telephonc message 10- luncheon tor the class ot 1928 to- Currier hall. plete!y ,fl,ned with books by by the Indian dicated Friday night, however, day at 12 :30 p.m. In thc River Thanksglvmg, and because the de- a b s d t that Graver may still be alive. room of the Iowa Memorial Un- liver JabUe IUD('beon ror Ib" . el... of 1921 al U:st ".m. In the partmental libraries lire now filled if:e ~ssao I~ i 0 A man's voice growled "Clem Is to capacity, with oijly a small area pa t ..., sa n O.K.'.' into the Graver telephone Ion. River room 0( lIIe Iowa MtDtOrial Approximately 230 members 01 Ullion. in Macbride. . lett for their over- ~' I't I s my earn-. when a member of the family an- Ilow, It I,B necessary that steps.be est hope that this swered it. The line went dead as the class and their fIIcsts are ex- AJI alUlDaI ~rree hour at the taken thiS summer to reorgaDlze agr t· 11 NEHRU the mysterIous caller hung up. peeted to attend. Loren Kicker on. UnAOD rrom I to r. .,.81. the Ubrary," EllswePih said. spe~r:;;nlea~ ~o an armistice and Dctectives said members of the director or the SUI alumni servlcc, GeIdel! Jubilee .unD"r ot lite Reserve LlbrU)' Moved just peace in Korea and to a re- family believed the message wlJl be malter 01 cercmonlcs. eJaea .f 1"3 at 1:3' p.m In the The following rearrangements laxing of' world tensions." genuine. WnUam Hageboeck, publlsbcr Illv., roem .. &lie Ullion. will be made: journal files tram India is one of the members of 3 Men In S-edau ot the Iowa Cily Press t:Ubcn, 11 1940. the reference collection and a five nailon commission set up Three men In a dark sedan organizer Lor the 1928 liberal arll US Red N t' f reference statt, and the closed re- under the Panmunjom agreement trailed his car to the garage a half class. Organizers or other 1928 .., ego la ors serves wl11 be mQved into the to handle POW repatriation. block from his West side home at classes arc: Floyd Plilafl, De. Ma R S d Shambaugh Heritale library on * * * 978 W. 18th PI. Two ot them went y f the first floor. Microfilm and ' Inside, forced him struggllng to MoInes, denUstry; Regina Hamil- eurn un ay thelr waiting car and sped away. ton, Omaha, Neb., nurslog: Dr. phonograph record rooms wi11 be Reds Open 3d Day moved from seeond to fitst floor. . An all night scarch by more Hubertamcdlclne; M.Edward Llvinaston, Von Cblcago,Hoen, For Decl'SI've Sess'lons The chrop.ojoglcal divisions on Of C ,. ;.I H than 100 policemen turned up no Wllllan1sburt, and Tyrrell Inger- tbe second floor will be consoll- on mueu eavy clues. Policc squad cars roamed sol, Cedar Rapids, law, and Ll!e T. MUNSAN (.4')- U.S. end Com- dated with the Library ot Congress through the West Side wards. Flalley, South Bend, Ind., com- munlst truce c!elegat may return Friends and political associates merce. to panmunJom Sunday or Mon- classified books now QD the third AHacks on AIII'es an(j. first 11001'11 and will all be searche!;l Isolated buildings, ga- Golden Jubilee Meella, day for decislv final c lions sbelved 01\ the second floor ac­ rages and back road ditches jn the Th lei j bit dl t th prIor to Lormal signing I KIJ- cording to their L.C; cJasslLic{l ~ SEOUL (Saturday) (A')-Thous- area. The FBI, although nol oi- e go en u ee riner 0 , C rcan ilrmJalk even tho\l&ll South tion numbers, except for Ihre~ IInd ~ ot Chinese Reds attacked ficlally in the case, was fonowlng class ot 1903 wUl be helt! at 6.30 Korean oppoaltion mW8 no sian! small groups (the A, M, ahet Q-Z allied poslHons across !he Korean it closely. p.m. In the River room 0' the Un- ot yielding. sections) which wlU be put on the central front F.rlday night and lOll. Hancher wJll also speak at Staff o!ticer. lhrashln, out III early today in the third straight PoUcreman Near Home tbis dinner., secret the details of an over-all third floor. day of heavy pre-armistice as- A policeman was stationed at • Some 85 cIa" members and prisoner exchance and demarca- Some reading room space will be 8au1l5. the Graver home to intercept a their auests have made reserva- tion line to sepal" th opposing opened up on the third tlo!lr. South Korean officers said a possible ransom message by tele- - tIona for the dinner. Members of armle. apparently neared th end wee CoDlerenee Booms Chinese division ot 9,000 troops phone or other means, but report- the 1003 class will be pr enled of their labors. J Some ot the semInar and confel'- rammed against White Hoise ed none was rceeived. wIth gold medals lor attendance Divided Into two teams, the ot- ence rooms on the second floor mountain on the central front. U PoLice Commissioner Timothy at the 50th anniversary. rleers were due to meet alain at • (Dan, I ...... PII.~.. Io, Dick 'I"~~h ) 0 I f th 1903 1 II (·8 F Id I will be eliminated. . true. that means the Reds had O'Connor ot Chicago sent Sgt. STUDENTS LINE UP AND PUT ON THEIR ACA DEMlC APPAREL priGr tG march In,; In&o Ute nelel rgan zers or e c ass a.m, p.m. ray, owa These alterations wlll be made thrown about 15,000 troops in all George Buckley of the homicide houle to receive their de,;ree Frlelay mvrnln,;. The black-,ownecl rraduate were a bit warm .. tile are Casper Schenk, Hollywood, Umc). without any intetterence with the into the central front assaults Frl- detail to Springfield, the state cIJ.P- mereUJ')' ro e to over 9Q ele,rees in tbe field bou e. (More pictures 011 Pare 3). CaJll .. liberal arts; Dr. W. J . Dun- Observers felt that the [ull del- summer sessIon. The fact that the day. Eighth army officers said, Ital, to question legislators and see can, Winfield, dentistr),; Mrs. Ta- Clatlons would return to Pan- Ubrary can mllke these alterations however, a nearby U.S. division whether Graver'S voting record R bb 5 I 0 If 3 F: h rana Grothaus Dulin, Iowa City, munJom Sunday or MondllY and k t.. 1 ,... 'th would have felt the pressure it the might ofLer a clue. a·· ., medici ne; Robert Bannister, Des that barring some un1)xpectcd de- bespea S I·e Il.e Umess 0 e R h b I ' lsi S Moines, law, and Mrs. Grace Col- velopments a formlll signing modular method of building 11- ~tack ad een ~ dlV on There were reports that Graver lIver ers al lIns Horeck, Iowa City, pharmacy. would follDw shortly. brades, Ellsworth said. str h. became a consistent supporter, W,hlaa.er Ftltn " U...... Tile North Korean Pyongyang The new arrangement will be Another COlD'!Iunist force, 3,000 starting in April, oLlegislation op- An II I mnl coff"e hour will radio slIld a llnal review of the 1~I ong traditiomU University Ii- men, hit the SDlper ~Idge area. posed by Chicago's crime syndi- To Inspl·re 1,06 5 G1.Qauates a au" whole armistice agreement re- , brary organil\ation lines. Fighting was ragmg in both cate. be held at the Union this after- mained as weJl as settlement of Chan,.. Art: Foreed sectors at latest reports. noon !rom 3 to 5. The motion pic- the demarcation 1Jne but no dif- , U.S. 3d division infantrymen on The Chic~go Tribune said that Three "faiths that will serve us ture aecoun~ of the SUI Scottlsh Clcultlea were expect~d. It aaid a "Necessity, not choice" forces Outpost Harry hurled back 3,000 beto~e Ap1'l1 Graver had voted b ' ld Highlanders Europea? trip 01 la. t sllTIinf( WII anticipated "momen- these chan,es on us, and we hope attacking Chinese early Saturday consistently for legislaUon backed i est' were 90ffered Fr ay morn-, summer, "Will Ye No Come Back tlr.lly" by the mob interests ng to the 1 53 graduating class 0 t ha t money w III b e f or th com In g In hand-to-hand righting. The . SUI by Rabbi Hillel Silver of Again?" will be shown at 4:30 p.m. Wb~ther South Korea's aged for the nellt unit BOOn so that we dogged Americans have fought off Cleveland, 0 .• one of the three to alumnl in the Union. President Synaman Rhee would can recapture some of the values powerful and persilltent Red B G' D ministers wM delivered prayers at The school of Journalism will yield at the \allt moment and go In the existing arrangement. '!Ie threats against the outpost hill for enson Iven egree the recent Inauguration of Presi- hold a eoUce hour lrom 10 a.m. along with tho truce remained tbe hope that we can restore some of three straight days. , dent Eisenhower. until noon today In the second big Question. the tacllities tor freshmen In the The latest series ot Red attacks All SI I r. II floor lounle, room 200, ot tho There was no outward sign that Sha!"baullh Heritage library that appeared designed to gain terri- . owa a e ,,0 ege To sustain and inspire the 1,085 Communications Center, corner ot his oppotllton to a truce that we must nt1W IIlve up. And, of tory or prestige just before an degree candidates in an age when CoUele and Madison st.. The leaves Korea divided and Chine e course, the loss of conference armistice. ' AMES (JP)- Secretary ot Agrl- man Is "seldom thought ot as an clUseI of 1.28 and 11>43 will be troo"" In th- North was relaxin, rooms I s ser Ious, .. Ell swor th sa.Id On the eastern front, Commu- culture Ezra Taft Benson was one end In himself but as a tool for especially honored but all alumn,I In any.... wa.,. '"

- J de~::~e~~I~~r~::ol~ a:!~cS~~~ ~:~h~~~~~I:r:~!O dt~;i~h~~ ~~d81~~~:~~ toF~~~:;ve n1:::e:~ ~~t:~:n ;~r!O~;~~i~~~~; J~: ~~~1:e':t~'T~~=S at~~!i:::S:: 219 -P---M--'~-·""-·- 1 All clianges w11l be completed by peated South KQrean counter- 'lowB State college's 82d annual ~osths ame ess afc h .o hlmmorl~tl~, ~ duced by students will be a lpecial USlellOS ' 10 e name 0 Ig mora I y, "1', feature of the collee hour. rep tb e end ot t b e $um.mer. assauIta. . commencemen t. R bb' Sil d Benson received the honorary a I ver urge : ' . s.trllaa CIA .eet- Jo Attend SUI Camp degree of doctor of agriculture. (1), FaUh In, the realUy vf pur- it ',., An Emeritus club dinner for . . pose 10 the umverse, a purpose of :'> I h d 0-1 , Dr. Charles E. Friley, preSIdent which our struggles and aspira- • W ~ -~ a umnl w 0 Jl'a uaoeu 51 yean A total ot 219 Iowa hlllh school ?of the colleg~. cited BQIlSon as tiona are an integral part. Man wilJ RABBI HILLEL SILVER OF CLEVELAND, 0,. oUen IIIree 'alUII ago or more was beld Friday at Instrumentalltts will arrive at an outstandtng cltlten, conse- reel at home in the world "only it to 1,065 SUI rradualel FrIday morninl' In Uae neld bvdae..... 111 8:10 p.m. In Currier hall SUI Sunday to beiln two weeks • ' r Icrated rellglo~ leader, dlsting- he believes that it 15 his Father's Sliver was one of the Ihree mlnl.ten who clellYered prayen at the The oldest alumnus to attend ot Intenllve tralnln, at. the All- A tonciensation of Late Developments uished alumnus of Iowa &tate co~- h "h aid recent lnaururaUon of Preslden" Eisenhower. was Charles Clark. Bablon Park. Slate Instrumental Music camp. 1lege, recognized authority In tbe ouse, e s . Fla. He lITaduated wltb the 1884 On Mond.y an esUmated 2S to I __...... ______.-;.. ____ ~ vital fields ot agriculture and ru- (.2) Faith In Ibe worlh anel 10.- "From YOU,1 to' whOm much has In hls commencement address, en(ineerln, class. so teacher. of h1eh scbool instnJ- WABIUNOTON (A') - The senate aJl'iculture committee voted ral lite, and an honored member erelgnty of the i~dlvi~ual and of been given, much will be demand- "Wha.t KInd of Faith Will Serve A lawn pa.ft.y for alumni, facul- mental music will also begin at- . unanimousi)' friday to Cive one million tons ot government-owned ot President Eisenhower's cabl· human personality. ~an, m':lst ed. And it you fail, lesser men will Us Best?" Rabbi Silver drew from ty, Bnd June grads waa held Frl- tendin, classes at thf' lAImmer wheat to Paltist;1n and help aven a lamine. Chairman AJken (R-Vt.) net." live and act always ~s ,If, hlS life undertake to do that which you the wrll.lngs of phllOllOphers day noon. An all alumni buffet Music r;ducation woruhopl for as said he ho.""" the lenate wllJ paiS the legislation next week and tbat Benson, an apostle 01 the Mo.- ~ere tremendously SIgnificant, d should have done," President Han- GCQ{ge SllIltayana and Bertrand dinner was served Friday eveninll teachel'll, to be held concurrently 4"-- _ "t' man chul"Ch In Salt Lake Clly, It his soul. and ml~d were boun - cher told the class of 1953, includ- Russell, mathematician Albert In Currier hall. An an-medical with both the instrumental and the house \'\1m act swimy so the !.irst allipmentB of J1'aln can reach Utah, was Identified with farming, less I~ their .ca~aclties ~nd in1lu- ing hiJl son, Virgil Hancher Jr. EInstein, Justice Oliver Wendell alumni dinner wal beld ,at the Ute vocal music camps. Pakistan In A,lliUlt. President '!Jaenhower asked cOnJ1'eli8 to make agriculture extension work and ence, Rabbr Silver afllI'med. "Your University has many Holmes, and tbe Books of Job, Iowa City Elks club at 6:30 p.m. The hlCh IChool atudenls will the gift In a ~poclal message he sent to Capitol H11l Wednesday. The cooperative movemenlr; before as- (3) Failh In a method of human claimS to distinction, but none so Isaiah and the Psalms. . spend Sunda)' 8uditionlng for pIt- COlt Of. the wbeat, plus transportaUon charges, is estimated at $100 suming bilt present post. progres,s which employs the ways great as that it has dared to be TraeeI JUl's HIRory .". sitlona In the camp's two larle mlllion ot justIce, freedom and peace to itsel I has dared to be creallve. Traciq individual man's gains Heal W, Continue band5, according to Ralph Rea, . ••• ' reach goals of justicll, freedom and In an age fascinated by the spell of and IOSRS lrom tho tribal We of ' camp direct,or. They will alIo re- WASIl1NGTON (Jf')-Another plea for a stay of execution was Fulhright Grants peace. "Each single step on the the physical sciences and in tech- primitive BOCiet.,y to the present Weatherman $nvs Cf'lve dorrrutorJ assignments and -T' way to a worthy objective must be nology, it has sought for itself the day, Rabbi Silver charged: . ", will be Jlven rehearsal .cheduJes. flied with the supreme court friday in behalf of JuUus and Ethel O .... necl to Faculty a worthy objective in itself. When best in the pbysica! sciences and in "Our age makes little of the In- DES MOINES (JP>- lo.ana will DeBilDed to provide the stu- ) ROIIenberll, condemned atom Iples. It wal promptly opposed by the f"V ruthless, brutal and desperate technology, bul it has dared also divldua1. HJa personal We Ia not just have to Jl'in and bear It at dents both with Intensive musie Jllltice department. And with the date .et for their tlectroeuUon on- Competition for F u I b r II h t measures are employed, tbey not to run counter to the spirit of the very Important. Men are handled least unUI Monday. tralnlne .nd adequate recreational ly six dlYs awllY, • hew series ot clemency .ppeals wa. dJrected at awards for 1954-1953 tor faculty only make the attainment of exalt- age by Its contributions to all that impersonaUy In the mass. Inereas- The weather bureau FridQ' ald ~vlu....,.~a camp :~= be- President EI.enhower, OQe came from Dr. Harold C. Urey' noted members bas been opened, ac- ed hllman goals impossible; they concerns man as man from the ingly they are becoming statistics the Mate's bilh temperature and b ::ast' t 'I a.m. 0 by American ohemls' an~ atomic lIClentist. Emmanuel H. BlOch IIttorne)' cordin, to Dean W. F. Loehwinll also turn m~n's long jo~ey cradle to the 'grave," Hanchet de- in the hands of a predatory col- humidit., readJql will continue ~I te ~. d Jndivld I , of the SUJ J1'aduate coUege. toward them IOta one of nusery clared. lectlvism. 1'bef are shunted about throtllh Sunda,.. va euona an ua for the ~Q8.nbttrp, .ald Urey lent ~ teleJ1'8Dl to the Wbl~ HoLlSe The' titi I III aU and horror" he sald. RepreaeD~G at stales llke nerds of cattle. They are Friday .. I .... t tern-rature read': praetiCf' . will be held from 7:10 ... I th I t th I" tr 1 gi d J tl " compe on s spec c y,,1_ ...... to 8'10 followed by rebell'8llJa of .... y na e ea.e alia n. • e coup •e ou ages• 0 c an us ceo for university lecturing and poat- Rabbi Silver assured the gradu- Ulndldates lor degr~s repre-, slaugbtered by the millions. They In .. were expecl.ed to drop only Ihe two. camp banda and the camp , . doctoral-level research. ates, their parents, friends and sented 34 states and 17 forelJTl are coordlna~ and subjlliated to Into Ute '1O'a. Tbls afternoon's orcbatra. BERLIN (A')-Red-ruled East Germany, in the procels of belnJ Fulbright awatds are avaUable otber Commencement vIsitors that counj,ries, Hancher conterted 67 the state unW the last ~~ of mara will ranae from to to II- Durini the early afternoon the aUurlnlly de-aovleUzed, and Weaterll Allied West German,. have to the tollowlng countries: AUH- "a golden age of universal juriloe, Ph.D. degrees, 103 M.D. degrees, their freedom and theU' rIghts even hiaher than on Friday when mlilidana win apread out over caUed for unity of all Germany. But derenae eommiuloner Tbeodor tia, Belilum and Luxembourl, brotherhood and peace awaits tbe and 52 doctor 'Of dental surgery de- vanishea. hlaht or H at Sioux Cit;, and 85 at &he SUI caJ1UIUI for secUonal re­ Bla!lk of the wary West warned that Allied defen.1I must be kept ~p. , Egypt, Finland, , human race arid can be hastened grees. There were 165 M..A.'s and "Becalllt tbe religious basls of Council Blufft were recorded. bearnll wtUt. university staff • •• Germany, Greece, Iraq, , Ja- by the efforts of the human race." 677 B.A. degrees awarded. our sooIety hal been cSenied, and Scattered showers and occu- member/ teachln, each individual LONDON /A")-Mo.cow racUo announced the Communllt party pan, Netherl*ndl, Norway, Pakls- I Cl!ar" to Candidates, ProI. M. Willard Lampe, director materialistic theories of ille and ional thundentonna are prediet- lDItrumeDtal croup. boas of tho luper-Ien.illve nationalist-inclined Ukraine republic hal tan, , and the Unl,ted Klng- In his charge to the 'Candidates of the school of religion, offered hIstory have takeq hold of the ed for thiI afternoon and evmlll The ,tudent. wUl forget their been fired. It ••Id Leonid' G, MIIlnikov failed to t~ the Lenlnlst- dam and colonial dependencies. aAer conferring the degrees, SUI the benediction Bnd Inv()()ation, thoughts and a~oDS ot men and and apin Sunda,.lll8ht. sludJ.. and muaica.1 inltrumenta Stalinilt ~ tloDiI II 110 ' tb bo d 110 More Information ls available at President Virgil M. Hancher added and the llnlverslty band, directed r Slilht17 cooler Iemperaturea are and eoJoJ NCrIMlonal acUvltlel II kJ ~ ~ cy e on e r er II of rea~v. Caecho- the SUI IJ'aduate coUeee offices this challenge to Rabbi Silver's by Charles B. Righter, played tra- (",ontinued 0" Page 3) expected after JlODClq, tbe ..._ frOm a:ao w 1:30 p.m. etICh after.. ova • a Hi• ..mtll1t, A. I, XlricbIClro, 10\ ~ Sob. in 014 capitoL _. _. __ _ .. , d~lan~ion of faith: ' diUonal music, _ _ ' _I &AB8I IQ.YI&- I _ _ __ UMr WlNIl Idded.' DOOD. 1 r Pace Z-THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City. la.-Sat.. June 13, 1955 'The ai' Place Just Isn't Like It Used To Be' P~ysics .Talks ~~a --:-,;:::- -- __ ~ -~ -.: .. .-...-...---- f:- -=:::=-~ -=.:;:::--______=_ Interpret~ -:::::~~.,:::--==:-- --..- -,..-..------.....-.... ~ TIle Diii~ lo~an To Open H~re I ~--:= == .::= ~ .::= t~e ' News , ------~ SATURDAY. JUNE 13, 1963 - ---- = :::. ::::_- • I. II.• OBERT. I&. -:::::; - ~- Publbbecl dalb' _I 8unda, ""I...... 11 ....1.. .rr.n .n" Fro' II. P ....u. ••1IUIMr On Wednesday -_-::: ?::- Aalge1a... Pr_ MoIIdaY an.. "'1A1 bollda,. II, Siudeni r.,..... II, .:" . .... Til. Dan, I ..... ~ - N..... ADaI,.. PUblleetiont. Ine .. 1M low. Ave .• Iowa etr ••IaU.. ..,...... 1. I. ... r... .J _ DAILY IOWAN IpiToaiAr. ITA" . Some Hghter sides of what is ' , ~Iy. Iowa. "",,*tI!" •• _ani! eta•• OU .r... 1i.11 ... hnm,. d ••,.. ••••• J:clI tor ...... J .me. Farlor ''j ...... ~. tna11 ll)alter a' the poatoHlc:e .1 Iowa I ••• Il•. , J• • ,ell Ire. 4 a.m ... 11 • .•• ~I~ ...•..•. usuaLly considered a highly in- ~ . . The Impression was growing.1~ el~)'. under th. acl of con ...... 01 aD. f ••1& I , .... I. 5 , .... '.11,. Bal.r. Mana,ln, Joseph MIJIer volved subject will be discussed ~...... __ ..... //..". ... Allied circles Thursday night tllat. _M_._rc~h_2._11_7'_. ______II.,. Ila ...: ...... 1e 11 •••D, NeWI Editor ...... Sarah Ae xperi- "bee wiJI drop his Intransigent at- Thil ~uoelaled Pr••• la enUtled ex- .op.rl DOW. Ita ...... D ...... Ita... . SocIety J:clIlor ...... Kathy Hurtt ences Thursday at SUr. • ": ." '. titude about a Korean truce when clwllve ), to th. uae for r~ubllcaUon .r Innoa... m ...11 Ie Til. DIll, . . • " i ~ t . 01 all the local new. printed In thlI I.". ... J:clItorlal Aailltant ...... K.~ Cr_ Topics of this part of the 15th .~!!!!!----L---':7"",,::--""":~-4.r '---_____"""_ he chips are really do~. newQlaper al weU al aU AP DeW. ~:~,:~~.:!~~.e. are .. III. 0 ...... ' ..• Cblel Pboto"..phe>' ...... BUI Tumor annual Colloquium' 01 College • The Allies, headed by the Unlt- _11_1._P_.Ic:hes...... _. ______1 Physicists - opening Wednesday ed States. have plenty of pressure IIII1BII:I Subacrlpllon r.... _ b, carrIe>' In Iowa DAILY IOWA;-;;;1N11I1 .IA" _ will range lrom "Cram Sheets·, to be used on Rhee in the ShOW-. AUDIT BUBI.UI Cl!)·. ~ c~nta weekly or .. per )I.ar In Builn." Manaler .. CIIa rle. It. GoeldD4r advance: 'Ix month" " .15; three Aa.t. BUlIn ... lII,r ..... Sam A. Preston to "Originality in the Lab~ratory .". down. It will be used if ne&essary. 0" month •. p.50. By maU In lowa. " per CIa ••lfle4 M.aneier ...... BarllaTe lIDI" By no COincidence. a man named Or ~ may see that he is work- CIBCtTLATIONI year; .Ix mont .... fI; three montha. iniJ hl-··"\f I 1 . i ss'bl sl ~: .lr 0111 ....· man .Ub~pUOIll. ,1Cf.00 Cram will give the lecture on , ·1 """'d ~ 0 an mhPo / h~ I'- Call 8-21$1 u , ••••••1 •• ,.1.. per year: .Ix months. fI . ~: three DAILY IOW~ CIBOtlJ.A1:10M I'un "cramming." He is S. W. Cram. uat on lin II ve up t e Ig . n , ..r Dall, la•• D II, 7 •.•. III.'..... months, $3 .25. · ClrculaUon MIona,er .... Rol>f!rt Cr...- ~tat~~s~~~~ , =~=~:~:::~J·~-~~--/~·----~~----G--E-Nrl--E-~7, -A--L~-N--O--T--I~C--E~S---- Dean Thoma H. Osgood 01 MJ- I hils Q few more .days in which to ourna Ism . K ' : blow his patriotic trumpets. S . ~ chigan State college will delve into i Only Haa To Fall Sllen' hort Go rse GENERAL NOTICES should .,.. dePoaited with the clb editor " the "PhySics of Golf" when he , 1. spcaks at the annual colloquium w..- I Rhee doesn't have to reverse The Daily Iowan In ute newlI'ooni, In. !he Communications Center. dinner Thursday at 6 p.m. in the ~ l... ,himself in order to let the truce Ends T~da Notlces mus' be submitted by 2 P~. the day precedlnr tlrtt PIllIII· Iowa Memorial Union. -+- &,0 through. All he has to do is U y ea'lon; ,they will NOT be aceepte by phone. and must be TYPED _I /'/~ ~ r- f fall silent. South Korean troops or LEGmLY WRITl'EN and SIG ED by a rHPOnalble persOn. Problems To Be D1seussed I/~~ +~I~/J are undl!r United Nations com- Public relations will be studied THE SUI mLLiL roUNDA. Most of the colloql1ium will be ~~ mand, and unless he tries to pull this morning by the 11 Iowa high tion extends an appeal tor recorda sily haJJ beginning at 1:lb p.m. oh d evoted to more weighty problem3. them out of that command belore school journalism advisers at- of classical music for the Hillel Tuesday. June 23. Stutlents. ex- however. Among these witl be the armistice Is signed. they will tending the short course sponsored foundation in Jerusalem. Thl! pectil1l to take . this examination "Tfle Atomic Physics of High take orders about cease-fire and bY: the SUI school of journalism American sponsored Hillel house sho~d .notif.y the secretary, room tory Production of Meson ." line just like other troops. A closing session at 10:30 a.m. sion of great importance and Physicists from all parts of th ~ ' r/ It he should try , to pull them today wl\l conclude the workshop. serves all groups of student.li there. TI\E 11911.-115 F U L B RIG B T nation are expected to attenc:t th I ~ out of the Allied command beCore The sessions are being held In the The records will be accept.d at competition is now open. Award! meeting. which' will feature an 'I. r1;. the truce. the Allied lutcracker new Communications Center. , the SUI Hillel house, 122 E. Mar- are ayailable in the (~l1owlDg address by E. U. Condon. president , 1/ wl11 go to work on him in earnest. Hil(h school advisers who have leet st. counlTles: Australia, Austna, Bel, Qt the American Association for The Allies would ,themselves be 'attended the short course Include glum. Burma. Ceylon. Denmark, the Advancement of Science. and '. ~L.._ required' to help control the slt- Bernice Bobenhouse, Logan; Ava THE FIRST REHEARSAL OF Egypt. Finland, France, Germany. one of the nation's foremost au- • uation on a basis of local insur- Brown, Manchester; Nels E. the University symphony orches- Greece, India, Iraq, Italy, Japan. thorities on atomic cnergy. He f , gency wherever South Korean Christensen. Strawberry Point; tra will be Tuesday, June 16 at Netherlands, New Zealand, Nor. served as scicntitic adviser to the I' ~ LJ..I troops threatened to violate the John Geraghty, Webb; Ed Hemen- 7:15 p.m. in North Music hall. Re- way. Pakistan. Phillppirles, Swe. spccial committee on atomic in- • {' ~;-t" lruce line. The situation would way. Correctionville;. Virginia hearsals throughout the summer den. Thailand, Union of So\ltb rgy of the U.S. scnate. .(o~ __ just not be one which the South 'Heston. Fairfield' Francis M. Nels. ~ession are as foJlows: Monday, Atrlca. and the Ul)lted KJngdom, Condon. who attcndcd the atom v Koreans would be capable of ChaTles City; 'Peggy Newman Tuesday. and Thursday evenings Applicants .enrolled in colieges or bomb tests at Bikini as a member filcing. Porter, Altoona, Mrs. Henrietta at 7:15 to 9:15 p.m. Those inle\,- universities may obtain akllllka- ot the president's evaluation board, 2 Aliern.atlves to Truce Ruff South Amana' Leona Sml- ested please contact Prof. Gower, tlon forms from the Fulbright ad" will deliver the Associated June , The Issue for the Allies is too ley. 'Charles City. a'nd Glenn, W. x2498. lI.iser of the Institute ot In~rn'. lectures Friday and Saturday 011 . \ great to permit disruption ot the Van Horne, Iowa Cliy. ___ tlOnal Education, 2 West 45th st..

~~~or~~~s~~Wooldridge To peak :===~==~=~=~=~=====~~======~======~~====~~~~~~Th~~~two alternative~ to a truce One porting~~~rsh~~~~ editing newspaper man- · ~~~W~p~~~Y~~~~~~~th t hit presently enrolled should request ------'----- Is a vastly intensified war ~ffort agemedt photo~aphY newspaper m t del o,,:n t area 0 are n ~- application forms from the lnsli· t'!" g Prior to Condon's Friday lec- at a cost which no one is willing pro d ucti~n feature w;iting news- eths e An . m onna 10ln concterUn tute. The cJoslOg date tor the re- LITh G I h B L d can A tl n nl tmes. Dean Wooldridge, vice- GCa ealer els F"ul Lengl usiness ea ers to contemplate, and at the risk ot paper makeup circulation' class- e ·t mw ssoc a k°ed °to • k- celpt of applications is Oct. SI. president of the research and de- . setting off a general war. roo m techniques adv~rtlsing versl:lh . omfoe~ Il:e.as fh fPfl.c 1953. Applicants for Australia and velopment laboratories or Hughes T .Be' C I ' , up suc m rma tIon a t e 0 Ice N Z 1 d • t b It th It Aircraft company. will discuss t ( 0 gin oRtro The other Is complete with· yearboo~ makeup, and yearbook of student affairs, III University e~! t~a an b m~s ~~ 7953 e "Problems in the Development ot Tec~nllcolor drawal trom the Korean aftalr. production. hall. , app ca ons y ct., . Gui~ed Mis~iles." II OrOnalllon F1llm S· M d which can hardly be eontemplat- The students have toured radio . 'bl't of new ed. That would be to give the station WSUI and the television THE FIRST REHEARSAL O. f' THE UNIVERS~TY BhAND'S Thc annual exhl esslons on ay Cit i t h' h th' . , Irst summ!!r sessIon te earsa I teaching devices and of publlca- "A Queen Is Crowned." a Brit- ommun S5 a v cory w IC ey 1eachlng studIOS and have also the Umvetlilty chorus ~1ll be wlll be Wednesda June 17 at tlons prepared by members of the ish-made feature-length film colored flags of heraldry. the The roster of the 14th annual could not attain by arms. worked on The Daily Iowan. Tuesday. J\lne 16 at 7:15 p.m. in 3'10 pm Those infe're5ted co~tact colloquium wili be conducted record of the coronation in tcchnl- ca.meras 'have graphica lly record.ed . management c.o u r s:e No S~teh Seen by Allies. ~erbert E. Clark has been co- South Music hall. Rehears.als Pro!. C. ·B. Righter, room 15. Mu, Thursday evening. Prizes will be color. is being shown this weekend With pr?per dignity the solemmty openmg Monday at SUI !Dcludes The Allaes ~ave largely .QUlt ordmator of the worksho~ . Mem- throughout the summer sessIOn sic building ext. 2322. awarded to winners of the ex- at Iowa City's Capitol theaier. of the ritual from the moment the more than :0 Industrial engineers worrying now about t~e posslbll • .?e rs of the SUI school Qf Journal- are as fo ilows: Monday, Tuesday, ' hlblts. The feature-iengt/1 film. re- Queen. attired in .the traditional and executives trom 16 states, Ity of a last·mlnute sWI.tch on the ISm fac~lty who have taught the and Thursday evenings at 7:15 to h .. leased by Universal-Inter:l3tional. robe of gold, is vested with the Canada and Sweden. . part of the Reds whlch ~ would classes mclude Charles E. Bar- 9:15 p.m. The production this .STUDENTS R~GISTE .1ED T e c~lloqulun:' IS sponsored. by IS the first technicolor coverage of orb, scepter. bracelets and crown For two weekB the industrIal break up the truce. negotaations. num. and Pro ~essors E. F. Mason, summer is La Boheme. abll thoSl! Wl~ the educatIOnal p1acement the NatIOnal SCience. fouodatlon, the coronation until the time her assembled rela- leaders wlll study the problems of The Swiss have qualifiedly agreed Walter A. Stelgleman, Arthur M. interested piease contact Pro!ei'- offIce are urged to report their the Research corporation and SUI. The film w~ processcd in Eng- tlves. lords and clergy pay her effectively coordinating the ef- to a~t on the prlson~r of war com- ~arnes, Wilbur Peterson and El- sor Stark. summer addresses before leaving land and sent to New York city by homage. Although the ritual forts of me,?- and machines. They missIOn, despite earber doubts due las Ne~ome . Jos~p~ Meyer, G. the campus. ' W·.II H d Saturday - some 3.000 miles and not Include the sacred anointing, will hear L.'Uian Gilbreth, presl- to Rhees stand. India Is still a bit Iowa C:lty• and William Hall, G. INTERl\W HOURS FOR THB Ruppe ea only four days from the pageantry no other facets are missed: ' • • . of a firm of consulting en~ worried about the South Korean Iowa City, each taught a class. MAIN LIBRARY ALL STUDENTS ACCEPTBD • I d· in Lond n The preli . a 0 k "As colorful JJerhaps as the glneers and mother of the family threat to oppose the entry of her Saturday, June 13- 8:30 a.m.- for admission into the college 01 Coopera tIve n Ian and Pla~ning requjre:~a~; ~c~- pageantry a tte~d nnt on the actual fea.;ured in " C~.a.per b.y the Doz- POW supl!rvisory ~oops . But botJj CANNED BEEF . 12,Noon. medicine beginning Septein~r, nicians. artisans, camera men and coronation is the ensuing and joy- en. on the subJect ot time-motion undoubt~dlY have been told th~i WASHINGTON (JIl)-The aarl- Sund~y. June 14-CLOSED. 1953, are requested to report as Researc h Program transportation men to speed the ful procession through a ' rainy study. . Rhee Will not be .pe:mltted .0 culture dep~l'tment announced Monday. June 15-8:30 a.m.-5 Soo)1 a~ possible to the oftlce ilt n th h . h' London The Coldstream Guards M. R. Lohmann, vl~·dean of make any actual phYSical reslst- Friday that It will offer to buy p.m. , the a!jSlStant dean, room 119, Med- SUI anthropologists have joined ,I m 11 ro~gk proc~ssmg w lch G en d:e s and a va tara i the OklaholDa I~titute of Tech- .:ince against the armistice or to "substantial" qUantities of canned Tuesday, . June 16-8:30 a.m.- leal Labol'atories, tor appolntrnen\ the University of Chicago in a co- norma y a es wee s'. r air s r y 0 nOlogy of the Oklahoma AgTicul- violate its terms once made. There beef f6r distribution through the 5 p.m. t cards for the required physical operative program to help the 620 ~s~ AhU Av~lJab le C~meras . m~n. at a~m.s from far-:lu~~ th tUfa1 and Mechanical college wHl seems little dou1;lt that when the non-profit school lunch program Wednesday, June 17-8:30 a.m. examination. Mesquakie Indians of Tama help 0 t e tec nleolor cameras m minions vie m eye appea WI e explain why "Management Is day .of truce-elgnlng ;lrrives, Rhee and relief outlets. The purpose Is - 10 p.m. themselves in adjustment to the were used for the oc- b °hfflcersi Ifords hand Man's Most Difficult Problem." will have been quelled. to help stabilize beef cattle prices. ' Departmental libraries will post PH D FRENCH hEADING """ LO~don l ed':led~.le~ American culture around them. caslon. .. ales mmg t e rou e 0 marc . Other speakers will present - . their hours on the doors. • : l\ OA' P r R ld J R f The New York Tlmcs m a re- QU'Cen Salutes Crowd production planning quaHty con- Sf I M (h HI h 6 amlnahon wm be Riven ThurSday, thropologyro. eyno will leave. fuppeor the 0 3,200an-. vIew 0 f th e (I'1.m sa.id "From. th e "Especially arresting is. the press trol, plant layout. wage'a admlnis- e al ange II way 'THE "TOOL"-r EXAMINATION' June 25 from 3 to 5 pm. . in room acre reservation today to repre- mome.nt that SIr Laurence OliVier. of thousands shouting 'We want tration and othel> problems and " in Business Statistics will be given 307 Schaeffer hall. Only th~se , wiU I)ent SUI In the research program speakm g . dr~maUst Christopher the Queen' on her return to the techniques ot combining human ., J, in room 217 University hall begin- be admitted to the .exammatJons conducted since 1932 by the Uni- ;ry's poehc lines. reve.rently say~. palace. It is on thi.s Instant. per- and mechanical energies. , D A Ilh B HI k nlng at 1:10 p.m. on Friday June who make applicatlOnbYsillnl.ng verslty of Chicago. · this royal throne of kmgs - thIS haps. that the genulOely charming Iowa industrial lea~ers featured 0 0 way WI 0 enec s 19. Students expecting to ta~e this the sheet posted outside 307 D SIT d' t ! lh England,' tPle camera, capturing qualities of the youthful ruler. now the program include James F. eJeamination should notify the sec- Schaeffer hall befo~e Wednesday, n ' ean. 0 ax! a Irec or 0 ~ scenes of the rolling hills of Wales. relaxed from her taxing task', are Biggane. chief Industrial engineer. . retary, room 106 Unlvel'slty hall, .Tune 24. Next examanation will be . U I verslt~ of ChIC go program a. the mountains of Scotland and effectively illustrated as she smll- and Verne R. Martin general sale..~ One of the primary problems I d fl't 1 f th b by Thursday June 18 The "tool" at the end of the summer Benion. (.1 Tama sald in a speech at SUI d h 1 t d b tr b h f 'th Ma t discussed here Friday by E F s no e OJ e p an or e pro - •. last february that "we are foolen rowsy am e s an us ang ingly waves to the appreciative manager. ot 0 e y ago . lems of highways and high ~ay examination in Accounting will be - by the fact that most Indians now town~, sets a picturesque and rev- populace. Nor was she ever shown company, Newton. Koch, Ames. chief engineer of the traffic in Iowa City, Koch ex- giv~p i.n room 217. University hall A JOURNALISM CO'PEE k E gUsh d th t th erentJal tone for the events to fol- in a more maternal light than at Prot. J. Wayne Deegan of indus- Iowa hi~hway .commlssion. was plained that the ' commission is beglnnmg at 1:10 p.m. on Monday hour for all alumni of the school ~~~aer tr° to sc~~ us'~ ey no low. this moment as she is flanked by trial engineering is director ot the the locat.lon of hIghway 6 through seeking to tind the best thing to June 22. Students expecting t~ of journalism and tor all SUI stu· "g . y . P .' . Use Ancnm' Rites her young children, who are mo- management cou.rse. SUI faculty Iowa City and the Burlington do. take this examination should noU- d~nts, ~aculty. ~ami1les. and I Ind:ans ~hll r~ma l ~ essentlal- "The rich accoutrements of the mentarily playful and unawne of members contrIbuting to the street bridge. . . He said he hoped that something !y th~ secretary, room 213 Unlver- frIends Interested In journalism Iy Indians m their phll~ophY of coronation, as well as ancient royal responsibilities. course ot ~tudy Include Lee W. Koch met WIth mer:nbers Of. the can be done about the surfacing sity haJl. by June 18. The "tool" will be ~eld Saturday from 10 ' life. The?, p~efer ~o contmue in a usages are brought into sharp re- "With 'A Queen Is Crowned' ~ochran. director of audio-visual recently tormed traffiC commIttee on the Burlington' street bridge examination In Economic Theory a.m. until noon In the second ,floor way of hfe m ,WhICh there is less lie! as' lords of the realm .heralds the British have fashioned a his~ mstruction; W. L. D~Ykln. protes- and members of the Cha.mber of a.nd approaches to the bridge wlll be given in room 217 Univer- lou nile. room 200. of the commU' l stress and stram and mo re gener- '. sor of labOr economl~1 Claude S. Commerce. About 25 persons at- .• nications Center. Two sound films osity than competitive strife," Tax ~nd sen~sch als. make kno,wn that a torlc, ,~eautiful and living docu- George. instructor of Industrial tended the meeting in the cham- within a f.ew months. If money -one on the school's moving 0))- explained. Q~een IS to be crowned. . ment. manageme11't; Robert J. Parden, ber office. ca.n be found to do the work it WSUI PROGRAM eratlons from East -hall and \be 1 Ruppe. an authority on Ameri- . CaUg~t. t~OO, are fhed rach tr~~- • : Instructor of industrial engineer- Koch said that it is hoped to rllitake the form of an asphalt i other a television newscast filmed can Indian culture, was the tirst QPmgs ~ th e 2~~a ca_ eld aS ll d ~ 9 Candidates File ing and assistant director of the have some plan (ormed within a o~ ng. T f d b t ... fl. CALENDAR and produced by Prof. Arthur 0 archaeologist permitted to exca- ueen. In e ~e.ar 0 ~ e management course; John R. tew months on whether the loca- so awal mg un s u ...e Barnes' students-will be shown \ E e vate in a living occupied pu,eblo. coach, dra:n ~tY elgh\ wl~ds~r For Solon District Hedges. associate director of au- tion ot highway 6 through Iowa ~:t::\t on. gthe ~rogr~::, .1Sg th~ The classes of 1928 and 1943 will In Acoma, N . M:: he fo und evi- gr.ays. rna es sway o . es - dio-vlsual instruction. and Stan- City shall be changed to eliminate r g enm an WI .enm 0 Ratnb;'. '-lie II. ltilS be especially 'honor~d. dence of the longest continually mHlnster Abbey. Ther~ , m the Board of·Education ley Nelson. manager of motion present bottlenecks or whether it about f~ved r.nil~S hot hlghW? AS 8:00 Momln, Chapel tJ occupied settlement in North e nr~ v II Chapel from the vault- plctute production. will remain In Its present location near o x or m 0 pson coun y. n~ ~~;;':ren" Circle t America. ed helgh.ts where hang the multl- Nine candidutes have filed nom- lJIinol$ Industries wm send the and be widened. date as tollwbhlen the 11lntdkS may be- 8:00 Or,onlo.Uonl ..... th Fa ..8_ come ava a e was no nown by 8:30 Or,anllreo ination petitions for election to the mos t 8 t u d e""" to e summer n ... Are LaeldD&' K h 8:45 Bob Crosby Show tl , Coronation Film Arrives five posts on the board of educa- management course, with 21; Ohio Due to lack of funds no detlnite oc. TI It Ind ftnJte 10 :00 Here'. Auslralla . • N g tion of the new Solon community Is represented by 12. Iowa by 9, construction is planned Immedia- No BPI!c~~C time ~or work on :n~ ::;:!~ursp~::amel . 'BULLETI school district. , New York by 6. Elvlr Berggren: tely, Koch stressed. He added that highwaY9 or bridges to be done 10 :45 Your Stat" Department 01 I s The election for the board posts production development managel the h I it h way commission does here was mentioned by the com- 11 :00 :a~~l~.!~d s~:~on SATURDAY. JUNE ~3, 1153 ill be held Jun 23 of the Swedish directorate 01 na- have some tuture plans for this . I I b l h Id h 11 :15 Serenade In 81 ... w. e . tlonal defense factories. Is coming area and is still seeking the an- miss on eng neer u e sa e 11 :30 D.A.R. Pro,..am VOL. XXIX, NO. 116 ReSIdents ~t t~e area voted June from Stockholm especially to at- swer to ' a number of other prob- hoPed It would come within two I~ : : ~;;~mlR.~b:;: 1 .to reor~anlze Into the new dis- tend the course. lema before makln more detinlte yeats. • 12;30 NN, trlct, which includes an area of Classes will be held In the En- pi n g Members of Iowa City s traftlc 12 ::& Orpnalree about 52 squire miles and has an glneering building; the student. ~~. "origin and destination" re- coh1mittee Include Harry B. Qun- ~ : oo ~::,~::lof~~:OP" 8&&1II'4a1, J.e 11 • assessed valuation of nearly $3 wiIJ reside in Hillcrest and East.:. port Is now being complied from lap Jr., chairman; Prof. AJlen 2:30 Masterwork. Prom France 9:30 a.m. - Profi!Jslonal ..... million.. . lawn dormitories. results of a survey taken here re- Tester; ~nBel' Cllapman; ~Ichard ~ ; :: ~~~3ry ~"WOII SthlOn-tmedicine, Medical ampli· CandIdates whO have filed for cently which will reveal Informa- Ilgenfritz, Atty. Roger Ivle. Prof. ':00 Unlverllty of Chlcalo Roundlable eo er. . the one-year terms are John D. B"bl S hiS f tlort needed to formulate plans re- Frederl~k C. Higbee and Prot. ;:: ;i!I;~")A r;:~~'U'I8I 12:30 p.m. - Silver Jubllee Stahle, president of Big Grove No. lee 00 e Ilarding hlllhway 6 the engineer John 0 Mara. 5:45 sporta Time luncheon, Iowa Union. I board and John Reyhons, presl- said.' . I' ::g: DInner Hour 12'30 pm - Tenth annJvel'llf1 dent Of. the present Solon board. By Lutheran Church Koch cited a factor reported In New ~as 8uilCling 7:00 ~::r~ P.M. IUhchllon,' c'urrier Hall. Candidates for the two-year ., the survey that almost 90 per cent I ~ ,8 :00 ~:~:U 8 Shop 3:00-5:00 p.m. - AU..:alull!lli' terms are William Steinbreeh, a The annual dally vacation BI- of traffic on the highway In Iowa Per"l'it , Granted I~ : ~ SIGN OFF coffee hour, Iowa Union. • member ot tIle Cedar No.6 board, ble school wllJ open at First En- City Is local, or had Iowa City ail . III ••••,. "n. 11. It.. d:30 p.m. - Golden Jubllft dID- and James H. Wilson and Charles Iish Lutheran church Monday at a destination, as the main reason P~laslon toccinstruct bulle , ,00 Mornln, Chapel rlet, IOwa Union. Meyers. both members of the Sol- 9:15 a.m. The school will be Ih the commission does not favor by- gasoltne storage tanks and a ':IS New~ TIIfJlday, J.lle II 8::10 Summer Serenade ~ on board. session Monday through FrIday. passes around Iowa City. building In low, City were grant- ':50 Woman'. News 8:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. - R~ItIVll- Seeking election to the three- 9:15 to 11:30 a.m. for two week!!. D.cJllen II Petldlnr ed by the office of City En- 10:00 M:l:IC you Wanl tlon for summer letillon, !leW year term are Albert MlJler a The theme of the school will be Whetb,eJ' to 'wIden the Burllng- glneer Fred Gartzke Friday. :~:: ~~. e~~~r!eJ house. member of th Cedar No 9, bo~rd' "The. Bible Jesus Used." CluseS ton street bridge. move it north The new plant will be built by 11:30 Ut Ther. Be LI,h' Wedne.csa" JUDe 11 . M . H id t 'f th C ' for children three ye8r. old and 6r seek a new route for highway the Cedar and Johnson County In: ~~::!r Sf~: P•• eo 7 a.m. - Openlna of cl ..... arvin am, pres. en 0 e e- older have been arral1led. The II here has not ~n decided. the Farm Servl~ Co. and wlJl .be 11;00 Jlhythm Jlarnble'l Sun•• ,. lime II da~ No. 8 board. Ollie Ulch. a 'classes wm also Include recre,Uon. chief commissioner said. located on Clinton at. south of 11,30 New. 7:16 p.m.-Sunday v.. ~1'I, !)t. reSident ot Big Grove township, The Rev. George Jacobleft, plli- Upon 8Uilestion by City Man- Benton It I~ : ~ ~~:S~:llr~al. Bernard Iddings Bell, "Sin, rear and Vincent O'Brien. a resident tor of the church, ia dean of the Oller Peter F. Roan at tlie meet- The plan will consist of four 3;00 New. and Salvation," West approad1, of Cedar .township. school. Mn. Jacobeea will be In inl, Koch bldlcated some consld- auollne stora&e tanks and' a ~ ; !g , ~':.::~~~rli:~BIC O.C. (senate, O.C.. III event at eharle of the music. eratlon will be giYen to a possible building to aerve aa an 0 flce and 3130 Canadian POllc/~.o.r.m rain). , NEWCOMERS PLAN P~RTY Teachel'Jl for the ella. Inclu~ routlnl of hllhways 1 and 218 bulk Illrtlllnr watehoUie. .,11 H ..... AUlU'all. Tu.If, Jane IS, . University Newcomers c I u b Mr.. Robert SutherUn, MhI. Jo- ,acroSl the Benton street bridle. \ • t: ~h~ldtU:l~ ~:~o;'let 8 p.m.-Summer .eSslon lectaft wlll hold a bridge party Monday seph Ja,uch, Mn. .kIhn Oreen, HlIhway 218 north of Iowa City PIONIV PLANNED 5:11 Mu.lo of MlnhatLon series. Teresita and ErnUl" . 0ftI, evenin, at 7:30 at the home ot Mra. WUllam Cot.... IIln, Rlthard wlJl be re-routed eventuall)" with A picnic Will be, l1eld by the :::: ;~w:1iI Tim. d.nce and plano team .,~t1bl , t Mrs. James Scott, 106 N. Governor Cartrae, Mra. Donald . Sll..b~r)', the completion of Coralville dana, 'Johnson' 'County' Medical ,delet,. .;~ r:n,r HOllr t.atln Am e ric a 1\ and '8panJ;ll' for United AJrUnes from Chl­ st. Mrs. Claude Bowen II chalr- Mill Janet Moore, 111'1. ' Leon anl,l w111 ,0 past the Oakdaie san ~ - Wellneaday at 8 p.m. at the ~ome ;:..~. I ~ P k mUllc, Mllcbrlde auditorium. III earo. rives £rIlle PaDbOl, owner and manarer of 'he Capitol thea· man of the committee for the Cooper, Mra. Duane "Doerr~. Mr~. forlum and come Into the cl\,Y of ~r. Oeorlle C\ Albrl'ht, 715 I;::: t.t ..f::~O~kB Pro,:r 'ran.. . 'l'hunda" Jun. _,S 'r ,' '.r. the rum ••IA Queen It Crowned." The ftlm arrived In Iowa event. Al8latlnl ,.111 be Mr•• Don- Mr•• Eeon Cooper, trom the ,welt, Koch said. I "ark road. In ~ale , of ralrr It wlll ... Mu.lc by Roth 8:00-8:60 'p.m.-Unlvl!t.ltJ cll/b CHi from Hew York' Frld.y atlernoon. it will be .,. ...OJVJl at Ul~ aId Dl1d~ay and Mn. , May 8~'~ •• """. I Ile Ijeld at C.S.A. halll' 500 bloe J;: ., ~r. ,hop ;aIM 1ft Ittd Pro .... ln: c!1U~ Ute &er Uaroqh Tuesda)'. .' . fred! .'-"~ .- .- ~ .: J-,liDlpti8ltzina...that- u y.t &here N. JebMoh .t. _ '10:00 liON orr -. Iowa Union. ".,/ , - - j . -- ". . ... ~ ~ .. :WeeRs • ;Warns' pI ridlafton If 'Sound Money' 3Companies Follow l program Ign'ored U.S. Steel Increase VI ASHINGTON (,4»- Secretary In Hourly Pay Rate of Commerce Sinclair Weeks Fri­ PITTSBURGH (A') - U.s. Steel ilay 'nlght delivered a sharp ver­ corporation gave Its 170.000 CIO .bal spanking to businessmen op­ United Steelworker employes an posing President ~Isenhower's re­ 8 cent·an-hou.1'- wage hike Fri- quest tor a delay in tax relie!. day and within a matter of bours I Weeks. who was a Boston in· four other bill compaJUn did II~iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i;_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii fdustrlalist before joining the Ei­ asenhower cabinet, warned busl· The pay raise ,oes Into etJect Inessmen in a speech at White immediately. Steelworkel'l had ! SulphUr Springs, W. Va .• that un­ thebeen sallU!. averaJi,nr $2.06 to '2.28 an • less they support the adminlstrn­ I'll 'S ,t!nn's "sound money" program, hO~~'e ink was hardly dry on the . the result may be Inflation and ;mounUng debts whIch will hit U.S. Steel pact before Bethlehem 1.. ------______..1 Steel corporation Iligned an identi- them hard. cal contract c:over1nll about 80.000 r Meanwhile, signs arose that the WANT AD RATES (administration was g a i n I n g workers. Republic Steel. which (strength In lils uphill battle to employs about 20.000, aDd Jon I Y'AMILY 01.. waJhlnc ~. ... & Laulhlin. which about 40,- ODe du ..... _ .... Ie per _ft1 14MI. ,postpone tax cuts whUe further m.s 000 USW members follow d TIaree ..,a .. _ ...11e Nr ww4 SI:WINO maclilne. omaIf wr1Uh. lable ,efforts are made toward a bal­ • • .nJl .IDOI. lMte cIotSk. "Ilrben ~IY" ancep budget. 1 milia PrIee IIIcIreaM n"e D,a __. .. lle 1'«'" Idtehen Ia~ ancl' "hairs. ~~. The ogreementl brouJht specu- Tea cia,. ... __ ..%10 per _ft1 Phone ,. I Retallen Suppori Requeet ·,.hel American Retall Federa­ lation that the .teel companies, no 0 ... 1II0Di1l ...... Ue per w..... CROSSLI!'Y .,..Ivaclor _riaeralor.... longer bothered by, covernment MlDbav.m eban'e Sio CAli 1-010'1. tion, II majOi' business organiza­ n P~.I.. DCoI< PII.... ke) tion, swung to lbe support of Ei­ Hnted 34 state. and 17 torell'D "n"ntrl... Hancher eonferred 17 controls, will Increase steel prices J'RJGIDA1JU, wul!Jn. rntdWwt. '" ~~ in the ne1lhborhood of $3.50 to CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CAU 1-4t1. att.r 5 p.m. Jlie nhower's request for a 51x­ Ph.D. de,ree., 103 1\1.D. and 5% doetor of dental 'urrery delTflea. $3.00 a ton. One Insertion '''' _...... 98c per SrNOLE beet ...cI IPrtn,.. O«'ulohal 'lnonths extension of the I excess Therle were ISS M.A. and 617 B.A. delTeea awarded. ~ roflls tax. It iJ possible that prlceJ of ma- Five insertions per month. IabIM. odd dlalr.. OL ..... Iam». The federation-made up of 511 tcrlals which WJe .teel wlU alao per Insertlon...... 88c per 1Dc:!l I '~::.~...=: -.:... · ______state and national retail associa­ , ·f D' Increa e. Ten insertions per month, owa C'y ,aper The pres nt price of at I Is per InserUon ...... 8Oc per tions-notified chairman Daniel (Continued from Page 1) .!l-eed (R-NY) of the tax-writing Derby Trac"- Meet about. $115 a ton. Dally Insertions durlnl I}ouse ways and means commit­ I( U.s. Ste I aarced to wipe oui per insertlon ...... 70c per tee that it. is withdrawing from governments, the stnture of the In- Set for June 20 tbe five-cent hourly w I dlfter- its "historic" stand against the idual. and with it, his rights entlal between the hllh r paid Ah.rll ....10 .. f • Th .rta.Dall, 1...... • Offl.. fAx to help Eisenhower's program and inherent dignity have su - Crawlers and toddlers wllJ com- workers in northern stDt s nd Ba...... 1 It•• , B.II .r tor a "balanced budget in 1955." fered. Every precinct of his life Is pete in the first "Diaper Derby" to those In the South. The federation said· that in the Invaded Dnd violoted. Hoving be held in Iowa City on June 20. Dllferenee Deereuea l?8St it has always opposed the tax denied to man the image oC God, The competition if open to ba- Next Jan. 1 the dHterential will On the ground that it is harmful he ha~ bccn ,Iven the mask oC the bles under t.wo years of age. be cut by 2~ cents. On July 1.1 _____-__.- __---- ___..!.~~!,.;~~~!!.. ___ to the nation's economy, destruc· ~obot. · The most endangered person Crawlers will be clossltled by 1954. the remaining 2~ cenlS wJJl, ___-:==:;..:.;;.:....::.;;:.:.::.::... ___ tlye to the growth of small busi­ In the world today Is the man weight and toddlers will be sub- be eliminated. """UL." ness, and inequitable. :vho thinks for himself. The eager- divIded by the extent of walking The plly booslls expected even- 1______- __ At the same time. Under Sec­ )y awaited 'people's century' has experience those who have had tuol1y to apply to the 600,OOO'--_~__.-"lIr..._-_.._..,...-- 1 retary of the Treasury Marion B. Unfortunately become the century more than' eight months and tho e workers employed In aU Amari· ::.:.. ______Folsom said in a speech here that of the secret poUce." who have had less than eight cln basic steel plants. USW mem- the sentiment of businessmen has Evolvln, Atomic A,e months. berll previously earned an averale ~...:...... ;,;,.... __ ~ ____.;....;;...;._ turned sharply in favor of extend­ "The classic way ot religion has The babies will race for the lin. 2.06 to $2.16 an hour. :..--- -or- do-"-b-..- roo- rn- (-r-bo-Y-•.-U-l-N. ing the excess profits tax until never been fully tried in the world. ish line Over a 25-foot course. The U.S. Steel Issued company ~ ___ ::....:.p_no... n... . _"'_ I______~ next Jan. 1. Today in an evolving atomic age rules will permit one parent to stntem nt which made it t'1/.Arl---....__ - ...... __ -+.--:....- BOARDERS and roo,n~n ..... nlA!d. QoocI' Has NewlPaper Support wherel'n man's power will be vast- bc at one end to start the crowleI' that the eorporatJon has aare d to (00d. rHlOnabl. price.. AI'haPhC~ Folsom ihdlcated he found en­ I I f j ' t t d 1111 Sllma 7.8Itrnll)'. II. E. Markol . on. augmented, lncluding the power or toddler oct and the other par- atu~ on proposa d or a iom s ~hY R~'~ontil:~~ · c!~pan~· .:.3'1_1:1... . ______couragel'l\ent and support for the of seIJ-destructlon, it Is ent at the other end ot the lrack 0 nsurance an pens on8. e Ft1RNlSlfEO room. (or men .t..unu. administration's stand In expres­ ~J~IMI ignored more thoroughly than to urge his entry. urvey wUI be In preparation .18 S. 004,• . Phon .. , • . sions by [our major organlZllltlons ,.- next year's negotiations when of business leaders. He also said time In human history. Stale The event J.S being sponsored by whole new contract must WANT junk Chevrolel.l. Phon. 1_1111. C1l0J~ room Or.cI...... woman. UI N, there was widespread editorial lind class autocracies have pro- the city recreation commission. It worked out. capitol. Pilon. 11.1. support by newspapers. ceeded on the th ory that there jr will be held at 4 p.m. at tPie The present pact, which xplres SINGLE rOOM. _ Mfn .lllcknl.l. 714 Iowa In a -speech prepared for a no law superior to theirs, and thai Brown st. plaYlround. June 30. 1954, has a provision CATERING In w""dln, .net AV nile. Pho ... .n. Iroup of manufacturers, Weeks , their brutal metllods are justified which allowed rates of pay to be cake •. SPKlalt, ball In •. Pbone th I e It PuU"1. 3T2I. declared: er r su s. 8a d Ch ec k S uspect discussed this year. ~':":": ___ """:"' ______--.,~_I ______"I solemnly warn any group of economic life of man has f I fellow businessmen that it will be Ir"... I\1pn itself Into a .bltter closs Saws Way Out 0 Jai Daykin Is Authot tragic for them If they fall to Each class I~ resort;lng Ralph DuUy, of Parnell, who Is look at the realities and at the without hesitancy or ~ompu!')ction want.ed In. Johnson county on bad Of La bor Article economy as a whole. to methods of violence. suppression check charges, escaped from the NEW EDITOR tor "As a businpssman In govern. and war. Each class justifies It Jackson county jail at Maquoket:l Prof. Walter L. Daykin of In w~I .;,~~~~)" Take ment, I am shocked to find some tactics in the name of some grent Thursday night. economics and personnel manage- lope In our counl)'. bll9inessmen il1loring the finan· human ideal. The shame of our age Duffy made his exit by sawinl met~ttl is :?!orau.thh0lnr o'Wan arOlictle r~tl~ r:te~ht:."'i. i~ cial menace hanging over this that men are committing the through three bars on a jail win. en Ie,d ~ nlS g ale a (1 The Tortlnlton T le.,am. government." shameless octs or immorality dow. His absence was discovered tor Bargaining," which appears In IW;i),~or;;miil nii'ii· ~-;[;;;;--;;;;;jj';;;;;;:--;;.;;;;:;;;,;-: I _.~~~~ ______...... ,..-- Altn8 a.t Bualnel8l1len name of' high morality. Friday morning when joll

New Trial Asked J I At SUI Vespers ·Bernard Iddings Ben, Esplsco- In Implement Case palian pastor, educator, and au­ Patrick O'Nelll and the Capitol thor at the University of Chicago, linplemebi Co. of Iowa City filed will speak at SUI vespers Sunday I motion In JohlUlon coUhty dls- eventng, June 21. trlct cour.t Thursday for a new The author of 20 books, includ­ tria\. ing "Crisis in Education" and The defendants aaainst whom "Crowd Culture," Rev . .Bell has the Johnson county district court chosen "Sin. Fear and Salvation" • trial tury returned a judgement for his outdoor address trom the for $4/633.32 May 21 In a case west approach of Old Capitol. . arlsl n, from a service station fire, a.ked the new trial, claiming that Artus Will Hear Talk tbe jury', verdict was C9Iltrary to . h . . law ond not supported by evl- By Researc ASSistant I ~I!nce. They Illso chllr,e err~rs oli thl! part of the court. • Sylvia Stone, assistant to the , research director of the committee ~oiia Is New He~d for econbmlc development. will . speak at an Inltlatlon banquet of Of k nights of Columbus Order of Artus, llOnO;ary eeon. Louis Lorio, generll plant fore­ ~n of SUI's printing service hu oml~ society Tuesday. Hen nllmed ,fand knlllht ot Mar- Miss Stone will outline ,the }'e- WANTED 1I11ette council, Knl'hta of Colum- search procedures of the eroup bUl. Dnd comment pn research current· Full Time Saleslady I Loria succeed. James Dalv a. Iy in prollress. Good openin. tor G.I. wiW -Itahd knlllht. t,orlalJerved al The bu't!et style banquet wliI • .6iputy ..-and krtl,ht lut year. be at 8 p.m. in the Jefferson hotel. 2 Jeart.or .,.. , Ahy. Jack C. Wllite II Uie new Members may make reBerva- Ittputy ,rond knljftt and Atty. J. t10nsby call1ni Warren Etcheson. FROHWEIN ~~Wman Toomey ~. ne¥or · chan .. eeonomlcs instructor and s~c/:,~y '-Uor. (ft' ot the group, 'a~ X20M'-, {J I ./1.. 1 \;;~_""_~~ __"""-lI"'-'" SUPPLY COMPANY .... ~TIU DAILY IOWAN-Ie.... CltT. 1&.-8at., Jae 13. liS! 1 ~ ..

Si1eaCl~ Fazio Champ Stops Arauio in 13th Trail · Tirea 'CARTER Boxing Lure Ling.~- ,. B AI 36 • Good fi&hts like last night's lightweight title scrap between en fer Jimmy Carter and George Araujo occur just often enough to dispel! • the periodic attacks of sportswriters and other sports officlala on the . OAKMONT, Pa. (}P? - Golf s boxing world. Imperturbable lltUe master,. Ben It's very seldom that a week goe!, by without someone taking II HOlan, showed sIgns of weakening Yankees Top potsho~ at boxing for 1) fleecing the public, 2) sacrlficing young, un- Friday and • c01.lple of har~ened developed fighters, or 3) being run by notorious underworld charac- old pros jarred his early griP on BROOKLYN (JP)- The BrooK- CLEVEI,.AND (JP) _ The New Golf association brought heated ten. But the p1.lbllc keep coming back for more. The rellson? That the 53rd National Open.goU cbam- lyn Dodgers climbed Into first York Yankees batted around In protests Friday from some players ever-pruent feeling th.t thlll fiabt will be a real, old.fashioned baclt p!onshlp. place in the National .league Fri- the seventh inning Filday, scoring competing In the National Open alley brawl. In an exhausting round which day night by whipping the cellar- twice on four singles and pushing golf tournament at Oakmont. * * * lasted four he-uri and 50 minutes, dwelling Chicago Cubs, 7-4, with another run across on two 'walks After Thursday's lon g delays, Perhllps the fight game is run by too many UJlBavory figures. the grim three-time champion a I2-hit attack and fine relief to beat the Cleveland Indians 4-2 Which saw some threesomes tak Perhaps too many young fi,hters are thrown ioto the ring agaiJlBt scrambled home with a second pitching by Jim Hughes. The loss tor their 15th straight victory. nearly five hours to play an 18-. veterans witb little more than a bi, build-up. But the public isn~t round 72, even par. ·which gave was the fifth straight lor the Winning the opener of the four hole round. the USGA took action' retting taken for a ride. If anythIng. the public il fleecing itself. him a halfway sc;ore of 139. Cubs. . game series here before 43.157 fans to see that play moved faster. Goocl Flrb&a QueD DluatlafaeUou Ri,ht on his heels two strOkes A pair of two-out rallIes gave increased the Yanks' first place Players were warned at the flrs\ Fans may go for weeks on end, watching dull, listless bouts. But back - with two taxing rounds Brookl~n . the decision. In the margin to seven and a half games. tee that they must ke~p movin just about the time they begin to believe some of the criticisms of scheduled ,today for the show- fourth mnmg Junior Gilliam and . with the threat of draWing a two the ,ame they read-such as the one by.Dan Parker Is the June is- down _ are lOCking Sam Snead. Pee Wee Reese doubled and Duke . The Yankees fourt~ r~n of the stroke penalty for unnecessary de. sue of True magazine-a good filtht comes along to dlspeU their dis- one of HOlan's 10flgtlme adver- Snider singled to produce two mght ~as ·Joe . ~olIm~ seventh lays. I satisfactions. saries, and the veteran George Fa- runs. Brooklyn got another one in lOto the nght field stands Officl.11 Took Placel The Carter-Arauj!l scrap will be enough to keep the fans happy zio. a perennial threat In this blue the seventh when Gil reliefer Bob Hooper In the Then high USGA Qfficials . for a month or so. Both filbters gave a good showing although Arau. ribbon cla~sir . running with th. pitch, scored ninth. It ran Collins' string of president Totten Heffelfinger, ex. )0 looked like he wanted to be home in bed instead of in the ring at- stnlta It Footer the way from first on a single by games with safe hits to Ll. ecutive secretary Joe Dey an ter beln, floored twice In the ninth round. As announcer Jimmy Snead aanlt In eO-foot pitch shot Carl Furillo that bounced off the * * * others - took positions on tli . t d r right field scoreboard. B B t t k I . Po wers commen e : on the fl~ ,,"\1 fer three- Hughe~ came 011 in the fifth in- rowns ea en cour-se 0 eep 1> ay movmg. I under-par 69, whlcb brought the Itt R M d Denny Shute, Akron. 0 ., vdera • Araujo i. trying to keep* at *least eight * feet away from Carter slammer threa strokes nearer the n ng after S ar er uss eyer ha ST. LOUIS (IP)- Eddie Robln- who twice won the PGA cham and doing a good job of It." lead. . blown an early three-run lead and son broke a 3-3 tie with pionship, said he made a form~ FQr as. many yean a. I can remember, there1s been a constant The 40-year-old Fazio who with picked UP hili. first victory. He eighth homer 'Of the season in complaint to Qf.f1cial!j. Claude H;ar barrage agaiJ1&t the wily boxing is run. It has come trom all co~eMl Lloyd Man(lI'Um 1000t a 'playod to allowed tour hits. ' fifth as rookie Marion mon and others also fumed ave and In overwhelmin, dOles. From all the talk one is led to beUeve Hogan for the tltl~ [n J950 added * * * hurled the Philadelphia what they termed "unfair prod . that the fans are ataylng aW/lY from f1~hts in droves and are con- a steady 71 to a previous' 70. Braves Split to a 5-3 tri.umph Friday ding on the course." stanutstl.y ~mblln« in front of their teleVision sets as they watcb the • In fourth place at i43 came ~ • over St. LOUIS, the 11 th "I want to see what they do t~ bo h 9 i PITTSBURGH (JP) -The MIl- loss for the Browns. Ben Hogan this afternoon," s a ~ Aver.,e F.D 18 Falr)- Happ- Mangrum, t e , fll champ on, who waukee Braves dropped into RI'ghthander Fricano C H f t t " ta hioned a 70 for the se nd layton ea nero ournamen p But I don't think that's the case. I think the average fan, TV s co ond place, a halt game behind just five hits-four of -them from Charlotte. N. C. "I want t and ringside, Is fairly happy with what he gets. He gets plenty of round. Jay Hebert. a surprise con- Brooklyn DO(lgers, as they the second inning when see them push him along tile wa fair ,fights, a good share of poor ones. and a tew "knock-ern-down ten~er trom ErIe, Pa., and former even' in a twin bill'with the Pitts- Browns displayed their only ... IIffalrs." Maybe the fans want more than this but they're willing asslstant "ro lit Oskm,9nt, followed burgh Pirates Friday nlgbt. !ensive power. they did us. . to settle for wpat they ,et; far more wllling than those who con- at 144, 8l\d then came Dick Metz, A'A! The Braves lost the first * * * "We played in three and a hal .tanllY criUclze the boxing game. a touring pro for a7 y~ars, with t idVf~ 4-2. but roared back to ta hours anc~ were always up wah * * * 145. ' fll' J second contest, 11-2, as ChiSox Lose the threesome in fron t of us. 1 In the True article, Dan parker. the vitriolic sportswriter who Follewed b:r .Cro~d scored 10 runs In tQe first in took Hogan four 8l}d a half hour . M 1 CHICAGO (JP)- Hector yesterday." h as d e b un. k e c\ everY spor t f rom a.mateur. tennis to prof ess Iona. 1 ro I] er Follow.... by the bulk of a t)itl• ....,., • ... , ...... • ,,,dlcel, eanwhl e. tlle Dodgers were .. B ·t . t k tl t th Ch k D K d G I titl b t ~ t t· h Ch' C b ny rown. WI h an assLS Told To Keep Golnr I a ng. CI es ~ uc avey- I aVI an e ou as a prIme ex- swarmln~. rope-tearing crowd of ea m, t e Icago u s. 7-4. Ellis Kinder, pitched the Boston . ample of today s poor boxing . pr~ctlces. A~cord1ng !o Parker, that 10,000, Hogall turned 1n all erratit" Stunned by the first galJle Red Sox to a 4-3 victory over the Harmon, .' pro of the WIn ge scrap showed how the public Isn t gett~g Its money s worth. . 36-36 o~'r the" 916-yard par 37- - feat whjchcame after the Chicago White Sox Friday. It Fo.ot club m ~amarone c k, N. Y. For my money, that w.s the best fight I've seen for a long lime. 3 72 d )trno t ' R d (rf K KO scored two runs t9 break a 2-2 Boston's fifth win in a row. said three oUiclal! acc?Sted him. Sure Davey was no match for the "Coban Keed" but you can't tell 5- a n crune. egar ed a er eeps 'Tillie Wllih in the eighth, thc Braves were B' bl to ' I t f on the course and told hIm to keep, me that the fan. didn't IrO for those four knockdowns in t11e ninth as the gr~a~st pu ter In the gama. . \ a hitting mood as the second rown. a e wm on y Vlo 0 going . round, and the fierce beating that Gavilan liished oul I think the he tl\rce-putt~d ,~o g1!ee~ and test opened. Before the five decisions in 24 games for " . . . ' fans loved every minute of It. especially the suspense of wailing for had trouble with hIS irons. NEW YORK (A') _ Jimmy Carl- ' . . inning was over they had Chicago last season, registered his We were p1aymg ver y fast-I~ th I ltabl Ie k t Two U\1QcT par goina to the . towald hiS own corner. the champ fifth 1953 . victory for the climbing less than thfee hours and a /lall. · e nev e ~oc ;.;.. Area'i Belnl' Fooled 16th,' his usunl1, mechanical game er, mQving eve~ onward with stolid drov.e a long right to the point of ~~t~h:~~~ singles of! three Red Sox. He has lost two. Harmon saili. Another of Parller'e points _ as shown 'In the Davey story _ w~ich turhed out Ii 67 ill the first facp and. cut nght eye, c~ump~ed t.he law. He. was u~ at a count of ~a c h man In the batting However, the lean righthander "1. was ,playing okay until the was th&-t the fanl are bel"" fooled by the tremendous buildups given round Thursday eeelJle4 to come toe-dancIng GeOl'le AraUJO WItt!. two but obVIously m trouble. . I d I b t th served a none-on home run ball presIdent came up to me on the . ; '. ,. h' lid h d uachlng friday C t ddt · d t slOg e. n e ~en e 12th hId Id 'Y b to undeserving fighters. About once a month some ~onder boy gets apart! . IS :so r- 0 y p . ar er see me e ermme 0 were a walk. a wild pitch to Jim Rivera in the fourth Inning 0 e an sa . ou oys are beat and hIs build-up bubble bursts. So what. I think the avera!e Hogan tool' • sirnllar two-stroke night t? hold his world lightweight end it there as he pressed t he at- some inept' fielding w~lch and in the eighth .gave way to slowing. up play. You have to keep

lan, even if he only sees bouts via the TV screenl isn't as dumb as lead,lnto thlllil;lal d\lY a year ago ch~ mplo~sh~P by . a technical tack. dropping Araujo with an- up to three errors. Kinder when, with none out, Fer- moving. some of these boxing crlticB think he Is. He knows which are the only to los~ his hold and watch knockout VIctory m .2:16 of the other right to the chin. This time * * * ris Fain doubled and Minnie Min- "So what did I do. I missed ,aooO fighters an(.f which ore just llving off of a publlcity agent's hard thl! " chal1lp~onshlp go to a rank 13th rQund at MadIson Square Araujo, his eyes wearing the Phollo L 050 tripled him home. Minoso easy pu;ts on the next three holeJ work. outsider, JuliUS J;!oros. Garden. startled look of a cornered animal, lieS ose scored on an infield out. _ and went bogey 6-5-6. * * * . BorOi Forrotten Man Referee AI Berl signalled an end took a three-count from knock- PHILADELf'IfIA (A')- * * * "What are they trying to do, Parker says the fans lost a lot of . ~ash and faith when GavU/ln ~oro s . the forgotten man of this to the contest as the 22-year-old down timekeeper Mark Conn. fo r six Innings, ' the TIOgers Nlop Nats anyhow? This Is OUr business. A pummeled colle,e-boy Chtrek: How many fans really throulht tbat 53rd ~ournament, matched Hogan's challenger frOom Providence, ij.I., Another smashing right to the Redlcgs chase4 rookie rlgh . putt can mean $1 ,000." Da:vey c0!-lld beat the Ch8!"plon? Not many I feel. ·Desplte the bl, toun~ wIth a par ,72, despite sOme $al1k to the floor tinder a thump- jaw halted Araujo in confusion Thornton Kipper d~ring a DETROIT (IP) - Jim D e l s in gl ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiii-:' bUIld-Up, the public w.asn t lulled Into thinking Davey . was cham- faulty puttIng but foUnd hImself Ing' right·that doubled him up The d h t d ' d th bell th' . F Id lined the first pitch in the bot;tornll lonshlp material Y , • an e s 00 In a aze as e run seven momg r ay P " eight stroke~ back at 147. 29-year-oJd . champ from NeVI rang to save him. He was led back to beat the Philadelphia "-",'HIP.' the ninth inning Into the up- Even the 'build-up couldn t cover. up enough for Davey. A lQt Tled with him 'Were four well. York twice floored ArauJ'o for t hi 4-1 beh' d the teady hurling per right field stands to give the of his luster faded when he "drew" WIth unknown Carmine BasiLio. ~ , . 0 s corner. , loS Davey first 1o.t the tight until an "error" was discovered in the known tourq.,-nent pros - little counts of two .and three In a nInth NaUonally Televised Jefty Jack Collum. Detroit Tigers a 2-1 victory over rderee's cllrd and the decision changed to a draw~ Then when he re- Jerry ·Bar\let. FreddIe Haas, Jlm- round explOSIOn that broke the This was a startling turn of ~arl T?rgeson homered ~or the Washington Senators Friday fused to fight Del Flanagan because his style was too slmJlar to my Dem~ret and Ted Kroll. fight wide op.en. . events to the crowd' of 7.132 pay- PhllIies 10 the fourth With night before 12,675 fans. Davey's it was prett" obvious that he wasn\t championship calibre. The fIeld t9d8y will be re- Up to the mnth there were times ing $36511 to see the nationally base~ empty. Delslng's homer. his fourth of In Pablldtr B .. LlWe Erred duced from Its present 150 to the when It seemed the nimble chal- I Is d Kipper kept the Redlegs the season. gave Tiger righthand- 'PONY IOLDIER' A good publicity job doCf little to affect a lans' judgment of low 50's and Ues for that I'osltion. lenger, bouncing In and out as he ~~ ~v ~ e~ent . . th A ' control until the seventh, er Dick MaHowe his first major AI fighters. All he wants Is a good scrap, a few knockdowns, and plenty The cutoff point was 1113, so play- flicked jabs to Carter's face, might tea~ngO o~ ~hen~~fi~ ial ::~~~ ;~~ ing fi1vke hJhts'edbutthfOur league victory. He had an 0-7 life- 'MODW,- INC.' of lolid. punching. ers shooting that and under quall- be able to . dance his way to the . . . a wa cas . e .angy time mark-including four losses ..lila As for the notorious gangsters ,behind the big-name fighters, fled for the final rounds.·· championship. !~~in~~~:~~o~~~~g took all the ~:~~:rSt:~~b~l!t;r~lt~iC:e:ingle l .:t;;;;h;;;;iS;;;;S;;;;1l;;;;as;;;;o;;;;n;;;;.======; 1 . HOW"IoD DUfF what .can the tans do about It? We ve got boxing laws and ~m- Down In Ninlh Referee Al Berl and Judge Har- scoring the fourth tally. .mlssions who are IUPPOlied to k~ep the game clean. The fan can ~ do Redlegs Cubs Trade- Lashing out with sudden fury in old Barnes scored it 7-5 in favor of * * * DANCELANDI anything about it" "nd wouldn t care. to, since all he wants 15 a the ninth. Carter crashed home a tarler up to the 13th. Judge Bert r , C d W· 3 1 Cedar a.,ld., 10". Plus! - \ - lood fight. * * * Yanks G' At Shortstop hook to the body. As Araujo lIed GraRt had It 8-4 for Carter. a.r Sin, - I ...a ·, limo.".' BaU.,om I MIDNITE SHOW TONlTEl AlB CONDITIONED The fan Is smart enough to knqw that there are many shady " NEW YORK (/PJ- t"mlcnlll~,eril "WEIRD WOMAN" \ deal$,ln boxing. If he pIWlkB down 'SO lor a ringside seat at a title A . ;I. Grant Dunlal' tl'ipled. his :;ec'"noll' I V.m. I" by V:4 ~ - N th C I G S.. Bolk •• ,tl•• Ilk .... - Then SlOT I.r 'bo 1IIldnll. Ski.. :::;r~1~~~;t~~ ::~:~~Ee~:~:~::~s:~~C~Sth:l~a~~~~ ::::~;=:~a:~:e:e~~~ O~ en,·ra roup i~~n~~!~i;~~;~~:~~~r~~~: t~~ rACK p~':;:: ::.:: ::·'~~" O"k.'ln I AI N. IExloa Cha.,. Araujo boat, a. lon, as a few ,ilhters are sent reeling into the ropes, cage Cubs for ri,btl'\ander Bob E· Ath It· C d fe~t the . New ¥ork Giants. :!- Zn.y WEDNE8DAY and as 100, as tbe lure of the knockout keeps Ita hold on the filbt Kelly and rookie southpaw J'red ases e leo e Fnday night. Coan ..la. uOVE~ ll·NITE" SUNDAY & MONDAY public the fana w1ll pasa throu,h the turnstiles or settle In front of Baczewskl In a .qoailFht player Dunlap's onl~ Oother safety ~1~~I;~~~~~~iiii~~~~~g l l J .... Polen - JellflY H ..to, 'trade. season was a ptncp hit home r "Lure of the Wilderness" hili TV scree" a.s happilY as they ever did. In another 4~a\, the New York CHICAGO (JP)-The North His drive oft tlt'lrlgM field ~a - DOOR8 OPEN 1:11 ~.. - b, 'I"llonl•• I .. ~ ... _._ ..- _.... c., •• Yankees PQ'rchased s~ort.a~op WiI- trat association, a strong Oklahoma A & M on a charge of scored Ray Jablonski and PIO~h "I .. o IlQl'C"lT "T~e Sea Hornet" lie Miranda troD). tbll St. Louis ern academic accrediting agency recruiting and subsidizing athletes. runn~r Rip llepuTh;kl. Harvey .. lth BOD CAIIlEllC,N Browns. Friday backpedaled on Its Because of commencement exer- Ha,dlx ran for DI.\~lap and scored "HNDI; Dancer Fayored in Belmont The 27-year.old Infielder has gent athletic code after in the college rea.tm, only af~r Solly H~ml\s lol)g 11y. . NOW MONDAY" A MOTION PIl.1'VRE TO YORK 1_ Tb of played with WaShington and Chl- by presidents of major .colleges . . 11 W'esl~ents attended Friday's the h;ir~ia~~ni~gnlY ':~:n ca::b~n NEW MAKE TilE WORLD ~r- e namea calO al well al the Browns. A The agency's commiSSIOn Oon unl- huddle With the NCA but the otb- y HOLD ITS BREATHI etght colts, three of them lon, bilt's colorful grey galloper, rules player wUl be released to make versiUes and colleges met Frld&y er schools were re~resented by fh?ms!n /~Ttd h9 ne ~f ~cr:o S:~- C ihot surprises, went into the en- the odds-on favorite at probable room for hip!, probably a pitcher. with representatives of 27 institu- o/licials. I erYtsfl IdS "ts , es .. '- ~ I htnh h try box for the 85th running of odds of 1 to 4. The Dancer is .11;1'" S&aIf . ' e e sea or fJ'" e, ome the Belmont StUM today, but It expected to let h~1I malD opposl- The sixth-place Reelless, solid tions and then recommended that Used 811 Minimum run of the season. etut appears a two or three horse tlon ~om Jamie K., who made to most all other departments, a soft~r athletic policy be follow- The commission agreed that jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiil race wIth N.tive Dancer the one Vanderbilt's ace ,0 ail out tc win have been seeking to bol.tpr their ed. . . pending the study and formal vote, to beat. ' the PreaIm_ by a neck three pltchiD' .tji~ lIince before the s,pec;lally, the commls~ion said the American COouncil on Educa- Whereas Belmont o~iclall ~aq w-:eu a,o. " leason i>l=,ian. Ttle Cubs, lloW in its'Own code which barreq a\~le'tlc recommendation "be used been expectln, onl1 four or five Many seem'\o think Royal Bay last place, a~o ~ave ' llad pitcher sC!l0larsh,Ips entirely slloul.d be re· as a. minimum basis for the inter- stllrters "for the mile lind one halI Gem' can get away with the .wag. troubl~ placed by,& 1952 recommendation pre~tlon" of the NCA code. :I-rear-old clasafc, tbey found TM loellQ' DaeI ctlurch, a 27-year-old rlght- of the American Council on Edu- The ACE policy states that in- ClInG.. BAR8A~ themselves with BalSanlo, Bob 0 haneier, hid. 5-' record with the cation. ' . stltutions should award scholar- DRIVE·UR·SELF liey and The. Preem. To most observer., however, the Redle .. laat " ••on : He had com- Prowess One 'Faeior ships and financial aid to students SYSTEM WEBB ° STANWYCK If all eiJbt 10, ~ 'Belmont ~a~ see:: tg ~ • =dbe,:w~ piled a 3-' a"te th~. far this year. The ACE's policy suggests that the fundamental 17asis of aca- would be the ric:b.~ ever .lnce oc ey c ue. n • a ve WIllI Pea ...... athletic prowess may be "one of demic ability and economic need -"-CHARLES20." ___ BRACKETT . Ruthlesa copJ)4lCl the inal.\lUfll In Daner and Eddie Arcaro, who Kell'" 25 pIA d with Des . MAHER IRQS. 1867 hopes to nab hia ath Belmont ", ye the factors considered In It stresses that athletes holding ...... 8QeCted. with Jamie K. Moines in lIMI, LoI Anleles In scholarships and grants-in ald." scholarships or grants-in-aid 304 S. GUberi PLUS - WALT DI8NEY'S N"'t .....ten th t -'''1 Some 50000 are expeC!ted de IH9 and Spri"~leld ot U!e Inter- A month a,o. 27 university pre~ meet the same academic and ti- "For Wbom The Bulla Toll" With e...i --, e po wu , , - naUonal 1,60. TIle Cubs Idents from six maJ'or confer- . . LATEST NEWS _ to'~l *120800 with thinner pend'-· on the vleather which lea~·.....' tn nanclal standards as reqUIred by JUlt PL"ne~I.., 96'6 _ nettlng... ." '84,5011 comp.redl ew to the may --brtDl showers.I The raoe will broulbtwon seven. him ..upmea tn. wh,le1901 andlosing he encesI11IE!dlately demanded suspend that ttsthe NCApro~;:a Im- oth er· students. 1!~~~!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Fnl1wJII record $82,~ collected 111 One be carried on the CBS network, four the bMt rocqrd that year tor f t hi t o! ______1 TODAY Count lu1 year. televisIon and radio, 2:30 to :I p.m. a B~in chuc.er '" e:.i:c;::en d ~~ te[Y on. ne noon OpeD 1:15 P.M. NatIve Dancer, Altred Vander- Iowa Urne. . Last yellr "'t a 4-9 record s 'T'h Ir e tal op as suthmmher' L ., .. ~ad .,ue ac on came on e eelli Thna with Ch!clllD. He hed .p~ared in of the NCA threat to discretUt TUESDAY 14 gam. for the CUbe . taUJ leason ' and hu • 0..1 Ilate. ~ Bae.WIld (pronouDced Buh­ lOW jUl-kee) Ia • 37-year.old native lII"iilll~1 of St; Paul. 1Itnn. He began his pro career ""~ AleJt.n~la of the Evan~~. leel\l.. 4n .''1 nel bad AJIDICoU'* "~p.L ...... IIAftOlfAL"L... a 18-10 record'..,' . == Na .. Y...... m ..... ,ya ...... 11 ... (: I \ - Ole...... J,I .. ,~ =:-:~. : ::: ~ :: .u Ed~I...IS.· R' _-- ,I ...... , .. ... ,. :::" ." ...... n ... 1': ra -p COl WuaI1IIIM ...... 11 11_ 1'.' .. ... M • \tit J' -11- ""...... , ...... " ....• MI'...... - II ..... 1..... =:..... _. :.:::r.....~-_ ...-- .1:'iHM7.: ... .u : :: tnt .....k" ...... 11 • ... 11 A'" :'... .,f'I 'r---..~~e FIn, ~...... 11 If.... CIIIea...... u .. .. 11 ..... _ -~-.. - • .. "...... ~,...... ' ...... - -- FrI.. ,...... ,,. .. l ' -- ...... ,... '*'-" ~ ~ " •• I'..... ~, a...... 1 dill, • ..,...., t...... , De ...... JII,.,..... 1 __.... I. 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