" , Serving the State The Weathe;' Universi'Y of Iowa c.... llerable dMdl_ ....y aM IODJrllt. PMII­ Campus and bIe _WKS o.h alter­ .... aM tealcllt. Hln Iowa City War It .. 'Z. Partir at do"" aU eeDttDu~d eeol E$I. 1868 - AP leose-j Wire. Wirephoto - Five Cents SatarUr. • I [ Strikes FO,rce GM * * * To Close 20 ' Plants DETROIT (IP) - General Mo------...... -­ tors Corp. said Thursday it will offer was primarily due to pr - Arthul Fish r Corey, tad y'5 Arthur F. Corey, It te ex c:utive secreLary ot lhe (AUtornll [ close 20 plants across tbe n:l- paring its po~l\ion In the Hahl 01 SUI comm ncem nt pe ker, Teachers a oclation, will deliver the eomm ncement address to 9.2 tion today idJil)g 60,000 work- the Ford agreemcnt, which pro­ mly prall to be one or the mo t SOl ,l'Iduat 5 It 9:30 this mornln, In the Iowa eld hou.se. ers. Parts shortages frol1'\ wlld- vldes a m dined iUarantecd popul r In th hl~tory of the I About 90 air force and army ROTC cadeu will receive their com- cat union strikcs protestin~ de- wage, p Ius pay pcn~ion s and June ct'r moni I ml on In c r monle at 8 a.m. In th north IYrnn alum. lay in CM contract negotiations olher co net'. ~Ion .. He h s wlr4'd SID otllt:! 1.1 PrOf. Orvlllr Hlt('h"()('k of th~ sm s~Ch dep3rtmenl will dt'- I wns IIlven as the rcason. Thc sl'l1tte"cd strikes werc that his I Ik will lin boul:'W * * * Icrlbl' the cn monl ov r radJo OM'. ImnQuncement came as subsiding Thur 'day in the race mlnut . st lion WSOl. talks with Ute cro United Auto of Reuther's warning that thcy The tltl of his talk will be Chart. Workers continued on a bopetul were "sabolagjn~" Ih(' ('onlr:lct Liisl of Events wTh D,nomlc~ of Fe om." Ii' Pr sid nt Vlrlll M. H nchl'r note thot an !\~roement could be n goliatlons. Tluy rrsultl'd In :l n S !lId th I IL will d ' ell will deliver the harl to the worked out to beat a Sunday purts shortage and othcrwl. extr ml. 1 0 butll Ih .. l..tt Thou. ands of :llumni tire 1''C- candldJIt art r con r r r I nil mldnl&ht strike deadline. unbolancine of the delic tely in- rllhl. peet d to alt nd SUI Alumni R ' - awards, honors, dl',rel'. ~nd d- OM wus reporled preparing to tegrated vast GM productive union vents hi're tod y nd vlln~d deir hand UAW, President Walter system. S turd y. Reuther and the union negoUa- GM elOlimated it will lose pro- Th 5ch dull' of cv n n the Prof. Robert S. Mlehaeisen, tll- tors an 0 t t e r pa tterned after duction oC 20,000 cars nnd truck two-d.,. profl'am In lude: rector of lhe SUI school or rell- Monday's Ford seltlement, but this week. nuDA}' ,lon, will Ilv the Invocation. both sides maintained a strict ------....;... • LJIL-eommi· 'Ionlnl of air This year's fl'aduaUn, cia. oC sil~nce. a for~ nd army ROTC fl'odullte, 942 I. 36 ~ Ihnl' lhl' 1954 cl3. The wild \ slrikcs crupled G R d rth pmn lum. or 978. earlier ek In a halt dozen thl ~ ermans · e s • a.m. r alstr:ul n for II S(Jr he.hi or more GM plants as thc UAW , extended its contract from Tues­ alumni, Iowa M ·morlol Union. The record uadu tlon rieur day to Sunday midnight. Strik­ 1:31 a.1IL - IIrodu tlon c re- w set. In 19:'<>, wh n World ers were reported contused - mont I, lowu tl Id house. War II veteran sw lied tho' about the . postponement lind Will Meelln h.- Jl .._ -m dleal lawn party rllnla to 1,9~0 , triltger-happy a walkout be­ dl- tor coli Ie or medlcln students, tor PROF. 11. DABNEY KERR, Ittt, retlnor hud ot t'u' 'VI r dlolory dtpartmtot, r eel" Today's rraduatel represent cause oC slow progress in the facully and alumnI. In front or a IIre-J cket I~ a Itotary club mcelJnr 'Thursday. Kt'rr. a bo Unr nlhUJJ t, I r t.lrllll: t I UIIIlIlet' ctlon. m dlcal laboratories. 113 of Iowa's t9 counHes, 40 Detroit bargaining. aftrr l> rvlne 25 u a deplrbnenL he d . Ire al ) rrceh.:d an hono ... ry m.:rn.bf:rthlp III the 10. It was Indicated, however, 'Near Future' Ity Rotan club, of which he haa been a membtr tor more than 20 years. John Piper, lItotar,. dub llPOne~ I 1%11' P.Ift.-reilstration of col- .tate., HawaII and 16 torel," na­ that CM's delay in making an presldtni, makl" the pre enl.&t\ n. He became xecullvc secretary I Ie or m!'dlem alumni at SUI tions. BONN, Germany (.11') - Chan­ of the a oclaUon In 1942. , neral hospital. cellor Konrad Adenauer Is will­ Th 942 defl'ee4 belnl award­ He has ~'en connected with %:31 p.m.-pro res ional medl- ing to ta Ik with the Soviet Un­ ed include: education Inee 1924, wh n h clIl ~Ions, medlclIl ,mphlthea- ion's leaders, bul not for several Doctor 01 philosophy 56, M.D, started II . a tcocher In the CDr- ter, Un~' rslty hospital . ,Oonlident Air weeks and not necess:lrily In d frees 107, doctor of dental lIur­ Moscow. a govcrnment spoke.­ den Oro\. , Callt., schools. ':31 ...m. -oll-medlcal alumni ler,)' 46, I.w 29, muter or arts man said Wed n sday. Jurisdiction Dispute' H has rved as school prln- dlnn r, low City Elk& club. 159, enilin rln. 34, Bachel r ot As Elizabelh cip:al and school superintendent 1:11 p,m. Ul Em rltus club There mu ~ t first be 8 low­ ILberal arts 347, pharmllcy 30, level exchange of views to de­ and on th' I'tatt of the Wa hlnll- dinner, south dlnlna room, Cur- commerce 122, and nursln, 12, Opens Session termine the "appropriate cir­ .on, D.C. oWce of education. rl r haU. About 5,000 alumni are ex­ cumstances," the s p 0 k e sma n ':SI p,m.-all-alumnl buffet pected to att.elld SUI Alunml Re­ LONDON' (.11') - Queen Eliza­ saLd. Halts Viaduct Talks, supper. north dlnln, room, CUr­ wnlon w~end 'lent. today and beth oPFned . a 'new J;>arllament Talk wllh Ike Fir t Bf lURK BOYD rier hall. S\lturd;lY. Thursday with a confident pre­ This apparently rules out anv 9t Ie mmer IItatf'm "t th m d r by exten.,lve repjllr., SATURDAY S.i~rd:f.l . L diction "fruitful necoUaliQI\$" PQsslbllity thllt Adenau r will 2~ ! qJ. hNrlnB on th.- be but added that "pi c -br-p1.ce , •.m.. -eolle,e ot nUfsin& col- Alth II . a'tutd y , I. ,'(!esl,- with Russia anll pledge that reply to the Kremlin until atter a Dodge treel vIaduct Thul'6day , (e Jlour: W tJawn. riat d .... Alamnl day• .lOme of Britain Will press ahead in he talks with President Eisen­ was cut short by II juriSdictional truUiC. ! re.torm, would not be ecoho"}!- search of a Formosa peace. hower and other Western lead­ disputE!'. Georie Barton, owner of the cal." 9:SI a.m.-SUI atumnJ alsocl:" the banqu ~d partir" will be aUon meettng, Old C cJlllol, held todU. DlnneJ1 tor meotcol I The young monarch, looking ers in Washington and New York A. B. Howland, attorney tor i Associa ted Coll.>ultants at Evan- I Jurisdictional DI.pute 9:3' I . rn .-p~ s Ion I medl- alumni, the VI ~etl~u. club raliiAnt In white gown and glit­ next week. Hc is to leave tor the the Chicago, Rock Islllnd lind slon, Ill., told the comml slon or Hbwland s id that 11 section of I cui Ii s.lon, medleal amphlth a- and the lene,.- ~ alomnl ¥lit! be terln, diamond tiara, delivered United States unday. I Pn nific Railway Co., claimed In his recornm ndatlons In a trllrfic thc Iowa cod' ala lin, tbat lh tel', University hospltaJ", held .at. G:3O,.poGl. ' her traditlona I speech from the Government 0 f ri c I a I s said his openlnl statement thaI. the report on Iowa City thal Dodll' railroad .hall be r' pon Ible for a._-$(:hool of Journalism One .oJ1he features at. Satur- throne In the ancient gilded Adenauer does not want to fall mattc~ mB~ not. be within the street be developed to r -route viaducts In no more than every I. House of Lords. into any trap that would per­ commISsion s jun.-diction. hl,hway 26] traffiC around th' Courlh bloek& may take the dl _ PARIS {JP). - Ru I~ h .. no corr hour, Communications day'S Alumni dllY prOtrllm wUl basic objection to .j)e,innlnl a Cent r. be the color-televlted tlental op- Assemblecl before her were petuate the Russian grip on Ea st C.ari W. Reed. commission busln s district. pute oul of the commIssion's Germany. Nor does he want to Bli Four top lev 1 m tina on 12:31 p..... - ,liver Jubilee ration to ~ held 'In Ille Dental the newly elected members of cl'\altm~n, ordered lawyers for 6,500 us I jurisdiction. Dodlle street is eet out of step with his Western July 18 at ~n va, Soviet For- lunch on. el S ot 1930. River bulldl!),. th~ House of Commons, headed the r8,llroad and Iowa Clly to He timated that about 6,500 three blOC'ks from the summit allies and lay himsel f open to a elm Mini er V. M. Molotov room. Iqw M morial Union. The operation wllJ take place by Conservative Prime Min is­ me briefs on tbe juri diction be- cars would be paSSing over the !reel viaduct. charge of disloyally playing ocr told French leaders Thurtday. 1%:3. p ....-class 01 194~ reun- In an oper,Wnt' roem in the Den- ter Anthony Eden, and peers of East against West, they said. fore J~y 1. I I R II Dodge str t villduct within th Howland al 0 claimed that (I) Th same r pOrt u ,Jvell by ion luncheon, 'Ii sL dining room, tal bulldlh,. ft -wlll;be ahow" on the realm robed in scarlet and Mlrht Meet at Geneva omm on U"J n xt to years If southCnstcrn the brldae hal 25 to 30 more Prime Mlnllter Eden to the Currier hllll. a closed teleylslon cinul( In the The commission will then rUle Iowa City conlinul'S to grow. years of us lett in ~t and (2) 1 ermine. Official reports said the Bonn hOU.'le ot commona In London. %:3' p.lIL-televls d dental op- Dental buUdln, audllprlum. But some of the old pomp WIIS on whether or not to contlnuc About 2800 ear now pass over h It' 1a 111 t governmenl is exploring the idell the hearings Re d said . ' . t c c y 5 P ns cn n, or a An il1forn1 d French source ration, dental build In, audltorl- It wJlJ mlltk I.h~ ti nt .~~asIQn dispensed with because the ' .'. d the Viaduct daily, Borton said. c:learDnce of 18 et do not meet ot Adenauer might me et the Rus­ T h e t hrc -man commIsSIon e- " t said Molol.ov old Premier Edaar um. on which SUI haa USed color railroad strike gripping the na­ sians at the Big Four summit cided, however, to hear part of !'Ie said lhnt trafllc over lhe Wit h, the commission s rule re- Faure and. AntoIne Pin.)', J p,JJL-al1-o1umnl coftee hour, television ilJ teacH In,. tion. Elizabeth drove to Parlia­ conference which the United the city'S case Thursday before bndle has Increased from II to quinnl clearances ot at Icut 22 Frcnch fotellO minister, at main }ounle, Iowa Memorial Un- The political ..c:ienoe depart- ment in a car instead of a horse­ States, Britain and France have postponing the hearings. J7 per cent dUring the past )2 feet. lunch herf! Thursday his ,overn- Ion. ment used black-and-white tele- drawn processions t hat would proposed be held in Geneva July The city of Iowa City peli- months. mentis not obJ din, to the place II:" , ...-&'Olden jubilee dln- vision for a ~l4s6 In ford6fl COV- have tied up trattic in London's 18-21. There is also a po!U House of Commons he believes trict. "unsafe for further use." SU6iC! u,aL e an nlly after a collision with D Panama- have its ~unlon at 12:30 p.m. Russia will have no objection to tion would be strictly observed. Lucas claimed in his opening He said the struclure could be thoughts of 176 graduatin, n- might vl8it l\I0,4cow. nian frei&hter. In the west aloin; room QI Cur- the 'Western Big Three's sugges­ jors of Iowa City high school. 'To.l1oI, Not DlDlomacy' Nineteen seamen from the 10,- rier hall.- ! tion for a heads of state meeting "As constant as the ten,sions This wa~ not II formal Invita- 788-ton JohalUlJshuJ were misS- ••"'~:'-"":"-- .. -, -~-; in Geneva July 18-21. Receive Pha rmacy Awards :md the many shifts in inlerna- llon, Faure IIlCplalned, but "more In, and I ared dead In the blaz- ' ta:. '· ( ,. . . tional lire have been, there is on tbe side CI.I lourlSlr! thlln dl- ing, oil-covered water.1. Qne $teel. ~age, Talks . * * * stili hope for the future" Ladd' plohlacy.'( body was recovered. RellC!ue 'ves • - ( ~~en Mishandling a. sured the reeord gl';duatln~ It wa~ tIM! French PTemler' se1s brought 23 survlt'ors tp Rec~.I'! t . Fri~. ' ~. I,~ class, ' . flrs~ m tln, with Molotov. But, porls on the British ~ide ,of \he ~ . ". " he said. tb ~ W3S "nothing pre.. channel. A Ramsllate lIfepoaC PITTSIlURCH ' (R» . - Giant Strike; Attlee Says ,!,o evaluate the unhappy eX- I cise, nothl", ,sen..ation:ll" about messaled lhere wa" no poaslbil- US. steel Cbrp. and Republl~ perlences In. Europe and Asia their conversation. it" ot further survivor.. ' '''~I Cor ..; ·ncessed w.~ talks LONDON W) - Labor Leader we must think of what condl- . t h 12ta p~ Clement Attlce accused Prime lions might havc been j{ Amer- N,..nt Pra1H~ Ileds The fr Igh r, t e ' . ",,-ton TblirJ~)' · ...-IUi \he ·C10 Urtiled Min rster Sir Anthony Eden iea had withdrawn to isolation Meanwhlfe, Soviet Premier Buccanl!t!r, reached a repait' yard Steel ·WOI'keTS. T~o . more major Thursday af mishandling the na­ " NikolaI Bulganln expre ed hope at Schledam In the Nel~land, produ~rs cweqed ntllOtIatiolls• tionwide railway strike and said Drler the war, he said. ThurslI}ent aolna ou." Chahal a.va..... fulure can be brillhter." owners- l et Uaem back. have been vaccinated. . . the 1J~',· ror ~' ~)', .

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\';:re z-.:THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, Ia.-Frl., June 10, 1955

e ~ d ; t Olr ; a -. 1 . 'l'oday Is the Day- , . We]], graduates, today is tile day. WASHINGTON (JP) - Adm. Arthur Radford will enter his The majority of you will be leaving SUI tud nt life behind sccond two-year term as chair­ to go out into "the cold cruel world" to live as useful and con­ man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff with a reputation as the "tough structive citizens. Homes, jobs and families will replace the guy" among American military l';uties, classes and dormitory life. leaders. You have all been told how it is your duty and responsi­ His name even crops up in the talk of a rock 'em, sock 'em bility to save our nation and our way of life. In fact you have school rcputedly convinced the . been told ..pis 1tI11til you are passing it off lightly. United States should smash Red . .•' But trite as tpis may seem, that is your very responsibility. China to halt Communisj ex­ : pansion in Asia; and t6at it IJnd as ir:dfIates of SUI you join a large group whose ability could be done without igniting t9 "do something about things" in our government and our 'World War III . . economy is potentially the greatest in our country. The' tallt' haS" grown to such !proportions that RadIord, on re­ If college has taught you to retain an a,~areness of issues :cent occasions, has taken the atound you and h a~ ingrained in you a habit of keeping an open trouble to aeny he bas any war­ Illind, it wil~ have been well worth your time here. ·like attitude. And his friends "No more teachers, no more books ..." is the refrain of an say such talk is sheer nonsense. Ike's CorilldeDCe . ~d schoolday ditty; But we sincerely hope that your diploma President Eisenhower and Se­ will not Signify the"end of your studies. cretary of Defense Charle.s Wil­ True. - you ~ will no longer attend lectures and carefully son haVe displayed complete transcribe the of professors for future reference. You will confidence in Radford as an ad­ itot~ visor. Eiscnhower made his own nb longer refer to yourselves as shldents. position clear when he announced In place of professors. you will learn from your newspapers Radford will keep his job for a,nd periodicals, from your favorite authors and commentators another two years. His prcsent term expircs Aug. 15. !ind from your business and social companions. All of these But the talk about Radford has ' scnlrces will be off ring you all kinds of information. It is up to persisted. you to pick out SQulld ideas and reject the rest. Why has the 59-year-old ad­ miral been singled out as the You will ~eet the pious and the bigoted, the optimists chip-on-the-shoulder influence alld the pessimi§ts, the radicals and the conservatives, the pro­ among all the top military lead­ ADM. ARTHUR RADFORD, chairman of the Joint Chletl 01 this and anti~lhats and the staunch "middle of tIle roaders ... · ers? Just, how much influence Staff, is shown here as he appeared before U1e sebale forelrn re­ dOCIl he have in shaplng U.S. for­ Y.~ur attitudes will the moulded by a Ll of these people. We hopc .. ,. Ia.tions committee early last month. Radford, characterized II the " eign policy? "t.ourb ll'Uy" among American mUltary leaders, 'WUl berm hla you choose wisely. .J It's an intrigw.ing .sto~y b~au~e second two years as bead of the JCS In AUKUSt. Graduates are. leaving StH with promising world prospects only a handful of people 10 the in view. Unlike graduates 6f most of the other Junes in the past administr~tion really knows modern warfare are limited, and tion has grown Irom a se ries of where State department diplo­ decade, this yel\f>tllere are no shooting wars going on anywhere from those who do not have his events reaching back to post- macy ends and 'Pentagon policy World War II days when be ill the worlet. '11lough the cold war continucs, Russiafl tactics begins. understanding of the capability stepped forward as a critic of indicate thlit tMre is ·a desire on their part for a truce for • • Far ''I;ast PQIlc:y of OUl: armed forces as they are unification of the armed forces s~veral years ~"~fIe they rebuild their industrial and agricultural Tpere are ~ome who say it is now c~nstituted under the "new and then became a centri\1 fiC­ Radford who has put "backbone" look." They poin 1 ou t that only ure in the "admiral's revolt" :aroductions. -~ " New Report Gn '(anter; Tobatto fink ' in the administration's Far East­ the President can authorize the against the air force program to Organized,]abor is in the process of fighting for a guaran­ ern policy and influenced a build up the B-36 as the nation's ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (JP)­ use of atom;" weapons - not strategic bomber. teed annual wage in the auto industry. They have received smoking habits, S;lid Drs. E. CUy- ftnd. The death rate among the tougher attitude, jllthough 1he Give up cigarette~, and you pro­ admiral insists the policy making the military. His friends ~ay he fought the l1artial success in their quest already. Their success will spear­ bably cut your risk of getting ler Hammond and Daniel Horn. ex-smokers still was 14 times is the responsibility of civilians One officer in a position to B-36 program because he thougllt head an era of better living standards for rabor. lung cancer, the American Can­ Among some 25,000 ex-smok- higher, though, than among mcn and noi the military. follow Radford's actions as chair- the navy's air strength was in • T.}:l~ ~rJd £If medicine is offering the promise of lif.e with cer Society's top statisticians de­ CUI, the lung cer death rate who had never smoked. None deny the admiral is in a man of the JC's had this to say: danger of being nibbled away, clared early this week- -. . and that he felt too much reli­ less pain and sickness. Dr. Salk's contribution has offercd the This is indicated by the latest in the last thrce years was only "It seems probable that even strong position to influence pol- Firm Attitude icy. He sees the President somc- "R;tdCord is no saber rattler. ance was being placed on one graduating medical students their latest powerful weapon in figures in the society's study of half as high as among men who . after . years of regular cigarette times two and three times a week. He doesn't want war. But he weapon. about 190,000 and their kep' smokin .." cigarettes, they 'mokmg, giving up the habit the fight against polio. men. may result in a reduction in the He sits in on important policy- does think that firmness now Gen. Omar N. Bradley, when New technology and new industries wi11 challenge the isk of developing lung cancer," making meetings. He has am- will avoid war later. Too many he was chairman of the JCS, an­ , pie opportunity to press his views people have misinterpreted his grily denounced as "fancy DallS" a;bilities of our graduating engineers, chemists and industrial Drs. Hammond and Horn told Interpreting the News- ,the American Medical Assn_ not only through the President attitude of flrmness as being the admirals who opposed the l~anage l' s. but also through Secretary Wil- warlike. ' program which congress finally t In fact, the prospect for this year's June graduate looks very 'Reasona.ble Doubt' son and Secretary of State John "I know Radford thinlts we approved. Later, it is said Brad­ .. ;Uul they declared more cases Foster Dulles. This becomes should be ready to do what we ley and Radford patched up their qright. Though it may sound trite after many repetitions, there Dulles Has tong-Standing at!! necded and must be studied doubly important where there say we will do. He thinks unless quarrel. ~ a great challenge and opportunity awaiting the graduate t oeIore it can be said to be "pro- may be differences of opinion we back up our words with ac­ But Radford and his friends aft:~r l~v~ng~l!_I : To borrow a phrase from freshman orienta­ vcn beyond reasonable doubt" among the Joint Chiefs of Staff. tions, then the Reds will keep did succeed in blocking those op­ t quitting reduces'the ehsftces Radford's critics contend he pushing us back further each posed to further construction of qon speeChes - it is up to you. Inter'est in l, Red Satellites \< ot. developing cancer. haS encourllged the administra- time until there is no choice lcft navy carriers, and in this sense l We wish you luck. By J. M.ltOBERTS J-Wflte ; ,mmmond-HorQ report a ,lion in a policy which they claim but war. he won his fight. Associated Press NeWs Analyst year ago covered 20 months and ties the military to the usc of "Hc believes that from a mil- ii"""""',."",.",,"""' ....."""'--= ... --~ about,5,000 deaths ... This week's atomic weapons. 'They say the itary standpoint wc don't have ~ * * * , * * * John Foster I(ulles' interest in covers 32 months and tnore United States now kas no choice to retreat because we have the Parties Woo the Women- setting up the tate of thc Euro- than 8,000 deaths. but to use nuclear weapons be- military capability to do what- Both parties are stepIJing up the1r activities to woo the pean satellites lis a major issue A spokesman for the tobacco cause the policy in effect rules ever we waut to do in backing out a "localized war." up our foreign diplomacy." ever increasing women's vote for the coming elections in 1956. f or th e Bi g F out con f erence goes I industry d eclared the ACS stud y _ back to a tim!; before hc was Idoes not "establish any cause Ground Forces Peiping Overrated At 910 Kilocycles 'f,l:,hiS political chivalry is based on some very practical statistics, secretary of stat.e. and effect relationship" between Further, they say, Radford is Radiord has made it clear in ause potentially women voters now outnumber the mcn by He has always urged that the cigaruttes and lung cancer, and wming, and has be.en willing, to in past that he regards Red PROGRAM NOTES said -the statistical study ignor- commit military force in sikta- China as being vastly overrated Friday, June 10 ut two m'ill io n. West do everything possible to ed l1lany..factors whi.ch may af- Hons which tpey claim inevit- as a mj]jtary power. He told "Letter To Andre" based on ~. A. recent -poll showed thllt women supplied 52 per cent of keep up the lipirits ·of the non- fect disease and longevity. ably would mean commitment of an intcrview(~r recently: "I con- the codep lctter of General Bene­ ~e vote th~t elegted President Eisenhower in 1952; another Communist u!,}dergrounds, sup- I findings of the ACS ground forces on a scale which tinue to be amazed at the ered- dict Arnold to Major Andre is :r j.h ('/ the army is not prepared to fur- ulity of so many people in ac- sfudy indicates t at women's votes increased \l9 per cent be- porting their hope lor eventual nish and still carry out its mis- cepting the theme of Chinese this week's historical drama on l;'W,een 1948 and 1952. During that time votes b y men intreased liberation, but not encouraging Lung cancer is rare among sion: in other I?arts of •• rl1>o .. If rop.rlod DAlLr IOWAN EDITO&"'u, IITAYJ' communism. lMofIdlIy and legal nollll.y. by Student b, 0 a.m. Tbe DaU, I.wan clrcalli"on Samrday, June 11 Saturday, Ju'ne 11 - 8 a.m .-5 Iowa Memorial Union. AU Btu­ ~bllc:at\0l'l' . Ine. • 130 Iowa ave .. Iowa dep.rtment, In VIOl. HaU. Dilbuque Edllol' ...... , .. Ira Kapensleln Alumni Day. p.m. No service Saturday aft- dent nurses a~e invited to attend. ftlty. low. Entered os second class Y •• , I • • aat J,,., •• pen from .... m Mana,lng Edllor l ...... Bill Baker iJrIall m.Uer .1 Ihe p(J!It oftlce at \.0 6 P. ... Monda, Ibro.,b .'.Ida, .na i/ Ten Year Ago Today Wed.Des4a,., June 15 II""'. CIty. under Ihe. \Iet of conll'e.. , a.m. t. 12 Doe. Saturd.,. I News Editor ..•...... J o Murray One hundre lirty to 200 Super[orts attacked five Japa,nese 7 a.m. - Opening ot summer ernoon. ATTENTION JUNE OIlADJ'- if March 2. 1810. Clly Editor •. , •...•...•,. K irk Boyd industrial plants nd repair bases on Honshu island. session classes. Sunday, June 12 - Closed. ates! Don't f~rget to order your Chief Pho\o,raopber .. IJob Huibregtse .ala .f lb. A8S0CIATED paES8 Dial 41911rom u .. I. IItld.I,bl I. The canning sugat· ration was cu to five pounds per ration Tuelday, June 21 Monday, June 13, and Tuesday, Daily Iowan before you leave. e '''lIOClated Press Is enllUed ox­ ",ert aewl 'tem., w ....n'. pare Wlrepboto Technlclan .. John Stegman book, according lo Mrs. Edith Jones, chief clerk of the Iowa Clty June 14 - 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Special rates for graduates. In ~hwftly 10 the use for republlcaUon Uena •• 'f aDa •• noemeat. t. T .... Dall, 8 p.m. - Summer session lec­ jtif aU the local new. printed In thIs I...... Edllorlal "Wee. ... In Tbe Ration board. ture - Chas. Duveen, "Is Amer­ We dnesday, June 15 - 8 a.m.- Iowa City: 3 months - $2.25, • Inew_per .. wen a. aU I\.P newa C._aaloaU.a. Co.ler. DAlLr 10"A" Ao'vzaTI81NG STAFF • Ispalehe•• 10 p.m. months - $3.80, 1 year - $l.1D. Busin_ Ma"",er •. B. JolKl Kollman ica aeing Taken for an Art SublCrlptloJl. rate. - by e ....ler In 4ut. Bu.lne.. Mit. . .. . :James Patten i Twenty Ye'ars Ago Today Rider __ Main loung~, Iowa Departmental libraries will In Iowa by mall: 3months 1_ [ uiun:a l Iowa City. 15 emil 'Neakly or .. per An indictment bf the New Deal-an 18-point "declaratlftn of AtJD.... aUUAU year In advance: sit, month•• t4.I5: ClMillied M6r. . William J . Vou,han Memorial Unlon. post their hours on the doors. $2.70, 6 months - $4.110, 1 year or three monlha, ,2.eo. By mall In lowl. PromoUon Man.. , ." K . W. ~orlol\ grieva(1ccs"-was adopted with shouts of approval bY ,1I ,rass roots - $8.10. Outside of low.: I Cl&(lULATIONI .. per year: .Ix monlh. . ,:;: three 'cah!crence of Republicans from 10 fann states. (For IDfOrmAUoll fe,ardin, WATERMELON S o\NP months. !Pi all other mall """",,rjp­ months - $2.90, 6 mQllthl - .. lion •• ,10 per yur: sIx month., $5 .81): The You' Smash 'Em, I Fix 'Em tc~m deJ~atpd VII­ dates beJond this lCbedClle, 1M marshmallows will be refresh­ 1 year - $9. Circulation Depart· tItl.~1.'J . >,If, '" ~_ a.' .... I ... three monlM. .,.15. DAILY 10.. U c:a(ltlLATIO" 'IHrF flltl\'S, lS-2';trnd the Elk.~ w:.1 11 opcd COfnlvitle, 14-5, in the rown City ft!tervaUOIlA In thf' orne" or mrnl s nl ~l n ouling of 111c IHlh ment, ('orner of 10wn nVMne lind ,.... b.lly r ...a. hy , : ~ I.m. Mah- • DiOUlondball lcngue. Ule Prell.ea" Old Ca,,'ol.) district NAI, June 13, at 8 p.m. Dubuque strcet, phone 411H. I .....,ylll II Ilv.n .a all .. ,wI •• Fred M . Pownall, PubUoher C1reJllaUOD M,r...... c»roon Chilli ,

I -, Retiring Housemother Gives Recipe #Ol. Chicken Curry BY B£TTY aaOYU!S Mrs. Robert GI n, Theta Xi fraternity housemother inee , 1939, will retjre this June. but I she intends to keep an interest 10 her boy. p '55 "The boys always k in ClASS OF touch with me," she said. "I receive mnny letters nd am one r of the first to eet plt'\ur of the ~west baby." 1 Mr. Glen plans to rem in lIv­ inc in Iowa City, and in July We· Have Appreciated rour Patronage and Wish will mO\'e onl lOme hundred feet Into her new apattment at the Commonwealth ap rtment buildin&:. She call the hort distance 'You All the Success ' in the' Future . . . move the "joke ot the year," from her front window she wl1l enjoy a birdseye vIew of hel I ro • which she planted In the We, the merchants of Iowa Ciry, wish to extend Thet Xl front yard. Born in £1 worth, K.n., Mr .. Glen calls Chl~,o h r hom . our ,ineere,t congratulations for your accomplishments here She was educated at Ward-B 1- mont junior colleae at Nashvl\1 , Tenn., and Randolph-Macon at the University of Iowa. We f ..1 proud that w. have been collele at Lynchber" Va. Son FUes able to serve you in your various needs. Your faith in the She ha one son, Capt. Rob rt E. Glen Jr., who me the Globe­ master out of Westover Alr­ State University of Iowa i, of common interest. We have • lorce ba e, We tavel', ¥ass. He gnduated from Florida univer­ sity, before receivIng hi air lorce watched your progren through the past four years and are comml lon In 1943. I In deaUn, wltb boys, Mr". MR . ROBERT GLEN, Theta XI fraternity bou emothu who Glen beUeves a nse of humor confident that you will attain sueee.s in your rnpedive en­ plans to retire this month, looks over the rote bUlhes In front of to be of utmo t Import nee. ShC! the ehapter house. From her new apartment he will . UII I1e thinks It I Olso Import nt to deavors, We like to feel that we have eontributed to your able to look at the roses, whlett she planted. ha\'e a sense of present Idea . "If you're ,olng to ,et alon" you must remember how you adivitie, here at the' State University of Iowa and that our felt at 18," she ald. Brown'ie, Girl Scout Mrs. Glen has always been In­ terested In writ In,. She has association will be remembered in coming year•. On your never laken any actu I wrlUn, Camp Schedules Told CaUl' es, but likes to "dabble at stories and poetry." return to Iowa City as alumni, we ,incerely hope that you Fun outdoors will keep Girl ------­ Following Maj. Glen's de th Scouts of Cardinal Council busy ule tor Brownies, while the In 1922, he wa a IstMt editor will renew friendship with us. during June. Day eamps fol' Scout Day camp will also In­ of a commercial law.journal In , . Brownies and for lntermedlate clude campcra[t and more out­ Chlcaao. Girl Scouts will both open Thurs­ door cooking in addition to day at City park in Iowa City, ,ames, crafts and sin,in,. Twelve Collee" Chllla Mr . Glen also collect china, while six troops will go to units wjlL a~omodate 269 Brow­ Camp Cardinal lor' three-day 'lies, and 142 lntermedlnte and he love a chIn tea s t troop camps next week. on her son brou,ht from Japan. CONGRATULATIONS AND Scouts will (orm seven units. 137 t Established camp will open at Her most recent opportunity to , , A highlight for the Brownies u e the tea set was May 28, wh n Camp Cardinal June 19, with .,.iII be a lunch to which their BEST WISHES every ca mp session already Ii li­ th Theta Xi actives and alum. South parents are invited June 17 at held a tea in hcr honor, ond pr - RY ed to capacity, according to Mrs. noon at Clly park. Intermediate lIugh Carson executive director sen ted her with a b aut/tuJ sllv I' Day camp will close with nn tray. Riverside o( Cardinal Council. Registra­ overnight trip to Cnmp Cardinal lton for day ~amps is also filled. June t6, with a program to be Mrs. Glen plans to us both Total registered tor the opening the tea scI lind tray more In the .Alger ~ Jewel" given for parents from 7 to 8 Drive one-week session and three ses­ future. "Wh n you do your own N that evening. sions or twelve days each at es­ entertaining, you really ,et the Brownie Day camp w!l1 be held tablished ca mp is 25~ girls. joy or cooking," she s id. from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday, Adult Committees Mrs. Glen is known as an ex­ June 9 and 13, H, 16 and 17 and Adults who will as ist wilh cellent coo~, and experlmenllJ'l will meet [rom 3 to 7 p.m. fri­ Picture Framing Brownie Day camp include ,Mrs. cookln, is her specialty. day, June 10. lnlermediate Day Merle Hale, Mrs. E. E. Perrin, She has many favorite recipes, • Neatly Done camp is scheduled for 3 to 7 p.m. " Mrs.. Robert Hochstedler, Mrs. but considers chicken curry as Thursday, 7:30 to 10 a.m. Friday, • Ralph Bohlin, Mrs. n. A. Herd­ her best. (It has beC!n .her spe­ 3 to 7 p.m. June 14 , 10 a.m. to 3 liska, Mrs. David Appel, Mrs. cial dinner both as a Major', p.m. June 15, and 5 p.m. June 16. Frank Lupini, Mrs. Charles wife and a housemother.) She ..----Sfittwett-...... • TroopU Grimm and Mrs. Joset Jauch. call it the "most beautiful d,ln- Paper and Paint 8 South Clinton Helping at Intermediate Day Troop 22 will go to Camp Car­ ner I've ever seen." A. dinal tor a troop camp June 12- I 216 I . Washington ~ial 9643 camp will be Mrs. C. Marks, Chicken Curry DI_er H, with Mrs. Merle Hale and Mrs. Robert Kupka, Mrs. Robert Cut at joints three 21'. -lb. Herring, Mrs. Betty Hennessy Mrs. Arthur Schmeichel accom­ chickens. Saute to ,olden brown. panying them. Mrs. Louis Shi­ on and Mrs. Norman Baenziger. Add I tsp. spice lsland Beau­ mon Qnd Mrs. Glen Helmer will Clrl Scouts serving as program monde. aides tor both day camps will go \Vith Troops 9 and II to ttl THE HOME OF FINE FOODS AT PLEASING PRteES Put in keltle. Add 6 cups wa­ camp June 14-16, and Mrs. Les­ J include Connie Weller, Mary ter. Cover and simmer until HAWKEYE . Hanson, Judy Seavy, Sberl West, lie Beers, Mrs. Ger Id Baugh­ lender. Cut (do not shred) meat man and Mrs. , Carson will ac­ Susan Boatman, Joan Gosenberg, from bone. Save chicken slack. Judy Murphy, Phoebe Welt, Jan­ compimy Troops 49, 56, and 62 BRADY'S For sauce melt I, lb. butter. A et Robertson, Joan Michener, to the camp on June 17-19. Add 3 medium sized chopped on­ BOOK STORE Nancy Croy, Donna Nelson, Each troop will plan Its own ac­ ions. Cook to golden brown. 103 West Burlington Dia1411S Georgia Fonken, Debbie Hawk­ tivities and do its own cooking Remove from fire. Add: tor the outing. 30 S. Clinton Dial 362.1 Ins. Mary Fran Cretzmeyel", Cor­ 3 tsp. Glncer FREE DELIVERY leen Pickering, Berthe Wells, 2 tsp. curry powder Marjorie Glasgow, Joan Alber- • SEASONING 2 tsp. fine chopped very dry hasky, Karen Herrick, Linda Braising meat? Take your cooked bacon 'f, Vanderhoef, Claudia Hopkins and choice of seasonings. Here are I tsp. sugar Jean Connelly. easonings you can c h a a s e 8 cups chicken stock Congratulations! Games, Crafts among: catchup, chili sauce, bay Cook. Add salt and pepper to With Best Wishes Games, singing, outdoor cook­ leaves, curry powder, garlic, Ta­ taste. Let all Ingredients come Best of Luck t , " Iing and crafts are n the sched- basco sauce, soy sauce. to boll. Add 3 egg yolks beaten for Continued Success It Will 'ay You To Keep In Touch With Us in % cup cream. Cook slowly untll slightly thick. Add chick­ To Wed June 20 en meat to Ihis !h hour before serving. Keep hot. Williams Surgical Supply (Q: ~ Spencer's Harmony Hall Wild or white rice cooked dry . ~ . should be served with chicken 107 Iowa Ave. 15 S. Dubuque curry. (Curry can be cooked d3Y before). Ten condiments that may be served with chicken curry are: We Are 1 freshly grated coconut Looking Forward to Seeing You Againl Chopped toasted almonds Avocado cut In slices mixed with crisp bacon crumbles Chutney Willard's 130 E. WashI ...... Chopped whites of 3 hard cooked Iowa City, Iowa The Da~o/ IOwan eggs Yokes of hard cooked egas press­ . Appa rei Shop ed through sieve Green pepper cut into small even pieces :; firm tomatoes cut Into small pieces. Remove watery pulp, Conveniently Located on Highway 6 seeds. It Pays To Shop at Fine)y chopped chives (onions will do) SJleed mushrooms sauted in but­ ter and mlnced wJth garlic. Table 8e...... MY-VEE Set the table for assembly-line Food serving. The bowl of rice is Food Stores placed at the table head, with , the chicken curry. The condi­ Dial 8-230 1~ , menis are then arranged In sep­ arate bowls In a halt moon around 1he curry. Dessert it ice cold fruit. Mel­ on balls are preferred with fresh Congratulations! Mrs. Maggie Lane, 711 E . Jefferson st., announces the engage­ berries, and other summer fruits Dickerson-Ellis Motor (o~· " ,- lTlent and approaching marriage ot ber daughter,lJean, to Mr. Wiley / topped with frozen oran,e juice. Your 'atronage Has Been Appreciated . I{eed, son of Mrs. Dove Reed, 1215 Muscatine ave. The beverage is tea. 11 The wedding will be beld June 20 at St. Patrick's Catbolic Your Headqua .... rs for CHIYSLEI • \ church, Brooklyn. , POTATOES AND BACON ( PLYMOUT" in the IOWA CITY MEA ,. Miss Lane is a graduate of Guernsey high school and Mercy Pile mashed potato into a [ SchOOl 01 NUISin,. She is now employed at M.erey hospital in Iowa shallow balUn, dish. Sprinkle . City. with bij.s of bacon. Broil until Mr. Reed is a graduale of Iowa City hiah school, and attended potato is heJIted throup and ba­ 325 E. Market Dial 8-3666 Cot colleie. con blli are browDed. - . ----_ . - "'- . -.... ---- .a.e 4-:TRE DAD..Y IOWAN-Iowa Cit,.. ".-Frt.. June 10, 195~ :; A's Blasl ­ enators 17-10oads Statistics* * * Yanks Beat I·n4-2 Win On Basilio KANSAS Kansas City AthleticB sc:orod iI1 In Syracuse On:Fight · Detroit, 7·3,: ~nly one Inning Thursday but that was enough. to defeat the SYRACUSE, N.Y. (JP) - Wel­ terweight Champion Tony De­ SYRACUSE, N.Y. (JP) - Facts Washington Senators, 4-%, as Marco of Boston invades Carmen and figures on the Tony DeMar­ Split Series Cubs ' Defeat Pirates Art ,Ditmar steadied after a Basilio's home territory lonigbt co-Carmen Basilio bout tonight: rocky start to pitch his third . DETROIT (IP) - Eddie Rob­ as a 17-10 underdog for the 15- Time - 8 p.m. inson, probably the best .230 hit­ victory. round title figM at the War Me­ Site - Syracuse War Memor­ Chuck Slobbs, Washll\JtOD'. ial Auditorium. ter in baseball. slammed his morial auditorium. Minner's 6-Hitter lefthander, got him self ill 10th home run with two on base On Title at stake - World wel­ It's turnabout for the chunky, in the first inning and started PITTSBURGH (.4»-The Chi­ trouble in the fourth innina by 23-year-old Bostonian. Last ,April terweight championship , ( 1 4 7 walking the first two men up, the New York Yankees to a cago Cubs collected six runs on another, bringing in Bed Wade 1 he grabbed the 147-pound title pounds). 7-3 victory over the Detroit Ti­ Hector Lopez and Bill Renna. 13 hits Thursday to beat the to pitch for Pittsburgh. Jim King on his home grounds by stopping Principals - Champion Tony gers Thursday. But he might have escaped it . Johnny Saxton in 14 rounds at DeMarco, Boston, vs. challenger i The triumph gave the Yanks Pittsburgh Pirates, 6-2. Cubs singled and Banks hit a sacrifice Bob Kline had handled Gu. Zer. the Boston Garden. Carmen Basilio, Canastota, N.Y. an even split in the four-game catcher Walker Cooper banged fly to end the scoring. nial's doubleplay graunder that The swarthy son ot a ­ Distance - t5 rounds or less. series with the Tigers and out his second homer ot the sea­ Chl.alO ...... 1 Jt4I ,3t--G IS • followed. The ball squirted Pltt,bpr,b . . .. " 1 ttO iM-:! u. through Kline's hands for an er· worker isn't .dismayed by the Probable attendance - 9,100. stretched their league lead over son in the seventh. l\1lnner and Co.peri "urlley. " fade un and Peterson. ~ ror as Lopez scored. After Simp­ odds. He made a joke of the wise Probable gross re<:eipts-$115,- rained out ,Ch icago to live Frank Thomas hjt his 1ifLh money by shellacking Saxton, a 000. games, longest of the season. son struck out, Vic Power homer ot the year in the fourth doubled to the centerCleld felice 4-1 favorite. Saxton, making his Radio and television - Na­ Relief pitcher Jim Konstanty, inning for the Pirates. first defense of the crown he tional Broadcasting Co. makinjf his sixth appearance in Nine Race Record: and Renna came in on the blow. Lefty Paul Minner, winning Zernial stopped at third. won from Kid Gavilan, failed to Betting odds - Basilio 17 to seven da~s, replaced shaky Ed­ his fifth game against two de­ In Money 7 Times go the route lor the first time. 10 favorite. die Ford in the fifth inning and feats, retired the last 10 batters Stobbs intentionally walked Tony Is Confident Purses - DeMarco 40 per checked the Tigers' on one hit he faced. He tossed a six-hitter. HALLANDALE, Fla. (A>)-Re­ Billy Stant'l to get to DiUnar, Tony said he Is conIident of cent, Basilio 20 per cent. the resL of the way. He killed Tbe Cubs scored a run in the trouve, a 5-year-old chestnut who promptly singled throuch the middle to bring in the win. winning but his handlers go him Officials - Two judges and 'i a Detroit rally in the fifth by third when Gene Baker collected horse, is what halter;men call a -Qne better. They firmly believe referee to be named by New throwing a double play ball to one of his three singles and Bob "useful horse." In nine races ning runs. DeMarco will win by a knock­ York State Athletic commission Jack Phillips with runners on Speake dOUbled liim home. They since last becember he has been Stobbs had pitehed hitless ball out in his first title defense even at ringside. first and second. added another in the fourth on out ot the money only twice. • through the lirst three inning. though the 28-year-old challeng­ Scoring - By rounds with The 38-year-old righthander singles by Ernie Banks and Dee Not only is the son ot Easy and except lor the seventh when Fondy, along with Cooper's dou­ er never has been stopped. supplementary point system. now has yielded only two runs Mon-Jane F consistent but he he gave up two hits, had the in 31 Y.J innings this season. ble play grounder. has been claimed six times in Athletics well in hand. He nve "Ncither was Saxton until he Boxers' records - DeMarco Robinson, who went into the The Pirates kept pace with a four months. In January, he was up seven hits in loaing his rlxth met Tony," said Sammy Fuller, 40-4-1, 25 knockouts, stopped (AP WJn,bola) CLEVELAND INDIANS ECOND BASDIAN Bobby Avila is out game with a .231 batting aver­ run in the third on Harding Pet­ claimed in two strnlght races at game against a sln~le victory. DeMarco's trainer. "Tony is twice; Basilio 44-11-7, 20 knock­ outs, never stopped. rolne into thIrd In the fir t Innlnr of the Cleveland-Boston pme. age connected against lOsing er&on's single and Qene Freese' Tropical Park, was claimed for WublDllon .. . ..•.•. 1'1 Nt __~ greatly underestimated. He has pitcher Steve Gromek in the triple, and the hotner by Thomas $5,000 in his next outing at Hia­ Kan ... CIty . .. ,.... HI ..,-4 He tried to CO from first to third when AI SmUll hit to riJbi W-Dllmu (S-". 1.-81.1oH (I"', the punch to put away Basilio:' field. Boston Red ox's third baseman Ted Lepclo took the throw first inning. He drove the ball in the next inning. leah and in bis subsequent start 'Carmen by a. KO' from rlchtllelder Sam Mele for Ute out, The umpire Is Hank Soar. ill"to the upper right field deck, Cooper put the Cubs ahead in at Gulfstream Park he went for * * 'A; Basilio's handlers leel the same tollowlng singles by Irv Noren the seventh and they scored $6 ,000. Next time out, running way about their gladiator. Dodgers Sell and Yogi Berra. three times in the eighth. Baker with a $7,500 claiming tag, he singled and Speake tripled for A's Zernial Aims "Carmen by a knockout," said It .was Robinson's fourth hom­ triumphed. In his last 29 races I . Johnny De John, Ba~i1io's co­ er in ,the series and gave him one, Randy Jackson singled for Retrouve has five wins, nine manager. Joe Black 26 runs batted in for the season, seconds and three thirds. Af Long ga'lI Crown Ordinarily statements 1 ike Car-ds even though he has been at bat RAIN NO PROBLEM (A» - Roberts Beats' BROOKLYN, N.Y. The these are grist for the propa­ only 81 times. LARAMIE, Wyo. (JP)-Univer­ 410 RECORD KANSAS CITY (A') - Gus Brooklyn Dodgers Thursday sold Zernial, Kansas City's lon, ball ganda mills. But this "natural" pitcher Joe Black, who won 15 Ne .. Yo.k . , •...... 4411 eoo 000-7 slty of Wyoming football candi­ EAST LANSING, Mich. Delnll . . • • " ., . I!OO Oil' Iloo-a dates have no fear oC the weath­ Michigan State track captain specialist, Is drawing a bead dn between two good little lighters games in 1952, to the Cincinnati W-KonSianly «a-.,. L - Oromek didn't need any steam-up. 111-3). er. When, cold or rainy weather Kevan Gosper wbn the 1955 the American league home run Redlegs for a reported $20,000 in None '· crown plus the coveted 100 2-0, Walks RSI comes up the Cowboy grid men Central 'Collegiate conference Tickets Sold Out cash and a player to be named PHILADELPHIA (A» - Robin The fight was sold out shortly use the tanbark area of Memo­ HO-yard dash title in the record mark. in the next couple 01 days. Roberts, throwing in his best mowed down the first 12 Cardi­ time of :47.5. That's the word from tlie after promoter Norm Rothschild The club declined to disclose mid-season form, sct the St, Tbinks Nashua Able rial field house. nal ba !lers to Cnce him, before husky AthletieSlQutfielde~Tburs ­ announced the ticket sale. Roth­ Louis Cardinals down with three the amount of cash involved but day. He is currently tied at schlld,_ co-promoting with the sources close to the Dodgel'ji put singles Thursday night as the allowing a single by Bill Virdon 14 with the Yankees' Mickey International Boxing club, has a the figure at $20,000. Philadelphia Phillies beat the in the mth. The next SiX; St. To Break Record NEW YORK (.4» ...... Racing of­ Mantle for the lea,ue homer 9,100 seat and $115,000 sE!llout. Black, 31, went into a slump Cards 2-0. Roberts fanned nine Louis bailers ent down in or­ fic ials at Belmont park said leadership. And wJth 37 runs In addition, the coast-to-coast after his impressive 1952 sea­ as' he won his ninth victory del' before Red Schoendienst I d 1IJ'JOr SCOre&oa~ Thursday Nashua is capable of batted in, he is amon, tlie radio broadcast and telecast both son, winning only seven' games ~gainst four losses. threatening the record time of -... ~ .. league's top five in that depart- NBC lor the 8 p.m. scrap, will since. His record this year is The Phillies' ace righthander off with a single in the, seventh. --- ______Wally Moon singled with one out the $100,000 Belmont Stakes Sat­ ment. ' add another $50,000 to the pot. 1-0. urday ...", provided something "Ozark Ike" doesn't expect to Closed Ttl Circuit In 1953 Black won six games in the ninth. AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE makes him run fast enough. W L Pet. OB W L Pel, GB reach his top hlttin, form until Ne .. York ... a~ 17 .IIM For Syracuse tans shut out of and lost three and last year was Robbie didn't walk a man in The Belair bullet was beaten Brooklyn •. , .40 I~ .7119 Chl.a,o ... . ~9 II) .lIeu 3 Chlcato ...... R':! ~ t .6(». Sl' the really hot weather arrives. the auditorium, a closed circuit shipped to Montreal where he in a thriller by' Swaps in the loveland .. ~D ·!I .~ ~K Ol~ Santee in the nine innings. New York .. . 27 20 .l!G9 1S'~ A glance at his past performance D et roU. •• .• . .. ':9 ':H .5.,», '2 telecast will be piped into the had a 12-10 record. fourth fastest Kentucky Derby l'rllwaukee . ' . ~tI 2U .CJQO I" The first Phi~adelphia run Booton ...... !~ ao .141 I~ shows that neither goal is out of nearby State Fair Ground» Coli­ He sfarted the 1952 World OJncioDaU • . ,'! l ~8 . I ~H I1lk on record May 7. Two weeks ago Wa. blnl'tol\ . . '!'! '!!) .' :U 11Hi SI. Loul •. .. . ·!I ~8 •• ~fl 111. his reach. - ;; seum. Rothschild said he expect­ Series against the New York came In the sixth on singles by Na~hua fractured the Pimlico Kania, Cily '!() II'! .~1'J H, Philadelphia. . :!'!. SO •• 2:& I_ Ualtlmore • ., III I .:IO~ '!O PIII.burrb ..• 17 3~ .ll·n ~3 Zemial has slammed in over ed about 6,000 fans to pay $3.50 Yankees and won one and lost Race Tonight Gran Hamner and Del Ennis 101- ttack and stakes record when Thur.da.y's nel.lt. ThJursda.Y'IIJ 100 runs in each of three seasons I each to watch the show on large two during the series. lie also New York '7, Oetroit. 3- Ru,,". lowed by Jim (;reengrass' sacri- Sarli toga chased him to the wire Rost.on ". Cltveland '! Chlc"eo 0, I'Itt.bur,b ~ in the American circuit. His was voted the National league's Philadelphia :!, St. Louis 0 sized screens. fi,* fly. The cond was scored in thl! Preakness. KllnlaW CILy 4. Wa.shlDJton 2 best year was 1953 In 'Phlladel· With his 40 per tent cut on rookie of the year for 1952. na.Ulmore at Chlca,o, (aln l'lllwa.ukee at New York. rala . th . 1 th M Bl I k T)1ere is a definite lack of any Today', Pitchers ClnclnpaU at Brooklyn, rain.,; phia, when he 'collected 42 hom· With Sowell III e elg 1 s arv ay oc claSs opposition to Nashua in the everything, DeMarco will rf!­ Washln,lun al Chlca,o (nl,bll Today', Pilch ... ers, batted in lOB runs alia firt· ceive about $60,000 and BaSilio, singled, advanl;ed on Hamner's I mlle-and-one-half Bel m 0 n t, Stune (~-6) .1. Truck. (ij-4). . Chl ..,o at Brooklyn (nllht) - Jon .. STOCKTON, <;alif. uP) - Two SalUmor ...~ ·Kan ... City (nl,hL) (U·S) VS. Erskine (7-~). ished with a .284 average. at 20 per cent, half as much. of the nation·'s fastest middle groundout an came liome on which will be ,broadcast and Wllion (4-G) VI. Hebert (O-fl. SI. Louis at New Vork (nl,hl) - Po· He lost out in t!)e hOme run HearsJ CO. Prepares Ennis' single. t'elevised ! r a.m 3:3&-4 p.m. Boston at Det.ro" - Nixon (t-') vs. h",.ky (1-2) n. lIoarn (O.CI). No Return Bout distance runners - Wes Santee )Ioal (4-2). Milwaukee at Pltll bur,b (nl,hL) race to Al Rosen that year. TIle There is no return boul con­ and Arnie Sowell-meet tonight The game was played before (EST) . New Vork at Cleveland (DI,M) - 1..0 - Conley (1-2) '". friend (3-1). Only I"ames schedule .. Cleveland ace finished with' 43,. tract but it is understood that To Appeal Case for the first time in a speCial a chilled crowd of 5,668 with A field of seven or eight is ex- pU (a·4) VS. Garel. (a-G). the winner will give the next LOS ANGELES (.4»-Attorneys half-mile which could produce the mercury in the low 50s. pected to be entered this morn- shot to. Saxton. for Vincent X. Flaherty, sports more work for the record keep­ Larry Jackson went the dis- ing lor the 87th Belmont, second DeMarco did a neat job of de­ columnist for the Los Angeles ers. for the Cards. The loss was oldest stakes race in the country. molishing Saxton and has won Examiner, and the Hearst Pub­ \ Santee, the ex-Kansas cowboy his third. He bas woh two. But whether they can menace st. Loul ..... _ IHHI Oi_ S 1 William Woodward Jr.'s fine colt a lot of· supporters. He has a lishing Co. Thursday prepared whO has made more unsuccess­ Pblladelphla . . . IMIO 001_1"-·) 7 0 is something else again let alone , 17-fight unbeaten streak over a to fight a $35,000 libel a ward to ful tries for a (our-minute mile Jack.on and Sarnl; BOberls ana f h" .. ' d lulck. S."- orce 1m m,o any recor s. span of two years, marred only ex-heavyweight boxer Lou Nova. than almost anybody, h as the "N~shua's at his peak right , by a draw with Jimmy Carter, A motion for a new . trial was second fastest B80 time in his­ CHINESE SCOUT now,and he's been working out , the lightweight king. DeMarco filed in superior court, where a tory on his slate. NEW YORK (JP)-"The Yan­ fast enough," said Jimmy KIl­ stands 5-5J,4, an inch shorter jury returned the verdict favor­ Sowell, the smooth-striding ro~, Belmont racing secretary, Everything it' takes kees and Braves will mee in the ~ 1 than Basilio, and will weigh ing the fighter after three hours University of Pittsburgh ace, has World Series," says chief Yankee when aske4 his opinions about . about 145, the-same as he did lor deliberation June 1. The trial been clocked at a speed for thc Scout Paul Krichel!. "And the the probable time of the race. Saxton. . bad lasted fivc days. distance nevcr prcviousl)! reach­ opening game will be pitched by Count Fleet set 1he Belmont 'to &."IOPS" Basilio, who had trouble mak­ In its verdict, thc jury ruled ed by a collegian. Ed Ford and Warren Spahn. My mark ot 2:28 1/5 in 1943, when ing 147 for Kid Gavilan here on Flaherty was wrong In calling The two brilliant times were Chinese laundryman in the he won by a whopping 25 Sept. 18, 1953, expects to make Nova a coward Cor his actions run within one week of each Bronx told me, and he's been lengths,' and Citation equalled weight easily this time. He has In a fight with then heavyweight other and on opposite sides of right many times." that clocking !lve years later. been under 147 for more than a Champion Joe Lou is on Sept. 29, the continent. Santee ripped off month. 1941. Flaherty had reviewed the a 1 :4B.5 clocking in the Califor­ fight and subsequent dressing nia relays at Modesto, Calit,. on action in a column two years May 21, and Sowell whipped his PIC-X YOUR PINCHECKS ago. collegiate rival, Tom Courtney STAN:DARD of Fordham, in 1:49.1 on May SURVIVES BAD ROUND 28 in the IC4A meet at New AIIFASHION UNDER FASHION" CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (JP) York for a new intercollegiate -Mary Ann Downey of Balti- record. more survived what she des- The fastest 680 ever run was GAS 0LIN ES--"Il cribed as "a fousy round of golf" n 1:47.5 by Lon Spurrier, ex­ by Thursday to win the annual University 01 California track Women's Eastern Golf Assn. captain, competing in a triangu­ ·n greyl ... llllanee; for top powar,aconomy, amateur championship wit h a lIar meet at Berk~ley, Calil., ~4-hole total of ll-over-par 230. March 26 . In colttfo~ble combtd cotton knit in wine! , . . I '. in royal and all 'round parformanca ••• and ral.ad, FrankCLEVELAND Sallivan, (JP)with - someTowering last •"=ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ , •• ' blue! inning help from, old Ellis Kind­ I • f er. beat the Cleveland Indians . to tha Highast Octana.lavals in our h1atol1l 4-2 Thursday to give the Boston \ lJlGS KNIT BOXERS Red Sox a sweep ot a 1hree­ STANDARD WHITE CROWN and RED C~OWN G8aolinea C~rter'sspecial aheds game series. knit "have been stepped up to the highest octane ratin,. neyer bulka More loose infielding, includ­ the wrinkl8l; in our sixty-six year history ... designed to give Covered long­ ing three errors, contributed to . of bin~. smooth, knock-free perfo~mance in th" most modern the Tribe's loS;;, its sixth in the life elutic waist. Full-cut of high compression engines-and older cars too, past .seven ,ames...... _ •. Needa no • But important as octane is, good gasolines need Sullivan blanked the Indians BECKMAN'S, beca\1le they're somethlng more. They must be balanced to give you on four hlts up to the ninth, , top performance with controlled volatility-the when he walked Larry Doby and right gasoline for the rig~t season ; no vapor lock Ralph Kiner, and Bob Lemon l.S()' even in the hottest summer weather, and clean­ pinch-singled to bring Doby FUNERAL HCDME buming for efficient, econl?mical performance. , home with t he Iirst Cleveland TRIGS BRIEFS run. Hal Naragon singled to load Try a ,anlcFul ,oJay, anJ Jriv. away COIIvjn.~.d4~1_­ the bases and Kiner was called 507 E. COLLEGE ST. - Fore-and-aft comrort' in. Kiner scbred ern pinchhitter lUafanteed by exclusive lite.. gasolin .. haw .very,hing it 'ak•• '0 be 'opt. Hank Majeski's fl" but Bob , Neva-Vextl Front. Lonl­ Avila !lied and Al Smlth popped PHONE 3240 Jife elutic in waist and out to end the game. aroUnd eu.toll\-fini.hed Errors by pitcher Herb Score ~.c:uf.. Seaml. teat. and -catcher Jim Hegan helped the Rell Sox to two runs in the 1.25 third inning. S"core missecf the bag on a throw from first bale­ You !!p'ect more from man Vic Wertz on BIlJ Good­ " man's grounder. . Att~r Billy Kiaus walked, Jackie Jensen singled Goodman home. Klaus took third when

A total ol 942 students will receive degrees at 9:30 a.m. to­ Kevin Edwin Cahill. Jon Enat'Ion carl... Rkhard Joseph WU-. Ellen J oan day at SUI Commencement ex­ Nola J ane CarJ>en""'. Robert WI1Ua.rn WoJ1e. ~ Ed.... rd \\·rI&bt. Ja<,rk1tl Robert Lou CUtlon. Cyn thJa. warle GILADUATlON BOSOR hospitals to lease facilities to In the 1 wsuH. the ho pita! ates in alphabetical order by de­ Coad. G..arele Joy Coble. SIIUy Joan , . .• group i seeking a rutinl allow- ~. crees: Coddlnrton. WIlUam J . COUey J r .• IN LlBEIlAL ARTS medic.. I specialists ~ auld open ing hospitals to operate their M.rllyn GoldIe COhen. ~ MAtil! 1f1l1o Bljllo... OIotI.eU .. : Barbara DOOTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Collis. Corroll J .mes COIsIOrt. Jeanette P"arl Behrens. Clorla Anna s-dt. the doo~ to disunity" and cause I own laboratories and employ WI\lI&m Arthur AUee. Barbar. lean Nobl .. Conr.. r. James Patrick Coon.. y Allee M. Btwu. Ph)11Is j\J\n Dnr. Jo t. Beecttler-, Mary Monroe &11, Chester J r., Thomas Llntoln Cory. An.n J oen Alule K...... o.vld Owen llI!. \'olunteer workers to "10. e In- certaIn medical peeiallst. The , ~ Benjamin. Forrest Lee BrLu K.tharioe S. Fox. John Matthia. Pran•• Camp. No". Edwin Demon ..y Jr.• ~I'­ lAonard r:lIlI B • J"", PhllJ P Webr. b nk VU Y Jn, Fu. David Thomas Gleim, nAd"'1!' LuC8J dl Lo",nzo. Robe'" FrM­ JaequeUne Jean Yat .... City National In Clinton witbout I license. John 1. Gross. Sue AUen Warren erick Doerr. lIennel\ Constance Dom­ Wllio DI ..I"cll .. : Ruth Be '"rlY lull· ..nd one 01 15 trustees of J ne Under qu orunl by A. A. •. Gruen, Clarence Bartman, Leon­ ~ck. William Robert Donovan. '9n. Ra;ymond Anton 1I..... hbadl. .rd J oseph HI ppchen , Jean Mar,ard M.rela Rose Oo~ .. r. Ele.nor G<>rdon Sltuyl Ann cra""ord. '1110".... Edward Lamb femodal hOllpltal, Clin- Hernc.k, one ot th lawyers for l' Homewood, PauJ Steven Hucbon. OOutt1.... M.,.I\yn Cle"",n. OU""ker. Dun.l<. Z81\1! E. e. J.yne Stewarl ton was the twentieth witness the ho pltal ...ouP. Townsend Chun·Juan Kao. Paul Edward KO~!I\ lr. ThomAS Edw.rd Dunlc. Robftt Emmetl Pl'eeman. Dorothy Pt or Hll1yer. • Anon Forest Raymond Lawrence. Chu­ Dunley. Phyllis Ann Dyer. Ella Mae Paul Roc.. Holmes, Jodie Wahl Kelur• cal~d by the Iowa Ho pita I sa d chan,in, the present rela­ • 1. Wnll: Lt. SUnK Ch . ln~ Lin,. Elmer Paul Eberl. John WIn.(j .. ld Enlibh. Stanl"Y J._s LoUla X ..."enll. Donald Ray A n. in the hospltal-doetor tionship bel ween peciallsts and Lquhaw. William F . Lowe. John V. J':dward Enrm.n. Zane E. Eat • Ann Mil... Nan ~y M.ne MU4Ct11Ye. John Meador. Ward Searln, MUler. Edward J acobian E"erln.ham. Sar. J ean E""r­ Rlehle Orr. John Roben ~.tt. Joan trial which started May 19 hospitals would mean that" ome Pru_ Richards. Rnclney Albert Rotlen. f:leld. Eleanor Ann "Iemme. ffenrl .. na .. HMlln C. Schult.. Rita Jane Sen1. Vernon Franell Ca )'. Doroth1 - Manana may be soon enoulh l ane FolkPns. John Wllltarn Fowler. KraUt. He Ie titled that the Clinton GeorclJtna Djenod7-1 Wei SI... Peter Olaf Jayne Sleward Freeman. 10Ann Mary " Cor Ih Latins. but Mrs. Ruth II.erseth. Morey .EU Slodkl. GOrdon Frey. J ame. Wall.,., Frost. Emma Lou BACHELOR OF MU I ho pital hires a patholo~ist, Dr. Utlnt Smith. Fuller. MJchul 1'10 .. GIbbS. Harold Emil Ruth Ann Bak.r. J am.,. lA'wl Clute. Marlin thln~ 17 years of man­ John stewart, on a "nat lee" of !JUt Carl P. Snider. Basil Nichol•• Oilimann. Catherine A. Gllm,,...... S.nd ... Jolin Fl' to Col PhylJl ..a. an Is 100 long to wait ror a let­ Splfto.. Robert Leroy Stewart. Malcolm FrIck Glaltly. Max P.uI Gr_leld. flelmke. lohn Peltr ler. Tho~ bet we n $1100 nd $600 a month, , Ray Stuart. Russell Paul SUlion. Mor­ ter. A friend Ir velin, in South J am... CIuII,"." Green. St.. ph .... J .... EUC ne Ma('Qf1lber. Robert Jamea and Ih t "we share him" with an rrwyn ThomAS. lean Belrttle Torn· GrHnbera. J.ne Lurene G .... er. N ..1I1 Quinn. RIchard Th..,tu R.tton America wrot her from Chile "klh ~. Willi.", Lionel West. Raymond I R \eb.~rda Oruver. D urward FrankUn BACHELOR OF crENCE in 1938. It was delivered to her tour other hospit where he David WIlderman. E .... yed Ahmed Guth. Robert UrI,,1 Cuthrte. l.net JdAe app ntly also work on a alnry Ztln·Eldln. Ii,berly. 1arjorle .Ellen Hahn. J. mao IN CHEM) Tty in 1955. Postmarks that could be )fA ... bl.l. MASTER OF ARTS CI~rk Halnllton. Patrkf. t.....e Sandy. W~'n~r. cifstin,ul hed Indicated that the ~Ila Jl,ldc!. Harry AI nsworth. Ann M.r,.rel M.ria Han,ariner. J o),ee 100m WarShaw.1< . Burrldg. Alderks. Donald Gedon. Garold Vaughn Bailey. George Eutrene Haynu. l ames V. Head. Helen IN PHY ICAL EDUC nON Jpoeph llartelme. Billy Joe Basham. H"lIman. Maryann Hen,. J .mes OrvU\" John Jam.. Collin•• J Udith Ann eon. of telling what happened to Itl Dr. Robut Knud en, nolly. Martlyn 1m. ,..Ik. Rob~rt M.ur. Portia Cecelia Boynton. J ohn Davis H",n~r. J erry Lewis Hes . Dorothy aCter thot. In Bould r. Colo. B~ sler. Shlrler Brid,/ord. Lawrence Pl-es ler Hillyer. Lol. MRrie HI~ltJer. lee Hazktl. D.I. Allen Howard. ld Dean Burke. Ermina Ellubeth BUliCh. Richard Voe \ioel. PINI Roeer Holm­ Trae,. Schaefer. Dale Ervin Aun hi.", Jo h Geol'1re Bruce Caldwell. Rex GUman .... Roc.r Hopkins. JoAnn Dorothv BACHELOR OF LAW Deluh I'V. Oon,ld Bruce Hlcke-f<. Wal tr Cha"". Robert Eugene C\.9us. Palrlcla Horn. Alice Elaine Howard. Ru I OR JURI DO TOR Bow n Inusm. Anthon,)' .Iohn Matelo­ Cajherlt\C Conner. J.mes M. Cremin. Spen""" Howard I ... John Floyd How­ pinto. ROil: r Kay M nd.nhal!. Johanne. Gene John Adc~man. Mor-rl tAnn­ lnes Maderal:o Damaso. ell. M."lon Richard Hun,erford. Fran_ orhelm. !:ulene GII~'" hllrln. Jay 80 rba ra Nielsen de Luna. LIIII.n c.. Lee In,.... AltK8nd .. r FNCI . II 0 Ten da ...... 20 ))tJ' " '01'4 !'OR AUt: U'lnl roon\ (urnlture. btcI. ALL TVPJ:!'I 01 1ypln • . 8·~ . lor .umm r. 3tO M.lrm .,e.• D,a l 'on. Vernon Rocer Katvertrand. Mary el. Fry Krlme. lI"urle. Eugene K rau­ .r. n Id L'lIn etc C. DleklnlOn. Ron.ld Htnry Doni. per InserUon ..... _. 88c per inch B.rwr 01.01'1. Nathan Daniel OUens. Irene Llvin,lton. Alice Ann Hammel Dean Caraway. Kenneth WlUlam Car· Wllllllm P.Wtk Du,an. Idnn 10ler T n insertions per month. TYPING. 144'. Mar>, ,rennn. Palmer. Carler A. PI\t•• Loren7.l Jean Lo<'1 man.nt or aummer IeMo\. lin .. t)\.n~ Savare. EI,o M.nShelm. Rnitenc Barbara Man· WendeU Klenk DoWn1n,. Edw.rd Win Creharn, ROb"rt De n Crlffllh. GOINO WUTt Flnt nl,ht be t .101' Phon. '"DIU. Dale P aul Scannell. Luther OrvlUe vln. Oary Michael Maranell. Geor.... Remlnlloo Durfle Jr.. WlIl.m Francl. Robert Du.ne Gr"".n. Paul Wlll1 ••" • p.m. weekday, for Insertion REFRJOERATOR .• It. 8cl)mtdt. Lillian Lois Sherrod. Benj •• M.lcolm Mariner. John Loul. Markham Elkleberr.l'. Norman John Elmer. Jnhn Gro.. helm. J.ck P.ul Gro,.. Donn. II at AAA APPROVJ:D PINE CRE t . '~~~=--~--:-:­ In followln.: morning', DalJy ~ndIt1nn. I",medl.le 30. 4 21& ",In Silver. Jerry Lew Sl<. tr. RI~bArd £

•• ,.. 1 r ' 1 t •• , I ~ , Pare '-THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa CUy, ".-Frl., June 10, US5 Gcts Rcgistration Matorials Journalism Classes Left Studies 19 Years Ago- , . .Police Sat E~ect New Officers "". Ira Kapenstein, A3, New York. N. Y., was elccted president of 43-Year-Old Ex-Exe(utive To Get M.D. TripleD,Paled the scnior class in (be SUI school of Jo urnalism In balloting that A 43.year.old ex-Coca Cola cnded Thursday. execu.tive who six years ago gave I Loy Brooks, A2, Des Moines, up his job and home in Water- 1 4' Body Site was elected president ot the 100 w bt\gln studies in medicine, I LE MARS (A"}-Ernest J. Trip. Junior class. will receive his M.D. at SUI I lett paled visibly when he saw T he officers elccted will serve as class officers during the 1955. commencement exercises this ' the canvas-covered body of 8- 56 academic year. morning. year-old Jimmy Bremmer in a Other senior class officers: Ar. 1 He is William D. Perrin, who fh!ld north of Sioux City last nold Gore, A3, Kankakee, 111., 19 years alo interrupted his col­ Sept. 30, a prosecution witness vice-president, and Tcrry Bled­ lege training at Iowa State testified Thursday in Triplett's soe, A3, Clinton, secretary. Teachers college to become of­ murder trial. treasurer. TripJeU, fice manager for Coca Cola. I an BEE-DEVILED Bill, his wife Edith and three music lesson ~lesmDn, is accused SPROUSE'S CORNER, Va. (.4') children, Tom~, 13, Jacky, 9, bea~iPcIl, th~ boy to death last at - The Virginia Museum of Fin~ and Cheri Anne, 6, have lived Aug. 31 Tne boy had' DeeR Jhe \ . ., Art's traveling artmobilc has for six years in Finkbine Park object f a mass search before drawn thousands of visitors, but while he finished work [or his his Ixld as found 30' da.Ys after one was decidedly unwelcome. ~.A. and completed tour years ot I he dlsllppearfd •' from his siOux A bee buzzed into the cab. The medical stlldies. City home. '...... MARLENE BOND, G, Jonesboro, La., len, is receiving regi tr~. curator-drivel', Sam Crockett, Short Course Te,PtLnlol'ly In the. trial re­ . tlon materials from i\frs. Glen Eckard In the basement of U~ I­ lost control and the vehicle over. versltJ hall, Thursday. Materials can be picked up today After taking a short course sumed' Thursday afternoon fol­ af~e.r turned. Neither Crokelt nor the lowing' a morning recess devoted commencement exercises until 4:30 p.m., saturday morning until cargo of paintings was iniured. here il\ anesthesiology in the noon, or until 4:30 p.m. Monday. Registration for the sumnler ses­ graduate college, Bill will go to to arguments by opposing coun­ The bee departed [or a study of De's Moines to serve a year's In­ sel as to whether an aUeged ,Ion Is Tuesday. real life subjects. ternship at Iowa Methodist hos­ tape-recorded 5 tat erne n t by l\IEASURED CAPACITY pital. Then he will go into gen­ Triplett that he was Involved in eral practice with Dr. James the boy's seath could be admit­ RAVENNA, O. (.4') - A Rav­ "Doors Open 1:15" Whitmire in Sumner. ted in evidence. Refugee Relief enna man testified that it takes "Dr. Whitmire practices the Appeal about four and a half CD ses of kind of medicine I'd always District Judge R. G. Rodman beer to get him drunk. Police dreiamed at being able to prac· ruled the statement could be arrested him for driving on the Ciee. He is clo.se to his people, played back to the jury. Defense Job 10 Gerety wrong side of the street and WILLIAM D. PERRIN'S CIDLDREN look at tbelr father's cap and lown In preparatIon for his rra­ him with driving while and he practices seven.day_a­ ~ttorney Thomas O. Tacy, how- WASHINGTON (.4» _ The job ~hal'g~d ~ek medicine," Bill said ad· duatlon from medical sch401 today. The eblldren, from leU are Tom. 13; Jack, 8, and Cheri Anne, 8. ever, Indicated be may appeal intoxIcated. Phclph said he mirlngly. Perrin Ielt a Job In Waterloo to get his education after more tban 19 years away from scbool. the case it the tape recordIng Is ot handllng the controversial drank le5s than [I caSe of beer "When he asked me to go into played and Triplett Bubsequently refugee relief progrom was before his arres t. , practice with him when I fin­ Is convicted. h:mded Thursday to Pierce J. ished my internship, I accepted Asst. Police Ohief 'Russell Cerety', a 41-year-old lawyer, enthusiastically." White of SIoux City and SiQux \\ ilh orders from President Eis­ Sumner I City Detective Lt. William A. Senate .Slal/sTo ' Let Dennison told during the after­ "nhowcr to "make it succeed." 1'n'Mnlt'nnw Bill explained that he was es· , \~"T""n ... ") peclally happy to be able to go noon of Triplett's actions when Gerety has been serving In In Penon Into practice in Sumner because he was brought to the · scene the compal'atively quiet job of RALPH MARTERIE "[ teel obliged to the state ot where JimmY's body was fou.nd. genl;!ral counsel oC the civil ser· and Uls 'Iowa since it has given me a WhIte said Triplett ran Crom vice commission. He formerly NIlUQnany FamO\lS chance to complete medical Humphrey Ca~t Vote Ridge Road up a high bank near headed a board which looked nance ()tch .... t,.:l WEONESDAY stUdies and I want to help out the body, although no one was in into loyally cases among Am­ 1\11 Oouble future in one of the small communities WASHINGTON (,4» - Down sight on the bank, the body could ericans employed by the United Allr.tllon - ovtr 4 where' general practitioners are through the years the senate has not be seen from the road and Nations and other inlcmotional Million UlL R.tord, , olil! had some unwsual lilibusters, in­ 'Nt-lIt_nls NO . , Folk S\nCeI so badly needed." no one had told him to go up the organizations. WESS PIERCE cluding a rilibuster on filibuster­ bank. , He had applied to 12 schools Des Moines Controversial Problem .~d III. R Wa ndo.lnc 1\oy. ing. betpre he came to SUI, but was Saw Bod:r The refugee problem has been P\U!Ii Leo and 'Us P\onff:f!I. hlrned down because he was Now it can add another to its ft ••• n.llons - ~.4:I'n imposing list: A rilibuster, by When Triplett reached a point in controversy before lind since 11 t. 4 D.lly Except "too old." B·oy Drowns where he could see the canvas­ congress passed a 1953 law per­ 't1>ud"y. - 0' 1\toll lo When Bill was attending West mutual consent, to allow time covered body', White related, the Marlon, Iowa. tor Sen. Hubert Humphrey (0- mi tting the en trance of 214,000 Waterloo high school he became Minn.) to come down to earth. salesman stopped, turned to De­ refugees and other non-quota engaged to his wife Edith. They tective Chief Harry Gibbons and immigrants by the end or 1956. The behlnd-the-scenes situ­ Inl River , of tryIng to wreck the refu­ l~le at Cedar Falls, seven miles into a storm and arrived at 4:45. bridge. mal1itafned the last lte· saw of gee . prOgri/m. Corsi said that tram Waterloo, and commuted so Well. the senate seemed to be The S ' I1Ote Stalle~ "We had (ound the raft - th€: boy WilS ' 'when Jimmy under what he called McLeod's t~at he could work from 1 p.m. dawdling, but even an expert just two barrels nailed together walked around tli.e house to the '!security gang," the program to'mldnight at Coca Cola. can't distlngulsh unerringly be- reach the chamber in time.to with a couple ot boards - near 1'ear of the ,Bremmer nome. ' had become "a complete failure . After three years at Iowa State tween a hurrying and a loltering vote. [ wish to get credit for go- the bridge," Ronald said. "We ' Marijuana aod a national scandal." Dulles Teachers college he Quit to take ·senate. ing along." got on and used sticks as pad­ Dennison also testified, over said he let Corsi go because hI! a position as Waterloo office Then Sen. Homer Oapehart More palaver, and Capehart ~. dIes. defense objections, that Triplett was trying to take over the I I I I m:lOager at Coca Cola. That was (,R-Ind,) let the cat out of the repeated: "1 m ~ rely wish to get I "When we reaohed some limbs had told officers he had used whole show. I I 1936. senatorial bag. credit for cooperating, so that In in the river, we lost the sticks. Marijuana for (our years and Gerjlty Under McLeod I ., . ' .Over a period 13 years Bil I During parliamentary skir. the able senator from Minnesota ot We got off the raft and thought that he had ,smoked a "reefer" It WiS stated specifically rose to the position of general mishing with the Democratic may reach thc chamber in time to vote." we could wade ttl shore but the on Aug. 3t. Thursday that Gerety will be oon ·'RUN FOR COVER' manaier of the Waterloo branch leader, Sen. Lyndon Johnson or water was over our heads. I 'can Testimony was to resume this under McLeod as deputy admin­ of·Ooca Cola company. Texas, Capehart said: "The senator trom Indiana," swim but Steve couldn't swim morning. The slate indicated istrator - a title the State de­ To Save Alonr, Johnson observed, "always wish- much." that the tape-recorded statement partment said was offered Corsi He hadn't intended that the "I know the purpose of the es all the credit he can get-and Ronald said he "tried to prag by Triplett might be one of H)e he gels it." - but will have "complete auth­ br.eak in his college work would request by Johnson is so that the him in but he kIcked me and I last items presented In the state's ority and responsibility for the DANCELAND ~ so long, but as he put It, "you senator from Minnesota may But still no announcement on couldn't." case. opera tion of the refugee pro· Cedar RapIds, Iowa "'_.. ..-t'" ...... cjl'n't)l ways tell how long It will what had become at Humphrey. Police con tinu.d to drag the Iowa's Smartest Ballroom GEORG( PAL· BYRON HASKlN'JAMESO'MOII '"'rhe prosecution said that In gram." __ PHiliP YOROAH , BARRE tYfj~ " tlike to start a family, and save (I B Arrival river for the body. the recorded "tatement Triplett Nothing was said , about any AIR CONDITIONED enough money to start school US ars, So the senate stalled along, admitted beit1g with jimmy the 90-day limit on the job. When PLUS MORE ADVENTURE 8'aln." and sta lied a long, and finally P f R h I, h Att d' night he disappeared. .and strik· Corsi was let o~, the State de­ Tonite , . Ilven while in the navy, Bill Humphrey rushed in the vote ro, 0 r IC en In9 ing him with his fist after the partment said 90 days was the EVERYTHING YOU ••• .clung to his ambition to become E J II' was taken, and passed 44 to 38. Physics Conference boy resisted hugs and kisses. limit on his "special adviser" job. Radio & TV Stars ACTUALLY HA~~IN" 8 ' doCtor. He was a pharmacist's scap'es aI ' "The delay in the vote untll my Prof. Fritz RohrJich of the SUl -.:...... ,..------~------­ TOM OWEN'S COWBOYS mate and taught hygiene, public arrival," Humphrey said, I'could department of physicS is attend­ ~ ROBIRrC.IW.III.\ · h.alt~, and re14lted courses at only have come about as a re- ing a conference on theoretical SATURDAY Farragut, Idaho. Later he be- MASON CITY (.4» - Lero;v suIt of cooperation from both physics In Ottawa, Ontario, JACK PAYNE VAFR[CA:' c~me an operating room techn!- McHale. 34, Duluth, Minn., held sides of the aisle, and i am Canada. clan and ,before goIng overseas on a robbery witl1 aggraVation grateful (0 my colleagues." , The conference, which is spon­ & HIS ORCHESTRA ADVENTURE ott the Cruiser "Little Rock" he charge, sawed out oC the Cerro Humphrey kept on being grate­ sored by the National Research 14 Artists H ~PATHECOUOR ~ t~",ht as senior corpsman in the Gordo county jail and escaped lui for a couple of hundred Council of Canada, will end June 'Creator 01 ,Iurglcal department at Farragut. Thursday afternoon. words. Especially, he said, was 18, America's Finest Dance Musio' - PLUS- 'When he came back to school He made his escape after ap. he grateful to Lyndon Johnson. HURRY AND FLURRY COLOR in' iIH9, it was over the objec- p'arenUy using a hacksaw blade "The senator trom Texas," Hum­ Next Wednesday tiollS of his friends and business to cut through the window bars phrey said, "is a genius in the BUG TUSSLE, Tex. (IP) 5 CARTOO,.,S Congenial "OVER 28-NITE" UIOCla~ l ln Waterloo, ot his cell, then Slipping through art of the legislative process." Judge James Bates Fink says one , T60 Old and dl'Opping the short distance Cooperated reason for the few traffic [[nes BOBBY LINDEMAN "You're too old," they said. to the ground. Capehart bobbed up to re- handed out in his justice court & HIS ORCHESTRA LAST TIMES TONI'~ is that to catch all the speeders .. It's · tbe mOst foolish thing I Sheriff Jerry Allen said Mc- min Humphrey that he had co­ MARLON BRAN DO .•1 ever heard ot. You're crazy to Hale was probably armed with operated. "We knew all the time would mean a lot of hurry and "ON THE WATERFRONT' flurry. Another reason, is "my MARLON "RANDO rlve. u.p One of the best jobs in a knife. where the sehator was," Cape- "DOOR OPEN 1:]5 P.M." n constable doesn't get paid well "TilE WILD ONE"I ' Waferlo. .,.. ." The sheriff said McHale got hart said, ' I but we d id not know : But Bill's family was whole- out during the shower time about ' when he was going to arrive." enough to inspire him. He's not heartedly in favor of his ambi- I :45 p.m. A resident across the "Neither~ did [," Humphrey a hurry and flurry man, no how." ~~n. He summed up their philo- street from the jail reported see- said. . ' . .4'13"£""Ends trnYll:lt 'sophy this way: "It doesn't mat- iug a man answering McHale'S Whereu,on, Ils wandermg TODAY Saturday" ter if YQU don't mae a dime, as description crossing the jail- member safely home, .the sena- Starts SATURDAY. lon, as you're happy." hoUse lawn five minutes ~ater: tors beca{TIe sp carnep aw::,y SKIN DIVER ACTION! 2 FIRST RUN HIM When he" left, a Waterloo res- The , bars had been secured with the :-vonders 01, senator181 AQUA-LUNG THRILLSI ello,l...... IIUIO ,/' taurant owner put Bill's picture with chewing gum. Allen said. courtesy t)1at COJll1pllments fell ~o~i:ow~~~: with a sign "From He theorized McHale slipped faster {)1~n the ram drops ~n MOORE • HAAS Every Mall back to his cell during the show. Humphrey_ll plane. She . In U1aterl!~fl~ad been the er perIod punched out the bars Everybody 'Seemed happy./Sen. Touched .• ,.. and tied' · P~ul Douglas '(D-Ill.), summed She onlt man, to be twice president McHal~ and James H. Blank- ,up the sl\I1atorial attitud'e \.\lith a D.. of, th!! junior chamber of com- . quote from Justice Holmes. tro~ m~rce. He served as cfairman ot enshlp, 33, Chicago, had be~n "It is extraordinary," Holmes HAIL'S II :fund-eampalgn committee ot bound over to t~e grand jury In once said, "with what .fortitude ~ of ~he Salvation Army that ,the $6,000 National Tea store a man can listen to excessive 127 Soutll Dub"que railedHe had $52,000. also been chairman ot ,robbery The highway on March patrol, 12. Mason ~p~r~a~is~e~o~f~h~im~se~if~"~iiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~:~~~~~::~. Waterloo distrIct school board, City police and shc:riU's deputies vice-chairman of the Salvation joined in setting up roadblocks Army ·corps, and vice-president around the city. aDd disaster chairman for tne ______~ cross in Blackhawk county. .IOWA'S FINEST .. : R4I 4 . Whlle in high school he or­ Parker Defendant .iOlzed a dance band, "Perrin's • 9 Vitamins and Minerals 'Pirates," and started the first In Damage Suit bJ,h .icllOol social dance program Thomas J. Parker, 1829 F st., • 20% More Protein in Waterloo. Wednesday filed suit in Johnson BOrn in ErIe, Pa., Bill lived In tounty court askinl $7,566 from PLUS - COLOR CARTOON .. ).·siatea and atttended 21 dif­ Wllliam W. Villhauer, 233 Mel­ • "EL GAUCHO GOOFY" ,~~ t ;rade pd hl,h schools rose st., for auto accident· Injur­ ,belote C(lming to Waterloo, ies. Special In his first year at SUI Bill William C. Villhauer, 813 'lth "lIollywood Flays Golr' 'lot straight A's In his pre­ ave., is not the detendant, as was ~al course•. ' He calls hlm­ reported Thursday In The Daily - LATE 'NEWS - .tiij "JUli an aVlraae Itudellt." Iowan, - . ,. --... ~ .'~ ; , - I