r l -Kept Secret for 6 Weelcs- '$12.8 Million Given Away Without Notice

NEW YORK (Nt - Charles Stewart Mott gave tell about the transaction. A spokesman at his He referred the questioner to the Latin From there on, the growth of his wealth 600,000 ahares respectively. away $128 million in one chu nk and it was nearly office said Wednesday he would have a state· phrase "Spectamur Agendo" under the crest 01 was nearly automatic. Among Mott's gifts to h commwtity last six weeks coming Lo public notice. ment today. his family escutcheon. It means "Known by our GM statisticians have figured that • 100- year were I '1,l!i3,OOO library aDd a .000 Tho no·fanfarc philanthrophy was character­ The huge transfer of stock came to light in deeds." share stockholding in J908 valued then at $10,000 children's bealth center. Istic, except for its size .. of the man who until an "insider's" report rued with the New York Flint, a city of about 200,000 population wilb would have grown by now to 228,975 sha.relI worth A reckoning In lJ60 revealed that he had May 10 a't least was the largest single stock­ Slock Exchange and the Securities and Exchange 10 GM plants employing 66,191 workers, some­ $16,028,250, assuming the holder exercised all given 13.5 million in buildings to FIin1'I $20- holder 01 General Motors Corp. Commission. times is called the "town that Mott bullt," a rigbts and options - which would have enlailed million cullural center - a project Cor which be a further cash input oC $373,600. Nobody knows exactly how much t~ ereeL, Direclors and large stockholders oC corpora­ reference to repeated large donations for public donated 40 acres of land. craggy-browed Motl g a'y e away before last tions whose securities are traded on registered purposes. On top oC the capital appreciation, the stock­ The father oC six children. Moet took up month but it certainly runs into the tens 01 mil· exchanges are obliged by law to Curnish such in­ The city is 61 miles northwest. of Detroit. holder would through JUDe 10 have accumulated tennis at age SO. He reluNnUy pve up the lions of dollars. formation.· A wheel-making business lay at the root 01 $8,953,199 in dividends - for a total gain of game on doctor's orders at 75 but still ride. about .$24.5 million before tax considerations. The latest gift , in the form of 1.826,421 GM Mott has been a GM director for 50 years, Moll's fortune. In 1909. he sold a 49 per cent horseback and drives his own car. common shares worth over $70 apiece, went to a and still attends board meetings regularly. interest to the then infant GM Corp. for GM The insider's report showed Mott, alter last Duril\( the 1960 interview in his 42-room nonprofit foundallon Moll set up in his home Asked in a 1960 interview about the extent stock then worth $1.481,000. month's gift, continued to directly hold 103,587 home in Flint, MOlt excused himself. walked I GM common shares. town of Flinl, Mich., in 1935 with the Flint Board oC ' his wealth, the industrialist, financier. philan. Four years later he turned over his con­ across the room and turned out an electric lIghl of Education as administrator. thropist replied: "It doesn't matLer. What mat· trolling interest in the firm [or another big hunk: Thls does not include two other large blocks "I have Scot ance tors," he remarked. "I In Flint, Mott, now 88, was in no hurry to tel's is what a man does with what he's worth." of GM stock. held Cor family trusts, amOllDting to 79,800 and can't stand to see anything wasted." I, 1IIIIIItUtlIIIIP'lIlIllIli llllllll" ~tt ft IrlllKn~1I1! 11 1111111 111.,11 r IlUlun III Showers (?) PII'tIy cIMy .. 8114 ...... st-.rs lflii th.,..rstwmw wi" 11Ic.1y mt~ ~ the ..... ""'" oil owan the _t ...... Hlth w.y ... Serving the State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City IS.

10 Cents Per Copy Associated Press LeaIed Wire, and Wlrepboto Iowa City, Iowa. 'nIursday. June 20, 1963 JFK Requests Civil Rights Measures After 71-Hour Flight - Tells Congress ,Soviet Girl Lands Safely To Stay Until MOSCOW (.4'1 - Tho Soviet cut loose with a piece of fine party Lbe multi-orbital n!ght has be n Union's first space girl. her "corn­ rhetoric. Bucce fully completed. The Olght flower blue eyes" sparkling and "Comrade !ir t secretary of the assignment has been fully carri d Bill Is Passed her nose bruised, landed safely Communi t party of the Soviet out. Wednesday in Siberia a few hours Union, chairman of the Council of "[ landed in the pre- t area, not Special Messoge ahead of her male partner, afler Ministers of tbe U.S.S.R.. [ report far from a vlllage. No scratches, Accompanies Bill a history-making orbital duet. no lnjuri ,feeling well." Valentina TereshkQv,. 26, II r, Bykovsky landed In the KustalUll WASHINGTON t6I - Presideo blonde and dimple.chinned para­ region of the Kazakhstan republic Kennedy a ked membcra or Con· chutist who is now sweetheart of Report Fewer about 1,000 mile southea t oC Mos· gress to look inlo their bearta and countless Russians, circled the cow. Valentina came down in the help end "rancor. violence, db· globe more than 48 Umes, covering same general area, 600 mUes unity and nalional h me" by pa 'let Troops of Bykovsky's touchdown. eas~ 1 • more than 1,240.000 miles In 71 SOy ing th most .w ping clvil rights hours. Air Force Maj. Gordon Cooper bill since ReconstrucUon Days. of Lt, Col. Valery Bykovsky, 28 al­ WASHINGTON' "" _ The State made 22 orbits in S4 hours, 2: min­ And hc told them to lay 10 s- Picture Progress most a forgotten man of the space 595.00 Unroofing Department reported Wednesday a utes and covered miles in sion this year unW th y do 8(1, Two workm.n, framed In the torn.out e~cape hatch of a partly dis­ nJght, also landed safe and sound continuing outflow of Ru Ian tho longest U.S. flight. Workmen are dismantling the roof of this barracks It the tI.t end - with no reported bump. He cir· His plea cam in a lpeeisl m s­ mlntl.d b.rracks, tear up wooden flooring from one of the she troops from Cuba and suggested The Soviet prom! r ulend d age Wednesday thaL accompanied barracks being dismantled at the east end of Finkbine Park to make of Finkbine Park to make way for Woolf Avenu. extension, pl.nnM! cled the globe more than 81 times those remaining are no longer warm congratulations to Bykovsky, in 119 hours and covered more a blll full of weapon against ra~lal 1 way for thlt Woolf Avenue extensio~ which will be built from New­ for completion by fall to provide .noth,r artery for footb.II tr.Hic. enough to stamp out an antl·Castro and noted he was first ever ad­ than 2 million mUes. revolt. milled to membership In the Kom- discrimination In slorea, IIotels and ton RoM! to Melrose Avenue, passing east of the Iowa Stadium. - Photos by Joe Lippincott Their dramatic dcseent inlo an other public places, to sCboolJ, III Press Offleer Richard 1. Phillips somol, the youth branch ot the job . in polling boolhs. area where the czar used to send gave a guarded estimate of the So. Communist party, "while in space." political exiles completed /I cosmic viet troops situation. remaining Bykov ky had reque ted sucb mem­ He asked for a law banning dis­ flight matched by no others. purposely vague on numbers and bership during his Olght, and it was crimination by any privately own­ Woods Dies Tbe blonde who flashed the firsl od enterprise that tv the pub­ Foes of Shaff I Plan Meet dates of the Red movements. prompUy granted. female smile through the cosmos lic. was on the telephone almost im­ Other o((icials said It is difficult Valentina came down at 11:20 DES MOINES fA'! - A state·wide "The Shaff plan was cOJlceived to be even more unfair than the (or U.S. intelUgence to arrive at a.m., Moscow time 3:20 a.m. EST, He a ked power for the attorney campaign to defeat the Shaff plan in apprehension, nurtured ino fru - pl'esent arrangement. Nye said. mediately willi a call from Premier "eneral to start school d segrega· At 73, Funeral Khrushchev. exact figures. Aiso it was suggested in her capsule Vo tok 6, about 38S of reapportionment for the state tralion. passed in desperation and The support for the Shaff plan in that certain broad Wa binaton miles northeast of Karanganda, a lion court suits on his own. legislature got under way here dedicated Lo the proposition that December's election was tel'med Barely could lhe premier get his "Hello" out of his mouth than she policy statements might stimulate coal mining cenler in Soviet He a ked for a massive program Wednesday with an organizational Lhe minority shall rule," sa i d formidable by Nye, but he added the Soviet out(low and help under- Kazakhstan. She had tucked her lo train Negroea and other unskill· J meeting and pep talk. Frank Ny e, associale ediLor of lhat the court·s decision strength ­ Set on Firday mine the Red Castro regime. blonde curls in her space helmct ed people for hlaher paying jobs. The Shaff amendment to the stale The Cedar Rapid~ Gazelle. Nye. ened the possibility of getting a fair Not since April 3 has any admin. for takeo[f at 12 :30 p.m. on Sunday. a longtime legislative correspond­ plan of apportionment. Pro f e s S 0 r Emerilus Roscoe He a ked (or the right to with· constitution. passed by the last two Jai I Escapee istratlon spokesman given a nu· Bykovsky (oUowed her to earth hold federal ald from a projecl sessions of the legislalure, will ent. has made a continuing study L. A. (Pat> Touchae of Waler- Woods, a member of SUI's mathe­ of the reapportionment problem in matics faculty since 1920, died merical report on the Russian per· at 2:06 p.m. in Vostok 5, aboul 358 when local oIIlcla1, discriminate come before the people in a ref­ 100 was sharply critical of the con­ sonnel still on the island. President mile northweslof that city. He bad against. Negroes. erendum Dec. 3. It wOllld set up Iowa. Lcnlion of Sha([ plan backel's thaI Wednesday morning at Mercy Hos­ ( pital. Surrenders Kennedy reported then that the So- taken oCf at 3 p.m. la t Friday. He asked for much other lelli­ a 58·member Senate based on pop· lie' traced the hislory of reap­ it improves the urban position by viet troops strength had dropped A massive Red Square demon· ulallon districts and a 99-mcmher portionment. recailing that lhe making the Senate the population Woods. 73, was acling bead of the IaUon . A 20-year-old Inmate of the Ana· from 22,000 during Jast October's stration 15 in store (or the two cos- And . In a real IlCllse, he may House, with 0 n e represenlative body. SUI Mathematics Department from Shalf plan had the sa me basic mosa Men's Reformatory who es· missile crisis to about 12,000. monauts lale in the week. have a ked lor one 01 the great (rom each county. features as a proposal introduced "They give us a handkerchief 1942 to 1946. and retired Crom full­ caped wbile beiog treated at the ______~----- in the SenaLe and steal our shirl time leaching in 1957. University Hospitals voluntarily legislaUve balOes in American W. Nearly 200 \lCrsons attended the in 1953 by Rep. Henry Slevens (R. tory. public meeting and approved the Scranton l. He pointed out that in the House," he said. Funeral services will be held at surrendered Wednesday at a Tiffin appointment of DU!lne Dewel, AI­ then state Rep. Fred Schwengel. The portion oC the Shaff amend· 2:30 p.m. Friday at Beckman's service station. State Police Break Up "Enaclment of 'the Clvll Rights g 0 n a newspaper publisher, as now an ]OW8 congressman, soughl ment which would base House rep­ Funeral Home in Iowa with Dennis Buckley, 20, walked into , Act oC 1963' al this session of [be ] chairman of the campaign againsl and failed to amend the plan to resentation on countv lines as they tile Rev. George Frank's Service Station and told Congress - however long it ma,v the ShaCf plan . Dewel, a former base apportionment of both houses existed Jan. 1, 1961 would make Graham of the the owner, Frank: Jedlicka, that he take and however troublesome It slaLe senator, had served as the on population. county reorganization impossiblp., Baptist Church of­ wanted to give himse\( up to police. Negro Demonstration may be -Is imperative," the Pres­ campaign's temporary chail·man. Sen. David Sha([ (R-Clinton) for Touchae said. lficiating. Burial Jedlicka then called Iowa Highway ident said. Mrs. Howard Dressel', Mason whom the plan is named. first He also criticized the analogy will be in Oakland patrolman William Kidwell wbo GADSDEN, Ala I.tI - State Pushing with their bands and 'nIe message showed little evI­ with the federal system's one house I • City, was named vice chairman. brought it UD in the Senate in 1959. Cemelery. took the escapee to the county jail. troopers broke up a massive sit-in long billy clubs and employing dence of any atlempt to compro­ Dewell said another vice chair­ It was defeated then, but passed in on area and one house on popula· Dr. Woods rose Jedlicka told the DI that Buckley demonstration by hundreds of Ne­ electric shock prod sticks, the mise ellher with Southern Dem­ man , a secretary and treasurer tion, noting that counties unlike from the rank of "just walked into the slation and groes early Wednesday, bUl inte­ nearly 100 troopers scattered the ocrats or conservati ve Rep u b­ 1061 and 1963. slates, . are primarily administra· and representatives and alternates Nye cited the opinion of a special instructor to pro­ sat down . We asked him if he gration leaders pledged to continue Negroes within minutes. Then they licans. This insured a bruising bat. from each congressional district tive units and not sovereign bodies. fessor during his wanted anything and he said, 'No.' protest activities. tie abead - delays by segregation­ three-judge court which ruled May cleared the opposile side of about will be appointed later 10 make up Among those attending were 43 years on the Then Buckley told us that be was Club-wielding troopers pushed, 200 wbite spectators who had ists in the House, a determined the executive committee. 3 that the present apportionment state Sens. George O'Malley, Des SUI faculty. Fol· the escapee and asked us to call prodded and chased about S50 Ne· heckled the Negroes with catcalls filibuster in the Senate. Moines; Eugene Hill, Newton; and Opposition to the Shaff plan was of the legislature constitutes "in­ lowing his retire- WOODS the police. groes from the Etowah County and jeers. Kennedy chided Congress for Peter Hansen, Manning. and Slate voiced both in speeche,s and in vidious discrimination." The court ment, he was a visiting professor at "He asked us for something to Courthouse lawn before dawn. end­ moving nowhere at all 00 hill ear· did not rule on Lhe Sha([ plan be­ Reps. Cleve Carnahan of Ottum­ Until dawn, the heavily armed 80ng. With Iowa City folk singer Grinnell College. and a lecturer at drink so we gave him a bottle of ing a sit-in siege oC approximately state police roamed the city and Iier civil rights proposals. cause it is not yet law. but com­ wa and Al Meyer of Winterset. All eight hours. Paul Kelso performing lyrics set Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, eaoh pop," Jedliclla added. clamped a light curlew over the to familiar tunes. mented that its formula appears are Democrats. for one year. Buckley said he bad slept in a Negroes said the troopers struck: "'l1Ie result of continued federal Negro section. legislation inaction," he said, "will Prior to coming to SUI, he was ditch tbe night before. He had women and children with their an instructor one year at George­ billy clubs in dispersing the crowd '!be troopers were moved In on continue, if DOl. increase, racial escaped Tuesday from the guard strife." Alabama U. Asks town College and for three years who accompanied him to tbe Un1- which had refused to obey repeated the request o[ Sherin Dewey Col· at the UniVersity of Maine. versity Hospitals. orders from city and county police­ vard and Mayor Lesley Gilliland in 'l1Ie . Presl~t tlll'lle4 from the in Brief the wake of an injunction Monday Today's N~ws For New Ru·ling Dr. Woods received his A.B. de­ He was receiving treatment for men to leave. congressmen and made a llpecial by Circuit Judge A. B. Cunning. appeal to Negro leaders to rein ni Leone Wednesday to Lry 10 form gree from Georgetown College to an eye ailment. The Rev. Bernard Lee, an inte­ HOOVE~ BETTER. Her b crt On Integration ham. their demonstrations 80 Congrea Hoover was reported Wednesday to a new cabineL beCore President 1914. his M.S. degree from the Uni­ Buckley, a native of Fort Dodge, gration leader, said several Ne· was serving a 10 years' senlence groes had head injuries. The Injunction prohibits breaches can "freely work ita will." have mado a miraculous Improve· Kennedy arrives June 30, BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (.4'I _ The versity of Maine in 1916. and his of the peace, the blocking of traf· ment. This led Lo an announcement Ph.D. degree from the UniverSity for breaking and entering. As he State safety director Col. Albert The President seemed I!OOcern­ University oC Alabama trustees of IWnois in 1920, all in mathe­ Cic. entrances, highways, streets by his doctors thut medical bulle· * • was taken into custody, he told on· Lingo, who led the troopers, said ed about threats by the Rev. Mar­ gave notice Wednesday they will matics. He is the aUtllOf of many and sidewalks. and bars peI'llOOll tins would be discontinued, URBAN RENEWAL. A proposed lookers. "Now I'll probably have to none of ~is men hit any of the Ne­ tin Luther King Jr. and other Ne­ new shopping center covering (our ask a federal appeals court to de· professional articles and four books serve five more years for running groes with clubs. from lying down 00 public streets. gro leaders that they would stap • • • blocks oC downtown Keokuk was lay integration at the University. in the field of geometry and trigo- away." The Negroes were protesting the It does not prohibit anyone from a march on Washiogton if South· QUESTION PROPUMO. Delcc­ approved in principle by the voters The board 01 trustees filed notice nometry. arresf of 396 del1lOllltrators on "peacefully walking iD single or em Senators start a filibuster tlves Qul~zed John Pro furno, dis· in an advisory election Tuesday. iL would ask the 5th U.S. Circuit The SUI professor was treasurer Equal Time Suspended charges of violating a state court double file" on Gadsden streets. against the legiJlation_ graced fOl'mer Brillsh Wsr minis­ Mayor James O'Brien said Wed­ Court of Appeals to overturn a dis· and a board member of the Iowa injunction against breach of the Some Negroes arrested Tuesday Kennedy said that demonstra­ tel' , In London Wednesday on his nesday the nexL step will be for triet court's refusal to delay the City Community Chest for six WASHINGTON III - The House peace. staged mass marches and blocked tions "have increasingly endan­ !lart In the Christine Kcelor sex the Cily Council to call a \lublic integration. years. He was a member of the voted 263 to 126 Weonesday to SUI· The helmeted troopers swept the aisles aDd entrances of d0wn­ gered lives and property, enflam­ scandal. Vlacount ~stOl' was also h aring for lurth r discussion of In e([ect, the appeal would ask First Baptist Church, Knights Tem· pend lhe equal broadcast time reo afOllDd a comer of the courthouse town stores. others were arrested ed emotions aDd II!IneceIsarIl1 di. Questioned. the plan. In the referendum 2.955 the court's permission to remove plar and was a 32nd degree Mason. quirement during the 1964 presi­ about 2:20 a.m. and surrounded the for sitliDt 011 the courthouse lawn vided communities." ,., re{uaing . .• . vOLers indicated they liked the idea two N~groes admitted to the Tu,s- j His professional activities included dential campaIgn. The bill wlll pave crowd of Negroes. The demonstra­ and to move, "They are not the WIlY In which WANTS r,rIW GOVERNMeNT, of c[.e8\ing a shopping center in the cal~B8J Ala :, c~mplls June lL.unlil l membership . in the Mathematical the way to lace·to·face appearances tors were told they must either /10 Negroes are seeking desegrega· tbia country sbouId riel iUe1f of Italian President Ar,Iollio Segni ~rt of tbe oowntown area while racjal tension$ in the stale have AssocialiO/l of America, Iowa Aca· by the Democratic and Republican home or be arrested. Some of them tion ' of downtown facilities aod raclal dlscrimlnaUoa." be coatln­ a ked Chrislian DemocraL Giovan· 1,002 voted nq. ca d. _ . dem)' oC SCience and Sigma Xi. candidates. left. better job opportunities. ued. '·Violence is Dever juatlfted." Tarquinius arld t~~ ~iby,ls "'. By RALPH McGILL for the price originally asked oJ to brap the bomb on the Chinese r We frequ~.r1tly are reminded of the nine. Co~munists, Yet another faclion a feffow' named Tarquinius. In T"eril~r 11 ~ wY"Will· wlshet to have none e£ thi~ trl\tlal I fact, it was whne wallinj for a lng to pay the pric'l for njhe, but use of the Ilxploslve whfch has I" table at hlnch that we ~ere so he refused to give it for six vol· It a part of the world's creatlOll, remihded. A winey·faced genUe- umes. The sibyl went awal\. and bllt cry very loudly Indeed that THURSDAY, JUNE 20, '963 low. City, law. mnn; who nppal'ently carried God bide4 her time. She ret'trned once tht:1r prophetic wisdom dictat~ st~~;; i4:Z ,1 28 ·30 around his vest pocket, and who more with ner propheflc revel· Moscow or Cuba tis tlte plac!!. ,. , Loren I • also knew all the answers to our ations at a moment when the Fortunatelr. save for those that prob1eriis, was holdIng foHh to Ii emperor was embarked on a war have 'had fOllr martinis. at lunch ", ~or 0 II'hi~ The P~p..Ie's gentleman and , a lady, Hi.s. voice of conque~t. This time ahe of· or dinner, today's sibyls can't '. , hites, was loud, fered to sell three volumes ror the take it. When backed into a corner "We must dn what we , shQuld . price a~ked for the ni~e , . and asked, "What do you mean Hicl do now or par the pripe. " he said. The t:mperor was so overcome by your emphatic declaratlort that were I ~ !~~~ht to Know'l lions "TI¥!T(! is no need waIting, We by curiosity and fear he paid the we must do all that is nece,aSa~ FEDB'RAL ACENCIES EXIST to serve, the American must act or pay price and took the three volumes. against C:\stro or Khrushchev?" ,I '. . legis ll ;, bosis J'eople. 'They 'are crellted by an electt.'d Tar· give them away by reading out the mIlitary planners an? the dip· lately, Experts testify, however, that this is nothing new. quinius. loud from them, or by obtaining lom~ts are co~ronted wlt/l .a fast· There ' a . tid unanimous consent to hav them movlDg tranSItion. ,There 18 now ~rgse!!t~ti:,~s o..f tha- n wspapers have attempted to . IS . PIC uresque egen . e . a use {or convenhonat weapons prot~ct. tlje peQple s right to ~now through legislation. To concernmg hIm, inserted In the Congre~slonal and troops. But Gen. de Gaulle Ji.e was a tyrant and his en· R( .~ord so ~hey may be maIled to does not think Europe is the place ,.," dat~ •• all. «;ffor.ts. h.av,e fail~d, ?nce again, the American emles were many. theIr conshtue?ts. for them. He wonts his own nu- "I NewspapCf Publishers Association and the. American So­ One day there came to him a There are Sibyls on the radio clear strike capacity so that he cietyof Newspaper Editors are supporting a bill to prOVide welt known sibyl from the town and newspaper. columnist sibyls may make Mr. K. think oC a freedom . of information a.bout operations of government oC Cumae, Sibyls were plentiful are loudly pointing out the errors wrecked Leningrad or Moscow. in those days, and were perhaps or Yalta, of Cuba. of Berlin and And Red ChIna? How can we agencies. roughly equivalent t 0 fortune· Laos,. giving one and all the 1m. plan about the future until we . a~Jef~y, th~ qill wO\lld requ~e each federal agency to tellers loday. This sibyl offered pression that only a blind and know that vast chunk of earth to Ta~quinius a set of nine vol· stupid oaf would ha~e failed ~o and its near-billion people will wmak available, .• all final agency opinjo~s, statements urnes m which were contained 011 co~~ by and ask, theIr phophetjc fit into the jigsaw puzzle of world , . of policy and interpretation for the guidance of the public." the destines of Rome. The em- opmlon before gomg off to those force? T~re would be regular procedures for examining rec, peror could find in these books far places. There are many sibyls offering the story of the future. These same sibyls now are of- us books of revelation. But we ords and each agency would have to make public the votes The price she asked was so fering. at no great increase in have walled late to buy. The an· of individual members. high the king refused. price, their prophetic version that swers may not be In What's lefl. Some time later. as the pres- now is the lime to "get tough," We'll have to work it out on our ThE; bill has been introduced by Sen . Long Qf Missouri, sure of events against the em- "to invade," "to use the bomb." own. chairman of the nate judiciary committee on administra­ peror became greater. she reo Unfortunately, there are two Dlstrlbuted 1903 turned nnd offered six: volumes lodges of these sibyls. One wants by the Hall Syndicate, Inc. tive practice and procedure. Co-sponsors include leaders "What Do They Expect Us To Do - (All Right. Re,..,rved) from both parties - men like Case, Dirksen. Symington, o. Keating and Neuberger. Listen To The Kids Pray At Home?" It is aimed at federal agen~ies, but its principle extends 'McNamara anc! tHe Military . \ to all governmental units, The government owes full in, By ROSCOE DRUMMOND Bell was mOl·e experienced, why That there IS no proof he has formation to the people with a few ac:;knowledged excep­ Cooper's Congressional leaders in both hadn't it submitted a superior de- been imprudent. parties are disturbed and critical sign?'! No answer, That it would be a grievous tions - security, land purcllase and discussion of personali­ of what they see as a p:.ttern of , NEW TEST MORATORIUM _ mistake for the Secretary of De· ties, for example. Bv JOHN CROSBY Prayer decisions by Secretary of Defense The Chiefs of Staff of the three fense to blur the military recom­ 1pis bill must have public support to outline ground What is. happening to the motion picture business in the world is Robert McNomara and President services were apparently not con. mendations on design and con· ,.\ pretty well summed up on the marquees of the theaters on the Champs What a great many people Kennedy which have the effect suited and their counter - vie\\,s tract by limiting the military nJIQS so esJential to an infqrmed citizenry, Elysees. You find one marquee emblazoned "Lawrence of Arabia." will remember about the - and perhaps the purpose - of passed over by Pr.esident Ken· evatuators to offering a series of options without clearty slating -Mason Cit!f Globe-Gazelle Underneath: "A Production of Sam Spiegel and David Lean." Nothing reducing the role of the natior.'s nedy when he proposed a volun­ flight of Leroy Gordon Coop. top military leaders in military ta~y moratorium on nuclenr test. their own preferences. el$e - no stars, Up the stwet the marquee is even more significant. .er is tllat he climaxed a brave and military-pl'lxluclian matters. iog in the atmosphere and Oongress has a duty - SOd a It reads: "Felliqi RY,," Belore attempting to make an pledged that the U.S. would not responsibility - as well as the a d venture witI 1 a speech to t f th' 'ti ' I t ~,., j The Heart of Federico Fellini, the writer and hood which made him the man he assessmen 0 IS crl Clsm, C test tis long as Russia didn't. We Secretary of Defense. Its duty is 1." , director, is not only the star ot ~, and then -- bang! -- to the 'congress' in which he recited me set out the actions which had such a moratorium once and to maintain a constant watch on tile marquee, the draw, the at· sensual pulls on his nature, as a moving prayer he had made have most produced this crit· the SOviets broke it - to our dis- the way the Executive spends -' trl\ction. He's the star of the pic­ if Fellini were trying to show icism. advantage. the massive defense funds it ap. '7Jhe :Race Problem in s()ace. Th t'O th tufe. "8\02" is the picture about how all these pulls and strains e BC I ns are ese: THE RUBEL PLAN __ In order propriates. It deserves to know AL'.l'HOUGH HEAT IN THE RACE controversy has a director making a picture - co-exist in a man at the same THE TFX - Secretary Mc· easily - not with painful prying his agonies, his doubts, his time. influencing his work, his The simple words, which Namara reversed the unanimous to avoid the necessity - and the - when the Secretary has over· centered on education, housing and voting rights the real dreams, the pressures, the con­ life. making him live on four or qui t e reverently included judgment of three military review embarrassment - of reversing ruled his military advisers. This anels in selecting the design and the recommendations of the mil· heart -of the_ proplem is "discrimin\ltion" in employment. f1iets - and there's never the five planes at the same moment. I'okay". left no dOll bt about P I'tary on desl'gn and contr t de is fairer to the military, fairer to slightest question that the hero in allocating the contract for the ac . Congress .' It generates I\!!at. 'lut A much Ingher percentage of Negroes is uqemployed At lell,5t ,tlrilt,'S "ITIY, t~e,ry an~ the. ·young man's relationship new experimental tactical fighter cisions. Assistant ~retary of (Marcllllo Mastroiani) is Fellini Fellin I weltomes partiCipation. Mr. McNamara is strong enough than wQites. This is partic:;ularly true in the teenage group. himself. It wasn't so many years with the infinite, We can all plane. This is the contract which Defense John H. Rubel told the and able enough to toke it. "Movies are a great corrup' the McClellan Committee is in. McClellan Committee a new pro- Copyright 1963: Because of low family illCOl"Des more Negro youths have to ago the movie· .. ·· tion of the freedom of the audio understand why he called his vestigating and which, thus far, cedure was being considered. This New Ydr" Herald Tribune. Inc. drop out of scliool and seek work early, In spite of denials gOer didn't know · ence, Because the audience Is space craft "Faith Seven ," it does not feel that Mr. Mc. procedure wOl,lld limit the mil. who a ' direcfor OJllllcw. DMY IUUIT1N unions do not welcome Negroes. As a matter of fact th\:ly not invited to participat. In the Namara has shown overriding itary evaluators to technical ap­ was. Certainly inner lif. of the film," he says. And isn't it strange that the reason for rejecting his military pr/lisal of different alternatives, w~co\1le few n~wcorpers of any kind in fields wh~re there be di(!n't care. And F.llini thinks this is W"!"II. Soviet astron~uts all scoffingly advisers. leaving the Secretary of Defense are jllSt ~ough jobs for their current membership. Now he's taken H. thinks ttl. aUdience will be THE V/STOL _ High Navy of. to choose among a series of op· Unlvenlty the center of the more fulfilled If they bring Hundreds of thousands of Negroes hav~ left tile South said they didn't find God on ficers have testiCied before the ligns - without being conCronled sta~e. : their own interpretation and 'their. space flights? s' C . th h With a recommendation. Calendar and moved to the large cities of the nbrthexpecting to fin~ lleft the Hotel Jh.ir creativity to the movie, tennIS ommlttee at t Il Civil- These are the principal devel. r] well.paid employment. Unless they are well trained for Lancaster wit h There a,.. not lJI"ny mov les Gordon Cooper had no such ian Defense officials overrul~ o~ments which have caused much joe Mankiewicz. you can do that tD, "8Y1" you trouble. their judgment in the choice and Thursday, JUM 20 some.particular kind of work they find the,going rough and contract award for a new type a xiety and considerable crit· 8 p.m. - Art Films uf Ute Far tile writer and can, -Orrwha World·H erald of vertical and short take-off or ic sm among both Democrats anll •East - Macbride Auditorium. end up on ~e unemployment roll. d ire c tor. CROSBY I foun~ the picture completely landing plane. They say they have Republicans in COllgress. Sunday, JUlie N one" night when he was besieged ful filling and not at all confusing. recommende<\ a cheaper and bet- All the facts are not yet in, but 3 p,m, - All-State Music Camp Thi\Jii$, ~e picture that was presented in a recent issue wIth autograph fans. From "A of II S. News. & World Report. It is not a situation that can "I have nothing to say but I in· LeHers Policy ter plane. on the basis of present informa· Concert - Union. Star Is Born" to "8*" shows not sist on saying it," says the direc· The stated basis for reversing tion. I cannot escape these con· 7 p.m. - Union Board ~vie, only how the industry has mao R•• de,.. .re invited to .xp,.. .. be corrected by new laws, protest parades Or pIOUS tal~s tor at one point in the film , opl.,lons In letters to th •. Edit. the military opinion was that elusions : "On the Waterrront" - Mac ride about "eq\lal rights." tured but how the audience has FeJlini feels the same guilt that or. All letter. must Incluel'. while the Douglas Aircraft Co. TJJat Secretary McNamara has Auditorium, matured too. It ~ l\ prFctical economic problem. Younger Negroes F. Scott Fifzgerald fe lt. and the ha dw Itftn It nd 1..1 design was technically superior, the responsibility and duty to W..... d.y, JUlie 26 I asked Fellini at lunch in writer in his picture tells him so dr:lse~, ands .::::--.,: tY~ the civilian decision _makers make aoiinal and independent de- 8 p.m, - SUI Opera Workshop, mqse;be given opportunity for better education. Older ones Rome whether II. thought Ita' at one point. At the end of the written .nd double-sp.ced. W. thought the Bell Aerosystems Co. cision on these weapons systems "L'infedelta delusa," Haydn film. the whole cast - and, as in &1._ I-h ,L_~ _ to who'" the contract was and where they shall be made . Macbride Audflorium. must. be trained for jobs just as unemployed whites must lia" movi.. wert the best in , rese,.,. ,ne r .. , to ...... 111 't· ha h' i . , many Fellim pictures. it·s a big ~ given _ was more experienced. T teLl elerc slOg hiS auth· Frl... y, June 21 be. I the world .nd he laid: "I tlan't IN , many movies, but I think one - join hands and march ~n, Goldwater's q\lestion: "If Of iI)', not exceeding il. Concert - Union. - :~at is.. the heart of the rase problem. It is not a Itall.n movies mu.t be the best, around the set to the catchy driv. -=====::::::==::::::=::::::~~:::::.....:=:::.:=-.:..==::.::...... : _C-.____ -.,. ______- ___'-- dilllmma t4f1t. can be solved qljickly or easily. But unless becaun In Italy the conditions ing melody of the theme of the U· ; B II B d first jteps toward, solving it are taken soop race dissension for an artist .re bett ... th.n in picture. Then suddenly everyone n1 ve rS 1 ty U et I' n 0 ar ather countries. w. are abli· melts away and there is only th~ will keep growing mOre bitter and dangerous to the nation. ,Ited to make better pictures little boy (who is Fellini as a . -Davenport Morning,D(!mocrat lIk.un othtrwl .. we would be child) marching around playing mo,.. Slullty than other countries a fife in a big circle of light. T. TI, T.n Tin, by Valentin Chll that hive IISS freedam." which is where the dream and (W. W. Norton, $4,95) the drive to make this picture "61,2" opens with a shot of a U N I V E RSIT Y CANOl HOUSE A"LICATIONS lor the Foreilln T. Ta. Till T.n is a Communist slol/an in Red China. It means : ~ports and the Birds started long ago. hpurs lor the summer sesolon will Service OUleer examination. .Iven "fight fight, talk talk" and describes the method used to subjusate mati caught in a traffic jam. He be MOJldQy·Frlday 2:00 to 8:00, Satur· by tho Slate Department and !lIe bein, The Very touching and emotionalty day 10:00 to 8:00. Qnd Sunday 12:00 United States (nlonnallon A,eney. the vust Chinese mainland and now threatens the rest of the worl~ , IF THE CARPINALS, and Oriole should happen to ~ h~ :s ~assed . satisfying and very true. In atl to 8:00. Please brln, your ID card are available .t the BuBlness .nd In· otlier motorists watch uncon· with ypu. d\lBlrial Placement Ofllce, 107 Unl · Valentin Chll draws aside the Bamboo Curtain in this book "tQ this Fellinl has nbt made the verllty Hall, The applications mllat win ' in: tbei~ respective league~, it will b!:CQme almost cerned, as he suffocates. Sudden1¥ describe. analyzq and interpreb Communist China to Weste~n rea4, S G be AUbmlUed by July Hnd in order slightest concession towards con· RECRIATIONAL WI MMIN 10 ~~9 tr, tp O~S~IV~ that qas~ball is for the birds. ' tile rno~rist. who Is the dir~ctor, (MIEN) hours at the FI~d Ifouso will take lhe examination ,Iven on ers," It Is a de(lIJ1e.s1 and authorJtative account. based on what the i!\ floating in the ~ky, and people ventionality, Even the title "81,2" be 12:00 to 2:00. Pleali4! presenl your September 7th. (1·22) -Mason City Globe-Gazette seems deliberately calculated not staff or summer sessIon ID ca'rd at Chinese Communists have said themselves In their newspaper •• on the ground are trying to pull the pool. UHIVIRIITY LIIRARY HOURS: maga~ines, and propaganda releases and on what relugees have down like a kite on a string: to try to placate or entice the Monday·Frlday; 7:30 a,m"Dlldnlllhl; "im audience. Saturday: 7:30 a.m.·S p.m.; Sunday: personally told the author, The resliits of ilk Chll's studies and The next moment. the film be­ FAMILY NITIS at the Field House 1:30 p.m.-midnight. Service desks: comes prosaic, naturalistic, I said to him that he seems to will be held each Wednesday nl,hl Monday·Thursday : 8 a.m ·10 p,m ,; interviews are fascinating - and alarm/n". this book is more than ihe:~ally lewon or June and July - except July Srd Friday and Saturday: 8 a,Ift.-S p,m,; have a ma~ificent disdain for just a factual recording of events, for as the author says, "o lthou~h ' It - from 7:15 to 9:15. For locully, SundfY: 2.5 p.m. PhotodupllcaUoa: 'flttJJJ~'~ If wrlttm tIf\d edited by,,~ and" g~ by. jumps from dream to real. popular taste. And he said : start. and students ... their apouse. MOfldQy.Frlday: 8 a.m.·S p.rn.- Mori· my appr ~ach to the China situatIon is. or course. objective, I have board f1/ ~ II1MUnI tt'Ulfe" ellcted by Ihe IIOOenl body IJfId four j~n\, from actual to abstract con· and children. CHILuREN MUS T day·Thursday : 6-10 p.m.; Sa(urday: "Why do I have to worry about COME WITH THEIR OWN PARENTS 10 ' .m. untU noon, 1·5 p,m.; Sunday; witnessed too much despair and hope, too much tre~chety and nl/' IrWfIa appolnted by the prmdmt of thl! Un1v.eTnty. T~e Dailg IowJ,,,', tll\uously. There is a lot of repe­ AND LEAVE WITII THEM, Stalt or 2,·5 p.m, titian (bUt (hen life is repetitive), what people think? Why should t summer seSBlon ID card Is required. bilit.y, too much hate and love, to study It os m r.e cIlemJcalll hI a ldIeorial polity " not IIfl. qeulota of SUI, adlldfli.l'ttalion j 01 (8·1) JlolWy bui there's not a single ctiche of tr~ 1,0 do what the people want IHTIR·YAItIlTY C..... I.TIA" ,.'" test tUbe." OJIIrIloa.lffany ~, ' LOWI~I'~ an Il\larde.I10111j1taU9nal because I don't know what Uley R(jd turpulen~ d{alojtUe or image or mood, The 'LAY NIGHTI at the F~ld House II'OUp or ltudenlaL ...... '.'ff China is a country of barely reatrained I\.IIdI ~" .... ~ ~. , i~tes ' are marvellous, a suc· wapt? I think it's impossibl<1. It's will be each 'l',uc~d~y I\Ild . •'rldJY Tu"aiiJy .v.nln. at 7:10 In til.. EMit restless confusion . III almost every spher , Mr. Chu p6iJltl out, Publ~ber .. ... , .. .. Edward P. Bauett humiliating to serVe the capriCe nIght from 1:*0 to 9:SO 111m AUlluat Lobb)' (ionfereDf. Roam. J1ItJ ta MIMI." Hiision of black and white com­ 23. Members 01 llle faculty, lIart and eon. IildeT ..rlou. 1oI>k!. til .....na AUDIT aURIAU Editor ...... Deln MIDI or so mysterious a boss. YOll have contradlctlOlll appear. While trying to compete wlth We tern tid· , 0' Mlnafln, Editor, . , ... Gary SpUJ',eon pqsitions of such continuous, com· sludellt body and lhelr spouses are IDttrelil. AU Itt, -cIIa1IJ llltitad .. CIItCU&.ATIONI to b,!} the boss of them. When I Invited to QUend . Stafl or summer attaD4 . vances In nuclear power and technology. Peking's attempta are City Editor ...... , TIm C&Uan pe'nin;: interest that the audience session student lD c.rd I. required. crippled by a mystical approach to science. One competent Scien· Nell" Edl or .... , ... , .... John SdIoia r o~ . lhe Champs Elysees hangs on make a picture, I try to make (8·23) TNI IWIMMIN. I'OOL III tile W. Sdltotlll . whilt I like,' and I hope that what "D" Gym lor all SUI coeu wID .. list bitterly accused the Parl¥ of "forcibly treating JgnorllnCe as ' Edltor_ ...... ,Uln¢' JUnnln, , b~aditessly, as if at a suspense THI DI'ARTMINTI 01' MU.IC open for Iwlmmlnll lrom 4:00 p~". .' .ParIi I 5~IO JPI'I. knowledjfe, Impossiblllty as possibllity." Ag1'lculture is in a state lik ~ Ihl'olli'h Spo E!II\or, .. ,.,., . ,J!le allu1n,.r mbvle. t and what the audijlnce likes AND DItAMA\ III oonlu~Cllon wlUl to p,m. MOl1d.y SOOle y Ed tor ...... ,Shlron ' Proctor Is the same," the Fine Art§ Festive presehl "La day. Swlmmln, lull. and tolli;I, will o{ chaos. due to Mllo's "agrarian" reforms - reforms, the author Cblel Photompb~" .Joe LlppllIcott be pro v Ide d by the Women'. "I get the feeling I'm molting 1003; Traviata, an O!lerA In tbtee Icl., ~t. CUy Editor .. , . , . 'j . ,Toai Irwin Copyright CODlf.ljlte wlll1 lull orc~e.tr., scenery Physical EducaUon De~ttm'Dt. (U) ~xplains enacted lor political reosons . The pre nt famine In Red AdverUlln, Director .. , rv G~ouman the. same picture all the time." New York Herald Tribune. Inc. an~ , costumd, Ju!y 30, 31, AU,ust 2 AdverUsln, Mana,er ., , .Dave Pe~" ' 011 3, 19&3, M~ orlletl aecnled CHRIITIAN lelINCI . O"_=A'" China I~ due "not so much to sudden drol1'1ati<; blow. (rom na~ure Clafl4lfled FeUjnl lil sald to me in Rome IlATIONi/ bolu a leltlmoll1 mOl an tlckiif soles start JylY 15t/l as t to a bureaucracy efficient in controt but l:l('kln~ In common MIlI.,,;r.,,,.,, .. ,Dennl.IlcKlni I'There is a continual develop­ throullh August 3rd 'd.lly .:~O a.m. tack Th nday afternoon III the DIiI 7,41f\ fJ'OIfI noon to mldnlJht to Nat'l .... dv. M'r ...... John Sch~ I to 5:30 p,m, Ticket De~kj 10"la lofe· Conferenee Room, lut Lobby, Iowa sense." Inent which has something to do I(.-tal UDlOII, AU ~ wei, rtDOn ..~. ...~ womelli' p .... e Adv. Photographer "" Ron Sleeb Or ~o morlal Union. All leata re~rved. _ to .tlacl. at 1;11. tiiiIj ' .nd 'lnDtlu_mbta tG 'l1ie AdverlWn, with the' 'essence of man, ' I'm ,U5. (8-3) Under Communist rule, the roots of C"lnc~ cu1tur~ have been Ioyp. ~tq~ orne.. are III Consultant ... . ,., .. ,DeMI. BInnl~ 1\ conthiuat conversation Clrculatlo~ Ma~a,er .. ' .. ,JIIII CollieI' hol~rng THI UNIVIIIIITY eHQRLlI II methodically llacked away. The result has been widespread dis· ~ , JUW:A\lPoIIJ Caa\er. · with 'irtyselt. n" I' (sn't tha~ very A IU""" .. FILM FIITIYAL ser· open to aU students and rellclMb 01 ~ They Say les II being offerM by the Auocl. ~ content and Insecurity, AI the family unIt ha been broken d\l\l'n, Trust"., ~Dlnl of Student 'Ub~1• personal?" I asked. "An artist lion or Oampu. 14l1dll,,, 01\ Friday IoWa City. Reh •• rlll. 11'/1 schedl\led tlon' Inc,: Lee Tbe!fenJ ~4.i La The last word in an argument nl'hll (June 28, JIlIy 11 and 28) at lor 7:15 to 8:15 p,m, on Mond.y the rates of murder. suicide. abortlon and illegitimate chi birth P,.,b b• 0, Nancy ' ~ All I a1wayS I talks about himself. If Tuelday and Thuraday In prepare! 8 p.m. In Sh.mblu,h AUditorium tlon 'or a concert at th, close of the have correspondently sky·rocketed . yod want to make a declaration Is what a wife has. Anythinll a In the Library. The series Includu .ummer .esslon. No .udlllo" I. P;~e~ . \:J~I:~t:Kool !rrJu~; the followt!14, lllms: "The Mo~ .. Theae and other facts are In marked conlrast to the "flguru" lam' IOcba.1 Iladl\ff, W. Dr. 0101'" to the worldl it's always easier hll8baii4 says after that is the be· That Roared\ "Forbidden GamU." necullry. Stephen HOblOr. vI.ltIn, Eu!ofu CoUell' 01 ~ntlatry; R!etl.rd tb ma'le It to yourself. Otherwise ginning of another argument. "The Red Ba loon:' al1d lIIarcel Mar­ lect~rer In lh~ Depart/llen or Nutl\: and the carefulty guided lours upon which many expert.a have based A. Mw.r, Ll; Dr. LiUrtD It.: Yajt ceau's "Pantomllllu" alld "In The will be director, (8-ZO) their repqrts on China, Mr. Chu looks behind the propaganda smoke· Dyu, Colle" of &dllf'j-Ioa. how are you ioing to talk to other -The Brookl (AI, •. ) aulletln Park". Series tlckeLa nlay be pur· lor IOWA MlMOltlAL UNIOW HOUUI screen til de~crlbe with compasSion olld anier hi. country os it People?"1118Ii'ed him If tllat were chlil<\d U .t .ny one ot the eateterla !l!"'n 11 :10 •.•.. \ Pt 1(_ ~ _ • .-. ~ "., , ... U ~' u do n,t reellv~->,oar rIOt 'leaning toward abstraction. • • Prote.lant Chure" Cectenl B~Pt~. 4I7,&atUrdlYl U;41 '.111 ,, ' ndlll really ia. With hl~ firm knowledlle of the ChIna of today, Mr, Cbu cllUllvt the 1I8I'tor 'ftllubl.,.Uon Datii' I""'n ' ,:10 1.JIIl II'U' DIilr J'rtdl¥: It:. a.m..1;" p.m.. unda)', "LUe gets prett¥ abstract," said Ma~e,w,II~ WBradf ICtbovfe,~ed t~eh etn- I B~~:Jeso:.r~a;;~P;·e~e:la~~~ ~~:! looks to ~ China of the future, predicting what it might bc\COnIe cI.,. 'I!t..•• prlnled 41 tI!II. . Iowan clrcullt 01\ ~~ 11\ ~. COlli: tl re,. ar w ewer p a o· 'llinater. ("28) OoId ....th.r "001II OIM'II , e. • , wF a. III AP DeWI munlcaUon. Cellt, W'~pen 1toiD .. Fellini. ely , 10:" P.ID .• Nonda,y·ThundQl t ..... and how the Unite.!,! States could innuence this transformation. • " .m. to Rolli, N~ , ~_=r,n. 1\;48. p,m .. rt\daYI • a.ID.·n ;41 1'.111. a , . '", gf~t tb~~t~ tt . (~erage ~'I:'~ 'ARINTI e;;';;;ATIYI IAIY. , • , I' 'l ~>: , .nd frll~lo 10 •. m.. 'afw , 19 "8~" the film jump!! 'frQ'1l .httdl71 bl0:41 p.1I\, SundaY. a... Sincil 1956. Mr. Chu ha. been wIth the New York edltorlal ofrlcel !ftIIe·,oalt'.. ce' olilllllilld pape ~ ~~,~g , ,11 !l:t!l ~~i'~ ll.l, • IT.1I 1(0, LIAOU,. ~!Ilber~ldeslrlnJ l'.Upn .... • 1.IIl,·1l AIht.n: ldI&8mI, Artbltf iii. San4, II not polllble. but. eVl!I'1, ~~an wJ1I the savage pre~sure ' of fIlrn:ni'ftk­ ;.;. • nlrrvalDUrSl (I\y.,) , sitter and thdse nterhlell n m6m· IIiI\II1J1'b~n I' a.lll.·l1 Wi of, Time and has colltributed articles on China to numerous publl· ,riii&if'AcI,.nlilJii ., ' SOIui Kott,; be m.de to ~ tn'OII ~ tJae­ ing, back to the director's child· H.rald J ) beralllp call Mi., WI\IWII V.~ At' .. i ~rrtdi ...... ,. I cationl, Includlnl The N,w L..... and U.S. N.w ..... w.... " ... ~ arwIaUoa. WIiIIIIr r.tlnoL IINllIIut. 7-8341, "., ......

....f'" .. - ...... ----~- .... - ... - .. ... ----...... ,...... - ...... a..a .. -_ ..... _- ---- ...... ~_ ... _ .. ___ ..... _. _ ...... _ ...... __ .... ,...... 'tHIDAIL V IOWAN-I ..a ~Ity, lowlt-T'IIIIndey, J_ 21. IN.J-.P ... ' , ./ I Pt'esft. ...., 11 .Says She'll 5 Pbysician , Denti,s Matty Rlchat.tl' Five piur~iclaus ond a dpdbt at Mel Dr. JII L. att, c 8 S . SUI ba e recell

MAN, TrI~e'5. Trll5. FeAR NOr, FRIEND, I'LL PLACE ON MY BAcK .Jusr GIVE IT A L.ITTLE ... TrlAlS KIL.LING. ME. -;J/:; --;?/- . • ~. rf

· . '" - ''-,,- ,. There will be nb extra·large heating bills during winter months if you pay your gas and .id IWY et.*ctilc hUla on. thft l~tn. ' P,~Y,Dlept Plan. This is how the Plan works;

• The annual COlt. of ..MW II esth"atec! ; boMCI on prevlDUI u.. Dr exp.rl.nce. OlD 'lOo ~ve~ : . .. .) • Th. totolll dlYld,d 1nlo 12 equal' monthly pO)'IMnh. WOTlCE w:m MOST COQl.:'S A~E. • TIIr fplI~,..n~ Jl'ne .~ COlt D!. ..rvlce a~ually u.. d fDr the y.ar II balanced again •• thl altlDunt paid. PlJSI{~IC:5 FOIl J • The dlH'pnce,11 then lubtroct.d IrDIII Dr added tD your July bill. . , Atotf DISPLAY OF APPRECIATION 7

El)lo~ the convenience of mowing every month euc:tl)' 'X~ your ~ IDd el!,pfric bill will be. Call or ltop thi. moot!. lot lnfOrmation about the your.-fQ..r better 'living plan, It belina In July. 19WfAII, ILLINOis . /j'! I ~~S afJ.~ , Ele,cl"i~; ' Cl!"!p\BY .t , : ' ~~ .~ • ,.t'. " ~I .. . ~~ ~ • "a.. 4-THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, low_Thursday, Junl 20, 1963 - Cl,tJ¥: -l?ropJoiesys Again: Nic~laus~ Ar,nie Renew F~,ud' CardiRe/s, Giants Stay" 7-2, '/Liston Will Fall in 81 For Golf Supremacy TOday BROOKLINE, Mass. III - Arn­ tWO'man show, Palmer vs. Nick­ NEW YORK IJIl'i - Cassius CIl.\Y fifth round so that he could make old Palmer and Jack Nicklaus, lit laus, lind the golfers themselves returned in triumph Wednesday his prediction "Cooper will fall in in ah informal poll showed fav­ from London, predicting the doom five" come out exactly, Clay and determined, renew their ,strug­ Los Angeles Falls 2V2 Back gle for No. 1 golf honors in Ule oritism for Palmer, the comeback­ . . oC heavyweight champion Sonny promptly had an answer ready. Liston "in eight when ' he meets POI didn't carry him," he said. 63rd National Open Championship er. the greatest" and denying that he "In fact , Crom what I hear the today over the knobby old course "I want to win this one so bad f Pierce Saves carried Henry Cooper so he would radio announcer said about the where history was made half a can taste it," Palmer said. "I'd faIl in exactly (ive rounds. fight, Cooper mll st have been car­ century ago. like to win by 10 strokes." Maris Belts "I want that big, Ugly Bear but rying me." I golta get my cut," said The The only mark the fistic poet Palmer, 33, his powerful game Nicklaus, who said he had cor· 8-3 Triumph 3-Run Homer Greatest at a series of press , radio bore of the Cooper fight was a and phenomenal drIve bolstered rccted a driving flaw on the prac­ and television interviews at Idle­ purplish bruise under his left eye. by a long rcst, is a H favorite to tice tee Tuesday , said, "Certainly. wild Airport. "I want a million and capture the title lost to Nicklaus I think T can win it - that's the a half guarantee plus hal£ of t\1e in a playoff at Oakmont, Pa., a reason I'm here." For Marichal To Nip Nats year ago. TV money. My managers are work­ Favored Aussie The 6,870 - yard, par 35-36-71 SAN FRANCISCO (,fI - Juan ~ _ _ r NEW YORK (JIl'i - Roger Maris ing on the deal. " He tees off at 7:42 a.m . (CST), course, wIth its hidden holes, teo Marichal survived the post-no-hit banged a three-run homer, his 12th Asked what would that leave .for Gets Tough Test with Jay Hebert and Doug Ford, nacious, short rough and postage jinx with relief help Wednesday oC the year and third in the last the champion , Clay promptly re­ one of the early threesomes in the stamp greens, is not much changed .and fired the San .Francisco Giants two games, in the sixth inning plied: In Cup Action • star-studded field of 139 profes­ from the links over which Francis sionals and 11 amateurs tackling to an 8-3 victory over Los Angeles Wednesday night as the New York "Man that fight will draw a $15- LONDON IA'! - Roy Emerson, Ouimet, a 20-year-old Brookline the links of The Country Club. before a sellout crowd at Candle, Yankees won their sixth straight, million gate with everything. It top-seed from Australia for the caddy, beat the great British stars, stick Par.k. 3-2, over the Washington Senators. will draw more than Cleopatra and men's singles in the Wimbledon He should have completed bis Harry Vardon and Ted Ray, for The defeat dumped the Dodge~s The victory protected the Yan­ Liz Taylor was at the ringside Tennis Championship, found him­ first round by the time Nicklaus the 1913 Open championship. deeper into third place behind the kees ' American League lead. and watching me Tuesday night." self in probably the toughest quar­ takes off at 11:04 a.m. with Bob • His triumph , the first in the Open -leading S1. Louis pinned the seventh straight defeat Told that Jack Nilon , Liston 'S ter of the draw Wednesday. Goalby and the reigning National for a native - horn American, Is Cardinals, who blasted tbe New on the cellar Senators. advisor wanted to put on a Clay­ Emerson opens his campaign for Amateur champion, Labron Harris credited with taking golf from its York Mets 9-4 Wednesday, and the Maris' homer Cobowed singles by L.iston .fight in Philadelphia in the title with a first-round match Jr. snobbish, country club setting and second-place Giants. The Dodgers Bobby Richardson - who had three September, providi ng Liston beat against William Lenoir of 'fucson, Strangely, Nicklaus who beat giving it to the common people. are 2'h games behind st. Louis and hits - and Tom Tresh, and came Floyd Patterson in their July 22 Ariz .. the IS-ra nked player in the Palmer in the ricb World Series two games behind the Giants. off left-handel' Claude Osteen. Os­ return bout, Clay said: United States. But there's even and Tournament of Champions, teen had shut out the Yankees 1-0 "That's all right with me. His Marichal, who no-hit Houston 1-0 more trouble ahead. In the same has been shoved back into second­ in his last outing against them. It home town will witness the anni­ Saturday, surrendered six hits in­ quarter as Emerson are Dennis ary status by the revival of Pal­ was Maris' second homer off a hilation. And then it's only a hop, Ralston, lhe American Davis CUp­ mer sentiment after Arnie's Thun­ cluding a two-run homer by Willie leCt-hander this year and sixth oCC skip and jump to New York, Pitts­ Davis and a one-run clout by Ron per from Bakersfield, Calif., and derbird victory last Sunday. Washington pitching. burgh and all the other nice cities Ramanathan KL'ishnan of India. Fairly, beCore leaving with two out Jim Bouton, who was the vic­ nearby so people can come to the Ralston and Krishnan probably The young giant from Ohio is 6-1 ill the eighth inning. tim of Osteen's shutout, got the fight." will meet in the second round. So in the friendly, illegal betting The victory was Marichal's iev­ victory to run his record to 9-2, Cassius turned 21 only last Jan . Emerson will have to deal with around the clubhouse . Other lead­ . enth straight. but the Senators knocked him out 17, is undefeated in 19 fights, in­ only one of them in his bid to get ing contenders, Gary Player, Dow Billy Pierce rescued Marichal with a two-run burst in the ninth. cluding his firth-round technical into the quarter-finals. Finsterwald, Julius Boros and after Fairly's and two WlShin,ton " 000 000 002- 1 7 0 knockout of Cooper Tuesday night , Seventeen Americans in the Gene Littler, are 10-1 shots and consecutive singles in the eighth. ~1J. New York .. 000 003 OOx- l 5 1 higher. Osteen, K.llno (7) and Landrith, Lep. and is ranked No.2 challenger be­ men's singles are spearheaded by Lo. An.ele. . ... 000 200 010- 3 7 3 pert (7); Bouton, Hlmllton (91, Stafford hind Patterson. Chuck McKinley , lhe 22-year-old Although the game's greatest SIn FrancllCo .. 200 130 D2x- I 13 1 (f) and HOWl rd. W - Bouton ('.2). L Drysdlle, Roebuck (5), P.rrenoskl - Osteen (1·5). So what's the hurry to meet Lis­ from St. Louis. players, domestic and from abroad, (5), Sherry (7) Ind Roseboro; Marlehal, Embarrassing Situation Homl run - New York, Marl. (12). ton , he was asked. are assembled here, it's strictly a ~Iorce (I) and aall.y. W - Marlchal 11 -3). L - Drysdale (1·8). "I want to be the youngest heavy­ SOX 12, TWINS 4 Home runl - Lo. Ang"e., W. DIvis San Francisco third baseman Cap Peterson, I,ft, looks back at S), Fairly (S). San FranCiSCO, McCovey weight champion ever. [ want to Chlc.go ...... 000 501 015-11" 1 los Angeles John Roseboro (8) as he is about to b. run Banks Smashes MlnnlSota . .. 100 000 102- 4 , 0 I14), Hillor (I). , break Patterson's record." Herbert and LoII.r; Stlgman, Forni.· down in the fifth inning of Wednesday's game at San Francisco's He was told thai to do so he 'n "), Roggtnburk (I), Moore (9)/ Plel. Candlestick Park. In the background is umpire Frank Sec:ory. 3S0th Home Run; (9) and BIIt.y. W - Herbert (6-4,. L - would have to be crowned by Dec . Stlgman (5-6). Roseboro is about to !let the toss from Dodger pitcher Ed Roebuck 12. Patterson won the title in 1956 Home run. - Chicago, McCraw 2 (2), Bill White Cubs Romp, 9-1 Robln.on 2 (6). Mlnnesotl, Killebrew for the rundown putout. The Giants downed the Dodgers, 8-3. when he was 21 years, 10 months, (12). - AP Wir.photo CHICAGO IA'! - Ernie Banks 26 days old . smashed his 350th home run, good "I'm going to break that record." When asked if he had allowed Bats Home 5 for two runs baited in that raised ToniteEnds * 'DR, NO' his career total to 1,001, Wednesday Cooper to stick around until the Orioles End Tribe's Streak to lead the to a 9-1 victory over the Houston Colts. To Sink Mets The game was played under dark f'mfffl At 7 in Row Behind Pappas and rain-laden clouds before play I ST. LOUIS (JIl'i - Bill White drove was delayed due to rain aJter Hous­ STARTS FRIDAY! in five runs with his second grand CLEVELAND (JIl'i _ Milt Pappas 'fed Abernathy (2-0) got the vic­ ton baited in the eighth. slam homer of the season and a hurled a five-hitter as Baltimore tory In relief with Stu Miller (1-4) AlteL' a 48·minute wait the um­ On a BEACHHEAD or double as i)'irst-place St. Louis defeated Cleveland 6-2 in the night­ taking the loss. pires ordered that play be resum­ Tonit. I. Buck·Ni.. smashed 14 hits for its third cap of a doubleheader Wednesday First Garno ed. YOUR eARFUL FOR $1.00 in a BEACH HOUSE ... BaUlmore . 000 100 210- 4 , 1 straight win over New Yo'rk Wed- ni ght and broke the Indians' string Cleveland 400 000 001- 5 I 0 The Cubs jumped on starter Hal these nesday, 9-4. at seven games. Cleveland had Barber, Millor (7) .nd L.u; Rlmos, Brown and Russ Kemmerer, his Abernathy (7) and Ateue. W - Aber· Starts TONIGHT! are the White's bases-loaded blast, the taken the opener 5-4 on Joe AzcLle's n.thy 1 2~) . L - Miller (1-4). immediate succeSSlr, for three sixth oC his career and his 12th ninth-inning homer. Home run. - B.Uimore, Gontllo (12), runs in the second inning. "ATLANTIS" Color Saverine (1). Cleveland, Alcu. (3). men home run this season, came ofC Pappas r5-3 ) had a two-hitter un­ Ron Santo tripled to score sing­ I ''THE lOST CONTINENT" Met starter Tracy Stallard in the til 'fito Francona slammed his Second Game ling Andre Rodgers before Banks that !" Baltimore ... .. 001 110 210- 6 12 0 fifth. White now has hit in 12 Com'th home run of the season in Cleveland .. . 000 000 200- 2 5 2 blasted his 15th homer over the •"VillAGE OF• straight games. the seventh inning, scoring Willie Pappas and Brown; Boll, McDow.1I left field bleachers. THE DAMNED" George Altman, with two singles, Kirkland, who had singled. (1), Walkor (8), NilChwlt1 (f) .nd Azeu •. After catcher Dick Bertell drove W - Pappu (5-3). L - Boll (3-5). Opan 7:00 , 1st Show 7: 50 stretched his hitting string to 17 Errors by Woodie Held helped Home run - CI.veland, Frlncona (4). his second 1963 homer into the cen­ consecutive games -longest in the ·the Orioles score a run in the third ler field bleachers, Banks stroked National League. St. Louis scored a run in the and fifth innings. They came in on Yastrzemski Hits a two-run single to power four a double by Luis Aparicio and runs in the Chicagoans' 6-0 lead. - DOORS OPEN 1:15 - AT second on Ron Taylor's hit, another Brooks Robinson's single. Houston ...... 000 001 000- 1 1 1 in the third on Ken Boyer's sacri· 2 Home Runs Chicago ...... 330 110 01x- f 13 1 fice fly, and one in the seventh 'on Baltimore picked up a pair oC Brown, K.mmerer (2) Zachlry (II and Campbell; Hobblo, Ellton (f) Ind Altman's bunt. The Cards added runs off Sam McDowell, who re­ To Pace Boston l.rt.lI. W - Hobble (3-51. L - "rown -STARTS- two more in the eighth on consecu- lieved Gary ~ell, in the seventh. (1-2). , A walk and singles by Russ Sny­ BOSTON (A'! - Carl Yastrzemski Home rvns - Hov.ton, Warwick (4). live doubles by Curt Flood, White der and Dick Brown brought them Chlca,o, Banks (IS), I.rtoll (2), Lan­ • THURSDAY· hit a pair of long home runs for drum (1). HIS VERY LATEST and Dick Groat. in. four runs batted in and rookie Ntw York ...... 202 110 100- 4 11 2 h . 10- NEW SONG HITS! PIZZA VILLA St. Loul ...... 011 400 120- "4 1 In t e opener, Azcue hit hiS right-hander Bob Heffner threw a • tlll ..d CllCo (4), RGwtl7l' MeeKen- game wl'nnl'ng blast wl'th two out 21. /1) Ind Shorry, Tlylor 5; Sed.ekl, - . seven-hitter in his first major 1i!!t'1IIUID...... Tlyor (2), Ilute (5), Shlntz (" and league start as Boston defeated ~---: McCarver. W - lavta (H). L - atal­ Detroit 9-2 Wednesday night. ... I I lard ·(2-4). Home ,un - It. Louis, White (12). Reds 6, Phils 5 The viclory was Boston's eighth CINCINNATI IA'I- Leo Cardenas' in their last nine, extended De· two-out single with the bases load­ troit's losing streak to nine and 6 Big Stars . . , in ed in the 10th inning drove in Frank was loss No. 2 for Tiger Manager we feature Scoreboard Robinson with the winning run in Cllarlie Dressen, who replaced Bob 2 Great Features! NATIONAL LlAGUI Cincinnati 's 6-5 victory over Phila­ Scheffing Thursday. W. L. Pet. G.II . delphia Wednesday night. Yastrzemski belted a solo homer • , ALL IN COLOR • 0 0 Ilt. Louis ...... 40 27 .597 Sin Francisco ... .. 40 28 .i188 \oil Robinson set up the decisive run 0(( reliefer Phil Regan in the fifth Los Angeles ...... 37 29 .581 2\oi1 when he walked with one out, stole inning and hit a two-run homer off Cincinnati ...... 3~ 30 .538 4 Ch Icago ...... 36 31 .537 4 second and reached third on walks Mickey LoIich in the seventh on Milwaukee ...... 31 34 .477 B Pittsburgh ...... 31 34 .477 8 to two men. Cardenas then lined a his next time at bat. Both drives pressure-fried chicken PhUadc1phla ...... 30 36 .455 91'J Jack Bladschun pitch to leCt field landed in the center field bleach· Houslon ...... 27 40 .403 13 New York ...... 25 43 .368 151'J for the clincher. ers. Wednesday" Rnvlls Clnclnnall .. 100 130 000 1- 6 • 2 Detroit ...... 000 110 000- 2 7 0 ju icy-tender­ SI. Louis g New York 4 Phlladelphl. . 000 041 000 0- 5 • 2 B05ton . . . 021 010 llx- '12 1 San FrancllCo 8, Los An,ele. 3 Gr.en, Short (5) Baldschun (101 and Mossl, Reg.n (51, Lolich (I) .nd Trlan· Chlclgo 9, HouSLon I Dllrymple, Oldls (6); Jay, Nuxha I (5), do.; Hef'ner and Tlllm.n. W - Hef" Pittsburgh 6, loIUwaukee 2 bnnl (10) and Edwards. W - Zanni n.r (1-0). L - MOIII (4-4). deliciousl Clnclnna11 6, Phlladelphta 3 (10 In, (H). L - Short (l-B). Home run. - Detroit, Brown (1). lIos· nlngs) Home runs - Philadelphia, Demeter ton, Mallone (1 0), Ylltr18mllll 2 (5). Today'. ProlMble Pltch.rs 2, (11). Cincinnati, Spencer (II. Houston (Droit 2-4) at Chtcago (Jack. ! Ion 708). _ e te CLEANERS PllLsbur,h (Schwall 3-4) at loIUwaukee Bues 6, Braves 2 TAI.LORING (Lemaster 2-4). ArtlS Ie PhiladelphIa (Greeo 1·1) et Cincinnati MILWAUKEE IA'I- Pitcher Earl (O'Toole 12·3). - nl,ht Only ,ames scheduled. Francis helped win his own game COMPLETE ~~~~~:G AMaRICAN LIAQUI with a double, two singles and three W. L. Pet. G.8. runs batted in as the Pittsburgh I 1 D.y Servic, New york ,...... It 23 .110 Pirates scored a 6-2 victory over Chicago ...... S8 28 .571 I e All Type. of T.iloring ... -.. , ... _.... - ... Basion ...... 33 28 .M9 3 the Milwaukee Braves Wednesday Cleveland ...... 34 27 .557 3~ night. Eni~ on Exciting E-ung '" Baltimore ...... 35 31 .530 4~ Mtnnesota ...... 33 33 .511 5 The Pirates ruined Bob Sadow­ 2 LOCATIONS ~. .' , tIu/Gbu"*, .·Los An,eles ..... 34 34 .500 6~ ski's major league debut with three .·Ken ... City ...... 30 33 .478 71'J 211 lowl Ave. . . 0" DetroIt ...... 24 It .317 13~ runs on seven hits in the first four m E. Burlington Ii ' GUTHRIE THEATRE Wa.hlnllon ...... 2S: 41 ~2 20 innings. x - played nl,ht ,aDle CritiCll from eo&ft ~ 00&8f, are publishin, SPECIAL Wednesday'. Result. Home runs by Hank Aaron and Ph. 7-4424 • 7·9865 rave review. about MiDneeota's own Tyrone New Yorl< 3,_Washl",ton 2 Mack Jones were the only runs off Guthrie Theatre. Now the Hotel Dyckman Chlca,o 12,L "'lnnuotl 4 Boston 9, uetrolt 2 Francis as he gained his third tri­ oft'e .. jl;'ou asPOcial Th ..tre Package to make )lour 'Evenine It the Theatre" e"en more Cleve lInd 5-2, Baltimore 408 umph against two deleats. ~ CHICKEN Los An,eles 4, K...... City 2 (lst 01 elcilin.-aDd eooDomioail Thia epecial pin two. Second game nlaht.) Plttlbu'lIh ...... 020 '130000-' 13 0 iJlcludet : Milwaukee ...... 001 001 000- 2 7 0 Cole Slaw Reg, $1.35 Toda,'. ProlMblo ~ltchers o aD eJepIIL rOOIll Washln,ton (Stenhouse 3-7) at New Frencl., Gibbon (7) and Brlnd; Sad. Vork (Downln, 2-0). , owskl, Fischer (5), Schneider (51, Funk o SUO dinner In the Chateau de Pa,l, French Fries Detroit (8. unnln, 4-6) at B 0 • too (I) and Torre. W - Francis (3-2). L - (acclaimed by Holiday magaaille AI (Earley 2-2). Sldowlill (0-1), FREE! l>IIe 01 Amerlca'e If_L French Buttered Roll Chlcl,o (Buzhardt 8-2) .t Mlnnelota Home runs - Mllwauk.e, H. Alron Reetaurants) (Kaa! 5-6). (20), Jone. (21. Baltimore (Roberta 4-7 or HIU 2-1) e a deU,h tlul Collunelltal Break!.. at Cleve lind (Grant 4-6) - nlahl. -PROMPT.:DELIVERY o .U lor 19.96 per ~ (double Only ,ame. scheduled. oeeupaney) ANGELS 4, A'S 2 MAICE IIISlItVATIOHS FOIt yoult "rVIHI,.O Kin... Cit, .... 010 CIt, ___ 2 2 0 Why don't YOU try Iowa City'l finelt Pizzal AT THI THIATIt," TODAY. Fol' pal'ties, picnics 01' exfra hung,'Y LH An ..l...... 100 0t0 to)- 4 , • Itakow ,"d Iclwal'1ls; Osinski Ind I. 'Idowlili. W - Oslnllli (,-3). L - Re, TODAY? BIG GEORGE has 14 delicious va .. guests, we have it by Ow tub-full. kow (6-5). H_ run, - Kln ..s Clly, DoiOreco rieties for YOU to choose from. 'l)~num (2). LH An,el", Fr"o.' (4). 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