, •• ,. .,(::; ~ '1 ... .' . ',,: f • ',. .... I • • ""1 " -4 10 ., .. .. . ces ., . ' Iowa Primary .. v. Eiection . , Rouradup ' owan. See Page 6 rlOd the People of Iowa City , , tWo \;ents a ~opy Iowa clf , Io.a, weaoe;a;,., JUDe i. t..... I , , i e Father, Like Daughter

lItiller." . ,_ , ...J .. ~allo'f~ ,:: ' HAWKtYIS • 'f· ,. #" S''\'~' " The 1956 Kawkeye Is now liein, dous t~ . mak~ dJstrfbuted at Itoom 201, Com­ lid mark. tlletr ••• I mlaleaUons Cehter. All Senion who applied 'for the book, and aU in MO'n~):~ other students whi'J IUbecribe4 Iowa Cl~y' ; ~ lor a copy, lire urged to pick up he third wiird . thelr boo~ ~re leavln, I~ Illot ' that ,,~. hOme. Room JOl wfll be ppen it was pe~ ' frl»m 8 a.m. tOeS p..m:, Wednes· The x'ii ' \ft~ , day, Thursday and Friday of this SAN FRANCISCO III - Adlai er stam'~, .'tlle WASHINGTON CIt - Hoqsc Re· week. S&evelllOCl attpped ahead of Scll. Eltes Ke(auver by almost 2 to 1 ~ida~e8 ' .w"~re publicU I~a~f Jp.s4:ph MartlD qy~l. , • " 1J0t was tjftil· til the (Irst returDI from Callfor­ Ie normal~. ed P-resldent EI~bow~r 8$ saying G - I 'f! nia'a DemocraUc: preaideDllaI prl· ,; Tuesday nl'ht It would be "danger. enera r- ears mAl')' Tue.,. . I ous to' nallMal ~tirlty;" to ,make • • • I , pen~Us t1)e. a .. in' the ' Corelgn IL __ CTION TOTALS AT 11:21 CST Y. are sol!1. ·. bjllloh~a(cu( New Missiles aid PrOgram. , ' " " • ,. \ With 4,741 of 24,&60 preciJlcts reo portin,: . ,,', Martlll ~de the $tatemenl to ') I . stevensoll , . . . 172,527 " . newsmen afterhe and otber, House Deve opmenf Kefauver ...... 94,910 . ' (SVI 'lI.t., leallCrs-Demcici'als as wed as Re· ' AIOUT TO GRADUATE and become. te.cher ~ 1011_' In the ..... publicans ;- liail con(elTed for al· WASHINGTON III - Th~ .biaelJt The count Includecl the tabul •• ,teps .. her father .nd gr.ndf.ther. both ,"",IMItt educ~, C.~. molt 90 mlnute~ .'Wlth the' President. worry of the gilD~ral in c:harge of tlQn from 130 ot t,415 Loa Angeles .,.i.. Nufflne of Pittsburgh, Pa. stopa for • moment .. e"emI ... "­ Ii '. ned lMi' cion " detendlng thi~ cou'!tty a~aInst s';lr' preclneta. Loa Angeles County has ,ert;.lt ef her distinguished gr.ndf.ther, Ch.rl •• C. Nuttine. C.~ ~\se~ ~e~ ca t : • .fe~ PrIse' Soviet air' attacks l~ that in- I'OUIhly ~ per cent of tho state's tri .... who will ,r.duate Friday from suI. la the cfaughJfr .. Chart •• in; tile WhIte ~oilae ' Cabinet ril()m terconUnental ballistic inilsllea o~Jhc .Coptlo,ental DcfcnSCl Com: million reaJatration 1n deddlnr the EJsen,~ww .."S , , ~~" . ' L~CS6 ~rid and the Air De/e.nse Co~ wIn1M!!' of II pledlecf votes to tho ,'" 0" n'0 r'• ra • ' e' e'pS . .' t9 . IIQth~a:ize a . ",!IOO>~~~ .> ald ma!1d, offered this personal Dcl1lQCraUc presidential nominaC. H~ pfO~i'.am (lir ~ " '~~ ' yea~ s<,rt. cern In .tes\iJ1lQl1)' made pu " InJ conventJon. IN. JUly I" .. ' "''', " Tuesday /l" lite Sen~c Air POWf ' President Ellenhower, unoppos. ·· -I ' SUI:r ' d'- .:...1 ,Nelth'er . t.i4rt\1\. nOr : tlK! , ~ Investigating subcorrimlttee. I ' ecf on the Reptlbllc.n ticket for 70 gave .Bt\y Indica.. t>arlrldge said Soylet ani'! GOP dele,ates, drew 158.188 voted ;..I a·' m' I Vs r,a"" "ItIO' ·n,",',. t~Jeaoors wllether" 'PIl'~~f the Pt'eSl~t Infenlls U.S. sCientists bolhare confidently ill L··lIe E 3 - _Incts Oem F, to .Insi~ 011 ~oratloil ', 'of ~ :Cnil working on the lCJ)M, cx~ed to I cr.; c!bI~mi,;' R~~PUb1kans :n ~{tlOUn1lrut \lY, tile , ~se Icominlt·· span thousands·,. of, m41f!'s. or' ocean (nail,...... ,. " le"1 II"V) the roll. by 712,000 • . On the 30th anniversary of her mother's graduatlop .wlth high dlstiri~: ~t\. 'fhC H~ W,~ : to M,~hl,rt ~. , In 30 millutes ' or JeS,B :.and drop a A CONSTRUCTION WORKER WII not 'nlu...... I.te Tuesday afttrnMfl when hi. motercycl. IMI .... mte The StCvenson • Ke(auver show.- tiqn (r9m SUI June 8, Catherine NUtting of Pittsburgh, Pa: will become bate. 'on thA 1.",Il ,Wedneiday: " ':, sodckn and devasUitm"' , nuclear flames.n Hlfhw.y I, five .nd _"'.If mil" e•• t ef 1_. City. Den .....,.. .. 11. H. I .....~e, w•• . h d t f th U ' it " . ''l' 1": '! , • _L W I h .. _t I th u. I I W • __L...... dOwn, erlUcal for their chances to a ftCW onor gra ua e 0 e mvers y. ' • ' " , Af~e'r , th&.· confe,rence, _Mal'\ln said bl~~ on unsuJpectlJlg clUe. or t_on to "t r.nc "Y. pIS.. ", motor at .fter e .ccl.nt. ow wal at.y", ". eat r ...... - lead . the part v'. 1..... tt-ket, .... Ip. of Seer ~.r , Her lathe",, Charles D. Nutting, now actl"ng cbancellor the Uru·ver· F1~h qwCr, ' etary,;' 11 f Statc areas. w'hlle w·-...... ln' on a .."rld,e con"trvct,'on• I-L.- ... "'-remw , ed pert up int.erftt" ...... _ '"and ann" d. ,5ity 01 Pittsburgh, was alsq an -- \Joijll lJl'Ostea: . Dulles anOcAIIJll. /ir; "My poil)t of, yiew is tha~ the tImated 60 _ cent turnout _ ._ honor graduate in 1927 In the SUI ' ~ . .... df 'd r i :'f £. •1.. th t f SO i t tt k b ICDM I ..... III CQUege or Liberal Arts and In 1930 A ';J,~ V ' thull ~, ~ ~r , .c a ~J1\a!l 9 ··"!" rea . ~ y e ~ ,ae . r q S an otherwise dull election. ~ t~.l CpU f L na. .I:.', OU Join, t· ~Iqf~, 9~ St.{If . alt ~ptes~ed so frl.Jtit~lp, to me th8t.""We~ Il was the Iut. and bluest. of r;.mhe Nut~~: cam~::Isre ~ad~:~ at ' ;, . the. vH:.dr_l~ ;\X~ '''da .. g~rO\1s , to, c~n noC aIr.... to "POt ,ll:ss their '~IkUlln ibowdoWns. Both ar'I clat . b k to 1 h C th . natlona!' ~Co~lt~ It> mate"a eot ,811 into -the ' delense'. than we can' into ... _...... the out-me .. hDOU,h to "V es IlC , w en a . Went t'o' I tt f ' ,...... the If "'de jd ~ ,...,w"'" '"V" etine's grandfather, Charles C. Jar,.!! 'a. tpi I ' ..,. tbC '1,,1-.000,000 0 cnse, Pettr~ sa . 86-Year..()ld Oracl Say. lwiII, the DOmination in Chlca,o Nutting, joln\ld ' the SUI zoology . • votM ~ the: UOUJe cO.mmittec. "PersOnally t1)ls seems to be an Dext Auguat. or at Jeut Influence faculty, to serve until his death in H,.gh S'choo'" 0/ Martin aakl 'the:Presldent, Dulles 41most in~lua~le 'frGI:llem, but our LONDON ~yprjot exlemists openly threatened Tuesday to put a He Will Min Coed. the.secllion milbtily. Both pre· 19%7 both liS head of the depart· and'.Rac,Md 6l1)re "fearful"·.that scientists say It .~n be done an~ bullel i!lto Field Marshal Sir John narding. The British immediately ; LOS ANGELES III _ John Bur. dleted victory. ment and cuflltor of the natural any /iuch ,eclIiet",n would, have "a w~, sho~ld be gett/I)g al~g with It." tightened their elaborate pol1<;e system for protectiRg the Cyprus gov· ,oyne Ely graduates witb honors California, which usually pledges history museum. Dna of the last very dlsa.~. effect on ,NATO," We are study ng the problem, erno[ and members of the Brtllsh Cabinet. t Its "U I tion .... - to ' Mrs, Elizabeth Schoenfelder had .... WI " he continued. "We are making h Saturday at UCLA - a the ripe n.. ona conven v"""" a honors of PrOfessor Nutting's life· Speake~ ...... 1) J;tayburn, the pem· prelIminary e4Umates on what is The threat-the first made openly In the BriUs rslcs-camc in leaf· a,e of 86 . "'avorite lOll," has never seen the titne was an honorary LI•. D. in an eighth grade education when ocratl~ .Ie., . told · neW8me~ ' ~e requited In the ~ way of tossed from a car racing "J'U miss those coeds, • o'clock likes 01 the iDtenalve bamstonn· June, 1926 from CQrnell College in she entered SUI in the fall .of 1952. personally feelil ,the House commit· and locations, comunicaUops,..aDd lI)e streets Manchester. Russ Church Leader classes and coffee brew. They 1111 by praidenUal contenders. 'I Mt, Vern9n, the same month that Friday she. will gradUate from tel!; co( t!lO ~,y. a~t. he , a~d antimisslles and so on, but we stm 160 I'rbm kept me (rom (eellng m age," he Ste entOI!'. manqers looked (or his future daujlhter.in·law gradu· SUI with a gradcpoint average of that there were ·no s~cific conel~; do not have a workable solution." Harding, show· laments. a winnina marlin of 200,000 to ated from SUr. 3.74 and as a Phi Beta '· Kappa slons. or re(.1jtMlendat~os ~ached Parlridee CJulckly added. in an· ing no concern, Re·e 1 Tea ch" g Six o( his Beven children - and 300,000 or the expected 2 mUlJon Catherlne',& mother, the former member. at .the. sed!ori ~th Els~hOwe~. swer fo a question, that scientists ~:ve: behind ' J C S In S four grandchildren, too - will be Democratic votes. Kefauver held Mary Agnes Flanagan ' of Iowa ~uP"arte~8 ,of, the committee cU,t had wor~ed ollt a eoullter:weapon dg of on hand when Ely lets his sheep- till prediction he would take the City, majored In classical Ian· Squeezing her cOllege education hav,e contetld~ It was ' ~cess~ry It in ptlncipJe "but it has not yet tlVCII from GREENWICH, CQnn. III - Met· skin 8S a bachelor o( arts in music. state by 115,000. guages and prior to her marriage between that of her two daughters, the J>UI iJ t9 :i. ~ 'House , al?~val. been translated Into any hprdware ernment ropolitan Nikolai, high ranking He got all A's and B's in his lour No partY'lWitching was possible taught Latin in Williamsburg and Georgia and Jeanette, Mrs. Scho. In this e~ year. withOUt an and until we can prove out the gi ovLoernmctoent prelate o( the Russian Orthodox )'Cars of college.. in the j)l'elidentiaJ.prefcrcnee vote. University HIgh Schools .•A major b' .. r 'I .... h n n n EI bo F b 10 1- In a ...... In E u'r 0 pea n literature and enCclder said that sile Is "{ulrulb1g even Jg.1l 1'...... , ' components and " llgur~ out a way sing the ( a I t h, declared Tuesday his y was rn e. ,"''', ~ 3,_. 173 fellate...... Demo· '1 tJ, •• . thougllt, Miss Nuttin, has signed a a life long ambition." The older Rayburn ~Id . the conferees dis· to make the tllillg work opera· of the church denounces Communist mao one room log cabin in the OIatk er.ta had the choice of national .1 lI'lI~a:". 1 , ',r • contract to teach Latin next year SchoenCelder daughter, Jeanette, eussed with t~enhower some de· tionally, I do not J'est very easy." eastern Mountains {If Arkansas. He wu COIIVentlon IIlateJ pledged to Ste- )' in Bremen High School in Midlo. was an SUI senior' in the fail oC mands I" C ii'~s that U.S. aid to ranean is I a n terlalJsm and Its teachings. living in the wild IronUer country venson and Kefauver. About 2.%77,- 1952 when she shoWed her fresh- YueoslaVia , , ahUt off because .of ( I'll '0'1' wJllch Prime Min. But the visiting Metropolitan, of Texas In 1878. 530 RepUbUcaas rerlstercd. t~:u!: father and daughter man mother around the campus. MaJ'shal Tlto I apparent reconcilia· ora VI e ' Sister Eden hat. said Britain must head of an eight -- man Soviet That year w.. the beginnlnl of III moat Cuell, however, Repub· sl 1,:' , "'Iccted to Phi' Beta Ka!l- th hi . lion wit!) M~w. Since his IH11 hold ' h .. del U t.._ • lsted his total of etaht rnoalhs 0( tram- lkanl aDd Democrata could vote were all " She passed e gti school ex· break with ttalin. Tlto has been " or c IIrc,. c,a on ncre, 1DS mar school. for rival party candidates for the :H pa, national honor society. Mrs. amAnaUons necessary for entrance w~ vi~{y by the United \ The "Kill Harding leaflets there ... no grounds (or conmct "When you learned to speD ·1JIl· Senate. 30 .ta ill the House and 49 I ' ~ I · Nutting was a charter member of and then was eXcused Cfom core State. wlth 'ir... ta 01 foreign aid. Ion I' nl I:;";,,.·W' (fung Into ~ancbe*r streets. were between church and state in tit: constltutionalily', you were con~d· 100 in the state Legislature. Cros. the SUI chapter of Eta Sigma Phi, courses In' sociai science, natural .tee . '. U sl~: "Dlanos. Cyprus Libera· Soviet Union. Nor did he give atfy ered ready for graduaiioo. I IJ'ICI- 0llII( 011 both tickets Is sUD aI. 59 I' 1~7 1 national classical honorary Crater· science and mathematics alter RaYQup" IIqed to give ~talL~ • tion Subcommittee, Great Britain: indication that his church opposes ua~ at seven." he recalled. lowed IJl th& state primaries. 69 I' , 1i2,1 nity, lind Miss Nutting was prcsi· paSsing proficiency exams In but nq~ed «t} spme House .mem· " EOKA." Preswnably thl$ Is the tbe leadershl~ o( the nation by the • By tho time he was 16, he pYI, dent of tllis group this year. them. She speaks G!1nnan and has bers 1I~llIg to offer an A zoning ordinanee, whlcb w~1 EOKA branch operating ' among Communist party. he had flJllabcd four years o( hiP Ts8l " ~. 1 1he 1956 ,raduate further fol· taken classes iii Hebrew, Arabic ~ . ~~ off any furth·, restrict erection of ~rtain types some of the 30 000 Cypriots living I' Nik l' b' ho of s"boolm' one term. 56 I , 112 ,1 I · b . b , Tlto's of . residences and business .fttab· .' MelropQ ,tan 0 a., IS p ... owed er mother's {ootsteps Y and Spanish. IIshments in eertaln af8. of Coral. In Britain. EO~~ Is the ~nned, Moscow Dloeese, lpoke at a news "The average person hasn't Confab Honors 1'¥1 r 2~' activities in the Newman Club, Mrs. Schoenfelder will graduate ville was read lot' the final time underground strlkin~ ror~e In CY· conference here at the Seabury learned a balanced life ollti.l he hu 156 I ail Uniycrslty organization Cor Catho· from SUI with a, "major" in both, and signed into law by the prus of the umon·wlth·Greece Hou~: seat o{ the Protestant cone throuch collep," Ely com· IIc ~tudenls, lind by studYil!g Am· religion and English. , ville Town Council ""'-day nl"ht, movement.. Epillcopal ....·-eb in the UDlted mented. erlcan Government {rom the same """" • """" the 142 I ;:"" "Religion was my choice as a The ordina",e calls {or reatrlc. Scotlabd Yard said It regarded S~tes . His delegation has been Next week he be,ins revising sui;Professor • I !....-I :~~[!:8~~, r1:::~~ . F, Robeson, a major and English, my husband's tions in live reals o{ the . threat' as genuine. The leaf· conferring bere for two days with 7S songs, eight sonatas, .Ix sym- 865 I . is. I Catherine's grandmother, Eloise choice," she said. _ industrial class A and B resi. Icts, addressed to Harding said: the Amcrican church leaders who phonies and one opera he baa com· DES MOINES 111- An sur pharo WlJIis Nutting, was' a '96 gradUate She' chose religion as ' one of her dential, 8IId' class J( and B busi· "You are (ul\y responsible (or visile bad per· Ics. Judie Richard T. Rivea of the ~hich Bti.II hasn't affected Ala- ~ to the group . Rob~r. wo n. Robert S Mletlael~n director'll formed '. serylee I" sponsorinl the The council also decided to con. U.S. Fifth Circnit of Appeals and ... directly becalllC this state OBIJ UIree c:.nta ., every dollar .. In illinois at Same Tim. the Sc~1 of Rellatcni said "Ad. bill to _top ~d to YUloslavla. duct a public hearing at 7' p.m'. P.artly cloudy skies and scat. Jud,e Frank M. Johnson Jr., of "un't unled in the JiUptioD speat for ' medIea1 reeearcb ill de- 6 OHICAGO III _ Bank robber" vlahll Mr.. Sc!boeIiielder' was "I think Ii. I. apparent to every June 19, at which time seated bids tered showcrs are predicted for the Middle DIstrict of Alabama wbic:b brou&bt the integraUoa rut· voted to reiearda oe meatal dIIord· atruck at almost the same bour mostly a n\atter of cautiOftiDc ber member of ~ HOUR, as weD as for oillna of aU Coralville .treets lo~a by the Weati1er Bureau. Bi,ned ~ ~rlt.y o~nlon bold· ~. ~," CbeIIDa said. Tucaday in aeparate parts o( 11· not to attempt 10 mucb cta,r.vork to every" me~r ,of . the Sell8te, will be accepted. TI'Ie b1da will be Iowa City ca1l expeet Ita fair II log bus ) seerelatlon contrll')'/ ..to " The Alabama Public SerYift . 'It Is the .l"ft!P'O'ibWtJ, of the UDoll an4 made off with .12,0Gb eacb lemeltcir • , ',' alie WII one ot that eert~y a lCarchin& reap- opeaeclat a COUDCU meetiDI whieh weather tlr conUnue . with little,: the 14th AmeDclment to the .Coastj., ComrnIukID. one of die ~ COIIIIIIUIIIt1 10 cit. ••., WItJJ tile lD one botdup and t14,000 In the those atudents wbd Is completAll)' pralsal shOUld ~e place," KDowl- will Immecllately .EoDew tile bear· chan,e. in temperat~; a hl'ltt , Jution. • . .. I ~ !II ~ 1Uit, said • dedIioa pi'e~ - -10 ftII»Ye tile etiIma lither, Ar.U·mntlvnte(\," • . Anct 1ItI1il4lltt il\Jt. of about 14 deJ{reell IS I'xpected. Judae ~bounl L)'1IIIe 0( the Will be appealed. ., ...... -.

.. t .,...... I ..... ". ",.k,,"nlJ.W ~. ; .. "",,.t_ MAWnt ." tI~f1 '"<11""1" - -~ p.,e 2-THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, la.-Wednuday, June 6, ltU The Daily Io'waR. d90~les by dean r{ J ., . The Dally Iowan Is an independent expression of SUI admlnlst~ation " policy OMeral JloticealnUlt \Ie left It' 't'he p.ll~ [ow,", orllce ..Room 201 Comn... ()f opinion...... C.nter. by • a.m. Monday t Jr publlchllon In The I!aUy lowun on Tuel!d.,. daily newspaper, written and edited by '{otit. for ottler week lIays musl be In by 5 p.m. two days prIor to publication. 1 r. The7 mUlt be typed or le,lbly wrllten and alaned. They will not be accept •• students. It is governed by a board of The Iowan, in tIle terms of a policy bl phone. Jl1ey will not be pubUshed more Ihan one week prior to the event. .• statement adopted by trustees in 1946, TIl. Dally Iowan ' re",no .. til. riCh! 10 AClIt noUce •. five student trustees elected by the stu· "will try to act as a good citizen of the GRADUATING VETERANS - 8 to 10 a.m., Room 32tAJ Schac(fer dent body and four faCtllty trustees SUI commun.lty and the community of Each Public Law 550 veteran Hall. Only those srgl1'1ftg '1he- sheet posted outside ''Schneffer appointed by the president Of tile uni- City. • , • w"ose situation fits all of the fo)· Rodin 3 2.) Liberal Arts, Commerce, Engi- petition only ill the sports in which Ile has nomic-minded age. By ARTHUR SCHLESINGER, JR. (EdUor', Nolo: The D211y ' lowan o( the three majo~ contributOrs to I noon and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. each !1tering. Law, Nursing and Gradu· ""III rua a UII or boolt. 0.. Ihe New Existentialist philosophy, Klerke- weekd~y. On the days whe~ the ~ e stiJdent!i 'must also. complet~ a • crossed "t11e line." • • • (F rom The New Republic) Book Sb.J( In Ihe Unlverslly Library gaard Heidegger and Sarte.> ,hall Windows are not open. sIgn up Request lor Selecllve ServIce Thus, a professional baseball player, - . While Wes Santee and dozens of UCLA American Paradgx: The Con. ~::~. w::~.:"':.~I!~ re!~ln~:::I~~s :~ Th.' O'CIlM of' Amerlc.n Lilltr. may be completed at the front desk. Form l()!l" blank in the Office of 'whether a star or a bush league bench· football players sit and wonder·why they are flict of Thought aHd Action, by rna.1 lnl,r.81 10 our r.ade ... ) all"". By Arthur Ekirch Jr. Long- inside the Veterans Service Office. tbe Registrar. Iyghest warmer - may play MIAA football, basket­ mans. $7.50 (An interpretive study ) pros and why their contemporaries on tracks Merle Curti, Rutgers; $2.75. By PHILIP SCHARPER of liberal tradition by a professor 195' HAWKEYE - The 1~6 HILLEL - Various scholarshiJjs, ~r cent hall, or any of the other conference sports. and gridirons the nation over aren't, the line In this volume Professor Curti (Frem Tho Comrnoaweal) of history at the American Uni· Hawkeyes are now being distriMt- awards and summer camp posl· 1 .1 of 18 ]n most other conferen~es - including grows more ~nd more vague. examines the historical record on ' Profiles In Cot/fage. By Sen- versity in Washington) .; , ed at 201 Communications Centcr tions are now available. Those in- " ~with • hi the Big 10 - the rule is "once a pro, always One theory for solving the problem is to The DI¥.lopment of Internatlon- instead of Campus Stores. They terested may conlact Dr. Fr\ldl)r­ the predicament of the American al Justice. By Sir Arpold Duncan may be obtained (rom 8 a.m. to Bargebubr at the SUI School of r next five a pro." remove all admission prices. With no money atar 101m F. Kennedy. Harper. ic~ intellectual. $3.50. McNair. New York University. 4 p.m. upon presentation of ID Religion. Jtge-a The "paradox" which concerns The width of the concept varies greatly bchind the event, the participants couldn't From the history of the Senate (Two le,ctures by the President o( cards. All students eligible for a pleting t when taken sport by sport. The general rule divide it up. Professor Curti is the persistent lion ." tension in American life between tlie junior Senator from Massachu- the International Court of Justice.) copy of the Hawkeye are urged to CARD SECTION - Applications . is any pay, from playing, coaching or con­ But sporting goods firms could, and s~tts has chosen eight legislators FICTION: pick up their books beCore going for Card Section' seats for faU r Gra~s thought and action. American cuI· ~lIege 0 l1ections with manufacturing or publishing would, continue to sponsor players, teams ture. he suggests, was founded on who displayed conspicuous political The Grand M..temoi"II.. By home. ~eme~ter should be mailed to Dave courage by championing a course Francis Steegmuller. Furar, $3.75 . " --, - '. Ad!)ms, Room 42, 222 E. ¥arket, craged firms, is enough to make a player a pro. ane1 1eague!. " . . I , , • a relatively new idea - the idea Ilf action which they knew to be The BHt Short StoriH of Theoo ·\ F·R. .E N C H EXAM .INATION , ~ Iowa City. Housing units and ae· ~d stud However, un "amateur" ice hockey .player Anot;h r ' means would be to elirninate that intellectual enterprise was no $3. litudied longer the monopoly of a unpopular, but which they also dore Dr.i"r. World. French fh.D. Examination will ,be credited University organizations may play three games with a pro team stadia and olber spectator areas. But the thought was right. In selecting his The Flight into , Eay,.. Jean given SaturdllY, June 23. 1956, Crom are open for cOnsideration. Years. ledged class, and that thinking and Studen ~ anc1/oJ' receive a regular pay check for play­ world loves the unde~dog and competition. doing should be united. But, for exemplars of political integrity, Bloch-Michel. Scribner. $3. -, ing - and still be an amateur. A pro or the At present the means of defining ama­ all this, the relationship between Senator Kennedy ranges in time The Way to the 'Gold. Wilbur • ~onors a $3.95: · caliber of Gordie Howe, Maurice Richard or teurs and "~olving" the problclII rcvvho thinkers and doers in America has from John Qllincy Adams to Robert Steeie. Doubleday. ludyQ\1 A. Taft, and his gallery includes OTHERS Mn. Ell Jean Beliv~a ll may apply for reinstatement as around mone~ary Jimits and rules ana regula- remained prickly and uneasy. At LeHers 1.'00 Et\III times. as in the first years o( the the famous - Webster, Calhoun, Sialinist Russia; A Marx'.1 An.: tIIobbln •• nn amateur after year~ of major league play t~n~ ~ , Non~ •• po republic, scholarship. and action George Norris - and the forgotten lysis. Hldron. ' Writer Says Bigots Raymond -and get it. Some of the top amateur hockey As long :11> the search for a solution re­ have flowed together; but at other - Edmund Ross. whose single vQte The R.ad to Peace and to Mera' BULLETIN Bode; Phi , Democracy, Vols. 1,2'. Boris Goure· Ar~ Well-Liked . D, Boone; . players in the U.s. and Canada are former mains on that level it will fail. times, such as the present, there ~rlll; Mrs is a marked hostility between the I vitch. InternatTonal. $20. TO THE EDITOR: ~omlC$. D George Moore: A R~onsl"'a. I was sitting Mxt to a guy at a Richard intellectuals and the rest of society. dor Rapl , t tlon. Malcolm Brown. Washington. lunch counter Ilist night and he tsrye a high value on education and M. Salter. Toronto. about that time (some say the often referred'to as the cold cruel world. classes abou~ one third will continl,1e their learning. As a thoughtful histor­ Wednesday,• June 6 l!t~':iu~: · It is fitting to look and see what they education in 'J ~olleges,' while at the 'turn of Power anc! Community. Robert year 4) a favorite son was born roto!ne. ; 1 , ian, he cannot conte,\t himself with Strausz-Hupe. Praeger . .$3. , called Christ and he became very Nothing scheduled-close of sec­ b . Des M , a single answer to so complex a llad u.rtrlal .. have accomplished so far and what awaits the century' Qnly few of them_ were able to Crumbs from the Master Table. well-liked for a Jew - so I felt ond semester' classes rlfo!nes ; ::. them in the future. do so. The p~rcentage of persons completing problem. He traces tile mistrust of Cheavant Derriclts. ·pageant. $2.50 quite happy being a Jew. But Thursday, June 7 nursIng. intellectuals to a number of fadors 6:30 p.m.-SUl Nurses Alumni ",countln , In the last generation education in the college curri(}lla is rising every y,ear. The Ca.. for Mdrn M.n. just a few years back we had a !!:ay Win - to the equalitarianism of the Senior Banquet - River Room, r Olnes. United States may not have improved in This mass educati~n has -raised standards Charles 'Frankel. Harper. $3.50. big war and a depression and an- frontier, to the utilitarianism of Ben Franklin. Nelson Beecher other bigger war and the Chris- Iowa Memorial Union. Floy B of living in Afrherica, but it cannof guarantee business community, to tbe nno'm~,_, ¢lty; loh quality, but it bas broadened in scope, and Keyes. Hanover. ,2.95. tians said the Jews caused , all Friday, June' pombe; SU today's graduate has studied, and will study success eithe~ ~~ hjgp. school or college level. tism of evangelical religion, to the 9:30 a.m. - University Com­ Orovej Ja Th. Cost of the N.tI ....1 H.alth this. Wars are bad and depres­ Sl. Fairlie df he enters a university, courses which liis The 014 ruler for success have not changed. tensions of the cold war, to the S.nico In England and Wales. sions unhealthy - and I didn't mencement-Fieldhouse f:ngineerln philosophical "revolt against Saturday I June' Berrier, ' grandfather never even dreamed of in 1915. They neYfr will)f progress is to continue. Brian Abel-S~lth and · ~. M. Tit· want people to t.hink I had any­ Mound; son ." • muss. Cambridge. thing to do with these so I be- Alumni Day. , . Grinnell ; In our day possession of a higl1 school r • • .. .. • The Sal' of Amerl"ft Football. came a Christian. Christians 10 ;30 a.m. - SUI Alumni Assn.­ tnce, V , To the grdduate, schoQI at any level can Senate Chamber, Old Capitol. 'Beth H • diploma is almost taken for granted, and a IN AN APPEALING conclusion, Alexander Weyand. Macmillan. seemed to be well-liked and I lmol"cne; :, colleg~ deg{ee is expected: The acquisition provide no ~ore than an outline of knowl­ PrOfe$sor Curti argues that the best St;n: Kennedy $4.50. was happy. But soon found that Sunday, Jun. 10 mer. phs Nothing scheduled. Dorothy of the first is painless. Gone is the era of the edge and instill in ,students habits of or~lerlr hope of resolving the conflict. lies, The Politi" of the Pru ..ian AT. ·some Christians could hatc. A Prancls D . not in the withdrawal of the intel- prevented the impeachment of my 1640,1945. Gordon A. Craig. Ox- few didn't but many people Monday, June 11 CIty; Ral ·•. rickety old school building, dark and poorly thought. The~e is another essentJai ivr suc­ lectual from socie~y, but in a re: Pre~ident Johnson and thereby put ford.' seemed to expect me to hate just Nothing scheduled. lt y; Don cess. This is ~ilIingness to work. Sc1looling is r. RD. heated; gone is also the necessity to wade newed effort to participate in so- the office of the Chief Executive DIf' Bundesclevtsche Lacht. SteC- because I was a Christian. In Tuesday, Jun. 12 ~rfl. "Pe 'through snow or mud to attend classes. not the end of education; the successful per­ cial reconstruction: beyond the reach of legislative an Brant. Stenigruben. fact, ' some even thought that a Nothing scheduled. HO, Iowa W.dnesday, June 13 James :.•. There are new bright school-houses, pnd son will add something to his knowledge "Only when American mob-rule. An Exlm"tl.1 T...... y. John' good Christian should bc well 1011a ; Do Nothing scheduled. school buses will provide transportation for almost every· day of his life. discovers and recognizes all • • * MacQuarri~. Macmillan. trained in hate. quoketa ; and talents as socially useful and THE BIG QUESTIONS for the Theory of Cultur. Chang •• Juli- WI!II, this gets us back to the first Thursday, JUfl8 14 l\'I".cat!n .. students living some distance a\vay. · Schooling will not guarantee success, bnt ..,lcnce. Jr important, and only when it capi- elected legislator in a democracy, an H. Steward. Illinois. point. I was sitting there and the 8 p.m. - Summer ~cssion Lec­ .l>u~lne.s e College also are made much more access­ will give one better opportunity for sllccess. taUzes these for the common good, as Senator Kennedy points out, are A History of Russia. · Bernard guy next to me slarted talking polio lure: "Musiealccturc" on "The Op­ Mrs. N \herapy, C ible to students with limited funds. Scholar­ It will put the individual on the road to use· will the antagonism between simply how to compromise, and Pares. Cape. tics. He lold rfte the lwo wars and eras of Mozart " Mr: '· :a:Q.b~·rt Law· N'n, chelTt rence - Iowa ships, fellowships, loans and part time em· fulness. thought and action, between Intel- with who/11 . ArtIculato I ..,.,y. Donald Da- the depression were caused by the 'Memocia1·, ~nion. 'boro; MH_ Mond.y, Jllii~'1'1 il:al enal ployment l)ave made it easier to obtain a Just as it was in grandfather's times, hard lectuals and the rest o( the people, Attempting to answer these 4Ut!S· vie . ~egan Paul. Jews. He said the Jews have 01- Stern ace finally diminish." tions conS\itutes the challenge to ways controlled the money and tbat All day - E n glis~ ' Teachers loudv l IIson college education. work today is necessary for everything. Ma· Workshop - Senatc Chamber, Old Ids ' Barb; "American Paradox" is thought- both the political insight and thtl F k' now the niggers were taking over ~IIY; Way • • • chines are doing the work of men today, but ful and tempered In its approach, political integrity of the legislator. Inl the country. Capilol. hen. D. ran g 15ychololf (For InformatIon "Iardln. ~lte • .,.. Today's high school and also col1ege m~n are ne1ed, to bllil~ and ma~ the ma- though somewhat discursive in its The electorate, Cor its part, cannot ' yond this achedule .•ce rtservntlon.. 1ft low. electr organization and not' always suf- reasonably expect infallible insight . I said, "I'll bet you're a Chris- the office 01 the President. Old I\'I rl"11 Wa graduate is immeasurably better fitted to chmes. I .' Ciciently rigorous in its analysis. from its elected representatives; INSTIAD OF PUrriNG an ex tian," ,~nd he replied ,enlhu~i~Sti ­ CapltoL1 ton. cope with life than was his grandfather. But, , Work todliy has taken a different form, q John B Thus Professor Curti's definition of demand extraordinary political tra burden on the publ1c, It w()ul~ c,lly, Whr.' yes, aren t you. I liD. Tlpto at the same time, he will also face stiffer but it still ~ demands physical and 'mental - anti.intellectualism is not at all courage of (them). The elector- be fl\f better ~o restrlct franking s~ld : .. I uscd to . be, but now Too Complacent 'l'r!l>ol1; B­ times clear. Does anti-intelitlctual- ate. as well as the elected, is often privileges of government agencies I m a ..blgot. They seem to be wcll Vinton: VIi cot,npeti~ion, for there are more trained per· energy, e~r!lestoess and devotion. (Counell 81uU. Nonp.r.Ul Walcott; C ism ~ean a contempt for logic and faced with the necesSIty of adjust- and congressm~n f alld have federal liked. R IItrt CI G Ther have b en few limes in D. Wapell. ------~------~--- learmng, for the usc of reason? Or ing ideals to reality. agencies pay postage 011 the vast a aus, church~9 Waterloo; recent history when the In •. Ht t: does it mean the conclusion-. ' numbers .f bureaul a1'El Ineillded could be. shortened ,by providing Cor more a problem In prarjically I. uc clall r;.,nUl •• ta: 'aU other mah .JblCrill- Clt7 &cI11or .: ...... "lin I'IanabUr, c~ I4lr.~.n Waxenllerl sor Curti for not yielding to the . Th. Wrl ..r OIt"n.d. By lJarvey As the gro.",th '0' thele ora.mza. all allPOllltive cornmhliion. every city and many rural corn' , acbool It. '" =tJ:rI:. )'.i!U .• Ix mon~, ,0.141; ".WI U'* ...... :' I)an ~n CIniIIIa~ MI1'.t' .<:h.rle. A. ~.rtnett current fashion of Inventlni a d~vU Breit. World. ~.7!;

•~ ~, , TNt DAILY IOWAN-I..,. City, 1•• -W ... sUy, June 6, ltS6-Jt... t " ..... SUI Gymhp$f .:is: .pr~pareCl; Antelop'e Dance? SUI Marketing Specialist -

101 Corn_ non TueMl.,.. takes 'ChIlO ~ LeiTe "Course o publication. Lists New Retail Problems I be accepled IAn SUI senior from Sibley who pie or ae~ion,," lie 8ar_ ~w, "andhe wasn't the only class member A shifting of merchandising con· ~ts are organized consumers, 61 JK'f' cent of aU adn!rtising was to the e"ellt. trol away from the retailer under­ ~~ss::: ~e .c:~s "!~:d~~n; ~~~ sneake(i in, early to take a seat in w~ was a bit8~ed ~y_the nur~'s WIth memOOr5hips in disc:ounting national. or initiated by the maDU­ Ues discounting of Ust prices. an c.re this semester will have a lot the. back.' l}ut be 500II got to skill and speed lit shIfting that m­ clubs, unions or associations " faeturer. In 1935 there was a 5G-50 tAl Schaeffer SUI marketing specialist suggests practical.,information at his fin. feelrng completely comfortable in fant around. Erickson notes. ' balance between national and local g' -the- sheet ot, in new issue of the Iowa Busl­ ger tips he starts raising a ,lfO\Ip and thinks now it is one Kuiper's fiancce, Virginia Mc­ the advertising, Erickson points out. 1!' 'Schaeffer w~n ~he ne Digest. Tracing the background of the -ehirilt June fl\mily of his own. of ~ most practical c:eurses he Carty, will graduatc this month discount trend, he obser\'c that in The writer disagrees with the .And nobody is likely to call Rich. baa taken. . from Grinnell College and the cou- Manufacturera and consumers the exami· today are playing more prominent the past manufacturer. looked \;Cw that cut-price selling bas beeD tion will be Kuiper a sissy for taking the Hamet Stevens of tl)c bpme eco- pie plans to be married in July. more to retailers to push goods am roles in the distribution, selling and caused primarily by manufactur­ the summer cturse, because he's a husky Indi- DC!mics faculty teaches t~ course Virginia and he were classmates at through to the consumer. And most service of goods, Leo Ericbon ers' emphasis on ,"olume, fo~in& vidual who has completed three and •. bringS' in eJSPCrta Iii' p"re-sebooi Sibley high school. Kuiper will 01 the $BIes promotion was done at prices down at the retail le\'eL Al­ Y'~ars of competition on the SUI edu~a(19n, nursmg and JNldialtics e.nter the air force in Augusl to says. . Therefore, they expect greater the POint of purchase, he says. though "high-Ievcl productloa bas ~CEMENT­ Gymnastics Team, having served to JHve.Jectuces and lead discus- complete his stint in the service. Even though the manufacturer ha Lencd and accentuated tbc dis­ captain of the group In 1954.55. sions in their particular areas. Aiter that, he hopes to do graduate financial rewards for theIr work. tered in the aa As a result the retailer's profit set the list price on his items, he count trend" be says price-cutUn, t Office and KUiper 'will receive a bachelor's de. Kuiper reeall • .as parlieularly val. work in clinical psychology. Io~mcrly round that prices and re­ is "b ically a sign of ahifUn, gtee with a major in psychology at uable 'some Information on feeding Will he prepare himself to work margin is often aquec7,Cd in the of 0llenings process, he points out in his arUcle. tal] profit margins were beyond his funcLions within the chatmell of· should send ~mmencement .friday. , Of infants' and small children elven with children on a professional COntrol becaU8e of the nature of the distribution ... lJ(uiper registered for the course to tile group ,by Amy Daniels. for· level? The decision on that will "Some Cauaes and Implications of s to that of· the Discount Movement. .. distributive setup. Thus high ro­ He says the retailer has allowed he campus. ) ... child eare partly by accident,. mer researcp piofessor Df butrition have to wait until he gets into WI margins carne into being. to some of his sales promotion and IlLt he is now thoroughly sold on Its at t~ Iowa Child Welfare Researcp graduate study, he says. But his Erickson cites Increasing "pre­ postcard or selling" through national advertis. A1\pport tHe manufactur('r.whole­ post-sale service functions to "slip ndum at the ",lue (or men. Thumbing throqgh Station. Dr_ Deniels became inter· child care notebook and hom~ Ii· I I Phot.) saler-reiiiller-<:ansumer pattern of away (rom him." And this has tlie University catalog In eomplet- nationally known in &be l~'s for brary oC government bulletins lind ANTELOPE DANCE HEADDRESS is unpacked by Roy Sieber, SUI ing, manufacturers' store displays lisp­ distribution and to pay for certain pened "so gradually that he bas btg thcir registration for the second her .. re·se~rch i~ ' nutrition at SUI. books collected during the last .rt instructor, in preparation for the Afric.n Sculpture exhibit to be and appliance service in factort branch agencies al examples of services, Erickson explains. not been awan: of it," TIle rctail r IVE - The ... s~mester, Kui~r , a'nd sever~ ~liiper can give )'~ tips on aU semester should help make raising 5hown in the ~UI Art Building Friday through July 31. With 160 piectl flj)cnds were trYlDg to choose an p""se; of care fot imaU children his own family a satisfying I!xper- plKted to point up maior traditions In Afrle.'s trib.1 culture., the shifts in acti"ity - and thus in con­ . But in the appliance field , for in· saw manufacturers and consumers ~ bo.ok drive "Laking on functions which he was ef:ctiv~ cou~se. . . from·. I;l~telislve notes which lie took ience, Kuiper is. sure. exhibit il the openinSl feature of the 18th annual Festival of Fine Art •. trol - from dealer to manufactur· atance, the manufacturer I now ~~s... .4pr stu· aivlng more services once uppUed willing to relinquish. He probably . Co~mg at:toss hstlng of tile class throilgliout the cour~. lie bas facts ' And if news gcts around the cam- It will be up a week ahead of schedule for the benefit of the Unlver· er. rrtitu~Il' ,. The chtld"care" someone said, .half on what YOllngsters pus about the wholehearted admira. ,Ity', Commencement visitors. "On many of his purchases the ~y retallers. One major appliance did not see the consequence.," c'te €( ,May 28 Jrl.. Immu'1i~ati~n' maker reports that beCore World Erickson suggests. ~Ing, Here s a course ~e pro- should have al)d . whCJI, · ~or. exam- lion of Kuiper's 65 coed classmates ------~...... ------consumer has probably decided shave becn what to buy before his retail visil. War II 95 per cent or his dealer He sums up "lIkely results of this haeffer Hall, bably ought to ta.ke. No .drubt all pie, from. a.lecture Dr. for his 10rthright attitudc about thc b~ ~vcrly Plan Med.11cal (onyocal11on The important shopping point he gave aervlces; today only about 90 tendency to discount" as t 1) short· Hall Currier of us coul~ .use thIS materia on our Qlson, ped18tdcian at U.mveralty need of prospective fathers to know per cent do, the article points out. own families before too many Hospitals. Mts. Lbra ThOmas. su- something about children chances looks Cor Is price, and, havIng more ening channels of diSLribulion from y.cars." But Kuiper was the only pervisor ' of pediatrics nursing at are good that Miss Ste~ens will The SUI College of Medicine will hold its sixth annual Medical Con­ leisure time today, he is willing to AJso the manufacturer is turning maker to user, (21 Increasin, em· one of the group who turned up in University Hoapltals, showed the meet a class with a little larger vocation Thursday at 8 p.rn. in the Iowa Memorial Union . spend a portion of it to earn a from trying to push his goods pha is on pre-selling at the manu­ I RES' - Pic. the class. class how to ,bathe. and handle a percentage of men come Septem· Principal speaker for the eVent will be Prof. Granger Westberg, of price cut," the Iowa marketing in· through the channels oC distribution factur r level, (3) a lumptlon of d 1956 Hawk· · structor continues. In favor of trying to pull them more sen'icing by the manufactur· haven't been "I felt a little silly the first cou- six-day?old baby, and Kuiper says ber. the school of rrligion at the Unh'ersity of Chicago and chaplain of tbat Institution's clinics. His top ic will be "Thc Role of the Physician in the "We are seeing what could be the through by pre-selling the con urn· er, and 141 overall incrcuci In the in the }lawk· beginning of an organized consum· er. the Iowa marketing specialist sizes of retail businesses to achieve Communica­ .---:...-...:...... ;....-----, Communlty." Awards, scholarships and honors will be presl'nt d to studcnts duro er inovement. It has been estimat· continues. greater volume and ofCset lower to 25 cents cd that today 13.5 miWon family For examJJ!e, in 1955 as much as profit rna rg i ns. 1955 seniors, ing. con~ocation ceremonies, whic4 relatives and friends of graduating inrlividua\s, r 72 Will 'Gratlna!e University senIOrs In the Coilege of Medicine are welcome to attend. WSUI will rganizations, broadcast the convocation program. candids and Ceremonics wiJi be under the direction Of Dr. Norman B. Nelson, 10 Eastern Briefs medical dean at SUI. W. W. Morris, assistant dean for medical student afCairs and associate professor of medical psychology, will officiate .smokers Have More W'ith Hi~h . 6~~or$ during the pre entation of awards. - Prior ·" Railroads · sent session, • Seventy.two SUI students . will , GRADUATE COUNCIL - ProC. eferment (or graduy.te with special honors at tbe A'" ~: ' f . '.' ~}11' 1' Robert Michaelsen, director of the ears ' shofud: University's spring Commen~. ,(5en,t.· ~ · ,er ~hool , 01 Religion; Prof. Jerry Lawrence Present Lung Cancer Specks I draft board To To Cut Rates ment exercises Friday at 9:30 p.m: ,: I.' ...... ~," . Kollros, chairman of the Zoology NEW YORK IA'I - Ten Eastern DETROIT IA'I - Tiny specks of and' stati n~ ".1 11\ the University Fieldhouse. 6' I'! ~:.• " ~'. Department; and ,Prof. Manford cancer are found In I he lungs ot e Form L09 O." Kuhn of the SociOlogy Deportment railroads in the next few days will , r ,ac;"s 'Musicalecture' Here file with the Interstate Commerce cigarette smokers far more often the Office of ,The 72 are from the SUI eollege~ . .' ",. ",' " , C' have been el~ctf,ld to the Univer.sity New Life 1JO days of the Commission ' reduced rates for ex­ lor than among non· mokers, a medi· of commcrce, engineering liberal ';', ". ~ .1 •• , • ,", " • 'Graduate Council for three year Robert Lawrencc, conduClot-. music critic and hloderator oC the Me- port-Import rail (reight passin, cal team r ported Tuesday. ~ ademic year. , . nursing and :r.hc 1 terms beginning Sept. 1. tropolitan Opera Quit, WIll prcsent a "musicalej;turc" on the operas meree, Engi· ar~s, pharm~cy. Dedfh·P.ehalty through north.. Atlantic ports In an These cancer specks, and other g and Gradu­ prmted SUI Commencement pro- ',~ . ' , .... , T •• • of Mozart June 14 at SU.. I 'i effort to end a historic freight rate Child With cell change that might be fore­ o complete a gram will indicate the top two ~i MONT,COMERY,: Ala . .Lft ~ Mrs. 'RAC;T.I~AL ~URSING - Seven- The first even~ of the \ ;n i~ erslty's summer lecture series, it will be differential, it was learned Tues- runners oC cancer, were detected ti ve Serviee cent from each 'college-a total ' o'f Rhonda ' ~,ell~ ' Mlittln an aub\lrn. teen students in, thc one year of open to the public at 8 p.m. 11'\ (ht! by paln taking micro capic exam· the Office of 12 students-as graduating "wfth halrect: · ~altl'. e~,. · facCJ . cieath for practical nursing program in the Main Lounge of Iowa Mcmorial Woman Killed as dafl;e ports of New York and Bo.s· Haifa Brain Ination at autop i s or 117 men. , 11 the arscnic kilhng of h f rth Cppege of Nursing will receive anion, explaiR$ Prof. Orville ton would be gIven equality with CHJCAGO t.1'I - it pr tty a·year­ Only 16 had nev r smoked at all. I»ghest distinction," the I)ext three husband. ,! . . ~:. cr . ou month oC supervised experience in Hitchcock, speech department, and Car Jumrs Curb oth r north Atlantic pbrts under old blonde girl who was bani hed or onLy Irregularly. Thirty·four, aU scholarshi\1s, ~r cent from ,.each cQllege-a to· ~he .wljs convicted by a 12-man the care of eldcrly persons during chairman oC the series. thc new rate schedules, If they are from school because or ugly be­ mokers, had di d of lung cancer. HOCK ]SLA ,111. m-A won,- approved, according to a spokes- camp posl· .1 of 18 students - graduating jury::Monday nlghf and under Ala. June. [t is billed as a "musicalectul'c" havior and unconlrollabl convul­ The oLher smokers and the non­ ble. Those in­ an was kill d Tuesday when two I man for the New York Centr'al sions i ready to start liCe again - smokers died of othcr causes. \ '.;.with ' high distinction:: and .the b~ma. law "'1Il bE! sentenced to .elec- • - because Lawl'cnce illustrates his ears collidecL at a downtown int r- Railroad, one of the roads filing tOr. Frf;)der­ next five ~er cent from eac/t col- "rocuti~h . Tlie Jury fixed ~he plen. Arpbs Hint New remarks at the piano, playing from with a new personality but only The tiny cancers, localized but SUI School of r section here Dnd onc jumped Ule thc new ratrs. half a brain. curb and hit her. , The new rates eliminate the pot ntinlly capablt' of spreading, I,ge-a tolal of 42 studen~om-. altr-,' .,._.' ' '. 0"1 F h' PI ~:r~f~;~s ~{ ~;f;a~~,~ ro:n~l ::~~: were found six times more fre· pleting their work "with distine- AfJ:er the , sen~e.nee is pronounced, franc Ise an Magic Flule." Mrs. John A. Hayes, 57, oC Rock three-cent per hundredwclght low- The girl hasn't had a con\'lIl ion ] land, died at a hospital a short er differeDlial enjoyed by Balli. si nce the right side of her brain quently in heavy smokers Ulan non- Applications t\on ." . it ,will be ' se,~ aside pending review Lawrence has been a between- time after the accident. Police more, Md. and Norfolk, Va., as was removed May 14. he i d · mok rs. ats for fall : . Grades from all undergra~liate b~ ~ S~lite , Supr.e~~ Court undcr AMMAN, Jordan IA'I - An in- the-acts commentator of the week. ~llege or university work are av- A abama (\JutO~atic .:appeal proc;e· formed sO\Jrc~ said Tuesday four Iy Metropolitan Opera radio brood­ wt're looking for the driver of one well as the two~nt per hundred- scribed as ehcerful and cooperaLiv In e\'ery man, the microscope ailed to Dave of the two cars involved in the ac. weight advantage held by PhUa- now, and oC normal intcllig nce. picked up some spots where cells E. Mai'ket, craged to determine the standing~, du.re , for . ~~~ cases. ' . . Arab count(ies arc consideri[1g a casts fOr the past 15 years. The cident. They said he apparently delphia. it was said. '1 Instead of placing h r in an in· lining th air tube showed changcs 'and students so ranked must have Mrs.-Mart}n, 49 weighIDg 170, .prcwent .using .Mid- author of a of lor units and ac­ a.n~ pLan ~ 'Q IIj1U~lIJS ~umb.e.r b09k~ left the scenc on foot after the The rate diffcrentl,l goes back tltution. Cor special care, her par- Crom normal. Such changes were organizations ~tudied at ' SUI for at least two admitted the , a/'s!,!nic ~eatbs ' (If tile Easterrr oil rfrom giving Israel children on opera and ballet. he far more frequent among smokers, Years. thr.l!e ,.of ,her . elii1~n, her mother . . is the co-author of "The ]\1ctro- crash. to 1877 when ocean transportation nls plan to send her back to chool ation. and more common among heavy Students who wi1l graduate with an~ two hu~nds. ,she, 'Vas tried military or , e~o~omlc. al~. politall Opera Guide" and is pres- Coroner Leslie II. Banning said rates at other ports were higher In the fail. 1Ionors are' . ol)IY fbr ICHlilrg. her fQurth husband, The coun~rles consldermg a COllY ently completing a new book, "The Mrs. Hayes was standing on the than Cor either New York or Bos· ' Surgeons at Chicago Wesley le· smok rs than light amoker!. " CIIIUQe ~Mart~. _,... ;..: mon policy in dealing with forcign· World of Opera ." eurb when the impact of the colU- ton. Since 1935. bowever. ocean moria) Hospital d erlbed the ca e Polluted city air, or somcthlng ~Udy QuInn. chemistry. D. Ainoworth; Sb I d' owned oil companle a e Sa di sion sent a car drivcn by Clyde M. freight rates have been equalized at a ne\\s conferencc Tuesday. lse, might expl.aln the cell ehang('s Mrs. Elizabeth Schoenfeldcr, rellrlon e a so I'C l1)itted .• giving poison . . . s r u Conductor oC the Phoenix . Ariz. Crump oC Rock Island over the and Lhe 10 railroads argue there They did not disclose the girl's Ind Enellsh. lit. D. Amana : Melllaret to her CUrr4!Dt "qSb~nd, :Ronald c. Arabia, Jordan, SyrIa and Leban- symphony orchestra, CrOln 1949 to and the Cew cancer specks found iIIobblns. English. HD. Am •• ; SWney C. M' I "' . h h on curb. Mrs. Hayes was dragged Is no further need for the diffcr· identity, except to say she lives among non-smokers, the report Non •• , pOliUcal 8clence, HID, Atlantic; ,art n, .SOll of er ourth . usband' . . 1952, he commuted by air each about 25 fe t by Crump's aulomo- entia!. with her parents and three younger Raymond ThomJ)BOn. cenerBI Iclence, D. who is pataly~ from effects oC The Informant said under one \veek to appear on '[ctropoll"an said. LLETIN Bode; PhlUp BIIUnl', ,eneral bu.ln.... ' " • bile. Carriers seeking the eQualiUlUon brothers and sisters In northern In- D. Boone; Billy Govl,. accountlJl;. D. arsenic poisouing. propos.at being considered the Opera broadcasts. He has been a The study was described to the include the Erie; Grand Trunk diana. third National Canccr Conference :~~\~.~R ~~~:~~.~mIeY. bome eto' Mrs. ,.Martln; thfOu~h her court. countries where the oil companies guest conductor. especialiy with NEW UN OUTPOSTS Eastern Region: and New York, A member of tile four·man teBm Richard H. Keehn. economics, D. Ceo apJlQinted l~wy~r, pleaded insanity. have he!ldquarter~ would be asked the music of Berlioz and Mozart, by a team headed by Dr. Oscar JERUS_O\LEM. [srael Sector IA'I - New Haven " Hartford. 01 brain surgeons that handled the Auerbach, Veterans Administration ALENDAR Gar RapIds; Barbara Parker .•, Iemen- 1be state' coatencjed two physi- to r.emam nel\tral m any future hos- in New York's Carnegie Hall and Twelve UN observation points have ----- case gave this account: "'~errYmedhU1Cnau~.!'. DII·hCedH"D' J\ac2!lds;Rxal·d~~ cialls ,hAd examiliCd the' de~endant tilities betwc,cn Israel and the Arab in many European music centefs. Hospital. East Orange, N.J., Dr, NE 6, 1956 o e • ~n, 8. • ~ar ap •. . . ' 'I t t been set up on the tense Gaza Nt)MINATtON The girl appeared of normal Arthur Purdy Stoat, College of o Barlow. physIcal education, D. ~.ar and, fOlJnd .hor s/l.ne. . s. a es. The summer lecture series is a border, UN pokcsman Alberl WASHINGTON III - Presldenl health and disposition unUl she Lake; S~lIy Jo Cames, sociology. 'D. . . •,.. ;. \. ( !'" , ' \ Th t' th t '( th Physicians and Surgeons, Colum· dar lteml .re ,ltIJJlton; Rodney Schroeder. polltloal Sta~ 'Pfo~c'\tor~ . contended that e 'pres~p Ion was a 1 ~ p~rt of the 18th annual Festival of Grand said Tuesday.'Six are on the Eisenhower has sent to the senate contracted sleeping sickness when resident'l of· ~le'\Ce. HD. Ollnton; Jyhn McLatcble, Mr!r. . ullr,IM scrve" arsenic to her countries did not agree, their 011 FlOe Arts the cultllral accompani- bia University, and Dr. E. Cuyler leneral bUBlness. 0 , Davenport; Thomas - "~ ""'. " .' . 'l,. • Id I th ' f '.. E:gyplian side and six on the Is· the nomination of Donald G. Burt 'she was a yeor old. ~d.ms, philosophy. D. Des Moines; .'. hlisb1ttld ,to:'. ~'~ol\~~·, sC?1ne paltry companles wou ose elr ran- "?ent to Umver.slty summer ses- _ Hammond, dIrector or statistical ra_e_Ii_. ______~a_&..:po:...... s_tm__ as.:...t_er __ at.:...p_o.:...l_k_C_lt=y~, ..:.lo:..w..:.a:.:._ Partial paralysis affected her research, American Cancer S0- il II Mrs. Sandra Bet. Handford. Europe,n 8lb6dnt ' of Insurance /Uld get him chises. ' slons. The opemng feature of the left arm and left leg. She lost "left Uune 6 I .teratur" and thought. Ht D. Des ... t t the' '. , ' ~ft she '-'d ' Festival will be a 160 p'c e d' hI ciety. Moines: Jame. Hou.er, gentTaI bU8lne .., uU O. , w.ay ov . COw • marry. . . - I e ISr ay See king a Solution lide" vlsion - being unable to sec close of sec- D. Des Moines: John Nellon. lallor lind hill son." .' . .. ' .' ,. of African Sculpture. from Friday objects to her left when looking After each man's death, tho bdwotrial maMcemerit HD. .Del ' . . '...... '. . Failing Utall"ty10th P Ie 0 gh J I 31 ' lh A t b 'ld' trachea·bronchial tree - the sys­ une 7 r,tolnes; Mrs. Suzannc i.rrell. SWllne, .;Mrs. M~rt.,in ~a;trii)d her stepson .• r u u y In e r UI mg. straight ahead. She became a "brat"-mistrcating others, shout­ tem of air tubes Crom the windpipe urses Alumni ~~::~~in~~ ~HRe. rr.~ln~~t.,eer;:>' ~~I~~ elg~t ~.ont~ .:a[~er ~r .foUrth hus- Breaks Ma n's Arm through the lungs - was removed River Room, D, De. wed Ap.!U :. 27.J951. ing at her mother and destroying ~~rn;rln" , speeCh Jlat~oIOC)', b~d Okay Fred Seaton toys and olher objects. She suffered and sliced into 208 specimens or Floy . Baughman, educallon. D. Dow Cireult Soilcitor W~Uam F. Thet· n. 1(' to 12 severe convulsions a day, sections checked mJcroscopically nil 8 City: John WlnCert .•eolo,y. D, Dun- ford produced evidence· that Mrs. A utility. pole lineman was in Fit " P t for signs of tissue changes. ""c mbe; Sue Reider. En_lI.h. Ht D. Eatle Martin eollc.cted 750 on three in- Mercy Hospital here Tuesday after ~Iacking out each time. iversity Com· rove; James Webe •. poUllnl s<'lence. · .• ,.2' : ' , , or nerlor os Only a few sections from non· use Sl. Palrfleld; Darrell Wyrick. ch.emic.1 sllta4ce pobcles, sIIortly after one of the poles pickcd him up and 1be newest medicines. including fnclneerin" liD. Ft. Madison; Oolln Claude Mllrtm clled. ···, threw him. WASHINGTON ,.. _ Presl'dellt tht tranqullIling drugs, were usc­ smokers showed tile cancer species. une 9 lIerrl.r. polllical Iclenee, D. Grand ~ , ". _ . \Jr' Some smokers had as many as 40. Mound: John Rasmuuen. :IIlslqry •. p; , '.. ri,ncis McSwiggin, 36, Lone Eisenhower's nominallon of Fred less in her case and sh2 was broUJht to Wesley Memorial. One man killed by lung cancer had Alumni Assn.­ G:~~,n·8,; J~~~ldr'K.r , political 8run get turpentin" _ Ke·okuk Bus Line ){D. TIpton; Roxie 8eloller, music, D. 1 bl th " For All Your lacent 'rrlpoll; Betty AM Waller. nUMlhl,. D. same per.ona pro erne e rest bought several days previously just I/Inlon; Wlyne Tanll, Iccoul)th'" RD, of UI face. ' . for this ope~ation. Informed that Quitting Service ' Nonpareil) Waloott: DAVid Winter ,enera' science, . few times In D. W.pel~o; Edith Blo(, a.ountln,. HD. Onl)l more 80, In the ~ase of Rep. another ~oD , hadodropped the bottle KEOKUK IA'I .:... This city, one of lhe church~s Waterloo. Jam •• E. Orabow. tceounl· Walter Ii' Rogers . ID) or Pampa and broken I't Inf' Ht 0, Walerloo; Joan IIchumMln,"'1' " the first in Iowa to have public ed as they are PIke man8,emellt. HD. Wlterloo; Tex. He haa 81x chlldrel'!, . Trying to get' of{ paint without lAP Wi .....' ..' USED TEXTBOOKS I(ellh R8thjen. electrical enrln.-rlil', . , transportation, was without 'IIny POSTMASTER GENERAL ARTHUR SUMMERFIELD steps' ill .. b. Williamsburg; DIIV;d Lowe, m.rket- " On Memortal Day "ogers decld- turpentine ' when 10-year-old came corrido,. outside his office to ,.t "Super," • MW,_'~ after • hcs havc been In" Ht D. Wiota. ed, as did many anotber husband In erylng, \ pointing to ugly gash ofter 6 p.m. Tuesday night. .., I years than in long closed conference Tueld.y on how Ie meet .... " ...... 11. of. Current Edition DRlynard Rommerr.td. aceountlnc. Ht and ·(... • ... r to spend the day at caused by fallin" off blc"ele Tot· Eliner Dayls, manager of th(' we can recall. · Woden: Irvin, Do_hott, aceount- , ..'" , • I' Midwest Transit Lines, which op man" problem. POlt Office offIcl.l, _t with ••,.rts In ...... moI '"" HD, Waverly: Carol Lou r.;o\·ok, hollJe, dqlna "a few chores that eel 10-year-oid to doctor's home fi.ld to find a solution to the proltl.m of molimen 1IeI", ettKbd Ity nson for Chris­ me economic.. D, Carlinville. III.: Mrs Ro,erl "as I...... n calling 10 where five stitche- clo' sed the erates the bus line in Keokuk, said Whether Used at arb... Sue Work. Journollim. !tn, . . , 1 ., \' Y"" p clogs. In 1955 the Post Service reported 5_ dol IIite c._ which, .... acent. Despite his firm was Quitting bcC3Use i1 rOlb.wood, lII.c_Barbara Lee Enl\frl, my attention for the past several wound. prvic. said, Is .pprollimmly OM out of ,vory 2t ClrrMra. embers hip and "hH080ph)'. D, MentorbO.; Marlon K. montfls." · · Learn...! doctor had been about to was unable to meet expelJ,ljes. Iowa or Not • haplro. IO,umpll.m, H • louth Euclid, ... • . ~- . ~bi(~mO'p~ exist I Cath I'lne' E. NuUtn" European IIt- He told about It Tuesda" In a depart for call to country. Thought Re"enue has not been sufficienl es.. It 'Io , II I'ature and thourht, D. Plttaburrh, PI.; ul J it Itt be hel fInd tf I ., t8ry A. Har,vckl. ~I.m.ntary education, do}e. f , report to bls cqnstltuents m tg p u ,a res u , to to maintain service in spite of a 1, ' :'iIl~ljAity alld · Thorp} WII.; JIBnoy R. Funer. dr.' back home. take hIm. Ran out of gas on way fare of 20 cents, Davis said. on the ' march, , -\Ie an.s and Ipel!Ch, liD, 8r.dney. , " " . out of town ' IOWA'S FINEST a • • essi ve today in I ~ow Iouth Wales, Austrilla: FI .. G. Ro,erS tho\liht It .would be nlee' p.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill. rc the forces 01 ~entzal' civil enlt!nwln., D, Laml., to aUrjlrlae the family with a break. Terrific downpour on way back. DON'T GET • 20% More Protein l'tee.. fu.t fte IIid .cooked wlU, his own Got bome to find ~ater pourIng in ng and juvenOe I I OLD!!'T 'U'IL leii.!atlve, hallds. So lie bounded . b~8e"JeII~ dbrci F~aIlY found oUJ' MARRI ED • , • ,.. _ ' Albuq'-r. oU~oI bed at 7 '.m. . sera n a come stoppe . I ho i I mlng more "d J.. ALBUQUERQUE 1m "" • ".. , , Unstopped. . Mopped. • •• w t ut IN nSl our comp ... in prar,tlcally • 'lue claims the oldest elementarye found e/(g. but n9 ~read for "'l1Iere .wasn't much left of the Brldel krvice. - Invlt.tion., ny rural com- , r_chool student In Nljw MexiCO, S~ toalt' i panc~e , no~ but ~ lyrUp. holiday for resting purposes" Rog. Announcements, Imprll'lted No,. • ,. Mrs. Teresa RodrilUeI, U, of W,ellt Ihopplq aJld w./uI~ with one era said, "so we all went to' bed." klnl, Wetldln, Bookl, "Th•• be a growill I ~exlco City. She w.nts to le,rn thill, IlId another \ didn t get to . One result of a day at home: ~~'.' NOtel, Wedding , ...... [ the. pow~r 01 ""nallsh 10 she can Itudy be.uty cbor81 IInt1l .10:,30. • Ro,ers hall decided to spend his csented .by UJe •cult\lre. She '. takln, her 'Cla88C ••t . Deddcd to llef-n by painting, next holiday Clitchlflg"lIp on choft'S ~ onditlon. In tile ~OI'91lIldo Schoo\, , • scre"n. FOUJId new IifrB¥ ' can ... ·his offlco, • \ \., . " ( , ! ~ 10" , arid, "II 1111 1.' .'11" 11 - fi·,tlfI:;;lb 1"'1(0 Inllll , .. Page 4-THE DAILV IOWAN-lewa eit.,. la.-Wednesday. June " 1956 CUDS Beal' Rir:ates· Sugar Ray Trombley's f MooreTKb~spom~ey.ln 10tli; , . By 'I Vs. Aragon 137 Leads • 11 Sh ' , Since [ • Indians u ·oes as a . tation, th Braves DrQP'fo 4th Open Qualify t 1 hos been ':w~~!~ ~~d:!.~t ~~,~~~:u:!g owCl"~;~h~~~~~ ! ° 0 $ 000 S 01 champion Ray Robinson will de- DALLAS IA't - Bill Trombley, . from behind Tuesday) njght to at least. Co 11 ISlon 14, ml e fend his tiUe in September, and DalJas professional, led section LONDON iA'I - Flasbing a broad Door Yolande Pompey three tirnes ( ments. Friend's Bid welterweight Art Aragon, the con- qualifying for thg National Open grin, Moore faced about 100 re- in tbe lOth .round and win on a • To Mel troversial "Golden Boy" of Cali- Tuesday with a 6-under-par 137 for porters in his tiny dressing room 10th round technical knockout in I noes ore Cornia rings, is pushing to get the 36 holes. and fenced off questions about his a bloody batUe for the title at and troub shot. Thirty-seven players qualified' future plans. Harringay Arena . morc thn For 7lh:in There is a good possibility that {rom this section. with most of the "I worked hard to get the world The victory virtually assured. Fitzgerl the two may ha ve it out in the touring professionals who played in light heavyweight title and the 39-year-oI~, ;:7'i'h-poUnd Moore his 52 ca Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., in Dallas' two Open tournaments the proud of it," he said. "I don't want of a September. showdown fiebt , . the pasL September. past two weeks posting their qual- to give that up until all the shuf- for the heavyweight crown against J give his! Row Hailed "Ray definitely will deCend the ifying scores here. Cling around in the heavyweight di- the winner of Friday night's Floyd J. tion from I biggest 5i title in September against anyone Among the top players who fail- vision is sorted out. I' Patterson - Tommy (Hurricane) CHICAGO Lfl-Bob Friend's bid of three possible opponents - ei- ed to qualify were Lloyd Mangrum Moore conceded he got off to a Ja<;kson 12-rounder In New York's ness. , for a seventh straight triumph col­ ther Aragon. former welterweight and Lawson Little, former Nation- slow start Tuesday night but ex. Madison ~uare Garde~. , Comrel siderable lapse.. under a five-run Chicago champion Carmen Basilio or Gene aJ Open champions. Mangrum had plained : "When you're in tllere ~oore IS :ated No. 1 heavy. blast in the third inning Tuesday Fullmer, the leading middleweight 153, which was five strokes over against one of these eager young weight follOWIng tl\e retirement 01 ty at SUi as the last-place Cubs spanked contender," said Joe Glaser. Rob- the qualifying limit. Little had 150. guys it's best to take it easy. boy, cha~pion. Rocky Mar.ciano. and in a PIttsburgh 7-3 and temporarily inson's financial advisor. The qualifying was held over two to take your time." GOing mto the eighth round, like the nudged the Pirates out of first Aragon, 29, who ;S oetermined to courses, the par 72 7,029 yard Dal- Pompey, with a deep cut over his Moore . was behind on ~intB. As if kerosene place. get the lucrative crack at the 36- las Athletic Club Country Club left eye and another under his on a .slg na~ , the champIOn smooth· Milwaukee took a percentage year-old champion, said he has course and the par 71 6.496-yard right eye, told newsmen: "Twice ly shlCted lOto high gear and went lead. .588 to .585, pending a night been dickering here for the fight. Lakewood Country Club course. I couldn't see Moore as he came in to work ?~ the 27-yeaI:rOld, 171'1,· game with Brooklyn. " It looks good but nothing has Second low shooter in the qual- throwing those crushing rights." pound Trinidad challenger. , Righthander Warren Hacker been settled," he said. . iCying was Fred Haas of New Or- I' d Arch I'e Moore Moore stalk~d P?mpey ,. like .8 scattered seven hits as he won his Glaser and Ernie Braca anoth- leans who had 140. Tied at 141 ~~:ayO~~r h~~V!~~~ ~~:e~!vye~; hunter and nailed hIm 14 Urnes 1ft Cirst game of the season for the er Robinson manager, said Robin- were amy Maxwell of Odessa, H . ht T' 1 N? lhe ninth. Pompey was hurt, and last-place Cubs against five de­ son tentatively had been offered Tex., Jerry Barber oC Los Angeles, cause of a suspected cracked rib. eavywelg 1~ e ext he bled from ~uts around both feats. Hacker weakened in the $150,000 for a title defense against and Jay Hebert of Sanford, Fla. Closer .eyes and Cram hiS nose. ninth when he yielded a three· run Aragon in the Rose Bowl but f!I> There were 37 places up here In the fatal lOth, Moore. know- homer to Frank Thomas. agreement has been reached. with 102 professionals lind 24 ama- "'''~HfE ,/MOORE, Ing a world heavyweight title shot Friend, the mound mainstay of Aragon has a tremendous follow- teurs seeking them. ; W!lO''!? PI?08A8t.Y awaited him, bombed Pompey Pittsburgh's sensational National ing .in eaDfornia. It is said that at Ct.O$EI? 7'0 nlG' down for an eight-count, a nine- League spurt, suffered his third Jeast half of the group watches Couldn't Wall, /I£AVVWEIG!lr IITlE count and another eight-count. defeat against nine victories as he swaggering Art's fights in thE! HOW IIIAI'IIY/IEN liE Pompe~ ~as dazed, his legs was knocked out of the box for (AP Wlr.photo ) (AP Wirephoto) hopes of seeing him beateh. /lAI? ,#fARC/Allo 01'1 were. qUlvermg. and blood WIB only the third time In 14 starts. CHICAGO CATCHER Hobill Lan· PETER THOMSOti, ·young Brit­ , 7'IIE !'tOOR _ IIIf lI'At>~ gushmg from hiS cuts when Ref· ish golfer, starts to jump for joy , 7'11£ L/7r OF ~ree Jack Hart shoved Moore It was Pittsburgh's fifth defeat drith collidH with thlrd·blll.man Pat Uebel Graduates, In its last 15 starts. with a brolld smile on hi' fllCII Wed 4Y2 Hours Later rill! IH./6/8t.EtG away and motioned Pompey to­ The issue was settled in th" Eddi. Miklll in the eighth Innrng al he links the putt thllt he al­ About 200 Golfers wards his corner. third when the Cubs batted around of the Cub,' game with th. Pitts­ lured fIrst place in the $14.000 WEST POINT, N. Y. IA't - Pat WIIO'Lt. COMPETE The unofficilll time of the, TKO Uebel, captain and backfield Fa/? r/lE in a seven-hit attack to producr burgh Pirate, in Chicago. The Texal Open Golf Tourney in Dill· For National Day VAcATEO was 2:50 oC the lOth. Times 8ft five runs against Friend after two two were chilling a foul fly off IllS, Monday. Thomson shot a 7. star of the 1955 Army football , r!lRONG'. not officially announced in British were out. The Cubs collected only the bllt of Bill Vlrclon. The c ..s uncler-PIIr 63 in a playoH round CHICAGO II1'l -~ About 200.000 team, was among 14 cadets who rings. one hit thereafter against thre(' cooled the hot Buccos, 7·3. after four golfers hlld been tied golfers are expected to partiCipate were married Tuesday after the For a couple oC minutes there Buc relief ers. for first. in National Golf Day, the Profes­ U.S. Military Academy gradua­ was confusion among the to,ooo However, Friend's immedial{' sional Golfers Assn., estimated tion. customers in Harringay Atena. successor, Jack McMahan, wa· Tuesday. Uehel, from Bellevue, Ky. , was Cheetful Norman, Moore's train· nicked Cor two more Cub lallies in The nation's players may com­ wed in the cadet chhpel to a girl er, reached into .the ring, tapped the fifth on two walks, a wild pilcr pete against national champions from his home town, Mitzi L . Harl on the sboulders and poin~ and Hacker'S single for a 7-0 lead Fay Crocker and Jack Fleck un Mueller, 4' 2 hours after he was to Moore. Moore then was oC£icial­ any day this week. However, Sat­ graduated as a second lieutenant. ly declared lhe w~_ lner. PIII.bDrrh ... . 000 000 oo!\-a 1 0 Chlca,...... oo~ 020 OOx-7 0 9 urday is the featured day, for then More, a pro 20 years, foulYlt Fl'lend, McMahon (4). Arroyo 161. the two National Opell' champs will CUBS RECALL EADDY like a 20-year-old in the 8th, 11th M.unier 18' and Follel, Kravltt (5), tee off at the Oak Hill Country CHICAGO II1'l-The Chicago Cubs and lOth. Pompey was the more Hacker and Landr!lh. W- Hack« 0-5) . AMEB1CAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE lr-Fl'lend \ 9-31. W · J. Pel. ~., lIome run: Plttlburlh- Thoma •• GS W L P.I. OD Club, Rochester, N. for rounds Tuesday announced the recall of active fighter of the two through Ntw York .... 20 17 .,~~o Plltlbu,h .. 201. 17 .611:; that will be the target"for lhe coun- infielder Don EQddy from Des the (jrst seven rounds but then be Cle\·ttancl .... '!ol 19 .Ii."olI Clnelnnlll .. , .1:1 18 .GAI Chlea,o . .. ~ I 17 .M3 81. LeI.I • ... . •26 19 .J1K try's goUers. Moines of the ' Western League. slowed almost to a halt. Dodgers 6, Braves 1 Detrolt .. _... :!'! '!I .ill'! Milwaukee " .20 ·li) ,;;71 Total revenue for the four nation- Eaddy was .immediately placed on Archie scored his first victory BostOD •• • ..•• 21 ~:! .488 Brooklyn ..... 2~ 19 J~:n Baltlmor. . .. . '!O ':r. .44-4 New York .. . 17 2lj .40.1 al days to date is more than $475,- the Cubs' national defense list of the day when he weiched in MILWAUKEE IA'I - Brooklyn Kiln" •• 1M City .. '!5 .410 Phll.del,.hl. . In 25 , H'~ to WUhln,lob .. 19 28 .41H 000 which was given leading since he has been called to service one-half pound below the light righthander Roger Craig tossed a Chl.'ro ...... I~ t~ .3~ D charities and worthy golC projects. in the Air Force. heavyweight limit. He came direc:t­ two·hitter against the Milwaukee 1(''''8' " Tuelday', Re l ults Jt~eS,~a~':W R~SO~~8 Iy from a Turkish bath to the Brave.s Tuesday night as the Cleveland S, BaltImore II Chlca.IO " Pltbburll'h S Dodgers won 6·1 and dropped Mil· " •• bln,ton •• Chle.co I 81. Lelul, 3. Now York , scale ceremony and weighed ex­ Detroit 14. Boston II ClaelnnaU 9. Pblladelphla 4 acUy what he said he would. waukee. into fourth place in the Today'. . Brooklyn fl, Milwaukee l National League. Chl ..,o " Wubln,ton (nl,bt) Today'. Pllche .. It was another ext.raorllliw'y Il ...hmln ('l-S) or Billey (1 -0) Vi. PltUadeipbl. a~ Clnclnnall (nl,ht) _ weight-reducing performance flJr The Braves, after holding Cirst Wiel ler CI-~). S. Miller ( 2-~ ) VI. Lawrtn~e (0.-0), the ancient gladiator. Moore took place most of the last month, now Cleveland at Hollimon (nlrbt) Broo1

.. ·. R~y~!~.~9~sCanoes Isn' f Wfiaf It ..U ~~~ ,}~.oy~~ Since the days when American • Irldlans used t.heir birch bark Can. W.., ... We ha e had some nice. days oes as a means oC water transpor- '. ~lS year. but"they h~ve .~n dur- tation. the canoe in this country mg the week. he sal~_ It. seems has been a symbol of romance or that on weekends thIS spnng we Home for Sale ot least ~ 'plel1sant leisurely mo. have had mostly rainy. cold days." lon and Found 'enonal loaM ments. ,. I Canoeing has fallen off consider- Advertising Rates READY FOR DtMEOTAn OCCUPAN- PUSONAL LOAl'IS 0 1\ tJpewrlleN. · CY: lias Portn . • bedroonu . .... 1), fl. RJ'!WARO fOT ""tum o! w~.t lad In To Mel Fitzgerald. however. ca. ably during t.he summer sessions pbOno..... sporU equlpmenl. • fllonth. In~ludln, boxes and In.llI'1U1Ct. or nur MemorIAl Union C. Siolten. ph. and . noes are a business with problems in the past few years also. Fitzger- ODe Day ...... U a Word 1171 Portn. thrH bedroom-. tat I j.,.,..e\n. HOCK-EYE LOAN CO" 211 S. Two Days ...... _. 1(k! a Word monlt!. I ~ bath 3nd Illacheart of .. fI ••t of S2 canoes that are shape is a .never-ending task, Fitz­ DEADLINE Wu,lu DI.I II"!!. e.tllt FPR SALE: Crib. pllypen. AVllloble ness: there were no golf courses at r.nt.d to students and oth.rs who wllnt to paddle on the Iowa Riv.r. gerald said. Deadline (or all classified ad· WANTED: Hou..,k.eeper for man Ind wlte I nd thr~ year old child. not June 13. Phone 8-2.$'1. "'It Homes for Rent the unh ersill1, ' no taverns. one The t'leet is own.d by M.I Fih,.rald. who for the IlIlt 46 y.ars hll' vertislng is 2 P.!\{. lor inlle.rtlon laundry. ,ood I>'i')'. IOt ..1 ,ecurlty. small teMis and very few '-.. Since all of his canoes are made Buy QualJt)' COCKERS. Dial

- ON AT I:la ONLY - • Com.panion Featllre • HUNTAMID Hllltl•• " _ ON AT 1.:. ONLY -' · dpen ,:~s tI'jj1'O;oo I I- ; i ~ n,, -_., i III 'I I!!! •• :'1 .. . ..t. ,.. "'t . . ' Congressional ' ')\ .. State Elect'ion " , Primaries: · '... .:,: '. I\s Johnson -County, .Prim~~ies ' -Went, .$0 Went .Iowal I ••.• Returns' • • .y KIRK BOYD Final Final .Resull$ / As.Jobnson County went, so went 'Close The vote in Monday's primary election in Iowa based on rcturns , " t I 'of i .. Political Races I \, the state of Iowa In Monday's pri­ from all of the statc~s 2,515 precincts complete: 293 preci"cts of 2'Oa mary elections. Bramhall ..... : ...... II,., Johnson County voters supported R.publlcen: D.mocr.t1c: Donald ...... ; . .. " . 1,975 j!;Stabb the winning cnndidates in five of Not New to McCullough ...... '. 11,&31 la'ck' White U.S. SENATOR ' - the seven state·wide elections. c. . • By KIRK BOYD Milnes ...... ! \ .. 3;3ts They even went so far ns to tur.n Burlie B. Hickeniooper 157.124 R. M. Evans .' ...... 64,472 341 precinctn/f-347 ' ., down the only candidate from their Close. races are noUling new to Jack C. White, the hair·breadth Demo· Dayton Countryman . . 75.684 Lumund F. Wilcox .. . 37,948 F d · Iii I' ,. cratic nominee for state senator {rom the 25th district. . or ...... : . . .. '--1- e, '10. county. Iowa City's Williall\ Bart· GOVERNOR Wolf ...... 8648 ley, Democratic candidate for lieu· White, an Iowa City attorney, squeezed out a 43·vote victory over John O'Connor Jr .• Lone Tree farmer, in the primary Monday. Leo A. Hoegh Herschel C. Loveless .. 77,120 34.7 precincts of 347~ ..' .' tenant governor. Muzumdar ...... S,W The final unofficial returns for Johnson and Iowa counties, which (Unopposed) Lawrence E. Plummer 33,611 Sen. George O'Malley (Dem., Des ------;------­ Talle ...... :, ...... 22,. Moines , successful candidate for comprise the 25th district, were LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR , 356 precincts of 356 \ . that something of a revolt in their Ryan, .5,203 to 5.130 In tbe third. 2,047 to 2,001. . tbe office, carried Jobnson County W. Nicholas ...... , 112,289 William Bartley . .. .. 4.7,371 favor showed itself in the voting lo· Micieh . will face Rep. H. R. Gross "[ won by only 16 votes the first .H. Micich .. , .. , ...... , .... .'\ . 5 203 over BarUey 1,735 to 1,698. Wendell Pendleton .. .. 100,278 of Iowa City Ryan ...... , ...... 5,130 tals in both primaries. • in November. timc I ran for ornce," White said With only a handful of precincts , George E. O'Malley ,~. 54,244 ' 356' precincts of 356 ·\ • ,. The (our·way battle for the De- Tuesday. "This time it was easy." . \_. unreported, he was leading state­ The average of the last five pri· Gross ...... ' ~,~ wide, 53,812 to 46,889. maries showed 273,000 Republican mocratic nomination as congress· 1'he flrs.t time was In 1943, wben STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL Seemann" ...... 6,057 Only In the Democratic race for and 70,000 Democratic votes cast. man from the first district (wbich Whlt~ was elected police judge of Norman A. Erbe ...... ]06.995 Edward R. Fitzgerald . 34,645 318 precincts of 318 ' . ' 32,881 attorney general and In the Repub­ This year's totals were about includes Iowa City, Davenpprt and Iowa City, his first elective office. Don Hise ...... 86,775 William H. Welch Carter ...... 5 r ~1 lican race for lieutenant governor 235,000 Republican and 125,000 De· Burlington) will havc to ·be ~eclded He has been a politically active Don Wilson . .. 32,4~ ' Kramer ...... , ... , ... 3,,"' by a convention of Democrats from Democrat In Johnson county ever did Johnson County voters back mocratic. STATE COMMERCE COMMISSIONER, Llndskoog ...... 3..503' the district. . . . since. He served three years as I . " the losing candidate. A better reason than a switcb to H. M. Reed ...... 63,684 Lewis E. Lint . . . 36,54.2 231 precincts of 231 Senator- the Democrats migbt be the great­ No candidate got 35 pCr ccnt of P,Ollce judge and followed this witb B. M. Richardson .... 63,684 Waltl\/' A. Vaugbn , .. ,' 50.635 Denman ...... ' . . ... 6,!! cr number of primary contests in the vote, which is required by iowa three' terms as county attorney be· Ray H. Thompson ... ' 61 ,711 Jones ...... , ...... ' . . . .. 1~ ..., Johnson County, like the rest of the Democratic column this year law for nOnUDatlpn in a primary.' fore IUs ovcrwbelml~g defeat at McLaughlin ...... :...... 3,-.. Iowa. showed no signs of thc Dem· over previous years. , 'I" D ~ rt . the IuInds of R4:pubtican Wllllam Smith ...... ~,. Dal e MI lies, aVCllpO, engmeer MearOOn In 1950>. ocratlc-desired farm revolt. The RepUblicans, who b,ave had Held in Brink's Case 333 precincts ·01. 333 . Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, hot gubernatorial primaries OVCJl and extreme 1ibera~ candidate, . led He is now Democratic county Carlson .' ...... I. th .. ',' .. 3.11&1 supporter of the Eisenhower flex· the past few years, didn't even give with 3,237 votes (30 per cenU. ~en· chaif~an. His wife. Catherine, Is Hays ." ...... , I..,~ ~l, . ~ J. Jensen ...... s,fU ible support program, carried Iowa incumbent Gov. Leo A. Hoogh pri. ry McCullough. a more conserva· secrelary of the Democratic state ,,", by more than a 2 to ] margin over mary opposition this time. tive Davenport Dom~rat, split the central, committee. ; h" .... Atty. Gen. Dayton Countryman, ex· vote of the {own (tbe district's lar- ~te W~ht through a he~tic ponent of high, rigid supports. Governor:- "est) with Milnes and wound up election ni~ht t\1at ~sted well mto In Jobnson County, Hlckenloop· with 2.974 votes . . The others: Ron. the, da.wn T~esday. . . tone Bana,i('& er's margin was only a few votes Johnson County also joined 'with lild Bramhlln, Kepkuk" 2,619. end It was 5:30 a.m. before the, fmal shy of being 3 to 1. And it was as the rest of Iowa in showing the in· Daniel Donald Stockport 1~. r~tun\s from Johnson C.ounty san· high in the rural precincts as it creased strength of Democratic gu­ , " , tiqoed p~per·ballot vollng system .The convention does to 8SS\lred him his slender victory. Primary Winner Rob,s' Milo ."~: was in Iowa City. bernatorial nominee Hershel Love- ~ot hav~ Hlckenlooper's resounding vic· less. stIck to the four candide;tes who "1 was rather diseouraged at tory settled the farm issue as far were on the ballot in making their abolJt midnight " White said Tues. as Iowa's Republican party Is con· In 1952, Loveless edged past for. sele~tion. Nick McManus, Demo· day. ' . Branch ·Baril{ . mer congressman Otha Wearin In cratic state senator from Keokuk By midnight O'Connor was cut· Senate Votes' Huge . ' cerned. MILO ' tm-A. lone lIandlt robbed . Even Countryman said: "The towa and carried Johnson County an4 author of the McMa~us plan tlltg his slender lead to almost farmers have shown that they are for . le~lslatlve re·apportlonment, nQJhing and five rural precincts, Research Project : . the People's TruSt and Savla,. happy by renominating Hicken· by about 12,000 to 6,000. . was bel.~g t,lked of Tuesday as a where O'Connor strength was, Bank bfanch ofrice of an e5t1rnat~ $1.400 her'e ·Tuesday afternoon looper." Monday he took the county by conventIon candidate. -ere yet to be heard from. WASHlNG'l'"JN IA"'- The Senate and escaped after threat'enln, the only Thc youthful (38) attorney gener· 2,496 to 865 and showed increased So was ' tall. Lincolnesque Tom By 1:30 a.m. a handful of reo Tuesday voted a record·breaking MISSI employe in the bank with a sawed 1111 whose name has become syn· strengtb over 1952 In all precincts. Dailey, Dem~ratic state senator porting rural precincts actually $184.:437,000 for research work by to ..... He showed what effect hand· from Burlington, ~nd John O'Con· thrust 'O'Connor into a two·vote off shotgun. ' .. \ onomous with the strict enforce· the NatIonal Institutes of Health. ftr, J ment of Iowa's liquor laws and shaking tours can have ' in the nor. the 1954 nominee who was 00· lead. The straggling city precincts John Greubel, alone In the b8nk _rl, three·precincts in wbich he pumped feated Monday in .his bid for .state restored White!s lead and the final 58 million more than Presiaent Et· when the bandit entered about 2;35 cracker· dry Iiqllor views, carried senbower asked. only one of Iowa's 99 counties. arms last week on a tour of the senator from the 25th district rural. votes tell just short of cut· p.m.. said the mall first asked ,to That was Adams County, home county. (Johnson and lowa counties>. , tiii! it. , The sum was inclUded In, a $2,. cash some checks, tlJen produced of ex·Gov. Dan Turner. who has The thrce precincts and his mar. r-~------+-' 0 Connor said Tult,day that the 372.523,281 money bill for- tile tht1 shotgun and "told me If I tr\ed been a leader in tbe anti·Hlcken. gin over his rjyal, Lawrence Plum. 10wa City. bon~ ruue election, Health·Education-WeUare and La· anYthing he'd blow me up or shoot· bor departments. PasSage was by looper National Farm Organization Bi G ) C d 5 which tllrned out a big vote In me or something." mer: grove (86·20 , e ar ( 5· White's home city was probably voice vote. The measure now goes Greubel said the bandit demand­ (NFO) and a booster of Country· 2' and Fremont (J08·39'. the deciding factor. POLICE CAItTAIN FRANCIS G. WiI ..n, I.ft, w.lks with his prison· man. to conference with the House .• ed money and after obtalru.r tit; ' Gene A. Fprd, SUI graduate stu· It brou,ht out a larger.than. .,.S, Edw.nt IWlmpy) B.nn.tt, wllrlng h.t, .nd John F. Bucc.ltl, Countryman even lost his home rlg~t, who _r. indicted by the Suffolk County gr.nd lury In Boston forced Greubel to lie on the fiQOr county, Story County. where he had dent from Cedar Rapids, lost 10 usllal primary vote in Iowa City, Pushbutto· n' Sh".ft .s .cc.,sorl... fttr the f.et In the $1,219,000 Brink's robbery. Th. and warned, him not to move ' lor Leonard Wolf, Elkader feed dealer, iIi \Vhich w,bit6. reaped' a 409.vote several minutes. The bank em· served as county attorney, by 500 m.n wer... iI,d by poIlc. lilt night .ft.r r.ldi", • roomlni ,*,s~ 'Ada in the race for Democratic nomi· . gI h t O'C . , I ' h ploye said he hear~ut did 'DOt votes. nation as s.. cond dlstrict congress. ~ar n t a onnor s rura pre· n.oes to t e Dogs .nd reeoverl", what th.y clescribed II nt.rly $",100 of tho Brink's by, the He ran comparatively close to Of .' • • cmcts could not cut down. iii' see-a car pullin, away from ·' the man. The county was 8,538 to 6,152. . TOO",,,!! 1(:8EDIILE , O'Connor said Tuesday that he 'oot. . • bank. .. . Mce. Hickenlooper in the drought·strick· s:oo Momln. Chia~ ~ . .JNQIANAPOLIS IA'l-Town Mar· lributi4 en southern Iowa counties, But, SUI's other candidate, Robert 8:10 ,News ' had np plans tlf colltest the elec· Sheriff's deputies and hirhw~, Newton, A4, Muscatine, had no opo , :30 Mornln, Serenade. tion, despite the close vote. shal Murris Settles of suburban w,ere T! the large cities, and especially the , ':150 The BookBheli . Lawrence, ticket · pad in hand, patrolmen establisbed road bloclls. position in 'the .Democratic primary 10:15 New. .. I' White will face incum~nt state Indict Three in Brink's Case cause ' ones in which he has led liquor-cn· rushed up to a car tMt had backed They reported they ~ wcre. ~I for state representative from Mus. Sen. D. O. Nolan, w.ho bad no Re· cataloi forcement raids, rolled him under. :t~ ~~e'Th'.~o~rtLl'ht " suddenly from . a business place. BOSTON IA'I - Two of three men H. Byrne sald Jordan ferry Jr .• for a green' Foret sedan with DtI· catine county. 11:45 ReUJlou ~ ,NeW$ Repot1.cr publican primary oppoSition, in the The Hickenlooper's margin was more sid~swiped a car and knocked indicted Tuesday as ' accessories 31, of Boston. the third· man in' nois licellse plates. ~, The Democratic congressional :U,g ~~~h~ Rambles November elections. of . aoo than 2 to 1 in Polk (Des Moines), down four mailboxes Tuesday, . after the fact in tbe $1,219,000 dict~ d, would waive extradition in The main office of tbe bank "Is of Pottawattamie (Council Bluffs) and battles in the fifth and third dis- 12:45 Sports at Midweek I : Thls race promises to be one of hillf 1.:00 Musical Chats ' the t h tl t t d I . I ;l;ij! put away the 'Pad when .be ' boo I d d . t Baltimore, Md" and be returned located in Indianola. about c 11 to req' Woodbury (Sioux City) counties. tricts were tight ones. 2:10 Music In BlacJc: ..,d Whit., mos 0 y con es e egIs a· Br 1 n k s ro ry p ea e mnocen tn Boston. miles northeast of here. • ,:, Z:3O Mu.l. From Interlochen tive contests in Iowa. raached the car and · found Mrs. ~'q . J It was more than 3 to 1 in Black William Denman, state represe. 3:30 News Nolan is pne of the Republican Gr.~fe Clotfelter'S Alaskan male­ in Superior Court and were held in Bennett and BucceUi were arrest. Greubel described the bandlt' la Hawk (Waterloo) and Dubuque :MCCo1 talive Trom Polk County, got pas t~ ~~4-J~r leaders In the Iowa senate. He de. mijte at the controls. $25,000, double surety, lor trial. ed hcre Monday after police raided 5 feet 8 or 9 incites tall with a iI~ (Dubuque) counties, more t1lan 4 slUde,rit Neal Smith, former national presio 5:00 Chlldren's liour fealed Leroy Mercer, long.time Mrs. Clotrelter had 'gone into a The pleas were entered by Ed· tbe sub· basement of a SOuth End complexion and Weighing aboqt Iss to 1 in Scott \Davenport> and Linn The m. dent o( the Young Democrats, in a ~:s tlme senator from. the 25tb district and 'Ining establishment, leaving to 160 pounds. The man was w~· (Cedar Rapids) counties and more t: c1 ward A. (Wimpy ) Bennett, 36. ~f rooming house and seizcd $90,000 of PII~tm'E four·way race by less than 700 6:00 Dlnner Hour now mayor of Iowa City, in 1952. the dog in the back seat. When it Ing a dark .shirt and 'elt hat *)14 c9pies tban 5 to 1 in Clinton (Clinton) Beyond . Weymouth, and John F. Buecelll, what authorities described as was about 40 year5 old, be sal4 .. votes. Denman will face Rep. Paul n~ ~:SChlld Johnson County, traditiontlly jumped into the front seat, one of In i. county. Cunningham November 7:30 Band Concm .dominates the 41 , of Brookline, after a 40·mlnule Brink's money. tn Dem~ratic, 2~th its paws hit the reverse button on Greubel said it could not be ~. VIdual trom France reading of the indictments before The pair was arrested after Democrats- Mayor Mike Mieich of Charles ng ~~~~~~. district and White has been in the tile automatic transmission. · The termlned how much . money tHe chemis City, a Republican·recently·turned 9!45 News and Sport. county's political life for more dog Ithen fell on the accelerator Judge Frank J. Donahue. Perry was seized In Baltimore with man obtained until a tborouJIi Iowa Democrats hoped Tuesday 10:00 Word. lor Tomorrow e;t<;.-a Democrat, squeeze d past J. P. SIGN QFF .,' th'an a decade. and the ride began. . The office of Dist. Atty, Garrett more than $4,000 in his possession. check could be made. i, bon . . Most chargiJ McCat" Central Figure for th more. JohnsQn :;. C~u 'ri'ty l~lFimii · r· y Election Retur,ns' longer ers, . S , , t I .•• # • '~. " ;'~ .' In Chicago " ,~ ...,' \ :~ ,~ (C'mpl.te Unofflcl.1 R.turns Com"iI.d by Th. D.lly low.n·WSUI EI.ctlon N.ws Burllu) sLarted only 0 1 Of tl DEMOCRATIC· ,' RETURNS REPUBLICAN RETURNS dividul Murder Dies I ~ '.' individ desire CHICAGO r.fr.:Dr. Alice LincJsay U.S. a.,r ••• nlallwe Sial. S.n. ".11. "J!' are bo II.S.lIta.ta, G... ra.. 1.1. G.... Aui".., On.. al la' 0111.101 20In Vlsl.I., Sbertlf U.~ . Stn&,or Govern.r Wynekoop - the eccentric figure '" V""'" Duri convicted in 1934 of one or the most .I: the re sensational murders in Chicago record history-died 11 months ago, the Iowa· City ·· receivi Chicago American said Tuesday. In F IIII receivi The newspaper said the elderly r I J I f ! I I j II ! f i !1 1 Sixty·s lst .lnI. ht pet, j I r7 . 44 I 103 84 I 84 59 I 44 ~ I 21 12 45 ' 45 f 61 89 I 93 11 39 1'It w.rd, lst pet. I 21 79 I 116 37' 54' I 39 ~2 l ea I woman physician was cremated l't w.n', 2d pet. ·- ---r- T SO--ss liS -36 1 '13171 35 28 73 ""I--:-I0::---:1""'9-':':43:--l!-:58~I'~82::---:78'::+I-:':89:-- 26 42 indlvid S(!cretly and buried in Mt. Hope ist w.rd, 24 pet. I 27 128 I 142 66 73 I 70 ~ \ t31·: I lions. 2dWtrd, lst pet7'.-"';"':'---1 43 178 7-1 --:1~95:--i--:lc:"OO::----:-91:--7-1--c c:"10:---=72=---1""'Iifl Cemetery here under the name Dr. 'd w.nt, , .. pet. 1 ]04 47 1 122 41 '1. 87 88 I 59 36 53 I 13 22 64 '35 1 87 112 I 113 26 38 1 Inll 7 Aliee Lois Lindsay. 24 wlni:1d !Kt. I 80 7t I 107 . 86 I 71 97 I 55 49 -46 I 19 - ~42--::7~3'''''1-:':95:---::7::-'97- 1 -60=---::3=-7 --'5:"::7 2d w.rd:2d pet. , --1--84392'1 .23 227 216 I 256 ~182 \ 41tl ecivcd A check showed that an 84.·year· 3d w.~ I 221 97 I 259 B7, I m 190 I 71 ' 76 170 I - 41 30 127 101 \. 139 245 I' 222 19 116 3d w.rd \ \ ~7 - 100 I 124 55 54 I 51 ~ I 112· .1 hundt( to ind! old woman named Alice Lois Lind· 4'-th:--w-'.iocI""'--,'~h-t -pe-t.------;1-168---=c74-i- "~---srr 119 1~ I So 69 90 I ,. 44 27 78-""'80'-'1- 1":'18""-"-:16::-'9 1-177 19 78 ,ijitW'fd, lst pet. j r - - 7-U- I86 I 229 100 139' I 99 132 I ;1 1 m In A say died last July 4 at the Burn· 4th w.nI, 2d pet. 1 Il5 ·95 I ~ 50 I lOS 130 I 72 66-' 68 I : 25 23 85 64 I 105 141 I 124 34 75 4th w.nt, i4 pet. I I -:s7-277T- -3~27=---i-·~14"...8 ---:17=:6--;1;--·..,.1~38,---:-1~ I 3~, . 1 183 w( side Rest HOme on the South Side. 5th w"nI, 1.t-pe-t.------;-I-I~72::--..,.,..139 I 244 102 I 157 205 I 102 ,121 98 I 41 60 96 104. I 187 186-,.'.,;-1 -:cl=73:--..,.56-c--,,:,I30~ 5th w.nI, 1.t pet. I 110 275 I 320 188 169, I , ITT 142 I *' ./ to indi Dr. Wynekoop would have been 84. 5th w.nt, 2d pet. I -t95 1M I 2411 86 I 145 198 I 95 68 ]20 '1 54 37 98 91 I 140 204 I 177 38 128 5=-th~w-.r-:d-:, 2:-:d,...:pct:.....,-. ------.-:f ' --:90~. -3:":'2O~i-1 ~34~2-;'-~146~-:27:::-5- 1 16t 202 I' U{,1 • Don' a' that time. qf 'lidl . She was 62 when in 1933 she be· IOWA CITY TOTALS 577 1935 2185 1067 1187 1101 1134 2'11' I catalol • ah Inc came the central figure in a grue· " Rural Rural '. quell : some crime story Involving her " catalol daughter·ln.law. Unlverllty Hel,htj I 41 52 I 70 30' SS 42 I 22 28 36 I 13 5 13 ~ 64 I 72 29 I 22 14 ' 56 UnlvOI'Ilty H.I,hts 27 104 121 I 66 61 I 73 ~9 I l2Q I materi Her daughter·in·law, pretty, au· C~.-r-:.I-:YI:;:;II.-7· --'------:---71. 3-1--9-'-1-32--1-1":"1-20--2-4-;-1-1-1'-1-0--17--;-1 - 7' 8 14 .8 1 25 19 1 22__ 6 __ 15 Cor.lv~------~--~~---2~6 ---:54~·-7----~68--7-I--~35~~4O~~I---~~~~~n,.~f'~~~l clded burn·haired Rbeta Gardner Wyne· ... Grove ". I 67 , 34 I 86 20 I 73 34 I 31 20 47 I 7 7 51 31 I 52 54 I 51 • 7 38 81, G~v.--~~~----~~----U----21--~~23-·1 --~15--~I -~ -i---:l~7 --~7 -,1- ~ I be .sen koop, 23, daughter of a well-to-do , .tltute CteI.r I 41 15 I 55 ~ 1 211 84 I 16 15 21 I 3 4 20 22 1 39 18 I 31 4 ]8 Cteler :_..;....,.:, 1--3 '--9""-"'---:6---;1--5 --3-1 -~8 '\ 4 I broker in Indianapolis, was found more nearly nude on an examining table (11Ir C.... k I 29 13 I ' 40 4 r 23 20 I 7 ]6 21 I '! 2 9 11 ~ 20.1 22 24. I 31 1 12 CI •• r CrHk I 9 28 I 30 I 19 1-:-3 ~1--:l"""6 10 I 82 / " The O.kd.14 --~--;'1 --:-:12'--~5i- -1':-:'4--:3c-:-- ·-:-.,----::-7+1--'5:-- --:-6 -"76";'1-~5 -":"6 --:4-~-1"':"1;--":" 1-"-::16";'1-·6:-:"' an ,in( In the basement office of "the 16- I 1 10 --r4 o.kd.l. '-'-'---7-1--8- 24 29 I 14 18 I 13 17 I 26 I room Wynekoop home. The girl ~tJlden Ellt Luc.. I 21 20 24 1'1 1' 20 24 I 10 18 14 -I 6 JI 13 1 3? 13 9 21 Ellt Lucts I 10 29 31 I - - ' lo- iS'-:-1-"'- 13:---""20"---;1---;7 I was dead-chloroformed/ and shot I --8" - I-~ $lIld. through the back. Frtmtnt ------:--1-'7:-6--57-c I:--I08-~ '18 681 32 . 37 60 I 19 24 44 ;< 4.0 I 126 38 1 sa 20 91 Fromont I 17 47 -:---56-:-1-- 42--20--:1--:34~-2-1 --;.1-....r.-1 , ~!18t It lrar's Rheta's husband, Earl, 27, told Gr.htm--..,.------,1;--4-0--12-'I'-, -36-"'-21·-;1 -2II~-33°~I-l-=-1 '-12 28 I 5 ' 10 20· . 14 1 35 22 1 21 5 31 Gr.hlm ·------~~~I ---16--~21:--i---$~·-.1 2. --~13:--1;--~lt-~1~5-;1--~M~1 prospe police he committed the murder, ---"._- H.nlln I 14 171 26-'-8 1 1'7 17 ~ 14 11 5 I 4 3 10 i'1T15-W I- 18 4 ]7 ""'n I 7 9 . , 8 I 7 6 I 6' but It was later shown he was hun· ~ I ,"-'" dreds of miles away on a trip aDd JefftrHn I 21 17 I 29 8 / ,. .12 / 8 ' 10 18 I .l' 5 11 1$ I I 16 . 22 I 28 . 15 , 5 J.fftrso"· I 7 17 20 I '17 8 I 11 9 I so I r.l. could not have done it. . Liberty I, I 45 18 I 4lI It I 40 24 I 21 12 28 1 .15 4 19 .· 18.1 -"34~341· '27 8 ' 33 Liberty I 4 14 13 I 13 • I 7 9, . •• if I -'r-- Then eame the indictment of Dr. L1nce1n I 17 3 I 15 4 I 13 8 I 4 2 14 I 3 1 10 6 1 18 .. I 7 3 12 Lincoln I 4 24 26---'1--1-:"---8 1 ,,-----18=---7 -i-j ---,n 'COr WY!lekoop. 1 MIdI.... ' ' I 14 11 I 15 Ii I 11 15 , 5 6 ij I 2 5 6 10 I 21 5 I 14 4. 11 Medlaon I 22 8 28 I 17 10' I 13 7 I a ~ l _ WA:! ----- • -Mon-I'OI------..;./--6.,-----:--6 -;.·-'7.IO~I;--- 8 3 I 3 • I • I SheaHer Pen Expects Monroe I 27 .1 28 4 t ,. II I 8 10 15 I 4 6 18 6 1 18 141 20- - 2-· 7 UJlion New,trt I 32 171 36 19 / 12 43 I 9 11 27 I 7 18 14' 9 1 28 28 I 18 8 29 -N.-w,..,..- ---,.,----- I 1 2 3 1- 2 0 I 0 i -ral union. To Double Export Sales new t. Ox~ I 105 25 I 115 Ii I q 49 i 49 27 57 I 9 .14 71 29 / 71 i9 I 77 19 40 :::-O._fe_nl___ --'-"~~~-_i_: --==~:__--~.:7=:==::~~:,...... ---~ :~~----~":'8--;.·;-I----::i",..f-.. -~1"+ ' : *-i R.M FORT MADISON Lfl-The SheaC. Penn I 29 21 I 32 II I 2? _ 23" 5 22 24 I .. 15 2Ii II 1 '25 23 I 24 12 17 vl~~ !:= =--~~;;-----:~----7---:--- =-...----,,-;.-.~-- ":------,...;--- fer Pen Co. expects to double Its P .....nt Ville, I 15 '71 14 ' 'J I J;I 8 , 3 " 2 . 13 I 1 2--6 --6 I 15 ,11 I 7 1 15 ~aIIs • export sales In the next five years, the·boo Craig R. Sheaffer, board chairman, Scott - I 29 11 I 31 • r II . 15' 9 7 23j5 4 17 12 I 21 20 I -25 1 14 , el, pl. told drstributors from about 50 for· Sh.,... I 13 21 10 ' 61 ,It,· 5 I 2 6 7 I 3 2 5 5 1 10 5 1 4. 4 6 nellt .: elgn countries gathered bere Tues­ Un"" .[ . 31, 7 I 2B '12rl ~ 11 I 3 23 I 5 3 ' 15 1.3 I 22 23 I 21 0 22 iea, a. day- - and rr W.lhl...... ---:-'-.--'''::-...:..·I .· 6 . 31 ' , 41 4 r 7 I 2 3 2 21 4 &1 1 3 6 Even it current exchange re­ , :The strictions are continued, the com­ WII":.UCI'. 2 9 2 2 , 0 12 Comrr­ pinf'. sales abroad should In· aid u­ creae (rom the c:\ImDt four mil­ RURAL TOTALS 137 171 414 ' 368 l:tr i32 RURAL TOTALS [ I 269 628 J84 4Gg 363 435 331 ~ , Aisn. Uoa dollars to elcbt millions by JOHNSON eo. TOTALS 405 · 415 1092 01019 I 1730 1823 f 1757 40% 1235_ 1161 S~nfrc.tl· SOlid. Ii I~ I

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