..... State Bar Examinations Today's Weather c...... ,.,tty cIMy ...., and tWtht. A little __ ...... Passed Here by 103 .... -.traI ...... tIIley. ail Q'won Hitht • em- '*"" ..... Iowa admitted 103 law graduates BURLINGTON: James Henry Serving the State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City ...... Thursday to practice law within the Dailey. -- state. CARROLL: James C. Smith. Established in 1868 10 Cents Per Copy Iowa City, Iowa. Friday, JUDe 14, IJD One hundred twetve applicants CEDAR RAPIDS: Jolm Chester from 15 law schools took Iowa bar Culver, Joseph E. Day, Don.ld D. ------~------,------examinations here this week. The Holmes, David D. Mitchell, Gerald examinations started T u e s day Thomas Sulli"all. m 0 r n i n g and were completed CLEAR LAKE: James Robert 1bursday. Frallks. Those who completed the exam COLLINS: John E. V.sey. inations successfully will be hon· CORWITH: James Elwood Thorn. ored at a luncheon at noon today CENTER: Peter All· In the River Room of the Iowa Me· drew Keller. Raci·al Tension Decreases morial Union . Chief Justice of the DAVENPORT: James Paul Ben. Iowa Supreme Court. Theodore nett, Elilworth Alfred F,~ch, Jr., _____ -'-__,--_~ ______Garfield, will preside. Douglas C. McDonald. The SUI College of Law had the DES MOINES: Delbert Claude highest number oC graduates taking Binford, Thoma. Nelson Bolton, Demonstration Kennedy Talks the exam which must be passed American Flag Is Honored to practice law in Iowa. t' ifty·seven Patrick Walter Brick, Gary L. SUI graduates passed the exem, Camp, Loren J. Duensing, Heartt Randolph Dunellt, Jr., Richard M. along with 28 from Drake Univer· In Jackson With Unions, slty. Gleaso", John J. Hanlon, Dani,1 P. Today on 186th Anniversary Iowa Assistant Attorney General Hansen, John Robert Hard, Richard Brice Oakley conducted the exam· Dale Herman, Robert R. Hulbreg· By HARRY NEYENS flag, but the nalion itself. And ination. Members of the Stale tse, De wayne A. Knoshaug, James Staff Writer whatever may be its symbols, its Suspended Congressmen Board of Examiners are Lowell LeGIt Lekin, Michael OWen MeDer' Today marks the 186th anniver. insignia. he reads chiefly In the Kindig, Sioux City ; PhilUp Cless, mott, Terry .Kyle McCleerey, Dnid saryof the flag of the United States flag, the government. the prinCi­ White ProfelSor, Girl Asks for Labor Backing Des Moines ; Charles Swisher, Jr .. Arne Opheim, Thomas Anthorty - the Stars and Stripes. ples, the truths, the history that be· Clubbed by Policemen Waterloo; David Elderkin , Cedar Renda, Lrle L~ Simpson, Nell Ed- Born amid the strife of battle, long to a nation that sets it forth ." Of Civil Rights Plans, Rapids; and Jonathan Richard s. ward Smith, Michael M. Weelees. the (Jag was established by a The first American flags deplcled In Earlier Protests More Jobs for Negroes Red Oak. DOWS: Roneld M. Frykbtorg. resolution passed on June 14, 1777, the struggle oC the colonials in a Temporary examiners assisting DYERSVILLE: 0 u an, John by the Continental Congress. Since JACKSON, Miss. (WI - Demon· WASffiNGTON 1.11 - PreaJdeDt were WilUam Bernau, Cedar Rap· Goedken. then, it has become the standard of strations following murder of a Kennedy liked labor unJoo oIflcllll ids ; Marion Neely, Iowa City ; EAGLE GROVE: Gary Jackson free people everywhere. Negro integration leader were sus· ThUl'lday lor Ideas on flllCHn( jaba pended temporarily Thursd~y "to Richard Wells, Davenport; and Groves. . lor Negroes IIId conCerted with Lewis Schultz, Marengo. ELK HORN: Thoma. L. Chri.. Its stars are sY!l1?ols of the let tempers cool" aller poUce club· ARNOLDS PARK: RDbert Frank· ten heaven and the diVIDe goal to bed a white professor and a young congr ional leaden of both Rich dRum sselt man has aspired from time lin Montgomery. ES;~RA'. ar u. unmemOrlal~hich girl. parties on forthcoming civR rllbt. ATLANTIC: John Herbert Budd. FT. MADISON: Leoll A. Conrad, . While police pressed their search le&islaUve proposals. ------Thomas James McD_ugh. Its stripes represent rays of light for the assassin of Medgar W. GREENE: James Lee Stanton. emanating from the sun . Together Mer t.aIkI.ng It leolth with more new land. Beavers, pine trees, rat· Evers, 37·year-old field secretary than 280 unioo repr8lelltaUve5, HALBUR: Ronald Joseph Ei •• they become a mighty emblem of (or the National Association of the Art Pieces ' cheld. world sovereignty. t1esnakes, anchors and various like Kennedy concluded the White insignia were affixed to their baD· Advancement of Colored People, HAMBURG: Edwin Clarke Gets' Harry Ward Beecher. noted 19th ners. Mottoes such as "Hope, " they also broke up spontaneous House ion by bringin, in lorm· eher. century American clergyman, once "Liberty," "Appeal to Heaven" or "mourning marches." er Pr Ideol Harry S, 'l'rUJnaD tAl On Exhibition HENDERSON : Sam Scott Killinger said, "A thoughtful mind, when it "Don't Tread on Me" gave Ceeling Prof. John Saller, of the pre· take a bow. II I. sees a nation's flag, sees not the to early American ideals. IOWA CITY : IVln J. Ackerman, ------dominantly Negro Tougaloo South· Truman and K nMCiy then talked For Festival In 1776, the Grand Union flag ern Chri tian College near here, privately in the President's office Davidiel Daggett, Leon Brodsky,Michael DuaneP. Dooley, Dan· G,·rl Involved became the standard of the Con· wa s seized, clubbed and arrested. but TrUman told newsmen later Eighteen paintings and sculp· John Michael Dull, Richard L1.I. tinenta.1 Army. It was this emblem Gloster Current of New York, • that Marines carried ashore on they did DOl discuss the knotty tures Crom the permanent collec· Fenstamaker, Jerry Henry Folkers, director of branches for the NAACP clvU tight. probl they had their first foreign expedition. m, tion of SUI now hanging in the John Herbert Grev., John B. Grier, said the demonstrations were sus· been expected to do. In Manhunt pended temporarily "to let tem· Terrace Lounge of the Union will Larry Alex High, Lester C. John· The resolution o[ 1777 estabUsbcd ''WE JUST TALKED 'White , be on exhibition through Aug . 7 as son, Alan R. Lltff. Gary E. L_ the Stars and Stripes, a star and a pers cool " because Negroes watch· w ~ House' and il3 history and the pic· a Ceature of the Silver Jubilee nard, Warren Clark LUll, David Is Returned stripe for each State In the new ing the demonstration took offense lure th t are in it end where they Fine Arts restival at SUI. Lande McCuskey. Cherles Wt5ley Union. Later, when Kentucky a.nd to the clubbing and jeered poliee. came from ," the fo rmer president. All 18 of the works in the show M c Man i 9 a I, Tracey Lawson Vermont were admitted, Congress CURRENT SAID. however . more In Jackson said . became aware that the nag would were purchased by the University Seholh, Sanford A. TurMr. Terry Irene Hullinger, 14·year-old demonstrations were expected Fri· TIM widow of slaIn NAACP leeder M.dgar Evers _ps O¥.r hi' Continuing his seri oIlntensive or given to SUI after having beeu JEFFERSON: James E. Flgen' Rockford. Ill ., girl who with two become unwieldy if this practice day. body et a fuMral hom. Ie.. Thursday. Ev.rs was .hot •• rly Wed· d cuss ions oC th raclal situation, shown in exhibitlons featured in shaw. men Crom Rockford led lawmen on continued. "Salter Is a special target" of n.sdlY In trent of his hem.. -AP Wirephoto the President consulted with an 11. earlier summer Fine Arts Festi· LAKE VIEW: Jamta Daniel a bullet·spattered manhunt last Thus it passed the law of April the poUce, Current said, "they di s· m n bipartisa n congre lona! group vals. Works have been bought an· Bruller. weekend was returned to RockCord 4, 1818, requiring the stripes to reo like him intense ly and apparently Thursday morning. No agreements nually Irom these exhibitions since MAPLETON: Charles E. Vander· Thursday in the custody of the main thirteen In number to repre· would like to do awey with him." were reached, particlpanll iDdical· 1945. All of the some 300 works bur. juvenile court in that city. sent the original colonies - and Newsmen also said they saw po. ed later. now in the University's permanent MARCUS: Keith J. Hey. One of the men involved in the adding a star for eacb new state on lice club 15-year-old Ca.rol¥n Ann Steel Industry in Doubt collection bave either been given Kennedy opened hlJ aftel'llOOll MARION: Walter David Tyl,r. escapade, John Rhoades, 20, was the fourth of July following its ad· Myles after the girl yelled "they ion with lh un ion men by aay. to SUI or purchased with funds ~ARSHALLTOWN: Samu.1 Wer· sen tenced Wednesday to 25 years mission. got my brother, they got my broth· contributed for the collection. No in, "I'd liII to hear from you thelmer. in the State Penitentiary at Fort A 411-star flag came with the er" as demonstrators were rounded As Union Talks Reopen about what we can most usefully tax money has been uscd Cor any MASON CITY: Da"ld Sheldon Madison after pleading guilty 10 up in the street. of them. admission of Arizona and New do" to find jobs Cor Negroel. Levlnlon. charges of robbery with aggrava· Mexico in 1912. PITTSBURGH (WI - The steel In. AU of the works in the current MELROSE: David L. Scieslinski. tlon. Negroes planned a marlyr fun· tails mu t be hammered out. In the prolonged diacussioD thal exhibition have increased markedly MIDDLE AMANA: Richerd J. Alaska added tbe 49th star in eral for Evers, who was gunned dustry is speculating over the de· One Pittsburgh new paper sa foUowed. lOme particlpant. SlId In value since they were pur· Hergert The second man , James Farn· 1959, and lIawnii brought the num· down in the driveway o( his home cision by the United Steelworkers the contract Is all wrapped up and later, Kennedy was given lOme chased by SUI and most of them NEwtON: Robert NelsDn Dow. ham , 29, pl~ded inncx:ent to simi· ber to 50 stars in 1960. early Wednesday . Union lo call its important Wage only n ds the expcct~ form al peclCie auuestions. One of them have been loaned for exhibitions in lar charills 10 connection with tbe Policy Committee into session ncxt approval of the Wage Polley Com· wa for a lederal falr employmenL nero AS AN AIR of sullen ten sJon hung week, art galleries and at universities ODEBOLT: Eugene AII.n Grot. holdup of a Coralville service sta· over Jackson, the NAACP said the mlttee. praetlc eomml Ion - aome\.hlng across the country. PERRY: Edwi" Alan Shlrl.y. tion. He was questioned by Rock· Boy Dead; Police Everyone seems to have a dif. Th is claim, however, is ada· thaL reportedly is not among the ford police Thursday. He had ad· wave or shock and outrage - which ferent idea what the 170·man com· Mlro's "Rosalie," purchased for POCAHONTAS: Rosemary Shaw. extended nationwide - had solidi· mantly denied by a union spokes- proposal, the Pre Ideot Is expected $1 ,620 following its exhibition in the POSTVILLE: Rob.rt M. Jamll. mitted stealing at gunpoint 111 Fea r Sex Pervert mittee will do about contracts wltb man who said, " it there's anything to submit \.0 Congress next week. Rockford the car the three used in fied as never before the determina. lhe basic steel industry. 1948 Fine Arts Festival, now is RUNNELLS: Edwin Watt,r Ski,.. tion to win the civil rights struggle. In the bag, Dave McDonald IUSW ONE LABOR LEADER said that valued at more than $15,000. Jack· Mr. the weekend escapade. He reo QUEBEC ill - Police searched The speculation runs the gamut presiden t> would certainly like to Kennedy had flve major requests mained in jail here under .10,000 Officers arrested 90 persons - from "a setUement is all but son Pollock's abstract oil painting ST. ANSGAR: David Burton Hen· for three missing boys Thursday including 84 marching tecn.agers know abou t it. " 01 the AFlrClO for what he termed titled "Portrait of H.M." is said bond. wrapped up" to "the contract will drlckson. after recovering the nude body o( and six bystanders - as they set One thing Is defini te. Some ac· "this summer 01 determined e[· to be worth $40.000 today. It was SIGOURNEY: Tho mas o.an be reopened." It all depends on tlon will be taken on a new con· Cort." given to SUI in 1947 hy Peggy Gug. one 12·year,OJd from a shallow out on an attempted mourning which "close, inCormed source" Is Phelps. grave. Officers feared all four march from a church to the City tract. Most source agree, how· The points were Iisled thls WI)': genheim, art collector now living State Aid Increase quoted. ever. that a wage tncrea pro!). • Kennedy aaked the AFlrClO SIOUX CITY: Michael Jon Kin· were slain by a sex pervert. ~all . One block from the church in Europe. dred. Since May I. the union has had ably will not be involved. to l up a top level committee SPRINGVILLE: K e I t h Allen To Grade,) Schools The body of Guy Luckenulck was about 100 officers swooped down on the right to formally reopen negoti· to work with the Adminlstration Reed. found Wednesday night in a mea· the group and took Salter, among ations, and with a reopening goes in a concerted drive, among DOlI' Methodists TIPTON: William Howard Bur· Passed in Illinois dow under eight inches of soil and others. into custody. the right to strike afler 90 days. while groupe, in a "massive at· ger. identified Thursday. A protruding An angry crowd of Negroes jeer. Itlormal talks have been In Space Pilot tack on job discriminallon." He I ' T R' POL I: Marlyn Wayne SPRINGFIELD, Ill. IA'I - The hand led to the discovery. ed some 100 policemen [rom near. progress for lOme time In the joint proposed that an attemPt at I Fight Liquor 0ItrD9g', Illinois House passed Thursday a He disappeared April 20 after by yards and bouse porches during labor·management Human Rcla' breakthrough be made in 30 or URBANDALE: Geralel C. Back· $32 mllUon increase for state aid coming to Quebec with his parents the .roundup. tions Committee, a group estab­ 40 ciUes this summer but did DOt DES MOlNES !.fI - The Soutb haus. to grade SChools. then recessed an from Kenogami, 115 miles north of THE UCiL Y scene underlined lished in 1960 to discuss mutual Receives Key spccily cities. Iowa Conference oC the Methodist WASHINGTON: Thomas Coffey here, for a music lesson. fears of NAACP leaders that Evers' problems. • He asked for all-out support afternoon session in an uproar But it Is the Wage Policy Com· Church reaf£irmed Thursday ils Morrison, Richard Rowland Wing •. after 310 bills were killed on a sin. Still missing were : Alain Carrier, death posed a threat of violent reo from the trade union movement opposition to liquor by tbe drink in WATERLOO: Thomas Mlcheel 12; Pierre Marquis, 13 and Michel action. mittee, which meets Tuesday fol· To Griswold for bis legislative package of IOcla1 Iowa. Horan. James Allen Stout, James gle molion. Morel, 9. Morel and Carrier dis· Current said he hoped Evers' lowing an executive board meeting and economic measures. In a resolution adopted on the H. Yagla. The bill to boost the stale level appeared May 5 while playing. death. would have a quieting effect Monday, that makes the final decl· GRISWOLD IA'I _ A high.{Jying • He urged an all-out campeigD closing day of its annual meeting, WEST LIBERTY: Stenley Dwight of support from the present $252 Marquis was last seen swim~ng on both Negroes and whiles. He sian on contract matters. Iowa native came back to the 1tate to build up voter registratioos, par· the conCerence commended law· Miller. per pupil to $297 was forwarded to near here May 26. His cloth 109 urged Negroes not to translate their The Iron Age, weekly trade mag· Thursday and described the United ticularly among minority groupe. makers who worked unsuccessfully WINTERSET: William James Ule Senate on a 167·] vote. The in· was not found. anger into violence. azine, claims a settlement is 1m· States space efforts as '''an un· • He called on International un· Koehn. minent and that the committee is limited challenge." during the 1963 legislature against crease is not included in Gov. Otto Police said there was little Saller's collision with police ions to put more Negroa ill posl· NON·IOWA bein~ assembled to smooth out Cinal Maj . Charles C. Bock Jr., 37, passage of the hill legalizing liq· Kerner's budget. chance of finding them alive. came as he stood on a porch shout· tion of respon ibillty. KeJIJledY uor by the drink. ILLiNOIS details. . . formerly of Council Bluffs, one ol was quoted as saying: "AI I look The conference also declared its Chic:ego: Gene O. MacIcIox. Kerner's two·year budget total Police Inspector J. A. Matte said ing along with lbe Rev. Edwin However, a unIon lOurce ID a group of pUots considered as po. of $433 million in school aid is near· officers were holding a man for King and Mrs. King. around this room, there are too support for local option elections to . MARYLAND Washington told ~he As.oclated tential astronauts, poke to us· many white Caces, both down there vote Iowa counties "dry" as per· Silver Springs: JDhn C. Slay,r. Iy $40 million above the current questioning who hunted and fished Newsmen said Deputy Police Press ~ere are vast disagree- tainlDg members of the Southwest and up here." allotment. But the increase is in the area where Luckenuick's Chief J. L. Ray told the three - milled under the new liquor law. MICHIGAN ments," which may result in a de· Iowa Council oC Boy Scouts at • He proposed tbat the UlIioa. The delegates commended the Ply m 0 u t h: Charl.s Konrad needed to lake care of higher en· body was found . The inspector said all of them white - to' be quiet or mand Cor contract reopening. Camp Wakonda near here. lake the initlative In forming bi­ legislature for providing funds to Moisio. roJlments and makes no changes the man had tried recenUy to lure Cace arrest for disturbing lhe ~ Wall Street Journal says an "Our space efforts today have racial cou.ocils all over the natioa. start a program for rehabilitation NEW MEXICO in the present $252 per pupil level. youths into the woods. peace. agreement Is near but many de· really only scratched the surface," Republican leader Everett II. of alchoholics. Albuquerque: Robert L. d'Tim· Bock said, adding he would like \.0 Dirksen of WiIloia said KelUledy Other resolutions called upon merman. o {Jy to the moon. indicated that he plans legislation Methodist church·supported hos· OH 10 23 Nowen Att d ,n9 "U's a challenge and an oppor· \.0 strengthen Negro voting rilbta. pitals, schools and church agencies Struthers: John J. Duggan. Two Negroes Meet Friends o °d I S tunity to do something tbat should extend the lile of the civil rights to refuse all public funds. and en· OREGON In d'v, ua ports prove to be worthwhile \.0 our commiasioa, empower tile attomeJ dorsed the work of an organization Eugene: Derrick E. McGavlc. country," be said. general \.0 file school clelegreptioa known as Protestants and Other Summer Worlcshop Bock may DeVer become an .ull3, aDd prohibit racial discrim· Americans United for Separation astronaut, be', an inch and a balf ination in public places lib air· of Church and State. As Third Enters· Alabama Twenty-two regi!trants from five over the maximum limit for astro­ ports and railway stations IDd in It referred to its Board of Chris· Bar the Bar! states and one Crom England are nauts now. private establishments like stora, tian Social Concerns, however, a HUNTSVILLE, Ala . 1.4'1 - A IGuardsmen before Miss Vivian Edwin Guthman, a special assist· attending the first summer work. The major is an engineering test restaurants and theaters. resolution opposing the transporta· Liquor Commission young Government scientist took Malone and James A. Hood, both ant to the U.S. attorney general, ship in individual sports for leach. pilot Cor the Air Force, statloned Dirksen added that the Pmldent tion of private and parochial school time off [rom his job Thursday to , 20, registered as undergraduates. said he was gratified that there ers of women's physical education at Edwards Air Force BallC, Calli., does not intend to submit a bW pupils on public school buses. Plays NalTle Game become the third Negro to enroll New gestures of friendship came were no incidents at Huntsville. to be held on the SUI campus. where at the moment he is testing setting up a fair employmeli. prac. as a University of Alabama stu· to Miss Malone and Hood Thw's, "THE SITUATION was handled Professor M. Gladys Scott, chair. the supersonic B-58 Hustler. tiees comm.lssion. DES MOINES ~ - When Is e dent this week. day 40m white students, most of entirely by local oUicers and tbal'a man of women's physical education In 1959 be was at the controls bar not a bar? Senator Protests Dave Mack McGlathery. 27, reg· them doing graduate work. tbe way it should be," he said. and co-ordinator for the two·week oC the B-52 mother ship which took When It's located In Iowa. islered without incident Cor a post· "This is a new cballenge to me." Back in Tuscaloosa, Misa Ma. program, said the conCerence i! de. the experimental X·IS aloft for its Morning Delivery Salary 'Increments That's the ruling of the Iowa graduate night courso in higher McGlathery, a Navy veteran, said lone and Hood wenl peacefully signed mainly for women teachlJlg first flights. Liquor Commission, which say. mathematics at the University Ex· after regislering. "It's up to me to about their classroom work. Block. physical education at the high Bock told a news conference that Of Daily Iowan WASHINGTON ill - A "fan· plae.s .erving IIquor-by-the-drlnk tension Cenler. ma.lle good - not necessarily for ades erected last week at many scbool level. The workshop opened manned aircrafl "will be wit.il us under Iowa's new law cannot us. taslic raid on the publlc lreasury" tt He (illed out. various forms, paul my rilce, but [or myself. points throughout the 434-acre Tuesday. for a long time to come." He com. Was the description applied by the word. "bar," "bar_ end a $60 fee ~nd JD less than an hour ttTHIS SPEAKS very well lor campus were removed. A curfew Areas of study conaiat of tennis, pared critics of the cost of the Starts Tuesday Sen. Slephen M. Young (D·Ohio l "slloon" on their lignl. was on h1S way back to work at Huntsville the State of Alabama was llited. beginning 8wimming, advanCed country's space elloN with those The Dally will ...... Previously the commission had 1__ to a proposed salary increase for the National Aeronautics and Space and the ~ation as a whole. We A1thougb tension ,lessened, how· swimming and diving, synchron. wbo said the Wright brothers were livered br carrier ...... ,.. bllll!ld only usa of the worel FUght His realize there are many problems ever, guardsmen with carbinea .till ized 8Wimming, goU, fencing and wasting lime and money trying to Supreme Court justices, Cabinet ~dministration Cent~r. IMIIt In eff-campus ...... members and othor officials. "saloon" on signs. Then It Wli first class was Thursday mght. but believe they can be worked out lingered in (ront of the dormitori~ bowJjng. fly. dllCO¥ered the lowl beer law startint T....uy. Young suggested that President There was no crowd of the idly for a betler nation." where tbe Negroea are quartered. Instruction will emphasize the As a Council Bluffs Boy Scout, Delivery win lit T u .. II • y Kennedy abolish a speCial commis· bans any signs with· the words curious, no federal troops - only a Wallace wasn't there to renew a Robert Davis, a Florida school leaching oC individual sports to Bock said he never dreamed of be. "bar," "barroom," "&lloon" or "'"""" s.tunIey IIurInt ... IUftIo alon headed by Clarence RandaU, Cew state troopers. federal mar· challenge to federal court desegre· teacher here for graduate work., high scboo1 *tudents and will coo· ing an Air Force lest pilot, "but I mer _Ion. retired Chicago sleel executive, "words of like Import." s.caust shals and a group of newsmen out· galion orders. He had said in ad· met Davis with oul3tretchecl hand sider source materials necessary always had a desire to fly." which made the recommendation. establJlltmerth must hive a beer side the two·story brick building on vance he would stay away. when both started for classes \.0 a school program of individual Test pilots mLl5t have a good In the ~Ime, ...... ,., The Ohioan lIIIid the commission IIcenst before obta inlng a liquor the 33O·acre campus. JeUerson Scnnett, vice president Thursday morning. Davis Is wblte sports. education, maturity, experience pick up cep'" 1# The .,.,., wanted to boost pay oC Supreme lIeenst, the commlulon revised THE SCENE was in sharp con· o[ the University, said: He introduced himself and said Participants will also bave an op. and level headedness, he said. I_lit ...... DffIca III ... Court Justices from $35,000 to $60,. Itl ruling. lrast to that oC Tuesday at Tusca· "We have completed our obliga· as they shook handa: "James, I'm portunity \.0 improve their own "Going into space ia a dilierent Communlcat .... c..tw. 000, Increase Cabinet o££lccrs to Commlulon ruling. also limit loosa, site of the University proper. lion to the courts, both here and at glad to see you." skills. story ," he said. "The psychiatnsts The I_lit Is _ ...... $50,000 and r/liae many other ap· .111 of signs adv.rtl,lng liquor There was a five·hour drama fea· Tuscaloosa. We are deeply grate· And Miss Malone told an AasocI· Instructors for the workshop in· reaJ1y get into the act. 1bere are livered anIy ,. ....1torIIt, ",.... pointed official. to from $30,000 to by the drink to no Ilrger than turing segregationist Gov. George Cui (or the support and security ated Press reporter abe did litUe elude Pauline Loeffier, Annie Cle· Iota of unsolved problems." rltd ~ ...... "" ... t.c.Ity $50,000 a year. Coosre88 members 1.V. feet Squ.rt. Only _ such C. Wallace, hundreds oC stale during our eUorts. Now we are sludying in bet dormitory Wednea- ment, Mary ,Lou Thornburll and Griawold Mayor Vernoo Deao homes IIfttII • lilt If ~ and' senatore would be raJsed trom .Ign will be .1I0wtd for teCh troGpe[8 and subSequen[ly more anxiqus .to. resume OUr DOrmal d8)' .. ni&ht "becaUle some &lrlll Dr. Scott, IIU of the womeo'. ~ PI'e8eIIted Bodt witb a iey \.0 the ...... "...... ~,MB t.o .-.DOO. . ... I • • place. h\1ndred~ of 'federallzed National activity." __ _ 1 , dropped by." . . ' . eal educatioll.clepartment.. city. • ._, . • the OffIce If the ...... I - ~ : 1'h~ 'Daily Iowan - A Trek For Religious Freedom ~~ OBSERVATIONS '01 ~ B Ie , AriNI If) The eVis By JOSEPH ALSOP army. and morc than enough dis­ - ! a : e I ever5 affection in the Chinese country. iiIl. s,"!!!":.t~,!half WASHINGTON - The "return , By RALPH hWilLl. beaut~ was su.cb t.luit quarries of the world's induwial iOCielia&. brought it into touch with the to the mainland." so long and so side. to insure a landing on a '.gel FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1963 Iowa City, low. It was just a ripple in the flood were opened there many cen­ It will be interesting to see if tele­ West. He learned by doing, did often proclainned. may really be relatively small scale acting like of news. but nonetheless. the story turies ago. Marmara marble vision and the comforts o( such a Peter, He worked under assumed attempted this year by Generalis­ a lighted match in a dry hay­ simo Chiang Kai-shek, of the arrival in' this country of found its way to Greece and other society' will proquce an erosion of nalnes as a common laborer in stack, 224 Old .aeliever~ shores along the Aegean. belief and integrity that centuries the shipyards of 1I0lland and Eng­ There is considerable danger As years wore on, thp weak of of Turkish exile could not. land. He served as a private in that this explosive possibility will THE QUESTION therefore is Let's Clean-up · from their long- ~ . not whether Chiang Kai-shek seri-­ establish- heart among the Old Believers There was pne symool. A grand­ ~is own army, He hired thousands be pooh-poohed. until the attempt ed homes in exile went back to Russia. The strong mother in the group. picked up of artists and artificers, engineers is actulllly underway, The Gen­ ously Intends to attempt his lllnd­ in Turkey was as remained •. resisUng an pffer .by from a remote Asian village and and builders, He fought wars and eralissimo and his government Ing in 1963, The truth is that 19li.1 Our Own Backyard fundamental and . the Soviets to come back to the ferried across continents an4 seas opened Russia to the sea. bUild­ have been talking about reinvad­ is all'cady being rather openly ~'f ' described in high government s y m b 0 Ii c as native land their ancestors had by the magic carpet of ~p\. air- ' ing a dtess nation, They were alLowed or in her hand ail the long jour­ herds of caltlc and sheep. built Wolf!·1 of lhe little boy in the Instead. the question is whe- , "Yes, it's too bad this nation has to put up with such Russia in 1708. religious freedom in Turkey. but ney, But the children, • ,? OOly palaces. cities, $txeets. roads , , _ story, ther or not Chiang Kai-shek will Southern bigots," replies his companion. The extremes of its revolution is nof yet com­ the years will tell. and managed all the while to be But in the first place. some act on his intenlion in the end, that truly remarkable man. Peter pleted, They fear to lose their Th o: Old Believers have a leg­ a COars~, brutal l7Ian given over The answer to this question Is TIlls conversation expresses the truth at its utmost. fast-talking American persuasion 1 (the Great) Alekseyevich, rights. end of bitterness for Peter the to vices which made inevitable was needed to avert at least one virtually certain to be in the af. but it happens to be.hypo<;ritical. ~owa and Iowa City have caused five thousand of their fore­ Taras Ataman. ,spokesman for Great. In Ireland they still curse a long, harsh death of great suf­ earlier attempt. And in the sec­ firmative. m 0 reo v e r. unless President Kennedy can' persuade their own racial problems, Ther are not great but they are bears to bundle and go. leaving t~e 224 survivors. explain~d; "The the name of Cromwell and talk fering, ond place. the indications from their homes and the land and rules of our church forbade us to of him as if he had scorged the ,Formosa this spring differ quite the Generalissimo to change his Significant enough to make a condemnation of the South He did make himself head of mind, language they knew. to settle in iljtermarry any further. But even land only yesterday, Old men and the church, Because of his severi­ sharply from any in the past. hypocritical, two villages about Lake Manyas so • .very few of us married the women in Georgia and South ties in religious laws the Russian THERE ARE no boast ful. Persuasion will be tried. at any in Turkey. (Lake Manyas is in rate, Even the American oUicials The two coffee commentators might be reminded that Moslems or Christians in Tur­ Carolina still sp~ak ill of William orthodox church had many sects empty proclamations now, In­ northwest Turkey near the south key," Tecumseh Sherman. though more to splinter from it , , , the Old stead there are serious prepara­ who believe a return to the main­ they should not criQcize others until their own backyards shore of the Sea of Marmara.> They will be settled in two com­ than a century has passed since Ritualists; the Old Believers; the tions. For example, besides build­ land may some day succeed are arc spotless, They would do better to turn their energies This sea is 172 miles long and munities in New York state. he demonstrated that war is hell. Khlysty groups

• .' THE DAILY IOWAN-I ... City, Jewe-FrIII.,., JIIM 14, lta-P';' , .Ministers" Ponaer Quitting" - FRESH FROM OUR f dis­ " '(Following Profumo THE ARISTOCRAT IN-STORE BAKERY ~ ntry­ Scandal oh a LONDON I.fI - Two key Cabinet A second emergency meeting of for the Conservatives. Iik. ministers Thursday night pondered the Cabinet in successive days The Conservatives have a Com· OF ROASTS hay- • walkout over the John Profumo ended with neitber Powell nor mons majority of about 100. The OLD FASHION ,candal that could start a land. Boyle serving notice that lhey have Government has ordered all mem­ t all d e sweeping Prime Minister positively decided to quit. bers to toe the party line. They l~e is Harold Macmillan from office. This roused Conservative hopes therefore virtually are assured of CINNAMON I"- serj, Macmillan and all Britain waited that Macmillan may yet ride the a majority if the Laborites force kl~~~1 while Health Minister Enoch Pow­ storm, at least until Monday. a no-confidence vote. STANDING Gpenly ell and Education Minister Sir His chief ministers, meanwhile, BUT ANY considerable number ROLLS ment .Edward Boyle debated thel~ de- organized a massive counter-of­ of Conservative abstentions - 20 ear of ,I cision . fensive in defense of the Govern­ or more is the number most orten A Conservative member of Par­ ment's position. mentioned - would almost certaJn­ liament, Sir Cyril Osborne, de­ QUEEN ELIZABETH 1\ will Iy oblige Macmillan to resign since RIB ROAST whe· clared: have a vital political role to play it would show him unable to com· I Dozen 49c tIk will "The whole beastly incident bas in choosing a successor if the Pro­ mand his party. ~ end. I dragged Tory honor in the gutter. fumo scandal should force Prime He would drive the mile from lion Is "I AM SICK of seeing our news­ Minister Harold Macmillan from the Commons to Buckingham Pal· e af. pa~rs and television screens full office. ace and hand the queen his regis­ • DECORATED unless of the sordid details of the farm· Even if Macmillan rides out the nation and his advice. suade yard morals and pigsty habits of coming political storm, and even He could ask the queen to dis­ e his I . pimps and prostitutes even though, if repeated hints of more Tory solve Parliament, thus calling an HY·VEE SUPERB TRIM LAMB FATHER'S DAY unhappily, some of them move in scandals are proved faise, most immediate national election. More at a~y high ~Ircles." competent observers expected the probably, he would suggest she RIB STEAK .• ••••• LB. 69c SHOULDER STEAK • • • LB. fficia]s Friends portrayed Powell and bad I y shaken Conservatives 0 call on some other ConservaUve 49c CAKES main. Boyle as deeply disturbed that the seek a new leader before the sum­ leader to form a Government. dare nation might believe the indiscre­ mer is out. Essentially, Macmillan's case is ARMOUR'S CAMPFIRI ARMOUR'S STAR y at· tions of former War Minister Pro­ The search could start mu('h that be was the victim of betrayal ~ by Profumo. The party-loving ex­ rllY ill· lumo were condoned by his fellow sooner, should MondRY'S debate in BACON • , LB. PICG_ 49c WIENERS •••. - - • LB. PKG. 49c Each S125 Cabinet ministers. the House of Commons go badly minister had denied nearly a dozen a clear limes be had been having an affair GUS GLASER'S GOLDEN NET nright ' with pretty Christine Keeler, 21. k be­ Last week Profumo admitted lying nd the Classics, Semi-classics to Parliament. Then he resigned SLICED BOLOGNA LB, PKG, 49c BREADED SHRIMP 10 OZ. PKG. 59c GARLlC·BUTIERED ~er 12 and went into hiding. COLLEAGUES reported Macmil. ation· ARMOUR'S STAR ARMOUR 'S STAR BARBEQUE BREAD d will Featured by Music Room Ian has resolved to offer the House of Commons Monday the chance to e risk CANNED PICNICSHB. CAN LOIN BACK RIBS 21,. LB. CAN ed by By CAROLE ANDERSON cording to Mrs., Mildred LeVois, set up any sort of investigation $1.79 $2.49 St.ff Writer executive hostess. which desired into all the circumstances , LOAF factor Desire a quiet, air-conditioned The Music Room was established oC the affair. 25~ place equipped with soft back­ shortly after 1927 by a donation of This is intended to meet possi­ mmllllllllllmllllllllllllllllllll~llIlIlIlIllIImlll ll1mlllllllllllllllllllllmmlllllllllllll1~llIlIIllIlIIllmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli ]11111111111~:mmlllllllllmlillllill~ ground music (or studying this several bundred 78 rpm records ble charges that an internal Gov­ summer? from the Carnegie Foundation. ~rnmental probe was inadequate. II ELGIN Such accommodations exist in The record library has expanded This inquiry hy Lord Dilhorne, the -E55!! WHITE·SLlCED '" the south section of the Iowa Me­ yearly to its present collection of lor d chancellor, suggested Pro­ morial Union in the Music Room nearly 500 LP classical and semi· fumo leaked no state secrets. located off the Terrace Lounge. classical albums, Mrs. LeVois said. There were rumors and coun· con AGE BREAD "The Music Room is the most­ ter-rumors that other important used room in the building other Students may request selections Conservatives may yet find them­ LB. CARTON than the Gold Feather Room," ac- to be played by Union hostesses selves named by members of the (rom the control booth in the Mu­ Keeler set as being in some way OLEO 2 FOR 29~ sic Room daily (rom 1-5 p,m. and involved. I 7·10 :45 p.m. Aides reported this is one of the W~lIl1l1l1mmlllmlll lllllll llllllllmllllllllll~mllllmllllllllllmlllllllm lllllllllllllllIlIImmlmlllllllllilllllllllllllllllmlllllllllllmlll ~mmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~lllllIlllllm I ~lllllllllllllilllllllm~~~mlllllmlmlllllllllllllllllllllllli .' Golden Rule An automatic record changer hig dangers looming over Macmil­ provides study music at other lan. If other members of his ad­ times. ministration seem to have been in­ local Three individual listening booths volved, even marginally, in the many Is New Goal' are provided Cor students who pre­ scandal, Macmillan and bis Gov­ world fer to bring their own records, or ernment would probably fall. simo's wish to check out records on file It seemed clear Macmillan's per­ s l)ew in the Music Room. sonai Cuture depends on the im· t- Of Engineer pression he makes when he ad­ Although the Music Room fea­ dresses Parliament. , Inc. ' ' TULSA, Okla, IA'I - Don Coving­ tures classical music, a variation ton is giving up work with a is provided on Tuesday nigbts with ICE CREAM !t2 Gallon slide rule to teach the Goiden Rul!!. the Union Board sponsored "jazz , Covington has left his job as a night". Korean Taxes project engineer (or Williams Bro­ "The Music Room features only thers, a pipeline construction com­ classical and semiclassical music , pany, to begin training to become because two other rooms, Gold an ordained Methodist minister and Feather and River Rooms, have Are Continued GEISHA rts-car eventually, he hopes, a missionary jazz and popuiar music," Mrs. Le­ cath. to Korea. Vols said, WASHINGTON I.fI - The House Ti"," His departure took away Crom passed Thursday lhe perennial bill MANDARIN ORANGES 4 CANS Aldersgate Methodist Church a to continue tax rates set during man who filled 50 many roles he Plans for $60,000 the Korean War on autos and termed himseU the church's "utili- parts, cigarettes, alcoholic liquor, HY-VEE I' ty in£l.elder". Be was recording Interceptor Sewer airline tickets, general telephone steward, taught a Sunday School service and corporate income. GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS 4 TALL CANS class, sang in the choir, served as ·t The 283-91 vote sent to lhe Sen­ youth counseUor and filled in 00 Sys t em G0 t 0 CI Yale a measure which it is estimat­ various other jobs - including ed will save the Treasury a $4.2- FLAV-R-PAK painting a sign for the church. Plans were turned over to Iowa billion revenue loss. His wife, Jo Anne, served as City officials, Wednesday, for the Some House members wanted ROYAL ANNE CHERRIES 4 TALL CANS church pianist and was active In first phase of the city's southwest to defeat the one-year extension other church work. interceptor sewer system. and let the ta~es expire to provide l Covington had been with Wil­ a cut ahead oC the general tax HI·C liams Brothers for six years, five The estimated $60 thousand phase overhaul and income tax reduc- 00 of them in Tulsa, working on pipe­ one c~lis for 24 inch sewer connect- tions asked by President Kennedy . ORANGE DRINK .. , ..... 3 460Z, CANS $1 lines, stations, terminals "and any­ ing to existing sewer near the inter­ That measure is now being drafted thing eise that has to do with the section of highways 218, 6, and 1 by the House Ways and Means • I transportation of oil or gas." Committee. WHITE OR Be was trained as a biochemist southwest of Iowa City. But Rep. Wilbur D. MlUs (0- lOG COUNT at tbe Universities of Kansas City Phase two plans are projected to Ark,), chairman o[ tbat committee, BOXES 89~ and Miami (Fla.), but worked with extend the interceptor sewer north­ strongly opposed such a course. COLORED KLEENEX ..... 4 a firm of refinery engineers and westward to a point near the inter­ After the tax overhaul is out of the builders while he was in school and section of the fWV road and the way, he said, the committee may thus was familiar with the oil and Coralville cut-oCf road. be able to consider gradual reduc­ gas business. He was a draftsman Another line would be constructed lions in the Korean War taxes in Kansas City for six years before Crom the junction of the phase one plus some others. be joined Wiliiams. Ilne to the sewage plant in south The tax rates covered in the Iowa City. f legislation passed Thursday mostly l . were set during the Korean conflict Eco.nomy Bag Phase one pians will be given to and have been extended on a one­ IBiliousness ~he city.council next week accor,d- year basis, occasionally longer. The or , mg to city manager Carsten Leik- rates will drop to a lower Jevel Twin-Pak . void. unless Congress completes action Potato Chips The plans are subject to approval on the bill by June 30. lox No Stumper by the highway commission and the WASHINGTON I'" - Glen Van state heaith department, in addi­ Stewart Succumbs; '[ Slyke 111 of Oak Ridge, Tenn ., a tion to the city council. HY-VEE teen-ager who likes to play chess, TALL read Bnli swim, is the new Na­ Ex-SUI Professor CANS tional Spelling Bee champion. Citizens Council R. M. Stewart, 84, proCessor oC ·GREEN BEANS 5 $1.0.0 He tucked the $1,000 first prize education at SUI 45 years ago, and I money into his pocket to put it Underway Here former president of Graceland Col­ HY-VEE away toward a college education lege, Lamoni, died Wednesday at CALIFORNIA at Rice ~nstitute in Texas. City Manager Carsten D. Leik­ Williston Park, N. Y. TALL CAN Glen, IS, an eighth-grader, woo void bas sent out letters to about Professor Stewart left Iowa City PORK & BEANS 10' on the word "biliousness". 150 Iowa City groups asking them in 1918 to go to Cornell University. Hi. parents Bnd ll-year-old sis­ to nominate members Cor a citizens He was professor and later head of MY·VEE BING CHERRIES ter, Paula, covered him with hugs council to consider civic questions. rural education there. After reo and kisses as he captured the prize Leikvold was directed to work on tiring there he served four years KIDNEY BEANS TALL CAN 10¢ In a dramatic North-South finale setting up such a committee by as director of the Project (or with 14·year-old Elaine Piecuch of city council action in May. Presidents of Negro Land Grant MARY LOU Winslow, Maine. The committee would consider a Colleges, 1946-50. Elaine, who wants to be a nun, large range of civic matters, He received his bachelors degree TALL CAN gamely applauded Glen after sbe from SUI in 1904 and Ph.D. in 1912. WHOLE POT ATOES lO¢ missed out by spelling the word though its formation was prompt­ with two "I's", Then, she wiped ed by possible urban renewal con­ away a tear as her opponent, in siderations. accordance with the contest rules, Some oC the speciCic considera­ SILVER BAR (Packed by Del Monte) spelled one more clinching word, tions listed in the letter were build­ "equipage," to be crowned cham­ ing codes, zoning, community plan­ ~~ pion. ning, neighborhood planning, parks, ,,_'1~i... CALIFORNIA ElaIne won $500 (or second place, playgrounds, library, organization Insured II, P.D_I.C. Tall can among the 69 contestants In the of the city, housing codes, housing RINK SALMON 49c IwOodBY spelldowD. for the aged and indigent, racial Third place and $250 in cash discrimination, trafCic, and park­ I STRAWBERRIES LB. went to Gary Barringer, H, o( ing. TODAY ... Eaat Liverpool, Ohio, who missed Ind IVory on "harIcot," a vegetable and ,..------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil meat dish, like a slew. He left out :.... ~ ... ~~49c LUTHERAN SERVICES FRIDAY the linal "t", after going 27 rounds : 50 : WITH In the competition that lasted 33 ST. PAUL LUTHERAN : IXTRA: rounds and used 752 words. a rec­ (MIlSouri Synod) Full Banking • FRII 0 EACH ord number for the event which • STAAtps· Itarted back in 1925_ 404 E•• I J.HersOll Service Until ...... : Roy. John COIIlt.bl. WATERMELON • vvtUUING INVITATIONS Summ.r Schedule 6:00 PJA. RRIDAL REGISTRY Service. 9 A,M. Another Ftiendly and Exclmive Service FOOD ,STORES WELCOME RIGHT TO LIMIT RESERVED W.AYNER'S I PARKING , r 111 FAST WASHINGTON ,It. • ':iI tt-;". T ~." •• ,... .. ' , - " '. Wdlface Lost "

Dr. Robert F. Ray, president of "In the interest of the nation's Hawkeyes the NCAA and an SUI dean, re­ amateur athletes and the United ceived a telegram from the Ama· States representation in the Olym· Bob Wallace, considered by many as Iowa's top quarterback teur Athletic Union Thursday which pic Games and other international appealed for an end to the squabble competition, I beseech you to en· prospect, has dropped from school because of academic reasons. over amateur spor(s. cOllrage the NCAA to join with oth. Head Coach Jerry Burns' announcement confirmed rumors The telegram from Luis J. Fish­ er U.S. amateur or¥anlzations in that had been circulating during recent weeks. Burns bad reo er , president of the AAU, offered cooperating fully with the recoG' to meet with NCAA representatives nized governing bodies in this cOLIn· Ported in March that Wallace was baving scholastic problems. HARRISON , N.Y. - SUI grad- seven one-putt greens. to achieve a cooperative effort Cor tl·Y. h f uate Jack Rule shot a 3·under-par "I felt fine, really relaxed," the Wallace quarterbacked the No.1 unit during rouc 0 spring 67 Thursday in the $100.000 Thun- 33-year.old, three . time Masters the 1964 Olympic Games and other "Our fine ama te ur athletes de· practice. BUrns refused to rate ,bis derbird Golf Classic and shot into big international contests. serve an end of this sports con· ' quarterbacks, saying that he was a tie for the lead with ArnOld Pal- champion said afterwards. " It Dr. Ray, dean of Special Servo f1ict and the United States needs counting on four prospects. mer. wasn't work. It was fun again. I ices Dnd of the Extension Division, our patriotic cooperation to main· Wo Id 440 . said tha t he I'eceived Fisher's tel· tain its rightful place in interna . Wallace played ODe complete Mule, a native of Waterloo, has enjoyed it." tional sports. game on offense last fall, filling been on the tour only a year. He Palmer quit the tour after shoot. egram Tuesday "and sent him a in for Matt Szykowny who was in- was so excited over lis round that ing a 299 _ 20 strokes back of the telegram in I'eturn say ing] would "On behel[ of the Amateur Ath· jured. The Alliance, Ohio 80pho- he was unable to describe it to reply by letter. letic Union of (he United States I Mark Bettered more led the Haw ks to a 14-10 VIC'· reporters. He sank putts of 20, 15, winning Boros, at the Colonial In· "1 am now in the ?rocess of am happy to guarantee full und tory over Indiana in that game. and 12 feet. vitation in Fort Worth a month writing the letter, but I do not feel equitable representation to the ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. "" - He completed six of 10 passes for Palmer f'oded a month's laycff ago. Whil e the go lf world buzzed it would be fair to Mr Fisher to NCAA on the governing councils Ulis Williams of Arizona State, who 68 yards and scored the Winning which was designed to snap a nag- with speculation that he may be disclose its contents until Mr. Fish­ of those sports for which we are has t~lce bettered the listed 440- touchdown. I .gillg. slwnp. He QUtwstanced top losing his edge, he returned to his er receives it." the established governing body. yard world record of 45.7 ~onds Rumors were circulating around rivals Jack ~icklaus and Gary Latrobe, Pa., home to rest and Dr. Ray said he probably would This includes complete represen· this year, ~ased to a :46.8 victory the campus Thursday that Wallace Player with a round of 33-34--'l7. work on his game. mail the leller today. He declined tation at all levels from the bot· iTn ihe quadhfYF~gldheacthof ih~ NC,,!, may enroll at Kent State or some Nicklaus the 23 -year.old preknu- "I was just mentally and phys· to comment on whether he favored tom to the very top. I am pre. rac k on Ie amplons hIps th hi' . II t' d " h 'd a meeting with the AAU and re­ pared to meet with NCAA repre. Th sda . ht 0 er sc ~ . er who took the Masters' crown Ica y Ire , e sal . Cused comment on details of Ilis ur y DIg . The Hawks have three quarter· from Palmer ·this ~pting and later Rule, an SUI graduate from Wat. sentatives immediately to effect a A crowd of about 3,000 sat u~der backs left on the team. The only beat him in the Tournament of erloo who has been on the tour reply to Fisher. cooperative effort." c~ear , warm skies at t.he UDlver· experienced signal caller is Fred Champions, and Player, the tough only a year, was so excited over The AAU and the NCAA were S!ty of New Mexico stadium for tbe Riddle. Riddle saw only limited lilUe Seuth African, finished the his round that he was unable to recently directed by Gen. Douglas first session of the three·day meet. action last fall. day tied with a dozen, two strokes describe it to interviewerR. MacArthur to settle their differ· Minnesota Trips ences. Williams, running in the outside Two sophomores are also in line back 'at 69. Nicklaus said "r piayed ve ry The text of the telegram, which lane in the fir~t of three prel~mi- for the position. Gary Snook of Ben Hogan, the mechanical hawk well compared to the way I've been , was released Thursday, follows: Kansas City, 6-3 nary heat~ of the 440 spurted mto Iowa City will be competing for the of another era, add~d nostalgia to playing but I pulted horribly. I the lea~ With 100 yards to run, then job. Burns said Snook's grades look the tournament by shooting a reo didn't even miss them close." ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS 1.11 - eased 1IIto the tape. favorable at this time. spectable 71 in his first toumament Player's round was featured by Nixon Scores Second baseman Bernie Alien, The most noteworthy casually Mickey Moses of Escanaba, competition in more than a year. an odd rulin g and spectacular shot blasting his way out of a aeaSOll· Russ Nixon of the slid.s saf.ly across home plate "'ays/. Homer long slump, crashed two solo home in the 440 was ~illa~ova's ~ Mich., is the other prospect. Moses Palmer and Rule had a one- on the 43e-yard par 4 eighth hole. as Washington Senators' catch.r Don Leppert leaps to take throw Webster, who ran fifth In the third is not in summer school. stroke edge aver a trio of outsiders 'There his second shot landed un- runs as Minnesota downed Kansas • in the eighth inning of their gam. at F.nway Park Thursdav. City 6-3 Thursday night. Ileae _ Bill Eggers of Henderson, Nev. ; der a rock. He was given a free The first tour in eacb heat of Cd· I F· II Bob Duden of Portland, Ore. and drop on the imbedded ball rule -AP Wirephoto Beats Chicago Allen also singled, giving him the qualifying races advanced to or InalS ,no y Gay Brewer, Jr., of Dallas, all with and he proceeded to chip in from ------:----~__:_. -_;;_------J~--- seven hits in his last 12 times at the Friday night semifinals. Master' Ph.llll.es identical scores of 34-~ . 45 fe et for a birdie 3. He had two SAN FRANCISCO (A'\ - Willie bat. The hits have included thrc~ This is the first year tlie NCAA The 6,550. yard, par 35-35-70 other birdies. Mays walloped a 10th·inning home homers and two doubles. Or'loles Top Yankees. ,-5 4 run Thursday, giving the San Fran· meet has been stretched over three h St L ' . Westchester Country Club course, * * * Vic Power also went on a days. ST: LOUIS "" - T e. . ~UI S site of this prelude t.o nest week's NEW YORK IA'I - The Baltimore two out and the bases loaded was cisco Gianls and Billy 0'· splurge, collecting jour hits on a Dell a 2-1 triumph over the Chi· The e~tended.sc~ule.resultedjn Car:ctmals batted.IO men IP tbe fi~st U.S. Open at Brookline, Mass., was Negro Golfer Says Orioles came from behind on the key hit in the Orioles' decisive double and three singles. some hearty doubling and tripling, innmg fO.r four runs and w~nt on a patsy for the star.studded field Brooks Robinson's two·run seventh. cago CUbs. particularly by Southern California, to a trlU.m.ph of 138 battling for the $25,000 first seventh· inning rally against relief Mays' 12th homer of the cam­ Bob Allison drove in two Twins' ram-shor~ned ~-3 inning single, snapped a five· game runs with a double to left on a fly er the losing string and knocked the New pilcher Bill Kunkel. who replaced paign, a 390-foot smash over the 1he. narrow team favorite. °Tvh· d TPhehllagdaemlPehl awasPchalVlleeJ pru,!. . _ Odds Against Him left center-field fence, beat soulh. that Chuck Essegian. misjudged J l· M . d' e urs ay. .. More than a score of players York Yankees out of lhe American starter Whitey Ford in the sixth. u 10 _ arm, usc' s IStan ce Be after 5\2 innings. . . paw Dick Ellsworth who gave the and let drop behind him. from Costa Rica, ran in the six· were at par or better. League lead 5-4 Thursday night. HARRISON, N.Y. IA'I - "I'm just Luis Aparicio started it with a Giants only four hits, one of them Jim Perry, now 5-4, got the vic· mile and entered the three·mile The victory moved the Cardinals . h h' The loss dropped the Yankees back into first place tie with San Palmer, driving the ball Wit IS one black man against 150 whites ground double to center, and Joe a seventh.inning home run by tory with ninth-inning relief help alld 3,OOO·meter steeplechase Fri- ld tim wer n d recovering and I got pressures nobody ever .010 percentage points back of idle Gaines and Jim Gentile followed Felipe Alou . from Jim Kaat. A's starter Moe day and Saturday. Vic Zwolak of FrancI'sco, five percentage points o·f e t'po 'ron a lay w·lth a com ahead of Los Angeles, pending the rom erra IC I P - dreamed of," Charlie Sifford said Chicago. with walks to load the bases. Veteran southpaw O'Dell notched Drabowsky, 0-1, gave up five ru. Villanova will try the same triple. . h petent putter, nailed three straight bitterly Thursday. Robinson's line shot 10 Jeft with B. lt lmore . . ... DOl 011 200- 5 13 0 his ninth win of the year in this and took the loss. Oregon, Oregon State, Arizona ou tcome of the Dodger,s' mg t birdies on the fifth, sixth and sev­ "Every time I tee off, the odds New York ... DID 120 000- ~ 11 I duel of left.handers before a State alld Stanford were the prin. game against Houston. enth holes , and climaxed his round Barber, HIli (7) and Orsino; Ford, . k f 17 lC.n... City . 000 003 000- 3 , • are stacked against me, 1,000 to 1." Malzone Loses Kunkel (i" RenlH (7), Hamlllon (9' Candleshc Park crowd 0 12,~ Mlnnuotl . 001 310 IOlC- ' II I cipaL threats to Southern Cali· Curt Flood opened the (irst with by knocking in a diffi cult 8.footer The hulking, clgar·c hom pin g and How.rd. W - aarber (10·5). L -, The Giants entered the game Just DrlbowskV, Fischer (6) Ind E'w."-; . a single and a stolen base off Phil· for a birdie on the 18th. He bad p.rrY K.al (9) .nd Bailey, l lmmer. forma ., lies starter and loser Chris Short. Negro golf professional sat in the L R S K~:~~ (:~~~ _ 1lIltlmor., Adair (4). two. percentage point~ behind the man 17) . W - Pury IS"'}. L. - 1).. "­ d d New York, Howlrd (11). Nallonal League leadmg Los An· owsky (0·1). Dick Groat walked and Flood upstairs locker room of the fashion~ I eo as e ox Home run. - Mlnnesola, AII,n 2 (e,. 11111.IIIIIIIIIIIIIOOII~mIIlIIIIIllWllllllllllllllmlllmlll11111111ml~1I11 able Westchester Country Club and I geles Dodgers who had a night en· scored when Roy Sievers . tlirew gagement with the Houston Coits. wild on Bill White's bunt. Charley talked freely of his own private Top Senators, 7-5 Accepting Entries ONE YEAR LATER war in the boiling racial crisis. Chicago 000 DID 000 0- 1 , 0 MUTIONTOWN, N.Y. ~ - '1"0/1'1 James and George Altman followed S.n Fr.n

Spiced Pepperoni PLEAS[ R[5[RVE_ ...... :-::o-.:::=_ fOR " OU~ [VINING AT TH[ THEATRE" 507 E. COLLEGE ST. 'No. 0' ho.m.) ".m.' ______~ ______Chlr •• @ Op.n Accounls Mond.y ~15 S. Dubuque , .' -PHONE 7.32AO ... .:~ .. Add,.. ,.... ___"':"""~_~--CI IY.------8t.~- Invlt.d Till. P.M. Phone .l':.. l I. .' 8-6433 , ' ,','. . 'v,I.. 1 D .... ______T lm.' ______-.~_ lteAwooA gltoss 'I ... , ...... ' - ~ . ~ k ahead & pltk up I,.. - !, IJ. ....~. ~ :>- o l~~.., •••______, other "flon.ln your p.;.y; , J 26 5, Clinton I.' l~mmllffilill l ~mlllllmml~lIlImlm~lIlIlIllIlmlll~"""IIIII"III I .______...... , . . TH. DAilY IOWAN-lewa elty. low.-Jtrlday. J\IftI 14, lHS-..... t . I . . Kremlin ~K~s I€oll ICrewless Trains? ·Hails • . . ,d. 0""'-" Says Its Possible __ For Ne~ Look at Relations Warren L. Van Dine, whose 1938 By request of Frank Paluka, ST. LOUIS _ The PCftlda book of verse "Unchaoging Gold" head oC Special Collections, Van of the e York Central RWoa4 MOSCOW !.fI - A Kremlin com· taken from another angle by West· hopes of a breakthrough in the has been on display beneath glass Dine is also writing a series of said Tbur&day railroads can run mentator Thursday hailed Pres· ern diplomats here . They were stalemate over disnrmament and a in the museum at Nauvoo State papers bout his recoUections or trains wilhoul crew •. ident Kennedy's call for a new nuclear test ban. al . I be' era! . t th Ith look at U.S.·Soviet relations as pleased that both the Communist Western diplomats' reactions to Park, ill.. most smce Is gm- sav promIDen au ors w "This system would provid "extremely signi£icant." But he Party organ Pravda and Izvestia the new propaganda initiative ning many ytars ago. is now listed \ whom he was acquainted durin. (Je.xibility and efficiency in opera· ! said that it was too early to talk published the Cull text of the Pres­ ranged widely . in the Special Collections Depart· his undergradWlte days at SUI. in. lion." Allred E. PerlJnan aald. of a thaw in the cold war. ident's Tuesday speech. Bu they They noted thaI the Soviet Un· ment o( the SUI Library. eluding DOvelisU Charlton Laird. Perlman spoke In a cereD'lOll)' This was roughly iile same view at:- said they did not think this ge ture ion still blamed East-West stale· A file has been set up for him Paul Frederick Corey John T St. Louis' Union Station in "hicll mates on Western reactionaries. 'w . . : . New York Central p nted ,the ' renected any basic change in S0- A US d' 1 t Id th here and a half·bushel or origl Fredenck aod blS Wife Esther National Museum of Transporfwitb viet policy. .. Ip oma sa e Bppar· . Is I It dBt P ul F-" i" F ~-.. L ..• .. - thr his . I Congressman ent modification of the propagan. ~nllSCrlp • e ers - so~ .. I a 111 ,,:uel' c~; ~cu...... , ee lonc oromot!v. . For one thing. they doubted if da tone did not appear to reneet 109 back 40 years to hIS high MOlt and Marqlll5 Childs. journal· I The ew York ~entral pre IdeM. Premier Khrushchev would want any basic policy changes. school days - and biOgraPhical \lstS. and historian E. Douglas ~[~ crew~.. ~~ ere M,qi ~ Found Guilty to appear on too friendly term I He noled that British Lab a r data has bftn placed in It. Branch, wl"Wenehw te<.'th,.uKlldesog~ Pnldoll'"Sth. r • P t H Id Wi! ave e lI'e to .. with the West when tough· line ar Y Le ad er. aro . son came These Eile are limited to SUI Tbese papen will be stored in he id "We need on!.L ' away from hiS talk WIth Khrush- . . y ... e~. Of Coercion ' Chinese Communists arrive here chevon Monday without havin, authors who are famou or rec· I SpedeI CoIlec.1I0115 . lor the use o( er!u',:er'lt Jldm of la&r~ next month to argue the Moscow. detected any changes in the So- ognized for outstanding ability as 1dlolars needmg biographical mao go er t to late th el) 'inl£ BALTIMORE. Md. !.fI - A U.S. Peking ideological split. viet position. writers. 'I I • I terlal aboUt these author.. th, future. District Court jury Thursday found There was no official Soviet former Democratic Congressmen comment on the ;president'S an· Thomas F. Johnson oC M~yland and Frank Boykin of Alabama and nouncement in that s[>l..'eCh of two co·defendants guilty of at· American. British and Soviet nu· tempting 10 influence the Justice clear test ban talks to open here Department to drop a mail fraud in July. nor on his suspension or charge against a Miami. Fla .• sav· American tests. ings and loah operator. The probable general line to be The jury of 10 men and two laken by propagandists emerged women deliberated less than five in a commentary published in the hours before convicting Johnson paper Soviet Russia. organ oC the and Boykin oC all eight counts each Russian Federated Republic. It of a federal indictment. Also con· was the paper's political observer, victed in connection with the case E. Baskakov. who called the Pres· ------were J. Kenneth Edlin. a Miami ident's speech "extremely alg' ------~=====-::- -. ROOMS FOR lENT TYPING SDV1a LOST & FOUND savings and loan operator. and his nificant. " One Point 01 View attorney. William L. Robinson. "For the first time in 20 years • ·s·lng na~ NICE room prlv.te bome. Mala rndu· TYPINO: Electric typewriter. Sheri LOt T: Woman'. bllek blllfOloi at City Advert. ate or lMtruetor. Near ho pllal.. paper .nd Ih II. 1-38U. t4lAR 'park. R ward. ..en. . "zo The jurors. one a substitute aboul of cold war." he wrote. ":1 Pres· ft:... 1·2764. I-tl --- -- ______-~~~~-- Most people don't have a to view _ of I"";a City's dlstinc· chan~ 10 days ago. heard the fir twit­ -... ft.- u_ • -- 1-:-=-=--:--:-- - --:--_-:--:::- TYPINO. N.at. urate. l>1li 7 ?ltC...... U1I!D HOUSING ident of the United States has pub· &_....., ...... MIOO ..- 2 NICE lIn.le rooms (or rent. SUD!' 7...ul ___""_"_ ....._ .._" ______tiv. landmarks - the twin smok.stacks on the SUI pow.r plant - ness April 1 and more than 1.5- licly spoken out for the necessity III Den ...... 1Ie a Wani mer .nd IIU. 1-3205. HI from this angl •. Any way you look .t them, it's • 10119 w.y up - million words went into the record. of a Cundamental reassessment 01 'I'e Den ...... IIe. Wen ROOM for men. CI~ 10 ~.mpu .. TYPING . .... 15. 1~1 INOLl ..d double r_ (ot - .-... W v~ • m.r. howe,., CI In. H~n. I-IS or • long w.y down. -Photo by Joe Lippincott The focal figures were defendants Soviel·Americao relations, and. to 0.. K_ ...... 6te a ani Summer ralel. "3457. 1-15 JERRY NYALL: ElectriC IBM tlPln, . Pbone "1130. 7UR APPROVED rumm r lloufla.. Men. Johnson and Boykin. both defeated a certain extent, recognized the (Jl.lDlmum Ad, • WordI) MEN'S room. by campul. Summer Cootl", 'acllltk . 1~2. . ... for re·election to Congress last necessity of peaeerul coexistence." rales. Kitchen beiliU ... ..SU.. 1-15 TYPING. 1-$214 . U _ ____-:-:- __~-_::__:_ II hit year. Boykin, 78. had served 28 r.r Cauoc:utlYe DIIIl'UoaI tI rll. on B But the observer added: "His­ QUIET, cle.n room. adJolnln. campul TYPING _ EJedric Typewriter. SUI J-IA Venezuelan President Cruises years from Mobile, Ala., and John· tOfical experience has taught that CLAIIIPI.ID DtlPLAY AIM lor men over 21. Cook.in, prlvUe.e.. BUIlneu Gradulte. Dial 1-8110. 7.. AR son, 53, had represented Mary· 11 E. Bur/ln,lon. 7..:134' or ~. RENTINO approved rooma lor m n. it would be premature to speak 0. IIIOII'tton • MeIItII •••• 11' .. 17AR TYPiNG. mM electric. Nail Krtmenak. Summer or t.u. Cool. &howen. oft· land's Eastern Shore Cor two terms. of the approach of a long·awaited Plin I....,..•• MontI! .... 1.1.. GRADUATe Men'a 1I0u ... 5lO N . CIlD- 1-3451. HI .treet P.rldlll. '10 E. Chu h fil . .. III Accused of conspiring with them spring in international relatiolll Ttp'Mtt1ItN... ~ ..... 1... ton. Cookln. prlvUe .... Sort W.ief HAVE En.lbh B.A. ....UI type. Belty As Police RO\lnd U'p' Reas · were Edlili, 64, and Robinson. 31. that would be able to melt the Ice· 1lI0we.... Sumer and 'aU. 1-M1? Of Steven . . ..14" . 1.I:tAR WHO DOES In ...... fw I .. c-.. ... 1~8. 1-11 ] both of Miami. They operated two berg of the cold war." --.---.------~-- CARACAS. Venezuela ~Presi· ment of tbe Revolutlonll!'Y Left savings IIl}d loan associations in FOR lrad,•• ta lIIen. Roo ... with kltch- DORIS DEL.ANEY eleelrlc tn·ln. eerY' IJAO.f:N'8 TV. Guaranteed telnWon The tone of the comment ap­ · ~191 en prlvUe,es. Can after 5:00 p.m. Ie . ~ or 7·51180. ..'IAR "",kin, by eerUned "teeD!en. dent Romulo Betancourt cruilied (MIRJ. The MIll is a plIr[y which Maryland and Edlin was indicted in Phone 7... 104741, B20 Iowa Ave. 1-%2 RATES trolll .,. a~,e. IVUI pick • a.m.·,. )O.m. lIond.y Ihl'ou,h 5atll'" off the coast in a destroyer Thurs· gets its illspir~iion from Ptlme peared to indicate a Kremlin at. II 2V day. '~2. I-21AR 1959 for mail fraud in connection tempt to avoid exaggerating the PI""" ...... :M p...... ALPHA DELTA PI bOu .. "JM!n (or up and dt .er. 1 . 6- day as police pressed a roundup of Minister Fidel Castro o[ Cuba. with one. ~ ,...... -" ...... _.. &. .umm r aluden~ m N. Cllnton. DlAPARINE Dllper Rental s.rv~ by Communists and Castroites ac· !he Communist and MIR cbn· The Government charged that -W" - --..,. .., 7..5862. ..U New Proceu Laundry. 313 S. Du· 1 :15 IxperftncM M Ta., WII MISC. fOR SALE bUQue. Phone "'Me. ..nA. cused of plotting to kill him. gres.smen are the persons Betan· during 1960 and 1961. Johnson and DOORS OPEN P.M. U_, Y With Y"" SlTlotMER room. avall.bl •. Cool 1\llII. --p IV 04Jr mer IMn,. Furnt.hed IIn.l. I'OOIlU, MOVING? lI.wkey. Tran&fer SUI Authorities were hampered be· court has charged With direcl.ing Boykin agreed to accept compen· Kllchrn and loun,e prlvlle,el Inelud. ..ent. IIlh~~ LI~~ cause Communist and Castroite terror Operlltiops and the assas· sation [or attempting to have lhe THI CAlL., IOWAN RI'IRV.I Inl! 'I V .nd I;leTeO. nellon.ble prlc!e. depulies were protecled by parlia· sination "aUempts. Justice Department drop the PIKA Fretcnlily. C.U 1."21. Wa,ne _ "":'--l -.,;:...... ______"l,TERATIONS .na 1e""I,. 7-3~~R • tmifD rHI RIGHT TO REJICT I\N\' Thompson. I-U • CU . It. Admlrel refrl .. ralot. One i ..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ...... ;i ...... i . mentary immunity and a sanctuary Police efforts were concentrated charge against Edlin. aftVIRTlllwg COpy y IT old 7·~ . I-U law forbids police to invade thl! Each of the defendants was - " • FOR RENT: Sln,le Ind COUble rool!'!! 'I ()II 'a search [or Roger Antonio Starts TODAY! male. ~91 . 840....,. 1aU BINO ULARS, tripod. t 01 campus of the University of Figueroa. a young Communist charged in eight counts for which - --- Delt n en.JlIMrin, dnlwbac In· PHOTOGRAPHIC who RENTING room I for (.U. Jot.le Itu· .trumentl plu drawln. leceUOrltl. Caracas. where many Reds have escaped during a gun battle aCter the maximum punishment amount· dent. over 21. AllO rooml /01' sum· Pl .... f.1I 1-81&3. 1-20 REPAIRS & RENTALS taken refuge. the attempt to kill Betancourt ed to 19 yellrs imprisonment and CHILD CARE mer. Grldu.te wom n. a.ll32e. 1.4 l WESTINOIlOU E top 01 Ihe Un. 1162 1 A SERVI·5HOP Betancourt. inIuriated by the failed. • $70.000 in Cines. .JAMES ROOMS with eookln,. min or women. portabl. Itereo record pl.yer. Exeel· latest of a series o[ attempts on BAB .... SITTING my bome. Dial 8-11981. ,raduate .tudents. Blaek·. Oradu"e lenl condition. B at oIfer. 7-4.:ZU. I-t5 YOUNG'S STUDIO Interior Minister CarlOil Andres ~~~~~~~~~j~~ ' .13 HoulO. 7·3103. 1-l1AR his liCe. ordered the arrest of all decliged today how many. if any. :: , . ~\ BOND, VM 722 atereo tape recorder. .cellent ~~liiIiiiilili.JIiiJiII.. ~ii!!!~ Venezuela's estimated 40.000 Com· Communists have been rounded up. 1 "I ',"" Agent 007 """'BILE HOMES~I -sau condition. Very rea onabl •. dS4~ ' 18 -- ~ I WOlK WANTED "'~ rv .. ... LEAIlN to akin .nd SCUBA d.lve. Ihdl­ munists and members of the Move· The pro·Communist tabloid Clar· vidual or el ... In,tructlon. Cont.et: The double IRONINGS. Student bOYI and IlrlL lese U'x8' 2.bedroom Vietor. Ex~.U~nl WOMAN'S 26" Amerlc.n blcycl . New Terry IIIUlman, 7·N«. SoU "0" means 220 Nor\.h Dodee. Reasonabl. price.. Cflndltlon. Reuon.ble prl~a June (». tire •. ,ZO . ....27t . I-ZO DRESSlIIAKlNG lilertn, .nd ICwllll ~e :~I~ r ii Sr~~g!~~:~n t~;A~;: (II~:' 'j II :_. ______1-14 cupaa;,y.Park Traner '"'* Court. IIItlr • V.III. Te.raee..I. PAIN'l'ED chu, or drawers. '10. '~2078-15. lnJtruCtlOIlL b lal a..1. '·11 Former SUlowan Armed Forces of National Libera· _ I_I • _ I I _ _ _ he has a tion may be ready to caU a truce 1 license to kia WANTED NEW .nd used mobile home.. Parl!· Receives Coveted Inl, towln. .nd paru. Denru. in Its raids on U.S.-owned installa· NOW. ENDS I ( when he WASHINOS . Dial a.t331. 1-15 Mobil. Home Court. 2312 ){uacaUne PETS TYPEWRITERS lions. • SATURDAY ,chooses ... ___"':":" __--~---- Ave .. lowl Clly, S37~181. 8-leAR Kaltenborn Award The story said the FALN was SIAKES£ lellt,nt. phone 7·94811. I REPAIRS See til e Speeding MANIACS . .. ,where he RIDE WANTED 1957 LIBERTY a·xu'. annex. (enee, responding to pleas by aoti·Betan· exlr ... Very reuon.ble. 1-7780 Iyen· • SALES A former SUI student, Vernon A. court organizations and by busi. racing 11 ot cars Across Our Giant In,l; 8-7530 dlYs. 1-21 chooses"., RIDE to and {rom Cedar Rapids or "UTOMOTIVI • RENTALS Stone of Woodburn. Ky .• has been nessmen. It did not say what the Screen! whom he Marlon durtn, lummer. Gall 331-5376, 1959 GREAT LAKES SO'd' ~th 100xlZ' awarded the H. V. Kaltenborn FALN would demand in return. Marlon, Iowa. 1-1. annex. Excellent condition. man1 choosesl .. edr... Nice lot. Foren View Trailer IgnitIon Authorized ROYAL Dealer Radio·Television Scholarship by the Although the attempted assasina. PERSONAl Court. 1·3031. 1-2% University oI Wisconsin. tion took place ' Tuesday, Betan. NOW If IS A Carburelor8 PORTABLES STANDARDS Stone recei ved his M.A. here in court kept it secret until he issued flESH ANO BLOOD ATrENTION students In 18:151. Ad· LAUNDl'RmES GENERATORS ST ARTUS 1953 and is currently working for a his roundup .orders from the Orin. 2. portverUaln, to Irv SalesOrossman and Promotion.201 Communi. reo i::::::======. Iriggl " Sll'Gtton Motors doctoral degree at the University oco River village of San Felix EXPERIENCE ON cation. Center tmmedlately. 8-1$ WIKEL WASH EIGHT THROW RUGS of Wisconsin . He plans to do teach· where he was visiting. THE SCREEN In-lDl\\.. ing and research in radio and telc· He has been 01) a tour dedicating I~~ IN BIG BOY Pyramid Services TYPEWRIT~R cO. ) . MONEY LOANED vision. public works projects. Then dry th.m et 421 ~. Dubuqut 0 1., 7·572.1 The Kaltenborn sch 0 I a r s hip ~ ______Diamond., C.mer.. , Typewriters, W.tchll, LUlf'''' DOWNTOWN LAUNDERETTE represents the earnings of a fund Guns, Mwlc.1 Illstrumenh established by the well·known news 226 S. Clln~ commentator to encourage broad· Dle17-4W cast journalism development. HOCK-rYl LOAN -== Tonite Onlyl APARTMENTS fOl RENT COLLEGE MEN - DOORS OPEN 1:15 - See Our Lucky HaP WArnED 3-ROOM colt',e. Alto 4.room lurnlshed APPLICANTS NOW BEING INTERVIEWED for full time sum­ apt. Black'. Graduate Hou ... 7-3703. i'.iir;;?Q Friday the 14th 1·5AB IN CEDAR RAPIDI WANTED for \lihi delivery, mile or mer employment. ThOle accepted will be offered - ' - TONIGHT­ Late Show female. neat .pp ..... nce. c.r. know. APp'ROVED .partmentl for rummer. FAMOUS ~dte oJ. city. 337·2659 from 9 ' .m. to a:.5631after 4:00 p.m. ..21 1. $110.?O weelely salary •" Ends NOW· Wednesday" TV .. RECORDING ITARS 12 nOOn . . 6015 OLDJ!R female .ndu.ta atudent to ATTENTION students In IP:151. Ad· IlIlre apt. for .ummer term. t-II83$. - HIS VERY LATEST - THE CHAMPS vertlslng Slle. and Promotion, reo I-ze 2. Chance for 1 of 15 $1,000 scholanhlpt "T.quill" port to Irv Grossman, 201 Communlc.· "Go Chimp, Gou Hops Cenler lmmedlateIY. 6015 AVAILABLE now. Lar,e furnJlhed". .IERRY lEWIS .. Adm. JI.25 . IAN FLEMING'S ' WANTED: olllee secretary tor Unl. room Ip.rlmenl. Laundry flcllUI •. 3. Chance for trlpl to Madrid, Spain, In Septem6er' tarlan church. CaU 7-3261, 1-15 Room lor • . 7-5.U8. 1·13 ~,"INIilTY - SATURDAY - N.w ""ordlnl II.,. YOU MAY BE O~ Students hired may continue on ° part time bolll when PROF ..... TJiE BI!ACHCOMBIRS of THE LUCKY WINNERSI ON Uptown Apartment they return to school in the Fall. Incentive pions available fA ""'1l"""lS Pro.TE-R.

FREE! Starting SATURDAYI t DELIVERY TO ALL SUI STUDENTS

OF : ~A'. ' j ': Iowa City's - ..... Finest Pizza - "Best Foreign Just Pick Up Your Picture Of The Year!" Phone and Call Us

GEORGE'S Dial 8-7545 GOU~MET 114 S. Dulluq", St, Aero .. from Hottl JtfftrlOll Orders to Go "a.. . '-THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, low_Friday, Jun, 14,1963 Iowa School Construction ,R LI Needs Funds This is the week to enjoy a thick, juicy Randall round steak for dinnerl And here are three rea­ Study by Grinstead sons why we're so anxious for you to try one: Indicates Solution BEITER Is Aid from State 1. Randall round steaks are the finest beef we A study of 30 reorganized school can bring you - graded U.S. Choice by the districts in Iowa indicates that hal! of the districts will not be able to United States Government. finance needed school buildings in VALU SELECTED- USDA CHOICE tlie next ten years, even if residents of the districts vote all their legal 2. Theyre inspected by Randall buyers, who bonding capacity. determine from the color, texture, and marb­ The study wa conducted at sur by Kenneth Grinstead, West Bur· ling whether the beef is the best of U.S. lington, in partial fulfillment of Choice. requirements for a Ph .D. degree in education. Included in the SUI study were 3. Skilled Randall market men Extra Value Trim all 30 Iowa districts reorganized all excess fat and bone before weighing. since 1956 into districts of at least 125 square miles with enrollments over 1,000 , including two or more So you see, not all steaks are alike. There's former high school districts. THIS AD Grinstead visited each district, GOOD more eating meat in a Randall Round Steak - estimated the 1971-72 enrollments, more to enjoy. tool and estimated the cost of needed THRU buildings at a standard $13 .50 per square Coot Cor elementary build· JUNE 15 ings and $13 for secondary build· Lb. BONELESS ings. The ability of districts to fi· nance new buildings was figured on the basis of present property HEEL ,. ROAST valuations in the districts. BONELESS Grinstead found that 100 present , buildings in the 30 districts could be utilized for future use and, with RUMP additions costing about $5.6 million, REFRESH1NG could provide for approximately three·fourths of the tolal 1971-72 ROAST Lb. predicted enrollment. Jle estimated that new buildings and shes WIll be required for about 10.000 ~I',rlpnt. or a fourth of the predicted enrollment in the 30 dis· PEPSI hICLS. Every district was judged to have BONELESS school plant needs, reports Grin· stead. Total cost of needed build· GOLD BOND ings was estimated at $29.2 million, FAMILY of which $10 million was for ele· COLA I mentary schools and $19 million for 2200 STAMPS secondary schools. STEAK Lb. The average estimal ed cost of needed buildings is $974,780 per WITH YOUR PURCHASES AT RANDALL'S district. '! Even if the total bonding capac· THIS WEEK END! ity of thtl districts were used, they would lack $5.3 million - or an FRESH FROZEN average of $176,511 each - of meet· ~ GOLD JOD STAMPS ing their building needs. Package Grinstead summarized that even PEAS or CORN • • IOe 6 With Your Purchase with the support of local residents PACK' of 4·01. Ton.', 011 bond issue 'votes, half of the re· At Randall's Thru Jun, 15th BLACK PEPPER . organized districts in the SUI study At Rlndlll'l Thru Juno 15th will have difficulty meeting their ,. school plant needs in this decade. Grinstead summarized: "It is un· FLAVORITE fortunate lhat the state, through SO GOJ.D BOlD STAMPS its legislative enactments and edu· IXftA . With Your Purcha" cat ion a I agencies, encourages With Your Purchase school district fe-organization to PICNIC· SUPPLY of 2 Stok,ly Frozen of 2·Lb. Super V.lu improve educational oportunities FRUIT PIES and then fails to provide financial POTATO (HIPS SALTINE CRACKERS mpsns to complete its desired pro· At Rlndlll'l Thru Jun. 15th eram." - EACH- HEADQUARTERS n.e· suggesls that the inability of districts to finance school plant SO GOI.D BOlD STAMPS needs within legal limitations in· * BAR·B·QUED CHICKENS dicates that state assistance for With Your Purchase ~ With Your Purchas, capital outlay should, together with of 5 North Stat, of 2 Cartons of increases in aid for current opera· * POTATO SALADS POT PIES BOOK MATCHES tion , receive consideration. AI Randait's Thru Jun. 15th At Randllt'l Th,u Jun. 15th Peoria, III. Trip · * BAKED BEANS Set lor Tuesday 50 GOJ.D JOIiD STAMPS * JELL-O SALADS ..,..,. I I By Local Chamber FANCY RUSH With Your Purchase * FRUIT SALADS of 6 Cans Happy Host Businessmen and farmers in the ~RENCH DONUTS VEGETABLES Iowa City area will board the train At RandlWI Thru Jun, 15th at 6 a.m. Tuesday for the Cham· * VEGETABLE SALADS ber of Commerce's annual Johnson dozen 39c County train trip. This year the group will go to Peoria, lllinois. The trip includes visils to the ~1GOJ.D IOID STAMPS Extra Gold With Your Purcha" With Your Purchas. Caterpillar and Keystone Wire of Kraft's Tasty Loaf plants and to the Bradley Univer· CASH 100 Bond Stamp. of 3 Cans Thank-You sity campus. The purpose of the CHEESE SPREAD PIE FILLING trip. according to the Chamber. is PRIZES AI Rondalt'l Thru Jun, 15th to promote good will and lellowship 10 For Each Empty for Johnson County. The group will return Tuesday night. EVERY WEEK 6 Pack of Bottles Tickets for the trip are $15 and are available from the Iowa City ON RETURNED TO Chamber of Commcrce and from With Your Purchase With Your Purchase the Johnson County Farm Bureau PLA Y. RANDALLETTE RANDALL'S of 4 L.oaves Butt.r Crust of 3 DOltn Offices. BREAD About 300 are expccted to go. GRADE A EGGS Nothing To Buy Or At R.nd."'1 Thru June 15th AI R.nda"'1 Thru Juno 15th Local Group To Study You May Have Just Register Cash Dancing in Connecticut SWEET 50 GOIIIOID STAMPS . I'J:'IIA Mary Lynn McRae, N2, Des JUICY With Your Purchua of Any With Your Purchase Moines, has been awarded a danCe MIDWEST'S WE SElL scholarship for study at the Con· RED RIPE LAYER CAKE of Gold'n Pf,iHtr necticut College School of Dance. LOWEST MONEY BEER New London, Conn. FOOD PRICES ORDERS At Rlndllt's Thru Jun. 15th The $200 award was made possi· ble by the Old Gold Fund and through a matching grant from Connecticut. Miss McRae is the newly·elected president of the Con· IWATrIE ~ MElON temporary Dance ClUb. With Your Purchas. With Your Purchase Other Dance Club members who 0' OM Stalk of 2 Lb •. Skinl ... will be spending the summer at Lhe CELERY FRANKS Connecticut School of Dance are At Iland.1I'1 Thru Junl ISth At Rand.1I'1 Thru Jun, 11th Chari Bunn, A3, Fort Madison; , I David Krohn, A2, Joliet, Ill.; and Marcia Thayer, instructor in dance. The faculty at the school will in· ..,..,.50 GOY. IOID ITAMPI c1ude Martha Graham and Jose ~" GOLD BOlD ITAMPS Limon. With Your Purcha .. With Your Purchase Hisey To Present Vocal of 10 Lbs. Whit, of 2 Lbs. Horm.I's Sklnl.u Ea. POTATOES BACON Recital Here Saturday Philip Hisey, G. Shreveport, La ., will present a vocal recital Satur· OPEN 7 DAYS day at 7:30 p.m. in South Music Hall. WE GIVE A WEEK Hisey's program will include an GOLD original composition by Daniel Moe, assistant professor of music. BOND With Your Purcha.a With Your Purchas. of 2·12 01. Ctn •. Flavorlte The work is titled "Sing Agree· STAMPS Of On, Front or Hind ably of Love," and $ ba ed on W. PLENTY OF H. Auden's poem of lhe same S~!!~'?!ru~J~~~~~ AI ~~!~II'I~~~~!.E~th Nme, _~ .. FREE PARI(ING