• ,. The Weather Serving the StQ~ • Partl, c:101ld7 IUId eeeaet University of Iowa Wa,. Warmer nUl ..t- t ered iJUa ...... en Campus and ThIlDdaJ'.1IlIb ....,. II: , low, ft. RIP ...... " til Iowa City e DID an' 1011', IZ. Eat. 1868 - AP Leaaed Wir. - FiYe Cent. .5, 1953 - Vol. ~,No. 220 Red Prisoners On Way to Exchange Site

POW's Are Being Returned No Iowans '. Listed A~nI 1st Returnees , PANMUNJOM (Wednesda.>') (AI') SEOUL (Wednesday) (",-U.S. - With Iwift militar1 precisjon, Secretary of State John Foster the exc~~e ot Korean wet' pri- Dulles opened his vital post-Ko- soner. be.a" \Oda,y and the first rean armlsUce conCerences today AJllerlc:an treed. 1rrunedla\ely re- with President Syngman Rhee late(i tha~ the Communis1.s only and .'laid afterward the meeting two dllYs alQ l).d lentehced some "went very well." high U.S. ofliaera to .peclal prj- "We had a good preliminary son terrna lor "lnat1gatlng acalnst talk and agreed on the topics to peace." COMMUNIST POW. march off an LST (lett) to board a troop train (rll'ht) at Inebon to continue be discussed," DuUea told cOl"rea- Maj. John Daujat of Richmond, their Journey to a holdlne camp near PaDmunJom, to be in readlne ror the bl, trade. The e are the pondents alter the 1 hour, 50' min- CaUf., told hIs chilling story as 1,s00 POW, who suddenly ripped their clothln, aad slashed their shoes and left the L T a littered ute conCerenee at Rhee's pl"Csl- the first of 400 Allied prisoners on mea. Tbey boarded tbe train sln&ina- Red sonrs. denUal mansion, today's exchlltlge list were handed The secretary said hc and Rhee over by the Chlneae and North ~ agreed to discuss these po1ots •.or! Korean Reds. • Ex -S UI I nsfructo r A r resteu ~;~:he t::~he::I:-:a:ore:Onnf:~ . _, .~_:t'~. .:~. ~:;.~ th;h~n~I!~~E~:~~~:tt!~ Czr:= · CI- I h' Utica I conrerence FREEDOM VILLAGE, where the tlrd I'ronps of Allied prlMltel'tl are belnl' broul'M troni Conunu- promptly at 8 p.m. Tuesd4ly (Iowa ·n e C arge tu2a'l AsecuUnrilttyedtrSeat~tyte.s-Korean mu. Blat captivity for exchanl'c, Is hown above. Operation "BII' Swlteh" wUJ !lee 12.'763 AllJed POW'., time) Included M sick and wound­ On Use d Car S·w, Inetudlna- 3,313 Americans. returned. At ri,ht in photo are ambulancea which are peedlnr tbe lick ed Americana. 3. American economic aid to the and woundf'd to ho pUal . Daujat, who looked ""ell, shouted A used car swindle scheme was Republic of Korea. • out his name to AlIJed correspond- disclosed Tuesday by the state d d They wlIl meet again at 10 ~.m., R 10K' B14M .II ents before the Cornmurmt ttuck motor vehic1e department follow- Ju ge Nixes New Spee ing Excuse Thursday. Uilia S Ig ee Ing had stopped rolllng, lng the arrest In New York city of Dullcs drove to Rhee's mansion , D . Ik There wlI.~ollow cou,hln, from a former SUI instructor. PRINCE GEORGE COURTHOUSE, Va, (IP) - A Virginia judge on a hillside overlooking till enles e lit lea.t one other prl~oner. An- J. F. Carl$o department dl- Tuesday reiect~d what was probably an unprecedented excuse tor war-shattered ci~y to ~gin con- Ina ' other threw his Chinese blue vest tor aid th:t' New York cit speeding. versatlons on post-arrrustice prob- A'skl Red Chi Partllcllpall'on D II Reft and white .carf to the lJ'Ound In ~Iee' a~e holding Gulvl MalviUi, "I was just trying to frighten my molher-In-Iaw," Johnny M. lems. . e U e S, ahll'Y eagorness to be rid of his 8 member 1he SUI romance Marshall. 26, of Baton Rouge, La" told the arresting oWter when he Dulles flew In Crom Waahln,- MOSCOW -The Sovlct unJonl • WASHINGTON (IP)- The state garment. of captivity. • language department from 1949 to was nabbed o~ U.S. 460 near here. ,ton Tuesday nlgbt aiter his plane,accepted the West's invllatlon terence concentrate on Cree elcc- department i.ssued a statement XIl"" NMbIn, or De.. 1951. Trial Justice W, F. Binford ruled, though, this wasn t excus~ had . been delayed 13 hours by bad WedT\esday to a Big Four foreign LJons to produce a unWed Ger- Tuesday designed to show that Daujat, a prisoner 31 mpnt~s, Carlson said Malville's opera- enough tor Marshall ~o d~ 65 to 70 miles per hour. IIc fined Marsha weather and engine trouble. He mlnillters' conference, but said many and an .independence treaty there Is no split between Presl- laid he knew: notbinl ot Maj, Gen. tl d It h t th $50 and suspended hls driving license for 10 days. was g[ven a rousing Korean wei- R d Ch' I' t· ' tl .. for Austria dent Elscnhower and Secretary of William F. ~, hilbest-ranldbc ons occul're a er e was a e E th' 't I t th h t the Lo 'sian m After his t th ltd 19 e n8 I par IClpa on wal cs- , AUled ttl held by the ...... s unlver~lt . He said Melville, II very mg wasn as, oug, o~ UI a an. come 'a e a rpor an II -iU:l scotial" for casing ot world ten- They said that a German peace State John Fostcr Dulles over use 0 cer ~...... R I Y t thl t i arrest. when he was bonded at the office of the justice or the peace, salute. . I treaty would be "'osslble only with of American army resources tor He 1'(te.n1lonetl a lieutenant he said uss ~n, came 0 s coun ry n h' th· 1 t k b th t r th ay to Peter bu g son, . ... b"lldl b tt ed K h d gotten a yeor's term on the 1949 IS mo er-m- aw 00 a ca e res 0 e w 5 r. Hopes to Alia, Mlqtvtap I te d Ii d T d t a free and representalive German I"e w nil war- a or orca. a .... , n no severe ucs ay 0 The department said a clarity- Reds' belated charges, but did not Carlson sa. id Malvillc Is charged Before he head, back to Wuh- the amb 5sadol'S ot B r I t a In, government chosen by free elec- i t b th White I hi ' I I A~ . I A I in .... on four da.n JIoeOee. Du I' d tn U it d St t th titm, . ng announcemen y e g ve. s name. I , at Cedar Rilpids and Del! Moines ranee an e n e a es, e . House Monday was released a(t'r Dean. a pri'lloner for three years, with "receiving goods by false ( omm n s vance In I sra ... to have allayed some oC Kremlin proposed a two-point The Soviet reply was made pub- "full consultation with the state wai not in the first c!jy:, U I II hOpe~ j ~oup, ersonation" and at Iowa City Rhec 8 0 u t s po ken JJ?lsglv "gs agenda Cor the conCerence: lie a few hours before a seheduJed d t t" Wlthl th ttl.. "1- P , US Ik D I about thc Korean armi&tice. Th ~y I Discussion of "measures to meeting of the Supreme Soviet epar men. n e nex ve wee ..s .. with embezzlement of mortgaged Threat 1o J e et ares also may chart a common poLicy d' I t ti It ' " parliament of lhc Soviet Union. Ocacials said, lhere had ~n most 87,000 ~en - n .. 783 JlUted property." tor the U.S. and the Republic of e~re~~ n ~rna o;a th cn~~. n ome interpretation of the White and 74,000 Co~unists - will be' John Hurley, special agent with • - , Korea at the Iorthcomlni peace 'bl sC~isS °lndlo e t blml Bh I d d S d House announcement as a repu- exchanced. the motor vehicle department pro em nc u ng re-es a s - n epen ent tu y diaUon by the President of Dulles 80me 8$lJl MIaII... said lite Investigation of MalvlLle'~ SEATTLE, Wash. (JP)-President E' h Id th t th t conference. ment of the unity oC Germany and and thllt they wanted to bring out Of these on1y 3313 are Amerl- activities led to Omaha, Neb., Chi- Eisenhower declared MOnd~y th~t Asi~s~~ e~;:rm:e vit!l t~O~m:~f_ Dulles issued a statemen~_ after the conc1u Ion of a peace treaty." For Grad Students the record to show that this W.l5 cans and there w~s no accounting cago, ant( New York city as well the advance of commumsm 10 can securlt because that are ~ bc stepped from the plane. The thr e Western powers pro- . not correct. tor some 8,300 otl\el's sUll listed as as to Iowa City, Cedar Rapids and southeast Asia and Iran has cre- holds 15 million peo Ie who still RNPtte from. War posed on Ju1y 15 that the Big Four BeQlns Next Week On Saturday Dulles told dfplo- missing in. action. Des Moines ated a "very ominous" threat to P, "I hope and believe that these hold II conference toward the end th' mats representing 15 United Na- .. ' ., American security, are not under the Kremlln s dom!- talks, conducted on a basis of mu- ot September on setting up free AU ough summer lIChool will be tions with troops in Korea that The eX,chanlrel k.n~,wn as Oper- , Hurl~y said Malvl~le s Iowa ac- The President, speaking inlor- na,~ce. , tual respect and mutual coopera- German elections leading to re- over next week for SUI under- President Eisenhower had ap- ation BI, Switch, cuI.min.a~d tlvity mvolved getting loans on mally at the annual governors' . If Indochl~a goes, scve~al tion, will help to ensure that the uniflcaUon of that country and on graduate students. ~ number. of proved the use ot American more than 20 months of bitter ne­ th~ee wrecked cars, and one non- conference here, pointed toward a ~,~mgs ha~pen n ght away, he said. respite from war now made pos- signing an AustrJan independence graduate students will stay on In- troops as missionaries of rehabil- gotiatloM during a stalemated War cXlsten~ car. . possible change in national policy rhe peninsula, the last little bit sible by the armistice, will be treaty. to Septem,ber by enroiling for the HaUon to rebuild the country Into thai Wall h~\\ed l\"l\~ dlJ.," 'a."~. Malvllie has refused extrad,l- which might give Asia immediate of land hanging on down there, :transformcd Into an honorable Today's Soviet note said the un~verslty s independent stu d y a show window of the free world, Among the other nationaUties tion from New York .. Hurley said _ 11 "not lasting- priority over ~ould be scarcely defensible. The and last10g peace lor all of Ko- Soviet Union felt the conference umt. He suggested that this would which the. Redl ~urned over ,the arrangements .are bemg made to Europe in the American defense tlO and tungsten that we so greatly rea," Dulles said. would have a better chance o( Under this plan. grad~a~e stu- create what he called a pole of at- [irst day were 250 South KoreanS, have Go":" William S. Beardslcy system, • valu,e from that area would cease With Dulles were: Ambassador success 11 the Austrian treaty deni.s rnay earn 8 maximum of traction for the people In Com- 26 British, 23 Turks, 12 F1llp1oo~, request hls return. . . , cormng and all India would be Henry Cabot Lodie the U.s per- were postponed until after the four semeater-houTs studying on munist North Korea and perhaps 7 Col\lmbiam 7 Frencl\ a.nd 1 Prof. Stephen Bush, retired dean Applauding the ~ecision of con- outflanked," manent representative to th~ UN; German problem had been dealt their own at the university. The make it impossible for the Com- each from ~ece, Australia, Ca- of the SUI romance language de- gres:' to put $400 mLllion oC foreign He said that if Indochina were Assistant Secretary ot State Wal- Ith program runs from Aug. 13 to muni.st leadership to prevent the nada BelglulIl and South Africa. partment, said Millville was a aId LOtO ~he defense of Indoc~ln~ , lost to the Reds, "Burma would tel'S. Robertson, who as Pres!- w Th'!! Western powel"s suggested Sept. 9, with one oredlt hour aJ- uolllcat1oo ot Korea. ' 7t1 FrH J,IH quiet, pleasant man, but some- the Presldent told the ~atlon S be in no position for defense." dent Eisenhower's special envoy 10 their Invitations that the con- lowed for each week's work, Monday this plan was chal- The Unltect Nations command' in. what erratic. , ~o~ernors f~rcefully that thlS is no .. Ob,serving t?,at India has the to Korea last month won Rbee's Usually Independent study In- lenged by members of congress on turn hand. over 2,400 able Do(p~ Bush said MalvlUe had been glve-away program. Sovlet empire as a neighbor, EI- qualllied acqeptance of a troce; volves work on a thesis or a spe- the ground that it seemed to im- North Koreltn and Chinese prb_ empioyed at sur as a teacher of "We are voting for the cheapest senhower said another neighbor, Carl McCardie, assistant secretary Wife Hears of Mate's cla1 project in connection with the ply employment of American sol- oners anti. 38&' sick and wounded. R~ian and French, but that au- way that can prevent the occur- Iran, is In a weakened condition of state for public af1a.lrs, and F d TV student's graduate work. Only dlers as forced labor, Consequent- The e~c:liange point, Il"eshl,. ,bPI!>. thontles declined to renew hls,renee of something that would be so far as the free world Is con- several otber state department ree om over ~udents who have completed some Iy Murray Snyder, assistant dozed and Its rour small,reeeptlob contrac~ in ~951. I of a m,ost terrible signific~nc,~ to cer?ed. official!. RICHMOND. CnUe. rIP) _ The graduate work In residence at the White House" press secl"etary, de- tents 'was flnt silht ot 'the tne- Malvllie IS not, an A~er1can the Umted States Ql AmerIca, he EIsenhower, who flew here Mon- Seeretar, of AI'JIIY wife ot Maj . John Daujat, tbe first university are eligible to enroll. c!ared that, There is no 1oten- world for the returnln, Allied pri_ ci,tizen, Hurley saId, and It con- said, day, nJ~ht, spok.e to 44 state and Also arriving in another plane American prisoner 01 war rc- Registration dates ate Aug. 10-11. hO.n of uSlDg Americ!n combat sonen. vlcted on any ot the charges He spelled this out as thepos- territorial governors. was Secretary or the Army Rob- turned by the Red! Tuesday Summer school will end with umts as labor troops, He said Representatives of each nation against him, ,faces. deportat~on.. ~ible ~oss of ali southea,st Asia, ert Stevens. heard of tbe news of her hUs~ commencement exercises Cor ap- the idea is to use speclaJlzed were on band to welcome the re- Hurley said hIS investigation mcludmg India and PakIstan to S - U· D· ' i troops such as engineers and ak "A_ In sbowed Malville is separated Cram !the Communists and the denla't to oVlet nlon enles .Dulles fa expected to work out band s release on televis on. proxim~telY :100 graduatl!S ~ug. medical units to help the South turning men and spa to t.~ . bls if d t h'ld h th f ld ·f th ti t t • b With Rhee . the tlnal form of the Mrs. Daujat and her daughters 12 at 7,30 p.m, in the Iowa fleld Koreans in rebuilding. their natIve tonaues. wean WO c l ren w 0 are, e ree wor 0 ~ n, ungs en Downing Bom.r mutual defense tl"eaty between have not seen the major si nce house. SUI President VirgU M. lIeU~ CafIT ~~ living in Paris, France. and othel" products It needs. the U.S. and South Korea. This 1948, when they left him, in Seoul. Haodler will conler the degrees ARRIVES FROM KOREA HellC9pter ~ws stood by to ~Y LONDON (Wednesday) (JP) - pact was drafted during the Rhee- He was captured Jan. 2, 1951, near and deliver the c:liarge. · SAN FRANCISCO (IP) _ The the ~rioualy sick and,wollruied to ~osc~wl rad~o sal~ ~Y t~~ So- Robertson talks lut month. It Seoul while serving as an ad- The commencement ceremon transport Gen. WilHam Mltebell the 12111t ev,,"cuatlon hospital near v lei I n on a~l reJ~c ~S co'!!- must be approved by the U.s. vlsory officer to the South Korean will be broadcast by radIo station arrived from the Orient Tuesday Seoul. . i ete y .grotut~ es~ . ~ d' prof senate. army. WSUI. with combat veterans from Korea. Truck convoys were set to roll es agall~s e s 00 ng own,. the able bodied repatriates I down an Amenean bomber of( SiberIa specially oiled roads 12 miles to A Condensation of Late Developments July 29, Candidates for Taft's Vacant Senatorial Seat Freedom Vlllap near lIi\mtal1, The y.S. pr~tesl had followed where the,. will be delouJ~, at,,- an ea~lier RUSSLan cha,rge that the en a quick medical c:heck and out- PANMUNJOM (Wednesday) (A'}-Tbe Communists informed Amencan I;llane had flown over tItled In fres~ new unitom\s. Allied officers Wednesday that the second day's return of war prison- Soviet t~rrttol'Y and opened Ure At M~lan, Ame~Ican BOldJer. ers wlll total 392. This total, eight less than the promised daily 400, on ,~US~I~~ ~IG i~lg~ht;:l'tI· h The wishin, to talk to ..w.mea lIdy will Include 70 Americans, 250 Koreans and 72 other Allied person- undlte t es hen d th c atrh,e do 110. The elibUi arm~ m'de l~ 'ill' I . k d d d an coun er-c arge a t c ~ n.L Tbe first group at 9 B,m, w mc ude .42 SlC an woun e MIGs had attacked the bomber 40 plain TutRa,. nllbt Uuit; no one Americans, two of them litter cases, and 50 Sick South Koreans, the 'I t tb Sea f J an will be barred from an InteTvl~w, Reds said. The 10 a.m return will 10clude 50 South Koreans, 3 able- m~~s o~ ;v~_50 e was ~orc:: i~to unleu he is sick or lIa,.1 that be bodied American", 25 British, 10 Filip1oos, 7 Colombians and 5 hus- the s~a ~ith 17 men aboard docs"llot want to S~ the press., traUans. Twenty-five Americans, 25 Turks and 50 So~th Kor.eans will An American naval v~ssel ~ 8eerita . be delivered at 11 a.m.; anlt the last group at noon will conSist of 100 rushed to the scene and picked up Tb~ prisoners wed all ciu- South Koreans. the co-pilot. The U.S. said It had tioned to "jIIl"uard militarY tn- • •• information that some others may formation, protect . Y0uf tello. FREEDOM VILLAGE, Korea (Wednesday) (JP)-U,S, helicop- have been rescued by Russian soldiera, YOW: family and y.oUr !era arrived here this morning bearing the first American sick and craft. c:ountry," in ta1tin, to petsoJu Wounded to be returned in today's opening of the prisoDer of wal" H W aIter taetr releue. exchanae. Both of the first two men to arrive at Freedom Village Iowa eat ave From MIIDIOll the able-bodl~ were named Davis, The first was CpJ. Richard M. Davis of Boone- B k T d American priaonera will be ~I\ \fille, Ark, a second division infantryman who was captured in Feb- ro en ues ay to Inchon, Seoul's port, whtr« ruaey; 1951. Hla helicopter mate was Sgt. James Davis, 25, a Negro DES MOINES (JP)-Iowa's heat tbey will boud tranaporb Mr ~& from Mullin, S.C. , who was captured Nov 27, 1950. James Davis de- wave was broken Tuesday after return to the United State&. Non- scribed his tr.a~ent 10 prison camp as "pretty tough. At first every- a cool tront entered tbe.state from Amerlc:p IlIiJoners hWi~1:e s~ one Uked to ~tarve to death." He said many of his POW buddies the west and moved rapidly east- ~_:al~n 'or proeeal• • starved to dellth In the first few months of 1951 . Ricbal'd Davis, a ward. .&&ON n. tbelr JO!1l'JlC1 Lb &oft-spokan Southerner, said, "It feels wonderful" to be back, Both By early Tuesday aftemoqn this ...... -ftIefI =... ' "'He dressed in blue Chinese uniforms and blue tennis shoes. Davis' frontal system had pushed pallt lls~ld,!,eeiemeu on the exc!han;e hair was unk.empt and he Deeded a shave. He said "there's not many the eastern boundaries of the state. Arthur Flemm','nl'l Thomas A. Burke Charles Taft MI'chael V. 0'15011e S ~el::' E. Franklln, Ev IIlen ieft" of those cap~ with ~im. A Cew light showers feU at scat- ., an.:OI'l, 'UL . w .. • tered Iowa points durin, the day TRESB FOUR MEN noua: MOST PROMINENTLY ill the spec- venUJ IUId II 01lJ'rtlllU, delell8e molltU ....1l cUree∨ 'l'b-. A. SIL Edward Hewlett,' Detroit. WASHINOTON' (JP)-The agriculture department reported Tues- as the cooler air advaneed. lila...... to the ,...bIIde .HOlIlWe to &lie leute Ie,t left "aeant Barke, Demoerat, II "Jor of ClevelaDd alld • protep ollA_elle: Sil Robert 1.. Ariaba, Morrtaon, day the farmer'. shye of the consumer's Cood doUar has dropped to Scattered thundershowers may ." the death of Sell. Robert A. T.~,~~b10. The appoilltmem wtll Charles Tal&, brother of tile late aena&or, r&Il UDnCClellfaUJ fer IJ1 lb. lowest level sJnce before World War n. The farm share was re- move into northwest Iowa late thla he"'e b, Demoentle 0.,. 00".• ~ Laaache. Arthur 8. Flem- 'o".rnor ...... l-auebe; Miehael V. DlSaile, DellMerat...... - Pvt. tt.ter Q. DefIl, ElmwOod POrted at U conts. Durin, the war It reached 34 cents. afternoon. JDillr, '8epu.blleaa. II .. leave .. prealden\ 01 9"\0 Wea\e,t.l\ \lm- Ie.... \\l. u.. \u\ snuoNl ,\ee\lOIl b, lob W. lkkIker. Pa.rk '\\\. 1

4.. I. • .... ~TD 'DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, la.-Wed.. AUK. 5, 1953 • Police Seek Teen-Age Molester T"h D I. 1 . fa DetecUve Harland F. Sprinkle of the Iowa City police department -e·'- aI' [yow an ame~ '. reported Tue5day that police are looking for a man who molested a sen. Knowland N New ~e~a~~rloo~e~waav~~~PM~dQ~r~a~~10~~ ___~~ ______~_~=~==~~~==~_~ _____ ~ __ ~~_-~~ it The man, who was c~uying a Itnlle, was about 18 or 19 years WEDNtsDAY. AUGUST 5. 1953 ~a~.61~t~mo~~hcl~~andw"v~y~~~~Heh~ll~t ______~~~_~~ ______~ ______~ . ______brown hair, croPlled closely and a pimply face. The man wore a red- PWIIIabad daII7 e:t Swula7 and ....1 .. II r...... u _.1..... - .r 'r.' ...... figured short-sl~ved shirt and blue jeans. Anyone knowing the ~~ ~ :;1~: ~n~~! r.r: ~~~a!.' ~::::::.:~ :.~:. PAILI' IO"AN .DITOaLU .,An fa Majority Le~der Of ' Senate whereabouts of this person Is asked to contact- Iowa CIty' police. Clll', 10"'.. ,.n...... elaU ..... ta ~.ear et Ot. Juruuaa J:dItor ...... _ r_ Sprinkle also said that Harold Wil~rt Simmonds, 31. who I1st- mall ma"er at tile ptof1lee at low. loaU.I ••• D."...... 1...... II Manadn. 'EdItor ...... To'" ...,. ed his address as 7 W. Burllngton st.. was arrestati Tuesday on two ~ u;,~'11~ act of -..-", :::';~·':.:':':jl '; ~.:e: f"'=~ New. Ulto ...... Sarah Am. Ferguson lleeted charges of disorderly conduct by Indecent exposure. ______...... ~. A.It. New. Edla ...... •• Jtoa Vaillne Police JudIe Emil G. Trott releued Simmonds on $260 bond to YDIUR OJ'TJR ASSOClATm PIlDS ------Cit)' wlo...... Ban aa ...... appear Friday. Tile AIIoeIaIe4 Pr_ III enUUe4 .,.- Call 61911 ...... '- .I'''r~' '- AIIL Cit)' J:dItor ...... !)av. ~ To Head iepublican cl\W.eb to Uaa ..... fer republkaUon ..,.rt •• "'. ",_.• _ ...... 1'-_. SpOrIa J:dItor ...... J're4 T~ of all lila Ioeal ..... prlDle4 In \lUI .t ...... '- 'Ike Dau~ 1••• L Sodel)' Bdlto. . .•.....•.• KaIh7 iIan1a . Given tabor Post 1 ....:.;~;..:pa:...-..;..IdIee..;..per-.;..._.. __ "'_aU_ .. __ aU__ AP__ ....._·_1 :~~~.:.~... an ta tit. C._.... - J:dltorlal " ..blabt ..... , .... Jtay Cr_ Policy Committee ...... -1I-U-""-~-Pt-lo-n-.-a-IaI---b7-eanl--;;"'In-l-_-a-1 C!h1ef Pbotocrapber ..•.... am Tune Lawyer A~mils . 1 "11111'1 ava."., CI\7, II Cf'nta weeki), 0' .. per ),ear In DAILY lOW AM .llllNalll IT"" WASHINGTON (.4') - Republi­ , or adv"",-el allt montha. r..II; u.r.. Bualn_ Manaca• •... 811D' A. P .... • can senators unanimously elected CUtCULATIOMI \ monUll, $1.110. B7 mall In OW&."", AalL Bu.. MIr•. •..••••. . lohn Ta_ 7"'; lilt Inonthl. ,,; three rnbntha. C1aulfled Manale. . .. . lbrtha Mo\te\ Sen. WIHlam F. Knowland of .. ~; aU other mIn au'DlcrtpUOlUl. I\O.GO Illegal jid Call II •••••, ...... per )'ea.; IlJC montha. " .eII; \hi" DAILY IOWAN CI.CULA'nOM ''fU' Cali ornia as majority leader v-21S1 ~e ~ ••• D.n, la..... , 1: •••. )lab,... ",,,nibs. $1.25. 'C1rculaUon l\QOOt CrOil&. Tuesday at a session that was 14,...... described as completely harmon­ Ious. To Democrats' Sen. Homer FerguSon of Michi- gan was named to eed Knowl- WASHINGTON (A")- A Wash­ Interpreting of·fi c; a I d QiJ.y ond as chairman GOP pol- Ington attorney who used to work icy committee. The vacancies In tor the Democratic NationaJ com­ the key leplatlve posts resulted mittee testified Tuesday he engi­ the News from .the death last Friday of mA­ neered an llJegal $30.000 contri­ BULLETIN jority leader Robert A. Taft of B,. J ... ROBERTS JR, bution tor the 1948 Democratic Ohio. ,,-laW rre. UNIVERSITY CALENDAR A ...... bJ Taft Sen. William F. Know and S H campaign. New. ADAlnt At 45. Knowland is one of ~e en. orner Ferguson Welburn Mayock, who called WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 5, 1953 VOL, XXIX, NO. ZII youngest men named to fill that To Replllce Taft To Replace Know/and himself "a furtive little lawyer." W hen the Un i ted States post In recent yea .... He had been told a house ways and means sub- UNIVERSITY CALENDAR ttelllll ar. .ebe'ale' cil . It 1 d d launched "Operation Food" for ~Oi~~:~J~; iaft~~~ ~~ ~~I~~ .Extra BuUer Harvard Scientists ~~::;~~ti~eW~~i~~\~~~f~~~~~ c~~~ East Germany the Communists ID the Preslden~'. offlCle, Old Capitol was lorced to give up active di- I t N A oJ sequences. promptly howled sabotage and WedDeacla,., AUl1lllt 5 Monda,., AuCU_a 10 rection 01 the senn+e le ... ·lative '!i R B W) d said th t 11 li f f. tf .' 8:15 p.m. - University Shakes- Registration for IndependeJlt "1"> 6'" nven ew ep. yrnes (R~ is .• aske the a re e 0 su ermg was peare repertory group. "As You Study Unit. program.' SO Million Pounds For Polio Victims greying. outspoken witness: real objective the Allies Like It" and "Julius Caesar," Tuesday. AU&'us' 11 Tuesday's select~ had been G- A "There was no question in your ROCCO C. SIOILIANO or (lhJ- should reopen normal trade chan- Theatre. Registration tor Independent :t~~~P!~~' c~o~-:~r ~~~:~'t: Iven way . BOSTON lIP) -: A sit-up ~ron ~~nhit ____ffi;;.;.;..·a;;.e:-W;.....;cw=t..:;G..:;d ____ APARTMENT tor rtnl 2 or J roo"... c1o •• tio S T ft b Dam T W kB II F od SI ,. purebred heifer, poultry and rab- In. private bath. Call 2511. • 10 • m~1s ;1l8;:~ w~ drrectede~oward 0 ret er Inl 0 . a Ions bit el'1,tries will be jucaed I.\.t 9:;30 We RI.Prfv~~ ~~looi,,~w~re apen'D" and ___kda_ Y_.______the people wlthlO his hearlOg. a.m .• AUi· 14. Baby beef ""II! l?c fRO --_.. ___.... _-~--- APARTloUNT fOIl rtnl. ,-n--t. .a. AI the Rev. Tucker finished bl.s judl{ed at 11 :30 a.m. A program Is Loat and Found Larew Co. JS7 &. W"b~o. ftoa. prayer the 13 member choir BERLIN ()P) - Six thousand for East Berlin needy. The govern- stlll in the planning stage to decil- lYery LO T: Wblte PUJOl ••1 Union 8W\da,. NIl - • to 5. Wee~W" arose and, slhglng, paSlied the Commun1st raiders were smashed ment out off American relief for cate the new toirarounds the eve- Will finder p~a.e return pertonal ef· ROOMS for 4 m~n . Stu...,t kllchon In. cilSket and walked out of the back with clubs and water guns the 18 million Germans in the SUI'- nlng of Aug. 14. miss I fect. to Union dHk. eluded. reatonalile. Call 1-1 ... 11 ••• church. Then the family slowly Tuesday by pollee commandos roundIng Soviet zone by blockad- The livestock lIa le will be held ----W.....o-rk-W".an-~t;a'"T---- JobnlOn. arose and moved out the side en· rushed to defend American !ree Ing rail and highway communl- Aug. 15. at 1 p.m .• nnd no live- - I ----..;.-..;..:;;;~--.;.;.;.;.;..:;.;.---...;;...- -N:"IC-n-Y-,-ur-n-III-b-ed-""'--tm-on-,-"-,-.-"'-- trance and down the sun beaten. food stations in West Berlin. cations to the clty Saturday night. stock will be released until that LAUNDRlJ:S. Pllone em. OlI'nUu. ~ roo01l. prlvat;, hatll ..... bleak,brown path for the burIal. More than 100 Red storm troop- Only a rew thousand have cvaded morning. The sal will be held In lACK and JW Pla7 8ehooL Call 1.3ItO. ~!:.~:!:i.'."lo,::m av•. S. &...... ers were carted off to jall. some the police barrlers around Berlin the new barn where scales are t: :..:.::.-..~:.-.. __~ ______II Last All-University Party with bleeding heaets, after 30- since tben. .J beinJl Installed. The scales may VoUNDlUES. Pbone 1'I'It. UNJURNlSHrD 4 ~ ..... Balbi 1»~ a. I PI eel f U' F 'd minute street battles In tbe U.S. not be relldy lor the show, how- rXPERT w.U •••hln, .... peT eloaninl. Clinton. 1[ ann or n.on rl ay and French sectors. Appanoose County ever, un. )SACJBLOJt e.,.,.lmenu. 104 N. Dubutl.... I WIlliam Wessler, a planist-co- Two pOlicemen were injured in Official for the show are the Penon@selVic:._D_Ia_I_...... --. - ...... __- ...-- median from Washington, la .• win the fighting. which fiared at mld- Needs Bullsnakes [ollowlng: Joseph W. Miltner Jr.. Automobil.. Wanted provide Intermission entertain- d~y atter the C?mmunlsts had • and Eldon Moss. ,l{eneral chairmen; C:A'lWlING In wedclJn, and bIrtlooda71--..:;~:;;:;:.;;;,;;;,:,;::;.....;.;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;:...-- ment at an ail-university party shpped "action bTigades" by sub- For Rain Dance Dean Rinner of Wilson and com- "'k" . ~lal~ baldn •. Pholl. T ••~ WANT wrecked Ch.vrol .... Bu.... IuI7 to ~ held In t~e Iowa Memorial way trom. the Soviet sector to pany, hOI( and sheep judge; Don " you '.III...... lnl... Patry, • mOdel. PhOne "*I'j Union Friday mght. West Berlm. CENTERVILE UP) _ Because Rinner Washington 10. tanner Illul I"HE8I8 \yplnl. Dlel 1-3101. ., Complete Union la~ilities win ~mall police details . regularly central Appanoose cpunty needs baby beet and pu~ebr~d helte; ALTJ:IlATlON. np&1r Oft men'" .. om..,', be available. There Will be soclnl assllDed to tbe tood dlStrlbutloll rain, they were bringing In bull- judge' Joseph Hineman ot the That women could be peHUaded to buy-keeI\ cIothln.. Tbo FamIl7 TaUcw 8boppe. IIt ~ 1:. Colle, •. Dial 1-4011 . , dancing in the RIver room from centers were o~erw~elmed by the snakes Tuesday Cor uSe in a "Hopi ~8te~n Iowa Artl1lcial Breeders thia in mind:- • to 12 p.m. Red rioters. WIth sirens scream- Indian rain dance" scheduled here association dairy heifer judge. WAITRESSES and This ' will be the last in a series ing. commando platoon cars and for Thursday night. ' While practically aU wbmefl read the ne~per, of sIx FrIday nil ht parties spon- truck-borne water guns raced Into An advertisement lor "12 live Lloyd Burr. Howard Fountain. aurveya mow that about 3 out of 4 women actually rou cen "tllc:k up Ca.b" lIelore flnall sored by the Union Board tor action. bullsnakes" was placed by Mrs. Leonard Dohrer. Ha~old Weeber. a. • tutor. Ad"ertI.. th. eoune .1Id read 1Omethin& on almoat every pll~e of the FOUNTAIN HELP ' summer session students. There It was the East German govern- Goldle Worth, a member of the Homer lUggle. Paul McNutt and .,.111" pbora. In till. eolUl1lA now. Olal 41.1. r newtpaper. wIll be no charge and all students ment's most brazen attempt to Centerville business and pr01es- Frank Colony are committee mem- lIALLBOOK dan.. r-. YJmt Youd, are invited. wreck the .glve-away food program slonal women's club. bers. They'll even read ada on paae 18 more cloeely Wurlu. DIal ..... WANTED She took the action aIter being Bernar~ Kozil, Lloyd Rensberg- than a headline on Pace One. advised by the famed Koshares er and Wllllam Cozine. beet cattle Bcoma for B~t Boy Scout dance group ot La superintendents; Lawrence La­ They read'them when tbty waQt to ••. wh.r. VERY nl~ room. I·ZlII, Full time and part time Gro.l!P Junta. Colo., that they probably cina. Lyle Yoder and John Dane. they want to .•••a lon~ .a they Ubi Hospital Reports .J, couldn·t present their Hopi rain dairy cattle superintendents; Leo­ ROOMS lew ...... "'..- boepllaL DIal JOn. So if you want the adl OIl your producta-to reach Steady Employmer;tt dance when they come to Ceoter- nard Dohrer. Ralph Troyer and SJNOLJ: , ...... Male .t1Idtftl. GO N . Du­ tlut MlIDI!Il who mi&bt J!lOIIi.bly buy. make aure buquI. Emergency Precautions ville because it was too warm to Ralph Jensen. swine superlnten­ transport their snakes. dents; Everett Winborn, Edgar the ada run in the n.wlpllper. BOOMS - .....uate .tucanM. P .... 4176. Apply to Mr. Co."., The Koshares dancers say It ha~ Colony and Woodrow Weeber, Make. bit with every QliIa ••• the uwapq«/ How the Iowa hospital associa- names at personnel appointed to rained within 24 hours at every sheep superintendents. DESIRABLE room lor 2 men. PlIone tlon Is preparing aiomic war specific duties and responsibili­ doelll I-03Il. tor location where they have per-I Gerald Bender, Dan Roth, ~uis Illd other large-scale eme~genciel ties the number . ot persons re- b ducrlbed in a recent Issue of . • . , termed the rain dance. Central Kulish and Ralph Ultrell, pol,ll­ I RACINE'S "r I 'H Ith" bli h d b qUlred m various areas, and the Appanoose county has had no raln try and rabbit superintendents; th or owa s ea , pu s e y type and quantities ot supp\cmen- since July 17. Emil Novy, Keith K!ater, 'Paul e ltate department of health. tary equlpl1Ient and supplies The response to Mrs. Worth's McNatt and Howard Fountain, Author of I.he arti.c1e is Ger- needed. • advertisement was prompt. record book superintendents. 'WANTED: bard ~man , supermtennent of "Every h06pitai has an obU.\la­ bo ymrw8nt wark UniverSIty hospitals and chairman tlo to be pre!)ared for casualtie BLONDIE CHIC of the assoclstlon's civil defense ma:y times greater than normal Mdl Time Floor Clerk committee. . co'mmu.nlty hospital facilities are between summer Hartman says that the comnut- called upon to serve. This is par- Frohweia lunldatio:!, . tee's recent report. 'H.osPltal tlc:ularly imperatlve in an age ~ply Co. ~ency Care and Civil De- whel1l «tomJc warfare constantly session and.the . tense," outlines emergency plans makes the headlines, but all t60 of at:Uon, a& well ... state and fed- frequently fails to penetrate the eral framewor~ ot mutual ald. day;- to-day consciousness ot com­ WANTED fall' ferml ,. , 'l'he aaaociaUon has prepared a munity leaders and hospital offi­ Young 'Woman Work kit to avoid confusion re- clals ,j Hartman observes IUlIIiII trom dupl1catlon ot e!torts ' • tot. Office Wwk. Advertise your ~rvicei ! ib time of emergency abd to pre­ .' \ with a .... vertt deterioration of service due Rttt# Cross Swim Experience helpful. to lack of planning. Hospitals in T • it ' ed. Dti&hborln, states have requested GlaS$es Extended ~time;:::{y : 10 ..... Emergency Defense kits to lieJp them in their prepara tions, For ExIra Week Apply iD per8OD. . Hartlhan notes. The kit is organized to li.t the Free Red Cross swimming class­ BEETL~ SEARS ROEBUCk CO. es are being continued this week through Friday. Prof. Gladys' M. ""' Scott's Funeral Scott,' water safety chairman of Ie, ttilt .j' ol1hson county Rep Cross to Held Todciy chapter said Tuesday. J'uneralaervices for Mrs. Helen .The six-week program was ex­ W ANT·ED IIaYl1lonci Scott. widow of the late tended a'week'because of the-time Dun Wl1liam G. Raymond ot the 100t after- the July 4 storm. she re­ Student for Afternoon Work, ~ of englneerln" wlll be held ported. f. tbtal of 10,408 persons It 2 p.m. today in the Hohenschuff have attended courses this year. for baIcmc:e 01 11IIDJD8I', aJeo jor • '. lIIortuary. Mis" Scott said. ' IICbaol y.Ir. M,.. be able to drtyt The Rev. Leon C. England of Red Cross certilicates have . r i"(", IlIe FIrat Christian church will of· been issued to many children. 1Nek. Apply IItlate. Burial w1ll be in Oakland Swiinl'!1efll qualifyln, this week .r.;~MtllOPV. will receive thell certificates soon ' ~~i Scotl ~ ~ 1Q ~ after &hj COW'MI end, MJII Scott --... Pa. Idvl.ea...... ".,. K'RWAN I FtURNfrURE • f • • I Campanella" BurdeHe Row Raschi Hurls, 2 More Years for 'Mo ' Writer PrediCts Phi/lies' Ace (.!!~~KEE~O~~~h" Hits in Roui B7 WILL GIlIMSLEY , b h tl .... NEW YORK (JP}-The league- Dumps Cards P 4-THE DAIL'" een as muc conversa on ~~ leading New York Yank-- smoth- NEW YORK (JI)\_ ThIS' is a ap • IOWAN-Iowa CUy, Ia.-Wed., Aur. 5, 1953 tween Lew and ROf ~~ n r- ST. LOUIS (IP')- Robin Robertsf-,,:-. --. -----~-----...:...:..----:..-.::..~..:..:...:...- Bur~ette'1 ered the helpless Detroit Tigers diction. Maureen Connolly won his 19th game of the season G .-d G . H Campanella Monday night as by- 1:1-0 Tuesday night as play about two more years of Tuesday night as he limited the., ·0 t . slanders re~orted Tuesday set a major league record for amateur tennis. She will tour thE St. Louis Cardinals to five hita I i '. 'n oln oug curfew would have halted \M by driving In seven of the pro circuit a year, then retirr t6 lead the Ph'l del h· Philr s ' ,." Ya;::eN~~;o rkers flaunted their ~~~ps to rear a batch of Little to :Onbe~, v~~~rlias ::aonly ~:_I ' I T' L' d co:~~:,s:~, the rpw between the strength at the seventh place -Ti- Now Maureen didn't tell us that. yen games, struck out seven, sea m . e a e r Braves' and the Brooklyn ,en; by lifting RllSChl after six in- These are just a few deductions walked two and hit one. catcher after Campanella had iO rungs to rest him for the big Chi- we plucked strictly on our own The C~rdinals scored their only (Note: This ls u.e 11m 01 a Ie- and his actions on the field make dodge twice in the procesa or cago series this weekend. between lines of a dialogue a.tter ~un agamst Roberts in the fi~s~ riel 01 pel'lOD&J lealure. about up for any conversational reli- striking out took only seconds. The righthander gave up just the Wightman Cup matches at mnlng when veterans Stan MUSIal Iowa loo&ball platen wbo will Cl'Tlce. What happened was that Campl two hits. Art Schallock, low man Rye, N.Y. and Enos Slaughter backed up a sun praeUce 8_ Z.) Houg was born in Osage, about went down swinging on a full on tbe Yankee staff, gave up four Today Little Mo can hit a ten- pair ot d~ubles. It takes the coaches and other 12 miles from St. Ansgar, and wiD count, started toward the dugout hits In the final three innings and nis ball better than any woman The Phlls banged Car? ace players, including the opposing be 21 yelrs old Aug. 16. His fa- then veered toward the mound, preserved the shu~ut. • in the world. Maybe she can hit Gerry Staley for thr~e runs In t~e orles, to appreciate the worth of ~her, Monrad Houg, is a merchant brandishing his bat. Plate umpin Raschi drove in two runs in the one better than any women in the tour and added a smgle .tally to Andy Houg. the 1 ~igbt guard and 10 St. Ansgar ot NorwelJian an- Tom Gorman and Bravea catcher second inning when he singled world ever could, Including the i the fifth and two in t~e SIxth be- captain of ,Iowa's 1953 · fwtball cestry. Andy has two teen-aged Del Crandall headea him oil, both with the bases loaded. That graceful SU1anne Lenglen and the • fore Joe Presko came In. team. sisters. benches mllled about a few min- equalled his total run& batted in poker-faced Helen Wills. That's ! . CUft Chambers replaced Presko .Houg, who with about 66 other Houg is the second permanent utes and quiet was reatored. for last season. In the third he one of those impossible debates. 10 th~ eighth. a~d was tagged for Iowans will repor~ tor the first season's Iowa captain in the past Campy Yells Someih1Dc came up again with the sacks full Sbe Love. To BIde the fll1~1 Pb~i~e. run The Phlls drill Sept. 2, i, typical of the line- 10 years. succeeding Bill Fenton, Burdette said Campanella yell- il and cleared them with a double. She also is 18, loves to ride garnere 12 m a . men who do a lot (It good but get the 1952 leader who will play hi. ed some~hing at him after tile Apin In the fourth the bases were horses, play be-bop on the phono- * * * little credit trom the llpecta tors , senior year at right end. third strike. . loaded when Vlc batted and this graph and shake an occasional ' except for the tans who are smart "I didn't quite hear what ~ time he singled' home two more. rhumba. She Is blonde, cute as the ReCilegs Fa II enough to follow the play of the said." Burdette said, "but I think girl next door and definite on ex- linemen. I read his lips concctly. If I ;id. * *' * acUy what she wants. WORLD TENNIS CHAMPtON Maureen (Utile Mo) Connolly, C1NCINNATI (JP)-Thi d b e Andy won a major letter as a the words were unprintjlble. But I. It's not Helen Wills' tennis rec- extreme r'-hl, chata with U.S. star Louise Brourh and an EDrilah D O'C II' r i hasth - defensive end In 1951. Last season' didn't even answer him." d I . " ·50 ug A'S ord!. friend alier.. wilUlinr the Wlml'ledon tournameDt recently In Enr~ inningman tripleanny droveonne in stwo e gruns - h e was s h'ttIe \0 auard, to take Campanella sald, I didn't sa), C h1 I "Gracious goodness no I have land. for Pittsburgh Tuesday night to advanta,e ot his natural speed and a worel, not a word. 1 just looked ' PHILADELPH (~_ Veter- no idea of g~lng after Hel~n Wills' ' end Cincinnati's lour-game win- defertslve ablllty. H-: is 185 lJounds at him and he shouted and thal'i ' an Virgil Truck$ ~ireballed a four- records," the San Diego, Calif., be readily understood. The young she and Br,i,nker are n~t engaged ning streak, 2-1. . and 6-2.*. when I started after him;" hitter at the Ppjladelphia Athle- girl said. "In the first place 1 don't man with whom she has been ro- but added: I guess you d call him O'C 11' bl t d 1 The coaches say he "puts out" However, the Dod.gers Jackle . tics Tuesday nflli as the Ch~C8g0 think I could match them. In the mantically linked-Norman Brlnk- a steadY;,l'm not going with any- hit Pi~;h~~g SjOb S:or s::: B~C/~~: 100%, both in practices and In Roblnson - like CiUllpanella, I; White SOl( came through With a second place 1 don't want to '"ve er of Roswell, 'N.M., a navy sea- one else. F F h . bl k d th games and Is a, worker whose ex" Negro-bad a good deal more to . . 1 _ ... Ih f ' a' a Is j i h I Ii t roy ace. ace, w 0\ an e e say on the subject than either 0(' six-run sp uro;y on . e ourth in- tennis that much of my lite. m n- a ump ng orse spec a s As for turning pro, Maureen Redlegs after giving up a first- ample is a fine one tor other play- nina to cushion theIr way for an No Pro AsplraUoDl who ~~ a membe~ of the U.S. will neither confirm nor deny, inning run, won his fifth game ers. Houg likes contact and shows the pr4tclpals. 8-3 win. "I don't plan to become a, ~ell, OlympIC equestrian team last leaving you to ,reach the conclu- ot the year. He has lost three. that Ukin, throuJlhout hie play. Ro."naon Cbara'et Abuse The 34-y righthander a traveling, uh, uh ..." • year. Maureen herself owns a Ten- slon sbe's not going to pass up Pittsburgh collected eight hits HOUJ InJlIftd "He called Campy a plank blank: racked up his th win 01 the sea- A pro~essional amateur athlete? nessee walking horse named Col. that one big purse opportunity off loser Jackie Collum who now Houg was ~jul'fld In early sea- nigger." Robinson charged. "H .. son against ti es. He held the we tried to help. Merry Boy. when it grins at her. has a live-six record. son last year. Badly mi8l\eq In se\'- called me practically the same' Philadelphia batsmen hitless until "Well, yes, if you want to put "I think more than anything in "Tennis is fUn," she said. "It eral games, Hou,'s presence later ~bing last week in Brooklyn. !hiS: Loren Babe !Jingled to open the it that way. I like tennis but I the world I'd like to become a has given me a chance to travel a * * * boosted the Iowa defense and his 15 the flrst time I heard that word, sixth inning. He now has 107 don't plan 10 make It my Ufe. 1 good horsewoman. ride ~n shows lot and see a lot of places whLle I C b .. performances ~de 1I gfl~at diUer- used since I b~oke into the major: astrikeoy wl10 was de~errnined to T S W. George Crowe-on their roster. , Chuck Stobbs into the eighth in- Garda scattered the hits b~- eighth lnnln, Tuesday night en- The Boston outburst drove Du- gaY !7na ,game delayed 55 minutes make go(ld in Big Ten football. O· araloga In Budette retort~d that he, "dldn t ning to score al\ its runs and de- tween five Senators as he won hiS ane PiLlette from the hill after y r . St. Ansgar, Ia,! (poQ. 934), nine say any such thing. ] don t know leat Washington 3-0 Tuesday 13th game ot the season in 19 abled the Boston Red Sox to snap he had held the Red Sox ' to a The dete;!t, New York's seventh miles fr0rt\ the Minnesota Qorder, Ihy he got mad about having \0 night behind the five-hit pitching dedsions. He walked two and tj1eir eight-game losing streak lone run in seven innings PHlel- in its iast nine starts on a current is his home. 1.{oug l1'aQuatect from SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (A') go dow~. That's all part of the of Mike Garcia. st ru~k out four. with a 6-2 victory over the last- te's record Is now four wins and western trip, was charged to hlah scl'lool il'tI!1'C iI\ 1950 after -~om Fool, the .Greentree Sta- game. PItching is my bread and Stobbs Wi13 coastlng along with * * * place St Louis Browns eight losses starter Sal Maglie, first of tour playjng left end 'ilIld,fUllback. for- ble s ,grea~ handicap champion, butter and I fntend to keep on a two-hitter until Bobby Avila. BoSox Lace Browns The R'ed Sox set off ~ five-run Billy G~odman's double and Giant pitchers. ward in ba~ke~all" and second f;e~~~~I~nf~~ o~t~~~edv~i~d~~: pitchlng t~e way I ha~e been:! ~ Larry Doby and George Strick- scoring barrage while 'eoming single led the eight-hit Boston at- Rush held the Giants to three base, third bile and , pJteher in b'lt' I ~r L d . th $16350 Meanw,hlle, Dodger otflcials BalJ land drove in the eighth-inning BOSTON (~ _ PInch-hitter from behind to provide Maury tack. hits until the ninth inning when baseball. ~il s nMI.~n Tan d 10 t ~ , that as ~r as they kneW no for. tour blows produced two New No MaJor Hone.. son I e ues ay a aratoga. mal actIOn would be taken and York runs. It was Bob's sixth vic- No major footbal), hQnors came The brilliant 4-year-old led all Gorman indicated his report to the .5 . D· ' · R 'J tory against nine defeats. this way: his );>est reeognition was of the way, and won by eight league would treat the whole mat· , ,V IS 1911 U Clyde McCullough's tourth ho- a place VI tl'le fourth all-state team lengths al though eas.ed uP, byltiiiieiiiir iiiiliiiii8;;;;h:.t;;;;IYiiii·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.;1. e 10 A -sens . me, . mer of the season gave the Cubs in basketball, But at 'Iowa he con- jockey Ted Atkinson the fmal:. Ch I () , • a 1-0 lead In the third Inning. centrated upon football ahd ' the . elgh~h ~t a mUe. I d d CHICAGO (R}- The Chicago The game was held up by rain results Improved every week. HIS .ttme w.as 1 :~7 1-5 on a fast E war S Rose-kyl While SO'l~. in hot pUl'8uit of the for almost an hour: in the fourth. The Iowa oQap'taln is an unns- track 10 makmg hIS victory • pace-setting But tha.t wasn't al~. when Judge attempted to "cut in" cont~uing .to use Rogovin .In face It was the seventh loss against sumlng guy,' almQllt shy. He does for the season seven-far-seven. Trade with your Orur store ref· Th Tuesday were vexed by extra- sa~heitC~c;:gOr::o~~~andi;:e~~~~ on a daneing partner of Fain's. ot hiS continued mound faIlure. eight trjumphs tor Maglie. r,ot find it nece,sarY ~o talk 925. e winner's purse was $10,- ularly - the coat il the lam&- cuni~ular trouble. has hit the Sox and that when a Frank Lane, general mana,ger, ''' '''''~'.•• '''.'',;; ., •. ',' •. ". ~~:e;r:~~:-:r~'~=l-;;'!:: Ferris Fain, Sox flut sacker locker toppled on second baseman said the Sox planned to "stand The greatness of Tom Fool of the rea-Istered pharmacist - who led the American leag e in NelUe Fox in Washington Sunday behind Fain in this aftait and conceded by the -Saratoga assocl- we are very anxIous to MI"t batting the past two seasons, had night, It occurred during a club- give him any legal help be de- ation. which ordered no betting you a~ Drug Shop - JOu sre al· frosted Manager Paul Richards' house brawl involving Fain. sites." . on the race. It was billed as an waYS welcome oake of woe with his tavern brawl Fox Suffers BruiHs Hand II Swollen exhibition. Had there been bet- ot Monday at Washington, ting, the customers would have U Fox was pinned under the lock- Fain rejOined the Sox Tuesday got nothing but a nickel on the DR G SHOP r er and suttered leg bruises. He In Phllad!!lphla with II badly '· dollar, the legal minimum, as Tom iowa City, Iowa .. described the story as .ridiculous. swolien left hand and was ex- Fool certainiy would have been 1Iir.~i~iiii~~ii~ Fox said the locker tumbled on pected to be benched a day or AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL "ZAGUE l to 20. him when he reached lor some 'two by the injury. Ne .. Ye.k .". w88 8~L .887Pol. 011 B •••k.,.. '" ..' ,,.,..'II ' ,.~. I ·...to n . 011 I j~I;;;;;ii~~:~~ tooth paste. Fain lett Washington betore a CIlI...... 84 41 .ft l' 3 .11...... ~ 4. ..r3 8~i Attendants in the visiting quar- U.S. rnar;gal could serve papers VI11 •• ...10. lo.' ...... ,. 8l118 U48 .-.1147 I~n~ plolI81, t•• ..elpll 11 •• .. : .... • • Ifl1li ..4~ .....84' I'11 I~ IttI~~6tIll. NOW! ters of Griffith field added to the on him. e Sox r~turn to Wash- 'Iva.. ln,l.n ...... IMI .4~7 !eli H4.. Y.,k •• . •.• 41 ~ UI~ Ena. Tb.rlde,1 confusion by Bob Feller of ington Sept. 16 and 17 and if PhUadolpblo ' " 411 .. .4IT :3li Vlnolnnoll...... It .487 191i • Cl I d besayi~ t Ii th . D.I ••II • ...... 118 f~ .1189 SOli C...... ,I n .% .114 %IIi \I • ~ , • ,'". ... eve .an ,a ar or ca s emcs, Fain falls to appear there, pre- 81. L ..I • . , .... 3<1 71 .m 53 plI"b.. ~II . , . . 114 15 .811 "I~ . '. ' MNoI. ... RO'ONlT loosened the locker by d(llng sum ably he would be fined by T .....," IUI.lI. .' T ••.,.", .....1. •... , . •. T i . , No .. V.r. 13. Delr.11 0 Chi..... I. N.. I.~k • .HACKE" c hin -ups in prevIous r be VIS\.!;. Richards if he misses those Chi ••,. '. Phll•• elphl. S Br•• k11" .1 1111 ...... , ••• ,.. , . • EJaiIe£'" STEWA,IIT Fain Is teellng a $50,000 dam- games. B,d,n I. 81. L .... e pIIII ••,'."'a 8. ",'" 1. ••1, 1 • . •• age suit resulting from his tavern In an earlier rumble in the Sox CI ...lond ST.':':;~I·::::Il:" PIII".,,11 .;.!'J.;!:~~:~.. • CO·FEATURE • altercation on the outskIrts of told, they wrlorm~d poorly in a Clnelan' .1 W ....'n''-n Cnl,lII) _ B;~~~~•• :\:~~.k" - lroklno cu- __ Robe Washington. He popped a fellow recent game with the Olncinnati L ..... n (15·9) n. p,ner'lel .. CI%·8) . Pllt...... OI ...... U - " .... CO·S) , , 'I . ~.' (I'RlrtE . who complained he had one tooth Redlegs at Cooperstown, N.Y. 0 ...... 1 p ..n .... lp .... (nl."') - D,"· ,. ... p ••".u." ,1-11'.' U\ .';' , ••• (6.5) n. F,I.... (304). N•• y ••k '•• c" .... ,. CI, ~.n ... CI.· knocked out and had to have five It was during' that game Man- Paul Richards DoI,.11 o. N ... Yo.k - H,.n (l." ,... (... ) I .. Le... CI-D' \ Catberinl

more extracted. ager Richards left the bench to H 01 B.lloa - Xrell ... (l.!) Fain KDoeked Dow1l conler with Lane over the fate of as Calc e 0f Woe ....M~!~r Fl L~~:...... ' cOo4). ~~~~~~~~::.:~::.:~~~~~~~~~~'~Md~E~O~D~CI· Fain admits he was knocked pitcher Saul 'Rogovin, whose A d R down by a punch between the hurling WM far below expected 10 En·· try END S TON IT E eyes. The dispute reportedly form all selll!On. It tlnally was lien ance 'Ise AHr'lbuled Braves'. stemmed from a dance tIoor In- decreed Saul had a sore elbow NEW YORK (A»-The CHEVROLET NIGHT ' ~' . ' r;."' •.• .) .';;;...... ::' "' ,,. ~ cident. and he was phiced on ·the dls- league can attribute its rise In at- year ago. FerriS Fain The suit was liled by James abled list. t d hi " The teams J d 28 f W hi gto 0 en ance t s season to the pres- Bt'tJwis En Tatlet'n u ge,. ,0 as n n, .C. Rlchards faced I sharp criticism sure of the Milwaukee Braves. ' cUnes i\lc1ude Chicago. 82,~30; The dISpute reportedly started from writers covering the Sox for With about two-thirds ot troit, 264,489; and St. LOUIS, 2 Technicolor Hits You'll ree'J season gone, the league boasts an 627. . . yO\ll'll1f aJow. attendance gain of 804,530 over The American league turn~ut "Caesar and crow - till iowa Gymnasts Have Rookie Is Shutout Star last year's figure at this time. for 1953 has been 4,804,2~1, while YOIl_m niDI AllAN "I1ED" Milwaukee alone shows an in- the -figure a year ago was 5,618,- Cleopatra" feet tall! 5 16 Meets on Slate WOATH(NGroN, crease ot 901 .802. 1.~2iiiO·iiiii_iiiii __iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiil -PLUS- "S u d an" 0;:- 7"IIE The American league, with sev-II Sixteen meets, with five yet to en of the eight clubs sutferlng de- "Doon ... -~- ,·1I(.lt;8r' be scheduled, appear on Iowa's N'W )1:::WK G/AN"'~ FIRGr AfOPER# creases in attendance, is 81 1953-'4 Dl11JlUtlCl ..:becIu1e, ac­ admissions behind its 1952 pace. cording to athletic director Paul ROOKIE "'-0 PileI! AdmlulOD Has Dipped Brechler. 'slltJrotJrs 1/1 illS Statistics compiled by the As­ Of this -total, a dozen are dual FlR~r rHO meets and ellbt of them will be sociated Press through Monday's held on four afternoon. by using S774l?rs - FIRST gam~ disclose an overall dip TODAY the asme -.,ent KOrea apinst two RUN WAS Nor 9,739 in both leagues over teams. Only three meets now are $COR~D OFFH'I'I Icheduled for Iowa City. (INTI L. AF7~R :::::. h~ ~~!~t ~~1;9,~~~ '::~ The team coached by Dick 19 'YJ this year they have played 10 1,- HoIzaepfel ..ill open .ita season INNINGS I 8l!O,232. ' ' .-, Dec. 1~ in the Midwest Open meet • The Braves, who performed In in Chlca,o, lind close April 2 and Boston last season, have .Ulnl;woll 3' ~ the NCAA: at Champaian, 1,096,949 fans to their 48 OL ileets are yet to be booked games In MilwatVtee. A year wIth Notre Dame, Western Illi­ only 111:1,147 Bostonians nois State, Kansas State, Eutern turned out to watch them. Illinois and Purdue. Others are: Jan. 15, Illinois and Other National league teams W~tem Illinois State at Cham­ with attelldance boosts inc1utle paiiQ.; Jan. 111, ' Minnesota and Louis, 73,759. Indiana at Blooinini1On; Jan. 23, ChiC&fo, Michigan State at Iowa City; ThOle club~ behind their Jan. 30, NorthweStern at Iowa pace Include Chica,o, 164,536; MAGRi. City; Feb. 1, Michigan at Iowa Cincinnati, 31,954. O'HARA City; Feb. :lI~, ,Navy Pier at Chl­ All told the lealUe has attrac~ AlIX calO; Feb. 20, Wisconsin and Chi­ ed 5,045,981 fRna as cOp1pared to PLV. - COLO. <:A.TOOH calo at ebb: • Feb. 28, Minne­ last season's figure of 4,241,Ul,,,. "ULUOTAfIIT puP" • ALEXANDER SCOURBY I NICOl. IOta and Nebraska at M.lnneapo­ In the American on- •••1 W. 00 AGAIN lis; Feb. 27, Northwest Gym So­ ly team to show an Imnrt,voiiri.l,ntlil "SPIClAL" SATURDAY ciety at MI~IIs; and March has been the New York 12, 1~ - Bll.,ir challlploothipa In 48 home games the Yanks -LA""" NI"_ Conle Back. Little Sheba lira WI) 1,034,50:1 a,alnst 918,4811 a 'l;'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;~1 ,1 C91"P\q~ L. •...... ~ .J..- •