.' aid of I . ~ ...... ~: t:Oih
D.C. ~Harry 'cdnes'day that lWer s h Q wed ld Interest" In People Iowa City for overhauUng Serving The State University of Iowa and the of loyalty· security Member or Xisociat:e:d Pn:.;s::AP .r:ea;;ea Wll'e ana WirephOto service Iowa City. iOwa. JiirliGy. June is. 1!i2 testimony pre. judiciary IUb. t1 tutlonal rlchta, ~s t" type abulle8 1 ~rogram to Such ~p1icaUon for a n~~ a terrlfylna
he bei8ft innocent mea tabbed as Be ever learnlDI real chance to
and a former hington state. I expects to be $15.000·a·year 11 . the Subversive ~ because of the
WASHINGTOI ~Three medi cal bulletins Thursday reporte6 I WASHINCTON l.fI - The Senote President Eisenhower . com In. Foreign Relations Committee bu ~EMBERS OF THE Motormen's Benevolent AJloclatlon give their support to motorman Jack RotfI, { along well. and getting to drink oyed administration hopes (or addi· (checkered ,hirt), and John P . Sweeney, (center), • fter their sUlpenllon tri,,.red the .trike which crip some tea. wann water and beet P,IH New Yoric's subway system. Vernon Deyo, unit ch.lrman, shakes their hand•• nd .Isures them un· broth in small amounts. tional (oulp aid money Thursday. *' Neklng lit the Brooklyn meeting. Roth, Sweeney, and .nother meterm.n were suspended when they A highlight o( the day 'wall' vis· II voted to put back more than halt refused te t.ke supe",llory personnel on • pr.ctlce run over parts of the UmMrtround .yst.m. The strike It from Chancellor Konrad Ado the '1,100.000.000 • I Iihed by tile WII settled nine hours after It began. nauer of West Germany. to whom Jlouse (rom Pr ~!dent Eiscnhow('r's the President voiced hOpe for tbe reqU t. "liberation" or 17 miUion Germans R publican! earrl d lh key 9-5 frpm "Soviet Communist rule." vote (or the admin! tration. six of There was also a continued re· New York"s AII·Qut Subway Cusal by press secretary James C. the se en GOP members on the Hagerty to discuss /lny qUestions committee approvln, the reston!' about a second term. so long as tlon of 600 million doUars for mlli· the President remains in Walter tary aid. There wa.s no head ~unt Reed Army Hospital. Strike) Ends after.Nine Hours on a later decision to add 15 mil· Hagerty refused to relay to Ei. HEAT DROVE SUI student. into the .Ir-conditioned Memorial Union lounge to study Thuraday nl,ht-the !.fI - lions to European "d('fen sup NEW YORK The first all· the same time IND service headed strike had begun to snowball anew senhower a question as to whether second night of summer school. Wh.ther the .ir cond:tionln. 01" the usignm.nts brought the urtt .. atvcty out subway strike in New York's back toward normal. on IRT lines. And a second inde· Port" lunds. his new Illness may lead the Presi· to 10 many students il h.rd to elK/de. At .ny r .... It's .n Indic.tion th.t clull' .re In IWln, a.al... history hit the nation's biggest Harris J. Klein. a former memo pclldent union. representing about dent to reconsider his Feb. 29 de· "'II The commltl thus recomm nd· transit system Thursday with stun· ber of the Transit Authority. 4.000 maintcnance men, was threat· cision to run for re-election. d a total of 615 millions more than !ling sucidenll(!ss. It ended after all piayed a key role in securing Ii ening to throw its weight behind Hagerty also refused to discuss the $3.800.000.000 authori: d by the tbree JInes were crippled for more truce. He stepped in as a media· the MBA strike. . in detail a newspaper columnist's House. than nine hours. tor at the request of the strikers. During the strike. which began report that some medical authori· The wea~~~r Jury Convicts Sllbway ofCicials estimated 780,000 He oblained a condition pledge at 1 p.m.. many trains ~id not ties say ileili6 orten recurs. Jleilis ~rsons were stranded in the from MBA President Theodore move at all . Others moved about is the intestinal ailment Cor which strike. Leos to nrder the strikers back to Eisenhower was operated on Sat· A vast, perilous crush of human- work. In turn. Klein promised to 30 minutes apart. so cramme~ that urday. c::;y L~l 2.rrum~n Aides ~gF:~~;,E~~1~ ity built up underground during the try to get an amnesty for the it was impossible to squeeze in any The morning visit with Adenauer everU,ii' rush hour. But it finally ·strikers. more passengers at slops. lasted 10 minutes. The German ST. LOUIS lA'I-Two top 'I'rumon ndmlnistr:!tlon officio Is, Malth w J . Democratic Leader Lyndon B. was dispersed without dealh, injury When the amnesty came, Leos. At the heights of the strikes. a leader said afterward that the s~ I~'.~ ~ Cooler \.~ ~,.' to.. '" ~ Connelly and T. Lamar Caudle. sat motionless Thursday as they h Ilrd Johnson of Tcx • not tI member or panic. hoarse from shouting and from In- policeman on duty in Midtown speed of Eisenhower's recove.ry C~ ~"" ' " n federal jufy convicl them of conspiring to help an Income tax dod,er. On a steaming day of 90.1 degree .baling tobacco smoke in a crowded J\1anhattdn told a reporter: . was a "miracle." He said the ..,. ~- The conviction could mean as much as five years imprisonment and oC the committee. had said earlier record heat. eight million New union meeting room. signalled this "In the main. the people are President's doctors told him It was I) $10.000 tin for both ConneUy. 48- the Pre~ld nt wal "In d p trou· Yorkers were confronttld with a with a wave of his arms and the taking it very calmly." , possible because they had "a Partly cloudy and not-so·warm ),car-old While House appointments bI .. in his plea (or addition:!1 aid transportation systelll that was command: To add to the discomfort. the healthy organism" to work with, weather is predicted for Iowa to· 'r tnry under former P ident money. Johnson uld most Demo. badly fouled from Coney lsland to "Back to work!" mercury hit 96.1 degrees. an all The rest of the 3:15 p.m. (CST) day with thundershowers expect. Truman. and Ole 52·year-old Cau· crats with whom he lalked (eel the the Bronx, from Tim~ Square to Only a short time earlier. the time high for this date. health bulletin : ed in the east and north. .. dl . on ·tim Justice Department tl1e d\stan sectTol1~ of Queens. . -"'=--.-=--____-'-_.-..L ' .....' ___--""::';_ ...... - ...... ----- tax head. admlnletration tla fall d to make "The Presid(nt·s condition con· Highs today will be 78-84 east. With tbe subways crippled, hun· tinues to progress satisfactorily. U.S. Dis!. Judge Rubey M. Hulen a ease (ot any increase in th U.S., Great Britain His pulse. blood pressure. temper· 82-88 west. . House filure. dreds of thousaltds of stranded Claussen Elected Record temperatures were set set their sentencin, ror July 19. He Eisenhower originally lOught au. riders besie~ed bus lines. taxis and ature and respiration continue sta· Will Trade Atomic ble and eSflentially normal. In the East Thursday with New said he would al 0 hear motiorlS thorl~ to .pend 14.900.000.000 in t(ains. Giganfic traffic tieops oc· that day and the d fense Indicated 'the year startJng July 1 for miIi· curred as private cars were press· Network President "He again rested ana catnapped York reaching 96.1. Newark. N.J .• Research Secrets most of the aft.ernoon. tt would seek a new trial. tary and economic a i tance to t>cl into service to get peopie about "During the aCternoon he had 99. and Columbus, Ohio, 92. Connelly tried to avoid newsmen friendly naUorlS. He appealed to the city. SPENCER lA'I - Gene Claussen WASHINGTON lA'l _ The United small amounts of liquid by mouth A cool mass of air over most o( the Senate !his week to give back . But the real drama od the his- of Radio Station KXIC in rowa City States is expected to furnish Bri. as well as intravenous feedings . the Northern Plains stat('s is as h walked from tho courlroon} a large amount of tbe House cut. toric strike was unfoldod in dimly was elected president of the Iowa tain with secrets of atomic sub. "The President has had a com· moving slowly easlward. brlrlg· "No comment, boys." was all he Admlnl tration lead rs said th y lit subWIlY platforms deep beneath ITall Corn Network at the close would say as he hurried {rom the needed at least 600 million of it. marine construction under an fortable day and his spirits and ing relief from the unseasor.a'bly New York's skyscraperS. Thursday of its two·day conven· morale remain high ." federal building. Sen. Theodore F. Green !O.R.l.I There hqndreds of thOusands of.. . . _ agreement disclosed Thursday by Hagerty reCused to comment on hot weather. proposed Thursday that the com· men. wotnen and children _ near ~lOn . Fifteen broadcastmg stations the State Pepartment and the quotations (rom a medical journal Caudie was obviously .hocked. mitlee reinstate a full billion dol- p'rost,ration fll9m the stifling heal _ 10 Iowa are members of the net· Atomic Energy Commission. and an insurance manual saying T. Lamar Caudle loo. He said: lars. He lost. 8..... It tt1ng support milled around In spectacular con- work. In return tor this and other in· that ileitis frequenUy recurs even 'J Am An Innocent Mart' "J know [ am an Innocent man. from onlY Chairman Walter George fusion. seeking trains that never Chosen a vice presldent to rep· aCter surgery. I-Day Mate convicted for something I never !O-Ga.l. Sens_ H. Alexander Smith formation 11\ fields in which this The quotations were carried In a did. I will (ace my COd, my sweet (R·N,J,) and Homer E. CapeharL ,came. . resent eastern Iowa was Bill country had forged ahead. the children and my friends when my fR·lnd.I. The Transit Auth?rity, which op· White of KFJB Marshalltown. syndieatt:d column by Doris Flee· erates the subway hnes under state , . • United 'States · expects to get varl· son. The writer suggested these Fal'stoDeath; time comes. I have no apologie. Republican Leader William F. mandate. finally waived the puni . .Represent1Og the western part of ous atomic research secrets Bri· views shOuld be weighed along Cor anything I have done." Knowland of California then moved The jury of four women and eight to restore 600 miJIiolll lor military live provisions of a state anti·strike the state as a vice president will tain had discovered. wjth statements made by Maj. law to get the motormen back to tbe M. W. McPherson of KCIM. Gen. Leonard D. Heaton. who per· men from rural eastern Missouri help abroad, The agreshoe Mansfield (J>.Mont.), Wayne Morse or Robert F. Wagner interpreted Broadcasters Assn. opens to· When ~eporters noted that Miss Mrs. Oren A. Pnltt of Charlo~te manufacturer.
., , . . porter Asks To Stop Segregation . ~ . Man, Dig That Hole 'Ded ucfion . I 'D ad Artists :.inn r Made Liars j. Honored in 'J,uslice Oep~~nl ' Must Act' I J • • • ... By SETTY LOU QUICK Consijtution," Porter said. He The only way the Su!)reme Court called thIS request unfair, as "even Of Iowans' Exhibit Here rpllng on desegregation can be en the Supr~mc Court gets mixed up ~rts A 36-painling exhibit " In Memor Iqrced at the present time is Cor the on t~at at times:' DES MOINES (.fI - Elmer F. lh a dead cat tlepartml'nt oC Justice to clo$!! al\ Another method is economic Heckinger, state income tax direc iam" 10 commemorate the work of nd the pesky schools practicing segregation, pressure, he said. A Negro who in tor, Thursday said the 5 per cent. 12 prominent American artists wbo ProC. Kirk Porter, head of Ihe sists on his right LO vote may lose $250 limit standard optional deduc I13ve died since 1943 is now on the tion Crom adjusted gro s income m ican Medical ~epartme nt oC Political Science, his job, his credit standing, and the 1955 law "made mas liars" of walts oC the Main Lounge oC the investigators ~ id Thursday. his possessions. Iowans. SUI Memoriel Un ion. ed that warts "The Department of Justice Although the administration is s. could close up any school in the He told the State Tax Study Com It will remain up unliJ A~. 1 as being criticized for nol taking aC mittee that Iowa taxpayers who evidence is Ipnd where it can prove segrega tion, Porter said. nothing can be a feature of the 1801 annual Fine haven't been tion is being practiced," Porter didn't learn the first time thallhey F tival. ~' hich accompanies done without "a specific act oC could itemize 10 per cent deduc arts can be l\lld the Iowa City Rotary Club . Congress." Diver ity's 57th annual sum ne person to He said one of the largest Issues tions, with $1,000 limit, on their These j~sucs of eivil rights and federal income tax returns Ciled lie ion, explains ~irector in the 1956 presidential campaign others which will become cam amended returns and claimed E. Harper oC the School professor of sur will be desegregation in schools. paign issue cannot be resolved im them. University of "The administration is . beitlg oC Fine Arts. mediately, Porter said. He Indi "'rhe federal Internal Revenue of Medicine, challenged to do Rome thin~ about "In Memoriam" is the second of cated it will take time ror these Service," Heckinger related. "won't nearly ~very it two major art shows of the lum that," Porter Said. "But is up to problems to be SQlved. help' us run down these state tax s a "eharae. Congress to speciCy what action "Both President Eisenhower and mer at the University. A 160-piecc eh off" warts. evaders because it doesn't care , should be taken." Democratic candidate Adlni Stev how much they pad their deduc exhibit or African sculpture was ~ring physical ' The President could order the enson are saying 'take it easy'," tions, iC they stay under the 10 per arang d June 8 in the Art building r, he said, is Department of Justice to close Porter said. He also quoted the re cent standard deduction." for the benefit of Conur.'!ncement esented with segregated schools, he said. "If I sults oC a recent Gallup Poll, say disease wc that is wha t the people want, I ing "the people are for modera Heckinger caned the standard vi. Itors and lI'ill be rormally opened slate deduction of $250, plus Cederal , think he could do it. There is noth------tion." Sunday at 4 p.m. The palntin,s "Tom Saw· income tax paid, "ridiculous" be· .g else he can do ," Porter con· Constitution," be said. Porter warned th at many un cause, he said, any single man who may be viewed from 8 a.m. until Finn offered nued. expected issues will rise during th e He ·said the administration is be owns a car honestly can claim 10 p.m. every day ex«pt when the Porter said he was not in favor campaign. "Nobody kno~s what and go to the j ing challenged on this issue. "rn morc than $250 or Itemized deduc lain Lounge i in u for summer f tbis move, as it would just be political issues arc," he said. "Say tions. WIDENING 01 tfIe .ntr.ltC... tho Libre,.,. ".riclnt lot I. w.tehocl by o.neld G_ AIMIe~ , G, Burll ...... ·dnight when dOing somethin g." my opinion it is a little crude com· it's an issue and you can get away .1 _rlll".n remove dirt from tw. MCtionI 01 .... au ...ey uftdtr .... CRANDIC troc:kI, Don J, 51ntk, eem- concerts or lectures. The sculp log from Democratic c~ndidbtes in Heckinger advoc::!ted increasing tures may be seen every day, in peen buried. A second issue in the 1956 cam- with anything:' the state standard deduction to the pus .u ... ,..i .... of tfIe pltysleel plent, ..h. perilenl of tfIe newly-o ...n . d JUbw.y would be used for e ,..,. the devil will - aign will be the right to vote, he view of the "fact that the situation Porter is currently appearing on tri.n .ntrone. to .... pericl", lot. cluding Sundays, Crom 1 to 5 p.m. has been brought to use bf leading federal 10 per cent. limited to $1, or three, but jaid. "The right to vote has been, the SUI TV Center series, "Presi 000, plus federal income tax paid. The 12 arli t of the " In Memor IX'm~rats, " Porter said. When they're 1 effect, denied in large portions dential Campaign, 1956." He an He also recommended allowing iam" exhibit include John Steuart ay you heave ( th e South," he said. "Organiza J.ie listed two methods used to swers questions asked by :I panel the Cederal exemptions or $600 for Curry, Arthur G. Dove, Arshile m, and say: l ions there undertook to keep Ne· keep Negroes from the polls. The on methods and problems 01 cam the taxpayer, his spouse and each Gorky, Marsden Hartley, Bernard e. Cat follow roes away from the polls and they clrst method Is the literacy test. I?aigning. He is the author oC some Gas Industry Committee Head Karfiol. Walt Kuhn, Ya uo Kunlyo dependent, In place of the deduc ats. I'm done . . hi, John Marin, Reginald Marsh, ere very effective. ' "TheSe ' tests orten ask for an in books on political science and has tion rrom computed tax oC $12 by "This is a Violation of the U.S. tefpretaLion of a portion of the contributed to journals. e::!ch person and each dependent. Kenneth Hayes Miller, John Sloan de a study of He favored giving Iowa state In· and Niles 9pcnct'r. warts among di vldual income taxpayers the ben· Says Group Did' Not tabby Among the be t known paintings age and resl· Froman Divorced efit oC the "split income" provision In the exhibit are Marin's "New ~inary, said he for married taxpayers who Cite jC/int WASHINGTON IA'l-The head of Sen. Clinton P. And rson (0 - th Humble Oil " R finin, Co. and York·Hudson Rl\' r" and "Black a number of ost Pe'r'Student LAS VEGAS, Nev. IA'I - The returns. It amounts to computing an oil and gas industry committee N.M.1 commented, with reference the cond large t wa $153,000 Ducks In FUght Over the Sea," Ku s, some more storybook marriage of singing the tax on half the taxable income which Cavored the now - v~toed na to the r deral tax of 52 per cent on (rom the Texa Co. niyoshi's "She Walks Amon, the others. He be· star Jane Froman ended in court of both , and multiplying the result tural las bill testified Thursday corporation Income, this meant in ~cCollum 's committee support· Ruin ." lar h's "Shoppers, Ea t ~autions could I ' Thursday when she divorced the by two. But it is calculated by that it spetJt $1,753,513 on a public eCCect that thp U.S. Trell ury "paid ed this year's bill to exempt na 14th Str et," and Curry's "The Tor airline pilot wI", saved her lire table on the Ceder::!1 return. education and information cam- 52 per cent or the cost of this cam tural gas producers rrom direct nado." Alon with Missourian in a crash in -Portugal 12 years ower' in 1'955 ' "A majority of Iowa taxpayer~ paign. paign." federal controls. It is one oC el,hl Thomas Benlon and Iowan Grant DES MOINES IA'\-A reduction or $109 in ihe average cost per student ago. who cln do It ar going to avail It was not lobbying, Leonard F. Anderson said the Int rnal R v or,anizalions, four for the bill and Wood, Curry, a nallve oC Kansas, is at SUI (or the fiscal year 1955, as computed by tbe .University, .wa s re She accused Jolm Cprtis Burn, thcmselves oC the split income sav- McCollum oC Houston , Tex., told enue Cod ays a company, In fig four against, that the Senate com recognlz d a one oC the lhr for· ment, ported Thursday by the state auditor's office. The average cost per her second husband, of de~rtion. ing," Heckingcr said. "regardle s the special Senate Lobby lrwesti uring Its income tax, may not de mittee is looking Into. mo t paint rs of Udwestcrn student was, $1,037. The crash which brought them of whether we give it to them by gation Committee. He said none oC duct from gross income any Thc bill was pass d amId great seen s. nobks' as An audit of SUI and University Hospitals books for the year ending together and led to their romance law." the money was given to lawmak- amounts spel)t on such activiti s conlrO\'ersy bul was vetoed by The paintings have been assem ns' Pat last June 30 showed also there . attracted nationwide interest and Heckinger renewed the State Tax ers in the Corm of campaign con as lobbying on legislation or "ex Pr Ident Eiscnhow r Feb. 17. lie bl d from galleri and private col were 8,471 full-t ime students, an a movie was made about her Commission 's advocacy of adopting tributions or otherwise, and mo t ploitaUon of propaganda" In othcr said he favored It obj ctlves but lection of 11 states by lhe Am rl increase oC 898 compared with the yes had a !lew . ~oegh TO 'Appoint comeback from serious inJurills. ~he Cederal withholding of tax and o( It went lor advertisements and than trade advertisl.ng of it prod (ound activities by a sma \1 ego can Federation of Art (or naUonal s Judge Har previous year. • Under questioning, Miss Fro· declaration oC estimated lax for printing. uct . ment of thc oil industry to be circulation in 1955 and 1956. Four e the rounds "The university was able to man testified "simply' that he left payment in advance by quart rly McCollum sai McCollum said lax lawyers had " highly questionable." of the paintings hav been listed ' s, a 3-year- sfiow a reduction in the cost per CommiHee'on Aging her a year ago and they hadn't inst::!lIments. He estimated with- that one ho!¥,d advised that contributions to the Th Senate committee was et ror ale by th ir own r , with prlc- , student because of the increase in f gone. back together. " holding would stop evasion of l~ for result of th up to inqu ire into any improper or s ranging from $1.200 to $5,000. ..,the number oC students," a repre industry committee could be Snooks, the . DES MOINE;S IA'I - Gov. Hoegb Both Miss Froman and Burn ~1i1lion dollars annually in state program was Ie, charged to business expense. illegal att
l'accounted for with all possible ac- ~...... curacy. .' sistant director rl "In order to improve and betler. ce Foundation, leo·ordinate all of the accounting .~' y night that I procedures in the outlying depart ··:iEVEL OUT ers of scientists ' >ments and activities of SUI, we , . mcasure of our aga in suggest that there is a deCi- ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. nce upon tech- Ihite need (or the establishment of It more comprehensive internal th annual Colla I ~ ud iting policy. ysicists at SUI, It "An internal auditing stafr should " . Introducing ce 1930 the na· l(Work in close harmony with the , ":YOUR GIIS BILLS e quadrupled in Ipresent supervisory officers, but U.S. engineers ~ hould be directly responsible to ,the business manager or the Uni Swenson, ' our scientists versity and recommend Cor his ., ' . Carl .. row at least at onSideratiOn and action such our population I hanges as seem best ror the im: hair stylist supplies of raw frovemenl and co·ordination oC all · And we must (Ipccou nting policies and proced-, let Mr. Swenson of the all-out 'Ores," ons to increase II The statistical phase oC the reo re-style your hair. We strength," he 'port showed that the University ·' ~nd the hospitals started the year • colloquium "a nder review with a cash balance also have a staff of together phy f $3 ,881,282. During the year reo stnall sc\lools eipts amounted to $34,607,053, in twelve other operators. large research luding $13,382,453 in appropri framework of a lions and $1,237,915 In fees and he NSF official uitions . . I' is "the key to Disbursemerlts totaled $34,075,- d technologIcal 56. Among them was $15,635,3:27 or salaries and wages. This left Itself provides balance at the end of the year of ns to draw good ~,4l2,979, an increase oC' $531,697. OLD WAY \ g and research, Out oC the $4,412,979 lIalance, who makes the '$198,005 was reverted to the state Itreasury under a ruling by the 19C5 of tcience state comptroller's office. It had la ble to lhe fu held that all unused appropriations y continued. except those for capital improve· ture sclcntific JUL. AUG. SE'. OCT. NOV. DEC. JAN. FEB. MAl. API. MAY- JUN. 'ments must revert to the state gen· Here is a hair style designed to pend upon tho 'eral fu nd at the end of the bienni- ·rB ch and upon lum. . "~'. fit right into a busy Khedule .•• in our society," • .. • ,I *WiTH · THE lEW 12·MOITH PAYMENT 'BUDGET PLAI! easy to keep, neat and extremely I , to the educa· WATCH FOR THE If. yoa're like mo.t people, you've often farther ahead. Yet It cests you DothiD, extrL flottering. Soft bangs tend to soften ot Proressor· ·W. Stewad, . OPENI~G OF THE wiahecl you eould .pread hl,her wintertime your face while the up-swinging h"in, and eledric biUs over the entire How does it work'! Simple. Your estimated lor o[/th~ Iowa annual las heatinr and electric cost Arizona 1 for Rule ana, Meerdinl<, Bucky Decli'nes Olym pic Trip NCAA Crown ROCH Frank lBucky) O'Connor, SUI ternatiolll mental work is when a coach real- Non-conCerence foes next year in OMAHA IN! - MinnesoJa's Big In Junior Gc)lf Final basketball coach, announced Wed England' nesday that he has turned down the Iy becomes acquainted with his clude the Big Seven champion, 'I'en conference baseball titlehold By JIM NEY ' ers Cha offer to become assistant coach of boys and when they .get to know Kansas State, and Nebraska, Den- ers cru~hed Arizona Thursday c8ped di the 1956 United States Olympic each other," O'Connor continued, ver University and "Loyola of New night, 12 to I, to win the NCAA col It's Jack Rule against Barry II succe basketball team. "and to leave them at that time Orleans. The Hawkeyes also play lege world series championship. Meerdink in the final mateh of the the first O'Connor. in commenting on his would hardly be fair." in the Dixie Classic at Chapel Hill, State junior golf tourney here to. Golf tour decision, said, "Dr. Paul W. Brech Minnesota finished the double day at Finkbine Course. O'Connor explained that the de N. C. over Christmas vacation. The Bob R ler, our Dirvetor of Atheties and I cision had been most difficult, and Dixio Classic is always one of the elimination tourney with a record Both boys were victorious in studied every possibility Cor find year-old that he was deeply pleased with top mid· winter basketball tourneys. oC 5 victories against one deCeat. semifinal round action Thursday from Pal ing a substitute for me during the the opportunity and honor of the Arizona finished with a 4-2 mark. afternoon. Rule, 17 oC Waterloo, Olympic trip." Letter winners returning from lead wit! position. eliminated Virgil Chevalier I of Rumors had been flying concern last year's team include Augie Mar The Big Ten kings got off to a strokes O'Connor expressed his apprecia tel, Rock Island. Ill.; Tom Payne; • Dubuque, 3 and 2. The 15-year~ld peler Tit ing the hiring of a substilute and fast start with three runs in the . Meerdink, Muscatine, in his sev an assistant for O'Connor for next tion to Dr. Brechler, the athletic Quincy, Ill. , and Frank Scbolt, Da last of the first inning on two sin ments board, SUI President Virgil M. venport, as well as Roy Johnson, enth tournament, finished oCf Phil ' series or season. O'Connor said, "We're gles, two.~tolen bases, two Arizona Ritz oC Waterloo. also by 3 and 2. looking for an assistant but so far, Hancher and the state board of re Homewood,. Ill., who is a two·year errors and a double by Doug GllI At tim Rul~, pre-tourney favorite and we've done nothing about it." gents, all of whom had endorsed letter winner but who did not play en that sent home a pair oC run Club cou his accepting tlie position and had last season because of a knee op State high school champ this ) session 0 O'Connor said that he felt the ' ners. spring, qualified Cor the semifinal!; time required in preparation for expressed pride in O'Connor's se eration. Other returning men In PGA c In the fifth Minnesota wrapped by ousting Ames' Joe Everds, 5 the Olympic trip to Australia in lection. clude Gregg Schroeder, Muscatinel got into things up with a six run outburst. and 4, Thursday morning. Meer· November and early December "[ most certainly hope that all Jim McConnell, Dcs Moines; and Commill dink sidelined Frank James 01 should be spent with his Iowa bas our Criends understand why I had Norman (Doc) Paul, Clarence. The Gophers slammed out a dou and then Grinnell, 4 and 3, to enter Thurs ketball team. Bucky O'Connor to decide this way. We'll be re Top prospects coming up from ble, three singles, a two run triple but he g day afternoon's activity. "We lost our entire first team '"Won't Leat;e Team' building and will go into an unusu the freshmen team are Dave Gun· by Jerry Thomas, who hurled his stroke and/some of their replacements by ally tough non-conference schedule ther, LeMars; Peer Hegg, Rock second win over Arizona, and a two Chevalier and Ritz had quali· :He ha graduation this year," O'Connor the same time this fall when I next winter and I think it best that Valley; Joe Willi*ins, Ames; Dick: run homer by Bill Horning. fied for the semifinals by decision· second p pointed out, "and much of the hard would be on the Olympic trip. I stay with the boys," said O'Con- Harring, DeWitt; and Americus Tbe homer was Horning's third ing Bill Hlrd, Fort Dodge, and to crack work oC rebuilding must be done ilt "When we are doing the funda- nor. John Lewis, Baton Rouge, La. . itraigbt hit of the game. Drew Pechachek, Sioux City, 5 but the and 4, and 4 and 3. score up 'rhe Championship consolation Burke Tennis Semifinttlic+~ \420-Foot Mantle Homer in 5-1 Victory- final round will also be this morn· signing , ing. Dean ChaUcd o( Cedar Rap. an act w ids will meet Jay Kraschmer, also JJlatic s I II mally Iowan Pholo by Bill Nt ..en) o( Cedar Rapids. card JACK RULE, of Fort Dodg. looks The hot sun continued to dry actually S pensive after oustin\! Virgil Chev the new course. However, several He had Yanks Now Lead Sox by Games eli.r of Dubuque in State lunior 1 sprinkler systems were in use at the NEW YORK 1.4'1 .:. Mick\!y Mantle , golf tourney, Thursday. Thursday in an effort to give tired." (ound the range Thursday with a much-needed water to the grass. The R 420·foot homer, his 22d of the year, rule of I as the Nl'w York Yankees beat the in its hi Chicago White Sox 5-1 and length· Dail Iowan fused to The but inst rned their lead over the Eecond Yankees and place Sox to five full games. strokes, This was Mantle's first homer pion a 7 Cotton since June 5 and it came with the Athletics in bases empty in the seventh. He tilt aUc twice w also doubled in the third, scoring the 17th Joe Collins, as part of a Yankee 4-Man Trade six ther outbreak that started with two out five . and resulted in three runs. NEW YORK IA'l-The New York Yankees Thursday night traded After The game, played in 95-degree liberalio heat, found tempers short. In the two playcrs to Kansas City, plac- ed on Iheir roster two others and mittee sixth, Dave Philley of the Sox pre- word of , cipitated a vociferous outbreak also arranged for tlle transfer Qf two men [rom the Athletics III scorer. when he argued a second strike I~O! sc~~e&Oa~'I stand at .called by Umpire Charles Berry Richmond, Va., their farm club in thc International League. I been dis and finally planted himself square· AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL I. EAOli ll proper c • lyon top oC the plate wilh his back W L Pel. 08 W L Pcl. 08 In the complicated series oC 'Sf'W Vork " . ,i.t '!' ,.ewl l'IUlbur,h . '!j4 ,!" ..~I deals, first baseman Ed Robinson . . ' Ford's to pitcher Bob Grim. Chlc_"o ... , . '!.:'\ ott ••'\-.1~ ;; ( 'Inelnnlltl . • . ~ ·!M "!I .!lH " lOth wh Cleveland . . :!M :!, .;~~K ~ nrookl)'1\ ...•!1 '! I .~m I and outfielder Lou Skizas went to Berry ordered Grim to pitch. Ho.lo n •.. • .• '!j .'!,j .:;'1" Ii St. Lo u I. ... '!9 '!3 . ~.'\M I into wh ~ ., Kansas City ; outfielder Norm Sie· Philley got back in the- box, and nelroll ... .. ~(I '!II ..W1I lIiIWAukf'f: .•. '!I ~u .•lHi creek. SEMIFINALISTS in the JayCee junior tennis tourney king held lit UaJUmorft .. . •:!:\ :!It .10a bern was purchased from Denver, the library tennis courts are: (bottom row, left to ri';1ht) Warren when Berry called a strike on the Kansas It)' .. :!"! :U .41;'; ~:~a~:rk .~. :: ;:: ~~ :~~ ~~ ~ Yankee farm club in the Ameri· he drop l'bl1adel,hl. . Il( :11 .!f4;7 ll)l ~ Hei.er, 9; Richie Strauss, 10; Chuck Darley, 10; lind Ski)) Johnson, next offering, which looked high ",•• binrton , . ~lj. :H ... tH «an Assn. and shortstop Billy nal ball Tbunday', R.elult", Thursday', Rea.Us a play 10. Top row, ,.ft to right: Bill VOle man, 17; Gary Lubin, 14; David and wide, pandemonium broke out. Sew York ri, CblcAIO l lllllwa.ukft: Q, New York '! Hunter was activated from the 110 Ion Ill. Clo.eland ;1 (Ollll' a"me scheduled) played it Strauss, 13; Gordon Hamilton, 14, and Jim VOle man, 15. Semifinals Manager Marty Marion stormed (Only ' .... e. scheduled ) Tocl.)". Pitchers disabled list; and pitcher Ed Burt· will be held at 1 :30 !,.m. today followed by the final round. out and both hr and Philley were rod a,', PUe.,bera Cll1clnnati .t. New l ' ork (nl,hi) sehy and outfielder Bill Renna tall. thrown out of the game. The Chi· Wa.bln,'." al Chi •• ," (nl,hl) ".lawrence (7.?) \'s. AnlonelU I:'i-rt). were sold to Richmond by the He w ",Ieller I'! ... ·!) va. Pierce (8 .. ::!). ~Ulwouk.e 01 Brooklyn (nl,hl) under tH eago bench tossed bats, balls and Bailimore at Kan ... Cll)" (nl,ht) BurdeLte (I.a) VB. Ma,lI. (1-0) . Athletics. Skizas had been playing towels onto the field and when ~Io.ro (:1-4) n. Krello", (a.. ;). ellearo ., Philadelphia (nl,h('-~) ..... the outfield (or Richmond. 01 takin JayCee Juniar Tennis BDston 'l.t Detrelt (hlrhl) - Porin " ..eker (J ·ii) and Kall.. (I-U) YO. Roh could h Marion finally persuaded Philley to tlold 1~-3) VI. Lary (4-ij). vln (2 .. M) a.nd Simmons (2-1\), Siebern, 23, is a service returnee Ne", \'ork ..I Cleveland (ntrhl) 81. Looll al Pllllbur,h Inl,bt) - (ieials s depart the Chicago first baseman Kaclu IT-:II vs. Oarel.. ( I-U) . Wehmeier (~-.) . v •. Kline (."1-1). and does not count in the l5-p\ay· tossed his hat 30 feet in the air. er limit. twice a~ Winds Up Play Today The Yankees won the game in the Robinson hit .222 as part·time been out hurlers ror a lotal of 30 hits. the Milwaukee Braves beat the Earlie Arc top seeded players ad'lanced John Conwell. 12-4; Bennett B ~rftn lead third witb two out. Gil McDougald Jensen put the Sox ahead to stay New York Giants, 5-2. • first baseman and pinch hitter, ("IS Bob Farnsworth II-G. m o(Ch 10 be was safe when Minnie Minoso with five homers. He is 35. No ' Augusta in the opening round of the JayCee finished loday; Cary Lubin ov ~ r Tom with a three-run homer in the third The veteran lefthander. who had price was announced. strokes junior tennis tourney Thursday at Browne. 12-0 dropped his short fly, then Collins inning. 1'hat made the sc~re 6-3. l:i years of nre Illid under sln,les: and Mantle doubled, Yogi Berra lost five in a row, struck out 10 as Hunter, 27. has been on the dis· the fiel the Library Courts. Wilmers in the QuarterCl .nls: Chuck Darley over Skip Jensen's single in the fifth drove in he c1,imed his Ulird victory against arrived four age divisions advance to the Johnson. 11-2: Richie Slr"u", over Bill drew a walk, and Moose Skowron another tlllly. He also singlcd and abled list since spring, due to a Iwrln. 11-1 ; Da ve Stra".s over Skip singled lIIantle home. six deCeald. It was the fifth victory mending ankle which was broken utes lal state finals to be hela in Cedar Macy, 8- 1; Worl'en Iloller over Bob scored in the second. ~or the fifth place Braves as they disquali Farnswor(h. 8-7. The Single Sox run came all Phil· in Denver last August. Rapids June 22, 23, and 24 . Gernert - playing leCt {ield in Lenie 8emltlnlll : Dar1.ey over R. Strauss. ley's home run in the fourth. dosed a l5 game homesland. ----- 8·5; O. Strauss ov~r Helser. 8-0. place of Ted Williams wha fanned Top seeded Bill Voxman and Ch le ..,o ...... 00II 100 Il00-1 4 I Spalm held all of the Giants ex· this fro J J ytarll or Ire and under filnr1es: in a pinch hitting 'role - drove in • second seeded Jim Voxman both QUl;rterfin.11s : Riehle Strllu s over Bob New 1'ork , ., 041:\ I.,.. Itx-'1 III I cept Willie Mays in pretty close I Wilson. Staley 18) And Lollar; Grim ~asi ly adl'anced in the l8-and·under Kennedy, S-I; Wal'ren H. I. ~r O\'er Bob three runs and scored three times. Macy. 11-0 ; Chuck DArley ovor John (4-0) and Berra. L-Wllson 18-31 . check. Mays had a perfect night as ~~~~ Dick got three singles and ~ walk. 'division while number one Gary Benn, 8-0; Skip J ohnson over Skip Home runt: Cblcallo-PhUJey. New he cracked his eighth home run of : Loc~ Mac>,. 11-3. York- Mantle. Gernert's single brought home Lubin and second seeded Dave the season in the lEcond mning and Jim Piersall. with what proved to \ Strauss did likewise in the 15·and banged singles in the sixth and I under group. Easily advancing in be the deciding run in the fifth. eighth. He drew a walk\ in the Piersall had just tripfed to bring I ~,e 13-and-lIndcr division was Dave Bosox 10, Tribe 9 third. ~, We've Got' em for Dadl Zaharia's' Condition home the doubling Don Bllddin. t Strauss, seeded number one, and Mays' homer was the first score s( Chuck Darley, number two. Chuck . BOSTON IA'J - Jackie Jens~n and Ike Delock, the Sox starter, was I Dick Gerriert accounted fOf seven credited with his second triumph of the game and the Giants went J;larley also advanced to the semi· Is 'Rather Good' ahead by two runs in the third on ~ . Dacron and Rayon 1 ST.L finals in the J"L-and-under class Boston runs Thursday as the Red against two losses, but needed Sox deCca ted Cleveland 10-9 in a some fine relief work from Leo singles by Ruben Gomez and Bill where he is seeded number one, as GALVESTON, Tex. IA'I - Babe White, and Eddie Mathews' error :~~~ R~o joint feast on wobbly pitching Kiely to make it. , four.for·l trid Richie S~rauss, the numller two Didrickson Zaharias, fjghtjng a on a grounder by Ed Bressoud, seed. staffs. Kiely, third Boston moundsman, j I which b . tl recurrence of cancer, was report- The two clubs hammel'cd six struck out pinch hitter Earl Aver New York's new shortstop called h Id Th e t ollrnament, e unaer Ie . . " ill' (or the final out in the sixth up from Minneapolis Thursday. Go ~' Wash~ble, ] ~;a~IJeA direction 'oC SUI tennis coach Don . ed Thursday La be feeling rathcr Slacks mez crossed the plate on the error. after Cleveland had come up with I Cnrdina Klotz, used modified sealing to Iwell ." four runs and had two men aboard. The Braves came from behind { prevent strain on young pl~yers in George Zaharias, husband of the '56 Open Is First I I The Cleveland .... Ut:! tr~1 __ • 1$ ., to win anll hang the loss on Gomez, ' \ i / the heat as well as makmg [or famous woman athlete, said Babe BDJlon ...... O'!. 1!'!tI 91l1'-JI It '? ~ Schoend Since '32 in N.Y. Lemon. B. Daley (51, McLlsh (61 and his lOth IIgainst seven victories. veteran better scbeduling. . the past 10 days has spent a ma- He,an; Deto.k, llurS 161. Kiely (6) and He held the Braves scoreless un· , I sons .wi ROCHESTER. N.Y. IA'I-1'he U.S. Daley. W-Delol!k (2-21. L-Lemo'l (6- ~ Some of the top matches of the jar portion of each day at his 41 . til ette filth and had permitted only 1 dina)s, day included Gurdon Hamilton's ' • 1';ational Open this year is the first Home nln.; Cleveland- Lemon. Bos one hit until Del Crandall slapped , news of 12-8 victory over John Orth, War- apartment a block Cram her room ton-Jensen. held on a New York state golf his lIth home run of the season I ift the ren Heiser's 8-7 defeat of Bob at the University of Texas medical course since 1932 when Gene Sara· aCter Frank Torre had singled. ~ I manner t'arnsworth, and Chuck Darley's branch John .Sealy Hospital. . zen shot a 286 at old Fresh Meadow Braves 5, Giants 2, Ne ... York ...... 011 1100 ~'! j I I second come-from-behind semirinal victory "She also has been walking Milwaukee ...... O:!~ ~Is-~ t I in Flushing. Gomez, Wilhelm cn and Mamum. I "That ol'er Richie Strauss, 8-5. I quite a bit and nearly walked Sarazen turned in his victory by MILWAUKEE IA'I - Warren Weslrum (7j; Spahn and Crandall. w ces," h touring the last 28 holes in 100 Spahn spaced seven hits and scored Spffhn 13-61. l.r-Gomez (2-51 . ~ New mirocle dacron for long- Semifinal and final r~nd match- around the block one day," Za Horne runs: New York- Mays. Mil I Gener. es will begin at 1; 30 today on the harias said. strokes. He was seven strokes back the winning run Thursday night as waukee-CrAndall. ~: moving Li,brary courts .. A consolation round Babe entered the hospital March when he stood on the ninth tee o( on trad' the morning round the final day. er wear, creose resistance. Will be held thiS afte~noon . In ca~e 29 Cor another series oC X.ray I Schoencl. Bobby Crufkshank and Phil Perk· . of ral~, the event Will be held ID tteatments. The series was com- - • I Brandt, the Fieldhouse. pleted several weeks ago. ins tied for second with 2895. Fashioned right to look right. I pitcher Old Fresh Meadow is now a I stop Da The public is urged 10 attend and In 1953 Babe underwent a five· housing development and thf new give their support to the junior hour operation in Beaumont for ~ , Lockma course is located in Great Neck. players who will be showing thei: removal of a rectal malignancy. In ton, grey and blue, Com- pitcher skill in the semifinals and finals Last July doctors at John Sealy '.'Red up," La today. reported a recurrence, saying STOLE~ BASE LEADER ~ Lane_ OtheJ' results: cancer had developed in lhe first pletely washable. Come in Red Rolfe, Dartmouth's athletic I is 1M y.a.. of •.•• and a ndor .Inrles: and second segments oC the sac director and a former Yankee third aJso QuarleTfln~I.: Bill Voxman-Bye; Gurd- runl at tIle bao " of the spl·ne. I roo~le o~ HamJlton o\'er John Orth. 12-8: Jim ;>C baseman, led the Eastern Intercol ~ TODA Yond get several poirs I his natlll Voxman over Tom Browne. 12-~ ; Gsry Recurrence/ 0f pain forced her legiate Baseball Lea~ue in I stolen Lubin over Bennett Benn. 12-2. I Cane I~ yo ... of a,o and under ,In,le.: to return to the hospital Nov. 1J bases with 11 "Tn 1931. He played I "great Quarterllnat.: Dave Sw.u~ over Bill and a""in March 29 for Dartmouth. Irwin. 12-1; Curdon Hamilton over I 6" . ~ of these cool slacks for Dad I lears a 1 prove U I man w he'll love 'em! I WalJy Gold j ReId. \ P.HONE 3240 , I Katt ~ .mith Watermelons " .lato, Available every hour of the day ~ I \leaUng Fathers Day is this S~nda!l, i ,d. , ,Schoen throu9ho~, the entire season . ,. ~ ~ , ' JWle 17 I known., I ~kcr ir I, ~ I re, ~ Cao/eel in wlttr wit/; Modern Rofrigerltion, the,. fin. Texl. Melon.' como to you direct : ~ , is fie Ind It tho !)elk of fllvor. TemlMrlture controlled, iovlttr-c:oolocl melon ••re t~ In fI.".... ~~ ade hi II 6ut wltl: Nothing I. 10lt in the c.ooling 'Iroc,lS. W'. buy ,good melon. end lu.,.n'" .very Ine. I ~~~~ , , fans. [ Open from, • ~.M. "ntil ld:30 P.M. every dey Includinf!l SundlY. end HoIidlYI.. I pccially- the ~ou Sch~ Hfgl-tway 6 We.t, ~ !br~ BR hflJlh ~ ...__ ...... - .....-----Qj-o:..,-lfdlff-:;-O~;.-c! __-' ...... _~...-...;..------... '_.. ".I ..;..'. 'I ,': ~~ l'1. III • THE DAILY IOWAN-I_a City, lo.--Friday, JIIM 15, 1m-P.... Rosburg' s ~8 Leads Open; Ex~Studenf'~ Cou nty' Treasu rer 271 from 7States u.s. Are Registered for Several Rhubarbs M~r Play Parents Talk Jells of Finances Music Camp Here BIIlTU" , BAUGH lAN. lIIr aDd " _ Ralph. r.!~ ROCHESTER, N.Y. '.4') ~ Two in During the first fi\'e month of 1956 reeei,ts totaling $3,096,845.61 and Ith .0.\ ~ .. bo) Tbunda> al Mere Tlllo hundred lie\' nty_on bigb ternationally famous golCeJ:S - disbursemenls of $2,899,643 .21 were made by Johnson County, Treasurer HOI