gioia. Thc1r selccUon Was made by • arrangements oommlUcc. They subject to ll'Outlne apJl"Oval by ~ ~epublican NatiOnal. OoInmlttee. The arrangements iroup na1iled leftist Group Protests Hagerty Japan . zabeth E. HeffeUlnger Of ltia. csot.a as convention secretary () ratified .the earlier &e~ Charles H. Percy, 40. or Chi~ chairman of the platform co.n:.l The Weath., ·t.tee a~ ~. Melvln R. Laird, Varible cloudiness throuib to­ Mob Out of Hand; Locally today, 8, of Wlsoon SUl. as vice chairman. night. cooler with Tile 59-year-old Halleck is Il\in.. highs ranJlng from "·72 northwest ty 100001' of the HoUSe lIlld . to 12·71 southeast. Little cMllIe in ot>rvolr,,,' his 13th term in Con~ Helicopter Rescue temperature tonight. ous~d Rep. Joseph W. Mart· The outlook for Sunday is for as House ow·an partly cloudy weather aDd a little M~chuset.ts GO~ TOKYO I!Pl - An angry leftist and ~ P.opz. of Iowa Cit~ In January. 1959, B.lId SUe., mob, scrcamlng protests against warmer. to U'le chairmanship held' President Eisenhower's visit to * * * Establisbed in 1868 Iowa City. Iowa, Saturday, June 11, 1980 at Ule last fl Ve GO~ Japan, 'pinncd down White House press secretary James C. Hag­ erty's car lor 80 tense minutes Eise"hower Frillay. He j!ot away unhurt in a lIelicopter and announced Eisen· hower will arrive as scheduled Still Plans June 19. RING Here to scout the Eisenhower route, liagerty tried to take the :1312 Are. Gra du'ated Friday road Eisenhower is scheduled to Japan Visit follow . rrom the airport to down· WASHINGTON "" - Presidont town Tokyo. With him were Doug· Eisenhawer F1riday held fast to las MacArthur II, the U.S. Am· his decision. In vjsit Japan . ffis bassador to Japan; and Thomas advisers counted on his getting a Reg~nts Approve SUI Budget, Arts Forum Hancher Says E. Stephens, White House appoint­ better 1'ccepbion than his press ments secretary. SCC1"itary, James C. Hagerty. T.n thouland y.lllng demon. Word 01 Hagerty's virtual im­ .trators blocle.d the' way and Iprisonmen't in an automobile by a Long Range Building Needs For Alumni Education For, .Iashed the tires of the car. They soreaming mob of 10.000 in Tokyo thr.w ston.. and dirt, battered A budget of $14.771.755 to mect mcnL house. $150,000; and land pur. This Morning the car, and cracleed Its windowi. reached the Wh.ite House eacly chases. $360,000. I Friday moening. salary and operating expenses at 'Unforeseen' Leftist student and labor groups SUI during the 1960-61 fiscal year Other bu ildings a nd needs for Free guided bus tours and a Uni· had anl'lounced plans for the anti­ Anne Wheaton, acting press sec· w/tich fund s will be sought duriJllf versity Forum on "Fine Arts at c retary in Hagerty's absence, sub· was approved Friday by lhe State Hagerty turnout but police de· 1963-71 include: Child Welfare SUI" will highlight the round 01 College learning No clared they were caught by sur­ sequently told newsmen Eisenhow· Board of Regents. Building, $480,000 ; Physical Plant activities planned for SUI's visit­ Guarant.. of Success, prise and blundered. The Japanese er had ·been advjsed and that he The budget, which is $440,760 ShQPs Building, $365,000; Physical ing alumni today. expressed gratification that Hag· grovernment was quick to apolo· higher than the 1959-60 budget, In­ Plant OC£ice Building. $120.000; The bus tours will take place Says SUI President gize. erty and the Americans witn hi m University High School Building, were unharmed. cludes totals of $11.694,608 for sala- from 9 to 9:50 a.m. and from 2:30 The man who believe that he About a mile Jrom the airport $1,875,000; He a I t h Services LI· to 3:20 p.m .. and will leave from can achIeve success on what he As for ..,. President'l own terminal, d~monstrators stood ries. $2,183.337 for general ex»ense, brary. $775.000; Health Services the south entrance of the Iowa travel plaM, Mrs. Wheaton learned in college will soon be massed on two roads approaching and $453,050 for equipment and Auditorium. $430.000; Dentistry Memorial Union. The tours will obsolete. SUI Presid nt Vlrgll M. steted he II ,oing through witn Lb. the airport. Thcy carried banners books. or the in crease. a to olaf ,Building, $2,200,000; Nursing Build· cover the Su[ campus and Iowa Hancher told orne 1.:JOO graduat· 31; and placards _reading: "Hang his scheduled visit to Japan June $119,786 is provided lor salaries ing, $690.000; Music Building, $L.­ City. Ing SUI students Friday morning 1M2. Hagerty," "Hagerty go home." "Go and expenses which will bc made 800,000; Auditorium Building $4 .. At 0:30 to 11 :30 a.m. the Col· at the Univ nily's spring Com· to bell Ike" and "We'll smash Ftrom the diplomatic standpOint, necessary by anticipated enroll· 400,000; Speech Pathology Build· lege of Nursing will hold a coUee mencement e.lerci . Delrrees KING you. " U.S. dfIicials £i gured thoce was ment increases. and $24.139 is al· ,ing, $1,060,000; Communications hour in the WesUawn Parlors Lor awarded thI morning brin& the They heard reports that two I1D oalternati~. For Elsenhowe.- to lowed for growth and moderniza· Center addition. $1 ,375,000; Library SUI nursing alumnae. total granted by SUI to lOrna oancel his trip now. they &aid. tion of present University pro- addition, $1,650,000; C hem i str 'I 80,600...... 2·Lb. Bag 79¢ helicopters had landed at the air­ earl e. Harper, dl r. C tor would cause untold loss of Ameri· grams during the 1960·61 fiscal B u i I din g addition. $1,350.000; port and Hagerty might try to fly of the SUI School of Fine Artl, Pointing out that In our rapidly out on one ' of them and escape can prestige throughout AsU!. \ year. W 0 men's Gymnasium addition. will be on. of the participants at changing world no Commcnc ment the cf()wd. The copters were there In peaker today can lay down a J&pan, cancellation of the Most of the increased budget $415,000; Medical Research Build· the 10:30 a.m. University Forum but Hagerty chose to go ahead by Cor trip would hUI't ·the sentiments of will be supported by $10 per term ing addition, $860,000; Art Building on fine artl to be h.ld In Mae· blueprint th future, President car. the vast majority of the proud fee increases approved earlier this addition. $720,000; Dramatic Art Hancber said. "You are venturing bride Auditorium. Other partl· forlh Into a world whose dlmen· heese Lb.49¢ Th. crowd burlt out of the ap­ Japanese people who, U.S. oW· year by the Regents to take effect Building. .addition, $33O,~: Arm­ clpantl will be Edwin W. London, proach roads and onto the main ciaJ.s believe. still want the U.S. next week with the opening oC the ory additIon. $200,000; utilitIes, $3 .. sion and nature will be diCCerenl President to come. And cancella· summer session. 000,000 and land purcheses, $750.- G. Oakland, Calif., who will dis· from the one into whicb your par· route circling the airport. They CUll music; Richard B. Byrne, met the limou.iM just as It tion ·would be a smashing blow to Budgets were also approved for 000. Where"s My Baby? nts and grandparents ventured. the fuiendlr Kishi government and G, I_a City, who will discull Your education. therefore. Is edu. j .merged from an und.rpas" A I• .,. ",other trill to pick, her child out of the 1.312 .radvatln, to prospects for Japanese raLifica- 1960·61 for the University Hospital ..,-ech and dramatic arts; and cation for the unfore 00II. Above The sea 01 demonstrators, tak­ Mar.ar.t Pollon, G, Ithaca, senior. at SUI aft.r Commenc.ment .."ci ..1 h.ld Friday at ' :30 en aback to find their prize in iion of ~ pending U.S.-Japanese ($8,575.717), Psychopathic Hospital 22nd SUI Summer aU you should have learned haw security treaty. ($982.723 ). tbe State Bacteriologi­ N.Y., who will dllCUIi art. In the Field Hou... - Dally Iowan Photo by Danny Rehder to contlnuc learning." front of them, hestitated momen· cal Laboratory ($366.831) and the tarily and then closed in. Alumni are particularly urged to w. _ to IYn ... Khed Hospital Schoo\ for Severely Hand· Fine Arts Festival take advantage of the opportunity In accented Englisb they shout· icapped Children ($563.802), that ....y.turvy wertcl dttcrlbe4 ed: "Goh boh-mu Ha-g-chee" and to hear Ule Forum presentation. In "A1I~ Threvth the L.... I'" Begins June 13 This session is a preliminary to the Hancher1s, Charge to Grads "Goh hoh-mu Yan-kee." Alum Recalls Members of the Graduating Cia and Fellow Alumni: Gla ..:' where "'t talces all ..,. 22nd annual Fine Arts Festival on """,Ing '" CM • to Itay I" In the initial onslaught some To enable* SUI *to provide* educa· An opera. five concerts, lhree It is a privilege and an bonor to welcome you into th greal body the SUI campus this summer from the HIM pI_. If '" want to threw stones and dirt. Others of the alumni of lhis di Unguished Univcr ity and to th company whacked the car with their ban­ Life at SUI tional facilities for the 16,000 stu· plays and three lectures will be in· June 13 to August 10. ... tMMW...... , '" must ner standards. A few kicked it. dents expected to be enrolled by eluded in this year's Fine Arts At 1 p.m.• the aU-alumni lunch· of cultivated and educated mcn and women everywhere. nln at I.ast twI~ al fast," ha Some got together and rocked it 1970, the Univ~rs!ty will need $27.- Festival which begins on the SUl eon will be held in the Main The ceremonies in which you have participated have been a neted. back and forth while others sat 45 Years Ago 995,000 lor. bwlding~ b~tweel1 the i:8mPtl Monday.. ' Lounge of the 10\\'a Memorial part of the academic lUe and tradition of the W I ro world for more "Who among u ." Hancher said , io the road. Half a dozen climbed end 01 the Qext blenmum (1963) . ... " Union. Following the luncheon at than a thousand years. Beginning with the University 01 S lerno "can predict With ..."ranee what on the roof and exhorted their BY THEO. KLEMESRUD and 1970, SUI officials told the Bizet s ~armen, has been s.c- State Board of Regents Friday. lecled as thIS year s opera. It WIll 2:30 to 3:20, buses will Once again that tradition spread to Bologna and Paris and Oxford and Cam· the next 40 years will bring?" fellows . For inslaDCe. he noted, we emer· Writt.~ For The Dally Iowan The long-range building needs be presented July 26·30 at Mac· leave Crom the Union's south en· bridge. to Harvard and Yale and we tward acr Our own country One tail light was smashed. A trance for free guide!i tours oC the ged as a people of dcstiny (rom "There have been some changes were approved by the Regents. bride Auditorium. to the far Pacific. For more than a century your Uni verity ha chromium-plated flagpole was campus and Iowa City. been a part of thIS gnat academic tradition. To entcr into it - World War II with the atomic broken off the front bumper. The made in the last 45 years," said For the general University. it Among the five concerts will be bomb and the mlghte t mllltary Earl R. Draper, Fairmont. Minn .. wUl be necessary to ask funds to a program by the University Sym· Th. day's festivltl.. will b. as you have today - gives no cause for arrogance. rather it place hood was dented. The car win, climax.d with the Golden JubllH and Industrial lorces the world ha dows were cracked. No move was who received a Uber'al arts degree equip six buildings and additions phony Orchestra, scheduled for upon you a lifelong obligation [or intellectual acumen and ociat ever seen - our leadership sccm· from SUI back in 1915. His home for which only construction funds July 6 at the Iowa Memorial Dinner for all graduatel of 1'10, responsibilities not laid upon tho e wllo have been denied the oppor­ made to reach inside. to be held In Bul'V' HaU'l south ed unchallenged. was at Afton. Iowa, while attend· will be sought from the next (59th ) Union . High school musicians will tunities which society - and in particular the peopie of this Slate - Harried American security men dining room at '.30 p.m. M.m· But today - only 15 years later formed a barrier around the stall· ing the University. General Assembly for the 1961-63 also give concerts during a stlm· have provided you. - wc are the objects of the ideo­ biennium. These include equipment mer Music Workshop . . bers of the clall will rae.lve fOld ed automobile. Draper, who has been coming m.dall Inscribed "For attend­ Here within this Univcrsity you have been led to know the boun­ logical hatred of two vast peoples Finally the Japan... polici ar· back each year for Homecoming, for South Hall (mathematics.phys- The Department of Dramatic ance at the 50th anniversary of daries of your knowlcdge and the beginnings of your ignorance. You IRusslarU. Red Chinese) who, by rived and the battl. came to a added Commencement this year ies), $90,000; Engineering Build· Arts will present two plays: "Am­ graduation." have been offered knowledge in depth a well as in breadth. By lheir sheer numbers. are present· Italemate. A I.. der blew hll and was present when a former ing addition, $65.000; Business Ad- phytrion 38" by Glraudoux-Bcr­ AU visiting alumni arc invited to teaching and by example you have been directed to bring your mind Iy powerful and polenUally ever ministration Building. $110.000; man. in the Studio Theatre July whistle and the crowd fell baclc fellow student. President Virgil visit the Alumni House at 130 Into locus. to discover and weigh Ule relevant cvidence, to reach more powerful. Hancher, conferred degrees on Storehouse addition, $75,000; and 21-23 , and Ugo Betti's "The Burnt a few paces. A Socialist legi.la­ North Madison St., across from sound conclusions, and to act oHectively upon them. Moreover :'Those peoples," Hancher said. 1,312 graduates - one of them the Social Science aod Zoology Build· Flower Bed," at the UniverSity "be1levc that they ride the 'wave tor, Toshio Tanalea, squeeled hi, the Iowa Memorial Union . Alumni you have been urged to be guided by a moral attitude, especially way up to th, batt.r.d limousine 8O.000th to receive a degree from ing, $150.000. Funds for four other Theatre August 4-6. Students at· House is the headquarters of Uni· of the future' and that what we and tried to talk to H.,.rty. SUI. "The entire student body needs, whic h SUl had originally tending a high school Drama Work· the uncompromising morality oC 1ruth, toward all that you know and stand for must pass away. versity alumni records. the SUI do. "Let him come, we'll hear what numbered 2,700 back in '15," hoped to seek from the 59th Gen. shop will present the third play of Alumni Association, the Old Gold "If they, ar .Ither .. them, Draper said. eral Assembly, will also be includ. the Festival. And basic to all this, you have been urged to learn how to con· ...... l1h.()l. Jar 75~ he has to say," said MacArthur. Development Fund, and thc SUI Ihould ~ te .... fore .....Mt But Tanaka suddenly was pushed Back when Draper was a sludent ed in the long-range program: con· Richard C. Hottlet, CBS news Foundation. Here alumni may tinue learning and how, with courage and compelence, to lace lhc u.:' ha warned, "the ...... away by police along with the here. there were only two resi· struction of North Hall (class· analyst. will lecture on "Germany check on addresses of University unforeseen. 1«"1 a"adc may not _ swirling mob. dences on tlte west side of the Iowa rooms, offices) , $L,500.000; car - Proving Ground of Western friends. Your Unlver ity. [ hope, has awakened your sense o[ beauty in thnuth an 1nt."""I'" Nt\on, storage garages, $110.000; museum Policy." on Juiy 7 in the Union . as I" W.... d War I ar WertcI Pkg. of 12 By government court , 28 police­ River. One of them was the home painting and sculpture, in music and the theater, in great Literaturc 43- men and an undisclosed number of an Attorney Byington, Draper building, $1,000,000; home manage- Vincent Sheean, author, reporter, and in tbe revelations o[ the laboratory. and thereby it has engaged War II, but it may came directly Israel Asks Argentina upon us with ne ...... , ...tIeft te recalls, who had two sons in II. and columnist. will lecture in Mac· of students were injured in the you in a commitment to the lire of the mind . delay the assault 8ftd .,. bride Auditorium Aug. 2 on "The w_ 12·Lb. scuffles and fights. One student school. LeGrand and William. ID Cards Bring Food To Reconsider Demand ,!Jere you have made rril'ndships which will lasl as long as you Ing fnm the ...... _ to alert 31- raised a placard reading "Dear Yes, Whetstone Drug was serv­ Struggle lor Supremacy in Asia." 2 Boxes BUENOS AIRES. Argentina III live. Now. as you depart. YOll carry with you in memory scenes of our defon .. ar to prepa... us far Ike - Don't support Kishi. who is ing students "way back when." In In New Credit System The third lecturer wiU be an· beauty from the hills, the river and the valley which have witnessed hounced at a later date. , - Israel's Prime Mlnister David a covnlwattadc." a traitor." lie brought it down fact it is the only present-day Iowa the comings and goings of many gencrations of men and women . In the space of 15 years. Han· with a thump on a policeman's City business still operating under Use of the SUI student identifi· The Fine Arts Festival was es· Bcn-Gurion appealed Friday night 00 to Argentine President Arluro 11Ie University is a place - it is a spirit - it is a compact between cher explained. "there has come helmet. a name Draper recalls. "The By· cation card will be expanded this tablished in 1939 by Earl Harper, Canl $1 Frondizi to reconsider Argentina's the dead, the living and the generations yet unborn. It is a compact a vast change in our posture in ...... 3 ingtons and Whetstones were rela­ summer to include food purchases Director o[ the School of Fine Arts. in the Iowa Memorial Union Gold demand for return of Nazi Adolf 01 which you are a part. from which you cannot escape, and from international affairs. We have pass­ tives," said Draper. The Festival wlll end Aug. 10. from a Eichmann. ed nation without rivalry in Summer Students Belldel the two residences Feather Room and Cafeteria, Rob· which you should never escape - because by this compact your liCe military power and potentlaI to ert Ware, supervisor of the Union Argentina made Its demand Wed· is enriched and enlarged, is made more complete and saUsfying, is BOI( wat of the river, there Will allO one whole primacy I. a matter ...... Lb. 29~ Cafeteria said Friday. "To use BOEDER FOUNDATION PREXY nesday. saying that unless Eich· brought in tune with all that is best in human thought and action. Register Tuesday' an aba~ limeltone quarry. of conjecture and debate - and this privilege, students must pur· Paul Boeder. associate professor mann is brought back from Israel May these things rest vividly in your hearts and minds today. whose security is a malLer 0( grave Som. of the me'l1 u.. d to crosl this week It would take the case to the river ( th.ra wa. only on. chase at least 50 cents worth of in the Department of Ophthalmol· May the enveloping presence of thi University and all lhat it stands concern. In Field House food, "Ware said. "The vouchers ogy at SUI's College of Medicine. the United Nations. 24.01. Botti. brldg. In those daYI) and hold 1,,1' surround you and abide with you wherever you may go and " How then can we Cace the pos. .. . . ~ ..... 45~ was elected president for the 11th Eichmann was captured in Ar­ bHr parties In quarry. (Mr. from the stamped J.D. cards will sibility that in the year ~ A.D . Registration Cor the SUI eight. ttre be collected, and the students will consecutive time of the Retina gentina recently and spirited away whatever you may do, and Draper and IOns hav. operated a fir t place may be taken by Red weeks summer session will begin be billed monthly for this serv­ Foundation Friday in Boston. to face trial in Israel as a mass "May the Lord watch between me and thee Tuesday It 9 'I1.m. in the Un,ilVer· whol ...I. bev.rag. company in China. with the USSR second. lhe ice," he added. Mass. slayer of Jews under Hitler. While we are ab ent one from the other:' United Stales 0( Europe Wrd. and .• tt ...... 'sity Ficld Hpuse and will close at F.lrmont, MI~n. sine. 1'34. ) - the United states of America 4:30 that attornoon, ac~ng to The football field was down by (ourlh1" Hancher asked. Ted McOarrel, SUI dean of admis­ the inter-urban tracks and the "De _ IY". the __...... sions and regisbrar. Armory was used as the Uniyersity the Itlmina .... the IfttenuIty HOURS: Students in liberal arts, educa­ gym. " It was also the only place to keep ouneIYes In tI"t place: tion, bu iness administration, nurs­ for the Junior Prom. or dances. Stalf Approves 01 Evy As Director ar H tint ,... be ...,.... _ ing , engineering and the graduate There was no Union at that lime," reach, c.n _ -'lust to a ...... a.m. to 6 p.m. college who ,plan to aUend the he added. \ BY ' CARL SHERMAN Board in /ti s efforts to maintain ingtbe Board'soannouncement was : grams was.a good move. "No ooe cation and Wcrc.otlegiate athletJcs position without eM.. " ....' to 9 p.m. summer sessi()n may pick up As Draper looked around lhe the fine, weJJ.obalanced program "I am very flattered that it will individual can really do justice to programs. he .said: "I don't be­ Can _ ."..., the Ildll .... regis1.!'ation materials at Room 129, colorful Burge Hall lobby. he re- StMf Writer we have bad .in the past and fake two people tD fill the posltioo I'>OCh jobs - though Paul (Brochic.r l lieve this is a point whidl rcqw.res ability ...... IPIrit .. c..,... Macbride Hall. The ~ludent's iden· coiled that 1915 SUIowans also had React.i.ons to Forest Evashevski's whicll we want very much to con- which I have lleld. I w:lsh them did 8 tremendous job." discussion at U1is Lime." ... with utieM which _ caRMI tificat.i.Qn card must be presented a lounge - in the lobby of the old lIl'Ppoirtment by the Stale Board tinue, and to retain an equally both ludt,'· Olen Treadway, new assistant John Gerber; professor ri Eng· control...... wwII - ...... to obtain regisll'aUoo materials. St. James Hotel , just a door from of Regents as SUI athletic direct- tine coaching staff," Rea<:tions from those few SUI football coach and quarterback on lish and meml>cr of the Faculty Students who have not beoo issued t~ bookstore. The hotel w~s not or were generally favorable and Said SUI President Virgil M. roaches who could be readied last fall 's Hawkeye squad, also Council which provides Uaison be­ penpa~""''''''''''''''''' fr.,ed - ,., .....1.naolA ()r have I~t the1r permanent UnJ. belDg operated and part of It was almost as anti.-climatic as the Hanchet': "All of us know Forest were equaily enthuslastic. felt Evy's appointment retr~ tween faculty and administratioo, ...... ce...... -.tnIcIfy. VeTsity .ldenHCicatlon card must rented for a lounge. The Burkley Board's IlIUlOIIIIcement that its Evashevsk.i'& ~ity as a foot· SaW!.assistant Iootball coach Jer· sented B fine choice. felt the Board's selection 0( Evy -W .,.".. tC'pOrt to Room 1, University Hall, Imperial wa.s the only hotel in long _ sometimes controversial - ball coach, and have confidence ry Burns aibout Evy's appou.ment: "I've aJl served: "The only regrettable tiWIg the admiDIetrative spllt, Flora laid the Board'a decision tAl split the letics more in the bands or the Profeuor Emil Witachl 0( SUI Au g. 10. Follow~ni !be eight-weeks developed into quite a daily." c:oacb. ~ .about Evy'oS appointment as ath. he could loreIee no diIfereace in physical education and int.ercoIIe­ faculty, be added: "I Bee 110 im­ received the hlahest recogniUon 8ession, an Independent ~ Draper lold this cub reporter In "We believe him to be capable \(tic director is that. ~'Il be JoB. ovecall policy as a result at the giate &hIetic:s programs "speaks mediate e«ect in this I'espect." ,iven by the Endocrine Society _ period wlli be open to tradUate parting. "When I was here it was 0{ I the wholcboarted support of the Brechler's ollly comment regard· Board's decisioa to splk the pro- cisioG to &plit the physical edu· or WeJ'C W1B Wli1abIe. daJ' evealq in Miami.. I ~~ -Iowan 1Jaity Japan's, t(ffinity,' fo leaCiers-'; Ro~ky; Ni • r SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1960 Iowa City, Iowa AG1JlIAS ACU1M CONQaEQATIOlC VETERANS nOSPITAL craUIlo Wonhlll • ".m • ..2 II .W •• blnrl..... \I ••m. Communi ... - Flu' ....., Rabbi S ...k .. fM Dally Iowan u tcrlUen and edited by "udent. ana " goolNled by IJ board of flo. "udenl elected bv May Be Cau se of Trouble ffwf." "rib, Bo .. lc. , 8 ".m. FREI':· MJI!TBODlST . CHA..EL. Is Gooa- aM IltUdcnl body and four ffICUUy ,nuC.6.I appointed by the president of the Unlt).""y. The Dally 10000'I Allern.le .... lIb IIIl1el H•••• MUlIe.Une and Sri A' •••• ting eerie sounds _ • • shouting strators and the police have labbaU. Worablp , Sllurd'r, 8 .... .,,1torltJI policy, ,heref",e, " not tJrI aprudon of SUI admlnl.rlratWn policy", opItUon, m ~~. Th. R ... J.m.1 W. 11.0...... NEW YORK UP\ - Vice Presi­ By WALTER BR IGGS foul and obscene epithets at their numbered hundreds. 10 • •m . Sunol., S.b.ol U a.m. Itloroin, " 1onhl, dent Richard M. Nixon and Gov. Ilerald Tribune News Service If many of the demonstrators ASSEMBLY 0" GGD own Prime Minister." IlLUe'. lloutes&" Nelson A. Rockefeller put aside at times seem embarrassed in 4 3~ S. Ollnlon 8'. 7:UU p.m. liulIdo, Evenln, Senle, Why, then, do they take pal·t? Tho Rov. A. R . Mren, Plltor TOKYO - From the shouting, their role, they change during • • their political dif£erences Friday zig·zagging demonstrators orten The Japanese, far more than lIomln, W ... bIP. 11 •• m. FRIENDS long enough {or a smiling, hand­ most peoples, are easily led. these vio len~ onslaughts: their I:na,eUln'" Service. 7 ,.m. N.rvol Tuoker. CI.rl Phone 8 .. 2A()t shaking get-together at a British seen these days on the streets o[ From time immemorial, they faces become charged with hatred • this capital city, new arrivals to BUIIANY BAPTIST OoVItOB Oonferent:lf) Room, IE... Le'" trade exhibit. .. have been taught to {ollow the and exultation. In the Japanese Iowa Memorial Ual.a . B SI. ~ Flflb Avo .. low. Vlly Japan may glean some insight psychology there is a demand 11:80 •• m. Moelto, for Woralll, "Hi ya , (eller," one observer leader - the Emperor, the sho­ UnlUed Morolo, Worship Servlo. '1&1 quoted Rockefeller as saying at into how it was lhat the Japanese gun (former military ruled, the for energetic escape - frequent­ a.nt. ·GRACE .UNiTIID . £n.ln, GOlpel Se.vlce, 7:30 p.m. his first meeting with Nixon since people permitted themselves to feudal lord, the hu sband and fa­ ly attained through boislerous MISSIONARY ()HVIl08 be swept into a suicidal war. II •. m. Re,.llr Cbur.h W... hlp Senl •• IBM M.I.aU.e Ave. they exchanged venbal jabs over ther, the employer, the gang drinking - lrom the frustrations CommunloD DO Itrat SODa'7 .f ••er1 Itev, "aymond G. Sah_el, P . .... month. the course oC the Republican This reporter remembers watch­ chieftain. In every facet of Jap· growing out of the tight social Bible 8tudy el •••• f.r .11 ."', ':U ... Sonic. IU :t~ ing comparable scenes upon hi s restrictions and obligations weigh­ '.111. party. anese society one finds the "oya· BITIIEL AFRIOAN M.ETBODltn Rev. K. L. Baker, Ga." They even joined harmoniously first visit here in 1940. Militarist bun" - the boss - and "kokun" ing upon every adult. An attack . CIIVRCH 7 p.m. Cb"lr Practice Japan had just signed the tri­ ftl 8. Go ..rnor 81. 1:!tt ,.m. E•• nla, S ... I.. • In Iinging "Happy Birthday to - his followers. against authority is such an es· ':lIO p.m., Wed ....d.' Pr',1f ...... partite pact with Nazi Germany Tb. Rov. Fre. L. Po ... " Puler You" to Prince Philip, who oH i­ cape. It '.m. Sund., S.bo.1 Blud, and Fascist Italy. This event in­ Whatever else it accomplished, clally opened the exhibition on the occupation did not make in­ An otherwise rational frie nd of HILLEL· ..OONDATlQIf . . itiated hours of organized march­ this reporter's, staring down from caal8TIAN REFORMI!D covaOB U!I EIII Msrkel 81. his 39th birthday. ing - with some, mere first­ dividualists out of the Japanese "rlday ':10 , .m. S.lIbalb Be ...... They made good-natured refer­ people. It could not bring about his office window at the demon- ~~~:r::.c;:.~r:lmU~I~·.l graders, passing in close file JEHOVAO'S· .WITNII . .. . ences to their political rift in their a metamorphosis of those tra· strators, said wistfully, "I wish Ph.n.203' ZI20 JJ 8'­ speeches in the opening ceremo­ with a Rising Sun clutched in · t j' th 1t Key. KeDlletb L. lI.veri ditional social institutions that I ha d time 0 ' OIn em. lIenl ••••, 10 '.m .•od 7 p.lII. I p.m . Pobllo Adarell each tiny fist and others, dodder­ "Achl ..ln, Ilapplne.1 In Tb. F•• U, nies. Then they strolled amiably ing crones, carrying grandchil. lend themselves to regimentation. The demonstrations arc slagcd ClrY. Gus Kapkl, Prea.chlnr B:U I.m. 1101), C.mm.lllta - Nln", strations could paralyze the coun­ comedy-melodramas, rather as gians fear the vacuum in author· H, II •.m Nursery Churcb tho.1 most vigorous events, and carthy used by Jason Robard.s Jr. in the will be boiled alive the day the try. though our most popular actors chit-chat. !It is odd how familiar ity their departure will create. Mor ket I rregu Ior u a.m. Sunday Sehool 11 a.m. 1I0ly C.mm.nloD final moments of "Toys in the Belgian flag cease to flutter 7 p.m. Vf!\r7 The strike hailed or seriously were to occupy themselves per· Their main reasons for the alarm 6:IG p.m., FrIday, S.nlor Cbolr and casllal a folk·form invariably Attic." Here the facial damage from the government buildings After Week's Big Gain nasr PRESBYTERIAN CBUItCB disrupted mail service, marriages, manently with "The Second gets, right in the middle of nil in Leopoldville. are: 16 E. Mortel I. - . - burials, public schools. commer­ is quite real enough to be terrify­ NEW YORK (All - A tired and D,. P. 1I0wilon Polloct. Mlollle. ST. MARY'S CHURca Shepherd's Play" and "Uncle that elaborate arlifice 1. To add But according to Belgian of­ The fate of the Belgian citi­ JeffersOD aDd LInD Sh. cial 'Plane nights, garbage col­ ing. It is also real enough to get irregular stock market managed The Rev. J.rome J. l ..kl., Monsl,no, C. H. M.labe." P..... Tom's Cabin." to the feeling of childlike experi­ ficials who ha ve recently return­ zens who have made the Congo Unlverdt, Pastor Sand .. , Mallt., 6 a.tn., 7;30 ...... lection, manual telephone service, in our way. We are so fascinated to carve out a statistical gain , .:118 and 11 '.m. Olluroh S.... I Whlle the Kabuki has certainly ment, the players continue to de­ ed [rom Africa, the Congo, a their home. The exodus is well 10: 10 •• m., Il :$0 '.m. customs inspection and many lo­ with it, so convinced by it, and sO Friday despite widespread prof- 8:30 .nd 1~ ..... M!,nID, ".: ...... , D.II, - 8:45 aDd 7:1f .... discovered scenery, it has not yet light in navigating the stage on month away from independence, under way. As one official put cal and national government func­ appalled at its actuality, that we resembles an unprepared student it: "Most Belgians would rather if taking on this weck's pheno- I'JRST ME'tHODlST CoVRCR ST_ ·PATRICK'S . CI'IO.08. discovered real­ built·up heels that must be 9 or are hardly able to hear a word lefler.on and DlIbuq I. St.. tions. Water pressure was down. 10 inches high. cramming for final exams: An­ not be around when independence menal a dvance. nr. L, L. Duonln,ton, allnlsle, IU E. C.. r' 8'. Two out oC three Paris sewer ism. Choirs of Mr. Robards is saying. Our con· ll'pped to 2,940,000 9 : ~0 •. m. Church .hool ROY. IU.hard E• • n, Puter musicians sit di­ xious, restless and easily upset. is declared. About 20,000 have al· Volume S Re •. 11a", J.lllntDbrlnk ••ub'" workers remained above ground. Now it is prohably true thnt nil cern for his statE! of mind is al­ shares from Thursday's 3,820,000 "The ChOI;" I, Y:ur" • !land., m.ntl _ ':If. ':15, 1:41, U reclly behind the this clinging to costumes that . During eighly-four years of Bel­ ready gone home, and the figure To bring their cause to the pub­ most obliterated by Our concern gian tutelage, roughly a third is likely to double in the com­ and was the smallest since May I'JItST CNlTAItlAN SOCflTT .ad 1.I •••m. - D~n, 6:41,.1:11 .... performers, or look like generou~ly-filled Easter lic eye, strikers in Paris and some for that face. 25 when 2,530,000 shares were I.... A••. and Gllbo.1 ~ I ZIO LUToEItAN ORVaca kibilz over their of 13,000,000 Congolese have learn­ ing month. "horen Arlslu, Jr., lIflollhr Johnson alld Bloomlo,I ...... provincial cities took to the streets baskets and to formalized mao It is a curious thing that reality traded. shoulders from neuvers that resemble witch-doc· ed to read and write. Yet most of The final major fear is the ':3& Upper S.hool lI.rvl ... 8 and 10:se '.m. to march, wave banners, sing, stage left, a s itself should ever become a veil, them , these returning offiicals Balkanization o( the Congo. "The High-priced blue chips which ~~ ~~~ ~:'~Cb:~~:o~""I.e !~~~~~I~~:oC:.:~I~:;o,,!'. .. chant and boo Fiance Minister tor incantations has in ani or an­ that instant recognition should tragedy of the Congo," a Bel­ they s t r ike other way kept the creative im· say, still conceive of independence gave Thursday's irregular mar- "Of M.n .nd Supoloalt'" ':SO p.lII, FIr •• I•• Ol.b Wilfred Baumgartner. s t r i n g s that interfere with our involvement. as the same sort of glittering gian diplomat said, "is that it ket a ri e based on popular aver------=------....:..... Between 10,000 and 15,000 strike pulse of a country from maturing But it would seem to . And I found bauble with which Stanley en­ has no N'Kruma." The tragedy seem to h a v e as much as it might have. ages were trimmed by moderate Good L.·sten.·ng- ers in the capital tramped half a been forged on myself wondering just how much ticed their anceslors into navi­ is also in part the result of Bel­ prdtit taking. mile down the Rue de Rivoli But I was seriously sll'lIck - we may have lost as we learned gating him down the Congo River. gium's !Lberal colonial adminis­ KERR anvils and chant ,; Meanwhile, trading interest chanting "Raise our Salaries." thunderstruck, altnost -- to find to duplicate with such fi~ity the The Belgians levi ~d taxes - tration. Instead of dOing a ay those portions 01 the slory that knitted to an assortment of sec'· They carried signs with the Ifig­ myself moving with the Kabuki conditions of life. The cjuestion 1J)any nali ~es, to show how strong­ with U1e tribal structure of 0- oMary issues, some of which did ures "45.000," indicating their the playwright has neglected to players into an int rior life that goes a little deeper still. When we ry they feel about independence, eidy, the. Belgians recQiltized put into dialogue. quIte well. Today On WSUI demand for a 45,000 franc - $90 - was very nearly more real [or see quickly fami liar people in fa­ have already stopped paying their the authority of tribal chiertains, minimum monthly wage. When a refugee prince arrives being less so. I'd better explain. mil inr settings doing completely polygamy - some natives, those and formed administrative-. d,ivi­ IT lIARDLY SEEMS POSSI· portant pr cedents. Loren, from Nurses in crisp uniforms, post­ at a barrier erected by his ene­ One of the short plays I saw (the detailed things, do we give such who can afford it, are stocking sions that left the tribes intact. BLE that another academic yenr Hampton, Iowa, was given re­ men on bicycles, telelJhone repair­ mies, there is no barrier: The bill changes weekly), was called ready assent that our minds go up on wives in anticipation of A political party in the Congo OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETI N has came and went, as we say in sponsibility for The Musical (Sat· men and office Workers of !ill opposing parties recite at one "Kagotsurube" or "The Cour­ the day o( independence. today is a tribe or a coalition of the trade. But one of the surest slack. long before we have done urdays al 9 a.m.> ond he built sorts paraded peacefully down the another in voices "to make the tesan," though I continue to think the kind of cooperative work that The merchant of independence friendly tribes. There is no na­ signs that this is lrue is that JIlidcity artery, blocking traffic heavens echo" over five or six of it as lhe casc of the pock­ would embroil us more fully? were elaborated at the Round tional movement, no political University those of us who are len behind the program into a veritable In· for more than an hour. In front of feet of empty space. When it is marked lover. When that remark­ When we say "Yes, that's right" Table Conference in Brussels last leader who can make himself at WSUI ore beginning to miss stitution. All along, however, he the Finance Ministry, localed in time to show :mimosity, Ih re is able actor Nakamura Kanzaburo as we look at a glossy, just-so February. In May, the Congolese be heard in the six provinces. Calenda r our d parI d seniors. One who. was taking command of the mu· the Louvre, the crowd halted no swift, lUnging nnger in the XVII enlcred with his. face a surface, have we begun to rest in were to elect an Assembly of 137 The language problem is so loss will be most heavily [elt will ic programming, the Serious Mil­ briefly to boo and whistle. Elia Kazan manner: instead, veritable flowering garden of the surface - and condemned members (one for every 100 ,000 grl!at that the Round Table Con­ be finishing up his official duties sic Guide and the technical prob­ The marchers then made a half­ four separate knees begin to rip­ ringed indentations, I murmured inhabitants), and eighty-four Sen­ ference provided that "the lan­ Saturday, Jun. 11 today; but the melody will linl{er lems which arc lnh rent in lite hearted errort to press on to Presi­ ourselves to a superficial pleas­ guage to be used in debates . _ • ple as though the earth beneat h to myself that when it comes to ure - instead of being forced to ators, fourteen from each o[ the on in the case of Loren Cocking, operation o[ two stations requir· dent de Gaulle's palace. A police six provinces. These elections shall be the !french language, ~:30 a.m. - College of Nursing them were in a state of seismtc pock-marks, the Japanrse don't dig to get nearer the whole truth? for ~e has establish dome itn· ing some sixty hours of serious official indicated heavy riot squad shock. And they ripple away kid around. But that is what they were completed several days ago and the presidents of both houses Coffee Hour - Westlawn Parlor. music per week. His 10 S will be reserves standing by in Side Does an unrealistic surface stir in an atmosphere of relative shall insure that all interjections 10:30 a.m. - Panel presenta' [rom, rather than toward, their were doing, rcally. The .disfigur· us to a profound imaginative ef· dl'eply feit - but not for a week. streets. The march leaders argued tranquility - they were stagger­ in Swahili, Lingala, Kikengo and tion, "Fine Arts at SUI," Dr. Salurday, June II, 1000 foes. ing splosh was as colorful, as fort that we would otherwise not For, with an p clal burst of brieny, then stood aside. formal, as vividly ov('rsize as the ed by region so the 25,OOO-man Tshiluba are translated into Earl E. Harper, moderator­ 8:00 Momlna Chapel JoyaJtY\ Loren has prepared all The crowd, dampened by a The price's guards arc uni­ make? French." 8:15 News heels and headdresses that hnd lIrmy could show up in fuJI force Macbride Auditorium. next week's music . By the time shower, rolled up the banners and formed in what seem to be mo· I confess I began to think SO 10:30 a.m. - School of Fine 8:30 Sporls ot Mldwrt'k bile pin-cushions, handsomely been parading by. as I watched boldly-carved gest­ 8:45 One Man'. Opinion h arrives in Sacramento to be­ drifted away. Arts Symposium; Earl E. Harp­ ' :00 The Muslc.1 Mass meetings nnd parad,es were adorned with ncatly-spac(ld puff What hnppened next? Because ures, and heard deliberately 10:00 Cue ~in at KJML in the capital of er, Moderator - Macbride Audi· 1:00 SnturdllY Supplement alifornia we will not yet have held in Nantes , La Rochelle, Metz, balls, while the principals of the what hat! signified a disease had rhythmic sounds, cut away all torium. 4:00 TN! Time Special Bordeaux, Montpellier lind Mul- t party toek front for soliloquies bren turned into a pnttern, we that was easily identifiable so 5:30 News b 'gun 10 work. No greater devo­ 1 p.m. - AII-Alumnl Luncheon 5:45 Sport- Time tion hath any mono hous e. like so many sloops in full sail. were swiftly able to dart past it that we should be forced to mOV\! University Bulletin Board - Main LInInge, Union. 6:00 Evenlnl Concert At Mulhouse, evera! hundred And the brilliantly painted scen· - past all that was presumed to - if we were to have any fun at 6:30 p.m. - Golden Jubilee 8:00 M".I. lor a Suturday Nlahi LOREN 0 KING STARS T0- O~nlt 1' • • 11...... " ...... ,.._.t .1 ft. Dally Ie_ l1li... 9:45 New. Final DAY on CUE, from 10 a.m. IQ I strikers sat down in thl1 streets cry, for that matter, is not so be unattractive about it - into all - closer to the intangible .....1 c...... "'." ••• Oe'''''' 'y •••• • 1 Ih. ' .y ,.f,,. ,.'110. l1li •• ftq Dinner, all classes of 1910 9:55 Sport Final , anrt blocked trartic. the yearning heart of the man ...... ".. ••• ...... " __ ...... , ., .rn •• , . 1 .,. or,• •_ ...... 10:00 SIGN OFF p.m., os WS I's service program plausible as it looks. A magni!i· core of things. • • h1tfl' ••' 1 ,, 111 . . . .." . ...,. f •• ,,, ...... Burge Hal! . The next move ,by the civil ser­ It.,, .. ,...... ,_.,.tI __... draws uJlQn his announcing servo . NAVAL ItESERVE ItESEARCH (JO~t- Ume. Indlcotcd In 204 UnJverslty Hall: van ls was uncertain. On the eve 116 THaclay, Jun. 1• PANV 9-10 wll! meet In room of Aecour\Unll, Friday, Jun. 17, at 1 MonalY, June I~, 10(;41 icc for the 10 t time. As usual, , E.. tlawn. Monday 01 7:30 p.m. ETIC p.m.: Economics, Monday, June 20. at 9 a.m. - Registration (or sum· of the strike, the government .IMBla Editorial Anlmnt ...... JIm ~a Items of intN sl and appropriate City Editor ...... Dorothy Collin Make-,ood II!tvIc. on mJlIed 1*.,.,. John F. McNeil USNR wlJl SJ;leak 1 p.m.; .nd Business StaUsUcs. Tues· 8:00 Momlnl Crn pel promised wage increases by next A"DIT BUaEAlI I. not possible, but every eflort will on "The Soviet Economy." All nava l day, June 21, at 1 p.m. Studenll ex· mer session - Field House_ 8:t5 New! to the ~cason arc Included in to­ Sports Editor ...... John Hanrahan be made to correct arran willi Ibe Reserve oWee .. and enUsted men In· pectin, to take these exam. should W,dnnday, J une 15 8:30 Education In the NoUon'. year. But this was too vague to or Soelety Editor ...... Anne Warner next IlISue. day's go-round: news of school· CJ&CULATIOlf. Chief Photographer ... .Dennls Rehder terested In sc!cnt!!lc research al'e noUfy lhe secretnry, 213 Unlver&1 1y 7 a.m. - Opening or summer ervtcc suit the civil servants. cordially Invited to aUend. Hall . by etel'lOll . 11. Students may hav. the DallY p.m. - cure y . Leo n· 4 :58 NbW. Capsule I to June 14. Phone 8·2666 for a .Itter 5:00 PrevieW 8ub!ICrlptlon rates - br carrier ID i or lnformatlon. Can Mra. Sieber al 10 In urday SU(1pl m nl (Emma b Iowa City, 211 cenll week y or ,10 per 100"on mailed any addre .. the ard R mel. Department of AI" &: 15 S,IOIIl Time DAILY IOWAN OtIlOULATION TaV8T1I1, BOAIlD 0' nVDIN1 8-1845 lor InformaUon aboul membu· United State. durl", the vacatioD mour Research Foundation, 11. Phelps wrnpped h r up and took rear In advance; .I~ monlh., ,5.50; sblp In Ihe leoaue. , period. 5 : 3~ News th .... months, ,3.00; y mati In low., Circulation Mana,er ...... Robert BeU PUBLICATION. !inols Institule of Technology, 6:45 F..dllodal PnRe h('r fl'othcrdustt'r to the tope lib­ .. Der year; .IX monthS, sa: three , r 01 8:00 Ev nlnll Concert _th., N: .U other mall aubscrlp- Wal"', Barbee, A4: Dr. Gear.. Ea. lUMMI. MAILING ADDaSBS 8:00 Evenlnll Fl'tItlire rary) moy re ult in ~ curloUl on. Collo,e of Den~.trYI J.n. a u. Delta SllIma PI. prole.slonol business 4..1:ua:!,~ :"~~~::houra: Mond8Y.!O'M- "Science and.Edl1cation" - Mac· tlCIIlI. 110 per year: IIX monthl, lUG: DIAL 4191 II you do not recelv. your christ, A3: Paul E. Ha.enllOn, DI: fraternlly. Is Rural Roul!! 3, Box 78. db, 1:30 a.m.-2 a.m.: Sal"rday, 7:30 brido Audltorhlm. 9:00 Trio m('l[ln~ of WSUf's owh, or!lIinal . " ... .,."...th•• ~.- 9:45 Newl Flnol 7:341 •. AI! correspondence durin, Bummer p •• IIl. J ~ D.lI)' Iowan b, m. The D.lly J'udllb Jon .., A4: Prof. Hu.b XeIoo, a.m.·. P.m.· Slinday, 1:30 -I •. lunday, H 9 :5S Sport. N'~",. eUorls (rom tho past year. R1!Iu, DAILY IOWAN EDITORIAL STAt'F ""II"'" ", ..,."' ....n" nlftt!~ t ... (,In",,,",,,,t .. Department of Polttlc.1 !Ic:lence; Prol. va.aUon mUll be maned \0 tM! ad· Desk aerv lce: Mon60y·:nIlIJolda" • 10 :00 SION OFF Editor ...... Ray Burdick eatlon!l Cenler Is open from 8 •.m. Lealie O. Moeller, !Ic:hool 01 Journal. dre ••. ... m.-IO p.m.: Friday. 8 11.111 •• ' .... , 3:30 p.m. - Concert by All· lor lislt'ncrs wishing to I1v~ their Mana.~ Ed ... Geor,. H. William. Jr. to 6 p.m. Monda), throu,h Prld." IIIII~ 1Iclllndlel, A'~PNf .... I KNIJI (I'M) 91.7 .m/o .. aDBar. D,,1Ia, D. Co ., _ ...... 8alurda)', • '.m.-5 p.m. ,...,..,. State Band, Chorus. and Orehes- li v s owr alloin are wekomt ... w. lor ...... DOlI J'ou)'tb. IJId from 1 to 141 •. m. OD BaIUliIQ . 'B.D. "TOOL" EXAM~ATION8 for ..m.-12 noonY: Sunday, I ,.BI.-' p. .. __t~~::..~ _,Lounge, Union. : I 7 '00 p '". Flnr Mu'lr ... ~- . Iba folloW In. count. will be liven .1 10 :00 pm. SIGN OFF from 1 p.m. to 4. _ "" f • - . Ro ky,' Nixon .at Exhibit~ Med Students I VETERANS bOBPITAL OBAPII. Wonhlp II a.m . Get Awards • • . m. co.",muola: - ..t,'! ...... FREII MBTROOIST VRAnL Is GooCl-Natured Meeting Mu s•• Une and 8.4 A ..... Th. aev. J.m .. W. II ...... At Convocation 10 • . m. U oday 8.hool NEW YORK IN! - Vice Presi­ 11 • . m . Mornln .. Worabtp "Life' . CO lllelt" dent Richard M. Nixoll and Gov. Scholarships and awards were Advertising Rates Rooml Ft)r Ront 10 '::'Roo-m-s -:F:-o-r-:R:-.-n~t----""":', ~O Hom.s For Rent I:~U p..... uJlday Evenl .. , S... I •• Nelson A. Rockefeller put aside ~~~~~------~ pcesented to 15 top medical stu· THIlU room furnhhed cottaa ... Dial · . . their political differences Friday dents Thursday evening at SUI's FJU£NO I 0.. DaJ ~_ ...... , • Word MAI..£, rummer sludents, oookinc. COOL ROOM lor "",n stud.nt. Av.D. 31)1. 1-' No.val Tucker. VI.rlt long enough £Or a smiling, hand· lIIIIIual medical convocation. Ielephone and .Ir-rondllloner. SIde able lor !he StIDlmB SeaIoJ1. Show. ;Phone 8·2800 shaking get· together at a British Two l>.,...... ~ • Word entrance. Landlad y employed d urine en, oU-...., \lUtLIII£ lUI E. CIlurch. Vonterene. Room, E...... , Dean Norman B. e1son of the the day. GlU 8-11151 aller 5 )I.m. or ...20 low. Memoria. tJal.. . trade exhibit. College of Medicine presided at the '!'bree D.,. , ...... 111 • Word lurday or Sunday. 7-1 1:30 •.m . He.Un, lor Wonhlp "Hi ya , felier," one observer Four D'n ...... loU • Word · . . ceremony ood W. W. Morris, asso· COOL room In quiet home. 6M9. 8-11 GRACE UNITED quoted Rockefeller as saying at ciate dean for medical student af­ HI grONARY OJIVIt~ "ve DI)'I ...... 1M • Word his first meeting with Nixon since ROOMS tor rent. Men. Dial "'\2\1. 7-11 APARTMENTS and 11 pl.na I'OOIDI lo( Hom •• For Sal. 18G4 MaleaUne A:••• fairs, presented the awards. Prin· Tell Dar...... Word atudents. Sumn>.u and fall. CaD 16 Rev. Ra,mond G . SabmeJ. P ..... they exchanged venbal jabs over cipal peaker [or the convocation 8-SG'I allU • p.m.. ... 11 ~ ._. )'n"~ n--' --'e w l' ~ --w~. Ilbl . Siudy .1 ..... tor all ..... ':U ~ the course of the Republican ODe lfulJl ...... , • Word ONE lart'e front room lor men &tu- ...... - ~,~ ...... le rv'e. JO :46 • •111. was Dr. David E. Price, an assist· party. clen ... 8-1364. &-11 ROOMS tor m&le studenlo. !lUJIlftIeI' and eye Trower - \be okl". prlvll.. . Alr- pald."O 00. 3238. ..II 141 "To sort of break the ice, I see you again." Nixon greeted at the Coliseum meeting. Phone 4191 CondIUon.... lArae po",h and rden. JlEORGA~lZEO C;'UItOR ;.; lieU' field , Estes Park, Colo. William 8-12211. e-14 VUItI ST OF 1.ATTE R OAt' BAM• • started to sing 'Happy Birthday, l\I[rs. RockefelJer warmly. After a briof chat In whicfl Rid. Wanted 33 , 221 M e lr~ue Ave. Dear Duke'; and everybody joined The meeting between Rockefel· Prince Philip I'oined, Gov. ond J. Dougherty, Marion, received the I . D. Ander.on. MI ...... ' MEN. Summer roomL Showe... Very in right away," said Hobbie Jean, I d ft '1 bl f the GOP other Plfenli Memorial prize. mw YORK CIT{ lifter June U . 25fII Char.b 80bool, 9:30 ..... er, ra ·aval a e or Mrs, Rock.fell.r procHCled' to cl~e In ~ . 8-17 or 71:13. 8-11 "orDJo. Wonblp, 10:30 a.a. a buxom Cockney who has been presidential nomination, and N'ix· the dais on tho main floor of the Richard A. Cheville, Jndepen· Mlte.llaneou. For Sal. 2 - . . dence, Mo. , received the Milford ROOMS, Apartment m.n. a-eon. 8-\1 SHARON BVANGELICAL pourJng for 40 years. on, described by Rockefeller as Coliseum for the openi", c.r.. CHOICE 1. I, 3. or • room fum1ahed UNITED BaETUERN COUao. Nixon and Rockefeller met for the I.. ding cilndidate. come only monies. EdW>in Barnes award given to a REFRIGERATOR and c:he t lr~zer . apartmen .... or ~ . ...14 Want 10 luy 31 X.lou junior medioal student with an out· Dial 8- I2IB. 7-11 SUMMER a=m04ll1ona. IradualAl Rev. "." ••d n. M.rll, ..... the first time since last fall in an two dilYs ilfter their political ~-::-::-______men. V.ter.n., t2,.00 monlll, II. E. TWO, lhtH, .nd IIv. room fumlohed 8:30 •• m. Suna.y ScMol anteroom of the Coliseum. home flare-up. Nixon, representing President standing record in hygiene and GARRARD tum- .... bl ... Oromm... Amp- Mld,,,t. 3781. ... If apartnumla. Prlva.. bath, ....rrlod BUNK bedI. Call 20 Solon. .-u 1. :~ 0 . R . m. Di vine W... bl, of the exhibit. The governor set it of( by de- Eisenhower, arrived at the dais preventive medicine. IIfler. Strombel'J-Carloon apeak .. r. couplu only. "&:164 . 1-2' Rur.1 Lit. 8un.ar Merck awards went to Herman R...... nabl.. price. Cau 8-14111 or 8-0511. PRIVATE room .nd br.. kfaat . lAundrY . The ."ice.president had arrived manding that Nixon make c1ellr a short time later side by side Ext. 20'19. 8-\4 l.cUltin. Other prlvUece. In lovely NEW three room apartmenL Fum- Child Care AO 'T. ANDREW· I'ItESBrTl.lllAlf first at the glasspaneled, curtain· his position on national issues with Prince Philip. R. Thomas Jr., Roland, and Rus· hqme for .tudent or nuroe for .ummer I hed or unfun1lthed. Coupl. Dial ______CUVRCD OLlV1!:'l'T porlable typewrlt.... N ..w . n In ••chan,e lor baby .ltlln. 3560. 1-1 p.m. ...11 lan.et and ~hlr ole A,,. .. draped anteroom, after driving prior to the GOP National Con- Philip and Lord Rootes, head of seU R. Widner, Manchester. Da vid 9341 nfter 8 p.m. 6-11 and nlhl bow.work. Ne.r hOlplt.aI.. NURSERY dool 18th... Experl.nHct. VnlversUT Ifrl,h" from the Wald'orf.Astoria Holel venlion. He said nei ther the nation the exhibition, sat between Nixon W. WeLrich, Grand Junction, reo U136. 6-14 N,[C!:L V CUtnllhed , ... rtmen" Dial W"II-tr.lned. Dell.... t .... o nu,.....ry Key. 11 uhf'rt B. Brom, ..det TRA YELlNG Weal! Under duh 12 volt 711t. f-Il I,ed children mornlnp In ber home. • a.m. Cbar.h 8cb.o l, till .u.a ... j with Prince Philip in his Rolls· nor the party could march und er and Rockefeller. ceived tile MacEwen Memorial ..r alr-eooler. 8-mm. B.N.H. MO"I. SU101MER room~ tor boy.. Cook In! " block lrom Memorlol Unto ... 11117. elder Royce gray convertible. a ·banner "whose only emblem is During the exhibit tour. surging prize awarded to the senior who C.m~l'II . Meier and c.... CaU 2038. I-II prlvU ..... Reasonable. ~161I. ..2 I1'URNlSflEl) .parlm n• . Meitole Clrcl.. .-u 10 •.m . CII.reb Schal, ar ...... has made an outstanding record in 4 room., prace. prl ... te yard. Mar- PLAY 'TOUpe• .1un. 14 • AuJUat 10111. ua.t Gov. and Mrs. Rockefeller ar· a question mark." crowds frequenUy pushed Nixon ANT1QUE Auellon SAturd.y. Jun. 111b. rled c:oupl. only. 01.1 41137. 1-11 Pre-ac:'-Iere momln ... Ala ., and 1. Wedn ..'.", e:ftO p.m. 8.nlo, CIo.lr rived a short time later. Nixon retorted Thursday that he and Rockefeller close together. his medical course. Z p.m.. 1225 S. Rlvel'lld. Drive. ..II DOlIBLE room. Male . Iudenll. Summer 'fleTnoona. . "l'e, Len d tAo Call Thursd." 4:10 . ... halor c.aIr, Nixon strode over and exten d------Philip seemed amused at the Mostly Scholarship Book awards • , Ion. W.II rent II alnlle. 6682. 11-21 ~-ROOM .partment with both. NI ... "'1221. 1-10 JO a.m. WOflbl, FOR SALE: Good ••• I\.ove. Phone lawn .nd shade Ir Localed oIl · . . ed his hand. Rockefeller grasped tumult. went to Davkl S. Dahl, FOI'eS. City; 8-0113. 6-18 APPROVED room. [or women. IUm- HI.hway 21 ••t North Libert". Phone IT. PAUL'S LUTRIRAN ca&nIo S hiD dI mer. AttrOcUv. and new. 831 Coller •. Richard C. Graham, Jr., Daven· 4111 Ot TIllln ...2110. ..11 III .url 8,. .... it, at the same time placing his C 00 aze " Do au always draw such a BEAUTIFUL Plywood Boat and Trall .. r. Nro. Verdin. .... In ~ ~. E. Jett ...... left hand 011 Nixon's right shoul- • • crQwd," he asked Nixon . port; Daryi K, Granner; Rockwell Deck.d. 'I~ . oo . 8-U91. 6-15 PUT your child ban4a on a •••. Jobn Cansl.bl. der in one of hi s typical gestures. "You know, you are drawing a City ; Robert T. KUnau Jr., Pres· COOL room ond belll lor rnan wlllln. I1'URNlSHID apartmenL Dial 138S. I-It trip or durl.na IIckn.... s d.y Ot 10 •. m. Sund., cbool and Blbl. CI •• TRUNKS Jor 18 le. 11-5701. 7-2 10 mow lawn. '997. 11-" I'URNlSHl!P .parlment.. Clo.. In lor Mv.ral. ElCpeI'lenc:o. ",terence.. ~i. o a_m . 1)1 vi Ilf'l ervlrel with 1101, The public, newsmen and pho- Schoolmarms Canoe few." Nixon replied. ton, and Robert \i!. VanScoy, 0 ceo Communion - uThlJ II n ard T. GUrrAR with eaoe, ..~ Mn. e-" SINGLE room. near 1I"",y. Qulel. bo..... Summer ..t. f50.oo and MO.oo. ~,....-=-...... ,...------., .. n.Ueve" tographers were banned from the 0 M···­ oia. Each receIved $20 gift cer· • anteroom, which was reserved tor own ISS/SS/PPI tificates toward the purchase of $475.00. Bauocl> .nd Lomb Binocular Student. M.n. 7~ . "It ~e~ 16511. ' -14 W_h;.;,• .;.r;.;,.;....;.1..;;.o;.;,E.;.o.;.t ______~5;.;,.O ST. TDO~rAS MORI CHAPa. MICl'OICOpe. A-I condition. Move- FURNlSJlED .partment. CI .... In. PrI· TURKl:Y SANDWICHES .nd HOMt:. about 40 specially invited guests. BEMIDJI, Minn. 1m - Two at· nrdioal publications. Mosby .~e 2 lor 1 Jur. 405 N ...... 1 •• able ler obJectlv •. $615 .00 new. PLEASANT room. .ummer - v.I. balll and entrance. Utilitl MADE pi .. 10 110. Maplecrftt lland· MOftll,nor J. n. Conwa1, P ...., tractive schoolmarms from Wil­ Prol: Pupils awards aTe made to senior who Phon. 3492. 8-24 .Ion. Glrla. KllChen )lrlvll.,e.. Phone nlshed . Av.l18ble Jul)' III. I-J41111 alt"r ",Ieh hop. Hw)'. ,,, Bouth. Aero 8uDda, Matltl, ft:4.5. 8, 8, 10, 11 :.. I." , have demonstNltcd abili.ty in the U05. "15 2 p.m.• nd w ek"end.. ..11 lrom the AIrport. Phone "1773. 7-m and 6 p.m. Tbe 10 a.m. mau It a JIll. consin were canoeing down the BOOKSHELVES, toot lockere. trunk;: M ... nn. b,. Ih .0n,r.,.I1 ... Mississippi River Friday on the field of mc.dicine. lu"",.. .Ieclrlc tan., Ilrlo 28" bl- GRADUATE men Ot over 22. C<>ol D.Ur -.: . 1 anel 7:30 •.111. eycle. Hock -Eye Loan. .~ . '.11 roonll. cook hIli privilege', showc ... P.ts For Sal. Newman Club aeUvltlu, Ind•• II, Gallic Civil start of a voyage to New Or­ Read Better 530 N. Clinton. SHa or 548~ ..11 )0 a.m. Cortee HOllr and und&1 nlf~. luns, rURIflSHED apartment. Coupl •. ,75.00. SIAMESI!! killena: 14M. I UpPUI are sa.pended ror ' ~. re· Chemistry Fraternity SIIMMl:R room 1 tor men. Cookl'" 2876. 7-1 malnder or the ume.tu. Mary Lou Germann and Doris Hom. Furnishings 2A pl'lvllPllei. DIAl 8·1701. . 6-18 · Brunner, bolh about 30 and sea· ------ONE room ep.rt.nenl for man. t35 00 Help Wonted, M.n 60 ST. WENCI!SLAUS. Clfu.QII -Service Balk But Need Aid Selects New Officers REFRIGERATOR, $40.00: Iarlle 181 ROOMS for mole tludenll. Summ r. per monlh. 14J fo ..... "'HI5. 1·1 818 1>. O.. enpor' 81. soned canoeists, expect to tako .tove. f'O .oo: Simmon. Hlde-a-bed, R.Lrhr."ator avallabl •. 8-1701. 6-18 SEVERAL men to work for rvom dur- ne a ••. Ed .... rd W. N ...U. Puler two months to cover the mighty Johnny can read better now than iURNtStu:D alr_ndltloned I\udlo In, IUmmer .13. G-18 lundaT I .. ea, 1:30 ••ID , • • a ..., 11 ..... William Comer, G, Iowa City, ~ . oo . 8-3" •.•15 Flnkbln. Park. 6-11 FREE room and board tor .lrl atud nl .partmenl. Dial 1·:aGIN .nd IItu • ll:U •.m. stream's entire length. They pl.n his counter>part could 30 years is the newly elected president of In.truC1ion .. In •• ch..... e for work. Dial MIG. 0·\1 p .Q).. 1it1l. 1-1 DaUy 1II ...... T a ...... 7:Sf .... to paddle all the way and camp ago, but we still need to make Work Wonted Snarls Nation Alpha. Chi Sigma, . professional ROOM tor renl, ,entlemen. 8-0781. 7-4 TJlREIC room furnl ,hed .pa""""nt. rOB· UNITE-D ClIlJRCB. out .along the banks. better adjustments to individual Ch emlstry fratermty. • ~~~O~ .t"~5~Q80~· KIml Y:~:: ROOM : .... du.le Ilrl or ov.r 23. Prlv.I. beth, nlra...,.. Clo.. In. WANTED : Ironln,1. Dial 8-3l108. 7-10 1M? Lower alaaea.tlne U. Miss Germann, Spooner, Wis., differences in teaching reading B. E.,ooo Wo ...I. P ..~ PARIS fA') - Frencb civil servo Other ,oCficer are William Gar· Cdoklnll and loundr)' f."lUlIet!. Close Married cO\l))I •• Dial un or 1514. 11-14 WANTED: How. wOlk . 1454. '-IS '_nd.,. ("bool, ' :45 • .18. ants snarled lhis nation's daily leaches English at Rice Lak., arid to ilicrease the library facili· field , G, Boulder. Colo., vice pres- to Campu •. 8-4718 efler 1:00 p.m. "14 FURNI KED or unfurnished apart_ ------Mornln, Won.. Jp, 8:45 ••• U ..... life Friday with a 24·hour strike Wis. Miss Brunner, Medford, ties of schools, according to &-nest Ident; Dave Pi"""'rl, ' G, Rock Who Do •• It? 6 menll. 1-4843. 8-24 D!SlGNlNG .nd _Inl. DedAu.tln. , p.m. Bnoln, W ...hlp Horn, professor in the College of """ SINGLE room for man. Summ.r. 42:n. In brlchll w r. Phone "'&:142. 7-1 · . for more pay. The walkout, by Wis., is a physical education Island, III., secretary; and Ger- 8·12 MAKE ~our nut move with H.wk- TI1.INlTY EPISCOI'AL CBlJIWII more than a million workers. was teacher at Cumberland, Wi •• Educa·Lion. aId Brunzie, G, .Downers Grove, STORE lIlat trunk with Hawkey. eye Trandu _ the ".retul movel'l. WANTED: Typl", or Hoopltal work. 120 Ii. C.Ue.. " Horn, who is nationally known Tramfer. For promPt. ec:onoml ..1 Call 8-0707 for promnt c:ourteola Mornln.a Only, DI.I 8-25Ua.' eVen· The X" ... eun,' J . B. I.r.'nl, ..... a clear warning to the govern· They started Thursday at Be­ III ., tr easurer. lervl" •. call "~107. anyllme. 7-2 ROOMS for rent, men. Summer anel aU"nUon .n""me. r I-U In.1. 1-17 1.U. Clo e In. 8-5007. 8-U ~~ R ~ ... Itobert L Walker, Clt.plala ment that growing labor demon· midji, the community closest to as co..author of the Horn-Ashbuagh I a.m. 1101 , CemmuDlon Spellers, addressed Iowa teachers CALL HAWKEYE TRANSFER day or A'M'RACTlVJ: • room unlurnlahed WAN'J'l!P: Walblnl" DW 1-0311. 11·14 9: I ~ •. m. Uol y Oom", ..loa - N.... r' strations could paralyze the coun· the river's source. nllht for prompt "OUrteOUll service ROOMS Lor r.nl, men. 2!~ blocka from apartment. Phone 1475, 8-21 CHILD car. weekl1. R4ferenc-. DtaJ Churcb Srhool try. attending the SUI Elementary on aU of your movln. need.. Local Campu.. 4921. "18 Mil . 1.lt 11 •. m . Hoi, Communl.D Reading Workshop which closed and lonl dl ne.. Anylhl", trem I FURNIS!IJ:D and unfurnished .part- 7 p .m . v~ ('1 The strike halted or seriously trunk to the depot 10 • hOlaelul to NICE room. B-2!lIB. 6-27 (;;-15 p.m., Friday, Senior Cbalr menlo. Prlvote oath and •• r• ••. Clooe Autol For Sol. 66 disrupted mail service, marriages, Thursday at SUI. Cali/omla. Phon .. 8-5707. 8-24 In. DIal tI6&t . ' ·2' ...;..;;..;,..;;.;;.;..;~...... ;.-=~ _____~ · - . New Red Disarm "The only t.hing you can say for HAGEN'S T.V. Gu.ranteed TeI.vlalon PLEASANT quiet room •. Summer or ST. MAltY'S CRURe. burials, public" schools. commer· Servltln. by eerULled "'lYlc. man. lall. Graduate men. DIal 8537 even- to))ERN three room CUmlahed .part- 18511 PONTIAC. Star ChId. 4-<1oor Jrttenan aDa Lina 8... I cial ion. You won't want to f.1I to mi ss it. . 2 - HILARIOUS SPRING CLEANING ON ~T' u day Supplement lEmma Sue Phrlps wrapp d her up Bnd toOk her fl'lllhNdu ter to the tape lib­ rary) mny result in a curiOl11 tnl'lang of WSUI's own, oriaiJIal Lou COltoUO in r(forts from the past yeor. Retu' "THE 30 FOOT BRIO. lor II slener wishing to IIv~ uaelr 01' CANDY ROCK" -Sclenco-Frlctlon In PLUS - COLOR CARTOON li ves ovrr ognin are weleoPJl If...... MIl c;Iewera" f Amo ..copo- from 1 p.ol. to 4. 1 • I If... 4-THI DAILY tOWAN-lew. City. I •.-s.tunt.v. June n, ,'" I GOAL TO GO '•• -;-••-;-; . Iy Alan Maver .Move to Within H~lf-Game of Top- 11 , /I Age, Paul Pender I A story Illd plctur. of Inother hom", which 'art to be toured It Defeat Sugar Ray th_ Am.rican ASIOC~tlon for the Orioles End ' Losi~g Streak is featur.d on pa,. , of today'. BOSTON (HTNS) - In a re- cl\mnpion, Johnny Savko scoring it match that was a vit'tual carbon \147 to 142 and Jim Carrig making BALTIMORE 1m - Ronnie Han· Tigers• 7, Senators1 4 copy of· the original, Paul Pender it a complete runaway with a tally sen drove in a pair of runs with Establis~ed in 1868 Friday niglt again defeated Sugar \ of 149 to 138, which recalled a a double and two singles Friday WASHlNGTON IA'I - Tl)e surg· Ray Robinson, .again by a split similar lopsided score by one as the Baltimore Orioles defeated lng DOOroit Tigers got a rOlir-1'UD docisionl 15-round bout lba.I. re- judge in the first fight. Kansas City 5-4 to break a four­ jump on Washlngton ln the first talned tbe world middleweight 'I Savko's card had to be the one game losing streak and climb to inning and went 6n to d~eat title, the Massachusetts, New York which most closely reflected the within a half-game of league-- the Senators. 7·4, behind Jim Bun· and European segment of it, for fi~t, in the view of most of the leading Cleveland. I ning ,aoo Hank Aguirre Friday the 29-year-old oorlTlEl' fireman 9,000 spect.atocs who paid an esti­ The young boosted his night. from nearby Brookline. mated $80,000 to see the nationally· American League leading RBI NATIONAL LIIAOlJE AMERICAN LEAGUE It was the Citith straight victory Once more the Mcree in the televised bout, sUppollted this mme W. L. Pel. O.B. W_ L. Pot. G.B. total to 40 and helped reliever Hal Pl ltsburgh .. . .. 31 18 .633 Cleveland ...... 28 18 .609- for Ule foltrth,plaee Tigers, and Boston Garden ring, this time Jim· by most of the pressbox corps, 30 BalUmore ...... 30 21 .588 I> Japa Brown to his sixth victory against x-San FI'8nelsco 20 .GOO I I> the eighth in ILhcir last 10 games. my 'McCarron, voted for Robinson, too. x-Milwaukee .. . 23 18 .561 4 New York ...... 26 21 ,553 2' • two losses. • Clnclnnall ...... 26 25 ,510 6 DetrOit ... , ...... 25 21 .543 3 Detroit ...... 401 200 oro- 7 10 0 146 to H4, on the 10-point scoring The Herald TrJbWle News Servo .469 6 Chlcallo ...... 27 23 .540 3 W.ashlnlCLon ...... 000 030 Ol ~ • 10 I Broolls Robfn son also got three St. Lo uiS ...... 23 26 BunnI"". A"ulrre 181 nnd Wllson; system as Joe Zapust,as had done ice scorecard came up willi a 145 Los A naclcs .... 22 28 .440 91 ~:I Wa hlngton ...... 20 27 .426 8' ~ SLobb., Lee Il) . Krallck 141 , Kaal (61, hits and drove in the winning run Chicago ...... 19 25 .432 9 1 a Kansas Clly ., .. 20 29 .408 9' ~ last Jan. 22. to 141 tally fur Pender, or, in 18 3Z BOlton ...... 15 31 ,326 13 Clevend"r 181 and Nar.llon. BaLley In the eighth inning off loser Mar­ PhUadeiphia .. .3G0 13 '1. 191. W - BLmnin, (3-3). L - Siobbi But the judges held the line - rounds scoring, 9 to 5 with one ty Kutyna (1-2), who relieved x-piaylng nl,ht game. FRIDAY' S RESULTS 13-21. on merit - for the delfending even. FRIDAY'S RESU LTS Delrolt 7. Wo.htniLon • Home runl - Detroit, Bllko (5). starter Dick Hall at the beginning' Chlcallo 6. Phllndelphln 1 I ChleaHo 13, Booton 3 W8lhl"lIlon , AlIlson (7). PendCt' \\TOte an historic chaIter, of the inning. St. Loul. g, Plltsburgh 6 N ew York 4, Cleveland 3 perhaps the final chapter, in the Baltimore rapped out 13 hits, Clnclnnatl 4, Los Angele. 3 Baltimore 5, Xansa. Clly 4 Milwaukee al San Fronclsco (nlllhl) Highla 2O-year, gaudy, glamorous and including a pair of doubles by TODAY' S /'ITCIIEIIS Cardinals 9, Pirates 6 TO DAr ' PITCIIEIIS Cleveland (Grant. 4-1J at New Yql'k Rep. Gross brillLatt careec of the controversial Gene Woodllng and a triple by Ph iladelphia (Conley 3-3) at Chl ea80 (Ford 2-41 . . ST. LOUIS III - The St. Louis ~Ray. Jackie Brandt in addition to Han­ IEllsworth 3-2). Kansas Clly (Herberl 2-51 at Balti­ Plttsburgh (Law 8-2) al SI. Louis more IE,troda 6-11 _. nlllht. Cardinals exploded wiLh fiv e runs The Brookline man who had sen's doubl e. ISadec kl 6-21 . Chlcarll (Wynn 2-5 .nd Shaw 5-51 in the fifth inning Fri~ay night brokeon his hands so ofren and' had Kansa. City ...... 201 000 Ol~ 4 9 1 Cincinnati (Newcombe 8-3) at Los al Boston fDeLock 11-1 and Ca .. le to beat th e first-place Pittsburgh Pooped Girls 'Doesn/t Dig ' Baltimore ...... 201 000 IIx- 5 13 2 Angeles IPod res 4-51 - night. 2-51 - 2 games. day-nlllht. fOUred so many times became the HaU, Kutyna (8) and P. Daley ; Milwaukee IPlzzaro 3-21 at San Fran­ Dctrolt (Mossi 3-31 at WashlngLon Pirates 9-6 as Larry Jackson Barber, Brown (8) and Triandos. W - cisco (AntoneUl 3-3 or O'Dell 2-5). IFllher 0-21. first, with the immeasurable aid Brown 16-21. L - Kutyna 11 - 2). staggered to his seventh straight of Father Time, to beat Robinson down-trodden Red Sox. ~------Reds 4, Dodgers 3 victory. March, Blow, twice. Yanks 4, Indians 3 The BosLon loss, its seventh The Cardinals' Ken Boyer pound­ Paul Richards LOS ANGELES iA'I - Cincinnati ed hi s 15th homer to tie Chicago's The old Robinson magi<: failed NEW YORK !A'I - Mickey sbraight, came after the Red Sox got only three hits but one was a Ernie Banks for the major league , WASHINGTON !Ail - Baseball is him. For the first time in 154 M~ntle's eighth· inning , announced that Billy Jurges had r-;.w aware of what Congress has bouts he could not rally to whip a his fOW1th in three games, cracked ben fired as manager. Jurges gra nd slam home run by Dutch lead, Don Hoak and Smoky Bur· Dance, Sing kDOWD lot some time - Rep. H. conquerOll' in a return match. He a tie and stopped Cleveland's wln' was relieved of his command two Dotterer and it was enough to gess each hit their fourth for the ". Gross (R-lowa) does noc hide had always beaten his man the ning streak at five Friday night as days ago when he WIaS ordered by bring the Redlegs a 4-3 victory Pirates. Busy Weekend Spent bis objections. second trime around; three times.in the defeated doctor s to take a rest. hver Los Angeles, despite two PIUsburllh...... 001 013 001- 6 10 3 homers by Dodger Norm St. Louis ...... 100 25l oox- t 14 0 Practicing in Rain, , Gross has denounced, in a letter Ithe past, in winning the middle-­ the f!rst-plaee Indians 4-3, Chlcallo ...... 001 610 131- 13 18 0 Hlddlx. Daniel. (S). Umbrkht (5). BosLon ...... 200 001 oo~ 3 7 0 Sherry. Grccn 171 and Burlle.s: Jackson, to Presideft Joe Cronin of the Am· weight title 'five times, he had I . It was the fourth consecutive K emmerer and Lollar;l Brewer, Slur.. DuJlba 171. McDanle) f9I and H. R. Gabbing about Tour crican League, .the dapor.t.ment of , regained .the title from the man ______~ __.!.._'______~..:...... ___ success {or the third-place Yan­ dlvant 141 , Bowlfleld (6), Borland (8) The victory was the fifth Smllll. W - Jackson (8-5), L - ' Had­ and 5adoW1l kJ . W - Kemm erer (3-31. dix (3-3). By JOHN ADAMSON Baltimore manager }'Qul Richards. woo had tJaken it {rom him, first I I ' kees and their sixth in seven L - Brewer (4-6). straight by CincinnaLi over the Hqme TWl8 - Pitt.b ur~ h , Hoek (3), games, pushing them within 2 ~ Home run - Boston. WUUams (4). Dodgers. who ha ven't beaten the Bur,ess (4). 51. Louis. Boyer (151 . Staff Writer ~::~co=~ ~clOSed hls ~~~a T~~~fi= ~~n! Red Sox Ma~e It 'Official- games of the Tribe. Redlegs since last September. At about 3 o'clock Monday after­ , RIOhanl<;, Gross obJected, waged B3Sllio. . u - ~. Right-hander Art Ditmar (4-3 ) Cubs 6, Phillies 1 Cincinnati ...... 040 000 000- 4 3 0 noon, between the blowing of bag­ 6agrant 1 [. was the wloner. He blanked the Lo. Angeles ...... 000 900 10~ 3 8 0 pipes and the bealing of drums, "a most and calculated But Pender, a 5 to underdog . I~" ';1 '. • cm~AGO iA'I - Towering Mark Purkey. Henry 181 Brosnan "lan" to upset Pedro lo January, a 9 to 5 underdog Fri- I 'I Ind1ans on ,two hits over the last Freeman, once a Louisiana State (8) and Dolterer; Koulax, Palmqulsl could be heard sounds of "My feet B·II G ts th A ;' four innings after blawing a 3-1 (21, McDevlt1 (6), Roebuck (8) and N. Meet yoo, friend. llamas of the Washington Senators Iday night, had the ~aftiness, the I y.J urges e e x baskeLlt.ill player, won his first Sherry. W - Purkey (5-2). L - Kou­ hurt," and "When do we get done In a· game with tihe Orioles here, skills and llie tools to beat an " I lead. major league victory Frl~ay, scat­ lax (1-6) . with rehearsal? I'm tired an' I shot Home run. - Cincinnati, Dotterer last Sunday. old man whQ was 39 or 40 and BOSTON 1m _ Billy Jurgl!S Fri- ~rom Mike Higgins in mid-season ManUe's tagged Dick Stig. tering four Philadelphia singles as 121. Los Anaele •. N, Sherry 2, (5) , at the Annex. wanna go home." These came , Umpire Bill M($inley banished fought an old man's fight. Sugar day was fired as manager of the last year. man with his third straight de· the Chicag() Cubs / clipped the from the 73 Scottish Highlanders feat, aIthougb ,he ,retired 10 of the Ramos in tthe fourth inning afn was made of a trip to ,tort, the 73 ca.". blck inning after mrung of a 'ball game Oth,er top scorers were Dennis permanent s uccesso~ to' J'urg~. "It . .' . has been decided by Maintenance -free Aluminum Home as Riohards, a shambles -will Corwin of Cedar Flails (50 points), Jurges, - a one-.tune National Mr. Yawkey and Mr. Harris that that night for onother two end 0 !lid half hours of song practlc. under have been made of this fine sport." IHal Byram of Marengo (44), Bob League great at shortStop, took Jurges might desire to take- as the directIon of Judy Croft, A4, The 60-year-old congressman, Conway of Waterloo (3~ ), Jim over the Red Sox generalship much rest as he thinks necessary Norwalk. who repeatedly objeots to legisJa. Dues of Lemon «kove, Calif., (33 ), and pecMPS later become affili. , After a swift nine and a half lion lj)J'ocedures in the ' House ob: and Rill Kaufman df Belmond (32), 'B II ~ed with some other team in base· Saturday and Sunday, Saturday and Sunday, hours of sleep and "gabbing" jooted that McKinley had ha~ded Corwin and Dum accOlmted for I a y Ache ball whioh be could not do H he I aoout their upcoming jaunt, re­ over Ramos' cap {or examination. two of the four new school rec. were still under cO'\ltI1act to .the I Ju'ne, 18 and 19 hearsal opened at 8 a.m. yesterday "The most humiliating act O'f I~' Covwin can a 4:17.2. mile in e Red Sox. • , June 11 and 12 I morning. "Finallyl A day without all," Gross sa.id, especially' since Ilns last race Of the sprlOg, and Wit hdraw n "Therefore, he is being given ' 1:00 P.M. to 6:00 P.M. 1:00 P.M. to 6:00 P.M. rain," the Highlanders gasped ~s MoKirlley did not convict Ramos I Duea set an mOOor pole vault his 'UIlCOOdilional release and his they went outside to practice on the or d()ctoring tile ball wiLh saliva, ,mark of 13-4 ~ . salat-y will be paid him in full for Field House tennis courts. McKinley, Gross said, also de--l Bill Hood of Davenport got the t 'B e Imont the 1960 season." 2633 WAYNE AVE. A pleasant break came in the serves a repr.imand for not s~· OOher ' indiv,idUal recocd, a 5O-3 ~ A morning's practice when the Di­ j ng Richards back to the bench heave of the shot indoors. / IN THE rector of the Iowa Memorial 8lId Ur offermg Ramos' cap to The Panther sprint medley team NEW YORK (.4'1 - Favored Bally Jack Rule Rated Union Earl E. Hatper, came to the Richards. \ nan '8 3:32.9 for another school Ache was withdrawn Friday from Highlander Barracks to wish the "That," dedar.ed the congress· , mark. Ted Broberg .,: N,A.T.A. i. Hopps against Miss Mortimer. mand 0.£ the tournament with his tic Ash. "CIRCULATING" FLOOR PLAN I he is Jlot chosen by a RepubllclIJII • Hard against Miss Haydon, ¥iss sensational round Friday_ He convention as the party', candi­ , aDd Dorothy Head K nod e carded seven birdies but had to , I,," 1,1,1 ,' , ! I' ',"',1' I, I, ' "',1' 1," 1 I, ' .,1 " ' If ' I,! ,I , I,I' ! If 1, 'f "" , 1.. 1t ',I date for ,the U. S. Senate he wUI Iform his own party and seek elec­ of the Canal Zone aaainst Miss Tru- be salisiCied with bogies on two I min and Shirley Bloomer Brasher. par l ive holes. VI .KI NG Aluminum home fe~tu~re;' Dupont/s baked-on' Lucite tion. Seeman was one of six candi­ ~ =-===~======~ What do YOUR Savings Earn? finish-greatestpaintdiscovery in 100 years: WIDE RANGE dates for the nomination in thE I For Mon.y dept1lred with Continental for only primary election June 6. None 0 DOWN twelve month. earn. a guarantHd " OF COLORS the oandidates received the re '299 DELICIOUS Food quirlXl 35 percent of the vote fo_ - hOmir;aj)ion, , at IUILT IY: SHOWN IYI '49 A MONTH I % Seeman, an uMUcccsSful candL IUYI A NIW 5 Interest d.... t()· foo- various offices in pre I. I REASONABLE Prices Int.r.st Startl 'Immediately - Payable 'Seml.Annually vlous elections, said he wm cal E,t.t the RENAULT I his par,ty Republi~ns . He sough Birchwood Builders The Beeler Agency the !k.'IWJle seat under that Iabe Daup~in8 CONTtNENTAL MORTGAGE in the 191)2 elecY.lon. INY.ITM.NT CoMPANY . INC. NATIONAL REALTORS Seeman ,l'8vealed earlier Monda~ MAID·RITE i I AUEN IMPORTS U'IQl he bad !llpent .. campaipl1lll 1124 lit A••• N.I. Acroa. from leha""" H.II Ph.N47' 2221 Hollywood Ilvd. Dial 8·5457 HOM E 5 218 E. WOlhln,ton Dial '·11ot for the Republleao nomin8tlon_ H­ CeHr It.pla I drew ICtiI than I) percent of thoe --~-.-~~~~-. primary vote, ' (