Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1960-08-19
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·urbed 1960's University Edition Rea-dy Saturday Ich 38th Annual Special Issue ~. W.lther F_Ht ~ys there will be a trlJll. Show.r, ond thundtrsterms ~. Flags will be run up In northe.at end .xtNmt I empty poles. Traffic wiD .alt todoy. Becoming pertfy The streets will be I Of Daily Iowan; 112 Pages cloudy Wilt oneilOUthcentrol And on the afternoon 0/ todlY, ond cl •• rlng milt p.rts tonl,ht. HI,h, todoy with all the pomp and By MARCtA BOLTON e-lIo.... 01 ~ \ that the Olympics caD a ··won 701 •••t .neI neor ... w.... StaH Wrlt.r Serving The State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City the games of the XVUl ! The Daily Iowan's University Edition, which is thought to be will open before 100 •• AIIodated Preaa Leued Wire ADd WIrepbcKo - Herald Tribune News Service Features Friday, August 19. 1960, Iowa City, Iowa bowl shaped Olympic the largest edition of a college newspaper in the world, will be published Saturday. The 112·page, 14 section issue, aimed at acquainting prospec· * * tive new students with all aspects of SUI, covers every phase of Uni· Way' versity life. Edited by Jim Kadera. Iowa City, and Marcia Boulton, Des Moines, the paper took five months of work by The Daily Iowan reo Events porting and photography staffs to bring to publication. Some 6,000 copies of the edition will be mailed to regula~ sub· Soviets Sa·y Powers ' Knew U.S. duel of the 1952 scribers, prospective students, Iowa high schools and all dally and Helsinki is well possible. weekly newspapers in the state. The paper will be sent to most of record set by the Ja· on that occasion, 3:03.9, the 50 states and to 14 foreign countries. of just under 46 sec· Copies of the University Edition moy ~ ordered by ,.ndtn. man, will be hard to 51 cents to Th. D.ily low.n Businell OHlc., Communlc.tlon, C.n a three·way battle untO ltr, Iowa City, or they moy be purchosed on new ..tonels In lowo when Gert Potgieter _II an automobile accident City Soturd.y hlr 2t centl 0 copy. Full Meaning of -· U2 Flight to withdraw from the The history of the University Edition of The Daily Iowan has Germany and Great been traced back through dusty files to Sep. 20, 1923, making the be . the best Euro- 1960 issue the 38th annual edition. New students had not been n glected by The Daily Iowan which became connected with the University in 1916, but the 1923 paper Senate OKs Trial Nears End; * was the first to go beyond a Cew scattered articles directed at the Congolese Riflemen Attack Couples uninitiated. Problems Thot hlr.runn.r of the pres.nt 112·p... edition wa. 0 16-pe •• Wage Bill Leniency Expected "Unlv.r.lty Section" odd.ct to the retul.r n.w. p..... In It w.r. ItOri.. telling n.w stud.ntl obout the COmpUI end whot to 'lIpect Canadian Unit at Airport from collet. life In much the .... vein o. the mocIern edition. In 62-34 Vote MOSCOW (' P) - The Soviet prosecution hammered (.4'1 nadians few more thon a dozen. his rifle butt in delivering thnt per istently Thurs~lay on the theme that Francis Gary Powers The £irst eight pages oC the special paper were called the "SPorts LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo - Congolese army riflemen kicked. Thirty Congolese blocked the blow. knew in advance the full meaning of his U-2 flight over Soviet and Publications Section" and told the lineup of the 1928 Cootball plan"1 takeoff. Ghana U.N . sodliers rushed to Victory for Kennedy; clubbed and robbed a Canadian territory. But elsewhere, hints were dropped that the court team as well as informing the new students that the football seat· U.N. unit at Leopoldville Airport The Canadians. two of whom help the Canadians. Raises Minimum Pay ing system had been changed. No longer would Cans put application Thursday. Protesting sharply, the wore wings and chcvrons Similar Under cover of Lumumba's would deal leniently with the American flier. The trial may end I envelopes in a receptable to have their seats drawn by chance from a U.N. Command cracked down and to the insignia of Belgian para· martial·law declaration, Congo· From $1 to $1.25 today. Time after time in the second day of the trial, technical barrel. Tickets were to be given out on a "[irst come· first served" reclaimed full control over the air· troopers, were robbed of their wal· lese troops movcd in uninvited to WASHINGTON (.4'1 - The Senate witnesses repeated that the May 1 flight was planned and basis. port. lets and some arms. share guard duty at the airport with Ghana troops of Maj. Gen. Thur day night passed Sen. John "premeditated." and attempted to Stories about the new Daily Iowan staff and the sta(f of "Frivol," The savage incident, one of a Their Canadian·French protests I series oC clashes of Premier Pa· Carl von Horn's U.N. forces. F. Kennedy's bill raising the mini· link Powers directly with the V.S. carried out a pollcy which bore a the campus humor magazine, were also features of that section. were shrugged off with a repeated mum wage from $1 to $1.25 an are: Harold V. and trice Lumumba's Negro soldiers charge that they were "Flemish The U.N. Command , concerned military. risk of war. Connolly of Santa The other section was called "Editorial and (:ity" and headlined with U.N. personnel, came as hour and giving about four million Powers disagreed with some of Th. .lIt.nt of po_rs' repent. Belgians." over a clash Wednesday of Congo· mor workers protection of the , and Abraham and a story about workmen finding marble tablets with inscriptions tell· Lumumba himself delivered Capt. Andre Taschereau of Mpn· lese with a Norwegian detachment, the testimony. But once more he ance ...ms to be .n l",.,orlant GrossCeld of Urbana, ing of the layi~g of the cornerstone for Old Capitol, July 4. 1840. pointed snubs to U.S. Ambassador wage·hour act. told the military section of the factor. Hi. Sovl.t dofonN coun· treal, the detachment's command· rushed three additional companies TM roll can 'lot. was 62.34. The stones had been hidden behind cornices built over the doors of Clare H. Timberlake and U.N. er was knocked unconscious by a to thc airport after the aUack on Soviet Supre m e ..I, Mllclwlll I. Grlnlov, telel p_. have this problem at Undersecretary Ralph J . Bunche. The vote marked a victory Cor .rs' family .fter the doY'1 pro. tbe building: rine butt smashed into his right the Canadians. These were two the Democratic presidential nomi· Court he repen ted n1vnnni.·." said Arthur J. Two inside pages were d'evoted to telling the new students about The Coneolese apparently mis· temple. companies of Sudancse and a his flight. The pi· ceoclint thot the fll.,'1 beh.vlor executive direc· took the Canadians, assigned to Th. Congol ..e forced some of Ghana company. nee. on the stlnel lnel hi. rep.. tocf ex· Iowa City:S chtlrches of 10 denominations. He was chief sponsor of the leg· lot. who has plead U.S. Olympic Committee. signal duty in the interior. for the Can.dions to lie on the GI\Il. Victor Lund\lla, the ex· ed guilty to spy.""· ...... ~ pr.sslon of r.g,.t .nd repent. are solving it just the $tudents were welcomed to Iowa City by the president of the Belgians. Some were aboard a ground Ind mid. on. .trlp to islation and shephered it through anc. rll," hope th.t the court sergeant commanding the iIl·disc!· the Senate. successfully fighting I ng, said he reo Merchant's Bureau and the president of the Chamber of Commerce. plane and others in jeeps when his shorts. plined Congolese forces, agrecd to gretted "ye r y . would be lenient with him. Mayor Emma J. Harval offered up the "keys to the city." the Congolese struck. The Con· Signalman Jose Mathieu of Que· off nearly all limiting amendments pull most of his men from the air· of a major nature. very much" that Powers' 'spirits seemed to have II special section for n.w students was not the only Innov.tlon golese totaled about 300; the Ca· bec was kicked twice in the face. port, leaving behind a token con· he had made lhe fallen as he finished his second Cpl. Robert Conroy of Kings. However, to win the closest bal· flight. and expres· that year. Th. D.ily lowln hod jUlt be.n .Iected to full member· tingent of 30. The bluc U.N. fiag tle of all during Thursday's ses· day of testimony, but he was chal· ton, Onl., suffered a blow on the was hoisted again on the control ed belief he had lenging some of the prosecution ship in the Allocloted Pr... Wire S.rvlce Ind bet.n usint liP ~ion. he had to agree to cut down back. He said a Congoiese broke tower. :lone his own coun· "~tu,.s in oddltlon to local n.ws produc.d by I .toH of 100 newi' the new coverage In the bill by POWERS witnesses. He had none of his own high, steel.spiked The News try a "very ill service." to testify to his character or to them. Both couples men. Georg. H. G.llup, compul polllt.r, wos edltori.1 lup.rvisor about 900.000 workers.