OJ Serving The State University ollown and the People of 'OlVa established In 1863 Five Cents a Copy Iowa city, Iowa. Thursday. July 3, 1958 00 eat o ounts o Seven Still Missing benies Adams' SLOW Revising Red 'School System ills 'Business Sputnik After Storm Near Audubon A DUHON (AP ) - Four more bodie were recovered in tl1is .ACTORS southwestern Iowa :lrea late Wednesday, bringing t11e number of Expenses' Hysteria known dead 10 l3 persons. Seven per ons were still missing. The dead and missing were victjms of a thunderstorm of historic Tax Testimony Fails ICROSSING Nonsense violen e \ hich struck this area early Wednesday, ca\lsing vast To Shake Eisenhower property damage as well as heavy loss of life. The ~urrent educational system Iy EDMOND LEBRETON ~Iore than 13 inches of rain fell in Audubon in a few hours. in Rus ia did not produce Sputnik. . A~lcluboll County officials reported that the bodies of three WASHINGTON IA'I - Bernard Any argument for adopting ome Bagley residents were picked out of the swirling flood waters, (joldfine said Wednesday night it of their educational practice in was not he but his accountants lhe United States because of Sput­ The victims were Mr. and Mrs. who treated his favors for Sherman ~ nik is nonsense. Clyde Carrick nnd a Bagley girl, Adams as business expenses. He George S. Counts, professor I'Wi Iderness' Camille Buckner, about 21. said the Government is free to ad· Unld,ntifi.d emertus at Teachers College, Col­ At Red Ook downstream on lhe just his tax returns. umbia University, expressed these Word that Goldfine had charged Tickets On East Nlshnabotna. the body of an views in two leclures on Soviet unidentified man about 50 or 00 off his gifts and hotel hospitality was taken from the water. Ef· to Adams as business expenses Education Wedne day at SUr. Counts ,aid the present RUII' forts were being made to identify did not shake President Eisenhow· Sale Today him . er's avowed determination to stick ian 10'Yllar middl. school 'y'­ by Adams, his chief aide. t.m which begins t.aching phy •. Tickets arc now on sale in East ------­ IOWA CITY WEATHER Several members of the House ics In .ixth gr.d. was initiated Lobby, Iowa Memorial Union. for il1l 1936. H. rel.ct.d the id •• Although sc.ttered thunder­ Commerce lubcommittN investl· the (irst play of the summer ses­ showers are .g.in pr.dicted for ,.tlnt the r.l.tlons betw ••n that graduates of this .yst.m launched Sputnik since they sion , Eugene O'Neill 's "Ah, Wil· the 1_. City are. today and Goldfln. .nd Adam. have con· derness!'" Frld.y, G.orge L. Roehr, r85l­ teneled th.t Goldfln.'. tax treat· could not be ov.r 30 years of ag •• He th en branded as nonsense SUI lummer students mu.t cMftt engln ..r .t the Cor.lvill. mant of the f.vors tv, Ad.ml Indi­ know their student numbers R... rvolr says there Is no ch.ne. cated h. meant to g.t .om.thing the much·publicized arguments for I when pres.nting their I.D. card of the low. River or the r.s.r· tantlbl. In r.turn. adopting elements of the Ru ian for reserved ...t tickets. I ndivid­ voir flooding. T.mper.tures to­ But Goldfine denied this in a educat,ional system purred by the ual IIdmlssiG\'I i. $1.25. day will r.nge from the mid 70'1 statement, as he had done under Sputnik launching. The (icket office will be closed te the mid 10' •• oath before the subcommittee Counts, who ha toured Russia Friday and Saturday of this week. ------earlier in the day. Adams had de· on three occasions. instead credited Added to the list of missing nied previously he exerted any the launching to a "long history of Regular ticket·office hours are persons were Roy Keeran of infillence In behalf of the wealthy intell ectualism." He then cloinled Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to Guthrie Center and Max Cornish Boston industrialist. America is anti-intellectual. 4:30 p.m., and Saturday (rom 9 of Bagley, the sheriff's o(£ice here In a statement handed to reo With a not. of .uppr.... d hu­ a.m. to noon. said. porters Wednesday night, Goldfine mor which enter.d •• veral of his In "Ah, Wilderness!" O'Neill de- M.ny persons narrowly ••- said: statements, Counts offered the sc.ped with th.lr IIv" wh.n Professor George S. Counts parted from his usual preoccupa· they _re caught lIy • w.II of . hr think most businessmen turn " radical idea that the prestige RI/ s~i{l has "/ollg history of intel/eell/a/hlll" over the paper work of account· of intell.ctu.1 brillianc. in the tlon with serious drama and wrote w.t.r from fI.sh floods on the ing and income tax returns to Unit.d States .hould b. r.lsed ------what he called "a dream walking" Eeat Ni,hn.lIotna .nd its trill· qualified accountants. That's what to at I.ast .qual to that of a ian education system so challeng. but a rough estimate would be 10 and "a comedy of recollection." utarl ••. I do." football capt. in , ing was stated in Pravda two years to 12 per cent by the Ru sians The play concerns the MUler fam- The flash floods washed away Goldfine said luch bill. ar. Explaining the composition of ago, he said: The Communist Par· and 3 to 31~ per Cl'nt by the United i1y household, their friends , rela- homes and business structures. ty is the sole master of thl' minds halldl~ .. a mattw of rCHItin. ~ Russian middk school, lit> ist St t(!s. li ves, neighbors and servants. Ragin, wat rs ripped out highway .nd that he has nothing to do with cd the percentage each field of of So vie t people. He lightly but effectively added bridges and flattened crops. Hun- Rlch.rd MIII.r, who at 17, re.ch dreds of families evacuated their them, Including those for Adams study holds in the total educational This system is the simplest, he would like to see twice as program : Russian language and polltic.1 th.ory .nd .pices It homes. .nd Mrt. Ad.ms. The subcomA least demanding on the in telligence much spe nt Cor education as ad· with poetry from Swlnisurnt, pro- mittel h.s s.ld Goldfin. pick.d literature 30 per cent: mathemat­ and virtue of the people, he em­ vertising ill this country and at vid •• th. atmo.ph.re fOt O'Neill's Hardest were Audubon, coun­ up • • bout $2,000 worth of hot.1 One for the Show ics (non·scientifiC> 20 per cent ; g.ntl, tr ••tm.nt of YOUth'. pa.s. ty seat town of 3,000, and the vilA lIiII. for Ad.m. onr a cCHIne physics and chemistry 14 per cent; phasized. least a much as for liquor. ag' into maturity. lage of Hamlin and town of Exira. eI four y.ars. . SLOW FOR THE SHOWl The town of Abingdon, Va., proud of being history and geography 14 per cent. Explaininll this, Counts said "The Communist C.ntral Com· both a few mUes south of Audubon. "There was no secret about it." the site of the State Barter Theatre, apparently f•• ls the actors d.· Counts used these figures to clar· nllarly 100 per cent of the Run· miHe. can simply issue a de· O'Neill, in a statement subse· r.ost of the deaths were at Ham. ian peopl. vote-but a dog could quent to the original production lin and Exira. Goldfine continued. "Gov. Adams' serve the same protection glvn caHI. that roam the nearby ar.a. of ify the mistaken idea that physics ere. for r,ol1lanlling education; of the play, said, "To me, the pame was right on top of the bills southw ••t Virginia. Theatrical prop for the brand new sign il Walda and related subjects were more b. trained to drop the ballot thank heaven. It's not that simA in a box as the Russian people America which was land isJ the Iowa National Guard units were which are still in our rues. The Chandler of Clifton For~, Va., a ..cond·year play.r with the Bart.r highly emphasized in the Russian pl. h.r.," Counts .aid. real America found its unique ex- pressed into emergency duly in Bureau of Internal Revenue men Eystem. do, On the other hand our .du. group. Miss Chandler is 19, stands 5-3, and the vital statistics IIr. cational system must train the lIe advocated we should study pression in such middle·class fami. Audubon and at Atlantic, down· can see them when they audit our 34·21-24. The road, jf you're .till with us, is 40 foot wide. -Ap Wire­ The Runi.n .ducational 'Y" lies as the Millers, among whom stream from Exira on the East income tax returns. people to make informed judg- Communism ill U.S. schools, just photo. t.m is now llein, revised, h. ments on great questions, he as we shoulc;l study cancer. so many of my generalton pa sed Nishnabotna River. "If the bureau feels we made said_ Counts believ .. this revl5' from adolescence into manhood. " Dr.m.tlc R.scun a mistake, then they will disallow ion will borrow some id ... from pointed out. Summarizing the American ed- There were dozens of dramatic Counts said it is hard to compare ucational systcm, Counts said, "It The play was written 111 1932 and rescues. Mrs, Russell Smith of those bills and we will adjust our our compr.henslve high school was produced in its original form returns." Offices to Close Cuban Rebels .etup. the per cent of national income is a glorious achievement, but by the Theater Guild in New York E:tira, swept (rom her home by President Eisenhower at his The factor which makes the Russ- both countries spend fol' education, with many deficiencies." In 1933. the river torrent at 2:30 a.m., was news conference Wednesday Friday for Holiday Free Five ------rescued four hours later by fire· aroused new speculation that he men at Griswold, 30 miles down· SUI offices, the library and the HAVANA IA'I - Five of the 49 SUI Research might reconsider his decision to 9 U.S. Soldiers in Red Germany- stream. She was clinging to a log. keep Adams on as his top assist­ Iowa Memorial Union Cafeteria' North Americans kidnaped by Cub· Her husband is missing. Her son ant. will be closed Friday in observ· an rebels in the past week were Balloon Lands In was rescued from a tree near ance of the Fourth of July. The freed and flown by helicopter Exira. Later, however, he sent out word ld F th R . th U ' Wednesday to the U.S. naval base through press secretary James C. G Four Audubon young men were o ea er oom In e Dlon at C;uantanamo. Indian Reservation Held As Political Hostages driving home when their car stall­ Hagerty that his statement of two and the Quadrangle Cafeteria will With them was Park Wollam, ed in the rising waters on U.S. weeks ago "stood then and stands sovereign government. now." be open as usual. U.S. consul at Santiago who went A gondola. carrying cosmic ray EDITOR'S NOTE: East German jeered at the East German posted Highway 71. Jerry Lau,itsen made The library will re.open on Sat. by jeep into the jungle last Satur· oHicial. cell.d in AP's B.rlin They disclosed they were turned as the Communists' spokesman. it to a tree and later was rescued Th.t w., the statement in day and effected their release. instruments from SUI, came to correspondent W.dn.sday and in. over to Soviet Army officials when "You're kidnapers, " some of the by boat but his three companions which Mr. Elsenh_.,. ••Id he urday from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. Indications were that more would earth at approximately 7:30 p.m. vlt.d him to • n.ws conf.r.nce they surrendered to Easf German men yelled. were swept away by a 'wall of bell.v.s In Ad.m.' hon ••ty .nd and Sunday from 1:30 untii 2 a.m. be freed today. Wednesday on the Standing Rock .,.ranged for nin. U.S. soldi.rs police June 7. Their helicopter had Integrity, tho""h Ad.ml might The East German spokesman water. Bodies of two or them later The Union Cafeteria will be open On. fr ••d American englne.r Indian Reservation about 15 miles h.ld .ince Jun. 7. H. wa. driv.n strayed across the border between said the prisoners would be reo were recovered at Hamlin. The h.v. .cted imprudently in hi. East and West Germany, and (hey rel.tion. with Goldfln., .nd "I Sunday only for the noon meal. , :I~: ~~~ ~~~:~. t~e:~~:i~!: g~:: northeast of McLaughJin, S.D. 1t ~o,.. ~~:~nh:~!: :~~:~t~E~~ leased quickJy if the United States third was still missing. were forced to land. T~e Russians would sign an agreement to recog· * * * need him." All city, county and federal 0(' the Cuban Gov.rnm.nt is u.ing had been launched from Minne· . Communist reporters attend.d turned them back to East German nize the East German regime as a DEAD The income tax issue came out fices will be closed Friday with all American·mad. bombs to .t.mp apolis under the direction of Frank the conference. Th. AP man was officials June 8, and ha ve insisted legal government. Li.ted a. de.d Wedne.day In in the open after a special House but the county of(ices returning to out the rebellion. B. McDonald, physics research as- the only Am.rican r.port.r there. the problem oC releasing them in· The men are being held in a Investigating subcommittee heard aI d Canadian engineer Edward Can· volves only the United States and greystone villa here. They have the Auduben CCHlnty storm: their usu schedules on Satur ay. non, I'n the (reed group, sal'd Raul sociate at SUI. at 7:20 a.m. Wed· the Boston textile and real estate By SEYMOUR TOPPING East Germany. three bedrooms, a dining room, a Harry Wige,s, Mads Marcussen, magnate swear his friendship with The county offices will take an Castro, brother of rebel leader Fi- nesday. DRESDEN, Germany IA't _ Nine "They are holding us as politi- clubroom, and a garden court to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wilkins and Adams and the gift·giving and en· extended holiday and remain del Castro, promised no more for- In. telephon. Int.rvi.w with cal hostages," Maj . George E. play volleyball. They see Com. John Parsons, all of Exira. tei'lainment incident to it were not closed until Monday. eigners would be kidnaped. The D.ily low.n W.dn.sday U.S. soldiers imprisoncd by the Kemper of Escondido, Calif., cried munist-line films but Kemper said Donald Byriel, Darwin Kuntz· intended to get him special Govern· Friday the swimming pool will Henry Salmonson, 46 - year - old night, .n oHici.1 .t Winz.n German Communists for 25 days angrily. As senior officer present. there has been no intensive effort weiler. Mrs. Dallas Hansen and ment favors - and did not. • American engineer who has a wife R.... rch Inc., of Minn ••polis, complained Wednesday they art' Kemper acted as spokesman for to instill propaganda. Franklin Wiges, all of in and near Goldfine did not get to complete open at to a.m., in anticipation o( and three children living in Port· ---td the b.lloon r•• ched its being held as political hostages. the Americans. THE AMERICANS' spokesman Is Audubon. his prepared testimony and will a large crowd. Boat races, base· land, Ore. , told of the rebel propa- maximum helghth of 122,000 fe.t IN A TENSE news conference put "YOU'RE A SOVEREIGN state a 43·year-old artilleryman. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Carrick and • f h . . h h ball and fireworks are planned for gandizing in these words : "They .t 10:35 •• m. - 3 hours .nd IS re.urn 01' anot II{ session Wit t e ld I t bo b d ' A . on for them by the Communists, Ibut not on the first night that we Kemper, dressed in green fa· Camille Buckner, about 21, all of 8ubcomm1ttee______teday. -"- ___....:.... City ______Park during Ule holiday. cato wereus t 18being m used s ma against e In merlthem- .d.minutes aft.r it had been I.unch. they hooted at claims that the Ger- were in East Germany," Capt. tigues and combat boots, said be· Bagley. man Communist regime is :1 Frank Athanason, Greenville, S.C., fore a battery of Communist news· Unidentiled man about 50 or 60 by the Cuban Government. Wlnzen Inc. was contracted for reel cameras: whose body was recovered about Going Home By Bus?- "They showed us what they said were bomb fragments and also the launching by the sponsor of "They are holding us as political 50 miles downstream. hostages. We are being used as Listed as missing were: pointed out some huts that had the balloon's flglht, the Office of tools. We are not being told about Mrs. Mads Marcussen, Mrs. John been destroyed by fire." Naval Research, to provide the what is going on in ~he political Parsons and daughter, all of Schedules Altered By .Strike Oth.rwlse, h. said, the rebel. balioon, launching apparatus. track. negotiations over us. Exira, and Donald Eaton of Au· took th.m .wimming .... d on h.p­ SUI students going home for the leave Iowa City at 4:15 a.m. and . py tours of the wilderness. H. ing of the balloon and recovering "I can't imagine why we are dubon . JIOliday may have trouble makini 11 :40 p.m; via Homestead, 8 a.m ., r.ported food and b.ds were of the equipmeIJt. being held. We got into East Ger· Roy Keeran of Guthrie Center. ~us connections to some points be· 2:05 p.m. and 5:40 p.m. These good. The gondola was released at 6 : 15 many accidenlally." Max Cornish o( Bagley, cause of a walk-out against the routes are a little more round· The five released captives and .p.m. and landed near McLaughlin rendered voluntarily to East Ger· Russell Smith of Exira. American Bus Lines over a wage about than the regular scheduJes, Consul Wollman came out of the about an hour and 15 minutes later. KEMPER SAID his group sur· * * * dispute. but connections are still Cairly good, jungle on two helicopter flights, McLaughJin is about 15 miJes from toan police after their helicopter TRANSPORTATION 'The THE OVER-ALL local effect Is Bogart said. three at a time. The second flight the North Dakota border and 100 got lost in a thunderstorm and ran Iowa Highway Commission ,negligible, according to James Bo­ There are stili connections to was completed as darkness fell miles north of Pierre. out of gas. at Ames said the nood washed gart, ticket agent, due to re-routing Davenport, Muscatine and Ottum- and flights were called off for the The apparatus was in flight just ' He disclosed that the East Ger· but three bridges and about 1,000 of other buses. wa, but nothing east o( OJ'tumwa. night. short of 12 hours and landed ap- mans promptly turned the Ameri· feet of pavement on Iowa 65 be· ccans over to the Soviet Army. tween Hamlin and Guthrie Center. The major inconvenience to most Quincy bound students still have At nightfall 44 captives were still proximately 400 miles northwest connections, but by a round about to be returned. of its launching point. They spent the first night In a The commission said the damage travelers will be in layovers be­ Soviet camp but the next morning to U.S. 71 over most of the 20 miles tween connecUol1s, and in altered route taking 2~ hours longer. 0 .. the ••cond flight with Wol- Its t,..cklng plane. retu,.ned to There will be no effect on the I.m w.re: Mlnn"polis after the gondola they were returned to the East from Hamlin to U.S, 8 couldn't be departing times (rom Iowa City, Germans. assessed beeause of water over the he .ald, northern I;>us connections except Anthony Chamberlain. Coral Ga· h.d r ••ched tha ,round .nd It that persons making late eonnee· bles, Fla. was not known wh.ther the In- Kemper's statement was the highway. LATE WEDNESDAY there were lions with other transportation Howard A. Roach, Watertown, fi rst evidence of direct Soviet in· The high water alS() closed these no bus connections from Iowa City through Cedar Rapids, will have to N.Y. .trument, h.d been d.m... d. volvement in the helicopter case. highways, the commission said: to Burlln.ton. Fairrleld or Mount lejlve ,by 7:40 p.m."the time of the The first three released are two On the balloon's prevlou launch· SIX OF THE NINE U.S. sOldi.,. h.ld prllOn.,. lIy Communl.t THE SOVIET UH'!otI, rejecting Iowa 13 between , ~tlantic and 1 Piealllnt. ",' ' I' ", last bus lq Cedar Rapids. Americans and a Canadian : ing Friday, the gondola was slight· U.S. demands for mynedlate reo Avoca;. U,S. , JM.ween Iowa 90 I· STUDENTI GO'NO"fb St.1 Lo\l'~ A la\~r , b~'S ~as " cancelled by the William 'Koster, 63, of Akron, ly damaged by its fall to earth Ea.t G.rmany .ince Jun~ 7 w~re .lIow.d • n.Ws confer.nc. W~ne.- lease of the pr!soner~, lias ~onte/)jk) and .~eclfleld;f', ~Qwa 2G south of (. will be ' rOUted ~(hrOUgh)Ici~5tea~ strike, Bo t sil.id. j Ohio. when the parachute failed to open day. From I.ft, th.y ar•. Malor J.m•• R. Zell.,., Mt. Joy, P •. , Lt. cd the c~s« IS one IOlelf ul)i\flr GutWJe Center,. . or Daveriport, With u hl~av g' in ~L'L I OT~ ~ . BYSES, tQ ~dar Henl'Y Salmonson, 46, of Port- properly. Mike EIII., Br.m.n, Ga., p.rtially hidden; M.Stt. Carrol T. RuHln, ' East Gerrfian Ju~lsdiCti(W ~~ In otf)er areaal~ r the ~tate Iowa Itr" CoIbntflla, Mo. rr~oin' i~, m111 tes til' Rd~lds ate" r~nning ' as usual be, land, Ore. McDonald was assl$ted , on ,the !;Cow., .Tax ••; U. ' Thom~. J. W•• tbrook, Macen, Ga,; Chiaf W.rr.nt Unlled St'ates . has refused l~ grant ItII was clOIed at l, ~e west edge of I two hoUri, ',f' 'f' o· cau~ lhetow~ , Ci~y, Cedar Rapipli , Edward Cannon, 53, or CornwaU; two launchings by Louis Hinton. OHlce,. L.roy. J\ M.lon!, R.ymond, Kan.; .nd C'pt. p,.ank Athan.son, ~a~t Germany . diplom,aUc , r~8' Des M.olnes and IOWA .,o was block. to . ''S •• to St. LOuIi via DavllilpOrt. llue"i$ no aUec!ed. , On~. , ,. • • A2, Davenporll • III " Gr ••nvllle, S.C. ' -AP Wirephoto by radio Itam .erlln. rutlon. ed two milea south qC knoxvWe. t

Did Anything 'No, Simple Formula:' Hoose ,€uts"~areign Sen~ ~es N t·Tend To For Educating Aid Bill $872 Million Expenses DES MOINES U1'I • Incriminate? WASHINGTON (,fI - The House out a compromise with the Sen· tor Alan Vest (R·Sal handed President Eisenhower a ate. eel Wednesday he Sl WASHINGTON (,fI - Vito Gen· Teachers: Hancher stinging setback Wednesday by An amendment to add $75 million his unsuccessful can, ovese, linked to murder, the faCia cutting foreign aid funds $872 mil- for defense support lost first by publican governor. and trea on beCore the Senate Rac· There is no simple formula for duct a graduate seminar with skill lion and ignoring his warning that teller vote of 120-97 and again by In his report filed its action "will encourage Com· again by roll·call vote of 214-165. kets Committee. refused Wednes· educating teachers, even though and equanimity couM easily face retary of sta te' s 0 ffiI day to tell the committee more munist imperialists." Another, to boost the President's some people approach the question defeat when confronting that wrig· campaign conlribu ~ than his name. gling, squirming - but undoubt· Aftcr beating all attempts to reo emergency fund by $55 million, as ir some such formula "might $2.391, of which he 1 The squat and swarthy New edly lovable - mass oC perpetual store funds chopped out by its failed by a teller vote of 114·55. the proceeds of a 1 York mobster, asked to state his enable us to roll the American motion to be found in the second Appropriations Committee, the No rolJ-call was taken. nero The rest came business or occupation, replied with and the Russian systems into one grade," he said. House passed and se nt to the Sen- On the key 214·165 roll·1call, 140 ferent individuals 8! an Italian accent: "I respectfully - from which would emerge all Good teaching mvolves more than ate by a roll·call vote of 253-126 Democrats and 74 Republicans State officials sai~ decline to answer on the grounds the virtues of both and the short· knowledge of the subject itself and a bill putting up $3,078,092,500 in I voted against adding the f75 mil. turn reporled by I it might tend to incriminate me." new cash to finance the aid pro· lion Pres. Eisenhower wanted, comings of neither," President of the methodology involved in im· ellce" of the amo, Among more than 200 questions parting that knowledge and guiding gram during the Ciscal year that while 60 Democrats and 105 Re. law, a candid.fe il he subsequently refused to ans· Virgil M. Hancher of SUI said the development of young minds, started Tuesday. publicans voted for Ule increase. ' q! .,..nd on a camp. wer was on. on whether he had Wednesday morning at Cleveland, the SUI president suggested. For President Eisenhower had asked On Cinal passage, the bill was .(,1 treasonable deali'TIgs in Italy duro Iowa law limits I Ohio. instance, the teacher must under· for $3,950,092,500. The House cut supported by 146 Democrats and /.'(, campaign expenditUi ing World War II. that by $872 million and voted to 107 Republicans, and opposed by Addressing several hundred stand the characteristics of today's He balked at saying whether he adult society - such as the fact appropriate $5971h million Jess than 57 Democrats and 69 Republicans. A Bit 01 Old Am ricana in Iowa City gave financial aid to Benito Mus· members of the National Education that change, rather than stability, Congress authorized last week in solini or whether the Italian dic· Association's representative as· is the nautre of life today, with the a separate enabling law. The to­ PLUM GROVE, historl~.1 site in southe",t 10w"1pty, is open every day through the summer for visitors. tolor decorated him for services sembly, President Hanchcr observ· speed of that change accelerating tal approved is $357,717,500 less Music Ca There are many old Items in tho former home of Robert Lu~"" first governor of the territory of Iowa. to Ule Fascist party. ed that teacher education is far continually. than the program was given last more complicated and difficult Soviet Memo The home was built In 1884. - Dally Iowan Photo. "Were you guilty oC treason?" Teachers must also be selective year. .. Robert F. Kennedy, committee than is generally understood, and with respect to what to teach and Only a few hours before the T To End T counsel asked him. warned that the subject has been how to teach it, since so much is ,House aeled, Pres. Eisenhower "dangerously oversimplified." When Genovese refused to an· now known that only a small pro· made a third plea that Congress On Stopping Visitors to Plum Grove Site swer, pleading a reply might in· Teacher Must Prepare portion of human knowlcdge can not follow the Appropriations Com· ~riminate be learned or taught, he said. The mittee recommendations. He made him, Kennedy said The teacher must be prepared to With Co~ similar appeals last Friday and Genovese was in It.ly during the deal with the range of intelligence, number of hours in the day, and war "helping and auisting an days in the years, have remained again Tuesday. Concerts by three the diversity of talent, diffetences Sneak Attacks enemy of fhis country." constant while knowledge bas in· 111"'1' school musIcians a Come from Nearly All States in motivation and "the variety The House didn't heed them as Kennedy remarked there is no creased. "It may be necessary, it beat back two attempts to hike WASHINGTON U1'I - Soviet Pre· ,~i show will complete of character and temperament mier Khrushchev sent a letter to " , By DON HANESWORTH crs of paint were scraped orr and addresses frem allover the limit' [or bringing a treason prose· therefore, for us to choose to know the funds in the face of Me. Ei· State Music Camp a with which the young are endow· three things well rather than six President Eisenhower Wednesday Staff Writer thcn the soft red bricks were sand· Un ited States. cution. He asked Genove&e if the ed," the SUI president said. Yet ,~e nhower ' s word that the cuts things poorly," he commented. about preventing SUrprise attack The high school tw Inoutheasl luwa City, an old Horace P. Jonks, 804 S. Gilbert, government had taken any steps because the mental growth and de· amounted Lo "reckless risks with blastcd and refinishcd. in the atomic age. I , form at 6:45 p.m. 0 briek hou. c - isolated In a square who has been the Plum Grove care· to bring such charges against him. velopment of a child is a day·to·day Because of this wealth of know· our safety." of gr!! . s nnd tr<'Cs - is one o[ the Interior work was extensIve. New taker for ten years, shows visitors The witness remained silent. process, parents and public may ledge, and for the sake of econo· Republicans who supporLed the A Soviet spokesman called the ," athletic field, Capit interesting historical spots or Iowa. floors were laid, the stairway was through the house. Committee members qucstioned not appreciate the expert guidance my oC effort, today's teacher must proposals for increases said they letter a new initiative for strength· r son Streets, with ening world peace. II is Plum Grove, the re tored refinished and 'the seven fireplaces A Jarge painting of Robert him vigorously. which the teacher is providing, be "prepared to welcome every felt certain the Senate would grant scheduled for 8 p.m, hom€.' o( Robert Luc!! , Cirst govcr· wcre restored. All seven rooms Lucas hangs above the mantle· "t;)o you operate on the ruthless, and the teaching profession, ac­ economical aid to learning, whether the request for more money, es­ The 4 ~ ·page letter, in Russian, piece in Ille living room. bnJtal basis of lust killing any. was delivered to the State Depart. 'I morial Union. AI Sto nor o[ the territory of Iowa. wcre replastercd and some re· cordingly, is apt not to get the it be a book, a cartoon, a radio pecially if the chief executive 1'h two ·c;tory brick building was Built·in Oven fhing that gets in your way?" recognition it deserves. program, an educational film, a makcs a public appeal for suport ment some hours after tbe While rector at Central Hi papered. Visitors walk Ulrough thc dining asked Chairman John L, McClel· House madc public a new Eisen· buill In the (311 of 1844. The Lucas One indication of TV kinescope, or a tape record­ via radio and television before the Wayne, Ind., will dir family owned it unU! 1866. From Thc yard was cleared of old trces room, with bright polted geraniums Ian (D·Ark.). " Did you ever do ing," President Hancher said. Senate acts. Normally the Senate hower letter to Khrushchev. program. on the wide windowsills, and into anything in your life that might public failure tl) then on the propcrty detcriorated and thickcts and plum trees and appreciate the pro· Sponsor Respect For Learning increases House Coreign aid funds In his letter, Mr. Eisenhower ac· The AII·State Orch until it was purchased by the State flowers were planted. Work was the kitchen. It has a' large open tend to incriminate you?" and then compromises on amounts cused the Soviet Government of fireplace with a built·in oven. Over Genovese stared at his question· Cessional status of And the nation necds teachers the evening progra oC Iowa in 1941. finished in 1946. teaching, he said, who can help re-create a respect halfway betwcen what the two wrecking diplomatic preparations the fireplace is a muzzle·loading ers through yellow·tinted glasses branches originally voted. for a possible summit meeting. movement of "Symp The "Govcrnor Robert Lucas Remodel1ng of Ule building was h . h d fl k d and kept his temper. is found in the for learning in our society, the u.nder the direction of the Conser. S otgun, Wit a power as ma e But the size of the House votes Mr. Eisenhower held open the door nor" by Schubert·D M morial Association" was form· from a horn. Thus he became another blind reI a tively low Iowa president said. "In a thousand d in Iowa City In 1940, with the valion Commission. The Society ot salaries paid tca· invisible ways, learning can oRCn against two separate amendments to resuming negotiations on sum· by "Prelude" from Colonial Dames aided in collecting Just ofC the kilchen is a small alley in the committee's investi­ to increase allotments strength­ mit issues, if Khrushchev wants to. purpo of preserving the land· gation of charges that the Mafia, chers in eompari· the minds and broaden the hori· sienne Suite, "Blue mark. This aSSOCiation, with the antique furniture. buttery, where curcd meats, vege· son to earnings zons of men. It can emancipate ened the position of House con· But he said Russia's recent con· The original furnishings were tables, and other supplies were the secret Italian Black Hand So· ferees who later will have to work duct "cannot but cast doubt" on by Strauss.sopkin Iowa State Con crvation Commis· cicty has muscled into American in other protes· men from the fears and taboos of sion and the Interim Committee, lost, but the rooms now have fur. once stored. sions. "It is diffi· the unknown. It can isolate the Soviet intentions toward careful Overture" by Herol labor unions and legitimate busi­ preparation lor a heads of gov· KUCinski, conductor purchased the house and land for niture similar to Ulat in the house The kitchen has an outside door ness enterprises. HANCHER cult to understand forces of nature and bid them do 'Porgy and Bess'Movie ernment conference. about $5.000. when it was occupied by thc to a porch, but visitors usually go FOl,lr other wilncsses have in. why the public for men's will. It, too, quite literally City Symphony Orc Robert Lucas family. back through the house and climb The latest message lrom Mos· Has Been Restored voked the Fifth Amendment since so many years kept teachers to can 'reveal the ways of God to Halted by Large Fire ·If nicipal Band, will After World War II, restoration The house is open to visitors the steep narrow stairs to the sec· a low level oC salaries, and then cow was delivered to Undersecre· the inquiry began on Monday and man,' " he continued. d: chestral numbers. was begun on the shabby house every day during the summer ond IIoor to see the three bedrooms. looked down upon them because HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (Il') - A mul· tary of State Christian Herter by have refused to answer hundreds As the link to the past and to the r Under the ba ton and the overgrown four acres sur· except Monday. There is no There are heavy old bedsteads with of questions about their activities they were poorly paid," he com· future, education is always con· timillion·dollar fire ruined the Soviet Embassy counselor Sergei rounding it. charge to vrllt the home. The bright coverlets and chests of and associates. mented. cerned with the next generation. world's second largest movie sound Striganov. cf)nduc\f)r Don Craig A front porch was removed, lay· gue.t register lists names and drawers with basins and pitchers Discussing the differing needs at "The education of the teacher, stage Wednesday. Striganov had been called to the 'OIr! Chorus will sing " - for washing. The blaze also postponed reali· State Department to receive a ~ diHerent levels of teaching, Han· therefore, should make him con· ino" by Pitoni a The small bedroom has a china· zation of a 10·year-old dream by U.S. rejection of a Russian pro· Geneva Delegates cher suggested that it is a mistake scious of the fact that it is his rare Light by Copy low· faced doll on the bed. Jonks says to assume that less education and privilege - and also his greatest producer Sam Goldwyn, who had test against a recent speech by " I Rebel Forces Around ~T ripoli the doll belonged to a granddaugh· Moving Cautiously skill are needed to teach in the reward - to hold before that next planed to start work in the big Atty. Gen. William Rogers crili· " gIrls' chorus will ter whom Robert Lucas never saw: elementary and high schools than generation the promise of what stage on "Porgy and Bess," the cizing Soviet policies. " 1 Thine Eyes" from E Isabel Ashley Lucas, who was born GENVA U1'I - Scientists from are ~eded for college teaching. learning can do for it," President classic George Gershwin musical. When Striganov emerged from '.' delssohn, to be folio in 1857 and died ten years later. both sides ol the Iron Curtain set "One who is quite adequate to con· Hancher concluded. But the vcteran moviemaker Herter's oflice, be disclosed the Hoist White Flags as !Fresh Plum Grove is open only during a cautious pace Wednesday for said reconstruction oC the 2oo·by· Khrushchev letter. He described chorus in "Crucificus the ummer. Jonks begins his cus· their conference on detecting vio­ 4oo-foot structure on his Hollywood it as "a new initiative of the So- ," "Mass In B minor" todian work the last week in March. lations of any nuclear test ban. lot will begin immediately. viet Govern ment . . . directed to- 'J!! McKay's "Night M He uncovers the furniture and puts The delegatcs called a one·day The County Fire Department ward lessening international' ten· , After two number Government Forces Close In up drapes in preparation lor open· recess to prepare for lhe highly SU'I Orchestra To Perform estimated the loss at between two sion and strengthening peace in chorus - "The Ea ing day, April 1, which was the technical work ahead. and five million dollars. The esti· the world." BEIRUT, Lebanon ~ Rebel break in the 54.{\ay-old rebellion birthday of Governor Lucas. The delegates are apparently in mate was inexact because props State Department press officer and the traditional units dug in around the port area and increasiJfg evidence that op· As many as 35 people a day wan- no rush to reach the difficult stag­ and other equipment were in the Lincoln While told reporters the Valley," arranged b of embalUed Tripoli hoisted white W,dnesday Night as Part position forces in the north around der through the Plum Grove home, es of the meeting, which must basement and it was impossible to message "concerns the question of chorus will close wi flags Wcdnesday and Government Tripoli are w~akening. which seems to sit back and rest 'necessarily for the first time give learn at once what was lost. prevention of surprise attack." .jJ Heart to Spring" by forces granted them a cease·fire. The rebels_tegan the revolt in after all the activity 01 its younger each side an indication of the ef­ Word of the new development Tripoli May 10. The Government days. ficiency of the other's nuclear ex· Of the Fine Arts Festival eone and "Let Not Y came even as government vigil· manned strong defenses there and It is a peacelul spot in an active plosion detection system. II.' by Cain. antes, hoMered by fresh volun· was determir'ied to keep the rebels community, a reminder of Iowa's The I SUI Symphony Orchestra State Schools To Show On the An·State tcers, closed in on rebel forces out of the cil.y lest they use it as early days. OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN will prescnt the first summer con· are "ASMC Welcom menacing Beirut Airport. a capital lor a separate govern· eert Wednesday al 8 p.m. in the (ord, "Court Festiva The Tripoli truce was shaky, ment. ~ Age of Science Exhibit however. It was accepted by the Iowa Memorial Union, as part of tham, "Prelude" t The biggeltLbatUes of the revolt Army only on strict condition that Pentagon Probing University Gounod·Steg, "Musi took place in TripoH last weekend. the 20th Annual Fine Arts Festival. Ule rebcls would not fire a singlc Government - forces repeatedly Tickets can be obtaincd free of by Richards, "Sprin shot. At the Iowa State Fair shelled rebel lines. Nuclear Explosion CCdandar charge at the Union Information suite for concert ba First Sign of Break Desk beginning Saturday. Supply Lines Cut A huge exhibit assembled by SUI, er III rocket, which is now clr· and Sousa's "Han lt markcd the first sign of a real For Rocket Power Iowa State College and Iowa State cling ' the earUl, a Deacon rockEll, I James Dixon, instructor of mus­ Sea March." The Tripoli forces of former THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1958 iC!, will conduct the orchestra, and Teachers College displaying the a Loki rocket, nose cones··of bOth Premier Raschid Karami have put WASHINGTON (A'I - The Pen· Jphn Ferrell, assistant professor of "Age of Science" wiU be a high· the Deacon and Loki rockets, a James Neilson, di u.s. Turns Down up some of the toughest resistance tagon is exploring the idea of sub· 8' p.m. - All·State Music Camp mu sic, will be violin soloist. light at the 100th Iowa State Fair special display covering Vanguard orche~ tra and choir to President Camille Chamoun's stituting a series of nuclear explo­ Final Concert - Iowa Memorial The Orchestra will perform Jo· in Des Moines, Aug. 22,31. . rockets and satellites and a model City. University-, wi Slander Charges pro· Western regime. But some of sions for conventional rocket pow· The exhibit includes U.S. satel· oC the Jupiter rocket which pro· thei r supply lines were cut the er in space-roaming ships of the Unf!. Friday, July 4 hannes Brahm's "Academic Festi­ band numbers. WASHlNGTON I"" - The United val Overture, op. 80. " Thc piece lite models, rockets, upper space pelled the Explorer satellltes Into Stat s rejected Wedncsday Russia's past week and one report said future. U iversity Holiday - classes sus­ research equipment, and new de· orbit will be shown . they might bc running out of am· The Advanced Research Proj· was written to acknowlcdge an hon· complaint that Atty. Gen. William pcn cd. orary doctor's degrce conferred on velopments in peacetime uses for Instruments for cosmic ray reo P. Rogers slandered the Soviet munition. ects Agency announced Wednes· Monday, July 7 James Dixon atomic power. search developed by George H. day the award of a conlract for Brahms in 1879, Robert J. Dietz: Decreas Union in a Chicago speech June 21. Meanwhile, armed villagcrs loy· rkshop in Music Education, graduate assistant of music, said. Will C01U[uct Concert The sur display will feature sat· Ludwig, SUI physics research as· studying thc feasibility of such pro­ M c Building. ellite and rocket developments sistant, a nose cone containing In· Soviet Charge d'Affaires Sergei al to Chamoun poured up to the i Dietz has prepared a complete pUlsion. Ployment Security Confer· while ISC will point·up uses of struments which measure electri· R. Striganov was told the Russian lines. These vigilantes, with jet ~ set of concert notes for the or· Iowa De fighter support, seized hills on Until now, official studies of the en Iowa Center for Continuation and December of 1775. The last atomic energy. cal currents in outer space, and actions such as intervention in Hun· possibility of nuclear energy in chestra's presentations. gary raUler than Rogers' remarks three sides of Kabr Chemoule vil· St . three concertos have become stand· Most of the rocket and satellite possibly a "Skyhook" balloon and space propulsion cenlered only on Ferrell wiII play "Concerto No. are to blame for unsatisfactory lage ncar Beirut. Rebel followers Wednesday, July' ard works in the orchestral reper­ exhibit will be assembled by sci· Rockoon roclrets are scheduled to the idea of applying nuclear heat 4 in 0 Major," fo r violin by W. A. East·Wc t relations. of Kamal Jumblatl have been ~ p.m. - SUI Symphony Or· tOire, Dietz said. entists at SUI and will also include be part of the SUI exhibit. On Hig to produce a continuous thrust, ches ra Concert - Iowa Memorial Mozart. Claude Debussy's "Iberia" and delicate instruments developed at Iowa State Fair officials also Hu sia formally protcsted Tucs· putting up a stiff fight in this area. ~ DES MOINES IA'I like that of any rocket. Moza~t, at the age of 19 , com­ day against Rogers' speech. Union. "Dance of the Seven Veils" from SUI as part of the country's re· hope to have J ames Van Allen, pro­ If the loyalists can closq the Bu t the Defense Department an­ Thursday, July 10 posed a ' set of five concerts for "Salome," by Richard Strauss, will cent satellite and rocket project. 63 fewer deaths an Hogers expressed doubt that Rus· fessor and head of the SUI Physics pincers and take Kabr Chemoule, nouncement of the nuclear study violin and orchestra between April conclude the concert program. A complete modcl of the Explor· accidents on Iowa h' sia wanted peaccCul coexistence 8 p.m. - "Ah, Wilderness!" by Department, participate in the for· ,!Ii> the immcdiate threat to Beirut ]n­ contract called it a new concept Eugene O'Neill University mal opening of the science exposi- . ,11 first half of 1958 th and said Ule Soviet Union "is mo­ ternational Airport will be reo of propulsion. Th atre. tiOD. ( I six months of last bilizing a massive aggression movcd. The theory involves use of a se· Frid.y, July 11 Safety Department against us." The ISC exhibit will include a " . ~ Most of the civilian reinlorce· ries of controlled dctonations of 8 p.m. - "Ah, Wilderness" by section on atomic energy with ae. ,D day. "What happen d in Hungary to ments in the battle outside Beirut nuclcar material. That apparently Eugene O'Neill University General Notices tunl ore lrom which uranium Is II In addition, 1,627 Ule Freedom Fighters and to Pre· were members of the pro.covern· means a chain of comparatively Theatre. General Nollceo mu.t be received at Tlte Dall), Iowan oUt"e, Room 201, Communkatlot18 Cent~r, b~ obtained, manipulators for hand· " were injured in tr mier agy will occur allover thc ment right·wing Syrian Social Na· small atomic explosions would de­ Saturday, July 12 • a.m. for pubUcailon the k/nowlnc morning. They musi be typed or legIbly wrlUen and shined: the, ling radioactive substances, a mo- .1: ,I (rom Jan. 1 to Jun if wUl Dot be accepied by telepbone. The Dally Iowan reserv... the rIght to edJt .n General Notices. world (ree people are taken In lional party: Others were merely liver a series oC kicks to drive 8 p.m. - "Ah, Wilderness!" by del alomic eleclrlcal generating Ih,:1 than' in the same by the idea of peaceful coexist· angry at th~ rebels (or attacking a crafl at rapidly accelerating Eugene O'Neill University CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES IN evening in the following order - swimming and family·type aeli· plant and cxamples of the uses "~ ; ago. ence." the aUorney general said. their villages: spccds out into space. Theatre. AUGUST: Ordl.rs {or official grad· linoleum block prints, July 7; ele· vities will be available from 7: 15 of radioaelive isotopes in diagnos- The saCety depart uation annollncements of the mcntary leathercralt, July 14; Bnd to 9; 15 p.m. ". Tuesday, July 15 ing and treating disease . , accidents were down 8 p.m. - Summcr Session Lec· August, 1958 Commencement are simple copper enameling, July 21. Titus G .Evans, professor and IF" traffic deaths were ture - "Fashions in Love" - now being taken. Place your order Sessions will continue through PLAYNITES fOr studentS, staff head of SUI Radiation Research . cent and personal .. 12 1h~ 1)o1ly Iowan Claire Luce - Iowa Memorial before noon Wednesday, July August 4. and Caeulty and thei r spousel at Laboratories, will head the clem- J ~J cut 16 17 per cent 5 Union. 16 at the Alumni House, 130 N. the Fieldhouse eact Tuesday and onstrations in the medical phases. .~ as compared with 1 Madison across from the Union. n.. Dally Iowan" wnrtm and edIt«l by ttud4mu tid II goomaed by IJ board of fl06 Itudem ,nut ... ,t.ceed SUMMER HOURS Friday night from 7:30 to 9:30 SUI will cooperate with the oth· The figures sho Price is 12 cenls each. by 'M Itudem body and four faculty,"",", apptJ!""d by 1M preIident of ,Ite Unioenity. The Dally Iowan', for the p.m. Admission will ~ by facult)·. er two state supported schools In I deaths, with 17 more MAIN LIBRARY staef or student Card. ThEi etlltorltJl polley, therefor" " not /III ftpreuIon of SUI adm/nlsf.ratiofl policy or opinion In any particular 1.0. maintaining an information desk to ~ ~Ib than in January 195 VETERANS: Each P.L. 550 vet· J WSUI Schedu!e Reserve De,k Weight Training ltoom will be distribute material and answer \'. I total accidents wer PalO 2 THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1tSl Iowa City, Iowa waul - IOWA CITY 81. k/o eran must sign a VA Form 7·1996a Mon .• Thurs. 8:00 a.m.' 5:00 p.m. at the follOWing Urnes : Mondays, 4 questions concerning the three "'/ less . . Tbund.al'. lall' S. 18~ to cover his attendance (rom June 6:00 p.m.· 9:50 p.m_ to 6 p.m.: Wednesdays, 4 to 6 p.m.; schools. from , to 1:30 a .m., on Saturda.,. Since then, ever DAILT IO"AJI ItDITOaJAL IITArr 8:00 Mornl!)c Chapel HI·June 30, 1958. A form will be Friday 8:00 a.m.' 5;00 p.m. and Fridays, 4 to 6 p.m. The National Science FoulldaUon ~ 1'h~ 'Daily Iowan Make"ood servIce on mIsSed ~pers Is 8:15 News shown a decrease in EdItor ...... :...... Jim D~vle s noi pOISlble. bui every effort will be 8:30 Tall< Feature available at the window outside Saturday. 8;00 a.m, -11.50 a.m . also will show a new satellite ex· ()!l' New. Editor r... JeTr, Kirkpatrick made to correct erron w ith the next 0:13 The Bookshelf the Veterans Service in University Sunday 2:00 p.m .• 4;50 p.m. PARKING - The University park· as compared with t • It.-Ita lUue. hi bit. , " .AUDIT BuaU17 City Editor ...... Jeln n..,le. 9:45 Window on ihe World Hall beginning Tuesday, July 1. Mlin Library inl( cOfllmittce reminds student ,(.n month of 1957, and t or Sport. Edltor_ ...... Dick Lynes 10:00 New. JlIlIIBE&.' t .. A880ClATED paESI 10:15 Kitchen Concert \958. Regular sign·up will continue Mon. · Fri. 7;30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. autoists that the 12-bour parking w~1 fewer accl4ents eae CJaCUl.Ano.1 ChIef Photolnpher .. Walter Kleine The As.roc:laled Prell l. entitled eX­ 11:45 Talk Feature on July 2 and 3. Office open hours Saturday 7:30 a.rn.· 5:00 p.m. Umlt applies to all University Iota Final Newspaper II year earlier except PublJaMd clall,. dc.pt BUDde,. and EdItorial AaUtant •. Dorua BlauJu.. cJuolvely 10 the use for republication 12:00 Rhythm RambIn )fonday and I.pi boUdQ. by Stu­ o( aU the local news printed In th.. ' 12:30 News are 8;30 a.m.·12 noon and 1 p.m.· SUJ1day 1;30 p.m. - 2:00 a.m. except the storage lot I('uth of the W k h S· T The department s clent PubUcatlon.. ID"., Commualce· newapaper .. well .a aU AP Dew. 12:45 French Press Review 4:30 p.m. Desks open 8:00 a.m., Mon.· Sat. Bydr tulles Laboratol'1. or s op aSSIon ,j, ~ 28,865 accidents in I Uoru• Centl!l' . low. CItJ'. IOWII. En­ DAIL!' IO"AN. ADnanlINQ STAFr cIl.~tche •. 1:00 Mostly MUll" .Ix months of this tered •• MCOnct da.. mauar at the Advartl.oln. Man...... Mel Adami 1:55 News Desks close 4;50 p.m., Fri. - Sun. THE UNIVERSITY Cooperative Edward E. Lindsay. editor of ~ il 2:.110 Masterworks from France po~ offlc~ at Iowa C1tJ', und~r the Aut. AdvertUln...... JIm Cham.,.,. RECREATIONAL CRAFTS AND . Baby.sitting League book is in the Decatur, 111 ., Herald-Review, iI' 28,140 in the first act of Con...... of MarcIl .. 1m. ClassUied lIlana,er .. Jerry Goldstein 2::10 Mo.t1y Musl" There were 10 .059 Promotion MAnaler .. Joe A rchI .... 1d 3:55 New. SW~MMING at the wo~n's gym· ~NYONE I~TEREST~D tn apply· charge of Mrs. Keast from June 23 will speak today on "The Newt· ( . :00 Tea Time in the 1957 half.y Dial 41'1 (rom .- to ~t to 5:30 New. n8Slum for ~ll universlty·related JOg fO~ life g~ardmg at the to July 7. 'fele,ll\lPne her at 2990 if !laper as a Citizen" at a luncheon III ~port De'" ltemo. wom",,'. JI8Ie 6: •• Sportstlme women: students, faculty, wlv~s, Women s GymnasIum P901 for ~ne a si~ter or i formation about j6in. in Iowa Memorial UDion. .1 8,432 up to June 30 Item.. or announcement. to The ' 8:00 Dinner Hour , ' Dally JO .... AII. _tonal otrt_ ere 6:55 News daughters. Each Monday evemng hour at 1\ lI.m. and 4: 1 l\~:Pl' datly iDgJhq gro is d ~s ired. Lindsay, who also is an cdltor In the Co lu Ioona c..lU. from 7:30·9:30 tbe'craftfhop will be p!(la.e contact th'\ ~~ at the t. T ~ of lhe workshop of the ~)'. IIVIN POLl ' ;,.. P~LJCATJON' • - -,7~ gg ~[~';~ap:.~nlon DES MOUI/ES WI ~-"":"'=-'~--M--t------'d - ...... R • Dt'.Ultry; I)avlc! :00 c...ce,t PM .• available and from 1:»t:30 swim- Women's Gymnalill.Inl... RE R 4TII'" MiN G $9hjlub ne)¥lIpapcr grDUp, 'VillI pr~ ' il tDtmmon ,\3: Tho",*- .. Ham- ' :50 Trill cases, ttfrl!ei of 1h min,. B!M' for children 1 "7 - HOUR,.t thl! (lnal speec;jI of tbe',wprk ,,;l !t!I ,A4: Prol_ RUCh KellO. Po~ • ' :50 Nd... ~ts Onlr. ' . --~ ; ~ ~IV Glsll1m ~pt Wei'e1 repCIhecl io 10 and ca\!s lUSt be worn by al . pA\ILy NITIS : ,IIt:11 •• n ( '.I'M tile I ,f .; 'Owllbt I.oweU ...th., A4; 10:00 SIGl>l OFT . \ ' • '· ~ ~, rsrJd. l peol~w.ru ~ I s~~ ~eWJIpaper ' l ~ first half' 6f tJillI Y LeaUe r ' \ ' .' • Char,e feu- materials and boUle for .t__ ta, ~ .. tMldti' l MOJ;l Ultol,lgh .: ·s o~ Clo,srooms of a FI'C\l Soclet)t:"~ \P;.;: . . anM~;)l'~': 'J:d . " ;. ~ l.itsUi a.) ,s(lRIDULI! • .., _,. at Belltll Department ~ ,uppUell used In Ou. epoUJeI 1100 elf f~ to , wol1)lO~ ~~ .• ~f now be.1a· bel.d III tbf 8\11 ...:.:,.. ~i'-ry w. WIWama, ~ 'I'Iacau' . ' :00-1:011 • '~ature work will be: crane. craft' &heir day. YI;JteJ, La. BeethOVen: Symlll\ony Nu. ~I will be tntreduced eac~ Monday every We.4nc~d~y!\ RccrcB;tlotral .tne!lJPl)r.s. l>ttiase 'brlng ap,' • pus ,~ ,

, THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, 10w_Thursuy, July 3, 19S1-Pa,e t S~n ~ ~est Reports Campaign Med Students Two SUI Doctors Receive Announce Test Blast at Bikini Atoll W~ SHINGTON IA'! - A nuclear thl' Atomic Energy Commission test detonation took place at the and Defense Department said . Serving With Bikini Atoll in the Southwest Pa­ No further detaiis of the detona­ Expenses Above Legal Limit Heart Research ellowships cific at 1:30 p.m. EDT Wednesday tion were announced. DES MOINES IA'! - State Sena !ent of the annual salary of the An "established investigator­ training in researcn methods un­ tor AJan Vest (R-Sac City) report lCCice he is seeking. Iowa M.D./S providing su pport (or (j ve der experienced guidance. ed Wednesday he spent $8, 196 or The last Legislature fixed the Nearly 100 medical student from his unsuccessful campaign for Re !ompensation oC legislative mem­ years oC uninterrupted heart reo Dr. Connor's fellowship will be NOTICE publican governor. >ers at $30 per diem for a 100- SUI are serving preceptorships search, has been awarded by the under the direction of Dr_Eckstein and Dr. Walter M. TEACHERS - PROFESSORS - SCHOOL PERSONNEL In his report filed with the sec jay session, or $3,000, and the with general physicians this sum­ American Heart Association to Dr. Jay oC the lieutenant governor and Kirkendall, ~­ retllry of state's o(fice, Vest Iistec mer in communities throughout IJohn W. Eckstein. assistant pro- ciate proCessor oC campaign contributions totaling speaker of the House at Iowa. Cessor oE internal medicine at StH. internal medicine Horace Mann Insurance $2 ,391 , oC which he said $970 wa ~ that amount. The preceptorship program is at SUl_ the proceeds of a campaign din W.dnesday was the lellal dead­ Dr. Eckstei n ' NOW AVAILABLE LOCALLY Both awards are , nero The rest came from 52 die. line for filinll of candidates' cam­ aimed at bringing the students. award i the first ferent individuals and groups_ pailin .xpense reports. The sec,..­ between their junior and senior oC its kind pre­ part of the heart Hospital- Surgical-Income Protection tary of stat.'s oHlc. reported 54 year, into "intimate association sented to an association's new ' State officials said the expendi­ with the general practice of medi­ Iowan. A select program aimed at Auto - Life - Etc. tures reportwd by Vest were in candldllt.s had not filed before noon W.dnesday. cine in the home and office." The , Janet Olson group of American encouraging an d Set or Phon. eKCIiS Qf the amount which, by Other expense accounts filed experience supplements that r e­ To Marry in Oregon sci e n tists arc supporting in d e- law, a candidate is entitled to ceived in University Hospitals. named by the na­ pendcnt research LUTHER E. RAUER - Agent .,end on a campaign. Wednesday included: Corbin Crawford. Ainsworth. un­ The program has been in opera· tional heart group programs by se- Uti East Court $tr.. t Ph_ 8-4798 Iowa law limits a cand idate's successful candidate for Demo­ tion since 1953. Through the Iowa Wedding To each year to re­ lected scientists across the nation. campaign expenditures to 50 per ceive the honor_ cratic nomination as lieutenant State Medical Society and the The established investigatorship :A:_:spo::n: .. governor, no contributiorts and lowa Academy of General Prac­ Dr. William E. wi ll enable Dr. Eckstein to devote ~~==:;=====I~_~S~. ~E~_ :r:td:======~~, $1,779 in expend itures. tice, physicians of the state volu"­ Connor, SUI in­ Cull time to his research in the Ellsworth O. Hayes of Hamli n, teer their services as preceptors. Be in August structor in internal medicine, bas area of shock and congestive heart Music Camp Democratic nominee for Congress In addition to of Ceri ng the stu­ been named to receive an ad­ failure during the five-year period. IOWA'S _FINEST ••• in the 7th District, $30 in contribu­ dent an insight into the private In Oregon vanced research fellowship from Dr. Connor's research involves JO% More Protein tions and $1,397 in expenditu res. practice of medicine, the precep­ the heart organization. Awarded studies of a "clearing Cactor" that c...a...... John Kyle oC Bloomfield, Repub· torship plan is designed to afford appears to remove fats from the ,'1_ 1 To End Today Iican nominee Cor Co ngress in the "a uniqu e opportunity to impress Mr_ and Mrs. William H. Olson, Cor two years, these fe ll owships en­ •.... 'asl.. end Mine.... 4th District, $385 in contribulions upon the student the social and 415 Ronalds St., announce the en­ able you ng scienUsts to obtain blood stream, and oC blood coagu­ and expenditures of $1,435. community responsibilities of the gagement and forthcoming mar­ lation in women, who are less sus· Neal Smith of Altoona, who led private practitioner in the smaller riage oC their daughter, Janet Car· "GIVE ' EM AN INCH • , ." ceptible than men to coronary With Concerts the five-man slate for Democratic communities. " disease_ The studies are aimed at 01, to Dr. Richard N. Howard, son LONDON"" - One-legged Glyn Concerts by three groups of high nomination for Congress in the 5th shedding light on the still unknown District. $785 in contributions and of Mr. Ralph T. Howard, Klamath Peters, 31, serving a five- year school musicians and a tw irling causes of athersclerosis (hardening expendi tures of $2,277. Low Flying Plane Falls, Ore. The wedding will take prison term Cor fraud, was taken show will complete the 1958 All­ Wally Bishop of Ames, Demo­ place Wednesday, August 13 at 2 of the arteries>. State Music Camp at SUI today. cratic candidate for nomination to to a hospital Wednesday to get p.m. in St. Thomas More Chapel ------=----==::::------=-~ --~- The high school twirlers will per­ Congress from the 5th District, Causes Collision fitted for an artificial leg. He got $2,918 in contributions and expen­ in Portland. it. eluded a guard and escaped. form at 6:45 p.m. on the women's ditures of $2,978, including $8 for WASHBURN (.4'! - A low flying Miss Olson attended Iowa City athletic Held, Capitol and Jeffer­ baby siters. aircraft caused an auto-truck col­ High School and graduated from son Streets, with the concerts lision about 1:30 a.m. Wednesday on Highway 218 one mile south of SUI in February of this year with scheduled for 8 p.m. in Iowa Me­ here. a major in elementary education. :( LA SS I FIE DAD'S morial Union. Al Stodden, band di­ Another ,218 William Pearson oC La Porte She is affiliated with Gamma Phi rector at Central High School, Ft. City told Sheriff Elmer Hightower Beta social sorority. Since her Way ne, Ind., will direct the twirling Detour Route that he was driving to La Porte graduation, she has been teaching Classified Teacher Wonted program. City from Waterloo when an air­ in th e Portland elementary !ft:hooJ plane suddenly flew in front of his COMMERcrAL teocher for port Ume The All-State Orchestra will open Through traffic on U.S. Highway Advertising Rate. work. Write Rehabilitation Unit, Stote car with its landing lights on . system. Sanatorium, Oakdale, Iowa. 7-3 5 ALE! the evening program with the fi rst 218 is now bei ng detoured east over Pearson stopped suddenly to Dr Howard attend d th e Uni­ movement of "Symphony in B Mi­ the Benton Street Bridge (rom Ben­ Word AcIP Apartment for R.nt USED ton Street and Riverside Drive, avoid hitting the plane and a versity of Oregon in Eugene and nor" by Schubert-Dasch, followed truck driven by Jack Kruger of graduated from the University of --_rN'rl. City· University; will conduCt the ,-3 8:~ 17 . Fr~WJ~£' -T~ip-r-N-C~.~31~7~(.------~~~7--~5 band numbers. Admission Thurs. NOW Ends TUESDAY ONLY ADULTS ISc Personal Fr.. Conv.rted PT.,RSONAL loan ~ on typewriter.. Decrease in IT'. TR.M • .,DOU•• pho no, raphs. spo,," equipment. A DRAMA OF LOVE Then Stay and Set HOCK-EYE LOAN 'CO. Burkele), Holel SINGER Our Doubl. F.aturel AND CONFLICTI Bullllln,. Phone 4515. 7-4R Portabl. Iowa Deaths 14·0· 14 l'IIUIHTe IISITTING BULLII Starts TODAY! Miscellaneou. for Sal. IN 100M CAI4UA II 95 MONTGOMERY CLIfT ,-. OLO Sears-Roebuck relrlleralor. Cheap; $29 Screen doors lor barrack•. P ial toU. On Highways TmOl ,7 -3 'WAR DRUMS" PLUS-COLOR CARTOON SAINT f'tf31fit Ignition DES MOINES tN) - There were -~ -Both F'lItures in Color- "OUMBELL OF YUKON" .... Carburetor. 63 fewer deaths and 1,475 fewer CANDID MIKE" SINGER SEWING accidents on Iowa highways in the "NOVEL HIT" GENERATORS 5T ARTERS first half of 1958 than in the first EXPECT SOMEtHING BIG ... Briggs & StraHon Motors six months of last year , the State XTRA-COLOR CARTOON COMEDY THRILL MACHINE CO. Safety Department said Wedn es­ "FIFI BLOWS HER TOP'~ Pyramid Services 125 S. Dubuqu. Ph_ 2413 day. YOU WON'T BE DISAPPOINTED! 821 S: Dubuque Dial 5721 In addition, 1,627 fewer persons -STARTS- were injured in traffic accidents BLONDIE YOUNn from J an. 1 to June 30 this year TO .. DAY than' In the same period a year "Over the WHk ..nd" ago. The safety department said Lotal PRICES-THIS ATTRACTION ONLY SHOWS AT accldellts were down 5.24 per cent, Week Day Matlne.s 'til 5:30-7Sc 1 :30-3:30 traffic deaths were off 19.75 per 5:35·7:35 Nites--HoIid.y-Sunday-9Oc 9:35 cent and personal injuries were Chlldren-AnyHme-25c "FEATURE 9:45" cut 16.17 per cent so far this year as compared with 1957. The figures showed January Tke Scre81\.1~vades deaths , with 17 more persons killed than in January 1957, even thougb total ,accidents were 10 per cent TheViol.n."t Age Of... less. Since then, every month has shown a decrease in traffic deaths as compared with the comparable month of 1957, and there have been fewer acclcJents each month than a year earller except in February. The department said there were 26,665 accidents in Iowa in the first .Ix months of this year against 28,140 in the fi rst half o( 1957. There were 10.059 persons injurec in the 1957 half-year, but onb 1,4.12 up to June 30 t~is year. KIRK DOUGlAS·TONY CURT~'ERNEST 8ORGNINE·JANH lEIGH , ' IIYIN POLIO CAliS DES MOiNES III - Seven polil 'Ibe case., Ufreei of them paralytic were rep6tted hi Iowa durilli lh( _ . _ ... u""' ..... ' fir.t h.'" 61 · this year, tile StAtl Bealm Department said Wednes ~ "PLUS-COLOR CARTOON day. , - "GONZAlES TAMALES" ..~ .... .,

I' • I I '" ) ':. I , . ~ I'~jl \ . "1/11'11 II or·quic,k lndian ,. ~c(~;;1\,.~ tbem H, 6-4, h 3·6, 7 I ! ~l Monroe, ~urls_ MInks';' S~~azen B~c~ :: Boxing ~u.dge Last'·Y. Men , Anolh.r Am.rh;an palr-J..... tr.nston ~ Sin M.rin•• C.lif., .... Mike Green. Miami B•• ch, Fl •• Sow·Ouf of were .limin.ted In the _II1II By To! 4-1 Win in First Staft .' By Seven In ' In:dicted FO'r round doubles. Tile Dill I ....n " OW .. In the women's doubles MIss LOU YOUNK i;.; BALTr ~ORE (.fI - Zack Mon· aboard to eba e Senators' starler British Open Fe e Fe ' h· Wimbledon Gibson and Maria Bueno of Bra. roe, promi ing rookie pilcher up Camilo Pascual in the ninth. IXI ng Ig ts zit stroll ed into the semifinals wit~ from Den\'er, made hi fir ' t tart The homer was Ted's 13th of ST. ANNE·S·ON-SEA. England . WIMBLEDON, England (N! - a 6·0, 6·0 triumph over Mrs. Philip as a ew York Yankee a master· the eason and his fifth in his last IA\ - Gene Sarazen of German· Two Australians - Ashley Cooper Chatrier of France and Britain', Outcome of Predictions hll one as he humbled Baltimore NEW YORK Ci1'I - Bert Grant, Angela Mortimer. ix games which included a pinch· town, N.Y.. hal a 2·over·par 73- a New YOl'k boxing judge, was in· and left·handed Neale Fraser - 4-1 Wedne day. hit appearance. Ii creditable score (or a 56·year· dicted Wednesday and arrested on slammed their way Wednesday into For 1958 All-Star Game Monroe. a right·hander, limited WashIn&ton " ... 000 SOO 020- 5 a 0 old golfer-in the rain.bound first Boston ...... 000 000 102- S 7 1 charges of conspiracy and bribery finals of the Wimbledon's men 's HOME·GROWN the Orioles to five hits over seven P alC ual ~ Hyde III and Courtney: round of the British OpeJl Golf in connection with his judging Brewer. KIely iI' Wan II, and White. Championship Wednesday. But he singles, underscoring their coun· before he appeared to tire. 'v - Pn.scual. L - Brewer. activity. Now that the American and Notional League All-Star lineups have Ryne Duren finin hed. - Bos,on. Williams (13). Cound himself seven strokes ofC try's domination of amateur ten· Peter Thomson's pace. Dist. Atty, Frank Hogan s.ld Sweetcorn ' been co'Tlpleted for Tuesday's big game, let' see how well I did on Monroe's performance over·shad· the indictment charged that nis. owed the hitling splurge of team R e dleg5 1, Braves 0 Thomson, a 28·year-old Austral· my predictions. Grant. 51. of Brooklyn. had con· Gardner Mulloy and Budge Pat· Of the 16 st.rting pl.y.rs. 'lIcludlng pitchers, I picked 11 cor­ mate Hank Bauer. who banged out MILWAUKEE LfI - Brooks ian who has an amazing record in from Muscatine Lawrence bested Joey Jay in an this tournament. butchered par for spired with Herman Hymie "th. ty finallv sKidd.d out of the roetly. Of the .ntir. tot. I of SO pl.yers from both leagues, I chose four singles and a double in five Mink" Wallman. a furrier and men', double. in a tough five trips. upping his average L8 points air·tight batUe of right·handers the 6.G;l5·yard Royal Lytham and First Picking Should 36 right. Wednesday night as Cincinnati SI. (Anne;S course with an opening widely known fight manager. to sett.r. Defe.t of these veterans 8e Ayail.bl. Saturcl.y, In the I was right on six of lhe eight starters to .289. commit brib.ry of participants in stylists I.ft Uncle Sam now wtth Billy O'Dell . picked by Casey blanked the Milwa ukee. Braves 1-0 rouJd 0(. 32·34-66. and picked 16 of the full team of 25 corr cUy . It! the to salvage one victory in a 3·game H~ led a mixed group of par boxing bouts. e chance for only a piece of the Stengel for mound duty in the mon's doubles crown CORAL Gifts I had five of the eight starters on the nose with 20 of the 25·man All·Star game here nexl Tuesday, series in County Stadium. breakers :Ul1lt included two South The district attorney said Wall· squad nam d correctly. It was the second successive 1-0 Africans, four Irishmen, a French· man was granted immunity for Bi g Barry MacKay of Dayton. lost his third game in lhree starts Ohio, still is alive in that section N.tion.' Leogue again t the Yankees. It was his shutout of the series. The Braves' man, a Belgian and a half dozen testifying beCore a New York Fruit Market of Lew Burdette b!'IIlked the Redlegs Britons. grand jury which is investigating with his Australian partner. Mer· and I picked three of the four starting infielders right in the National ninlh loss compared to eight vic· I' vyn Rose. They beat a pair of League, They are first baseman Stan Musial of the Cardinals, second tories for the year. Tuesday night. Rain Cel nioe times on the par professional boxing. Hogan said Boston Grant hfused to waive immunity Brazilians, Ronald Barnes and presents "to baseman Bill Mozeroski of the Pirates and shortstop Ernie Banks New York ...... 100 000 12G- 4 11 0 Lawrence, whose brilliant shut· 35·36-71 Seaside course during the Baltimore ...... 000 001 OOG- 1 6 0 out gave him a 6·3 mark [or the day and hurt the chances of Sara· a month ago before the grand jury Carlos Fernandes, 6·3, 7·5. 6-2. workers who of the Cub . . But in gntat measure it is all Kirkwood O'Monroe.Dell and DuTriandosren (8.1 Wand _ HowardMonroe.; season. he ld th e Na t'lona 1 L eague zen, Mon t e B radl ey 0 f jil' II S boro, and therefcre was not permitted fiees," But a My third bose choice, Cincinnati's Don Hoak, was left off the Home runs - Baltimore, William. leaders to only four hits. all sfngles, Tex .• the only other American Qual· to testify. up to Althea Gibson now to sal· investigator. yage some tennis prestige for 'he team entirely, The volers' pick was Frank Thomas of Pittsburgh. Il l. as he snapped their four·game ifier; and defending champion Bob· lin. said he The indictment .lIeg.d that Unit.d State, out of this tour· Kwik Kleen Orl.ndo CepM. of Son Fr.ncisco. Johnny Temple of Cincinnati winning streak. He yielded only one bY'Locke. Gr .nt would accept bribes to fa· girt came to O.ryl Spenc.r of Son Fr.ncisco and Ed M.thew, of Milw.ukH w.r. Giants 5, Cubs 2 hit after the third . Bradley, on leave from the Army n.ment. The N.w York girl, de· the co"ag. of Qu.llty Service yor be·lI.rs man.g.d by Wallman, hnding her women's singles The House my picks .s r ...rv. infl.lders. Fred H.n• .,·, choicOl w.r. Don CHICAGO (.fI - Homers by Ray The loser, 22·year-old Jay. limit· in Germany, shot an opening 39· Grant was accused of r.c.iving ,aling ed the Redlegs to five safetiu. It 87-76. Locke, four·time winner of crown. meets Britain', Ann Hay· 81011ng.me of St. Louis. G.org. Crow. of Cincinnati. Johnny Log.n Jablonski and Bob Schmidt rallied a total of $300 for four flgh .. don in the semifinals today, Expert Dry Cleanin, persons as was his second deCeat against two lhe Open. had a 76. • of Milw.ukH .nd Moth.ws. the Giants in the which he worked and $100 for .n· Slone·faced Fraser defeated the One was Thomas was my left ficld selection with teammate Bob Skinner sixth inning Wednesday for a 5·2 victories. Thomson won the championship other fight in which he did not Shirts Skillfully Gus Bell drove in the lone tally three times in a row in 1954·55·56 carefree Dane, Kurt Neilsen, 6-4. • launc!ered and pressed as a reserve. but the senior loop voters chose Skinner as the starter. triumph over the officiate. 6·4, 17·19. 6·4 in one of Wednes· behind the nine·hit, junk·ball pitch· of the game with a sacrifice fly in and he was second in 1952, 1953 The fights involved, said Hogan, or Course. Willie Mays of the Giants ran away with the starting center the third. Johnny Temple doubled , and 1957. He won the qualiCying day's men's singles semifinals. Complete ' Laundry lield berth. • ing of Stu Miller. were: Cooper outplayed his compatriot, • Service It was Miller's second decision moved to third on Jerry Lynch's medal Tuesday with a record 133 Middleweights Moses Ward, De· A,hburn • Reserve Rose, 7.9, 6·2. 6·2. 6.3 to complete against four losses. His other vic· g~ounder and scored on Bell's long score after breaking the record trait. and Billy Kilgore, Miami, at Across from Hy.V .. Groc.ry ny to center. at Lytlulm. with a 63 Monday. the third all·Australian final in as 1 was way oCf in right field though by picking the Phils' Richie tory. and only complete game of the Garden, Oct. 4, 1954. Ward, many years. They clash Friday. Cincinnati ...... 001 000 000- I 5 1 Ashburn. Hank Aaron, who I left off my team. will be the slarter. the season, also came over the Mnwaukee ...... 000 000 000- 0 4 I Wallman's fighter, won a unani· The pass ing years finally proved Ashburn was Haney's pick as a res rve as was Lee Walls of the Cubs. Lawrence and Burgess: Jay arid mous decision. Grant waa accused Kirkwood udall. Ted, Stan, Mickey too much for the gallant Mulloy Cubs who was one of my reserve choices. The other reserve outfielder Miller yielded two singles in suc· of soliciting and agreeing to a and Patty, defending titleholders Kwik Kleen will be the Cubs ' Walt Moryn. I had picked Gene Green of St. Louis. cession in the ninth with two out bribe and oC receiving $100. in the doubles. Ramanathan Krish· Invited to Open Featherweights Ike Chestnut. The Br.yOl' 0.1 Cnnd.1I was tho right choic. for tho No. 1 and Johnny Antonelli was rushed nan and Nareth Kumar, two panth· in 10 face pinch hiUer Jim Bolger. New York, and Gil CadiJli, Los c.tcher ill w., tho Dodg.rs· John Roseboro for the No. 2 spot. My Bolger flied out to center to end S~nate Hearings Angeles, at the Garden. March IS, third c.tch.... however, was Hal Smith of the Cord, while Haney the game. IA'! - 1957. Chestnut. managed by Wall· choM Bob Schmidt of tho Gi.nts. WASHWGTON Ted WiI· The Cubs were ahead 2·1 until Iiams, Mickey Mantle and Stan man, won a unanimous decision 1 correctly named Warren Spahn of Milwaukee, Bob Friend of the Giants teed oCf on loser Dick Musial are among baseball stars and Grant allegedly received $100. Pittsburgh, Johnny Padres of Los Angeles, Bob Purkey of Cincinnati Drott in the sixth to paste the Invited to open Senate hearings Heavyweight, AI.x Mitoff. Ar· and Johnny Antonelli of San Francisco to the pitching stafr. Larry young right·hander with a 3·6 mark next week on a bill to give pro· gentina. and Willie Besm.noff. Jackson of the Cards, Dick Farrell of the Phillies and Don McMahon for the season and his fifth set· Cessional team sports broad ex· Germany. At St. Nicholas. Jun. back in a row. Orlando Cepeda's 10, 1957. Miteff. Wallman', fight. oC the Braves were the other thrce hurlers named by Haney. My emptions from the antitrust laws. women picks were Sam Junes of St. Louis, Moe Drabowsky of Chicago and lead·off single was followed by Ja· LEAGUI Mantle's Yankee manager, the er, won unanimous decision and blonski's No. 7 homer. Schmidt got L P. . GB Grant allegedly receiyed $50. from Bob Rush of Milwaukee. 24 .652 colorful Casey Stenl/el also has -on CLU' '!Ulging from the hint and hammered his 12th 34 . 51~ IHi been invited to testify when hear· Lightweights Orlando Zulueta, American League and the Giants were ahead 4·2. 35 .507 10 Cuba. and Frank Ippolito, New Hagerty In the American League I again chose three of the four starling 35 .500 10 V. ings begin Wednesday on House· Willie Mays padded the score in 36 .486 ll Y. passed sport!' legislation. York. St. Nicholas, Aug. 12, 1957. Sherman, infielders; Bill Skowron of New York at first base, Nellie Fox of the seventh with his only hit of OIevelanO 39 .468 13 Zulueta. managed by Wallman, won Adams. got 38 .457 13 1/. So have Eddli~ Yost of 'Washing. Chicago at second and Frank Malzone oC Boston at third. the game-home run No. 16. 41 .423 16 tQn and Robin Roberts of Phila· a unanimous deCision , and Grant Christmas St.rting ,hort,top LuI. Ap.ricio of the White Sox was left off San Frpncl8co ..... 001 003 100- 5 6 0 EDNESDAY' S 1tf;8ULTS delphia, chief player representa· allegedly received $50. him. The Chicagb ...... 011 000 000- 2 I 2 my te.m as my choIce, D.troit·, Billy Martin failed to make Casey 4. Baltimore l. tives o( ·the American and National Heavyweights MiteH and Nino Mrs. H~l en Miller. Antonelli (SI and Schmidt: 5, Kansas City O. St.ng.l·s ,qu.d. Droll. Elston 181 and S. Taylor. W - .Walshlngt.,n 5. 110lton 3. LeagUes. Valdes, Cuba, at the Garden, Feb. Thomas E. Mil ler. L - Drot!. SC heduled . Estes Kefauver (D·Tenn.), 21. 1958. Miteff won a split de· Eisenhower's Casey's reserve infielders are Mickey Vernon of the Indians, Gil Home runs - San Francisco, Jablon­ TODA Y'S PITCHERS sen. McDougald and Tony Kubek oC the Yankees and Rocky Bridges o( ski 171. Schmidt 112) . Mays (161. ChI· ew York at Washln,ton - Ford announced tbe Jist Wednesday in cision. tary. cago, Walls 1161 . ( .h3 1 vs Cl.evenlfer 14.71. setting the date for starting an in· "In connection with this fight." the Senators. I cho$e the first three but had Bridges' teammate Herb Kansas City 01 ChIcago - Herbert Quiry by his antimonopoly subcom· said Hogan, "Grant is accused of every year Plews as the tourth substitute. 13·31 V8 Wilson (6·6). Tiger5 S, A's 0 Baltimore at Boston - Beamon (0·1) mittee. agreeing to accept a $100 bribe to DRY AS A Another on Six oC the seven outfielders on the junior league squad were also v. Sisler 16·41 . Only aome. scheduled. influence his decision. if as he ex· my choices. I named six and they all made it, but not Quite in the DETROIT IA'! - Jim Bunning, remembered pected, he should be designated Ilenographer, same order I picked them. Stengel's seventh outfielder is his own returning to the form that made NATloJIIAL LtAGVB Jordan UDsetS Logart him a 20·game wInner a year ago, L Pel OB r one of the judges. But he was not tor: . the JIouse Elston Howard. Milwaukee ...... " 3. 29 .574 3 Ott' Surprise D,cision so designated. MiteH won a split blanked the Kansas City Athletics Sl. Loull ...... 36 32 .a29 ~ of which Cery To Start 3 OOLLYWOOD 1.4'\ - Don Jordan. decision and after the fight Grant on four scattered safeties Wed· San FrancIsco .. 38 a4 .a28 ,---- ijae\('tt Cincinnati ...... 33 34 .493 ~~ 14~~ oC !-:os Angeles, scored an up· was paid otr by Wallman on the Bob Cerv of Kansas City and Jackie Jens~n of Boston were correct nesday and the Detroit Tigers cap· Chicago ...... 35 38 .478 picks (or left and right field respectively. However, my centerfield tured a 5-0 decision. Philadelphia . .. . 31 34 .477 8Y. set split decision over Isaac Lo· basis of their agreement." PIII sburgh ...... 34 38 .472 ~ v. gart, 1460/., of Cuba. in a national· choice, Harvey Kuenn of the Tigers, was named as a reserve behind Gall Harris' sixth home run in Los Angeles ... 32 39 .451 ly televised 10·round fight Wednes· the Yanks' Mickey Mantle. I hit on the oth r two reserves by choosing the sixth inning gave Bunning all WEDNESDAY' S RESULTS day hight that drew a hearty mix· Boston's Ted Williams and AI Kaline of the Tigers. the batting support he nceded for San FranciSCO. 5 Chicago 2. Cincinnati I , Milwaukee O. ture of boos and hometown cheers NYI- his fourth straight triumph and his Only games scheduled. Edward S. Rose 1 had the American League reversed. The starting for' the winner. Our Pharmacy Is very near to will be Baltimore's Gus Triandos with Sherm Lollar of the White Sox sixth in 11 decisions. TODA V'S PITCHERS Bunning, an early season disap· Philadelphia at Mllwaukee - Roberts Logart. the No .' 1 challenger for you-in tho cent.r of the busi. behind him. I missed the No.3 receiver again by picking Cleveland's 15·81 vs Willey (2-0 1. Ihe' '/Vorld welterweight champion· nl$s district-leaye your order pointment who was able to finish Sl. Louis 01 Los An,ele. (2·twlnl,htl with us for filling whil. you shop Russ Nixon. Stengel's Yogi Berra was his choice to round out the only one of his first eight starts. Jone. (4-7) and Maglle 12·0) v. Wll· ship. and his backers were com· catching stafC. Uams (3·21 and Drysdale ' 4·8) or ple{~iy stunned when the split ver· In oth.r stor.s-OUR SHOP Is never permitted the Athletics to Podre. 17· 71. , near you at all times- we .re Stengel named only IOven pitchers to his squad .nd I h.d six muster even a mild threat. Chlcaeo at San Francisco - Phillips diet was announced. and even the anxiou, to serve you promptly. 15·21 vs GIl'l \1.21. 22·year-old Jordan seemed sur· of tMm right. Th. on. I mill.d was the Y.nk... • Ryne Duren. Th. His mound opponent, Ralph Pittsburgh at Clnolnnati ( K) - Witt carefully and skillfully-YOU ar. sill I nam.d corr.ctly were 80b Turley and Whitey Ford of New Terry, doubled with one out in the (l·11 vs Nu>