~ Weather

e",tiftl*! w_ .n4 huml4 w.. thtr with IMre 8' sc...... thundersterms, mHtly ill tht Mrih· 01 owan w.st. Hi,h tMtper.tvrts w.r••• peded .. r .... Serving the State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City fr.m the ",,"r Ik .. tht mid Ms.

Eslablished in 1868 Associated Pre Leased Wire and Wirephoto 10 ..... a CIty, low ,Thursday, August 23, 1962 QVlets• rop er In• omman ~, e I de T te u.s. Will Still Hold Hump h. fey Accuse d 0 f MIS ea Ing es Imony Russia to Oblig~tions

REm.l (P) - The 0\ iet nion took one morr \trp Senator Calls "'l'dnr~da) 1m lIrd its annOlllll't'd objectiH' of fnrcing til£' ., De Gaulle Escapes 3rd \\ r\tern lIie. out of Berlin. , n. h.1Il Y),lIbo\ ky, oviet romm.ILldant for all Ellsi C('r· It An Attempt m.my, mmmoned officer of the three We. tern (lOW r. to hi IAssassination ' in Year h .Idqllilrt rs and hand d tllCm an anIlOlln('('ment thllt the n' \il'l (:ommand in Flerlin is being abolished. P IUS (AP) - ~rn('hinc lin hur"t firrd h} ilSSi'~. in from To Cloud Issue The Ollllllllllc.m."t salel the ambush in II 'Illiet P;\ri~ slIburb hoi out Ihe n'ar window lind comm.ndo"t's elutlu wert "'1", Will Clear Up Issues two lirl's of Prrsidrnt Chari s d Gallllc's "pel'ding car Wt'd­ Ir.nsftrred t. So..,l.t h.tcI4!uar. Ill' day nighl, hut he and his pad, e c\p<'d IIl1harnll'd. It" In E•• , G.rmany. Tha .. duo In Resumed Hearings; 2 A-Subs ties I"..,ot..,. mo",,, relotln, to / Two vrhirh [lnd gunml'll at Ihl' n);lthidl' figllrl'd in thl1 tht mO""f\'\OIIt 01141 supplies of See'y: No Comment . il \in.tLloll It mpt ngailht tht' 71 }t'JI "It! prc\idt'nl, poliu' the W.st.rn ,.rrl_. III and IIIIt Hold Polar of West Btf'lIn. WASIIlNGTON loft - Sen. Cloir said. In Washington, the Stall' Engle 1'0' or to indicate precisely the reason SOUl,rht frtoedom oVl'r th ~ Commo- represented their operating cost~, the Pacific was made public Wed. This results, the GAO slIid, from risen to on intenSIty or 100 by six particles of the artiflclot radia. duclion controls over wheat h('- for the award. nist.built wall through Uerlin . ' thereby billing the Government ror nesdny evening by sm physif'ist . tion Nit th.t their .010r.c.1t il1(1dequacie in th lows for dis· hours after the blast. trlbuting the aid money among the ginning with the 1964 crop, il pro· Following the rendClvous anll ovet· $1 milJio~ " which ':Hanna The preliminary repol'l wa . based power supplies were dam.,ed Before the explo ion the radia­ tate. du ers of this bread grain lIgreed anti.submarine warfare maneuve l ', Anger over tbe killing prompll'd should ~~ve paid from their uwn on observations with the lnjun r and they . tDppee! tr.nsml"ing. .. (d t b West Berliners to slone RU.'lSlan tion count at 800 mil s above the The GAO - Congrt'ss's audiling to It m ~ re eren ~m ne~ ye:lJ' y lhe two ships surraced through the IlOCkets. salellite. which cuts through the corth was between 100 and 500 . The SUI physicists lire now a k· n. two-thirds moJorlty. ~lIrr prO'IUl" ice at the Pole. Ceremonial par. lIrmy vehiel s in W t Berlin. So 4. Auditor's estimates that Hon.' artificial belt at altitudes 01 about nrm - said in a report Congress tlon controls are prOVided , :lDnrt lies, including nag.bearing color the Russians started chan&ing the Six hours after the blast the radia· jng Injun to lransmlt less orten so should consider tightening up the na acquired for $1.7 million a Gov· 500 miles 28 times each day. tion count at the same altitude that its power system will continue from. acreage, but growe~ would guards, wero londed on the ice . guard lit their war monument by er,nment-built s~elter p~ant near its The report by Brian J. O'Brien, laws for passing out federal-aid get higher supports on their share Crew members visited each other means oC armored personnel ('ur· was 10,000. to operate. It is stili operating at RI.d~le, Ore., mme wh~ch co.sl $25 assist.nt professor of physics and highway funds. The report dealt The orbils for U.S. spacemen this lime and completed its 5,820th wilh apportionments between the of wheat produced for domestic and took a walk "around lhe riers, million: and ~?mphrey s testll~onr. astronomy, Curtis Laughlin, resi. Glenn and Carpenter took them as orbit Wednesday afternoon. fiscal years 1956.63. uses and exports. world" on the Ice at the spot The Russians were permitted to thal Ihls was not worth anythmg dent assistant in physics and as. Ihigh as 160 miles above the earth. marking lhe top 01 the earth. lise the armored carriers on lhe without Hanna ore and had been tronomy and James A. Ven Auditors found these inequities understar.ding they would not b' 1 paid for in full with nickel for the Allen, of the Department of A second chart preparl!d by the in the syslem, the report. said: In corrying out the submarine h~ad SUI physicists and b.sed on doto armed. Maj. Gen. Albert Watson stockpile. Physics and Astronomy, will be vs. submarine maneuver, the two received from tha sa ..llit. July, Backs Force ]) Twelve western states won·t Geneva Talks subs were · a Isted by the ice­ lJ, American commandant, order· "Now' somebody is not telling published in the internation.lly. to 24, indicat.s how lost the roell· get enough aid money to finance breaker Burton Island and Navy ed that these vehictes be accom· the truth, " Engle said. "I would distributed English scientific per· atlon is deterloroting, The SUI the federal share of interstate planes shore·based in Alaska. panied at all Umes by U.S. escorts draw no conclusion on this malter iodical, " Nature." physicists conclude thot the In· In Job Rights highway costs. Thus the progress in the interests of "sarety and good now, but this quest ion will be reo The SUI physicists report that the or these states loward completion Break Up Commllndcr of the Skate is order of traffic .... t.IIsily .t lower allitudes is do­ WASHINGTON loft - President Cmdr. Joseph L. Skoog. wbo is solved in one way or anolher - radiation caused by the Johnston creasing much faster th.n .t Kennedy's equal opporlunity com· or the sprawling interstate high. The th,... sm.1I .rmortel per. and we will find out just who is Island blast was perhaps 1,000 woys system - which aU states Cmdr. Charles D. Summit, (rom higher oltilud ... mittee decided Wednesday to use from Seattle. _nel c.rrtl" relied up .. lying - when hearings on this mat· times greater than Ihat produced However, more than two weeks both compulsion and persuasion to are supposed to complete at the In Deadlock Chodepoi,,' Charlie al 1 p.m. ter are resumed." by the "Argus" test series of high after lhe blast, the inlensity of rad· achieve improved job rights for same time - may be impeded. Skipper of the Seadragon is Iofort thtV cllllid proceed into Symington is recuperating from altitude nuclear blasts fow' years ialion even at lower altitudes was 21 Connecticut and Vermont are GENEVA loft - The 17·nation Nashville, Tenn. West Btf'lin I" Americon (.., Negroes, but to rely primarily 0' disarmament conference, wilh only an operation. Hearings are not ex· ago. still well above lhe normal level compulsion. getting an unfair advantage in WOl dM"" Icrns tholr poth. peeled tn resume for al least two "It appears likely that the elec· an East-West deadlock to show lor for the inner Van Allen bell, they The committee unanimously the fund allotments because of a Two Russian officers finally dis· more weeks. trans artificially injected by the point out. provision based on a population its five months of work, voted We and )lOt to We have to use them all, of would be like it Sen. Wayne veyance on which major iSSl!F must be transported. L t's tional affairs.) _lead. It 'is to advise. 'I, course. But we have 1.0 remember Morse, running against Lyndon Th ey, ; E~H~~ ~ th' ~ ~est air the facts as best we cdn perceive tllem, identify the dun­ SAl GO N, South Vi.t Nam ... .; "If r Ihil* I\Pf:lcfllllmjll}der of this: this is .a people's war. If Johnson on a Kennedy-reaction­ • Those oyerlr.-caricatul'e.c!, "ugly" I this rcgimelll, i ~ing or plljllU)ilfg , 'fe get the pcpp ,We \fin';jf the ary ticket, becal'Jle Mr. Kennedy's gers fot those involved, and instigate those safeguards and ''quiet' "A me1'1ciln~ 1jl UJi,S I,.. omeUjil1g,\nnx~~m;,JQ,:a.~, ac.l.v,i:le ~olilmunists' get 'em, we've had Vice President. Theh how would And the Bun Gets an Ear!';", where necessary. -Joe Morton war-racked litlle Southeast AsiaI'! against it,' pne ~\'Ican officer II/f here." the U.S. cqhgre ~ like it if Ken­ I nation are being replaced - 1 explained.' .... But.\ li~'~ oesp't'llke' T~is is the . of ~SlVVY" nedy resigned ~nd Mr. Morse be­ MALAGA, Spain - The dream the great mano-a-manos with ,1 among .th~ soldiery anyhow --: by , mr a,dv),~q, ,pc' ,CilJ) tell m~ to 1ou9d increasing ~eri- came, President?, a gratlfYlng numbcr of Unrted climb a roVe. - add sometimes can soldiers her e (arm of the bullfight haters. who loathe Dominiquin in 1959, when collect­ Thus Goulart was a minority bullfights even more passionately At 'Home/ He/s a Rat, St~te Army officer~ and men who does." . villages in the st~aming Mekong vice president whom the military ed ten ears, four ta ils, three mlg~t be c~lled, ~Ithout flatterv, THIS R~S~ONSIBILITY 1~lth- delta to the long-house villages Ol ' reluctantly accepted as Quadros's than the aficionados love them, is hooves from six bulls! 1959 was the savvy Americans. out authoTJty Irks some ~merlCall the mountain tribesmen on the successor rather than violate the an Anglo-Saxon dream of fair the year Ordonez edged past THE ARMY still has a goodly s?ldiers ~ere, convinced their ad- cool, misty high plateau, among constitution. They accepted him play. They see a nUll, one hoof number of grumblers and petu- vice - if taken - could mean men who six months or a year Dominquin - that year as Spai n's , Abroad, /He/s a Pal! only after Congress amended the npraised in a sort of benedictiOll, lant malcontents on assi~ment more. defeats for the Communist ago thought of war as regiments greatest bullfighter. Just as Dom-:' constitution and hastily created over a dead matador while a little here, plus Lts full quota m aU guerrillas. and bombs and rarely if ever in . The Atlantic cables hum and on this side out come a parliamentary form of govern­ man cuts off the matador's ear. inq uin drove Manolete so hard, ranks of regulations and "book" But the restraints on their au- terms of children's yaws or a ment. thus taking to itself some that he was killed the ring, Or.' news pictures of Jackie Kennedy in a swimming suit. worshippers, the non-imaginative thority, plus Cl'verience in the village's rice crop. That's the Anglo-Saxon rub, real­ of the president's powers. ly. It's not so much that the bull donez drove Dominquin into re· r It's an idea for Telstar. Europe can flash to us "live a,nd unseeing, the d~adh.ea ds. field here and '!luch close-hand THESE ARE the Americans, always gets killed. because, after tirement. 'I ~ere .Slill are. the . Inevlt.a~le ~tudy a~d reflectIOn on Commun- wearing guns, who worry and ON THE SURFACE Goulart views of American tourists at p11y in Europe_ And U.S. acquiesced i,n his diminished role all, there is a faint faint hope the Always the bright young fero­ AI my tune-servel s hel e •. waiting 1st tactIcs an~ ways to. thwart scheme for a new well or a medi- matador might get killed too, but ciously a m bi t ious youngstec television can respond \vith pictures of Europeans at the only (or the end of their tours. the~ ha,,:e. Widened VISIbly the cal dispensary for a village, Who but soon proclaimed he wasn't going to stand still long and func­ never gets an ear. And it's not comes along to challenge the tiTl, • World's Fair or anyp~ace on tIle New York-Washington­ But in general, and especially pollllco-mil!tary knowledge .and insist South Viet Nam's army fair. ing master. But now what? in field advisory posts with the und~rstandlDg of man~ American must be presented to South Viet tion "like the Queen of England." San Francisco axis, which is the State Department beat for Well, it's not, but then bull­ Ordonez is not suffering from too . South Vietnamese army and in soldiers here. who prevlou~ly were Nam's people as a friendly and He has been devoting every much competition as from none ," foreign visitors. the sensitive jobs of counselling con~erned With war ~nd t~ e pro- helpful (orce concerned first with waking moment to making it im­ fights were never supposed to be fair. Bullfighting at all - and all bullfighters need It would be worth the few miJUon dollars it might cost. South Vietnamese officers and fessl?n of an~~ only m therr most them. possible for the new parliamen­ to be pushed . There's a saying in civilian officials on politico-mili- reslrlcted, military sense. tary system to work. It is evi­ is not a sport ; Anybody is more interesting when he is abroad, This is the kind of "savvy" it's a ritualistic Spain that there's no such thing­ tary programs to light Commun- Thus, a veleran American para- which is difficult to translate into dent he doesn't want it to work. as a good rich bullfighter - and ists, the Army men on duty here troop major pounded the side Qf killing of a bull. You may never speak to your next-door neighbor; but action through the South Vietna­ President Goulart has been so People who Ordonez is getting rich. are impressive. Notably the his jeep on a Mekong delta road husy arguing that he hasn't suf­ meet him ill Venice or Hong Kong - and, boy, what a pall "savvy" ones. recently and exclaimed, "U's not mese Government, however - loathe bullfight­ The day I arrived in Spain { given the restraints on authority ficient powers to govern that he ing. I notice, saw Ordonez kill two bulls with \ -The Oregonian Those are the soldiers who have artillery or jumpers or airplanes has neglected to use the large learned that this war involves not or tanks thal's going to win this within which an American adviser hardly ever com­ such shimmering artistry, such ------can suggest but not order, plead powers he still possesses to deal pl a in ab ou t total control and und~rslandiDg only battalions and machine guns, war. but not dictate. And difficult to seriously with tbe nation's eco­ but also politics, economics, min- "We can win this onc only if slaughter houses. of the bulls, and - above all ~ I Un.iversity Bulletin Board ority factions, civic aclion, and we get these farmers and the translate into action also because nomic, fi nancial , and social prob­ If you push them such pure and perfect taste that that group in each nation of the Saigon clerks behind this war, of the South Viet Nam Govern­ lems. He hasn't even had ti me i n t 0 a corner, I'll lnever forget them. But since University lullltln I ... rd nOlicl. must be recelv. " It Till Dilly low.n ment's thus far sluggish attempts to fulfill the commitments he office, Room 201, Communlcl tlo"s Clnter, by noon of till dl Y before pu b­ world to which most armics here- really on the government's side. they' ll tell you then I've seen him fight and kill IIcltlon. They mult be typed Ind . Ignld by an ad.IH r or offlc.r of '". or­ fore - despite pious platitudes And we can do that by making to get its pcople on its side in the made to President Kennedy when slaughter houses are humane, quickly, almost perfunctorily, as ' glnlg'lon beln, publicized. Purely soclll function. Ire not 11I1I1bl' for war here. he was in Washington this spring. which is a lot o( tommyrot if bored with the whole business, '"I. Mcllon, to the contrary - have been life a liltlc better for them, not UNIVERSITY LIIRAItY INTElttM tlon about league membe ••hlp call sll'angers: the people. much, just a little, maybe by cur- Nobody can tcll yct if the WHAT WE are witnessing here (France has just had a scandal What grates the old master" HOURS (Aug. n to Sept. 10): 7:30 Mrs. Stacy Proffitt at 8-3801. THE UN ITED STATES Army is ing their kids' yaws or seeing the broadened politico-military know­ now is a cold war conducted by about thc torment of animals in (and th is is the first year that 1M! a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday lhrough FrI- --- ledge acquired by ma ny Ameri­ day; 7:30 a.m. t o noon Saturday; No IOWA MEMORIAL UNION IN- not engaged here as a military old man keeps a little more of an aspiring president aga inst an slaughter houses), and that bulls has been called that terrible word I Re.erve Desir: on Satur day. TERIM HOURS (Aug. 9 to Sept. 19): machine in direct conflict with what he earnS or grows, giving cans here will speed or even expiring congress. are tortured in bullrings, which "old") is that he can and does :, 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. bring victory in South Viet Monday through Friday. BuUding lhe Communists. Officers and them something they want Lo Goul art has been demanding the are not. perfo rm (eats of incredible wi!· ' COO PER A TIVE .AIYSITTING closed Saturday and Sunday; No Nam's war. It shoul d help, if the men assigned to duty in South keep, SOl1le im:cnllve to side with that Congress give him two But the idea that the bull never aOO ry in the bullring that 81'1! ' LEAGUE will be In the char,e of food service aIter Aug. 13. Reerea­ South Vietnamese Government re­ Mrs. James SpUlane throu, h Aug. 27. tlon area will be closed for con. Viet Nam are advisers only. They us." things: exceptional powers for gets his revenge and that it's just profoundly and totally misunder­ Call 8-1533 for a sitter. For Informa- structlon untU further notice. sometimes briefly become com- HE GRINNED, a quick, mirU)· sponds to it and the people re­ six months to run the coun try not fair - well , I'm not so sure stood, that are not evell dimly i ------manders, in effect, of the units less grimace, his teeth flashing spond to the South Vietnamese about that. It's a subtler form of appreciated. And I don't mean to ,I Government. without congressional interfer­ 1 they advise. notably during com- white in his dusty face. "The psy­ ence and an early plebescite. vengeance, really, and in many say they are appreciated only by I Copyrfght 1962: bat operations with South Viet- chologists have a word for it, New York Herald Tribune, Inc. From this plebescite he expects ways more devastating. I watched the aIicionados. the people wbq 1h~naily Iowan to get popular support to compel Antonio Ordonez, the greatest have seen hundreds' and hundreds The Daill} Iowon is written and edited by studenls and is governed by a congress to restore his partially bullfighter of modern times of bullfights and who talk wil,b board uf fwe student trustees elected by the student body and four shorn presidential powers. (some say - others don't), trying passionate authority and excori­ Success for 'Preventive Diplomacy' his absolute magnificent best to trustees appointed by the president of the University. The Daily Iowan's Congress doesn't want a plebis­ ating scorn about the bullring, Or­ By LEWIS GULICK uary 1961 - along with several BU NKER came up with a com­ cite until after the congressional get a good fight out o( a bad bull, donez's opinion of the aficionados editorial policy is not an expression of SUI administration policy or only to be rewarded with stony is low, too. He thinks only about opinion, in any particular. Associated Press News Analyst dozen other issues. promise form ula which, in Dutch_ elections in October and, like the WASHINGTON IA'I - U.S. dip­ United States Congress, isn't dis­ silence and a few jeering whistles. ten people in a bullring really Indonesian secret talks started in THURSDAY, AUGUST 23,1962 Iowa City, Iowa lomats see a notable success for The Dutch had held on to West posed to give blank-check powers Ordonez is not having a good kn'ow what he's doing or eveo "preventive diplomacy" in the New Guinea wben giving Indone­ Washington last Marcb, has to one president, particularly on e season, although it's too early to what his Illotives and aims are - settlement by Holland and Indo­ sia indepe'ndence in 1949. The In­ wound up in essence as the peace it doesn't trust. tell whether or not it's going to be and all ten fire also bUllfighters. .' MIMI•• PubUsber .... _.. . Edward P. Blaaett donesians said the territory right­ AUDIT . UIIA. Editor ...... lerry Ellea nesia oC tbe long festering dis­ settlement accepted by both sides. a downright bad on e as was 1960. 'What really hurts is that after., 0' Mana, lng Editor ..... Larry Hatfield fully belonged to them. No par­ THUS BRAZIL'S poli tical pic­ But he's been booed in La Linea , CIICULATIOQ Clly Editor ...... •...J oan Anderson pute over West New Guinea. The agreement provides (or ture comes full-circle back to its performing a feat of misunder­ New. Editor ...... TIm canan ticular solution seemed in sight. ~ere he was pretty bed. ae's stood legerdemain received In to. • •. Editorial Asststant .. Peter Donbowe THE AGREEMENT transfer­ transfer of West New Guinea by swirling vacuum. Everything's in PubUlhed bJ' Student PubllcltlolII, AS PART of lin effort to erase been booed elsewhere too. He had tal silence by the unseeing aud(" . ~~ CommunlcattoDJ Center, 10"1 Assistant City ring the territory from Dutch to motion and getting nowhere - Editor ...... Suzanne Mont,omery international disputes before they Holland first to the U. N. Then the a fa irly calamitous time at the ~, IOWI, dally neept Sunday and Indonesian conlrol, at the least. unl ess it be nearer combustion. ence (the trouble with beiDg .. , 1I0nlkY. Ind le,11 bolldays. En~red Assistant News Edlt.or ...• Fran Elsea removes a canker between the flared up - preventive diplomacy U.N. wifi turn over the territory Malaga fair, culminated by an master is that you get 60 far out U IecODd-i:leu matter It the post ~orts Editor ...... loe Gehrtnier Combustion can't be ruled out awful mano-a-mano with Paco ofllce at Iowa CIty under the Ad Chief PhotoV lpber .. Joe LlpplDcott two U.S. friends and spikes Mos­ - even if America was not di­ to Indonesia, which is to conduct since the menace of a general in front of the audience they caD of Convell 01 MUch 2, 18.,.. AIIlstant to the Mlna,ln, Camino. cow's avowed desire for a settle­ rectly involved, Washington un­ strike is now threatened unless barely see you at alll is that a" Editor ...... Jobn Klein derlook to get the ball rolling on a self-determination plebiscite for few minutes later Ordonez must • Advertlslng Director .. Irv Grossman ment by force . Congress yields to President Goul­ "It was like watching Laurence Dill 1-4'" from Doon to mlcInIIbt to a West New Guinea settlement. West New Guinea's Papuan na­ sland aside and listen to the , report neWI lIema, women's page Advertlslnl1 Mana,er. Dennis Btnntni Some Washinglon policy-makers lives in 1969. art. The unions are pretty l1luch Oli vier playing 'Saturday Night ln I ~ml Ind Innouncement. to The CtreullUon Mlnl,er ...•.. Lee Welt had feared the friction could President Kennedy had the in the pocket of the go vernment a Turkish Bath ," mourned Ken­ crowd roar with delighted appro,: ' Dally IOWlo. JtdItorlal ofllee. are In al at cheap tricks performed by [ the CommunleatloDJ Cen~r . spread into a major South Asian West New Guinea issue at least - Goulart was a longtime Sec­ neth Tynan, an aficionado of con­ Trultee., .....d of Student PubliCI­ war sucking in the big powers. partly in mind when he extended Or So They Say siderable standi ng. "lhe greatest matadors that don 't belong in tile tlon', Inc.: Lee Theisen, A4,i Larrl retary of Labor - and are a han­ sa me ring or the same league 'ulMerl",lo" Itat.. : By can1er ID Prybll, A4; Nancy Shinn, A~; Pro . As it is now, predictions are for to President Sukarno in Febuary Lighting the way of men to dy instrument of political pres­ bullfighter of modern times fi ght­ lowl City, 25 cent. wHki¥ or 110 DIle Bentz, University Library; Prof. with him. r year In Idunce ' IIx month., Leslie G. Moeller. Ilcbool of Journal· a rebirth of mutually helpful con­ 1961 an invitation (0 visit the betterment is the finest profession sure. ing those Iiltle bulls against that 'so; three mODtha, a. By IIIIU In Ism, Michael MaduJl, A4; Dr. Georl1e tacts between the Netherlands United State . But the main prog­ known. litlle man." The crowd consistently uks SOWl, til per f~.,;._.Ii montla. till Ell ton, Collere of DentlBtry; Richard ress was imparted in secret nc­ Goulart is trying to make a more and more of Ordonez, &- . three mODth .. N- All other 1IIIIl1Ur,; A. Miller,_ A ~; Dr. Lauren A. Van and its one-time colony and re­ -Britt News-Tribune scapegoat out of congress for Ordonez fought fiv e bulls that RriPtlolII, tl0 per yelllllx aoatha, Dyke, COllege of EducaUon. gotiations shepherded, under the mands only the best, and doesn't fS_80; three month., ~ , 25. . moval of an irritant in the South­ • • • whatever goes wrong and Con­ day, two in the afternoon and eAst Asia area where the United U.N. umbrella of neutrality, by Thc aged are ass ured that th ree at nighl, for a grand tolal of understand or appreciate it wbee £11.17""" II you do not reeclveyour Ellsworth Bunker. gress is trying to make a scapc­ they get it. That's the hull's re­ 'l'be A_t.~d Prell ts _HIed ex­ Dally lown by 7:30 I .m. The DIUy Stales has troubles enough al­ there's scientific merit in the say­ goat out of Goulart. one ear. What a comedown [rom Ilulively to thIl Ule for rellUbllclUon Iowan clrcullUon oU\~ e In tbe Com­ ready. Bunker. a 68-year-old U.S. busi­ ing, "You're only as old as you the great mano-a-anos with Dam­ venge on the bullfighter and il' .. •.. r! all tile local news prlnled In thl.s .JDunicattona Center Is OpeD froll\ a Until the new elections this fali, happened to every great bullflgbt­ ::'TcC. U well. I I Itt AP new. I.m. to 5 p.m. Monclly throu,h Fri­ WEST NEW Guinea was al­ nessman with a sideline of im­ feel," But sometimes we figure inqu in in 1959, when he collected day Ind from 9 to 10 a.m. Sl lurdlY_ ready one of the international portant diplomalrc assignments that if we were as old as we felt the least bad thing that can hap­ ten ears, foul' tails, three hooves er. That's when the bull geta 81 Mlt~,ood service on ml ~d plperl pell here is nothing. ('AI' . A.vJleI'll EdItorial, Arthur M, San­ IJI not pollllbl6, bu~ every effo rt will sol'e pols wh n Lhc KCllIlI'dy od- in the pst, IVUS culled out o[ re­ II' 'd be dcad. from six bulls! 1959 was lhe y(,at· be made to QljITIgt . rrorl with U. Copyright 19112: Copyrll1bt 19112: ... ' .: ~n.i. ,-"\dvertlsln,, E. John Kotp 1l.1inlstration took over in Jan- tirement for the Job. - Lake Mills 4rapllla. OrdoAe.i .~ Pilat Domi U

. I. . - .... - ...... --.:- ~:",,,,"' ~ De Gaulle- Student, 19, " (ContinlU'd from Page 1) StucJx Says Iowa Remap sued a communique late Wednes­ Bludgeons day night saying: It was De Gaulle's third known close brush with assa. ins in less Would Be Passed in 1970 Dcid to Death .IIi than a y ar_ lt came as he was An SUI tudy ju t completed reseere"," ,.., ttI.t lowanl will doe. have " "'finile efftct 011 . peedi1\g to h' count!)' home from indicates that if the question o[ vete to hold the convention. wheth.r or not people do vote." H TSVILLE, Tex. LtI - A col­ a cabinet meeting devoted to The results of the tudy were lege student who admired his pra­ measures against a French crime holding a Constitutional Conven· Of the more than one million tion in 1970 is again ba ed on the submitted lhis month by Da\'id O. Jowans \'oting in 19611, 51.2 per cent fessor Cather so much he wanted 'rave blamed on French gunmen Arnold, Chicago graduate ludent , foreed out of independent Algeria. issue of' reapportionment, ''there opposed the eonvention while ~ .• to he a teadl~r, teo, wordles Iy can be litUe doubt that the question in partial fulfillment of the require. per cent I'oted in fa vor of it. bludgeoned his parent to death "We can only assume the at­ ments for a master's degree in tack was made by the European will pass _" Arnold points out that Iowa is Wednesday. sociology at SUI. the heart of the nation's fann belt H.... L. flu ..... , 19, an "An Secret Army tOAS)," a Paris po­ This prediction is be ed primar­ in Arnold states the report that and the mere mention o[ the state sh,dIn., foI.tI ... story in the lice headquarters officer said. ily on the fact that the SUI reo urbanization alone accounts for al­ The OAS has been blamed for will frequently call forth images sheriWs tfflce .lter hi. f.t..... earch project clearly shoWs "that most 80 per cent of the variation in previous nssas ination plots de­ of acre after acre of cornfields. Dr. H.rrfs L. Russell, 504, wu the constitutional convention elec· the percentage of the Con tltutional signed 10 block De Gaulle's c· The possibility that JO\\8 might be­ Oft tion was a rural-urban fight not Convention vote in ellch county. ,,""""eel .... II'Tival .1 cessful campaign for Algerian in­ only in theory, but in practice as come predominately urban would H.hvllle ~al Hwpi'e1. dependence. Arnold adds that political party strike mO I people as remote, be well . " affiliation in no way determined The father and son lived logether The Interior Ministry saX! that conlinu s. in their home at County Camp\L~ , gunmen fired three bUrsts at the B.cause of the increase in the vote on the Con itutional Con. uriNniulioft whic:h un be ex· vention que tion. "But this "iew oC Iowa is today a part of Sam Houston State Col· ofCicial presidential sedan carrying ob ole ," he yl. The U.s. Cen- lege here where tbe father taught De Gaulle. his and son-in-law to an pected te occur In the state IIy He .dd., "Our rll.,lI, .Iso JeM 1t70 when the queltion of holding support to previoul flndlngs thlt us In 1960 for the fir t time clas i­ and the 50!! was a ummer tudent. airport outside Paris. nes a majority 153 per centl of Bullets ripped two tire of De a Constitutional Convention will the use of voting machln.s, while The youth's mother and father ag.in be p"t to I vot., the SUI not l~iItt how people vote, Iowa's population as living in urban were divorced. She remarried. GauUe's car but there were no in· are . jUries. The tires were safety type The .am. c.nsu. found mwe Here is lJ1e slory, lJ1e boy told that do not go nat Immediately. puple .mployed in m.nllf.ctur· Sheriff Floyd Farris and Counly Atty. John W. Phillip : The party cluinged to another car ing or transporl.tion (22.4 per that took them to a military air· Kennedy Stresses Russia/s c.nt of "II emplored ,..,._s) Young Russell arose about 7 port. than in I"ricullure (20.6 per a.m. and prepared to go to classes. De Gaulle and his party later c.nt I, s.y. Arnold. He walked into the living room \ new as scheduled to hi country ,, home at Columbet·les.Deux-Eglises Lead over America in Space "In regard to the relative eco­ where his father was ipping cof­ in Eastern France, where he has nomic importance DC industry and fee. 'Now, Look, Bug • • • heen spending most of the summer. WASHINGTON !.f! - President 3) A constitutional amendment agriculture in Iowa, the difference A 12·indl I,..,. INr, part of " He arrived ,there safely later in Kennedy, stressing repeatedly that to ouUaw the poll tax. He said a is still more striking, " he a)lS. In waltht lift!n, set, was ... Ih. Ir.d Crull, 3 h"s found. good Ult for the seven· will be tempt.d to try the inseds for dinner. the evemng. Russia Is ahead in creating big two-thirds vole in the House Mon· 1960 th valu of indu tri 1 pro· tlMr. Ht ...... 110 r",_ he y•• r locusls which are "bund.nt in low. City Br"d is the son of Mr ••nd Mrs. Rog.r Crull, Police said two vehicles believed rockets necessary for far-nung duction In Iowa w $5.2 billion can .."aln ... pIclted up the b.r space travel, predicled Wednesday day is es enlial because American now - put them on the end of a hook. drop the 108 Templin P.rk. used in the ambush were fouod annually while that of agriculture .nd hIt his father on ttle he.d. that by 19'TO the Unit~ Stales will citizens should not have to pay to was $2.3 billion. h · d h k ? L_ fl h _ Photo by Joe Lippinc:ott later parked in the nearby IllIburb His [ather ssld, "Oh, hell!" hook into t e rlv.r an , w 0 nows m"y_. s of Clamart. One was a sedan or overtake its Soviet rival. vote. These hUts ha I'e not been reo ------the same model as the De Gaulle As If to squelch some subordi· 4) The reciprocal trade bill. He nected in lhe state legislature, The youth hit him repeatedly. Citroen and the other wa osman nate o((icials who have tended to ur,ed the Senate to pass it without however. he says. In 1960, 'J:1 per Then he look his father and hclped Renaull panel lruck. downgrade the explDlts of the cos· restrictive amendments. ]t has cent of the people of Iowa could him into a bedroom and into a bed. Submachine guns and h nd gre· monaut twins, Kennedy used the been approved by the House. eleel a majority of the members The father, wracked by pni~ , NFO IMembers, in .Rrotest . nodes were round inside both ve­ word "behind" even times in reo 5) The United Nationt bond of the Hou of Representatives, tried to talk. Young Rus eU leanld hicles, officers said. Spent shell ferring to the U.S. position. bill, which h. uid Is "n issue while 32 per cent could elect a mao over his fath r, th' fatht'r stiKk ' casings littered the noor or the ve­ .. Anybody who attempts to sug· "nel D.mocr.tlc or R.public.n jorlty of th State Senators, con· '.'It hi hand a:.d said, "Givc Ole hicles. gest we are not behind misleads bUI Am.rlc:"n." H. Slid he i. eludes Arnold. yeur hand. t 10 ',' you." Against Ford Official~s Action The Interior Ministry so id at first the American people," he said in confld.nt It will be .pproved by that De GauUe's car was fired on a news conference carried by tele· thoughtful members of the DES MOINES IA'I - National n.. rly a dOltn st.,,, W.dn,,· president of Ford Motor Co., the by a passing sedan. Farmers Organization members in diY, the NFO members uid they NFO n.tion,1 prllident, Oren vision and radio. House. But police said the gunfire came "We st.rted lat.," h. ",id, but In response to a question aboul FIRE EXTINGUISHERS and the Midwest jumped in their cars wert no' trying to hurt the com· L.. Staley of R.a, Mo., said th.t from gunmen who jumpect out of a and trucks Wednesday, drove to pany or loul .... I.rs but that if the CEO recomm.ndationt ar. a tr.m.ndout eHort I. new .,n"'r the Soviet Union's exploit of put­ parked panel truck and a Citroen w.y. Thl. y.. r's tp"ce bud,e., ling two men into orbit at the FIRE ALARMS their Ford dealers and protested th.y want.d • repudiation of Ih. carri.d out il "would ttarve two sedan which were both stationed PROTECT YOUR a <:rilical farm report signed by a CEO r.port. million farm work.r. out of agri. he ",id, Is .rtlter "th"n th. cem· same time, Kennedy commented within 50 yard of each other on that "We are second to the Soviet Ford executive. "This is not meant as D criticism cullur. in the n.xt five years." bin.d sp.ce bud .... of the prevl· • APARTMENTS SORORITY the dimly lighted boul vard on the Union in long range boosters." • The farmers asked the dealers of local businessmen. We are for "This is a vicious I\ttack upon o"s eillht y.. ,..." • ROOMING HOUSE FRATERNITY route oC the presideatial motor­ The President also : Anyon who Iries to deny we are • 10 urge the Ford Motor Co. in De· you. It is a protest demonstration the family type farm and (armers ('I U Ted Fay, r~lIr d Fire D~plrtrnent Capllin for expert aclvlc~ , terv. cade. behind, he said, i· deceiving the troit to repudiate the report of against the CEO report," said have a right to know whether the • Announced thnt two U.S. nu· In, Jowa Clly In ule. " ervl & (or 25 year •. All t.sllll6uullera V.L. A dozen bullets crashed inlo the clear submarines have made a American people. But he .aid thiJi the Committee on Economic De- signs on NFO vehicles outside n I companies whose names were in- window of n radio-lclevision slore, I pproved and ,u. rantoed (or to years. All ",.Un,ul en .r. Rrvked velopment (CEDJ. Mason City, [owa, motor company. volved in this report, bUpport or "historic rendezvous" under the administration is leading a vast ef­ )early or .. needed. one of many small shops that lino north polar icecap. fort to catch up, with a space bud­ On. of the sign.rs of the r.. Between 40 and 50 farmers driv· repudiate the CEO report," Staley the suburban street. CALL CAPT. TED FAY port WIS Th.odor. O. Vnteml, a lng Fords staged a horn·honklng said . • Served notice that tbe Soviets' get ns big as the last eigbt com­ 2416 CRESTVIEW One bullet hit the cra h helmet latest move in Berlin cannot "af· bined. DIAL 331·3204 Ford vic. presidenl. He .aid caravan in Ottumwa, Iowa. "The CEO report, If carried out, of a policeman in De Gaulle's es· Tuesday the report refl.ch his The cars carried banners : "We would also de tr y many of the fect our rights." The Soviets abol· corl, but he was not injured. Two ished Wednesday their comman­ own views and not neusSlrlly drive Fords" and "NFO is not boy- small busine s men in rural Ameri· other bullets blew out the tires of tholt of the Ford company. cotling Ford dealers but only ca," he added . dant's office in Berlin - a step passing civilian cars. which many officials viewed as The report proposed a gradual wanls the company to dlsassocl~te Staley said he doubted whether An official car {allowing De • part of the long Kremlin effort to reduction in farm price supports Itself from the CEO statement. farmers would be "satisfied with Gaulle's had to stop because o( a turn East Berlin over to the Com· over the Jlellt five years and dilled Lesler Glov.r, president of a fence straddled ! tat e ~nt on Ihls bullet hole in the crankcase. munisl East German regime and CLASSIFIEDS for a massh'e "Government train- Glo .... r Ford Co., Ottumwa, wh.n matter." press the Western garrisons out oC ing program of farm workers who .,k.d to comment on the demon· On. of Ih. largesl groups Clf Berlin. ~Ty-p-:l-ng------:----:4 1 Help Wanted ,: "I would be foooed to the cities from · slr.tlon, saldl demonslrators{ .,bout 7S, ass.m- • Discloltd that Fidel Castro's the farm. I "Our compl,"y enjoys a good bled al Trenton, Mo. A delegation Cuba hll' r.centl)" rec.ived I.rg. TYPING ~rvlce. IBM el~~trlc, x25G5 FOUNTAIN h.lp. Excellent hour. an" Today', peaceful demonitratiOils . trad among farmers. We de not of SO, describ.d by Ford Manag.r ;focus On .8 ... Iory. AppJ,y In penon Lubin.. 11-15 qu.nlltlu of additional supplies Advertising Rates or 7-5986 . after 5 p.m. 9 followed similar ones in several as a car dealer participate in Ray Wragg. "fri'l\clly bul II' from Communlst·bloc countrl .., WANTED parl time HcreLary; 1:00 to Midwest states against Sears' Roe- statements on federal (arm poll· firm" In opposition to the ceo plus mort tec:hnlc:llns. Three Days ...... ISc a Word TYPING: Elt ctrlc IBM ; .ccurltl!, elf· J:OO . Phone 8-U28. 8-2' buck and 00. stores. A Sears board cles." policy, appe.red at Brok.n Bow, II:Health • Brushed asid a charge by Six Days ...... 190 a Word ))frienced. 01.1 7-25\8. B.3OR f1lC.mber , Theodore V. Houser, also Another caravan of cars c1rcle<\ N.b. George 1\1. Humphrey, Republican Ten Days ...... 23c a Word MALt or temlle .tudent dealer•. Wit· ~"U E 1I'1IS One Month ...... 44<: a Word NANCY 18- EI U'I "'-In, 1<1 Product_, ,2.$4 bourly wage. a member of the committee. Ford dealers in Centerville and A 6O-vehicle caravan from t5 former secrelary oC the treasury, "" . - ec C OJ" Wrll 367 2nd Av . S.W., Cedar napfru, Service. Dill 1-68:14. 8-28R lowi. 9" Sears officials in Chicago have Corydon, Iowa. Iowa cDunties _ which included Career Satisfaction that a Senate investigation of stock­ For Consecutive Insertions refused comment on the NFO de· "[ never saw so many Fords in cars and trucks ranging from Mod­ Are all general practitioners piling sales by Humphrey com· (Minimum Ad, 8 Words) mands. But in Detroit a Ford all my lile,- said Tex Campion, a el A Cords to 1962 models _ pa. 'rHi"o--m-.--;:F"'u--rn::-:j--shL'j;":n--g--s----'liftO t'ountatn h tp wlnted. Plrt or fuU specialists happy in their chosen panies is "a stab in the back" time. ApplJ In ))frlOO. Lubin'., 11~ spokesman said today that in view dealer in Centerville. raded through Fort DOdge. career? A survey publl hed by aimed at former Preaid nt Dwight CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS Eaot Waillln,lon. $'" Df ~ntema's reply he doubted Some of the dealers invited the The Daviess County, Ky., NFO Medical Economics shows the va t D. Eisenhower. Kennedy said "Con. One Insertion a Month .. , .$1.35· MATTRESSES, box sprln,., Hollywood wbether any fur the r company farmers into their places for re- chapter also paraded in downtown (rimes, hea,dbo.rd" .nd bunk beds. =--.k-.Wrr:':":':--dr------.2"'O majority are satisfied with their gress ought to do its job" that there Five Insertion •• Monlh ... $1.15· See our Flctory how Room on HI,b. Wor______ant. _ statement would be forthcoming. freshments. areas of Owensboro. profession of medicine. But when are "extremely large profits" in· T.n Innrtlons a Month .. , .. 1.05· In calling on Ford .genei •• in In a lett.r to Henry Ford II, An NFO spokesman ill Madison, WlY 8 weat It lOth Avenue, Coralville. it comes to their own specialty, the volved in stockpiling, and it is im· °R.t.. for E.ch Column Inch Pickart Mattress Co. '-7 IVA TEO laundrles Ind baby sltUn,. Wis., said a tOO-car demonstration happiness curl'e drops - some­ portant [or the people to know who 0111 8-4"5. 8-31 was planned at Ford agenCies in times sharply. makes the money. Dane and Fon du Lac countles in Psychiatrists are the most satis· A reporter told Kennedy there _M_is_c_. _F_o_r_S_a_l_e ______l_1 Perianal 24 Italy Returns to Normal Wisconsin. fied lot. Ninety·three per cent of have been rumors that Sovict Pre­ LARGE, heavy pl ••Uc ba,., 25c. AIr Ford agenc:ie, in M.ryvill., them are happy to be in medicine mier Khru hchev wUl come to the cooled Down LaundereUe. 226 liouth ------A TrP tor the ",1M - to sell, buy or Clinton. ' .2 swap UN DIlly Iowan Want Ads (or Mo., Sioux F.lIs, S, 0., Roches· and 85 per cent arc satlsried with United Nations session in ew York quIck, .IClcient .nd inexpensIve serv­ t.r, Minn., Sierling, III., Om.ha, the specialty they selected. this fall, and asked whether it Ice. '-lR After Series of Quakes N.b., and Corning, Iowa, hom. • • • might be useful for the two Jl1en to Apartments For Rent 15 I. meet again. NAPLES, Italy IA'I - Slight earth­ m.ny re.idents huddl.d ntar of ttle NFO, w.re among tho.e Pollen and Hay Fever 'IIisiled. "J don't know whether he is FURNISHED three room apartment. All quakes tumbled a few damaged c"mp fires in .... ~sl"', or Many hay fever sufferers hal'e coming," Kennedy replied. "We utilitIes p.ld. Will l~~onunod.lhome run in the Milwaukee 6, 51. Louis 4 Wednesday. He hadn't played fool· he left for his training camp. seventh by Frank Howard over ning powered the onrushing third­ to Chi.:ago with head coach Pittsburgh Pirates eliminated the TODAY'S PROBABLE PITCHERS Sharm Scheuerman to confer with Houston Colts from the National .n Francisco ISanford 17.(1) at New ball ince high school, when he The champ, opening his camp at the Marycresl Farm in Elgin for the teft field roof which tied the place Cincinn ati Reds to a 9·5 vic· York ICraig 7·20) was a star quarterback. The his title defense against Sonny Liston Sept. 25 in Comiskey Park, held score at l·t. Lane. League pennant race with a 3·0 Cincinnati INuxhall 3.0) al Chicago I tory over the Chi cago Cubs Wed­ Nelson was the Zephyr's third viclory. (Koonce 9-61 Browns had hoped he could make I his confereoce in a Loop hotel. The Phillies broke the tie II'IU. nesday in a game III which a total t. Louis IBroelio 10-5) Oil Mllwau· a Idly in the seventh and then dralt choice. The loss was the 81st of the kee !Hendley 8·10, it as a !lanker. D h k G t During the conference Patter~on of 42 players was used. It lasted Los An,ele. (Pod res g·IO) at PI,II.· ' h d ft 10 OWS answered the usual run of roullne clinchco the game with Ihree runs It was reporled thaI Nelson had year - and sixth in a row - for delphia (lIcnnett 5-111 - nl~ht Th e Browns sevent ra yes on homers by Johnny Callisoll and 3 hours, 49 minutes. demanded a no-cut, no·transfer Ihe Colts. They have won 45. Houslon IFarrell 8·16) at Plt16~urgh (Law 9.(11- nleht choice this year, Havlicek also F,·rst A L W; n questions in his subdued, loll'- Dc" Dcmeter in the eighth. co ntract caiJing for between $12,000 Sturdivant won his sixlh game The Reds paraded 22 players, in· was drafted by Boston of the • • voiced manner. and $15,000 a year. against three losses and had a no· W. L. Pet .. G.B. 'I'he loss was the eighth in t\leir eluding six pitchers and six pinch (NBA) and Cleveland of the rival "Liston says he will get you in last II games (or the Dodgers, and The contract nullifies Nelson's hitter for 4'h innings before Hal .·New York 75 49 .I lOS Over 80ston, 4-2 hitters. The Cubs used 20, includin~ x·LOS An,eles 71 55 .563 5 American Basketball League, five rounds," someone said. Ih' win was the 11th in 13 for the four pinch batters and five hurlers. pact as Iowa assistant freshman Smith singled to left. AI Spangler's .~·Mlnnesola . .. 72 56 .563 5 and had offers from the sev~nth·place Phlllies. two-out single in the sixth and Bob Chicago . .. 66 62 .516 11 Cleveland Indians, New York KANSAS CITY (N! - Moe Drab· "I hope he doesn't," replied the Delrolt . 63 63 .500 131, Kasko's thi rd gra nd·slammer in Lillis' leadoff doubl e in the ninth Baltimore . 61 64 .488 14' , Yankees, Pittsburgh and Phila· owsky pitched his first American chomp. Los Ang.ltI 000 000 100- I 3 2 a tolal of 15 homers for his career Cleveland . 60 66 .476 16 I Phll.delphl. . 000 001 13x- 5 7 0 were the only other blows off the Richert L. Sherry ('), Roebuck (I) ca me after Bob Anderson served a Boston .. 59 68 .465 I;' ~ delphia. L ague victory for Kansas City I "Liston has belittled your hitting one·lime New York Yankee slar. Kansas City 59 69 .461 ]8 .nd C.mllll, Roseboro (II: Short .nd singe and two walks in loading the e " r power. W~at do you say to that?" Oldls. W - Short (1·71. L - Richert Skinner's triple in the third in· x·W ••hln llon 46 79 .363 29'. "I consider Boston lhe New Wednesday night, With the aid a "I! I I Ii th hltt' !t . ·played nl,ht eames " .. . ee ave e 109 power (2·31. sacks. was only his second homer ning came after Don Hoak and York Yankees of basketball, said brilhant relicf hurlmg from John to lake him out." Home runs - Los Angeles, Howord of the season. WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS (21). Phll.dllphl., C.llison (17), DI­ Dick Groat Singled. Bob Clemente Cleveland 7, Detroit 3 Havlicek, who was the Celtics" WY~l~. the Athletics took II 14·2 "How much do 'YOU weigh and meier (21). A Kansas elly 4, Boston 2 as pinch three·run. first·pltch followed with a to number one dralt choice . He .aid deCISion from the Boston Red Sox . what your training plans?" homer by Bank Foiles in the sel" score Skinner. Chlco,o 7, Baltimore 6 are Washlneton lit Minnesota - nlllht he would have liked to play with Drabowsky, who pitched fol' lhe enlh inning had rallied the Reds. ", HOUlton 000 000 000- 0 , 0 New York ot Los Angeles - nl~bt "I'm at 190 now and pilln to Plttlburgh 003 000 OOx-' • 0 TODAY'S PROBABLE PITCHtRS Lucas professionally but "wasn't Chicago Cubs and Cincinnati be· Mets Edge It cut the Cubs lead to 5-4. In the .runet, MeM.hon (a) and Smith: Cleveland IGrant 6·51 at UNroll too sure the American BlIs. fore coming 10 the Athletics a few weigh that at fighltitne. The heav­ same inning Vada Pinson singled Sturdlv.nt .nd BurVI .., W - Sturdl. IAgulrre ]1·5) or .,nt ('.J). L - .run.t (1.2). 1I0ston ICon ley II·U) at Xun ••• Cliy weeks ago, gave up solo home runs iest I evor weighed for a tiUe de­ in the tying run and the score reo (Seiul 8·51 ketball League." to Eddie Bressoud In the fourth and fense was 195/ The last time I Giants, 5-4 mained locked 5·5 until Kasko s New York (Terry 18·10) ot Los An· "I didn't have any Irouble with Gary Geiger with one out in the blow. geles (Chance 11·7, the physical conlact," Havlicek eighth in'V . boxed was Sunday at my camp in Washington (Hobuueh 1·1) .t Mlnne· ng NEW YORK (.4'1 - The New The victory Was the Reds lith Braves Whip sola (ComeL 1.21 - nlghl Highland Mills (N.Y. I. I probably York Mets, after blowing a thre~­ (only ,am~. scnpdulecl) _ explained regarding his pro fool· Wyatt struck out Bressoud Il.,c\ out of their lost 18 games. ball venture. "[ just came up at will bOl( agaIn Saturday. I've been run lead , scrambled back for the an inopportune lime. There :;re Lu Clinton to end that inning and Clnelnnltl ... 100 000 400 4- , 14 1 training on Ilnd off at Highland lie·breaker in the bottom of the .1. so many good pass receivers here. got another pair of strikeollts in Chle.go 200 003 000 0- 5 11 1 Cards, 6-4 Affectionately Wins Mills since February. I could be eig~th Wednesday night and edged Another handicap was that I neve~ the ninth when Boston threatened O'Toole, H.nry (. ), Brosn." (') I( San Francisco's Giants 5·4. Klippstlln (7), Wil l, (", J.y Ind MILWAUKEE (N! - Del Cran· ready to fight in a week or so I') At Saratoga Springs had to block before, having be~, again. After striking out Pete the fight was then. I have no fear Edw"ds' EII.worth, Elston (7, H.... dall's pinch single chased over two a quarterback in high school. I Runnels and getting Frank Mal­ The loss left the second place ble (", Andenon (10), G... rd (10) Ind runs and pulled the Milwaukee SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y. (N! of going stale. I know how to pace Giants still S12 games back of B'''.I.n( Thick" (I ), B.rt.1I 1'" w ~Iill think 1 can catch the ball as zone on a groundout, Russ Nixon myself physically and menIally ." - Jay ( '·10). L - Anderson H ). Braves to their fourth straight vic· - Ethel D. Jacobs, Affectionately, lieU as anyone." singled and Jim Pagliaroni was hit Los Angeles which lost to Phila­ Home run - Clncln n.II, FollIS (11, tory, a 6-4 decision ovel' the St. undisput d 2·year-old filly queen, by a pitch. Then he whiHed Car­ The champ's entourage includes delphia 5·1, but only a half game Kaska (2). DON NELSON Louis Cardinals Wednesday night. and Bohemia Stable's Kelso, horse Browns' Coach Paul Brown roll Hardy to end the game. a party of nine. plus two limou· ahead of onrushing Cincinnati, Set Seven Iowa Records The Braves, winners of five of or the year in 1960·61, shared the said Havlicek "did amazingly sines driven in from New York. which beat Chicago 9·5 in 10 in­ well but was hand ica pped by Ike Delock started for the Red nings. ChiSox 7, Orioles 6 coach, a position he had held along six games in a home stand, spot­ honors before a crowd of 14,804 Following the meeting, he left Wednesday at Saratoga. years away from football while Sox and gave up all four runs, in· with Gary Lorenz of Clinton since ted the Cards four runs but worked c1uding a home run by Gino Cimoli. for Elgin, 35 miles away . It was the Giants third straight BALTIMORE (N! - A home run at Ohio State." s~ven by Mike Hershberger gave Ihe early May. from behind on the relief hurling Both odds·on choices ran fully to Boston . 000 100 01f- 2 7 0 loss and sixth in starts. a 7-6 Victory It is now expected Lorenz will of Jack Curtis, who allowed only expectations, as Affectionately ac­ "He probably could have stayed K.ns.. City . 001 021 OOx-" 7 • The Mets had a 4·1 lead behintl a si ngle hit befo re he was litted counted for the 71st running of on a while longer, but I felt it was Deloek, Eorl.y t61, Kolst.d I.) .nd Favorites Win Ihe four·hit pitching of right-hand­ Wednesday night in a free·swing· take over as freshman coach when Ni xon; Drobowsky. Wy.1I IiI .Ild ing, seesaw marathon with the Dick Schultz moves up 10 help for a pinch·hitler in the eighth. the $79,725 Spinaway Stakes and beller to make the decision now. Bry.n. W _ Drobowlkl (loll); L - D.· el' Bob Miller, who was looking The Braves went into the eighth Kelso celebrated his comeback [ told John r felt his future was in lock (4·31. for his first victory, when th~ Baltimore Orioles . Scheuerman with the varsity. Hom. runs - IIoston, ~n Tennis Doubles a run behind and tied the score with a victory on the grass cour e. basketball. .. Gell.r t13). K,ns .. CitY, Giants jammed in three runs in Hershbel'ger decided it in the " Don is the most complete on a single by Frank Dolling. _":"'__ -'-:...:o~ basketball player and the most BltOOKLINE, Mass. (N! - Mar­ (he top of the eighth to tie it. top of the ninth with two out when Crandall's hit came off Lindy Mc­ ~aret duPont and Margaret Varner complete person I have ever The Mets, however, came back he poled his third home run 01 Oaniel, the second Card hurler, o('Wilmington, Del. , stole the show ~gainst relief pitchers Don Lar· coached," Scheuerman laid of the season inlo the le(t field who took the loss. Wednesday in th'e National Doubles sen and rookie Bob Garibaldi to stands . the signing. "The Zephyrs are ~1ilwaukee's Hank Aaron ex· renhfs Championships at the Long. II 'n in their half of the inning. Chle.go ., ...... 210 110101- 114 2 to be congratulated on lignlng trnded his hitting streak to 22 Cricket ClUb. him, wood s.n Fr.nclseo 010 000 030- 4 • 3 Baltimore 100 013 100- '14 I straight games by singling with l\~iS l ~uPont, a winner of the Now York 210 001 0,.- 5 1 I Buzhardt, Fisher (6), Stone (6h joyu 't "I would have liked to have kept one out in the (ourth, and went on S.MOrd, LITson (I), G.rlb.ldl (8) .nd (1), B.umlnn (') and C.rreon; ~.pplI, title 13 times, and Miss Varner, H.II.,: R. L. Miller, M.eKenzle 18), leubke (5/, H." (6), Hoell (11. Stock him as a member of my coaching to score Milwaukee's first run. former world badminton champion , Cr.19 (') .nd Col.m.n. W - MlcK.n· (1). Wilhe m (IL I nd Trl.nd.s. W - staff," he added. "But he is being St. Loull 000 400 000- 4 10 2 broke.8 personal jinx in stopping lie (5-4). L ~ l.rsen (404) . B,umann (H). - Wilhelm (H). given a great opportunity to pla~' MllwlUkll 000 102 030- 6 12 0 Home run - New York, M.nllil. Home runs - Chlc.gol C.rrton 14), WlShburn, MeD.nl.1 (6), Simmons MOl'garet Smith of A\I$h'alia and (III. Hershberger (3). Sl lIImore, Ad.lr " . (or a Cine organization with a fint) (') .nd S.w.tskl, Oliver (": Sh.w, Justina Bricks of SI. Louis, 4·6, coach, Jack McMahon." Curtis 15), WIllIV ('I .nd Torre. W - 9·7, 9·7 in a quarter-final match Nelson sct seven records while Curtis 3·5). L - MeD.nl" (3"). played in a drizzle. playing for the Hawkeyes. They Australians Rod Laver and Fred are most points in one season, 570; Cubs Give Hubbs Stolle, the number 2 foreign seed, most points in a three-year career, l subdued Charley Pasarell o( San­ 1,526; mosl free throws in one year. New Pact, Raise tUI'ce, Puerto Rico, and Clark J86 ; most rebounds career, 784 ; Graebern of Lakewood, Ohio, 9-7, most rebounds in one season, 285 ' CHtCAGO IA'I - Rookie Ken 6·4, 7-5. mo t rebound in one game, 21; anti rIlIl..bs, who broke two NatiollJl The defending champions, U.S. field goal accuracy. one season, L('ugue fielding records lor secor.u ,544. Davis Cuppers Chuck McKinley of V[LVrT ITI' base men a week ago, signed a new St. Ann, Mo., and Dennis Ralston '~ Nelson will join eight former contract with the Chicago C\!bs oC Bakersfield, had thcir third Big Ten stars with the Zephyrs. Wednesday for an undisclosed I);))' straight routine match-6-4, 6-2, 6·t The Chicago team 11110 bOlllis increase. over the Pelham, N.Y., team of Bill McGill of Utah, who I.ad the It was the third 1962 contract Jim Farrin and Bill Tully. nation's individuat collegi.te s i~ned by th 20-year-old formel' scorer5 last ,eason. Colton, Ca lif.. high school star. The Zephyrs are still trying to After a routine signing for 1962 sign Purdue'S Terry Disching~r, Ilist fall , he was given a new con· go;:. C O(QQ • their number one drart choice a"d tr:Jct early in the season on the top Big Ten scorer, but he has re­ ua i of his fine play. ~ jecled all offers so far. Hubbs a week ago played his 5:\t h straight gamll without an ('r· 1'01' and handled his 321st consecu· ;.---~SIX REASONS ;:t= tive chance flawlessly. Bolh wel'e -;:;: Donovan Gets :eague records for second ba e­ ~ WHY IT PAYS TO BUY men. ~. APPEAL DECISION Kirkland Lands at Third FROM OUR ADV'ERTISERS 16th Victory NEW YORK IA'I - The Bufralo Bisons Wednesday a p pe a led Outfielder Willi, Kirkland of Cleveland was safe Tiger Stadium, Kirkland had advanced to second against a decision o( the loop's at third base when Detroit Tigers third baseman on a l ingl. by catch.r John Romano_ Clev.land You benefit from a greater selection - advertising president in forfeiting three ga mes St.ve Boros 10lt sight of the ball tossed to him won the g8me, 7-3. merchants, in general, are better stocked. For Cleveland for use of an ineligible player. from left field by Wednesday at - AP Wirephoto 1. DETROIT (N! - Dick Donovan earned his 16th victory and ignited You save time shopping - consult the ads before you the game-winning raUy with his third single Wednesday as the 2. compile your shopping list. Cleveland Indians beat the De­ troit Tigers 7-3. The victory put Donovan six You save money - you are constantly informed of the games ahead of his 10-10 mark of 3. latest market prices. 1961 when he was with Washington and led American League hurlers in earned run average. TMlYou1uI~ You are assured of better quality - you are doing AI Luplow's triple in the eighth business with reputable established firms. scored Donovan and Willie TasbY...... * * * 4. : snapping a 3-3 tie. Tasby reachE'd J base on Dick McAuliffe's fumble You identify yourself as a progressive citizen by pa­ of an apparent double·play ground­ 'DON'TWAIT 1" - tronizing the merchants whose advertisements appear er and that could have carried the CheCK ga!J :::- Tigers safely out of the inning. ~ your th=e nnostat to maKe sure your automatic furnace will operate properly this fall and avoid delays in these columns. Vic Wertz' pinch·hit homer tied . ".ntil fall e • • the score for Detroit in the seventh. caused by the fall rush for service. • . You help build a better community by patronizing Gary Bell saved the viclory (Ol" Here's How: , those who help build home institutions. Donovan , escaping (rom a jam 1. Be sure the furnace pilot light is burning. 6. when the Tigers loaded the bases in lhe eighth. Bell , getting Cleve­ 2. Set thennostat well above room temperahlre, tnen wait land's fourth hit, singled in a run TRY YOUR a few seconds for furnace to respond normally. in the two·run ninth. 3, Tum thennostat down, wait 30 seconds ••• then test it [ CleVlllnd ...... 010 001 122- 7 13 0 again. Detroit 100 010 100- 1 , 2 111~1)aily Iowan Dononn, McDowl1i (.), 1.11 (I) .nd 4. If your furnace does not respond, repeat steps 1,2 and 3. Rom.no; Kllnl, Fox m, Mo", 1" If the furnace still fails to tum on, a serviceman may be NIKhwitz (').! Koplllz (l), Foyftck (tf Adverl; il1(1 Departm ent • nd 'rown, ~o"k. ('). W - DonoVin HERMOSTAT (IH). L - Mos.1 ('·12). needed to locate the trouble • Hom. run - Dltrolt, W.rt. (41. FOREST HILLS, N. Y. - A Follow this procedure to make certain you'll have instant quartet of Russians and players heat in the CaU, from Communist Czechoslovakia NOW youn for beller lifling and Yugo lavia are included in the list of more than 80 foreigners who will compete lhis year in the Na­ IOWA.,II.I.INOIS Uolllll Ten.n1i Championships. G", "lid E.I.f:frw Cum/fuI, ------