Weather THIS ...... ,tIeuIIy...., ...... A few ...... ~ owon ...... etwe chMte. Hlih ..., .. the ... MORNING Serving ~he State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City Auoclated Preu Leased Wires and Wirephoto Iowa City. Iowa, Tuesday. JUDe 4. 1163 ON CAMPUS- A GAS meter explosion in lhe SUI printing service nuilding, at the corner of N. Dubuque Sl. and Iowa . , Ave., Monday caused IIltle damage, but firemen believed it could have been much more serious. A small fire occurred at 3: 15 p.m. shortly after the gas company had changed and hooked up a gas or ope o n meter. The explosion shattered the meter's metal case and scattered I pieces of it across the room. A smaU fire following the explosion scorched paint on the ceiling. The · I k Contributed to World fire was partly extinguished by use o[ a hand extinguisher before fire· Plane Carriying 101 men arrived. Lost In A as a Peace, Christian Unity No one was injured. VATICAN CITY (AP)-Pope John xxnr, who touched IN THE CITY- Contact Fails the heart of a divided world with his untiring work for unity COUNCIL MEETING: The City D · and peace died Monday night as the sun set over 100,000 Council will conduct public hear· urlng grieving faithful gathered beneath hi window. ings in the Council Chambers of the I Flight Civic Center tonignt on alley im· The 81-year-old Supreme Pontiff of the world', ball-billion CIttI­ • provements In f I v e downtown olles, In the words oC Vatican radio, "paued away reUlioUIJy IDd blocks and on vacating an alley To Anchorage serenely" on the fourth day of his agonized atrugcle with deat.h. between Maiden Lane and Gilbert Hilt closest relatives and associates were at bis aide in the papal Street. A hearing on plans and JUNEAU , Alaska (AP) - A apartment overlooking St. Peter's Square, where only nine minuteI specifications for a pump station before an extraordinary outdllOl' Mass for him bad ended. at the new city well will also be military-chartered airliner car· hcld. rying 101 persons - men, worn· "My time wlll come at nleht:' the Pope had once &aid. "SY citY Matters expecled to be consid· en and children - vanished off I bave church business." ered by the Council at its meeting the wild sou theast coast of True to his prediction, Pope John - by o[f1clal Vatican reckon­ includc appointments of a city at· ing the 261st PontlIf and spiritual ruler of the world', Catholics - Nuc.lear tomey, a police judge, and a city Alaska Monday undcr circum· died at 7:(9 p.m. 112:49 p.m. CST). will be treasurer, all of which positions stanccs suggesting sudden dis· will be vacated July 1. The deep.throated campanone, master beU of st. Peter's BasiUca, but ex. J aster. tolled the sad news to the world, and the great bronze door by the I The Northwest Airlines DC7, a basilica closed tight In symbol of the Pope', death. IN- THE STATE- piston·engined aircraft, last radioed 450 and thole couaUea 30 to 40 miles at sea off Prince of Then the bells of Rome's churcbes of APPEAL IGNORED. A petition churches In various lands on both sldes of the Iron Curtain took up for an order to compel Ottumwa Wales Island, requesting a change JOHN XXIII. • • , •• THE PEOPLE'S POPE Municipal Judge Willard Dullard of altitude from 14,000 to 18,000 _-'-______-'- __ the mournful dIrge for the departed PonUf!. to allow appeal of a case growing feet. Air traffic men trying to reply * * * * * * * The thousands In St. Peter's Square were Just beelnn!n, to drift out of a dinner club raid last Dec. minutes later got no answer. No Decision P S' h E I' P * * away when the sudden boomln, from the blUest bell in the biggest 16, was Iiled with the Iowa Suo The last confirmcd message from rotestant IS Op U oglzes ope- church in Christendom froze them In thelr trackll. preme Court late Monday. the plane was at 12:06 p.m. (CST) A moaning sigh swept through the thron, as the hu;e broOD about 2'1. hours after it left Mc- On Wallace The court set June 19 for a pre· door closed. "He'll dead, He 's dead," they cried In many lanJuaps, liminary hearing on the motion, Chord Air Force Base, Wasb., with 95 military passengers, including Thousands fell to their knees. They wept, they prayed. rued by Gene Glenn of Ottumwa BIRMINGHAM, Ala. IA'I - U.S. dependents, and a crew of six. JHe Was Man of the Hour The mourn1nc begun In st. Peter's swept around the world, as attorney lor Mrs. Betty Fran­ District Judge Seybourn Lynne cis. AN INTENSIVE search by planes withheld an Immediate decision across barriers of nature .nd man. World leadera disJllAlyed rare • • • and vessels was made in deterio· Monday on the Federal Govern­ unanimity In their praise of Pope John, and church leadera of DIU)' COURT NOMINATIONS. Nomin. rating weather. ment's petition for an injUnction sects joined in prayers lor hlm. ations of 127 attorneys as members Air traffic records at Seattle restraining Gov. George C. Wallace For Our Confused World' President Kennedy. the United states' Lirst Roman CathoUc chief of the commissIons to choose can· showed this sequence: from trying to block desegregation , I The 10 :06 a.m. report from the (IOITOR'S NOTI: For ',o'II,.nll, be diflereot without ooc being dom· also forlhrlght and willing to pio· oC state, saId the Pope's "concern for the human spirIt tranJceDded didates to fill vacancies on the of the University of Alabama next •• well .. lIoman CI'hollc., Po", nee r in applying his idens to so· all boundaries of beUel or &eoeraphy ••• His wisdom, compassion Iowa Supreme Court and district four-engine atrliner was to the air Monday. John XXIII cll.red the WIY for In. Inant or antagonl tic. station at Sandspit, B.C.. on the cr•• sln,ly close rol.llonlllip. 'mon, cict~ and kindly strength have bequeathed bumanity • new legacy 01 court bench 'Vere being processed Tbe judge said he hopes to hand the church.s. In the follow In, He was a man of simple tastes, east coast of Graham Island in .rtlel.\ • lo.dln, Protll'.nt, M.'ho. T~e rank·and-file of Communi h purpose and coura,e for tbe future. Monday in Des Moines. down a ruling not later than 9 and never 10 t the naluralness oC a northern British Columbia. dis' ••hop Frod Ploreo CorlOn of child. He loved people more Ulan he believed, were rehgiou at beart. a.m., Wednesday. 'hll•• lphl., ...... tho ,I,nlfl. He told me that ho had proved this, Soviet Premier Khrushchev sent lleartfelt condolences to the - Tbe pilot, Capt. Albert F. Olsen cane. '0 .11 d.noml.,.tlon. of Pope he loved power, and it was inevit· Vatican and said Pope John's "frultful aellvilles for the malnteaance IN THE NATION of Sumner, Wash., asked for the Wallace was not present at the John's I..... hlp . by their response to him on his now able that he should become known and Itrengthenin& of peace have earned him wide reco&nilion. and HAITIAN RELATIONS. With an change of altitude. Sandspit asked SO·minute hearing. By BISHOP FRED CORSON as "the people's Pope." famous train ride away from Vatl· Written for A$loci.ted can City, and he sought to open the won him the respect of peace-Iovlni peoples." air of reluctancc, the United Slates air tra£fic control at Anchorage, Shortly afte-r it cnded, univer­ Th. P,.." HIS INTERESTS were ecumeni. announced Monday that it is reo A1a.ska - the charter night's dest!. sity 'officials announced that they Copyright 19~ by The AP doors which would enable the Death came to the humble Italian tenant Carmer'. 100 (OW' cal and universal. In the private church to serve these people in sqrning normal diplomatic rela- nabon - for approva~ of the altl­ have accepted a third Negro stu· Not only all oC Chri tendom but audience 'I wa privilcged to have years, seven mooths and six days after be began his reign as spirit­ tions with the Haitian regime of tud~ cbang~. But Paclfle Northern dent, James A. Hood of East Gads­ Communist countries. ual leader or the world', Cathollca. For his slmplicllY. his Jove aod lhe entire world mourns the pass· with him, after he had been ill­ BY HIS LIFE , Pope John reo dictator Francois Duvalier. Airlines Flight 5 was northbound den, Ala., for enrollment. A state· ing of Pope John XX Ill. No reli· rormed oC the seriousness or his his Yearnin, lor all men to lJve as brothers, he became kDow:a as • .. at 18,000, one minute behind the ment by the board of trustees said: stored to a secular and material· Press OffIcer Lincoln. WhIte s~ld Northwest Airlines plane. So the gious leader since the Reformation illness, he was as much concerned the "Pope oC unity and peace." , I "It is apticipated that Hood will istic.minded world the practical the State Depart~ent .IS o.rdermg DC7 was cleared for 16,000 instead. has had the confidence and good to know about MeUlodist people as realilies of the spirilual life . In the last throes of death, he expressed his bopes for peace, appear for registration on the main will of the millIons of people who do he was about his Roman Catholic the U;S. charge d aff~l!s m Port SANDSPIT THEN tried to call He had great issues UpDll his Christlan unity and social justice many times. au Prmce, Gllon CurtIs Jr., to re- the Northwest pilot with that in[or. campus at the time that Vivian nol belong to hi s church as Pope people. Malone of Mobile, who had previ· heart, and knew that both because He worked untlrtngly for th ends ev n In the Jut monUII 01 sume the diplomatic co~tac~s sus· malion. There was no response. John has had. He knew how to handle people of his age and illness his days on pend~ ~hen Duvaller s ..~IX-year The nearby PNA plane also tried ously been admilted, arrives for By personality, ability and lib· hIs mortallUncss, registration. " and situations, and was the con· this earth were numbered . Yet his ~onstltutl~nal term as HaitI s pres· without success. All this was within eral spirit, he became the man or stant active guiding hand DC the acceptance of his fate has brought Death was caused by a stomach tumor compJlcated by periton· Ident expired May 15. three or four minutes after the last The third student is David Mc· the hour for a conIused, fearful and Second Vatican Council. When It to this world realization that God itis. The Pope was stricken a year ago with the tumor, which call1ed • •• confirmed message from the DC? Glathery of Huntsville who is insecure world. He will go down in appeared as If there would be a and not man has ultimate control hemorrhaging, but he continued working at his heavy tasks almolt scheduled to enroll at the Hunts· history as the first of a new type serious break between the liberals t , RAI LROAD DISPUTE. H. E. Gil· Reports circulated earlier at and that death is not tragedy but to the end. Two weeks ago the Pontl£f sulfered a grave relapae. bert, president of the Brotherhood Anchorage that a fishing boat crew ville campus of the urtiverslly. of leader who seeks to reconcile Bnd the conservatives over the reward. of Locomotive Firemen and En· heard a radio call, "This is DC? _ Wallace declined to comment on our rei i g i a u 5 differences, heal question of the sources of revela· Pope John made goodness news, The final crisis began Friday morning, when peritonitis - lofta­ glnemen, said Monday in Cleve· emergency," but this was not con. either the university announcement the wounds of our religious wars. tion, which, had it occurred, would and opened a new phase of public malion oC tbe lIning of the abdominal cavitY-6Ct In. He was eloee to land, that reports going to Secre- firmed. about Hood or the result of the fed· and unite all men of good will have stopped the conversations on relations for church leaders. By all death then. tary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz on From Sandspit the normal flight eral court hearing. through mutual appreciation and unity between Catholics and Protes· tests, he was the number one public Bul the strong beart of this son oC an Italian peasant continued the progress of negotiations in the route would be offshore lor several In another development Monday, recognition. tants, it was Pope Jobn wbo re­ relations man DC this century. to pump life through hIs veins. The Vatican doctors were astonished national work rules dispute "wiU hundred miles over the Gulf of the National States Rights Party HE WILL BE known as the in­ solved the dllCerence and re tored In an age which has made youth at his vitality. He rallied 8u(flciently a number of times to bless not be encouraging." Alaska before turning inland to. good will. advised The Associated Press that augurator of a new kind of ecu· a feti h, his life reminds us that those about him and to console them. He was, he told prelates and Wirtz has called for representa· ward Elmendorf Air Force Base at party members will be at Tusca· menicity based on the proposition POPE JOHN HAD his ideas old men with vision, experience and relatives at his bedside, ready to go "sweetly toward the end." lives of the railroads and their op- Anchorage. Dozens of islands dot loosa next Monday to back Wallace thaL diversity of expression is not about human relations. He was an dedication still constitute our great. erating unions to meet with bim in the Alaskan coastline east of the "whether he wants our help or incompatible with oneness of Chris· exponent oC better social condi· est a set in leader bip for human Often in excruciating pain, the Pontiff fought oU death for II· Washington today to tell him where flight path. not." tian faith, and that two things can tions and of world peace. He was progress. Though he has departed most four more days. He [irst rejected the use of morphine to ease they stand In negotiations aimed --==-.=------~------______thi world, like Lincoln, now he be· his pain, offering up his lIuffering as a sacrifice or the aims wbich at heading off a nationwide rail longs to the ages. had been closest to him - world peace and Christian unit,)'. Later be strike. JFK Ha~ Revised Program W3ll given pain killers. IN THE WORLD- - The Pontiff and the out~e world knew that the end would come Finals Schedule soon for the man who, as Angelo Gluseppe RoncaW. bad risen from LAOTIAN PEACE TALKS: Pro· humble beginnings to the throne of St. Peter. Communist Palhel Lao chieC Prince This is today's [inal examination In the final hours, the Vatican said, the pain wal "atrocioul." Souphanouvong bas proposed that schedule: The dying PonUCf clutched a crucifix to his breast.. Only IJIICOII. contending Laotian factions get to· on Tuo.uy, June 4 New Move Civil Rights 8 '.m.: CIU8e. which meet IIrli on sciousness brought him reUef. In the momentt of conaeiouallell the gether on the Plaines des Jarres Monda)! at 8:30. All _Uo ... or Bot. Pope appeared to concentrate on prayer. for peace talks. WASHINGTON (.4'\ - President MI·nn.) told reporters afler a White interview, the Administration 's aLers and similar places. 2:2; German 13:12, :21, :32, ::14.. I 10 I .m .: AU sectlon. or Bll• .Ad. But his neutralist hall-brother, Kennedy is seltil\ll his sights on House conference earlier in the I legislative pl'Ogram would call for Desegregation of all public ac- 6L:55. German 13:12. :22; PEW 28:14' In calm, solemn lerma, the Vatican radio allllllWlCed the aonvw. Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma. presenting a revised civil rights lul news to the world, firIt in Italian, then in 30 other lanpages. day that the Administration's pro· banning segregation in private en. commodations such as swimming '~dp~~ ' ~ !~~!~. or Bus.Ad. 80::14. said Monday the oUer was hedged program to Congress early next posals would be presented to Con· .. . M lh 22 4 5 e 7 nd PEW 28. Below the chapel apartment in the great aquaTe 01 St. Peter'a, with unacceptable conditions. He gress this week. terprlses whIch deal in mterstate pools, rail and bus depOts, would • . .: . : , : ,: • : . wee k, informed Administration the MalIS lor the dying Pope bad come to a cloee only nine minutes did not speclCy what these condi· sources said Monday night. Humphrey, the acting Senate prod~~ts . The measure would list be made mandatory. Federal aid TJe%d~y' ~~'"::~,:"hll'U m=u~':;:t ~ tlons werc. Democratic leader, said agree. speCIfically department s tor e s, would be provided for school dis. Bus.ACl. 60:119; RUllian 41:102; Speech before. At least 100,000 of all nationalities and faiths knelt In the On this basis. next Monday is cobbled aqU8l'e in prayer wbile the Cardinal Vicar of Rome, Lui&i the earliest when a message or ment in principle on a package _d_ru_g_ st_o_re_s_, _Iu_n_c_bc_o_un_t_er_s_, _th_e_._tr_ic_ts_w_hi_c_h_a_sk_ f_l·n_an_c_ia_l_h_e_lp_._ 38~\ . !~°cias!:~l2w:~~ ~":t "~ • • • "1 • h hed on Monda)! .t 2:30. AU ..,ct1_ Of Traglia, Intoned the ancient Latin of the Mass. PRAVDA ON THE U.S.: Pravda, legislation could be submitted to CIVI rtg ts program was reac Frencb i :12 .nd Core 11 :40. The Vatican announced tbe death a minute after it occurred. the organ of the Communist party Capitol Hill. at the conference between Ken. Three minutes later the Vatican radio broadcast this anDCItIIlCeIIIe: published Monday - somewhallate There had been some indications nedy and Democratic congressional - a picture of a police dog altack· leaders. He said agreement on the "With a soul profoundly moved, we give the followin&: BIld ... that Kennedy would be ready to language of proposed bills was all Ing a Negro in Birmingham, Ala. move on civil rights before depar· The End!· nouncemenl: that was delaying ilS submission "The Supreme Pontiff. John XXIII, Is dead ..... "Here is the American way of lure Wednesday on a four·day ny· to Congress. life in action," it said. "Police re­ ing swing through the West. Santa Delivers Finals The Vatican at once notifIed emballies and le,atiOllJ of 50 IIfoo prisals against Negro demonstra· Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (0. But Administration informants To Photography Clau tlons bavin& diplomatic relations with the Vatican. It informed car· tors in the city of Birmingham. said the message could not be dinaJa throughout the world who now mua come to Rome {or the worked out in time for submission Do not open until . • . It was conclave wbieh will elect a lIuccessor. The conclave must Itart In They are attacked by dogs set this week, since the President feels upon them, Police beat them and Iowa City Property Christmas in June for the 36 stu­ 18 days, but could be sooner with the speed of modern transporta· more conferences and discussions dents in Donald K. Woolley's news put them in concentration camps, are required. tion, though It cannot begin before a 15-day wlllinl period iDcludIJIc only becal.lse they demand respect photography oourse Monday com­ 9 days of mourning. Raises $1 Million Kennedy himself will be talking plete with Santa Claus coming in for their dignity and human rights with legislative leaders and others Cardinals now will don violet robes. of deep mournin&. Instead , .. Everybody's heart shrinks with Property tax assessments {or from the sky, in a helicopter since and will be keeping in touch with there was no snow, bearing a sack­ of their traditioaal crimson. Many of tbe 82 present members of the' paln and wrath when he sees these next year have increased more AUy. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy collete are expected to arrive in Rome in time fIX' the fuDenI accusing pictures!' ful of goodies - individually than $I million over' last year, City while he is traveling. wrapped final examinations. aervices. • • • Assessor Victor J. Belger said Administration officials said he The students reported to tbeir The servicea exteDd over the nine· day IIIOUrIling period. and MOURNING: Italy Monday night Monday. will do this by telephone and cour­ classroom at 10 a.m. and were cardinals now In the Eternal City will meet u IOOD • poalbIe 60 ordered three days of national iers operating back and forth be· Belger said the increase was due directed to report to the women's decide when the period. will begin and to make arraogemehtl for the mourning for the death of Pope tween Washington and wherever primarily to 199 new houses whIch atbletic field to pick up their final administration of the church in the interregnmn. John XXlII. are included on the tax roles for be might be. They said the attorney exams. Pope John XXlll reigned just four years, 88YeII moatiI mI • The Government announced lhat the first time. The total taxable general will be busy with confer· Shortly after the students arrived reign, 8D Indelible ~ flags would fly at half mast, all valuation on them is $780,264. ences here. there a helicopter landed and a days. It was a relatively brief but it left The While House legislative con· upon history. schools would be closed and all The gross total real estate and friend of Woolley's emerged wear· public housel, Including movie ference was held as Republicans ing a Santa Claus suit and carrying Of the many rnilettone act1 of bil reilD, the pootiff seemed 10 personal property Is $31,539,809 sought to take the initiative in houses, would be shut down. compared with $3O,512,99l for 1962. the finals in a bag. The students set the greatest store by the Ecumenical CoaDcll be ....n-.d IMt what one GOP senator called a were instructed not to open their autumn to deal with the distant goal 01 CbrIItlan 1I1IitJ. • • • Property taxes to be paid next year "civil rlehts crisis." will be based on the £irst Cigure. exams until they returned to their Pope John's death now automatically terminates this ~ un· VOLCANO ERUPTS: Mt. Mina­ Kennedy plans to meet with about Tot Injured classroom. mi, an active volcano on Sakura The assessments for public utlll­ 100 business leaders from around dertaking. When a SllCCellOt' is choaea by a IOIemn COlICIne of the Miry Dr.ke, " dlughter of M,... Ruth Drlke, 1105 N. Summit, I, "Since It's a news photography Island., Southern Japan, erupted ties, which are set by the state tax, the country today and is expected course, this should teach tbem that College of Cardinali, one of the first major deciliOOl to be flCed placed on I ,t,..tcher M tho SCOM of • collision between tho .uto twice Monday, spewing smoke high and the deductions for veterans to try to enlist them in his cam· they should carry their cameras will be whether to continue the COUDCiI. whlcb bad been In 1'eceII Into the sk¥. There were no reports exelTll?tions , were ,_not included In paign ,for voluntary deseeregation. In which .... WI. ridiOf and I INdtd hvck, Mond..,. Sat Plge 3 with ttiem at all limes" Woolley .ince Dec. 8 and was scheduled to ~e Sept, .. IX' whether to ot casual!'l .. or dama8e. the compar~tive t~t!\ls. . • As outlined by Humphrey in ~ for detlll" said. leave it iD uPenalon. •

: .- .... "-..;' ' I .,,' "'1'

I -Roscoe Drummond Reports~

By ROSCOE DRUMMOND ification and can be advanced as a firm U.S. com­ WASHINGTON - Aided by the timely lnitiatlve mitment. TUESDAY, JUNE 4, I'" lowl City, I... of Sens. Thomas J. Dodd (Conn.) and Hubert The advantages of banning all tests by both , Humphrey (Minn.), the United States is making a sides in the atmosphere are that it would end all further human hazard Crom radioactive fallout; it I last good try to rescue the test-ban talks in Geneva / McNamara from total failure. would reduce the amount of testing; It would elim­ Will Secretary inate the testing df multi-megaton weapons; It would I The chance of the Soviet Union's agreeing is be a solid beginning toward the cessation of all slim bordering on the invisible. testing. Weather the Storm? The evidence suggests that the Soviet Union, This is quite a budget oC advantages to be How to isolate and control the economic-political far from negotiating seriously to bring about an shared equally by both sides - and by the whole inspectable test ban, has been world. pressure arising from a military budget that now equals doing its best to avoid it - without • • • the ~mbined budget of all the state and local govern­ quite appearing to do so. Will the Soviets be at all disposed to accept a menu in the United States? This remains one of the most The central fact is that for the ban on atmospheric and underwater'tests when they 1I' " important problems "before the country. past two years Moscow has talked have rejected it twice before? The very size of the military -budget together with the ban and practised testing. Sens, Dodd and Humphrey think they may on The Soviets gave their word the ground that, as they see it, the earlier proposals degree of dependence on it by so many localities and in­ to at they wouid refrain from test­ were put forward "rather half-heal'tedly" and at a dustries, makes inevitable the kind 'of pressures that have ing as long as the U.S. and Britain time when Moscow might still have thought it could bellO 8iscl06ed iii the TJi'X and RS-70 controversies, Tech­ did the same - and broke their get the U.S. to accept a ban on underground tests nical disputes over competing weapons become sll-uggles word. without adequate inspection. ' for power among competing corporlltions, regions, states, . They secretly prepared to re­ Now the Geneva taLks are at a make-or-break sume tesling while negotiating at Geneva and then point. Moscow offers "two or three" on-site inspec­ members of Congress and military officials. There is no suddenly broke off the negotiations to begin a mas­ tions and Mr. Khrushchev says that if we don't snap question that the contest poses grave dangers for the sive series of tests in September, 1961. them UP. even that much will be withdrawn. The future of our Government as President Eisenhower pointed They have rejected any degree of on-site in­ prospect of agreement is now so slight that only one 1 ~ut in a now-famous valedictory. spection to make a test ban workable. constructive alternative remains: if the Soviets will not accept that part of a test ban (underground) • • • These are the circumstances which have caused which requires on-site inspection, will they accept What dan be done about it is less eas), to say. Congress· the President to despair of reaching any agreement two-thirds of a test ban (atmosphere and under­ at all. m~n ,from areas dependent up9D de(ense contracts spend • • • water ) which requires no on-site inspection ? much of thei r time protecting their constituency's interests Perhaps the Soviets want to continue testing in II is at this point that Sens. Dodd and Humph­ every element and therefore want to avoid any kind because, as Representative Brademas of Indiana says, rey, backed by 28 Democratic and Republican col­ of test ban while trying to make it appear that it is "anyone who didn't do it wOl,lldn't be here very long." Yet leagues, have come forward with their proposal [or tile U.S. which is blocking the way. Perhaps the it_ is clearly against the natioQul interest to award con­ a first -step agreement banning all tests in the crises and controversies within the Communist bloc earth's atmosphere and underwater. No on-_site are so disturbing to the Kremlin that Premier tract~on the ba is of pressure rather than the merits of each inspection would be needed to detect violations. propOsal. l'he national interest can only be protected by a Khrushchev wants to put any agreement with the The significance of this proposal is not that it West in the deep-freeze while Soviet world policy Secretary of Defense who is willing to s~and up against is new. It isn't. Both tbe Eisenhower and ' the Ken­ is being reviewed . pressure fr~m every quarter, military or polHical, and who nedy Administrations have offered it before. Its sig­ The Dodd-Humphrey initiative is well timed lind has the unreserved support of the President in doing so. nificance is that. with the wide bi-partisan backing well conceived. It puts the decision squarely up to Secretary Robert McNamara ql1aiifjes as that hnd of Moscow. already evident, it has assurance o[ Senatorial rat- Copyrlght 1963: New York Herold Tribune Inc. a cublnet member, and by and large President Kennedy ------~. A Death in the Family has given .him the strongest backing. The trouhle i~ Ul:lt n9t:.eVen .the White House is immune to thc temptation tQ use defehse contracts for political purposes. Secretary Frauleins Desert Native Soil - The Ralph McGill Column - , .McNamara in the end refused to go on producing' M-14 rifles in Massachusetts as a favor to Massachusetts politi. For the Exciting Life of Italy -' clans, inclllding the President's brother. But White House By JOHN CROSBY French, the boys are saying here. that dislike their own nationals, JA pressure did persuade him to postpone the contract can­ Crisis of Immediacyl . Passing yourself off as French too. Lots of Swedish girls here cellation until after the ejection at which Edward Kennedy ROME - Christa Wanninger is not at all easy and I rather prefer Italians or any olher kind By RALPH MeGILL 5 per cent. Much of our overall skilled persons - young, middle­ wQn flis Senate seat. was a pretty, curvaceous, green­ doubt they'll make it. But a good to Swedes, and there are a good Thc research report is titled unemployment problem, it thus aged, and old. The harsher truth eyed. 22-year-old German girl who many German girls (and some many American women who go is that many are unemployable. , ~y comparison with the enormous forces brought into enjoyed "IIi dolce vita" to the "Young Workers! Their Special becomes apparent, is directly con­ German men) pass themselves off for an accent - any accent, too. 'rhe problem is national. play 'by the TFX controversy, this was a /.'e1atively minor very utmost. right up to the point as Austrians or Swiss. At a party But with the German girls the Training Needs." It is issued by centrated amidst the youngest dereliction; but the civilian he.ad of the military establish· where she was knifed to death a here an actor pointed out that o[ aversion is more deep-seated, a the Office of Manpower, Automa­ age brackets in our labor force. But Southern leadership in the few minutes' walk away from five Swiss actresses there, he was part oC the shedding of the ident­ tion and Training of the U.S. De­ And chronic joble sness in the Congrc s and in the state capitols rilej1t" can afford no derelictions at all if he is to retain the partment of Labor. The title may will do well to know that the Rome's celebrated Via Veneto on willing to bet at least three were ity. middle and late teen s hardly rerr public confidence he must have to resist local Rnd political May 2. This has given the Italian not attract. It has the sOllnd of problem is worse in the Southern German. Not all of this is Ililler shame. resents an encouraging formula irl~l!ences _ press its juiciest scandal since Time magazine has written statlstics. But, in fact, it is a states. Mo t of the drorrouts o the Montesi case, and it is having Some of it is more elemental and document of crisis and meaning for the future adult leadership the among the five and a half million • • about the hordes of German wom­ more feminine. A. good many Ger­ a high old time printing details en who come to Italy in search of to every person strivlng to under­ nation requires in the space­ of non-college-going young people Mr. McNamara is . under heavy attack from various about Christa's weekends with man girls, especially the pretty, stand his country and his time. who will enter the labor force in romance, specifically with Italian adventurous ones who go abroad, atomic age_ ,I, quarters. He has offended generals, admirals powerful rich men, her partying, her bout men, a lighthearted, good-looklng Jt spotlights harsh realities. It the next three years will be from with sleeping pills, and other tid- e.re damned tired of their Ger­ says oC them that they. are of .. Again, the facts suggest a the South. members of Congress and important economic interests. lot. But the other side of the coin manic reputation as club-footed, bits. \ is less pleasant. A good many such magnitude that they "no crisis oC immediacy which has, Nowhcre is the educational It would be surprising indeed if he did not have his short· thick-waisted . hausfraus. They longer permit indifference." in truth, totally escaped the wide­ Actually, there is nothing like German women not only like don'~ want to drink beer anymore. problem as serious as in the comings, like everybody elsel but on the whole he seems the high-level hanky-panky that Italian men, but actively dislike They do not permit indifference. spread concern of our people. WQ South. They want to drink champagne are, today, already at a midway distinguished the Montesi case ~rman men, their own country­ But we will, as a people, remain to us a man of real courage and e~.. traordinary ability. A and they want to act I ike Latins. point in the five-year period J960- The Labor Department report in this one. Two · . men. indifferent. There will bc those (urther highlights the trageuy of successful campaign to destroy him politically would ho a things make the Copyrliht 1903 who will talk of 1965. During that period, the There are some other women New York Herald TrIbune lnc. number of young people in the Governor George Wallace of Ala­ tragedy for the nation. Wanninger mur­ the "jungle of bama and Ross Barnett of Missis­ The question is not whether all Mr. McNamara's de­ der. which is still crime" in Wash­ labor force will increase by 54 per cent. In 1963 alone, some 1.5 sippi, whose policies inevitably cisions have been right, but whether they have been his unsolved, inter­ Matter of Fact - ington and other will worsen the problems of thejr esling. One is the cities in terms of million non-college-bound youths will enter the labor market ; with stal.es and handicap the genera­ own and founded on facts rather than pressures. We think [act that Christa racial s t ere 0- the corresponding figure for 1964 tion of young people who must he ~core!; high in this regard. We hope that, with President loved being pho­ types instead o[ compete, in education and skills, \ographed. Why Legislate? facing the facts. projected at 1.9 million, for 1965 Kennedy's full backing, he will weather the storm. Other· at 2.2 million. This is to take with the children of other regions. Although she ap­ others wlll re­ Distributed 1903 wlse the military-industrial-political "complex" to which By JOSEPH ALSOP are rising especially rapidly. Vio­ place against the backgroun'd oC (All RllIht. Reservedl parently n eve r fUse to face real­ by The Hall SyndIcate, Inc. President Eisenhower referred will have won a tremendous had been a mod- WASHINGTON - By the Jus­ lence cannot be condoned. But if ity because oC a present economic growth rate which clearly and simply is not victory a. the country's expense. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch el (she'd earned CROSBY tice Department's initial, incom­ blood is shed, those who shed it ,the ~ost. They OFFICIAL DAILY IULLmN I I II precarious living as a clerk. in­ will only share the guilt with ignore the inevitable, which is keeping pace with the job crea­ plete count, more than 30 Negro tion we require. terpreter, office worker, and ciga­ mass demonstrations against ra­ those who obstinately seek to per­ that the price of indifference will rette girl at various times), she petuate the system of unequal be far greater in human terms as "There is another sign of dis­ \lap a huge file of pictures of cial discrimination occurred in rights. well as dollars. turbing nationwide signi£icance Univenlty .Il Was Folly, But It berself in batbing suits, slacks, the last seven days. The Federal Bureau of Inves­ in the revelation that only one of . This is the real background of every ten teenagers now growing Calendar sitting on sports cars, and so In Chicago, 1,700 Negroes gath­ the Kennedy administration's 'ligation tells us that the largest forth, and these the Italian and 'increase in crime is in the young up in rural areas is likely to ob­ Will Happen Again ered to protest a cemetery's re­ last-mlnute decision to offer a tain a farm job upon entering the German press have heen doling new Civil Rights bill to Congress. age groups. The Department of W.dnesday, Jun. 5 fusal to cremate the body of a labor market. ... At root in the Close o[ second semester class, TIle issue that became the focal point of exacerbated but day by day in the absence of Labor informs us that the highest fresh facts to write about. Negro woman, In Los Angeles, Attorney-General Kennedy. the percentage of unemployment in problem underlined by this sta­ es, 5:30 p.m. United States-Canadian relations has been settled: Can. 30,000 filled the city stadium to President himself, other mem­ age groups is in that of the young­ tistic is the most dramatic change But !be other and more signifi­ mark their sympathy with the Friday, June 7 ada's new Liberal government has followed through on cant aspect of the Wanninger bers of the Cabinet when they est - 18 to 25. in employment pattcrns the na­ Negroes of Birmingham. III North could be helpful, have all spent tion has ever experienced. With University Commencement Ex· its election pledge and will accept nuclear war heads for murder is simply that she's a The second statistic is e:.:plained ercises, 0:30 a.m. German girl. There are a large Carolina alone, there were six time and effort without stint to by the first. the full maturity oC our agricul­ , I Bomarc missiles as Canada originally agreed in 1959. But major or minor demonstrations. persuade key businessmen in seg­ tural process has come I he farm Monday, June 10 number of German girls in Rome. The first three paragraphs of Orientation for new undergradu­ even more important is the fact that, at the highest level, The German press is hinting that This is the context in which the regationist states to move for­ the Department of Labor report econo my's end as a principal grim tale of tbe Jackson, Miss., ward toward desegregation . This source of job creation." ate students. we and the Canadians are talking to each other again, and Rome is not a safe place for pre ent a "crisis of immediacy." young German girls. that they school-children must be read. massive but unseen effort has They read: We cannot - without paying a Tuesday, Jun. 11 not mutually sniping. Misunderstandings and differences ought to stay in Germany, and It is disgusting, not to say brought results, but not enough "During 1962, the unemploy­ heavy price - remain indiffer­ 9 a.m. - Regi tration for 8- between us there have been previously, and there will be the ones in Rome ought to come macabre, that American citizens results . ment rate of our youngsters stood ent to this situation. But we will. week and 12-week sessions_ more. But now that the nuclear issue has been laid to rest, home. should be driven to use the device Furthermore, tbe unseen effort at a rate of 13 per cent, as con­ Every city in America has its Wednelday, Jun, 12 of mass protest, over a hundred has revealed a pattcrn justifying tlasted to an adult rate of 4 to percentage of uneducated, un- 7 a.m. - Opening or classes it must be honestly admitted 'by both sides that it was But the German girls here have Stal no intention of coming home. years since the Civil War began, a call for legislation. Among the ------~--~ folly ever to permit relations to be so severely strained. Most of them are having the time for the sole purpose of securing many scores o[ department store -The Detroit News of their lives. Many of them have equal treatment with their fel­ owners, theater owners, and the left Germany not only physically lows. like whom Attorney-General Ken­ . University Bulletin Board but emotionally. Many of them - Meanwhile, however, the practi­ nedy has urged to accept desegre­ gation, not one has flliled to admit Unlverslly Bulletin 10.reI nollc .. must b. r.ClI.td at Th. D.lly Iowan offiCI. Room 201 Communica­ • I not only in Rome but also in Lon­ cal [acl must also be faced that tion. C.nl.r, by noon of Ihe day before publication. Th.y mu.t b. Iyped and sllned by tn aelvlNr 1h~ TIatly Iowan don and Paris - deny that they the country is confronted with a that desegregation was ultimately or officer of the or,anilltlon beln, publlcll.d. f'ur.ly IOclll functions arl not .II,lblt for thl. unavoidable. Often they have said secllon_ Dally and edited by are Germans. new phenomenon. The long pas­ TM Iowon " written student, and " govomecl bJ • it was desirable. THE "TOOL" EXAMINATION IN PLAY NIGHTS. Play·RHca at the for I p.rtlcular 1J'01IlI .., till Rome is the halfway mark, a sivity and the subsequent sporadic .,... o. aUAI bponI of floe itudmt ",",11. el8cl4ld by 'ho ltudsn' body and foor anger of the Negro people have Many have refused to move, ACCOUNTING will be liven on Wed­ Field House will resume Tuesday, ,,.,., appoInUd by the preridenI of the UnI1>er8lty_ The Dallg 10WGn', writer told me. A German girl nesday, June 12, beginning at 1:00 June 11th at 7:30 p.m. now been transmuted into a new however, or have moved only by p.m., In a room to be designated EDUCATIONAL P LAC. MIN T. IdIltJNl polley " not an e:tpreulon of SUI admlnlltrmion policy fit comes here and mingles with the later. Students eXllectlna to take THE GUILD GA~LERY, 130 ~ S. Summer addreases should be repo~­ Italians and pretty soon she picks mass feeling. Attorney-General the poorest half-measures, and this examination should noUly (he CJJnton St.. will .how painting., od by 1110 e atlll 5 eklne position•• opInIMI, IIIIny ~. Robert Kennedy, who knows more always on the same excuse. They secretory. Uoom 219 University Hall. drawlnes and &culpture by Jon This may be dene by po tcard or_ b)' up an Italian accent. Then she by June 5. Thompson and ceramIcs by Cloyde leav ing a memorandum a! tb. Edu­ meets an American oil man and about the matter than anyone have said that if "everybody Snook opening Sunday at 3 p.m. The cational PloCl'ment Ollie •. PubllllMr ... : ._ ... &4Ward P. Ba.. U exhIbit will be open Monday through , I MIMI.. EdItor ...... else, expects the mass protest would do it," tbey would 'be glad THE "TOOL" EXAMINATION IN AUDIT IURIAU Deu MillI pretty soon she's in the United ECONOMICS will be given on Thurs­ Saturday 8:30 to ~:30 and 8 to 10 INTIR-VAIIITY CHIIITIAN ,IL, 01' lIanqln, Bclltor ...... Gal'J Spur,eoa States either as his girl friend or movement to grow ralher than to desegregate. But they have day, June 13. be,lnnlnl at 1:00 p.m., p.m. each day. LOWSHIP} .n InterdeDoll1ln.UonaI CIRCULATION. City Edl{or ...... _.... Cele '.m.r subside. been reluctant to "do it all In a room to be desIgnated later. ,roup 01 Itudent. ~Ic ,".rr ~tor . .•...... Erlc ZoftIIIer his wife. But somewhere in the Students expecting to lake this ex­ CANOEING_ The Canoe House '1~I~'~IY ovenlnl It ~ ' IO In the &all process she has shed her German It is a fearful thing to say, but slonp " In other words, they have amlnallon should notlcy the secre· hours May 28-Junc 11 Inclullve will Lobby Cont.ronee 1I00m. IlIU It P.,e Editor ...... DeJlJlt. Blnnlnl tary. Room 201 Unlveriltl' 11011 by bo Monday throurh FrIday 1:00 p.m. ~o"~d.r varlou. topl.. of ••naraI Spom EcIltor •.•... Harriett HtadaIaa background altogether. She tells it Is nonetheless the truth that bee" reluctant to move because Int.rut. All are eordlaJ17 1IIY1tt4 .. !'¥U4ed• •b, Student PubUcltionl, Society Editor ...... Sharon Proctor J~ne 6. to 8:00 ~ . m . ; Saturday/. 10:00 to 8:00; I I they feared the white eXtremists and Sunday lZ:oo to u:oo. attead. rae.. COIILDJunlcetlenl Center, 10WI Cblef Photo,rapher . . •~oe Lipplneott people she's Italian but that she so far the United States has been CIty. low., dally excel't Sunday and Aut. Cit)' Edltor, .... . John Lewarqe on the other side. THE "TOOL7'iX'AMINATION III once worked in Germany. lucky in the outcome of these pro­ STATISTICS wiU bc lIlven on ~'rlday, I'ARiNTI COOPEIATIVI BABY­ IOWA MIMORi'ALUNIOW HOUR'I IllIIIday. and leeal hoUday •. Entered t;ldln~ GOdwin Oafeterla a,.-n 11:30 l .m,-l p.m. JotoDo II -oiId-eIau matter at the ~n tests. Things have happened, These re pon cs sholl' the need Junc' 14, helllnning at 1:00 p.m., In a SITTING LIAGUI. Members do.lrlnll AlIt. PhotOI1'~ber ... Rolllrt HUldeU Why does she want to shed her room to be designated lateI'. Stu· sltlers caU Ml'I. lIuwtrUY, 8~62~ . d,y-Saturday; &-4:45 p.m.. Monda1' oIfICe . It Illwa CIty Ilnder the Act Aut. Sport. E Itor ...... ,. ,Jim Piper scenes have been enacted, which for posllive legislation desegre­ ,.rtdlY: 11 :10 • .m .-I:80 P.III .. SUllder_ 01' CoIIINII Ollllart!b .. 1171. German nationality ? It's hurd to dents expecting 10 take thIs exam­ Tbose Intercsted In membership caU A"t. SocIety cIltor .... PhyUb eftWI ought to have shocked any Amer­ gating publ1c faciliUes - legisla­ Ination should Ilotlfy the .ecretary, Mre. Van AHa, 7·5346. Gold Fllthe, Room open , . .... Advertllln, Dlrector ... 1rv Gr_ tell. Girls lJke Christa, who was Room 301 Unlv.f8I(y UaU by June 10:4ft p.n,., Monday.Thur.da)'; , . .... Advertl8\ne MIn.,er .... DIck P.pke ican who believe in freedom, be tion which wiIl serve as a shelter, TO CANDIDAT&I lor derrees In 11 :411 p.m., Friday; 8 I .m.-ll:" " ... 0111 74191 from noon to mIdnlCht to CIUlifled four years old when Hitler died, 7. Saturday; 1-10:45 p.m. Sunda)'. JteIo neWI, 1141liii0 women', pa,e he Christian Or atheist. Yet no so to say. behind which those who June: r:ommollcemcnt annoullce­ '•U1d 1IIII __ellll to TIl. lIana,er .. _...... Dennll IIcKlnne,. had no part of Nazism. Still, they CHILDREN'S ART cLAssn, sur mente h,ve arrived. Order, may be I'lIIt1on II ea opea a a.m.-ll I Advert&ln, ColllU1t.nt • . . BUI Bry.n • one has been killed. wish to desegregate but dan' not picked up at the AlumnI 1I0UJe. 130 MO/lday-ThundaYI • . .m.-12 kifaIW IoWUI. II41tor\al oIflce. art ID Dennl. BIJUI\ItI feel ah inherited sense of guilt. Art Bldg. Room 201. Re,lstratlon and IIllbt, Friday lIId "IW'dI7. .. &be "Cd1Da11UIIeatlolll Cebter. can go forward safely. first class June II. Are 6·9 mee~ N. Madison St. Fhlhtt-,V CIrculation Manl,er ...... JIIII CoUJer They want to wash off the blood­ But if the mass protests in­ T-Th 10:30·12:00 ' Aile 10·12 meet. .,m THI IWIMMINQ POOL In the WOo stalns, first by physically leaving crease from 30 to 40 a week, to Copyright 1963 T·Th 1:30·3:00. A wcek course ~20. THI GUILD GALLIIY, 1I0~ ...... • ...r. ., IIIn'IIr In TIUIt_, loan! of student I'uelc" New York Herald Tribune Inc. Inslruclor: Miss Doll/h. (1.15) men'a Gym lor aU SUI coed. will be tl_ Inc.1 Lee TIlelaen. M' 8 it CUnton St., II . howlnll palnUn,.. ... I~ Cltr. ,10 per )lear In advance; Germany, thert by shedding their 00 or 80 week, is impossible open for .wlmmln, Irom ' :JG p.m. prybli 0; Nancy Shinn A~l P . to 1:15 p.m. MoniiA. throu.b 'Frt.• drawlnjll b)' Pro!. John ~om ... The 111* molltM, •.110; three month•• ". Dale Bent!. Unlverllty LlLral')'; Prof. Germanness like a discarded skin. to suppose that the luck will hold. ALL UNIVERSITY offices and de­ day. SwimmIng IUUI and lowel. hOU ri Monday throu,h Siturday ....: 1Iy mall In to...... per ,. ••rl IIx Lell.le O. _oeller SchoOl 01 Joll1'lll!. partmcnts will be OP ~II from 7:30 8 to 5 and 8 to 10 p_m. 011 SunC\J1, III; t~ montb.. P. AU There are a couple of beautiful Somewhere, somehow, emotions will be provided by the Women" au_ lmIi MIchael lIaduff, Ll, Dr. G.or,e LaHars Policy a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (C .S.T.) belllnning Pb-Yltell -'(hlt',lIftnn n"u.rtmont 3 10 ~ p.m. oCIMt iDa11 IIIbacrh,tloIII, el0 P.er EaIt_I!!\\ Colla,e of Dentlitl'YJ Rlc!hard will rise too high , or the PQlice June 10 and extendln, through German girls here from Paris. .rt ~. 11& -till, 16M, three DIOnthl, A. lIWer, LJ: Dr, Lauren A. VIII dogs of another Commissioner R•• den Invited to ,xpr.aa Aug. 31. The lunch period will con­ lUI OI.. RVATORT wlll be open UN/VIR.ITY LIIIIARY HOUIIt Dyke. Cohe,e of Education. They speak nothing but French, tinuo to be ["om noon to 1 p.m. , "Bull" Connor will break their oplnlona In I,tt.n to the Edit­ to~ the I1l1bllc every clear Monday Monday·Frlday, 7:'11-2 • .m .1 Saturelatl which they speak beautifully. or. All lett,r. mu.t Include The.e ncw hour. replace tlte pl'e­ between 7:30 And 8:30 p.m . throuih­ 7.:S0 a.m.-lO p.m,; Sunday: 1:30 p .... 01'1 7-4'" If you do not racelv, ],ollr leashes, or something else will senl 8 a.m. 10 5 p.m. Ichedule tor out the Iprlnll lemelt~r except I I .Ql . Servlc, !Xl.lle: Monday-TIi\ll't' TIle r£fitecl PH,.. .. ,ntltled ea· Dally lowln by 7:30 a.m. The Dally They boast that in ten years they lhe summer only. (31·14) dull" to the u .. lor ra~bllCatlOa hlndwritt ... II,natum Ind Id· durin, Unlveralty bolldlya. Any per· day: 8 a.m.-Ioi.m.; 'rldlY JOel It" 01 all !Mal ~,. In tht. lowin ~lreulatlon ofllee In thoe be such Parisiennes tllat no happen, and blood will be shed. -r--- IOn Interelted In vlcwlne with the urdll)': 8 I.m. p.m., 7-10 p.-. ,ria munJeatlona Center II nnfrom ii wDl eire ...., Inci should bt· type. 1: ..~per ." w... II all IUIW. The blood may indeed be shed CHlltTlAN ICIINCI OIOAN­ te,eacope may visit the oblervatory ..m only)1 Sund.y: 1.5 P.III., - 1M CIIIpI&CIIJ.. a.m. to a P.lll. MOIIdIr lid one will ever know they have ,wrlJt'n Ind qoubl'-IPICH, W. iZATION hold •• t ••Hmon, m.. t\~ during 'hen hOUri without r uervl. II m. mil.,.,. onlyl. PhotodllDl ,. daY and fI'OlII • to nn . ."TiI1 • ever been anything else. If you by Negro demonstrators_ That .Icb 1'hu rsday afternoon In tb. !tad lion_ Friday n1ebla are relMlrvec1 for tlon: Mondav-l"11dIlY' ••.m." D.... I Mue-,ood I18rvice on mlUed papera r.Mrv, the rlllht to thort ... Conference Room, Ea.t Lobby, Iowa .'lIIIno of M'hool .hll~r.n or pPopl. Mondav-1hur.day: ..10 p.m., 1.1uI' ..1_ EdItorial. Arthur M_ Sand­ II Dot poUible. but e.ery .Ifort wUt hang around those German girls possibility has to be faced, for ..... ,... lIemorl.1 Union, .t 5:16. All art wti­ In other pubJJc or,anlntlons. Tho... "ay: 10 am. u.oUl 110011, l;a ..... - _; Advertl.llq I. John Kolt­ be mlde to comet enon with the Jong enough, you 'll Jearn excellent Negro emotions, very naturally, _e ~ ItttDd. wbo wlab to obtllll a r ...rvatioD '1111011: ... p.a. IIQI QrcaIaUoa. WUbar h'-- III&t a.ua. • '. . TH E DAl l Y IOWAN-I,," City, '_ T""",, JIM " 1MS-P... I

. 1 Hotel Owner Testifies Only 126 Honorary I""" ,._ • At Mavrias Hea~ing The owner and the of Ing of the fire . the Campus Hotel te tined Salur· He lest iIied he had had IJ1IUble Degrees Awarded day they did not know Ronald with Habermann before and fired la\'ria nor any reason be would him oortly after the fire . Ibear ill will toward tbe botel or its Habermann bad te tified Friday Ioccupant . he had discovere4 the (ires and saw Roland Sm:,il, 330 Golfview, Mavrias In the Hey coming toward owner of tbe hotel. and Clifton O. the hotel. In SUI's History fyers, 523 E. Burlington, botel Habermann and other wilnessa man ger. were the ixth and sev· said they had not seen lavrias sel enth wimes s to appear in the the fires nor bad they beard him At the first SU[ commence· Falls, who received his bachelor's I Princeton U., father of William O. hearing before Justice of the Peace talking about it. l. ment, in 1858, two degrees and master's degrees at sur. Aydelolle. of the SUI History De· Carl J. Goetz. LEGAL FIGURES honored in· parlment; LL.D. to Edwin Rogers The hearing iJ expected to COD· {avrias. 22, is charged with set· tlnue later thiJ week. were conferred - a bachelor eluded Emlin McLain. SUI grad· Embree. educator and humanitar· UIlI a small fire al the rear of the of science degr e to Dexter uate, early chancellor of the SUI ian; LL.D. to Eugene Gilmore. Sandy Smash up hotel early on larch 22. He is ELKS CLUI HIT Edson Smith, and an honorary College of Law. and juslice of the president of SUI (1934-1940), and be\n. beld in the county jail in SHENANDOAH til - E1IlI dubs Iowa Supreme Court; Eugene vice·governor and governor gen. , ' bachelor of arts degree to D. An I-y ..r-old child wa, hospitaliled Monday with was traveling ust on Church St. wh.n the ."to lieu of $10,000 bond. In two southv; est Iowa lOWDJ were Wambaugh long·time professor of eral of the Philippine Islands; injuri.s sustall\fll whll. riding in an auto whi ch driven by Mrs. Dr.k ••pproached from the north Questioned by county attorney entered during the nlcbl and an law at the Harvard Law School and LL.D. to L. Paul Sieg, president Franklin Wells, then head of collided with a INcIecI dump.truck at the inter· on Johnson Str•• t. Police Slid Wagner att.mpted Ralph Neuill and defense attorney undelermined amount of .-y former SU1 professor, and Scott M. of the University of Washington, L. G. Klein, Smith te tified be bad the SUi Normal Department, uction of Church and Johnson str•• ts. Al so in· to avoid The lIuto by swerving. how.ver the ",. taken from their safe. Ladd, lowa Supreme Court jus· native lowan, who received his never seen favria. around the Don Wilson. mall8&er of the Ellul ) I jured In the crash w.r. the driver of the car. hicles collided lind cam. to rut on the grlss pl'edecessor of the SUI College lice father of the present dean of B.S .• M.S., and Ph.D. degrees at hotel. He said he knew tbe door 10 Club here, said a ledge Ilammer of Educa tion. the ' sm College of Law Mason Iowa and was professor of physics Mrs. Ruth Drake, 110S N. Summit. and the driver parking on the southeast corn.r of the inters.,;· the rear of th hotel wa not locked was used 10 pound open the .are. of the truck, Donald Duan. Wagn. r, 106 S. Gilbert. lion. Witnesses at the scene lold polic. the truck Among the 1.390 graduales at the Ladd. 'at SUI; 1942 - LL. D. to William R. I, at the time of the fire and that he A cigarette machine allO was 105th Spring Commencement Fri· Recipients of honorary degrees Boyd, member of the Finance Com· both suffering whiplash injuries. Mary Drake, had been tr.veling at a low rat. of sPHd at the seldom inspecled that area. broken into. day wilJ be Ihe recipient of SUI's conferred by SUI in the past 50 mittee, State Board of Educalion daught.r of Mrs. Drak., sustained a I. caration time of the '"cident, 5:41 p.m. Mrs. Drlk. was Myer, manager for 21 years, At Red Oak. poJice said tbe sale 88.000th degree. Only a tiny Lrac· years are: (Regents) for 33 year~, and 1889 of her right I'g ...,d was bo ing held .It M.rcy charged with failuflt to yi.ld the rillh! of way in lold Klein that W Carl Habermann in th Elk Club wa opened by graduate of SUI. tion of this all·time lotal have 1913 - LL.D. to John Campbell, Hospit.l for oburntion Mand. y night. The truck, connection with the IIccident. Wagner WIIS not had been night cierk on the morn· u lng the combination. been hono rary degrees - the Uni· chief justice of the Colorado Suo 1954 - LL.D. to Her~r t Hoover, owned by Iowa City Excantion and Gr. ding Inc .• charged. -Photo by Joe Lippincott versity's special means of recog· preme Court. who received his president of the United States nizing an individual's outstanding B.A., LL.B. and M.A. degrees from (1929-1933), and native of Iowa; 1962 - LL.D. to Earl Warren. cur· achievement in profeSSional or pub· SUI; 1916 - LL.D. to J 0 s e p h Supreme Court Decision - The lic life, contribution to the well· Charles Arthur, botanist. Purdue rent chief justice of the U.S. SUI being of society, and dedication to University, who received his B.S. preme Court. the purposes and ideals of the Uni· degree from SUI ; 1917 - LL.D. to Perfect , , versity. Onl y 26 honorary degrees William Lowe Bryan , president of have heen awarded by SUI in the Indiana University; 1918 - LL.D. Agency Shop Held Legal Gift past 50 years, and on ly slightly to Frank Orrin Lowden, former 3 Top Alums more than 125 in all its history. governor of Illinois. and 1885 grad· WASHINGTON IA'I - The SUI in passing the Taft·Hartlcy Labor 1n its ccond 8-0 ruling th~ court The roll of those who have reo uate of SUI. preme Court ruled Monday that Law in 1947, mad e illegal the upheld the Florida upreme Court federal labor law does not prohibit A ceived this honor from SUI in· 1919 - LL.D. to Marion LeRoy To Be HonQred c1osed·shop contracts under which in its findings that the agency agency shop contrads between em· workers had lo join the union be· shop violates that late's right·to­ eludes two U.S. presidents, two Burton. then president of the Uni· ployers and unions but it beld that Quality Composer Meredith Willson. Ma· fore being hired. work 10\\ . governors of Iowa, U.S. senaLors versity of Minnesota, later pres· states are free to ban such agree· and representatives, six former ident of the University of Michigan; son City newspaperman W. Earl ments. Gradua tion presidents of SUI, justices of the 1920 - LL.D. to George Evan Rob· Hall and Burlington businessman The court also handed down im· U.S. and Iowa Supreme Courts, as erts, New York City, banker; 1922 John H. Witte Jr. will be the first portant racial segregation deci· Portrait we l l as distinguished lawyers. - LL.D. to Vilhjalmur Stefansson, three recipients of Distinguished sions for the third straight week scientists and educators. arctic explorer, 1903 graduate of Free Pick-up and Delivery Service Awards to be presented in and ruled in tbe Jong·pending case from FRIDAY HONORARY degrees SUI ; LL.D. to Franklin H. Gid· a new program of SUI. involving five states and the Fed· will be conferred on Dr . Richard dings, sociologist, Columbia Uni· The awards will be presented to eral Government over use of Col· Shirts Repairs E. Shope, graduate of SUI. inLer· versity: 1923 - LL.D. to Ellwood the men at the annual All·A1umni orado River water. nationally· known virologist, and P. Cubberly, educator. Stanford T. W ong Luncheon next Saturday during the The justices were unanimous - 8 Fluff and Fold Sweaters professor at The Rockefeller Insti· University ; LL.D. (0 Charles H. University's Commencement week· tute, New York City, and Rear Judd, psychologist, Chicago Uni· to 0 - in laying down the collective end, SUI President Virgil M. Han· bargaining guJdellne for the agency 111 S, Clinton Adm iral Lewis L. Strauss (ret.), versity ; LL.D . to Ernest H. Lind· cher annou nced today. former chairman of the U.S. ley, president of the University of shop. T his is a relatively new Atomic Energy Commission. Kansas; LL.D. to James E. Rus· A limited number of the new arrangement under which work· Varsity Cleaners William Howard Taft, later to sell. educator; LL.D. to Edward awards will be presented each year ers need not join the union but For Per onal Appointmellt.· Pholle 7-3961 r in recognition of ou[Standing public. must pay unions thal bargain on Phon. 7-4153 17 E. Washington be elected President of the U.S., L. Thorndike, educator. gl'aduate professional and citizen services. was honored in 1907. He was sec. of SUI. Each of the first recipients of tbe andtheir duesbehalf by the members. equivalent Such of feesar· If';;~~ ~~~~;:~~~~~~==~=~::~~~~i:~~iiii;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ relary of war in Theodore Roose· 1928 - LL.D. to Thomas H. Mac· new award also has been instru· rangements are called for in about veil's cabinel at the time, Herbert bride, president of SUI (19l4.l9l6); mental in strengthening programs 6,000 or more labor.management Hoover, 30th man to be President LL.D. to Herman Knapp. vice pres· of the University. conlracts in lhe United States. of the U.S., was gIven an honorary ident and treasurer, Iowa State They will receive bronze medal· But some of the 20 states which degree in 1954. Charles Warren College (now Iowa State Univer· have what is known as rlght·to· Fairbanks, vice president of the ,sity). Ames; 1934 - Litl.D. to lions picturing Old Capitol and the IF MONEY work laws ban the agency shop as U.S. in Theodore Roosevelt's sec· George MacLean. president of SUI Iowa hawk as permanent me· mentos of the honor. well as union sbop contracts un· ond term, received an honorary (1899-1911); Litt.D. to John Bow· der which a worker must join a degree in 1905, while in office. man. president of SUI (1911-1914); Willson, a native 01 Mason City, union after be is hired. Congress. Iowa governors Ralph P. Lowe of Litl.D. to Walter Jessup. president and composer of "The Music Man". will be honored for his na' IS MUSIC Muscatine (1858-1860) and Buren of SUI (1916-1934 ); 1936 - ~ltt.D . R. Sherman of Vinton 0882-1886), to Abraha~ Flexner, then director tional salesmanship of Iowa. and ,I were recipients of honorary degrees of ~he InstItute for. Advanced Sudy, for his wholesome Influence in the in 1872 and 1885, respectively . U.S. Prmceton l!mverslty. wol'ld of American entertainment. KWAD , senators from Iowa to be honored 1941 - LJtt.D. to Frank Aydelot· An honorary life member of the IIOkc TO ,YOUR EARS · " were George Grover Wright, Des te, Institute for Advanced Study, sur Al umni Association. Willson The Dormitory Voice of Moines (1871-1877) in 1864 when he has written some of the Univer· I I sity's most popular musical num· The State University of Iowa was Iowa Supreme Court justice, Tu .....y. Jun. 4, "n bers. 24 hour, of the world', and William Boyde Allison of Du· Vienna Editors tlnest music to ,tudy by buque (1873-1908) in 1903. Hall, who recently retired after Stop by IOWA BOOK The second honorary degree con· Call for Effective more than 40 years as editor and ferred by SUI was to Samuel F. publisher of the Mason City Globe· MlIIer. In 1862, who was the first Opera Operation Gazette. will be honored for a wide Iowan to serve on the U.S. Suo range o! community and stale servo preme Court. Appointed associate ices, and for his advancement of VIENNA IA'I - Leading Vienna quality in Iowa educalion. including justice in that year, he served un· newspapers have called on Her· til his death in 1890. SUI. He is a former member of the berl von Karajan to start effective Iowa State Board of Education, CHIEF JUSTICE Earl Warren, management of the Vienna State now the Slate Board of Regents. Tu.. ...V . JUne 4. nn Now that the semester has drawn to an end, your of the U.S. Supreme Court. was Opera or resign . awarded an honorary degree in Hall was graduated fr om SUI in 8:00 New, Iieadllnes This marked the end of the year· 1918. 8:01 NMeOwrn,ln' Chapel 1962. 8:15 books have served their purpose. These are the only , I old honeymoon of most of the Aus· Witte, Burlington druggist and 8:30 Morning Feature The commencement of 1934 saw 9:00 Music three former presidents of sur reo trian press with the famed but manufacturer. wilJ be recognized 9:30 Booklhelf ceive honorary degrees : George E. controversial conductor. for his cons istent community lead· Ig~gg ~~;I~ items you have purchased during the past semester MacLean, John G. Bowman. and "Karajan must decide either to ershi p and ded ication to the 10:30 Soclolo,y of FamUl' take over effective total manage· strength and welfare of the city 11:00 The Kin, of lnatrument. Walter A. Jessup. Former pres· 11:30 Muuc Ident Thomas H. Macbride had reo ment of the opera himself with all of BUrlington. and for his support 11:51 New. CIJ.lUle that have served you well in your academic pursuits ceived the same honor in 1928, and Lhe obligations resulting from it, or of research. U;~ ~'r::':oo n -::,~~ in 1941, former president Eugene geltulg to his side a real opera ;;;;;;;';;;;iiiiiiiiii;;;;;::;:;;"'~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_ 12:45 News Back, round and still have substantial cash value . . . So cash in on A. Gil more also received an hon· manager." said 'the conservative ~ ; ~ ~~:: class· I. orary degree. James Black, acting Volksbiatt. 4:30 Tea TIme president of SUI from 1868-70 was "If he is not willing to take either ~;~ ~e~~~~, T:::~ort Iowa Book and Supply/s BONUS PRICES FOR USED given an honorary degree in 1882. of these two roads, there is still a 5:45 News S.ck,round Among noted educators were third ... " the paper added. This :~ gg f~I~~)'C~'lcw.~1IY BOOKS. Bring your unwanted books to the base ~ clearly meant his resignati on. 9:00 Trio ,1 Henry Sabin of Des Moines, early 9:45 News Final pu blic school educator and Iowa Volksblatt charged Karajan reo 10:00 SIGN OFF Superintendent of Public Instruc· garded the opera as a "giant play· ~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiii~;i;i;;;;;i;i;iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iii., mentforfast and experienced appraisal for the ' high~ tion from 1888-92j Theodore S. Par· thing." It added the opera has been vin. member of the original nine· in the midst of a crisis for years est possible prices. Now is the time to bring in your man faculty and fir t head of Nat· and not much has been done about ural History at SUI. and Homer H. it. The climax was when a per· Seerley. long· time president of formance had to be canceled in used books of current edition because you'll get Iowa State Teachers College (now early May because a singer failed State Coll ege of Iowa). Cedar to show up . . " dividend prices and faster service before June 5.

• I Capture this happy FOR BOOKS WHICH day forever with ARE BEING DISCONTINUED quality color In an effort to give you the best possible photographs. '.ie rvice, we have contracted with other book stores and used book wholesalers for the sale of many books which will be You Gall adeqtllliely convey youI' feeling wlwn We have a complete selection of cameras 11 discontinued at SUI since there have been you remember the Graduate with one of our and photographic supplies, sa please stop in an unusual number of new editions and lovely Selection of Corsages, or Cut, Flower and get fully prepared for graduation day. title changes, This way we can give you top prices on books which you thought Bouquets . •• Appmpriate cUI'iLs and gifls call you 'd be stuck with, a1 0 be found i ll wiele selcctiolls at , •• PROMPT QUALITY FINISHING - 24 hour •• rvlce for black and white - Dally shipment for color Bell,! ~ Flower Snop ooi and HALL'S GIFTS Li nd'S PHOTO and ART SUPPLY ~lfJj2& 127 S. Dubuque St, Ph , 8·1622 "F "ielldly, Per8QIlal Sl;! rmce Always" Eight South Clinton

I 1 . ..

Page 4-TH; DAILV IOWAN-low. City. Iowa- Tuesday, June 4, 1963 Wi cker~ham/s 4-Hitter Wrecl(img" AAtJ:t Fede ~ation Gives AI s 4-1 Victory U.S. Tearn for Russian M'eet KANSAS CITY IA'I - Dave Wick- walked, then John Wojcik lined a ersham's [our-hit pitching, a home single to right and Wickersham was NEW YORK (AP) - A vet­ can claim the AAU couldn't (ield a letes in the AAU championship, Ortiz Won/t Sign; Michigan Harris Leads run by Doc Edwards and a costly held up at third. But when Allison proper team against Russia." that this was proper so long as the throwing error by Bob Allison cn- threw the baH in the TWins' dug­ eran AA U official charged Mon­ Sober, who helped negotiate the athletes got permission or their abled the Kansas City Athletics to out, two runs scored and Wojcik day that the college-sponsored tattered peace plan between the athletic directors. , whip the Minnesota Twins, 4-1, went to third. Ed Charles singled U.S. Track Federation is out to warring groups with Gen . Douglas In his new message, Bushnell Withdraws from WBA U.Se Golfers in Monday night. Wojcik home. wreck the American team that MacArthur, said man y actions said he had been "reminded " that MUSKEGON, Mich. (t1'I - Mi chi ­ Cudelsky, chairman o( the Michi­ C.amBo Pascual start~~ for the ~!~~::o~~ty . =m ~~=! ; : being taken by the college group it is a Federation stand that col· gan formally washed its hands of gan State Athletic Board of Con­ Twms and waged a brilhant duel PIICUII, Moor. (8), Plels (') and will go to Ru~sia , and hopes it "are in dil'ecl violation of the Mac- lege athletes can not compete in World Boxing Association member­ trol. with Wickersham over the first aattey; Wlckershlm and Edwards. will succeed. Arthur agreement." an AAU meet unless the meet di· ship Monday and invited other British Meet . . . W - Wickersham (4.3). L - "ascual seven tnnmgs. Pascual aHowed only (7.5). Sober said the AAU hoped that rectors get Federation sanction , He c(lfl'ied ou( ea rli er threats to Pinky Sobel', AAU attol'Dey, com­ states to Collow in the walkoul. four hits and gave up his only run Home runs - Kans .. City, Edwards MacArthur would make a new Itoo . The action was taken by David I. withdraw Michigan from the WBA ST. A'JDREWS, Scotland IA'I - menting on moves to wilhdraw col­ Labr6n Harris, the United Stales in the fifth when Edwards hit his (_'_). __-======- __ _ ruling on recent Federation moves . The AAU has maintained that upon failure by lightweight cham· first homer since joining the A's lege athletes from the AAU na· THE AAU oCficial's immediate this is dual sanction, outlawed by amateur go lC champion, Monday last week. tional championships, said: lire was aimed at a letter o[ claro the . MacArthur flgreement, and pion Carlos Ortiz to sign by Mon­ grabbed a one-hole victory over The Athletics wrapped it up with "The Federation is out to wreck ification sent to the 132 colleges in flally refuses to seek it. Speedway Golf day [or a title defense against vet­ compatriot Paul Coste and led four three runs in the eighth against the AAU and its clubs, even to the the Eastern College Athletic Con- An AAU official revealed Monday eran Muskegon southpaw Kenny of hi s Walker Cup colleagues into Ray Moore. Wickersham singled extent of decimating the U.S. team ference , the largest college group that the entry of only one college Lane. the second round of the Brili h with two out and Wayne Causey against Russia. in the country. athlete, decathlon world record Amateur Championship. "And they hope for that, so they The letter, released l\1onday at holder C. K. Yang of UCLA, had Championship Gudelsky was particularly di s· Richard Davies, the 32-year-old a luncheon of track officials and been filed so (ar. Yang is from tUl'bed over a statement by Dr . defending champion from Pasa­ writers, in effect ordered ECAC Formosa, and would not he eligible Charles P: Larson of Tacoma, dena, Calif., chalkea up the most Farrell Hurls colleges to keep their athletes out for the U.S . leam to Russia. Wash., WBA president, who said he impressive triumph of lhe Ameri­ of AAU meets. GEN. MacARTHUR'S office here To Finsterwald can Walker Cuppers in the first Iowa Thinclads believed Ortiz and Lane would This includes the nallonal AA U said the genera l had no imme­ round. He lashed Robert Goodwin Colts to Win AMERICAN LEAGUE championships at St. Louis June diate comment on the situation. INDIANAPOLIS (.4'1 - Dow Fin- meet sometime this summer. If of Canada 6 and 5 and finished 1 W. L. Pet. G.B. 21-22, where the American team He arranged the shaky truce sterwald, won his first go lf tourna- not, Larson said, the possibil ity of under par for the holes played. Baltimore ...... 30 20 .600 for the annual meet with Russia last January, at the request of ment in more than three years The big surprise oC the opening r New York . 26 17 .605 11.0 Win 5 Events 'th a clos'ng 68 for a 16- stripping the crown trom Ortiz Ov Dodgers x-Chicago . . .. 29 20 .592 11.0 will be picked . President Kennedy, who warned Monday wl "' day was the defeat of British Kansas City . . 26 21 .553 2Y.1 THE U.S. MEN'S team has never that the U.S. teams for the Tokyo under-par 268 to grab first prize probably would be discussed af. the Walker Cupper Sandy Saddler, a HOUSTON IA'I - Dick Farrell, Boston .. . 23 22 .511 412 Mlnn~sola . . 24 24 .500 5 lost a meet to Russia, but would Olympics were in danger o[ being of $10,000 in the Speedway Festival WBA anual convention. seeded Scot, who lost to Alec Rose, the well-traveled fast-bailer who x·Los Angeles ... 24 27 .471 6'h be almost certain to lose badly dangerously weakened. was a 20-game loser last season, Cleveland .. .. 19 25 .432 8 At Des Moines Tournament. IN TACOMA, Dr . Larson said the playing on Ilis home links - the Detroit .. . .. 20 27 .426 811.0 if college athletes are not allowed Sniping continued, and the gen­ The victory boosted the 33-year- Lane-Ortiz situation "was being 6,936·yard , par 36-36·73 old course held Lo Angeles hitless until one Washington 17 35 .327 14 The Iowa track team, competing to compete. Most o( America's top eral had to rule again in March out in the eighth inning Monday ,,·played night game old Ohioan [rom ninth to sixth on studied," hut more information was of St. Andrews. in the first Iowa Track and Field short - distance runners are col- on the question o( sanctions of the PGA money list this season neded. He said there will be no All matc:'es - until Saturday's night in pitching the Houston Colts Monday's Results Federation meet at Des Moines lege athletes. meets, to save the indoor track to a 2-1 victory over the Dodgers. Kansas City 4, MinnesOta 1 with a total of $26,503. His last hasty action. final - will be over 8 holes. Chicago at Los Angeles - nlghl Saturday, "did real well consider­ The latest ECAC direclive re- season. triumph was the New Orleans Open Earlier, the professional boxing Harris, trying to become the first Dick Tracewski got the first hit Only games sched uled. ing the meet came right in the versed an earlier decision by Asa Now warfare has broken out off Farrell, a clean single to ccn­ in April 1960. police organization was on record American since Lawson Little to Today'. Probable Pllchers middle o[ finals week," Bushnell, commissioner of the con- again. There was a four-way tie Cor calling for an Ortiz· Lane title bout hold both the American and Brit. ter, and the 29-year-old right­ New York (Terry 6-4) at Baltimore Francis Cretzmeyer said Monday . ference. The general ruled in March that hander lost his shutout in the ninth (Barber 8-41 - nlghl second place at 270. The group in- signing by June 3 or Ortiz would ish tilles at the same time, ran into Chicago (Buzhardt 5·2) al Los An· Hawkeye winners were Cloyd BUSHNELL SAID last week, aft-I the AAU had control of open meets cluded Bobby Nichol s. who missed forfeit his crown. a tough competitor in Coste. Little when Jim Gilliam led off with a geles (OsinskI 3-1) - nlghl er Manhallan College had an- and the Federation had control of Detroll (LoUch 0·1) at Cleveland Webb in the discus throw with a, an eight-foot eagle putt on the last ORTIZ AND HIS 1T':Inager, Bill held the two titles in both 1934 triple and score!l on Tommy (Lalman 1·2 or Grant 3·5) - ntght nounced it planned to run its ath- college athletes. Davis' sacrifice fly. Mlnnesota (Perry 3.3) at Kansas City distance ot 167-7; Roger Kerr who hole to finish with a 33-31·64; Tom- Daley, spurned an offer Saturday and 1935. Rusty Staub struck the deciding (Rakow 6-21 - nlgll' ran the half in 1:52.5 ; Gary Rich­ my Aaron, with 69 ; Julius Boro, 70, from Muskegon pro:l.oler Jerry The young Oklahoman was 2 up Bo,lon (Wilson 4-4) at Washington ards in the 220 with a time of :21.9; blow [or Houston against Don Drys­ (Cheney 4·6) - night and Tony Lema, who defeated DeLise, who said he would put up going to the 17th - the famous dale with his first major leaguer Don Gardner in the 440-yard inter­ Aaron last week in a playoff for $30,000 plus a gate percentage for "Road" hole o[ the old course. He NATIONAL LEAGUE mediate hurdles in :53.9 and the Ibex Out of Belmont; the Metnphis Open title, 67. a title match in Muskegon thi~ was at the front of the green ill homer, [ollowing a walk to Carl W. L. Pd_ G.B. , . WOI'wick in the fourth. San Francisco . 31 19 .620 mile relay team which won in Fred Hawkins , lirst-round leader, summer. DeLise ~aid Daley was two. Coste was in a bunker but St. Louis ...... 30 22 .577 2 3: 13.1. Farrell retired (he first 11 Dodg­ Los Angeles .. . . 27 23 .540 4 was only a stroke behind Finster- bolding out [or a $60,000 guarantee. played a fine and shot to within Chicago . 27 23 .540 4 wlad after a birdie on the 17th bole. Earlier Delay rejected offers of three feet of the hole and sank his ers in order, then gave up a walk Cincinnati 24 23 .5 11 512 Bill Frazier did not run the third Five Entries Uncertain to Ron Fairly in the fourth. He Pittsburgh ...... 24 24 .500 6 leg of the mile relay because oC on On the 485-yard 18th, Finsterwald, $42,000 (Or a Ortiz-Lane .tiUe fight putt to take the hole while Harris Philadelphia ..... 23 27 .460 8 playing in the same three-some, in New York or New Jersey. three putted. also walked Drysdale and Wally Milwaukee ... .. 22 27 .449 811.0 injured foot. Gary Hollingsworth, NEW YORK (.4'1 - Sunny Jim Preakness. Last week, while Cha­ Moon with one out in the sixth , but lIouston ...... 22 30 .423 10 Gary Richards, Scott Rocker and Fitzsimmons withdrew one-half of teaugay was resting, Candy Spots boomed a 285-yard drive and put Dr. Larson said the WBA needed ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Ne\\ York . 20 32 .385 12 neither mon was able to advance. Kerr teamed up for the victory. his expected entry for the $125,000 romped off with the Jersey Derby his approach shot just . hor t of the to know if this was "a firm and Artistic: Cleaners 211 Iowa Av •• Lo. Angelas 000 000 001- 1 2 0 Monday's Resulls Hollingsworth ran the fastest quar­ Belmont Stakes Saturday at Aque­ - his fourth $100,000 stakes of the green. fair offer" and other circumstances Houston . 000 200 OOx- 2 • 0 Houston 2, Los Angeles 1 ter, :46.9. Drysdale, Perrlno skl (I) ROSebOrO ' Only 'game scheduled duct, while trainers of five other season. He had won the Santa Anita ~awkins, aft~r matching Dow's before rcferring to matter to the FREE STORAGE Farrell and Campbell. W - Farrel r I Gary Fischer was second in the horses sat back and waited for and Florida Derbies last Winter. drive, faded hiS second shot mto I executive committee. I (5"). L - Drysdale (6-6). Today', Probable Pitchers a creek. He pulled ofC a shoe and Slor. your winter gorments till - Houston, Staub (1).. San Francisco (Sanford 7·3) at Chi- mile run with a 4:14 .8 time and somebody else to make a move. cago (Jackson 7·5) Mr. Filz said Monday Ogden Chateaugay also is a definite a sock, and with his bare foot next fa" ... " our low Los Angeles (Miller 3·2) at Houston Larry Kramer placed second in the starter, and so is Sunny Jim 's planted in the water, played the RODGERS INJURED cI.anlng cost. (Droll 2-2) - nigh I three-mile run while George Clarke Phipps would not put up $5, 000 to France Advances other horse - the Wheatley Sta- ball out with a sa nd wedge . His IA'I - Milwaukee (Hendley 4·3) al New placed third in that event. make The Ibex a supplementary LOS ANGELES Bob York (Willey 4-4) - nlghl ble 's Insurrection. Trainer Syl Ve- chip took a bad bounce and left Rodgers, the Los Angeles Angels' Cincinnati (Purkey 1-2) at Pittsburgh The Federation meet will now be­ nominee. In European Zone (Cardwell 2·6) - night The New York Racing Associa· itch is rea?y to shoot for h!s thir,d him about 25 feet (rom the pin . He first sIring , will be out of Artistic x{~' Only Kaines scheduled. come an annual event. Belmont wltl1 D. Widener s two-putted it for a bogey 6, fin. tion still lists the names oC 10 3- Ge~rge the line-up for from 10 days to two Tailoring /' •. ' Davis Cup Play year·olds as possible starters in T?p Gallant. Veitch s~ddled two islling with a 69 for 271. week. duc to an ankle sprain, the NO STALLING wmncrs Cor C. V. Whitney, Ph~- , Finsterwald knocked his third club said Monday. 411 1'. lIurllngton PARIS IA'I- France advanced to Hoffman Manager the I Ih -mile class­ MONTREAL IA'I - The National ic , but several lanx 10 .1947 and Co~nterpolnt 10 shot 75 feet to within eight inches lie turned it while base-running Ph. 7-"24 the quarter-finals oi the European 1951. A lift? pro~able IS the Green- of the cup and was down (or a against Baltimore Sunday. 7-9"5 Zone Davis Cup tennis competition Hockey League rules committee trainers definitely broke the ice Monday, making rule Of Baltimore's are playing it' by tree Stable s Outmg Class. birdie, his second in the last three Monday as Jean·Claude Barclay The $25,000 Kent Stakes at Del· holes. It gave him a 33-3j-68 defeated Jose Edson Mandarino of change3 to restrict stalling. ear. Pro Cage Team First off, the aware Park Saturday may divert against par 35-36-71. Brazil, 3-6, 6·2, 6-0, 6-4, in a singles The action was the lirst taken at some oC the traffic away [rom Finsterwald's pre vious rounds match. That brought the France­ the circuit's annual summer meet­ ,prospect o( tan­ .BALTIMORE 1.4'1- Paul Hoffman gling with Rex Aqueduct. were 68-68-64 as he led one or HENRY - LOUIS' Brazil score to 3-1 and assured ing, Lo be climaxed by Wednesday's was named Monday general man­ France's victory. intra-league draft. Ellsworth's Candy IvaI' Balding, who now trains for golf's greatest parow r e c kin g ager of the Baltimore Zephyrs, a S pot s isn't en- . Whitney, has Tom Cat on the fence, charges. In all, 63 player hcttcred presents ..... France had earlier won one sin­ Under the new regulations, a National Basketball League team couraging S 0 m e with a 50-50 chance he'll go in the par of 284 [or the distance. gles match and the doubles. bench penalty will be assessed moved here Crom Chicago. The French team will mcet Spain against any team whose players owners to put up Belmont - or the Kent. Grouped with Hawkins at 271 Hoffman, 98, played in the NBA the $1,250 neces- IB EX Al so In the questionable cate- were 127-pound ChiChi Rodriguez later this month in Barcelona. persist in staying offside after with Baltimore, New York and Sp

IBye ~ . ~

If you're being graduated, here's our congratulations and best wlshe. for the future. We've enjoyed knowing you and serving you during your stay In Iowa Citl'.

If you're leaving just for the summer, here's hoping you'll have a wonderful vacation, a good job, .. or lOIS of fun in whatever you've decided to do, And hurry back.

Incidentally, If you're going to work for the summer, stop in and we'll fix you up with somE) of our Bank-By.Maii envelopes so that you may deposll your earnings from anywhere In the WQlld, (It'll be nice to have .ome money to come back to next fall, won't it?)

Yes, we'll no doubt stili be in the throes of remodeling when you get back next September, but take our word for it, thlngs'~e gonna' be diHerent elrol/lld

hel'~1 If won't be too 10llg after Septembor that we'll have (I nice, new place to 1I Does a man really take unfair advantage of women bank fOr you I when he uses Mennen Skin Bracer? Have a nice summerl All depends on why he uses it. Most men simply think Menthol-Iced Skin Bracer Is thl best after·shave lotion around. Because it cools rather than burns, Because it helps heal shaving nicks and Ie rape •. Becaute it IOWA\ STATE BANK helps prevent blemishes. So who can blame th em if Bracer's crisp, long·laltlng aroma just happens to affect women so remarkably? I & TRUST I COMPANY Of course, some men mlY 1111 Menn.n Skin atlCer blCIUIf of this effect. t::\ Member F,D,I.C. - How intelligont( ~ SciCDlIfk J)\:f onnel botll In .,OHI Board Replies To Many Grads Not m nt and in indu TY," h said. The 4 SUlowans [0 Work higbert de\'elopment of science, he I Prof's Criticism Answer for Space, said, "ill the creation o{ men's mind resulting from man 's jD\'es­ The Johnson County Board of Says Van Allen ligalion. 11 i not aimle potter­ In Europe for Summer Supervisors Monday repIJed to ing." JACKSONVILLE, 1lI. IA'I - Dr. He did not elaborate on the tate­ Four SUI students will leave the United States affiliate. ElIch comments by Russell M. Ro ,as­ Jame A. Van Allen, authority on student will pay {or his own trans- sociate professor of political sci­ men! about waste Iowa June 19 for summer jobs with radiation, told a commencement Van Allen, dj,'col'erer of the vast European industries. portalion to Europe. The firms pay ence, crltici:r.ing the efficiency of audience fonday that rna pro­ band of radioacti\'ily in pace students a living allowance up to county governments. Their trip is part o{ a student ex­ duclion of eience graduate is nol which bear his name, Is head o[ $80 a week. Kopel is pre ident of the answer to America's pace age change program which will bring tbe SUI chapter of the associatIon . Ross said he felt cities and the department of phY ' ic and a progress. tronomy at lh Unil'er itl' of Iowa. {our European students to Iowa for An Iowa firm must accept a schools were orten blamed for high peaking at 134-year-old Illinois tbe summer. European student for the summer taxes when the county was taking College which conferred on him an SUI Europe-bound students are: in exchange for each SUI student a large share of the money. "Coon­ honorary degree of doctor of sci­ Jim Kopel , G, Marshalltown, who goes to Europe. " Every Iowa ties are serving a different pur­ ence, Van Allen aid quality of tl!\i411Q "~?:~,, Elaine Till, B4, Farley, Shirley [jr~ which offers a pla~e ror a I pose today," Ross continued, "than science education and wise appli­ Stevens, B4, Iowa City ; and Judi foreign sludent engages ID ages- . cation o{ cience talent are import­ JUDY GARLAND Smith B4, Moravia . ture or international good will, " th~y did 100 years ago, but they ant. DIRK BOGARDE Kopel will work at N. V. Philips said SUI Professor John S. Harlow, stili use the same government "There Is a prodigiou waste of GloeilamenIabrieken, manufacturer adviser to the local program. machinery." .,COULD· of appliances including Norelco The student exchange program is The press and radio, Ross said, - DOORS OPEN 1:00 - ~ J ~OON - products, in Eindhoven, Holland. supported at SUI by ~e Old Gold I are to blame In part for tl1e gene- Miss Till will work for Nederland­ Development Fund, which channel . A \(i SINGINGIt sche Reisvereniging, travel agency funds [rom SUI alumni and friends ral pubhc apathy toward county to serve area of need at the Uni- governments. ei$'~(~ at The Hague. Miss Stevens will "ENDS work for AB Wiskadals Fabrlk, a versity which cannot ordinarily be Board Chairman Emil Novy, NOW met through state appropriations. WEDNESDAY" . e women's clothing manufacturer in countering one or Ross's remarks, Boras, Sweden. MIss Smith has not which were printed in Sundav 's Adulb - Mati.,.., - 7Sc yet been assigned to a firm . They Civil War Exhibit Set Cedar Rapids Gazette, said that - Evenings - Me; will spend eight week in manage­ Johnson county costs have risen Kid. - Anytlmt - 5k •• COMING SOON •. Planning Ahead ment trainee positions with the Far Iowa State Fair 65 .21 per cent in the past ten years "DR. NOli Four SU I students ch.ck the map for plice; tlMy cheng. of lowl Ind European stud.nts. are (from firms. while the tax needs of the county I WASHINGTON IA'I- The Army's schools have increased 311.3 per want to be sure to visit durin; tIM sum.r while left) Shirley Stevens, 83, Iowa City; Jim Kopel, The European stu

, MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE APARTMENTS ~R RENT mINi SERV/C[ ROOMS FOR RENT 1 ROOMS FOR RENT APPROVED HOUSING HOME FOR RENT 1958 10'x50' 3·bedrooms. Washing ma· 3·ROOM cottage. Also «room furnished TYPlNG. 8-8214. &-7 ------5 NICE approved room •. Graduate or I------APPROVED .Ingle Ind double room ------APPROVEJ) room •. lIIen. Call ' ·7411:1 FOR lumm r, 1&62 lrailer Cuml h d. Advertising Rates chIne and air conditioner. Accep! .pt. Black's Graduate House. 7-3703. undu,r.duate boy.. Summer se. lor toll. 7·7623 . &-e after 5 p.m. ... Wa.her, dryer. 101, wlter and .a . reasonable offer. 8-5703. 4HI 6-4AR DORIS DELANEY electric typlnt aerv- "on. 7-3205. 6-2R -- --- Available June lOth. &-20". &-12 Dqa .• , ...... Ice. x2565 or 7-5988. 5-!IAR RENTING rooms ror lall. Mile ItU' APPROVED room.. undergrldUIII, 'ftree tr.e • Word FOR SALE: 1959 Westwood 10'x5O'. 2- ONE large and one small furnished ' ROOMS with cook11l11 men or women, d nl, over 21. Also rooms Cor lum· men. Close In. RcCrlnrllor. Parlling ______8b: DI11 ...... lIe. Word bedroom, ."tra nice. terms. S-8075 or un£urnished aplrtment. No child· J~RY N'(ALL: EI.ctrlc mM typln,. cr.dult ••tu dent •. Black'. Graduat. mer. Craduate women. 8-0326. H 'P.ce. SUTlmer Ind faU. ' ·l24.2. 6-11 WO~K WANTED alter 6 p.Dl. 1-8 reno 6-4845. 6-11 phone 8·ISSG. .7Aft House, 7-3703. 8-MR SINGLE .nd double rooms lor aum. ______. 'fa Dayl ...... lie. Word 1956 ",,,~, 2-bedroom VIctor. Excellent AVAlLABLE In June. 3·roolD furnished TYPING _ eledrlc Iypewrlter. SUI COOL room. for lummer. Off.street MISC. FOR SALE mer. Showen. Clo .. In. 7·2573. &-15 mONlNGS. Student boy. ancl «Irli. OM 1I000th ...... 441:. Word condition. Reasonable price June oc· apartment for , men or women. )'ullneu ,radllat Dtal 8-8110 6-7Aft parkIn • . 610 E. Church SI. 6-12 APPROVED lummer hou Ind. Men. 220 North Dod,e. RealOn.ble price .. cupancy. 8-5526 aCter 6 p.m. Terrace UtUltles furnished $120. Phone 7-5349. r . > • ! e. . a 6-14 (lIlDImum Ad,' WordI) Park Traller Court. &-H 8-16AR TYPING: Experienced in Unlverllty ROOMS fGr men over 21, ~ block from STORAGE trunk., 'Ultc~~:1c. 1001- 1 Cooldn, flcUltIe •. 7·5651. 6-30 thesis manuacr.CI. ete. Electric East Hall. 7-92811. H locken, lar,e lit PPIn' Dllt APPROVED double room Cor .i;b. 1I'or CGuecutfv. 1DIertl._ NEW and ueed moblle homes. Park· APPROVED apartments for summer. typewriter (elite). D 117.22«. 4HI 7-4535. 6-4 7-2447. 6-14 H~LP WANTED lng, towing and parts. DennIs 85637 alt ' :00 a 21 HA tall CLAIIIFIED DISPLAY AD, MobUe Home Court. 2312 Muscatine' er : p.m. V" Yt Jngllsh B...... wW type. Betty NICE roollll. Summer and 8-2318. FRIGIDAIRE .Lr-condltloner. Art:~ NEW approved houlln, {or minor wo- Ave .. Jowa CLty, 337-4791. 6·16AR Stevens. 8.1.S.. 8-10Aft ..10 5:00 p.m., 8oMB5. men. Summer. 8-1328. 4HI SUMMER work. Dell.re stud 01. from DUPLEX apartment completely fur· !!utern Iowa or Westun lLllno ... 0.. 1""rtM , Month .... IUI" nlshed. Carpeted, drapery etc. For TYPING: Eleelric typewriter. Sbort DOUBLE toom. lor summer. Showers, REFRIGtRATOR, stovel . dinette sel, Can earn 1140 pc'r week. Car netelllT)'. 1 FOR SALE: 19GO, 52'xlO' Westwood 2- couple or single person. Bedroo,,!, liv. aper and thesis. 7-3843. 6.23AR close in. 7·"73. ..11 rUIl and pad, lofa oed, bec¥oom Write Colle,e Employment, Bolt 3~21 « FIv .. I""rtlona I MontIt .. . ,1.11" P a) CARS bedroom, automatic washer. 8-BI12. Ing room, kltehen. Both avauable set, three.quarter bed, desk. T~ an· USE Rock Island, 111. IH T.. In"'Ion•• Month .. .. 1•• • 6-4 June 81h. Call 8·1151 days. 7·7668 even· TYPING. Neal, aCcurale. Dial 7-7196. QUIET, clean room. adJolnlne campul tenOls. 8-6007. 6-4 ---- -Rata for I ... CeIumrl I... 1959 HILTON 10'xU'. Two bedroom, lings. 6-28 HAR tor men over 2i. Cooklns prlvllelleS. CAR CLOTHES hln,erl _ for thlt CONVERTIBLE Chevrolet 1158 V-8 . FRATERNITY kllchln boy. {or next front kItchen, alr·concUlloned, car- .1 E. Burllneton. 7·5349 or 8·5654 . \lmmer lrlp. Easy.to-adjust, fit .ny f350. Full power. 7·3368. 8-4 fall. 7-3474 . ..~ I'ele~ 7-4751 afler 4:00. 8-5 / OLDER female graduale student to 6-17M car. FIrestone, 231 Eln Burllnglon. 6-4 i96i'AUSTIN Healey SprUe. Good con. ------,hare apt. for summer lerm. 8-6835. -~~--.----- 1957 ANDERSON mobUe home. 4l'x8'. 6-29 CHILD CARE ROOM lor rent over 21. 14 W. Bur· IPRI TING planl for •• Ie. Over 20 dltlon. 8·9507. 6-8 Bright future on the Aerosplce Telll Phone 7-4191 F.ctory Installed air-condllloner, ,as ilnillon. 8·2983. &-18 years old. lelle."re S. WIU ltand 1955 FORD V... tral,hl Illdr:, ,125. healed floor, fenced yard. B'x1S' in· NEW 2·bedroom duplex In Court Hill WILL care for ehlld In my bome, e10sesL InvesllgaUon, owners health, 8-474-4. 6-4 sul~ted alumInum annex. See for addlUon. Slove and refriserator wee1r:daYI. Experienced. 8-0123 . 6-6 GRADUATJ: Men's Hou .... 530 N. Clin· reason. Conllct MonUct.Uo Shoppers quailLy at reasonable prIce. 8-7785. &-7 Curllished. Available June 15. 74818. ---- ton. Cookln, prlvUe,es. SoCt ,,"er IGuide, Monticello, Iowa. 8·5 IB~ PLYMOUTH 2-4oor hard top. 5175. 6-11 CONSCIENTIOUS superviSion, con· ahowen. Sumer and fall. 7-5487 or AUTOMATIC hi hi G d 8-4744. 8-4 AIR FORCE 1956 S'x41' 2·bedroom Rollohome. slrucHve play In Flnkblne. 8-4733. 6-7 7·6848. 6-18 condilion. $65".as . n•.mac nt.. ~015 - --- Heated aDnu, fine condition. Rea- 79444 ~ DKW, 1958. $250. Good condition. 338· sonable. 7-401S. 6-8 1 bedroom. Furnished, stove, reCriger- alor, garage. Heat and waler paId. FOR Iraduate men . Rooms with kllcb- . TV sl.nd' TV anlenna' curtains' 41l. alter 5:00. 8-12 8'x29' TRAlLETTE. Air conditioner. ,70. Available June 8th. 8·8209. ' 6·7 RIDERS WANTED en privUe,ea. Call alter 5:00 p.m· l lrUmpel' saxophone' table: rue 9x\2! 1960 Triumph TR·3, overdrive, new torr YOUR a'R FORCE RECRUITER Comr,letely furnished. Comfortable 8-4741, 820 Iowa Ave. 6·22 refM,erator. 337-43d. ' , u.3 tire •. 8.1316 alter 5 p.m. 6-8 .xL N home or one or couple. 7·3016. 6-5 2 ROOM apt. furnished for 1. UtlIltles WANTED rider 10 Albany. N.Y .• June SINGLE sleepl". room . Man over 21. I ______---- MUST selllBS9 Enslen 8'x38'. Excellent paid. Male. 8-8161. &-14 23rd. 8·5114. 6·6 &-:;~ . summer session. Near camp~ WHO DOES In condition. Reasonable. 7·5010. 6-6 I 6·ROOM apartment with laundry, reo 8'x29' TRAILETTE. Air condilloner. frlgerator, slove, rugs furnished. OPPORTUNITIES ~R WOMEN ALPHA DELT ... PI house open for HAGEN'S TV, Guaranteed tele~l4lon ,I"", • I,m... 4:. p,m...... Completely furnished. Comfortable Write Box 304, Lone Tree, Iowa. 6·7 summer studenu. 222 N. CHolon. aervlclng by certlCled rvlcemen. COLLEGE MEN ...,.. Clotecl SaturUyt. All home. For one or couple. 7·3076. 6·5 7.:186" 6-23 9 ~ . m. · B_ p.m. Monday lbrou,h Satur· daY . 8-3~2. 6-2IAR SALII: FURNISHED apt. Couple. Dial 7-4795. bpertencM Ad Trltw •• FOR lB52 New Moan 30'x8'. H SEWERS WANTED SUMMER rooml avaU.ble. Cool Ium· With or Without annex 1"x8'. Musl APPLICANTS NOW BEING INTERVIEWED for full lime sum­ .... Y.. Wlttl y.., M. sell. Will atepl reasonable oHer. IMMEDIATELY mer Ilvlnl. Furn\ahed IInele room.l . 8-OOSS. 6-8 FURNISIIED apl. Close In, available Kllch~n .nd lounge prIvileges J.nclud· ImmedIately. 8·S214. 6-4 ing. 1 V and St~reo. Reasonlbleprice. Young's Studio mer employment. Those accepted will be offered - Worle It home dolnll Ilmple ..w· PIKA Fraternity. Cail 7-9621. W.y'l'! THI DAIL., IOWAN RISIRVII In,. We supply mlterlal. Ind ,..l Thompson. 8-23 shipping both WIYS. Good rat. of the gIft emlt) you. can gfoe THI RIGHT TO RIJICT ANY PDSONAL '·BEDROOM air-conditioned apt. for I l. $110.00 weekly salary 3 or 4 mell or women. $120 per mo} ",Y. Piece worle. Apply. Dept, AD- 2 ROOMS lor summer. 221 N. Linn. , ADVIRTISUIO COPY. Close to campus. 8·8464. 7.. 597, lOll 7010, Adeilid. Post OHlce, 7-4861. 6-28 DISTINCTIVE PORTRAITS SPECIAL Hope-Chesl GraduaUon GIIt Toronto, Ontlrlo, C.n.dl, 2. Chance for 1 of 15 $1,000 scholarship. for Senior GIrls. Compllmenl. of ROOMS - summer rales, maie over ~ ~uI!uque St. 7.. 158 Wear·Ever Uteosll Co. Send nlUlle Ind 21. 6-6370 or 7-3297. 6·8 addre51 to Wear-Ever. 324 11th St., AUTOMOTIVe 3, Chance for trip. to Madrid, Spain, in Sept.mber Rock Island. III. 8.. LAUNDERmES ROOMS {or men. Summer rates, -;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;=;;;=;;; kllchen facWtles. Close tn, 214 N. SCREENS uP-atonn. down. Wln40w. WANTID Ignition • Capital. 6·6 washe

back J.<'. H~J<~, BEETLE.' D~INK THIS ON~ OVeR PAR IS ,.., "T'Wo tJNDE:R P"R II> AN WHATS TEN ~tlD TELL NE IF IT ISN'T EAGl..E. BoG.eY. e A REASON To Q,ulr. '~E 6E6, COFFEE YOU 10 OVeR PAR r ONE UNDER. ~R IS ,., TWO O~R ~R )G A EVEIit TASTED! BIRDI6, DoliBt..E Bo6Ey. '1,1 '-THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, low_Tuesdav, June 4, 1963 33 SUlowans To Receive ROTC Commissions Campus ' Notes Kefauver Probes E./ectors Dance Conference technical sessions. He will describe WASHINGTON 1.1'1 - A senatorial permit the choice of unpledged nominee - contributed a total of 15 to bar the admission of Negro stu­ Eighteen Army and fifteen Air College of Liberal Arls will address some new organocalcium com· inquiry into an un pledged eleclor electors. He added lhal at least one to Sen . Harry F. Byrd (D·Va.> . dents to the university in his state. Force Re erve Officer Training the new officers. The invocation Professor Marcia Thayer, chair· pounds of a very unusual type that movement aimed at denying Presi· house of the state legislatures in man of SUI's Department of The unpledged elector movement BarnetL is plugging for Southeh Corps cadels at SUI will be com· will be ghl'n by Profcssor Roberl were prepared under his super· dent Kennedy Southern supporl in Florida and Louisiana has pasSed Dance, will conduct classes in Mod· vi ion by Dr . Ailen H. Utkc, for. 1964 was ordered Monday by Sen. similar bills. has been spearheaded by Missis· primaries 10 let lhe votcrs choose missioned as second lieutcnants at S. ~lichaelsen, director of lhe SUI ern Dance and Ballet at the sev· mer SUI graduate student, for his Esles Ke(auver, (o·Tenn.>. "This could result in the removal sippi Gov. Ross Barnett, whose Olr between unplcdgcd Democratic 8 a.m. Friday, preceding lhe Uni· School of Religion. enth annual Yanklon College Fine Ph.D. thesis. Kefauver staled lhal the Senate's ON Arts Conference which will be held of lhese slales, representing a lotal position 10 the admission of a Nc· presidentiol electors and those versity's spring Commencemenl Colonel William N. 1I0lm, profes· • • • Constitutional Amendmenls sub· gro student to the slate university from June 10 to 16, at Yankton of 53 electoral voles, from the elcc· pledged to support the national cc exercises. sor of military science, will pre· committee he heads will seek loral equilibrium which has here· at Oxford sparked violence and the College ,Yankton, S.D. Heintz Named Democratic nominee. He said the A~ Each cadet will receive a degree sent the Army commissions. Ad· public testimony tofore existed, with the possibility sending of federal troops. campaign is directed toward elect· Prof. Thayer specializes in mod· Roy Heintz, lU9 E. Court, ha.s Tuesday on the ef· men from SUI following the commis ion· that the presidential election could Barnett has scheduled a June 17 ing "a conservative president who ministering the oath of office will ern dance and dramatic choreo- been named to the Board of 01' lecl and legal as· be thrown into an entirely different nIgh ing. graphy. rectors of ~ommunity Giv.e rs, Inc. fund·raising dinner at which the believes in constitutional govern. be Major R. J. Lutz. peets of efforts in arena, the House of Representa· pri ncipal speaker will be Alabama ment and the rights of the states step Dean Dewey B. Stull of the Y kton's Fine Arts Conference I .Community ~I.v ers , Inc ..IS ~ co~. five states to sur Colonel Michael N. Mikulak, pro· an . bmed fund ralsmg orgamzatlon In tives," he said. Gov. George C. Wallace, who has to conlrol and direct their own af. Pag fessor of air science, will prescnt ?ffers vaned progr~s of study Iowa City, Coralville, and Univer. presidential elec· Unless one candidale collects 270 threatened to stand in the doorway fairs ." In all al'eas of the fme arts. Ap· '1 H' hIs tors from even the the Air Force commissions. Cap· eJectoral votes in 1964 , lhe deci· F===:====::;=F======7=====:;:;=; DI plicalions will be received until lhe Sl ~ein~~: ~anager of the Pep. moral obligation sion on the winner would be passed low to spend a week_ tain Allen G. Lincoln will admini . conference opens. on June 10. peridge Farm plant, will serve on of voting for the to the Hou se, where each state ACT ler the oath of office. ~rof. Thayer IS a . graduate of a temporary basis until a perman. candidate beading delegation would have a single vote SAVE ~IME poet i. Chicago for $15 Students to be commissioned are: Mills College and received her M.A. ent director is named next winter either party's in choosing the president. be 0 in Dramatic Art from SUr. at the organization 's annual meel. tional ticket. Kennedy won in 1960 with 303 TOM CHERRY AIR FORCE - Larry Kaufrman, ni a Audubon; Frederick Kolpln. Aurellaj The subcommit· KEFAUVER U. of Kenluc~ •• ing. electoral votes, including 27 from . Laundry Service for the VI Lexington, Ky. Ralph Trimble, Cedar Rapids; Edwara lee will vote June 12 on a series of Alabama, Georgia ' and Louisiana . Say., .. ,.,"" Sear, Clinton; William Stanley, Corn· Microbiology Fellow Community Givers will hegin its proposed constitutional a men d· PRill student, m .. Ing; Mike Arganbright, Guthrie Ccn· annual campaign in the area next This was 31 more than the 262 to\al Busy Student • I Dep C)t"womaa.,eM ter; Charles Gearnarl Hopkinton; Dr. Way burn S. Jeter, associate ments to change the electoral sys· • tay.t James Blommers and Rl chard Norris, fall. Seventeen local agencies are he needed lhen . Florida gave its 10 Chicago', Iowa City; Merwyn Schug, Manchesler; professor in SUI's Department of cw-rently receiving funds from the tem . voles to former Vice President Wash & Dry (Not Folded) ,. , .... " 10c Lb. YMCA Hotol Thomas Davis, Sigourney; Nell Schultz, Microbiology. has been elected a Kefauver named Alabama, Mis· and enjoy a SpragUCviUei Calvin Roulson, West organization. Richard M. Nixon . Mississippi, Ala· weekend for Union; Richard Rankin, Bridgevlllo, fellow of the American Academy • • • sissippi and Georgia as states in bama and Oklahoma - where a Wash, Dry and Folded .... , , .... , 12c Lb. $15.00. Here Is Del.; John Jensen, CinCinnati, Ohio. of Microbiology, Inc. whlch he said new election laws how I did it." Nb:on elector exercised his legal ! i ARMY - Steven Holm, ~'r.derlck Dr. G. I. Wallace, executive sec· Phillips Fund Small Rugs, Blankets, Etc .... , .. , ., 12c Lb. Radloff and Ken Wright all of Cedar right not to vole for the Republican 1Ii. •.AL Di n.. , at YMCA Hot.! $US Rapids; Paul Carlson, DaVenport; Lar· retary of the academy, said Dr. Chesler A. Phillips Scholarship TRACTOR DEATH ry Meier, Denver' Jonn Marston, earl· Jeter's professional accomplish· Large Rugs ...... ,." .... , ISc Lb. Chicago SymphOllY 2.50 ham; Jay GlIIet!e, John Kinnamon, Fund awards for 1962 to 1963 have ME LBOURNE, Iowa IA'I _ James Coke .le John Parker. and John WICkS/ ments and contributions to the been announced by Dean Sidney G. Hess, 40, of Marshalltown, was ALSO GOOD FAST DRY CLEANING 100. 01 '( Hoi., 1.78 aU of Iowa City' John Sykes, Los sci e n c e of microbiology had Nation; Howard DiCkey, Merion; James Winter of the College of Business killed late Monday when the trac. Open 7 'til 6, Mondl Ythr ough SaturdlY Clark, Sioux City; Dennis Edwal'\ls, brought him the honor. Administration. tor he was driving overturned and SaL A.M. "eoUast at Y Holel .58 Vinton; Glen Shoemaker, West Des Fellowship in the academy is by M In.liluto Tour 'ree Moines; Frank Bauer, Army Chemical invitation only and is recognized Candidates for the B.B .A. degree crushed him as he was mowing W·· ~A~·n tl WEE WASH IT S25hi:,ts 1 45 Cenler, Md .; Douglas Pulse, Man· at the convocation on June 7 and weeds along Highway 64 near here...... ~ I.oI nch ot Bamboo I,. . kalo, Minn. ; Charles Schalon, RIpon, as one of the highest honors in Wis. receiving Phillips awards are Mrs. Hess was employed by the State 229 S. Dubuque Phont ,.U" laL.oM. Hot. Hi,I. Mu.eu .. Tour Fr .. this science. Membership is limit· Dinnor 01 Y HoI.1 1.15 ed to those with a doctoral degree Delores Bengtson Mueller, B4 , tH~i~~h~W~a~y~C~O~m~m~i:ss~io~n~. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;...;;~~~~~~~~.. iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~ iiiiiii~~ and at least seven years of dis· Cherokee, with a grade point aver· ~ Sat. nit. dance, Y HoIei .10 Dinner To Honor age of 3.35; and Stephen L. WiI· Coke dato .45 tinguished posldoctoral experience kinson, B4, Sioux City, with a 3.26 10010 at Y Hotol 2.78 in microbiology. average ...... A.M. "eak'osl 01 Y Hotel .58 Pharmacy Grads • • • An award was also made to Les· Worship at Central Church Some 100 SUI faculty members, Chemistry Lecture ta Gafeller, B4, West Liberty, who lunch 01 Y Hotel 1.35 students, wives, and guest's are SUI Chemistry Professor R. T. expects to receive her degree in February, 1964. s.... PoM. Back 10 campul ex peeled to attend the annual Sanderson will lecture on "Applica· tions of ElectronegaUvity" at the Toiol $14.97 Pharmacy Senior Dinner TllUrsday Chemical Institute of Canada's an· at 6: 15 p.m. in the River Room of Rusk Pledges WE'RE nual meeting June 5 to 8 in Toron· u.s. MEN • WOME~ • FAMILIES . SLay al Chicago's the Iowa Memorial Union. to. Sanderson's topic describes some Support to India Guest speaker at the banquel will I I YMCA HOT EL be George Squibb, director of sales of his research of the past 13' years at SUI. He will be one of four in· WASHINGTON IA'I - Secretary 826 Soulll Wabash of the E. R. Squ ibb and Sons Lab· ternationally noted chemists who of State Dean Rusk assured In· at the edge of the Loop oratories, New York City. will present a special symposium dia's President SarvepaUi Radha· Ia-.Nlloll I., 2.... • rat.1 Sl.1G .nd up A feature of the evening will be krishnan Monday the United States PAYING on recent developments in inorgan· is greatly interested in "lhe safety W,iI. for ,eservolioM Dr call WA 2·3183 lhe presenlation of eight awards to ic chemistry. outstanding pharmacy seniors by Dr. Sanderson has also been of your people wherever under· Dean Louis C. Zopc. The senior asked to present a principal re· mined or attacked ." class has 36 members this year. search paper at one of lhe regular The commitment followed a sim· ilar assurance which President Kennedy gave the Indian chief of HIGH EST ~RICES state on his arrival here for a ceremonial 10·day state visit. Radhakrishnan expressed the WORRIED ABOUT hope that the United States and India "will be able to stand to· gether wbatever happens." The 74· year· old philosopher· IN TOWN GRADUATION GUESTS? statesman said India is well aware of the "little done and the vast undone" in developing democratic Stop 'Vorrying. Aero Rental has everything ideals. But he said that the crisis brought by the Chinese Commu· you need, , , nist attack on India last laIL has demonstrated the sIr eng t h of for USED democracy in India. Just Pick Up The Phone and " Dial 8-9711 ' BOOKS! I I

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SILVERWARE SERVING UTENSILS , I

(,'iI't

GLASSES, GOBLETS, We don't ' , SHERBERTS - Glassware We Pay th~lnd beating a drum to let you know that of every shape PUNCH BOWLS AND and size' MA TCHING CUPS Now that f' ~ighest prices in tow n.fo r your usecl books. you will w 'tlals are iust about over for the semester Bring the~t"lt to get rid of your unwanted textbooks. Shakespeare ne't'er sold life insurance as far as ... e know. But we do know that the bard 's to give yo", to Hawkeye first - Don Noll will be glad 'AERO RE NTAL WOI'ds could have been ",Mtte. just for our business, Qn appraisal. Delaying the start of your fir. 810 Maiden Lane Ph. 8-9711 insurance progra m could be • costly. When you think you're ready to purchase insu rance, 'tOU C4N'T BEAT I I yo u may not be insurable. QUICK, ACCURATE ,-;:------...... -;------1·--1 And the costwill never be ~s low as It is today. Ou r campus office specializes OU~ PRICES APPRAISAL I ~ ~(!JI VALUABLE COUPON I}J~~ I In planning life Insurance pro· grams for young men. Stop by We Sive the k . 01' tolephon .. obi f 'ghest prices pos- Our trained staff can quickly and II e or yo" ' r "sed books. Bring accurately appraise the worth of I I SAVE 25c ~!~:oh~s ~ I them In - , each book. No waiting, no stand .. LAWRENCE T, WADI, 't us tell you what ing in line for hours. Come in ON A MINIT CAR WASH h I I I I General Agsne t ey ore warth. With Or Without A Gasoline Purchase I now and avoid the rush. I Coupon Good Tuesdav, Wednesday and Thursday, Jun. 4, 5 and' I I GREATER SAVINGS WITH SHELL GAS PURCHASE ••• As Low As 74c With 15 Go ',Ion Pu rchase I I... City, low. COME, IN WITH BOOKS I "YOUR C~R CL EANED INSID E AND OUT , , • IN MINUTES" I Phont S3146Jl _ I 8:00 A.M. to 5:30 .P.M. Monday through Siturday WALK AWAY WITH CASH! I I

!~t~~J~~~lf.f~~~_ 1.1 ~~~IWE~ I ~~r.l~rFI~r.ttl"fi;l~~~ri'l Insurance Company HAWKEYE BOOK STORE I ~i.i~U~UWU~UWUW . ~ I Of Philadelphia I 30 South Clinton I__ ._ ... _------~-~ '. .