~ 01 0wan Serving The State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City

l\Il!moer O[ ASso( \8U!CI t'ress AP LeaJe(J WlJ"e and PhOto Service Iowa CIty, la., saturday, August 10, 1957 House Approves Government Pay Raise Wage Hike • Hurricane' Bertha Loses Its Wir::ld Still Needs Storm Abates * * * * * Senate Okay Soviet Infiltration WASHINGTON IN! - An 11 per Before Hitting c nt annual pay raise Cor the Gov­ ernment"s one million white coUar workers was approved overwhelm­ Reported in Mid-East Ingly by the House Friday despite Gulf Coastline President Eisenhower'S opposition. NEW ORLEANS IN! - Tropical By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The measure wa. passed by • roll-c.1I vote of 329-st. This w•• storm Bertha, no longer a hurri­ The Soviet Union is report d Infiltrating another section of the Arab cane, moved inl and Friday night 71 votes .".re than would be world with a supply of arms to the desert kingdom of Yemen . The Rus­ needed to override the preslden­ and was crossing the path follow­ sians also may be sending more submarines to the easlern Mediter­ ed by its murderous sisler of six tl.1 veto predicted by JOmt ranean for the Syrian-Egyptinn axis. Hou.. I.aders. weeks ago, Hurricane Audrey. Britain accused Russia Friday of sending six of v n shipload of G. L. Allen, forecaster at the Howe ver, the measure must still propeller-driven planes, old T34 * * * bc approved by the Senate. A bill New Orleans Weather Bureau, said tanks, troop carriers, artillery and Bertha apparently was headed in N H I W d providing for a 7\h per cent raise small arms this year to Yemen, 0 epante is pending in that chamber. the direction of Lufkin in east cen­ a remote realm of 4Ya million tral Texas. By a llo-n teller vote, the House Arabs on the Red Sen side o( the The two Polish submarines deCeated a proposal to make the Allen said Bertha was crossing Arabian Peninsula. crulsed down Britnin's East Coast Audrey's pllth ntar C.meron, L•. , raise 7~ per cent. A British Foreign Office spokes­ about 7 p.m. (or 24 hours with no more than In a teller vote, the members man said "we undcrstand that three curt words to the British lAP Wi •• p hoto) march by tellers - one for "aye" The Weather Bur•• u's 7 ,.m. about 50 Russian instructors aT bulletin located the c.nter of Roynl Navy. Early today they dis- JACK SO I> EL w.s pr.sent when his wife Myra, was Itnt. nced Frl- Jnd one Cor "no" - and are count­ advisers are in the country," ed. Bertha about 20 mil.. south of which has been feuding (or months appeared in a storm lashing the day to S'h y. ars In prison for spying activiti .. for Ruula. Sobel will Lake Charles, La, English Channel. b. sentenced Sept. la. Sentenced .Iong wi th Mrs. Sobel was Jacob The 1_. delegation was 1,lIt with the neighboring British pro­ Albam. 5 to 3 In f.vor of the bill Friday. The bulletin said the highest tide tectorate o( Aden. reported along the central Louisi­ The boats were eyed carefully * * * * Votlnll for the bill w.re Repl. ana coast was five feet and the Few Yemenls arc mechanics. Ulrouihout Friday by the British . * Cunningham, HOIvell, 5",,_",.1 highest wind from a reliable source Most would obviously need pro­ navy as they passed clo e to shore * lind Talle, R.publlcanl, and longed instruction to make effi­ M S b I J b Coad, the onl y Domocrat in the was 65 m.p.h. but refused to be drawn into any · rs 0 e aco The storm was moving north­ -,f'+:C cient use of planes and motorized delegation. westt'r1y about 12 m.p.h. The bul­ ~r Iequipment. ex;!:n~~it~!hn~v;~S~~:~:~~:;:;led I ~ I Voting again" w.re Reps. .... -~ Similar instruction has been giv­ Gross, L.Compt. and J.nse n, letin said hurricane warnings '<~' them and signaled a courtesy offer would remain di splayed from Gal­ en to the Egyptians and Syrians of any assistance. Republicans. .~ ~ I after they broke the Ice by buy­ At 11 per cent, the increuse Cig­ veston, Tex., to Vermilion Bay, (AP WI •• photo) Th Poles dot-dashed back on a La., and storm warnings on the CAMERON PARISH SherlH O. B_ Carter stands in Cameron's desert. ing Red arms. signal lamp: "No help needed." Alborn Sentence ures out to be about $SaO million east Louisiana coast. ed m.ln street, a few hours before Tropical Storm B.rtha struck Fri­ Red submarine. got back In the a year. The Weather Bureau reduced day. A bo.t left Itr.nded In the he.rt of town by Hurricane Audrey news, from C.lro to London_ NEW YORK IN! - Two European refugees who found a haven in Mr. Eisenhower has taken a Bertha's classification to a tropical serv... s a grim testimonial of this season's earlier holocaust in that A Syrian source In C. lro said States Seek this country were sentenced Friday to 5\-i years each In prison {or spy- stand against a general pay in­ storm when its winds dropped be­ arta. Syria .xpects to g. t two small Ing on the United States for Russia. crease fo r Federal workers at this low 75 miles an hour, the minimum submarine. al1d six torpedo boats At th snme time, Col. Rudolph Iva novich Abel, was held without time. He said anything that could Velocity of a hurricane. u part of • new Soviet .Id agr.. - P t " f bail in another federal court on an add to Inflatio nary pressures Fewer persons .pp.,..ntly were ment signed Tuesday in Moscow. or Ion 0 el Urcly different spy charge. He should be avoided. In Bertha's WilY wh.n it reach.d Th. Egyptians took deliv,ry of wns indicted Wednesday by a A move to take about 10,000 Fed­ Eisenhower Names eral legislative and judicial em­ the Cam.ron area_ Most coaatal Story Told 01 How three submarines last month, F d I T federal grand jury in Brooklyn re.idents, the i r stubbornn... Moseow announcements of the e ax and faces a possible death sen­ ployes out of the 11 per cent pay washed away by Audrey's tide" era tence if convicted. increase bill was defeated by a Soviet-Syrian aid agreement did Foreign Aid Chief 126-114 teller vote. fled to higher IIrounds .t flnt 1m - not mention arms. Thcy told only HERSHEY, Pa. An "ac- Sent to prison from U.S. Di .. R.p. H.lleck of Indiana, .s­ warning. of a wide range of Soviet econom. lion" committee of governors Fri- triet Court In Ma"hattan w.,. Earlier, tides of five to six feet, Dio Was Paid Off Iistant Republlc.n floor leader, Ic and technical assistance to day sounded out Secretary of the Jacob ~Ibam, 64, wteo came hart And U.N. Delegates more than fou r feet above normal, predicted the bill will be vetoed lVASliING~ON Ct1'I _ The Senate Rackets Committee was jold fri- Syria which is doing business with Treasury Anderson on the poSSi-1 from Llthu.nia; and Mrs. Myr. If It is Itnt to Mr. Eisenhower werv· pledicted for Galvwlon and h h me- RlISs1anll largely of! th dlrl. bmty of relinqqishlng til the states Sobel, 53, bora In ~uIII •• T1My WAS HINGTON fA'! - James H. Sabine Pass, Tex., whlle lesser d ay t at t e 01 AFL Au to Workers let gangster Johnny Dio Dioguardia The Syrian informant said the aid a $750 mlliion dollar portion of an- ..e m. d tak.n .back by the ..n· Smith Jr., 4', Corme r a sistant III ... ,...."' ....._ Rep. Murray m-Tenn.) predict­ swellings of three to fi ve feet were and two others set $396,000 as their price for leaving the union. would amount to $66 to $100 nual Federal revenues. tenc., The blonde Mrs. Sobel secretary of the Navy (or air, was mll. ed both this bill and a previous forecast for the central Louisiana Committee Counsel Robert F. Kennedy thus summed up the evi- lion. In turn the states would take the had laullhed In court wh.n .r- named by President Eisenhower Friday to take over the mul tibil · pay r aise for postal workers " will coastline. dence just before the senators re- Hil report of the pro.pectiv. Federal Government completely rested. Friday she wept_ lion doll ar foreign aid program. never become law." Th e small Cishing and hunting cessed their hearing fo r the week- naval acquisitions coincided with out of such aid-to-states functiolls The pair had pleaded guilty to town of Ca meron in extreme south­ Smith will succeed John B. Hol­ The House has voted to postal end. The committee is invesUgat- Democratic Leader a mysterioul voyall' by two Po- as schools lunches, vocational ed- reduced espionage charges, thus lister as director of the Intem a­ workers a $546 across the board west Louisiana, all but eradicated ing allegations of improper labor- lish l ubmarin.. down Britain', ueation, needy old age assistance, avoiding the possibility oC th by Audrey's merciless hammer­ tional Cooperation Administratio n annual raise - about 12\h per cent ing, was almost deserted. Resi­ management activities. Rayburn Says Take east coast, Th. British navy disaster relief and water pollution, death sentence under the original which runs the aid program. Hol­ - at a cost of about $317 mlUion. The last wltn... w.s Earl Heat. shadow.d tham. Th.re was wide- programs now co ting an esUmat- ind ictment. Maximum sentences dents ned to Lake Charles, 60 Lister is returning to his law o[fice The Senate has not acted on this. 0", outeolng prelident of the AI- spread speculation as to their ed"$400 million a year. under their pleas were 10 years miles to the north. in Cincinnati but has agreed to I~y Some of the Cajun inhablt.nts lied Industrial Workerl (AFL. Senate Rl'ghts BI"II I purpose_ Anderson was noncommiH.1. each and lines. No lines were on the job until Smith's appoint· of the marshy coastlandl clung CIO), the new n.me of the Auto One theory was that they were He and Secretary of Labor Mitch- levied. ment has been confirmed by the to their hardy outlook .nd chose Work.rs. on their way from the Baltic to ell showed up as President Elsen- Their eooperation with the gov- Senate. Believe Ice Cubes j to battle the tropical menace. Heaton testified that Anthony WASHINGTON lm-I1ouse Speak- the Mediterranean for delivery in hower's principal spokesmen at a ernmcnt in baring seerets o{ the Smith is an Aspen, Colo., raJl(h­ Dep uty Sheriff Charles Murphy Doria, ousted secretary-treasurer er Sam Rayburn called the Middle East. This was the conference set up with seven gov- spy ring apparently led them to er and lawyer. A carrier pilot in . same roule taken by three Soviet ernors to examine what Federal hope [or greater leniency. The gov- From Jet Stream of Cameron remained. He said he of the Allied Industrial Workers, on the House Friday to accept the submarl'nes recenUy handed over b b b d b th Worl d War II, Smith served as as­ fr programs can e a sor eye ernment also said neither of them believed "it is my duty to serve was promised $80,000 if he got out Senate's version of the civil rights to President Nasser·s navy at t t sistant secretary of the Navy from READING, Pa. IN! _ A chemical the public." But he sent his wife of the union. Doria was involved s a es. was an important cog in a ring In welfare fund scandals. bill. But he left the door open for Alexandria. "Fir:.t of all , we should endeav- headed by Mrs. Sobel's husband, 1953 to 1956. There he was a.n out- researcher said Friday the two and three children to the safety spo ~e ll advocate of naval aV Iation. chunks of ice that fell on the Carm of Red Cross shelters In Lake Actually Doria has received only a compromise. - - - -- or to seek out some specific fun c- Jack. He is to be sentenced Sept. Eisenhower. als.o sent to . the Sen- oC Edwin Groff July 30 may have Charles. $25,000, plus a unlon-owned Cadll- Rayburn. leader of the Democra- B hS II Rf lion which can be turned over ex· 18. ate the nom.matlOns of five delf'- been blown thousands o( miles in Cameron Sheriff O. B. Carter es· lac, Heaton said, and he is suing lie major ity in the Rouse, said that ritis Ii e use elusively to the states," Anderson Acting U.S. Atty. Thomas B, gates and fI ve alternates to the a jet stream. timated about 500 persons were in to collect on union notes lor the while he is for the Senate bill as said in a statement to the gover- Gilchrllt Jr., told sentencint U.N . General Assembly. The ice had been kept by Groff the city doing rebuilding and re­ balance. . it stands he would be willing to US P I' V· nors. Di,t. Judge Richard H. LeVIt He!ll"y Cabo.t Lodge Jr., was re- in his home freezer since they habili tation work when · the Cirst Heaton to1 d the Investigators· Dl,o li ml· t th e t erms 0 f I·t S con t rovers .l a I •• 0 10 acclne "At Ule same lime,th we will come ...."' t M-.,...- 1-&.-1 played ...... - part a'ppo m~d chlef U.S. ~ep r esenta - nearly struck him on tile head. The warnings of Bertha came. He said get $16,000 when he lelt the old jury trial amendment. to a meeting of e minds on spe- of a wife doing the biddint of ciCic tax sources from which the her husband and .t no time did live, wIth Jam.l!s J. Wall ":ortb of s i ~e of the ice cakes-~lDe nearly about 15 per cent were evaeuated It His IN! - Ne~ York desIgnated as hlS chlet 50 pounds and the other half that u.nion in 1954. .was . also testi- I statement de(jnitely im- LONDON Britain deCended F e di era Governme n t w ill W·tI hd r aw initiate .ny .ctlon in further- by nightfall Thursday. fled th a t Angelo In~lso was allow.ed proved the chances oC the House its refusal to import Salk anti- pol- and which the states can use." .nce"'t of the objects of the con. aSSIstant, although technically an weight- attracted considerable in- An)(iety relgn.d alont a 125- _.A altetnate. terest in this area. to take along a Chicago local With and Senate getting together on 1·0 vacclll· e today. The government T"-'.. reac ti on of th e governor. splr.cy "nor commit .ny overt mil. front from V.rmillon Bay, aisets of ~,OOO when he depart- civil rights legislation which Pres- said it couldn't be done in time to action group w.s gentrally fav· act oth.r than .t the direction Re p~. Carnahan CD-Mo.l and Judd Airline officials said at the time L•. , to G.lvtston, Tex. Fors­ ed under fire from the UAW. ident Eisenhower would be wilJing halt the serious increase in British orable to the broad propolall of her husband." (R-'Mmn.) were named as dele- the cakes were reported that they casten sold it would be dlHlcult The committee hill produc.d to sign. polio cases. m.de by Pr.. ident EI.. nhow.r at gates to succeed SeilS. Humphrey could not have fallen £rom an ait­ to pinpoint the spot whe,.. Ber­ .vldence that Dlo, while ost.nll- Eisenhower opposes the Senate's Safety tests like thor'" applied to ... - , L. t WII Mrs. Sobel's lawyer, George CD-Minn .l .and.Knowi and CR-Calif.l. liner because such planes carr)' .... .ow governors con.. ,..nce • - Wolt, pleaded with Judge Levet tha would c"- to strlke_ bly out of the union, retal"ed a jury trial amendment as a danger Britis h vaccine would take about liamsburg, Va_, in June. The practice [s to alternate sena- nothing larger than ice cubes and Forecaster C. L. Ailen said the firm h.nd In Its .H.lrs behind to the power of Federal courts to three months, a Ministry of Health But indivi dual governors were to £ree her on probation for the tors and House members on the the Weather Bureau said the ice storm's present path would take it the Ic.nel. enforce their orders in injunction statement said. cautious In their viewpoints on spo- sake of her 17-year-old son Law- delegation. . chunks could not be explained as inland around Galveston, or 50 Heaton also testified that James cases. Administration sources say It claimed the British vaccine cWc details for carryi ng out the rence. George Meany, presIdent of the huge hail stones. miles eithet' side of the Texas re­ R. Hoffa, a vice-president of the he would veto any bill so amended. is "superior in safety and effective- P resi dent's suggestions. " U she serves a prison sen­ AFL-CIO, and Herman B. Wells, Dr. Malcolm J . Reider head of a sort city. But he quickly empha­ Teamsters Union, and Dio were House GOP Leader Marti n of In e~" to the American product. They agreed to present their tence," Wolf said, "he will be president of Indiana University, chemical research fir~ , said he sized the whimsical storm could "more than speaking acquaintanc- Massachusetts demanded that the ~LDce January, 2,366 polio cases staff reports to Federal officials without a home and lorced to live also were named delegates. sprayed the ice pieces-now melt­ veer to the north and hit LOuiSIana, es." Senate's version be reJ·ected. have been reported In Britain. during their two-day conference. In Canada with a sister of Mrs. ed considerably smaller than when or move to the south and back Prodded to ·say just how friendly .;;___ - -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;__ L" _____ •• Sobel." - Sodtown- originally found-with distilled wa· into the Gulf where it was spawned. Hoffa and Dio were, Heaton said, In passing sentence, Judge Levet ter to remove all foreign matter, "Well, that's a matter of degree." declared: "I have seriously weigh­ HISTORIC ORIGIN and then split them to determine But the witness said he had seen Ie d factors of the national defense NOT A TOWN the " cleavage planes." , Dulles Spurns Red Hoffa and Dio together at labor r invol ved and have considered the This test and others, Dr. Reider Sodtown, Ia., is not a tOWD. conventions. problem of what sentences to im­ said , Indicated tbe Ice was not I pose." The question was raised by a manufactured but came from at· Nuclear Test Plan Ch.lrm." McClella~ (D-ArIc,) Mrs_ Sobel's husb.nd also facts Manchester resident In a letter mospheric conditions. A high chl­ WASHINGTON. IA'I- Secretary of '.nd other members of the com­ oride content, Dr. Reider ad­ State John Foster Dulles has tiCnt ml"".,.. digging for evidence, • maximum lei-year ...... nc. to The Daily Iowan editor. Since when ha comes before the court ded, indicated also that the ice word to the Kremlin that the Unit. In advance of HoH.'s .ppe.r.nce then, considerable Interest. has came from an area (ar removed cd States will never agree to stop al a wltnell, to butt,.... th.ir nellt month. He, too, h.. coop­ .r.ted with the government In developed and a local resident [rom Readin.. To remain intI!ct testing atomic weapons without 1\ com."tion that there II • cor- while traveling such distaDce, he simultaneous agreement to stop rupt alll.nc. be __n Hoff. and .n .ttempt to win I.nlency_ has come to the rescue with an An obscure figure In New York's explanation of the term. said, the ice cakes could only have making them. Dio. been whipped along by a jet animal hair products industry, Early in I9wa's history, a band American officials hope this re- lJeaton, who is 48 but looks much !tream-an·air current at ply to a Soviet Inquiry will (lnally older, testified that as president Sobel beaded a well-knit interna­ travellni of pioneers from ~uthern Indi· hundreds of miles an hour. convince Soviet leaders that they of the United Auto Workers he tional spy ring fr om about 1944. ana migrated to an area south­ have no prospect of winning Amer- raised no objection to paying Dio It fed defense data to Russian lean, or Western, acceptance of $16,000 for letting out of the union. agents at clandestine meetings in west of what is nOw Coggon, lao their test-suspension plan. Russia Heaton said Dio demanded $10- New York, Paris, Geneva, Lau­ Their first houses were made of $3 Billion-Plus wants to call off tests (or two or 000 as his price for quitting the sanne and Vienna. sod cut from the Iowa prairie, three years apart from any other union, but that he upped the date Abel, 55, who appeared In court thus giving birth to the name Aid Plan ORered in Brooklyn, had no direct connec­ 'step in disarmament. to $16,000 and received that "sodtown." Dulles and his associates would amount. tion with the activities oI the Sobel WASHINGTON f.I\ - Congress know better how to estimate Soviet Heaton testified Dio claimed he ring. He posed for nine years as a The community is still in ex­ W88 presented today with a ",388,- reaction to the U.S. poSition on this was entitled to the money for re­ Brooklyn artist whUe, the govern­ istence and the name remains as 000,000 foreip aid prolfam em­ point - and In fact, on a whole payment of funds Dio had put into ment sald, he collected atomic and a reminder of its historic origln_ bodying a first step toward a 1011&­ range of diplomatic questions - if the union. Heaton added that he military data Cor transmission to range prolfam of economic help they felt they knew who is really was told by Doria, that Dio had Moscow. abroad. · . running Soviet (oreign policy. put up at least that much, and I Abel w.. held without bell fer President EJaeDhower bas uraed But the identity of the mind be- maybe more, of bls own money. . • further .hearing TIIe"y t. ,I"e such a prolfam. hind Kremlin diplomacy is de· Deri. who, 1",/", from H.a­ him time .. get • I.wyer. Senate and HOUle confereea leribed here as a real mystery. It .'s ...tlmony, knew much .".,. Dall,. 10 ••D Pilote by 8JU Nee•• ke. A wI.,y, dlsheveled 1M", look­ agreed Thursday on a compromile" is more baffling tban some that .. whet went on In the union I", not at .11 11k•• top.fllght foreign aid bill, slashed $489,f10,. Moscow has produced In the past th.n ..... did, I. ICheduled to Fino/s?-No, Preliminaries espionage agent, Abel said the 000 below the ts,864,f10,OOO Eisen­ years because the identities of the be • wltnell Mfere the com­ Rusli.n goye""",nt h., m" no hower asked fot mlUtary, ecooomic Ipparent top authorities are of mlttee. . FOR SOMI! PEOPLE, Ichool day. W.,. 0".' W. dn."y. For Cllhera, such •• thoso plcturtd nove, nMl¥e on hla lathalf ainee hi. 1.. - and techaicaI ~ce abroad. • course well MOWD. D~lell has Kennedy sal(l Dio provided vou­ they .re only begln"ing. Thll gto", II part of the I" coml", freshma" and transfer .tudltnts who teok d/cIJtMnt, ChClinge In doioi JO. 1 ~ conferees just asked Intellii~nce agencies to study Ichers showin, only • little over pl.oemel't testl Thursday .nd Fridel' .t SUI. Ar-thur Mlttmen. fempor.ry DI,..cter of 1 ••mln.Hona "That's their busineSll," he told about split.. tile 500~ rniJIlon differ­ the puzzle aDd come up with a .,000 was due him, rather than Servlc., said a 1Itt1. ov.r • thousand stvdentl have talc", the t.... 10 f., thli summe,. Th. fin.t group reporters. "I have no intention of ence betWeeIl SeDate aDd Houae MIuUon, the $16,000 he was JI41d. will t.k. ''''Ir examln•• lons Mond.y end Tlletd.,. actt1P& in touch with aD¥0De." totala. I • 1he-1)aily Iowan Ice~ergs Turn .·Fine Arts Festival- Tile Daily Iowan Is wrUten and cdited uy tlldents andi, gowrned by a boord of ffvc student Imslces eleeled by Shipping Aside ·A 19 Yea r fM "udent booy and fOllr faculty ,rusteC$ appointed by the pre IdclIt of tile University. TIle Daily Iotea/l', edito­ By BARBARA ROBERDEE - rial policy. therefore . is 1I0t all expression of SUI admlnlstmtion policy or opinion In ally par/feulnr. Each summer, (or the past nine­ Plitt SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1957 Iowa City, Iowa In 'Invasion' teen years. lhe School oC Fine Arts By TOM HORGAN has presented a Fine Arts Festival. This year's Festival ended Wednes­ BOSTON INI - A grimly beauli­ day. A Mere Matter of $25 Million ful. whltc invasion fleet, stealing A summer session afCair. the down from the frozen North, has Festival includes contributions From the Wall Street Journal forced onc of the world's busiest from the SUI deparlments of Art. shipping lanes to make its annual Music. Band. Dramatic Art and the Saudi Arabia is a pretty warm place but no­ aiu to Saudi Arabia dug up by the Hoover bend south ill obedience to nature_ Unh'crsity Museum. body there is quite as hot as some Congress­ Commission. In 1953, I .C.A.'s predecessor, tJ1 e This invasion of the icebergs has The Festival, which began in virtually taken over a 3OO-square­ 1938. was originally Jlbout two men in WOlshington are right now about the Foreign Operations Admini~tration, asked mile area south and cast of New­ weeks long. For apprOXimately little mOltter of $25 million in foreign aid to Saudi Arabia what the U-S. could do to help foundland, where the only ships six or eight years, the Festival King Saud. and the Kjng suggested a VOlst bathhouse for that wisely brave the clogged wat­ was held for two weeks and was ers arc those of the International really considered a "festivaL" It St..'CI1lS that when the King was here early pilgrims on their way to I\lecca. lee Patrol. From morning till night. plays. this year negotiations were begu~ ' to grant The bathhouse was to cost aroum.l $300,000 IT IS THIS fleet of icc cutters lectures. concerts and operas were Saudi Arabia that much money from) the 1957 anti to include steam sterilizers for the pil­ with help from a detachment o[ presented to the public. planes that blows the wbisUe on Foreign Aid funds, and talks were started about grims' robes and prayer rtlgs. A site was chos­ Originally. there was a play man's only defense against the .cheduled almolt every night for where the man y could bcst be spcnt for the en, work was begun and then F.O.A. tech­ wandering islands of icc - ade­ two weeks. Now the number of country's economy. Naturally, there were some nicians discovered that there wasn't nough quate warning for the freighters plays has been cut down to four and passenger liners. strings to the spending. The .. thought most water there to rlln th e steam stcrili.l:crs. The or five a summer_ Icc is the purlieular business o( The Art Department prcsented of the funds ought to go to develo~)I11ent of project was abandon d. Capt. Kenneth S. Davis, command­ exhibitions and also scheduled lec­ Damman, a port neUl' the .S. air base at It may be that some ~imilar strange idea of er oC the International Icc Patrol. tu[es on different phases of art. THE SUI MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY. unique among university museums. The mounted ante­ who has just returned after logging Large. important exhibits were Dhahran. The Saudis were willing to spend Saudi Arabia's economic neeus led to the lack more than 800 bergs thus far this lopes pictured above is but ono of the many exhibits that Fine Arts Fe5tiv81 visitors law durin" the 1951 some there, but wanted the balance spent for brought in from New York and summer session. of agreement which enued in the failure of year. other art ecnters around the coun­ other purposes. CAPT_ DAVIS believes this year's try. King SllUd to pick up that $25 million check; icc broken from the Greenland icc jng5, prints,* sculptures, * * crafts, Romulo *and Ivan* T. *Sanderson takes part* in the* Festival.* The Ambassador Wadsworth made 11 Iwmber of This summer's festival began But we can unuerstand the King's uisinterr cap is the heaviest in more than June 12 and ended with the close of and other works of art by profes­ spoke to SUI lecture audiences. spacious Music Room of the Union, trips to the king's desert palace to try to in­ hal! a century. In addition, it ar­ sional artists who have eamed with excellent high fidelity equip­ est in the aid, conSidering the fact that he the SUI summer session. The Nine­ As a participant in the Festival duce the king to take the money. But the king rived earlier and is remaining teenth Annual Fine Arts Festival one or more degre" from SUI. the Natural History Museum has ment and an extensive Ilbrary of was reported preoccupi d with other matters takes in some $250 million a year in oil reve­ longer than usual. presented plays. concerts. lectures, The exhibition was di vided be­ been featuring both new and old recordings. has been availabJe to nues. W11at we find diIfielll t is the insistence The icc patrol was begun by the and painting and sculpture ex­ tween the Main Lounge of the exhibits. Whether one is a natur­ th e public throughout the summer. and the JUlle 30 deadline passed. Coast Guurd after a berg claimed hibits. Broadcasts oC interesting opera­ of th State Department that Congress also Union and the Exhibition Lounge alist, artist, or curious visitor, None of that makes the Congressml'l1 mad. the luxury liner Titanic and 1.517 The highlight of the summer sea­ of the Art Building. he will find the Museum offers tic and symphonic programs arc What hus them hot as a Bedouin Js lhe fact 'hould insist on giving away thaL '25 miJlion lives on her maiden voyage in son was an opera which is staged -an educitional and enlightening received from time to time in the April 1912. annually. ~ This is an addition to the Programs of symphonic, cham­ that the State Department is b, ck asking Con­ by making it again available to Saudi Arabia. experience. Among the displays Music Room. In the television room Such tr3gcdy has not been re­ Festival. since until recently no ber. band and choral music wcre recently Installed in Bird I-Jall programs have been available gl"ess to grant the amount of money again in And cqn)iuering all the circumstanc 'S, tl~ peated. Cost of the patrol is shared operas wcre given during the sum­ presentcd by the Music and Band Annex are two ,now-white birds, every day and evening, in addillon the hop('~ that King Saud can be induceu to b sl thing .. ongress can do with that IInwan ~­ by the world's principal maritime mer.! This summer's performance, Departments as lheir contributio:' the American Egret and Trum­ to the telecasts of public events df nations, on a Lonnage basis. with "Albert Herring," by Benjamin accept it. cd $25 million is to make it and more avd'tT­ to the Festival. A number of con­ peter Swan. unusual interest presented in the Britain picking up the heaviest Britten. illustrates the integration Main Lounge. The International Coop ration Administra­ able to the taxpa y~rs by refusing to approp chit. of the talents of the Music and certs by high school students as­ Special cases throughout the Museum are devoted to such things Both the present and past admin­ tion was wise to put som strings on the grant, ate money for foreign aid that foreigners dOll THIS YEAR'S ice crop is unusual Dramatic Art departments. sembled at SUI for the All-State Two plays have been prescnted as extinct species; abnormal color. istration have taken special llrCde conSidering the account of one item of foreign want. in some respects. It made its ap.­ Camps were among the early mus­ ation in animals ; and ethnological in building up the Fine Arts School pearance much earlier tban aver­ to the public this slimmer. "Arms and the Man." by G. B. Shaw. and ical events. materials from all over the world, at sm. Their success in this eD­ age, for one thing. and it consists including a fine collection of origi­ deavor is best illustrated by the en· of solid chunks of icc. "Very Love." an original play by Three lectures were scheduled in David Larson, G. Ule summer lecture series. Such nal Eskimo ivory implements and thusiastic support accordcd the aD· Out of Circulation Usually thc bergs arc filled with carvings. nual Fine Arts Festivals. "faults" - air pockets and the like, A notable feature of the Fes­ distinguished speakcrs as Dr. Ever­ tival was a presentation of paint- ett R. Clinchy, General Carlos P. From the Wall Street Journal which cause Ulem to melt rapidly The Iowa Memor.al Union also REPORT FROM HUNGARY after reaching the Gulf Stream. Vienna. Austria INI - The rela­ We see by the pap rs that a ongl'essional decline in Federal spending would take a lQ Not so this year - the bergs are * * * * * * * tionship betwecn church and state eommlUee plans u study of the ill1pact of Fed­ of money out of circulation. And we ju~t slow in melting. * * in Hungary "has very much im- , Arter breaking oll the Greenland eral spending on Lhe economy. thollght we would remind the Congressmen pro ved." says Bishop Lajos Ordass, ice cap. bergs meander about 2~ primate oC the Hungarian Luthcrilb 111al'5 a rather broad subjcct alld we arc th at if they cut the budget und let us keep t~ years. traveling some 2.000 miles and often gelling trapped in bays Church. IiltIe more of Our money, we can a~sure them looking forward to the results of the eommit­ along the Labrador coast before In his first trip outside his home· tec's study. In the meantime, we offcl' a qUick it won't stay long out of circulation· reaching the tail of the Grand land since 1948, the bishop who was Banks as a threat to shipping. freed last year from a Red prison report on the impact of Federal spcnding 011 . told a clerical conference that the I CAPT. DAVIS estimates lhat only one family'S economy· ,_, "It is common sense that there must be Hungarian church was now allowed an infinitesimal percentage of the to do more Christian education., .It knocks a big hole. in It. The lady at our a limit to the lI!)wud price piral, ~sc n loaf bergs complete the course. work than previollsL,y,. . ,v .• 1 , house has a number of spending projcets plnn­ of brend will demand a wheel harmw of cur­ Two cutters, the Evergreen and Acushnet, and three and some­ ned that would add a little more prosperity to rency' as it did in Cermany after World War times four planes - B17s - are tho building trades and tho electrical anu l."-KANSAS CITY, KAN., PRESS. guarding the steamer lanes this 'WSUI Schedule home furnishing industries, all of which arc year. Usually the patrol ends in mid-July. but Capt. Davis docs not S.t~rday. Au,ust 10. 10;;1 having their economic troubles these days. Un­ "1\ 1.\0 Tsc·tung is now reported to have see termination before mid-August. 8 :00 MornIng Chapel ',r. 8:15 News fortuuately this planned spending woo't have admitted that 800,000 people were Iicluidated Icebergs arc. of course. fresh 8:30 Morning Serenado and noL salt. and when afloat in 9:15 The B,>okshelf much impact on the economy b ause our by his regilne up to 1954. Th· news seems 9:4~ Voice o( Agriculture the ocea n, approximately nine­ 10:00 Little Orchestra So<:lcty money's gone to pay for lhe C rnmcnt's cold in print. But it should be dwelled upon tenths of their bulk is submerged. 11 :30 Recital Hall 12:00 Rhythm Ramble• planned spending. . . . J low many regimes in all history have One recenUy reported was 600 12:30 News feet long and 250 feet above the 12:45 One Man'. Opinion It's a minor matter, perhaps, but . e do note executed as many as 800,000 human beings?" 1:00 Music lor Listenine water. 2:00 News that one of the eommittee's worries is that a - FREDONIA, N. Y., CENSOR. Underwater measurement could 2:15 SIGN OFF

only be estimated. Mond.y. A~ru.t n, 19;;1 8:00 Morning Chapel 8 : 1~ News MUNICIPAL PROBLEM 8:30 Morning Serenade 9: 15 The Bookshelf STROUD. Okla. (A'I - Stroud city 9:45 Musical Showcase 10:00 News officials arc taking a survey on 10:15 Kitchen Conterl whether to drcss Oleir policemen SUI Pholo 11 :30 Proudly We Hall 12:00 Rhythm Rambles in uniforms. Thcre have been cases A GEORGE BERNARD SHAW comedy, "Arms and the Man," was one of the first productions of the 1?:30 News of persons looking [or policemen 1'57 Fine Arts Festival. Pictured in this scene from the play are from left to right. Marion Michael, G. 12:45 Over the Back Fence 1:00 MU bieal Ch.ls and not being able to spot them muncy, Pa.: David Cropp, G, Emporia, Kan.; Jo Gillette, A3, Iowa City and Carolyn Welch, G, Wadley, 2:01) New. without uniforms on. Ala. 2:15 SIGN Of'F ------~----~------

(kneral MoUe •• mutt lie receIved .t The Da.IJ, lo•• n oltta. a.- .1. c-. Wtl you munleaUons Center by 8 a.m. for PUbU" M'On the follo ..ln. morn In•. ~ must. be typed or l e,lbly ."rlY.~n and 'lilned; the, ..m net be I~ .... t.l.epbon•. Tho n_llT Iowan """,rYe. tho rilrbl to .ott a.IJ ~ N~ I SUNDAY, AUGUST " 1957 rlalPl' CR.ISTIAN CBv.ca JlENNONrrr; CIroROB en 10 ... Aye. AI 4 CI.rl< SI. with the Educational Placement AOUOA" "'CHIM CONGaEOATION Tile It..,. A. C. Holrlchter Jr. . P ...... Th. It.... VlrSIl Br,...... m ••• P ..... BABY SITTING-The University cas E. "a ... IIII". II •• S.UJ A. Smith. Mlnlot.r 0' Educallon Sunday Sehool flour, 9:4:"; a.M. Cooperative Baby-Si Lting League Office should report change of acJ. a.bbl 8t.. I., B.r••• and Student. Work Mornln, W.,.l1h,. 10:45 ••m. dress before leaving the campus. Frida, 8er.Jee, • ,.In. Adull. Stud en I. Youth S~udy (,rad. 7 book will be in the charge of Mrs. up) S.bb.i.. w.rsbIP. 1I.I.r'." • • .•• ItEOIlGANIZED CRUItCR 0 .. Jl!8CI Mcrvin Dougal from AUgl.\st 6 to . . . Merolar Wouh)p and CommunJ.n 9:lG INTERIM HOURS FOR VUItIST OF LATTr:1t DAY 8A1NTI August 20. Telephone her at 3738 if A8SI!"IILY or OOD •. m. Conterenee a ••", 1 THE MAIN LIBRARY 411% 8 . CUnlo. "" 8ermtn: "AlShlde lIeaven .ltd Earth" ..... M.morl.l Ualon a sitter or information abou\ join­ Th. ae •. Dan MIII,r, ...... Cburch Sch.ol (thr.u,h ,rode 01. 9:1~ August 7 - September 25 Mor"l", W.nhltt. H •. m. a .m. aloh.rd C. SeUorher,. 1II1 .....r ing the group is desired_ Oeaeral Wor,hl" p,a. .... Monday-Friday - 7:30 a.m. Chrl ••'. Am".... '.,.. " ...... ftl.nhy, Stew.r4r •• lIIeeUn,. 7:39 p.m . 1 ...1011.11: 8."1.. ; 7 , ... W.dn ••d.y: Quilt.... D:QO a.m. C1 ...... 0:4» ...... 5:00 p.m.; Saturday - 7:30 a:m- Se,mDD. 10:80 • •111. VETERANS - Each P.L. 550 12 :00 Noon; Saturday - Reserve ' BETHANY BAPTIST CHUItCH • • veteran mllst sign a V.A. Form 7· D SI... Filth A ••. , I .... CII, rl&IT OUIlRCR 0' CII&JIT. III1AItOI'l EVANGEt.lCAL Desk Closed. Other desks ~Ioiejl +or Leonar. D. Boran.on ••••'or 1IC1I!NTI8T l!J96a to cover his attendance from 11:50 7f1l! E. C • .,.,. 11'. UNI'fED BRETHItEN CHIl.Ca a.m.; Sunday - CLOSED; Unill.. 1II0r.la, Wor.hlp B.nl.o, ' :U X.lona I July 1 to August 7. 1057. A form a.m. S.nh, Soho.I_ ':U ..... Th. a.,y .•• C. PI.lh,.atl...... , Labor Day - CLOSED. A roE 8en,lctl. 11 •. 111. will be available beginning Wed­ The Mess_lfI: HDuly .r DeHrht" e.ft•• " S,.nd., Schoot, 9:~ ...... Even'n, Gespel 8er.tGe. p.m/ eermon: .. tlpl' .... ' VETERANS - Any veteran wbo l JlIJysic.i : ':3. W,daud.y-Ttltimony M.dla,. 8 p.m. Morn.ftc Worship, 10 ::~U • . m. nesday. August 7 at the window The Men:,e: "Ne.' 1 Bu' ~~r,,"tf " .... In, Wonbip. ,,30 p.m. olltside the Veterans Service in has used Public Law 550 benefit/' and L (For iran.porL.Uen, call ,,_U94f1, I·,UG Plblic • aITaEL APItICAN .ITaODIft ftalT INGLISH LUTaEaAlf or '-4!41.1 University Hall. Regular sign-up for Summer Session 1957 and who . CRU.C. CRIlItCR • • will continue August 8. and Au­ does not plan pursuit under PubHc' Broadc III II. a.um., ... O.'.q ••• ad M.rk.' IUL led to ~ ,.,.. c. a ....0 ...... Wln,.h, ,ru.bID,. liT. MAltY'S CRUaeB gust 9. A change of address for Law 550 for or prior to the 1811,1 De ••"' •••', a ,.a...... Y J.rr.... n .nd LI •• 11'" clio net Mornlnl 8erylee t 11 •. m . check purposes should be noted on Summer Session is urged to visit w... bl, ...... • •••• , 11 ..... 1•• :(5 ..... at...... C. II. M.lnb.r,. P ••, •• QiT. B.Iltla, MUle., 6 ....., 1:••.••••••• •• lbe V.A. Form 7-1~a. the Veterans Service in University· 'l'RI! CRIl ..CR or caun 11:11 ...... 11:80 •.•• Hall for advisement regardinf ' Perla IU. Kirk ..... A .... rl•• T PRE8BrTII:ltiAN cauae. . . Il,SCarc 81bl. C1..... 9. ... . ~g t. M.rket 81. IT. PATltlCJ{'S CUllaOB EDUCATIONAL PLACEMENT­ time limitations on pursuit of Iii' " Mernlnc W.,.hlp. II • •m. Dr. P. Be_i ••D pon.", •• 'Mlall'er xu E. C.ur. 8'. leal YE GUelt Speaker! Llndber. Pres•• n T~o •••• J.ro ... J ...... Ualwer.n, MI,r ....trlck J. 0'1t.1II ...... r SumlT\er School students registered program. . • 1 ed~~a~ional ~. r of UlC ( Sermen: .tTbe Oo.pel er Cb.I",' P•• , •• 1/." Mallei, 61lfO. 8 :4&, 11 . .... tv •• ln, Wo ..bll, aenl••• ':lIII •••• (;"11 and Vare Nauery 8 :30 •. m. HI,h Ma... 8,13 a.m. LAfFaA-DA Y ff BrYSOD ';peaker: Mr. Pres!•• M~rnln, W... hl,. .::It '.m. u,., O.Y". G:.G. 1. ~ ...... ~. " ...... Sermon: ,. Rom ••s" Tb. kv. W ••a ... n lha .. ler, pr.lLehln, ", thor an • • • 8ermen: u A Ob,•• 'l •• '. Wonbl," IT. PAUL'S LIlTnltAN CRUae. camplL!S CIIIl.CR 0 .. JUUI CR•• IIT MI ••• u.1 8y .... 0 .. '.ATTE.-DAY .AlNT. • • ,.rr.... n an' 011""" ItL Wsa r~c III E. r.tr."U. I" r.R8T METHODl8T CRUaCB Tho It.v. I.b" C •••taltl.. , ••ta. elios C»J ••1 ...... U., ...... J.n..... aad De".".. IIlL M.ralnl ''-....1' ••••••••• 11 .... lu .. d., 1 .....1. 11 •.•_ D •• L. L. Oan.,.,ha•• ,."le, Vel,erl, , ]I.m. WSUI. I ..ra ...... &I.r •• :11 , ... CII.reb Seh.el, 1:31 a.m. Profe · . . .. ••• Iar W .....,'. B:1It ' .m. IT. taOMAS MORE CaAl'SL iDg a CIIU.C. or TBI NAZA.EQ tOI "cL••• 8t. B.rll.,,,. ••• CII.I.. Ill. n.1IT IlNlTA.IAN 10ClIT. '110 ••n. A. A. B.rd.akl'e"'" ••• to. IboarII...... ~ ...... ,:.. IW,'.''' •• r "'.b. I . .... Ilar.i., W... lllp ••••••••• 11;" .... <.... MOille, tbroup rr~ _ Glr, W, wUUaw. AI. _. _._ _ , ••• ,er... : "OalUvatlAl ....l D"lru" A.1Il1 a~I. CIMI•• :...... _, '. - I

THI DAILY IOWAN-low. City, I•. -$.tu,~y. Alleus' 10, 1957-P.,. , u.s. Continues Fight Against . .- Professor. Whitesel Allocations Made to 19 Departments / . Iowa News Roun d up' Renamed Chairman Communist Espionage Rings Ill' THE ASSOCJATIlD .alllS From the Old Gale! Development Fund ~ DES MOINES - Iowa's 1957 corn rF.DAP oAprnc: - Polic. P.. Of Fellowship Plans Assistant Alorney General William F. Tompkins, reporting on tile crop improved so much during this troIman Rlch.rd St•••• wa. ac· Special mid·year allocations to­ income. Under the present Univer­ tween certain parental attitudes progress made by the Internal Security Division in its fight against month of July that the estimated lIulttecI In MUIIlcl,.1 Court Frio Russel Whitesel, Professor of po­ taling $9,129 have been made to 15 sity loan program, funds cannot be and the anxiety levels of children; Communism and other subversive activity during the (irst half of the production was increased Friday ...y of • tr.ffIc wlelatlen cNrte litical Science at SUI, has been SUI departments from the Old Gold made available to students unllJ to upport research in medicine, by about 4OU, million bu hel . filed by Police Capt, L.W. Kom­ named to continue as regional aUer they have registered, Dr. dentistry, education and archaeol· 1951. said activity was highlighted by the smashIng of a highly import· Development Fund IOGDFJ, SUI ant international Communist espionage ring. Ing ..... chairman for the selection of Wood· Davis noted. ogy; to support a "tissue bank" Furthermore, the Iowa Crop and Provo t Harvey H. Davis has an· This ring, he said, had members in the highest echelons oC Lhe Livestock Reporting Service upped Remington accused St.ves of row Wilson National Fellowship The Botany Department received in the SUI department of urgery; Soviet IntelUgcnce service and its lIctivitles extended over a period of the indicated yield as of Aug. 1 by f.ilure to yield the rl,ht of w.y holders for 1958·59. nouced. $500 to continue a study of vegeta· to provide student loan and schol· years. • four bushels per acre over the July when .mergi", from • prlv.te The purpo e of the Woodrow WiI· The OGDF wa organized by tion in Iowa. The inter-institutional arships; to enable the SUI LibrarY In other areas, he said. the Pivision has pressed a driving attack 1 forecast. driveway with a police car. De· son Fellowships is to encourage top Iowa alumni la t year a a chan· program of field study will even· Lo acquire unusual books and col· against threats to the nation's SC()urity. Ipit. R.mington', teltlmony. college students to enter graduate "The condition of the crop has nel through which they might pro­ tually provide a basis for specific lections, and to support several Di~~ussing the first six months of 1957, Mr. Tompkins stated: work, prererably with the aim of improved in .11 .r.as of the st.t. further testimony and police rec· vide ,'ol untary financial assistance recommendations lor soil conser· other special projects and organiza­ "The Internal Security Divillion was instrumental in hailing the ord. show.d Stave. 5tepped be· entering eolleg teaching. Expan· except the lOuth central and to their University. Such girts sup· vation and flood control. tions. operation of an apparatus oC in- for ••merglng ••nd .notfMr car. sion of the Woodrow Wilson Na· * * * port projects which could not or· Tha School of Joumalism was Many of the projects receiving ternational Soviet agents bent upon southeast districts." the service which h.d cut In toward the curti. lional Fellowship Foundation pro­ s.id. "Th. IUblOiI moisture has dinarily be financed from state ap? alloc.ted $510 for a preliminary mid·year allocations were begun in obtaining important national de­ scr.ped Staves' poIlc. c.r. gram has been made possible by 1956 with alumni donations. During fense data and transmitting it to g.nerally been adequate in all propriations. .tudy of .... imp.ct of preIS, a grant of $24.5 million from the Dr. Davis said the OGDF coun­ the Fund's first year of operation Ibe Soviet Union for its inf\ll'mation p.rts of the It.t.... INDEPENDENCE - Mrs. Carl Ford Foundation. radio .nd televilion upon atti· cil, of which he is chairman, voted 1,320 alumni, throughout the United and advantage. The service e timated Lhe 1957 Sauer, 60, of Rowley, Iowa, was The foundation expects to award tudes .nd behavior of children. to allocate the money contributed States, contributed a total of $27,. In New York, Jack and Myra production would be 577,239,000 in fairly good condition Friday at some 1,000 fellowships next year. Prof. Erich Funke was given $300 so far this year to the Fund, to 920.2L to Fund projects. Soble and Jacob Albam were bushels. That would be a 11 per an Independence hospital where Five Iowans were among 302 reo to continue the development of charged in an indictment, naming cent gain over the 1956 crop. It she was being treated for injuries cipients of fellowships for 1957·58. enable various projects to get Tran lingua Script, a system oC under way at once. Final alloca· VafIBUIi Molev and nine other So· also would b 6 per cent higher suIfered in one of a series of ac· Members of Prof. Whilesel's cQde numbers to make communi· Seven SUI Students Get viet officials as co-conspirators, than the 1946·55 average produc­ cidents. committee for the selection of tions of money received during cation possible between people who with violating the peace·time es· tion. A h.y b.l.r c.ught fire In • nominees from Region 10 are Wil­ 1957 will be made to sur depart· speak different languages. Old Gold Fund Awards pionage statute. Molev, a member ments at the close of the 1957 Fund fi.ld n.. r Independence Thurs­ liam Sachse. University or Wiscon· Another $600 was given to the Se of IJIe Soviet Embassy staff in COU ClL BLUfFS - Bernard d.y ••nd .1 Mrl. S.uer .pproach· sin; Robert Stange, University of year, he said. SUI Institute or Gerontology, to ven SUI students with oul· Washington, and entitlcd to dip· Glen Flock, 40. Omaha oil refinerY .d the .cene her c.r had • flat Minnesota; Robert Irrman. Beloit Mld.y •• r .Iloc.tion, Included. continue the first comprehensiVe standing academic records have ItmaUc immunity, was ordered to worker accused in the fatal beating grant of $1.510 to tha University tire near the bl.li", fi.ld. College, Beloit, Wis.; and Arild survey ever made or the adult pOP- been namod to receive Old Gold leave the United States upon the of a Council Bluffs widow, Friday Schol.rshlp Comml.... to pro­ John Manke. 40, Rumford, S.D .. Miller, Carleton College. North­ ulation of an entire Iowa county. Development Fund Merit Scholar· arrest of Sobles and Albam. afternoon was bound over to the wide merit scholarship. for de· stopped 10 assi 1 Mrs. Sauer, and field, Minn. Region 10 include From the data obtained retirement grand jury on a second degree servin, student. wt. do not ships [or the 1957·58 school year, The charges included an attempt as they were getUog back into their Iowa, North Dazota, Wisconsin and plan aod activities for Iowa's elder murder charge. qu.llfy for help frem e.l.tln, r.· according to Helen Reich. chair· ' to transmit documents, photo. cars, a car driven by Charles Ihlen· Minnesota. citizens can be formulated. graphs and other information reo Flock pleaded innoc.nt at his feldt, 22, of Waterloo, collided with strlcted funch. LI.t year 15 low. man or the University Scholarship arr.ignment Friday in Municipal Lhe Manke auto, knOCking it into AEC Post to SUI Grad fr.,hmen received merit .chol.r· The School of Religion was given $500 to bring competent scientists, Committee. Court here In the d.ath of Mrs. tho Sauer car. David L. Mayer, a graduate or ship. from OGDF funds. Col. Rudloph lvanovlch Abel. Id. Kenn.dy at her hDme last philosophers and theologians to the Students named to receive the A lengthy traffic jam developed SUI holding both B.A. and J .D. An Initial allocation of $t,OOO was SUI campus for letcures on Lhe in. scholar hips are Robert Mezey, A2 , a hith rankin, Ru.si.n .py. S.turd.y. involving motorists who were going degrees, has been appointed Di· mad to a new scholarship loan w.s Indicted WednIJd.y by • Secret Agent Abel ter.relationship between science and William Brogan, E4, both or Police Capt. Charles Merrimen home rrom the Buchanan County rector of the Security Division al Cund to provide financial assistance and religion. Five lecture will be Iowa City; Franklin Katz. A3 , Ceo Feder.1 Gr.nd Jury on .splon· Inclicteci fOT Espionage teslified at a preliminary hearing Fair at Independence. Argonne National Laboratory, near to deservin~ students who need spe· presented over a three.year period. dar Rapid ; Nadine Johnson, A2. a" ch.rg... H. has posed ••• that Flock had sign d a statement Lamont, m. cial help. Such students orten need Osage; Paul Wuebben, A2, Rem· .t",.,I1", .rtl,t in Brooklyn admitting he had been involved in a DES MOINES - Ed Hartzer, Argonne is operated by the Uni­ the a urance that they will have, Thes.ar. only. few of .... 25 sen; LaVerne Cain, A3, Sioux City; for nine ye.rs. Construction Bids fight with the 57·year-old Mrs. Ken­ bu iness repre cntative of Team· versity of Chicago for th U.S. not only a cholarship, but surnc· project. which will receive sup- Ruth Hale, A2, West Liberty. nedy the morning o[ her death. sters Local 90, Friday predicted Atomic Energy Commi sion. May. ient funds to draw upon until they port from the Old Gold D.velop- PrO\'ided by the Old Gold De. Being Requested An in,.nity information brought that Iowa delegates will vote ror er has been acting Director of Se· become oriented to their new en· rnent Fund duri", 1957. v lopment Fund, an SUI alumni " laUng to the intl!lIigence activities ag.inst Flock was dismin.d James R. Hoffa for national presi­ curity at the research and develop. virol)JTlent and find employment or Alumni dollars will also be used projeet, the e scholar hips cover ' and armed forces of the Unitcd The Stale Board of Regents asked Thursday by the Pottawattamie dent of the Teamsters Union. ment center since March. other means of supplementing their to investigate the relationships be· . all basic fees, amounting 10 $2::0. ~ states to the Sovict Union. The de· Thursday for bids on the replace· County Insanity Commislcn. Th. fendants in this case have pleaded Hartl.r said h. bellev •• Hoff. " ment onhe east elevator in the SUI Information was fil.d by his sis· Y(1I1 recelv. the vot .. of som. 20 guilty to one count of the indict· ter. " Medical Laboratories and for the Iowa cltlegates to the union', nl' ment and arc awaiting sentence. Flock is being held under $20.· construction of permanent bleach· tlon.1 conv,ntion .t Mi.ml "Further contribution has been 000 bond. Beach. Fl •.• opening Sept. 30. made to tile campaign to eliminate ers Cor the SUI Fieldhouse Swim­ "My vote will go for Hoffa," Communist infiltration of organized ming Pool. GRINNELL - Grinncll college trustees huve approved the sale of said Hartzer. "He's the best man labor in the United States. In Janu· Scaled bids will be accepted until ary of this year, James S. West, the Okoboji Summer Th atre build· Cor the job." 1:30 p.m., Aug. 21, according to Edward Joseph Chaka, Andrew Re· ing for $2,500 to a building corpor· Little Opposition has appeared to mes, Hyman Lumer, Sam Reed, Ceorge L. Horner, Superintendent ation now being formed in tbe Iowa block Hoffa's path to the presiden· cy. Eric Reinthaler, Marie-Reed Haug, oC Planning and oCnstructlon for Great Lakes region. aDd Fred Haug were charged in SUI. A public hearing on the pro· The Okoboji Summer Theatre Classified Male Help Wanted Typing Trailer for Sale Assn. will conlinue to arrange [or RED OAK - A tot.1 of 125 men I Cleveland with conspiring to vio· posal wiU be held atl p.m. that day Advertising Rates while 10ARD J08 openln,. BUI boy. Apply ______(or sale. Phao.nle latu statute by filing '(alse a(· dramatic talent tile building .nd women r"I.ter.d here Fri· leleh'l Cafe. '·13 't"PlNG-'oO~2 9 . ~.:..ur U~~,D6.1l0USE.TRAlIJER" too and the bids will be opened at 2 O fidavits with the National Labor corporation, which includes boLh day for the ~o·d.y ~9t" 1I""lIa\ One Da, ...... \c: a Word Relations Board. p.m. local and summer residents, will convention of tIM low. Black· Two Days ...... lOc a Word Apartment for Rent TYl'l1'10. mlmeollrDp'nlna -'NOIATY l'u,\). i>e\s ~or 'E>a\e have charge of Lhe property. smith and W.ldars Alln. and its Three Days ...... 120 a Word '\Ie. Mary V. Burn., eel Iowa Slnlc In other cases involving the filing The new bleachers at the Field· aanll bulldln,. Pial 21158. 8·10 COCKERS fo" onle. Dial """'. Roy J . Smith or Spirit Lake, own· .uxill.ry. Four Day...... 14<: a Word TWO FIRST lloor, 3 room oph. Fully • ""',, 8·30 of false non·communist affidavits house Swimming Pool are to reo furnl hed. Private entrance and bath. with the Board, indictments have place the "knock-down" bleachers er or the real estate on which the Committee appointments were Five Day...... l5c a Word w ..hlnl fa cilities BUl by door. Phon. TYPINa-2U7. Miscellaneous for Sale formerly used and now condemned, theatre stahds, agreed to sell at an announc.d and deme'TIstrations Ten Days ...... 2Oc a Word 4S35. Aller ,:00 call 3411. , .\4 ------been returned against Lee Brown. 'tYPING-ao0437. 8·10 SIMMONS "wrlters. of the year. phono,raphe. aport. Cl(Iulpmenl and hrtabl.. Standa~ Oontrol Board that the California The Iowa and the Wisconsin are jewelry. HOCK·Eyr;· LOAN Co. 221 Labor School, Inc., register as a South Capitol. ' ·19r communist·front. now the only active battlewagons I Wikel The Board has reaffirlT)ed Its surviving the trend toward air· SALARY COe order that the Communist Party craft carriers and other more Typewriter Itself register as a communist· ac· modern ship types. Dial 8·1051 23 E. WalhingtOt PLUS BONUS Thr. S. R·2R tIon organization, and an attempt The changes were ordered as One 01 the (O.t.lt proa-re•• lp.g com· is being made by the Division to panles In It. field will ha,," a rep· part or an over·aU economy drive reSenUlllye Interviewing m"n who the Supreme Court of the consti· hold the followln, qualifications: RENT-A-CAR obtain an early determination in designed to hold defense spending I- A •• 21·i3. 2-0wn aUlomOblle In ,00<1 con· You'll find BIG Values tUtional issues arising under the for the current £iscaJ year to 38 dillon. OR Internal Sccurity Act. 3-WIllII1ll to bel away from home billion dollars. Monday through Friday. Home every week-end. As another part or the drive 4-HI,h School educaUon. '. RENT -A-TRUCK In the WANT ADSI the Navy announced yesterday a !'t-Avallable tor Immediate em· cutback of 10 to 15 per cent in ployment. LICENSEr;) loolclng for a room or apartment for fa,II ... a dlf· qBS To Broadcast · TRAINING: No experience I. neee.. the 254 million barrels of petro' sary. Thoroulh tralnln. Is .I\·en by ferent job ... a busln ... opportunity ... a used car? Comp"ny and pay be,ln. with IrOcln' leum products it . had planned to Ing. Hertz DtHurSystem Whatev.r you are hunting or selling. th. place to Van A!len Interview buy for aU the armed services for Apply In person. look for the bigg.st values is the year. The saving was estlmat· lNTEaVIEW8 Employ_eat RepruentaUW'e ·BROS. A recorded interview between eel at between 115 and 170 million rewa Sial. Emplo' ....1 S.rvlc. MAHER pbysicist James Van Allen of SUI dollars. M_" •• ,., Aa,. I'! Daily Iowan Want Ads It A.M. Ie 3 r.M. Phone 9696 ,. . 8IId Lyman Bryson, director of Mothballing of 19 vessels was ~blic affairs for the Columbia Monday announcement of the reo , Broadcasting Company, is schedu· announced as a revision or the led to go over the CBS national ra· tirement of the Iowa and 59 other dio network Tuesday at 8:30 p.m., ships, including 26 other combat ~T. vessels. Pertaining to upper atmospheric Except for the Wisconsin, there ~arch of International Geophys· was no announcement of the spe. iCaI Year, the interview is a part CAP Wlrepholel cific types or ships included in the 01 the CBS "Do You KnC>w" series. new deactivation scbedule. Bryson, prominent New York au· Mother-Daughter Act By the end of this calendar year, ( tbor and educator, came to the SUI the number of ship!! in ti1e active campus for the interview, which INGRID BERGMAN, cl.d in short•• nd .w.... hlrt •• ppe.rs .Imost IS fleets will be whittled from 967 to Was recorded last month In the stu· youn, .s her tHn.g. daughter. J.nny Ann Lindstrom. I.ft. ill they 923. dios of University radio 6tallon W.lk In the Vi. Vittorio Emanuel. on the 1.1. of C.pri. Tha Mothar· Although the Navy will be forced WSUI. D.u,hter stvdy was photogr.phed Tuesday. J.nny Ann. Ingrid', to retire 79 vessels, it will com· Proressor Van Allen is now lead· daughter by previous marriage to Dr. Peter Lindstrom, is v.c.tionin, mlssion 23 new ships and. add 10 ing a cosmic ray research party with her mother. She 11 a student at tha Univ.rsity of Color••. that have been modernized. aboard the U.S.S. Plymouth Rock, a self·powered floating dock on a apply mission to Greenland an' Barnn IsJand. Fort Madison Gets ~ , Wi~ tile Iowa scientist are three ijffififl NOW THRU TUESDAY SUI 6tudents-Laurence Cahill, New HOf?p Coach Il'aduate stuClent from Bangor. FORT MADISON I.6-Keith Reed NOWI OVER THE WEEKEND 1st IOWA CITY SHOWING lie.; Donald Simanek, junior from who handled the sophomore team 'alker, and Gary Strine, junior tom Tama. The expeQition is one last year, Friday was the new II several in dilIerent parts oC the basketball coach at Fort Madison _arid involvinll the Iowa physicists High School. clJriDa International Geophysical He was appointed Thursday night l_. immediately after BiU Purden reo low. radio statiens and the times signed to accept a .,350 8 year !hat theJ Ire sch~ to carry coaching job at Harvey, m., his !he Bryson· Van ·A1leh 'interview in· alma mater. tilde KGLO;:}fa'son City, 8:30 p.m. Purdf'n had fx>f'n Ill'\'(' two years l'ueJday; WMT, Cedar Rapid8, 9:00 p:m., Tuc::sdliy, lind KRNT, Des after bringing two Winfirld High lfOble., 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 17.· teams to t!'e state tournament, I______~ ·· ...... ur • Iwaukee M rs• St. I largest Lead Nieman Slams Orioles tel Victory Over Yankees Of National • Batte~ Shrugs Hurdler's Wedding League Season Defies AAU Ru les, ST. LOUIS f.f! - Milwaukee streaked to the biggest lead in the Off Slump and May Bar Him National League this season-3~ NEW YORK IA'I - ]n defiance games-as Bob Buhl, backed by of the Amateur Athletic Union, an 18 hit attack. subdued the sec­ Bangs 4 Runs . Olympic gold medal winner Lee ond-place st. Louis Cardinals Fri­ Calhoun was married Friday on day night, 13·2. BALTIMORE IA'I - Bob Nieman the "Bride and Groom" television Hank Aaron. Ed Mathews, Wes NATIONAL LEAG E snapped out a slump Friday night show to his coUege sweetheart. Covington and rookie Bob Hazle I IV L Pct. G.8. with a borne run and two doubles Gwendolyn BanniSter. all homered as the Braves furied MII\Oj8Uk"" •.. . f6 '1 . ~II An AAU spokesman said that SI. Louis ... . 62 4~ .579 as he drove in all the runs for Ule tlle Cards. Brookl' n ... . bl 47 .5b5 Baltimore Orioles in a 4-3 victory the moment the 23·year·old ath· Aaron .334 took over the Na· Clnclnnall ... 00 49 .550 Philadelphia .. 58 50 .537 over the New Yo rk Yankees. lete appeared on the network tional League balting lead with New York .... 49 el .445 show he disqualified himself as The loss, third straight and two-far-five and ti d Stan Musial Chlc~go .. ., 39 , .364 an amateur. Pittsburgh .. ... 37 10 .3t8 rourth in their last five games, .332 of the Cards for RBI leader· Dan Ferris. e.xecutive secretary TOO 1" PITCIIER. left the Yanks lour games ahead ship with 87. Philadelph ia II New York-Haddl~ of the AAU, had warned Calhoun of second·place Chicago in the Loser Lindy McDaniel was hit (9-81 VI. B.1rclay 1S-71. a week ago that the commercial· Brooklyn al Pittsburgh· Drysdale (g- American League standings. hard Cor six runs and seven hits. 6) VI. Purkey 110-81. ized wedding would capitalize on Cive of them extra·base blows in Chleallo al Cincinnati- Hillman (4-7) Nieman slugged his homer in the VI. Jefleoat 1I~-81. his athletic fame. The couple re­ two and one-third innings. Milwaukee ot St. Louis (nlehl) - fourth off loser Whitey Ford and ceived gifts worth an estimated Milwaukee ...... 114 001 42~13 18 0 Spahn (1t-8) vs. V. McDaniel (6-21. hit a base-clearing double in the 51. Louis ...... DID 000 001- 2 9 I $2,500, as well as an undisclosed Buh! and Rice; L. McDaniel. MuUel AlItERJ('~N LBAGUE sixth following singles by Billy amount of traveler's checks and r W L Pel. G.O. (31. SchmIdt (()I Merritt (81 and Land· Npw York ..... 70 38 .648 Gardner and Bob Boyd and a walk plane tickets for a Paris honey· rllh. L-McDan el. Chlcaeo ...... 85 41 .613 to George Kell. Home runs-Mllwauke". Hagle (2). Borton ...... 57 50 .533 moon. Aoron. Mathew.. Covington. SL Lou I. The big outfielder entered the - Ennla. BalUmore . ... • 53 54 .495 The AAU has strict rules . ,"lid .... 53 5~ .491 game with a .254 average and one Detroit ...... 51 55 .481 against appearances on cammer· WasnlnJlton .. . 4Z 67 .385 hit in his last 21 times at bat. cialized TV and radio programs. Reds* 9-6, * Cubs * 7-4 Kanaa. City . . 38 69 .353 New York ...... 002 100 000-3 ]] 0 There was one surprise when TOOA1"S PITCIIERS Baltimore ...... 000 103 OOx- ' 611 the Olympic Games llO-yard high CINCINNATI tm-A four·run up­ Kanlas City at Cleveland-Urban (1- Ford. Klick. (7) and Berra; Wlehl. 2) ,I •. Garcia (5-7). hurdle champion's father. the rising on five hits in the eighth Zuverlnk 18) and Triandos. W- WI'hl. Washington at Boston-Po.cual 18-U) ~Ford. inning carried Cincinnati's Redlegs VI. 1-'orterueld 13-4) or SIllier (7-6), Rev. Carey Calhoun of the Even· New York at lialtlmore Inlehtl- Ulr­ Home runs-Baltimore. Nieman. ing Star Baptist Church, Gary, to a 6-4 victory over Chicago's Cubs '"n (6-4) VB. WI Chi (3-51 or Brown Friday night In the nightcap. com­ (4-61. IInd., married th~e. DetroIt at Chlcallo (nl,htl-Lary (4- * * * pleting a doubleheader sweep. 15 V1. Derrlnllon (0-0). Chisox 5, Tigers 4 The Reds outslugged the Cubs PEPSI-COLA in lhe opener for a 9-7 triumJ,lh. CHICAGO f.f! - Nellie Fox kept In both cases. the Reds ha dto Tam 'World' Meet alive Chicago's diminishing pen­ 36c per 6 pack or Swarm from behind twice before nant hopes Friday when he twice $1.40 per case nailing down the decision. drove in the game-tying run, then Goes Into Round 3, romped homo in the 11th inning on Chicago ...... 30t OM 30~7 11 0 WEST BRANCH Cincinnati .....', .. 202 100 (4)(-9 11 0 Lary Doby's single for a 5-4 uphill Brosnan. Anderson (4). Lown (7). White Sox victory over the Detroit ICE CREAM Llttlerteld f81 and Neeman : Amor. The Lead's Snead's Tigers. Cro. iSl. KlIpp,teln f7l. Freemon (9) 7Sc per V2 gal. Dnd Bur!:e... W- KUpsteln. L-L1tUe- Fox' single in the ninth inning fi~d . I CHICAGO Iil'f-With the instinct Home run§-Chlc8ao, Lon,_ Tonner... or an old fire horse when the scored pinch runner Sammy Es­ Get Our Brake Inspection Sp"oke ; Clnclnnatl. Crow", Robl.nlon, posito to send the game into extra Burs .... alarm sounds, perked·up Sam and Adjustment Second Game Snead showed his heels to the innings with the scored lied 3-3. Chfcago ...... 100001 111-4 13 2 Cincinnati ...... 000 002 04x-6 10 0 awed younger pros Friday with a The diminutive second baseman $1.00 Elston. Anderson (7). Poholsky (8). also singled home a run in the bot· (AP WIrephoto) (AI' \Vlrrphoto) ---~----- ... ond Fannlna. Neeman (7,; Fowle't, second round 69 and a sizzling --- Acker (71. Nuxhan (8). Freeman (9). halfway total of 134 to maintain tom oC the lith after Detroit had Lawrence (9) nnd Burgen. W- Nux­ his lead in golf's biggest money taken a 4-3 lead, then scored the LAMANSKY bull. ~Anderson. Tam OIS.hanter Green Scenes l-tome run..-.-Clnclnnatl, Bur&ess. stampede. winning marker on Doby's shot in· The 45-year-old sweet swinger to center fi6ld. ROBERTO de VINCENZ, left, of Mexico City, winner of the 'AII·Amer· Friday the body language of Stan Leonard pf Lachute Quebec, Can· AUTO SERVICE finishcd his chore in a light rain Detroit ...... 100 lO t 000 01-4 14 0 Ican" golf tournament last week at Tam O'Shanter, seems to be hav· ada, was a little more abusive; Leonard, right, missed a four foot putt Corner. Gilbert & Colleg. at Tam O'Shanter, Chicago ...... 000 001 101 02-5 9 2 ing trouble getting the ball into the cup in the first round of the"Wor· in the second round and in disgust gave the third green a sound * * * J 1 Inl1ln ll' Id" golf tourney on the same course. The ball he is trying to persuade thump with his heel. Winner of the tourney stands to take a neat $100· Bums 4, Bues 2 His 134 npresented 10 strokes Foylack. Sleater (91 and Wllron; DIAL 9711 under par and wheeled him far­ Donovan, HoweU (101. Staley (11) and with body english just hung on the lip of the second hole thursday. thousand. PITTSBURGH IA'I - The Brook­ Lollar. W-Staley. L-Slealer. lyn Dodgers snapped a three game ther a~elld in the field of 100 pros losing streak with a 4·2 victory ov· prospecting for the game's rich­ -----~--~------~~.- •. --~~~~--~--~~~~~~ er the PiltsbUl'gh Pirates Friday e" reward-$SO,OOO in cash allif Na's* 8, *Bosox * 0 NCAA, Big 10 Say night. a $50,000 exhibition contract. Danny McDevitt, Brooklyn's Mike Souchak wilh a 33- 37-70 BOSTON IA'I- Washington's ped­ rookie southpaw, was credited with and Shelley Mayfield with 36·34-70 ro Ramos, long-lime Red Sox tor­ Law, Order Reign (oming his fifth victory against one defeat shared lhird place at 138. Grouped mentor. hurled a six.hit, 8·0 vic· although he needed help to put at 139 were Ed Oliver and Tony tory over Boston Friday night for down a ninth-inning uprising ;"..­ Holguin, followed at 140 by Bob the Senators' seventh triumph in In College Athletics which the Pirates scored one. Rosburg and Arnold Palmer. their last eight games. First base· CH]CAGO (A') - The chief officers Duke Snider, back in the Brook· National Open champion Dick man Art Schult drove in [our runs. lyn lineup after missing six games Mayer and highly favorcd Gcne Washington ...... 000 000 143-8 14 0 of the National Collegiate Athletic ~oo 000 6 with a bad knee, hit 3. solo homer Littler were among seven check· Boston ...... , 000-0 1 Assn. and the Big Ten, in reports Ramos and Bel'beret.; Brewer, Dc­ Soonl ing in at 141. Dow Fin terwald in the eighU). lock f81. MlnarcLn (9) and Whlle. Daley to the NaUon's football writrrs. Brooklyn ...... 000 200 020-4 10 L and Bill Casper, lwo other touted (9). L-Brewer. Plt\Jburah .... . 100 000 001-~ G 2 young players, were among Ulose agreed Friday that law and order McDevitt. Koufax (9). Labillo (0) and Walker; Friend. An'oyo (0) and at 142. prevail in the college athletic ranks FoUes. W-McDcvltt. L-Frlcnd. Defending "World" champion * * * Home runs-Brooklyn . SnIder. A's 3, Tribe 2 despite a few rebels. Bigger Than Ever • • • Ted Kroll was burled at 143 along * *. * with Jerry Barber and Jack CLEVELAND uPI -:--Billy Martin's Walter Byers, executive director Giants 6, Phi/s 2 Ficek. while All America n win. single in the 13th inning scored oi the NCAA and Kenneth L. ner Roberto de Vicenzo was an Bob Cerv lrom second base and Tug Wilson, Big Ten commls· , NEW YORK f.f! - Righthander also.ran at 147 and leading led the Kansas City Athletics to .ioner, made statistical reports R ay Crone ' beat Philadelphia 6·2 money winner lind Masters' a 3-2 vi'ctory over the Cleveland on their athletic codes before th~ with a five·hitter Friday night as champion Doug Ford was lost at lndians Friday night. tht.> New York Giants won their 141. The defeat dropped the Indians annual meeting of the Football fourth in a row and tagged Robin Writers Aun. of America. U IVERSITY The "World" championship into fifth place, a hall game be· Roberts with his 15th deCeat. winds up 72 holes of pressure hind the Baltimore Orioles. Byers, pointing out that 18 cases The Giants rapped 10 hits, col· shooting Sm,day. Roger Maris tied the score with of NCAA violation currently are lecting 8 in the first three frames Snead, probably the best·heel- a home run in the ninth inning off being investigated, still came to the as they scored three runs in the ed pro in the business. said that Ralph Terry, who held the lndians conclusion that " this p,rogram has first and third off Roberts, who on. of his main worries Friday to three hits until that point. done a tremendous job, in coopera­ has won eight. Hank Sauer hit his w •• keeping his wallet dry. . Kansas Cily .. 000 000 110 000 1-3 11 2 17th home run, a two-run Job and tion with the conferences, of estab­ "I sweated clear through tbe CJ.eveland .. 000 .(110 001 000 0-1 6 0 lishing law and order in eollege EDITION his third in three games. "h dId "U d d Terry. Trucks (121 and Thompson ; thi (11). 031 Philadelphia ...... 000 020 00~2 5 2 ng, e raw e. n erstan Wynn, Gray McLlsh and Nar- athletic administration." now, 1 don't have any money in agon, Nixon (lI). H . Smllh (12) . W­ New York ...... 303 000 OOx-6 10 2 Although the Big Ten recently Rober~. Mor"h"ad (5) . Hurn (7) and it. But I didn't want the ink to Trucks. L-McLl.h. Lopata ; Cron" and TImma •. ~Roberu . get faded on those bills I owe. la:;do~ir!~~~;:r7;~' .CUy. Held. Cleve- suspended ]ndiana's new football • Home runs-New York. Sauer. coach, Phil Dickens. ' for violating of its controversial new financial aid program. Wilson told the writers: "1 think there definitely is a Giants Take·· AII.:·Stars 22 -12 growing acceptance and approval of the plan among our people, as (Nine sedions~ 72 pages) CHICAGO f.f! - Chuck Conerly ball League (NFL) champions of to take a clipping penalty instead admini.trators and coaches have passed the New York Giants to a 1956, were 10-point favorites. In of the offside. On the play, the punt had a chllnce to .ea it in opera· . - featuring - . 22-12 victory over the College All- Ill. .nd it was th.lr superior return by of Mich­ tiClfl." Stars Friday night before a damp team play that tipped the balance igan State close to midfield was The Big Ten plan primarily is crowd of nearly 75,000 in Soldier despite the performances of Bro­ marched back to the All-StaD 33 pegged on grants for board, room. • All Campus Activities and • What's Coming In Iowa Field. dl., Barne., Df No- yard line. books, tuition and fees on the basis John Brodie of Stanford almost tr. Dame. Jim Brown of Syrll' The Giants showed real po in of need. The need factor is deter­ Events Athletics matched Conerly'S passing skill and cu.. and Jon Arnett of Southern the second period. The NFL cham­ mined by a professional survey of of Wake Forest C.llfornia. pions moved 88 yards in only Jive an interested athlete's family wiggled his way through the Giant John Matske of Michigan State plays. One of these was a 33-,ard means. offense to keep the game in sus- played a strong game for the All· pass [rom Conerly to Webster. A conference school pays the dif­ • New University Projects • SU I Fad Iities a nd Services pense almost to the end. Stars at center. Then Conerly passed to Ken Mac· ference between the total cost and Barnes .cored .". AII·St.r The All-Stars scored at the out- Afee who caught the ball on the what the family presumably acn touch.wn .nd Paige Cothren of set after Alex Webster of the #Gi· All-Stars' 25 and ran for the touch­ Mi ••lsslppi kicked two fi.ld ants fumbled and Wayne Bock of afford - or the whole amount, if • down. The play was good for 38 the survey certWes it. goals and n.rrowly mls.. d • Illinois recovered on the All-Star yards. The Big Ten also allo..,s full fi· third. 45. Barnes carried over irem the Th. AII-St.n cam. back .ft*r Conerly passed for both qf the 2 after Brodie passed to Ron Kra· nancllll aid to athletes with high TH ERE1S STI LL TIME Giant touhcdowns. but Ben Agajan- mer ol Michigan for 10 and to Ar­ the Giants took a 10.6 I.ad In the ac.demlc rating. Under the new ian added the spectacular touch nett for 11. Abe Woodson of llli· ..cond period. Th, coll•• I.ns pi.." .ach Big Ten school was with bis two field goals Cor the New nois scampered around left el'd swapt from th. • lr 15 to the GI· allowed to extend 100 tenders 01 .Id prospective freshmen ath­ York teall). He kicked one from 33 for 18 to highlight the drive. .nn' 7 in' lO pl.ys. to yards away in the first period and T"- Giants' flrat score came at letes, This covered all sports. ORDER YOUR MAIL-AWAY COPIES NOW! Then Cothren of Mississippi kic­ I another from 45 in the fourth. the .nd of the first period wh.n ked a field goal from the 7. Wilson reported that, as of the Bob Pellegrini, former Mary. Aug. 1 deadline for accepting ten­ IlInd c.nter, w.s pre.. nted with -,At.lanlan kicked a field go.1 A ruling that Peaks of Michigan ------.------, ders, 911 were extended to 776 boys i Circulation Department, Deadline for Ord.rl/1g i • silver trophy Frld.y nl.ht.t from '33 yards away. Barne. State interfered with one of Con· Only with a total of 691 acceptances. The Daily Iowan, , I August 15, 1957 : halftime ceremonle. of the Col- p..... nt.d the Glann with the opo erly's passes intended for Frank Box lege All St.r·N_ York Giant portuftlty when h. fumbled .nd Gifford paved the way for the Gi· 552, ! football .a..... ants touchdown in the third per­ A Iowa City, Jowa I P.llegrlnl w •• voted the moat C"'rl., Toogood r.cov.red on iod. This gave the ball to the Gi· I National Home c Her. is my order for ...... copy (ies) of the annual University Edition. : v.lua.... All S•• r pla,er of the "'* AII,S'.n 25. ants on the All-Stars' 15 and Con- I ' I 1956 All St.r aquH which I... to There was a two-minute delay in erly prompUy. passed to MacAlec IN TH E NEW 25 I enclole $ ...... to cover entire cost at 25 cents a copy. Pleas. mall to: : CI.veland. 26-1. the game when the New York Gi· who was all alone in UJO end zone. TOWNCREST ADDITION I Rain fell oll and on throughout ants deliberated over a choice of STATISTICS IS A Name ...... :..... : ...... ,1 the game. penalties against.the Au·Stars. New York Glant-Collele AU-Star lAMe. GOOD INVESTMENT '0 copy . Tbe .Giants triumph ill the 24th While it appeared to the national New York Giant...... :I 7 7 6-22 FOR THE FUTURE. Addre...... : All Sian ...... • a 0 ~12 Solei .lxcl.IYely b, ~ I annual game made it 15 victories TV audience the officials were sty· Ne... Tar' S •• rln,: To ..'d ..- for profeSSional teama alainat 7 mied by an All-Star offside and MacAtee (2) 38-yard pap-run. ' 1e 10- I City and Stat...... , ...... f yard pa .. Jrom ConerJ.y. en".",... - Byron D. Bee ar (Cov." colt of paper, for the colleJians , with two ties. cliPiling infraction on the same Atalanlan (2). Field ,oaJ.-A1IJa"Jan --... ,...... --...... -...... --.. ---.. ---.... --... ------.. ---- . --.-----~ Proceeds of the game, the first of pi., in the third period. the delay (I) 33. 45. • A h.ndlln•• nd post••• ) U... xtr •• he.t for additional nam.... address••• 1I,'eI7 - Wood ron t.c/tled by Nolan. ganey -. the 1957 season, go to the ChlC8lO was in the Giants' decision. All-Star S•• rl.r: T.ue ...... n. -Barnett Tribune charities. . '. The Giants, wlMl had the balJ on 2.yord rwl. I'ftld •••t. - Coih(cn (3) 2111. W.sh. Phone 1-1109 ~ The 01 ....., the National F.... their 21 when Uley punted decided 1~~. _~ __ ~ ______~ __ I'_~.... ""~~"""~" __ """"~"~" __ ~ ____ ~"~ ______"'__ ~" __.. '

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