.. ers, Residents Claim DDT Kills ourse oj ( Ci ty Sll nda, I Birds, Ooesn1t Help Elms owon' t ~ t es featured I SmWag tlas StaU UraWerftty of Iowa tmd 1M Peopl6 of 10tDtJ C"" swnmer at By PAM SHAW spread feeHng ex Us that the pray by insecticid .. Doctor _ C. [liS and PAT ASLESON poisons robins and other birds and Hueper of the National Cancer In- Associated Press w ased Wire and Wirephoto 5 CeD per CGpy Iowa City, Iowa, Wectne.day, JUDe lS, 1962 Guest Writers that the chemical may get into stitut sa)' DDT is c ncer·produc- r will also in. A petition signed by l67 ni- water y tern causing an o,-erall ing." vcr ity Heights resident reQue t- harmful eHect on humans. An article appe ring in the Chi- ing the city to refrain from pray- The petition in part late: ca a Tribune on . lay 25. charged Course-- ing Dutch Elm trees with poison- "It is Umated that rrom GO to that the practice of praying elms ous materials becau e of harmful l 80 per cenl of the robins and card· with DDT wa "ignorant and un effects on wildlife was pre ented inals which inhabited the sprayed cientific " Dr W. J . Beecher, di· to the Iowa City Town Council area have be n killed. To a I er rector of the ChIC go Ac demy of Monday night. extent olher pecie of bird and Science. aid that many robins Rep. Mills Not Committed Although they received the peti· quirreIs have been similarly af- were being killed by the "mi tion, the council took no action on fected. Dr. George Wallace of guided program." fneral cducaUon it. Michigan State niver ity said that "Jt i a shotgun method of f the Far East Following a spraying of elm c"tpanding pe tic ide s p ray i n g tTl'atm nt," h said, "an admi a part of ~ - trees during the latter part oC po es by Car the greate I threat to ion of mediocrity on part of in East prog}'iIIII April , the petition was circulated wildlife tlle country has ever faced. ve tigator - and thoroughly unsci g the sumtner and signed by 109 households in the Jt i quite obviou that poi onou enlirlc." x niversity Heights area. Wide· sprays are dangerous to pets. Tbe Iowa Clty petition condud : To Backing JPK's Ta Cut e pecially cats and dog which pick " Sine 80m communitie have - . ver the history up birds crippled by the poison. had good ucce with nitation ovemment an! "Scientist are concerned abOut only and the ddition oC pr ying Gayno Denies the danger of In eclicide to hu- is of doubt(ul "alu or might even Democratic House Leaders mic geography I mands. Professor Galloway oC hinder the conlrol. and inc it is ere will be sev. Drake University taled thal it i harmful to wildlif and maybe hu the Course at his belief that a high percentage man ," the practice hould be will be present I Guilt in Death of und iagnosed deaths are cau. d ' top d. To Urge Passage This Year I·the discUSSion ------W SHI teTON (AP ) - nle chainnan of the House ~ ud e nt lunch~ I W.r nd ~Iean Conunittee aid Tu day he i not cOmmitted union Cafeteria, Of Stepmother 3 Convicts Disappear to b.le" Pr id nt Ken ned , pl.m for an income tao cut next ed . l HEDRICK (.4'J - The li me·erusted car. who will COIt· 1 body oC accused slayer Gayno Rep. , i1bllr D. Mill (D· rl::. ) told the Hou e Rules e Chu·tsing U, Smith's stepmother was found in Committee, " You have not heard . of art; y. p. a shallow grave outside their home After Alcatraz Escape f me dvocaUng t reduction thl House commIUee, M Ill , would prien tal stUdies. Tuesday. SAN FRANCISCO ~ - Three Hourly cell checks through the 1,0; Kennard W. ye r or 116t year." handle Kennedy', plan for a top- The woman, Mrs. Juanita Mar Alcatraz convicts vanished Crom night did not d teet their di op Democratic conare ion.& lead· to· bottom tax reduction next year. profeSSOr 01 cella Smith, 46 , was killed by a the island rock pri on Tuesday p arance. rs wxIerUned their d tt'rminalion Testllylng before the Rules Com- and Valerie H. bl ow on the head from a blunt in· after months of chipping wit h The men apparently worked for to fi ght for passace thi year or l - -_... _- tt 0.111_ assistant, Tsn. strument, Dr . E. S. Ioshaker, Ke spoons through a concrete c e I I month gouging with coffee pocn Kennedy's t a x withholding and m ttee on ..~ rna er, ...... okuk County medical examiner. wall. surrounding hea,·y m tal air \Cent busin Incentive proposals. said in c~ulJy measured word•• hopes to lend said after an autopsy to identify Their escape Crom three pa- in each oC the three c il s, clo to " . have not commltted myself to t Ther. have bieft thAt course of acUon_ 1 have not the body. the noor. .utt"""' ral understand· I rate cells, through air vcnt into t hat the contrMen101 H__ aid 1 would be a reductloo In cd to college a pipe tunnel, apparenLly was con They used palnt.d cardboard rIM" Mrs. Smith, divorced from passed tax rev III...... lie our total revenues wbUe we are chers, and corn. cealed for hours by life-like, plas covers resembling tho vontl to Gayno's father, Andrew Smith, sholved and Includod III tM bl, spending more ~ w are ta~ln, had been missing since last fall. ter.headed durnmi s they I Ct in keep the wall holes hidden. Even. tax overll.ul K..,nedy .... Mid in." Authorities said she was last their beds. tually they had dug holes' by 12 he will seek next "Hr, seen alive Oct, 2, ,,,1. If any of thf' three made it to inch.s leading to a utility pipo As chal rman or the tax-writing Mills said. however. lit" II com· The 24·year-old Gayno . who shore it would be the first suc tunnel back of the celli. milled to tax revision. E cessful brcak from Alcntraz in the tise On Sher ifC John Wa ilerich said has The men clearly were able to He I, kntWft .. .,..... "'""" orally admitted slaying an aunl, 23 yeal's the rock has been a fed ke p going in and out of th air tlen. that his cemmlttM "",ht uncle and three cousins on May eral prison . vents for ome lim whll pr par Laos Prince begin werle .... the bl, tax re L 011 27, is in jail at Sigourney. He has Warden Olin D. Blackwell said ing and perfecti ng th ir e cape vl.1en bill durlntl the cen,reseJen. been charged with murder, but It was hi s opinion that if they roule to th cell hou e roo!. The .1 I... ttlil Celt ts Your FUlurt ree... "Hr .. t.nd.rd I has given no motive for the kill tried the water they d i d not Anglin brother were in cells ide Blasts U.S. .,.... ClIft oct 41uldcly next year. ings. make it. by id and Morri four c ,lis away. Kennedy ~ tm.nl II The w."" tM tax c ...... onomlc Stephen Gerard, Sigourney al "I am told the water is 54 de After getting out of the pipe made retreact!v... next J ..... 1. ny Hed,e After Unity torney who is representing young grees out there with a current up lunnel Ihry climb d a drain pipe Until Tuesday, MlUa had avoJded to eight miles an hour," he said . r R'lullr Smith, said Tuesday night he toid lo the cell hou e roof. They re KlfANG KHAY, Lao til - Pro Gny public comment on tbe ~ Gayno of the finding of his step "r do not believe that convicts. moved a rive led ection or an air ETINS Communist Prince Soupbanouvong tax reduclnll Proposal. mother's body. withoul training for such a Ceat , dUCl and al 0 remov d bars from No Obll"tlOftI could swim Cor it and make it." look a jab at the United States Committee m mberl asked him "He seemed surprised wh.n I the duct lo get out on the roof. Sizing Up the Market how a tax cut could be justified NG CORP, Ltd. told him about the body," Ger· The wal'den conceded that if the They crossed the me .. hall roof Tuet , going lo stand aloof and let such dieted the GOP will reach that goal clared It could ...... piv.tal Democratic Leader Mike M. a D , but it was oC sufficient size to cause tralisl, pro-Western and pro-Com field 01 Montana alter Kennedy'. armed robbery. cbairman of the House Ways and matters as Berlin, Laos, Cuba and in 1964. .v.1It "I" the CHUM ef Jtrentth. multiple fractures. John W. Anglin , 34 , under l5- munist - wenl ahead wllh their weekly WhilAl HOUle breakfast with Means Committee, said he is mak- Red China become dead issues. Th. national committee said in new agreement to (orm a nation ..,i.,. peac. I" Seuthe ..t All.... There also was a cut on the year sentence Cor the January 1958 ing a new check to dctermine I th I of the party's leaders In ConIreU. Rob.rt A. Forsythe, Minnesota report nil • re.u t. a gran· wide coalition Gpvernment. throat. He said it was not II robbery of the Bank of Columbia, ,~ hethe r the Republican - backed MansfJeld added that "Other sec stat. chairman, keynoted att.cks roots poll tb.t "Pr•• I ...... "_od Kon- Souphanouvon,'s statement was lethal incission but would have Rusk cautiously described the tions of the bill are equally impor Ala. $306 billion fi gure would pu t the on Administration dom.stic poli- nody'. grab for more and m_ in militant contrast to the aWtude caused a great loss of blood. three princes' accord a " the first tant - particularly the (Il'OI)9I8I Clarence An g 1 i n. 28, John's Treasury in too confining a strait- des when he told the windup executive power will be the over. or his neutralist b al f brother, In a number of steps which wfll to withhold taxes dividends and Smith is accused of killing Mr. brother. lmder 100year sentence for jacket. committee meetlng the K..,..-.a.. riding Iss.,. of the campailln." Prin(:e Souvanna Phouma. the pre on U he is reassured, when the ______' ...._ J'_ have to be taken berore we wfll interest which Is 'and' Mrs. Andrew McBeth of near tbe Columbia robbery. mier - desiiDat.e, who welcomed Income, esseotial ~ I Martinsburg and there three teen Blackwell hastened back from vote is expected, he will not oppose The report said the Administra- know with assurance that Laos can aa a matter of simple tax (air- e become a neutral and independent American belp in persuading the aged children - Gayno's cousin s. vacation aCter word of the escape the lower level, M1Us Said. F t t I tion's anti·business attitude was pro-Western Royal Government to ness." The present ceiling is $300 bil· second in line and Kennedy's pro- country. A fourth cousin, Patsy McBelh, and gave this account: an as IC·. step down. It I. the ...... cent tax with- 15. fl ed the nighttime massacre Because of the plaster- headed lion, equal to the World War n posal to finance medical care (or "U it is evident thal the parties hoIdintis fMtu,...... _ in,side the Me}3eth farmhouse and bed dummies, the three bank rob high. The KeMedy Administration the elderly through Social Security in Laos have settled down seri SouvaMa raised a gLass of cham .... ItIffelt ...... 1tItn .. the ...... , identified Smith as the. sl ayer, bers were not missed from tbeir proposed raising it (or the year be- SUI Students Find taxes was third. ously to the problem of trying to pagne "to the return or peace and ...... 1 ...... ln ...... I.O" ...... to the health hi. majesty, King Sherj(f John Wallerich said. Smith cells until '7:15 .a.m . ginning July 1 to $308 billion. The Registration Easy "Of the various foreign policies construct a coalition government 01 IMSt veeal IPP m..... Is Cha .... Ijller admitted he killed the five All the Pfiso,,'. 234 convicts are Democratic majority of the Ways considered - BerHn, Laos, Cuba, which would be neutral in charac Savant Vath8fta." .... Herry F ••yr,l (D-Ya.) .. persons, the sheriff said. required at that hour to step to and Means Committee agreed, but Unbelievable. That is the way Red China and 'neutralism' - the ter and would strive for the in· The toa.t ,...... flv ..ml .... the SeN+e Pi..... c:....1tIeI. ~mi l h h~s given no motive for the front of their cells fOT inspec· stipulated that the limit should most SUlowans felt about Tues- poll pointed up the fact that Ad dependence of that country, [ ute cere""",, ",,"ntI 13 ",,"ttl, which has b.... studY"" ... s the killings. tion by guards_ drop by stages. day's registration Cor the 1962 sum- ministration poHcy on Cuba is still would think that aid arrangements .. .,..ott.tiOI'Il over the little measure ..... twW tw. mtftIhs. A mer session. causing the greatest grassroot con that are satisCactory would be 1"",1e kl.,.dom'. future. cemmlttee molerlty ....,...... , cern," the report said. worked out," Rusk added...... the wltNleWint ...... Used to the hurry-scurry and rat Premier Prince Boun OWn of tling experience of fall and spring It added that " this is emphati- Washington cut 0[( $S mi11ion a the outgoing government, Sou Mansfield said be exj)e(U the registration, it was hard to believe cally true in the South." month in economic support to the phanouvong and Souvanna sliDed bill to reach the 8eAat.e CJoor for I right-wing Boun Oum Government a three-page document to set up action next month. Even thoucb that the cool , leisure pace of regis tering in the uncrowded Field last February in an erfort to prod the coalition. a provisional gov· Byrd opposes aome parts 01 the House was not a dream. City Will Keep that reluctant regime into a coali ernment o( national union that in measure, he added, "Sen. B)'J'lf is tion (;{Jvernment with the neutral cludes rightists, leftists and neu diligent and faJr and will not d_ " I breezed through registration Private Students ists and Reds. tralists. the bill" in 10 minutes," said Larry Darling, A witness at Tueeday'. cloeed A3, Cedar Rapids. "There was ac U.S. officials said resumption of Britain and the Soviet Union, Already Enrolled h ear in II was Secretary of the tually room to walk around with sucb aid to the BOUD Oum group co-chairmen o( the 14-natlon Gen Treasury Douglas Dillon. Byrd said The Iowa City School Board was being considered on an in eva Conference on Laos. were rep out bumping into anyone. It was there was no dilcu.uion 01 the wttb my Castest registration in fi ve adopted a proposal Tuesday to ac· terim basis unW the nationwide resented by diplomatic observers holding section of lUI)' provisioa times." cept the continued enrollment o( government is formed. After that. _ British Ambassador John Addis they said, the coalftion Govern· and Soviet Charge d'Affaires Vas other than taxation 01 fcnilll ear. " I think regi tration this se non-resident private tuition pupils ings. as long as conditions permit. ment would be offered U.S. eco sill Cbiviliev. mester was very well run," said nomic help. Byrd said the committee wiD be All these pupils enrolled before AIM en ...... wwt ,..,. Mary Kay Free, A4, Hinton. Asked wbether U.S. troops would .sent.- unable to spend any more time 011 I just walked in and walked out. June I , 1962 will be able to con tlv.. ., the 1.... 1 .... .c ...... I.""'.. be withdrawn (rom Thailand, in .Ish In...,.,...... 1 Cam the measure this week. Next week, "There was no waiting, no delay. tinue througb the elementary and view of the princes' aJl'eement, C...... he said, the seNlton will re-GIM!ft §35 Frankly, I thought it was dull." high school. ntinlen. e!! Lincoln White noted President Ken their publie bearl/lll to spend four §j " I was disappointed," sighed If necessary, students enrolled nedy bas said American forces wID lt I. stipulated. that all decisions more days t.ak1ni testImany 011 the Terry Tidrick, AS, Iowa City. "No after tbls date may not be ac remain as long as necessary. related to the mInistries of de foreign iDcome provlsienl. . fenae, interior and the forelll1 al· body got in my way, nobody push cepted at any grade level due to "There are a lot or bi" rat ed me around, all the courses I lack oC space. question marks left," White added. ~~uata~~e ~ Johnston Beats Hollings : wanted to take were open. I was Presently, students from other " I don 't think anyone is prepared 11111II1111iI disappointed. " townships are designated to attend to define, at this stage, what is beads of groupe" lakin. part iD the In S. Carolina EJection Government. Registrar Donald Rhoades said schools in Iowa City School Dis· necessary when, really. these are that there is no way of knowing trict. These townships pay the tui but the early opening steps of this Tbe premier-desipate said Pbou- COLUMBIA. S_ C. III - ~ how many registered until Friday. tion for students. new Government." mi will lead a cabmet delepUoll Olin D. Johnstoa, a politJc.aIJt Wile "There is no way to keep count of Fourteen districts now send stu- to Geneva June 24 f1/t June 15 to veteran, soundly defeated Ji;aUifui the students who walk in and out dents to Iowa City High School. CRASH TOLL ratify the It-nation GeDeva Agree- Gov. Ernest F. HoIUap tor Demo of the Field House," he said. Pupils brought to Iowa City un-j BUENO AIRES (II - Pollee said ment on LaoI. The main thin, cratic renorninatioll to .. 11.8. needed DOW is a deClaration by Senate TueIday- . "The statistical Service starts der the auspices of SUI agencies Tuesday a recheck showed 33 per will also be accepted as long as sons were killed in Monday's col l.aos of the neutrality it expects In another aurpriIe, n..w ... working on all the cards tonight to maintain under the new Gov· seD. lotmel' presJdeat of Ihe tJII. and we should know the number ot conditions permit. lision between a commuter train emrnent. venity of South c.qUaa. I'M students registered this semester In other action the School Board and a sclIool bus. EarUer, authori by Friday," be said. accepted the resignations of seven ties put the toll at 41. Tbe qreemeat ~ for with- aVl., fram Lt. Gov_ BurDet B. professional staff members 8Dd apo More thaD 5,000 penons attended drawal of all roreiln military MaybeDk aDd tIIree atben to wIa A View From' the Bridge pointments or 10 members to the fameral arvic:el for the al cbiJdreD fon:ea. 'lbeIe include several bull- the Democratic IIQIDfwwtjon for ,.,. The Weather starrs; and Bet July 10 for the An- who died in the erasIa. drecI U.s. advisers to the Royal emGI'. 'I1Ie nom'netkMI II tIIIIao SUI at· night ••• lik. the calm be,.,.. the shlrm, student to the beekl. It will .... Iy ...... nual ,Board Meeting, August 14 for It 0Cdi led • a fOl-tbrouded Army and several tboUSaDd Com- mount to ~, -.ee the ... Tho romantic ..ttin. pictured hare though devoid w"lcencfs - , flHtlnt break In the lMI...... y .. Generally fair .xcept In the .x.. Budget Hearin" and September grade croulng. OUiclaIs saki about munist. North VietDlll!*e troopI Ileal haft lID ~ III U. ., .... other It. wll' ...... al atucly t,le. tfIt Ie"",, . - Photo ~ J" LIppfIIaIt trtmt weft ..u, _ tonitIIt. 10 Cor the relular School &ectioo, 100 perIOIII were OIl &be ... backin& the rebel c:ause. November eJedJIa
, , Editorial Page -- Jail Diilas ~ Puff, Puff e • • Poof ~ By JOHN CROSBY Back in 1955 when Edward R. Second Class Citizens Almost ten years after lhe Murrow was still tl1ere. CBS did Because He's two "See It Now" programs 011 TJle shocking disclosures of denials of due process American Cancer Society issued its report linking cigaret smoking the controversy. of la",' and police bruta11ty experienced by Indians in South and lung cancer. the British Roy In all. precious little time has o.u.ota are a reminder that the United States bas an al CoUege of Physicians has re been given over to cautioning Anti-Stalin people not to smoke, especially in "IDdian problem" as well as a "Negro problem" in uphold ported flaUy that "cigaret smok [ view of the hours and hours of By ROSCOE DRUMMOND ing is the cause of lung cancer." ing civil rights. While a bit late on the scene. the well-paid time given over to try No one has more violently ex ing to wheedle them into smoking The abuse, beatings and lack of protection of legal British have reacted far more coriated the evil deeds or Josef vigorously than we did . by the cigaret companies. rigbts reported Senate Subcommittee on Constitu Ours is a government of pres by the StaUn than his successor, Niklta The Conservative Government tional Rrghts are not suHered by South Dakota Indians sure groups rather than a repre Khrushchev. Yet. when the for· pledged it will do all in its power sentative government and. as WO(lc. The Eede~l Civil Rights COQImissiQn reported last mer Vice President of Yugoslav to acquaint the British pubUc President Kennedy has remarke4 with t.he dangers of smoking. The yca,r. "The denial of equal protection of the laws to Indians ia, l\{iJovan Djilas. writes down recently. the one guy with no British Ministry of Realth has al lobby to pI'otect him is the con app.ears to be severe and widespread ... Reservation and his "Conversations with Stalin" ready hung throughout Great Bri tain great signs which read: sumer. Sen. Maurine B. Neu non-rcservatioa Indians are treated unfairly by police and wledgemeut that rock 'n' roll is here to stay. weren't alrudy like animal trainers or bigger migilll state in small type that FarleE vious) ways. We deny them housing. not because Government of Yugoslavia. They ret companies. We have no BBC, animali 'making use of us . _ . th.y can't spend fashioned a Communist nation not the American Cancer Society ngW E. Gil But. this week's "Honor Holl of Current Pop Tunes" they are colored - spare the thought - but, well free of advertising pressures. a' penny on mtlklng any of the slums fit to with the aid of Soviet tanks, but holds that "all evidence demon· cation gi"~ ti, . shocltin~ piece of information we can't lUis you know what the neighbors would say. And be What has network TV done to rive in, fH'~or a hone to live in. Th.y wouldn't with their own power and convic· acquaint the public of a menace strates beyond a reasonable dOlUlt versitl cn p,enyng on - "PT two'. months ago a to ' l"- • I sides. we can always tell them the room is already that cigaret smoking- is the rnajqr sistenl l()9," '(~ick ' I ~ut th.i.rt.horses in any at those houses in the tions. The political leaders in any to lheir health? The American rented. nation who may be tempted to Broadcasting Company arid the cause of lung cance.l1 in the Unit, tionl cl ' :"" ha~ tilDen to an abysmally low No. 31. t slums. No, the horse is too precious ••• I'm sistanl The man speaking in " Goddam White Man" only think that Stalinism' was just an National Broadcasting Company ed States." . 1 ~ t seems safe to predl mcdy at 98 cents a throw. there. But he fails to look and HATFIELD man. watch out." has a terrible meaning. There it voice or even his. eyebrow to pro which was even preached. pre Sputnik. by a few of the leading when the Soviet masses had eat~n J3ut who knows? If a f4ture investigation could prove condemn where to him it should count more - promises the destruction of a nation with the test, he. too, would have lost his best was 1959. Since thea the here in America. It is too easy to look away. They wholesale slaughter of Europeans and Africans. life. Western experts on the Soviet i~ltIt the' President ever skipped school. recording com Union. standard has declined I' a I her can't do it. but we do. In America. the warning has a slightly different }' al).ics and their artists will have another source of group But the frank and fearless judg On the other hand. and even sharply. In South Africa, they have signs saying "EURO implication. but it is as terrible, America is going ment of Djilas is that. it is com THIS DECLINE has occurred. is1cntification and a new song - maybe titled "Big John more important. the rude awaken 1 PEANS ONLY." In America, no less subtlely but down thE: drain unless someone stops it. The death m~m that is abnormal. not just ing of the Sputnik called Western moreover. against a background ~Jaycd Hookey, We Can Too." - Jern) Elsea to "we pure Americans" more justified (because of the dream will be complete. Stalin that was abnormal. He attention to the very high Soviet . of repeated promises by Khrusb of the dUferences. you know). we have signs like So watch out. white man. watch out. warns the world that when a man rate of economic growth, Because e h e v and his colleagues that like Stalin can long rule one of of this rale of everything was going to het bet \Jle most powerful sliltes in the growth. tile So ter and better. t hat the U.S. worid it is the system itseU LaHers Policy t viet leaders ap would soon be "overtaken" and University Bulletin Board which is at fault. pear to be able so on and on. In the Khrushchev Raaders a ... Invited to ex".... CAN YOU really expect to have to offer the Rus era. the Soviet Union has become .,Inlons In I..... rs to the Edl· Unlverslty BulletIn aoard !\OtIc•• muat lie rK8JvacII .t Th. Dally ...... a dictatorship without a dictator? s ian people a what is now called "a society of fer, All I..... 's mutt Include IIHtc., Room .1, ~_",unlca'lon' C.nter, "y noen of the dey llefO,. pu. I am not arguing that the only modest but con rising expectations." But will this l!catlon. They ",uat lie typed Inc! "Ineel by In Idvlser or o"lc.r of the .... handwritten .Ignature. and guarantee against a Stalin or a tinuous (a n d "society of rising expectatio\1s" ecId ...... , should be typewrit ..nll&tlon bel"l publlcil&d.. Puraly _lal function. Ire not .1 ..1.... fOr cheerfully tolerate the disappoint this IICtioh. ' Mao or a Castro is a democracy therefore satisfy ten MCI ...... lpaeed .• in the image oC the American i n g) improve ment of its expectations? I... City, I...... WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1962 .hould not axceed a maximum PARENT'S COOPERATIVE BABV oUlce, x2240 bel.teD 1 and 5 p.IIL democracy. 1 do suggest t hat men t in their The answer is, oC course, IINtt SITTING League !s In the charge of .,. ." wenIs. We ,...~ the Mra. Harry Marker through June 26. The YWCA can provide beb,v.ltten there are t h r e e rights indis I eve 1 of life. the dJsappoint will be tolerated • Publlther ...... Edward P. BaueU rI,htto~ ...... Call 74253 for a sitter. For Informa· for aftemoo~ .Dd eyentDp aDd .. but not cheerfully tolerated. In tion about league- membership, caU IOIIlO aD dU laturdar ... pensable to protection against a w h i I e simul ~ , -. AUDIT aU_IAU Editor ...... Jem ElH. c_ his speech on the food price rises. Mfl. John Uzodlnma at 8·7331. (1) taneously financing the most mas ~ . dictator: the right of the peo .• .IICU&,..... Man.,ln, Editor ..... Lam g.tfleld .wu,.... Khrushchev remarked g rim 1 y: ple t\> choose \Jle kind of Govern sive military and basic industrial - CIty EdJtor '" '.' ...... Nol'lll Rolllnt OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN READING IMPROVEMENT LABORA "Those who do not wish to under t '-' __ investment. The h i g h rate of pybllsbed IlY Student Publlc.t.1oJu, EDUCATIONAL P LAC. M. N T: ment th~ want; (2) the right of New. Editor . . "." ... ,. Tim CaII.n tORV tor Increasing rate 01 reading Summer addre,ees lIIIould be re stand should be called to order." I~' C '. (:ommunleatlons Center, low. AIIistaDt Cily Editor and Is scftcduled to begin June 18 In 88 the people to remove a Govern basic investment in turn seemed e y, 10wa."lIaUy. N~ Sunday and News Editor """ " " Fran SmIth OAT. Two sections are offered at 8 ported by those atlll ...IQn. posi NO STUDENT of the Soviet tIons. This may be done by pa.tcard ment from office at intervals; to assure the continued rapid ud/IY .. ,nd le,al holiday•. Eatereel Sports Editor " "'. " Joe Gehrln,er University and 10 a.m, Each will meet Monday or by leavln, a memorandum .t the ~nomic growth. agricultural problem believealhat ... 'r.Ca"-cteII JlljltI'l; at the ~ Chief Pboto,rapber . . Joe Lippincott through Thursday untU July 30. In (3) ,the right of free speech and Wee at Iowa City under the Act 1&\ terested persons are advised to sign Placement OlLJce. Khrushchev him s elf rather the problem is going to be aolved free assembly. ct., ~lI\f,- CIt Jl¥cIl.Z, ~8'1t. Bulnea ~r .nd Ad- . Calenda, up at registration at the RhetorIc ta by the jerry-built expedients noW 4 i vertilln, Dlnictor .... Bob OWeke clearly believed. at one time. in - c. ble, For those unable to enroll at that IOWA MlMOlllAL UNION HOUUI None of these rights have ex ~~I 7-4191 lrom noon to mldnlfht to Advertlsln, ManaJer ,Dennis Blnnln, lime. there will be a l!st posted out FrIday UI4 Satmda7 - r .... te this theory of the limitless up being attempted. which larae!Y rf),lort ~w.f ItIllDS. wllllen·. pa,e ~ al.de S8 OAT be,lnnlng June 13. En· "~ht. isted in Russia since the Commu ll!t-ms and · an'neuneemenu te The CIrculatlOll IlaDapr . . , . .. IAe West 28 ward spiral. But he knows better depend on the use of bureaucral8 Wednesday, Jun. 13 rollment will be restrIcted to per Tbe Gold relthu R_ II otn nists seized office. TbbJ is why ~Ib' ~"J\; IIcUWial oCIlc~ .,. ill sons [or each section. Further Infer from ., •.ID. to 11:15 p.m. oa SlUIdaI now. The proof is his guns-for as a substitute for fertilizer, If Ille COII)lnul\tcat{ou Center. 7 a ,m. - Opening of Summer IUllon m.y be obt.lned at the Read· there was no protection against - .0:. ,., UlrouIh Thurtda1 aA4 fI'om 7 ..... many persons "do not wish to un Session C1asselj. 1111 Laboratory in 35A OAT. exten to 11:65 p.m. OD ~ aud IabpI. butter speech on Saturday. ask .... ".,Iea ~,: By carrier ID ston 2274. the rise of Stalin. This is why derstand." the "calling to order" -1,WI CIty. 2:1 c:enta we.klY Qr tl0 Tuesday, June '9 ing the Soviet workers to accept StaliniSll) and Communism are will have to begin. \>"t·\ .J04!at•• In. aMace: * aonth., Last day for adding courses ap PH.D. TOOL EXAMINATION In da.f.b. Caf.terla II opeD m. the steep increase in the prices ~:;o; Ihree montha. as. By mail in a.m. to 1 ,.IIL for 1\uIcb IIld companions. Accountln, will be ,Iven June 13 I p.1Il. to .:65 p.m. fOl' dbIIIer.= N, of meat and dairy products, Stalin's telTor can hardly be 14":,8, $11 per 7"1';- six month•• f$; proved by adviser and Instructor. at 1 p.m. In 2M University Hall...... -.ltbl. IA. All .eMr 1II8ll lUI). briakfub ant _ned and ~ II CopYt'i,ht 1962: revived after Stalin's reburial. .. riday, June 22 .. ..-.cl OD 8atvdQ ...... ,. New York Herald Tribune Inc • IN THIS speech, Khrushchev !9riT>lI~, tiD pez: year... ItJt mGnthl, But it is not impossiple that the '",H; t"~M mOnt'" "".25. Last day for adding courses said in effect that the farmel'S PH.D. TOOL EXAMINATION in had to be paid more. in order to Russian people will again ex - -r.\~ ~o\$40CI.te4 ':pt... It epUtled ex approved by adviser. instructor Economics wUl be gIven June 14 at lUI oa".VATORY atC!IJ the 1 p.m. In 204 University Hall. Physic! lluUd1n& II open to t.Iie p~1). Or So They Say induce them produce m 0 r e perience one oC those abrupt in c~11 t ..... u .. for~bbe.Uon and dean of undergraduate col- lice every Monday from. to II to ~~.Il ~M kM!tol. WI tn thla ,.m. creases of police control and Ieee: I when ,klal 8J'e cIau. It II ~ ope, I( you think the books modem meat. But the farmers could not It ~'" lip ..... r .. w":! . u • neWl! PH.D. TOOL EXAMINATION III shrinkages of freedom which have ":.... I"iN. - -, ·eq , tietlnnday, June 27 Statistics will be given June 15 at 1 to.~r!6te il'OUpS Frl~ e youngsters read are a source or be paJd morc. by reducing basic m .....rv.l1oaa U. of.n. 8Ii-- occurred so oCleg . ia l1li8180- Applications for August degrees p.m. III ICK Unlverelty Hall. toahl .1a1UbIma, & ,11 PIIT" WOJ;Q'. ilLit taie a ,,*.at ~ ·industrial i\lvestment or cutting \be IDIIIt be Tiled In Ihe OOlce or lhe BuUdIn,. I of the rnl1qllzines. (Iefcnse sp~ndll\g. which h:lS in ('holy RUSSian past. . PIISONI DI.. IlINCII l.aYIIT, . The UlDOnwUI be \'lsi" tor ""'. Copy:rlght 1962: Re,lStrar. TINO lOme. may call til. YWCA - llli June • and U. -4r"" RtcOnftr ract been heEl v 11 y increased. New Yo,. ,H~ral. ·frill .... ",. • ~ ~ • u. . \. .. ~...... \------THE DAI LY IOWAN-fl w, City, ,.w..-W.. .. J.. 13. 1~... ; . -: Edward R. re, CBS did rograrns 011 Martians May Compare 3rd Heaviest Bids on Engineering .'.' Ie time has rautioning ~pecialiy in 1- But Look Different IMoney Loss Addition Open Today 10 hours of . over to try. 'E" Y RK (lIT.' ) - \\'ho has not wondered about th Bids on construction of an addl· Old CapJ\ol. l!O smoking poihilil)- of <:r ature' and plants on oth r I avenly boeHl'S? tion to 1'5 Engineermg Building The project budget for Construc II!S. Rocks Market ill be opt'Md and read at % p.m. tien, but equipm nt, ill S715,OOO , ml of pres. E\' n 'bod,' h heard 0 '( rtian nd \'en et'n few in th today in tbe Senate Chamber of I!.hich was approprialed by the 59th NEW YORK til - The third an a repre dra,,:ing 'of our latter-d. rtooni t: the oth r-world creatur General A robly. beavi t I of the current slump t and, as being little hooded men \lith thr At 1 p.m., • ~ic he ...... rocked the tock mar ket TUt!s. oxygl n of our .arthly .ir. cause the ugar acts as an anti· nedy's remark at Yale Univer· two weeks ago, after I , Y 28 I boratorie , and the ~nd Roor nlrasted to Workshop Guests stock market plunge, that the Ad· l!.iU conlain a I lure room for 110 ), Dr S. M. Siegel, a re archer fre 2e. sity comm ncement exercl I' in· for the Union Carbide Rese rch ministration hOuld announ ta udent ... cIa rooms,:& re arch Ibout it, we Bob GI. fcka (right), businlss ma"ager and ael· Workshop which Mgan Mond.y and . nds Frid. y.) Furthermore, the shape ot the dicated be would hold to his own Institut at Tarrytown, , y" nol. economic Id a even busine eu plan 8 quickly a po. Ible I boralories, and 2 faculty oltice • h()se 34.000 . I rtlsino director of The Daily Iowan, uplains Picturld .r. (from l.ft) Glafch, Frank Stanberg, plant may change. Dr. Salisbury JC manalle",.nt consultant for Th. Egypti. n. SIU only bell v plants .n urvivc suggested that fartaln plants m ay men didn't like them. He said Tuesd y h was pI a ed Th llUrd noor wlll house a draft I more than low. n operations to thr.. members of the Southern by Pre ident Kennedy's deci Ion ing room, four laboratones and ypocrisy of stud.nt newspa,.r; Dr. How. rd R. Long, ch.ir such rigors but has proved it by have wide thin leaves which curl Kennedy and his advisers have Illinois Univlrslty Dl partm.nt of Journalism h.,.. growing some 35 difter nt ie to a k Conll' tor 8 tax cut C· Icht faculty oroce. The Courth ~t s . If you, up at nigbt to conserve heat. lie contended that the stock market's TUllday. (Thl gUilts from Carbo"dale, 111. arl m.n of the SIU DI.,.rtmlnt of Journali sm, . nd next J an. I. Asked If the noor will contain three drafting e the U.S, of plants under tartlan condi· also un ted that Martian plants decline came upon Investor reali· feet!,'e • ttl ndin, the fivl-cI.y High School Publications GIOrgi Brown, business manag. r of Th. Egyptian • Uon . economy could continu upward rooms. tour taculty olCice , • (rod· ~, you will would turn white al night. zation that stock price had gon - Photo by Joe Lippll1 cott through January without an em r· ing and min tion storage room. The Weight ". think it is entirely pos. ible In hi s .xperimlnts, porlermocl too IUgh and that innation W D no ,ncy tax cut, Hod aid, An equJpm IlUlciline &hop, . implicates that "arUan lite may be compar· with L. A. Rosen .nd Miss Con· lo ng r a vital effect on the econ nt and ipal, causal able to th life we have here on sl.nci Glum. rro. Dr. 5i.,.1 also omy. "You're still goini to have oDd buildJnc rvice equipm nl room , d inoidence Earth." Dr. Siegel said in an inter· showed th.t tM wlntor rye could Bell said in a New York speech bu iDe . You're not goIng to have Bnd torage ar 8S will be contain· te b.y tnt , view. "Of cour 1\ may look dif lI.nnln.tl under sev.,.. f1uctu.t. Tuesday that admini tration pend fu ll economic activity." ~ in the ba ment. 3 ·Music Workshop s in June ferent because it has had to adapt Specifications caU for occupancy Dr. Leroy In, conditions .nd low oxy,," ing and tax policies would be in th fall or 1963 )wever, the sur wiU bold three music work· Milton Anderson, director oC choral Cessor Voxman. to diff rent conditions." pressure. During the d.y the chanaed this year If the economy Dr. Si.OII', surmise I s not 'vice lel;lves shops this month - {or classroom music at Dav nport High School. iarjorie Malone Coakley, t Ie t.."peratures ranglct from ct. begins to la, seriously. U.S. Fires No. 18 new. Last April. Dr. Frank Sali s 5. 'au, rather teachers, teachers of music in jun- A two·week workshop in instru· supervi or oC music in the Slate ll rel l Fahrl nhelt to 7:J ...... Sam Wall Str et experts ind l LOIS of Bolt May Have D partment oC Education, Colum bury, of Colorado St. .. Univ.r· In Nuclear Series ,ne of thelr lor and senior high schools, aDd in· mental music education will open lust II It would during tho long catcd a beller th t th m rket wa sh. bus, Ohio, wlll onduct a workshop slty, F 0" t Collins, marshalled Caused N,Y, Jet Crash strumental music supervisors and Monday in South MusiC Hall and in Martian summ. r. A t night It approachinc ott of the low leve) WASInNGTON "" - Th United ~ aret com· next week in teaching children some Impro"lvl circumstantial WASHINGTON til - The loss o{ .. teachers. rooms in the adjoining Mu ie Stu· .rgum.nts .Iong thl simi lines dropped to 23 .nd 14 dot""" a It reached two weeks 010 . A sue- Sl te (,lCplod d shot No 18 in the out $157.2 music in the lementary choo!. M.rtlan Midsum",.r Night. WI". a mall boll that dropped out oC a dio Building. The starr wlll includ In a revi.w article in " Scilnc.," e ful te ·t, they sald, would ind i- Pacific nuclear te t erie Tues dle you into A workshop in teaching music in Sc. sions will be held at Uni\'cr ily t.rs • r I conl ldor.bly colder; contr I m hanl m could have Jerry Gales oC WOOdrOW Wilson the magazine the Aml rican cate that a ba had been formed day - another device dropped >ers, maga· Schools. of clown to 150 6ogr.. . Mlow :llro. caused New York's Jamaica Bay the junior and sentor high school Junior High School, Des Moines; Application for registration will Association for thl Adva"clmln' from which an advance could be from on airplane. ), and tcle· will meet at UniverSity Schools t era h in which 95 person were lei' articles Hermann Hertz, conductor of the be accepted up to the first day of of Sciltnce. "The pI nts m to tolerate the mounted. Th bla t wa In the Intermedl· \ June 25-29. Registration will take cold better with low almo pherlc killed. the Federal Aviation agency Isted public Duluth, Minn ., Symphony Orches each workshop. After consideration of aU the Key stocks suICered losses rang- ale range - 113 have been nearly plaee June 25 from 8·9 a,m. at said Tu sday. g ive an in· tra; Forrest Morliboy, director of evidence, Dr. Sail bury concluded oxygen," Dr. Siegel said. " 10ybe Ing Crom a C w c nts to $3 a hare all the t t - whJch m an it had University High SchOOl. instrumental music {or the Daven· it's the added sugar." whUe high'priced i u pilln d on explo iv rorce equal to b The agency said the bolt rnay chance W Pilot Roc:kets 34 Miles Ihat IlC provides the best explana· have slipped out oC pl ace wh n n ile cigaret, Members of the SUI faculty on port Public Schools, and William lion for the various color changes Dr. Siegel does not believe oxy· d ee p e r. International Busin s tween 20,000 and 1 million ton of Rhoads, director of bands at ew 1achine lost $23.87 to '-135.12, n TNT. nut curing it r II out - becau e et industry the workshop staCC are F rederick In Space on X15 Flight n on the planet's surface during gen is the real problem Cor Mar· someone rorgot to install the tiny . ads which C. Ebbs, director oC band s; Lloyd Mexico University, Albuquerque, the various season . For example, tian life. Based on his experiments, low for the year. A joint announcem nt by the N. M. EDWARDS AIR ~ORCE BAS~, living forms only could emerge Atomlc EneriY Comml sJon and cotter pin thllt normoUy secUt«!s type that Farlee, graduate assistant; Neal he thinks the plant's bioch mJcal the nut. ;ociety now E. Glenn, professor of music edu sur faculty members on the Calif. IA'I - Test pilot Bo~ W~lte from the cov ring of yeUow dust. syst m can ea i1y adapt to the RETURN TO SPAIN the Defens Depnrtm nt said the Ice demon· cation and head oC music at Uni staCf arc Paul Anderson, French rocketed more I~an .34 ~11lles IOtO Dr. Salisbury did not rule out the absence of the gas. The real prob MADRID, Spain tA'I - Actres test was touch 'd otf n ar Chrl l [lable doldlt versity Schools; Edwin Gordon, as horn; Thomas Ayres, clarinet; ~pace Tuesday !n hiS 11.t'st tJlaht J remote possibility that even intelli· lem will be with water: the plants Ava Gardner Is returning to th mas I land. ; the ma:illr sistant proCessor oC music educa John Beer, trumpet; Thomas L. 10 an XIS speCIally eqUipped [or gent beings mig h t inhabit the will have to develop pecial means cr n altcr a three·year absence This t l followed by two days n the Unit· tion; Thomas Gray, gradu ate as Davis, assistant director of Uni· upcomi~g rccordaltitudc missions planet. lie reports that orne ob of conserving it. in a film being produced only Ie on of th blgi t xplo I n 0 sistanl; Daniel Moe, director of versity Bands; ProCes or Ebbs; to 75 mIles 01' more. servers hav€> se n flashes of bright "When we getla fars, we'l] fi nd miles from her home in Madrid. rar In th Pacific test program lure in "tir choral actiVities, and Hi mie Vox William Gower, head or brass in· White hit a speed of 3.545 mp.b. light follOWed by a white cloud. some Interesting plants," he said, Terms of her contract were nol which beaan April 25. Tb unday 1 is really I man, head of the Department of struction; Theodore Heger, oboe; on the way up to an altitude of "Was this volcanic activity," he "but I don't think their chemJstry disclosed. Miss Gardner had re shot was In the low megaton lOSe. 34,000 Music. Also on the staff will be Donald Munsell, bassoon, and Pro· 180,000 Ieet. asked. "or are th Martians now will surprise us much." portedly a ked (or $500,000. raoge..
'ald Trlbu~e
, I.
1/ III :!r masses : bill, even meanjnzIuJ iCe , eory of the ard spiral ,uld a)wa,ys d, Kbrush· Be Ready for the SUMMER SESSION that tnete , h. He has :oviet lead· e past, bas We have lists of required books and supplies. Come in now for your books, draw ing rity to the trial se c· kits, art supplies, and gym equipment ... we'll be happy to serve you. .5 are not
meat and Ie increas- .viet short· . .. :lstuffs eX' n that the ard is not n laboring :ans much consumer Self-Selection SUPPLIES ~. The ye{lr ; had eat~n tl\ea the ART SUPPLIES of .' r at h er • NOTEBOOKS - all kinds • DEVOE TEMPERA COLORS occurred, 1 • NOTEBOOK FILLERS ,ackground ' . ly Khrush· • Permanent Pigment Oils & 19ues that Water Colors • LAB SUPPLIES & KITS t.o bet bet· New and Used Textbooks the U.S. • Pelikan Inks and Designer Colors aken" .nd • TYPING PADS :brushchev • Canvas & Stretchers for ALL Departments as becOme • FOUNTAIN PENS society or LJ t will this • Hundreds of Other Items teetations" No waiting • • • select your books quickly and conveniently in our SELF.SELECTION BOOK • PENCILS :lIsappoint· • Over 50 DiHerent Art Papers , ,t • LS? DEPARTMENT. Over 4500 square feet all on one floor ••• all books departmentalized for ,urse, Utat tolerated, your c:onvenience ••• Come in and get yc)ur book. the easy. modem way. e rated. In ~r lee riseS, Air Conditioned Compfete Line g ri m ly: :a to unciet;; to order. for of :.he Soviet .lieves that Your Comfort , be solved Sporting Goods :3ients lID'" :::h laraelY u reaucrats .-tiJjzer. If .... isb to un· to order"
:I1ardly be reburial . the .e that , ' again eX' .abrupt In· trol and • If which haVC b _all' If It's a Boole It's Our Business Eight South Clinton St • ..... W . I,
Face Saves Wiclrenham 'Hurls 31 , I 3 HiHer·, ''A's, NI~t'f; Pirates, 4-3 W};ite Sox, 2-1 AI CHICAGO III - Fireman Elroy KANSAS CITY r.fI - Dave Wick· Face saved the Pittsburgh Pirates' NEW YORK PITCHERS Pittsburgh shoved off with two from South Africa, France, Italy he visits Madison Square Garden to watch lightweight contenders pensions planned by league head· Los Angeles Koufax (7.2) at MU. Minnesota, led off the eiibth with and West Germany. Never berore 'ard, a 35-footer, will just mUe opera(<< quarters. waukee Spahn (6-6) N. run scoring sprees in the first and a single to left c ~ nterfleld. .Aftllr it over the minimum rating. " ering a Paolo Hosi and Carlos Hernandez in action. second innings, to beat the CUbs have the ltaUans and South A4'i. Baltimore had moved on to Bos. CI~~:t1F~~~~~~o ( 1~~t'Y~~ (6·5) al Cln· Norm Siebern foulcd out and Ed Candada is contributing its ~ic, tors in ThCl'e's a strong possibility the a fifth time in the season's first cans had a go at this pri~, which ton with a 5-3 victory over the New York Hoolf (4-6) at Houston Charles flied deep to center, Cimoli heavy yawl Pickle to the scramble news b recently crowned king of the 135- BJ'uce (4-}) N. six games. Glen Hobbie was the every two years ~rin~s the cream tripled and Azcue hit a single tha~ for the service academy cup. $he torlal p pound set will take on the winner Yanks. The umpiring crew had PhUadelphla Bennett (2·1) at St. victim, suffering his eiloth set of the Atlantic Coast offsbore fleet shifted to another city. The Yanks Louis Gibson (7-4) N. scored the winning run. flies the burgee of the RoY~l Ca in the for hi s first defense of the title Yankees Nip back in nine decisions. together for a 635-~i1e test of hu1\s, he won from old Joe Brown in were entertaining Detroit, another K:~~~~u(~n McBean (5·3) al ChIcago Jimenez had three hits in four rigs and men. 'l'he start is from nadian Naval Sailing Associat .. velopml April. potentially explosive opponent. AMERICAN LEAGUE Plttsburlh ...... 220 toe ~ 4 I 1 tries and raised his average to Newport, on JUIl/} 16. Also from across the border is graphic Chkalo , ...... 100 210 01 ..... 3 11 2 .350. undersl Unlike some leading boxers who Detroit, 2-1 In Boston, Joe Cronin, American w. L. Pet. • .•• The italian Itandard·bearer is ll)ishfree, a 1960 competitor wltb Haddix, F.e. (I) anet aru.... ; Hob- of the I profess to hate the game and say League president, said he had a x·IIUnnesol...... 3. 24 .5t3 (~)f The Sox scored their run in the a new owner, W. Bernard Herlllll1l New York ...... 32 22 .593 bie, Schultz Elston (') .net T.ppa, second inning when Floyd Robin- Corsaro II, designed by the New they wouldn't walk around the NEW YORK IA'I - The New York telephone report Crom umpire·in· Cleveland ...... 31 22 .5M 1'h Ttllclf.r ('). w - H.etetlx ('·2). L - of Ontario. are cur Hollbl. (1 ~). son walked, went to third. 01),. AI . York firm ef S,.rkman & St~ph rooms, block' to see a title fight, Ortiz Yankees beat their old Detroit chief Charley Berry and also a x·Los Angeles . . , . ,30 24 .556 2 Springtime, Z a r a ban d a and Detroit ... , ...... 28 27 .599 ""'h Smith's single and came in on Bob ....and _plettcl In lust unabashedly proclaims his love for wire from Berry. Chicago ...... 2' 30 .412 5'h ~t"y Major jinx, Frank Lary, 2·1, with the Sadowski's sacrifice fly. In tl,me f.,. her to sail in last Pherousa will get in some tuning the sport. · " h ' d ' h Baltimore ...... 28 30 .460 6 up licks in the N.Y. Yacht Club's for the belp of Roger Maris' 11th home At t e tune, I on t see were Kansas Oily ...... 26 33 .441 8 ~ The victory broke a six-game ,.ars San P .... · to •. Honolulu include "If it ' wasn't for boxing. I'd any action is necessary," Cronin BQston ...... 13 31 .fla 11~ Whitfield's regatta on Long Island Sound June . , WashlngtDn , ...... 19 36 .S45 13'h losing streak for the Athletics. race with a crew of Italutn naval Hottelel probab,ly be pushing • cart or run and Bill Stafford's six hitter 2·3 at the invitation of Commodore said. "I will receive Berry's writ· x·Nlgbt Game Cillueo , . , .. , ... ,01. Il1O __ • 3 0 academy clldet. coml\1.nded by news digging- a ditch for 60 bucks a Tuesday night. ten report later." TUESDAY'S RESULTS H, Irving PTatt. Then Sprinatillle K.n ... Cltv ...... 000 000 ___ 2 • 0 Captain Augu.tlno Straulino, ene and con weel1;" 5 aid the 25· year - old Cleveland at Washington, ppd,. rAin PI,arro .nd C.rratf\; Wlcktr1h_ of the I.M S bo will move 'eastward lind sail in the The Yanks, who had lost three "r was listening to the game on New York 2, Detroit 1 .nd ""eua. W _ Wleakrsll." (7·2). L wor u s ItI'Hte.t tar at Kennett champ Tuesday. "1 love boxing. H~mer Nips - PI...... (3.01). sailors. Corsaro II, a 68-foot ver Of~ SQundings Club cruise June '·9 straight to Baltimore, got to Lary the radio. It sounded like ' the old BDston 4, Baltimore 3 Donald, I like to box. I like to watch Minnesota at Los An,eles - N. s Ion ef Bolero and Northern befor~ going on to Newport for the fights. This Is a pretty good fIght for a run in the first on Phil Linz' Baltimore Orioles spirit bounced Kansas City 2. Chlca40 1 chief op back." TODAV'S PROBABLE PITCHERS Litht (ex·Venturw), to_ vl,it st~t ot the l6th. Saturday night and I may take single, Bobby Richardson's sacri· w. ricer oj "Charlie told me that after Rob. Sb~d~~lt /4-r.:loSSI (5-5) at New York Ph'illies, 3-2 Mets.. Fall to,0 ... AIIoatQIi. ~e mevint .... to Moines on the winner - if the price Is iice and Johnny Blanchard's single Newport. right. erts threw high over Maris' head, S ~aJtlml Dre ENstrada (3·7) at Boston and Tril to right. cnwal (1.)7 . ST. LOUIS IA'I - Rookie Fred chepple, Birdsell, "] was offered $62,500 to fight he told both managers t hey woul\l Cleveland Donovan (,,2) and Ramos II $h'ong contender- fol' first·lo WlIson, Whitfield blasted a two·run homer Houston, 3-2 , Flash Elorde of the Philippines in Maris hit a Lary pitch into the be responsible for any throwing (3·2) at Washington Osteen (2·5) and HOUSTON Joe Amalfitano finish honors will be Storm vogel, a of thl1 , " IStenhouse (4·1) 2 twl·nlgbt. orf Paul Brown in the eighth in· 1m - Fisher, O'Connor Manil a, but I'll take the winnel' upper deck in right field in the contest. Minnesota ](rallck (5-4) at LQs An· new, lillht displacement Yawl own· bureau, ning Tuesday night, giving the St. rifled It single to left field drlvln, here if some promoter will come third inning. It left him 14 games C . 'd B Id h' th t geles Chalice (f·S) N. in pineh runner Roman Mejias ed by C. 8ruynzeel of Stellen. an<1 Ro ronm Sal erry to un a Chicago BuzhlTdt (80S) at KalUllls Louis Cardinals a 3·2 victory over LeQd Golf Meet's up with more money," said Ortiz, behind his record pace of last year. he didn't think the pitchers were City Bl$s (2·5) or Walker (6-4) N . with the winning run as the Hous· bosch an old hand at ocean racing the Nat the pesky Philadelphia Phil lies. a New Yorker vi a Puerto Rico. Stafford, who took a string of intentionally throwing at the hit· ton Colts came from behind to de and cruising. ' HAMPTON IA'I - Jim .. ScbepPIe of Eng] , The Garden has indicated in· 16 'h scoreless innings into his 12th ters. Brown opened the seventh with feat the New York Mets, 3-2 Tues Stormvogel, after creat.ing some· of WaterloO birdied lhe sixth bllle at UrU\ a double anc\ then scored to put City. terest in a lightweight title fight start of the year. came through The incident began in the fourth day night with two runs in the thing of a sensation in last year's of a su~den-death playoff ao<\ won ' with a six-hitter and extended his the Phillies In front, 2·1. He had Fastnet, sailed home to South Af· the qualifying medal in lhe lowa SPeak, but the offici.ls would like to see inning when Powell was hit by Bud Giants• Win.1 ninth inning. runless string to 25 innings, before yielded four hIts, all singles. until paper 'how Hernandez. a 'airly new Daley. He was carried off the field Craig Anderson was the victim rica for thls winter's B. A.-to·Rio Junior Chamber of Commerce IJGif the Tigers scored in the ninth on Whitfield connected after Julian face, makes out. If the fourth· on a stretcher and taken to the of the Colts' uprising. With one out, de Janeiro fixture. She was first tournament here Tuesday. singles by Rocky Colavito, Vic Javier walked. ranking contender fro m Vene· hospital where X-rays proved nega· pinch hitter Billy Goodman beat 10 finish in that, overtaking the .. Schepple, state high school challl' Wertz and Chico Fernandez. It 2 from Reds; Brown, bidding for his first rna· zuela can beat the second·ranked ".lve . out an in fi eld hit and that spelled U.S. Naval Academy yawl Hoyono pioll. and Jeff Birdsell of Ramplon JJ ( Rosi and make a good Impres· was Stafford's sixth victory against • jor league victory, was saddled the start or Anderson's downfall. on the last day out. ended the first 18 holes tied with In the Yankee half of the fourth, sion, then thara's a sound chance three defeats. with his firth loss. Jim Busby ran for Goodman and Nq foreign yacht has come 74s and were still even on a Maris was the first man up, Rob· five of a title fight. Lary, a four·time winner against l Browne, batting for Ken Johnson closer to winning than the British hole playoff when the Waterloo erts' first pitch sailed over his 1 Game ·Ou.t Ex·Phillie Don Ferrarese, who "I'll fight Hernandez anywhere the Yanks last year and once this tripled him home to tie the score cutter Belmorll which wu sec· routh dropped a 10·putt to win the To head to the screen. Maris started worked the last two innings, earn in this country or even in his home season while building a 28·10 life· at 2-2. Mejias ran for Browne and ond to Finlsterra in 1960 anel next hole. slowly toward the mound, bat in CINCINNATI IA'I - 'There was no ed his first victory against two BERL t o w n of Caracas providing the time record against New York, went to sccohd when Anderson third two years earlier This may Eighteen young golfers who hand. Hobie Landrith, Baltimore June swoon for the San Francisco losses. The lefty has not been scor· mechani money is right," said the cham· left for a pinch hitter in the eighth ed on In his last nine appearances. walked Al Spangler intentionally. accqunt for the presanca of three qualified for the title round with catcher, intercepted him. Giants Tuesday ni~ht as they snap· aDd fde pion, after allowing seven hits and both, ped out or a six-game losing $treak He struck Qut four. Then Amalfitano hit his game· English hopefUls ~n what will be 82 or better, will shoot the fiul Berlin a Winner of six straight, Hernandez runs. Landrith said something that dis· winning single. a fleet of about the same propor· 18 holes Wednesday. and swept a doubleheader from the T~e Cardinals scored their first her four pleased Maris who reacted by shov, tlons as last year's 135, the all. has a 25·1·3 won·lost-draw record. Cincinnati Reds, 2·1 and 7·5. run in the third Inning. Doug Clem Johnson went all the way and hauled Detroit .. , ... '" 000 000 001- 1 , 1 ing the catcher. Then Elston How· tlon Rosi, 34. has a 37·9·2 record. 80th New York ... ' 101 000 000- 2 7 2 The victories, coupled with Mil· ens walked, moved to third on a limited the Mets to five hits in time hi'h in particllN • IOWA CITY 1m - Bruce Fischer crib. I ' ar e good punchers. Hernandez has LlrV, Nischwlh (I) .net Brown; ard, Yank catcher, got into the act. waukee's defeat of Los Angeles, recording his fourth victor'y against Twa of the Brltishers and the o[ 'Manning and Bill O'Connor of Altoge I Stafford end Howerd. W - Stafford sacrifice and Curl Flood's single knocked out 12 fo~ s while Rosi has Maris wouldn't say what it was six defeats. r 'HlJLos Angeles Dodgers put on qu~te a show of spinl\tw seeea4. hille , to win. the, medAl groupalt arown, a.ldschun ~'l.nd DalrymPI.· Stu Miller and Don Larsen to quell arOlllo, MeD.nlel 7, Ferraru. ('l 15·2 Tuesday night behind the pitch· acrobalics on the starting line. !hono!. "HI. f • h) j East G( the Reds in the second game: • nd .e",.tskI Sch., er ('). W - F.r. ing of Lew Bw·dette . Zaraband., aoother &. & S. design, Remain in British r.resa (1·2). L - .rown (0·5). lici~~ .. First G.m. The Braves bombed Los Angeles cut her racing teeth \n Australia's by 14 t s.n Fr~n'-i¥CI ...OQO QIlQ 2tO- 1. t1 t Hom. run - St. Louis, Whltfl.ld (2). Amateur Meet CInclnn.tl . , . , ,000 100" OCJO-.... f 7 0 starter Johnny Padres for five runs famous SYd!\c:y-Hobart race, river ex, Mlele"'l .ncS a.lleV; O'Toqla .nd in the first inning and Burdette Ma" AItken'lj Drumbeat, which :MOVING? lied safE Edwarda. W - ~rl'-b.1 (,-4), L. - HOYLAKE, England 1m - Thir O'Toole (4-7). Hardy Stars as coasted- to his first victory over IIa$ trte" Ule Bermuda befote, is in a bUI teen Americans, some of them in Hom. run - Clnclnn.tI, Col.m.n lhe Dodgers in Milwaukee County due in New York OI'! June 5 Check O.r The tu ('). anq the weekend player class, survived "cond G.me Red, Sox Whip Stadium since July 13, 1956. will join ber cyuntremen at Indiao big grol another round in the British Ama· S.n Francisco ",320 010 001- 7 • 1 The veteran right · handel' was Harbor where the club's .a,,~I'\~ LOWER RATES past six Clncln ...tl , ,',. 000 0111 "1~ S • 3 teur Golf Championship' Tuesday McConnlck. Millar (II. Lnsan I,) altimore~ 4-3 supported by the home runs of ambassador for ocean raoing, Dick On ~ Local 4nd Lon, Pete,. Distance Moves bllt the defending titleholder was .nd •• I ..v; OrAbowskV, ~1Ip'pst.ln ("), Gus Bell, Eddie Mathews, Hank Nye, will be host. who liv Slsl ... ~), WUII ~') .nd. Foue-. W - o ON (..fI - Carroll Hardy Aaron, Frank Bolling and Tommie knocked out. McCormick (3.2). L - Or.bowsky (1.5), Pheroil", flying the flail. of CAU e-5707 fOR Home runs - S.n FrAncisco, C.pad. doubled home the winning run and Aaron. England's Michael Bonallack, 2 (17). Clnclnn.tl, FolI.s (1). tile Frenc;h Cr,\lting . ~ub. Is fit robbed Jim Gentile of a grand BUI"Ciette allowed only six hits in A FREE ESTIMATE the 1961 tiUist and W~lker Cup I Goc slam. homer as Boston defeated the winning his fourth straight after ting out .t ~oCI~m's on City star, was bounced out of the tour , d a!Jd (make her head· • Care'ul Experlenc.d WorkmQ r BjlItimore Orioles 4·3 T u e s day four losses. He struck out eichl "ill ney in the second round by Jack· . sports ~ , quarters at A...,-ic." Y.C., Rye: .. CleM ...... w.u.Mu.. night ;utd walked only one. For Storall' S9lI Taggart, an unheral~ed North Har owner Is edouar4 Michel • CIIII Ue "ar your .very ked The Dodgers scored a run in the Movlnl Probl.m , ern h;isljlTlfln, 2 and 1. . JW'rlf. !fOO. a twq.pageer down .mt M ifill trav. for .iII", -•. By In B'rief ,.',. the left field line to climax a three tirst as Maury Wills led off with II r The Yank group, some In the vllOr th, yacht'~ de.i_nllr.. none Writ run third. Frank Malzone had driv triple and Jim Gilliam doubled. second round and lOme in the other tillin ~apt"n John: Hr - I]," Transf., ST. PAUL·MINNEAPOLIS 1m - en in the earlier tallies with a They were unable to get another THE l third, was headed by veteran IIn,worfi, ~ B.,tlsh I yachtl~ Jerry Reichow, former Iowa quar· single and two-run homer. hit until a two~ut single by Wally summer David Spec Goldm.n of Dallas, terback and leading Minnesota Vik· Moon in the seventh. ~ : 30 on t The score was 4-() in the sixth Bob Falkenburg. the Californl.n ings pass receiver last season, Pod res, who suffered his fifth Klrio pi now living In BrazH, .n" Bolt \llhen LIle viilto{s loaded the bases Tuesday signed contracts with the against winner Ike Delock on a loss in eight decisions. was lItgged BeethOVE Sweeny, the Palm Be.ch, Fla.• National Football League club for anate (r, w~ two si]lgles. Gentile hit for six hits ad SQven runs beforo Investment banker who won this 1982 1963. ana to be s i a'nd a towering drive but tJardy leaned being relieved by Phil Ortega after tltla 25 years ago. Terms were IlOl: alUlouMed, but Mathews' Hth homer and No. 381 KSUI·F~ far i~~o tho 50ats to pull it down. Eight Americans, including Gold· Reieho~ said he was satisf~. however. The O(iol s ~cjJ:ed on t)at sacrifice of his career in the second. Ortega Coach- Norm Van BrOckI(n !laid man and Falkenburg. won, and fly and another by Jackie Brandt. was greeted by ~enry Aaron who performe Putting Pouters five lost in the first round Tues· he plans to continue using Reichow smacked his 11th homer. He IW" person. J Baltimore scored its third run day. Of the nine U.S. players who as a flanker back. In 1901. Reichow rendered five more runs in the variol Bo Wini.r, left, to .... hie "'..... Into the elr end ap,._rs to be on three singles in the eighth. won first rounders Monday, four caught 11 touchdown passes, grab· next two innings. musician leading a song while his practice partner, Cary MiddlecoH. thro,,!,s won and four lost in the second bing SO aerials for 859 yards. 1I.ltlmor...... 000 002 010- 3 10 0 Los Anlleles , ... , lot 000 010- 2 , 0 Charles his head back In dis,ust after he toe misse. a putt in Tuesday's , ...... 103 000 000- 4 12 0 Mllw.ukH ...... 533 2" 020-15 17 1 round. Poetr ... Ort... (2) Roebuck (Il .nCll violins' , practice for the opening of the National Open Championship at INTI!!RNATIONAL LEAGUE (3), Stock (7) .nd L.n· Rosebora; .uri.tt. l .nd Cr.n'" I, ' W The idle player was Sweeny, SO, Rad.tz (7), Earl.v (t) 'rhom~ Oakmont, Pa.. Thursday, Toronto " RlchmQlld 5 - al/rdett. (4-4). L - Pod ..s (3-S). who turned up at the last minute LouJavllle 5. Denver 1 - D.Iee'" (1.0). L - Home runl - Mllw.uke., ••11 (2). Uain Do - AP Wirephoto Monday and won his match im· JaeskonvWe 2. Rochesler 0 Mlth.w. (11). H. A.ron (11), .ollln, of the l~ Columbus 9. Bulfa1c • (11 In\llftSs) - .oston, Matzon. (7). (5), T. A.ron (2). pressively. Sweeuy and Tuearlay's eight other American first round "STER winners will play their second feiHer r . . UTES" ~ Littler Not Worried After rounds Wednesday over the 6,932· casting-J yard Royal Liverpool course which would al has a par of 36·36-72. ~t7L( ~ (ALt~ Me advance, the musi. 82' Open Practice Round / The second round victors Tues ().lO~ r P(~L€ 1HIIJ~ IH right out ck'll Included Mertht It.ncwlch I G/V6 OAKMONT, Pa, IA'I - Gene Lit· to go stale," he said, "I see no AUOF I 111~ WR~6 ' of Chicago who defeated Dan IGNAC tier looked like anything except reason that I shouldn't be pla~ing IMPR~~ION $ IF I Sfm RYM of lrelend. 5 ... 4; 'at (00Pf1l. UP (~,A. CU>5[{) APAer- the great a cha!)1pion Tuesday in his first weU again tomorrow and the pext Brady of Reidsville. N.C., 4 and tour of the saw·toothed Oakmont day. certainly feel that my game MENf, HM WI/..l. 1I/E'( &VfR KlJou) man, is r 3 over Bruce Pelmore of &nl' course, where his NaUo\lal Ol?C Js as sound and my attitllde as Legendar n land; Wllli.m P. Castleman of r'H mo 10 fRI£IJCI§IfIPr golf title goes up fOf grabs Tburs· good as when I won a year ago - ~ : 5() p.m_ White Sulphur Springs, W_ Va., J our If r Hoveo 1AJ10 day. But he wasn't concerned. or won the tournament last week. 2 and 1 DYer G. Horrock.-Taylor A fueuc fam~ APAR':I Neither was he visibly shaken ':r can't believe, as some say, of Engl.nd; and Bud Rudolph of 1800m ~ ,,, version c by reports his chief rival, Arnold that the long hitter, such as Pal· Los Angeles, 3 and 2 over Ltdlie Palmer, despite .a nasty linger mer and Jack Nicklaus, has an G. BI.,. of Belmont, N.V. wound. was buming up the layout advantage here. The man who Wee: tor the second straight day and wins, will be C1IIe who can drive In other second round matches 8:00 Mo. 8:15 Ne\lO regaining the form and confidence straight and putt well." Bryan P. Malone of England elimi· 8:30 Mu. which )lave es~ablish~ him a,s th~ . In his round Tuesday, Littler said nated Truman F. Connell, of Te· 8:30 Boo , 9:5& Ne top golfer of the day. his entire game was "loose . aad questa, Fla., 5 and 4; J. K. Tate 10:00 Mu.l! 4t~ 1 SEe, WE'LL, 40UR sloppy." of England tumbled Ken Bensen ~f 40V ! OOW"f IlAv6 mr Wt\,~ 56 1t1J c~~rs Foe 1'IIG 11:55 COlli ."r had 8~ blOW: if I had ~~~." Palmer, who shot a 71 Monday of Brooklyn, 2 .and I, and Michael TElfPHOt.J~ COHPMJ4 11:5& Ne\lO WANT ~NY1HIN6! fI~\ 1\IR~6 MIIJl1Tt'S A~O F/V& 12:Q() llh)o LllIler said, a tel' scram mg with a bandaged ring finger on hi$ Burgess o~ England ousted Phil WILL 00 A~/"IOSr 12:30 Ne .. around the 6,494-yard, par 71 Oak· 1>- f . I N H~ 10 1)I,,1'S ~y Cli~TS FOR ~"Cl\ SU,,€WIf,)G U : ~ Ne\lO mont Country Club course. "But right hand, was a couple of strokes _eit elder of Lmco n, eb., 5 and A!l41H IN G 1) M"Ic'E' HAV~ 1 ~r ~ "O\R~E' H~UTtS' PlUS m: USI»J.. 1:00 MUI! M~4 , SII2, Bur t 2:45 New it's ridiculous to take this score under par for his latest round with 3. HOIJ'(\(s SECURITl-I lfJ MIJ"IJC~. l:S() Mus a 69 and you could see his ~nCi- Beaides Goldm;ln and r Falken· /X)JJ ', )(NOW 1r '\\l6 FRIENp,r 16t£PH~€' 4:25 Ne .. seriously, I'm a bit tired and I was dence booming. He had one bogey bur., the first rOUlld winners in. aoom! Huh' IS 1llF:R€ Mt.l1l11/J6 nS6? 4:30 Tea. CA/J .. 5:15 Spo- just horsing around." and three birdies. Sam Sneact and cluded Richard. D. Devies of Pas.· MUCH? 5:30 NI!" The quiet professional from Bob Gajda also had practice 69's. Calif.; Joho. Nicholson 5:f5 Ne .. deia, A.i of 8:00 Eve I Rancho Bernado, Calif" scoffed aL "Two of the six stitches came Gl~m Cove, N.Y.; BOyd O'Donnell 7:00 OAr. a suggestion he probably was sur· out of my finger," Palmer said., 01 1M Angeles; Lynn A. Cre8lQn . :30 . oTr:ii ~[ Ii , { fcring a letdown after his $25,000 "The cut didn't bother me at all Las Vuu, Nev.; M. D. Binky . :45 Ne'; first prize victory last weekend in I'm pl~Ying well._ I (eel won4erful. ¥Itchella, of Fort Worth, Texas, 9:5$ Spo 10:00 81Q , i the $100,000 Golf Cla!lsic lit Up· He ,cut hi. tilller Sundl1lC. nlillt, n airmail ,tolionccl in Englancl ; .a.1WiuI;; PCI' Montolair, N.J. removing luggage from the trunk and ' Michael Sanger of Bedford, I, "I haven't played enou&h soU compartment of his car, N,Y, l ,I I 31 High .·~Jlool Jnstructors Will Attend SUI Journalism Workshop 'n to Y... Thjr!.Y-ilne high school teacbers Eyerly, managing editor; J . R. from 1S states wiU participate., in Hudson, public relations director, the fifth annual SUI workshop on and Frank Miller, editora) cartoon Germania the Newspaper in the Classroom ist, all of the Des Moines Register ) and is IIO~ oC a Free Society, June 17-29. and Tribune; Charles Capaldo, at MillJle. The workshop is designed to show Iowa bureau manager. Associated Bermuda's higb school instructors ways the Press Bureau; David Gottleib, Ilprise Bill newspaper can be a valuable teach· business manager, Davenport ;hicane IDd ing aid. and to acquaint them with Times and Democrat; Ted Stevens, Moot sloop the role and practices oC the daily advertising director, Waterloo her mast iI newspaper. Courier; and Donald Breed. editor, rty Triming. t1Ie high school teachers are at Freeport (Ill.) Journal and Stand· It South'ard. tending the tw~·week SUI pro ard. osite pole in gram on scholarships from their Spellkers representing the Uni· Whereas the local daily newspapers. versity are Professors Paul Olson Irely squeez. SUbjects to be discussed during and Clark Bloom, both economics; lum overall the two-week workshop include: the Clyde F . Kohn, professor of ge !Sured iI'IIIII place or newspapers in Americ~ ography; Hugh E . Kelso, associate [frail, South. culture; patterns of ownership and proCessor of political science; Not Quite Like September I just make operation of newspapers; the gath Patrick L. Alston, assistant profes raling. ering and seleclion of news; fac sor of history ; Harold W. Saunders, No loud neise, not much hunyin" not even much pushing .nd Unlvtr-slty ,.me. And else mit the ,...... 1 .-. the SUlowan left Hng its ~la, tors influencing the handling oC professor of sociology; nnd Arthur shoving - Summer Snsien R.. I,tretion Tuetda.. went elmost as the Fi.ldhouse feeling no more inspired tt..n w...... _nt III. !he scramble news by wire services; the edi M. Sanderson, instructor; Arthur smoothly es the fines outside the Stadium on the de.. of the Indiana - ~ b.. J .. Lippincott my cup. $he torial page; the role of advertising M. Barnes, professor; Ellis H. New HOTTELET l uch o( the editing and writing e Royal Ca. In the daily newspaper; the de some. associate professor; Rich· I n in 10 a City. but Associatiell. velopment of an economic, geo ard Budd, assistant to the director; Prof. Wood id he h also gath- e border II graphic, political, and sociological Edward P . Bassett, instructor; and Richerd* C. HoHelet,* CBS* news red m t rial from Ubrarie at Use Daily Iowan Classifieds To Sell Your Stow-aways lpetitor with understanding and interpretation Leslie G. Moeller. director, all com~ntetor, will bring 20 ye... , Harvard. Yale and th Library o( lard HerlllaD or the news; and how newspapers journalism. of foreign reporting experience to Gonges . He said h also plans to are currently being used in class Others scheduled to address the 1_. City when he opens the Sum· do re earch at the Huntington Li· rooms. workshop are: John Gearon, Chi mer Seilion Lecture Sen.. et SUI brary in San Marino. Callf. Jamda aad Prof. Wood joined the SUI t c some tuning Major speakers " cago Public Schools; Robert Wil June 19_ for the workshop liams, Slephen Decatur High ulty in 1 . Ii had p lously been Yacht Club's Hottel.... who h •• made s.veral an Engti. h instructor at the Unj· I Sound June include Richard C. School, Decatur, TIl ; Edna C. trips to South Americ. recently, Hottelet, CBS Downing, Maria Sanford Junior versity of Tcnne . LchJ,h Uni· . Commodore will speak on "Letin Americ. - news anal y s t High School, Minneapolis, Minn.; \o er iLy alid th l' 'achusetls in l SprinaUme N... Cold War Bllttl.,rounct?" in and comnlentator; and WiUlam Hieronymou , 1962 stitute of Tl'CMOlogy. CLASSIFIEDS \d sail in IIle the Mein Lounge of lowe Memorial He ha been editor or the Phil- -- uise June 8-9 Kenneth S. Mac graduate of University High School, Union Tuesdey .t , p.m. Tlck.t, -----~-- Donald, edilor and Iowa City. ological arterly since 1955. wport for the will not be required for the lectur• . chief operating of The workshop is co-sponsored by 5 Mobil. Hom.. For Sal. 13 RooIM Po, I.nt 16 £leer of the Des the SUI College of Education and Hottelet will also addre.. an SUI ROONEY BANKRUPT high school t.echer.· worlclhop. H 0 L L Y 0 Lf\ - Actor WANTED: Cblld to (aroe lor. My hom.... 1~7 II. VER STAR: 47' It 8', P ffhl ROOMS fot $Ummer stud' ;'t women, ~{oines Register School of Journalism, the Social woo Advertising Rates 7·»13. _ II-I! carpet In" t~nc . Mu t II. Cal 21 y "" and o," r. Cookln, prlv· 1\lick 'y Rooney Iiled petitions (or ~irdsell, and Tribun~; Jack Sciences Council or the National , WANT1!:D: Ba by ,lIl1n" my hOllle;. 73-430. f.lS UJ'~!a_"'__ W_ ashl.ncton. ' ·73411• .!':! Wilson, I member Education As ociation, lind the \,olunlary bankruptcy In federa l CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADS full or pan tltll . 1017 .' Intbln mw IIllIllmlltl d. 1 bedrooml Gupl .., of th~ Washington MACDOH~ D American Newspaper'. Publishers leCKher Training court Tu sday. CcJuecuthe JII.1I'1ioruI W Mf.. fH3 lIhI(eretor. )nnOl Par .."part",en" n F-r_._' ______Rent 15 R Ito...alt)t Co. 1·2123 ••velWlll, Wh l~ l-0477.· KI'", bureau, ·Cowles Publications .. Inc.; Associatiop. .. , Roon y ll ttd d bt! of ~84 , 914 nu-e. Day. . ... ,. lSf • Word &-27R aDd Robtlrt Oarl~en' I president of Jamcs E . Hayes, director of cur·, To 8e TV Topic a nd a t. of $500 worth of I\ou:e· ~ Day...... 19f • Word Meets TeD Dan ...... SSf a Word • ROOMS (or m.le rrlduRt or o•• r the National Council of Teachers rlculum and inptruction for the hold good nd c1oflle!;. 0 2l Cor &W1llIIcr Ind l&lJ. 8·:11137 a.. tH ODe Month ...... Wont JIl l! TELL: 1 30 Chevrolct Impala. • p.m. 7·9 of En,llsh. and head of English Burlington Public Schools. is direc On 'Meet Profl Dial 1-51$' . &.16 rim : ScbePflle ()(J.nImUID Ad" Wordl) be sixth ~Cile at UlUversity High School. Iowa tor of the workshop. He is being t Side. City. FOR ALE: 1m rhunderblrd. DIal 8·le yoff an~ won assisted by H. H. Wubben and The process of training teacher One I...... MeMtt .... S~.U· wm. 11-24 lin the Iowa Speakers reptesenting the news Harry Jackson of University High for America's schools will be spot Pm lnart..... a MMttt 11.15" paper industry include: Frank School In Iowa City. Till I ...... ,1"- 9 LARGE {urnl.hl'd Iparim nL Vtllill • Immerce /JCIM Ughted in the techniqu s practiced a ...... Pets paid, aero (rom campu . "5 per , R.c.. ,.,. I ... ----..,..------month Call Mr. 8)' U , EM a·:II\3. ROOM for mil lIuaent oyer 21 . ell sday. by Prof. Joseph J . Schwab at Ih ) Special Engagement .adI CeMnn C dar Re"ld. , 6-30 Nortb JohnlOD St. a·TUO. 8-11 schpol cl)elll' University of Chicago on "Meet I of Hampton TWO room Ipartm nt with k ltcb.n Wan..... d l~ Crawl .Through Tunnel the Profe sor" Sunday at 1:30 p.m . DIal 1·2523. fl. 13 '. II lies tied witb . , . * 3 Days Only * en on a five on KCRG-TV, Cedar Rapids. ------j"ill · Ch~~ . the Waterloo Itt a, Inte To Prof. Schwab is a specialist in Starting TODA YI 81 ~ Itt to win the Escape East Berlin mathematical genetics lind hll a TURE&.ROO I ap.rtJn nta wllh prlvlte BERLIN tfI - A West Berlin reporter how it we. e",inHred. bathe. on unrurnl h d. No .hlldren Ph.D. degree in biology. II d m· or pels. Married couple. only. Dial golfers who mechanic told Tuesday how he He and five fricnds dug a shaft Shows AI 1 :40 - 4: 1 0, Misc. For Sale 11 onstrates one of his methods of 7-S8~2 or 7-5353 . ..1' e round with and friends dug a tunnel into East 60 Ieet long from a We t Berlin 6:35 • 9;00 p.m. loot the fillll Berlin and rescued his fiancee and cellar, he said. It was nine feet developing teachers, the use of a ------28-INCII man', bIcycle. I II a·legs erl· er ~ P.M. 6-18 Rooms for Rent her four-month·old baby, who was underground and just two·feet mock class session interrupted by Phone 7-4191 hauled to safety in a sledge-like high. . 7Sc MAPLE settee. tott Ilble, platform qu e s t i on 5 and comment by Matin.e-- -.- rOCker. G.E. <' Ieclrlc .Iove and wuh lruce Fischer crib. Scholz said he was in hospital PI""" •• 4:~ p.m. WHit, Schwab and olhcr observers. Evening - 90c .m. ,. er, dra"••• balhe"elte , . lroUer. 8·51111' O'Connor of Altogether, he said 11 per$l)1s with appendicili when the E ast day.. Closed Ito.tvnley., An 6-15 , placo in the from .,East Berlin esca~d Satur· GeflTums sea),ed off I W lit a r)in ReCipient of one of the first Child,en - 25c I!xr:rtencad 4d Tlker Will QUi6c C IT lor Jell article.! Round Help Wanted 19 1 p You Your Ad. Iow~ Jllnlor day through the tunqel UQder ij\e last Aug. 13, M\lllinlli ~ lI! Ws Ji:,~ Quantreli p rl~(\ Cor e){tcllence in Ha With up those Idhl ertlcld from bal>oe- ----....-----,-., me nt. Ittlc or I.ra.. - then ll~t "" PA II T TIME worlc ~ stud nt . Aprly III ~ and' the 11· Ceet: of East German ,&uards. Berlin, fiancee . .' • . r teaching in 1943, Dr . Schwab \\'a tbem In a Dallv 10WaD ClualJled Ad . COLOR THE DAILY IOWAN RESERVES ofl bed. bike, book. or car, )lou'll Ifet e .... oll. Ted', Grill. 106 outh Capl· medal'l'Ionors At the nme time, Wat B.rlin Whtn the tunnel Wti .compl.t. THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY peedy Slies reaull. Il 10" coat. Phone te)r.. 15 al 0 l award d til William Rainey ' \\ e /'(' 'OW Able ayof"'. Wedn,.uv.* *June U. * '''2 By MOBT WALI:EB 8:00 Mornlne Chapel BEETLE BAILEY 8:15 News IND. "World of Susie Wong\' & "Sex Klnens Go To College" 8:30 Mu.le TONITE 8:80 Bookshelf '. .,.JJ WELL, I-IE CAME FI(O .... A POOR 8:55 News eACKGROU D__ DER?RIVlLEGED__ 10:00 Mu.lc BAD 1\:55 Coming Event. .' -DRIVII··IN 1\ :~ New. Call.ul" TH&A.TRE CO,\'PAN!QNS 12:00 Rhythm Ramble. .'. 12:30 News 12 :~ New. BackfrOUlld TRUE! Besed On When H. T ooIc Her 1:00 Mu.le 2:4. News The Story Of Guy In His Arms She 2:50 Music GaNidon The Marine Crossed The 4:25 News Who Ceptured OYer 4:30 Tea Time 1000 Prisoners Color Line .. _ 5: IS 1I»orts Time 5:30 News ·~o · !IDiN£-I~(IY· E.sMot~ 3:45 News Sack"ouM . NHELL TO "1 PASSED e:oo Evening Concert • CO-HIT. 7;00 'AM·FM Stereo Concert • Munier Seals A ETERNITYII FOR WHITE" 8:3f) 'Trio Recital - P1811J1 ·CeUQ."\!io- Secretl II lin. Wm. and Carfl.u. 0011,. De. ~. mann and Chari". 'rrc~er "DEAD TO I:U ",ew. Final 1:55 Sports Final THE WORl:D", 10:00 SION OFF 'aa.IIIeU&..o.r K.iVl-61l
, ~ .- pq. &-THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, Iowa-Wed" June " , m~ S'UI Graduate Writes ..... U.N. Decides Law App~iccmts Taking ( High School Art Book To Ponder 1Bar Examination Here .. "The art teacher who fo tel'S busy work, entertainment and s. Rhodesia incty-five applicants from 13 amination. Mcmbers of the Slate law schools are taking Iowa bar creative patty-cake is overlooking the importance of art in the B9ard of Examiners are Lowell U ITED NATIONS, .Y.!.1'I examinations at SUI this week. Kmdig, Sioux City; Phillip Cless, secondary school clITl'i<.ulllm," an 1 study pOints out, adding In a sharp rebuff to the Western Des Moines; Homer Stephens, powers the U.N. General Assembly The examination started Tues· that growth in self-uwurene s is the most valuable contribution day moming will be completed at Clarinda; Charles Swisher, Jr., decided Tuesday to take up im ,"hich an alt program can make. noon Thursday. Successful appli Waterloo and David Elderkin, mediately the question of white Cedar Rapids. rule in Southern Rhodesia. cants will be honored at a break Alva McGarab. Kent. Wash .. who fast at the Iowa Memorial Union Temporary examiners assisting received an M.A. degree from SUI Asian, Afdcan and Communist Friday morning. Applicants wish· with the examination are William Methodists Rap last week, wrote a course in the delegates banded together to en· ing to practice law in Iowa must Bernau, Cedar Rapids; Richard appreciation of American art for dorse by 62-26, with 15 abstentions, Wells, Davenport; Johnathan Rich I, the recommendation of its Steel'- success[ully complete the examina secondary schools in parti al ful- tion. ards, Red Oak and Marion eely, fillment of the requirements for :I,;;" ing Committee to add Southern Iowa City. Administration the degree. In the course, Mrs. , . , lRhodesia to the agenda. The SUI College of Law heads the list of colleges represented by per· • McGarah traces the history of I '" ·"' 1 Only five Latin American na- Amcrican art from colonial times I tions - the Dominican Republic, ons taking the examination ~ith Peru Presidential 54, followed by Drake, 23; Crelgh- I " ~ p arfisanship' into the atomic agc. r' L EI Salvador, Honduras, Paraguay and Peru - supported the West· ton, five ; Notre Dame, Michigan, I Race Narrowed Mrs. McGarah teaches in Kent, Northwestern, two each, and other MOUNT VERNON (A'J - Northern ern power s, Uruguay, Haiti, f Wash., where she is using her colleges, seven. Iowa Methodists Tuesday voted course of study. V e n e % u e I a and Cuba voted To Le twingers doWn proposed re olutions opposing against the West, while the other Iowa Assistant Attorney·General compulsory health insurance under Typical of coloniaJ art which she Latin American countries abo Brice Oakley is conducting the ex- LIMA, Peru UI'I - Peru's hotly s o c i a 1 security and expressed descl'ibes is folk wood art as the A Safe Arrival stained. contested presidential election de· tavern signs in the reconstl'ucted veloped Tuesday into a ballle be criticism of the Kennedy Admin Tears of happiness are shared by Henry Nagel, train accident Sunday. Nag.I was one of the Before the final vote the assem· istration on some issues. lown of Williamsburg, Va. These bly approved an African proposal tween two candidates who cam signs with symbolic lettering made Davenport and his daughter, Mrs. Richard Ro members of the " Last Man's Club" whose mem that only a simple majority was Summer Play paigned on leftist platforms. After a flurry of debate the res it possible for the early non-read mans, Rock Island, as he arrives home Tuesday bers escaped almost unscathed in the derailm.nt. The It-cnd at the two-thirds mark Qlljlions offered by the Rev. D. L. requircd to decide the issue. As it ing colonists to find their way in from a trip west marred by the Missoula, Mont. - AP Wirephoto turned out, the victory margin ex seemed to favor Fernando Belaun Hal'bour of Dows were killed by the community, she points out. de TetTY of the Popular Action tabling them. ceeded the two-thirds majority. Thc American Civil War was the British Delegate Sir Patrick Dean Season Books Party, who never embraced the The one on health insurance first war extensively recorded by came into the assembly expecting Communists though openly support. propos.d that this be handled artists and photographers, Mrs. that the two-thirds majority would ed by them. through a voluntary program. McGarah writes. School Construction Boom be required. Bt'itish sources charg On the basis of some newspaPEr Go on Sale and radio and television r~ports , The other resolution charged the One early 19th Century Amer ed alterward lhe Africans resorted Kennedy Administration with par to an expediency that amounted to he was running ahead of the vet ican painter may have been the Season books for four world eran campaigner, Vielor Raul Ra· tisanship on the appointment of first mobil. trailer owner, she throwing away the rLlles. famous dramas to be presented be May Soon Settle into Slump Both Dean and U.S. Delegate ya de la Torre of Apra, who ran judges, favortism to certain seg not e s. William Sidney Mount ginning July 6 by the 1962 Sum as an anti-Communist Jeftist, and ments of the press nnd unwarrant "toured the countryside in a Adlai E. Stevenson warned that mer Repertory Company at SUI ed economic reprisals in the steel Ever sine. World War I I, Amer·struction this year was predicted Henee school boards and school to take up Southern Rhodesia the ex-dictatol' Gen. Manuel A. 0<1. korse-drawn contraption that had ican schools and colleges have Jasl week by the monthly educa superintendents are hesitant to go on sale Thursday. ria, who took a more central posi· situation. a stove, skylight and glass win now might worsen the situation in been scrambling to catch up on tional magazinc Overview. Its an propose new bond issues 'in large that African territory. Mail orders for the season books, tion. 'rhe North Iowa Conference of dow," she says. building enough ciassrooms and nual survey o[ 19,000 administra sums for fear of rejection. priced at $4 cach, are being ac With seven candidales in the the church also adopted a scries The assembly will open debate AL the beginning of Lhe 20th Cen· dormitories to house the huge crop tors in public and private schools The I BA report.d that the cepted now. Such orders should be field, it seemed unlikely, however. of other resolutions in the thit'd day Thursday on Southern Rhodesia, tm'y, art bcgan to reflect realistic of war babies. They're still strug- and colleges showed that more number of successful issues addressed to Ticket Reservation thal any candidate would win one· of its annuaJ mccting. where a white minol'ity rules over ordinary city life, the art course gling and they're still more than than $3.77 billion was spent on dropped from 1,189 in 1960 to 977 about three million Africans. Desk, East Lobby, Iowa Memorial lhird of the popular voles plus one It ren.wed opposition to the points oul. The artists in this group 127,000 schoolrooms behind, not to 9,324 buildings and additions in last year. Local di stricts tend to Asian and African nations have Union. required for election. The new Con sale of liquor by the drink, asked came to be known as the "ash can mention needed college buildings. 1961 while $375 million more went solve their spac. 'problems, in charged that a projected constitu The price of tickets for single gress would then elect the new for more strict control of key school" bccausc they turned to lhe Construction is way up now, even into furnishings and equipment for lieu of new buildl",s with such tion for the territory is designed admission for each of the plays president by July 28. clubs, recommended legislation sordid and seamy side of liCe. if the signposts of a slump are al. thcse buildings. makeshift solutions as larger to perpetuate control by he white will be $1.25. This price was list to permit local option on the sale ready visible, Dr, Archibald B. Shaw, editor The explosion of the first atomic class sizes, rent.d classroom minority. ed iltlCorrectly in the June Calen· T -of beer in taverns and liquor in By TERRY FERRER of Overview and former super· dar of Events as $1.75. Liberals Get Edge bomb over Hiroshima ushered in space and double sessions. si .state stores and called for meas· an era of "splash and splatter" in Herald Tribune News Service intendent of schools in Scarsdale, The second factor is that dis· Coupons in the seoson ticket book .,res to allow chemical tests on st American art, Mrs. McGarah con School and college construction N. Y., was among those who pre tricts are on their second, third or Finally! Sandburg may be exchanged for reserved In Italian Election sUSpicion of drunken driving. nl tinues. Out of this has grown Ab is booming. There is hardJy a dicted "a big slump" in 1963 fourth go-around in bond issues. seat tickets beginning June 27, the building. To Get Diploma ROME (,4') - The biggest gainers ., ,The conference also: stract Expressionism, America's campus uncongested by bulldozers "In the early 195Os," Dr. Shaw same day thal single·admission in Italy's weekend municipal elec· , " Urged increased lise of our ago u n i que contribution to modern and cranes, scarcely a big school "Up to 1958", he said , "there said, "many districts would pass GALESBURG, m. (,4') _ Carl tickets will go on sale. tion were right-of·center Liberals painting. was a steady flow upward of con· ricultural abundance Lo help feed district that is not talking about, issues and brag about their first SandbUl'g, Pulitzer Prize poet and On June 27, reserved-seat tickets who will have no part in the center· hungry peoples through Food for hoping for, planning or building a struction after the war. Then 1959 new school building in 20 years. historian, finally is going to get for all four shows may be obtained left national Government of Prem Peace or similar plans. school or an addition. In fact, edu look a drop partly because of an When you get around to the fourth a high school diploma. by mail, at the Reservation Desk ier Amintore Fanfani. Escapees Caught cational construction in 1962 may ticipation of Federal aid, which 1 .. Supported the "ideal of the time ... " Galesburg High School officials in the Union, or by telephoning The biggest losers percentage hit an all·lime peak o[ some $4 never came, ond now we're climb Peace Corps." COUNCIL BLUFFS IA'I - Two Thirdly, he said some districts decided Monday night to confer University Extension 4432. wise were die-hard Monarchists. billion. ing again." • Asked for cMlinued study of escapees from the Potlawattamie Dr. Shaw pinpointed the reasons are reaching the limits of their the diploma on Sandburg on his SU I students may obtain tickets Right after the Monarchists in But there are already signs that the advisibilily of recognizing Red County jail were found Tuesday for the rejections that have been bonded indebtedness. 85th birthday Jan. 6, 1963. without charge upon presenta' the loss column came Fanfani's China and termed lhe United Na the boom may become a slump, in a private home, together with plaguing many a school district. At any rate, 1962 may still be Sandburg finished eighth grade tion of their student identifica· Christian Democrats, who are al tions the present best hope for perhaps as early as 1963. School The Investment Bankers Associa· tbe biggesl year for new class- in Galesburg, then headed west to tion cards beginning June 27. lied with Democratic Socialists and refl• the son of the family and a 16- bond election results for 1961 nre peace. provals were only 68 per cent of rOoms, dormitories, science build- work in the wheat ficlds of Ne Plays which will be presented in Republicans in running the coun· pea now complete, they show a drop '. Deplored al'gumcnts that nu year-old girl. tion survey showed lhat 1961 ap ings, libraries and physicol educa· braska. rotation in the SUI Theatre from try. by more than haH in dollar value We clear armament is lhc best answer Officers said Roy Haskell Owens, lhe dollars proposed, while in 1960 tion buildings. One can only hope The white-haJred biographer of July 6-24 are Shakespeare's "Much Fanfani indicated he was not dis mel to the threat of war. against 1960. 26, of Manawa, and John Leroy approvals were as high as 81 per that the voters, tired of haphazard Lincoln has been aworded honor. Ado About Nothing," Moliere's appointed with the voting. He said bly • Proposed that a committee bc Inevitably the drop will be re cent of proposals_ school housing and bulging class- ary doelorates from many institu· "The Miser," Jean Giraudoux's the opposition parties "had made Barrett, 23, of Council Bluffs, to named to investigate the cffec nected sooner or later in curtailed "We have all seen the steadily rooms, will make a better record lions, including Y ale, Harvard, "The Madwoman of Chaillot' and it clear that their objective was jecl tiveness or racial integration at were unarmed and surrendered conslruction. increasing resistance of voters to tbis year in approving buildings for INorthwestern and Knox CoUege, Arthur Miller's "Death of a Sales· to mortify" his Government but the Jocal church level. without resistance. The eslimated $4 billion in con- higher taxes," Dr. Shaw said. the future. which absorbed Lombard. man." Lhey had failed. tior• nes pro the spa
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