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Get ,The End of a Long, Long Trail ski . • • o ons are conditioned for II Is silly for an)'. the champion of a better than the • Icolmpara,ble confer.

coached or had teams from e .p #I • Irar counlry and in the ambl. boy to win, be or West," he said. , AHorneys, only Iowa or Wis­ Student Leaders classified as a the coming Big I " Minnesota with ,. Congressmen must be reo with eVen Talk To Loveless a positlan other tcam By JIM DAVIES Speak Out 11.111 r... on ell) E~lIur WA HINGTON 1,1'1 _ ew mov(' Berger's char. "A spl!Cial es. ion of the legl lature will d finlt iy be callcd, prob. limed at avin G/ WiUiam S. Gi. " Why is it Jbly about Sept. I," Gov. lIerschei [.oveles told two SUI studen rll rd from trial by a Jopan . e college Friday, -:ourt den'lo!X'd Friday in Congr '5 day [ saw lII' s,lid h(' W'l. calling th!! legi lature tOGether for the pcciCic pur md In ~ accused soldier's home Irlll'lcrnan in the -' pose of providin for capital need. town, wearing seven of the tote Institutions, Rep, Jame A. Haley ID-Fla.l at various meets ! Bill Teeter, L2, president of the introduced a rc olution . kina thl' coUege football S I tudent CouncH, and Larry United Slate to rewn, Id r i German Paper highly controvcrsial agreemcnt to with a wrist Popofsky. A3 , vice'president, went let J pan try the Ottolwa, III . soi. toul~hd llwn scored lto D!! tololnes \0 talk with th a proCession· I O\'l'rnor and registe. SUI student' di r on II charae of fatally hoot· ,ng a Japan woman , Tells Progress concern over [.ovcle~ , recent veto The re~lution wouldn't b bind. of a General Assembly bill appro· ing on the government but would priating $16,059,000 for state In Ii· ('xpr th nliment of lh Hour. Of Theologians tulions. Girard, 21. aprciali I Sc. I~ c· The SllIt!! Bo rd of nell nll was cu d of cpu. in Ih dcath o( th Thr~c SUI thl'ologlans arc demo to r~cciv(' $tO,975,000 to admlni ter Japan woman on an I\rmy firine onstraling to Germ n audiences a l lowa's high r educational in mu· range la I Jan. 30. The I ue i religious application of a malhe tlons. whl'th r he hould be tried by U.S. matical law. according to a clip- SUI': . hare _ $3.739,200 _ was Army court m rtial or, a tilt' go\,· 'li ng [rom lhl' Hamburger Frem· to be u. ed for a new Law building, crnment greed earll('r Ihls week, enblatl which ju t reached the a Pharmacy building, and n oddl. by a Japan. court. I 'UI campu . lion to the Main Library. In Ottawa, a fund in Girard ' IX', , Th axiom' parol lei hnes are At th lime of the \'cto, thc Stu. half was started a a citizen com· ~t l Pbal0 straight lines which me t In thl.' ; d('nt Council regIStered a strong mittl"C piano d to ny to Washing· NEARLY 1,100 SUI STUDENTS completed their college careers Friday in Com· cher deliv~red the charge to the graduates and confarred the degrees. The Inlloit . As applied by a German I prote t and SUI Pre idrnt Virgil ton Monday with a prote. t to th(· mencement exercises in the Fieldhouse, Here they listen to the main speaker, proof positive - the diplomas - were distributed after tho ceremonies. journalist to ,the SUI Schooi of He· M. lIanchl'r and oth r University of. White Hou. () alnt the gon'rn· II i th I f II I m('nl's dl'cision, W, Howard Chase, a 1932 SUI graduate. Later, SUI President Virg il M. Han- g on' 111('5 0 our rc g ous Ifici Is eltpr . I'd d ep concrrn, President 1::1 nhow r told a orientation ml'ct in the in[nite, [.o1'Cll' . wa Interc ·tl'd In the neW8 confcrl.'nee 10 t W~ncday Thl' newspafl('r article r ports r a. on th student. come to . ce thi country would sc thol justice how Prof Robert Weich ICatho'l him since he [l.'lt it was th' Iii I· was done In Girard's co ' Breakthrough IUnion Money Used Iic l, Pror. George Forell IProtes· ialure who had failed the students At Camp Whittington, 'Japan Gi. Chase Tells Grads tnnll and Prof. Jo'r dcrich Borg '1 by not con idcrlnll the con :qu 'nco rard Friday d nied Jap n .• char. buhr IJewi h I stood sid by side I ell of pr lnting what thl! governor ges thaI he ('nticed Ull' wumun e Discovered in F G- I oe n a crowded Presbyterian Church C(lnsidercd an unworkablc taK bUl. scrap collector. Mrs. aka Sakal, In Hamburg recently to. explain I T!'Hcr aid it was Lovel as' veto 46, onLo the firing range belore Iir· Peace Is Deman drng of MS or I.r. 5, rnners the SUI program in Inter-re1igiou of the bill which lucused the stu· Ina a blank riOc cartridge from 0 Ca~se n truction. dents' attention on the subject of rcnad launcher. Girard laid the By JIM DAVIES I world on [lie basis of their econom· WASIJINGTON fA'! - A convicted pro~litlltr dl'~crib('d as thl' "girl It goes on to say that the Iowa Icapilal I!lCpcnditures and the unl· shooting was IIccid ntal »011, 'own City UII.. , ie seaworthiness Dnd credit-worthl- PHlLADELPHIA (A'I - A Russian friend" of Jaml!s G. Cross, international pre idl'nt of the Baker. Union, thl'ologians "rcprc ent professlon- versity's need for buiidlng fund, As Ih d bate rag d on In Con· A fundamental shift in our inter. nes~" and not on the, hypothetIcal born medical researcher announc· rcfu~ed to say Friday whelhcr Cross bl'at her up in a row over a dia aily lhelr faiths in an objectively Since official so urces limate gr and elsewhere ov~r thl' decl· Dational; diplomatic, and economic baSIS that we a~e bUYing thClr love cd Friday he has "100 fl('r cent mond ring, cicnLific and subjectively religiou ', that by anowlng the sale tax to r· slon to turn Girard over to Japan- policy is needed to "maintain and Cor us and their hatred for Cam· reasort to believe" a micro-organ· Testimony at a Senate investigation of th' union jumped to [.0 An· sense. The sludents have every op- turn to two fl('r cent, the stale will esc courts, II balLery of AIlll'ric(ln munism," ism she had isolated previously geles wilh statements by and about portunity to inrorm themselves 10 e 14 10 15 million dollar yearly attorneys sought to allay lhe cun · expand democracy and the dignity 00' f lti Ii' h ' If' d" d th t ' f "W H d Ch t Id More could be accomplished at IS the cause 0 mu p e sc crOSlS t e "glr nen - an a umon about confc~ion olher than their tn income, T~ter asked why lhe fu Ion OI'Cf wbo's who among COUll' ~~eanung stude~7::t SU;~ridOay less expense by these means, I (MS)' "goons" there beal up a 14-year. own, thu gaining a unique expcr· governor had vetoed the tax bill, \ e1. • morni ng. ,Chase said" lhan- by "the [~enelic ,Miss Rose, R. Ich~lson said the old boy. Rough Going ience - namely, that the tragic Lov I ss said h thought the tax "AU concernl'd loday announ~ 'd Chase president of Communica- current policy of attempting tOl dlscovery will permit researchl'rs Mrs, Kay Lower, a comely but separation of the religion mu t bill - as it stood - to be lnequit· they arc working toward a sln"ie lions C~unselors Inc New York meet Communist strength wherev. throughout the world to concen· nervous 26-year·old brunette with SUI Grad Gets Away- not necessarily cau e haired and abie for a number of reasons and goal - thc best interest of William In and a 1932 grad~ate ~f SUI, spok~ ~r"t he Comunists choose to display trate now on the immunization and a bloodsbol left eye. look the Fiftll 0 I 4 M'I oluarrels, but can givc ri e 10 reo lhat he lold the legislature thal he Girard as a rcpr' entativ!' of Ihe on "The Brink of Peace" at Com. It. cure of the disease, Amendment on whether she knows I n y I es ~fl('ct, veneration and iove." wouid veto the bill If it was pre. American GI In his rclation wilh mencement exercises in the Uni- He concluded by teHing the grad- As far back as 1951 , Miss [ehel- Cross and whether he beal her up, Alvin ~ush, Wellington, Kan ., Bargebuhr is quoted as saying. scnled Lo him in an unacceptable I the Army," a iawyer's staleJn nt versity Fieldhouse, uates they were assembled at an son said she had succeded in i60- But she said "I imagine so" ~h.o recPlv('d a dcgre~ from SUI "The Ulrce of us are tanding be. form. said. II added : SUI ,President Virgil lIf, Hancher extraordinary point in world bis· lating the organism - spirochaeta when asked if she had received L-nday, found Ihe gorng ~ hllil' [ore you as brothers. We beiong to. This turned out to be the case: "They have agrced Lo joIO forcel deliyered the traditional charge to tory, myelophthora - and later she an- money from Cross. Later she be. rough, shortly after graduation cer· leI her thanks to lhe fact lhat we however, and he said il pul him i~ I in presenting lhe petition - to lhe the graduates, "Whether you stand at the brink nounced she was doing it with reg· came more po itive, saying she emOllll's. Jre different." an undesirable predicam nt. I Supreme Court - for 8 writ of "Peace' in a volative world is as of a precipice or at the brink of u\arity, had received money from hipl, She Ru. h put hi s wife and baby into So far, the lhree have spoken at An earlier allorney·general's rul· habeas corpus ond olso to Ind '. ~emanding, exciting, a,nd challeng· peace," Chase said, "you have in Isolating the organism alive, she invoked the Fifth Amendmrnt when his car and hitch~d up lhe [amily' lhe Germ rshehn branch o[ the Ing hod declared that a seeLlon of I' fl('ndently pursue other channels DIg as war," Chase said, "and the your hands the instrument that said Friday at a news conference, asked what tile payments were for, trailer in preparation lor a trip to . ' h U ' [owa law giving lhe governor pow· ovallabie to their "oal." , waging of peace demands boldness, can change the destiny o[ Ule had permitted tests which enabled Albert Barclay Lestified lilat be. Wellington, UniverSity of Malllz, t e nlver· er to reduce or pro-rate appropria. Dayton I. Har~ lngton, a Wp. h· rision and a wiUingness to scrap world. her to determine that it was the fore he was fired as office manager About four mil('s west of here sity of Berlin and in Heidelberg, tion I'S unconstitutional. InKtOD aUorncy. dic.Lat d thtat '. The remalnd r of their itinerary t rt th out~o"? patterns of thought and "The instrument is dedicated cit. possible cause of multiple sclerosis, of Bakers Union Local '$1 in Los tile trailer broke ioose and over· Lovelc ~ said he [cil morally ment 0 repo crs III e pre ('nce acllon , , izenship, You must decide how to It aiso permItted development of a Angeles $35 a week went into a turned, The car remained upright will lakc them to Zurich Tuesday, re ponslbl to ofl('ratc the stale of tWO atlorncys [rom PCOTl~, til., , He told graduales lhat .they live I use it. A Illuttered decision will be skin tcst - similar to thal used for fund to' pay thugs, He said the and the Wilsons were not injured to Basel Wednc day, to Paris within its lacome and since the James 0 , Reynold Dn~ EI~lott B. In a world where "the eXIstence of lost. Announce your views in a tuberCUlosis _ to determine if a thugs beat up a boy named Ncw· But lhe trailer nnd belonging ac- Thursday and to Lyon June 16-17, I gislalurc was unable to come up Young, Harrington said E~rl J, life itself depend on the sympa· loud clear voice," person has multiple sclerosis. I some and a "colored genUeman," cumulated during the last several with a workable bill to raise mollCY Carroll and Joseph ~' . RobiN on, thetic interrelationships between Mr. Hancher, in his charge to The nexl step, ~he told a news and burned up a c~r, years were demolished, OK AF PROJECTS for tate appropriations. he was New York atlornl'Y5. JOllied In II. peopie o[ the world," I h to I conference is [or other researchers I And, Barclay saId. $75 a week ' t Girard had planned to marry 11 Chase said that ill order to main- the gradu~tes, we corned, t em , 'd' f h b sent to the iocal by the internation- APPROVE FOREIGN AID WASHlNGTON I.fI - The House force.d III cut down on sta e ex· fl('lite, freckled Japanc girl. lIaru lain peace, the "have" nations of the alumm of the UDlv~rslty, to C,hcCk her flD lOgs. I t ey su '[1' f "M C "I WASlIINGTON IN\ The Senate Armed Service Committee Friday oenditures In the oniy way Ceas· (Candy ) Sueyama, lasl March "You IYI'II fl'nd" lIe said "that slal)tiate them, and Miss lchelson a , und,on \Val s or k r, .foss Egi I~ f ' Relatio' ns C-omm'lttee ap the world must eilher maintain "'d "[ th ' k th 'n " ' t' t crlen so 0 spea - ,,,rs SIC erlcgn . gave tenlative aprovel to 26 Air able.. '" She has strongly d fend 'd him, The eapllal appropriations bill and has prayed daily before a Bud. military and economic supremacy, everytbing. i more complicatedI" salcan ,begin to10 seekcy a WI,way ofsC;len Immun. IS s , Ka y L'owe r,.. 'Iproved Friday night a $3 .637 ,110 ,- Force proJ'ects in a military public ~ r aid the "have not" nations to than It looks to Il:ost peop e, , , .' Robert F. Kennedy, coun 01 Cor 000 fori~gn aid program, cut only works aulhorization bill, including LOVELESS- dhlst aitar that "Bill will be clear· develop their resOurccs, Mr, lIan~her said the gr~duatc s :~m1t agalllst the disease and cur· the special Senate committee in. $227,300,000 below President EI. $248,000 Cor the Sioux City, Iowa (Colltinued on PClgc 3) cd:' id 1._ I . He proposed lhal our own gov. have, acqUired the foundatIOns o[ g. " , vestigaling improper activities of senhower's rtoquesL. municip'al airport. She ha sa t"" looting wa . an ernment ael on a policy of "calm learning, but stili Ilave much to Olher sCientists preVIOusly had labor and management asked Mrs -.______---- accidcnt and that Girard could not appraisal of economic and social ie~rn, , seen spirochaeta myelophth?ra ?ut Lower whether she h~d told Lo C I e kill anyone, need in under-develbped countries. There IS not one among you none had bee,n ~ble to keep It alive Angeles police thaL "Cross came ongratu atlons to She has blamed the opposition fOllowed by reasonable practical who could nat go Into the smaliest or pre ,erve It 111 ~ culture. That to your room and beat you up" in a Grad -1932 Socialist party in Japan for the action to help the countries them· Iowa town and lea~n a very grea,~ was MISS fchelson s fIrst step. an altercation over a diamond ring. outcry over his case. Iflves correct that nced," deal ~rom some wise mall there, Before switching to Los Angeles , "Somebody is always waiting to He said we must "conduct our he said. FBI P the Senate probers turned up testi· make two friends become enem· diploma lie and political relation· "It is our hope that your brief resses mOllY that bakery own('rs were les," she said recenUy. ships with the countries of the years h ?~e hav~ prepared you for pressured inl:'o contributing to a Girard's Army buddie have de· f • the realities 01 hCe - that YOll have KI·II er Hun t testimonial dinner which amassed scribed him as a good soldier. Ja· the discipline, the ima~i~ativen~ss, some $60,000 for the kingpin of the pane e who know him have been Ike Lauds Efforts th~ energy and the S~lfIt. reqUired OMAHA IA'! - The FBI and local Bakers Union in New York City. quoted as saying he was a nice to master Ils complicatIOns and police forcl's pressed the search One bakpr in fl('rson and others man who liked Japane people. In Saratoga Rescue distraction ," Friday for a man known as John in a£[idavils, said they chipped in Little altention was paid to lile Mr, Hancher e~prcsscd the hope David Phillips, 32, sought ror the $50 to $200 Cor licket for a dinner case at first. Americans in Japan EN RO UTE. WITH, ~ISENHOW lhat the students, days amlds~ the falal shooting of pretty, 21-year· I [or Max Kralstein. international who watched it Crom the tart have ERIA'I - PreSident Eisenhower sa- b~au~~ and st,ability o[ Ule Umvcl'- oid Rita Kappcnman, vice.president, last June, or ad~ in been quoted as saying the situalion IUled a dramatic halr·successfui ' sity have given you a sen e of 0 I I' 'd PI 'ii' a souvenir journai oUl o[ fear that might have been avoided had th air ·sea resclle ofl('rallon' 0t U' SI Ioya It y t0 a. U litla 'IS I1I8'le5'''' t an d rnaU la hpo d Icef' sald .11 IpSI t' ap- omethlDg" might happen .If they Army not clammed uP. or had atomic.ago naval power Friqay, best in human knowiedge, human paren y, a nel.l s 01 re a I~es balked, quickly summoned a court·martial and then haded hack to Washllig. experience and human aspiration," Ini Cacrlilsle , Ark'd' nKatnSatS City, A short litUe man with skimpy to determine Girard's re pollsibil· Ion "May the spirit of this Univer· 1\ 0.; lIeago , an C 1'01 , • h ' d h' h th' . " ' - , " .," graYing arr an a Ig 10 VOIce, ily. The PreSident took oU [rom Slty, jlnd Its love of Tr~th and ,1 he ,FBI 81d PhIlllp~, very pos· Kralstein p<'ered through his horn. Ifayporl Navai Base, Fla., in hi Beauty and Goodness, abide with sibly IS not hIS name, rimm~ glas es and said he didn't plane Columbine III after an over- you," he concluded, "and 'May the Omaha agent·m-charge Joseph see anything wrong with such din­ The Weather night cruise aboard the 60,000 ton Lord watch between me and thee, Thornton said . inilial checks led ners. IUpercarricr Saratoga, while we are absenl one from the to tile conclusion thaI the narpe Kennedy asked Kralslcin: Shortly before he ieft it was an·, other' ," used by the man ~ere might be an "Do you know of anyone el e IIOunced th at one o[ two Navy jet I alias, who got $60,000 - plus a dinner? " . Cluudy pilots downed at ea during the I Swimming Classes Start "We have to consider him arm· "You see Mr. Kennrdy," KI·al. , night had been [ound dead. The • cd and dangerous," Thornton said. slein replied in a deprecating tone, and olher was rescued alive and in Monday at City Pool ~1rs, Kappenmon, an expectant "you're strcssing the amount again, "~ery good" condition. . Red Cross swimming classes will mother, was shot May 29 in the I say it is Ule principle and noUling Cool The Presidl'nt was on the Sara· begin Monday at the pool In City bedroom . o( Ihe tiny basement else." loea's nag bridge shortly a,fter 8:30 Park, The first scssion wi!! extend apartment whl're she and her den- A wave of laughter rolled through I m, when word came that the first Lhrough July 6, lat student husband, Keith, lived, the big Senate caucuroom. Iowa City had cloudy skies Fri· or the mi ssing pilots had been There are till piaces available Phi Hips was charged with mur· "Would you answer my ques- day and light rain and the Weath· lived. for studenls at all ability le\'cls der Thursday afler police found a tion'?" Kennedy inquired, er Bureau predicls more of the As the search for the s cond man f[roln non·swimmers to interml'd· shirt which they said belonged to "I wouldn'l know," lhe wilness same Cor today, High wiil be 75 lI~nt forwa rd, Mr, EI ellhowcr con· iatc, thollgh choice o[ hours is him. Thl' garment was minus a an wered, degrees and the low will be 50 Itatuiated the task (otc;e lind Cl\~ ijmited, buLton, Officers said a button Kralstein didn't deny thal oul of lUI Ph, •• to ~ . P1'es~ a "prayerful ,hope" Lh~t " lteelstration will be acorptcd al matching IhosE' on the shirt was lh(' dinner h(' got a $1,447 portrait TWENTY.FIVE YEARS after receiving his own de.r" for SUI, W. How.rd Cha .., left, I, cOftlr.tul.t­ Continued cool weather and the second pil!)t lIIould l tJ fOlIl~hl llieJflIIcli Mundll.y ,jI nd 1'ue day be, round benealh Mrs, Kappenman 's of himself, a $1,650 fur coat for his .d by SUI President Virgil M. Hancher on his .ddress to some 1,100 19S7 'r.... t ... t C_ partly cloudy skies are expected alive and wt'iI. , '~'IIIWl 'l lhilll(l 11 :15 ,I,ill, I Ilody. Wifl', Md ncarly $38,000 in c;] ~ h, Olel1t exen:ise. Friday. Chase's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H, Ctlas. of Ames, join in the ~",ratvl.tlon.1 Saturday with highs' in lhe 70·!I.

.I ' Palle 2- THE DAILY, 10WAN-lo•• City, I•. -Setvruy, Juno ., 1'57 'That Guy'JI Run A""rican Comics Out of Business' Management Na't'f ,Graduations ... 1 . The Daily Iowon Lt writ­ pointed by the pruitlem of ... ------.. --~--.... ~ ten and edited by rtruhnfl the unioerBity_ The Iowan', Course Opens and Is governed by • board editorial polley, therefore, II ,,, of floe student trusteu elect­ not an erpresBion of SUI ad­ ed by the student body and ministration polley or opin­ 'Here Monday . four faculty trustee, ap- Ion in any partleullJr, The 18th annual Summer Man. \ agement Course - two weeks of I concentraled study on how best to i 'Unrecognized' Difficulty coordinate the powers of men, rna· chines and materials - will open It b comes more nnd more difficult for the nited States I Monday at SUI. to maintain it polic)' of non-recognition of the Far Eastern na· i James E. Stewart. manager of the Iowa Cily ofrice of the Iowa·. tion of 600 million people. Illinois Gas & Electric Co .. is one When Britain announced last week that she was lifting her • of the 52 indu trial engineers and ; supervisors registered for lhe embargo of non·strategic goods to Communi. t China and its course. Firms from II states and at lIite , the U.S. could only comment "mo t disappointing." Canada will be represented. The course is designed primar. 1t certainly must have been di appointing when last week ily for industry's younger evecu· I in Paris, out of the 15 nations .in the voluntary committee on ! tives and is under lhe direction coordination of selective embargo on Red China, CHI CO~'1, 10f J. Wayne Deegan, cilairman of ' . the SUI Department of Mechanical only one - Turkey - supported the U.S. in i tenee that the Engineering. "China differential" be maintained. Participants will select one of four divisions for specialized study : Reaction of Britain's National nion of \fanufacturers was technical methods of managemenl that the decision "sho\lld open wide and profitable markets to engineering. control melhods for I British e.\ports;' and that "the re trietions arc but out·of·date management, problems of produc., lion supervision, and analysis of diplomatic consideration." work methods, molion, and lime. GRADUATION DAY at Great Lakes, Ill inois is the last step of ,.. ncloubteclly a contributing factor to the recel'lt move has They will all ha ve three hours oC cruit training. The impressive Saturday morning reviews wi'" tlleu· lecture and practice daily in prob· I)('en :1 ft·eling on the part of Britain that in order to maintain sands of American bluejackets will 1M part of the homecoming And lems o( human communications Open House this summer at the Naval Training Center. The review prestige she must follow n mqre U.S.· independent policy. Fnls­ and will hear several special lee· is open to the public. lrated in the Egyptian venture, she has now provided a way for tures designed ' to broaden back· grounds and points of view. other nations to follow her lead in changing China po)jcy. SpeCial lectures will include "The ~ rany will, for France, Cermany, Jall.1n and others also International Situation," by Prof. Navy Plans 'Salute to Iowa' live to a great extent by foreign tr,lde and are eager to begin Vernon Van Dyke, SUI Department of Political Science; "Tension Con· negotiations with Communist China. trol," by Prof.' Frank D. Sills. SUI How much the move was political and how much eco­ Distribut.d by King Fealures Syndical. Department of Physical Erucalion ; At Great Lakes August 12-18 nomic, is given some insight by the fact thilt only one per cent and "Disasler," by Dr. Sidney Zii·, The State of [olVa will be honored and Navy officials at graduation. fren , SUI Prof. of Surgery. by the U.S. Navy this summer duro of Britain's .foreign trade will be comprised o[ goods labeled Great Lakes Navy Homecoming ing the world's largest homecom­ is a summer·long event and will 'Red China. Also Commllnist China is ubw pledged to Russia ing at the world's largest naval be celebrated from May 27 through for better than 80 per cent of its- trade. training center. Oct. 7. During this time, perman· It is apparent that an effort to stimulate deb:lte on a more A "Salute to Iowa" will lake ent exhibits depicting the Navy's Iowa University place at Great Lakes Navy Home· progress during the last half cen· lenient .S.·China policy has been going on in the U.S. since coming during the week of Aug. 12 tury and focused on new nuclear last winter. through Aug. 18. weapons and missiles will be on ",.. The Foreign Policy Association, which supplies debating The thousands of Iowans who display. AJum Roundup , Briefs Naval air demonstrations and t- themes and background materials on U.S. Foreign policy to have trained at Great Lakes arc James F. FOl(, a g,aduatc of extended an open in vitation to visit guided tours or the installation wiU c1\1hs and discus ion groups acro 's the nation, listed among its DES MOfNES I!PI - Herschel be featured weekly. ' , Loveless Friday proclaimed June I SUI. has been appoinled assistant lheir service Alma Mater. .. 1957 topics the problem: Should the U.S. Deal With Red China? 14 as Flag day. lie called on 10. director of public rehtions and ad· Thc "seabag alumni" of the I ..... The topic has been among the most popular on th list. wans to "lake special pains and vertising for The Chase Manhat­ Hawkeye state are part of lhe al· Doctors attend tan Bank. Two leading monthly magazines, 1Iarpers and the Atlalltic, efforts to educate ourselves on the most two million men and women WSUI Schedule reunion at SUI hislory of our nag and the impor· For lhe [last four years 1\1r. Fox who have received training th ere in SATURDAY. JUNt: A by one of Uleir ,. hav(> devoted full length feature articles to recognizing Red tance it has played in OUI' nation ." has been in charge of public rela· the past forty·six years. ' 8:00 MornIng Chapel today's . 8:15 News • - Chin:l, amI the New Rep llblic published an enti.re iss\le dealing ~ Loveless also designated lhe first tions for the agricultural chemical Saturday, Aug. 17. will be the 8:30 MornIng Serenade doctors and recently i've difiCovered thal the 'another room to see if this discov· with the problem. The consen us of the articles seemed to be: week in June as Public Servants divisions of the Olin MatJlieson high point of ceremonies honoring 9:15 The Bookshelf Dr. Otto L. Week. besl way 10 beal lhe summer heat ~ry ',Vas the exception or thl'. l:ule. Chemical Corp. Iowa's contribution to the Navy - 10:009:43 ChaU,n,.Voice of Agriculturo graduated from th(' smart mOVl' is re ognition. is to lie down in a cool place and In t~IS room the class was dlVldpd Fox is a native of Cedar Rapids. and the nation. A special all.lowa 11:00 Family Album Meidcine 25 years . . . . up Inlo two bIg, before the game 1t :3O Recital Hall ••" Washington Democrat Warren C. Magnuson, announcing DES MOINES lA'I- E. O. Fenton, recruit company will graduate thal 12:00 Rhythm Rambles !he University as founder of the American Institute lhmk of the glor exemplified by huddles . . . they were discussing 'that his special Senate Commerce Subcommittee would study late fall. and wll __an think of fall plays with lhe person in the nLiddle -- . , morning in a review at the train· 12 :30 New. and reminded of Business here, was honored Fri· Three SUI staH members w. III I'ng cCllter. 12 :45 One 111.,,'. Opinion alumni thal a opening U.S.·Hed China trade, declared, "We can't keep 600 without thinking _of football. and who was either the quarterback 1:00 E~r on the Midwest day night at the AlB Aillmni Assn. attend the ~Ist annual conv~nlion Th e recruits will arrive at Greal 1 :30 Books In the M.kln, duty" as a milljon people bellind an economic 13amboo Cuhain forevCl: dinner. Fenlon founded the school who can think oD foolball WiUlout or the only studious student in the of ~he Amerl~an College Public R~. Lakes about June 17. They will ! : ~ ~eu:\t~~r S~::lnlng sarily doing in 1921 and retired May I. thinking of last ~~ason's fantastic I gi rouP' t'l b k lations assncmlton June 24 to 27 111 begin nine weeks of training which 5:00 StorIes 'N Stuff just because we don't like the politics of their government." Fenlon is a native of Plano and n t he 1ast row wo tal ae s were Omaha 5:30 News Dr .. Bettag, as .::. I . will transform them into Navy 5:45 Sportstlme linois Two possible effects of the trade move arc in evidenc('. a graduate o[ Centerville High Iowa team. and tlll:!se ,thoughts are mapping out strategy. They are Gordon B. Strayer, edi· mcn.o.warsmen. 6:00 Dl,mer Hour . S 6:55 News fare, is rC""UJlSlUl(, .1 ..... By helping Communist China become less independent of Hus· School. as rIWeshmg as a draught of finally the referet and linemen lor of News an d InformatIon erv· Their training will climax when 7:00 Operl~ PM sia, ~Jao may decide to take a more "Tito-IiJce" road. freshly chilled, delicious iowa city came in to see that the game was ice; Kenneth Donelson. assistant to lhcy pass in revi"w before State 9:45 News and Spor\s .. , DES MOINES IM-Frank Haugh, water. I played according to the rules. the director of university relations ; _____~. ____. __ I_O_:OO_ S[_G_N_OF_F______On the otlwr hand, 14 million friendly, largely pro· alion· 62 •. suffered possible broken ribs i really love football . . . didn 't all during the test it seemed some and Joseph W. Brown , scientific alist Chinese and entire non·Communist Asia may be won to FrIday when he was allacked by , I rId d k editor for univeI sity relations. I t bo h h ·d. o. miss a game la t year . . . would 0 t le stu ents wante to ta e the idea that the only answer to Asian poverty is totalitarianism. wo. y~, woe Sat wer~ m . .. over one of the jobs of the refcree Strayer will give a report on G~eneral Notices lesting hIS 15.y~ar.old granddaugh. h~v e made [t out to callforma ex· . . . they kept flipping COiDS . . . Where do Formosa ami Chiang fit into this picture? What "Home Town Tapes for Bagpipers Ileneral Nouco. mull oe reCe'!veG at The DaUy Io"an otflce. Room 101, C­ ter and her friends on theIr way cept i cut my paw on a broken I and the moans all through the Abrpad." • mUn1caUonl Center. DY 8 I.m. for pubUclltlon Ibt (0110 wIn' mom In.. '!\If mull be typed 'Or le8lbly wrltt.n Ind IiIIned: they will n~t be •• " Olec! IIr "Can we can their status be? That remains another problematical facet home from ~chool. beer bollle someone had thought· class were worse than a real game. teleDhone. Tlle Dat17 10", ... r ...."' •• the rJ&h1 to ecIIt aU "_eral Noll .... those resl~on:sibiliU ~ of the Far East situation. . Haugh said one of tbe boys beat lcssly thrown on 'capital street. so, early In the test lwo or three peo. Donelson and Browv will serve him with a heavy club: The boys. i figurcd i couldn't make the walk. pIe Iropped back lwenty yards to on committees. COMMENCEMENT ANNOUNCE. PLAY NITE - The facilities of by voting MENTS - Candidates for Degrees 16 and 11, we\'e tak~n m~o custody all these things were passing the back door and punled ... this the Fieldhouse will be available observing lhe ~nd turned over to Juvemle aulhor· through my mind as i accidentally move of uller frustration coupled A mid·summer event at SUI will who ordered commencement an during the summer session begin· Mosl doclors Lette~ To The Editor nouncements may pick up their or· ning June 11. Mixed recreational high taxes and lUes. wandered into a classroom in Iwith the moaning and cllmplaining be the July 29·30 School Building ders at the Alumni House, across activities each Tuesday and Friday _I h II d f I' I' --- ', schaeffer hall where a final exam were just. too much for my weak Conference devoled to planning blank politicians" Reooer C a enge or Re iglous Exc usivlty .CEI?AR RAPIDS lA'I- Cedar Ra· , was about lo be laken. 10 and be. old canine stomach .. . i had to better junior and senior high school from the Union. night from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Fam· conslructive about ily night will be Wednesday from TO TH E EDITOR : to decide to do or not to do any. PI~S firemen had a busy half hour Ihold i wasn't the only one with leave. plants. INTERIM LIBRARY HOURS - 7:15 to 9:15 during which children Dr. Bettag said I 100, as well as Miss Miller lIet· thing on this earth without [irst Fnday afternoon. foolball on the brain. even with the i think that maybe we really are Featured speaker will be Walter Desk open 8 a.m. oC faculty, starr, and stude nt body is self·sufficient tel's _ May 311, have been watch· considering the matter and its al· . They were called to put out a Is train of final week, the students pulling away from oLd line free Cocking, a native Iowan who has June 8 - 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. may attend if accompanied by par· a person ing reports of the progress of the ternalives and choosing among fIre In a basemenl lock e ~ at a were thinking of pasL football team and equal democratic tradilions been editor of School Executive Saturday - Reserve desk closed, ents. Admission will be by facul· material Prophet from Carolina. and, al· them. And in a matter as vitally downtown drug store. WhIle that actions and are on the road to socialism magazine since 1943. oUler des ks closed - 11:50 a.m. ty, staff or student J.D. card. nol be · d f di . I t th O th I l' f fire was still burning.. another . ' . . .. we now even have communal be found wilh th oug h I f111 no cause or ssen· 'lmpor an as IS. e eva ua Ion 0 st arted at McKinley High School IthiS sudden revelallon .happened h . Cocking is the author or co· Jun. 9 - CLOSED. tion with most of lo~iss Miller's fhe question must be I'ery exhaus· where police said vandals tossed when a group of four SU I students c eatmg. au.t~or 0(. four books on school ad· he said. and it June 10, 11 - 7:30 a.m.,S p.m. VETERANS _ Each Public LSII if shared with slatemenls concerning lhe good it've and painstaking. fire crackers in lhe auditorium, .. , al.1 With ears b~azlng red. . . PALATE PIRATE mlmst~atlo~ . He has been dean of June 12 - 7:30 a.m.·2 a.m. 550 It· VA F reverend she made one which me· If you actually l)elieve that no igniting a stage curtain. stealthily sneaked mto the room BREMERTON, Wash. lA'I _ How- the U~lverslty of Georgl~ an.d stale Departmental libraries will post ve eran mus slg~ a orm olhers. hours on doors. 7·1996a to cover IllS attendan ce Thi applies eq thinks will bear examination. "The ' ne can be wisely critical of Chris· A third fire was then reported in befor e the In trllclor ~howed up. ard E. Guest oC Tacoma, a worker \ commISSioner of education 111 Ten· frol11 May 1 through June 5. A riage union, th ~ non·spiritual man, one who has not anily, a spiritual thing, until and the motor of a passenger elevator ~hey form ed a t·formalion. one sat at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard nessee. . . form will be available to each in· exeprJenced a spirilual re·birth in not before he has been received in a downtown department store. In th\) row ah.ead. of the other three here has half of his false teeth I Dr. Cocklllg WIll speak on EDUCATIONAL PLACEMENT­ United States All lhose who arc registered in the dividual on or after the day of his Jesus Christ, is simply not qual· into the Christian comunity through and kept askmg If the others knew b k . , I"Trends in the Design of L~rge last final examination. The form lions, Dr. Hied to make critical evalu ations re·birth in Jesus Christ, and if it KEOKUK lA'I _ A Keokuk native, qUeSlio~l C, .or if they could see or I a~ue~ra;~~t his slore-bought up. Group Sp1\Ces for Sec 0 n dar y Educational Placement Office and may be obtained at the Veteran's "Recogn· who wish notifications oC openings of .spiritual things. .. Even with is true that making the decision 10 Dayton M. Harrington, 40. is one SOID{'thlng hke that. pers and lowers when a seagull I Schools, ." "Trends in the D"esign Service reception desk on days sej{·sufficient , my so mew hal foggy grasp of the joiD or not to join the Christian al P R d during the summer should send of the attorneys seeking to bar i guess it was a mUltiple cheal slvobpcd down and made off with O"f SpeCI urpose ooms, an when the hall window is closed, others who seek basic tenets of the Christian legend community involves a highly criti- Se d CI L b any change of address to that of· O((ice hours are 8:30 a.m. to 12 he said . "And to I can percieve a serious defect in cal evaluation of all the issues in. trial of Army S.C. William S. Gi· test. Guest's lunch sack, in which he . con ary as.sro~~ns as a ora· fice before leaving the campus. we must recognize the preceeding statement. volved, then it seems to me that rard of Ottawa, Ill., by a Japanese another group fcame in. andb se ttled h had put his false teeth. tones for Lcarmng. This may pe done by postcard or noon. and 1 to 4 :30 p.m. on week· ' court in the same ormation. ut I en A fellow workman found one· days and 9 a.m to 12 noon on Sat· self·interes t and It is my understanding, l\Iliss Mil· we have one br the olher of two . by leaving a memorandum at the di sclnline are the Harrl'ngton the son of 1\fr and sent oUl a wing back to make a Iialf o[ the set on the roof of one At t B d f D' t urday June 1, 1957. ler, that in order to be saved and embarrassing situations before us. , . . a recen oar 0 Irec ors Placement Office. cnls of common received into tbe Lord's household Either all the Christians that Mrs. J. M. Harrington. is a gradu· split T. there was dissension in of the shops at the yard. Only meeting, Dean Louis C. Zopf, SUI mon good . ate of St Peter 11 1 RE or whatever, the penilent must I'er lived were not true Christians . ' 's High School Ilere the ranks. tile gUl'lty gull knol"sY wllere the C0 ege 0f Ph armacy, was honore d VETERANS - Any veteran w 10 SELECTIVE S E R V ICE• • make himself subservient to the since they had not been born in and the SUI School of Law. i then' wandered down the hall !o other half is. by being elected into a Fellowship has used Public Law 550 benefits MINDER - Before the close of the "A nd whalever cause. it follows th Holy Spirit. promise to make obei· ~esus Christ before lhey became ,t . in the American College o[ Apothe· for Second Semester, 1956·57, and present session, all students desir· must accept indi vic sance 10 the diety for ever anon Christians, lhey were not qualified W Id W·d 10 ,,, S IUSI A caries. " who docs not plan returning to ing deferment for the next sea· ity in and for collet and make his life conform to the to make the critical evaluation of The ACA is an association con· campus for the 1957·58 school year, demic year should: 1. Write to or I e pen easoD on ' j "You and I s h ~ Chri tian way. Now you said, did this spiritual thing, Christianity, - sisting of pharmacists whose pri· ~s u~ged t? v.!sit the Veterans S~rv. their local draft board requesting causo with l'1'('ry you not. that someone who has not necessary to decide whether or not , mary function is the handling oC Ice In Umverslty Hall for adVIse· deferrment and stating that Se- 'had a spiritual re·birth in Jesus to become Christian. and hence 8y GEORGE DIXON appropriations cuts, his people all USIA man in Taipei. The att3ck drugs and prescriptions . Its pur. ! ment .regarding time. limitations on lecti ve Service Form 109 will be thinking American . Christ is 'not qualified to make a could not become Christian); or KIn, r ..tur.. yndl .. t. over the universe have been won· ; must have slruck the victim as a pose is the advancement of Public I pursull of hIS educatIOnal program. mailed from the Office of the Ref' critical evaluation of spiritual else you assumed your present po. WASHINGTON, D.C. _ I was dering if they'll be cut too. and decided novelty. USIA staffers are Health through the dissemination of istrar within 30 days of the close things, but I am quite sure that sition in the matter too hastily. and Igelling ready to go to Europe, ~hou ldn'l hal'e to worry about be· more accustomed to filling waste the lales t pharmaceutical and med. BABY SITTING - The Univer· of the current academic year. 2. the Christian dogma says that one : in order that the ark of Christianity so I thought I would drop around mg scragged. .,. baskets than being conked with ical information to its Fellows. sity Cooperative Baby Silting Liberal Arts, Commerce. Engineer· cannot be re·born in Christ unlil he Inot become shi pw~ecked upon one . to the United Slates Information ~ Intend to l'ISlt Vo~ce (l( ~m. them. League will be handled by Mrs. lng. Law, Nursing. and Graduate -does all these things. stubborn rock standing in the mid· I Agency and see if it had any in Cor· ~flca and other USIA InstallatIOns The affair here, of course, was. -- Mary Ann Rafakjo from June 6 to students must also complete 8 Very well then, you will have to die of the spiritual ocean you will mation. I heard low moans. which 111 England. Germany and France, loo shocking for levity. A newly Five members of th~ SUI College June 12. Call 9606 if a sitter or "Request for Selective Service agree that deciding whether or not have to remove your bit of Illogic turned out to be the' Voice of Am· but if anybody comes at me with married Voice of America an- of Pharma~y staff WIll attend ,the Information about joining the l Form 109" blank in the Office of to do all of these things Involl'es from the heretofore unruffled ex. erica crying in aguish. The voicers I a shiv, rod. or bludgeon, I am nouncer·translator named Zurab annual ~emll1ar o( the Iowa Society League is desired. the Registrar. , an evaluation o( them and their ef· panse of the Christian pond. sobbed that it seemed as if all the going to write a sliff lettcr home to Abdusbell called upon Miss Edi th of HospItal PharmaCIsts Sunday at __ fect, q highly critical evaluation. J.me. H.c!te., AI world was cel.ebraling Be Beastly Imy congr.essman. .. Loui e Hough, a stylish private Drake Universit~. Des Moines. PHD. "TooL" EXAMS The ",'ltR5I1jl • • It is si mply imposs ible for anyone RR ND. 4 To USIA Week. !Blast It, 1 forgot: I lIve In the secretary. and she pumped six bul· Those .i'ho will attend are .Wil . "tool" examination in Business ",~9c11>1 oll.c.al . . , District of Columbia and. we dis· lets into him . Ham Tester, Vern F. ThudlUl11, Statistics will be given in Room ~ .' I} SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1957 In additIon to b~lI1.g cut by Co~. , enfranchised second class citizens But the thing that stung Dire.. t· Harold J. Black. David Howard 223 beginning at 1 p.m. on Mon . ~· ,~ DAILY ------.------I~ress Irom $113 mlillon ,to ,90 mIl· don 't have a congressman!) or Larson most in Be Beastly To and Donald Ebersman. day, June 17. Students expecting 't!J MEMIIEIl Dial 4191 If you do nol reetlve hon, and denounced as ~ mad But I am going to cry out with USIA Week was relatively minor. h d" d h . 1 k lh' . t' h Id ,.".~ BULLETIN I AUDIT II UIlBAII your Dally Iowan by 1:30 a.m. The spendthrift of the taxpayer s m~n · the Voice of America crying in the It was a passing refrrencc by T u IUm. Instructor an os pita to ta e IS examma Ion s ou no· ...... • ' I OF Dally Iowan . Irell ter. Hays object d especially to Classified Iowa' SLEEPINC ROO" tor ont Powell 's stalement that Negro \'ot­ Advertising Rates odull.. DI.I S-O'I". BUY MERRY p.w. cock.... er are asking, "Why end Penn­ SL'[ Ph·o(o ylvania and Ohio Democrats to One Da, ...... Be a Word SVITI: nt ",om with kllchtn .nd bath. IAMES£ kmene (or I&le. Dial ... APAII'n.IENT for ... mmt •. 41$T. AJ" FOUR GENERATIONS o,f Stewarts fro m Fairfi eld look part in Commen" ment and alumni r. union Congress if they must take th eir Two Days ...... 10C a Word print enlf~n~ .. Cradu,l. 1ft n 8... 0 . 6-11 Jor 101, .. 0.'.7. ..14 12-18 activities Friday at the State University of Iowa wh en brothers Robert. left , and James Stewart were ord rs from middle men who erve Three Days ...... 12c a Word 11-11 Autos for Sale ONE .nd 1...... _'" fuml hod aparl· .warded M.D. degree5. Afte r watch ing his sons rece ive their degrees, Dr. W. D. St. w. rt. standing, m n 130 00 and '45.00 Adul DI at graduation. the White Citizen ' Councils in Mis- Fout Days ...... He a Word LARC!! room. Suitable for two Pr l\·.I~ U714. 1- 14 Homecoming center. atten ded the 25th reun ion of his 1932 SUI College of Dentistry gr.duating clan. while his father, i sippi and Alabama ?" Dr. W. L. Stewart. seated, center, attended the 50th reunion of his 1907 graduating d au Irom the SU I Five Days ...... 15c a Word bolh. CI \0 1l000pll.l . • 7. f-H "~?;'~ .. ~ Ford Ru."n.bl •. Pho.~. LOV&LY lbr.. room a.,.,tnltnl, coupl. event and will Hays sa id Democratic represen-, May 27 through College of Medi cine. On hand for the festivitie s, although not yet willing to be quoted on the question Ten Days ...... 20C a Word ' ROOiiS' for m n. Clo. In 115 Norlh or thlld. .100 b """nJ .~rtm .nl of how they'll choose between medicine or denti stry, were Dr. James Stewart's two son.: flvl,wllk· Italives from Pennsylvania and CllnlOi Phon~ 833IL 11-11 Personal loonl Two m.n PTI ..I ., bolll.,.10 In 14 time, perman· Ohio were voting Cor civil rights One Month ...... 39c a Word ___' _ N. Joh"",n. 14Ill. "I' the Navy's old David. and Douglas, who is "nearly two." 'f!!N 'lUd,nl. Un.n. fUml.h.... lIa -...,.... legislation last year while Powell DEADLINE I P!!R~ONAL LOANS on 1)l!<'wrtl..... A'l"!'ltACTtVE fum. he1.1 I·, Dr. Otto L. Beltag, who w~s : Dr. Bettag said he did not be. hi s work in founding Piney Woods Ithis summer. Day camps begin Ulis (Minimum Charge SOC) m.. Inn . Nlc.. end cool GID r. Chlln:h. ..II , ROO. f lumlohf'd .plrtmfhl ... 10' graduated from SUI's Coll ege of l lieve that all physicians should en· School for Negro children in Mis· weekend for Scouts In the 3·county _ • J BEDROOM hou .,aUable Imme. North Capitol. Adul I7S00. Phon. Meidcine 25 years ago, returned to ter the fields of politics or educa· sissippi. Cardinal Council area. DIAL MEN - UMMER Tile 81 ~JO N. dlll.\JI. Coupl .... Ith I chlldr.n or 4 5~B . ' -I I Clinton .nd 214 N . Capllnl. Cookl", bo~l . Phon. 1-,::.0:\. 1-. the UniverSity as a guest speaker tion. "Bu t [ do believe." he sa id , I Mae Anders who receiv('d the Brownie day camp sessions in lIr1vll,.".. ho ... ~n . PI"",. ~848. 7.1 TWO room luml hed .parlm..,t, '1 .. , lost ond Found 7-1 and reminded his fellow medical I "th at there are many mem bers of B.A. degree fr~m SUI In 1907, read City Park are scheduled for 10 M!!N ,Iudont.. 2 ."Tlcll" doubl. alumni thaL a doctor who "does his Our profession who are supremely the citation which said "We rec. a.m. to 3 p.m .. June 10. 11. 13 lind rooms ""l1h adJolnlnc IIvlnc rnom nnd TWO lpartmenla lor June lilt. r.tfh~ 4191 $40.1'10 pt, n LOST br e 0 c __ ties may call Mrs. Robert Herring, ---- ..;;..!;...------Carburetors be found with and through olhers, 434.728,000 bushels. TillS compared was the only bill he could \'eto, he camp commillee chairman. [or STUDENT for part-time lanllor work. he said, and it can only be hel d With 388,O2;l,OOO bushels from the explained, because all the other further information. 2lP~~Y ,J~&hrn~~: Larew comp"'8~8 GENERATORS STARTERS 1955 Briggs & Stralton Motors - Each Public La" if shared with and protected by 1 crop stored to the same dale. bills were operational _ necessary Three representatives from Car. -----. must sign a VA Form cover his attendance othe~s. . , a K:::e ar~~n half of the amount for day to day expenses of govern- dinal Council will attend a Senior CAREER IN SELLING Pyramid Services 1 through June 5. A . ThiS a~phes cqally to the mar· was stored in Illinoi s and Iowa . the men!. Scout and Leader Conference at Permanent pOSition for the man 621 S. Dubuqut> Diai 5723 avail able to each in· fla?e U11Ion , th". labor llI:lOn. the lop producing states. The amount When Loveless said he resorted Excelsior Springs, Mo .• June 17 to with sales experience 01' back. T. Thr. Fr. 8-m after the day of his ~fl1ted States Ot th U11Itcd Na· in Illinois was 129020 000 bu!hels to the veto only because there was 21. They are: Mrs. Doyle o'Rear' I' ground in mee ting til public. The (arm 11~? ' Dr. ]~ eltog added. and in Iowa 107,56i,ooo'. Minnesota no way.to raise the money needed board member and se nior leader ; Car nece sary. A high income is TYPEWRITERS at tile Veteran's ReCflc,gmZltng that wte . ~re ~olhl ,was third with 62.446.000 bushels. for capital Improvements , Teeter and Betsy Funke and Janet Robert· waiting for some ambitious and desk on days se If,su IClen, we mus lOID WI mentioned Senate FHe No. 4. son , Senior Girl Scouts. enthusiastic man . Many of our • REPAIRS window is closed. others who seek Ihe same things, " This was a bill designed lo raise Cardinal Council Girl Scouts will representatives have been with • SAL ES are 8:30 a.m. to 12 he said. "And.to join with them, HOARY RELIC I (unds for improvements by hiking also make two long trips this sum. our company over 10 years, • RENTALS to 4:30 p.m. on week· we ~llst recog11lze that enlightened POTEAU, Okla . 1M - Th ere's an I up student tuition and fees. mer; one to Washington, D.C.. and Employers representative will Autho,i18d • Royal to 12 noon on Sat· selC'1l1terest and thoughtful self· ordinance here that states lhat any· I Loveless sa id he did not (eel one to Colorado Springs, Colo. interview and hire on Mon· Dealer 1. 1957. disc i ~lin e are lhe e~sentia l ingredi· one can be fined (or "crossing any thal lhe students should be forced day, June 10 from 10 a. m. cnts of common action for the com· I bridge fa tel' than a walk. " to bear the cost o( capital improve. to 4 p.m. Portables Standa,ds S E R V I C·E RE· mon good. Tile statute goes back to horse ments and that he had no sympa· Music Course Open Iowa State Wikel the close of tile "And whatever the common and buggy days but is still on the thy for the bill. " al\ students desir· cause, it follows that each so joined ' books. Another one showed that He also said he would have vee For Grade, High Employment Service Typewriter Co for the next aca· must accept individual rcs ponsibil· the citizens back in the old days toed Rep. Whitney' s bill if it had Burlington and Gilbert Streets • Prindle, you've been EATING agai n!" should: 1. Write to ity in and for collective action. were wary of the machine age. Il come before him instead of being Schoof Students Fri Sa.j).8 Dial 8-1051 23 E. Washingtor ) draft board reques ting hY" and I shuc 0 common is~il l again~ci~~w~RII ga. willidrawn. Th~ bill would have 1_~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ___~ _ _ ~~~L~~S.~8-~2~n~~~~ _____~_ ~.J ~~ _____~ __~_~_~~ and stating that Se· cause with (\vcry other d cent· oline after dark, or store it under- limited eJ1l'oI1 ment in slate schools. The annual 8.week, All-City In- " Form 109 will be thinking American. It is our com· ground . Loveless said that the capital im· strumental Music Course for ele- the Office of the Reg· .------provements are only temporarily mentary and high school students 30 days of the close delayed and that he plans to ask oC Iowa City and surrounding com· academic year. Z. Busy, Busy Man the special session for exactly munities will begin Wednesday at Enginecr' what he asked before - $10 million SU I and continue through Aug. 7. and Graduale fo r the Board o[ Regents to be Instructors are members of the com plete a raised by biennial bo nd issues. summer session University Music &> I" l'thlfl Service University officials have esll· Department. in the Office of mated that beca use of the veto, F 'd f . 1 '11 I co nstruction will M delayed Cor up ees pal or pri vate essons WI "'I also permit pupils to pa rticipate in to a year. ensemble rehearsals. Registration Loveless said that if the special will take place Mo nday at 9 a.m. official session will approve his plan and in South Music Hall . No guarantee DAILY appropriate the money in the man· can be given thllt students seeking ncr he asks, construction will be La register 'lifter that date will be held up only two or three months. admitted to the course. "I'm a contractor In Ottumwa, I . and I know." he said. St~d e nt s e nr o ll c ~ ID !he summer Teeter said the gover nor's ma n. session of the Um.v~rs lt y E l em~~ . ner was [riendly and sincere and tary SchOOl are eligible to parbcl- , JUM • that he seemed pleased that SUI pate In the c: n s~mb l es and. upon .. By M 0 R T . - Sil ver Jubllee students were concerned about payment of pnvate lesson fees.' Main Lounge, IOIIa . their un iversity and the problems !"lor. Inclu~e both. ense mble and - All·Alumni cor· , co nfronting both the state govern· IOdl vldulil IDstructlOn . Lounge. Iowa ment and the school. Quali (jed students of high school I Teeter and Popofsky asked Love. age will be welcome in lhe Uni ve r­ less if he thought a student lobby sit)' music organizations made up would be of any use in registering primarily oCo lder p~ l;lyers, but th.ey student opinion of legislati ve mat· must be enrolled 10 the AII-Clty ters. Music Course or for individual in- The governor applied in the af· struction from University teachers fi rmsti ve and also advised them or in the Unive rsity Experimental 8tH Ph oto to contact the state representatives Schools to be eligible. be published 1ft ALLAH FISHER. who r. ceived both M.D. • nd Ph.D. degr". Friday from their own districts when Uley Further ·informatlon may be had Of campul club from SUI , Is . hown In on. of the labor.lori .. at the University Medi. are home and expl ain their unlver· by calling Laverne Winter meyer , column eacA cal Center. Dr. Fi. her wUI Intern at ,St. L'uk.i. Methodist HOlpltal sity's problems. Howard Robertson, Mrs. Him ic In his hom • •city of Cedar ~.p i d. lor onl Ylllr beginning In July. Tell them. he sa id . that SUI's Voxman, and C~ li a Eckey of City Wdn.) ,.lIowl\19 his intern ship, Dr. Flsh, r plan • • Ither 10 ttlch In a coU.g. fees are third highest In the Bi g High School , or Will iam Tietze of of IMdlc lM or 10 conduct rtlurch for I phlrmlctlltlCl1 firm. Ten. University High School...... 4-THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowl City, ' • .-S.turday, June I, 1m . .. Sox Lose -But- Keep 5 Game Lead as Detroit Blasts Both Safel Dodgers Trim Redlegsl Lead I Former 4ger Says Yankees For To One-Half Game on 3 Hits He Used 'Pep Pills' SAN FRANCISCO (A'J - Bruno BROOKLYN t.fI - Righthander Roger Craig, claiming his first com· Banducci, fo rmer all·pro guard for 4 Runs in 7th plete game since last July, checked Cincinnati on just Ulrce hils for a 'I the San Francisco 4gers, said Fri· 6·3 Brooklyn victory Friday night as the second place Dodgers trimmed day that U. S. "layers in the Cana· DETROIT 1.4'1 - The Detroit Ti· ti'e skidding Redlegs' National League I ad to a half game. di an Leagu. including himself, gcrs rallied for four runs in the I f , Don Zimmer batted in a pair used o·called "pep pills" in games seventh inning Friday night and of Dodger runs, with a double and when he was 'in that league two whipped the New York Yankee B home run and Charlie Neal years ago. 6-3, preserving a brilliant pitching Ask Dodgers 11 performance by righthander Jim banged three of the Brooks' hits. Banducci's statement was made Bunning. The crowd oC 43,474 was The Redlegs, who now hal'e lost in connection with charges by the the largest of the season in either six of their last 10, paired two AMA that stich pills were used in league. To Look at hits - Johnny Temple's double and amateur and professional sports. Bunning, lifted for a pinch bat· Bob Thurman's single - with a hI used them myself when I was ter in the middle of !he rally, walk and sacrifice for two runs with Toronto," Banducci told news. struck out 10 Yankees and yield· and a 2·1 lead in the third inning. FUTURITY \.OI'lTENDER Bill men . "All of the fellows who came But Craig didn't allow another hit ed just [jve hits in seven innings. Chennault, Kansas City, Mo., from the Uniled Stales did. He walked only two in recording BOSTON IM-The Boston Herald unUl Ed Bailey walloped his loth I who was named I.M.C.A. " Rook· his fifth triumph again t a single says the Brookl~n.. Dodgers ~re ' home run over the right lield i. of the Year" at the close of They Iclt they had to in order to sclback. , studying the POSSibility of moving scoreboard with one out in the the 1956 season, placed the No. 4 play lhe entire game as was ex· Second baseman Frank Bolling to Greater Boston as a result of an ninth. Tom Randol Offenhauser in the pected of them up there." dropped a bases-loaded single in· invitation by a Massachusetts state Craig struck out four , walked I power packed field of big.car to right field off reliefer Bob Grim AP WlrepbDto senator. four in evening his record at 2·2. stars getting set for the third an· to bring home the tying and decid· FRONT ENQ OF DOUBLE STEAL - Dal. Long, Chicago Cub. first b.uman, s.nds up • spray of dull The Herald, In a byline story by Clndnnalt ...... OO~ ')00 001.-3 nual Hawkeye Futurity speedway ing runs. The Tigers rapped Bob as he slidel into third bas, as the front runner of • doubl. ,te.1 in the ,.cond Inning a.ainst 1f •• sports editor Ed Costello says that Brooklyn .... :...... 011 200 IIx-6 classic at the Iowa State Fair I Home runs - Brooklyn. Walker. Zlm ~ thompson Grim and starter Don Larsen for Phillies here tonight. The play started with L.. Walls on first .nd Long on second, bitter Jack Littrell Sen. John E. Powers m·Boston) m.. ; Clndnnnll, Bailey. track Sunday. Paced by Bobby four safeties and took advantage struck out and both runners moved with the pitch. Phlll!., third bauman Willi. Jonel took the invited Brooklyn president Walter * * * Grim, LM.C.A. champion, the furniture mart of two walks, throw from catcher Stan Lopata. F. O'Malley "to bring his Dodgers B 5 p. te 0 drivers will begin time trials at . New York ...... 100 ooa 00II-3 to Boston instead 01 moving them "Where smart bllyers Oclroll ...... DID 001 40x- 8 raves , Ira s 12 p.m. with the first race start· II Home run. - New York. Mantle. De­ and a half of the Red Sox. to Los Angeles." PITTSBURGH 1m - Veteran ing at 2:30 p.m. The 100 laps fllmish their hom es" t l'OlI . Porter. I 'C t t R t t' I Kan as City drove Boston start· The story says that Powers talk· Warren Spahn huried his second will be split Into five 10.lap heats nons an e rea; and the SO·lap Futurity, New Used * * * er Willard Nixon from the mound ed with O'Malley Thursday and 1 s~u.tout of the seas~n Friday nigl~t , Orioles 3, Sox 2 in the second inning with a 4-run F II D·· J' urged him not to move the Dodgers gIVIng up seven hIts as ·the Mil· outburst thal WOII the game. U to the West Coast "until you have 1 ~aukee Braves defeated the PiUs· UNPAINTED CHICAGO 1m - Baltimore's Ori· mer eClslons ones thoroughly explored the Boston sit'l burgh Pirates 5·0. Spahn was NEW- oles nipped the league·leading Smith, who also had a singl e for uaUon ." backed up by a nine·hit attack Chicago While Sox, 3·2 Friday a perlect night. sct lhe offensive CHICAGO 1m - Former middleweight champion Gene Fullmer, al· The Herald said that Powers , which included two doubles by fURNITURE 5295. Gilbert Street night on Tito Francona's run· h~l~~ for the Athletics who got 12 though fighting in constant retreat, won a unanimous 10·round decision brought up the prospect of the IJoe Adcock in his only official scoring single In the 11th inning. over Ralph ('ilgerl Jones at the Chicago Stadium Friday night. state or metropolitan district com. tnps to the plate. fOR SALE 1--- The loss didn't affect Chi<;ago's Wally Burnette turned in his Jones, a 9·5 underdog, continually pressed Fullmer, but the West Desk $17.50 Israel five.game lead since , the second· first route.going performance of Utah, toughie came roaring oil the - . mission "ere~ting a stadium a' The victory pu~le~ the fourth· Lowe. ' PrJu. In low' en, III: DRIVE-IN • Cbe.' of Drawers '. ,,,. .'/)/. _ _ .J.L_ place New York Yankees dropped th season to gain the victory. ropes or out of the cerners to short .way outsld.e hBoston, on Ro~te place Braves ~o wltl.lln. two .games I".,' /~ I • Lawn Furniture . a 6·3 decision at Detroit. Boston . . _ . . .010 000 020-3 pound out his victory. G If A d 128 highway, . WIt ~mple parking of Jeague·leadlOg ClOcl1lnatJ. • Childre n', Desk. · WI·t S Krm ... City ...... 140 000 Olx-G Th k kd • th 0 rou n space and Iram serVJce to the park Spahn was aided by three dou· • Spl.. C.blnet. Bo b Nleman, ex· u e ox, Home run - Knn ••• City, Slnllh. ere were no noc owns III e gates" bl J b t h d'd 't d I • Bird House. - opened the 11th with a double to ¥- ¥- ¥ nationally·televised bout, but Jones Id '. e pays u e I ~ nee muc I Phone 4218 or St. TONITE! right center o{[ Sox starter and W h 11 T. b 7 went down twice on slips and Full· The Wo r ~!it:;or~:adr~~g Sen Powers' help as a~1 of the .hlt ~ he /Io:ve~ J. D. Milfer loser, Jack Harshman, who suf- as ,n e I mer once. idea O'Malley promjs~d not to were slOg es. In wmnmg IS SIXt LONDON IA'I - fered his second loss against four CLEVELAND IA'I- L t. I Referee Jocy White voted for CHANTILLY F 181 _ C I mak~ any final decision . .. until ga~e agall~t three d~feats, the FATS DOMINO ship of its own under victOrl:S. . . Wa hington broke out otS7'~ at~: Fullmer, ~~-46, i.n the Illinois "5- Ken Smith, ~ ~~~~~alant pifot , he had investigated all angles 01 ~~~ t~al:~ :nae~ struc out two And Joe Turner in Three hostile Arab Al Pllarclk ran for Nieman and with four runs- three unearned _ point must scormg system. ~udge from Orlando Fla celebrated hls the Boston possibility. . - are on the gulf stayed at second a Gus Triandos in the eighth Inning Friday night Howard Walsh saw It for Fullmer, 37th birthday 'Frid~y with two vic. "At the same lime O'Malley ad- .Bob Purkey was ~harged With "SHAKE, RATTLE flied to rig.ht. Francona then to win 1]-7 over the Cleveland In. 48-43, and judge Fr,snk Clark voted tories that placed him in Ule final milled, 'I'd love to c~me to Boston. h~s fo~rth defeat agamst as many dumped a smgle along the left dians who now have lost five 49-44. The AP had It 46-45 for Full· round 01 the French International I've always thought the territory vlctorl~s. He was rac~cd. for two AND ROCK" r Id r I k k ' tl . . g mer. ' . ' runs 10 the second mnmg The Ie me 0 noe 10 Ie wmnlll straight, t~eir longest string of Amateur Championship. big enough for two teams.' " Braves scored three more r~ns in ~~PLUS;;:::;- ~ Co·urt.F ==== ~~I~imor...... 100 000 DID 01 setbacks thiS season. 10;tU~s 3:ni~~~~ei~~0~~tje Fi~l~h~~ A weekend golfer, stationed at Th~1 Bra~cs ~oved from Boston the seventh off reliefer Roy Face. Cedar Rapids, Iowa MARLA ENGLISH ChlcalO ...... 000 0001 100 00 Rocky Colavito hit two home . f'f h d k ' k Fountainbleau, France, Smith will to Ml wau ee m 1953. . __ Milwa ukee ...... 020 000 300-5 in * * * runs for the Indians, and Milt Bol· same rmg on a 1 t roun noc· meet Henri de Lamaze of Paris, IPIU sburlh ...... 000 000 004}-0 SATURDAY I 6 B 3 ling contributed one to Washing. out by Sugar Ray Robinson: Full· who has won this tournament the of lhe 8th green Friday to pro· * * * "RUNAWAY Women J A S ,OSOX ton's 16·hit attack against six mer weighed 161 lind Jone~ , 157. last three years in a row and t t hid £t t d f "Boy Meets Girl Nite" Ph·ll· 1 C b 0 II KANSAS CITY 1m _ Catcher Hal Tribe hurlers. seven times in all. The fact that ~~ th~~d e~adj~s e~G~o ~I~:~P~O~ ' lieS, u S JACK PAYNE DAUGHTERS Smith hit a home run and two Thc deciding run was scored by HERB RECUPERATING Chantilly is the Frenchman's home ship. PHILADELPH1A 1m - Rookie L=:;::::;;;;;- ~y Milit doubles Friday night as the Kan· Roy Sievers, who I d of[ the Herb Score obscrv~d his 24th course didn't seem to bother Smith Wiffy oC St. Clair, Mich., shol Jack Sanford, pitching a three· and His 14 Ambassadors PLUS~~ sa City Athletics defeated the eighth with a double. He went birthday quieLly Friday and an· at all . a one-over·par 71 on her second hitler ana slriking out 13, mowed , COMING FRIDAY-JUNE 14 illT111S BIG BONUS ROCK" ROLL Boslon Red Sox 6·3 in the opener to third on a ground·out and nounced he 'll be "disappoirited" if "I'm' looking forward to another round over the shOTt, but demand· down the Chicago Cubs 1-0 Friday ~ AND 110RROR l'nOGRA~l LeRoy Van Dyke (l) Freddie Martin in o[ a four·game series with fifth scored when shortstop Larry hc 's not back pitching baseballs round of golf," he said. The Air iog Churchill Valley course. That I' ni ght, enabling the pJace in the American League at Raines mutled Bolling's grounder. before the season's over. . Force flyer and the 38·year-old gave her a 36·hole total of 139 Phillies to keep pace with Brook· THE AUCTIONEER II "MUSIC BY MARTIN" stake. . Washlng\On ...... 03 1 001 2400-11 The strikeout king of. the Cleve· French internationalist will play after an opening 68 and a four Iyn . The Dodgers dcfeated Icague· . (2) King Sisters, Gaylords & Harmonlcats in The viclo~y mov~d . Ihe slxlh CI~~~~~'dru~~ _" wAshin:'~.31 i~l,;g: land . I~dians itS HrecuJ?Ctrating 'Mfrdom 36 holes Saturday ov r the par 72, strOke margin over , leading Cincinnati 6·3, shavi ng the ~~;=~;;~~r=1 1 "STRICTLY INFORMAL" place Athlelics to wlthm a game : Ieve la"d. Colavito 2. , eye injUries a agers own, " 6,100·yard layout. who challenged her up to the last Rcdlcgs tead to a half game. The 1 I (3) Feature Length Hit .. , four holes. Phil's lone run came on a fourth r., ! 1~ '. (tJ ~ II 'WHEN GAN:;LAN~TRIKES' AKRON, Ohio (A'J _ Tomy Bolt, Another stroke back at 144 inning sacri[jce fly by Chico Fer· ~_ •• ~ • __ _ the veteran !irebrand, and youth. were Marlene Bauer Hagge, the nandez, scoring Will ie Jones. OVER THE WEEKEND [ul , mild·mannered Dow Finster· tiny defending champion, and 1t was the second shutout for SEE FOR YOURSELF-THE wald fired th.eir second consecutive youthful Joyee Ziske o[ Water· Sanlord, fire·balling righthander, LIVES IN THE * * * sub.par rounds Friday to lead at lord, Wis. , who matched Wiffy's who now boasts a '·1 record. He , ADOLESCENT DRIVE·IN THEATRE the end of the second round of 71 on Friday's second round. walked four. I JUNGLE OF the $22,000 rourlll annual Rubber . In contrast to Thursday's open· Recently recalled Dave Hillman , AMERICAI STARTS SUNDAY City Open golf tournament. mg round when four players broke who was Ii£ted in the eighth for a I U.,., They were deadlocked at 135, par ~nd the old course recor~, .no Cub pinchhitter, gave ~p only I n6.~~_J seven under par, a stroke ahead one In the FIeld ?f 26 fe~mme Jour Ms, stl'll~k out five and 1 AII\C of Gay Brewer Jr. of Cincinnati, pros broke C~urchlll Valley s. par 1 walked three. !lIS s~cond loss, he a ...... John Pott of Shreveport, La ., and of 36·34·70 ~r1~ay . Only Manlynn has ye.t . to wm thl year. Turk I AJ,Ia , Walker Inman Jr. of Bolton, Mass. 1~mlth of Wlchlt~, Kan ., equalled Lawn flDl shed lhe game: I MOORE, HUGO HAAS Bolt added a 68 to his opening It for a 146 tota . :hlc'/lo ...... 000 000 000-<1 - AND - Philadelphia " ...... 000 100 OOx - l 1 TEENAGERS 67. Finsterwald, a native 01 Ath· CHICAGO IA'I _ The U.S. Gall * * * I ens, Ohio, but playing from Te., d . questa, Fla., reversed Bolt's score, Assn. ruled Friday that National I Amateur champion Car s 5, Giants 3 g~tling a 67 Friday after opening had violated "rules of amateur NEW YORK IA'! _ Del Ennis de. wllh a 68. status" and placed him on proba· livered a two·run homer in the , of Latrobe, Pa., tion for one year. 11th inning - his first hit of the ~~~~~===~;E=~ turned in the tournament's best After a day·long meeting at the game - to bring the St Cardinals round so far as he scored six Western Golf Assn. headquarters 1a 5·3 victory over the New York - DOORS OPEN 1:15- , bJrdies for a 66, which moved him in Suburban Golf, Ill., the USGA's Gianls Friday night. The firth I Into sixth place with 137. executive committee cross-examin· place Card, who have won JO of ed him of the penalty which ex· their last 14 games, now are within (.1'.'1;1- PI'ITSBURGH (A'J - Freckled· tends through May 5, 1958. 4 ~ games of the National League ~IMONDAY" NOW THRU TUESDAY face Wlffy Smith, playing emo· Joseph Dey, USGA exeeutil'e di· lead. 2-FIRST RUN HITS tionless and almost errorless golf, rector, announced that Ward had Jackson won his seventh , but holed a SO·foot chip from the edge accepted unauthorized expenses. Forrut l\hrl Wallace Check T needed Lloyd Merritl's relief help . Tucker Blanchard Ford when Red Schoendeinst led of( the READY FOR BIG ONE • - By Alan Maver lith with the seventh Giant hit. IISTAGECOACH In. ~ flY; Merritt got Willie !\fays to hit TO FURYII OMAH A fm - Po into a force out, but then walked lOught to learn , Hank Sauer before Daryl Spencer I Phjlii~s , hit into a game·ending doublepJay DAVID VIRGINIA Kappenman , a Yes, only one medium completely - the third of the night by the I BRIAN GREY I!8lit before th e slayir Cards. IIACCUSED Patrolman Donald St. Louis ...... ,, 00 1 002 000 02-5 talled a prowler call New York .. ... 002 001 000 00-3 u .Iff. Home runs - New York , Sauer. St. OF MURDER lure Mrs, Kappenmc Covers the University Market .•• [.oull, Ennis. ------If8r where the car "1'10 OF 6Ot.F'S I Dozens of li ps weI' "/~($esr NAI1E~, IUed in connection w DOORS OPEN 1:15 P.M.- anti that medium is The Daily Iowan II06A" ANt> SHeAPI Maiors I - Penman case . Two de AN&J I"" 10 Sioux City, Iowa, 8f~r "O(J~NE~ tllT\an de cribed as a "II! U.S, OPEN, 1'biUips. (J5()AUY PItOV,O' S~~~I!~~~Erd 1STARTS TO·DAY W;::e~~ay" Mrs . Kappcnll1an i./NK5 II/S"o/?y Chicago ...... 3'i' I~' .~g~ ' G.~ T~E SCHOOt TEACHER AND THE MOBSTERS! death the morning of I eye~Y ,jUliE New York . .... , . 27 19 .587 P, , M·e;; ... ,M&8CNTS -- - 2011\ CfHTU.HO~ apartment where she D etro it .•••• 25 23 521 8 JEAN PAUL ANTHONY """'It Deborah Robert band 'Ii ved. 8£}/ \ ~5~~~nd :'::':.:: ~ ~ :~~~ Ig", SIMMONS' DOU GLAS· FRANCIOSA When you want to sell merchandise, you havt K.n.... City .... 21 26 .441 II', '" HOtJAN, BalUmor ...... 20 Z6 .435 12 ~o COULD--- BE- I KER to tell your prospective customers about it. And Wllo'p Washington ...... 17 33 .340 17 I .&.n.&.i:> The Wea' se FlltS1 NATIONAL LEAGUE "FHE NIGHT . If. L. l'ct. 0 ·8 . ___ ' NCTNPMAqrorr--- $-1IMe Cincinnati ...... 28 Ii .017 _ "';;"';"';"__ :';';"':;"';"~;"';";"';"--' __-. when your prospective customers are University h'1/(NER I~ Brooklyn. .•... . 27 17 .614 h PLUS COLOR CARTOON Philadelphia .. . .. 2a II .009 .'''1 - IfE CAME Milwaukee .. ... 26 19 .~ 7a. "FLEBUS" students, the one sure way to tell All of them 51. Loul ...... 23 21 .~23 4',' 1#/?O(j6# At' New york ...... 20 28 .417 9' , INV~/rN~S~, Piltsburgh ...... 15 31 .326 \3', SPECIAL about it is to advertise in their. own newspaper, C.c. I" ( ~c~~~.' .... , 13 29 .310 13' ~ "Walter Winch,1I Party" 1'~UOo, .Jt/He .....-- .. The Daily Iowan. If you want-the extra business 1$ 1"0 loS. , Texas After 3d Title ~==~ the student market can give you, Call 4191 and OMAHA IM-The University oC Cloudy ski eR and s1 Texas is after an unprecedented «em, POuible thund rstol" *AA1 'Ends third championship in the NCAA ..n 0 W'• Monday' 'uther prediction fa take advantage of the services The Daily Iowan SN£).f), I college baSeball world series open· ~ay. The temperatl peRIIAP5 ing here tOday. C.Mn.IAScoPl U t ,1"'ILOl 'Jit. IUW the Iuw 80 's and offers you. .,IIE Connecticut gets the first crack l'Impanied by hi gh h 5/fEArfSr at the Longhorns. They lead of! I Light rain settled a 60t.H/? 1'1110 the series at 10 a.m. I yesterday. Low temp. NEYE/{ IYoil At 1 p.m. Penn Slate plays FloI" IS degree and the I rllf eVENr ida State, California is paired with degrees. Colorado Stale at 5 p.m. and at I I. The po ibility of r: 7 p.m. In wa Slul l' nn t! olrc Dtll11l' hnue throu gh Wcdn play. '-_~ __.. ___ " IJ;Irlly cloudy sk I£'s t~pc;ra!ure change. , .