Serving the SI. ~ The Weather University of Iowa COOl" with ...... ,. aN Campul and ntUretl thaMl8sbe_n loda, e&tWHd thllllllu- Iowa City bo"...... tar.. ,. . Blah at owan 104a, . : ..... sa. a ..... '!bunda,.. 7.; 1_. IS.

Iowa City, Iowa, Friday. Ju.ne 20, 1952 - Vol. 86, No. 184 I 200 Expected Here 'Congress Canoot Compel Me For Stuttering Meet Nearly 200 speech pathologists. sludents and parents are expected to attend the conlerenct!. on stut­ ioering La be held at SUI today and SUI Workshop To Use T~H Law,' Truman Says Saturday. • The conference, "Twenty-Five Years of Stuttering Research and Its Clinical Application," will be In Management open to the public, and will fea­ Wins $12,000 on 7O-Cent Bet Silent About Next Step ture discussions by the coun try's LONDON (A') - Three nUmMCI, 7-1-24, .re the num~r' on th first speech pathologist, Lee Ed­ To Open Today racec rd of thne winnlnr borse•• t the .ucot track ThursdllY which ward Travis, and three ot his In Solution 01 Deadlock won $12,059.40 for II little man In a blue ,ull who bet 10 nt50 rly pupils. Travis, presently dl- Four wage and salary stabiliza­ B\lt the litlle man did not .how up to cl im his wlnninls. Th W ASlUNGTON (A') -Presld nt TrUm n took th position Thurs­ tion authorities will tackle prob­ manaler or the tot.aliutor walled tOr ntarly an hour ftu the llUt day th.t congre cannot compel him to seek a Tart-Hartley Injune­ lems and Questions posed by more 111~ had been , and tht'll closed down the machine. lion to slop tlte steel trike. He said that even If be dId so, the 450,000 than 125 persons attending the The Utile man In the blue .Illt, the onl1 one of 19,145 bettOl'J to CIO strike mllht not obey a back-to-work coun order. openine session of SUI's Labor­ pick the day's Ascot treble has nine days In whJch to claim hill wln­ The President said, In response Manaeetnent conference in the nlnp. tD a question, that use of the Tatt­ house chamber ot Old Co pliO I at Hartley Act has bet'n under con­ 9 a.m. today. Ideratlon all alon&", but Indicllted The tour-man panel will in­ he i still l'xtremely relu tant to clude MlIrvln M. Schmidt, Des Striking Union Living Cost Invoke the law he hal r peatedly Moines, Industry member of the denounced. regional wage stabilization board He s Id the Jlrlke I bccomin, at Kansas City; Luther M. Slink­ AgreestoMove Nears Peak more and mo~ serious, and will .rfect e\'ery Indu try In the coun­ ard, labor member of Ihe regional WASHINGTON rJP) - The east of try unl pJoductlon Is resumed. rector or the speech and hearing WSB; Louis M. Solomon, vice­ livia, II mea W'ed by th ,0"­ But he was .11 nt on his next ~linic at the University ot South­ chairman and public memb r of Defense Steel ernment, Thursday crept cl~ to mo\'e. He ho asked con ere . for ern California, received his train­ the regional WSB, and James D. the nil-tim pe k et lut Janu- power to seize Ihe Industry but ing at SUI and was the first di­ Marshall. Wa shlneton, D.C., In­ PITTSBURGH (.4') - The trlJl- .ry. has b n turn d down. rector of the Iowa speech clinic. dustry member of the construction Inll CIO United St lworkers dls- Rlaln, tood and rt'nt costi The lenate hal requl'·t d him to Jollnson To Participate Industry stabilization commission. patched orders Thursd y to local boosted th l.teat Index, co\' rln, U.l' the TaCt-Hartley Act, which Wendell Johnson, director ot Sponsored by the university's union officials to co-operate ....1th price for the monlh ended 1 Y provide tor court injunction. to e sur speech clinic and one of bureau of labor and management, company ex uti\'es In mo,·lnl I~, to 189 per ~nt of the 1935-39 top .uch trik for 80 day', nCl Travis' first stuttering students, the two-day conterence will a Iso d fense-vH I 5t I Into th hll1ldl . vera,e. La t Janu ry It r ached Ih house Is expected to follow \Viii also participate in thc two­ reature a study of safety in in­ or th military. 189.1 per cent, fell sh rply III da y confcrcnce. dustry. W. A. Eggert. chief psy­ Ovid J. McDon Id, eretory- February, and start d clJmbln, aJ T-R I Prrmi Ive The three pupils that will par­ chologist, Lumbermens Mutual Tafts Arrive at GOP Dinner tre surer oC the teelworker, ',lIln In t reh. But Trumiln aid conlr ss can't clpate In discussions with TraviS Casualty company, Chicago, TIl., tel ,raphed USW tocals to pas Til n w lillure,' published by tell him whilt to do. Th law I lire Charles Van Riper, dlreclor will speak on "Sellin, the Satety EN. ROBERT A. TAFT plUfl1 a. hllnd on tM arm 01 hia In .lId d fen material throullh pickel Ih bur au of labor stati Ii.: , pcrmb.lv lind not mand tory, he qf the speech clinic at Western Program" at 1 :30 p.m. wife as the), arrived a& the Republican nalorial comm.1lw dlnnu line'. He acted aner ree Ivl~ , an automatic two-cent Should Raise, ~nld. H • dd d that he Is pr uy Michigan college of education; In Wa bJllI'ton. The Ohlo nalor. caA)dhtal.e 'or Ihe Republican Ito\'ernment u..t or wareholl. hourI wag boost tor 1,250,000 hard to fore wh n h doesn't John Knott, associate pl'ocessor oC Saturday the confer nee will turn its attention to "The Public pre Idenllal nom.1n.atlon, disc eel UllJpallll 9Ia. "'flh pari]' lead­ and mills In which the n ded railro d workers and II~ lelllt a want to do Jom thin,. nnd pretty psychology in the SUI deportment er at the eloted mcdIlli'. M .... Tart, .IID conft.ued io her wheelchair rnte~est In Labor-Mana,cmcnt type of sleel lire stored. pellny tor an tim t d 100.000 hard to b ck wh n h wants of psychiatry, and Wendell John­ dter a. ~Iltnt IIln , I pu he4 b the TaI\ cJlaulfeur. Not Cut, Taxes, Eaewh re on the slrlke front: t xtil , /IIlrcr,ft and 011 r nnln, son, chal rman ot the council on Relations," an address by Maj. to do .omethlnll'. MUrTaY' DecUDtd olDJDeDl workers. A ked why ho dlcln't l'ek a spe eh potholoiY and oudiology at Charles T. Estes, specia l :lsslstant to the director of the Federal I. USW I'rbld lit Philip Mur- These workers h ve contr cl. court injunction to potpone the ' SUI. rlly declln d to commcnt on which 110 wo el with lhe cost or The conference wlil give the four Mediation and Conciliation ser­ President Says trike 80 days, h sald Ihe strike men an opportunity to dlscu sand vice, Washington. D.C. Taft Rips Ike's Aims, PI' Ident Truman's statl'ml'nt he Iivlnl. Adjuslmenti III e mud pr \'Ioully.... po··tponed 99 days defend in open meeting their var­ Arter roundtable dl cusslons on Is consldclinl u.c of the Tart- every thr months. WASllINGTON rA"'1 -President and 80 mor would only prolonc Ious theories about the basis ot tlte Impact of labor-managemelll Hartley Act to end the cl'!pplJnll More than on million auto Truman aid Thursclay thllt no th cony. stuttering and ways In which stut­ relations of tlte community, on 16-day·old SI I Btrlk . Som un- workers who alo hav contra IS prc.ldent, Demot'rat or Republi­ Wh n onc f{'porter remarked terers can be helped to overcome th farmer, and on prices, lit Sat­ Ion official nd union member tied to th Index w r not t­ can, cun cut tllXeIl 15 per c nt. In thut production would 110 for 80 Criticizes Marshall hinted they would balk at r turn- t cte<;5or of speech pa­ can win the coming presldentiol 4. He (Taft) wpuld reduce talt- ot Tf)at was his Way or lakin, • later ruled that h I eked power workers received an avera,e or maLnIy becaUl of a 3.9 per cent thology at SUI. Clothing Union Head election. by Hi per ~nt In th second couple of n w con! r nc politi­ to selzl'. $2.11 an hour in May, compared jump In the price or Ir h fruits Today each of the Cour prin­ TaIt also made the direct state- year Arter he Is elected, but EI­ cal punch . at Gen. Dwleht D. Th TaU-Hartley Act provides cipal participants will have an op­ To Speak at Opening ment that G n. Geor e C. Mar- senbower does not promise any to approximately $1.95 an hour and ve,etables. Thos lood re EI nhower, and more parlicular­ no penaltle for r (uiol to return portunity to present his views. shaJJ was among those "respon- reducUon even In the second year. palc1 USW members. exempt Irom price control. Iy at Sen. Roberl A. Tatt of Ohio. to work, but courts hove power to Sa turday they will join in a 3. St.r1klng unionists are fcelln, The Index revealed that prlc Tart madl' a nat promls Wed­ punish perlOOs who flout injunc­ sible for" the los! of China to the 5. He (Tatt) has pined 58 or lhe financial pinch now that pre- have lone up 4.1 per cent since ro undtable discussion of the prob­ Of Econ Conference Communists. rnore deleeates since Eisenhower's nesday of a 15 per cent tax cut If tions. lem ot making the stutterer on ac­ Marsh311, tormer army chle! return from Europe. but " I can'l strLke savlnls have been eaten up. price controls went Lnlo ftect 18 he gets Into th Whit House. The stt' 1 dlsput('. which started cepted member society despite ot The USW doc not p3y slrlke months aeo. ot H. H. BookbInder, assistant re­ staff and secretary of slate, was find any thal Gen. Eisenhower Els nhow r ~ald If he becomes 10 t N'ovembt'r, I locked In a his handicap. The conference will search director of the Amalga­ sent to China by President Tru- has gained." ben rtt but does Id hard hlp Price. 01 clotblnll, hous furn- pr sid nt the bud, can be bal­ stru,,1 ov('r thl' union's demand be held in the senate chamber ot mated Clothln, Workers union, man as a speclill representative The prOll'lIm WIIS cllrerul\y re- cases. ishlne and fuel and ('I ctrlclty ane d, Alii d military trenith for thl' union shop. ThIs would Old Capitol on the SUI campus. l.a¥-0I1 P- Thrut d pad. now on leave with the national In 1945. hears d, wllh 011 princlpalJl pre- 4. Lay-offs In alii d IndUltne, rop ______ral-eel to a par with RUll5lon, and reqUir all workers to be mem­ production authority, Washln,llon, llIxell cut - ail In two yea rs. Tar bers of Ih union. Tbe Lndustry Talt .,. lIle Vacue sent fOr more than a.n hour be- pos a ,rowine thr at to mor Harriman to Meet D.C., wl\l speak at two sessions ot ToCt, answereln, a Question con- tore the cameras focused on Taft. and Eisenhower are the main ri­ has 0[(1'rec1 to meet most other SUI's Workshop on EconomJc Ed­ and more workers. Several com­ vals the R pubUcan pr Id n­ unJon demand•• cernlna Eisenhower's attitude to- It was cllrried over three ma- panl dlsclo ed thut furlOUghs of Koie's Toughest tor ucatIon today. hal nomlnatJ 11. Democrats ward the Far East, replied, jor TV nctworks (CBS, ABC, and thousands ot workers loom If the Iowa Bookbinder will review "Eco­ In spite ot th .!Ipe('ch 'Elsen- "It Is very dHflcult lo tell be- NlK:) and wos labeIL>d "nnsw r to steel slrlk continues. The num­ Compound Cleared DES MOINES (A') - Averell nomic Issues and Attitudes of cause Gen. Eisenhower has nol Abilene." how r ho b n m kin, lately - Hbrrlman, candidate !or the Dem­ American Labor" at a morning b r already Idled has tis n past Congress Boosts expressed his opLnlon obout the Eisenhower's homecoming, In­ 100,000. . orne not elt8ctly trl ndly to thl' ocratic preSidential nomination, meeting In the Law Commons, Far Ea t, as far as I can nnd, ex- eluding a speech and a news con­ Without Incielent Truman administroUon - Trum n wUl II \'IogreR' wa made In plans ot meet Iowa national conven­ and he will participate In panel cept that H condemned the 10 s ference, nt Abilene, Kun., was said hI' I~ very lond oC Eisenhow­ tion delegates and party leaders on the same subject In the a f­ governm('nt, Industry und union KOJE ISLAND, Korea (FRI­ Marine Strength of Chino in very generol terms, televised several w eks oeo. DA Y) Notorious compound er, that the Ceneral Is nUlled to here today. temoon. to keep the military machlne roll­ (If» - refUSing tn name n:lmes like Gen. Tbe "Answer ttl Abil ne" pro­ Ing by gctUn, steel needed by 62, Ie ne of Koj 's bloodiest riot b Is own poLlical Y4 WI In 3 fr About 30 Iowa delegates and Alexander Black, of the Solar Marshall who wet responsible tor gram showed Toft deliverIng a country. To 400,000 Men 'IIlterna tes are expected to come Aircraft company, Des MOines, the armed forces ond th Atoml hlst February, WBS mptird the loss of Chin:l." prepared address; answering liS Whll the ('mph ql. was on WASHINGTON UP) - The sen­ will speak on "The Role of Eco­ Eneray commis Ion. Thursday without so much a to confer with HarrltMn', who has Taft olso said: questions from several Indlvld- thin,s politlc:!l. th n W1I con­ ate and ho Thursday unanJ­ nomic Education In a Free So­ Red jeer. held numerous diplomatic and I. He does not believe Elsen- UR is lind four newspaper!; a group The 7,000 p r o-Communist ference hopped around among as­ mou ly approved I gtslation set­ rcpresentative posts in the lid mln­ ciety" at the workshop's dinner hower understands the Taft-Hart- ot glrlJ known as "Bell s for Bob" North and South KOl' on clvlll ns sorted oth r subje s, such tin, the top strcngth ot tJ1e U.S. Istm lions of both Presidents meeting this evening In the Iowa ley act but "I 1 I h Is hostile an adding machine ticking off Ike's Views Expected wert' marched without Incident steel. marine.!l al 400,000 enlisted men Roosevelt and Truman. Memorial Union. to It." the total delegates, by states, thot to smail, 600-man compounds Effects oJ the ~trlk are beCtlm­ and IIlvLne the leothl'rnl'ck II. --~------.------2. Eisenhower seems not to un- Tall's organiz:ltlon claims for where they will be eruller to man­ Inll v ry erlous, Truman suld. stronger voice in milJtary policy. On Delegates, Dams a,e. Auto prodUction is belnt cut. Ev­ The corps now has obout Noted·Writer to Talk Here ~::~lO~~o::!~,r ~~et_he_~ ...:e;:..r_~_~_~_m_Of_o_~_ra_If'_k_;_b~_n_~_h_ea_s_:_~_~_~~_r_.b_r_Ie_f_S_ign_-_OI_f DENVER (A') - Gen. DwllllL D. ThiS brought to about 70,000 ery Industry will fcel the strllee. 214,000 enlisted mcn. Eisenhower prepared Thursday the number 01 prisoners of war But at present the President. is not The senate Quickly passed a for a !lying weekend Irlp to TelC­ who have been moved to ncw considering summoning steel labor house-a pproved version lind sent compound. sin c e "Operation • Robert A. Smith, editorial as and Nevada, where he III ex­ Dnd manngemen to the Whit the bill to the White Hou . Both House Strikes 2 Blows pect.ed to speak out on the contest­ Breakup" begon 10 days ago. House lor more conferences. actions were by voice vole. .writer with the New York Times, the Times, graduated from Ohio d e P /e ed Texas GOP dele,ates and on For many years the marines ' wili be the second of a series of Wesleyan unJversity and received At A e e t t on 0 ICY western reclamatlon. have had no direct voice In mili­ :~~r:.U:~~e l:~~~e~:w~o~~~o~~ a Rhodes scholarship. mIn I s r a I . The general kept the day free Top.POW Leader Discovered tary hJlh command. They have Smith originally Intended to be of appointments. His ottlce said been represented by the navy. al Union campus. a teacher, but soon switched to WASHINGTON (.4') The He will speak on "What Makes journalism. He beean his work house struck two blows at admin­ he worked on mail and on Ideo Under the hou e-aPllrovl!d leg­ debate and votln, the major part he will develop In five free­ Islation, the marine commandant ""en Free?" In case of rain, the on the Cincinnati Commercial Istration policy Thursday as it ot the bill remained open [or con­ will be held In Macbride Tribune. Arter lour years he set began voting on a bLll to elttend wheeline meetings, speeche.a and lor the lirst time would be per­ ~ec turc sideration and the house put over news conferences during the trip . mitted to lit-In with the joint • uditorium. The summer lectures out tor the Far ~ast to begin his wage, price and rent controls tor further action until today. re a part of the 14th annual SUI studies of Aslatlc politics in Japan another year. The RepUblican presidential as­ chiers of staff - .tbe beads ot the Before doing so, the house ap­ army, na y and alr lorce - as a proved a committee amendment pJrant said Wednesday, In talking and Manchuria. First it voted 169 to 102 to ease to the Oregon dele,atlon, that co-equal on matters aUectin, the Smith joined the Times staff as current restrictions on the im­ authorlzlne Reconstruction Fi­ marines. nance corporation loans to en­ he will speak out on the Texas correspondent for the PbiHpplnes portation of critical and strategtc The me~ure now goes to the couralle the manutacture of news­ delegate situation. Contestlng In 1930, also acting as news editor materials. This was a blow at Ihe groups support him and Sen. Rob­ senate tor expected approval. print. of the Manila Bulletin. controls system set up by 1he In­ ert A. Taft of Ohio for the nom­ The day ' before Pearl Harbor ternational Materials Conference. Lnation. Both Il'0ups seeles eats was attacked, Smith joined the Then It adopted an amendment Methodists Invite at the Republican national con­ office of the coordinator of in­ to hold down Imports of foreign vention. Reds Want Evidence formalion, with Ihe assignment or goods wben the domestic produc­ settin, up an American informa­ tion of similar goods Is limited by Negro Churches In 'Germ War' Charge tion service in the Far East. allocation 01 raw materials. The * * * UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. OP) - This assignment became known vote was \12 to 43. To Join Conference Ike Clarifies View Russin was reported by anli-Reds as the India-Burma division of Rep. Abraham J. Multer (0- Thursday to have asked Com­ the oWce ot war information. N.Y. ), opposing the amendment, DAVENPORT (.4') - In what I~ On Budget Cutting munist China and North Korea to Smith came home after two years declared it would injure this na­ believed to be the first acUon of and went into the New York oi­ tion's trade ties with (riendJy its kind, Negro Methodist cb,urch­ DENVER IA') - Gen. Dwight make a better case to back up charges that UN forces are using flce of the OWl, training people countries and torce them to trade es have been Invited to join the D. Eisenhower made It clear that germ warfare In Korea. fOr the field. with Russia. North Iowa Methodist conference. he was referring to a cut ot $30 In addition, he acted as the Meanwhile support developed The conlerence nassed a moUon billion to $40 billion in the federal Russia was said to have up­ prlncJpal radio commentator on for a proposal to aboUsh the wage at Its annun L convention here late budget - not in taxes - wben braided the two countries for not produc.lng more satisfactory evi­ Far Eastern aUalrs for the "Voice stabilization board and replace it Wt'dnesday, I n vttln~ the Negro asked by a visitor to clarity a Metllodist chure hes within the statement made a week alo in dent(! up 10 now on alleged bac­ of America." with 8 body stripped of all au­ terlolo&lcal weapons. Atter ~he war he relurned to conference bounds 10 "live within New York. thority to inte.rvene In labor dis­ The reports of RU!alian dis­ Robert A. Smith the forel", desk of the Times and putes. The new group would be the framework of our state eccles­ The statement was made in hill was later promoted to the edi­ iastical organization." closed visit with the New York pleasure with the conduct of !be liJni ted to policy functions. IDENTIFIED ONLY AS LT. COL. RIIKE. (hands behlncl head) who .crm warfare propapnda cam­ Fine Arts festival. The festival, torial department. There are only two Neit'o delecation. It has been quoled in had bee. Mu,ht 'er "eell. •• tire nvmH1: elle Cemmunls' POW pal&"ll came (rom non-CommunJst which lasts until August 6, in­ Smith has written several Expeclell nanela, PulaCe churehes within conference terri­ several forms. Wednesday a mem­ House leaders boped to dispose tory - at Marshalltown and ber of the Orelon dele,atlon ..... e' _"WI' I" en Koje Island, leavell the eom"WI' alter delegation sources In the UN. cludes four more lectures. books, among them are "Our Fu­ 1M .... bee. "lnte4 ••, b, an _piD, Nortb X.erean prisoner, Be which specified they musl not be Smith. who specializes in the ture In Asia," "Your Foreiln of the controls ext~nsion bill Mason City. They have a com· which visited the eeneral asked ...... ,.eDtiJ' keD ...... er.cUDJ as aD eDlJlted maL identified. far East and natnonal defen". on Policy" and ''Divided India." Thursday. but a.fter five hours of bined membership of about 100. him to clarify It.

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------PAGE TWO - UlE DAILY IOWAN, FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1952 Prisoners of War Letters to the Edi.tor.' (B.e.O.~ .re .."Ued t. ex.re•• • plll. ---______...... -The Da/~ Iowan tenl 10 lettera t. the £dU.r. AU Jette ...... t IDcl ••e ban ••rIU.. I' •• at.ru an occupational hazard for thOle a ••••dreIJu - I"ewrltlea .',natllJ'u FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1952 Uti n •••eee,lable. Letteu bee.... lbe who act, as well as talk, alla1nst ro~r',. .f Tilt: Dall" 1o.... 'I'll. injustice. What is more important r.owan re.en'e. 'be rI.la, to , ".rtea, is tbat no amount of frantic name­ Publlahed daJl:r -xcepl Sund.tT and .tled re.reltDtata"t letten wileD ..a.,. r.,.rl.' b ':51 I .m. Tile DIU, I.w.. ...re. M. r.wnall, p.lln.... ' •• t.ke ..me ••bJect. .re ,eedve.. or calling can hide the central issues Monday and le•• 1 hoUda,.. by Siudent elre.laO.a 4e,.rtmen't 1ft Ole re-I' ., .. IUlb.l. lettAu. Conlrtb.t.rt are PubllcatlOlll. IDC .. ue lowl Ave .. 10... 01. l ..rull.m balldlel'. D.b.q ••••• DAILY IOWAN IlDITORIAL STAPP U1'll_lte. to not. more Ulan two letter. In of tbe trial. It is significant that Cllt'. low•. Entered .1 second cia.. mall lewl ..... , ••JeD Ire..... , m, •• 11 •. DI. Fdltor ...... • .. WIlliam Clabby aby so. ••, per' ••, aad ah.a.. limit the · Anti-Defamation I e a g u e, mailer at lbe poltoUlee at 10"" City. IDI IralD I , .... ,. G p.m ••• n,. 8lhr- Ibe.. le"erl t. BOt w.rd. .r Ie ••. under the act 01 conereu of Marcb J. ••, ....,.: .... t. 11 N .... Mana811ll1 Edltar ...... , Jouph Mel'e O.lnlo.. extreated d. G.t aer.eu.rU,. which sponsored the Oliver.Pilat , 117 •• News f:dltor ...... Robert He.. re,rehDI •.b." ., Tile Dan, I.waft.) article quoted by Mr. MacNair, MEMBER OJ' TBJ: ASSOCIATW parss Call 4191 Ir•••••• I...... 111 City Editor ...... Geor,e Youn, has taken no position on the guilt The AuocJated Pre.. II enUUed ex­ .. re•• ,' aewa ,t•• I. ,.. ...ea', ..,e Ass't. City Editor . .. Don Mapes c1uslve1)' to the use for republication TO THE EDITOR: or innocence of the Rosenberp. lte .....r .DD...... e ... te Tbe Dall, Sports Editor ...... Jack Bender of all the lot.1 newl prlnled to Ihll le ..aD, Edlt.rla ••rrleu are ID &..be base· Furthermare, it is appalling; that newspaper as well as all AP newl _ellt .r aid U.U, DortJa ,ntuDee. Society Editor ...... Mary Donal Friday the 13th may be a bad cIllpatcbes. dllY for the appearance of one's Mr. MacNair makes no attempt to DAlLY IOWAN BUSINESS STAFP come to terms with the key poinlJ Min.... ietter-to-the-edUor in The Daily SubOcrlption rites - by carrier In low. Bwdneu . . John Crulsnberry Iowan. But Mr. James MacNair's I made about the trial. AVDnor BUilIlAV CJty, 21 centl weekly or f8 per yeaI' in A ..· t. BualnelS Mir.. Calvin Lambert .dv~; Iix: months, ....2$; three National Adv. Mana,er " Ed Hunlln, answer to my letter on the case The testimony by David Green­ cmCVLAflOlf1 monlhi, S2.50. By mall In 10w8, $8 pe, yearj stx month.. $0: thru: montba. Cl... l!led Adv. Mer. Leonard Hlppchen of .Julius and Ethel Rosenberg is glass, self-confessed spy, and by U J'••••• t ro ••••• ~; All other mail lubscrlpUons ,10.00 much more unfortunate. What IS some 20 other witnesses was 50 Call ~151 DAILY IOWAN CIKCULA'flON STAFP , .... DaU, lawaD b, 1 • .111 . r.:tel ••' per year; aJx rnonthJ, $15.60; thre< unsupported by documents and aett1ee• b ,I.-e.. e. .U eery e. erro,.. ~ . 25 . most unforgivable is that MI'. monlhl, ClrculaUon Mana,er .... Robert Heu MacNair, a supposedly responsible conventional material evidence journalist with a professed con­ that in normal times the prose­ GENERAL NOTICES cern about "checking all the cution's case would have been -Previews- facts," should have written his ridiculed out of court. Again and GENERAL NOTJCES ahould be dep08ltecJ with the cUy edUor of letter on the basis of one second­ again, competent observers have By JIM GOLTZ -, The Dally Iowan In Ute newlfoom In Eaat hall. Notices must be Bub­ hand in[Jammatory article with­ refuted Judge Kaufman'S state­ mltted by 2 p.m. the day preeedlnc fint publication; Utey will NOT ON A SHOPPING SPREE: out cbecking back into the case It­ ment that tl1..e Rosenbergs we~ be aeeepted by phone, and muR be TYPED OR LEGIBLY WRIT­ An Iowa City music store has ~lf. A sober evaluation of the guilty of "purting into the hands TEN and SIGNED by a reapoll8lble penon, available almost every record issues, not name-calling or ignor­ of the Russians the A-bomb." Of ever re orded -a statement made ing my arguments, will decide the hundred~ of examples that ALL PERSONS REGISTERED a picnic supper. A short medita­ with no trace of exaggeration. whether the Rosenbergs deserve could be quoted (I mentioned two with the Educational Placement tion will be given by Pastor A. C. Their phenomenal collection rang­ bffice, pl'i!ase inform the office Proehl. There will be a late car to die. in my letter of June 13th), I add es from classical cuttings now ex­ As I see it, Mr. MacNair, os­ one: in December, 19~1, in the regarding summer school schedule leaving at 4:30 [or those unable to tinct to discs straigM out of a and address at once. come at 2:30. tensibly presenting those "aspects opening paragraph of a ne", jazz-fiend's paradise - all are of the case" which I fail to see or story datelined Washington, D.C, GRADUATE ED UCATJ ON ROBERT AURA SMlTH, ED­ "collector's items." else do not care to acknowledge, the International News Servire wives will hold their summer itorial writer for the New York Now on sale at the store are makes two main points: that thl.! reported, "The atomic enere party June 23, at 7:45 p.m. in Times, will present the second the MGM album "Lovely To Look issue of anti-Semitism has been commission ' Friday bare(\ seem Wesley house. All wives of grad­ summer session lecture on Mon­ At" ("Roberta") 45 rpm, 33 rpm, documentary proof that Russia and unjustly introduced into the de­ uate students in education are in­ day, June 23, 8 p.m. on the 78 rpm ...an album of scenes has known the scienliiic secreu from Verdi's "Otello" with Elea­ fense of the Rosenbergs, and that vited. south Union campus (or Mac­ those who are taking the initiativl! of atom bomb manufacture sInce bride hall, if the weather is un­ nor Steber and Ramon Vinay . .. 1940, the year the United States a new album, "As You Desire in bringing the facts to light (the FRIDAY FROLIC, JUNE 20, 8 favorable). His subject will be National Committee to Secure began attempts to develop the p.m. in the main lounge of the "What Makes Men Free?" Me," featuring Jo Stafford sing­ missile." The overt acts charted ing type of songs which estab­ Justice in the Rosenberg Case) Iowa Memorial Union. Record are either Communists or mem­ against the Rosenbergs supposedly dan c e, movies, entertainment, lished her fame before bill-billy occurred in 1944-45. GERMAN PH. D. READING tunes and Frankie Laine duets bers of a "front." These "aspects ~ridge, and television. examination will be given on of the case" are, at worst, irre­ Nor does Mr. MacNair face the Friday, June 20, at 1 to 3 p.m. in reared their ugly heads. Included fact that never before has a death are "Don't Worry 'Bout Me," sponsible; at best, they are irrele­ THE NEWMAN CLUB COR­ 104 Schaeffer hall. Register in .... vant to my letter . sen tence · been imposed by an dially invites all Catholic students "September In The Rain," "East American court for espionage. room 101 Schaeffer hall by noon I said nothing at all about anti­ at SUI to attend a regularly sched­ Thursday, June 19 if you intend of the Sun," "Something To Re­ Even in the , wartime spy cast Illed meeting Tuesday, June 24 at member You By," and Rodgers Semitism in the Rosenberg trial, known as U.S. vs. Molzahn, tour to take the test. yet Mr. MacNalr devotes more 8 p.m. at the Catholic Student and Hart's "Spring )s Here." men who gl)ve vital aircraft se­ than hall his communication to it. center, 108 McClean st. The meet­ THE IOWA MOUNTAINEERS Also available at the store are crets to Germany in the fall of ing will be followed by a social will have an outing at the Back­ books on music, including a neW Since he brings It up, however, 1941 were let off with 5 to 15 biography of Verdi - a musical program of dancing, entertain­ bone State Park on June 21 and it should be pointed out that anti­ year sentences. Finally, Mr. Mac­ ment and refreshments. Graduate 22. Camping overnight, swimming, subject-matter always engrossing. Semitism was pertinent in the Nair overlooks my point thai the as well as undergraduate students hiking, and a campfire program. A department store seems to be trial. It is significant that leading judge and prosecutor prejudiced are invited to attend. For further We will leave the Clubhouse nt the only merchandise market in Jewish publications like The Seo­ the jury by introducing, extrane· town to handle white swimming Medium Tank Was Home, tinel, American-Jewish magazine ously, the assumption that the information contact Gene Mc­ 2 p.m. June 21. Register with Jim u.s. Namara, Phone, 6954 or Carolyn Osburn, 1132 E. Burlington, phone trunks - in 'case any potenti;)l published in Chicago, said Judge Rosenbergs were Communistl, Wagner, phone 3827. 6427, by June 19. Fee is $2, pay­ liIe-guards insist upon white as Kaufman "was carried away to despite the fact that not a gnat able in advance. the best contrast to that golden an extent by tbe hysteria which of evidence was introduced in THE LUTlIERAN STUDENT brown 01', if you insist, parlor bas overtaken our country," and support and that the Rosenberp association is planning an outing THO S E INTERESTED IN grey - summer pigmentation. Workshop and Weapon for G.I.'s that the Jewish Daily Forwards were not being tried for theIr this Sunday June 22. The group singing in the University Mixed )n another department, a new fo und the death sentence :'too ideas. In short, Mr. MacNair sun lotion, "Copper Tone," is be­ horrible" and "too cruel," and dodges the major issues. But thai wil~ meet at the Lutheran Student Chorus, please contact Professor ing marketed which is probabiy house, 122 E. Church st. at 2:30. S~ark, X2278. Reflearsals are added, "every Jew feelS the same the Rosenbcrg case has all the Transportation will be provided Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday the only chemists, burn-preventer way." Furthermore, the govern­ earmarks of a 20th century Drey- to West Liberty where there will evenings 7:15-9:15. Non-students devised which actually prevents ment's chief prosecuting attorney, fus case seems to concern hIm not be swimming, tennis, softball anel are welcome. that lobster red shade. tormerly lrving Saypol, was reprimanded a tall. sold only in Florida and Calilor­ after the trial by the court of Mr. MacNair mentions mx re­ nia, the miraculous lotion is now apPcllls for anti-Semitism In an­ ference to the pamphlet, "'1'0 Se­ I available to we of the middle , . other case. Finally, it is strange cure Justice in the Rosenberg I west. that in a city (New York) which Case" by William A. Re~ben. ofliciqi' daily IN THE CURRENT ISSUE of has a .Jewish population of more Since he didn't bother to read It "Quick" magazine, in case you than one-third there was not a before disparaging it, I recom­ haven't noticed: "The Aberdeen Jewish juror on the trial mend it to him again. Mr. Reu· ci ty council refused to foot the paneL Agninst such a background, ben's model reporting job Is doc · 8t1.LlE1·IN bill for 'chorus girls with notbi:lg it is not inconceivable that anti­ umented, honest as it is ' sllock­ on.' Later a councilor explained Semitism would prejudice a jury. ing, and still unanswered by Utose FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1952 VOL. xXVOJ, NO. 184 . . .'we can get the real McCoy But this is hardly the main point who fear it. I challenge Mr. Mac­ UNIVERSITY CALENDAR itelD8 are IIClheduled free right here'." ...Real, live, of the defense. Nair to write for it (246 Filth ill the Pre.ideD\'a office, Old Capl~1 100 per cent chorus girls for free? At a time when everyone from ave., New York, 1, N.Y.) and an­ OMISSIONS that should not Owen Lattimore tp George C. swer it point by pOint, in as com­ friday, June 20 Lecture, Robert Aura Smith, New have been omitted in my rece~t Marshall is accused of Communist petent a way as 141'. Reuben has - Institute for Labor-Manage­ York Times, " What Makes Men cataloguing of "Who's Who In the sympathies, it is not surprising done. ment, Hillcrest. 9:00 a.m. and 2:00 Free?", South Union Campus. University Theater" - Mary Van that the charge should come up George Bluestone ~.m. - Speech Pathology Conler­ , Tuesday, June 24 Fleet, the regal "Mary Stuart" of here. The accusation has become 617 E. College ence, senate chamber, Old Capitol -Speech Conference, Old Cap­ stage fame, Nancy Burnam, noted Saturday, June 21 itol. for her sincere performance in - Institute for Labor-Manage­ Wednesday, June 25 "Death Of A Saiesman," Stan ment, senate chamber, Old Capi­ 8:00 p.m. Music Hour, Wood­ Moody, an old hand at "old skin­ tol. wind Chamber Music, Studio E, flint" roles (Le. "The Beggar's Army· Secretary Pace Monday, June U WSUI. Opera") and a perfect choice for - Speech Conference, Old Cap- Thursday, June 26 the lead in "Second Threshold," itol. 3:00 p.m.- The University Club (providing it hasn't been cast 8:00 p.m. - Summer ;;:ession Guest Tea, Iowa Union. yet), Jean Ogden ,th~ best "stage To Call for More Men hand" in the business, and Gerald (For Information reCardlD&' dates beyond this schedule, Tippit, a natural "hero" type from WASHINGTON (JP) - Secre­ lee reservatloDs In the' office of tile P,re.ldent. Old Capl~I.) the deep south. Last, but by no tary of the army Pace said Wed­ has voted on military spending. means least, is Sue Wood, and nesday "it will be imperative... in being, we have eight divisions to ask congress for more men" if who could forget her "Queen "at the 20~division army noll' Elizabeth" in "Mary Stuart." Miss the war in Korea continues. He did not say how many more in the Far East and fille in Eu: Autonomy in Indo-Chino Wood is back on campus and Tank 61-Ready for Battle in Korea rove," he said. "O[ the remain· would be required. The United , ready and willing to emote again. ing seven in the U.S., we have "ART DIGEST," the "good THIS U.S. MEDIUM TANK WAS THE HOME of five American Gl's In the Korean war. In action States now has nearly 3~~ million men under arms in the army, been able to maintain only one book" of art-minded enthUSiasts, near Chlpyong-nl, it carried the five tbrough enem y lines to relieve the American 23d infantry and a as astra tegic reserve, ready and French battallon. Shown here is Sgt. Rudolph E. Kardynal of Springfield, Mass., who mans the 50- navy and air force. Is Help to Allied ·Cause has, in its latest issue, a summary capable of immediate deploymenl of "New York Gallery Groups" calibre machlne gun. (This is a U.. army photograph.) The sec·retary gave his apprais­ By J. M. ROBERTS JR. al to a senate appropriations sub­ overslias. Associated Press News Analyst with the type of exhibits they Communists. will show, a column of "Who's By Central Press . company command post and a infantry riding on the tank decks. committee in a prepared state­ "If we are called upon to con­ ment made public by Sen. tinue the war in Korea into fiscal Increased U.S. aid for the anti­ It's Just a cold fact, though, News" in the fine arts area, a voice barking: "You are to move As their ammunition was used up 0'­ SOMEWHERE )N ·KOREA Mahoney (D-Wyo.). O'Mahoney year 1953 (starting July 1), 85 Communist forces in Indo-China that the. more involved the United summertime gUide for "New York up and relieve the 23rd Infantry Tank, Medium, M-46, USA 30163- the infantrymen would jump in is chairman of the group, which now appears virtually certain, the is going primarily to the three States becomes, the more she is City Museum Visitors," and a and the French battalion at Chip­ well-written editorial on "Art Ed­ 381, U.S. Army Serial No. 525, and yong-ni - they are completely the ditches with the Chinese - met behind closed doors. support requirements placed on young national states there rather considered throughout southeast assigned No. 61 by D Company, our forces here at home will be Asia-throughout the Orient-as ucation and TV Antennae." surrounded. You arc to get beating them over the head with Pace appealed to congress for , than to France. 6th Tank Battalion, attached to IX greater and their state 01 readi­ . a partner of imperialism. BELIEVE IT OR NOT, Iowa th rough a tall .costs." their entrenching tools. more money and more f1'Cedom to Insofar as con~~ct of the W~l' is Corps, was more than a hulk of spend it for arming than the ness correspondingly even less fa­ concerned, that 'doesn't mean a The effort, then, to act as far City's summer "sub- tropical" cli­ "At all costs!" "At all costs!" Knutson uttered a quick prayer mate bears all amazing resembl­ steel stamped with various con­ Those three short words packed a house has voted. vorable. thing. Laos, Cambodia and the as possible throu~ native rather ance to the clima te of India, as fusing numbers. tremendous amount of meaning to when a round of baz90ka am­ He saJd the army has only 20 "It the war continues in Korea, chief belligerent, Vitnam, al­ than European lnstitutions, is an described in Sinclair'S "Night ln It was both home and work­ the crew. munition failed to explode and of the 21 divisions it needs, and it will be imperative under these though given some technical au­ important one. It tends to Bombay" - sudden spurts of shop for five men. Yes, five men At 1500 hours the steady crunch bounced off the turret. "There could not afford to expand under facts to ask congress for more tonomy in 1949 as members ot the strengthen the local states for would heat their rations over its the $46 billion ceiling the house men." their eventual time real autono­ rain followed by oppressive. heat of the tank treads on the snow were so many of them and so French union, actually are com­ Dr followed by more rain. If one exhaust, sleep on its back, bathe my and diminishes the talking was interrupted by the disturbed­ mucb of their equipment aU pletely controlled by France in all were of an imaginative natute, beside it, and fight from it. wasp-nest sound of angry bullets war matters and in most other points of the opposition. These five formed a compact aroulld us, that anywhere I point­ one could close one's eyes and furrowing the icy air. ed the 1l0-mm. I could some­ things too. By building up the armies - of imagine a harem of geisha girls little unit which was taught to Their governments were im­ the three states the drain on fight as a team. Leader was 2nd Infantry Leaves Tanks thing," says Sergeant Kardynal. doing the dance of the several "We knocked out at least three /. Try Clnd Stop ·Me I posed by France and their leaders France will also be reduced, and Lt. Jesse O. Giddens from Perry, About 1,000 yards south of Ko­ veik The only assets we haven't bazooka teams. owe their jobs to France. Oppo­ she will be able to contribute got are India's red clay and the Fla. He joined the regular army kusri the small arms and mortar '-----By BENNETT CERF,---...... · sition to French l;4l19nialism was more to the Europcan defense Taj Mahal hotel! 10 years ago when he was 18 and fire became so heavy the lnfan- Bullet Pierces Helmet the beginning of and stl Il is the program which the U.S. considers had been a master sergeant until trymen riding on the tanks. had Lieutenant Giddens was lucky., N No People Like Sho'w People, Maurice Zolotow adds a chief strength of the rebellious so vital. he got his battlefield promotion. to . leave them and go afoot. Chi- A bullet passed through his hel- : I choice item to the Jack Benny saga. Jack was once so down V;ietminh party, now Communist Gunner From Poland nese were well ' entrenched on U.S. Contribution Hellvy met but didn't even touch him. on his luck that when his agent heard a New Jersey pop vaude­ WSUI PROGRAM Second - in - command was the both sides of the road. But Sergeant Calhoun didn't have Thus many of The United States is now con­ gunner, Sgt. Rudolph E. Kardyn- This wasn't the first time the ville palladium was offering tributing about one third of the the same luck. Some ammunition $25 for a novelty animal act, the rebels are of aI, originally from Karkov, Po- crew of Tank 61 had encountered exploded in the ready rack and a type which material, costing a billion dollars, CALENDAR land, and now from Springfield, the Chinese - they had been he cried, "I'll take it." He which goes annually into the he received first, second and third once were called Frida,. J ."e ~O, 1911'~ Mass. surrounded themselves at Wonsan Indo-China war. This is about degree burns. He was evacuated borrowed two mangey Pe­ patriots in the 8:00 Mornlni Chapel , He arrived in the United States and been without food, water and three times what it was two years 8:15 New. with other American wounded. kingese pups from a friend, U nil e d Slates. 8:30 · Summer Serenade in 1947, when he was 20, and in ammunition until supplied by air- ago, when France was primarily (He recovered and later rejoined carried them on-stage in the The U rn i t eld 9:00 Freshman Forum 1948 jomed th~ Regular Army. drop. But Dotson claims he had holding on rather than trying to 8:50 Women', News his crew.) Jersey theater, tied them to S tat e s could 10:00 Thc Bookshelf Driver of No . 61 was Sgt. John nevel' seen as many Chinese as he Shortly thereaftcr the task clean up the situation once and 10:15 Boker's Dozch A. Calhoun from Laona, Wi s. saw that afternoon. a piece of scenery, and pro­ 'lardly enUst in 11:00 U.S. Navy B""d force succeeded in making contact I for all. ceeded to wow the audience a war against lJ:15 Summer Management Program Another regular army man, Cal- The chief dangel· was the .n.u­ with the 23rd and the French ba­ them except that That effort is now being made, 11 :30 Here's To Veterans houn has been in since 1947, when merous rushes the enemy made with funny stories and and both French and American II :45 Errand 01 Mercy tll11ion . In just the small area that first ac- 12 :00 Rhythm Ramble. he was 17 years old. toward the rear of the tanks with D Company fought, Knutson wheezings on his fiddle. • ROBERTS cepted Commu- authorities are expl'essillg opti­ 12 :M New. Next man on the team was P tc. pole and satchel charges. And ba­ The manager forked over the mism that it can be done. Viet­ 12 :45 Journey Behind the News counted 1,200 enemy dead .. The nist aid, and now have been taken 1:00 Musical Chats Loven K. Knutson, the assistan~ zookas at short range were a tankers had accomplished their $2:1 with the reservation that minh has been badly kicked 2:00 News gunner and radio man. He hailed men(lCc. They accounted for two over as one of the weapons of Im­ 2 :10 Elrly l'th Century Music break-through mission. this certainly WIlS the most pe- • periaUst Communism in the Rus­ around this year. It will reassem­ 3 :00 Music b)' Roth from Inwood, Iowa, and is now American tanks that afternoon. culiar animal act he ever did '• ~ ble its forces during the next few 3:30 M8.~rworkll from FrAnce .,4 sian effort to dominate the world. 4 :00 Grinnell Coile,. 25 years old . Cpl. Emery Dotson, Snows All Night see. "Don't those pups do any , The complexity has a close paral­ rainy months, but the Allies are 4:30 Tea Time Melodl .. 19, from Majestic, Ky., completed The Weathet remained cloudy :bALKS AT D1SHWASHING tricks at all?" he demanded. "They sure do," said Jack airily, "but 5:00 NO\tA ttme lel near-by in British-controlled hoping one more campaign sea­ the team. He was BOG gunner and cold. It snowed al! that night. MALLrNG, ENG. (JP)-A judge not at theae price8." . son will do the job. 5:15 Children', Hour ¥alaya • . 5:30 News and assistant drnver. The crew buttoned up the hatches Wednesday sentenced Charles • • • • Then, if the job is to remain 5:45 Sports TIme Action In February in the tank, ate their rations cold, A noted savant, addressing the Acade~ie Francaise in Pari.: French Wani ImJtrovement 8;00 Dinner Hour Mackay to 14 days in jail because done, France, with consIderable 8:55 News Illustrative of their combat job and catnapped. They tpok turns he refused to wash dishes. A re­ assured his audience tha. Civilization would last al10ther fifty thou· France shows some signs of a ':00 HOI Air Concert American help, is going to have is an action that took place 011 at guard, manning the .50-caliber ceptIon center for homeless peo­ sand years. "Brallo," cried an Academie member. "And when do y6~ desire to improve Indo-Chlna's 7:30 MUlIlo You Want to start doing for Indo-China 8:00 MUlIle 10r the Cnnnnl.""ur two Feqruary days. The whole machine gun. ple said Mackay had gotten free expect this clllUlzat,ion to begin 1" . - , situation as soon as sho can IVLth­ what the U.S. did tor the Ph1ll11- 9:00 Co,npul flh0r. O:.dS NeWM ROlin, 01) show sla1'le<1 on the 1:lth with n Next morning 1h e), moved lodetng in I'CtUl'll rnr a promise to COPl'ri.i1t, 1952, by Bennett Cel ( Dlsl1lbulrd b)' Kin' Fenl\u'cs S)hdl(ale. Qut turning the area over to the pines. 10:00 SJON OFf' _._ ~ ~d.!U_ fleld telephone jllng!lng .pl_ U1eil' low.a rd. the t!·a'p'p~d . unit .wlth the Wl!SQ 'eill ... 'IllE DAlLY (OW~', FJUDAY, JID."E 21, 'un - PAGE TIDD • 0" Miss Betty Houghton, '51, I Women Play Large Role Taffefized Finish Is Wed to Robert Hauser In India's Development Applied to Fabrics Miss Betty Houghton and Rob­ Fashion accent I on crisp fab­ ··Never undereshmate the power ert Hauser were married Sunday rll'S. One is called the "taffetized" or a wom.n." The hny person of held smce Mahatma Gandhi tirst afternoon In the Central Christian finish. The finish is nol new. but irs. Hansa Mehta, India's rep~ ­ caUed on them to partiCipate in Swish otPetficoaf church in Marshalltown. Its application has been ntath'e on the US. Hum n the fiibl ror independence. ex~ed The bride is the daughter of to a variety of fabrics. It may be Mr. and Mrs. Clement T. Hough­ Rights Commission, belles the "We re:5ponded, includlnl those New Spring Sound f.miliar phrase, but her sott­ who had never been out at their appHed to crepes, snantunl5. taf­ ton at Marshalltown and ~r. Crtas, Japanese Ilk habulae • Ho­ spoken words carry Its full im­ homes betore. And il was throulh Hauser is the son of Mr. and Mrs. nan, and tl5sue failles. Howard R. Hauser of Whitten. pact. this struuie that we learned that For Every Woman we, too, had a very poslUve re­ The "tatreti%ed" finish is made The bride's sister, Miss Delores One of th three .omen on til by applyinl a lacquer to th.e fab­ Any woman can pull a Scarlet! Houghton or Mar halltown, was Comml ,ion. on whi h h sponsJbillty In building the coun­ try thaI we had fouabt tor. Our ric surface. The tiber content and O'Hara act these days. All she mold of honor and the brides­ srn'ed inee 1947, .Irs. Mehta be.. the weave or fabric consuruction maids were fiss Ma rcelIe Baxter lievH that the ...·ork ot thr body, m n Ie rned it too tor there hasn't needs is a couple or swishy new been the sUcht hesitation in determine the \·Iacoslt)' of the lac­ 'f Niota, Ill., Marilyn Brown and the completed Declaration at Hu­ quer to be applied In ordrr to cotton petticoats. ?atricia farsolek, both of Mar­ man Rights and the pr nt draft­ placing capable women In tht And, now they're in colors - central ('ablnet, In state govern­ achieve the best .dherence to the shaJitown. in& of Ihe Co"f!nants to Implement f.bric and Imll8rt the desired stripes, plaids or prints - ror Donald Hauser, cousin of the It, will serve a an inspiration and ments, in emba I abroad.nd In Internailonal or,aniZlltlons. hand or erispn~ . For example, every figure type. groom, was best man. The ushers a m6Sa&e of hope to peace-Iovin& Ihe lacquer applied very Jlc'htly were Harley Shine or Traer, peopl everywhere. Mrs. Mehta has been in the For the young in years are wide forefront of the treedom movt­ aives a crisp, flexible but soft wight Long of Whitten and Ber­ Mrs. 1eht. explained that In~ skirts billowed out with crino­ ment since 1930. She Is also very hand; if applied heavily, a sUffer nard Weaver of Marshalltown. dlan womrn "are not workln, on fabric with more body. more )lnes, Ladles who are not so prominent in educational work. Mrs. Hauser was graduated the lines at some Cemlnlst move­ lind .at pre nt Is one of th rep­ rustlr, is achieved. young and have to watch they from SUT In 1951. :'>1r. Hauser at­ ment prevalent abroad. perhnp resentativ of the Govrrnment of The national Il\lititute of clean­ silhouettes, probably would take tended Capitol City Commercial It Is becau.e Ihe fight tor. uUrag India on the American Education Ing and dyeinl recomm nds that to the classic style. ' ollege. At present, he Is an audi­ has not bet-n ne .. ry in our Foundallon Bo rtf tor Ihe Indo­ yOU takt care In seleeUnl the taf­ tor for the state of Iowa and Is country. iThe Can tituUon Ilv Regardless of fashion likes, the U S. Fulbri&ht Scholarship Ex­ fetlzed flnl hed fabrics you may working In lawn City. The couple III citluns over 21 years the rlCht w.nt In your wardrobe. Some of new cotton lingerie underlies both chanlle Student proJrlm, as weU will be at home in Jowa City atter to vote, regard Ie. or x, caste or as beln, Vice-Chancellor of Bar­ them ar serviceable; others re­ 1"f'1Ir1on). And perh.p. 100. be· silhouettes appropriately. July 6. ( o-allr J...... t., oda University. one of India', 28 quire $peelal handling; still others Slim-silhouetted slips cut on the cau all of us, men and women, unlversltlH. Shr has .Iso written are unservlceablr. MR. VlNCE l\IORA\'EC HA CON TRlJCTED and dtsJped Uli nower arra~mrnt outside hi bome had to start from scratch toaether straight plus bias are classic In at 605 1 J • Gilbert. The arra",tment ha U,.hled ria,,'er bo outlldt Ihl' t('ond ory wlndo, . The several boo In Gujratl and Eng­ to tulflll the democratic Id als on Iitlh, including tr nslahons of ]Jne and becoming to all figure Paint Remover 51,.n "I Look lJp t Flo\\'trs" MOP bfotween Ihe arra~rmut. • 10fnl~ I lorlH ,,11mb 10 Iht roof "bere 'hleh our freedom stru"t \\IllS Ihere are et of Duuh lllllfea dlspl. ed Dra)'in,. Mowen. "Hamlet" and "The M rehant 01 types, they suggested. The strap­ bll ed. Iha t we re ·hum nl. t.' lind Venice." Edward S. Rose Sayt less cotton batiste slip with elas­ Contains Cotton ------not 'feminist '." Mrs. Mehta Is not th only ac­ M.,be durl", Uleae June ..,. ticized sections tor form-Cit bodies that has co t him approximately flower boxes on th Iround noor Mrs. Mehta d not reprd her live member of th flmlly. Her )'ou will need a aoothl", There's cotlon everywhere, and $300 alrl'ady. ·'And there's mar up to the . eeond floor window ('ream for unburD - • rem­ alternating with eyelet-embroid­ it you don't believe It look around. Petunia Fancier po. ilion a unu uaL Sh hu band. Dr. JI\'lral N. f hta. to ~ome," he IIIYS. boxe . out that she I ju t on of the ed for lnaeet blt.n - a I'.om­ Why there's even cotton in paint w s India's Director-General of fortin .. po .... der 'or lied rash ered panels and slim skirt is re­ He ha planted red, white ~d Flowers alw8),s grow! fro many Indi n wom n In r pon 1- Health Service .,(1947-48) and I commended tor most figures. remover, or at. least in one pain' Does His Share rll, we will be pleued .. blue mornln, ,Iorl s and many Moravec. who bathe and cares ble positions today .nd that the at pr ent Mlnlsttr of Flnant'e for Mlp you - ob, to be ure al ~ remover, Klean-Strlp. CeUulose­ colors of petUnia In gr y heet for thcm In his free time. He glv new Republ c Is dependlnl on all Camisole and petticoat sets acetate, a derivatiVe of the cotton Bcmbay St.te. Their daughter, low u to till your PllESCRIP­ trimmed with eyelet embroidery To Beautify City metal boxes with bronze no..... er the 30 or 40 reet of climbln vln , It. citizen. rellardl of x. Anjanl, took her M.A. at Colum­ TION - plant, Is used In Klean-Strlp as a decorations. The arrangement of thot grow on the vine T ck In "Our Constitution," he conllnued, make sUm underpinnings Cor clas­ bodying ngent, Instead of the wax bia University (1949) and Is now three nCOn Ughted flower boxe, his living room D both. e\,ery two "hal lifted worn n out of th mi­ used In old-fashioned paint re­ B, JO PACKEV In DeIhl In one oC the lovern­ sic styles. Many slim skirts with which Increase In size, c1lna to week.!, u ing lh water sprayln, nority category, endOJ"lllnl II po­ m nl's thre lourilt Information DRUG SHOP deep flounces are Idea 1 under movers. Vince Moravec Is one TaWil CH­ the Willi In front 01 his econd ttachment at hi vacuum clean­ siUon which they ha\ e ctually This new development makes It Ian who has gone all out to do ottlcc! • moderately tlared hemlines. story IIvlnlr room window. A er. unnecessary to do the mean, messy his share In the campaign to Wonderful cottons to Interpret U,hted decoration hanes between For a ma.n who started a f1ow­ lob or "washing-up" before a new beautify Iowa City. th arran em at. A sign mad of er hobby year, ago wh n a I dy the tull skirt trend a re crisp and (inish can be appJled to II surfac He has constructed and de­ tatretized. Chintz, moire, embossed bronze h et meull spells out "I Ir ve him n lip 01 8 plant, he ha which has heen stripped, Its man~ signed a fiower arrangement out­ Look Up At Flower ." thl. to say· "Plants smile at you. lind wame piques and organdies uloeturer claims. side his home at 605', S. Gilbert, are included in this group. Since Mornlna ,Iorles climb to the People don't rc lI~e the full the wide-skirted vogue depends ------roof wher thre et of Dutch bChicago Cubs for the third stormer from the Coot of the Ozarks, won the low medal in the PGA · * * * 1943, and 1948 'prior to last year. straight time, 5-0. golf tournament Thursday with a S6-hole score of 136, eight undpr Golfers who suller gallery jitters !,lo home early in the PGA. o the I' quarterfinal winners Erskine allowed only one Chi­ pal'. Take the throng that thrilled to Lloyd Mangrum's 4-under-par 32 over chill, wind-swept Skok i~ cago batter to reach base as he The tall, stoop-shouldered Arkansas traveler riveted a three- on the front nine during Thursday's qualifying. And died for the country club fo11o,-"eo form. became the first National leaguer under-par G9 to a first round 67 over the wide-open big spring course brutally bad breaks that hounded Porky Oliver like an incurable dis­ Medalist Besty Ra wls, 1952 to turn the trick this year. Virgil to elinch the $250 qualifying prize by a stroke ovpitcher, was the balter to with the field to be redu('ed to 16 with two rounds of eliminations. his gravel voice. Straining for a Birdie time Western champion, elimin­ reach base. He walked on four From then on, it's 3Cl-hole matches every day until the champion- Oliver hit the middle oC the fairway with his drive on one rare ated amateur Mary Lena Faulk q( straight pitches in the third inning ship is decided next Tuesday in golf's most rugged test. occasion. His caddy walked automatically to the rough anyway, about CHARLES HARTER of Logansport, [nd .. strained hard for a birdie Thomasville in an all-Georgia to ruIn Erskine's bid for the first Defending champion Sam Snead heads the bracket. Exempt from 40 yards beyond Oliver'S ball. Porky called him back and good- on the first hole as the Professional Golfers Association tournament scrap, 5 and 4, to move against perfect game since Charley Rob­ qualiiying, the aching back West Virginian changed his mind and naturediy asked him: opened in LouJsvllle, Ky. But ht missed the putt, as you 'Can see, Miss Rawls in today's semi-finals. ertson of the finally decided to shoot for the medal. Troubied by a pulled muscle "Who d'ya think I am, Tarzan?" and took a par 5. Barbara Romack, sure-shooting retired 27 T igers in succession on ------~------19-year-old amateur [rom Scara­ April 30, 1922. mento, Calif., won t,he day's "kid First This Year Local Boy Advances match," eliminating Barbara Mc­ II was the first 4-1 SUI's Wheeler Qualifies Intir~, 17-year-01d Toledo high Shantz Wins 11th Straight school girl, 4 and 3. no-hitter since Cli(f Chambers of Pittsburgh checked the Boston To Singles Final Braves May 6, 1951. CHICAGO (IP) - Philadelphia's ' . For 0 /ym pic Tryouts The last time Chicago was held miraculous leftQander, pint-.sized CUBS BIG CLOUTER By Alan Maver Bobby Shantz, Thursday achieved (.4') - hitless was on May 2, 1917, by Ted Wheeler, SUI sophomore, ------­ TROON, Scotland Moira his 11 th consecutive victory of In Kansas City Meet Paterson brought the Women's Fred Toney of the Cincinnati qualiied for the final Olympic meter race; Scott believes he can the season as the "A's" divided a Art Andrews of Iowa City ad- Bri tisl;1 Go If title to Scotland {or Reds. with the Chicago trials by placing filth in the improve in the 400-meters; and the first time in 14 years Thurs­ The victory was Erskine's sixth White Sox. NCAA BOO-meter race at Berke- Ira Murchison, sprinter, hopes to vanced to the finals of the boy's day by defeating Frances Steph­ agaInst one defeat and his first Shantz pitched Philadelphia to ley, Calif., June 14. The [irst six qualify in the 100. Murchison iost singles in the Heart ot America ens of England, I up on the 38th • against Chicago since he con­ a stirring 4-1 victory in the open­ American citizens in each event out in the toughest semi-final tennis tournament in Ka nsas City hole with one of the most amaz­ quered the Cubs in his major ing with a brilliant five-hit per­ ing comebacks tn spot·ts. '1' I league debut, Aug. 5, 1948. formance to register his 12th tri­ became eligible. heat of the 100 at the NCAA meet. Thursday. Brooklyn President· Waiter F. Wheeler won his preliminal·y Ferguson has returned to his He defeated Ronald Debus, Kan­ umph against one defeat. The " POOl'S Open 1 :15 lI.m.-9:45" O'Malley, happy beyond words, White Sox barely won the sec­ heat in 1 :53.B and ran I :51.1 in home in Canada to participate in sas City, 6-3, 6-1. presen ted Erski ne with a $500 ond, 5-4. As a result, the Sox re­ the final for the fastest time at his Olympic trials. Andrews teamed up with Ed check immediately after the game mained in third place, four games HOffman of Omaha in the boys and ordered a case of champagne career. behind the league leading Yan­ doubles competition . to defeat a to be sent down to the clubhouse kees, despite the Sox' 10 victories Gary Scott also turned in his Kansas City duo, 6-2, 6-2. They met."ENDS where the Dodgers celebrated as in their last 13 games. best performance in the 400- will play in the semifinals today. TODAY MONDAY" if they had just won the pennant. The Latins, Minnie Minoso and meter race, :47.7, but finished Diehl Selected for ClaIms It Was Control /lANK Suzy Hamilton, Iowa City·s Hector Rodriguez took charge in sixth in the semi-final heat won • FIAn RUN MITt ~ "My control did it," beamed the second game but the Sox were SAUER, other contestant, won her third in :47.1. Four men qualified for NCAA District Team Erskine in the clubhouse as he within a hair's breath of blowing 5 Ll/6GIN6 round matches, 6-2, 6-2, but was being besieged by photo­ it in the ninth. the [ina!. Bob (Whitey) Diehl or the SUI graphers from all sides. Minoso contributed his season's Ol/rFIEL.PER bowed out of the girls competi­ OF rilE Had Scott finished fifth instead baseball squad has been selected "I threw a lot of curves and eighth and Rodriguez of sixth, he would have been eli­ tion in the semifinals before Be,,- some fast balls. 1 had them hitting drove home the Chicago team's CHICAGO CUBS, gible for the final Olympic trials as one of the on the all- Siebert of Kansas City, 8-6, the pitch I wanted them to. My second and third runs with a OFF.,-O rHt: as three of the eight finalists were star baseball team ot the NCAA 6-1. control was good, I didn't have to in the fourth. EJI:tG l ~rARr not U.S. citizens. The committee fourth district. Selections were resort to my change of pace, Joe Dobson, , re­ OF flI5 named the two fifth-place men in made by a committee of three col­ SERVED 500 JUDGMENT which is my best pitCh." tired in the eighth and in the CAREER, the semi-final heats to complete lege baseball coaches assisted by CHICAGO (IP) - Welterweight Although only five balls were ninth it required both Bill Ken­ the Olympic qualifiers. Gary ran IIA~ BeEN recommendations fro mother Johnny Bratton of Chicago Thurs­ hit to the outfield, Erskine needed nedy and Harry Dorish to stop PAcI1'I6 :48.1 in his preliminary heat. day was served with a $500 judg­ and received some fine defensive the A's one run short of tying rillE Rich Ferguson, Iowa distance coaches. ment by a sheriff's deputy for sup­ help from his mates. Twice third the score. II1AJOR'5 runner, dropped out of the 5,000- Diehl won four and lost one port of his daughter, Dana. 1 ne basemaro Bobby Morgan made In the first game, Philadelphia meter race when he developed leg in the conference this season. ThE: money was to be deducted [rom swell stops and throws to take triumphed with a three run blast 11'1 riflE , muscle trouble. He had been Iowa City right-hander also lost the boxer's purse for his 10 round away hits from the Cub batters. in the ninth, aiter the Sox had /?/3. I. bout in Chicallo stadium Wednes­ tied thc score, 1-1, in the seventh. COt.(lIt1/1 running with the first lhree men Erskine a lso chipped in with fine [or halt the race. two non-conference games tor a day nighl with Rocky Castellani. fielding plays. He figured in six / total of four wins and three losses. ------of the . * * * 81e HANK'5 "''''.,....~-'A''-= Coach Francis Cretzmeyer has He still has another season of 1------"1 l3etW ONt: OF IHe 816 taken three Iowa runners to Long . . I lh H Buy ~ 1.00 - 52.00 - S5.00 Furillo Aids Erskine competItIOn or e awkeyes. Tonite for 95c Each. In the fifth inning Carl Furillo Bosox Blank Sf. Louis f(EAtGOtV'fj FOR CIIICA&O'G Beach, Calif., for the National backed up against the right field FAtGl 'StARr, 100 -flE''S AAU championships June 20 and SOLD AT 8;15 ONLY fence to gather in Ransom Jack­ ST. LOUIS (IP)-A young right­ iJEE/V RE~,POtV5 IBt.E FoR 21. C>fUVINe IN ~5% OF son's deep fly. Furillo had to do hand pitcher who previously had Wheeler will enter the 1500- 3 SUI Tennis Men started only one game this season 'tllelR RCI/V'S, AVER,451;ve the same thing to haul in Hank OVER CWe RoB.1. PER Sauer's deep smash in the sev­ and failed to last five innings then, completely baWed the St. 6AME - It1Ay' IflrANEW 1I0A1ER To Play in NCAA enth. flIGII-IIAr:. NeVE,R BI:E/'I Baseball's Top 10 The Dodgers wasted little time Louis Browns Thursday as the Three SUI tennis men will par­ won the series BELOw 30 A'S"If Rt:(5t1L.AR Dr The Anoelated l~r tlS Tonite - Saturday giving the "knot hole day" gath­ ticipate in the NCAA champion­ Two Color fIlt~ finai, 2 to O. Lead'"r Batsmen Ibn!led on 125 at bots. ering of 14,000, including 7,7 32 Not Including ThurSday n1 aht's g:lmes. sh ip meet June 23 to 28 at Ev­ cash customers, a demonstration Ivan Delock, whose regular "Cariboo Trail" anston, Ill. Included will be Nor­ n. SCOlL teed off on starter Warren Hack­ chore with the Red Sox is relief NATIONAL LEAGUE pitching. held the Browns to five Playu and Club AU R II Pel. man Barnes, Roger Kroth and of their hiting prowess. They Musial, St. Louf. 214 37 72 .336 "Hurricane er for three runs in .the first inn­ scattered hits as he recorded his Robinson, Brooklyn 114 43 57 .323 Bruce Higley. Lockman, New Y9rk 219 48 71 Island" ing as Roy Campanella and Fur­ thi I'd victory. Reynolds Hurls Yanks .'24 Barnes, a sophomore from Ce­ Baumholtz. Chicago . 134 24 43 .~1 iIIo smashed home runs. Andy The Browns took the series, two Atwell. Chicago lZ2 16 42 .a lB sauer. Chlcnio 231 .3 1r. dar Rapids, is the Big Ten sin­ Pafko followed with another !,lames to one. 39 73 , Marshall. Cincinnati 127 16 4IJ .315 gles champion. He upset Stan , four-bagger in the second to send Boston's first-inning run, scored Adams. CinclnnaU 214 36 12 .30B off Ken Holcombe, started with a To 8-0 Win Over Tigers Slaughter, St. Louis . 173 24 53 .307 Drobac, Michigan State, 6-3 and Hackel' to the showers. Gordon. Boston '" 181 27 3. .298 " Ramsell then baffled the Dod­ walk to the first batter of the DETROIT (IP) - Hulking Allie 6-4. For the season he won eight game, Dom DiMaggio. Billy Good­ Home RlIns: Sauer, Chicago. 19 : Hod­ .. gers until the eighth when the Reynolds, the New York Yankee l'un across during and lost Lour dual Singles matches. man's single to right advanced the rally and ,es. BrOOklyn 12 ; Thomsoll, New York, Brooks got their fifth run. righthander who shuns help from Mickey Vernon doubied Yost 12; We.lrum. New York. 12; Kiner. Pit­ Higley, Iowa City senior, had a Dom and he scored on George relief pitchers, hurled his third tsburgh. II. home. season's record of nine wins and Kell's infield hit. 1952 shutout and his 15th straight 'I'he Nats took a 3-0 lead wi th Runs Batted In : Sauer, Chicago. 60; * * * The Browns, in turn, loaded the Thomson. New York. 54 ; Campanella , three losses in dual meets, while ThulSday as the runs in the first, second and third Brooklyn, 47j Hodges, B rooklYIl . 43; Pirates 8, Giants 1 bases with two out of their hits first place Yankees battered the innings against Early Wynn, who Snider, Brooklyn. 41. Kroth, Winfield, Kans. senior, had and a walk in this busy first in­ Detroit Tigers, 8 to 0, with the went the route for the Indians a six won and two lost record. NEW YORK lIP) - The Pitts­ ning, but De lock pulled out un­ AMERICAN LEAGUE burgh Pirates scored five times in help of two home runs by Yogi and suffered his sixth loss in con­ DIMaggio. BO!Iton 204 39 69 .:()] hurt when left fi~lder ,Archie Wil­ a hectic third inning to defeat the Berra and one by Hank Bauer. trast to seven victories. He sur­ Kell. Boston .. 212 24 70 .330 son turned Dick Kryhoski's fly in­ The Yankees grabbed their 11th rendered 14 hits. Rosen. Cleveland . 212 36 69 .326 New York Giants, 8 to 1, and d rop to a double play by picking Jim Goodman, Boston 155 24 50 .323 DANCELAND aiZ:;femj the National league champions victory in the last 13 games by But the Indians came back to Mi tchell. Cleveland . 150 19. 4!J .316 Cedar Rar.ldl, low. Delsing ott second base. Robinson, Chicago 228 35 71 .311 10"'.'5 Smar elt Ba llroom shelling loser Ted Gray and two tie the score against Chico Mar­ Doby. CLeveland . .. 113 27 53 .306 "ENDS five games behind the pace­ The Red Sox drove Holcombe setting Brooklyn Dodgers. relief hurlers lor 12 hits. Gray rero, who also went the distance Bauer. New York . 192 23 58 .30)2 . - SATURDAY" out in the third inning a nd were now has a 7-6 lecord and Rey­ 8nd received credit for his sixth Mantle, New York 162 26 49 .302 TONIGIIT TO DAY During the third inning rally, a then handcuffed by relief Dave Woodllng. New York 129 17 39 .302 Best In " ' elltun g "' lnC rhubarb developed when plate nolds, who gave up seven hits and victory against two defea ts. Dale KENNY 1l0FER Actually filmed high in the Home Runs: \Vert~ . Detroit, 13 ; Rosen, Madison. But the Sox added their struck out eight, an 8-4 mark . • Mitchell homered orc him in the " illS MIDWESTERNEfI umpire Babe Pin elli '~ first called second run off Satchel Paige in Cleveland. 12; Dropo, Detroit. 12; Berro. rugged, periled reaches Pittsburgh outfielder George Met­ Berra smashed a one-run homer third and Larry Doby hit a two­ New York. 12. of America's vast the ninth when Kell doubled and in the third in­ run homer in the seventh. Saturday kovich out, then safe. When play was driven home by Del Wilber. Runs Balted In : Rosen, Cleveland. 4:1 : Name nand Ma.le REDWOOD TIMBERS. was resumed after a heated argu­ ning and a two­ OroPO, Detroit, 39 ; Mele. Chlcago. 35 .. RA l' WIN EGAR run homer in the Doby, Cleveland. 35. " illS GREAT UAIiD ment. announced * * * I ~ Artish I ~ that the Giants were playing the -* * * sixth into the Maior Scoreboard upper right field Every WEDNESDAY game under protest because of r NATIONAL STANDINGS Reds 7 Braves 4 stands. Six of his CE-MAR ACRES Po,alar " OVER ~8-N ITE " PlneUi's reversed decision, W L PCT. GB Veteran righthander Murry 12 home runs Brooklyn .. 40 15 .727 Cedar Rapids, Iowa BOSTON (IP) - Hank Edwards have been hit off New York .. 35 20 .6:«; 5 Dickson went the distance for the Chico go .... 34 24 .586 7 1, blasted Tellef pitcher Sheldon Tiger pitching. ENDS TODAY Pirates, posting his iilih triumph St. Louis .. . 31 30 . ~08 12 Jones for a three-run homer in Bauer homered Cincinnati . . 28 :tJ .483 i3 1 a STOCK CAR RACES JOSE FERRER as he checked the Giaots with five the ninth inning Thursday night Philadelphia . 23 33 .411 17 \\1 Every Friday Nlrht and into the upper Boston . 23 34 .404 18 CYRANO DE BERGERAC hits. 1 Every Sunday Nicht to gi ve the a 7-4 REYNOLDS left field stands Pittsburgh . 17 45 .214 26 , The Pirates made 13'- hilS, in­ victory over the Boston Braves. in the fourth in­ Tbur.d.,'s Ru.lt. cluding two singles by Dick Groat, The Reds pulled into · an eighth ACTION SPEED 21-year-old Duke university ath­ ning after Joe Collins sin glcd. It I Brooklyn 5. Chicago 0 -PLUS­ inning tie by driving starter Ernie was Bauer's eighth home run. Pltlllbur&h 8. New York I EXCITEMENT fii1iijjft lete who signed his professional J ohnson out of action with a two­ Sl. Loul. 6. Philadelphia 4 COLOR CARTOON Reynold S, who pitched three CincinnaU 7, Boston" contract only two days ago and runs uprising. complete games at the end of the Time trials - 7;00 p.m. STARTS SATURDAY "Flipper Frolics" played his first game jll shprt~top Jones set the stage [or his 1951 season and 12 this year, Today·. PUchers Races - 8:15 p.m. Thursday. Sl. Louis al Boslon I Nlghll - Slaley BACK AGAIN TO downfall by passing Grady Hat­ struck put the last two batters in 19-41 VI, Wilson 15-5l. Children under 12 admitted provide you WITH LAUGH&! SPORT ton. After the later was sacrificed Cincinnati at Philadelphia INlghl] - FREE the second inning with the bases Blockwell 12-7. VI. Drews 12-7 1. "Conq uer1ng 'Ihe Surf" * * * by Willard Marshall, Ted Klus­ loaded and two other times with Chicago at New York (Nlghll - Min­ zewski was walked intentionally. ner 16-21 "S. Maille .9-21. Join the Crowds at Ce-Mar Cards 6, Phillies 4 two runners on he struck out bat- Plttsburch at Brooklyn - Pollet 12-7. Amusement Park Eddie Pellagrini went in to run - LATE NEWS - tel's. vs. Wade IS-31. Trail. 11. TIII-A-Wb • • 1 !:Oe PHILADELPHIA (IP) - The St. for Kluszewski before Edwards Jeep, .· url. Wheel AMERICAN STANDINGS Louis Cardinals pulled their fav­ lashed his follrth homer of the LUlie Air Planel R.II·.~PI.n" * * * W L PCT. GD Ulr Air Plano. Sea Cr.l.o ored " big inning act" Thursday season into the Reds' in New York 33 20 .023 Carl C halr .. J\ .... '.ne night with five tallles in the sixth right field. Hats Whip Indians Boston .. " .. 33 25 .569 2' .. M.... J-O.- R ...d Glld.-A-Plane Chlc"QO 32 27 .542 4 to whip the , The Reds bunched four of their CLEVELAND (IP) - The Wash­ Clevell1nd 32 28 .533 4 ',> 6 to 4. Doubles by Hal Ri ce and 11 hits against Johnson in the ington Senators scored three runs Washington 28 26 .519 51. CONCESSIONS plus a by SI. Louis 27 32 .411R R Cnlton Candy Pop eighth to deadlock matters. Dur­ in the ninth inning Thursday to Phllad, lphla 23 29 .442 9' ~ Cloyd Boyer added to the Phillies' Detroit 18 39 .310 17 Carmel Corn Barbeqae ing that rally, Bubba Church, the sweep a three-game series from SaDd_'ehu downfall. Cincinnati starter, gave way to (j&-ndy Apples the Cleveland Indians, 6-3, and TIt.radar'. Ruults lI.t 00,1 I ce Cream The Cardinals rode roughshod pinch-hitter Cal Abrams, who hand the Indians their sixth Wo shl'lvton 6. Cleveland 3 pop Corn Snow Cone. ove!- Philadelphia starter Howie Philadelphia 4. Chicago 1 lIst game . Calfee singled home both straight defeat. ChIcago S. Philadelphia 4 12d gOl11e. Pc-anut. Fox and three relief hurlers, Jim and Wally Westlake. A crowd of 5,368 saw the Nats New' York B. Delrolt 0 BOlloll 2. SI. Louis 0 Free Parkin&' and Konstanty, Andy Hansen and Ken break a 3-3 deadlock in the ninth Free Picnic Grounds H eintzelman. The victory gave St. DAVENPORT GOLFER WINS when AI Rosen, who had Jielded Today', Pilch ... Roller skatinc every nlrhl Louis the edge in the four-game ST. PAUL, MINN. (.4') ~ Dan Mickey Grasso's , threw wild New York .t Chicago (Night, - Ros- cht ,6-f' VI. ROiovh\ 15-61. from 7 :30 f.1l 10:30 series, three games ·to one. Molyn~aux of Davenport, defeat- to sernnd in an Rt l"m'lt te fo ern W ••h !I1l1ton ot st. Louis rNlght . _ Every Saturday and SUl1day . Eleven Cardinals went to the cd Herbert Klontz Jr., of Ottum- Mel Hoderlein. Hoderlein scored !,;jeater '3-11 or Moreno r2-5' VI. Byrne " I '~ . 11. • a'~rnoon 2100 &iII 8:00 fV1RYTHlN..; plate in tire big sixth inning and WB, 2 and I, In one 01 'l:hursdjlY's 0 ... the error and Grasso reached Phtla" ,lphla . t Detroit INlght ] _ B)'rd I ~ondaYI reserved for collcctl'r1 fllur hil ~ lind ns mnny match ps In thl' Western JuniOrj thi! d. ,(' -A) \. Trllrk. , 1, . Yvonne DeCARLO too! bases on balls. golI tournament, r Edclle Yost sI ngled the second {.. _t~"t~~I. '1.~~~tl('5'.~).tNi gh1i PlrnoU Prlvtlt P r11PIl • nIDAY. IUN~ %to ItS! PAGE nn 57 Law Graduates Admitted to Iowa Bar SUI Educators (ity Record Mountaineers Change Trip Fitty-seven recent law grad­ To enable members o[ the 1952 uates passed their state examin­ Discuss Plan summer expedition to miss some ations and were admitted to prac­ Bt:lLOL"G PEI.lMIT L . R. John_on. 1132 Hot~ a\·e.. 28, and th n ",.ill Doctor Signals Twins' Arrival hot weather, the Io .... a Mountain_ to Iowa Cil)·. tice before the Iowa bar Thurs­ V;hllin.. Steel Buildinc 300 tor the addition of a porch. eers ha\,e re\'i:ed their pla.ns for S17,000 tor l'ODStruc1ion at John Ebert. expedilion I.. ader day at the SUI coUege of law. the club's annual trip to the ..... 1' t_ 01 Family Life warehOI!! at Prenl st DE TH and veteran at many mountain c.K. Thompson. Iowa supreme Expedition lead sa ~ that the Malden Lane. $ . Ida M. Work. 75, Ncr h cUm bin, and bikinI trips. in\·ited court justice from Cedar Rapids, cbange also will aUolI' more per­ all pe ons int restPd In th .. trip swore in the new lawyers, aIter It exper:eace the be t teach- Joe Cilek. 25.000 for construc­ ·berty. Thursday at University sons to join the group. The trip er, the parent education leaders tion of a new home on Richard ho pltals. to rontacl him at WSUI. He de­ which they were extended com­ w11l be made in cars. clared that mountain climbina pllmentary one-year membershlps aHending their third annual st. In {amille Heigh . According \0 officials oC the skill Is not neee ry. Costs of Ih~ in the Iowa Bar association by workshop at the State University Donald J . Seydel, 1107 N. um­ BLRTH climbing and hiking club at SUI, or Iowa this week should be well­ mit lit., SI2.000 for con !ruction of expedlUon can be obtained on re­ Ingalls Swisher, Iowa City at­ A aIr! for fro and trs. Man'in the MountaIneers still plan TO quest. torney and immediate past pres­ trained to or,anize education pro­ a new residenee at 1I0S N Sum­ Jindrich. FairfaJl. Wedn ..sday ilt leave Iowa City on the e\'ening grams In their a 'n Iowa com­ mit. M.. rcy hospital. Thi will be Ih 13th ye r ttle ident of the association. 91 August 8. They ..... 111 fir t &0 club has conducted the summer All but six of those passing munitJes. Allan Mulford. 1411 Sheridan A lirl for fro and frs. Richard to the Teton mountain of 'Wyo­ activity. the bar examinations were grad­ urCilnlled a a "dynamic av.. .. $5,000 to mo"" a house 10 a Benninchoft. Route 5, Wl'dnesdsy ming for one week. hO\l,e\·cr. in­ uates of the SUI college of law. grouP." th.. wllrkshop members lot on Dearborn st. at Mer~' hospital. stead at goine directly to the SI­ 'ALBINO' BLA KBIAO FO ' 0 Crai, Cook. Davenport, and Doro­ have planned and evaluated their J . P Paulson. 403 E. Jefferson A boy for Mr. and irs. Eman­ erras as originally planned. thy C. Sauer, Dubuque, "read" work Crom day to day. Hch or­ st.. 1350 to build a new gara e. uel BrenJlt'man, 922 Iowa ave., It is expeded that some xpe­ CHEROKEE, IA. fA» - Tw (studied) law for several years ,anizing and conductlnc some of WiJllam Sibley. 30S Prenti Wednesday at Merc' hospital. dlt on members will find It ncce.­ boy came up with a rather rare under the direction of practising th lon$. Each person present­ st .. $350 to bulld a new cara, • A bo\' for Mr. and frs. Ray­ sar)' to r .. turn folic;wine th .." week specimen here thlS \\'eek - an attorneys to qualify for the bar ed programs In the form of ki'. Ruby Gillespie, 408 E. Fairchild mond Kennedy, Route 5, Thul'J­ in Wyominc. rather than con­ "albino" blackbird. exams. discussion periods aDd Icctun!S on st., $300 to construct an outside day at Mercy hospital. tinue to California. The beak-_napplng species from SUI graduates who passed the specific phases of par.. nls and stairway. A girl [or ~r. and f . Carroll In th Si .. rras, the uoup will the regular blackbird class wa~ exarnJnations include Marvin S. family hee education. Harold Cr in, 209 Park rd • S2,- Sa SS, Route 5, Thul"5day at Mer­ climb in the North Pahsad and discovered on the Cherokee coun­ Andich, Davenport; Wells BUrton "Actual leadership practice" 500 for the addition of a bedroom. CY ho pita!. ML Whitney areb from Au,. 21- try dub loll cour e. Bryan, Montezuma; Charles Da­ utlllzed during the work hop. was vid Campbell, Cedar Rapids; WIl ­ described by Mrs. Lloyd Mum­ Ilam S. Charlton, Manchester; ford , Council Blufts. parent edu­ Robert L. Claypool, Williamsburg; cation chairman o[ th rowa PTA, Thomas M.W. COllins, Rock is­ as the belit method Cor developing land, Ill.; Richard H. Crandall, lead rs tor developing leaders Cor Lake City; Thomas W. Curry, SCREEN ACTRE INGRID BEBG~IAN ' PItY I J • Pror. Plero Huto-Oarbone (rl .. btl. holds up two fin ..ers Indicatin&, the arrival local tudy Ifoups. Creston; Robert B. Dickey, Keo­ Del gates repr enting their of twin r\rls to the wed h aetre and b ~ r director hu band Ro ­ kuk; John E. Ducharme, Spencer, local orcanizatlons concluded thai John L. Duhigg, Emmetsburg; Ted berto RossllUnl. At the I.. n. th.. rati'S of the . Intor Mondl Unlc in Rome are decorated with twin bOil . al 0 Indlca!!n, the twlllll' to be effective lcaders they must Enabnit, Osage; David H. Foster, understand the dynamic group Cedar Rapids; Robert C. Frost, arrival. Tbe bable , welrhed a tolal of approxlmalel U pounds. wer-t named Invld and Isabel. process and Ih variOUS te:h­ Clinton; Stephen C. Gerard, Si­ niqu at group discuuion. gourney; N. S. Gould, Marshall­ To gaJD a fund am ntal kl'lOw­ Sell Your Odds & Ends Through Thrifty Iowan Classifiedsl town; Charles P. Grahl, Iowa ledg of chIld .rowth and d­ City; Albert T. Gravelie, Mason Moeller, Morrison Will velllpment, lead rs hould become WANT AD RATES Rooms for Rent City; Albert Habhab, Ft. Dodge; acquainled with the maJor sources • Richard Max Hemingway, Waver­ of books, Plimphl Is and hlms ly ; Robert W. Hill, Keokuk; Paul Oae day ...... _... Ie per o1'cl jlnltQr avallable In this field, Ihe .ro'~p G. James Jr., Des Moines; Discuss Newspaper Jobs concluded. Three da,. .. 12(1 per worcl Walter F. Johnson, Chillicothe; Five da,...... 15e pn word Lemucl T. Jones, Jr., Iowa City; P rof. Leslie G. Mocller, director Mrs. Mumford expr th belief that Ihe workshop s ·Ion Tea day, ...... %Oe per ord Kenneth L. Keith, Delhi; Freder- of the SUI school at journalism. Cerro Gordo, Worth. Winnebago, Oae month ...... 3ge ~ wC'lrcl will hclp the participants uUlize Ick Koch, Des Moines; George lind J ames Morrison, head of the Hancock, Wright. FI'anklln, But­ !W.laJmum ehar&,e 50e the rescurc s at their own com­ Lindeman. Waterloo; Donald e. SUI newspaper production lab_ l IeI', Floyd and Mltchel_l._ munlti s In stimulating an inter t I Marlin, Jowa City; Richard A. oratory, wlll discuss mellns or Dt:ADLINE Mayer, Clinton; William H. Miles, In parent education. : In II typical e sian Wednesd y 4 p.m. weekdays for insuUon Corydon; John J . Murray, Iowa remedying the problem at the Election Results In followln, mom in,', Dally City; Albert C. McClain, Iowa shortage of workers in the print- afterr.oon Mrs. James Berkey and Mr . Don B. LeCroy, bolh at 0 s Iowan. Please check your ad City, Elliott R. McDonald , J r., ing tield at n meetlDlt of the Given by Board Moines, str Sled the increa ed re­ In the first Is ue It appean. pavenport; Robert C. Nelson, Hawkeye Press club Saturday span ibilities of par nts In pro­ The Dajly Iowan caD be re­ C~d a r R~pid s; J ames S. Nettleton. evening, June 21. DES MOrNES (IPI _ The &tate motina molion I maturity tor lponslble for only one incor­ SIO UX CIty; I The meeting of this north- ('aD\ ' as~inll board reported Thur _ youth today. r ct In erUon. W. M. Newport. Davenport; central Iowa newspaper gl'oup Honorah Noonan, ~ ars h a llt~wn ; will be held in the Cle r L ke day the otrlt'ial total~ by which Members or th workshop plan­ niD, committee Included Mrs. O. WilH am Q. Norehus, . Demson; shelter house. Lester S. Gillette wun the Demo- CLASS IFIED DISPLAY S. Filtland, Colfax, president One insertlon ...... JISc per Inch George D. Pappadackls, Storm The great numb r oC jobs now at Lake, Richard V. Paulos, Daven- the Iowa paren and teach r : Five Insertions per month, port; WIIIJam B. Petty, Iowa City; open to persons tJ'ained In th Mrs. Jam s Shannahan. Des per Insertlon ...... SSc per tnch Richard E. Phillips. Pleasant Val- v ~rlous phases of newspaper work b came the Democratic nomln e Mo!nes, dlreclor ot th depart­ T~ Insertions per month, ley; Robert D. Prichard, Onaw:l, WIll be discussed by Pro lessor for ~tate treasur r. men t at home lerv!c ;. and 1r~ . per insertion ...... SOc per Inch John L. Redfern, Bur lington; Moeller. H~ ....-ill suggest ways 10 Mumford. Daily Insertion. during month, Gail M. Richardson, Jefferson; which pubhshers may call the t- Ncith('r hnd opposition in tlle 'URNI H~D room I lor ILlmmer. Clo.. In. per In rtlon ...... 7Oc per Inch how,,.. Ie. Oon al G.mbla or D,"l William W. Sindlinger, Waterloo; ten Han. of young people to the op- June 2 primary eleetiun. Gillettf.', ••22%1 . Roy K. Stoddard, Jr., Iowa City; porlumltes lor employm0'11" ,/mp.v, dl Uble 'bp In. llllu­ Uon, C

Houses \U>c ohlr\, 1'-3-4; \"" call.... 14',: whit. formal bow Of: : , ... hllf' Ir-tilicill Clrn.lIon: whlte LET UI tranifer your lumltur. .felr formal IU pend~~ . Wont onc~. 1.undt"r... Here Are Typical Results ",lth our mod rn t'Qujpment. to your ne'" f'd , rpdT 10 "'",.r. ttO v.lue, ta. Coli ho.... Mlher Bro • T ... n.f.... . DJoI 868t. 41f1 . LAROI lIo..,nlo..,,, bou ~ [or III. IUlO From Want Ad Users! down. tIS per month. ~mplelel ~ (urn' hec:l exce-pt own r h,(o bedroom PARAKItETS. Dial WI. lpartment.. Room. averale IXr month. y.... around. tll.sao Iolal'1.' IIrl ••• SItRV£L Rtlrl&..... r.or. Wke ne". Pho. Phon. 1-2310. fU5 . 1li0ii ROYAL po.labl • . beell."l condi­ . . . found a buyer! Autos for Sale Used tion. IoU. II. S LInn. API . 10 - I-~ P . I " W needed ch and decided to sell our ." PONTIAC. D .I 6883 C H Ie summera cottaie. I ran a Want Ad for II1!18 DE SOTO f'd.n. MUler .nd over· ____ GEE .. r \',()NOER drtv~. W . Rlch.rd W. Grl_nbeck. IlSO S UTK Coronl porlable t.ypewrller. only two day and &Old it for 20~: more 114 E. Mark.l. Phone 3783. Good condlllon. 1113. _ . IF SHE 0 SETTLE than the local agent had offered." FOR 11138 CHEVROLET couP<'. $125. Phon. CENTS! '-2802. House for Rent - ~~~~~~--~ lOVING' Dial .... and UN Ih' com pIela modun eqUlIIJllCflI of the M . ber 8 /'01. Tran.[e.r. Garage for Rent Typing . . . got a 'iob fast G ARAGE - Cor or llor.,• . THESIS .nd ,.nera: IYllln, . mJm.o Phone "Even with a business school diploma, a:rlphln.. Nolary PubIJc. Mary V. r." Burn. . 101 Iowa Slate Bank. Dial _ the l;e~t 1 was offered was $35 a week Ot 2:121. Ignition . . . till I ran a Want Ad statini my CARBURETORS qualificatl ons. Next day I landed a job EXPERI ENCED th ...., ,onor.l Iypln• . paying me $50." Phone 2m . GENERATORS STARTERS TH&SlS tYllln• . 0 101 . -3108. Brigg8 & Stratton Motors TYPING. Dial ' -~ IOI . PYRAMID SERVICES 220 S. Clinton Dial 5723 . .. sold my stove LAFF·A.DAY "My r ange was 11 years old and no longer manuactured. But I found a buyer for It with a Want Ad in one day. And sold it for 40 ~( more than I'd hoped ror."

... got a high oHer "The best 1 had been offered by friends and neighbors for my old baby plan pen, ba'by carriage, )[ETT high chair and scales was S15. With a Want Ad thilt cost only OVEJe ABSQR B ING' WOMAN SPE:NDS $1.40 I got $32 [01' the lat." A SODA AND YAK.­ r2.ST HA~F ~ HEI"2. I"IG WIT)~ 1HE IN 1HE fCE'<.Q.!':AM GANG.~' - fSN'T t-'.~ " u.;JIc. AND 1HE 10 M seCOND FOR QUICK HALF IN A BEAUTY PAl'llOI2 ! ECONOMICAL RESULTS •.• PHONE 4191 Daily Iowan Wanl Ads ...... but up! You dOlft know how lucky you ue!~ PAGE SIX - THE DAILY IOWAN. :nIDAY, JUy.;E ·Zt, 1.51 Man Happy, Wife Tired 'Flying Arrives 'Gas Main Added R J " Educato Po~' To Downtown A,_ Classi(s d d An additional gas main Is beinC _e_(O~m_m_e_n~e~-: -o~. ~: -.. ~-.~r~~AfkrQoo~AreB~n ~~:~~_ installed in the Iowa City down. If more adults could lose their town area to relieve pressure 0., "reading prejudices," they would WEYMOUTH. MASS. 1.4') - A rad, "the flying pop," arrived at quads - ew'renUy new England's the other conducts. enjoy many of the classics. Koie Island PC;>Ws Stage Rus~ian Dances 39-year-old ex-marine walked this large air base in southern The reason aiven by the Iowa. Adult educators were shown jauntily out of South Shore hos­ only set - he said, "Every day is Norway Thursday after a 4,000- a day to the good for the babies. Illinois Cas and Electric complllJ evidence to bear this out in an pital Thursday carrying four car­ mile flight from Washington, D.C., was the Increase in the use of evening session of the SUI adult nations in honor of his newborn It will take a few more days be­ gas tor hea Ung and ' appliallUl. fore any prediction can be made." in a tiny Piper Cub, and said he education leadership workshop quadruplets. The new main Is being installed Thursday by Hew Roberts, asso­ Three of the flowers were red Tue quads have a brother and would do it again. bet ween the curb a nd the side. ciate professor of education at for the boys. A white one was Cor two sisters: Dennis, 4, Mary 3, and Conrad was welcomed by a re­ walk on the north side of Wasb. SUr. the girl, who as the first-born of 2-year-old Anne Marie. ception committee from the near­ Ington st. trom Gilbert to JohlUOll From his experiences in adult the Quads. The fa mily home is a seven­ by city of Stavanger, headed by sts. ' education in this country and his room white frame house on Pleas­ John J. Manning sa id his wiCe Mayor Karlson and Deputy Mayor The new main Is a four InCb native AustraLia, Roberts cited a ant st., South Weymouth. insisted he take the flowers from Ragnvald Ripsskog. pine. It i~ expected to be com. number of personal experiences Persons well acquainted with Conrad is on a good-will mis­ pleted within two weeks. a bouquet at her bedside. the family said they knew of no with adult groups who, when un­ sion, carrying 20.000 messllge~ aware ot the nature of a book, He saw her briefly earlier, financial oCfers ot help. while she was still in the delivery from Scandinavian-born people become deeply interested in quot­ "There was a small television in Minnesota to friends and rela­ SUfgeOIl'. IaatruIuaIa ed passages and proceed to read room. deal," one recalled, "but Manning tions in the old countries. "How are the babies. J:>hn?" turned it down." Equ.lpmeat & SUP.PI* the entire book. In a similar fash­ The 48-year-old flier made Ion, he said, parents can help a shp ~skpd. "Are they all well?" For E\'el'J Fteld .f Praeilee "They're lovely, they're marvel­ stops at WaShington, Goose Bay. high school student with a read­ In.rtrument Make" ing assignment in Shakespeare - ous," the rather expounded, Television Show Greenland, Iceland, and Storno­ way. For T/~ Profeulon "They're beautilu l , ::md they're and thoroughly enjoy it, if they SlneB 1895 can overcome their "prejudice" all healthy." To Feature Student Conrad said the last part of tht toward the classics. The weary 27-year-old mother An SUI grnauate student from journey was the worst. "The skies Expert.s Not Needed had dozed off by then. Canton, China, his wife, and their were overcast. and to top It all 1 Margaret Lee Keyser, director "Now I've got three bus drivers," three-year-old son wiU be fea­ lost my watch In Stornaway. On of the SUI I'eading clinic, told the chuckled Mann ing, who is presi- tured on the UniverSity hour tele­ the last lap I never knew what R.... Pheba, RePftllft...... time it was. DIAL Sltl group that adult reading habits dent of South Shore coach lines, vision program ' to be presented !OI Koter Aye. II.". CItr can be imprOVed without the Inc. Sunday at noon over Stntion Today he will hop the Inland guidance ot reading experts. The three prospective drivers WOC-TV, Davenport. Norwegian mountains to Oslo. "Sell-helps" such as setting up and their sister are reported in The student, Chu Tsing Li, and standards of reading speed and " pretty good" condition. his family will be introduced at memory enable the reader . to All four are in humidity cribs the beginning of the regular hal!­ strive continually to improve his - incubators with the tempera- hour show. Later he will com­ INLAID LIIOLEUMS reading habits, she said. Persons SHORTLY AFTER OFFICER PRISONERS were mBved from compound 66 to their new compound, ture around 80 degrees. ment on a movie, "Peiplng Fam­ from dramatic arts and other near compound 85. on Koje 1.lanel, the prisoners In 85 put on a performanee (above) on an Improvls'ed The quads will get their first Hy," which will be shown on the lields can also help the adult sta ..e. Some of the POWs drened as women, others as RU8Ilan men, supposedly in typical Russian ARMSTRONG CALIFOltNIA meal today. It prObably will be program. The movie depicts the SLOANE ROLL ENDS ORIGINALS reader with expressl.>n in reading, costumes, dld Rusllian dancel. This picture was made throu.-h barbed wire fencin.-. glucose from a medicine dropper. life oj an average family in Peip- vocabulary and the concepts ne------KANSAS ATI'ORNEY REMOVED----- Newborn infants arc rarely fed ing prior to the fall of the Na- AS LOW AS $1.65 sq. yd. L~~ ~sR~: for understanding, she tOI' 24 hOl.\rs, reported Dr. Robert tiona list government. ~~~:? SUI ,Professor Returns' , WASHINGTON (JP) - Attomey R. Ryan, Weymouth general prac- Li is working on his doctor's Miss Keyser advised the ed:J- General McGranery Thursday an- titioner who delivered them. degree in art history the uni- Iowa City Flooring Co. eatol's to bring persons from all C ./. P k nounced the removal oC the U.S. Many times, he said, "They versity. His Wife, who took her fields into their community groups omp Ime"., ts ' a ,·stanl·s district attorney for Kansas and don't tolerate anything. There's a college work at Nanking Unlver­ 211 Kirkwood Ave. so that they may increase their 'e' said a federal grand jury will be tendency for C1uid in the lungs." sity In China. is employed at Uni- Iowa City, Iowa fields of "reading interests." asked to revie:v some of his acts. Concerning the f\.lture of the versity hospitals. Adllits Can Be Interested Friendliness and warmth are In earLier demonstrations this major characteristics of the, people Pakistan Seience conference at F;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~:;;;;;;;;~;:;:;;;;;~;;;~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~;;~======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ week in the workshop "sample of Pakistan, according to Dean F. Peshewar. He also judged two de- room," the adult educators were M. Dawson of thl! SUI college Qf bates and had more than ten con­ shown "by doing" that adults In­ ferences wi th sma 11 groups of terested In craft work can be­ engineering. The Dawsons have teachers. come interested in art apprecia­ just returned from four months In addition his duties ali a tion. in Pakistan, where he was a Ful­ teacher, Dawson spent some time A folk and square dancing de­ bright professor at Punjab Col­ observing the Pakistan irrigation monstration, led by Dudley Ash­ system, the largest in the world. lege of Ehgim!ering and Technol- ton, associate proCessor for wo­ The irrigated area is fiat, so soil men's physical education, stressed ogy in Lahore. erosion is no great problem, . but the promotion of international un­ Dawson suggests that this the land has been irrigated and derstanding as well as the health friendship shown by the people ot farmed lor so many centuries that , . and entertainment values of the Pakistan is extremely valuable in $oil fertllity is a problell). tolk-dllllce. the world struggle against com­ According to Roberts, the work­ Don't Use FertlUdr munism, but he cautions that Am­ Despite long use of the land, shop demonstrations were based ericans must not think that these on projects which have "worked" crops to support the large popula­ people want merely to imitate us, tion can still be grown. Fertilizer in a number of Iowa communities for their own country and customs and require a minimum of techni­ is rarely used, Dawson sayt, be­ require solutions different from ca use natural fertilizer is usually cal knowledge and skill. ours, Church Role Deacrlbed needed for fuel and artificial fer­ At a general meeting Thursday Dawson emphasizes the great tlllzers are too costly to ilUlil9rt. , . morning the Rev. Lee Jacobs, pas­ variety of physical features, es­ He says the problem requiring tor of the Ft. Dodge Congregation­ pecialIy desert and mountains, more attention is the result of al church. described the role of which crowd a large population continued irrigation, for through the church in adult education. A into a relatively stn