, Hawkeye~ Open '59 Football5eason At -,roday By DON FORSYTHE Probable Starting Lineups I Injurie 10 . and ~ilburn Hollis .and the lack of contact Sports Editor wort n by the Hawkeye this fall throw stdl more clouds of doubt The many questions that have lingered in the minds oC IOWA CALIFORNIA Ion the Hawkeye outlook. football fans the past several months may be an w red today as (214) .. LE . (11S) DAVE GEORGE The Bears arcely· Jaid a hand on Jet r in the R Bowl game the Hawkeyes open their 1959 season meeting California at Berkeley CHARLES LEE (221) LT . (1ft) PAT NEWELL a he raced to 1JH yards in 9 carri and had a 81' )'ard run, Dodgers Win in a contest scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Iowa time. SHERWYH THORSON (2ft) .. LG (215) PETE DOMOTO but the peedy halfb ek has ~n hamphed by injuries this fall. The Hawkeyes have been made a one·touchdown Cavorite in this BILL LAPHAM (UI) .. C ... (2t1) TERRY JONES He rnis ed v«al day, with a diiloc ted finger, then w side· their second consecutive game with the Bears. The Hawkeyes romped MARK MANDERS (215) RG . (1") DON PIESTRUP lined ror a longer period with D prained ankle. He is back with the past Pete Elliot's crew 38·12 In the Rose Bowl contest that capped JOHN SAWIN (215) RT . . (221) FRANK !ALLY fir t ring now but hetber or not he can match la t ason's effMh Co Braves Lose Iowa's 8-1·1 record last year. (174) RE (215) GAEL BARIOTTI I n is yet to be n. Iowa's path appears to be much more rugged against the Bears OLEN TREADWAY (15') QB .. (196) LARRY PARQUE Hollis, ho long with Olen Tre3dwIIY will mold the u ,., today. With 23 letterman returning - seven oC them Rose Bowl start· BOB JETER (113) LH . . (1") GROVER GARVIN or the Jlawkeyes lit qulll1erbllck this nson.· listed II doubtful (See Story - Page 4) ers - California is considered stronger than last sea on. (1"" RH ... (lIS) 808 WILLS Coach 's crew seemingly cannot reach the peak (1") .. FB ... (1.7) BILLY PATTON oC the 1958 squad. Gone are all·American Ran.dy Duncan, HAWKS- four starting interior linemen' and Willie (two·touchdown) Fleming, G.me Time 2~31 - Radio .Natlc.. tI by WSUI, KXIC, WMT, (Continlled On Page 5) perhaps Ute most exciting halfback in Iowa football hi tory. WHO, KRNT. '0 iI, owanI I ..erving ;he Stflte and the People of Iowa City

Established In 1868 AsSOCiated Press Leased Wire And Wirelll*o 10 Cit , 10WI , Saturday, Sept m~r 26. 1959 FranceWalksOut Ik,e, Khrushchev Of U.N.Assembly OpenCrucial Talk Obiects To Hist~ry Prof Experts Seek 2 Teenagers Union Quits; To Discuss ~harges Of Attends Meet Cause Of · Invade School, Deadlock In Maior Cold Saudi' Arabia In 'Europe Air Disaster Rob Teacher Steel Talks War Issues Delegation Returns Rob rt M. Kingdon, associate NEW YORK "" - Fruitle professor of history at SUI, repre· n i otlallon in th nation's 73-da}' BORDEAUX, France (II - Gov· NEW YORK IN) - Two t nailed Meeting At Ike's When Speech Concludes sented the University at a Colloquy ernment experts combed a splin· boys boldly invaded a fifth , rod ~ tt'C1 trike co\lup I'd campI ·tely Friday. The br akdown h i , hte ~d Mountain Retreat U ITED ATIO S, N.Y. on Theodore Beza - his corres· tered woodland Friday for the clas room Friday and at knifepoint cause oC France's worst civil air the po ibllity of Tafl·Hartl y I w (AP) - France walked Ollt of pondence and his publications, robbed a t acher whil h r small 10, Md. ( P)­ disaster. It killed 53 people. pupils screamed in terror. lnt rVl.' ntlon by the i overnm nt to the U.N. General Assembly Fri· durin g the summer in Geneva, open th .truck mills. nhowt'r lind So­ Twelve survivors were treated The teacher, Mrs. Betty Kofler. day in p.J;o test against charges Switzerland. The colloquy was for burns, fractures and shook. All Th striking U n it ~d St e~ lwork('r iklta Khru h he Before Walkout 10 t $39 In II pocketbook the two ge by Saudi Arabia's cJlief dele· held under the auspices of the nIne crew members perished, one Negro youths took from her . Th y Union saId it aw no point In COIl· tightly gmlrd d Association Humanisme et Rena· on re·entering the iJurning wreck. t1nu ing th talk 0 lon& 8 i1 :. gate that the French army in Memb.rs of til' French deleg.tion to the United N.tion. confer be· both were said to be about 16 y ars of n . 1 ryl nd mount in issance. The official passenger roll listed old. du lry In ist ' on work r gulaUn" A IgeJia were torturers thirsting three Britons as the only non· for. the start of Friday', s.sslon. Th. Fr.nch I.t.r w.lked out In conc . ion . Th union ays the e night for ft . tnrl on Theodore Beza was the succes· prot.st against charge. of cruelty In Alg.ril. From I.ft to right .r. Mrs. Kofrer was holding clas for Ie for blood. sor to John Ca Ivin as leader of French passengers. or aim d Ilt "unlon bu tin,." rud I cold w r talks. . Bound for Africa Thursday night. Ambass.dor Armand B.rard; First S.cret.ry Edoll.rd Theysset, about 25 pupils. ranging In ag the Reformed churches of the "w' rc , oing hom " announc ·d Th Pr . ldenl and th Kremlin But members of the French dele· the four·engined DC7 strained into .nd Raymond Gastambld., the d.l.g.ti.... •• Mer.tary-g.ner.t. - AP Crom 9 to 11, in her rourth floor gation returned at the conclusion oC 16th Century. A number of scholar· classroom at P.S. 1~. a ir8mmar lht' un ion pre Ident, D vld J. lof c· I aOOr, both In a jovial mood, ar· the air after a faltering takeoff, Wir. photq. Don Id . "This fart ical filibu tC'r a vitrolic speech by Ahmad Shuk· ly studies of his career and writ· floundered , then plunged into a school on Ea t 99th St. rived at Camp David by helicopter 51. ing~ has ended." after a 3S-mlnul ht from th airy, a Palestinian Mab who at have been launched this Iiine forest Its ias tanks spewed When she w the youth!! ap· m one time represented Syria at the year. in ' cOlljlnletlon, w1th cele· flames high Into the nigbt sky. proach, ahe told poUce. has· He added lha the union stands Houae &rounds in WashIng· United Nations. brations of the 400th anniversary of umed they wanted to ask about ready to I' u me talks it jt r •• ton. In the shattered fu selage, pas· cl'iv from lndu "an hon l A spokesman for the delegation the foundlng oC the University of sengers screamed as flames eo· one or her puplls. As she sought to try Th y went Immediately to EI n· said its members did not want to Geneva and the calling of the first guUed them . Two families, five aid them, one youth pulled out a oCfer worthy of consideration by hower' ru ti lod e, named Aspen , li sten to insulting language. French Reformed Synod, even~ persons in each, were wiped out. A knife and told h r: "I don't dill you e]f·respecUnll teel workers." and it was announced they would Shukairy referred to the state· in which Beza was d ~eply involvea. steady rain had little effect on the Professed Monk lady." McDonald was ask d if the union , down to bra tack talks around ment by French President Charles The Association Humanisme et flames. Mrs. Korrer and several of her would re um talk If th gov rn· th dinn r table wltltin th hour. de Gaulle offering self·determina· Renaissance is one of the leading pupils screamed. mpnt requ st It. Beth EI_'-tr and hi. guest tion to the Algerian people provided The worst previous French ci viL international organizations of sc hoo crash was in Cairo in 1956 when The second youth grabbed the " W have n ver re isled 8 ca\1 ch.ttecI .ncI IHad throu,h In peace is restored. De Gaulle said lars intcrested in Renaissance 52 perSons died . Shoots Minister teacher'S pocketbook from a d sk of /)lIr ovc rnmcnl. But we ee no interpreter ., ...... r.phen Algeria would be considered at studies. No details oC the investigation and the pall' walked out of th . pn In coming back to N('w Yf\rk sn.pped plcturft In front of the peace if no more than 200 violent were revealed by the government BULLETIN "He is still gravely ill," a medi classroom and dlsappeared. City. The at of the government lodge. deaths occurred in a year. Kingdon read a report at the or the privately owned airline, TAl COLOMBO. Ceylon L4'! - Prim. cal bulletin said. Mrs. Koffer told police she wa Is In Wa hlngton. The seat of the Th bemedaled Khru hchev. "What sort of math.m.tics colloquy on some of his own reo (Transport,s Aeriens rntercontin· Minister Solomon Bandarlnaike Gov. Gen. Sir Oliver Goonetil· sure the young thugs were not stu· ~tcel Industry I in Plt~burah :' h ~ wearin, a light aray 6UIt. was first brought about this figure of the earch on 'fhe<>dore Beza's political out oC th black llmou In which ideas. He also spent six weeks, entaux). The last reported radio died Saturday from bullet _unds leke, ' he representative ol Queen dents at the school, which ha r plied. dead?" Shukairy demand.d. inflicted Friday by an aUlISlln Elizabeth II, proclaimed a state brought them to the lod&e Cram a before and after the colloquy, do· contact with the plane was when it classes through the sixth grade for Chief Induslry negotiator R. "We know there are some blood· clad in the robes of a Buddhist of emergency. virtua: martial law. Conrad Coopcr said the industry nearby heliport. thirsty colons (French colonists ) ing research in Genevan manu· was cleared to take off. children from 5 to about 12 y ar Crowds watched th e crash from monk. He called for "ab olute peace and old. till I prep3rl:d to r~ume nego· Th Kremlin chi ( spotted Jam who are ready to step up the maxi· script collections on this and reo COLOMBO, Ce}'~on IN) - A pro· calm" throughout his richly en Police Lt. Louis Cottell a igned tiatlon londay. C. Hagerty. White Hou press ec· lated historic topics. the airport where many had just wished relatives and fri ends bon fessed Buddhist medical monk dowed British Commonwealth land seven detectives to seek the in· "W hope that the union will r . r tary, and they shook hands De Gaulle Tests , voyage. wbipped a pistol from his saffron of 10 million oft n·bickering people. truders and added: ''1.'11 slick con id r it pobition and join wtth heartily. robes Friday and critically Army, navy ond air force reserves around until we get those bums." u then in a r newed effort to wounded Prime Minister Solol11li:l were mobill7.ed. Meetings and pro break the d adloclc . This ha ~en Votes for Nikita Reaction To Plan ' 16 Die In Hueser Resigns Bandaranalke, who led this island cessions were banned. our agreed seal of negotiations. W,' DUNKERQUE, Franc. I.f) - nation into the Asian neutral bloc. Th~ shooting came just thre t Take Narcotics, plan to be here. We want to bar· As Board Member Presid.nt Charl.s d. Gaull. As Secretary Of The attacker was captured. JJe days before Bandaranaike was to gain and we want to reach an tlliked with miners and shipYllrd RICHMOND. V., ~ - The Plane Crash was shot in one knee by a sentry leave for New York to address the $65J In Sreak;n agreement," he added In a tat.. · world', H.. '1 Cemmunl,t re­ workers of northern Frllnce Fri· Young GOP AS he sought to flee the Prime U.N. General Assembly. Alter ment. day to test reliction to his pe.ce c.lved 1,511 vote, F rW.r In .n Minister's private bungalow at a speech there Tuesday, be was to At Mason City 1cDonald pulled out of negotia· .lectIon .. • pur.ly c.pIt.Ustlc plan for Algeri •. He got a 5trong DUBUQU E; rm - Resignation of Rosmead Place, Colombo's mo ·t have gone to Washington for tali<.' tlons oncl.' before, (or a three-week ....t - directw.. • pledge of support. ' In Aleutians (II - I.,... _. .James A. Hueser as exccutive ~ec· luxuriOUS residential area. with President Eisenhower and on MASON CITY Thieves period in Augu t. But secono· trlng por.tlon. Ev.n in largely Communi .. !'etary of the Young Republicans stole a larga amount of narcotics ANCHORAGE, Ala'S ka (N) Three oC his burst oC six bullets to London, Bonn and Cairo. union negotiator then contlnu d Morton Adler at N_ York c.st areas of the north.rn Fr.nch co.1 of Iowa was announced Friday by and $651 In ca h in a breakin at Sixteen persons died Friday night bit Bandaranaike, damaging . the Speculation on tfIe motive fw talks with the indu try. This tim" the vet., fw Soviet Premier NI· fields, De Gaulle won ch ....s State Chairman Edward D. Failor, !iver, spl en and one arm of the: ... .ss.ssln.tion ....mpt cen­ the Medical Arts Pharmacy here, thl.' union said it's completely clo whcn a commercial airJl'ner flying police reported Friday. kit. Khrvlhchev .. be • member wh.n he said again the Alg.rl.n. over :he wi1d, rugged Aleutian of Dubuque. frail British·educated aristocrat ..red .round ion old conflict .... jng up hop here. at the bNnI at lfirecten .. Vir· must decide their future by th.lr The resignation will be effective Mi Ing from a cabinet at th(' who was a champion oC Ceylonese twHn practiti_r, .. W.... m. However, the chief federal me­ glnl..c: ..... ln. Cheml~1 Corp, • own free choice .nd the French Islands smashed into a mountain· side apd burst into flames. Sept. 20 and the state centrar com· independence Crom Britoin. styl. medicine .nd Eastem IINI· drugstore, located in a new doc· diltor, Joseph F. Finnegan suld: The Sevlet 10.... .u..'t Jet the at hom. must .ndone Algeria's mittee ·of the organization will On a hospit.1 ,tr.tcher. the ing m.thock known •• Arur· tors' center on the outskirts of "We don't intend to let this thing lob. dacision. A search party worked its wa] meet 5unday to discuss a succes· 6O·year-old Pri,.,. Ministw for. yect., which employ ma".... het Mason City, were 500 tablets of drift, in view of its impact on A .,..,... critic at the _. up to the 2,OOO·foot level on the sor, Failor said. gave him lind appealed for com· compre... s .nd Me"" herb com- morphine. The money was taken 600,000 souls and in; impact on the mum figure of President de Gauije. side Qf an unnamed 5,OOO·Coot peak por.tlon, AcIIor twme4 Khrvsh­ "During. the time Hueser has p.ssion for "this foolish m.n." pound •. from a sale whJch was rolled into national economy. The right to ~tt chev ". ma.tw ••port wi... We know sl1ch thirst for blood is to of Great Sitkin Island and reported been :Jur executive secretary, the The bullets were removed and This started when police an· the back o( the store and pried the time and place of meetina,s Is ,....,." be found in the French army itself there were no survivors in the Young Republicans of Iowa have Bandaranaike was given (our ~ints nounced the gunman, also hospital· open. a fun ction of the Federal Mediation - as evidenced by the most brutal wreckllge of the Reeve Aleutia:1 attained national prominC'nce," the of blood during five hours oC cor· ired, idpntified himself as Taldl1we About $600 in checks and small and Conciliation Service." Then Eisenhower and Khrush· acts of torture committed against Airways DC4. state chairman lIaid. "Today, we rective surgery. Doctors said h Somarama Th~o , 43, a speciali t change was untoucl1ed. Finnegan indicated there migilt chev moved to the Cront door while 00 the people of Algeria." A Navy pilot who first spotted lead the nation with the number of stood the operati9n well and that, at the gove rnment hospital in The breakin was discovered Fri· be a change of locale when talks a battery of photouaphers and re­ Victor A. Belaunde oC Peru, 75· the wreckage ~ ai4 only thll tail colleges with Young Republican although he was still in danger, his Colombo for Eastern·style medi· day morning. The intruders gained re ume - presumably iV Washing· porters crowded around. year·old Assembly. president, Inter· section of the four-engined airliner dubs on campus." condition was satisfactory. rine. entrance through a back door. Ion. " I am glad they don't shoot," rupted Shukairy and asked him not was intact. The remainder of the ------"------.------:------­ Eisenhower said with a nod toward to use language "that mi ght disturb plane was still burning when first the cameramen. the atmosphere of the Assembly." sight~d. New Play The PrHident', chuddi", ,... Shukairy replied that he believed, The airliner, pijoled by Eugene matte w., tr...... fer Khrulh­ freedom ot speech was guaranteed Str9l1Se, wid(!Jy known Alaska ai.~ chH, .. the PAm., eyes st tlle Umted Nabons, then went on man carried a crew of five two Dailr,,' lowan Staf'f Named twf"'di,,,. .... 1NIck: "It', IudIy with hi s prepared text. . civilians and nine military ~en- Wins Award Mr. Garst i. Mt here:' Later he remark.d to a r.port· seven from the Air Force one An 8-member starf was appoint· As managing editor, Blackstock Miss Jorgensen handles all )0' ing local sports news, selects That was an aUusion to Roswell .r on the Fr.nch action: "I hope Army one Navy. ' ed this week by the Board of Stud· coordinates the acti"ities or the cil news and supervises all reo stories for publication, and lays For Riner Garst, the Iowa farm« who was out all sports pages. KI1ruJhehev's hOlt in Coon Rapids they walk out of Alg.rl.... Str;use, as a lieutenant colonel ent Publications, Inc. to edit The city, sports and SOCiety depart· porters assigne~ to city and uni· Actu~ ll y m.embers of the Fr ~ nch in the Air Force, once commande.l 't two days ago. At one time the Daily Iowan until May 15, 1960. ments, makes the final seleetion versity beats. In addition she copy· Anne Warner . A4 , Mason CI Y, Charles Ritter who holds de- crush of newsmen was 10 great de~egahon, beaded by tall white· 3n air rescue squadron in Alaska. haired Ambassador Armand Be· Named editor was Stephen Tu· of articles and pictures for publi· reads their stories, handles In· has been named society editor. A gr~ from SUI, Mary Washington that Garst threw corn hUlb and rard, walked out o( the blue and dar, G, Tacoma, Wash. Tudor cation and makes up pages. coming public relations releases. senior in magar.ine journalism, she College, and the Universit)' of silate at some 01 them. gold Assembly hall before Shukairy worked on The Dally Iowan staff Appointed news editor was Ron and inCorms the chief photographer has previously been II reporter Florida has received bis third play· KhnIshchev added with a grin: made his reference to the French TweetJo Head during the summer session, writ· Weber, G, Mason City. Weber has oC pictures needed. . and an assistant to the society writing award in the last 12 "If be (Garst) were here he would army. ing a regular editorial page col· worked previously on the Mason Appointed chief photographer edItor of The Daily Iowan. So- months. try to OI'ianize thia his own way." ciely pages will be published on His "Money, Love. and Other But they had read that portion of Iowa Engineers umn. While serving in the United City Globe Gazelle. He is presently was Jerry Smith, A4, Des Moine •. TUesdays and Fridays this year. Things," a one·act play premiered th e speech in advance of its de· S.tes Army, Tudor edited his bal-' enrolled as a graduate student in Smith was both a photographer TALK5- DES MOINES (II - Nool T. MiJS Warner, with an assistant, last fall before the Florida Speech livery. A French press officer had tallon's newspaper. the Writers' Workshop. and a reporter for The Dally Tweet of Kansas City, has been will write and aelect material on Association, has been awarded first (Continued on page 2) hUrt'ied a copy into the Assembly As editor of The Daily Iowan, Weber's tasks ~n The Dally Iowan last year. As chief photo,· with the reference underlined. named executi've director of th(' fashions and other women's fea· place at the University of Washing· '.------Iowa Engineering Society, head· Tudor will carry out the poliCies Iowan include the supervision of apher he will supervise a staff of tures and will lay out the pages. ton workshop theater. Thla' play is Franc