* * * * * * Rebels Say , Two SUI Professors Only De Gaulle View French Crisis Is Acceptable 01 owon Serving The Stafe University of Iowa aud thl1 J'eoplp o/lowa City By JACK JONES without being in open rebellion Constitutional Change Sta" Wrlt.r against the French Government. P ierre Pflimlin, the French Pre­ Is Proposed (EDITOR'S NOTE: In the 101· Eltablihed in 1868 - Fh'e Wire. ~1embt>r of A. sod tt'd Pre~AP Lea. ~ Wire and Phot? Servll!e Iowa City, Iowa, Thursday, lay 22, 1958 mler, endorsed Salan Tuesday.say- IV GODFREY ANDERSON !.wi", Dally low.n feature, two 109 Salan was wlth the Government SUI pr.... lOrs atte'"flt hi pro­ and not a part of the De Gaulli I PARIS I.ft - Premier Pi rre vl4e some b.ckground to the .... hid for power. Pnlmlin mOI'ed Wedne day to re- cent FAnch de".lopments). Spitzer said Pnimlin had prevent- a rt his authority Oil r lhe right­ The United States is in the un- ed the Algerian ituation from be' i t hotbed in Algeria. comfortable po ition of being an coming an open rupture for the He ..nt Gen. Henri L.,.III.. his ally of France and champion of lime being.. He s~i d Pnimlin's j newly a",*nted chi.f .. the ~_ freedom for colonies, Vernon Van laled confIdence In Salan left bined Fr.nch forc ••, hi AI.len Dyke, professor of Political Sci- open an avenue of relreat for the .ft.r ••ttin. p.rliament.ry .up­ Stemm Death Probe ence, said in an inlerview Wednes- di ssident generals wilhout anyone port for An.wed e!!Mr,.nc:y pew· day. having to 10 e face. efl_ "A t' b th U 't d St t WHEN ASKED who the soldiers The move wa int erpreted a on· ny ac Ion y e 01 e a es would follow in the cI'ent of an might have the effect of alienating army revolt, Spitzer said many of oth r etback for De Gaulle. either France or colonies which are the oldiers were professionals who On the home front, Pnlmlin lind now fighting for their independence ld leaders of political partie in his or are already free," Van Dyke wou most likely follow the mlli- coalition hammered out agr m nt Eaid. tary.leaders. ". on a four-point propo al for am nd- . SpItzer ~ dd d, Howel er, there menl of the con titution to give Takes On New Vigor "GREAT BRITAIN gave inde- Is.a core of dra!t. s who might or more power and more tability to pendence to a great lIumber of her mIght not. be wtlhng to follow the Ithe executive branch. colonies in a gentlemanly manner. general . .mto a rebelJlon .. again t A key provi ion was reported to France has taken the position of the PanSlan Gove~nmenl. . be that the parliamentary oppo i- allowing independence to colonies The movement In AI.gerla has tion must agree on an alternative ollly if they fight for il. been termed a De Gaulhst bid for premier and proil'am before it can Senate Passes State ~aw Agents "France, by making her colonies po.wer. The I ~a ders of the Com· overthrow a Cabinet. fight for their freedom, may be mlttee of Public ~afety f provlsion- The whole proposal _ to be taken starting a long series of colonial al Government an A~gerla) have up today _ is . ubj ct to Parlla- wars." demanded De Gaulle s return to menl's approval. Postal Rate Join Investigation The French Communist Party power. Lorillol's job Is to canCer with Jlas largely ignored the colonial SPITZER said of De Gaulle, "It Gen. R oul Salan, th French com­ John. on Coullty It" officer. now aided b thr e agent from problem in the current turmoil of would be hard for me to say he' mander in AI,eria who likes Gen. th ta te BUrL'au of riminal ]nve tig. lion, have broadened the tbe last week to give their full op- a neo-fascist although he cerlainly Charles De Gaulle. New defiance Increase Bill position Gen. Charles De Gaulle's is not a democrat in the strict rolled up in Algeria as Lorillot' (;OP of th ir inv stig.ltion into t h de th la t SlInday of larence bid for power. s nse." mi ion was announc d. House May Act tunm, n Lon Tree farmer. ALAN B, SPITZER, assistant pro- Spitzer said, "I believe De Gaulle "We will accept no one but Gen. nntisfied \ ith their quest ioning of the Stemm family fessor of History, said the French favors a stronger constitutional de Gaulle," declared Alain de Ser­ Today Communists may be vocally fa- Government with a strong presi- igny, innuential member of junta WASHINGTON flit - A bill pro· I \ t'Cine. da, • offi cr today ar b ginning a fuJI cnle question­ ,'oring the Fourth Republic in an denl. De Gaulle's recent state- th reo " He is th only on capo. viding for th blU t po tal rate ing of neighbor urrounding the W nlter Stemm fnnn located effort to gain back lost strength. ments are quite vngue but he seems bl of maintaining the unity of the increose in U.S. hi~tory was PB~ d Spitzer also said, "It would be to favor nlso a more independent oat ion." by the Senate Wedn :'!day and sent 11 mi\('s sOllth of l owol it\,. I * * * more advantageous for the Com· role for France than it now has." Lorillot h ld the Algeria com- Lo the Hou e. I The St mm family was Q~('S- Lone Tree munists to have a republic form of Spitzer and Van Dyke both said mand before Salan took over. It would r.i.. the first ct ... tionl'ncc Slemm's d .th was at· Constoble Wright said he arrived the recent bombing In Tunisia. Algeria. It consists of three colon· 150 miles from th e capital the ]958 bill. * * tributed to drowning although the at the Walter Stemm farm, II "The French Government has els and seven civilians. Oth r developments arc: It covers pracllcally every rote * * autopsy how d a .22 bullet In his miles south of Iowa City, about been too weak and unstable Lo do The phrase. Committee oC Pub- in every cills of moil under con· * * noon Sunday and stayed there the anything but accept these acts Hc Safety, came from th e French ALGIERS fU P ) - Aig rian fos· gre ional juri diction, he added he;~E POSSIBILITY of suicide rest of the day, Which were sometimes in direct Revolution. Spitzer said. "The lem rebels lobbed mortor shells San.hI p ...... W.I on .n . ·0 Freshmen Take• was lirst inve tigated wh n Mrs, Wright ••Id he could flncf ne rollc.1I vot., Tha Hou.. is ex­ Four contradiction to issued orders." rightists in Algeria using the name from their Tunisian sanctuary into Stemm produc d a note, allegedly expl.n.tlon •• hi how Shlmm's VAN DYKE SAID Gen. Raoul Sa- now are on the opposite end of the five French army border Installa· pected to p... the bill pouibly found on a fence near th house, body tot I".. the -*Ie tank lan, commander of the French fence from the original members tion last night, the French high today. · E T· h that r ad: "Look out north in the wheA he .11 ....y drewnecf. armed forces in Algeria, and Masu of the Committee of Public Safe- command charged. While the rates ar lower than tonk g t me out of th east end." have gone about as far as they can ty ." he said. One of the French positions shell- President Eisenhower recommend­ USIC xa m on Ig " If Stemm was shot In the M t Tucker slIid Wednesday that vicinity wh re the gun was (ound ed, was near Saki t Sidl You sef, ed-and lh pay rais is high r-it the TunisIan bord r town whose was pr dieted the President would Tickets lire still available for summ r. authoriti('s searched th area he would have had to walk 75 feet bombing by French war planes last sign it. tonight's concert by the Four STARTING as lh " Tune Top- wh re the gun and note were found to the tank, which Included climb· ~rof. Reardon~s Play Feb. 28 touched off new French­ Postmaster General Summerfield Freshmen in lh(' Ma in Lounge of per. ," the group chonged th ir "thoroughly and repeatedly" on ing over a slight hill and going Tunisian tension that eventually was reported to have given th bill I the Iowa 1 moriol Union . titl on the advice of a Chicago Sunday without seeing ither. over a fence," Wright said. precipitated much of the current a strong endorsement at the White The versatile Four Fre hm n, th trical ag nt. Tucker also reported the re- Wright also reported that he French crisis in North Africa. House Monday. winner of many critics' and read- In 1950 the Four Fre hmen went volver had been checked and car­ could not explain the absence of To Be Telecast Today • • • If Mr. Ei enhower sign th~ bill ers' polls, will be entertaining on to Hollywood and made recordings rled no fingerprint. blood in or around the stock tanle PARIS CU P ) - The French Gov. before th end or May, the hIgher the SUI campus for the second which gave them a ta te of nalion- A FULL REPORT will be made or any other place on the 160 acre William Reardon, SUI associate eroment has lifted cen or hip on first class mail rates would be- time in two y('ors. wid popularity shortly aner. by Tucke~ Friday on the revolver, farm. professor of Speech and Dramatic all news concerning Algeria for come ef~ectlve Aug. 1. They mad their fir t appear. Since their ri to fam in 1950, handwritten note, and handwriting The questJon of how tile alleged Arts, has written a play which publication abroad 36 hours after Rate IOcr a e for other types ance at sur _ before 0 capacity th group has 0150 appcored on specimens of the stemm family. note from Clarence and the re­ will be dramatized on Matinee it had been imposed. of mail would ~ stretchcd out over crowd _ in February 1957. The network televi ion, In motion plc- He said the item wer turned volver, found Monday afternoon, Theatre today. It was announced, however, that a four-year perIod. famou group has scored repeated ture , and radio. Allhough they n vcr returned to over to Stat Agent Jack Barnett, could have been mlssed in the first "Day of Discoveries" has been censorship would continue In effecl success s in concert engagetn nts college. the Four Fr shmen soy De Moine, Wednesday, and that search over the same area Sunday, adapted for Matinee Theatre by on such news intended for publi- 5en,·0,sl G,ades rrom coa t to coast. is to date unanswered. Sheldon Stark. The one-hour show calion inside France or Algeria. they still have a soft spot in their a balllstics test will be run on the THE FOUR FRESHMEN have will be presented in color as well ••• Due by May 28 hearts for collegiate audience. revolver and the handwriting The investigation was started as black and white, MONT DE MARSAN, France com a long way since their be· THE FRESHMEN agree that samples will go through comparl­ Sunday morning when Johnson The play is the story of a busi- (UP I - Terrorists exploded a bomb Preliminary grades (the last bar- ginning at the Jordan Conserva­ coUege audiences orc most recep- son tests. County Sherifr Albert J. (Pat) tory of Music in Indianapoli in ness man who almost ruins his life in a doorway next to the local Com- rier for graduating seniors I are live. "Th ir minds are young and Also hclping in the probe are Murphy and Coroner George D. trying to Jive up to his father-in- munist Party headquorters Tuesdoy due in the Office of the Regi Lrar 1948. Broth rs Ross and Don Bar­ flexible; they like our tyle," said State Agents Sam Kelly, Daven· Callahan were called to the farm bour, thelr cou in Bob Flanigan. law's formula for success, while night No one was injured and Wedne day, fay 28. Ross Barbour, drummer and trum- I port, and Pete Carmichael, Des to Investi,ate the death of Walter hi§ wife fights tp preserve her damage was reported Insignificant. SUI students who will be worry- and Ken Alber, who joined lhe pet player in the group. Moines. Stemm, 62, Wright reported. family. • •• ing about grad s for the la t time Fre hm n in April, 1956, have built When offIc." arrlW41 at the their "sound" and musical integ­ The play was written a year ago ALGIERS I.ft - Gen. Raoul Solan, can pick up their caps and gown farm, they found the INcIy of rity on a firm base. and bought last month. Reardon the Paris-appointed dictator of in- I for commencement, starling June l W.lter In bad Ind the INcIy of hi, commented that he didn't like the surgent Algeria, told a wildly 10, at the Campus Stores. Regi - Appropriately-ror their appear­ son, CI.rence, 21, .n the fI_ play himself because "It didn't say cheering crowd Wednesday night trar Ted McCarrel aid that each ance here - the Freshmen owe IDead Explorer III ...Ar the INd. what I set out to say." in cryptic and apparently symbol- senior would be notified by mail their ellistence to collegiate life. The Stemm family told officers Reardon's plays are not new to ic language: to pick up their garb for the long The group, later a lap seller for that Walter had been ill last week television. He has had four plays "We will all go to the Champs- awaited day. Capitol Records, never got past and that they had found him dead produced on Pharmacy Series, and Elysees." That Is the beautiful, The preliminary grading system their lirst year in college. They Broadcasting Again about 5:30 Sunday morning. Clar­ . w. Reardon . University television studios have short, sloping tree·lIned avenue was started at SUI in 1948. Before decided to pool their talents in ence, they said, had been found In 1948 and go on the road during the the stock tank by hls mother, Mrs, "Day lrf Discoveries" 011 TV filmed several of his plays. and some time political echo cham- then, graduates did not receive After being pronounced dead one week ago, the Explorer lJ[ tape Reardon currently has two other ber In the heart of Paris. their diplomas at commencement. recorder came to life again Wednesday. Walter Stemm, about 7:30 a .m, scripts circulating for possible sale, I But once again Salan refrained The sheep kins were mailed to the Students Must Sign Up J ames A. Van Allen , SUI proressor and head of Physics, received An autopsy performed Sunday a story about a 9-year-old girl en- from an outright call for a return , lucky ones, sometimes up to one word Wednesday afternoon thal the satellite had aisin reported con­ afternoon revealed that Clarence ~cElroy Hints At titled "Where Dierdra Shone" and of Charles De Gaulle to power in month after they had left the Today For Card Section dition in outer pace to ground receiving stations. Stemm died by drowning, but al80 a teenage story called "Violent France, as the yelling crowd de- campus. The recorder failed to re pond to command signals on May 14 and that a .22 short slug had penetrated Weapon to Destroy Vacuum." mands here In lu loud daily dem- " We now have the system work- Students wishin. to .it in the the ational Academy of Sciences reported that a transmitter had his forehead and had lodged three He is working on a full-length onstralions. ing very well," McCarrel said. card .action during the "51 probably been weakened earlier when the satellite passed through inches In his brain. n-Flight R()ckets play which is not intended for tele- ••• "The instructors have become ac· football ...,on must sign up to· debri from Halley's Comet. An lutopsy IhewetI that Wllter day in the E.st Lobby of tn. WASHINGTON (UP) - Defense vision and which is as yet unnam- PARIS t.fI - French Cabinet ' customed to the plan and have The recorder, d igned by SUI phy icist George Ludwigr replied had 4IecI tr.m I "-"hit .Icar. H. ed. members - and American observ- become very accurate with their low. M.morial Union betwHn • some 500 times during its first 49 days in space. Explorer III was The ,..,.,.. ntimahld the time .. Secretary Nell McElroy has I.m. .nd 5 p.m. hlnted to Congress that U.S. selen­ Reardon has also had several ers as well - are more concerned estimates of the senior's grades." launched March 26. his delth ••s latvnla, "Hint. ,tists are worldng on a highly-secret short stories published, including about the people around Gharles The instructors can not change Approxlm.tely 700 vlc.nc:ie_ Ludwig told The Daily Iowan that he believed Wednesday's report When the Stemm famlly .a. Dew weapon to destroy enemy rock­ the "Sad Sack" series in Leatller- De Gaulle than they are about the the preliminary grades after they tw. to each individu.l-ar. to be wa a "chance interrogation." asked why authorities bad DOt been ets in flight. ' neck magazine and stories fCir general himself. have sent them in, until the com- fillad on a first-corna fint ..rved "The Iran mlller bateries have probably recovered enough for spor­ called sooner, Constable Wright

n. Daa, lOUHm " fDrltten and edued ", Itudenu lind ., g01Jemed by a board of f/uA "udlnt Irtuteu elected ~, The "Picture- jn Alger..;o ... , " II I If 1M ItfIMreI hod" aM four fGCVUy trumu appointed by ti,e president of the Unlverllty. The Daily lowon', ..utorW polktJ, "her~qr~ " aot lin e.rpr~on of SUI administration policy qr opinion in any particular. By JAMES MAGMER Algerian refugees, and provided condition that we can control the Staff Writer training facilities for thousands of Tunisian borders and Bourguiba ,.... 2 THURSOAY, MAY 22, 19S'8 1_. City, low. Arab soldiers who return across will pledge himself to stop med­ Algeria is at the bottom of the the border 10 fight the French in dling in our war with the Arabs. Two new Don Shirley discs high­ Bond and Kenneth Fricker, is COlI­ French crisis. BeCore Frenchmen Algeria. In Paris, when Mr. Murphy and light a new batch oC jazz Ip's. Ac­ siderable and really doesn't IlIIn can make a choice between Pre­ Mr. Beely made their report, the tually it would be nice if someone the sound bottom-heavy as one mier Pierre Pnimlin and Gen. THIS HAS PUT France at odds with Bourguiba and Tunisia. Bour­ Independent Party (the one noW thought oC a word for the sort of might think it would. The disc Charles De Gaulle they must first agitating Cor the return of De guiba denied that arms and soldiers mu ic this pianist and many other opens with an 11-and-a·half-minute· agree on what should be done about Gau11e I declared its opposition to Algeria. were cros ing the border into Al­ musicians nnw create. It is not long "Porgy & Bess Suite." The geria, but the French had evidence any foreign mediation in the How did this hot, dry and arid they were. Last February, in an France-Tunisian dispule and to any really jan nor is it what is usually Gershwin tunes are given surpris. country in North Africa on the blue attack unauthorized by the Paris compromise settlement of the Al­ called classical music (or some­ ing treatments. "Walkin' My Baby lip of the Medlteranean Sea come Government, the ·French bombed gerian /luestion thai would give Al­ limes serious music. as i( jazz mu­ Back Home" provides a tongue·ln· to be the issue that has set brother geria independence. Sakiet, a town. in Tunisia which sicians were kidding). Anyway, cheek (I think) Erroll Garner imi· ...." ... , .... ~~ against brother in France today?' THE FRENCH Socialist and Com­ they claimed was a center for Al­ there's no doubt that it's good mu­ tation. "September Song" evokes THE STORY is a long one - and gerian rebels. munist parties both favored the some of it was told in this column When Bourguiba protested the withdrawal of French authority sic, so let's continue. some pungent harmonics, and Tuesday. bombing, Frenchmen told him to Crom Algeria and granting Algeri­ THE FIRST album, Cadence "Body and Soul" is given a long Algeria, for some years, has been stop Algerians from operating ans independence. (These two par­ and lovely development. The man's ties . are nO\f opposing the return CLP 3007, is "Don Shirley Solos." a part of France, not a territory or against them across the Tunisian Shirley's penchant for choosing the a genius. Listen to him. a colony, but an overseas depart­ borders. But Bourguiba would not. of De Gaulle. to powerl. But the most familiar tunes and then play­ "DAVE 8RU8ECK PLAYS" on ment which means Algeria is one He lined his soldiers up on the ru­ Independents made it clear that if Premier Gaillard should make any of the states making up the Repub­ nisian borde!' to keep the French ing them like you never heard Fantasy 3259, a new Ip with anoth­ move to settle the Algerian ques­ lic of France. Frenchmen may tra­ out and asked support and help them before is seen here. Even two er delightful cover. This one shows against France from the rest · of tion with this sort ol compromise, vel in Algeria and native Algerians they would withdraw from his cab­ Liberace numbers, ''I'm in the Dave at hi s piano twiddling away may travel in France without a the world. inet. Mood for Love." and "J'1t be Seeing merrily while over his shoulder .. passport. Algeria annually sends AFTER SAKIET, to ease the ten­ Because Gaillard favored a com­ You," are u ed as Shirley carries Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, " • representatives to sit in the French sion between France and Tunisia, promise and wanted to work out the listener quite comfortably from Chopin and Rachmaninoff peer with parliament. the United Stales sent Mr. Mur­ the problem through the good of­ the known the unknown. His a variety of amazed expressions. BUT THE FRENCH are not the phy, undersecretary of State, and flees of Mr. Murphy and Mr. Beely, to only occupants of Algeria - Arabs Britain sent Mr. Beely from their {:ven though it meant granting Al­ great knowledge oC the masters is The solos include music aU the also live there. Some of them !'Ife foreign offices to render their geria independence, the Indepen­ ihown in many small peculiarities way from Victor Herbert to Bru­ happy to be associated with "good offices" in hopes of prevent­ dents withdrew their support and of classical composers which are beck himself. Dave's favorite is France, but others, touched with ing Bourguiba from breaking with the Government of Premier Gail­ adopted for the dressing-up of the "Imagination" and the extended the unrest and the desire for na­ West and joining Egypt and pre­ lard fell. tionalism and independence that venting France from declaring an UNTIL LAST TUESDAY (May tunes. Ravel's influence is often ballad shows it. His own "In has recently movcd all through the all-out war against Tunisia. 13) France was without a Govern­ seen, as in "Laura," which uses Search oC a Theme" is a clever Arab world, want to break away To render "good oWces," Mr. ment. Pierre Pflimlin was Presi­ the repeated-note motive of La Gi­ ditty with the repeated-note tech­ from France and cstablish Algeria Murphy and Mr. Beely stepped in dent Coty's third candidate lor the bet {rom Gaspard de la Nuit. In nique again. The theme, by the as an independent nation. between Tunisia and France and job. But he was reported to favor "This is my Beloved," the har­ way, is not found. Jerome Kern's Right after World War II, Alger­ asked Bourguiba, first, what condi­ a compromise to end his country's ian Arabs began asking France to tions of peaceful settlement he difficulties in North Africa. He monies oC Ravel's Pavane Cor a "I'm Old-Fashioned" swings with grant them political independence. would accept. When they learned intended to carry out the same pol­ Dead Princess arc heard. Other left-hand stride and rich chords. FrQnchmen in Algeria were against these, the Anglo-American team icy Gaillard had proposed. extremely trite melodies are fitted Dave's brand oC improvisation is this. So were Frenchmen in France. planned to return to Paris and ask In the past, the new Government in here and there with wonderful quite different from Don Shirley's, Wijen the French refused to give Felix Gaillard, then Prime Minis­ in France, has usually carried out them independence, or even a hope tel', to tell them whether France the policy for which the old was effect: In "Little Girl Blue" a but they both swing, and that's that one day they might attain it, would accept Bourguiba's condi­ overthrown. Should the rule prove snatch of Mary Had a Little Lamb, what matters. Algerians went to the other extreme tions. true again this time, Algeria and in "April in Paris," Alouetta, ANOTHER "Porgy & Bess Suite," aOil began a guerilla war to fight IT SOON 8ECAME apparent to would gain her independence - the French folk song. also about 11 minutes long, opens for it. I Mr. Murphy and Mr. Beely, and would no longer be a part of THE SECOND Don Shirley album Cal Tjader's latest Fantasy rec­ · liHE• SKIRMISHES of this war their Governments, that no solution France. on Cadence, CLP 3008 is titled, ord, No. 3253. This San Francisco Waiting for the Call to Arms during the last 42 months, have was possible without a settlement TO PREVENT THIS, Gen. • been cruel and shocking. Jean of the Algerian war which meant Jacques Massu seized power in Al­ "Don Shirley With 2 Basses." The vibraphone virtuoso al ready has Pall I Sartre's report of French at­ giving Algerians a large measure geria with a military junta last cover photo. even more striking cight other albums on Fantasy, .. rocities in Algeria was so uncom­ oC political independence. Tuesday and called for the return than the one on the other album, which I wish we had space to talk o{ De Gaulle to set up a one man • Spring and the River plinlcntary to the French army Bourguiba said Tunisia regarded explains everything. It shows a about. The other members of the that it was suppressed in Paris Algeria as an independent Arab Government for France. To pre­ right after it was published. nation and would only accept a set­ vent De Gaulle from assuming Central Park baseball diamond Tjader Quartet on this one are Spring has sprung in Iowa City and already Each year, as swimmers and boats take to The conflict was not confined to tlement with France that would power, the French Assembly quick­ with Don Shirley and his Steinway Vince Guaraldi, pianist; Al Torres, at home plate, a bass player each the Iowa River has begun to chalk up a list of the river, it seems to take one serious accident Algeria, but extended to Tunisia, a g i v e Algerians independence. ly gave POimlin a vote oC confi­ drums; Gene Wright, bass. They small, oblong country bordering France would have to withdraw dence, making him the 25th post­ at 1st and 3rd, and Cadence-caller play the Gershwin tunes as if they ,casualties, So far, at least nine SUI students to make recreation-bent outers stop in their Algeria on the east, and sympathet­ her troops, if Bourguiba was to war premier of France Archie Bleyer at 2nd base. shared Cal's enthusiasm for them and they probably do. Tbe opus have reported to Student Health Service with tracks and r call those oft n-repeated, often- ic , ~o the Arabs fighting for inde­ accept the good offices of the An­ So before Frenchmen can decide As on the other new album, it pendence inside Algeria. glo'Alnerican team, and give Alge­ what to do about prumlin and De also contains a severaJ-sentence was the reason for the entire al­ cuts on their feet, and two of the students had ignored rules of watcr safcty. . Habib Bourguiba, president of ria her independence. Gaulle, they must (irst decide what sales message telling you what's bum being made. The original mu­ '~o be hospitalized. Tunisia, has sent arms and sup­ BUT FRENCHMEN said, Algeria to do about Algeria - grant it in­ inside, which is both whimsical and sic camc from "The George Gersh­ We can only hope that this year there will is a part oC France. We will only dependence, or keep on insisting useful. (The correlation between win Piano Book" which has Gersh· Evidently the broken beer bottles of last plies across the border to help the bc no serious accident; that this year the fun­ Arab rebels, given sanctuary to accept a peace with Tunisia on the Algeria is part of France. record covers and the music inside win's own terrific arrangements of year still litter the river bed and present a is getting about as low as that be­ his tunes for piano solo. (The en· Ure book is played by Leonid Ham­ serious hazard to swimmers. sters will be too smart for tlle river. tween Hollywood movie ads and Anti-Racketeering Legislation- the movies>. The extra stimulation bro on Walden records, I might Aside from cuts, the river holds other To this end we endorse the plea of Dr. provided by the two bassists, Jim mention). dangers for the careless. Two injuries to ~tll­ Chestcr I. !iller, head of Student Health Serv­ \lents have been caused by water skiing, and ice, wAo urges all students to use extreme care drowning is an ever-present possibility. in their recreation activities on the river. Economic -Review 'And General Notices Otitlbok'''nq G.noral Notice. must be rPcelved at TIle Dally Iowan oUlce, Room 201. eo.. By JOHN J. FLAGLER dustry, the laundry and dry clean- weapons are violence, inlimidation. munlr.Uons center. by 8 a.ro:. lor publlcaUon the foUowlnr mornln,. The, Program Director, log industries, most of the baking not stopping short of murder and must be typed or le"bly written and sll/l1ed; they wUJ not be accepted br telepbone. The Dally Iowan reserve. th. rIMbl to edit aU General NoU.,. .. Tuition On Installment 8ureau of Labor and Management industry, the restaurant and re­ mayhem. In a racketeer dominated sort business. Together with dis- industry, the statutory right to PARKING - The University park­ may be picked up at Alumni House Speculation is rife, as June ap- closures oC racketeering in the taxi withdraw from a union would have ing committee reminds student across from Iowa Memorial Union. Although other topics have taken over the home pump, he stands a good chance of bene­ proaches, as to the nature and business and municipal garbage little meaning when non-member­ autoists tbat the 12-hour parking headlines bere at SUI recently, the University fiting from tllis move. scope of legislation that will be re- dispo al in New York, these repre­ ship may mean loss of livelihood or limit applies to all University lots PENGUINS - There will be no ported out of the Senate Labor scnt the Iiulk of cases where physical harm. Right to Work leg­ except the storage lot sruth of the further meetings of the Penguin quietly initiated a policy some time ago which And when we begin to doubt that the Ad­ Committee. Some skeptics doubt abuses were uncovered by the Mc­ islation can be argued but not on Hydnulics Laboratory. that any broad regulatory legisla- Clellan committee. Club. indicated a real understanding of one of the ministration has a concern for making educa­ the ground that this type of regu­ tion will be proposed in time for On the pertinence of anti-trust lation is a remedy for labor rack­ FAMILY NITES at the Field­ PH.D. GERMAN - reading exam· students' biggest heaaaches: getting tuition tion a matt I' of ability to learn rather tllan cODgressional action before ad- legislation to the problem of cor­ eteering. bouse for students. st.ut. facult,., ination, Tuesday, May 27, 3·5, in journment. In this event we can ruption, one must ask what there their spouses and their families money together in one lump sum. ability to pay, it only takes something like this Room 104 Schaeffer Hall . Please expect that thc Republican minor- is in these statutes that would pro­ Conclusion on the second and (ourth Wed­ Beginning this fall, students will be able to to make us realize one thing: ity will make this a major issue in mote control of trade unions by nesdays of each month. Recreation­ rcgister in 101 Schaeffer by Mon­ coming Congressional elections. their membership. The final an- There is a real danger that the pay their fees on the installment plan if tlley No matter what fault we might find with al swimming and famIly-type aeti. day, May 26, if taking the exalT!. IT CAN BE assumed that tho swer to corrupt leadership must be passage of punitive or irrelevant vities will be available (rom 7: 15 prefer. In most cases, only $50 will be due the dministration, lllsincerity of concern for Democrats are not insensitive to sougbj; in an alert and functioning legislation hastily designed may to 9;15 p.m. THE UNIVERSITY COOPER~T. lull the public into thinking that an the demand for legislation in this democratic union structure_ There IVE BABY-SITTING . LEAGUE when the semester begins. and the rest Will students' problems is not one of them. critical area. It appears inevitable is nothing in anti-trust legislation appropriate remedy has been de­ PLAYNITES ror stuclents, staIl book will be in the charge of Mrs. ~ t major labor legislation will b~ to encourage this result. veloped. It would be a disservice be billed to the student in three installments. It is all too easy to criticize those things we and faculty and their spouses at cn cted, if not during June, at National "Right to Work" Law: to management, labor and the gen­ Charles Schermerhorn from Ma), the Fieldhouse eact Tuesday and Whether the student is a CI-biller, working dislike, instinctively, and gloss over those ac­ least during 1958. The supporters of legislation which eral public to fail to meet the cen­ 13 to May 'n. Telephone her at The compeUing question is what forbids the negotiation of union tral issues involved. The only ef­ Friday night from 7:30 to 9:30 ~i~ way thr?ugh college, or still pumping the tions which tend to invalidate our prejudices. p.m. Admission will be by faculty, 84240 if a sitter or information tyrIe of regulation should be en- security provisions in labor-man­ fective attack on labor racketeer­ staff or student 1. D. Card. The about joining the group is desired. acted? agement contracts argue that this ing must come through legislation that: Weight Training lloom will be Thc disclosures of racketeering type of prohibition would be an ef- FOREIGN STUDIES CERTIFI­ influence and corruption in some fectlve remedy for the abuse of (1) PROVI DES for financial ac­ at the foliowlDg tImes: Mondays, 4 to 6 p.m.; Wednesdays, 4 to 6 p.m.; CATES - Students expecting their Lebanon Is Close Kin unions has caused great public leadership power. The reasoning is countability on the part of labor , and Fridays, 4 to 6 p.m. Foreign Studies certifiea tes by t.he cern. Any proposed legislation, that When union members are free leadership. This would mean re­ end of this semester should contact quiring the presentation to a re­ - Present Mid-East Situation Similar To Jordan t relore, should be considered in to withdraw from a union they Prof. Erich Funke (106 Schaeffer t rms of its relevancy to the issue have greater power to compel sponsible government agency of YWCA BA8Y SITTING - A Halll as soon as possible. By J. M. ROBERTS It ncver got beyond the arms and properly evaluales the intcnt of 0 • orruption. The danger is that honest and eCficient administration an accurate statement of the baby-sitting service to the residents AHOCi.ted p,.... NIWI AnalYlt money stage in Jordan. congress. union's finances. This needs to be of Inwa City is beIng offered by p lic sentiment may cause law- of trade union government. Only WOMEN'S GYM - There will be In In Lebanon the thr at of direct At that lime the Nasser regime backed up by adequate penalty for the Person&1 Service committee of The situation Lebanon today is mjlkers to press for merely puni- through a consistently high level recreational swlmming at Ole close kin but not exactly parallel to and open attack ha not developed. in Egypl- now also covering Syria fraudulent reporting. Penalties the Y.W.C.A. Call x2240 to make ti ~ and hence irrelevant legis la- of honesty and performance can Women's Gymnasium on Monda1, the one in Jordan when the Eisen. Lebanon does charge infiltration by - wa considercd more closely tilJl that will damage constructive the leadership demonstrate the could include loss of the union 's arrangement. for transportation bower doctrine was promulgated. armed interventionists from Syria, aligned with international com­ tax exempt status and the services and price. Tuesday, Thursday and Fridl1 la~r-management relations with- value oC unionism and thereby from 4:15 to 5:15. All women _ In the Jordan case the govern­ but the charges are vague. munism than it is now. American ou dealing with the problem of "sell" the union to prospective of the Federal labor relations dents, staff, 8Bd faculty memberl ment had put down an attempted . The United Arab Republic - policy towa rd it has been softened . ra eteering. members. agencies as well as prison sentcn­ SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATIONS - Syria and Egypt - has conducted are invited. coup by much the same forces EFFORT is being exerted to pre­ THE TEST OF appropriate legis- THE ARGUMENTS for and ces for felonious fraud. The law Undergraduate students interested ment I intensive agitation. however, and which are at work in Lebanon now. vent driving Nasser into the arms lafon therefore is: does it provide against right to work laws include might prohibit certain types oC ex­ In obtaining inforrr~tlon about June 1 There was fear that Syria might its subversive operations in Leban­ of, or having him enveloped by, tell1cdy Cor the abuse? Will it d' . penditures which represent oppor­ scholarships for the 1958-59 schnol OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN the !iv. have Soviet arms and backing for on are obvious. communism. calise greater harm to the goal of many other considerations an It IS tunities to raid the union's treasury year are advised to check with tendan, au attack. SECRETARY DULLES says that Another prong of the dilemma is constructive industrial relations not the purpose of this article to for personal profit. the Office of Student Affairs. Re­ Mast • ON THE SURFACE, at least, the since the rcsolution slated the im­ that iC Lebanon should ask for than the good contemplated? offer opinions as to which side is Here the legal concept of "fiduci­ quests for scholarshIps from stu· University ulty in correct. The question raised here Soviet Union was Car noisier than portance of the independence of lhe help, and the United States com­ Let's examine some oC the pro- is: are these laws revel ani to the ary responsibility" which apply to dents now in school must be made I here, t abe has been in the Lebanon case. countries to the security of the promises because oC the new atti­ posed cures in this light: the trusteeship status oC corporate before Jl>ne 5, 1958. Calendar I School Against that background, the United States, the President is em­ tude toward Nasser, Middle East­ Anti-Trust Regulation: The ef- problem of racketeering in the management would be carried United States proclaimed, through powered to act in such situations. ern Caith in the value of the Eisen­ feet of this proposal would be to labor movement? over to labor leaders/Iip. CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES - THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1951 To Gi an administration'sponsored con­ He emphasized that the United hower Doctrine, never too wide­ penalize unions for conducting The evidence strongly indicates (2) LEGISLATION to promote -in June - commencement an­ strikes "in restraint of trade"? that "right to work" legislation more effecliye .control o{ their' ae.- nouncements have arrived. Orders 7 p.m. - Young Republicans - Speel gressional resolution, her Intention States is not anxious to put Corces spread, will be undermined. Professor Murray, Ames, Candl· r to protect Middle Eastern countries The Dulles statement will pro­ This would categorically deprive fails to dcal with the issue of fairs by rank and file member­ into the area. daLe for Governor - Senate Cham­ I Fred( unions oC U1eir right to strike since racketeering. Testimony before ship. Provisions are needed to against attack by international H the Lebanese government asks duce a legalistic argument in the ber, Old Capitol. ,ciate p United States. e{(ecl in the Mid­ any concerted withdrawal ' oC the McClcllan Committee disclosed guarantee free election of officers, communism. Intervention was to be for intervention, the debate will Its WSUI Schedu~e 8 p.m. - University Play - "'The ogy, \ by Invitation. revolve around whether Dulles dle East will be entirely practical. l ~bor's services has Cor its objec- that abuses occurred with, appar­ the right to impeach, open conven- Alohemist" - University Theatre. ma ter, tive the "restraining oC the trade" ebUy I as much frequency in the 18 tions with reasonable periodicity, I ",8m - IOWA CITY 010 tIC Thunday. May':!!!, W;'iS 8 p.m. - Four Freshman Coa­ lege, I from 7 to ':30 I.m.. on SatUl'da;r. of the employer. Strikes would be states that have righ[ to work laws prO vision for fair trial in expUlsion cert - Iowa Memorial UnloD. ment a DAILY IOWAN EDITORIAL 8TAP" proceedings. Chapel I -.he- 1)olly Iowan Make-good service on ml'oed ""pers I. permitted if they were either (J) as in statcs where the limited tn ~~:,ing D:lrle EdItor ...... 00 • Jl", Davl .. Friday, May 23 ' not possible. buL every eUort wJll be incffective or (2) wcre directed union security provisions allowed Here the law mak~rs would need 8:30 Life Problems Managlnll Editor . . Don MltchcH made to correct errors WIth the next 3:30 p.m. - Baseball - SUI vs. at Nell - M&.. &a juue. against an industry not involved in under the Taft-Hartley Act prevail. AlJDIT BU&&AU News Editor .... Jerf')' Kirkpatrick to exercise due caution that dang- :;~~ ~~~d:~~~~I~c World Michigan State. l.iIl gil 01' City Edllor ...... Jean Davies interstate commerce. Among "righ! to work law" states erous legal precedent is not estab- 10:00 New. dress I I macuLATION. IIEIlBO ., tbe A8S0ClATED PRESS he 'd f . . . 8 p.m. - University Play - "'1be • Society EdItor .... Donna Blaufu •• The Assoolated Pre .. I. entitled ex- The wisdom of any proposal to w re eVI ence 0 Improper acllvl- lished that would invite unneces- ~n~ ~\~I~~d ~~~fto( the Air Alchemist" - University Theatre. gradual dally except Bunda" and Sporb Editor ...... Di ck Lynes clu.lvely to the use for republication suppress the right to strike in a ties has been uncovered are Ten- sary meddling by government into 12:00 Rhythm Rambles New 'cribbedndaJ and lepl holieS.,.. by Btu- of aU the local new! prInted In 1.h1. FI 'd T N th C Saturday, May 24 Chief Photorrapher .. Walter Kleine newspaper ... well •• all AP new. democratic society must, of course, nessee, Of! a, exas, Or ar- the affairs of private organizations. Pres. Review t PubllcaUON. Inc Communlca­ Editorial As (slant .... Suzanne For ~r~ ~o'~~h 1 :30 p.m. - Baseball - SUI VI. lat Silv( tIoftl ~n\er, Jowa CII,. Iowa. En­ dlspaJche.. be viewed with grave misgivings. olina,' South Carolina, and Jowa . The menace of racketeer inCUtra- 1:00 MosUy Music 1:55 New, Michigan -(doubleheader>. ~ .. IIKOIId elala. matler . at the 2:00 ptot office at Iowa ClIy. under the DAILY IOWAN ADVERTISING STAFF DAILY IOWAN SUPERVISORS nOM ON THE QUESTION of the rele· THE FEDERAL 8AN on the tion is not solely a union problem. Mostly Music 8 p.m. - University Play - "The Nt of Co~ of March I. 1m. Advertl.lnl Mana,er ... .. Mel Adam • SCHOOL 01' JOURNALISM FACULTY vancy of anti-trust regulation to closed shop has failed to curb Many businesses such as trucking, Hour . r~ ~~ll'~,.cn·. Alchemist" - Univprsity Theatre. Asst. Advertlline Mlr... John Ruddy Publlsher ...... John M . lIs1'1'lson the problem of labor racketeering, rackete ring in trucking and the coIn-operated devi<;es, restaurant, 4:30 Tea 'TIme Clau:lrJed Manager , . ... Jack Powers Edilo rial ...... Arthur M . Salldcl'l1On . I ld be b did ' Mond.y, May 26 Promollon Manager ...... Jim Orlh Advertl.ln, ...... E. Jobn KoUman It S lOU ' 0 serve t 1at esPlte construction industries whcreby resort and hotels to mention but a g : ;~ :::"8time 4: 10 p.m. - Mcdical lecture ~latlon ...... Wilbur Peterson the widespread publicity of the necessities of the labor market, few arc plagued. The aUaek musL 8:00 DIllner Hour sponsored by AKK - William J, U T IT CirculationDAILY IOWANM.na,er CIRCULATION ... . . Paul Beard T& S EI!:v:ftc~lg~8 unDiT T.eams t'er sease, th e heavlcs . t· m- mos t . empJo ~~rs h avo~ ICC'001 at d be made on a broader front, lest' ~ ; gg ~l~~:nl OpIniol1 ,Fry, Profcssor and Head, Bio·Ph),· AIaIIWIt ~.,er .... MichaeL DaUey Dr. Gegrle.. E.ion, PenU.too: David cldence of labor racketeering has their preter6lJCe fqr' -r.cJosed, sbop. we discover that we have merely 7'3O.8t'1llD .... AJ; Th04Jlai • . Ham- octurred in iIItrastate com..... _The 'art of the.r ~ driven racketeers out oC labor into : ; ~ ~~I~cert PM sity of DIinois - "Present Statal DI • I 41 1 If you do noL recelve your Uton, At: Prot. Hu~ l{ellO. PoUUaal h th . I.r h ' ,t... ' ',=t DaUy lo,wan by ' :30 a.lI\. The DaIry Selenee; DwI.ht Lowell biatbes. M; were, c anti- ust statutes ave \ ~ck n; 1'1',.." in tr~ la!;l(lr'" d other enterprises, much the same 9:45 News ,n9r,~r.\-" "". '1 'and Potential oC Ultra Jiouiil II Iowa Circulation oWeo In ODmmunJ- Prof. WIlle G. Moe! .. ..Journallpn; no dirtct application. Anti-tl'ust !Misin ara: not ..~DCI~n\ '· II as theieal of rohibition herded KSVI (FMI SCHEDULE, 01.7 m,. Basic and ~linical Researc~ III ...tIona C.. ter 11 open froID a LIL , ... Pro!. L. A. Van Dyke, Zducation; rcguJaUGn would fail to<.deal ,.;t;h writt It COD...... ' a1~Rilo"."''t~ . to them g :00 'k wl1~ b : the- 'Centrad Nervous Systt:m" .4 • p .ID... 011 MOI1day. fro .. , LIII. to ~ ' 1' aary ..,. wuu.m., AI; Tbomu W. "'.. ~"t"n" " ORr ....'u~ businc ....'.... ''' :.W·oplail . t Thentre ; p. ..., ~ t.hrol/lb 1't14a), .... J,.u~J."t.a. , ..."Q,.cf~u~Uo~;n thc jcolll$tf CtiO~ in- p~ • ~~iKI~~~o\,~~I~ r . ~ Movles . Medical AmpbithCBtre. : • • • & "0. , 91 1 1 r .," ., ~ . ./ .. ~ . .-,.1 .. ~I- 1 'A...ltf ! , .. I IJ

------. THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa City, 'owa.;;..Tfi.rs., May 21, 19S1-P ... , e, Lauded or laughed At...... The·Sack ·Still Sells I. com­ ENGINEERING WIVES Will i ~h ·lter 01 Ci ty Park. Food will be " Husbands are 8ccompaning attention. BlIck act' n the Iy DONNA BLAUFUSS ing tbing. honor \j,'I\'e of June and August brou ht by each person aU ending. Society Editor their wive and prefuinl a chem­ ise purchase. It is a t)'le that is Other ource5 offer a econdary gr duating engineer tonight at Don't sack that chemise! We beller liked the more ii' n, " a use for the n w look. M ternity their lilUll IllCCling at 7:.5 p.m. in YWCA CABINET MEMBERS may be baggy for six years yet! Iowa City merchants are seeing clerk remarked. clothes alway are the same, and tbe South Rh'er Room of the lowa will m tat 4:30 p.m. today in the their own replica of the Gold Rush MALe STUDeNT reception. it seems that the pre nt rad i re- 1 morial Union. A preview 01 fu· Y.W.C.. office. The group will go 0/ '49. but this time it's the chemise however. isn't always so compli­ iving wide acceplance by the ture fashions ror engln rinl: wi n ' on n picnic, co ling 50 CE'nts each. rr tl' of '58. A survey of local mentary. But don't worry, men, ores revl'oled that sales have mothi- oC tomorrow. will bt> includ(·d in the program. The clerks aU agree that the strict· mounted since the new fashion hit The wholE' world i in thE' hllnds R Cr.· hm nl will be rfvcd. AVIATION EDUCATION organl· Iy sacky sack (the shirt with a long ~ campus. of the fashion experts these days, zation will bear Colonel McLaugh· tal)) is popular ror the clas room, \en th furnitur de ign rs. Rob­ .. pring clothes are moving tre­ SIGMA DELTA PI, proCe ional lin . latE' aeronautical adviser, mendously fast this year and it's but the more serious purchaJ§es are rt A. G ra's ch m chair crea­ tion wa • topic of can,' rsalion reo commerce frat roity, will hold it speak at 7:30 p.m. tonight In the the cl1emise that's selling, not the ..... concentrated OD the modified tonl'entionat styles." one owner cently at the Spring tart anti In­ la t me ting of the year tonight at Pentacl'(' t of the 10 ..... a femoria! man's styles. even amon, tbe coeds. Belt­ said. "We don 't have enough sales· ternational Furniture De ign Show 7 p.m. in Room 2.14. University Anyone interested may at· /{~ r ( , l~' ed backs and bows scattered heller in Chicago. ,,'omen to accomodate the crowd Hall, 01 customer ." he added, skelter are ,ettin, the widest ac­ ; .' II ';f..-..b' lllQo' ~~~ \ ceptance locally. HIS SENSATIONAL chair Is de­ ONE PROBLEM that faces the signed to elimmat the hiking ten­ local shops i the delay in ship· And the future looks brighl, and ZETA TAU ALPHA alumni elllb denci 5 of the chemi. when the ments. " I I ' I I. \ \ rather shapeless, according to the will honor the cha pter E'nior to· DON'T GET .1 \ \ • I fashion experts in New York. Fall tylc-dominated ladY it.s down. night at 5:30 p.m. with a picnic in "These dresses are movIng so , , I The chair h a lightly higher seat MARRIED ..• Quickly thal the manufacturers are , I , clothes now in production are the hom oC Irs. Jack Davis. R.R. carrying the same lines or lack o( with a swh I and rocking mechan· 2. The hou mother and ntir~ I • • "" thou, In, OUl' t'Omplete having trouble keeping stores sup­ ism that allows madam to it and _1IIiiiiiio,,~,.r "rlda. trwlt" - .nvU.U••• A ... plied wIth enough dresses to meet 'I''" '~-...J"'---jL';.- ~'.:!..__ lines. and the word is circulating chapter have been invited. Follow. I n •• nerm,,". 'm,,'ntfllll Wa,kl ••• that this Isn't rad but fashion. The rise gracerully. ing th picniC the nior ..... ilI be "ell.' ... U•• Iu, »1' ...... y •• " N.lu. the ever increasing demand," com­ ~#J n .... r ••,. t flf. mented another store owner...... predicted life of the chemise has The swivel was incorporated to initialed lOto thE' alumni club and 1.. to the modified style with the low· even outdone Sputnik. We may these days. to remain in high fa hion. The coeds have set the fashion ered and somewhat revealing help Ihe feminine conv rs tionall t new alumna officers will be in· Hall's Bridal Service have these dressell ror six years. BUT, GALS, don't n gled that to engng in the rna intere ting o[ Yes, the Roarilll Twenties parade, but the older sets are not waistline. tall d. 127 South Dultuctuo lagging far behind, according to the they say. calorie counting. In tead, add ex­ several topics by tumin, the chair coming back: shapel dre • Sales of local apparel stores in· local sales reports. The mature Included In the new wardrobes ercises to the diet habits, ror the in the mo t prom Ing direction. long beads, cloche hats. bows and ZOOLOGY SEMINAR ..... ill h ar a dicate that the reception of the new more bows. and even a rec s ion to groups are still viewing fashions are chemise raincoats. winter and emphasis is on the po terlor, and This arllfice may take away som talk by Ray L. Watterson. profe • add to th auth nticlty in th with a conservative eye, however. dress is favorable from the views fall coats, and e\'en pajamas. The the previou Iy "hidden" parts of masculine appeat of th chcmi • or in th D partment of Zoology birth of a [amou era. Wanted: Teacher Their purchases lIsually are limited of both sexes. sun rises and sets with the chemise the anatomy are now the c nters of but it help th self-con cious lady nt Northwe tern niversity Friday at 4:10 p.m. in Room 204 Zool ....; ror upper grad 5 in el mentary Cohen Elected Building. He will peak on "Recent • chaol at Children'S Home for JCs Elect IPat Dvorak Named jAetors Elect Studi on Hypophysectomil d nIt d and depend nt chll· Schedule 7 Music President of AEPi Chick and Duck Embryo " I dr n. Good propo ilion for the Spring Playmate N 0,,· right person. L. A. Stumme, New Prexy ew leers Jim Cohen, C3. D loin s. Is DAME'S HOMEMAKING GROUP Supcrint nd ·nl. Luth ran Chil­ the n wly el cted pre Ident of At. will have II picniC tonight at 30 dren' 110m . Mu olin, Iowa. Th(' Iowa City Junior Chamber Iowa City Community Theatre Recitals for Week pba Epsilon Pi ocial fraternity. ~p~._m~~. :ln~~t_h;~n:o:rt~h~id::by~th:' I~O~W~t.r~=====~;:===== of Commerce has elected Melvin recently el ct d the Collowing of· H. Schweer to ucceed Kent An· SUI music student$ will present Etudes" by Schumann. Other new officers include: Er- Ii' licers: David Beut r, pr sid nt; gerer a president. seven recitals in the hext week. Cellist Peggy Munro. A4, Betten· rol Za veil, A2, Schweer. vice·president of the Baritone Gerri! Laning, G. Down· dare. will present a recital Satur· Mrs. Arthur Kern. vice·president; B tt ndorr. vice· Jaycees last year, will head the ers Grove. 111.. will present a recl· day at .. p.m. In North Mu II' Hall. Roberta Sh ets. secretary; Thomas president; Mar· lal Friday at 7:30 p.m. in North She will be accompanied by Rita FREE DELIVERY organization for one year. E. Koehler Jr.• trea ur r. Board oC shall Gonsky. C4, Also elected recently were Wil­ Music Hall. Benton. G, Iowa City. on the piano. Chicago, UI.. scc· 1 Made fr.,h - nothing Frolen - lee them mad.1 Director memb r el cted (or 2· liam Gilpin. first vice·president; Laning will be accompanIed by Includ d In the recital will be retary; Gene Bor· Ted Riltenmeyer, second vice· James ·raggart. G. Peru. Nebr .• on "SolUlta In G Major" by Bach. year term were Michael Vel z, ochorr, A3, Wav- president, and Robert Dohrer, the piano and harpsichord, as ist· "Adagio and Rondo" by Weber. Emma Sue Ph Ip • ond ProCessor erly. trea urer; ed by violinists Roberta Winston, and "Sonata in 0 Major. Op, 102" Ireasurer. Ronald Gee. Hold-over Board I J rry Diamond, A3, Ottumwa, and Carol Donnelly. by B thov n. AI, Fort Dodge, New members of the board of m mbers nre Hugo Sippel. Mrs. directors, who are elected for 2· A2, Cedar Rapids; Loulta Goode, Judith McGinnis. A4, Britt. wlll hou e mannger: A4, Lamoni. on the viola and Eli,· present a soprano recital Sunday . John Ru hton, and Marlha H mp· year terms. are Richard Gay. COHEN Pet Landwcber. Richard Duncan and C. Robert abeth Quam, G. Fargo. N. D .• on at. p.m. in North Mu II' Hall. She tad. Jo. ph Mauck will remain AI. Iowa City. Cronk. the violoncello. will be accompanied by Donneta on Ihe Board as past pre. ldenl. Corr sponding secretary ; Martin Eot them here, toke them oul, or have us deliver. Taggart will sing "O'amorous Frees. A4, Iowa City. The spring banqllct for Commun· Ba man. A3, 0 s Moin s. sentin· Cuer" by Halle, "C'est Force. Included in the recital will be ity Theatre will be h ld at the Ho· el; Len Singcr. AI. Medford, Faire Le WeB" by Machault. "1m "Scbben Crudele" by Caldara, "Se 4 1 Levinsky to Head tel J tfer on at 7 p.m. Sunday. Open p.m. to a.m, every day Mai" by Wolkenstein. "AI Amor Tu M'amJ" by Pergolesl. "0 Del Mass .. a. Istant tr asurer; Har ' y ,Phi Epsilon Pi Quierro Vencer" by Milan. "Can Mia Dolce Ardor" by Gluck, "Vit­ May 25. with a oclal hour to begin Rothenbere. A3, Ft. Madison. his­ She Excuse My Wrongs" by Dow· torla, Vlltoria!" by Carisslmi. "In al 6: 15 p.m . omc r will be In· torian; and Jack Nabedrock, A2, PIZZA HOU SE stalled and Irving oward (or oUl· It. Plea ant. ond Howard Abra· Mark Levensky. A3, Des Moines. land, "If Thou Wilt Give Me Back the Boat" and "With a Water LIl· 127 E, College Dial 8-5248 My Love" by Purcell. "Herr, So Iy" by Grieg. and "I Will Go Wilh Pat Dvorak tanding aehl vern nt in eight Iulm . C3 ' ClIf[ id Park. .J .. recently was elected president of categories will be pre nted, members at large. Phi Epsilon Pi social fraternity. DlI WlIlt" by Bach and "An Die My Father Aploughio," by Gurney, Delta Chi Playmate Ferne Geliebte" by :Beethoven. Also included in the recital wJII Other new orricers are: William D Ita Chi fraternity mcmbers Heyman. A3 , Des Moines, vice· WSUI will broadcast a recital by be "La Chauml re" by Couperin, chose Pat Dvorak, At. CharI slon. two SUI students Saturday at 10 "L'heure Exquise" and "lnCidelite" Van Dyke to Speak at president ; David ~ " m.. as their Playmate recently at Brodsky, A2, Iowa ., a.m. by Hahn, "Chere Nult" by Bachel I Final Spotlight Session Terrence Rust, A3, Ames, plan. and "A Cycle pf Life" by Rono..ld. th fraternity', prine formal. At· YOUR City, pledge mas. ''', tendants w re Jo Ann Poot • A2. ter ; Jerry Rosen· ist. will play "Fantasy and Fugue ,Tenor Ricbard Fulton. G, Iowa The SpoUight Series lInal stu­ in G Minor" by Bach.Liszt. City, will pre eot a recital Sunday Newton. and Barbara Boeke. N3. dent·faculty dlscu sian will be hE'ld berg, A2, Morton Hubbard. APPLIANCE DOCTOR'S Grove, W.. treas· Joan Ehle s A3 W rthi gt at 7:~ p.m. In North Mu Ic Hall. Friday from 3:30 to 5 p.m. In the .. . r • '..0 n o~. He will be accompanied by Mar· Ea t Lobby Confer nct' Room or urer ; Ed Berkson, pianist. Will play SymphoniC garet Pendleton, assistant music Neely Chosen Magister the Iowa Memorial Union. ORDER: A I • Highland profe or, on the piano and harp i­ Park. Ill ., corre· Elect Davis President chord, a isted by violini t B rta Of Law Fraternity Dr. Vernon Van Dyke, professor I ponding secre· Winston, A3 , Ottumwa. Marion Neely, L2. lason City. of Political Science, will lead the tary; Ellis Bent· Of Lambda Chi Alpha Fulton will slng "Kantate No. recently was chosen ma,lsler of discus ion of "The Summit Confer· full IIOI/!;EI'OYIER ensky, AI, Des 160" by Bach, "Lied der Mignon," Phi Delta Phi, profell ional law enee." The dl cu ion ses ion is Appliances feeling low? Are they slow to . loines. recording Norman Davis. C3, Cedar Rap· "Erstarrung." "Am Meer" and fraternity. open to the public. secretary; Stan Shindler, A2, Sioux ids. is president of Lambda Chi "Abschled" by Schubert, and "Was Oth r orficers include: Robert work? And inefficient when they do? Then, City, and Max Lettween, E2. Des Alpha social fraternity. Will Die Einsame Thrane," "Fruh· Linder, L2, Oelwein, exchequer; Among the other new ofricers better have a HOUSEPOWER check-upl Moines, delegates-at·large. lingsfahrt,'· "Mondnacht" and "Der Robert Baleson. Ll, Eldora. clerk; uya- Gary Cohn, A2. Waterloo. and are: James Lavia. A2, Des lTIoines. Hidalgo" by Schumann. Robert Byers, L2. Marshalltown. Edward S. Rose There's no obligation - just call your elec­ Ita Berek, Al. Ames. social chair­ vice'president; Richard Potts, AI, Also included in the recital will historian; John Bouma. Ll. Poca· Bettendorf, treasurer; Dale Jan­ B•• lde, flllln, your pruc:rlptionl trical contractor or our Home Wiring Di­ men ; David Markman. A3. Des be (our numbers by Brahms. hontas, and Frank O'Rourke. A2. with Skill and Exactnen - let Moines. athletic chairman; Harold sen, AI. Manning. secretary; Dan "lleimweh I.,.. "Wenn Du Nur Iowa City. repres ntatives to Law UI furnish you ottMr Drug S.ore vision, You'll be glad you didl Pidgeon, A2. Des MOines, steward; Coffman. A3. Arlington, social Zuweilen Lachelst," "Nachlclang" Student Council . Ken Gerwin, A2. Marshalltown, chairman; Jerry Kolda, A2. Cedar and "Vergebllches Standchen." It.ms 01 First Aid ond HOIPlt.1 scholarship chairman; Mike Mey· Rapids. rituals chairman; Robert Arametta Maughan, A4, Leon, UAW ENDORSES BISHOP Suppll.1 - YOU ARE ALWAYS "ours for better living ler. A2, Omaha. Nebr .• alumni·re· Estes, AI, Storm Lake. rush chair· will present a piano recital at 2 DES MOINES (of) - The United WELCOME. lations cbairman; and Stanley man ; and Arthur Roblnson. A2, p.m. Sunday in North Music Hall. Aula Workers Union Des )ioines Tenafly. N.J., pledge trainer, ILLINOIS Bernstein, A2, Des Moines. song Included in tbe recital will be area council Wedhe day endorsed IOWA chairman. "Sonata No. 10" by Haydn, "Son· DRUG SHOP SNOW STORM ata, Op. 153" by Schubert, and Wally Bi hop of Ames (or the Demo- Electric Compan) MEXICO CITY

Some minor repairs may be done VICEROY GIVES YOU MORE while you wait. OF WHAT YOU CHANGE ,...;. C..... r. Shop .. TO A FILTER FOR! .,.._ ... " ...... LOUIS REXALL ' DRUG ' ~'-I CltUSH·I"ROO" ~I~ ' O-" _ ...... "AMI~ 0" "AMOIolS ._ -,---- A J Mlp"e- 124 EAST COLLEGE I • p ... 4-THE DAILY IOWAN-.... City, tow.-;n.r... M., Ii. 1951 I " ( Big Ten 'Tennis To~rney Opens Zaharias lr.op,hy To , NEW YORK..., - .Tennis cham· standin, honor is that it doesI!'l By Conference Meet Starts Friday- Hawks Rated pion Althea Gibson Wednesday was repre&ent one sport but all SpoN.· Fine Prep formally awarded the Babe Did· Milis Gibson said. "I hope I IUaY rikson Zaharias Trophy as the 1957 be able to win it again aUbOl\&b 1'111 DICK .. woman athlete of the 3Jear." afraid my new career may inter • LYNES • ~igh on List Cagers for "This is the greatest honor of my fere somewhat." s,•• 1t £dUo. life." the 3O·year~ld Harlem girl Althea's other career is si". I said as she took A student of voice for many Pick 'I11,ni In Track the giant silver months, she will make her televi. Smile, Podner Of Favorites Iowa: Sharm bowl and a small· sion debut on the Ed Sullivan .how There are a few sports writers lIy JI!RRY LAMBERT I er replica from the next Sunday nlgbt when sI1e will St." WriM, the Iowa attack are Tim Hines and By LOU YOUNKIN Iowa's new head basketball donor, George Za· sing her latest recording, "So Muth around the state that ought to be lowa's track team leaves today Tom Burrows in the sprints. Bill Staff Writer coach SJlarm Scheuerman said harias. to Live For." still red in the face today after for Purdue Unlvcrsity and the Btg Orris in the hurdles. John Brown SOD-Veteran The Iowa teDnis team, which has Wednesday night that although The larger tro­ Monday she will fly to EnglaDd ' come up with the best dual meet Iowa got a late start in the pro­ Tuesday evening's announcement Ten Outdoor Championships. The in the 44O·yard dash and Joe Ca· phy, almost 81 the for a series of preliminary tOlltll8. that Sharm Scheuerman was ap­ meet is scheduled for Friday and mamo in the broad jump. record in Iowa history. is rated as cess of recruiting prep cage pros· Davis Cup. is ments leadillg up to defense of her one of the top contenders in the pects. "some fine boys are ex· pointed head basketbalJ coach at Saturday. Hines. who has hit the peak of Crashes Car; Althea's ooa;!IC~·. Wimbledon championship. Iowa - including this desk. Bi, Ten cbamplonships which pected to come to Iowa." He didn't sion until it is The tan Harlem girl, who le~ Coach Francis Cretzmeyer se· his career since a fine showing in open today lit Evanston, Ill. mention any names. A few members of fourth estate lected a 13·man group to repre· the Drake Relays, will be rated awarded to some. the game with a"I1de paddles oa tile The favorite's role in the \,()urna· AI".dy reported II _intI .. one e I s e. The sidewalks of New York, won ldh hierarcy have mentioned practical· sent the Hawkeyes in the confer· among the favorites in the 100 and Probably Out ment will be filled by Illinois. Iowa I.w.." D.v. Meller ef It. Iy everybody down to their great ence meet. 22O-yard dashes. Hines tied the smaller version is hers for keeps, the Wimbledon and U.S. champjon. coach Don J{lotz said, with the Mery', of 1_. City, a,", for· The trophy is awardod annually ships last year, the first NetTO grandad and railed to even mention CRETZMEY&R PICKED Illinois school record of 9.6 in the century INDIANAPOLIS"" - Fred Aga· Hawkeyes and Northwestern as the wwd Gery Lorea .f Clilltetl. ever to do so . • Sharm's name at all. and Ohio State as the teams to and set a school record of 21.4 in bashian of Alamo, Calif .• a veteran on the basis of the Assooiated Press top cballengers. Defending cham· SchtuerlWMn said he ~I ""edy poll. The fabulous Babe, ODe of In Tuesday evening's edition of beat for the championship. Illinois, the 220 two weeks ago against Min· of 11 straight Indianapolis 5OO·mile pion Michigan is rated as a dark· r.c.lved I liined tender ef fl· one paper, the sporls editor was at with a group of talented sopho· nesota. He is undefeated in the races, crashed a car into the the world's all·time great athletes, horse In the tourney which ends nenclel .Id from J" Noowek, • won the honor six times before ~r least partially correct in assuming mores won the indoor champion· 220 this spring. speedway retaining wall late Wed· Saturday. The Wolverines have won guud from Rock 1,lend, and Don that" . .. Iowa apparently has se· ships in March. The Buckeyes fin· BI:'RROWS HAS pushed Hines in nesday, but apparently escaped death from cancer in September, the championship the last three N.lton, a c.nter from the 1.11M 1956. lected its new head basketball ished second. Michigan State and the sprints. both indoors and out· with relatively minor injuries. years. school. Agabashian. a consulting engi· "The Babe asked me to set up a coacb and the choice will be made Indiana could be called the dark· doors. He also broke the school THE HAWKE YES have never Scheuerman said many of the trophy for the outstanding woman distinctive public within the next 24 hours." neer, was testing a Kuzma owned horses of the meet. record in the 220 in the same race won a Big Ten championship in "blue ribbon" athletes are already athlete." Zaharias, bull·shouldered , by H. H. Johnson of Chula Vi~a. However, he missed the boat by "Ohio State may beat Illinois in which Hines did at Minnesota. tennis. The closest they have been decided as to what school they onetime wrestler said. "I think mens wear only two or three thousand miles. this time," Cretzmeyer said. "Glen Leading the hurdlers for the Calif .. and scheduled to be driven able to come to the coveted crown will attend. Under the Big Ten she would have been very proud by veteran Jimmy Daywalt of In· give or take a few. Dayis (Olympic broad jumper who Hawkeyes will be sophomore Orris. is third place in both 1951 and 1952. aid plan, tenders can be sent to of ALthea and also of Pat McCor· tuxedo rental "It is believ.d thet fln.1 also runs the sprints) is good for He finished fifth in low hurdles in dlanapolis. Last year Iowa finished fifth. athletes by colleges on or alter mick, who won last year," cholc. for lowe lob ley be· 18 to 20 points, which is enough to the indoor championships. Jack The car is proba bly out of the In compiling a to-I record this May 1 and the recipients must fill Pat McCormick. Olympic diving headquarters "It 30 twe.n Joe Vencilln, h.. d cuch make any team a threat." McDonald. also a sophomore, will May race. The front end was season, coach Don Klotz's squad out the applications within 20 days. champion, W8$ the first to receive at Yel., end F"et A. SChaUl, The Buckeyes' force has heen be entered in the hurdle races. badly smashed. hlls defeated conference foes Wis· "Nothlnl will be telk.d .bout the Zaharias trophy . 105 E. College htad coech et Wilt Virglnle •••" bolstered since the indoor meet by Brown defeated Wisconsin's Jes· Agabashian lost control going consin, Indiana. Michigan State, conc.rnlng an auiltent cOlch "What makes this such an out· The entire story didn't contain so returning service veteran Lee Wi!· se Nixon In the 440·yard dash last into the southeast turn. spun com· Ohio State and Minnesota. Illinois until Dr. BrKhl.r Cathl.tlc dl· much as a whisper tbat Sharm liams. He is a broad jumper and weekend to establish himself as pletely around and bit the wall is the only team with a victory over rector) ..t. beck to town," was still in the running. hurdler. one of the meet favorites in this almost out of the turn. Iowa this year; a 6-3 win May 3. Sch.u.rmen said. STUDENTS DEACON JONES, distance ace ev~t. Nixon was conference Don Edmunds of Anaheim, Klotz said be plans to continue Scheuerman didn't say much Meanwhile, another sports editor with the change he made in the concerning the varsity squad ex· led of{ his column with this: for the Hawkeyes, will defy his champion In the 440 last spring. Cal' , wrecked lhe other McKay Relch'$ Cofe u now under new 111OIl(lgemeJlt. car ay ]0. doubles lineup at mid eason. Art cept that the veteran squad may "Reports from lowe City insist case of the flu which has held him Brown finished fourth in the 300· It is aur aIm to continlle to bring you the some below normal since mid·March. yard run in the indoor meet. , Andrews and Bob Potthast will be be helped by a couple of freshmen. the n.w University of lowe bl.· the No.1 doubles team; Joe Martin Sharm, however, said more scor· Bnd run both the mile Bnd the 2· Camamo rInished fifth in the delicious food and sen;ice that you "ave received k.tball coach I. Joe V.ncilln, B • croft Advances and Don Middlebrook will be No. 2; . ing punch from the forwards was here in tile past. Stop in today - let's get ac· now htad coech et Yel. end for· mile races. He won the two races broadjump Indoors. Bob Warren ahd BiU Voxman and John Stoy one thing the Hawkeyes needed. m.rly en nsistent et Minnente. In the indoor and outdoor meets won the broadjump against Wis· will handle the No. 3 assignment. quaitlted. last spring and in the indoor meet consin, with Camamo finishing In State Tourney Word i. thet Vencisin hili be.n These six men will also make GRANT'S '57 RECORD BEN .nd ETHYL GRACEY. hir.d, pending Ipprovel by the in March. second to add hopes to the Hawk· SON CITY"" - St. John's of up the Iowa singles squad in the Jim (Mudcall Grant, rookie Ne· University of lowe presld.nt, Deacon has not run the tiriflg eyes' hopes in this event. Bana-ort shot into the champion. torunament. gro pitcher with the Cleveland In· . who is in the East now." dual in recent meets. as be at· Completing the squad for the ship game of the Iowa high school ANDREWS, Potthast and Middle· dians. had an 18·7 record with a I Another well known paper be· tempted to regain the form which Hawkeyes will be : Frank Dotseth baseball tournament with a ]!H) brook are undefeated in conference 2.32 earned run mark with San Di· gan dropping names or the more Hawkeye track fans have become and Ralph Lylc in the 88O·yard victory over Clarence Wednesday singles play this season. ego In 1957. probable candidates a couple weeks accustomed to during his brilliant run; Gastonia Finch in the 440· nigbt. 10wa has not had a singles cham· back. career. yard dash, and Jim Young in the Denny Menke, pitcher-shortstop, pion in the tournament since 1952 They suggested all lhose men· Other men expected to bolster shot put and discus throw. played in the infield for BancroCl when Norman Barnes turned the tioned above, plus sprinkling in a and made several sensational plays trick. The Hawks have never won \ the doubles championship in the 48· Central Party' Presents few more of tbeir own. However, a~ at least 14 professional scouts • • • unlike the two above examples, watched. Denny banged out a year history of the Big Ten tour· I • ~ they did mention Scheuerman's double, two singles and drew a ney. I Dodgers Win Again Since 1934 when learn champion. name, if only in passing. walk . He drove in three runs. I ships were oCCicially begun. Michi· The Ann'-lal No doubt other papers throughout ------gan has won six titles. Northwest· I the state dished up some of the oC home runs as the Baltimore ern seven, Indiana three, and IIIi· same and should be equally as red Orioles downed the Detroit Tigers nols, Ohio State and Michigan in the face as the three eKllmpJes Over Braves, 2-1 8·1. State one apiece. Chicago won five afore mentioned. Baltimore ...... 000 3120 SIlO-8 8 1 titles before dropping out of the MlLWAUKF;E "" - A lead off Detroit...... '. .. 000 000 001-1 a 0 Spring Concert Before calling the Dl sports desk single followed I>y Gino Cimoli's that gave the San Francisco Giants Johnoon. Lehman (II. Zuverlnk (8) conference. a bunch of wild·haired radicals, I'll a come·from·behind 5-4 victory and Trl.ndo.; Lory, Sleater (41. SUlce home run w~s enough to give tbe rsJ. Shaw (7). Alulrre (8) and Lau. be the first to admit that Sharm's over the Cincinnati Redlegs Wed· LEAOVE LEADERS Los Angeles Dodgers a 2·1 deci· W-Lehman. L-Lary. (Ntt l.ol."n, We ••eod.,. al,b", Featuring ' appointment came as a rather plea· nesday night. Home runo-BalUmore. Woocllln, (1), sion over Milwaukee Wednesday Trlnndol 2 (6). .. ames) sant surprise to me. He was the even though Bob Rush yielded only San Franelaco .... 200 000 200 1-5 12 1 AMERICAN LBAGUB favorite choice around the office. CincInnati ...... 020 101 000 - 4 10 I lA.dlnr Ba.hmen two hlts the rest of the way. MonziDt, Worthlnlton ~4). Grl •• om Nieman, Bait., .409; McDoUlald, N.Y ., but his chances of getting the nod (I) and Thorn... Schmidt m; Law· Washington* * 6, *KC 1 .S74; Skowron. N.Y... 373 . seemed a little beyond his reach. The victory was the third in a rence. Jeffeo.t f') and Bailey. W­ KANSAS CITY "" - Fastballer ae.e "DI :Jour :Jrejhmen row for the Oodllers - £irst time Orl'lOm. L-Jeffooat. Cerv. Kansa, City, 11 : Jensen, Boston, • • • Home runs-Clnclnnatl, Bailey (3); Russ Kemmerer put an end to I ; Marls, ClevoLand. 7. they've turned the trick this sea· San FranelilCO. May. 1121. Kansas City's five·game winning "p. Ballod III I think it's pointless to say that son. 1t also was the first deci· Cerv. k.n.. 1 City, 30; Jf!nsen. Bos· ton, :til Ge.nert. Boston. 20. Thursday, May 22 Sharm has some awfully big shoes sion ,as a starter lor Don Drys­ skein Wednesday, pitching Wash­ Cleveland 3, Boston 2 ington a 6-1 victory as JIJIl Lem· NATIONAL LEAOUE to fill . dale, who now is 2·7 and he need· * * * to Lea.lar a.llme. !A'I _ Mu.lol. SL Loul.. .467; M8)'1 . San I met Sharm for the first time ed help from 'Clem Labine in the CLEVELAND Minnie Mi. on, Norm Zauchin and Ken Aspro· tranelsco, .409.i. Crow •. Clnt! ... 3t7. At The Tuesday evening. about 15 minutes monte clouted home runs. •••e "aM seventh to record it. noso lashed his sixth home run of Wuhlneton ...... 011 MO \12-6 11 1 Thol'lj". Pltt,burlh. 13 ; WaU.. Chl­ after the announcement had been Lor Anael". ..•..... 200 000 I)M-.% 4 1 the season with two out in the 12th K.n .... City ...... 000 100 000-1 4 0 c.ao; Mays. San Francisco; COpeda, madc. He was excited, quite nat· Milwaukee ... , '" 010 01'0 000-1 • 0 .. W d d h Kemmerer nnd Courtney: Terry, San Francisco. all II . Dry"'alo. Labln~ m and Roseboro; mmng e nes ay, glvmg t e Truck' '" and Hou.e, Smith fS). L- •••• Balled In Iowa Memorial urally. but there seemed to be an Ruth. JohnlOn fll and Crandall. w­ Cleveland IndJans a hard-fought 3·2 Terry. Thomas. Plttsburllh. 33 ; Spencer. Son element of assurance in his voice Drysdale. L-ltu.h. Victory over the Boston Red Sox. Home runt- Washln,ton, LI>mon (2), FranCisco. '3; Mays. San Fr.nciseo, 29. when he talked seriously about Home run-LQa An,eJes, Clmo\l (51. Zauchln (11, Aspromont.e (2l. . , Iowa's basketball future. . * . * * Dick Tomanek, the Indians' 27· * * * TREATED FINE Phillies 1, Cords 0 year-old leU hander, limited the Yanks 5, Chisox 2 NEW YORK ,.., - The U.S. Concert Begins at 8:00 P.M .. 16 Top Women Golfers Red Sox to five hits. CH1CAGO !A'I _ The runaway Davis Cup team couldn't have PHILADELPHLA f.fI - Thc Phil· ~oc~~r..nd · · ':::. :: =~~ ~ I~ ~ New York Yankces showed the been treated more cordially than Tickets Available adelphia Phifllcs beat the 51. Sialer. Kiely (61. Delock (81. Wall Chicago White Sox how the homer In Round Robin Event 001 and White; Tomanek and Nh

~ -. _ __ __~ __ _ ~ "'_ _ __ ~_ J ~ ~ -~~- - -- Congressl Dilemma: To .linker .. Dirty Deal Politicians Closing Ranks ,I , ~ . I .' s City Record Forbid GarbOgemen l Not To Following Stassen Defeat MA&IU Gil!: L1CE"'ISE Or finker with Stars Top Hat and Tails P J Tr'ahan. Zl. Roclc Island. m., nd LaVOI1.lW' R- ChrWnl~r. 23, lowt. ,PITTSBURGH Pennsylvania's Rep~lican ~ ratic City. WASlUNG'1'ON (11'1 - Congress assurance of joy." LONDON (.f! - L"'" ...... CUP) - rty organizations, whose candidates won with ~ase 10 y Eldon H .llll~r. 20. Ro ...·dy. Ky .• and bas begun considering whether to The leadoff man before the collKton Mwe the eHici" ~r Ella 1. GIn.uieh. D. Kalona primaries. began wa\'ing the olh'e brancb to dissident ele~ts today House Judiciary subcommlllee was -they mwt not ...r t.p Mt. Tboma'lO ft. Flu... 25. Fort M.d n. adopt an ofricial ver ion o[ the with the bope of closing ranks before the Non'mber election, and Patrkla K~lu . 20. Lone Tree. Rep. Joel T. Broyhill (R·Va.). He ilnd tail. on the Ieb. Ronald G . Rund~.. . 23. , Iemphlo. Star-Spangled Banner. The job .... as harder {or the Cavors going back to the earlie. Four hilPPY' _n found Re- I-- Tenn .. and Vickie M. R~. II. CflI.r And almost before you could say, t ,.rba .. publicans than for the Democrats, Pittsburgh mayor, for the gover· aapl ...... ch of fornutl clothes iIfMftI Donald It C ....d'·. Io.... a City. and "0, say can you see," it got itself written version by Francis Scott who appeared weD unified under norshlp. Scotl will [ace Leader for Key for the orfieial words, and to a the rafv.. the other Cy.:m E. H.,I.n. 10"'. Clt~~ tangled up in questions. mome .... the leadership of Pitt burgh Mayor the .5. Senat at being vacated D TO melody worked out by the ationru They put tMm on .nd b,..uH ,...... D.rry. a:I. 718 Sp\"nlh A\· ~ . Suppose an official version be· Da\'id L. Lowr nce, Gov. George by retiring Sen. Edward 1ar11n, a ta) 10. 1usic Council. merrUy threutlh the 4.y'. won , M. Lead r aDd Stale Chairman Republican. Slanl" came law, could a president send A special r cording had been Munlc l~ 1 offinll ~id they hiId Mr. and Mrs. Jack Brad I Y. ZOII'. r; in troops if some school band lead· Jo ph f. Barr. I The tate's junior enator, Jo- BloomlnC'Oft St .. a ,Irl•• 1.:-- IT. made for the subcommittee, show· raeolnd ... miIfIY c.lI. frem But Republican Slale Chairman ph S. Clark. is a Democrat. Mr. .nd M rs. Robert J'Wler. lSot'. er didn't play it the olficial way? ing how the tune could be played to.vwholcle" ••i", .bout the R~tr Avt,. • ,Irl. '.! 11. George I. Bloom w lit to work .im. Sia n showed again he is a r. nd Mrs. ~ I e. 1m Hlah· And would Utcre be bootleg Star in different different per· chnge of uniform. TIl. officiills .eys tor mediately to heal party wounds, politician who dies hard. While land Ave., • (lrl. y 17. • ., Spangled Banners, with one knowl· formers, C!)I' a beginning piano ",Iod 1OI0mnly thilt top Mts Md Mr. • nd n . John y.'.,-ner. OJCford. edgeable audience sitting and a opened wider by Harold Stassen's other independent candidates con· a boy, MIY 11 . play r. f\ll' example, or the zippy t.Us disrupt the "rly ,..uti". unsuccessful try for the nomina· ceded last night, Stassen w nt to Mr. and In. 011._ Bro , Tiffin. a less tune·e,. a boy. May II. log there is "no waIting until the j until an 11 a.m. pre conference Many think it ought to be more Mr and Mrs. W.I~ Undem~)'er, 414 certainty in the committee room. fall," said the GOP would start at Wednesday. Plumb SL. a boy. 11'.1 18 singable. Those who think so in· Mrs. Charles Hafg of Washington, Religious Seminar once to organize a drive to IDcrea Mr. and Mn. Wllllam Nice. R.B. :I. clude Lucy Monroe, who has sung D.C., representing the Daughters SOlon. a alrl. May ... Republlcan registration throughout Mr• • nd Mr.. G"" ..~ Miller, North the song 5,000 times, and \'ery stir· of the American Revolution. sald in I To Discuss Faith, the tate. Llberly, a boy. May 18 ringly, too. She favors some minor Mr. and !ofn Ro~rl Durry, 1031 a stage whisper, "We ought to Bloom, who was in the forefront Trucker Burns Up Tlnkb. Pa,k, I bo}, May 11). tinkering with the high aDd low stand." Bill no one did, and the Scientific Method in Ihe denunciation of Sta n for r and Mf$ ~ Donald ""orr II. Solon, notes which, she says. " would al· scientific demonstration continued. a ,Irl. May . Biblical faith. the sci Dtific attempting to seek political office The Road, Firemen Mr nd Mrs. Ro~r1 Ga • . 710 CI rk low all or us to join in with greater Rep. Basil L. Whitener 10· .C.l in PennsylvanIa, had kind words to a bo~', May 2~ m thod and oth r sy terns of val· for the former "boy wonder" gov­ Mr Ind Mrs Ronald M.tth~"", W. I . aid he can'l understand what the LI~rly. a boy, M. :0 fuss is about. ues will be examined in "Religious ernor or finnesota, who 10 t d Put Out the Blaze Perspecti\'cs in College Teaching," cI ively to Arthur P. McGonigle, "I mentioned it in the barber A De Joines trucker found he Two Fined for TraHic TODAY'S shop down hom , 10 .ee what reo a 3-101' k nation-wide seminar June Reading, Pa., pretzel manufactur. wa literally burning up the road action I'd get," Whiten raid. 23-July 11 at S I. er, in the gubernatorial primary. Violations, One Charged Supported by th Danforth Faun· He described Sta n a a " The barber said, 'The d vii! Wedne day. and had to call on the lin City Police Court TOP RECORDS dation of St. Louis, the seminar "worthy and capablc" opponent We '\'e had one for over 100 years, fOW8 City tll'e departm nt tor help. Two persons were fined in Iowa will bring together 25 colle e and who "well d rver ;.n' In, with local asene)'. PO Box 84$ WAY"-Johnny Cash. 4191 ). 5·31 Trailer Home For Sale • All title. not available on 78 rpm. lor 3·BOOM fu,nlobed lal .• Ir \"Ondillon. WANT&D: Experlc~k men', 1.56 MARLETTE ~-fool on Coralvlll~ ed room for boy. Phon~ '·I~3I > s'UI hou.ln, unll. Good pay. Ne.., 'Iov. 101 , Phone ~IIIJ~ 5·3 1 Personal I ----- Meal plannln, IIIken ear. 01. n mtll Campus Record Shop '·ROOM furnl hed aparlmenl lor mon. per weak. so-.eo men. Phone 8-2869 or im n:WART 37.1001. 2·i>edroOm with TYRONE POWER '.'.00. Dial '·4~. Salurdly" Sun· SJOO ' .13 Iwnln,. Nk.ly Joc.~d . DIal 8481 . l17 Iowa Ave. PERSONAL loan. on Iypewrl~.a, dIY' or weekdlY ' .fler 8:00 p.m. 1-2 __. ___ ...,....,.. 5-23 Iowa City, lowil phonOlraph.. aporIJ equipment.' . W ' W· d MAl ZETTERLING LLOYD NOLAN HOCK'EYE LOAN CO. Burkel", Rotel LARGI!! furnlahed IpArlln.nl In KIlnnl. arc a"",;.;te;.;;;. ___ B tldl Ph fm 6-1R lor Summer Ion.'" 00. CAr - Aportment to Sub·Lease u nil-- one . pool.. Call Frink (collectl 187 . ft r' TORMS DOWN, ltC 'Unl 4l: Windowl p.m. 1-' .... bed . P'uU Inouran"" covera.". AI· S118Ll.,.. !1.room (\Ifni Iwrl AIJi,rtllH'lIt [or ~umlncr jon. Ph net e\l~n- THREE ronm furnl.hed apartment. Two bert A. ""1. Can :10. SOlo,. 5·~ THfWORLD'S Rooms for Re", 11l~ • 51~ 5·24 blocluo from campu .. 1-18'11 . 5-13 ! ~ SUBLET nicely furnished apL Auto· VARSITY j -- - Apartment Wanted MOST -With- DOUBLE Ind In,le roo ..... for boYI l'lr, APA RTMENT for ten!, furnl.bed . math: wa h r, ('IOIe to C:lmpUI. IUmmer. h .. w..... IS". I-n Adull .01.1 845S . 1-20 couple prderred. Phone 1-13IMI • ftcr FURNISHED a p"rtmen I 01' houao by HONORED NOW! James Craig Lita Milan I or 2 MEN to .hare a"altmenl lor 5;00. 5· 28 INGLE room for boy o. ,Id. 01.'~ summer a.ro.. from campul. Phon. HI,h IkhOOI Athletle Dlrect .. r and wUe (or • wr.ek lUm.mf!r Ion. No FURNISHED 4 room! ond IIArA.e duo SHOW Barton MacLane , ·un. 5-i3 '.5244 from 1:00 to ? :OO . S.U children or pe,-- R. L. Or ne Bole IU, piu. l ummer montt... $110.00 per DOUBLE Ind Iln.le room. for me~ LARGE f""nbll" aPlrtment. Dill 1'1'"".. . "I. j '.13 month '·4284 5·24 . Iudenla. f02 N. Dod,•. Phone 1-02U ••"43 . 8·7 YOUNG couple dealre '11Irlm.n~ or ______--.:. ' ._2i:- I3-ROOM furnlah" Ipartment. 1-31101. hou.e for Summer Se.. l6n . R ..pon· "DOORS OPEN 1 :15 P.M." Ilblc Indlvldu.... Write: J)on Lauer. 5211Sr TWO cIouble .I""pln, room for me". 1______..,....---~-5;;...... ;. 22 prlvoll: kitchen. bath. TV. Phonif 2.ROOM turn,.h" aputmenl for sum. R.1.. # Box 5·20, 1\1undel~ln, IIIJI~~~ '·2440. 5-n. mer Itld faU. Mlrrtcd couple.. Dill College Men "'CrUR' ~~------~I----~ ~ . .~ NEW full ·lIme Dally lowln '111" AWARDS SINGLE room for ,raduale .... om.n rnember needl ;. bedroom howe or Full time Summer Employment udenl. Phone 4'11. &- . apartment. up to $80 .00 I month, ~. I#lilrt!#liil ,Innln, July I. Have been home owner LIVlNO .nd bedroom for two - $l,ooo. plus tuition scholar· & WORLD room Auto. for Sale Ind will \.iIke 'ODd eare of )OU r pro· \'eekdroy ~[II. ~ p .m. JIAT lNEE - lIOe :'1 AI('':> TO DAY "ENDS ,Irl or ,radua'" students. aero .. E\'entn, II All Oa, - SATURDAY" perty. Write Box 11. Dally Iowan. 5-22 hip. WID' 11 1. & Sun. from Bu.r,e Hall. Phone 1-4189. 5· I Sunda, - $I.l!~ l838 VOLKSWAGEN convertible. Interviews will be held AT: HONORS-~-· MaUneo 1:110·1 :110 Klddle, - ;,0. I 2 DOUBLE rooml f... men. Prl ... blaok, whIle IldeWIUI. Phone ~? Ignition The OCfice of Student Affairs ~ venlnrl aL H:OO p.l11. Anytime kitchen and bath. '.2211. 7-2. Carburetors Mon. MIY 26-1 p,m. to 4 p.m. MEN'S SUmm", rooms. 530 N. Clinton. 1"2 PLYMOUTH 2-<1oor Ied.n. Orl· Tues. Mily 27-1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Cootlna prh,ne.... Showers. Rea.., ,Inal owner. USO·OO. Old 5·12 GENERATORS STARTERS AT Jefferson Hotel Ible. 5&48 or lI535. &-1 '.3ge3. IHSPLY $8;;.00. 8·4l1li0. 5·23 Briggs & Stratton Moton Mon. MilY p.m. to 10 p.m. STARTS ENDS TODAY SLEEPINO room. for boYI. Close In. ~ounr 2~7 Dr. In The Houte I-3l1Ot . ' •.jIII CHI!!VROLET 1852. Two-door Tues, May 27-7 p.m. to 10 p.m. FRIDAY Standard .tUft. GOOG c:ondltlon.Iedan New' l Pyra m 'Id Serv'lces X Dr. At Sel 2 DOUBLE rooms for lummer ~l,\. A Comedy About Amour .and More Amour! denla. men. Dial H:!'. .1-7 baltery8·28Ot. . Avallable July. $3t5.00.~.~D~5-2W~4 _,,:I2~l~S~'~D~U:~~ue~,,:,D~I:al~572S:_~~~~~~J~.~E~'~K~N~O~~~~~ ------~------Iy CHIC " ' )- >~.:*. ~ I• ~ .. !£!Zun ser, Cue MagaZIne

"ONE Or-THE YEAR'S TEN BEST!" Crow'h .r :. ~ Y T,me. BAWDY-NAWDY.ENOUGH TO BE FRENCH!" - Wol'., Won ,h." " ,-., , ," 112.3 Times Gayer Than / Bardot's "And God Created Woman" Winston, N.Y. Post

l'Ll', - COLOI' CARTOON' ""1ISO IDI'!~ IUIm'LE" / . P~ '-THE DAILY Newscasters \i IDev~ce "Woula1 ALASKAN STATEHOOD BILL Return Human . To Hold Joint CLEARS FIRST HURDLE IN HOUSE WASHINGTON (UP) - The hotly-di puted Ala ka statehood bill From Space Meeting Here W. R. Irwin. SUI associate pro­ cleared its fir l major hurdle Wednesday when the House overrode (t'ssor of Engli h. has been granted powerful Democratic and Republican forces and agreed to debate the WASHINGTON (UP) - A miJj.. a Fulbright pro(essorship LO teach A spring convention of the Iowa measure. tary contractor said Wednesday biI Broadcnsters Association and th .. in Germany during the school year By the unexpectedly large margin of 217 to 172, the House voted 1958-59. according to an announce­ (irm was ready to build a recovery Iowa Radio-Televi ion News Asso­ to bypass its innuential rules committee and to take up immediately ment from the U.S. Department of the legislation to make the territory the 49th state in the Union. device that would bring 0 II1II ciation (ffiTNAI wlll be held at State. But a long. bilter fight appeared in prosPf'ct. with little indication home safely from a rocket trip into SUI today and Friday. Subject to approval of a leave oC just whC'n the HOllse would reach a £inal VOle. space. • THE TWO GROUPS, which usu· absence by the State Board of Re­ genIs, Irwin will lecture on Eng· 1'he statement was made by Wai­ ally hold separate conventions each CARDINAL STRITCH VISITED BY ter C. Hasselhorn , president of spring. are meeting jointly this Iish and American literature at the University of Tuebingen. in south­ NEPHEW: CONDITION STILL CRITICAL Cook Electric Co. of Chical9. The year_ Areas to be discussed during western Germany. A member of firm's research division designed the convention include sales. pro­ the 'su I faculty since 1947, he is a ROME I.fI - Samuel Cardinal i archbishop of Chicago, is in criti­ and built the intricate parachute. gramming and news. specialist .in 18Lh-century English. Stritch's nephew. Robert Stritch oC ca~ .condition in Rome 's Sanatrix and-balloon mechanism used to literature and in 2Oth-century fic­ Chicago visited for an hour Wed- CliniC from a. cerebral stroke suC- recover th~ 3,OOO-pound nose cone Opening convention activities Cor , , " Cered three mghts ago. of a Jupiter missile from the At· the Iowa Broadcasters is a sales tioA I nesday With the man he calls my Prof. Arnaldo Pozzi, director of Irwin is a native of Shenandoah lantic Ocean last Sunday. clinic at 2 p.m_ in the Pentacrest Uncle Sam, " and left the hospital the clinic where he is hospitalized. and a 19Si graduate o( Grinnell saying: He's very sick. But he said Wednesday : "The cardinal's Cook representatives told a news Room in the Union . Merrill Lind­ CoIlCie. He earned his advanced secms ~tter tha~ I had expected_" condition is stationary. though conference the recovery system sey, chairman 01 the radio board ' degrees at Columbia University. CardlDal Strltch, 70-year-old there is reason for hope." used Sunday was an advanced ver· of the National Association oC sion o( one built by the same firm Broadcastcrs, Washington 0_ C., U.S. OKs ARMS TO INDONESIA; and used to retrieve a small-scale will preside at the clinic and Wil­ Governors Jupiter nose cone last Aug. 8. liam Holm , WLPO, LaSalle, Ill.; JAKARTA GOV'T. CLAIMS VICTORY Hasselhorn said the new model, Sob Mason. WMRN, Marion. 0., WASHINGTON (UP) - The State Department has granted ('xport with some modifications, could and John Meagher, vice-president Ignore Tax licenses for shipment of small arms to the Indonesian central Govern­ bring a man down safely from a in charge oC radio for the National ment of President Sukarno, official disclosed Wednes!lay. space flight. Proposals had been Association o( Broadcasters. Wash­ U.S. officials said the shipment could be interpreted as an indica­ submitted to the Army Ballistle ington D.C., will participate in the ~ OUTI I TlMr. w.... "'outs gl .. and look. of uIIF-a.lmii.allion tion oC generally improved relations between Washington and the cen­ Missiles Agency (or the project, he clinic. hon. Cen ..r Wedn ..dey when 2,166 H.wkeyn w.rt distribut.d to tlg.r SUI ltudents .•• Junk, CI, Cut Issues tral Government in Jakarta. said. Guttenburg, .nd M.rg.r.t Dickenon, N2, Clinton, I"m quite pl ....d with the picturn in tlMlr boott. A JOINT DINNER in the Penta· -D.ily low.n photo by Bob Strawn. MIAMI BEACH, Fla_ IA'l - The JAKARTA, Indonesia I.fI - The army claimed complete control of The Army agency, headed by crest Room will (eature Lindsey governors conference ended Wed­ the island of Morotai in East Indonesia Wednesday and said its troops Maj_ Gen _ John E. Medaris, h8J as guest speaker. l nesday with an appeal to President will strike next at Menado, capital of rebel-held North Celebes. been seeking a defense department On the Friday morning agenda lAnd There/s Your Picture Eisenhower to team with Congress A Navy spokesman said occupaGon o( Morotai was accomplished go· ahead to shoot a human volun­ are business meetings for the two agaInst the recession and with his after the initial landing of an amphibious task force_ ter about 150 miles into space. groups. Then the Iowa Broadcast­ * Admi.nlstratlon in retreat on cut· ers will hear a panel discussion on Hitting Moon Like Shooting Almost *hal( oC the *5.750 new ting the number o( National Guard PALACE SOURCE DENIES PRINCESS Nab Man on Charge. programming moderated by Mason Hlwkeyes were distributed in three divisions. PLANS ENGAGEMENT TO TOWNSEND beginning at 10 a.m. Other partici· hours Wednesday afternoon, Jack The Pentaeon backed down on Of Selling Indecent Art pants in the panel include Holm, Hols, G, Burlington, Hawkeye busi- abolishing 6 of 'J:l National Guard LONDON I.fI - A Buckingham tion issued in the Call or 1955 re­ Lindsey, and Meagher. Balloon From A Carousel ness manager. reported. divisions - to unrestrained ap- Paiace spokesman Wednesday mains unaltered. At that time, she NEW YORK I.fI - A man tabbed Although 20 persons worked plause of the state executives. Gen. night denied reports that Princess renounced her love for Townsend the nation's biggest distributor o( Held concurrently will be an Hitting lhe moon with a rocket will be a very difficult technological JRTNA television ncws clinic with handihg out the 1958 yearbooks. Maxwell D. Taylor, Army Chief of Margaret soon will be engaged to because the Church of England is indecent pictures was arrested feat, Gerald Kuiper, professor of the University of Chicago's Yerkes bl9Ck long lines formed as classes Staff. told them the plan is out. Group Capt. Peter Townsend. opposed to the remarriage of di- Wednesday. He was said to have Dean Naven, Shenandoah, presid­ Ubservatory, satU W onesaay night. ing. let out on the half hours. Hols But the Administration still may A staLement issued by Queen vorced persons. The 44-year-old made $300,000 a year through a An internationally recognized authority on the solar system, Kuiper complicated setup involving agcn· SPEAKER at the joint luncheon spoke on "The Moon" at th e Spring sold 2.166 yearbook copies were balk at cancelling a projected 10 Elizabeth's press secretary said Townsend Is the father of two boys dl&tributed during the afternoon. per cent reduction in National Ihat Princess Margaret's declara- by on earlier marriage. cles and studios both here and in In the North River Room will bc initiation meeting of the SUI chap­ Denmark. Loren Hickerson, sur director of ter of Sigma Xi, scientific honor· Hoffa Indictment "Persons who have not yet picked Guard manpower. alumni records. ury fraternity. uJj their 1958 Hawkeyes may do so So the governors pumped out D ' DRIVER TESTING LEGALITY Assistant District Attorney 8i4· ney M_ Fruhling said the man, on programming will tollay and Friday between . 8:30 resolution demanding that lhe I OF TRAFFIC POINT SYSTEM A panel With the carlh and moon both Conspiracy Denied a.fn. and 4:30 p.m. Books will be strength of the guard be kept at William Glanzman, 32. dealt In in· closc convention activities. rotating, placing a rocket 'on the distributed Saturday from 9 a_m. 400,000 men and 27 divisions. decent photographs and In target would be something like NEW YORK CUP) - The prose· WATERLOO IA'l - District Judge George C. Heath Wednesday took art cution denied Wednesday that in­ to noon. In their final public forum the under advisement the case of Bernard W. Hitchcock o( Cedar Falls, poses which were not indecent but snooting from a seat on a merry­ The 428 page annual may also governors all but ignored such im­ go-round at a tiny balloon whirllng formation obtained Crom wiretaps testing tile lega lity of lowa's new point system of driving license sus­ suggest! ve. French Tennis Fans was used Lo obtain a conspiracy in­ be picked up Monday and Tues- posing issues as recession, taxes pensions and revocations (or traffic law violators. in an eccentric orbit around the day between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 and heavy spending. seat, Kuiper said. dictment against Teamsters Union Hitchcock was arrested for speeding the £irst day the point system TO DIRECT 'VOtCE' Treated to Display Presidenl James R. Hof(a and two p.m. After that, copies will be went into eCCect. His license was suspended for 30 days. It would not be a straight shot available only in the business of­ He obtained a writ o( certiorari requirIng State Safety Commis- WASHINGTON (uP) - Henry but curv.d bec.use the rocket other men. Congress Talks 01 Gold Panties U.S. Attorney Paul W. Williams fice on the second floor of the ioner Rus ell Brown to certify the records in his case to District Court. Loomis, 39, a White House aide. would require about two day, Communications Center. Attorncys representing Hitchcock and the state argued on legal Wednesday was named director 01 PARIS I!PI - Sex finally rearcd to .rch oVlr the 240,000 miles.. told Federal Judge Thomas M. Murphy that the Government knew Greta Leinbach, AS, Rockwell Low Excise Tax points at a hearing before Judge Heath. the Voice of America. He succeeds its seductive head Wednesday in \ '''Correcti~ bunts" would be City, 1959 Hawkeye editor. heLd a nec'$I'ry to control the direc· about a deal involving two mini­ WASHINGTON (UP) _ Presl- AIRFO C SS S 0 Robert E. Button who was namfd the midst of France's civil-military fones - instruments used in wire­ coHee hour Wednesday night lor dent Eisenhower's promise to reach Tuesday as Public A£falrs adviser cri is, dominated up to now by tion of the rocket en rout., h. I persons interested in working on R E MilLE T ' said. . tapping - "long before the wire- an early decision on tax cuts stirred CONTINUE CARRYING MICE ALOFT to Ambassador W. Randolph Bur· aging politicians. tap transcripts aired before the next year's annual. Approximately C I I I gess. U.S. representative on the "But a flight which brought a 30 students attended. new ongre s.ona ta k Wednesd.ay CHICAGO IA'I _ The Air ,Force scribed the program - known as North AUant,'c Councl·l. It appeared in the Corm o( a (Senate Rackets) Committee were about reductions in some excIse . . pretty American tennis player's closeup view oC lhe moon would made available to the Govern­ levies to pep up consumer buying. have begun rocketmg mice into Project Able - in a missile age ------gold lame panties. yield aLI kinds of new information ment." Sen. Norris Cotton (R-N. H.) space and will follow later with briefing before the Air Force Asso- ~ To Relorest Gein's ciation. "They'r•• trlctly • gimmick," about the nature of the moon 's sur· The transcripts were recordings Cace. Kuiper said. cilled for a suspension of excise other animals in preparation for .mll.d blonde Kuol F.g.rol, of oC a telephone conversation be­ taxes or manufactured goods and Cuture manned flights, a general He said: "In the months ahead. ~ A~rfa IS BACk "The moon is a museum of fossil tween HoECa in Detroit and someone 'Horror Farm' as each Project Able missile is ./4~ MI.ml, Fl •. "1 h.d to do lome­ PLAINFIELD, Wis. (uP) - Kill­ tranf;j>brLation as an anti-recession said Wednesday. 11'-, tested. it will carry a mouse in the with thing .g.lnst an the competition records dating back some 4'h bil­ in New York in 1953. lion years. when the moon solidi­ er Edward Geln's "horror farm" ~eallure. He .~aid. the ~ction wou!d Maj _ Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, nose cone. We expect the mouse's from the Palail Bourbon." Murphy overruled a motion to kick off a natIonWIde bargam commander of the Air Force Bal- 1" actions will tell us a lot about fied after its first billion years of stricken the testimony. will become a reCorestation area, Karol put her panties on view at existence. A closer study would it was announced Wednesday. sale" that would spur buying, pro- listie Missile Division. Air Research the effect oC space flight on Hving France's international tennis The farm's new owners an­ ducUon and employment. and Development Command de- organisms. increase knowledge of how the The President said in a New York ------.--~:-=---=~..:.:..------­ ISOPAN:', tournament, which despite skies as earth was Cormed," he said. Name Illinois Executive nounced the land will be planted threatening as the political crisis. speec;h last night that the Adminis­ madc in West GcrmallY Although the sam. age II the Graceland President with 60,000 trees this week. The (rati6tl would make "certain deci· went on as scheduled. moon, the earth don not provide LAMONI I!PI - Appointment of an farm achieved grisly (arne when slons" on taxes after consulting Dr. Silha Attending Frenchmen trying to get their such a long and continuous mu­ industry executive as the new pres· police discovered last November with l:ongresslonal leaders. He said Nixon - Avoid minds off the complex political sit­ seum. Th. earth's surf.c. il idcnt of Graceland College here that the Plainfield handyman had the decision would be based on the Army Course On uation by concentrating on tennis constantly ch.nging through was announced Wednesday by Earl murdered two women and robbed latest economic data available. Dental Techniques became even more distracted by wind and water erosion, IS well T. Higdon, chairman of the Board the graves of others to furnish his The President is expected to ask Keeping Latin Miss Fageros_ IS through crust upliftl by in­ of Trustees_ home with human relics. Coneress soon to extend for anoth· Dr. Robert E. Silha, SUI assist­ W•• ring her very brl., gold t.rior fore.. liko vole:anic .e:­ He is Dr_ Harvey H. Grice. 45, Gein is an inmate at the Central er year present corporation and ant professor of Oral Diagnosis in I.me p.ntln, Mill F.g.ros had tion," Kuiper said. Kankakee. Ill. Dr. Grice, manager State Hospital for the Criminal In­ excise lax rates. now scheduled to the SUI College of Dentistry, is little trouble Wednnd.y in de· He expressed the hope that some of manufacturIng and engineering sa ne. His farm burned down just drop ' July 1. Some Congressmen Elite in Power attending a course on Oral Diagno· , ..ting Mill ColI.t Monnet of time a rocket might scoop up a of the Kankakee operations of Gen­ as Plainfield villagers became may use this request as a spring. sis and Therapeutics at the Walter board for attempts to slash some WASHINGTON /UP) - Vice- France who wort regulation, or sample of the moon's surface and eral Foods Corp., will assume his (earful that it would be turned into Reed Army Medical Center in World 's most acciaimed line cotton, p.nties. bring it back (or identification. new duties after July 1. a museum of horrors. excise levies. President Richard M. Nixon said Washington, D.C., this week. of black-and-white films "Actually," explained Miss Fa­ Wednesday the United States must The instructional sta(f is com­ avoid foreign aid policies which posed o( physicians and dentists FEATURING MAXIMUM geros as she hiked her short pleat­ Communists Meet CONTOUR SHARPNESS ed skirt to expose her long muscu­ Elect Rep. Hays With Good Baritones - keep an elite group in power or stationed at the Medical Center, lar legs and her wispy panties, with the course being given for The long-awaited return of To Discvss Tito "make the rich richer" in Latin dentists holding commissions in the Ger· "they are real comfortable." Head 01 Baptists American countries_ many's greatest photograpbic Regular Army, Army Reserve and trademark to our camera shop is She was surrounded by photog­ MOSCOW CUP) - Top party and He also said U.S. diplomatic, eco­ the National Guard_ HOUSTON, Tex. (uP) - U_S. Nothing Li~e a Band Government leaders of llussia and of particular importance to the raphers and a swarm of French­ Rep. Brooks Hays, the only U.S. nomic and information policies in Dr. Silha has a captain's com­ black-and-white photographer. To men. It was difficult to say if they seven eastern European Communist South America shouid be coordin­ mission in the Dental Corps of the get the most out of today's sharp Congressman ever to head a na­ - For Flash and Life states met Wednesday in a top-se­ were tennis fans or just plain ated to combat Communist influ· :--iational Guard. lenses req uires the sharpest pol: tional religious organization, Wed­ cret "summit" conference which sible film_ Agfa has developed Franchmen weary of the political nesday was re-elected president of A Oall7 l.",an 'R.evle,. vor, it could hn. betn accur· ence. situation. By* JOHN* JANSSON * * * * Western diplomats speculated in· unique new methods to give their the Southern Baptist Convention. .tely n.med "v.ri.tlon, on • cludtM iiisclission of Yugoslav Nixon reported on his riot-marred world·famous Isopan films exira· Miss Fageros, a formcr model, It will be Hays' second I-year Coneer' by UI 8,. mpbony Band, theme." President Tilo's refusal to "toe the goodwill tour to a sell-out crowd Reiect Demand ordinary cont.,ur sharpness, alon, was told that Britain's Wimbledon Frederick C. Ebb., c.endDCllor, " oC 500 at the National Press Club. term as president of the organiza­ p.m. Mal' =1, IU.l8. Ma'n Loun,e, It W.I Introcluc.d by the MoscOw line." For Emergency with exceptional latitude, freedom tennis officials had barred gold tion. ~·g':~.r~c";,~:1 ~1j',I,~':.u.GU~lt un- trumpets .nd modul.t.cI Into • Yugoslavia was not represented Nixon said he made the trip de· Crom halation and the widest Tallie lam.e panties. spite death threats because "if we oC tonal gradation. The comblDa' Voting was held Cor a first vice­ Portu,a' : FOR''', Ol'ranllt, chor.le. It wa. then pl.yed in either by an oHicial delegation or Air Safety Rule tion of these exclusive Iaopan (ea· Said she: "The English are fair­ president, but ballots were not to Caprle.'o Conetta.. RI ..rd m.rch time (which I'd hate .. by observers at the conference to allow a bunch of blackmailing bul­ AnUpbon, for Wind. Keeble,. lies to keep Government oWcials WASHINGTON III - Federal air tures results in the inimitable Agfa minded. They believe in playing be counted until the evening ses· Fa",'a .. anot Alle,r. Williams march to) with. frenzied eMl- discuss plans for mutual economic image quality. the game. I'm playing the game, ,.id. according to the Soviet Press. Crom doing what needs to be done, officials Wednesday night turned sion_ :~~'::.nf:r:!tt, ~:ll::: : lng, comple .. with .lIdl ... from. down a Congressional demand {or C.lonel Buey Mareh AIf.rd boMS. The third v.rlatlon had • ~Il Soviet newtpapers gave Cront­ we better get orr the face of the "AGFA lSOPAN FF too. I've got on something beneath Earlier. a prominent clergyman an immediate emergency air safe· my gold lames." Gerona Mareb Lope di.tlncHy c.-I.ntal flavor, the page treatment to a bare bone com­ earth." <16 ASA) told the convention that man's ne Stan and Sir".. .L_ ty rule to halt the increasing num­ greatest challenge now is in "the F.r ..er Soap meme being Introduced In the m'"nique announcing the top-level He said it would be a basic mis­ Acclaimed as the highest-definilioll meeting. It WBi the first disclos· take to assume that Communists ber oC tragic midair collisions be­ realm oC human behaviour_" Th.t • conc.rt b.nd can ploy 'Iutn .nd .n,_red In the IIII- tween civil and miLilary planes. black·and-white film. with the flDo Gussie* Thunderstruck, * * both m.rch mu.lc .nd .ymphon. lish hom. TIM fln.1 v.rl.tlon, ure that such a conference was were entirely responsible (or rock· est grain on the market today. I' It is in this field, the Rev. Ro· under way. throwing spitting riots against him But ale oCCicials promised to Tonal gradation is incomparably w bert E. Nalor of Fort Worth 's Tra· Ie wortc. WII proved quit. con. ' which dlsgui ..d the thfme quite have new safety measures in ef· But Not by the Panties elusively lilt night. But thi. did _II, W'I t.ken Ity cl.rlMts .nd Premier and Communist Party in Venezuela and Peru. He said delicate for a thin·emulsion film. P vis Avenue Baptist Church said, Chid Nikita S. Khrushchev headed the "Co mmunists spearheaded the feet in about 90 days. Orthopanchromatic (Cully corred' tE NEW YORK I.fI - "Why, I'm that a lack of knowledge "has pre· not become .pp.rent until Clif- flUtes. The .neIIng w" chot... The congressmen, headed by "n WIIIi.ms took the b.ton to nic., with • dogfight .nd ••1 ..... the Soviet c1t1egalion. attack .. _ but they had a lot of ed for all colors I. i thunderstruck," said Gorgeous vented us Crom administering to willing spear-carriers_" Rep . Prince Preston (D-Ga.l, e Gussie Moran Wednesday when man 's spiritual needs." le.d hi. own work.. Following ing .nd. orompUy voted to take the maller "AGFA" ISOPAN F told that Karol Fageros' gold the In"rmiuion, the conc.rt .... EbiK r.turned to l.ad the c .... He said non-Communist backing (40 ASA ) Seventeen thousand persons, in­ Physl~s ~rolessor directly to President Eisenhower_ tr. lame panties had been barred cluding 13,000 "messengers" (offi ­ ,.n to t.ke ",.",. Ing m.rches. They _,. wei. for the violence should be a "great Presion gave this account a(ter A very fine·grain medlum:spt\fd from the "Wimbledon tennis The M.ln Loungo w.. only done. Precl.lon, bal.nce, I...... • lesson' for private enterprise and to cial delegates), are attending thr To 'Atten'd Institute his House Appropriations subcom· film willi the characteristic All. si courts. - Southern Baptist convention's an­ two·thlnh to three-4iu'rtor. full; flon ond toM qu.llty were "I U.S. policy makers that economic mittee called into a closed session contour sharpness . I :>rogress is not enough. F "The next thing they will be nual meeting. • pparenHy It I. more ,,,hlon.bl. good, but the pieces m.y ha". Frill Rohrlich. SUI associate James T. Pyle, chief of the Civil .. .ttonCl ..-choltr. concerts. betn pI.yed 0 bit more sIewIy "AG.FA" ISOPAN IS. tr. doing is taking away women's professor of PhYSiCS, will be one oC The concept of a "good life for Aeronautics Administrations; El· (100 ASA) But the fl.", .nd firo of good th.n they could h.ve bHn. They w: sufCrage," Gussie added. 1~ . V-~S . . ancl- fqreign physi~ists to the few " instead of a "better li(e wood Quesada. Airways Moderni­ Coe College To Get A fast film with Cine ' grain _ PI "This action is dictatorial. U's band mu.lc c.n " found no· ...med to lock some of the "'11. participate this s.ummer in an In­ for the many" plust be revised, he zation Board chairman; and Un· New Music Building whero 01... .nd cocklM" which I. part .. aid, noting that Venezuela is one aersecretllry or. ,Air Malcolm A. outstanding contour sh~. tjl czaristic. U's a blow at democ­ Wllli.m. whlPtMd the b.nd in.. the .pirlt of bal'Cl music. stitute oJ. Theoretical Physics June Adaptable to a great variety tl racy and freedom. i. to Aug. 23 at a , new branch o( of the richest Latin American na­ MacIntyre. CEDAR RAPIDS (II - Construc­ "'..... H. g.v. his com",lltion. The ,..ult WII In"",,,,,,, tions. lighting conditions. la "It's like takin; away Carrie the National .Bureau of Standards 'The subcommittee session was tion of the new music building at good dlaploy. HI. conducting WII _theI .... The dl,nlflod triM' He said the Communists argued called hurriedly because of Tues­ "AGFA" ISOPAN ULTRA i~ Nation's hatchet, plucking out Coe College will begin at once, it precl ..; he cued-In ••ch volc. ment .nowed some of the .lIc.. (NBS) at Boulder, Colo. - . The institute js under the joint that "have·not" people must turn day's collision between a commer­ (250 ASA daylight; fk Pocahontas' Ceather, bursting Sal­ was announced Wednesday. with cl.rlty .nd cort.inty. It cin .nd lOCondary me...... 320 ASA tungsten) ly Rand's bupble and cutting sponsorship of University of to communism for a better life. cial lIirliner and a military jet w••• ufflclont .nd .Hlcient, but "'1M through for • pl."I", ... the trainer near Brunswick, Md_ The Lady GodIva's hair. Contracts were let this week to Colorado, the Air Force Of (ice of "We must prove by action and word The only high'speed filJp on the sa three Cedar Rapids firms. not obtru.lve. feet. The counto,.".lo4Ie. 01 the that this is not true," Nixon said. tragedy cost 12 Jives. till "I think women of the world Both "F.nt.,." .nd "SoI.mn bariMM horn. uncMr prlllCl,ot ScientifiC Research. and the NBS. market offering true COOtour .~ Razing o( Marshall Hall, pres· ness - an extraordinary comlJill. 811 should revolt against such an ac­ Fill"''' woro pod, solid _rtcs, Kromer ••". • ent music building, may be fin­ J..... ""glllc lion, achieved by means ~., an tion. I'd suggest they all come w.1I done. The "FlllUO" bepn thrill, which ,.mlnded 1M .. "'y Culley to Chair unique single-layer emula.lon wbjell out on the court in long. anlde­ ished prior to June 7 and work on with • c.lm, ..,.M m.lody in b.ritone-ployl", d.y. In hlth sut', lal the new structure will start on the reduces light seatterinf. to a de."e length bloomers - white, of the d.ri.,..., which WII coun- school. Personnel Conference IOWA'S FINEST ••• not attainable in mult -layer emul· course - that would show them." site. ..red by the b...... nd picked Their t_ w., alllr, _II cell· slons. Red senaivlty has bees the In 1949 Gorgeous Gussie shock­ up by the Engll'" horn. It w.. troIlod .nd .ccur.... H."oy Jack Culley. SUI director oC the • 20% Men ProteI. M&-. stepped up for increased lunptea , ed Wimbledon when she appeared 3 TIMES 13 ,..... t.cI by cl.rln.... nd flute, Soll",...r'. piccolo Nltll•• " In Bureau or Labor and Manage· c.w- ... 1'1111, .. . rating. ba III on the center court in white pan­ BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. ,...m.r with the ba ...., with. "St." .nd Strl,.." . w.. ~ ment. will serve as chairman of a 1 -The Schlegel triplets will cete. • w-InI and Mi .... AGFA ISQPAN FILMS COM& IN ties trimmed in delicate laee, co .....rmolody In the h'''"",'1 . ~ ·_ acc",... , o,en • \Uikm "r ,the J~ ROnbl. 'Conrer REUSABL"E ALUMINUM CON· wh I)rate their birthday again Thur~ ....short bIIl~ipa -slUrt. F~"'I", • cllm,. ... ~ri •. .,.1..- the ·'itlW': ~ *e '01 the • Ama-icln .Society for TAINERS 1 day - for tbe 83rd time. .- W; - PerlOnnel AdmlnJstration Mondor J f l~s d\'OpPed their •", .. ,..,.... •• ~ ~I ~.w .1~."'''''''T''' , ftc ~1 gnettes. The men shined up .The "girls" - Miss Julia Sehte­ .tteR, ~ wh~f'- ~ Nct •..,lytt .' . , . ~ .,... ~ ~ .~ :, ,'n; .II, ~"I'" ~~ I "ete$Cf~ ~ -Jfhiladel thr their--binoculars-.- But no- COl'lllal gel, Mrs. Helen Sholes and Mrs. an .H.lr of .ta... . "" M. 1Ii.1I ~ 1;.1 , i'lUa. . • ,- I j 'aetlor! wU1tallen tieCause\he only ' Mary Sichler - plan to eat out at The .ul.. WII the mo.t .mltl· for hll solo. In the ....nln. wwk. . Culley ha. been chairman of thl lo~r. ;J~jTJlja stipulation about dress In the the local hotel as a special birth- tIou. .. WIIII.m.' wwk.. 01.- 9"tf phrlll", m_ hi. eHwts 1oclety'S national industry-educa ...... ~iM rwel is that it be white. , day treat. All are in good health. pl.yi", • di.tlnctly modern fl.. outs•• ndlnl. . Uon committee since 1957. 1241 ... C.I ....