~ The Weather let ~rving the State , r .... _f8!I' ....,. Universi.ty of Iowa c-ua.-...... Campus and Wel...... r. RIch War. se t.; lew. 11. I11I'II M .....'. 13: lew. 1L Iowa City J at 'ow'an Eat. 1868 - AP Leaaed Wire - Five Centa Iowa City. Iowa. TlMtMl • June 30. 1953 - Vol. 97. No. 195 Reds Offer' H.oarded Food To uiet German Riots Declare (risis BritainSuggesfsEarly'Meeting Polio Vaccination Readied in. Alabama Stopped, Army MONTGOMERY, Ala. (JI') - * * * \01 Big Three Without Churchill Doctors, nurses and anxIous par- prevcntive measures except on an l"'Y Old I 80 be turned into hu,e laboratorIes ent - teacber volunteers worked experimental basis. 1 n j e c t Ion s ..,. ear- Loca Y for the vaccination operaUon. LONDON (IP) - Ailing feverishly Monday to get ready were given previously at Houston"1 lit County Polio Case They wil] be open day and nliM Keeps (onlrol Winston Churchill's substitute for the nation's first mass gamma Tex., and Sioux City, where iests government moved Monday to ar- ilobulin vaccination of children proved the serum can prevent: TIle If-Jur-old "Il of Mr••• until Friday, when the last 5hots BERLIN (A') - Communists range an eady American-British- In a polio-stricken community. pollo if used In time. Mn. Cedi HUl'heI. Lit. 4, ._ are to be given. threw open lana-hoarded supplt FrencH meeting on .world prob- An estimated 30,000 boys and Dr. A. H. Graham. thc county Clar, .. &be flm po"o cue report- Every physician In the county 01 food MondlY to quiet the rum- lems demanding ur,ent attention. girls will be given precious shots health of(lcer, said there prob-" t. JohnlOll coual' ahla 11I_n. and the eotire medical statts of bUn of new WlJ'est among the There was immediate specula, of the polio-arresting serum In a ably won't be any noticeable de- Gur HIal'M .... Ia "'atr eoa- Maxwell and Gunter air torce sullen Ealt GeTman workers tion that the proposed n1lnister- desperate eHort to stem an out- cline In the polio rate here tor the dillou" at UalvenltJ ...... late bases In .Monllomery enlisted to wnOie r beUJ(m June 17 bro~ht ial-Ievel talks wm replace. ra- break that has stricken 80 vlc- first week atter county-wide Im- Mo.ar. He wu admitted Frio". help give the shots. SovIet na~Jal law. I ther than precede the thrice post- Urns In the past few weeks. Three munization. But atter that, he "Id Barbara Marx, ZI. Waterloo. "al Dlrectin, the preparations, In Despite tbe stern meHW'es en'" paned Bermuda conference be- children have died. "We expect the number of casel aI.. admiued &0 the pelle ward co-operation with Oraham anli forced by Red army troops and tween Churchi11, President Eisen- Every child in MontgomerY to drop off about 60 per cen!." rrtda)'. Her eonclllloa II &lao "'-'1'." state bealth oUlcer D. G. Gill, WII armor ever &lace they queUed tb hower and the new French Pre- county under 10 years of age is The preventive effects at thc 80_ II peru.. have bee1l Dr. Uwl, Coriell, medicli dlrect- rebellion, there wer vera I at- mler, Joseph Laniel. eligible for the Inoculation free of serum last on'ly about four weeks, Irea&e4I for DO"O a' 1hIivenlb ....- or at the Camden. N.J., Munlcl- tempted demonalratioru lor more A foreign office spokesman charge in a wholesale immunlza- but health authorities are hope-,.&aIa IfIlCle Jill..", I. pal hOlpllal. Coriell. a specialist food late last Wt!H.. said, however, the three tion program which starts today. ful that will get Montgomery past a"lllled by the National rounda- Hermann Kastner Communist bQllM!I moved swift- planned to get together later. Never before has gamma globu- the worst ~t the hot weather "po- Twelve city schools and six Uon lor Inl'ntll. Paralysis, took , h'ay Take Ov..... Iy. however. and Monday the Red That Big Thr~e conference lin been used in such wide-spread 110 seMon.' others throughout the county wlU part 11\ the experimental inocula- ~ "' . PreA claimed they bad whipped postponed twice because France Hans in TexIS and IOwa. the food uwll. didn't have a Premier and the F d POW Sixty-seven gallons of gamml R d 5 ~ Opeae41 third time, last Friday, because ree F·Ine Art SE X· b·b·' I I 0pens gJobulin were !lawn Into Mont- e S· purn Public Jarden were opened and Churchlll's doctors said the 76- gomery along with 30,000 hypo- Id . ' tood r~rvH long denied lhe year-old prime minister was tOil D,·s· charged dermlo needle$ and 15,000 syrlnre. ea To S,gn huniry workers were distributed. tired to carryon ,the heavy duties DilplllVs Feature Metalwork, Design and Craftl; late la.st week after the U.S. Pub- Food l10clu w rc rushed In to of government and needed a A' 'D I /' -'. lic Health Service labeled the W·th · t Rh crHlcal areu. Imports from other rest. S ; soya Proied Assembled in Art Building Lounge county an emef(~ency area and the I OU ee Soviet IItellHes wero Increased. Chancellor of. the Exchequer R. oWce ot defense mobllizallon 111- AI tood' uppUes Jmproved. A. Butler. headln~ the admlnis- SAN FRANCISCO (JP) _ Paul An exhibition of design, metal- located the senlm. SEOUL (TUESDAY) (.If,) _ UN strikers resumed work. tration while Churchill convales- Schnur Jr., onc of the first Ameri- work and c,rafts Is now belns pre- sign and turnlture. Schulze es- The National Pallo Foundation, COmmander Gen. Mark Clark .~- Everywbere throUlhout Lbe rlo- ces, told parliament Britain ha's can prisoners released by the sen ted as a part of the 15th an- lImated the building cost of the which t.. footing much ot the blll, ,ested to the Reds Monday that aI-shaken Soviet wne th embers negotiated with Washington and Winston Churchill Communists at Panmunjom last nual fine al'l3 festival In the ex- house at about. $20,000, and added estimated the mass Inoculation the AL!les and the Communists at revolt appelred dyln,. The Paris for an Interim meeting Will Miss Big Three Huddle Aprjl, has been discharged from hibltlon lounge ot the Art build- that this would save $7.000 to $8,- will COlt $1 million. immedJBtely sign a Korean arm- 300,000 man Rl.I68lan Army seemed discuss "certain urgent problems the army as "disloyal or sub- Istlce without approval 01 South In complete controL of common concern." . .. sixth army headquarters Ing. 000 over normal costs. Korean President Synrman Rhea, Ma,. Be Premier He said Britain would be rep- third gall bladder operation. said Monday. The displll.Y, assembled by Prof. CoeoallU& Hulis Hnch T Rece"l e but today thc Red Pyon,yang ra- West Berlin new p pe report resented by Lord Salisbury. lord The problems to be di~c;ussed Schnur, 24, returncd to America Raoul Delmare and Prof. John H. A case ot jeweiry, mostly llter- a er 0 Y dlo quickly spurned the offer. that Hermann Kastner, form r president of the Council who!TI at ihe proposed parley obvlousl)' an air force plane carrying 22 Schulze 01 the.school of fine arts ling silver, Is a display of Donna $2 SOO Sal H"k Clark made his proposal In a chairman of th.C German Liberal ChIJrchHl late Mond!ly appointed ""ould Include the ~o~e.an Rcd captivC6 classitled by is open daJly trom 0 a.m. to 10 L. Stray, G, Osceola. Delmare ant I e leUer handed to the Reds at Pan- Democratic party, may lue ed as acting foreign secret~ry during cr~is, p~o.spects o~ unltmg army as "temporary victims".. urllll A 1 ltd . t th t Mis St l' ~ , munjom after another secret ses- OUo Grotewohl M premier ol the apsence 0.1 Antbony. Eden, who many, All.led po~icles in the of Communist propaganda. ....m. ~g. . po n e ou a s roy i 10 T $18 SOO Y I sion with Rhee. East Germlny. Orotewohl has is conval~scing in the U.S. from it East artd Asia, and welding The ex-POW was awarded the ['he exblbils, i~cl~de work in uses cocoanut h~lI s, pearls, wood 0 , ear Y Clark emphasir.ed that ho does- been under lire sillce the outbreak front to deal with Rus- Bronze Star (or valor after bIs re- architectural, inlerlor. Iurnlture and other materials In her cralts- o't contra) the South Korean ""v- of rloUn" io lb.e Soviet lector. ldld"" . . ov • IAII CI . C new w?r -": e peace lease by tbe CommunLsts. Then and advertising desIgning. Archl- man.hlp. sur President Vlrlil M. Han- ernment but does command Jts We_tern milit... y experl.l Mon- asses anceled ~trategy. was taken to Letterman araly tectural drawing of two projects A (ull case of ceramic work by cher will receive a 2,500 raise In army. day admitted the), were Impr ed ,~ In Washington, the state hospital here. His family llves are shown' SAlary effective Wednesda . Th(" He promised the Reds bls com- -and a bit aJarmed- .t !.be ef- A P rt f J' I 4 partment said the ~rltish here where his (ather Is a former . . Glenn C. Nelson: G, Racine, Wis .• 141m give Hancher a yearl), salary mand would do Ita bcst to lIet Ilclent way the Soviet troops h.;d .S a ... 0 uy posed that. Lord Sahsbury CIO l~?or le~der. " The Ill'S! set Includes designs ls another exhibit. of $18,500. Rhee's co-operation In a tTuce and smashed Ihe widespread attack by I • ." there withm th~ next two His undeSirable dlschallge w~s tor a new building to house the Delmare explained that gold, The salary, hllhest ever paJd II said that, It nee sary, the UN two mUllan rloUn, atrlkers. At. the same time, a or~ered by the a~jutant general S design department across the silver, copper, bras and !;Iewter- $tate offlcJal, equals the salary to command would use armed lorce AnD1 P.werfuJ I Celebration' . Acl'Yltles l!aLd, the French were fully office in Washmg~on, a s~~ street from the Art building. lined copper are used in the be palll James H. Hilton, new "to the limit.. at Its ability" to , formed but have not yet army spokesman said. The dls- ! Yean Researeh metalwork classes. Other work la rOllident t I wa SI te colle auure observanco of a truce The Red army. perrormanc. l A holiday for SUI students, flre- worli of the,ir !eac~ion to the pro- charae i.s not a dishonorable ODe, Th d i 01 dr 10 de- Clone In I~ath.~r, t~xtl1es, w!)od ~1ton w"~ re~ re~n, pre:~~ The lint Red reacUon .;, the convinced many of these exper works ferri~ wheels and homeruns posal. - . and does not deprive the recipient ~ &econ ~ aw II carving Bnd In native stoncs that the West cln no lonler dJa- '1 t f th bIn f th t Th ' tl d of any rights or benefits as a picts a medical clinic in a small . dent Charles E. FrUey on Wednes ... leUer came today lrarn the North collnt the Soviet .rmy In Ea t are a 1 par 0 e .. our 0 e Bugges on was .ma e I 't Th I Delmar Nordquist G Towa City day Korean Communiat radio at 0 July celebration planned for Iowa iJy I'riday when Britain informe'd veteran. owa commUDl y. e pans re- ". • . ermany 81 a lOft occupation City the US of Churchm'~ tempOtliry Army regulations term it· quired two years of plannlni and has a display ot cut and pohshed Friley, who has been president Pyongyang. Jt said the letter wu torce Incapable of launchln. a . retlre~~nt and the need to post- "A direct discharge to indivld- research. stones w h I c h were orlglna lIy 01 low8 State for 17 years received not a~~eptablc, sho~ed "no sln~ sudden and effective aHack west- All classes will be suspended tb til uals who have been determined One of the Ieatures of the ex- found ·In the Iowa river. $18000 a year. cerlty, and waB inconsistent' ward. Sliturday for the holIday pone e op- eve Del ltd t th l' with the lacta 1- So I id Th 1 C·t J I eh be by investigation to be disloyal or hlbit is a display ot two lines or mare 'po n e ou a mal1Y Tho raise w.. approved by the' A new I .." of v et conf ence e owa 1 ~ WI or . am r subversive but In whose cases trial furniture developed by AI Bruce of the crafts students are not art state board o( education The bl"Oacast, monitored by Ky- In the Ilrmne I of Its military con- al Commerce sponsor1Og the by court martial h88 been de- Ottumwa former SUI student' students. Students In the field at . ado news agency In Tokyo. said Irol came Monday nliht when the day's events Whidh will get u~der- Itostherv,."e Sen,.or creed not teasible or warranted." Schulze, ~nder whom Bruce stud~ home economics, physical educa- Moat atate offlclel. wUJ receive the letter gave "no guarantee" 00 Northwest Oerman radio reported w8 Y when the umtPire ye1ls Play I: Schnur's tather headed the 10- ied for four years said that it tion, as well as occupational thera- $5° per yeahr ra1se, becilI ultJe 01 the future conduct at the South martJal law lilted In rural areas 1° b 1 53 l t Ba lI" at 9: 30 a.m. 0 open the soft- T 8 N Eel. ' . be 11 ted lri act on y teo,9 I a ure. Korean ,vern ent nd that d p..... d Lei zj b 11 t t i City k 0 e ew ,tor cal Committee to Save the Rosen- normal1y requires 10 years for a py mem rs are a represen EI ec tl oWolals othe than the 0 m a aroun o_Im an p g. a . °huI~nhatmetn thn d palr · b bergs, and now manages real student to reach the proficiency the crafts department. tt ve I' '11 r Iv $7 therelore the Communiats could Troops atill stood lUard In the H ll Ig g 0 e ay w e a Of L R· tat f Vi t H lli 10-2 .ch a ornoy lenera WI reee 0 ,- not accept it Iii h $1,000 fireworks display scheduled OW ev,ew es? or ncen a nan, iJ wlli Bruce has reached in only 000 a year. The attorney len&ral . * c eSt owever. f 9 T'" di I . b' candidate for president on the one and one-hall years. Ie f IliI i ,.000 * * Demo""""_ Reponed or p.m. ,.~ .p ay IS ell)g I· . ' leftist Independent Progressive Few T,·c ets Le f w rece vO'" . Sab • S R d underw.ritten br the JCC, but the Joh~ E. McTavlsh, ~4, Esther- ticket The elder Schnur has been .Bruce ~esllns new f~rnlture, District court judie! will get I reJets et ecor The lood demcm.traUoos which organization hopes to pay expenses ville, IS the new edltor-m-cbief ot t' '. th P ' !;Ilans Chlcallo merchandLse dis- F U· C rf raise In aalary of ,1 000 per year spurred the Red. 4n their appease- name) \ by charging adml~llon. the Iowa Uiw Review, the 38- ae Ive 10 e rOg~SSL~e part)'. plays and handles all furniture or n,on once Three members of the state li~ Of 68 K"ll I J men! program were reported at JCC officials estimate that the year-old quarterly mjlgazlne . once was secre ry- reasurer advertising for the two factories I S In une Edurt, Deaaau, Halle lind Frank- crowd this year will be -about 15.- the SUI co~lege of law. He suc- the CIO council here. of Period Tabies Inc .• of Hender- A few tickets are still available ~U~~tCO~tTo!:Ol1Jm:r~~n .~I~~~ , fur-.on-Oder. WHtern radio re- ARY 000 the number that attended last ceeds George McBurney, Council son, Ky. {or the SUI summer .symphony IlI'7 , ports deacrlbed tbem u minor- yea~'s celebration. , Bluffs, 195~-1053 editor. Douglas' Dec"ls"lon EbonJ Tablet! concert to be presented Wednes- 15,000. SEOUL (Tuesday) (J.S. Sabre- tho~h .IanJ!lclnt-aUall'l. The" Five 10wa City softball teams ' In the next highest spot on the Se I' f t difr day at 8 p.m. In the main lounge jeta dltroyed nine Comunlat MIG CONlated mainLy of disgruntled . I vera pieces rom wo er- of the Iowa MemorIal Union jet.. todl" for a new record of 88 II " have already entued the tourna- review 10 which articles by lega D" d I H ent lines which Bruce has de- . BU L [ET I N kills In onth the fifth air Ihoppers shaUl ng We want tOOd ment and sever.al more teams are !lut/lOrltles on current law Iscusse In ouse signed are displayed One line Prof. John Simms, of the music f o~m, tor our children" when the! found expected"Comp1ete, Auto Service, lems. and legislation features two ebony-~pped tables department, will be featured solo- orce repa . .tore .belves emp1y after wallin. Iowa Supply, Mm\ted Cab, Odd are edited ao!I published by WASHINGTON (.IP)-Rep. W. M. with black metal legs. Tbe other I.5t on, th~ program, playing Beet- TOUO (TIIeI4\a,) ~brIa- It topped by flve the previous In long IInM to .hOD. Fellows and Breese Auto are the law seniors, Donald Dorei. (D-Oa) Monday accused line of tables features brown hoven s • Plano Concerto In G Ma- ~,e4 fIoeII waten reced~ ....' record of 83 RUSlian-buUt jet teams that have 8~bmltted entries. DavenPort, succeeds C. Ed supreme court 'justlce William O. Japanese-wood fronts. • jar." Simms is scbeduled to play Oil tile ...... en "'l1li4 0' 1tJ'a. ~~5~ters d~tToyed in September Concessions of various types and man, Spencer. Dorei will' be Douglas of treason as part at spe- B . ml N 0 At, H 1 I a concert In Carnegie hall next All af&ef' tall'" more t"aa 4" . Sludenl. Teacher. a number o( ride~, including ferris tlele aad book review ,edlt?r. clfic grouncLs for impeachment. dls~~~ ~em~rk~le cr::':';:: raU with the New York Phllhar- llvee. le.vla. a mUllea beMeI.. The new Jet combat record came ., whe.els, merry-go-round and a Notes and legislation edtior for Wbeeler took the house floor lor ship, according to Schul%e, in a monic orchestTa. atld wreadllDI ...... nil.... as fl,ltting on the blulnll western Meet FOl Study miniature trajn will appear on the the next four. Issues of the an hour's IIlscussion of his resolu- modernistic curved office desk or Other numbers to be played by at ,%It JIalIla... Korean front dropped ott sbarply midway. A tood stand, operated by Law ~~vie?l . will be ~Ick. L. tion to impeach Douglas for "high birch. The desk will later go into lb.e symphony Include the tone po- Baa a a'...... bead~ ...... atter battered South Korean ~ In 4 Conferences JCC members, wl11 be on the sen, LS, Audubon. Comments crimes and misdemeanors" as an the main office of the art depart- em "A Hero's Life" by Richard the atriClkea ItIaIld. 'file ",ptller fantry fell back from four grounds. tOfs' for 1953-19~4 Will be Oordon aftermath to Douglas' stay of ex- ment His work also Includes Strauss, and "Fantasy", an orcbes- ...rea ..... II " k_ I" CIOIIrIe north ot Seoul. More than 12:1 (OWl blih scbool Feature ()f the afternoon pro- L,',Fors!th, 'LS, OC!Lfax ~ . and Phil- ecutlon to atom spies ·Jullus and punch bowls and bon-bon dishes tral pIece by James Waery, AI, tbe ...... artke Ia a week The South Koreans also were Itudents and teachers be,an stu- gram will be oonte.ts for the chil- IIp ! ~. •Dandos, 1J3, Sioux City. Ethel Rosenberg. A 6 1L ' od 1 h h' h' Iowa City. _leu. thrown back on th)e eutern tronit, dies and rehearsals Monday at d n These wlll Inelud f t Ot..... b f n.. 11 d t 7Z-~oom m e ouse, w IC where forward e emen.. of • x f '--b d re . e 00 races ' ...,r mem . ers 0 ",e. The tu court vacate the say, was built to exact specifications Conducting the orchestra wUI NaUoaal JIOI'efl eou..... ", Chillese divisions are on the at- our wor.... ops an camps now and novelty races. Children will 8t~r. who sel~cted ' t~eJr OWifJ alt.h~ugh the majority stTessed t~e for an Iowa City lot, Is complete in be Prot. P. G. Clapp, head of the dead, It' ... aDd liT taJaed. tack alan the valle of the Puk- In aemon here. be divided Into fl'oups by aae lor cessors with the approv~l opmlon that Douglas acted withlO every detail Including interior de- music department. han I I Th i nl ere Nearly 71 ltUdents begin re- 1, these conte8ts. /'I. lint aid stand la.w . faculty are James 8.. ' his authority in &ranting It. The ' __ . , . force: v~~. Lao:o t areatal ~ust beardn, tad.., at the All-State will be attended throughout the No+tbwodd'; ' Cral, O. Clarlf, , Rosenbergs were executed a few ' •• ft h"bi 0 u moun n Vocal MtJIIc eamp, preparlnr for day to care lor any possible In- erloo, and RODeTl I., TJylor, hours afterward. on June i9. G.raduates Study DIS play It:" era s Ex I t ~~'w~~:: ~v:~~:'l~; ::.b- three concerts \0 be presented be- juries. In advance of house committee . .•.... ", "' . ' •.. • .' .'. . • Only in the air could the AIlJes f~ the camp e10tJe1 next week. hearings today. Wheeler declared ,~... / ' !ind victory. SlibTe pilots reported Another Z3 hilb ICbooi students he was not basing his Impeach- they shot down six 11101 who from aD over Iowa began four ment action on any question of tTied to stop Sabre filbter-bomb- weeki of IpeeCh and dramatic art Douglas' authority. The justice's .)· era from a plasterin, raid on .tudJes, 1ocludln, a production of World News Briefs t actfon In the Rosenberg case, he Namsl, near the Yalu dver. Sabres a Shakespearean pla! in the SUI said, only served "to accentuate Festivil ottl1De Arts.. a conclusion I had reached" as Runnin, concurrently with both A Co.-de;'lation of La'e Developments to his "general unfitness." SEOUL (TMIII.,.) (JP)- A U.S. student campi are two workshops On the point of treason, Wheel- ...., pOet ...... " nIP' Illet fOT blah ~l tachen of vocal IJERLIN (JP)-AlUed quarters said Monday night a report pub- er accused Douglas of "giving aid dewn &we c.-..... 111M "a_ mUlic and lpeeeb and dramatic lished In the Urllt~ States that Soviet troops had moved Into Pilsen. and support to the enemy" by It JDIIes ...... , 8eMI. tile lit.... art. both of wblcb began Monday. Czechoslovaldat to quell a Czer.h uprising is news to them. Ottlcen "consorting with sworn enemies .u.:oree ~~~~ The music workahops are de- whose duty It Is to know about any unusual troop movements in of this government," and maJdng .... _8 -_...... - "De- ai(ned to provide two weeks of 111- central Europe said they had no knowledge of the use of Red army statements w b Ie h "must have ::-..:,.Bet ~~ ...... : tenllve training tor the students units In the Soviet ~temte. made him highly regarded by the ., tile 1_" &n~ ._~ ItId teacben, wbile the speech and • • . •• Kremlin," Among etatementB at- war.. -- _ ..-... dramatic art workshops provide WA8IDNOtON' (JP)-Presldent Eisenhowet signed Monday a bill trlbuted \0 Douglas was one Id- TIle ...... eruIIet ,. ..ne. four weeD of classes and experl- ~xtending rot two )'ea.,s legislation under which doctors, dentists and vocating recolllition at Red China :-:a of 8..... Tbel.=: ence 1a the University hlgb school veterInarians' ltlay be drafted. The le(lslation applies to men up to by the United States. __ ... .0...... theatre and the University theatre. the aile of 110 yean. No furt~er information was released. _8 IuIowa. • • • • I I---.l'''------I k d LONDON . .- The U.S. navy Bald Monday tbat takeoff and Hancher Among S~ho art tbua ran their month's score to 51 UN Ma .. 3 Payment la.ndlng exerclHS I1Y 1,T.S. and British jet planes aboatd the Amerl- Visiting Old Alma Mater MIGS' only four short ot the tee- On U.S. Building Loan • can carrier "'n.letl1'\ had "proved the worth" of the sloping deck on ord let In September of 1852. , aircraft carrier•• . T}le British 10 19111 had the idea of pu""g ille Oxford, England (IP)- Former CoOrpI officers said the Weight UNITBD NATIONS, N. Y. (A"}- flilht deck ot carriers at an anale and then canting (sloping) It td Rhodes scholars, among them SUI of about 12,000 Chlaese and an The United NaUODI lent a cbeek IIlve a clearer !Iigbt path and increa.e the parking area. The U.S. president Virgil M. Hancher, IB- artlllel'1 barra,e just sbort of a of $1.5 mUllon to the UnIted Stales navy adopted tile Idel after trials with B analed deck in British car- thered Monday from all oVer the Korean war record forced the de- Mondly. It wu tile third pay- riers. , world to visit their old alma ma- cllion to break off tile adion and meat on the .. million loan • • • • ter. let the Chloe8e take over four made'" the U.s. w build the UN TOKYO (T\alldIlY) (A') - A 2!1-man Swws truce Bupervlslon The graduates joIned In celebra- , fien:eJ, contested billa west of beadquarten. team arrived 1ft 'J'OiD'ottoda:y and .etUed down to await a Korean ar- \lam marking this year', canten- .... h".B ...... am w..- YODebon .ome to mIlea norlh of ThJI malt. p.s million repaid mlstlce. ,n WII thll ",cond , neutral nlltion's supervisory. group to aT- ary of the birth ot British Empire r r Seo\ll to the U.s. bJ the UN on IbJa loan. rive 1n the 'ar ~~ thll week. Repre~ntative8 , from Sweden got in builder Cecil Rhodes. • EZaJEL 8PUOEL. G. HVDLT JllLL8. ~.. (left) ... J ...... 0. !f...... Va...... , ... ., Pour otber hUla which the CbI- '!'be papaeaf II made from Sunda)". Other naUon ...lected for the lupervJiory job were India, Hancher I. vice-pruldent of the Ute tllaplan .. llae el ...... _.rk ItDII eiaftI.xbI1IHIoD ...... Ia ...... u.. neM hid aHacUd .un were In moDey provided b7 the replar POland ancl C,eobollovUJa. " . • ••• , .. 'U.s. Rhode. Sebolan lIIOdaUou...... 01 .... AI1 ~~.t n. .... ~ be "811 froID ...... Ie I' ..... fha ... IIIIIIl .... L BOK banda. ' ------.- budpt. - - - ______Pate ~THE DAILY IOWAN-Iowa CUy. Ia.-Tues., lune 30. 1953 Polio Patient Movsd t.o New Quart rs SUI Receives Foundation Gift ~fle 11£110/ Iowan To Study Tonsillectomy·Polio TUESDAY. JUNE 30, 1953 Publlshed dally except Sunday and nrvlee I, ,hen an .u lervlce .rron 0 ,--.-:.------Monday and leIal holidays by Student p.ld IGba.rlb ... If r.porled ~1 •••m. Fro. ". P .....U ••• 1oU. ••• '( A March of Dimes grant of $7,- Publication •• Inc .. 128 [o"'a Avo .. Iowa Tbo D.ny lo ... n olr ••,.n.n de,.rl· DAILY IOWAN I!DITOaJAL JiTAP' 652 recently accepted by the fi- Top found tha~ ~~, or 93.5 per ~~. ~~:~ .1n~~e~O:,f:I~~o';.'! ~": men.. In tlte nar .1 Old Joarn.ll1m Uttor ...... '" ...... Jamel rOller nance committee of the state cent, had had ~thl'ir tonsils re- City. under the acl of eonlJl'81' of balillni, Dub_qae and Iowa aye., I. Mana,lntl EdItor ...... Jo",pb Merer .pen from 4 a,m. to l~ n.o. Tuesdl, Ju board of education will make pos· moved sometime m lite. 'Four automobile accidents in the March 2. 1878. 110...... t .... ,; 8 . .... I. Ie no.n Newl KeIllor ...... Sarah Adami sible an investigation of the rela· Oui 01 the total number of polio Iowa City area over the weekend ---~------Mon •• ,.. • City Edllor ...... Ben Banll:_ . f f MEMBial OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS tlonship of tonsil removal to polio. deaths, 122, during tbe period, 85, resulted in hospitalization or our The AaIoclaled Pre •• I. enUtled ex- ~.t. City Edl\o~ ...... Da ve Po,.1'1011 EXI myelitis. or 69.1 per cent were among those persons. eluslv.ly to Ihe .e for republication ..,.rt ...... Itl ...... ml.·. ,a .. I.... . Sportl Edllor ...... Fred Thomu Dr. Franklin H. Top. SUI head wbo had had tonsillectomies. ot An accident J'ust north ot North ~wl11._~: l.. oealwenueW .. ,p~I,~tedouble cl'~I'cal facI'lities of the t problems," the veteran manage- Wednesday, July 1, 1953. Applica· States adm'itted Friday that it J ourna 0 e ~II can e Ica 1 . w General fronts of the cars. , ment consultant declared. tions received for the August Com- was regrettable that France should association Top urged that sober ems. . the space and bed capacity for the hospital. Two Iowa City men escaped in- "Too often we mechanize out mencement after the July 1 date be represented at this moment by one judgm«!nt 'be given the proposed . One. stud~ found that boys w.lth treatment of poliomyelitis and The linal p"ase will be the con- jury but badly damaged tneir car kitchens into paragons of spotless can not be accepted. 1 premier who is virtually un. Bu removal of tonsils except when high m.telhgence who a.re ~omg other contagious diseases in the struction of a. ~ew one-story ?nd in an accident on an overpass efficiency, then go out somewhere ___ known in international affairs. 82 removlli was necessary tor COI'\- SUI hospitals was marked by the addition tO the old lSO- about two miles north of North to eat almost every night. Why? THE MAIN LffiRARY WILL BE They pointed out however thnt '. . r~o~!rv:nfa~~~~l ,:~~ ~~~teu~~~::: ba~emen: I . ~:: tinued good health. pathetic and demanding. McCand- t!,ansfe: Monday of II polio pa- lat~~nt ~V~gd to Ctomp tete ~he t new Liberty. Because we've taken ~ut ~o~ mu.ch closed all day on the Fourth of though most of hls gover~ment Experience in' Detroit less explained that the study in- tJen,ts Into a n. wl.y , remodeled ~e la ncs epar men, ar man The men, Cecil V. Cox, 19, ~uman warmth and l~dlvld~abty July. Reserve books may be connections have been minor, he In this article Top pointed to dicated such boys are "hitting wing of the Chlldlen s hospItal. ays. Broadway, and Leo Rogers. 943 S. m. our quest for effiCIency, she charged out starting at 4 p.m. on has been a member of parliament I his 1940-1949 experience in a De- back" Indirectly at their fathers In their .spacious . new qua:ters Linn st., were driving over the saId. h M G' Friday, July 3 and will not be due for more than 20 years and is not but trolt hospital. Among the 46 who for their severe treatment by fail- all me~haOlcal. respirator patlen. ts A f b'r Mk overpass when their car appar- On the ot er hand, rs. 11- '1 M d I" Th 1" . d ext h t ts d omo e ers I d did b th 'd th t k' lit' untl on ay morn no.. e 1- mexperlence . died of bulbar polio in Herman ing to come up to expectations now ave easy :1CCCSS 0 ou. I e U I a ent y spun aroun ~n p unge tl.roen "asdaldl'ct"alikaewhoerrseslflmSPeeslcaal_- brary will be open from 2 to 5 Ass. ocJated with BldauJt $80 Kiefer hospital during this period, for them in school. wmdows, lind from stations I~ a through the guard rail. fed Sympathetic Mothers central glass enclosur and offices A 61 d T S The tront of the car hung on to most everywhere situations in p.m. on ~und~y, J~ly 5. Depart- Amencan pbservers, too, were Girls whose mothers know and in the area, attending nurse~ and re a 0 ee the overpass, but the rear wheels which needless drudgery and re- mental lIbrarIes Will post their quick to note that Jos~ph Lan.lel understand their interests most doctors can more convemently . rested on the bank below, accord- pititlon could be reduced by mod- hours on the doors. has been closely aSSOCiated WIth Iowa Farm Income thoroughly arc likely to have the ~vatc\l over their charges, acco~d- Iowans Prosper ing to patrolVian Smith. In the ac- ern methods. On air force hospital --- Foriegn Minister George Bldaull " h ThO Y best relationships with thcir mo- 109 to Ge~har~ Ha;-tman, ~upenn- eldent the car snapped wires be- planes for instance she noted the FAMILY NIGHTS WILL BE for many years, and that Bldault Hfg er IS ear thers, another study shows. M~- tendent of universIty hospitals. ' . . side the Crandic tracks. heavy ' medical kit; of the flight held at th:e field house every Wed- :-vas expected t~ succe~d himself, ' CandJess said the study revealed The new isolation division is Automo~lle mll>luracturer~ like nurses their uncomfortable seats nesday mght of the summer ses- In the new cabmet. ThiS was ac. Iy 'f ' A "I Da that such girls feel least that they now allied in the same building to see family heads prosper. In the and the "diabolicallY long" forms sion from 7:30 to 9: 15. Summer ~e pted as a token ot continuity in tha Despi e pn are bcingcontrolled by .their mo- with orthopedics, the brace shop $3,000 to annlual they fill.. out for each patient. session students, staff and faculty foreign policy, as was IP ~6f,OthOO. f mco~e Newspapermen Set ~d ~Iel'! wil thers like to be with their mo- and physical and occupational range, and I elr sa es orecas - Yet she admitted tbat she re- are invited to bring their spouseE outline his plans. before the as- a b Iowa farm InCOme .lor the first thers' and are best' satisfied with therapy units. When remodeling ers could ~hoose they would rat~. Me han ·cat Session sisted her husband Frank's efforts and families for game activities ~embly which gave him a nice mao four months of 1953 was five per their lot as girls. Is completed, the new area will er have mc.orne boosts occ~r 1n C I to put her icebox next to the kit- and swimming. There will be a ;ority in approving him for the cent higher than for the same pe· A study of asthmatic children have an expa.ndabla capacity 0 10~a thar ~\ New Yor\ ~I~ At Lalce Laboratory chen range, because she liked to sp~cial pool for the small folks. task of creating a new cabinet. riod In 1952, reports "Iowa showed that such children arc some 110 beds, as compared to the enera 0 ors e~onom s n- take the extra steps to the back Children will be admitted only Laniel was vague, but did men- Trends" 01 the July Issue of the likely to be tremendously over- maximum 64 or old isolation. warB ~rew T. C:urt ~escrlbed eco~?m- Men and women whose work porch, the frequent trips whiCh when accompanied by a parent. tion ratification of the European Iowa Business Digest. pmbitious for themselves, Mc- of the Genera) hospital. ~c ~~earc Jnt ~rge co:po~~ lO~S makes It possible for Iowans to be took her closer to her neighbors! ___ defense treaties as part of his pro- Unusually high income during Candless said. Mothers of these The polio patients were moved t? e c~r~en h COl~~l1~ UC - informed on the news of the day Mrs. Gilbreth told the 70 indus- TilE FINE ARTS FESTIVAL ~am. However, he still predicates January, 1953-the highest of any children also tended to expect via elevators and underground IOn wor s op ere on ay. will meet In the northwestern cor trial men at their last dinner meet- of· 1953 will present the Univer- it on a solution of the Saar dis- month oC the last three years - their children to achieve much tunnels, with each of the nine in Related to Returns ner of the state July 24 and 25 t~ ing of the two-weeks course how slty Summer Session Symphony '.lute with Germany and closer ties largely explains the total 1953 in· more than they were capable of respirators accompanied by nurs- He said that most Americans in thrash out some of the problems important it is that labor and man- orchestra concert on Wednesday, betw~en Britain and the new army crease over 1952, the pUblication of doing. McCandless pointed out es, temporal'Y generators and suc- the lower income levels begin which make their jobs difficult. agement groups are turning to uni. July 1 at 8 p.m. In the Iowa Me- of umty. the SUI bureau of bustness and that the study implies a need lor tion equipment throughout their thinking about a new car with a They are the editors publishers versities to find . suitable atmos- morial Union lounge. Dr. Philip Foreign Policy No~ Streue4 economic research points out. the teacher to help the child with 15·minuie journey to the Chll- raise in pay, but it's difficult)o and newspaper mech~nical men pheres for objective study of their Greeley Clapp, bead of the music Foreign policy, however, was not In recent months .farmers' cash exaggerated ambitions develop dren's hospital building across the sell a new automobile to a Clt~- who are now enrolling In the problems. department, will conduct. Free uppermost in the minds or the r~celpts from .marltetings have more realist!c. expec!ations. street fro.m Genera.l hospitals. ~en who already has t~o .. ~hlS Newspaper ¥echanical workshop tickets may be obtained at the In- French parliament. Laniel!s job Is dlppt'd, lower In Aprll than!n Two .qualltles which McCand- Last Friday 34 children travelerl ~ rel.ated to the la~ of dlm.mls~- at the Iowa Lakeside laboratory on ' formation desk in the Union be- to stop the downward glide of the March and lower this April than 10 less saId. have been ~ound to above ground to the new pediat- 109 returns, he said, and. It fIts the shores of Lake Okoboji. Wd d Dft~dl' ginning Saturday, June 27 and up franc. present an acceptable tax the sa,me month of last year, the characterIze b~ys a~d gIrls who ries ward of the Gene~al hospital shoe:s as :-veIl. as automobll~s. Sponsored by the extension di- e nes ay ~ ,ne until the time of ilie concert. program in a country where no tax Digest notes. are suc.cessfu~ m theIr gro~ps ~re r~placing the old isolation ward. P.losperlty m Io~a and other vision and the school of journalism S f E I --- program is ever acceptable for Crop Income Up a good workmg relationslup WIth Here they will be closer to the agricultural states IS b~tter for the workshop is a continuation of et or xemphons FACULTY MEMBERS INTER- very long, and bring government On another comparative level their parents and a clear under- - General Motors than upswept sal- th fifth I _ iested in Fulbright awards for expenditures nearer Into line with the editors of the monthly pub11: standil)g of "who is who'\ in the aries on Manhattan island, be- he . I anfnua nehwsldPalPert Fmbe 1954-55, for univerSity lecturing revenue. c amca con erence e as e - P ns ho f '1 to ake appl' d d cation note that Iowll crop income Social group to which. they belong. BUS L·,ne D·,spute cause' not s? m~ny peopl~ there ruary at SUr. Some 100 newspa erso w al m 1- an a va need research, may ob- The French deficit has been through April of this year was This social empathy or under- buy cars With Increased JDcome. t d t tte d - cation for homestead ~xemption tain further information from tht' growing at a constantly incr~asinR 1~4.3 per cent above the first four standing of who are'the leaders Prompts New Sujt Court 'observed. pe~~ae~ ~~e~:fn~~:h ;r:'id~nt of by 5 p.m., Wednesday WIll be Coh- gr'lduate college, 4 D.C. rate which already has passed ,5 months of 1952, but livestock and and "who likes who", character- S Diesels Are Dillicult the National Editorial association sidered to have waived the credit, --- million a day. j livestock pl'oducts income was 13.6 ize.s the better adjusted child, he In upreme Court Forecasting diesel locomotive and edl'tor of the Laverne. Minn city assessor Victor J. Belger said SUl\&1t1ER HOURS FOR Laniel will prohably get some ~ d ., Monday. THE MAIN LmRARY last ditch legislative co-operation per ce~t lower.. sal . . sales is different, Court said. In Star-Herald, will speak at the Twenty~six Iowa ~ity home Monday-Friday-8 a.m.-10 p.m. in whatever program he produces OWing to heavIer pre-Easter Faclo~ on Prejudice The que~tlOn as to wh~ther the that area it's hardest to sell the workshop dinner ' July 24. R. R own~rs shll hav~ not filed .for the (Desks close at 5 p.m. on FrIday) for two reasons: ..... buying this yea.r, Iowa de~artment Resear:h ~n the development of Cedar Rar:nds and Io~a CIty ~ail- first one to a railroad company, Jackson of the Spencer Reporter credIt, Belger s~l.d. ApprOXImately Saturday _ 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Under the constitution, another stores report slJ?htly heaVIer sales race l?reJudlce ha~ ~hown tho t way Co. or the Amel'lcan B~slmes, because their shops are all geared will speak at another session. 3,700 l~cal c.lhzens wh.o own Sunday _ 2 'p.m .• S p.m. cabinet crisis wlll., result in dlss~ - 1.5 per cent higher.,....for the first such lnto~erance IS lIkely to be Inc., shall ope~ate a bus Ime be- to the steam-spouters. But once In response to requests from homes In whIch they live are lutlon of parliament and an elee- four months of 1953 than for the accompamed by resentment to- tween Iowa CIty and Cedar Ra- they get the first one, they clln't many Iowa newspapermen Henry eligible to claim the exemption. SUNDAY MASSES AT ST. tion. That would put many mem- correspondi~g period' of 19:12, the ward peop.le in gene:al, McCand- pids was asked Of the Iowa su- wait for delivery of the rest of Africa, head of SUI's ne~spaper Homestead credits give up to II Thomas More chapel are at 5:45 bers in danger of their jobs. }:'rends contmue. . ~ess explaJn7d. Clllldren force~ preme court Monday. the~r fleet, so they can co~plete production labOl'atory, will des- maximum ' credit of 25 . mills on 8, 10. and 11 :30 a.m. Confesslon~ And it would further disturb the Because of the expansion of out- mto. tasks WIthout adequate prep- The case was filed jointly by theIr conversion to one kmd of crlbe the plant layout at the lab- the fIrst $2,500 of assessed valu- Saturday, ~ to 5:30 and 7 to 8:30 economic situation. door activity in building and high- arabon may learn. a. permanent the Iowa commerce commission roundhouse. oratory. He wlll direct questions ation or 0 total of $62.50 in pro- p.m. way construction. AprU emplo),- fear ~f new expenences, such .as and Crandic on appeal from a But General Motors economists and answers concerning composing perty taxes. ___ RETAILER MARTIN . DlBS ment in Iowa - not including ag- ecquamtanc~ with. other raCIal ruling of Judge Jalll ~ P: Gaffney find it much more di~lcult to room problems. Persons sign for homestead cre- ASP E E D E D REA DIN G CEDAR RAPIDS (JP)- Funerll rlcultural workers - was up over groups, studIes mdlcate. in JQhnson county dIstrIct court. fo recast how many family auto· dits at the assessor'li office in tho'! course will be presented this sum- services will be held there tocla, the March total by 6,250 workers. A desire to do well in school is He gave the bus ri'ghts to Ameri- mobiles will roll out of the sales- basement of the courthouse. mer from ~ to !J p.m. Monday for Edward J. Carey, 78, presIdent It was above the April, 1952 more closely related to good can. rooms each year. Such things as S "' C t' + I t through Thursday for 5 weeks. ot the Martin Dry Goods Co. and number by 8,850. ,grades than a high l.Q., ~nother Crandic asked the commission a ;rise in the cost of llving index, 01 onserva Ion IS s MALIK SPREADS CHEER Those students interested please the Martln Building Co. here. H. Workers Total Z,SS' study showed. for authority to op~ate the bus movemel)t of people into cities, LONDON (JP)-Russian Ambos- report to Schaeffer hall, room 6 on died Friday after an lllness of .Buildlng and bighway construc- Workshop students will see line as a supplement to tbe Cran- "hard money" policies ot. the Hear Beardsley Talk sador Jacob Malik called at the Monday, June 29, or Tuesday, about a year. Carey was a business tlon accounted for 2850 of those films which are new in the are;! dic electric line between Cedar banks and many other factors British foreign office Monday to June 30, at 4 p.m. The course will leader in Cedar RapIds for more hired in April. Trans~ortation and or human relations this afternoon, Rapids and Iowa City about a affect sales. express the Soviet government's be limited to 25 students. than 50 years. public utilities increased their em- according to Prof. Ralph H. Oje· year ago. Like other economists who have SPIRIT LAKE (iP)- Gov. Wil- best wishes for Prime Minister • Y ploymentcent, with for trucking the month firms by leading2.5 per mann, workshop coordinator. ineLater, authority Amer icanand askedremoval for ofa busre- visitedworkshop, the Courtfourth isannual a bit summerworried nightliam S."All Beardsley states must said reapprais Mondae 1______ChuwrChslllu'SlrappldRreoCOGveRrYA' M_ 11~~~S~.,1)'~~) 0 f f ; c ;a I J a ; I y thls field by engaging 1,000 more Anti-Trust Case striction on its current operations about recession prospects In the their conservation. methods an d workers, the Digest reports. between the two cities. It Is al- next year or two but he stoutly plan a comprehensive program for Manufacturing employment for Re e d 'T·/ Fall lowed to carry passengers from maintained that "nothing has hap- the years to come." April was sUghtly below. March C sse, Iowa City to points beyond Ce- pened yet which makes a depres- His remarks were made at a CAL' ENDAR lXt ~ B (1 t LET N but 3.4 per cent above April, 19:12.' CHICAGO (iP) _ The last of dar Rapids, but. may not discharge sian inevitable." 10-state com'!llttee conference of t ~!P In the July issue's feature article more than two million words of them at that ~It?" ~i1 c.onservatt~n o~flcials. He said .- Prof. ChesteT A. Morgan of the'd d 2 000 d t The COmmlSSlon granted tlje J h '. T S k lS view was ase on experl enc- T,,"d.y. June 110. lellS SUI department of labor and in- :~~~7~e w~~e e~,ered o~~~:~y a~~ . Crandic .a ppJicatipn ~nd denied 0 nson 0 pea es of the last decade. :;~g -::~~~lnJl Chapel UNIVERSITY CALENDAR dustl'ial management ex p I a ins the reco('d ) of the government's ~he one flIed b~ AmerIcan. Am~r- T S h G About 80 persons from the 10 8:110 Summer Serenade . TUESDAY, JUNE 30,1953 some of the problems of setting up l' t t It . t th E I D u Ican then applied to the dlstnct 0 peec roup states and guests from three others 9:1lQ Classroom VOL. XXIX. NO. 1M Pensions for employes of the small pan It- drusNsu Bgaihsd C e 'f W· Il court which ruled for the bus were attending the three-day, 9:50 Woman', News firm. ~n t ~ ;~ours an 0., 0 - company. Then the commiSSIon Prot. Wendell Johnson, chair- fourth ann u a I meeting . whlcl! l~:=: ~:~~s Y~~.e~ant UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Items are scheduled 0 I J d W It and Crandic took the case to the man of the SUI council on speech opened Monday. The 10 states are Jl:OO The BCIOk.helf In the President'. oWee. Old Ca»Uol m~~ 'F~' U .r " LaB en b er3 b ge a ~rtb' supreme court. pathology and audiology, will Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota, Wis· n::; t,~:r;:::;~e" ~d~::fa!l~.ty . uy, W 0 has een h earIng e . 1111 I d . Oh' Saturday, July. Thunday, Jub f 3 Iowans, 20th ers, 't ·th t· . N 18 speak." today to the workshop m consln, no 5, In lana, 10. 11:58 PraYer for Peace Independence day-Classes BUS· 10:00 a.m. _ Unlverslty ~\Iib, h ~~2,w:all: aa :r:ss s~~C::I a~~~m~ ~ublic speech correction be~ng held Michigan, Kentucky and Kansas. lr~ ~~~~m Ramblel pended. -k Get SUI Fellows ips when briefs will be filed with clos- Iowa Woman To Head I~ ~e Iowa center for cOl)tmuation ~he ~u:s~~ are from Nebraska an d l~:~ ~~~e~~ ~~~WOOd Sunday. "uDe 21 brunch and program, Iowa Uil1_ Three SUI graduate students ing arguments heard. Delegation for Sweden s ~. Y,. . , ~ a 0 S. 1 It 2:00 .New. 6:30.7:00 p.m.-Oraan Med1ta- 8:00 p.m..-Graduale College abd have been awordea $1,000 univer- The government seeks through . Y Pla~O~~Jc ~Ob!~~S :~h th,e f llNalli~g th~.ra nltdro~kwre~e UO Reeen t"'ond Contemporary MUllo tations, Danlorth chapel. Departments ol Classics Ind Dra· sity fellowships lor £953-1954. the suit to require the Du Pont NEW YORK (iP) - Miss Helen o~ng u erer WI e 0 nso~ 5 a ~,an ma mg wa ns ead ~ : : ~~!l:~'~~~~ Herlla,e Sunday, July II matle Arts lecture, Prof. Rober\ D W aIt F Loeh ' f th company to sell its 23 per cent G. Irwin of Des Moines president tOPIC for a morning lecture, and ne of , is a natural concept which 4:00 10wa Union Radio Hour Q:30-7:oo p.m.-Or,an Medlta- Levens, Oxlord university, un. g::;uate c:~eg~ has a~~~~n:ed. e stock IDterest in the General Mo- ot the National Fed~rat1on of will discuss "Apprising the Publlc gives us the key to the future," :::l: ~~~IJ,.~r;:P. ~~~le8 tions, Danlorth chapel. Dramatic UnlUes: Greek and M04· . The Iowans who received fel· tors Corp. and to require Individ- Business and Profesional Women's ~f Speech Problems and Their Beardsley said. He added: .:15 Mu.lc of M.nhalUin , Tueaclay, July" ern Drama," house chamber, 0,0. of lowsb'ips are Abram M. Plum, Os. ual members of the Du Pont fam- clubs, will h~ad a delegation of Management" In an afternoon talk. "Our programs fDust be predl· 5:10 News 8:00 p.m.-Summer Session Lee. Suad.y, July 11 bo kaloosa. who Is studying music; i1y to sell their stock holdings in some 150 American women to an Tests of handedness of the cated on the policy of workln, ::: ~r.:~~r 't:~:r ture series, Claude M. Feu99, 6:S0-7:00 p.m.- Or,an lIedl"· ap Wllliam E. Lucht. Davenport, En- the U.S. Rubber Co. international meeting in Sweden, speech of young stutterers will be with nature instead of aaainst na- e : ~ Newl long-time Headmaster, Phillips. tions, Danforth chapel. po gUsh major, and Ge-orge R. Poage. It is the government's contention it was announced Monday. de~onstrated for ilie workshop ture. ~:: ¥~;::~~~t; c:'[r~~:tB:~~m Exeter academy, ·"The SatisIac· (Forlnlorma"on rerardf.., ... Ifa,nburgj a .student in history. that Du Pont turned both General The wonyn will leave within durmg the day. Beardsley said that in Iowa 8:00 DramaUc Hour tions of ·Thchln,," South Union beJond thle leheclale ...... ,.,.. l.t re Two 0 the r fellowships were Motor, and U.S. Rubber into cap- the next few days to attend the Twenty-four speech correction marked progress has been made 8:'0 Here to RaCllo lowl campus (Macbride auditorium lh lioal In"" ttlee of ",e ...... I\warded to. Reynold A. Berkey, tive markets fur Du Pont products sixth congress oJ the Internatlen- work ersromt SIX. m Id wes t ern In soil con8erva~ion work. In the .8;00'10 CimpulProu4/Y W.Shop Hall • Constantine, Mich. a chemistry through stockholdings. Witnesses al Federation of Business and Pro. states are registered for the work- lIght of elCperience, he continued, e:'5 New. event of rain). 0.0.) , student, and Walter C. Sweet, for all three companies have re· fesslonal Women in StoC'kholm shop, whIch will meet throulh planning can now be done wisely l~ : ~ ' :~~u.~!: Cbeck (For IntonalUon re'lr41.., 4a... be,ond thll achechal., DeJl¢e~'r Colo .• a geoloay major. peatedly denled the charges. July 5 throuih 10. July 10. for the future. 1:00 BIGN OFr ..e reaervaUoal ID Ihl! olftCle i Ihe Pr.a.ldeul, Old OUltll) , I

. . • JlUle it. 1.5l--P.. ~ S 7 City Playgroun~s 5th ula ommittee To Meet Community Songfesls, Dane A city-wide commUni' sing :--~":"~-i-:"--;'-":'----':"';"-: Water Safety Chairman ~iftII!lWl and an outdoor teen-a e dance are I Junior high, today, 8:30 p..m., July 8; Members t ..... o of the e\'ents scheduled for bike n • Prida 5 om hobo Star and Stripes week. thls week, ,y, P .. Explains Canoeing Tips at the seven low City play- day, trip to City park tor CIImp· Expect House Vote grounds, flre supper, r lays and pm . WASHINGTON (JP) :... Rep. .. Careful use of canoes and boats r------The community sing will be Kirkwood, Wednesda): •• Un.. Daniel Reed (R-N,Y.) called oi'l can make an important contribu- with the canoe. Don't try to swim held at 7 p.m. Wednesday In City special crafts; Friday, 8 a.m.. his committee blockade against tion to water safety this week ashore for the craft even over- park and the teen-a, dancoe at a crowning ot kin&' and Queen Lor il:,u, President Eisenhower's excess during National Water Safety turned will support you Inde!in- site and time to be announced. th d bi I t--- y, cyc e con ~ .... I rr •• tan profits tax bJll Monday and a week and throughout the season, Itely until help can arrive," Miss Tatm ... Winners In the "Operation Name Lon.... Uow Thund 5 test of administration strength on according to Prot. Gladys Scott Scott noted, It" contest will be announced this · .' , Il7 JI.m.. MOllet the house floor was averted at the of the women's physical education Sh~ also emphasized the im- week. The contest, open to chil- cit lunches, mov! ; Friday, 3:30 IUrt last minute. department and water safety portance of holding on to the ca­ dren registered at the playgrounds, p.m., bike contests. Cr... chairman for the Johnson county noe as it goes over, Otherwise it While personally refusing to sur- Red Cross. may drift out of yOur grasp. Is beln, held to elect nam for Muscatine, Wednesday, 3;30 p.m., render in his opposition to con- She stressed the ability to swim "Any boat in good condition is the B nton t., Brown It ,. and hobo day parade; Thu.rsday, • p.m., Muscatine ave playgrounds.. ?uses ramlly rught, bIcycle contests, {Inuing the profits tax from July as a prerequisite to boating. "Peo- safe when properly handled," she ~~~~~~'~~!~~~~~~~S~ to tb municIpal swlmmin, pool dult gam . ' t 1 to Dec. 31, Reed called a meet- pIe who cannot swim should not concluded. ' Ing of the ways and means com- be out In boats, especially canoes," will be awarded to the winners. mittee, which he heads, for July she said. "If you must take out Ik ' F E Activities at the playgrounds for POPULATION GaOW8 8. non-swimmers, have along at e s ormer scort ' Bro"n, this week include: ~nton st.. WASHINGTON (N)-Tbe Cen~ In tense, backstage maneuvers, least one good swimmer for each 7ou're never too old to learn by reeehins a water klint: 1 D W dn sday, 1 p.m., w t rn garb sus bureau esUmated FrIday thai Eisenhower forces won assurances nanona-scWcl' di'flenmt.~;' to help in case of Becomes Operator trom Larry l\lclver at a water how In Unenln park. rII ..... ullee. contest and 3:30 p.m., bike con- tb population of the United Statu from several members that that WII. Brown walks 20 mUes a day, used to be a blryele endlll'8l:1te tesL cr ... by over 2'. mlUioo persona lcommittee, which Reed previously "Children who don't swim Of H rider. Brown It., Thursday, 1 p,m .• from May, 1952, to May this year. had refused to convene, would should wear life-jackets when jn ouse Elevator bulldin, railroad in the sand reaching a total ot 158.210.000. send a tax extension bill to the boats," she added. "Rubber play d II h box, table tennis tournament·, Fri- C n~'s Bureau ...... - Ro'--t Godl E en Is "A Rig uu~...... floor. 11 toys are no substitute for lile- rey Is Home ; t," day, I p.m., hobo day costum W. ....Burcess u said th.iJ May I eatl. With those assurances, house Ca s Committee Meeting jackets because children may WASHINGTON (.4") - The man , To Rest in New~rt judgln" 2:80 p.m., bike contests, mate of population IndIcated that t leaders dramatically called off' an easily lose their grasp of them," who preceded Gen. Dwight D, Leaves Hospita 6 r II I ht Canoes and boats shou.ld never Eisenhower during much of "BOSTON (IP)- riUsh foreign p.m., am Y n, . the nation h d grown by 8,1.28,000 effort .to bypass the tax-wrlting AI 0 *n A th Ed ill Cit k F Id 1 ,e... the '--t te year -nsus 00 committee and force a bitter floor C arth Y May' Ak be overloaded. "On rental boats, y.'orld War II i.s back In th.e bus- ter peraflon secre ... ry n ony n, m n, y p r, r y, p.m., crown- IS"'" UlA n- ~~ MC s the capacity is usually painted on mess ot escortlOg dlgnitanes. Al broadly and l?Oking ~it, left New ing ot king and Queen of hohoe . Apnl t, 11150. showdown. T ' T T taf the bollt. The capacity is deter- Salem has signed on as an ele- LEESBURG, Va. (JP) _ Radio- England Bapt t hosp1tal Monday -- Results Told ruman ' 0 es I Y mined by the number of people vator oper~tor In the house of TV star Arthur Godfrey landed at 21 days art~r he entered tor a bUe Today's The up.hot was twofold: the boat will support when filled representatives. duct operatIon. 1. The administration avoided In Atomalc Spy Probe with water and still allow the oc- Salem [ought the war 01\ a mo- this northern Virginta town late Prior to Eden's departure tor what was shaping up as a close cupants to have their heads out or torcycle, lirst 11 England and then Monday after an unannounced Newport, R.L, to convalesce, hls Th LAST DA YI [ and spectacular floor tight over water" Miss Scott said. "Few peo- in ~rance, escorting generals, flight trom Boston, where he had surgeon, Dr, . R~.chard Cattell, said e , the by-passing procedure- a fight WASHINGTON (JP) - Sen. ple r~aJjze thai boats and canoes movie actors, the Knlg and Queen been recuperating from a hip op- in a bulletin, We a,re convinced sure to leave gaping wounds in Joseph McCarthy ER-Wis.) sa!tl even when filled with wotel' will ot England snd Mrs. Eleanor Ihat after a full period 01 conva- party harmony. Monday ~e may invite tormer support the occupants" she ad- Roosevelt. Topping his !lst was eratlon. lescence complete recovery cun be 2. It still seemed certain to get Pre~ide~t Harry ~. Tr~man to ded. 'Ei~.enho~er, , He went imm dla~elY t~ his 350- assured.". .. what it wants-extension of the testIfy m a new investigation 01 "Never stand up in a canoe or I don t know how many times acte county estate III nelghborlng . Eden told newsmen he felt all CIGARETTES tax. Leaders on both sides have Americans s~spected of atomiC move from ' place to place in it," we escorted Eisenhower," Salem Loudoun county. right." over· cOnceded that tax extension wllJ spying for SO~let Russia. Miss Scott advised. "Any canoe said Monda~ . "But we were on the Mrs. Godfrey, who mel her hus- :======1 ber at skim through congress once it McCarthy saId he wants to know becomes top heavy when you ~it go all the Ume. We wore out two b d t th . t Id h ld reaches the house floor, regardless whet?er. Truman turned ov.er to on the seats. It's better to kn~el motorcycles a year." an a e alrpor , sa c wou Professional-Honorary United of how it gets there. the JustJc~ dep~r~ment a list of Inside, with your weight lower. Salem, now 31 , stayed In Eng- convalesce lit his hOme lor sevcral Fraternities at it Th ttl t d I 150 Amencan cItIzens alleged to Bow and stern paddlers should land atter the.war, sold suits and we kos. should e se bemf en tWhas tassure ?n y have been involved in the sensa- paddle on opposite sides" married an English girl. He did- The tlight was made in God enl by one day e ore e ax expIres, ti led' f th . " J t - We Cat r· To Private ?a~ular B~nds I "If 2 B t th h' h ' to ona ana Ian spy case 0 e you should capSize, stay n t come back to ohns on, Pa., Irey's private plane I y un· , u e evy, w IC ra~ges up. 19405, until 1950. . Lunch on-Dim1 r Irs. 82 per cent on corpo~ahon proMs Secret List RepOrted" Always an ardent Republican, Godfrey's departure from Mas- .?bove those earned In past , per- Alfred Kohlberg, New York im- Freighter Tanker he pitched into the campaign with sachusetts General hospital in Me tings lr, that' l rnment . lods, can be renewed retroactively. porter and publisher, reported in C II"d: great enthusiasm when Eisenhow- Boston Monday was a surprise, or, he Affects F~ Finns mid-1950 th.at such a secret list 0 I e In Fog; • er was nominated. The peak. was "Mr. Godfrey was just dis- Good Food and Service I H aHects relatIVely few firms, had been given to Truman per- reached, for Salcm. when Elsen- h d ld hi bill d 1 ft" CO. liament B "I" K"II d SUP~o~gL~' ~t~ At Sensible Prices I is not but Eisenhower urged a six-month sonally in 1945 by then Canadian razi Ian I e hower visited Johnstown, and carie, pa s ~n C, a i extension to raise an estimated Prime Minister Mackenzie King, Salem rode the motorcycle leading hospital spokesman slld. $800 million and help reduce the In an open letter, Kohlberg said BARNEGAT LIGHT, N. J. (JP)- the parade, just like old times. Godfrey was convalescing from Air Conditi 11 d I On Hi9hway 6 u lederal deficit and fight inflation, not one arrest had resulted in tM A Brazilian freighter, gashed from A couple of months ago, his an op ralion May 15 which is said , were Banquet Room ~~~~~~~~==:===~~~~~~~ Ways and means committee intervening fi,,:e years: dE!c~ ,to w~terJine in a fogbound house burned, and with his wife to have restored II large degree of Laniel members said that at next week's McCarthy said he WIll first ask ColL1slon wtth a tanker, was towed and two children, he came to . d with meeting, a member of the grollp the justice department if it re- slowly to port Monday night car- Washington. The elevator job is motion to hlS dght hip. Both hips Bldaull is expected to move that the pro- ceived the !lst from Truman. n rylng the body of a crewman who temporary, and he hopes to catch were so badly fractured in an au­ Bldault fits bill be taken up. not, he said, he will ask his sen- had tried to soften the impact. on with a house committee, or tomobile accident 22 years ago hlm.self \ House leaders said ~mphatical- aile investigations subcommittee The only victim of the collision possibly get a job abroad. that he was unable to tie his own I as ac· ly they have Ironclad assurances for permission to invite Truman Monday night 12 mUes offshore Even in the grim war dllYs, Sa- shoe laces. REI(!:~JAFE lASSlllIDB that a majority of the commi~e to testify. was Arigtttles Bestos dos Santos Il!m said, Eisenhower kept his =:':"'::':=~------=:::--::=------:====II ~=:;:;;::;~:::;:;;:~::;~;:=:;j==~;:::-;=:::;::;:::;;:::;=::; will support the move and bring "I don't think it would be nec- 33, of Rio de Janerio crewman 01; sense of, humor. He once reminded I ~ WANT AD RATES Apartment for Rent ~:~~ a bill to the !loor. essary to subpoena Mr. Truman," the 5,408-ton treight~r Loide Pan- Salem, "Of all the generals you've - l~; rna· Called Oft Meetlnrs McCarthy added. "I h~pe it Isn't." ama, escorted, you ne~er lost a gen- or the , TrUman Smllel Shipmates said Doe Santos saw eral." One day ...... c per , ord fnet. Reel'! preVIOusly had called oU In New York Truman smiled th b' A . t k G rr Reterrind to' bls J'ob as an .I~~ II 'tt t' t t ' . , e 1i merlcan an er u - .. Three day .. ~ ... 12 per word tl men· a comml ee mee mgs 0 preven when told of McCarthy's state- t db' d i th f d vator jockey Salem said) any action on the profits tax, ment and said· ra he d ~arm1 ~wn nb e og an "And I've ~ever lost a congress- Five day .. ,...... lSe per word m er The break came dramatically, "What I co~ld tell you, you :~s e'd 0 pUh a e:;;p t : over man either." Ten da s ...... 200 per word as a packed house convened ex- wouldn't print. be Stlt e trwikere Jdeh' an er was ______One Month ...... 390 per WON TRIC'rt..V mOber. ne Cb... P ...... aIM. head-on collision -;-! person.ally I W.lhtnlton. J8:K. ---...... Wn-o..,rk ..... W-an~l~ea ..... --- JloolIS------lew------...... N_ ~':--" IHaJ .n. do not think the membership ______SINGLE room. Male ...... L _ N. D\l. does." Dies in' CleveJand CLEVELAND (.4» - James p, Shields 6~ strapplRg, sllver.hjllred _J§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====::~~~~~~:;::~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_ JACKLAUND~ .nd .1m, P~ne~,PIa)' ~ c.u 1-II1II. TWO-~----.------II8epInc _.------A9aJl.lbie 1_ lJ. leader of tile. 80;OOO.member Bro­ Phone .1.1, DeaCiline Is Today therhOOd 01 LocilmQtive Engineers, LAUNDRIES. Phone tn'II. ROOMS - arad... te It...... PIIaae died of a heart attac/t 'Monday. rXPERT wall wuhlnl, poPft"~, ..".. For Vet'. Bonuses 7347. The soft-spoken 'Union offiCial, LAJIG& _ .. IfIrIa ...... 0aU DES MOINES (JP) _ Qualitied known ,as grand 'chief engineer, TINY Tot PrHch""L 0181 1-2'!III • .... Iowa veterans of World War II collapsed at his dl!sk while con- will have their last chance today ferrlng with tWD associates, , Pemonal services Music cmcI RadiO to apply for a state bonus. He was rushed, to a hOspital, but Ran Yehtes, executive secretary was dead whIm he· al1J'ivl!d. , of the stllte World War II bonus Shields had been head of the board, said Monday that all bonus union 'Ince 1950. , ALTERATION, repair on men'•• women', A&C, Cockers. DIal .... clothln,. The FamU,. T.Uor Sboppe. A"-- for a::c u::::S applications bearing a June 30 The 6-tQOt-l, 21!!-poUhd union­ l1'~E.~DIal~ ..- -- ___ postmark will be honored. 1st had partl~pated In mOlt top Thirty bc>nus appllcations were bt'otherhood-manaJlellle;t neioUa. Tvning lItI ItA1SI:IL ...... -..u.. * ... I------u===.....-"'------I 0M4 tondltlan. JII_ -*cw...... SId. received Monday and the board tlons over tb~ past 10 yiarl. '" na­ TR'ISts typln" .-:an. ... expects 0 busy day today. In ad. tlve of Neoga, Ill., he started his dillon to handlin, last minute ap- railroad career as a fireman for TRZSIS typl",. Dial 11.. 1110 PACItARD. Ooot ...sa...... pilcallons the board will be wind- the Michigan Central in 1906. Ten ~~------DI~ TKJ:SlS typlq. I-IIU. .~~!U~8Ai0i~;;;;;;;;;_;;;;;;; 1nll up its atfain. years later he became an en&inaer, --:~------I.. mlDEllUUR *_pl ...... TH&SJS \¥P1nl. Dial 1-1101. llIIe, ~, c .....1tlnn. DIn ...... , ~;Seixas; Nielson D~op Alissie Will.ici~$,ToReturn IromKorea ' ~ eDai~ Iowan', ~ Stars fr()m Wimbledon "", Play W~dnes~ay For Ear Treatment Slugger Won't Plly Murchison Will Run in Europe ' ~ ' Hoad, Rosewall Fall; --L-a-rs-e-n -Fa- I-Is-a-tW- im-b-Ied--'-:-o'--n ~'--- ' Ball This Season j Pare 4-THE DAlLY IOWAN-low. cny, la.-'rue,., June 30, 1951 WASH1NGTON (Jf1)- The ma­ "Larsen Eliminated corps said Monday that Ted WIMBLEDON, Enaland (Jf1) ilUams will come back from Ko­ " Au B t ra II a. relaning power In Wednesday but that he prob­ Cubs Smother Cards; 6-2 world tennis the past three years, ably won't play any baseball this )ost two ·of its stara in quarter­ ST. LOUIS (.4»- Big Paul Min­ ~ flnal round matches of the Wim­ Williams, a captain lo the 1st ner limited the St. Louis Cardinals in the seventh when Jackson led . bledon tournament Monday with air wing, was ordered back to six hits, only two in the Urst oft with a double to center for his Vic Seixas of Philadelphia, en­ seven , as he pitched the third of the game and Clark iineering one gf the surprises. the states tor treatment of an and nose ailment that Impairs Chicago Cubs to a 6-2 victory came up with some hectic fleld­ '. . Sclxes' 5-7. 6-t. 1-6,9-7 triumph Monday nlsht. log on Bill Serena's tap to the over Aussle Lewis Hoad, who had usefulness as a jet pilot. He had flown 38 combat missions before The Cubs touched three Cardi- mound. Clark fumbled the rolter, 'I been playing some of the best ten­ nal for 10 hits including Serena to reach first, and \ nis on display this year. was a he was grounded earlier this month. home runs by Frankie Baumholtz willi to the plate as I I. complete surprise. and Eddie ~Iksls, who also lined pounded home. . Kurt Nielsen's victory by scores Lou Boudreau, mana,er of the I , said he's con­ off the left field wall. Schoendlenst, leading the major \ of 7-5. 4-6, 6-8, 8-0, 6-2 over Ken Ray Jablonski found the range league hitters, became the first to I . Rosewall, seeded No.1 here and vinced Williams would get back into the lineup If he is released for the Cardinals, dumping his 100 hits this season with a ' . the Australlans' big gun in the 11th homer of the season into the first to center. He from active duty before the end of t comlng Davis Cup campaign, was field bleachers in the eightth. got two for four for the night, pad- ~ • . shocker. the season. Minner retired 14 Card batters his average to .346. Nielaen, 23-year-old Dane, vlr­ Served In Marines in order before Jablonski homered. h~ally blew the overtrained Rose­ The 35-year-old slugger has fi­ Miksis rammed his' third homer E Ch P Al ,wall off the No. 1 court In the been with ·the Red Sox since 1939 of the season into the left field \ x- amps ace nal two seta. except for hitches with the marine seats in the fourth ahd Baumholtz , • • In the other quarterfinal round corps in World War II and his lined his first of the year atop the matches Merwyn Rose, the third more recent service In Korea. He right field pavilion for the first of BaHers', Schoendlenst member of Australia's youthful was called back to duty in May, two Cub runs In the fifth. L d S' I trio, elimloated Art Larsen of San 1952. A single by after ea s emor LOOP Leandro, Callf., former U.S. cllam. A marine corps spokesman said Kiner walked and Hank plbn, and Jaros)av Drobny of Williams' tour of Ij.uty Is not up Sauer was hit by a pitched ball NEW YORK (A')-Three former Emt defeated Ed Sven Davidson untH October, when the baseball scored Chicago's second fifth-inn· of ·Sweden, 7.&, 6-4, 8.0, batting champions are running season wlll be over, and "It's most ing marker. ' Wednesday's semifinal round one-two-three In the American iltely Williams will be released Presko, a righthander suffering league 1953 hitting race. p.irlnKB will pit SeixaB alalnst active duty be{o~ then." his eighth defeat, left the game in Billy Goodman of the Boston Rose and DrobnY .pinlt Nlellerp. He said Williams will enter the the sixth as the Cubs came back Red Sox to~s all batters with a The Utle will be dec:lded Friday. for two more runs. Mlksis led olf .332 mark, followed by teammate The defeats of IloIewaU and Oak Knoll hospital near San Fran­ cisco upon his l eturn from Korea. with his triple and scored on a George Kell at .330 and Washing­ Hoad boosted U.S. Davis Cup long fly by Clyde McCullough. ton's Vickey Vernon at .328. (Fig. hopes greatly. For three years Just what will happen to Ted after that is not known, the spokesman Mike Clark relieved Presko after ures include Sunday's games.) Australia has held the cup, and it Baumholtz and Dee Fondy hit sin­ was the general ~lief that it ART LARSEN, SAN LEANDRO, CaUf., ~turlll a foreuo ...mash said, adding "It's up to the doc- Vernon was the first of the trio .. gles, and was tapped for a single to win the batting title when he would control the huge interna. from AllliraJla's Merwin Rose in Monda.y's WlmbJedoll quarter­ by Kiner tha,t scored Baumholtz. tIol\al trophy for IOmetime to tlnal.. Laraen, former U.S. c::alDllion, Josi to t.he AvaslH' third No lDdleaUoDll hit .353 in 1946. Kell, with the De­ The Cubs scored their final run troit Tigers, won the ' crown In come with Its army of youngsters. _ b_H_'_I1_I_a_yer__. ______c- _____ ------1 1949 with .343. The tollowing sea­ son Goodman c41ptured hitting honors with .354. Lineups Shuffled Red Schoendienst of the St. Yank Antics Rabbit Ball Talk Dies Down IRA MURCWSON, former Iowa tractt man and co·holder of the Louis Cards continues to set the university IOO-yard dash mark will tour En,land a ..d Europe with In All-Star Poll pace with .:\1,4: ' an American all-star track team. .J\I(urchison, who ran a :09.6 100 CHICA~O (JP)-There was quite Jackie Robinson of the Brooklyn May.' Parallel here, no~ competell for a Ch.lcalro CYO team. a shuffle in the AIl-Slar baseball Dodgers retained second ptace lineups Monday as the poll to se· with .335, and Cincinnati's Gus lect National and Bell moved into third with .323. players headed into Its final tour Gus Zernial of the A's still tops 't928I . Season. Ex-Hawk Joins AII·Star SguaH days. the American league in home runs , Ira Murchison, former Iowa ______.....:. _ _ . ..• ,Tllh,ne,nr,e.. were five changes in the with 18, but Al Rosen of the In· Dr JOE RElCHLER I •• league leaders and two dians has ~orged to the front in lrack star, will tour England and team slated to leave the United American. In one shift, runs batted In with 53. Europe this summer as a member Slates the tirst of August to travel Mantle, New York Yankee In the . National league, Ted of "an all-star AAU track and field to Sc.otland and Enlliand ..The centerfielder, reg'"ained his indlvi­ Kluszewskl of the Redlegs has dis­ team. team IS coached by Frank GelS of dual leadership over WashlngtQn's lodged Milwaukee's Ed Mathews Murchison, who Is now running San Francisco. ~ Mickey Vernon. as the leader with 22. I for a CYO team in Chicago, was iJ 11111 The poll, conducted by more Roy Campanella ot the Dodgers I a member of the Iowa track squad L d . M k than 200 newspapers and radio continues to head the RB[ depart­ during the 1951-1952 season. He is un qUlst a es stations, will determine the start­ ment with 64. HoganlGone: a co-holder of the school 100-yard 2d Tell ing lineups for the 20th annual In_ Ed Lopat of the Yanks leacI. dash record o( :09.6 with Andy eam 0 ege terleague game at CinCinnati, July the American lcague pitchers m Dooley of the 1935 team. Murch.!- All A · 9' 14. Ballotfng opened June 12 and won-lost percentage with an 8-~ { Prors tife ' son' ran his record time against - merlcan will close at midnight Friday. record for .889. Pitching laurels . Northwestern in a dual meet" . In other changes, Boston's Billy In the National loop belong to beating Wildcat ace Jim Golliday. Iowa s Jilek LundqUIst, now Goodman passed Nellie Fox, Chl­ Lew Burdette of the Braves with Murchison is a member of the playing fo~ Terre Haute in the cago White Sox second baseman, a 7-0 slate. Is .Relaxini Three-I lel\gue, lanlied a place on and Phil Rizzuto of the Yankees 'f;::;:;;;;;::;;===rt BlRMINGHAM, Mich. (Jf1) on Fly Rod the Ali-American college oaseba;l Chicago's Chico Carrasquel ll With Ben Hogan some 3,N>n miles second team in ,ightfield . for the starting shortstop post in vvv LOIn'R... Angler Fight . the American ieague. away in Carnoustle, the country"s Iowa State catcher Ken Bawek Hank Sauer of the Chicago golt -professionals ~an relax and OTTUMW A (JP) _ Any med- also made the second squad. Cubs, a starter in last year's game Tu rnesa To Defend PGA Title e~oy their own private tee party ium sized fish on a fly rod can The first team Included: Dick took over first place in the Nation- rONITE" ".(a· .. ·7 thIS week. give a {ell ow a whale of a fl'ght ' ., all g I ht f · ld b 'll t' f Dlz.,. Dean story! It's the 35th annual b t h ' t' 30 d tf' h' Murphy, OhIO uDiversity, Mickey ea ue r g Ie a 0 mg rom u w en 1 s a -poun ca IS Enos Slaughter of the S1. Louis '"tHE PlUDE Of ship of the Professional he's reall got a job on his hands. Sullivan, Baylor, and Fred Flem- Cardinals. The Cubs' Ralph Kiner, ST, LOUIS" assoclation-a 216-hole medal hahds. ing, Bowdoin, outfielders>; Paul who had been ahead of his lett- Don D.II.,. . match play marathon which That was what happened to A. Giel, M.innesota, and Warren Neu- rivals, dropped into second lMa". Oro gins with qualifying L. Torrence of Ottumwa when I.e berger CCNY pitchers' John place behind Stan· Musial of St. 'AmUe Oakley' and continues throuib July 7. was fishing from a bridge here. ' , I Louis Bar"". ~I&.w,.o' The site is the cozy Birmingham He hooked the big yellow cat on a Shepard, Stanford, catcher; Ed . :~ country clllb, a short 6,4-65-yard, 9-toot fly rod with 18-pound test S Imp son, Southern California, • ~~ par 71 layout which has been doc- lin+, baited with small minnows. first base; Cene Sheets. Oklanoma, Giants May Play Ball tored up a bit for the occasion by Torrence battled for an hour second base; Bruce Hayman, Against JapaneH Team the widely-known fairway archi- before landing the fish. It meas- Michigan, shortstop, and B. B. NEW YORK. (A')-For the tirst tect, Robert Trent Jones. ured 42 Inches. Hopkins, Tennessee, third base. time in history an entire - HELD OVER- Oatrated CrIes ' league baseball team the It was Trent Jones who "souped York Giants may Visit' Japan up" nearby Oakland Hills for the ~ , fall to play ~ series of f:zmttBJ U.S. Open two years ago, and you 4'~~.eLftl. against that country's ' LAST TJ¥E THURSDA YI can still hear the outraged ".0,J' '-'"".1 ~ I ~ club, the Tokyo Giants. of the competitors. President Horace Stoneham AU NEW FUN ... T~e advance favorites are bro-...... the National league club Bud mul Lou • , • Loo.a ken-handed Sam Snead, seeking Monday he had tentatively ae- On a Mlaquldad MillaUal his fourth' PGA title; George NATIONAL LEAGtll AIII!JtICAN Lt;AGUI cepted an invitation from Shodl zio, who led the country In " L Pel. W IJ Pol. OB · Y r tional qualifying; defending .B'lolokl,~n ...... ~=l %6 .'~Zl .! 1 N... Yor' ..... 48 %0 .881 t asuda, °twhnet 0 f ~hfethTOknYeOI~Et!SeSallrmY'11 .,...... • :It" OI ...land 40:le 8M e 0 ma ke e r 1pie p Ion Ji m T urnes a, Dr. Gary Mid - ...... 1...... !8 .1188 ~ Ii Chi ...... 4l :18 'IIN eli I . b bt I d dlecoff and Jackie Burke. hll.d.l.hl. .. . 1141 %1 .Ml 4 ••,...... • • IlO< perm sSlOn can e 0 a ne . NY. 114 .. • • B •• I.n ...... ~1 .. .5.1 ,. These are the boys who usually ow or . .. . .,. .101" 1\ W.ohln,l.n ... 114 811 .41141 U C1.ol"ull ...... " 87 .41W 12 Ii Phll.delpbl • . ,. 3:1 811 .4)1 18 collect the big dough when Hogan ClIea'o .....•.. :r4 4.8 .388 lO 81. Loal • . , .... %8 .. .861 !S LAST TIMES TONITE and Lloyd Mangrum aren't first PI''''.r,b .... 24 110 .3%4 Zllfl Delroll ...... " ~. .8M !J STARS & STRIPES FOREVER in line. Mangrum, second to Ho- ilion'.,.'. It••• u. •...... _ ..... J ___ CII.. ,o •• III. Leal. J M ••d.,' ..... u. HANGMAN'S KNOT ADUB» gan In the year's money winning To ••,... PUob... No Ga .... Sell •••I •• v., •• C.rI ••• _ T ..nl .. .. list, also is In CornousUe seeking ""n.d.l.hlo 01 B.eo",.n (nl,M) - T,d07'. P1loh ... H ••I ••I N ...II, - Lat. N .... the British Open title ON'" (6.3)," al ••11< (8·S) 0 •• MIIII"" OI ...I.nd.1 D.lr." (nl,hl) - 11 ..110· • (8-". ..In (8·1) " •• G."•• (I"). To..... eD Len ' PlI"...... 1I .l N." Yorl< (nl,M) - N... y". a& Boal.. (.1.111) - a.J. Hogan, a two. time winner Frto.d (% • ., n. 0 ..... (4·'). "old. (f.a) n. III.D .....I. ('.8). wouldn't be c rht d d .11"'...... 1 Clnolnnall (%-I.. I·nl •• t) au ea in the -Llddl. (8.1) .nd 8a.h.& (9.2) ••• P... St. L•• I •• & (llll •••• (,,1.111) - C.I" Sf a rt I WEDNESDAY HELD OVER TbnI PGA tournament since his near ..,. ... " ..) ••• C.II ... (%.J)' ('·S) " .. Pi.... (8.11, Thunda fatal automobile accident In 1949 CIlI •••••& III. L•• I. (n.,lIl) - v.U.... W•• IoI., .... 1& PIIl ....I.I ... 1111,111) - Cooled by Refrl;watlOll Y It's too tough on his lep, he says: (I.t) n .•111 •• ".1). PD.I •• 'I.ld (1_') \'I, ...... II·d). rl'."!miD . Snead, winner In 1942, 19f9 and FINEST SETUP "''''TURNESA, 1951 has a b "Doon' Opell l:16-.O:"" WHO'lL BE left hand a one separation in his Michigan State's Jenison field -rile oeFENDlIYf!1 cHAMP ty grippin ~d says he has dlfflcul- hou$e has the finest press-radio- NOW· w'~r" M·G-M " .._ Burk. Withdraws' IN "rHE 35TH Pot!i.A. ises to Pla~ t' ~~bpBut he prom- televisl?n setup of any Indoor THI IINIATIONAL CHAMPION'5HIP A"r -='~iiiiill~iiG~A~.iiiiiiiii. In the country. TECHNICOLOR STORY Oil From Tournament /IIIfMIN<5#AM, MIC#ltSAH, • .1 STRANOE "Doors Open 1:13" " BIRMINGHAM, Mich. UP) ~ C/UlY f 1""07. IOWA CITY ROLLS OUT LOYI AI'FAIRII Jackie Burke of Kiametba Lake, THE WELCOME MAT N.Y., dropped out of the 15th Pro­ FOR THE MOST feaional Golfera al89Cia~on tour­ _l"'" A1',c ••• 'U....- WELCOME KIND OF • W&D..-II&'U, .1 .....' ., n~ment Monday .04 hll wttq· __""------t.-~~iiii~~~~i!iiIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.1 \.&0 ••,. tlON ••&1 ~ MUSICAL IN YEARSI drlwal emphallaed the probablUty NCAA W ••.T ."NO&.' THE tbit there'll be .. wide open Icrap Announces 29 Edward S. . TODAY e ~al. - -••Db' ,,..,., ='~ec:.~n f.~t ~:ar~l~e New Swimming Marks .De 10U -J.t'ra'e. STORY prleea"&her WOODY MEatAAN Burke, who w., lurtertn, fro!" NEW YORl< (JP)-The National marked a4veriIaM It•• , .. Ie ...... flu h h th T. &he ...t para are IOIeI -' tile OF w en e w~n . . .. uverne~s Collegiate Athletic association an- low prlee 1fe SELL them AS "".. ... snt"0"."" .... tournament w~ before l~t, fln- nounced Monday that 29 swjrn- LOW II .., ,Iaclli In ""' ilhed In a tie t~r" ellhtb In tne f'1Me - o. *heae &hut II 'ne • II"T - JACK o"TTI • 1HREB lian~ Open at (!leh1and SU(I- mlng records, four by vaulty con- lower cut PI'kIe _ ... Wn.ve o-.c&&8'fa"- , d.y. MOIIday he Hnt word that be testants, bad been approved by ita .., beUer I I ••~ •• ,...,.- Co...... tl·1 lOVES wa, licit and wouic:\ not 'be abl. swImming records committee. ;::en ma": ~::.. we ":11:: '.11, •••. T...... (OMP4NION fEtHUIlE to play. .' The intercolle,iate records for YOU Aal ALWAYS WlL­ Ie" 1'1, •••" .... PLUS - COLOR CARTOON . Curley haired Jackie wu one ot the 1952-53 season include: 20- COMJ:- A GREAT STORY OF A "OPEN HOUSE" GREAT STALLION, , • Dament_lieut two proa dozen "bel pm,top·tllptwith tour- the yard coune-200 yard. backstroke, DRUG SHOP I sp.oRn lMJIOar.u. In - Trueolor - ""peeI"I" I wrat body of "clur," prC)f""oft.l. 2:13.8, Leroy Anderson, Iowal ---.-,- td ... Up-tilt taP)' u.t of 100, ! State, hb,' If. 1" .. DOa'..... "ITAWON CANYON" - LATJ:IT NEWS - ': -- --" , : '/ .,