has tn rt'dt , J. 01 Serving The State University of Iowa and the Peoplf? of Iowa ';stabUshed In 1860 - FIve Cents a Copy lember or ASsociated press tea ed WIre and Photo serVIce Iowa CIty, Iowa, saturdiy. June 28. liiSS =. rCER oca emos ast ams- e Also Stress Financial McDo~ald Conducts Cosmic Ray Experiment Needs of State Institutions ~lIoon 8~ FRED HAWKER Cuban Rebels I St.ff WrI"r Hall Says Newspapers Th John on County Democratic County Convention Friday launched night went on record a condemning President Eis nhow r for Kidnap Ten Must Help Educate "condoning Shennan dam' conduct in th Ad ms-Coldfine debacle." Ncw papcrs and chools are tn Missouri partners in the broad field of edu-I They al 0 called for the nee ary fin, neial upport of 10 A gondola, launched by ,balloon Americans cation, for "information, enlight­ state supported school . congratul ted UI sat lIite-phy ie·ist enment. education are the core of Jame Vall Allen and SUI for mpH hmcnts in cicntifi c ­ undj!r the direction of SUI's Frank By GEORGE KAUFMAN newspapering," an Iowa cditor B. McDonald, physics research as· ploration and other fi£'lds of higher edu{'Iltion, nd called ror HAVANA , Cuba IA'I- Fidel Ca . said in a lccturc at SUI Friday - night. sociate, dropped to earth near tro's rebels swooped out or their additional support and rror- * * * Ellis, Kan., about 5:20 p.m. Fri· mountain hideouts and kidnaped W. E.rl H.II, editor of the M.son City Globe·Gaz.tte, spok. ganization for Iowa' stat ho· GOP Backs dllY, the Associated Press report· 10 American and two Canadian pitals. engi neers in a 21ft -hour gu n-blazing to hIgh school t"chers att.nd­ ed. raid on the Oriente Province city ing the workshop, "The Newspa· 'White W.sh' The balloon was launched from of Moa Thu rsday night. Three men per In tM CIIS,room." H. de· Th resolution condemning Mo,i>erly, Mo., at 4:47 a.m. Friday were killed. cI.red th.t "the on, highest Presld nL Eisenhower staIM that White House, 10, study cosmic rays in relation A rebel luder told Mrs. John compliment that could be paid th "moral ton of th Republican Schilll.r, wife of on. of the • n.wspaper" il to consid.r It Adminl tration , . . Is qu.it!c welJ to the sun spot cycles. Ellis .n .ducatlon.1 medium. lliu trat d by Pre ident El n­ a\XIut 430 airline miles west kidnaped m.n, they w.re teking School Aid the group a. a reprisal. The reb­ "If our world is to be saved, hower's 'white wa. n' of thc Adams· Moberly. .1 chl.ftain charged the United education must be the key," lI alJ Goldfine dcbacl ." The ca of Pre Id nU I All 1st- Tracked by Plene St.tes was allowing Cuban .rmy said in speaking on "A New pa· They charged that Ada~ broke ant Sb rman Adams rce iv d at­ A 2-engine tracking plane was plan .. to r.fu.1 .nd load bombs per' Responsibility in the Modern F d r I law when h gave Gold­ tention In the form 01 a r lutlon $~nt aloft to follow the balIoop, World." at the U.S. nav.1 bue at Guan· fine. Boston Indu trial t. ltIorma­ adopted at the JohnJOn County Re­ but its crew reported it lost the tanamo, 40 miles from Moe. He empha ized his beli f in thi publican Conv nUon Friday. tion concerning a pcndi~ Civil belium-filIed plastic bag ncar Hill journalJ tic crcdo : "Jt ncwspapers The reMlution reg.rdlng City, Kan.. about 30 miles north­ Castro's rebels bave been right­ ing the Government oC President will help light thc palh, the people contempt ca IIgaln t Goldlin and Adam. said: ''W. a .. c.lftfldant west of Ellis. Fulgencio Batista for months and of our representative dcmocracy W. Earl Hall hi nrm . th.t If It I. ....Mn.bly estab­ 21, of flllJ(!rs and Sc;/' oofs Par/llers MI., Oelore, Helgert, Castro contends the United States wlll find Uleir way." Goldfino 011>0 WllS charged with Iithed thet such actIvlti.. • ... 1111" reported by telephone she not enly imprvclent but Improper, has been aiding Batista. H.II stre.sed ,Iso his bell.f in breaking Fed ral law. ~w the gondol. par.chute to the Import.nc. of interest in hi' ,"~i.t*, with the Whit, Mrs. SChissler said the rclx'ls fairs "more loc.1 .nd person. I ~.rth IS ,he we. driving home thl, country in world aff.ir•. Danger",. Prec"nt Hoult will be ..rmin.ted ." told her the men would be held for mo.t of ua" th.n homelown frem work. Miss Helgert w.lk.d for a fcw days, would be wcll· pointing th' disappearanec They flU slioned how "any in­ Adan has be n und r fir in helf • mU, through a field to In to n,wI, he said. The sure.t poul. treated, and thcn relcased. of i olationism a "a comforting ble sa"gu.rd 'I/.inst agr'$lI .... telligent lind honorable Chic( Exec- Wa hinglon as a r suIt of ell r 'e the gondol. end found on it in­ Formal Compllint Lodged policy for American newspapers that he ace pted aralultle from ..ructions to t.l.phone Moberly. war is educ.tlon which ...d. to U.S. Amba sad or Earl E. T. and Congress." Hall commented, democracy. Thome. McCorkl., .ssistant Bernard Goldfine, and all g dly The crew of the tracking plane Smith lodged a formal complaint "maybe we could have gone sr· "No popular governm nl in Ollr profeuor In the SUI lnatihlt. inlcrvened for Goldfine with \,Vas instructed to pick up the in­ with the Cuban government lind renely on our isolationist ways If of Agrlculhlral Medicine, drew v rlou fedcral B nell:' _ world loday could get away with Prempt ActI.n struments and take them back to ordered U.S. Consui Park Wollan we had been content to be a launching a war. To do so would • Ilugh from tM Democratic the baUoon's lanching site. to Cly from Santiago to Moa to second·class nation ." be to affront the decpt'st In $tinct County Convention by st.ting In another re olulion, the county The gondola and its parachute investigate. Americ.'s world leadar.hip in human nature-the in tinct for th.t vic un ...... comes from • con v ntlon urllcd prompt action and Increased appropr atlon lor \l{ere sunspended under the balloon TWO HUNDRED POUNDS of scientific equipm.nt from SUI W.r. Smith said Wollan was to make • nd ",.nding m.k. foreign .f- peace." he d elared . "dw.rfed c.mel" not • "moun· and were released by a dynamite a full report but not to attempt to taln goat" •• ",I,inally st.ted In capital improvements at Board launch.d Friday in a thln·sklnned balloon. The b.ll00n (pictured or Regents operat d illltitutions. cap, The cap exploded by a timing above Iud before launching) was rel ••sed .t Moberly, Mo., un.r the deal with the rebels. He said the tha "AdaJ'M.oG.ldfine deb,,,ct." ~vlce set to release the gondola at resolution. The convention c.lled for • con­ direction of Frank B. McDonald, SUI physics res •• rch ..sociat •• Cuban Government was doing ev­ 4:30 p.m. tin".tlen .n4 eJql,,,.len tf ,t... -AP Wirephoto. erything possible to get the meA Fox Swears Goldfine • Go.. U, 2t Mil.. . back_ utlcc could "condone such chIcan­ .Id to sch"'s until 25 per c.nt 01 tl,pendltvr.. tram st... The 17·5 foot long balloon WiUl a The ambassador I.id he "u­ ery on the part of his first assistant ,r. ca{l8city of two million cubic feet peets the m.n will be released Bought House For Adams and I Adams' ) 'old friend' Gold­ MVretl, Was in the stratosphere approxi­ Alaska Backers falrlv soon Ind unh.rmed." Condemning Governor H r hel By DOUGLAS • . CORN ELL fine, " and charged lhat this mately nine hours. It reached a World Watch He added: "The kidnaping was "Adam ·Goldfine me s" may set Lovele for his v to of capital heighth of 119,000 feet. Scientists Win 2 Skirmishes a useless defiant gesture which improvement legislation in 1957, WASHINGTON IA'I - Boston financial mogul John Fox swore Friday a dangcrous precedent for ~I other eslimated it took the gondola 50 WASHINGTON fA') - Alaska the convention pa sl:'d a rcsolution will boomerang against the per­ that Bernard Goldfine had told him of buying a Washington house for members of thc Executive Depart· minutes to float back to earth. statehood backers won the first chargin, Lovel 5 with placing Requested For petrators. If this is a publicity Sherman Adams and regularly scnding Adams checks over "long ment. MOlt of the instruments that two tests of strength in the Senate act, it is an unfortunate one." Iowa In tltutlons two years hchlnd _nt .Ioft were from SUI, but Friday, both by comfortable mar· Moa Bay Mining Co. officials periods of time." The Democrats then went on In its building proiram and with the Ma ...chusett. Institute of l gins. were reported to have gone into The White HOUse, where Adam serve as President Ei nhower's record condemni ng the corrupting takln, an e Umat d $15,000,000 to Tlchnology .nd the University of IMoon Death Leaders then a bandoned plans the hills Friday night to dicker chief as istant, immedialely and hotly accu ed Fox of ridiculous lies. of public officials as pracUced by $18,000,000 in state Did away from Minnesot ••110 had "hitch.hik." for a night session, adjourning for the release of the engineer . FOX, FORMER publisher of the B rnard Goldfine and the moral local school . e,ulpment ••rd. The National Academy of Sci­ until Monday. Sen . Mike Mans· They also expressed confidence defunct Boston Post. 81 0 told a laxity and wcakn exhititcd by R,11t Sal,rl.. McDonald and ' an assistant, ence Friday requested a watch field (D-Monl.l, acting majority they would get a quick release of 4,500 Summer House subcommittee that i1l the the FirsL Pr sidentlal A slWint. The Republicans approved in­ Louis Hinton, A2, Davenport, are throughout th e world for the im­ leader, said he plans to keep the the men when they pointed out to 1952 Massachusetts election cam· The convention stated ~t It Is cr a e In appropriation for pub­ • scheduled to go directly to Min­ pending end of Explorer III. Alaska bill before the Senate until the rebels that the publicity in the Students At SUI paign for the U.S. Senate: "vlgorou Iy in fav or of the finan­ lJc institutions to brin, laries In nl;apolis to re-Iaunch the balloon The Academy asked that any ob· it passes - "Monday, Tuesday, United Staes would be bad for He originally supported Repub­ cial support of our slate- IIPported lin with eompclil\l lldwest uni· and the instruments to determine server of the satellite's fall inform Wednesday, Thursday or if neces­ the rebel cause. lican Henry Cabot Lodge, con­ Institutions .. . [support) n~es ary versiU s. More than 4,500 students-3,053 cluded Lodge had "be n soft on the amount of cosmic rays at that the Academy in Washington, D.C. sary later than that." Thr.. Killed to enable them to meet the need ,. Among other con lderatlon , th latitude. promptly and protect and preserve Backers of the measure ap· Two civilians and one rebei men and 1,524 women-arc attend· Communists," swung his backing of Iowa and its youth, and flflrm d convention supported the Iowa pearcd confident the Senate would were reported killed in the attack to the successful Democrat, Sen. 'QIc project is sponsored by the the remains if any. ing SUI this summer_ John F .Kennedy, and later on ob- its support of Governor Loveless in rlght-to·work law, urged the con­ Office of Naval Research. approve the House-passed meas­ on the Moa Army post, and three developing short- and lqog·term strucUon of a n w Mcha(fey The time and location of the fall soldiers were wounded. Earlier re­ Final enrollment figures released taihed a $500,000 loan from Ken­ should be noted and forwarded to ure without change. means of £inaneing the in ·tutions. Bridge, and supported Congr .s­ They turned back 53-28 a con­ ports said three soldiers were Friday by the president's office, nedy's Cather, Joseph P. Kennedy. man Fred Schweng~I's bUJ for the Smithsonian Astrophysical Ob­ killed. A White House de crlption of SUI I"",,".mon" tention that a statehood measurc The delegates congratul-'cd SUI tax reUef for parents of coUege P.oorman Pleads servatory in Cambridge, Mass. includes an unconstitutional pro­ In addition to emptying the hos· listed the total at 4,577-the highest this as "fanta tic testimony" cov. and Dr. James Van AlItA, and and unlversity students. Explorer III carries instruments vision . The bill's supporters de­ pital of medical supplies and the summer enrollment since 1949, ered Fox' statements about the Guilty; Paroled buill by the SUI Physics Depart­ feated 50·29 an amendment to commissary of foodstuffs. the reb· house, checks, and Lodge , who now pledged their support lc>r "pl'OllreS­ ment. give the territory commonwealth els took 19 vehicles and a 2,500- SUI's 1949 summer enrollment is U.S. ambassador to the Unlted sive Improvement of the personnel Local Man 'Hurt In 19 Attorney Army scientist. said the tiny status instead of making it the gaUon gasoline tank truck. was 4,86Z. Last year's was 4,2 19. Nations. and physical plant of SUI. man·mada moon and ita com­ 49th state. The attack on the city was the The SUI Graduate College has LDDGE HIM$ILF said of tht' Thcy also recommended ¥dditJon· Motorcycle Mishap A former sur student starts a panion, Ellplor.r I, have proved The bill's floor , Sen. first major rebel outburst since testimony by Fox: "No comment. al financal supporl to stale flo­ th.t man can control the tem­ Henry M. Jackson CD-Wash.), pre­ Castro's offensive to crush Batista the highest enrollment, 2,350; the My record peaks (or Itself: ' pilals and a "rcorganigt!a. of con· A young motorcycle rid r und r­ • fQ~ month parole today after perature of splice v.hicle. within dicted Senate passage next week. feil flat last April. College of Liberal Arts has 1,316. Lodge's statement was issued trol, administration. pcrsoancJ and went surgery late Friday night • I!leading guilty to pilfering a range. ea,ily acceptable for ~rough the U.S. delegation at the program necessary for lbcir e(· arter an accident on a counly road parked car behind the Acacia fra­ human survival. U.N. in New York. ficient operation. west of Iowa City. ternity house. In radio broadcasts back to Government Hard Pressed As- From the While House, from Other resolutions: Merc), Hospital authorities could Gary Poorman, Waverly, appear­ earth the Explorers also reported Adams and from Congress criti­ Called for rcapportioJW'ICnt of give no indication of the Injuries ing before Johnson County District that cosmic radiation at higher al· cism erupled against the House the Iowa Senate by a constitutional suffered by Michael Donova n, 21. Court Judge Harold D. Evans, was titudes is considerably more intense subcommittee for allowing itscIr to amendment to provide for "repre­ oC RL 7. • Donovan was lhrown from hi Sl!ntenced Friday to four months than had been anticipated. Fighting Spreads In Lebanon become a public forum for such sentation according to population motorcycle about 9 p.m. Friday • ill, jail. SUI Instrumented testimony. rather than territory. 'BEIRUT, Lebanon Ul'I - Jet when it flipped over twice and Tilt ..n"ne. .uspended James Van Allen, head of the Rebel fighters opened a heavy tional front said one requisite for In New York, the elder Ken· Denounced the "Right-to-Work" w.. planes, artillery and armored attack on Army positions on Mt.. forming a rcbel Government has oedy's office said the loan Fox landed in the diteh on the Rherct IlI9d Poo"",n waf p,rol.d for SUI Physics Department, is chier law and favored legalizing the Road. four miles wcst of here. of instrumentaton on tne Explorer cars thundered into action Friday Tereol in north Lebanon, but were been winning control of most of mentioned was not discussed or union hop in Iowa. ....r month. to hi. .ttorn.y Wi!, against rebel forces slashing at the country. He claimed naming A witne&S told Sheri[f Albert J . satellites. drivcn off after jet planes and contemplated at the time the Post Supported Governor Loveless' '*" B. Mooney, Wav.rly. Lebanon's hard . pressed Govern· artillery were thrown in to support a rebel regime now is a matter endorsed the son. Murphy that Donovan had appar· While students at SUI, Poorman George H. Ludwig, SUI graduate ment. An army communique said the troops, the communique said. of timing. "THE LOAN .•.was made," a stand against the three per cent ently 10 t control of his machine UId John W. Creach, Montebello, student, designed the tiny tape re­ rebel attacks were stopped on It claimed the rebels outnumbered Former Premeir Abdul Yafit, a lormal statemenl said, "after the sales tax. before it went into the ditch. CalJr., were surprised while rifling corder for Explorer In which four . fronts in a new spread of Government troops 5·1 in that at­ Moslem: and Muad Ammoun, election as a purcly commercial can behind the Acacia rraternity stored LIP information on cosmic fighting. tack. leader of the Christian opposition, transaction - for 60 days only with house the night or March 6. rays and, upon radio command, The pro·Western regime of Presi· In a third engagement, rebels held a joint news conference to full collateral. al full inlcrest and Ike Sa~s Foreign ~id They were spotted by Roy M. transmitted it back to earth. dent Camille Chamoun was facing struck at a garrison at Rashaya assert the rebel national front's was fully rcpaid on lime - and Johnson, A3, West Liberty. When Friction with the atmoaphei'. in the Bekaa Valley of southern claims. was simply one of many commcr· Lebanon. The attackers were y.fit Slid mort th.n 300 .lor. the pair startcd to to Poor­ II it loomed erratically through WASHINGTON (.fI _ Th. Unit- cial transactions in which tbis driven off in a sharp exchange of d.ni.n .nd Ir.qi troops in the Slash Could Be Disastrous man's car, Johnson fired his .22 spac. doomed Explorer III to an ed St..... nnounc.d Frid.y it office has participated." gunfire, the communique said. uniforms of their own Caliber high powered rifle and .arly death, .ccording to Alloci- is shipping 65,010 ton. of wMat .rmi.. Fox himself said the Kennedy WASHINGTON fA'I _ President similarly passed the authorization The rebel forces made another .re fighting for the L.b.nelt family did not know in advance of bl·ll. sendl'ng it to Whl'te Ho'-". Creach In the left Jeg. .t.d Pr.1I r.ports. to r.volt.torn L.b.non. 'd J hn Eisenhower reported him elf Fri- .L_.. "' .. ~ attack at the north Lebanese port Government. He Slid Jord.n, h 0 Explorer ] is expected to circle The St.te De"rtment Slid the t c Post s en orsemcnt of day to be decply distrcssed over a THE AUTHORIZATION mea ure Creach's leg was later amputated of Tripoli. The Army said they Ira, .nd Turk.y .re in"mring Kenne d y an d th a t the Ioan was . ti Co . mercly sets a ceiling' and the 8t University Hospitals. the earth for another se ven years. .hipment would be made 15 . be f he House Approprta ons mmlUcc Data from an entire orbit - quickly., poalibl •• penetrated to within 50 yards of In Leb.n... .Halrs to .id Ch.­ rna de m Decem r - a ter t slash of $872-million from the for- terms for expenditures, which arc army positions before they were moun. C.... ch, who pludtcf ,ullty to nearly two hours - has been re- ______November election. - and was se- eign aid funds he asked. determined by actual appropria- !he ..me chart. of I.re,ny In th, corded by the tiny instrument in driven off in a heavy exchange of Ammoun commented that the cured and repaId. tJons. Congress onen authorizc~ ....httlm., ,Iven the •• me the hardest challenge of the seven­ fire. national front wants to call U.N. ADAMS DENOUNCED Friday as Saying he hoped and bellcved bilger programs than it evcntual- w.. Explorer III and played back to "another mailicious falsehood" a that this cut would not stand up Iy finances...... tonc. by DI.trlct t.urt Judg. receiving stations in five seconds. weeks-old rebeJllon. The rebel national (ront cfaimed observers' attention to evidcnce .lime, p, G.ffney.n April " .nd 'Sporadic shooting and bomb it now controls three-fourths of that the Government is receiving statement by Fox that Goldfine the rest oC the way througb Con- Mr. Eisenhower originally had To Ult N.w IBM blasts echoed through Beirut Fri­ Lebanon and rebel spokesman de· help from the outside. once said in the presence of Adams gress, Mr. Eisenhower added in a asked for $3.950,092,50 in new aid !hen perol.d to J.hnlOll County Satellite information from the .rlff Albert J. (P,t) Murphy. day night. clared the fighting will go on until The two leaders said they weI­ and Fox that Adams was inter- statement that if it did : "I fear funds. 1be authorization bill rc­ Explorers is expected to be anal­ Heavy fighting broke out in Chamoun quits as president. Cha- come the interest of the United vening for him In a trade commis- tbere will be important losses for duced this by f274J.i·million, and ACter the larceny charges had yzed by SUI's new International Beirut's Basta Moslem quarter in moun has admitted the rebels Nations in Lebanon but oppose sion difCicully. the free world and a serious de- the Appropriations Committee lop- been flied against the pair, Creach Business Machines computer this tbe morning and again in the af· dominate at least 25 per cent of creation of a U.N. police force. Fox had sworn that Goldfine creasing of the security or the peel off another $5I71,)-miWon. withdrew from the University. fall. ternoon. Machine gun and rine the country. The Government has charged had said: "Those 10 and so's at United States. DESPITE the sharp reduction , Poorman was suspOnded from SUI Explorer In was launched at fire and both mortar and bomb Chamoun had predicted earlier · that the United Arab Republic is the Federal Trade Commiuion THE COMMITTIE r!!commencicd the Appropriation CommiUcc's aI­ ~Inll final action of District Cape Canaveral, Fla., March 26. Its explosions shook the city. the rebels would begin an aUo(Jut helping the Lebanese rebels by (FTC ) are givin. one of my mills $3.078.082.500 in new funda for the lotmenta would leave the aid pro­ OfIrt. high elliptical orbit carried it as far On. relHH't ..id Itveral ...... 1. drive /l18,inst the Government. sending armed bands and supplies and my son and some 9r my other program for the fiseal year begin- aram with a Wtal of $11,273,014,500 Dcan of Students M. L. Hult said as 1.700 miles from tilll earth, and w.re '11Itd in the a•• t. are., lilt •• cl...... contlnwd....,.· across the oorder from neighbor· peo'ple a hard time, and , Gov. Ad- nlng next Tuesday. Its aation pre- for use durin, the coming year. ~ay that no final disciplinary ae· as near as 117 hillel 'in its carly The A nny sllid re1Mils fired od .dic.lly It _mod that the reb- Ing $yria, now 11 U.A.R. province. ams is going to take care of that ceded by only an hour House pass- This it 10 because or laTie carry­ uOll OD Poorman's ~allC h~ been St8g~S . I . J ff~ '1 I I ·n j troops from behInd a street bar­ 01 ••04 the Itcurlty tore,. _r. But there are indications tile U.N_ for me." . . age of a separate bill authorizing oven of previoul appropriatJons. ... However, the florl ,declsion I. Explorer HI tran~mitted ' (oilr ricade in the afterDoon fiJhting ~Il'ing .. tftt· IIch .ther" i" · observers have made little head­ ~dams ' silid' In_ , ,tateme~t: a $3.875,592,500 . aid P@PIIl lot MOlt of these have been obligated by the Univl'r~lty Will Ila ~ Illlldl' ~pafllte signals ' uh~lf It's bnft~tld sad ~arm\:ire~ cars I ~ttacked ~nd "..,.... , .. way in building up proof of U.A ,R. "This is another m,lic.oo. false- the year. for specific uses although Dot • rtly, ' died two months ago. '~ .\ erusned (rae tllihl'Cade . . A spokesman lor tile rebel ' Jla, interference, hood, 1 deny It ever happened." Later in the day, tJlt. Senate spent. _ . ___ _ _ ._ _ I , ' ,I , Ii , :.> Ivl i'1~ ,v , 11\0·" Prof. Jaucb '>1 "Electronic Brain~ :r Makes Po si 2 Jets Set Atla ntic Speed II • t 11 "I l I" I \ 1.,1 I ' To Researcll' Record, Unaware 3rd Plane At Geneva 3 New '" Computing' Courses t At least three courses in elec· brain" on the campus. The IBM as director o[ lhe SUI Computing quist. education; Norman Ba~n. }osef M. Jauch, SUI professor tronic computer methodology are computer. which can "memorize" Centel·. ziger. chemistry; Royce E. Becke,t er: Crashed Killing 15 Men and theoretical physicist, will do planned for the SUI curriculum 20,000 digits. is expected to be in Name 3 Course, and Louis Landweber. mechanics I Lf research at the European Center of next Call, according Lo Dean Walter operation by Sept. 1. he said. Dolch, now systems engineer in and hydraulics; Edwin N. Ober,. I th­ WESTOVER AIR FORCE BASE. takeoff said the aircraft was ap· maintenance. Nuclear Research (CERN) at Gen· F. Loehwing of the sur Graduate BeCore the Call semestcr opens, the Iowa Testing Program, said mathematics and astronomy\ ./ un Mass. IA'I - A jet Stratotanker parently flying in normal flying A spokesman said a preliminary College. IBM will train a elected group of eva, Switzerland, for the 1958-59 the three courses planned to teach James A. Van Allen, physics; and lef cr ashed and exploded seconds aft­ altitude when it broke ground. investigation started immediately Courses in operating an elec· graduate students and faculty the operation of the computer will C. Frank Smith. general bUSiness; , academic year. Jauch and his er takeoff early Friday on a pro­ The weight at which the aircraft after the crash. tronic'computer are now made pos· members so the machine may be be Scientific Computing Operations. and Joseph P. Kasper. instructo~ fOI jected speed test nonstop round was operating was less than the Tankers Refuel Jets family left Iowa City Thursday. sible, Dean Loehwing said, since put into operation immediately, Numerical Analysis, and Business in physics. • , (;0 trip to London. The 15 men aboard weight oC air~raft flown regularly The tankers, built by Boeing, The SUI physicist was granted a sur will install an "electronic said John P. Dolch. who wiJI serve Da ta Processing. The SUI Computer Center WiU )i perished in the flaming wreckage. its in normal training operations." are used to refuel airborne jet leave of absence after receiving an Instructors already qualified to occupy 1,000 square Ieet of floor riC Two sister jets. which took off Joint Investigation bombers and fighters of the Stra· space in Room N1, in the northwest I invitation from CERN, an inlerna· teach the classes are Dolch and ne, minutes earlier. reached London Westover officials announced la­ tegic Air Command. Air Force Norman Kalla\ls. assistant profes· wing o( East Hall. The center will in record time. their passengers ter a joint U.S. Air Force·indus­ authorities call them vilal in keep· tional atomic research center, to sor of business education. be composed of the computer con­ unaware of the tragedy. A fourth try accident investigation board ing the United States ahead of the do research at Geneva and lecture sole, an input·output machine that . hi' plane. poised on the runway. did will probe the cause of the crash. Dean Loehwing said it has been Soviet Union in world air power. on nuclear physics at European estimated that 170,000 specialists reads and punches cards. and the , ior not take ofC because of the mis· Maj. Gcn. Joseph B. Calbara. The plane snapped power lines power supply. Accompanyin, in-, wh hap. director of the directorate of USAF universities. will be needed to operate the 10,000 70 feet above the ground and then electronic computers in the U.S. by slruments will include a tabulator , to Newsmen Killed flight safety research, will head plummeted. Its cargo of fuel·es­ A native of Switzeralnd, Jauch and card reproducer, a card sort· gr. The dead included Brig. Gen. the investigation. completed the equivalent of bache· 1966. He said training these spe· timated the equivalent oC three· cialists is a serious problem facing ing machine and key punch equip. hi~ Donald W. Saunders o{ Athens. The board will be comprised oC and·a-half railroad tank cars or lor of science and master of science ment. 1 N.Y., airborne commander in educational institutions. business technical specialists oC the air· 35,000 gallons-broke into an in- at the Federal Institute of Techno. and indu try. {u. charge of the operation. and six stantaneous inferno. arl newsmen assigned 10 cover the craft industry and the best in· logy at Zurich. Switzerland. He re­ Complex Rl!Search The blazing craft slithered "Modern research now requires Bartlett To Give l:j prl !light. vestigatlng talent available. the across the Massachusetts Turn. ceived a Ph.D. from the Univer· The official Air Force st!\tement Air Force said. the extensive use of these highly pike - a new east· west toll road sity of Minnesota in 1940, and tben complex machines," Dean Loeh­ Woodwind Recital: rifJ on the accident said: These will include experts on that crosses the state-and blew went back to Switzerland. "It has been eslablished that wing said. ''It is of considerable im­ Loren W. Bartlett. G. Russell· reI flight operations. structures and up with a thunderous roar in a In 1942 he returned to the U.S. portance that SUI graduates in re­ ville. Ark .• will present a recital of the aircraft broke ground at exact cornfield. prediction on the runway. The air· aerodynamics. hydraulic. electri­ Wreckage Scattered and taught at Princeton. In 1945 he search fields be , able to exploit music for woodwind instruments every possible technological de· Wednesday at 2 p.m. in Macbride craft was airborne. cal and electronic systems. power Wreckage was scattered over became a naturalized American ml~~~~ "Observers who witnessed the plants, fuel and oil systems and velopment. " Auditorium. 'fl the 30·acre farm of Kazimierz Mac­ Accompanying Bartlett on the a howski. With the installation of the com­ puter. sur will join a family of 40 piano will be Norma Cross, sut! I:\u The two planes that broke rec­ universities throughout the nation associate professor of music. SP'j er Cowboy Casanova Nearly ords in the transatlantic flight that now using such equipment. There Opening the recital will be Bach's ended at Brize Norton Air Base. are 11 similar machines in Iowa. "Sonata in B minor for £lute and'i llC England, sought to demonstrate piano." Continuing, Bartlett will i Go the Air Force capability to send In addition to teachin~ the opera· present "Sonata. No. 3. for bassoon tion of the computer. Dean Loeh · high-performance jet tanker air· and piano," by Johann Galliard. I Swindles Clergyman/s Wife wing said that "practically every craft to strategic points anywhere PI LAMBDA THETA invites all and "Rapsodie for E·nat Sax~ (~ phase of university work will find where in the world. members of the faculty of the Col­ phone" by Claude Debussy. as ST. LOUIS IA'I - A clergyman had $84.000 in the hotel safe and use for the computer as a research The and his wife were reconciled Fri· $2.300 in ~tsh on him. plus expen· The first plane landed in an lege of Education and all women program will close with Paul Cres­ Vi tool. " in dny after she had b~en nearly roo sive jewelry. elapsed time of 5 hours. 27 min· enrolled in one or more courses in ton's "Sonata for E·nat Saxophone, manced out of a $203,000 inherit· utes, 42.8 seconds. the National education to an informal tea Tues­ SUI Colleges and Departments Op . 19." In Washington, the FBI said Ray· which already have problems to be ance before her cowboy Casanova mond Lewjs Headspeth had a long Aeronautics Assn. reported. The day. from 3-5 p.m. in the social The program will be presented' classroom of the Women's Gym. fed into the machines include was arrested. record of Ilifficultics with the po· elapsed time of the second craft by Bartlett in partial fulfillment of was given as 5:29 :37.4. chemistry. commerce. education, the requirements for the Ph.D. de­ "There will be no divorce." the lice. which included convictions for engineering, geography, hydraulics, Rev. James A. Doubleday said. forgery. grand larceny and auto Break British Record PHI DELTA KAPPA will hold a gree in music literature and per­ Records set in 1955 by a British noon luncheon Wednesday at the physics. psychology and sociology, formance. The 39-year-old rector of the Grace theft. and many other departments are Episcopal church in suburban Kirk­ Royal Air Force C:anberra bomber Iowa Memorial Union. Speaker will II were 7 hours 29 mmutes from Lon· be W. W. Maner. Foreign Student expected to have research involv· wood added a reconciliation had ing the machine in future months, b en effected. don to New York, and on the re-I Adviser What They turn flight. 6 hours 16 minutes. . Dean Loehwing said. In Reno 4 Months Spe~ch Meet '·Member Committee Are Doing Mrs. Barbara Fox Doubleday. 33, The plan of the two jets to re- UNIVERSITY CLUB will hold a The initial 9-member computer had gone to Reno four months ago turn from Lortdon to New York. special business meeting Tuesday , committee. appOinted by Dean to divorce her husband. Ends Today after a brief stoP. was abandoned. at 9:45 a.m. in the Club Rooms Loehwing to study the need for THE NEWMAN CLUB will spon. Acquaintances oC Mrs. Doubleday The first plane to arrive in Lon- along with the coffee and bridge such a machine at sur. included sor a coffee bour immediately after ga An innate neural lag or slow­ don - dubbed Alpha by the Air session. .. j • kit said she decided - after receiving Force - had six newsmen as pas· Professors Harold P. Bechtoldt, 9 a.m. Mass Sunday at the Calholic the inheritance last spring from her down in the functioning of the ner­ chairman, psychology; E. F. Lind· Student Center. Fr grandfather - to live independent­ vous system was advanced Friday sengers. The second, Brava. had I TOT.TENDING SERVICE is I at SUI as the fundamental cause I ly as a career singer. third and ill.fated plane, watching children. of students. who It s Delightful ha of stuttering in about one·half of on~he She was a soprano in the church was called Cocoa. Its pilot, Lt. Col. Je unable to flOd baby sItters the people who develop this speech Broustas, was described by the Air err Wednesday and Sunday even- BOATING, SWIMMING AND GOLFING FEVER swept through Iowa choir here and at Brunswick. defect. Maine. where her husband held a Force as its most experienced g m the East Lobby Conference City Friday as temperatures hit the middle 80s for the first time in two Where rectorate five years until 1954. Jon Eisensdn, director of thc KC135 pilot. It was the first KC135 oom of the Iowa Mcmorial Union weeks. The boat dock at City Park was crowded all afternoon and speech and hearing clinic at Queens the Air Force had lost. Broustas' ' ~tween 6:45 and. 9:45. Students early evening as nautical enthusists took advantage of the warm AGUDAS ACHIM CONGREGATION aaACE UNITED Married 11 Years 602 E. WalhlDrto.. St. KJ8S10NAltY CHuac. But Mrs. Doubleday. married 11 College. New York. explained that log showed 8,126 hours in Air u~t present ~helr ID cards to weather. Golfers at Finkbine 'Course reported that many SUI pros Rabbi Stant., Buma. IBM M_• .al",. An. some of the lag or "perseveration" Force planes. Ihze the servIce and are to pro- were polishing their woods on the 18-hole course, and for the first time ,.Id.,. ServIce. 8 p. ... Tile ae • • N.rDlaa Beltb...... , years and the mother of two. met Sabbath worship, Saturd.r, I . .... 1:45 •. m. Rlble Slu&y dalleo I •• oil Raymond Lewis Headspeth. 37. a is found in all of us to a degree In the KC135 he had 135 hours de their own toys. diapers and .in many days the City Swimming Pool was crowded. -Daily Iowan .,tl and said some authorities contend more than any other Air Forc~ ibs. Photo by Robert Malone. ASSEMBLl!· - OF GOD. 10:45 ".1"0. Sermon: HBe.tle¥I ..., B.we ranch hand who neglected to tell 482 S. CII"ton SI. Life Throll,h His Name" her o{ his police record. it is normal for some situations. man. Pentagon records show _..;lL-_._~ ______------The Rev. D.n Mille., P.. t .. 7:S0 p.m. Yoalb Fell.w.bl, 1\\b," fIa, Marnln, \Vorlhlp, 11 a .m . 8:00 p. .... Serman EnD,el"'" She and the husky cowboy start· Eisens0.!1 president of the Am· planes of the KC135 type have G- OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN Ch.lot·, Amba sadon. 6:45 ,." 7:8t p.m. Wedotada,: ...... ed a romance. She converted into erican Speech and Hearing Asso· flown more than 7.800.000 miles. overnments Documents E •• n,ell,Uio,. Servtee, 1 p.lD. S'nd, .nd p ••,.e. 80"1... Tit o cash the bonds from her inherit· ciation. spoke at the Weekend Con· An identification team (rom r BETHANY· BAPTIST. CHURCH. wh once and they left for a motel at I D St. " FIfth An.. I ....a ClI, HILLEL FOUNDAT10Jl ference on Stuttering Therapy. Wright Patterson AFB. Ohio, was Records F,·led ,·n L,·brary University UnIfied Mornln, Worlhlp 8enl ••• 8:.' loa 1&11 Markel SI. an Tucson, Ariz .• last Friday. SUIIge.t a Pause flown to the scene to handle iden- a.m. Frida,. Sabbalb Benlee: ',M ,." S •• laU.I .. , : .:lIt as Some authorities believe that a tification of the crash victims. What was the dircct testimony The Census Reports are one of the Ivenla, Gospel Senl •• , ':Be , .... Saturday, Barbara found the I Blbl. DI ..... I.. : .:.. th cowboy had silently broken camp. medium degree of perseveration. or Westover officials said it probably $terman Adams gave to a House reference works most frequently Calendar Salar.a, ••rala, .."I.... 1IIIt It BETHEL· AFRICAN MITHODIIT lJ ISO a.m ~ Her money was gone. too. tendency t() pause before taking ac- would be Sunday or Monday be· illvcstigating committee? What are us~d in the department. The reports CHURCH 411 s. O .... rao. 81. 29, Tipped that a free·spending tion following a stimulus of some fore remains are released to next Ule Federal specifications on manu. include figures on agriculture. Mr.. C. 8.. McDoDI •• , P ...., JIHOVAH'S WITNII.II Westerner was at a Miami hotel. type, permits the individual to size of kin. fll.cturing an ashtray? manufacturers, and business. as SATURDAY, JUNE 28,1958 Oel'oUtna., 3 ,.m. litO B It. an W.rsblp. , p.m. Sund.y. 3:00 p.BI. POlio Talk po the FBI arrested Headspeth Thurs­ up the whole situation confronting List 15 Dead These questions and many more well as population. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. - Workshop in UWhat Did Christ Aan.em'" day. He said Barbara had given him and ~o act more wisely. Ei- The dead. besides Gen. Saun- can be answered in the Government The material in Government Doc- THE ·cnURCH 0' CBallT .:00 p.m. W.lcht ...er 81.',: be senson explained. ders: Stuttering - House Chamber. Old 1320 Klrk ...ed A... " Increated Knowled,t Brl." L .."., him the money. 'el J. Coughll·n. 31. Boston. Documents Department in the SUI uments is shelved on third floor, and Capitol. 8Ib!. C""U, 9 • . m. Benefits" The fact that both perseveration Danl I . th G t D t MorllJn, Worlhlp, 10 • .•. Tue.day. 8 p.m. PubU. Talk a $84,000 in Cash Associated Press newsman. Library. a so m e overnmen ocumen s Evealn, Wor.blp Servle .. 1:00 ,.ID. The FBI said the cowboy had and stutte ng are relatively higher The department receives material reading room where students can co in about ~ e same degree in men Robert B. Sibley. 57. Boston t d th t' I th Mondav, June 30 KENNONlTI CRtJlICII tio bought at $9,000 foreign car and than in wdtnen seems another indio Traveler aviation editor. from state, national and foreign s u Y or copy e rna ena ey cnURCH OF JESUS CHRIST 614 Clark 81. 9 a.m. to 12 noon-Summer Can· OF LATTER-DAY 8AINTS Th ...... Vlr,1I .Br.D ...... , ...... DID E. F.lr.blld Sl. calion th% this neural lag is the Norman J. Montellier. 37, United Government~ , alon~ Wilth publ~ca- ne~dili' R n Id . h d f ference Cor Iowa High School Prl •• lhood Mo.Un, .••.•. Saudav Sellool Hoa •• t:" .... basis of many stutterers' problem. Press International, New York. tions from mternatlOna agencIes. a arIne ey 0 s IS ea 0 Teachers of English - Senate Sanda, Scbo.l. 10 •.m. 1':63 Mornl., Worsblp d p ermon: "The Llvln, Ch.r,," In Aetl'~i Committee Set the Queen! professor said. James L. McConaughy Jr .• 42. such as the United Nations. GCOI~ernmen~hD~cume~t: danb MMa Chamber. Old Capitol. Saer.meat M•• llor. 6:30 , .•• ' :30 p.m. Sermon: "Tr.ly 004 I. 0..... hief of the Washington bureau of Over 455.000 volumes and 50.000 0 echon. e 1S assls e y rs. " 'ed., ':4lS p.m. MI'week 8l1f.lce .r Joseph G. Sheehan told the con· C d '1 bl Robert E ans cnVReH 0' THI NAZARINI l'ray.r BIble .t.d,. To Run United t!h. Time and Life magazines. maps are ma e aval a e to stu- v. Burlln,ton &-nd en.ton S". .n. ference ",(,.t stuttering seems es- Glenn A. Williams, 41. associate dents at SUI. Two graduate assistants, Les Hol- Tuesday, July 1 Tbe R.,.. G. M. FIeld. 11111111'" 8u nday School. 9:45 a.m. sentially II> matter o{ role conflict . I d I C't d R Id Ch 9 t 0 12 S C UOaGA~ZED C~.C. ·or II."" editor of U.S. News and World Workshop Students VISit an • owa I y. an ona erry, a.m. noon- ummer on- IIlornlD, Worsblp. It:.~ a.... CHJUS'r OF LATTEA DAY IAJIIIrl Fund Campaign • within the individual. Sheehan is in Report. High school students in the Speech A3. Clutier, also work in the depart- ference for Iowa High School BrelCe Fellowship, & ,.JIl. t.1 .. 'erene, •••• I charge o( he speech clinic at the t T h f E l' h Youlb n ... r. 6:46 1I .m.. Iowa Kemer.a. U.I•• The Iowa City Chamber of Com· Universit¥_ o( California at Los Robert A. Ginsburgh. 63. also and Dramatic Art Summer Work- ______!pen. eac______ers 0 ng IS . _ alellard O. 8.Uer".". • ...... Angeles. associate editor of U.S. News and shop. have visited the department TRE CONGRIGATIONAL· . CHuacR ',S1: Cb ..ob a.It •• 1 merce has taken action to get a CllntoD .nc! JolI.,.o. 81 ..... 10 :30 • . m.. ~1.r"lnr W.nlll, United Fund campaign underway World Report. a\l week getting material for their Tbe Rov. Jobn O. Cral" .1.111•• 7:80 , .•.• Y.P.M." Stuttering typically starts at the William Cochran, 36. of Center- speeches and reports. IO:Ir. Chur." School by setting up a committee, headed lO:4~ Re,ular Church S.rvl •• • by Attorney Robert Osmundson. age at which the youngster is just port. N.Y .• civilian observer, Na- During the regular school year. General Notices SerlDon: "III ,h Fidelity" - R... Cral,. SHAItON IVANGIUVAL beginning to define his role in the tional Aeronautics Assn. graduate students and Communica. · . . UNITED BaETH.£N CHlIRCII The Chamber of Commerce com­ General Notice. must be rp.eelved at TIl~ Dally Iowan office. Room 201. Co_ EVANGELICAL FREE CRllaOll Kal ••• .OY. a.w.rd H. Mart,...... mittee was established following a groups of ",hich he is a part, Shee- William Enyart. 45. former presi· tion Skills students use the depart­ munlcRr.Jons Center. by 8 a.J"1. for publlcatlon (he following mornIng. They OF CORALVILLt: han pointm out. The fact that boys dent of the National Aeronautics ment regularly. Many students. must be typed or leglbl;v wrItten and signed; they will not be accepted b, The Re •. W. Robert Culber ..... Pa,I., Sund.y Se.o.l. 9:8. a..... survey of Chamber members in telephone. The Dally Iowan reserve. 1M rlllhl 10 edil aU General Notice .. 9:4" •. m. Sun d.,. Se100.1. Mornlnr Werthlp, 1':81 ••• I.enlnr W.rsblp, 7:Be , .•• which 95 per cent expressed that tend to b6)pushed earlier than girls Assn .• and long identified with the though. are unaware of the type tI ,OO •. m .• Worsbl .. Servl •• ermon: "ChrId In You" Unl.oralt, Fellowllll,. hi.... •.... 1 into rolesitror which they may not judging and approval of flights and volume of material avaiJable in VETERANS: Each P.L. 550 vet­ Desks close 4: 50 p.m.. Fri. - Sun. II 4:00 ... m. they were in favor of a local. 7:30 p.m. Evonlnr Servle. (F.r TraD.p.rtall... call ...... community·wide United Fund., be ready , ·may account for the made for the purpose oC attempt· the department. eran must sign a VA Form 7-1996a larger nu~ber of stutterers among ing to set new records. His home The Government Documents De- to cover his attendance from June FIRST· BAPTIST. CHUltCH. UU), ANYONE INTERESTED in apply­ N.rtb Cllat.n .nd ,.Irobll« II ... It is hoped that the first drive A • bays. he :Uggested. was in Greenwhich. Conn. partment has House and Senate 18-June 30. 1958. form will be ing for life guarding at the R~y. G. Thomas FaLhru.o. l\lhalder IT. ANDalW l'aESJlI'TlRIAJf may be held this fall. However. Meeti", Clo ... Today Lt. Col. George Broustas. 39. committee hearings that go Dack to available at the window outside Marloa V.. Dy". MIDI.te, .1 .alle OHUaCH this committee will not be res­ Women's Gymnasium pool for one o a .m. Church School The weekend conference will Brattleboro, Vt.. commander o( the 51st Congress In 1890. th~ Veterans Service in University BIl ...1 BI. and Mel .... A'r" ponsible Cor conducting the cam· hour atll a.m. and 4: 15 p.m. daily I~:I~ a.m. "'.rshlll III Unl.erall, Bol,~ .. close at Doon today following a the craft. Bills and Reports Hall beginning Tuesday. July 1. Sermon: "Star-CountJn, .nd Deart­ P.ul II. P.rker. 1111 ...... paign but will retire when a new please contact the secretary at t.lY.! UeaUnr" 9:09 •.m. C~lIr.b 8010 ••1 panel discllssion on "For What is Lt. Joseph C: Sweet. 26. Chan· The bills and reports introduced 1958. Regular sign·up will continue 6:30 board of directors is elected. Women's Gymnasium. p.m. BapUsI Youlb Fellowlhl, 10 :00 ...... M.rnln, Wo ..III, Therapy Needed." Panelists will die!'. Ariz .• copIlot.. I by the last two U.S. congresses are on July 2 and 3. Office open hours II a.m. to 4 p.m. Church Picnic at City 10 :~ •• m. Cbur.1o 8e100.1 ar. 0,... The Chamber committee is pri· are 8:30 a.m.-12 noon and 1 p.m.- Park an. Under include Drs. Eisenson. Sheehan, Capt. J~mcs E. Shl~man, 35. also available. 8 ...... BIble 81u., marily interested in gelling the Williams, Oliver Bloodstein of Kansas CIty. Kan., navIgator. ______4:30 p.m. FAMIL Y NITES at the Fjeld· FIItST CHRIST'A'" CRuaCR Ta ••. , ,0:tI() a.m. Blbl ....., campaign organized. Brooklyn College. Wendell Johnson Capt. John B. Gordon. 30. Ral- bouse for students. st.. n. faculty . 211 E. 1.... A ••• Wed" 8:8' Cbolr Pr .. II •• oC SUI. and James V. Frick of eigh. N.C .• third pilot. their spouses and theLr fa mille! T". It .... A. C. Ho'rlehl .. 'r., ••,1., Other members of the Commit­ S.I1, A. SmUb. Mlnl.t •• or Ed ...II .. 'T. .AUL·II LUTHI.AN 0WtI1IOII Pennsylvania Slate University. M. Sgt. Donald Gabbard, 38. Los RECREATtONAL CRAFTS AND every Wednesday. Recreational 8:30 •. m" Youlh .nd Adull Cburell tee are Robert D. Marsden. Rob­ WSUI Schedu~e MI .... rl '"•• ' ert K. Sorensen. the Rev. John Frederic L. Darley. associate prO-I Gatos. Fla., boom operator. SWIMMING at the wOl1'lQn 's gym­ swimming and family-type acti­ School U4 E. J.r .,.•• 1\ WSUI - IOWA CITY 010 "/e 0:1:1 a .Tn. WOrlhlp Senlce T". a.... J.h. C .....bl ...... , I G. Craig, Robert Ettinger and Cessor of speech pathology at SUI, T. Sgt. Joseph G. Hutter. Miami. Saturday, June 2M, 10llA nasium for all university-related vities will be avaiJable from 7: 15 ermon: "Seek Ye the Lhdnr Chrl.t" 10 a.m. S ...., 8.1t ••1 .) 8:00 Mornlnl Chapel women: students. faculty, wives • o: ln M.In ., Children'. Church SehGal II:lIt a.m. M.'Dln, W.,.II~ James R. Jordan. wlll serve as moderator. Fla .• crew chicf. 8:15 News to 9: 15 p.m. II '.m. to (p.m. burch PIcnic II CUy daughters. Each Monday evening • ~ 8:30 Family Album Park 'T. THO ..AI MORI C-.u'1L 'H 9:00 Challen,e from 7:30·9:30 the era(tshop will be PLAYNITES ror stu(lents. staff Itl M.L ... 'L 10 :00 Cue FlaST CHU.CH ..... t'n.' II. D. .. c ..wa, ...... 12 :00 Rhylhm Rambles available and from 8:30-9:30 swim· and facuIty and their spouses at 0. OURI8T 8CJENTI.T 12:30 IoD'.' M...... , ..... '. II, ... 111. News mingo Bring suits for children only the Fieldhouse eact Tuesday and T~t E. Collo,. .1. a,m, ~e-1)oily Iowan 12:4~ One Man'. OpInion 8onda, So.b.ol, 9:4~ • . m. 'rbe If ...... I••• 1, .. 11_ n .. I :00 Editorial Pa,e and caps must be worn by all. Friday night (rom 7: 30 to 9: 30 Sind., Ser.lCf!. I. I .m, _, 110. ou,re,.U•• , , I :15 A Year AIO This Week , Charge made (or materials and p.m. Admission will be by facult)·. LellKon Sermon: "OhrJi"an 8efenf!e" 0.11, M...... "M . ..." , ..... ' ... ~ 1:30 Showc.se supplies used in crafts. One eraft Wed., 8 p.m. TuUm.n, M ••II., . . I'M Dall"lolllGn " IDrittM and MiUed bllnudenll and j, gOfJemed by 4 boa,d of five nudent trmtf)fJI f)~ctf)d ~I 4:00 Tea TIme SpecIal starr or student 1.0. Card. The IT. WINCISLAtJ. C8U~ 5:lO News · . . by tMntUhnl bod" tmd fOC1llt" trultUl appolnUd by thl! pruident of tM Un/verslty. The Da/ly Iowan', will be introduced each Monday Weight Training Room will be rlallT I!fOLISR LUT81aU .... D.... '.n IL tow 5:45 Sportstfme evening in the following order - CHURCH Tbe IIOY ••, • .,. W. N.IIII ...... tdftorlal polley. thM.,«e. " noI an ftpreuWn of SUI admln/slration po/Icy or opinion In any particuw 6 :00 Dinner Hour at the IoUowmg times: Mondays, • Dubaque .nd M.rkel .... 1.lId., M ••••• , .:8t • .• . , ...... 6:55 News aluminum etching. June 30; linol­ to 6 p.m.: Wednesdays, 4 to 6 p.m.: litev. a., WI.,.le, ...... Ia. It ...... III" . .... 7 :00 Opora PM eum block prints, July 7; elemen· S.rvleoa: n:So. Y. Jl • . m. Oallr M ...... 1 • .• ~ ':M ..... Page 2 SATURDAY, JUNE 21, ~9S1 Iowa City, Iowa 9:50 News and Fridays. 4 to 6 p.m. ' N'url~r1: ••A. 11 •••• o 0 0 tary lealhercrafl, July 14; and ~UD'.y ••b ..l1 ••. IL . THB UNITED CHUaC. • 0 0 1\107 L ....r Ma •• all.. ... DAILY 10WAM EDITO.IAL ITA,.,. trom , 10 . :30 •.m .. on 9.turd.,. WSUI - IOWA CITY 910 k/e simple copper enameling. July 21. PARKING - The University park. 1'he-1)Olly Iowan Make-load servIce on mlued paper. I. Flan PRESBYTIIRIAN CBUaC. I. Buea. Wd.el, PII'" Editor ...... JIm Davies Monelay, Jane 00, 10M Sessions will continuc through Inl( committee reminds student t6 E. M.rkel SI. ':43 '.m. 8In.. , 8 .....1 not IKlnlble. hut every effort will be 8:00 Morning Chapel Dr. P. n.",I ... P.II •• k, MI ...I •• 11 : ••.m . W.,... I, New. EdItor .... Jerry Kirkpatrick mad .. to correct .rron with the nexl August 4. M.r.i., .IIIBI. • :15 News au~olsts that the 12-hour parklna Til ..... Jerome J. Le .... Wo,". ,." 1-' "m.. ,..1., Clt AUDIT aUU4V City Editor ...... • ... . Je.n D.vle. ta.ue . 8:30 VIctorian LIterature limit applies to all University lots Ual ..... Il, P ....r Pro.tI •• OF Sports Editor ...... Dick Lynes 9:15 The Bookshelf 0,110 and II l .m. Churd. SCIoO.1 • 0 • ClROVLA,"ONI Chief Photollflpher .. Walter Kleine MIMHER .r lb. Afl80CIATED pal8' 9:45 Mornl"l FeatUl'e except the storage lot sruth of the ":l{U Il.m. M.ofnln( ~orlhlP TalNlTl' EPISCOPAL c.V8CS The AssocIated Pres. II entlUed ex­ 10:00 News SUMMER HOURS Hydr tulies I,.uboratory. lilt I. C.ne(. • •• Publllhed d.n, except Sund., .n4 Edltorl,1 A•• I.tanl .. Donna Blaufu •• c1u.lvely to Ihe USe for republication 10:1~ Kitchen Concert FIRST MITRODl8T CHU.O. 'I'll .....,. •• l .•• , ...... Monda)' .nd lepl boUda)'. b, Stu­ of aU the local news printed In thl. 11 :45 The Church at Work for the J.".roon .nd Dub.q.. II•. 1100 ' .m. HOi, C ...", ••I .. d"nt Publlc.Uola, Inc .• Communl.. - new"p.per .1 well AI all AP new. 12:00 Rhythm Rambles Dr. L. L. D_nnlnrlo •• Mla ..I •• ":4~ a.m .. Br .. kl ..1 tiOni• Center, low. CI\7. low.. &n­ DAILY IOWAN ADVIRTIIING ITA" dl.patche •. 12:30 New. MAIN LIBRARY THE UNIVERSITY Cooperatlve 9:90 a.m., ChurClb choal 1115 •. m. C',rell ...... t t.red a. Ncond clan matler .t the Advertlatnc M.na,,,r .... Mel Adarna 12 :45 New. Backltollnd _ Reserve DISk Baby·Sitting League book is fn JhRO ..... Mornln, W... hlp F.mll, 80 ..le. pod om.,. .t low. City. under tbe Asst. AdverU,ln, M.r.. . Jlm Cham~rs DAILY IOWAN IUPERVISORII F.OM 1 :00 MoatJy MusIc Serm.n: "BeClomlnr" Rev. Rober' 1",11, leI of Con"... 01 M.rch 2. 1m. Claul!led Manaler .. Jerry Ooldsleln 1:55 New. charge o( Mrs. Keast from June 23 SCHOOL or JOURNALIS .. FACULT1 2:00 Masterworks from France · . . lI:at M':7~:;;~r C8U~ I Promotion ranaler .. Joe ArChlba~ Mon. - Thurs. 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. to July 7. TelephQne her at 2990 if ,Iall'r UNITA ..A" 1I00l1'n P"bUlher ...... John M. H.rrloon 2:aO Mostly MusIc 01.1 41.1 from noon to mldnllht to Edltorl.1 ...... Arthur M. SanderlOll 6 00 9 50 I ••• A .... a.oj GlIb.rt III. Jell...... u •• .... 3:55 New. : p.m. - : p.m. a sitler or information about join- ....tor Rev. Kher.n ArI.I .. a ...... o. 8 •••1 ...... rePOn newa I...... wom.n'. pille Advertlsln, ...... E. John Kotlman 4:00 Tea TIme IIema, or UfIOWl""mentll _ The Clrcul.tlon ...... Wilbur Pelenon Friday 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. ing the group is desired. IO:30 .•• m. "The 001111, .r Albenl" ....a' ....a •••••.•.• , ...... DAILY ~OWA" eJaCULATION 5:30 Newl 11:11 •••.• Ill...... nail, Iowan. EdItorial otfleee are 5:45 9porlalime Saturday 8:00 a.m. - 11:50 a.m. nn "flITHO~'8T O~APIL areu"Uoll M.n ...... P.uI Beard TaUITIlII. aOA.D 0' ITUDIMT o • 0 III Ut. COmmunlc.UOIlI CeII"r. AulAIIlI Mant.er •••• Mlcbael Dalley 6:00 DInner }four Sunday 2:00 p.m.· ~ 4:50 p.m. .11 'fbI •• An. IT. 'A"aICI[', C8va9 I PIJaUCATIONI ':&5 Newl llr. Oeol'le .Jalon, DenUatr7: D.Y14 7:00 Basic BeUef. . '. RECJ.~ATJ.ON"1. 'I S~' 11M I N G '!I. a ..;. J ..... w. H...... ~ nt r.. C.If'" I II- 'Itulmnlo.... A3; Thoma. B. HUll­ W.ly b.,.t I .... , •••.•• I.' , ... I · J\:OO Concert PM , M.ln ~lIlr,ry .' HOUI{ilt ~~~PJm-n/ ~\flDa.lum ~•• ~;!, ".~:~I~· •.:...... , .. I .... 11 .... IIton, A4: Prol. "ulh Kelso. "'UtI~ 9:00 Trio W,-, ...... 11 .... L IIclence; Dw"-ht LoweU M~the ...... : 9:45 New •• nd Sporll Mon. , 'Fr11 " 7:30 a.m.' 2.00 p.ni· R~o1' wil bt' from . :15 to ,5:15 • r~IINDllIl'E TI~O Pro!· '~t.fa.,.Jt.r. Joumaljam: KSUI (Fall SCH'IDULI, 11.7 mI. Saturday 7,M-a.m. - 5;00 ~day 'hrou,'" Ff'id~, U II ope~ Y"rA: IV;. 111 ...... 1 " •• •••' ,."".o J.• O'''Wr,• ,- Pro!. 1.. V Pll.ke Education. 8:00-8:00 F •• ture work' '1\1111 be: P'R· ""''P, 0",,, ,'"...... I 'I'IIIaaI W . BAC~lj Prelud ••nd YUlue In E- Sunday J 1:30 f) :ml .. . 2:00 a .. to tJlI,~~..?ri\etl: t~d . n.~~.~J n:M lri.. t::I~n. r~·~~:;~~I~ • . *,OM LV,.. .." .. CII~ j Je...... /.'1 ...... ~,I& ~ ) Fial Major . , ~~~~~.~~~ ~:~ a.m .• ldon,,~ ~~.' ~~ers. ~!!!..'l)pr)J~p, _. !J.Y!W "11ft... , ... .Il*' -: ..... 111'" lI.fllLv Ion". 1.:...... ' THE DAILY IOWAN-low. eity, 1__ S.turd.y . Ju.,. II, 1tS8-P.ge 3 . . ---'- - Probe·rs Told Union Bids Opened I Congress • I For Burge • (From Dlilly 1__ LI.H" Wlrllt Greenlee Named Academic Equipment Holds line WASID OTO. Head Stole Functs ended a &-month dvance in Jun , Bids [or the completion or din· dropping off about 3'2 per nt. Baen. Dean at Coe College WASHINGTON (A'I - Senale prob­ on a $20,000 investment in lands ing rvice equipment and for mis· N w ro 01 some produtarted ~ckeu On Tax Cuts ers were told Friday that William sold to lndiana (or highway rights CEDAR RAPIDS 1.4'1 - Appointment or Dr. Howard S. Greenlee, 39, cellaneou completion service of moving to mark t in \'olume to hanics 1 L! Hutcheson, late president of of way. of Parkville, Mo., as academic dean of Coe College, was announced Fri· Burge Hall, new S I women' dar· WASHl GTON III _ Can ease scarciti and pull down ~berll" 1 the Carpenters Union, embezzled The embezzlement accusation day by Presidcnt Joseph E. McCabe. mitory, wlll be accepted until 1:30 nomYI '1 union property worth $250,000 and against the elder Hutcheson p.m. Ju.ly 15. held the lin on taxe Friday ex- price. I; and Greenlee has been dean of the college of Park College in ParkviUe­ These dec1in reported by the left it to his heirs. stemmed from the 1930 purchase cept Cor a reduction oC $485-million Agrlculture Department Friday liness; He will assume his duties at Cae August 1. George L. Horner, SUI Superin· As the charge was outlined be· o( 50 shares o( stock in the Adams tendent 01 Planning and Construc· a year in fr igbt shipment le\'ies. w re chiefly in vegetable , wbeat, ucto~ Packing Co., an Auburndale, Fla. A native of Illinois, Dr . Greenlee took both his undergraduate studies fore the special Senate Rackets tion, announced Friday that bids The House voted 365-9 in Cavor oC calUe and potat r "l (;ommltlee by Robert F. Kennedy, company I]OW liquidated. and his doctorate at the University of Cbicago. would be aocepted al his o(flce (or WiU:i it counsel, Hutcheson's son Mau· Kennedy and Harold Ranstad, a He was associate professor or bistory and chairman of the Social the Iowa Stat Board of Regent . a compronuse bill eJCtending the 52 Orficials said the 10 r pr floor I rice sat poker·faced in lhe wit· committee- investigator, placed in Studies Department at Simpson College, Indianola, from 1950 to 1955. The sealed propo als (or the per nt tax r te on corporate in· are beginnini to be r fleeted in lWest l ness chair. evidence a statement that the He was associate dean at Southwestern University, Georgetown, Tex., completion of the construction pro­ com s and tile pre nt excise taxes' lower relail price , particularly for will Refu,es To Te5tify slock was. split profitably on two before gOing to Park College. .. vee tabl aDd potat Late con· jects wUl be publicly opened and on utomoblle, clgarett ,whi. kyo winter scareiti of these items Maurice Hutcheson succeeded occasions and that the elder Hutch· read July 15 at 2 p.m. in Hom r's tthat . his father as president o[ the un· eson had received $5,300 in cash 'Snark' Guided Missile Fired o[fice. and beer. caused by freezes had forced their dthe , ion. He refused to tell the Senalors and an orange grove in Lakeland, Horner aid the dining ervice The compromise wa approved pri far above normal. gin·" whether he had used union money Fla., worth at least ~l6(J,OOO for By Military Troops for First Time completion job would involve con. by the Senate Thur d y and now The downturn came at a tim ulator I to "fix" a Lake Counly, Indiana, his holdings. neeting kitchen equipm nl to goes to Pr id nl Ei nbow r for when Ei nbow r Admini tration sortt ·) grand jury investigating Indiana Formed Company CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. 1.4'1 - weapon was Cir d by troops of the leader were pointing to what they equip. - plumbing, electric, leam wat r his expected signature. highway scandals. A new company known as A Snark guided missile, the na­ 556tb Missile Squadron of the said were improved economic con· The younger Hutcheson also reo Adams Packing 00., Inc., was and. gas J.ines, an~ installing some It averts a drop of $2,115,000 000 a tion's only weapon to travel inter· Strategic Air Command. The unit ditions in agriculture. fused to say whether he had an formed later, the statement said, continental range, passed a big refngeratlon equIpment. ' had been training for this particu· The oth r bid would be for con- year on Fed ral revenue. Corporate II arrangement with James R. Hoffa, and the Carpenters Union was hurdle in its test program Friday Th Carm price le\'el still Wa 5 lar job (or months . necting som utilily mains to SUI incom lax rates and exci s on per cenl above that of a y r ago. "I president o( the Teamsters Union, voted 250 shares of stock in it when it was fired (or the first time ujlder which Hoffa wa s to have plu $7,000 in cash. The statement by military troops . The objective of the test was to service lines. many semi·luxury good were Officials voiced connd nee pric ita1: made himself useful to him in alleged that the elder Hutcheson The 69·foot missile, expected to evaluate the capabilities oC the unit T. M. Rehd r, Director or S I chedul d to drop July 1- would hold uch a margin in 'le remaind r of th y ar. ~ssell. return for Hutcheso n' s support "on had transferred some o( the new become operational by 1959, streak· as well as the mi sile. Dormitories and Dining Sen'ic, Originally th Hou had voted the Question of his (Ho(fa's) being stock to himself and that it now ed aloft with a blast of orange Tne results of the t st would not announced last week that students for an exten ion oC all current A little oC the d elin was oreset ousted from the AFL·CIO." has a book value of $92.000. Dame on what reportedly was a be known for some 24 hours, the who are now applying Cor rooms by a d cr ot one·third of 1 per ' ~~r~, This was tilC closest the co m· The Senate group's inquiry into 5,OOO·mile trip over the AUantic Air Force said. It tak a Snark 10 in Burge lIall will be temporarily laxes, but I I Friday the Senat c nt in prices or goods od n 'lc s mittee came to asking Hutcheson Max Raddock's activities and the test range. hours to complcte an intercontin· assign d to the Commons Dorml· appro v d elimination of $710-mil· larmers u in production and ID Carpenters Union have halted first n the about allegations by Kennedy that The highly advanced Northrop ental trip. tory becau c oC the po ibility thal lion a year in tran portation taxes. family living. Thl wa the sut l l\utcheson and Horra had co n· temporarily. Hoffa is expected to food service could not begin at The Senale propo d to r peal th uch dcclin ince July ]957. Never· f spired with Max Raddock, publish· be interrogated later. thele ,th June I v I of uch I' LeMay Goes to Belgium Burg until mid·October. liach's er of a Flushing, N.Y., labor pa· McClellan said the hearings had Rehder aid however, lhat con· 10 per cent tax on pa nger travel pric ,w 3 per cent higher than Ie andl per, and others to fix the Lake shown that Raddock had perpe· To Represent U.S. ·at Air Show struction on the new 1,289·woman and the 3 per cent tax on fr Ight, a year e rUer. ~ will " qounty grand jury. trated a $185,000 fraud against the dormitory i proceeding on ched· both wartime mea ures. Possible Contempt union in a book publishing deal. ~SSOOD WASHINGTON (.4'1- Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, vice ule. ln a Senate· Hou e conCer nc , l!liard, ,Chairman John L. McClellan He said Hulcheson and other un· chief oC starr of the U.S. Air Force, left Friday howc\'er, it wa agreed that th Tired of Waiting Saxo­ (J;).Ark.l told newsmen he would ion officers must bear some of night on a nonstop jet tanker flight to Liege, Bel· $61,740 PICTURE repealer be h Id to elimination on . The ask the committee to consider responsibility for the fraud. gium. Au,. 1 of th excise on highway, For Jobless Pay­ whether Hutcheson 's attitude was McClellan further said the testi· LONDON 1.4'1 - A portrait bl- Cres- LeMay was at the controls of the plane when it the 18th c ntury English painter rail, aIr, and water shipmen and in contempt of Congress. mony indicates that certain high left nearby Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland. few oth r tran porta lion taxe . They Shoot Dice The Lake County grand jury did officials of both the Teamsters and Thomas Gain borough wa auc· The trip was expected to take about six hours, tioned (or 21,000 guin~'a - $61,740 'Wt return any indictments, but Carpenters Unions, with the as· The Air Force said LeMay is making the trip BEI.,OIT, Wis. III - 1lK'y could :::~l a,nother one in Indianapolis has sistance of Raddock, were in· - in the Christie howroom Fri· To Open Two Lanes have be n prayin . Or looking for nt of volved in a conspiracy to subvert as the official representative of the U.S. Govern· day. D. de· c1larged Hutcheson and others with ment and the U.S. Air Force to participate in special som thing. Or ther mlihl havt S making an illegal profit of $78, 000 justice in Indiana . Of Highway 6 Project en a n,ht becau, a bii crowd d per· air meets scheduled at Lieg , Belgium, and Soest· had gath red. ersberg, The NetherlandS, the lattcr part of this At 1 a 1 two Ian oC tra!fic on LeMAY month and early July. City Record U.S. Highways 6 and 218 betw n All th thoughts coursed Newton Road and Iowa A\' nue through the minds 01 two B loll Paris Artists Paint ' policem n when they potted lhr c Two Nuclear Tests Announced MARRIAGE LICENSE I will be open nt'xt w ek. Portions o( m n on their kn . ld tilt, Richard L. Phillis, 22, Chicago, th pavIng proj et will r main Rock County Public wclTare Refrigerator Interiors At Eniwetok Atoll Ill ., and Dian E. Boyle, 23, Iowa clo I'd whJJe the concrete "sets" Offl~ . On clo r in pecUon, it turn d WASHINGTON 1.4'1 - Two nu· the other at 12:30 p.m. City. and clean·up work is campi ted. PARIS (.4'1- Paris' swankiest art $30,000 (or a new electric icebox. DEATH C. C. Leltner, a istant dl trict out lh trio \\ a shooling dice. All clear tnt detonations, an hour The tests lire part of the H.rd. gallery Friday put culture in the Bernard Buffet, the current rage MIlo Klenk, 71, Homestead. June engln r 111 Cedar RapIds, said Fri· thr wer booked on gambllng .p.rt, took pl.c:e in the P.c:ific: tllCk nuclear weapons tests ,er· kitchen - refrigerators painted by of art collectors and richest of the it. now unde,. way .t the Eni· 26. I , day th two lane are being opened charges. ked for an explanation, France's top artists. young painters, used his usual Friday at Eniwetok Atoll. w,tok provine groun4 •. BIRTH bcfore the work i campI t d in one of them said: If you're one of those people who blacks, mauves, dark blues in the A ioint .nnounc:ement by the No inform.tio" was glvln by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald WestCall, order to eliminale th lengthy truck "W aot lir d of waiting to ,et in have everything - but everything series of still lifes to brighten his Atomic Energy Commission and the two agencies on the sir. of R.R. 4, girl, June "n. \I detour now being used. to pick up our reI f mon y." ...... here's your chalice to pay up to refrigerator' and then added a the Departm,nt of D,fen" laid the bla,h or the type of w.. pon • brilliant pink fish . one occ:urred lit 11 :30 a.m., lind test.d. p Artist·writer Jean Cocteau gave the show at the Gallerie Charpen· 3 Men Kidnap, Rob Polish Safecracker tier its philosophical tone by sayIng painting on refrigerators "[s a vic· Diplomat in Washington How'd Ya' Like Ta tory over th e negative style of em ptiness." WASHINGTON !.fI - Police reported Friday thal three men kId· I Crack a Safe? naped and robbed a Polish diplomat and latcr dumped him inlo Rock His own contribution showed a Creek. DETROIT (.4'1 -Police said Ralph green·haired male nude and an Police Capt. Nunzio Bonaccors said Marian Dobraslelski, 35, first TUcci, 24, made a mistake Friday orange· haired female one. secretary of the Polish Embassy, was seized early Friday morning, when he broke into a ,))ostoffice The French Government through blindfolded and taken on a wild ride through cily streets. Classified Personal Aportment for Rent its Di vision of Arts and Letters, and then went out to the street and Dobrasielski reported he was robbed oC $25, his watch and a belt patronized the show. The refrigera· before the trio stopped in Rock Creek Park, atlack d him, and tossed Advertising Rate. PERSONAL loanl on I,pe",rl"'" FOR RENT. fIIrnlohtd Ipl. , room. and ... asked a passerby to help him crack tors will be auctioned off (or the PhonOgraph,!.. ,perIJ equipment. bath. A,.llable now. teo 00. Dill '- - , him into the creek. Word Adr HOCK.EYE LoAN CO. Burkel., IIolel "18. 7·' lie WANT rid 10 AU tin. Itllnn,aota .f1~r the postoffice safe. benefit of a home for youths in Capt. Bonaccors said the watch and belt were Cound in a car used by Bulldln,. Phone 035. 7 ..R 1 p.m. today. hare UP'n . Call ...... The pedestrian, Dennis Highland, moral danger and for a maternity three men who had been arrested in connection with another robbery. ODe D81 ...... Ie a Word FOR RENT, 'urnl hed IP1 • rooml room 301 , Jell.,..,n HOltl 1-21 29, declined to help in the robbery home. Police identified the three held for investigation of Dobrasielski's Two Days ...... lOe 8 Word Miscellaneous for Sal. JU~~d 1~~"IiI.~lou~.~n $100·911· AV.~1~2~: Koom. tor Kenr and instead started shouting for complaint as Jacob L. Watts, 24, of Washington ; James C. Coale, 19, DC Three Days .•....• 12c 8 Word PURNlSHItD apartm ely 14$5 ATTRACTIV1! room' "ome... Phon.. ALERT ARREST Four Days ...... 140 a Word OESK and book ahel"e', I rul 8". nL • '.1; • 1"'1 a ll~r 1,30 p,m. ,., police. A passing patrolman grab· Mount Tanier. Md., ami Bernard W. Anthony, 18, of Washington. 8-6014 8·21 bed Tucci. DES MOINES IA'l-Paul R. Davis, Five Days ...... 15c a Word ------MEN'S cool room . lJmmer ratf' • . I Tucci, who was [ree on bond Ten Days ...... 20c • Word US EO rtfrlltr.tor $20.00. DIal "0936, SPACIOUS IIflIt noor .putmenL 1100. Cook In. privUrfH. 5ho",..... 11& N. ....11.' 38, Des Moines, was arrested and ELECTRICAL LOAN ' .1 8464 or 514'. ,.\1 Capitol. 030 N, CI nton . P" n. 5141- 7· ' awaiting se~ence on a burglary WASHINGTON (.fl ..:.. The Rural ODe MontD ...... 89c a Word charged with forgery because of NtCE room. 1-1$11. 8· 21 conviction, was held for investiga­ ViUi5irv NOWI (J4inlmum Charlie SOc) FOR RI.NT: Phon. 1-32n.~ .. and 1""0 the alertness of a grocery store Elechjfication Administration an· {' ... ,,", 1\, " (0 (>' Instruction room furnished .parl 1.1, 145.110. tion o( breaking and en tering. cashier, police related Friday. nounced Friday it has granted a • DOUBLE room. lor --;;;;:- PrJ •• ;; Display Ach $50.00 .nd teo.OO per ma 2 blocks kl hln .nd balh. ' · :1278. 7-2...... The story goes like this : Davis $4 ,967,000 loan to the Corn Belt CO· BALLROOM dance lu""n.. SPtClnl ' rom campul. UIUIUe. paW: 7·11 ODe InserUoD ...... rote. Mimi Youde Wurlu. DI.I 1411!!. ROOM kltch .., and dln~tte 2405 , .. attempted to pass a check for $60 operative at Humboldt, Iowa, to $1 .20 a ColumD Inch 7·15 PRACTICALLY new - rdlshed apart. Unemployment on the account of a grocery com· expand and improve its rural ment lor lIudent r OIlP". Slll1\mer power system. Five IDJertions a Month, .....Ion or b, ,ur. 71. Jiq. Dubuque Work Wonted .. pany. The store cashier, Mrs. Ida Ho.vse For Sol. olter 1:00 p.m. '·30 ----- ~~-~ Winnick, noted two irregularities. F.ach Insertion ...... CHILD care In rny home Lar,. f Employment ServIce less benefits; an undetermined low. City, 1__ 10... Cit number of them are still unem· Pyramid Services" MAHER BROS. Tuesday, JUly I Tuead.y, July lit. 10 • . m. - 3 p.m. played and not showing up in the 621 S. Dubuque Dial 5723 Phon. 9696 figures. aorSi£tL t~c.i.t~M' Insured unemployment is still Of- lI I.HTfUllY (ODl,(I ILONDIE Iy CHI C YOUNG more than double Jast year's total .- ..... --=; ~ - 01 1,268,700 at this time. . Entire New Show The largest declines in insured unemployment were reported for ---- the June 14 week by Calilornia 22,300, Ohio 15,000, Michigan 10,600, -.OOORS OPEN 1:15- • SUNDAY· And New York 9,300. _THY Initial claims Cor jobless benefits, Jrldicatinl( new ,job layoffs, dropped ,MALONE 'by 13,800 to 318,500 during the week ~ .....uO iallll,,'I"""t,...,Mft ..... ended June 21. This was the lowest ' ...ktOoIII .... ARTS number for any week since mid· S:r TO·DAY E. November last year. The 318,500 weekly total of new claims com· .--,1. • FLYNN -1. . atWfllll.. , pares with 202,600 {or the same Jol\o"'~"" week a year ago, ,,_I10 ksJlM1 "TOO • lit Show At 8:00 • MUCH, IIETLE IAILEY [ENDS TONITE- PAPE~ PAPE~ PA~~! L_mot!" EVEIlYONe IN CAMP OETS fi1 • Ph. "'301m D.lperadoelGAol Ar. InCMH Town TOO MIMEoe.~AP~E" COPIES OFlVlRf1'tIIf&I I I J " , L...SlmlN, Show Terror Tonite SOOff , of M.u M.u And a ,hock.d world loid. "like fath.r-lik, dovght.,"

- WAIIIO BRos. ...,- I1h , 2 BIG HITS • SUNDAY & MONDAY EFREM ZIMBAlIST, JR.;., DAHTON. N(YA MTTEII$OH wu_, HAMilTON.

RITA HAYWORTH. PLU5-COLORCARTOON . flANK SIMArIA "MINaR'S DAUGHTER" KIM NOVAK ' • • Sp,EC/AL HIT '._NIO.OII ·'SHIEP/SH WOLF" p ... 4-THI DAILY 10WAN-lowl City, 10w_Sa.urday, Jun. 21, 1.51 • 10 YOUNKIN- On AIl-Stars;;II' lo 'Peatur,e:., I·'Rig A Limb Triandos Will To~my ' Bolt Redbirds Fly Crocker's 68 Gordon Arrives In Pierce Loses Bid For Cleveland, E"ger By Repl~c~ Yogi; Violates PGA He h Ske Sets New To Start New Job Tho 01111 Iowan', O,..a . Ig I Ipper Open Mark LOU YOUNKIN CLEVELAND IA'I - Joe Gordon Perfect Game in 9tl1 made a flying trip here Friday to DETROIT 1.4'1 - Fay Crocker eerv for Ted CHICAGO (.4') - Veteran left· rates 3·1 Friday night as they Code, FIned T Iks P t take over the helm of the struggl. Cincinnati's Slump hander Billy Pierce pitched 8¥.! handed the Pirates their seventh EAST NORWICH. N.Y. ,.. a ennan of Montevideo, Uruguay. estab· ing Cleveland Indians and imme· NEW YORK (.4') - Don't be sur· innings of perfect ball Friday un Hshed a record for U.S. Wom en's prised if New York's Bob Turley straight deCeat behind the fine diately wenl into conference with One of the oddities of the 1958 night and lost his bid for a pitch. pitching of Moe Drabowsky. who is Tommy Bolt. who recently got PHILADELPH~A I..., _ Fred Open play Friday. but her (ive un· campaign is the and Pittsburgh's Bob Friend - a golf religion. Friday was fined Hutchinson, the normally sloical. der par 68 failed to dislodge young General Manager Frank Lane. ing masterpiece when being married here today to air· The b.lding, 43·year-old Gor •. sudden slump in pro. pair of strong armed righthanders Ed Fitz Gerald doubled to right $500 by the Professional Golf tight·lipped manager ' of the St. Mickey Wright Crom the lead. - are the starting in the line stewardess Elizabeth Johns. don, so ••••r It his first chlnce duction by the Cincinnati Redlegs. field as the Chicago White Sox de· Drilbowsky yielded only three Assn . for violation of its code of Louis Cardinals. is beginning to Min Crocker, 43.yur-old win. 1958 AIl·Star Game at Baltimorc ethics. talk of a pennant for his hot ball n.r of the 1955 Open, burned up to m.n.ge • m.lor le ••ue club Two years ago the slugging Red· July 8. feated Washington 3-0. hits over the first eight innings, but he still h.. not t.lk.d contrac. legs tied the major league record Fitz Gerald belted Pierce's (irsl he was tapped for singles by Ted Boll. the serf . announced reo club. the Ferest L.ke Country Club Managers Casey Stengel o( the terms, ••id he would h.ve to con· when they slammed 221 home runs Kluszewski and Roberto Clemente formed club thrower who only "With a little bit of luck, we course with, a 35-3~ despite • American League and Fred Haney two weeks ago won the National can win the pennant," Hutch said f.ltering start In which she bog· fer with L.ne .nd his coaches and finished a close third behind in the ninth with only one out. Bill before m.kin. planl tor "'­ the pennant·winning Dodgers and of the National won't make their Open, picked up after playing nine after the Red Birds made it six i.d two of the first five holes. pitching staHs public until Sunday. Henry came on in relief and forced holes Friday in the Long lsIand straight and 8 of 10 on an eastern The bcst previous ·round team. the Braves. Last year their four· .. Bill Virdon to line into a double base production was down to 187 It·s a cinch. howev£'r. each skip· Open. He' said he was ill and trip by beating Pittsburgh. scoring in the Women's Open was The gt'ncral reaction to the hiring per will slock his staff with right· play to end the thl·eat. 71. of Gordon appeared favorable. as the Redlegs finished 15 games Chlcsgo ...... 000 012 000- 3 LO 0 could not be reached for comment It was perhaps the biggest sin. Both Miss Crocker and ama· off the pace in fourth place. handers. It happens the starting PIU.sburgh ...... 000 000 010- 1 5 0 on the action by the PGA. He leur Barbara Mclnitre of Jupiter. Many fans remember him as the lineups o[ both squads, announced Drabowsky , Henry lO) a nd S . TayJor; threw two clubs during Friday's Fla., fired 71s in the 1956 classic ; star seeond baseman on the Indi· This yur Birdie T.bbetts' Friend. Face 181 and Folies. Hail (81. Friday. are predominantly right­ W - Drabowsky. L - Friend. nine holes and took seven jabbing Patty Berg did it twice in the 1953 an squad that won the world chi",,, have hit only 46 homers handed. The starters must play at putts on his final hole. and 1955 Opens. and the late Babe championship in 1948. In 61 ,Imes going In.o Frid.y leasl three innings. Redlegs 6, Giants 5 H.rvey Roynor, IUpirvisor of Zaharias shot a 71 in the 1954 lJ .S. No one. of course. expects Gor· nl.ht's contlst with S.n Fr.ncis· CINCINNATI (.4') - Second base· don, replacing Bobby Bragan who co. Clncinn.ti Is currently occu· The failure of louthpaw Iwlng. the pro tour, .nnounced the flne Open. erl Ted Williams .nd Yogi Berra man whacked a .fter Bolt left the course but Miss Wright. protectiag a one was fired Thursday, to pull the pyln. fourth plue, 4V2 .am.. ou. triple in the ninth inning Friday s.id it had nothln. to with Fri. stroke lead after the first 18 holes. Tribe up Crom sixth place to of first. But tMy have lost 31 to m.ke the starting team leaves the Americ.ns with only one left· night good for two runs and a 6·5 d.y's .ctlon by Bolt. fired a steady 72 in the second championship contention. of ~eir .1 .n.... ments. handed batter besides the Iwitch Cincinnati Redleg victory over San On Tuesday, Bolt·s conduct be. round and her 146 total at the The new field manager had been You might think the drop in hitting Mickey Mantle. He il Chi· Francisco's Giants. Jerry Lynch fore and after a benefit tourna. halfway point was a stroke bet· selling insurance in Sacramento, home runs could be traced to the c.go's Nellie Fox, who beat out swatted a homer for the victors. ler than Miss Crocker's. Cali£'. since he left baseball after trades of and Wal· ment at the Piping Rock Club was Louise Suggs ,twice a winner Gil McDougald for secDnd bile An error by Giant second base· criticized by Frank X. Shields, and twice runnerup. in this the piloting San Francisco to a Paci£ic Iy Post over the winter. Kluszew· by four yotes. man Ed Bressoud helped set up the the former tennis player who is Coast League pennant last year. ski. however. has hit only four Redleg winning raIly, allowing Gus directing th~ Lpng Island Open at biggest of the ladies' tournaments, He said he had turned down roundltrippers for Pittsburgh and Williams. who missed out only in his rookie year o[ 1939 discount· Bell to reach first safely. Pinch the Pine Hollow Course. stayed in a threatening position coaching offers from other major Post has hit for the distance only hitter Walt Dropo drew a walk three strokes off the pace with a league clubs. twice for Philadelphia. A third ' big ing his service years, leads all Billy Pierce It w., elalmed Bolt used .bu· 74 that gave her a 36·hole total of American Leaguers with 14 All·Star from reliefer Marv Grissom and gun on the record·tying 1956 club, Retired First 26 Men siYe t.ngu.,e to Shields who me' 149. ADVERTISEMENT , has five homers selections. Berra had becn named then came Temple's big hit. him .t the .Irport. Bolt relue· ------to ten straight All-Star teams. Kan· pilch down the right field line. San Francisco '" .102 020 000- 5 13 1 Intlv stlrted pliV in the one· so far this year for the Giants. Cillcinnall ...... 130 000 002- 6 10 J the Cardinals now are only a game Wanted: Teacher sas City's Bob Cerv beat out Wil· Pierce then struck out Albie Pear· Gomez. Miller (2). Grissom (7) and· These three men. Kluszewski. day ch.rity event •• PIping Rock for upper grades in elementary liams for the left field post. 106 to son to end the game. Schmidt; Lawrence. Schmldt (5). Jeff­ but quit .fter nine hoi... He and a half behind Milwaukee. Post and Jablonski. connected for coaL (SI and Bailey. W- Jelfcoal. L­ school at Children's Home for 86. Gus Triandos. Baltimore's slug· The triumph W.I the third Grissom. Slid h. was not ,"ling well. Hutch s.id he .....rds tM out. 86 home runs in 1956, but only 11 Home runs - San Franc~o, Spen .. field as the bi.gest improyement. neglected and dependent chilo ging . topped Berra, as weil str.ight shutout for Plerc •. The Bolt has a long history of mis· so far this season. as runner-up Sherm Lollar of Chi· cer (11). Cepeda (l6). Clncinnall, Fred Hutchinson He praised rookl. c.ntlr fielder dren. Good proposition for the crowd of 11,300 booed loudly when Lynch (5). conduct on the golt course. right person. L. A. Stumme. paced the 1956 cago. Fin G.r.ld stepped to the pl.te Says Cards Can Win Curtis Flood and Itrong • Irmed sluggers with 38 home runs and Tigers 7, Red Sox 4 But two months ago. Bolt said Gme Gr"n, .noth.r reekie, In Superintendent, Lutheran Chil· The absence of such AIl·Star .nd je.rs got louder when Um· he read a book by Bishop Fulton dren's Home. Muscatine. Iowa . is also pacing this year's crew. . pire Charley Berry slgn.led the Dll:TJWIT IA'I - Red Wilson's gle victory in the Cardinals drive right . regulars as Red Schoendienst and Sheen and since has carried a His 1958 total. however. is only Eddie Mathews leaves the Nation­ ball f.ir. two·run single sparked a four·run because of a strong pitching job Hutch didn't say it, but one of eight. seventh inning rally and provided card given to him by a friend. by Lindy Mc,?aniel. who hadn't the most encouraging factors to al League starting squad with just Pierce didn 't walk a man and The card carries an inspiration hit 10 homers in two lefthanded hitters, (jrst base· faced only 28 men. one over the the Detroit Tigers with a come'· won a ~ame m a month. A ~5. St. Louis fans has been the abili. 1956 as a first baseman replace· (rom·behind 7-4 victory over the religious prayer designed to fore· game winner last ye~r. McD~R1el ty to win in recent weeks without Kirkwood man Stan Musial of st. Louis and minimum . Pierce, who never has stall outbusts of temper. ment for Kluszewski and in 1957 Bob Skinner of Pitts· had a no-Jutter. now has three Boston Red Sox Friday night. ~u~t come th.rough If the I,lgh~. much help from Stan Musial. The left fielder It worked wonders [or Tommy he topped the Redlegs with 31 burgh. one hitters and 29 shutouts in his Th/:! Tigers. who trailed 4·0 in the hitting Red Birds are to Win It Isevcn • time batting champ has KwikKleen circuit smashes. His total to date career. first inning. sent 10 batters to the in the recent National Open. But al!; . . . just emerged lrom a long slump Musi.l, who will establish • Friday, the' jut·jawed, tough·talk· I thmk McDaRl.el can do II and which has dragged his once sky­ in 1958 is a mere five. mark every time he goel to b.t, The 3I·year·old southpaw dou· plate in their big frame beMe ing 39·year-old was in trouble again S? d.oes AI H.~lhngsw?rth, Ca.rd high batling average down to .358. Jablonski hit 15 homers in 1956 w.s n.med for the 15th time. He bled in the third inning and came 33.756 spectators. Four Red Sox before being traded. home with the Only run needed on pitchers were needed to get the and it was not known if he would Plt~~lng co~ch, Hutchinson said. Musial hit .529 during the club's received the highest number of appear at Akron. Ohio, next week, And With lust • littl. more nightmarish first 17 games. • Expert Dry Cleaninl took over the hot corner for Teb· yotes - 201 out of • possible 235 a single by Jim Landis. The Sox Tigers out. wrapped up the contest in the the next stop on the pro tour. thump, I'd Sly we h.d a good • Shim Skillfully betts last year and surprlsed al· -from the plavers, managers .nd The victory gave Detroit sole ch.nce to win the penn.nt, not most everyone when he hit 19 co.ches particip.ting in the poll. eighth when Sherman Lollar sin. possession of third place and, the laundered and p,..... d led home two more runs. ju.t • ch.nce." DON'T GET drives out of the park. Hoak's total This is • change from the form­ Red Sox were dropped to fourth in The Cardinal pitching staff has in 1958 is three. The iast perfect game in the • Complete Laundry er f.n yote method. the American League standings. allowed only 11 runs in the 6· majors was hurled by Charley Boston ...... 400 000 000- 4 7 1 MARRIED ..• Service The Clnclnn.ti outfield hit 103 Weather Halts Ci Frank Thomas, the league's lead· Robertson of the White Sox against Detroit " ...... 000 011 41x- 7 10 0 game slreak and ve of these . . . ..III,...... In. .., .... '1 ... home runs in 1956 with Robinson ing home run and RBI man. won Brewer. Wall ( 7 ) . Kiely (7). For· came in one game. Larry Jack· Brld.1 Ser.It,t!J - In.U.U ...., A,,- Across from Hy.V .. Groc.", hitting 3., Post 16 .nd Detroit in 1922. Don Larsen of the nlel.. (7 ) and Berberet; Lary. Susce D...... "'. loa"la',. NIlIll.. . over Mathews for third base and New York Yankees pitched one II). Morgan (6), Fischer (7) and WII· son. too valuable in relief now to Wed.Ja, B•• Ju, "T".ak,. ••" Het.. , 29. Tebbett's outfielders h.ve hit Bill Mazeroski. Thomas' team· son. W- Flscher. L-Wall. be used as a starter. has pitched W... lar Ph.Ie •• w... Jar rl...... 20 so f.r In 1951. Robinson has against Brooklyn in the 1956 World Hom. runs - Boston. Williams (10). Wimbledon As Weddlftl C_lIu. MI... I.' Mis•• Kirkwood Series. Jel\8en (20) . Dettolt. Kalin. 181. 12 straight scoreless innings since Nalo. eight, aell six, Jerry Lynch four, his return to the bull pen. Pete WhlsenMlt one .nd the now Pierce ran up a count of three Yankees 10, A's 3 Hall's Iridal Shop KwikKleen bails on only two batters. He had Despite a horrible start in which 127 South Dubuque dep.rted rookie fI.sh, V.d. Pin. KANSAS CITY (.4') - The New a 3·2 count on Pearson in the M_cKay ~ T rails they lost 14 of their first 17 games .on on •. York Yankees ex pi oded with a 6· fourth and got him on a fly ball ln the catching department. the run seventh inning Friday night WIMBLEDON. England (.4') - totals have decreased from 40 hom· and a 3·1 count on Jim Lemon in to defeat the second place Athletics the eighth before getting Lemon Rain, wind. cold and darkness at ers in 1956. to 34 in 1957 and only on a fly . 10·3 before a turnout of 31,602. Kan· noon wrecked the Wimbledon pro· eight so far this year. Ed Bailey Washlnglon ...... 000 000 000- 0 1 0 sas City's largest crowd of the gram Friday and caught Ameri· drilled 28 round·trippers in 1956, Chicago .. .. 001 000 02x- 3 8 0 season. ca's Bar r y MacKay midway Kemmerer and Korcheck; Pierce and 20 last year and only 5 so far in Lollar. The Athletics went into this first through the battle of his young 1958. Smokey Burgess has hit 12, of a three·game series on the crest life. 14 and 3 from 1956·1958. Indians 6, Orioles 5 of a 6·game winning streak. The ,LAST 2 DA YSr M.cK.y .nd Austr.Ii.', Bob The Redlegs' batting average <- 8 11 0 NATIONAL LEAGUI for a victory in the men's singlc kee's in right field and O·Dell. Zuverink (7) . Lehman (8) and W L re. Gil n.ti s•• tistics is in tM st.nding Triandos; Narleskl. Mossl (5) and Nix· Milwaukee ...... 35 28 .556 of this 72nd Wimbledon Cham· of tMlr pitching st.H. In the behind the bat. on. Porler (6). W- Mossl. L-Q·Dell. 51. Loul...... 34 30 .531 I ~ pionships. Home runs - Baltimore. Triandos San Francisco . 36 32 . ~29 h.rd·hittlng y.ar of 1956, tM Red· The American League starters. (16) . Cleveland, Avila 13). Colavito Cincinnati ...... 31 31 .500 ;:,: There are three other Yank I.. hurl.rs hid • combined besides Cerv, Triandos. Mantle and (12) . Chicago . ... , .. . 33 35 .485 4'h males left · and two of them start. Plllsburgh ...... 32 36 .471 elrned run Iy.ra.. of 3 ••5 good Fox, are New York's Bill Skowron, Phils 5, Cardinals 4 Philadelphia '" 29 33 ,468 : ~ ed battling against each other Fri· Los Angeles .. .. 31 36 .463 WHY RENT? for only fifth plac. In the llnier first base; Boston's Frank Mal· o day. PHILADELPHIA 1.4'1 - Pinch· FR~DAY'S RESULTS circuit. zone, third base; Chicago's Luis hitter Dave Philley's double scor­ Lo Angeles 3. Milwaukee 1 Gardnar Mulloy, 44, of Coral Aparicio, shortstop; and Boston's P hIladelphia 5. Sl. Loul. • III Inn· See a good, three be~room home that can 'The last pi~ching averages I saw ing from second gave lng) , Galbes. Fla.. had a slight lead had t~ Cincinnati pitchers leading Jackie Jensen. right field. Malzone. the Philadelphia Phillies an 11·ln· Chicago 3. Pittsburgh I. over his young neighbor, Mike with 186 votes. was the leading Cincinnati 6. San Francisco 5. the league with an ERA of 3.73. ning 5-4 victory Friday night over TODAY'II PITCHERS Green. 22, of Miami Beach. The be built for you for only The fieidlng average of the Cin· vote·getter of the squad. the St. Louis Cardinals. The loss Lo Angeles at Milwaukee - Podre. veteran was ahead, 2-6. 6-4, 2-1. Under the rules. all 16 clubs (7·61 vs Willey (1·0) . when the rains came. Mulloy cinnatl representatives has been snapped a six·game Cardinal win· Chlcaao al Plltsbur,h - Droit 13-f\ remarkably constant. In 1956 it must be represented on the All· ning streak. vs Raydon (2·2). played the second set in his bare Star squad. That's up to Stengel San Francisco at C(nclnnati (N) - feet on the soggy. slippery grass was .981. 1957 ••9112 and so far in Philley hit for relief hurler Dick McCormlck (4 ·1) vs Nuxhall (3·3 •. 1958 It is .981. and Haney, who will announce the Farrell after Post and Chico Fer­ St. Louis at Philadelphia - Malllle court. rest of the squad, including pitch· (1·0J v. Simmons lS·7). nandez singled of{ Card reliefer T Budge Patty. the 1950 Wlmble· So It Is Dnly ... hlttin. of the , 1 $ down ers, Sunday. Billy MufCett. AMIBICAN LEAGUE don champion from Los Angeles Red1 ..s thlt h~s suffered this The American League. a 6·5 win· W L Pc' Gil St. Louis ...... 003 000 001 00- ~ 8 1 and Paris, was leading bearded including lIa..... And I doubt If tM N.t· ncr in St. Louis last year, leads the PhlladeJphla .. .. 000 000 400 01- 5 8 1 Ne'/f york ...... 4~ ~2 .6~ lonll L•• ,ue hurlers will gD 11 I In~lnas) Kaol.as City .. .. 34 31 .523 Torben Ulrich of Denmark. 4-6. over·all series which began in 1933, Brosnan. Mjlrtln i7J, Paine (7), MuC­ Detroit ...... 33 32 .:!O8 7·5, 6-1. 0·1. when play was called closing COlts much long.r containing "" CIn· 14 to 10. There was no game in rett 19) and Smith. Landrith (9); BOlltn ...... 33 34 .493 clnRlt! sluggars. Roberts. Farr~ll (9) and Sawatslel. w­ Chl~&O ...... 31 34 .f77 off for the day. 1945. !',,,rell. L-MufJeU. CIe'V land ...... 3:l 36 .471 Crowe. Hoak. Temple and Lynch The starting players for the July Bal are ...... 2' 35 .U3 Four American women, headed Dodgers 3, Braves 1 Washln,lon .... 28 36 .424 by defending champion Althea I!re either above or just under the 8 All-Star baseball game at Balti· t'IUDA J" 8 RUULTS and .300 mark and one of these days more as selected by the players, MILWAUKEE I.fI - The Los Chicago 3. W.shlntrton o. Gibson. still are in the running for Angeles Dodgers continued their Cleveland 6. Baltimore ~. the women's singles title. Althea I have the feeling the Redlegs are coaches and managers of the two Detroit 7. Boston 4. going to start ripping that long major leagues. mastery \)ver the Milwaukee New York 10. Kans • • CIt~ ' 3. and Mimi Arnold of Redwood City. Braves Friday night. winning their TODA Y'S PITCHERS Calif.. are in the fourth round. monthly payments b'all again. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York at Kan... City IN) $ seventh straight from the World )f the Cincinnati hitters do catch Stan Musial, St. Louis lb .358. Ford (8·3) v. Urban (6·4). Mrs. Margaret DuPont oC WiI· including with their vastly improved Champions 3·1 on homers by Dick BaSion .t Detroit - Siller (8·4) VI mlngton. Del.. and Karol Fageros up Bill Mazeroski. Pittsburgh. 2b. Gray and Johnny Roseboro and Bunning (5-51. pitching staff. the Redlegs will .278. Washlnrton at Chlcollo - Clevenller of Miami, had hoped to reach that taxes and insurances definitely be a team to look out the seven·hit pitching oC Sandy (4-5) V8 Wilson (6'61 . fr.ame Friday. They'll try again Ernie Banks, Chicago, ss ..303 . Koufax. BalUmore at Cleveland - Loe. (0.7) (or. With the addition of pitchers v. Grant (6'4). Saturday. weather permitting. Frank Thomas. Pittsburgh, 3b. The yictory was the sixth In Bob Purkey from Pittsburgh and < .301. liven .tarts for tM lilt pI.ce Harvey, Haddix from Philadelphia. Bob Skinner. Pittsburgh, If, .321. Tebbetts finally able to give Dodger. durin. tMlr current Is , San Francisco. cr, ro.d .rlp anti their ninth In a LAUNDRY AND, DRY CLEANING his over·worked ace Brooks Law· .372. row oy.r MllwlUkH countln, rence a deserved rest. Hank Aaron, Milwaukee. rl, .258. two at the end of la.t se.lOn. LOCATED ACROSS Tebbetts may have to use some Del Crandall, Milwaukee. c .282. It w.s the third s'rll,ht 10 .. of )lis college training in psy· AMERICAN LEAGUE for tM BrlYlI Ind their ninth from Pearson's Drug chology, but a team like Cincinnati BIIi Skowron. New York. lb, .280. in a row to a I.ft-Jtan.r. j~t ~oesn ' t figure to suddenly lie ,Nelson Fox, Chicago. 2b •.383. Loa Anl.lel ...... 000 100 110- a 5 I • down and play dead pt the plate. Luis ·Apa,ricio. Chicago. E. .~ . Milwaukee ...... ,000 100 000- 1 7 I "aulax and ROI.bo"'i Jay. McMahon . Maybe Commissioner rrank Malzone. Bqston, 3b, .304. IS. and IIlc~. L - Jay. should have let the fans vote ,for Bob Cerv. Kansas City, If •.318 . Home'run. - LOtI 4"",1... sy (71, the AII,sfar team again this year. MickUY Mantie, New York. cr. Ro..,boro 14' . Mllwau,-,-", - Aso'on (12/ . ~l ~:'M~a, ~~~~ " Even the Redle, fans probably .278. Cubs 3, Pltates 1 "wouldn't have voted ror mnny or .Jackie Jenson. Boston, rr, .294. PI'M'SBURGH III - The Chicago Monday th'~ $.JJ' .... y • t2*r Heroes' llIls lHI,(I()II. ' " Gus Triaodos, Baltimore ,, ~! ••278. Cubs whipped the Pitlsburah Pi- . .