Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1961-07-01

Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1961-07-01

rlt. Weath.r P.rtly cloudy todey _ ........., with --- No DI Wednesday .. showers _ thunders..",.. ....... ..... The D.lly low.n will not be ....lIshod WocI· ...... W.rmer ntrMM ................ CIOIer ...ad.y mornl"" bec.u.. of tho UtlIv.rslty Mrthwe.. end .xtreme nor1tI tMey. CMIer ·Holld.., on tho Fourth of July. Pultllcetlen will west end -'" tonitht. H'" teeley tt ~ be resumed Thursd.y. owan w.st .. Serving the State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City ,S .1..-,.. Herald Tribune News Service Features Saturday. July 1, 1961, Iowa City, Iowa orce •In .urope ncrease Physics Dept. -Gets Add Division ~o Prepare Signals from Iniun For Berlin Signals from INJUN had come graduate students in physics cal­ in clearly on receiving equipment culated. in SUI's Physics Department dur­ The signals are recorded on Definite Decisions ing two good "passes" of the satel­ magnetic tapes which are ready By Kennedy Expected lite over the Mid""est by Friday to be fcd Into the giant mM 7070 afternoon. Faint and somewhat in· computer at SUI to provide infor­ Within Next 3 W"ks distinct signals had been received mation for interpretation by the WASHINGTON"" - The United on several other passes of the sur­ SUI physicists. The sateUite is States may send lOme additional built satellite. qollecling data on the Van Allen military forces to Europe later Washington reports, meanwhile. Radialion belts and the charged­ this summer in preparation for a Music Camp Queen that the Injun and the Greb, two particle aclivity which creates the possible showdown with the Soviet of throe sateLlites shot aloft togeth­ auroras. Union over West Berlin. Crowned !lU_ of the An st.to Mu.lc Camp Frl­ SWHt, Story City; Pam Bushm.n, Amo.; and er Wednesday, have aparently fail­ This is reported to be one of the d.y night w•• Marilyn Qu.m, AmH, (cont.r). Judy Sucromol, Tipton. Mlch.1 H .... 'h.w. Shon­ ed to separate. measures under consideration in MIlS Quam wa. crowned at a party hold for the The Navy said the photometer Ittle Kennedy administration for andoah, roceived tho tit'o of king of the camp oviet, dealing with Berlin crises. Officials ....rly 400 low. high .chool mu.lci.ns who device aboard the Injun to observe .t­ at tho party. E 'Cort5 for the four a"ondann to expect tension over Berlin to' be­ tended the two-week camp. Tho party followed airglow radiation cannot function. tho quoon woro: Gory Beamon, Oeater; D .... id liowever, the Navy said the de­ come acute toward the end oC the tho la.t night conc.rt of the ....Ion .nd brought year. the .vent ... clo... Mi" Qu.m's .ttendants oro Boaz, Wilton Jundion; Gordon Howard, Crlco; teclors to observe the aurora! Leaders Talk emissions apparently 'were work­ Tho United St.tes h.s five di­ (from loft): K.rlynn Speldl"", Clinton; Sus.n .nd Evere" Lunning. Codar Ropid •. ing properly. visions in Gorm.ny u pert of tho W"t Europe.n doten .. foreo of Launched late Wednesday night Disarmament the North AH.ntic Tre.ty Org.n­ in a lriple-deck payload with iz.tion. Pro,lelent K.nnedy w.nta Transit IY·A and GREB III in the WASHlNGTON (ofI - President .. lnere... tho conventlon.l, non­ fino! stage of a Thor·A ble·Star Kcnnedy sought personally Fri­ nuclo.r ability of thl. force .. rocket system fired from Cape entative 5'ettl~.' ""ent, day 10 give laggi ng U.S.-Soviet moot any Communl.t .Hlck and ·r Canaveral. rNJUN had traveled disarmament talks a forward push haa Ul'1led tho Europea., aHi" to 630.000 miles during 22 orbits of b calling in the chief Soviet dis· build up their _n .trength for the carth by the time is was 'S7 n mamcnt negotiators. that purposo. hours old at 1 p.m. (COT) Friday, In a haH-hour ehat with Valeri­ , U.S. military authorities are re­ lUI A. ZoriD. Kennedy trcssed th ported to favor the dispatch of at Rea'ched"in £'frike importance the United States at· Smitten with Kitten least one more U.S. division to Enrollment taches to gctting a disarmament Europe. Thls would not only' bol- NEW YORK (ofI - The largest appiy to aLi of more than 80,000 and other conditions are below that accord. S.ra R.poporl, S, found a n.w fri.nd Frld.y whon on unkn_n, ster NATO defensive l'O.wer but In o[ striking seamen's unions reached striklng seamen. But it would run of Amerioan merchant mariners. The White House meeting cli­ but .ppe.ling kitten, wanetorod up .. hor homo In Finkbine P.rt. their view also would prOvide evl- tentative accord with shipowners Into the ~\lions annually and, The NMU's lcntaliva agreement Hits 4,800 maxed two weeks of talks between Sara took to the kittef1 •• all li"1e girl. do, .nd tho fellne ......ed dence for Khrusbchev or the de- Friday. 11he break-thro~h 1/1 a since _rnpsi , 4filerican merchant refer th.. i8~111' tn /I j!rlVr.ronwnl .Iohn J. Mc~loy, ~h U.S. dis(lrma­ to be plo~sod about tho whole thl", too, ter,mi/latioll. ot the polted States to eomp,litated .wdloc!k could ~n shipl$ recelve govemmen . subsl­ fact-finding group lor study and ment c~ie~ and ZOl'ip, Sovlet I 1 ...oally Iowa'! p~ .by !-arn Ra~ I lu!plr, !~~l~plPlT)itnJePlf! tp I ~~,cl the 'Way \for ql)i~1I: settl'ement o!: a l dies, could cost the taxpayer a eventual recommendations. About deput)t fr:itlelgj, I minIster and/llpJ . ,. ;Nes~ ~r Il1. illl I( ~ f .' ;' 1 "-'HI two-week national maritime Stri Ke, pretty penny. 450 American ships' operate under For"Summer .' bassador to the United Nations. I ,',II • I • I J VI '" "whQle r~ng~ 0 po.s~ ble ,!lC- There were a· nmnoor f tick· 1'l1he NMU made the ~ttiement " To Ci ' f forelln !lags, ~j lh the fe9cral Little progress has been made in iR )ish '(\(Ids and 'Inds ti> 'be clEiaretl fcontiDffiDt on acce~an~ of ~~ Mor~ ' than 4.800 students - the efllment retain g a mea ure highest summer enrollment since the discussions. 'C' ~ '"eaH " .. t~ : Oli ,', ~~(*~:~ ~ d~St~~~4arg~ ~l~!~ '" up, " however, before the entire terms Iby two other striking ~, , .·t I I , ' I I< UW I • , a'ld dlpl0!1lBf\c offiCIals cOntrol over th m in the case of ~ "j: mDI~ary gr~u'p bf five tHldng un tons ~d with which it is closely . aligned, 1949 - are attending SUI this sum. Presidential pre s s sccretary national emergency. I p1 1<~' I .1"'. " Iff''!' h " . ~ ::I " dur~g a !l1~ling o( the Nat~nal be broUght Ihto line. Thus there 'the Masters, Mates ~d PLlots Un­ mer, President VirglJ M. Hanchcr Pierre Salinger announced the ne­ was no clear present Indication o( ion, and the American Radio As­ The propoted contract extends annOunced today. Final enroll· gotialions will recess here and be It .' w.. a return to sea of some 150 or more sociation. four years. and there is no re­ meot figures lisled the -lotal as rcsumed in Moscow July 17. IAny' Agg' r'ef"'ss'- ·I·'o '''n'' ''/ Se~~!r.:,.u~:rmation ~ opening clause. - • tho Pr"ldent .d not Imrnoclloto­ American ships, stranded In 30 Over-all, the unions represent 4,816. The U.S.-Soviel discussions are Iy m.ko ony firm cIoci.ion. on port cities coast to coast. more than 80,000 seamen who man Able-bodied seamen now receive Graduate College enrollment aimed at setting up a multi-nation KUWAIT (.fI - Tough Bedouin The secretary of state added step. to be t.ken In preperatlon The National Maritime Union, nearly 1,000 American vessels. a basic wage of $369 a month, plus makes up 53 per cent of the ·total general disarmament conference. tribesmen were given arms by the that John Richmond, British po- for cr.allng with tho Borlin situ· with 37,000 members, accepted a However, about 800 of the ships $2.28 an hour for ovel'time. The registered, with 2,554. The College But it appears doubtful now that government Friday hight and Iitical agent in Kuwait who had atfon. The... ,.. oxpected, ~. wage increase of slightly better have been riding out the strike at proposed conlract would raise oC Liberal Arts claims th e second any such conference could get armored cars of Kuwait's tiny been the sheik's chief adviser un· .ver, In tho nelet two ... throe than ur per cent, spread over four sea, subject to immobilization only these rates 4 per cent immediately. highest with 1,464 - 31 more than started by the target date of July army were posted at the northern til Kuwait beca.rn,e independent w.ok5. , years. In return, the NMU shelved if they put into port. There would be additional in­ in 1960. The College of Nursing is 31. border after reports were received last week, once mor; ~~red the The National Security Council for the time being the crucial issue The unions struck June 15. creases of 2V. per cent in the sec­ third, with Z94 registered. McCloy and Zorln have argued that Iraqi tanks are massing .that Bnta.Ul 18 ready session resulted mainly in the as­ of its right to organize runaway The unions insisted that the prob- govet'nme~ ond, third and fourth years. Men outnumber women not quite over makeup of the general con­ across the border.

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