| Show 00 1 — — ' 4 ' ' t - - r""""1""4101411001rAr01000MA ' i° - s- 0 0 Continued from Page One w o " alumnus of this w Mr Romney was university" " 'cited for "his distinguished ac 0 w complishments in American : industry his significant lead : ership in economic and public affairs his' vigorous thought w and effeco and his courageous o tive advocacy of the ways of I- I ' freedom" O - a -' ' - 4'''' 4''' - 01 '10' - ' ' ' - ' ' 'a r '? - - - --- -' DRIZZLE also ruled out an informal reception which was to have taken place on the football field after the ceremony According to Mrs A- Ray Olpin wife of the University president this is the second time rain has spoiled a University commencement in the past 15 years t 1 t i ? 44 'a - z fA - : : TT a1: t -- :- w t 0 a ‘ I a -- ow aa I 4m - ' It's Raining! The ' i ) 4 I - l' ' k ' t' - 't ‘ t "4 i I ) ' t ) t' I1 E I 1 ' i' ' -- - 4 0104 Ili - - 4 - - N v 1 a ‘ ' " ' ‘ $ I ) I Zlii t some happy some serious march In caps and gowns Into the University of Utah stadium for I commencement exercises ended for loszr persons Hide Solon -- Travel Costs cI --'' - - ' - '' " I ' Aitt ' oF P ' t - i ' - A'' - -- e ' ' ' Continued from Page One ' r- t '!" '' ' 1 't ' -- ' i fr N N - '' - ' A 4 t ?'t IN EACH OF 23 countries to Sudan from Argentina where members of the Judiciary Committee traveled their report asserts that they spent exactly 30 per cent of their counterpart money for tans- - tt I f t 00 - '- ‘ I j N ! ( t per cent for miscellaneous In all the report shows the expenditure of $5436381 In counterpart funds during 1959 Committee Chairman Emdenied' manuel Celler ) that his committee concocts its overseas expense accounts But Celler told a reporter that he never before had seen the March 7 report to which his name is appended as it appears in the Congressional Record (D-NY- 1 Levi Edgar Young and George Romney cited in education industry and in history ' whether he would the circumstances of the compilation of this unASKED look into usual "consolidated' spending report Celler answered flatly: "No" Bess E Dick the committee clerk who compiled the report conceded that she estimated the pattern of spending in each country by simply ap plying percentages CELLER TAKES tha position that unless these counterpart funds are spent by traveling congressmen they may molder in the bank vaults overseas 400' - The Rome Public Works Committee also has an unusual pattern of counterpart spending s ii - e - 6 - — e Out of ii - r ( -0 o--- Orb F Cook of Boston I — say on this16th anniversary of the Normandy invasion FOR MORE THAN five hours the - Presi- - visit as host at a dinner for his In classmates - invaniversary of the sion he commanded in 1944 He was inspecting one of the classrooms with a map of By W IL Lawrence the Normandy area when Lt New York Times Writer Gen Garrison H Davidson Gov Cecil Underwood of West Virginia Monday emerged West - Point superintendent as the favorite to deliver the keynote address opening the asked him: Republican national convention in Chicago July 25 Did you recall air that Well - inf orded Republican this is AIM ethr sources reported that Gov Underi wood had the edge among a field of "Mat was the first thing I five possibles from which a final se- - t thought of this morning" Mr lection will be made by the commitEisenhower replied He seemed 4Erals tee on arrangements and the national ' to muse about it for a mot tonunittee later this week ment and then added quickly: Others tn contention are two t "Well I don't have to live governors and two Republican mem- that day over anyhow" bers ofthe House of Representa- After the tour the President lives des joined his 1915 classmates for William are Underwood Gov Goys Quin of They the traditional alumni march Hawaii and Mark Hatfield of Oregon and Reps John Byrnes to the plain the parade ground of Wisconsin and Walter H Judd of Minnesota high above the Hudson River The choice of a keynoter is the last important assignment to be at the GOP convention Rep Charles A Halleck of IN GLORIOUS weather he Indiana the House Republican floor leader already has been and the other old grads—some of them now rather feeble— recommended for permanent chairman moved along to band numbers CHARLES PERCY Chicago businessman has been chosen which included "Tramp to head the resolutions committee which will write the party Tramp Tramp The Boys Are Marching" "Hail Hail The platform The party machinery controlling arrangements for the Gang's All Here" and "When Republican convention is firmly in the hands of supporters Johnny Comes Marching of Vice President Richard M Nixon for the Republican presi- Home" dential nomination Nixon originally authorized offering the When Mr Eisenhower line keynoter's role to Gov Nelson A Rockefeller of New York stepped smartly into the a grinning classmate directed in a party unity move him to a front row position with a crisp "right here mister—the salutation of upperVegas School Girls classmen to plebe cadets Underwood: The GOP Keynoter? -- - 4 - DURING THE march Mr Eisenhower stepped out of line once to shake hands with the LAS VEGAS NEV June 6 (UPI)—Two aged and now retired trainer girls were killecillionday when struck at an intersection as of West Point athletic teams o Marty Maher' they walked home from school Now legless as a result of A Toledo Ohio woman was booked for Involuntary illness Maher was in a wheel police said Speeding DriveiKills Two -- - - 4 manslaughter chair - AURA EASLEY (IL sped through a stop sign bless you Marty at a speed estimated by witnesses as up to 60 miles an hour the"God President called as he and struck three small girls walking home from school hustled back to his classpolice said mates Virginia Ann Sabo and Carol Sue Decker died of their Mr Eisenhower stood at atInjuries at Southern Nevada Hospital Diane Marie Gresser tention during "taps" at a meas released after treatment also 6 morial service at the statue OFFICERS SAID MRS EASLEY swerved around two of Sylvanus Thayer known as ears that were stopped at the intersection before she struck the father of West Point — he children The Decker girl was carried 200 feet by the THEN he stood at the 'euge Impact of the parade grounds to take Before being booked Mrs Easley who came here nine a salute and revieW the' weeks ago with her husband was examined by a psychia– briskly marching corps of t trist !cadets DIRS 21-gu- - '- — -2 4 k o- By Ausclated Press WEST POINT NY June 8 President Eisenhower marched happily Monday with West Point old grads and reminisced solemnly about D IT DEVELOPED early Monon the Los Angeles Board of Education and one term on day that Eisenhower was well the California State Board of Education aware of this being the 16th an- Degrees -- ' dent- was on the go—under a hot sun on the parade down grounds up and stairs on a nostalgic tour of the military academy on to an alumni luncheon and then to of his 1915 class a ARTHUR W ECKMAN of Cambridge was named presi: meeting con he Ills committee's March 1 "consolidated" report for 1959 spending shows that committee travelers in Brazil spent exactly 25 per cent of their US owned truzeiros on transportation exactly 25 per cent on lodging exactly 30 per cent on meals exactly 10 per cent on gratuities and exactly 10 per cent on miscellaneous The report on a third House t body the Committee on Agriculture which covers the expenditure of $3198643 in coUnterpart during 1959 fails to break the spending down into Itemized as recategories quired by law Julian Langston clerk of the House Administration Committee is the man who receives these consolidated House committee expense reports Langston says the committee does no policing of the ret Rain-b- y They-Geports—merely sends them along to the public printer for Ariel received Dr and Mrs Williams Jr get out of J received medical degree Ilk wife Insertion in the Congressional - i -rainaa all U graduates did Mr Willhuns i her bachelor's degree in medical technology iRemrd 1 CHEYENNE WYO June 6 — Machinists manned picket lines at Warren Air Force Base and four outlying Atlas missile sitet Monday but con- -' struction workers refused to honorthe picket lines BOWEVER construe t ton work was halted several hours before the Cheyenne Building Trades Council voted not to honor the picket lines The strike by the Interns-tona- l Association of Machinists is part of a nation-widwalkout to enforce its demands for Increased - wages from Convair Astronautics Division of General Dynamics 1 Corp - cent Mrs Kathrun for food exactly 10 1 ' BOSTON June 6 UP)—The decisions about national elections should come out of each voter's communion with God and the guidance attained through prayer the Christian Science board of directors said Mon- 0 ' - day They called for an end to apathy 1 irresponsibility and blind partisan- t ' ship At the annual meeting of the A le motherchurch—the PirstChurch of 'I Christ Scientist—attended by more 7000 Christian Scientists the than k T directors said: ' "In the United States the current ' ' year vvill record important political decisions as well as international apMr Eckman proaches!' They added that 'through prayer we can rise above blind partisanship and the irresponsible tumult of of aggressive mental suggestion" Ike 3 larches With Grads At Academy reunion i 1- exclusively of lawyers It is concerned among other things with the administration of Justice But its report for 1959 on counterpart spending as printeclAnthe Congressional Record shows a remarkable reading of the requirements of the law Board Urges Prayer on Vote law ' ' INSIDE TILE 11te fieldhouse where diplomas were handed out On a makeshift stage Dr A Ray Olpin university president was cheerful pointing out that 'the diplomas are still as good as it they were conferred outside" But it was a disappointment to Mrs Olpin because the was Olpins1 son lHoward among the graduates and she "did want to see him come down the ramp" - When the officers reentered the house Mrs O'Boyle was lying across her husband's body Both were taken to St John's Hospital and pronounced dead of heart attacks q Joint Reports --1 Bloiv Death Delivers ' s' t' Long line of students 1 1 ' ' - i 1 1 ' - By Associated Preis — - I 4 ) ' I - Machinist Lines Fail to Halt Other Workers 0 New York Times Service n 4 It math ' j ' ' t- 'No liónors Go to Leaders in Three Fields '" Urge Nixon 'Silent Vote' :') It '4- - 1 I - -- 11 1 t 4 " 1 WHEN the weather man wasn't looking the clouds sneaked in and registered a "mission accomplished ° as with little threatened they drizzles and then f inally doctorate degrees Mon soaked graduates distin- Receiving honorary day night were William J O'Connor left guished faculty members parents and friends alike Beautiful graduation hairdos commencewere ruined ment programs became makeand there shift umbrellas was some speculation about whether the black caps and gowns of graduates would rain fade onto the party dresses and suits they wore under - —11 : j t te ' v t -- i RUT : ' fr 4 j ----: 4 :4 Avho saw setting 1 l'1 - A" on whether he fEshtSpalorelinAegGeEssarly5 naowdirt man said Monday he vetoed thought President Eisenhower ri shoulir have—approved—the fa: spy Plane flights"'over Russia dealTruman told ait newsvo be mousU2 spy plane flight over and China When he was in of ference "I suppose pas tct ' Russia on the eve of the sum' mit conference Truman said "I ji thought it wasn't necessary in 41 1949 and I still don't think so" I TRUMAN REVEALED his 0 A—LciirirttirtPrs of Gov Nelson A order against spy plane sr June so flights sr SAN FRANCISCO t Rockefeller of New York Monday urged Republicans to give during his usual early morning Vice President Richard M Nixon the "silent" treatment in stroll and elaborated on the subject at an afternoon news the California presidential primary Tuesday conference 4 Truman said that sometime THEY BEGAN taking to the radio in four major cities 1 with oneminute advertising announcements exhorting evervn 1949 or 1950 "somebody in ' 'i Republican listener to "be a silent voter for Nelson A the State Department came up 00:4 with the idea" of spy plane Rockefeller" t I I 4 were cEaled upon to mark their ballots for flights over Russia and China' Republicans 4 44 urged to "sidgabox i every office except 't DISCUSSED—the—p- ro----""- -' at the top of the ballot marked "convention delegates" com- - posal with then Secretary of 17 - mitted to Vice President Nixon I State Dean Acheson and they 14— t because down thumbs turned 4:4 vote A spokesman for Nixon labeled talk of a "silent" I "I didn't think such flights 1 for Rockefeller "pare bunk" were proper" Truman said ir 411 move announced first by Truman said the United I He said the I could and which had a former States Archibald M Mull Jr a Sacramento attorney plane t A Bar was "contrary to American tradi- have made overflights at a president of the State ‘ - -- - i ' height of 90000 feet during tion" his term of office But no spy ballot on the NIXON IS the only Republican presidential ' flights were made "with my 1 II A write-ivote for any otter candidate is forbidden by Cali- permission" he said i fornia law which specifies that a presidential candidate must 1 "I had nothing to do with have a delegate ticket pledged to him ' t dirtiness of spying" the ''' t Rockefeller supporters in California became virtually Truman said I 4t I Inactive last winter after the New Yorker removed himself In his speech Monday Trufrom consideration and po move was made before the deadline to circulate petitions to get a Rockefeller delegate ticket man delivered implied criticism of fellow Democrat Adlai E onthe - Govballot Edmund G Brown expects to win handily on the Stevenson's charges that EisDemocratic presidential ballot over George L McLain Los enhower bungled the summit conference old age pension Promoter Angeles i r WITHOUT NAMING Steven son Truman said "I would be One-Tw- o the last to want to discourage debate ' but in the field of o LOWEJL MASS June 6 (2)—Mrs John F O'Boyle 1 there is no room foreign policy t 70 telephoned police Monday she was unable to arouse her i talk espe for irresponsible husband 1 I at a time when the na 4 Officers John Maher and Thomas Hession responded cially I tion is being subjected to new In a cruiser provocations and attacks from Four years or more of college They found O'Boyle 65 apparently dead in bed and the Kremlin" largest graduating class ever returned to the cruiser to call an ambulance 4" 1 storm clouds threatening to spoil their show of shows — the 91st annual commencement ceremony which was achedtiled Monday evening in the U's Stadium Bowl— checked periodically with the Weather Bureau up to 5 pm they said and were assured that the clouds wouldn't open up on the graduation So it was with confidence that plans went ahead for con ferring diplomas on some 1321 University of Utah gradu ates in the traditional t : A ancrdoes not - think such done but I didn't want any part A1A of University t Utah administrators it - ri ' i - Iagain s - ' woo"' - t 4 It did weatherman ! 41 e t ilficie FoculnnecrAprGeosdjenutneHa6rry(ITTruI)— 13 p A : tit T t ' it:" ' - t t 1 -- $ - ' Heyr f 1 ? -- V 4 "- 4 --- annedSpglights'--Truma- n - 4' ktit12 c 4 4 1- r- k -- 1 4t ! - - "I - 0 Showers? No 4 - t )4 or ' YEARS AGO she whole affair was moved indoors at the start of the program when it began to rain P 1 d ITHREE pi w ' 4 174- - T ' iv 4 A '''''"f ' - '''''''' ' e 4 1 I - Glance- livat ''N-- '- itime::' Vi 4' ""i 4 - Mg $ 1Z w:""f7"'9 US at a '"""""7 4 4 I 1'1'417" ) -a- " P - 104 e 4" r drr ' ' - ' ty4k" t l I- g 40 - TRIBUTE WAS PAID to t - Pres Young by Dr Leland H Creel' head of the department : of history who called him "the 4 beloved teacher of many gen ' erations of University stu t : dents who had the happy fac k Ulty of arousing intense Interest In the history of Utah" a Dr Creer cited Pres Young's 4 "notable contribution to the z and cultural develop 't : Ment of the American West as O student teacher and alumnus 4 " 4 of this university and Graduate professional 4 degrees and the honorary de : 4 grees had been conferred be fore the drizzle drove bedrag tt ? 4 graduates and audience i4 gled indoors and cut short the re '! maining program which was 0 to have included a welcoming speech to graduates by Rob ert H Cutler president of the i U Alumni Assn and present- 1 of the class gift by Sen i aition President Robert H Breinholt ' al4 0f' " VIPOVSVm1111110 - i -z -- - A : - Mr"VorPOVOMPo10t ' 't ---I- I t7 a a r --- A 40 '4 -- N th f 4te - tinguished ' - -- t I Jit - - : ' ''' ) ' ''' 'e " ' - - - ' Of U Gives Out I ' '' -in Degrees : ' 1 — R amy-Rder ' - 7 1960 - 4 - Like Tribune Tuesday June The Salt 1321 graduates - ' :1 - ' 4 -- - - I rJT - - - |