• 1945 - , MEAT8, FATS... d ,Ia ..,.. T6 I~, •• ,h Z5 ••• AS .b,•• ,b PI .OW ...... 00&88110 '0008, blu ....P.. C~ III,n,. Q .aU.. HUGA...... t .., .Ia.p 113 ..U" I•• II ...... d.. 1.018, ...... Il, ••• Clearing .....,. " ! ••• a ..... 1... tI.I"'" GASOLINI. 16-A eo.poD. r.e. aa..... , B-'7, c .. e aDd I., ,•• , ,.0. .. IOWA: (JJe~ and rather 0-7 nU. 10' II.. '.11.... FUlL OIL, perlo. 0.0 51 IlIroll.b lin ••• p.... ,ve", .Ito '0.' ,.ar. perl." THE DAILY IOWAN ~d. to.r .Dd II ...... Iowa Cit y , • M 0 r n I n.9 N • w spa p • r

WS, FIVE CENTS I'ID .ulOOlAftD ..... IOWA CITY, IOWA THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1945 VOLUMEm NUMBER 163 ech

ubltcal ly • ed, ,liS Gallup persons r of un i­ rmy In ...... entra ermany 'ce laws 'd, Lnst ,ued an AIRBORNE TROOPS DO GOOD JOB ssia pro­ Russians Push Prime Factor in Initial Victories- • Tenth Controls h,e dura- Kassel, Gotha,

s one of America Last Germans Autobahns Lead #0 NaZI Defeat One-Sixth Suhl 'Fall the men By KlltKE L. SIMPSON As this was written it was along closest on the west to Berlin and r,u con~ As!Iocla.tecl Press War Analyst that master highway General a junction with Russian forces. 1 asking 01 Ok· When the full story of Nazi Patton's advance columns stood Third army and SeVenth army ~, Inawa From Hungary Germany is written historians will defeat. They have played a vital spearheads are threatening a rup- To Pallon record the great web of outobahns role in the Russian steam-roller lure of the main central north- as a prime factor leading first to surge to the OdeI'. They are play- south autobahn that links Berlin ~end initial Nazi victories and finally ing an all important part in the and Munich. Third ' Amphibious Unit British Cross Weser Bratislava Captured to defeat. allied surge beyond the Rhine. It is the main stem of the whole Ie Less Than 24 Hours Autobahn is the German name Once German !rontiers were miJJtary superhighway web. Throws Defense Line To Flank North Sea for the six-lane super military passed, Russian and allied maneu- The importance of the Coblenz­ Across Narrow Isthmus Port of Bremen After Opening of Siege highways conceived and built to vers were largely grooved to Leipzig autobahn in solving Pat­ of Com­ implement plans tor continental that great autobahn network. The ton's supply problems cannot be PARIS (AP}-The United send two LONDON, Thursday (A P)r­ mastery and world domination. logistical miracles wrouaht by the overrrated. It is along that road GUAM, Thursday (AP)­ )wa City The Rn sians captured Bratis· Supplementing a German road armies invading Germany could roaring truck columns are supply­ Lieut. Gen. Simon B 0 I i val' States Third army burst into I be held lava, cleared the last Gel'maDs and rail web unmatched in Eu- not have been possible without it. ing his Third army from railheads Buckner's veteran Tenth army the central Germany plain last mn 11, In out of Hungary aud fought into rope for war use, they served Tracing the pattern ot the west of the Rhine. forces swept forward in sensa· night on a IOO-mile front after nber )'las Vienna's southern suburbs yes­ their purpose well. They made American Third army eastward There is no sign yet of an allied tional new gains over Okinawa toppling the cities of Kassel, Ilive, terday in a day of sensational possible swift and sudden concen- dash beyond the Rhine. The main pause due to over-extended supply yesterday and by nightfall of Gotha and Suhl in a. race to )igh, two trations of the once miehty Wehr- central autobahn east-west lateral lines, but it must come to give the the fourt h day of the virtually split the staggered Reich, while nnd one successes all along the soutlJ­ macht east, west or south against is its dominant factor. It leads enemy breathing space unless even unopposed inva'lion had about in the north the British crossed St, Pat­ ('astern fron t. iIl·prepared neighbors. from the Coblenz area on the greater miracles of transport are The combinrd hlows of the 80 square miles-or one-sixth of the Weser river in a flanking en about With the tide now turned it is Rhine clear to besieged Breslau on achieved. Contlnuing German re­ movement on th great Nazi , accord­ Second, Third Ilnd FOll rth the island-nnder their control. those conquest corridors that are the upper Oder now far behind sistance in the west, spotty as it is, North sea port of Bremen. ys' State Ukrainian army grOllps also leading inevitably to utter German the eastern fighting front. mRy be keyed to that bope. Maj. Gen. Roy S . Geiger's Karlsruhe, capital of Baden Chopek hurled thl' Nazis back in north- Third marine amphibious COrpR on the Upper Rhine, fell to the " west Yugoslavia in the Mma on the north flank advanced French, an official French com­ of the river valley and overcame the quickly to 8. point 3,000 to 4,000 Jorted on enemy foothold in the Little Car­ At a Glance- Iowa Senate Passes yards north of Ishikawa and munique said, and tbe United Counly Bond States Seventh army plunged to owa City pathian mountains north of Bra­ threw a defense line across the be avail. tislava, presaging the early clear­ neck of Okinawa's narrowest within 34 miles of Nuernberg, big Building Measures Nazi convention city and road hub 1 this vi. ance of all Slovakia. jsthmus. mer, The Premier Stalin announced the On the south Maj. Gen. Andrew astride the Berlin-Brenner pass handled storming 01 Bratislava, capital of Quota for May .Today' s Bills Returned D. Bruce's 77th Infantry division, routes Into Italy. J, At the the Nazi puppet state of Siovakia with other units, pushed forward The allled armies were pound­ lav is will and a key Danubian stronghold of To House for Okay against virtually negligible re­ Lng ahead in a Victory-bound of­ able /01' 160,000 population, less than 24 On Amendments Sistance and held a line between fensive costing the Nazis more An,i1ounced Iowan THE FIRST ALLIED AIRBORNE ARMY had Ute difficult ta.lk of dis· than two divisions daily in prison­ o register hours after Marshal Roclion Y. Uchi Tomarl on the west coast, ruptlng German conununlcatlons on ~he east side Of the Rhine wblle p relieve Malinovsky's Second Ukrainian ...... ers alone. Patton Invades central Ger­ DES MOINES (AP)-The sen- Kamiyama in the center and other doughboys orossed that river. Tbe men did a I'ood Job, &00. In Johnson trOup had laid siege to the city. ate yesterday approved two ap- Nakgusuku on the east coast. Weser Cl'08Iilll J 0 h n son county's $2,036,000 many plain on 100-mile tront. the two descriptive (delayed) photos above the a1rborne fll'hten are The subsequent Moscow broad­ propriations bills setting aside Troops moving down the west shown Immedbtely after they landed. Gilders can 'be seen eomlJlf In the north, Field Marshal lub were quota for the Seventh War Loan cast communique announced that campaign was announced yester­ $14,172,500 for copital improve- coast were within approximately In with their car&,oes of more troops. Montgomery's British 11th arm­ !ut, Eddie Marshal Feodor I. Tolbrukhin's Soviets clear Hungary of Ger­ day at a state-wide meeting of ments at the institutions under the two miles of the Machinato air­ ored division swept around Osna­ 'om over· 'lhird Ukrainian forces seized mans, capture Bratislava. county war finance committee boards of education and I=ontrol field and four miles from Naha, brueck and crossed the Weser llian and more than 30 communities south during the next two years. capital city of Okinawa and larg- river, one of the last two barriers ,ieutenant and southwest of Vienna, one ot leaders in Des Moines. The fiE" One· sixth of Okinawa under bond quota for the drive which Yank control. Both measures were passed 41 est in the Ryukyus with a pOpu­ Eighth Army Invades before Berlin, in a swift strike the work· them-Zwoellazing-only a mile to 0 ond now go back to the l'KIuse lation of 66,000. They were about Allied Planes aimed at both Hannover and ,nd to the and a hal1 trom the southern city will open May )5 is $1,112,000. County quota for Seventh War for concurrence In amendments. jfour mlles from another aIrstrip, Bremen. My units, Ilmits and seven and a hal1 from Quota for the Seventh War Loan The upper chambel' also adopted Yonbaru, Which Is incornpleted. Masbate Island; is $180,000 more than the $1,883,· Loan drive announced. ~he exact point of the crossing the very center of the Austrian a conference committee r porI. on G ' troRl. .J.\vQ.. I:,() four miles was not divulged, but a front dis­ d's bard­ capital. 000 goal which was reached in the iuJ departmental approprrAtions ere l'egistered 1~ all sectors, and mash Reich patch Indicated it was above Summer school registration to Jap Shipping Blocked )mber, I, I Sixth War Loan drive in Johnson Almost due south of Vienna the bill, which earmarks slJghtly more Admiral Chester W. Nimitz' com­ Minden, which is 53 miles soutb l glue, county last December, start April 9. I RUSSians announced they had than $6,000,000 for the support of munique today said the enemy MANILA, Thursday (AP)­ LON DON (AP)-The allles of Bremen and 32 mUes west of hurled the last of the Germans off Quotas for adjacent counties are: stale departments for each year still "offered scattered resistance Hannover. es of the County Quota 'IE" Bonds Masbale island in the central Phil­ hurled 3,000 planes against the ed holf of Hungarian territory and were of the biennium beginning next to the advances of all troops." pressing their liberating invasion Washington $1 ,365,000 $ 882 ,000 \ipines was invaded by Maj. Gen, dwindljng targets of shrunken The American Ninth army deposit s, July 1. The Yanks were many day~ Rapp Brush's veteran 40tb infan­ C e r man y yesterday, including charged up to the 240-foot Weser of Yugoslavia. Cedar ...... 1,166,000 786,000 Transportation Bill Largest appropriations ahead of schedule. Iowa ...... 939,000 651,000 try division Tuesday, Gen. Doug­ 1,000 Flying Fortresses and Liber­ river, next to last barrier on the Similarly, Czechoslovak arrpy measure passed was one approprl- Asociated Press Correspondent las MacArthur announced today ators which blasted submarine high road to Berlin, 170 miles forces aided in the southwestward Muscatine .~ .. 2,579,000 1,155,000 ating $7,300,00 trom the three- Vern Haugland reported t hat Linn ...... 9,268,000 3,490 .000 For School Districts in a communique which pro­ building yards at Kiel and Ham­ away. Reacbing the river at Bad thrust of the Fourth Ukrainian point tax fund (income, corpora- towns, villages and mUitary ob­ claimed the American blockade ot burg and airfields throughout tbe Oeynhausen, the Americans men­ army in northwest Slovakia, which tion and sales taxes) for capital jeclives had been reduced to rub­ Japanese shipping "in complete northwestern Reicb. aced the large Prussian communl-· captured more than 60 populated Approved by Senate improvements at the five Institu- ble, Airmen were complaining operation." The American attacks were cations center of Hannover, 38 places. Or.e Superfort Lost tions under the state board of edu- they were unable to find suitable miles from Ninth army tanks. The This resumed offensive by Col. cation. targets. MacArthur also reported that driven home despite stltf opposi­ DES MOINES (AP)- The sen­ escorted heovy bombers scored tion from formations of jet-pro­ naval base of Bremen lay 57 miles Gen, Ivan Petrov's Fourth Ukrain­ The original bill called tor ap- Japanese Civilians were giving to the north. ians was apparently the 10ng-elC­ In Latest Tokyo Raid ate yesterday voted 46 to 0 in propriation of $5,800,000, but the themselves up in droves. their first concerted strike on the pelled ME-262's. Nine bombers great shipping base ot Hongkong, and four fighters were missing, Ruhr Trapped Narrowed s peeted push to team up with Mal­ favor of appropriating $2,000,000 senate adopted an appropriations Seventb division doughboys The Ninth pressed down from hitting the Kowloon and Taikoo but the Swedish radio said one Inovsky's northern units and put GUAM (AP)-Japanese aircraft annually from state funds to re­ committee amendment set tin g consolidated their positions along the north on the shrinking Ruhr production in the Tokyo area was dock areas with 126 tons of bombs. of the bombers landed safely at the squeeze on the German held imburse rural and local school dis­ aside an additional $1,500,000 for the coast of Nakagusuku bay, one­ trap where up to 150,000 Germans remainder of Slovakia. hi t by some 300 Superlortresses expansion of the psychopathic hos- time Japanese fleet anchorage on Innumerable fires and explosions Malmoe airport in Sweden. from the Marianas yesterday tricts for transportation of pu'pils, dotted the target. Not a plane was faced surrender or annihilation. Another more significant linkup pital at Iowa City. the eastern shore, while the Third At least 11 of the twin-jet in­ F'ield Marshal Albert Kesselring, (Tuesday U,S. time) in a low level The measure now goes back to the The three-point tax fund also marines at the north established lost. terceptors and four other enemy Le was indicated in Malinovsky's demolition roid that left a smoke supreme Nazi commander in the capture of Bratislava. This laid house for concurrence in amend­ will furnish the $6,872,500 appro- a line on a narrow isthmus just Twenty-eight Japanese vessels, fighters were shot down by Mus­ west, was in the doomed pocket, plume rising thousands of leet m·ents. priated for new buildings, repairs, north of Tontan hill. including a destroyer-escort, were tangs which made up part ot the open the traditional invasion gate above one target area, a dispatch trom the Ninth army to Austria and promised early It was the 10th school code re­ replacements, improvements and sunk or damaged in the China sea 850-plane escort. But the ME- front said. Advancing infantry One pl ane was missing, the 20th alterations at the 15 institutions and waters to the south. 262's, closing to short range in :for­ union with the Tolbrukhin forces vision bill to pass the senate. moved within five miles of Dort­ that already were 'in Vienna's airforce command announced in undel' the board of control. MacArthur said the Eighth army mations of four and eigbt planes, mund on two sides. Before passing the bill, the sen­ southern suburbs. Washington, from the triple threat Fred Vinson Yanks invading Masbate, fairly knocked down several American The Canadians moved up to foray that encountered but slight ate defeated by standing vote an large sugar island just west of bombers in attacks concentrated Arnhem and were less than 20 fighter plane opposition and mod­ Nazi Secret Weapon Samar, on the main shipping lane amendment by its appropriations By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS chiefly on a force of Liberators miles from the Zuider Zee in HoI· erate ground fire, co.mmittee which would have lim­ A Spanish radio station at Val­ through the centrlll Philippines, assigned to targets at Hamburg. land. Once they reach that great British Force Enters Targets were the Shizuoka air­ ited the amount of state aid to ladolid in a domestic broadcast Approved were aided by guerrilla forces, and Many of the American fighters body of water they wJU have cut craft pLant at Shizuoka, 85 miles $1 ,500,000 annually. last night asserted that Nazi claims added: carried out widespread strafing off part of the 90,000 Germans Main Jap Supply north of Tokyo; the Nakajima In seeking adoption of the to possession of secret weapons "We are rapIdly securing the en­ raids against German airfields originally anchored in western plant at Koizuma, and the Tachik­ amendment, Senator Irving D. capable of wlnning the war "can­ W~SHINGTON (AP)-F'red M. tire island." which are becoming more con­ Holland. awa aircraft works at Tackikawa. Long (R., Manchester) explained not be doubted." Vinson, 55-year-old Kentuckian, Masbate is the 36th Philippine gested daily as the enemy is Port of West Burma Heavy clouds, obscuring the that a study of state finances and "The delay in the employment was confirmed unanimously by the island invaded. !brced to evacuate his fields in the targets, made instrumen t bombing anticipated income for the next of those means," said the broad­ senate yesterday as director of war \Vest, 70 of which already have CALCUTTA (AP)-A security necessary. two years showed that approxi­ cast, "may be e:lcplained by sev­ mobilization and reconversion. been lost. Draft Boards to Call Radio Tokyo admitted fires were mately $3,500,000 could be appro­ eral reasons. They have a destruc· Stepping into the position held blackout was lifted yesterday by James F. Byrnes until he re­ Eisenhow,er Ded,ares from British operations in the set in some areas, said they were priated for the school program. tive power so enormous that their Fewer Older Men extinguished immediately and The original school code revision employment can be justified only signed Monday, Vinson is not ex­ Allies Gain Foothold Arakan sector of Burma with the pected to make any abrupt changes announcement tbat an amphibious claimed three Superforts were shot program called for annual expend­ when there is no other way to 'End Not Far Off' On East Italy Fron, WASHINGTON (AP) - Some down over the Tokyo day area. iture of $12,000,000 in state aid. the life of the nation." immediately in the general policies force which landed in the vicinity ot his predecessor. Under Byrnes With Linkup of Unit. reduction in selective service calls of Letpan March 13 now has the job became unofficially known PARIS (AP) - General Eisen­ for older men was forecast yes­ driven south to enter Taungup, the BRINGS RUSSIAN AND CHINESE ENVOYS TOGETHER hower declared last night "The end terday as a result of a deep slash as "assistant president." ROM E (AP)-Elghth army main Jal?anese supply port for the Members of the senate finance is not far off" in 0 statement in the navy's draft requirements. WEst Burma coastal area. broadcast to urban residents of troops of Lieut. Gen Sir Richard High officials who requested committee questioned Vinson for L. McCreery had a firm anchor for The British landing at Letpan nearly an hour behind closed doors western Germany warning them to anonimity disclosed that the navy \Vas opposed by infantry but close flee at once from factories, mines the eastern flank of their Italian will need only about 16,000 draft this morning before clearing his line yesterday as a result of tbe air support helped eliminate Jap nomination to the senate. and rail centers and hide until thE: registrants in May instead of twice Itrongpoints and the push south­ allies arrived. linkup of units which landed on that number as had been planned. He was reported to have told both sides of the narrow spit of ward became a ~out as the enemy them he was in general agreement The supreme allied commander, They said the June quota, origin­ ~manders strived desperately in another of the series of instruc­ land separating shallow' VaUl di ally about the same as May, might witb the industrial demobilization Comachio lagoon from the Adri­ to withdraw their forces eastward and reconversion plans outlined by tions being broadcast to town be reduced by more than 50 per toward Prome. Byrnes in his report of Saturday. dwellers in western Germany, atic. cent, and when the navy reaches Dire~t and long-range air sup­ said: On the rest of the :lront even peak strength in July there prob­ port continued in its usual pat­ U, S, to Remove "Avoid at all costs being en­ the customary patrol actions were ably will be a further substantial tern, In latest operations P-1S's of rolled into the Volkssturm. Un­ lighter than usual, thougb there cut. the Second air command shot up Economic Barriers trained, and ill armed, for you the was increased German artillery The reductions for May and airfield installations in lower Against ,Argentina Volkssturm will mean a last min­ fire in some sections. June amount to about a 12 per Bur/J'Ja and Liberators bombed two ute death." The aUled airforces were bag­ cent cut in the overall draft calls brid,es on the enemy's .main over­ WASHINGTON (AP)-P r e­ ging a mounting toll of German for the army and navy. Tbey had land supply route, the Burma­ parinl to reestablish relations • • transport as the enemy pulled o~t been scheduled at approximately 'I'Il.Hand railway. with Argentina, the state depart­ Spring Will Return \ of Youeoslavia in the face c:t 132,000 men each month. ment bas decided to remove Its trontal attack by Marshal Tito's special e con 0 m i c restrictions I Eventually to towa forces and the danaer of havln, Nine Film Studios ----. bis line of escape cut of! by the Sichwan Recaptured agaInst tbat country, it was .Iowa Citians had a bad scare advancing Russions. Dismiss Employes learned yesterday. that winter was coming back for By Chinese Forces On 25-Day Strike The orlelnal date set for lifting good but it now seems that spring bans imposed during the year­ may eventuaIJy return. Yesterday Seventh War Loan CHUNGKING (AP)-F rei h HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Nine ma­ long estrangement was April 9, the clouds showed some signs at WASHINGTON (AP)-The of­ successes against a Japanese force jor film stUdios last night mailed but since Areentina siined the breaking up although a strong ficial openin& of the Seventh War esUmated at 80,000 troops in dlImiasal notices to all of their act of Chapultepic in Mexico yes­ wind threw snowflakes all over. Loan drive will be stBged May 14 southwestern Honan and north­ employes who have been on strike terday, the move may come Today it will be generaliy clear at Buffalo, N. Y., with Treasury ern Hupeh were reported yester­ for the last 25 days. sooner. but still rather chilly, although the Secretary Morgenthau and Gen­ day by the Chinese high com­ This actlon, announced after a A United States tanker is going sun will warm things up a lit.tle. eral Stilwell partiCipating. mand. llleetin, of producers, came as the to Arge~tina with petroleum and Iowa City was pretty lucky on Prelirnlnaty plana annQunced In Honan a Chinese counter­ ~esult of an ultimatum issued two FOil THE FIRST time, RURian and Chlnne amballadon conferred Ilmultaneoully with United Statu will pick up linseed 011 there. 1he whole; no hard freeze, al­ last night by a war finance aaency attack reeained the town of Sich­ daYI aao in which the approxi­ Secretary 01 State Edward B. St.Ulnlul Ir.. when, with British Ambassador Lord Halifax, the four met Several months ago, the war though last night the mercury spokesman include a naUonwlde wan, 22 miles southwest of Neisl­ mately 14,000 studio workers were In the Itate depaJ1ment at Waahlnrton. Shown seated in SteUlnlUl' office are (left to rlchU Lord Hall· shlppln, administration prohibited went well below freezing, and no broadcast 9-10 p. m, central war ana, and killed 400 Japanese. The ordered to return to work today fax, secretar, 8teUInlUl, ltulSlan AmbalUdor Andrei Grolll)'ko, and Chinne Ambuudor Dr, 'Wel rao- Arnerica~ ships from calUng at buge piles of snow. Yesterday's time (Blue), a rally at the Buffalo enemy had captured Sichwan or Joee th.ir jobl. 1IiUu, Ar,entine ports. high, 36; low, 32. stadium and a dinne... Monday. ,AGETWO THE DAILY IOWAN. IOWA CITY., IOWA , \ THURSDAY. APRIL 5.1945 .. 'THE DAILY IOWAN 'In', Chiter. Play- .OFFICIAl DA,ILY BULLETIN It.... tile ",""I.SrrY CIlLI".,,,. are ...... ed •• tbe 'rell. .. • ..... 0""', OIl v.,.,.... aw.. ret I ... Ol".,a"" KOIICII ~rt Published ~v~ry morning ~xcept Monday by Student Publications ':I ~ ••,oaIted- ..II. Ille .....,.. edIIwr ." Til. 0.,., I...... r ma, 'a I. II" ... til. In lit. locorporated at 126-130 Iowa avenu~, Iowa City Iowa. I~ .....~ p...... "' .. n.ooft .ttl.... ., , .. Pinky' e Puppefeer--SlY/ Student ~ I • Dall,. , ...... GBNBaAL NOTICBS ..... be ...... ,.U,. I •••• " j flt 4:" • • III. lb.... ,. ,,..ed'., 'Iu' ,ubl/c.U •• , ••II.e ...Id NOT •• lIJ..f ••••, .... b, '.1...... 1 be TYPED oa LEOlBLY "a"'TIN ." JOIINfilY JOIIM8'l'OK • ••• 8101'1110 It, • nlp••• Jbl. p.r. ••. Ikard of trustees: Wilbur Kirk H. Pomr, A. Crail. * * * Twin category, either, but heavy (I Sc:hramm. D.lb Iowan Si.n Writer BeirdL Paul R. Ollon, Donald Ottilie, Mal:)' JaM Nevi~. Mary seth solid reading like Shakespeare, Vol. XXI,; No. 1907 Thursday, ApJlt. 5. IMI. "Puppdeerinr- Is a ~ art and PUm~r, Karalyn K~ll~r, Jack Moyers. Plato, the JIliad, the Odsyey. AI provides a wonderful background "When I was 10 i accepted Plato UNIVERSITY CALENDAR for anyone with an interest in the as the gospel h'uth, although now Fred M, Pownall, PubUsher theater," says Helene Jean Wick­ I disagree heartily with him on Thuncla1,A.1!1l 5 8 p. m. Vesper service: "A Re­ Se Dorothy Klein, Editor Dick Bftta-, A!f¥. JIIr. ham, A3 o~ t.t.rsbaUtown, who many poinlts. I r~ad such pondell- 7:15 p, m. Iowa Seotlon, Ameri- ligiDn fol' Today," by Dr. Preston ::k~~ g{vlng 'p(ippelsho.... and ous things when I was lime that ' ~an Cheminl society; lecture on Bradley, Macbride Buditt>rlum. • the tiny fllU .... for ' e1lbt I In, .tercel M second class mail Subscription rates-ay mall $5 now read more in a ligh~r vein. "SpHiral Pbotome~ the Stud7' M.D_1, April 9 years. I like Sar6yoan very mUch and of Aant Pi_ents," by Dr. matter at the posloftice at Iowa per year; by carrier, U cent. 8 p. m, Public lecture by Lamar Helehe Jf!an, who Is widely think Noel Coward is wandllrful Zschlele, ;lt4 chemistry building. City, Iowa, under the act of con­ weekly, $5 per y~ar. Dodd, Iowa Union. known as ''Pinky'' because 01 her in his techniques and philosophies. 7:30 p. m. Lefevre Oratorical cress or March 2, 1879. ---- 8 p. m. University play, Univer. The A§oda~ Press- exclu- U,hUah I'C!d hair, Is a dramatics I enjoy Somerset Maugham's coniest, senate chamber, Old Capi­ Is sity theater. C TELEPHONES sively entitled to use lor republi­ art majot. A luge chunk of her novels and would like to take in tol. for cation all newll dillpatchl!l5 lime is swallowed ul> by work at more of Dreiser, James and 8:30 p. III DaIle., Trian,l.. ch\b. Tu~, AprD 10 EdHDrial Office ...... 4192 o.t gin credited to it 01' not otherwilIe the UniversIty theater for she bas Joyce." . Friday, April 6 2 p. m. Bridge, University club. at ' Society Office ...... 4193 credited in this paper II,Od also worked bacltstap on paint. COll­ Intending to major in art when 5 p. m. Sigma Xl Initiation, sen- 6:30 p. m. Picnic supper, Tr\,. gin Business Office ...... 4191 the local news publillbed herein. tume, property or stall! crews on she entered college, Pinky studied ate cbam/)er, Old Capitol. angle club. cor every production during the cur- art quite extensively In her sdphb- 6:30111. rA. S1irna Xl banquet, 8 p. m, University play, Unlver. yes THURSDAY. APRO. 5.1945 rent season. _ more year at State Teachers col- Hotel JeffersOn. sity theater.' 'Teg "I started makln,. puppets when Lege in Cedar Fa III!. She is in~- 8-11 p. m. All-Unlvefslty party, WecbIeIda" Api'll 11 I was about 12 and built a,' ilttle ested eSpeciaUy tn the use" of Iowa·l1blon.. 8·p. m. University play, Univer. sta,e in the basement," sbe re­ color. Nowadays, her art is only a ...... ". ~ 7 sity theater. meml)ered. "My ,reat QPus waS a means to an end fOr slle rrtakes APt conferenee: 8 p. m. Concert by UnlversU)' Press FreedOm Drive Past Talking Stage- borrll)le satire on 'Romeo and numerous sketches of things at the 9-1"1Mr a. m. ~lfstraUon alld Symphony orchestra, Iowa UnloIL juUet.' It was, very bad, but' it theater which she wants to reo e,,~, art building; Thursday. April 12 aF PAUL MlLLD many ends in view, and all ROOd , made my smalt audIenCe laugb ~ member. tOln: a. 1ft.. Radio broaMast, sen- 2 p. m. Red Cross Kensington, WASHINGTON (AP) - The Chief of these, simply stated, is as I didn't . mlnd. Those puppetS "At first I thougbt sutrealisl1t aile- cbamber, Old Capitol. University club. principle or world freedom of follows: were sutffed with cotton and we.re was the real thing, but now' tl)at 12:15 p. m, Luncheon, Iowa 4 p. m. Tea, University club. news exchange probably will be "rn the next postwar era a free weird loolting even for" ppp~fs." I know more about it I'm. not so Ulrion ca~a . 8 p. m. University play, Unlv~r- endorsed by the united nations at press and freedom of international Entertalnin,. for n,el~~ol'!! and sute," she smiled. "It's fun t<:J do, 1:30' ~ m, Afternoon aession, art sity theater. San Francisco, and, going beyonp news exchange everywhere must for parties the YOU.th~ur -pu~feer but even if you understand your buildmt\ ~I'i\un. Frlda.y, April 13 'lip service, there appears to be be guaranteed. There can be no pve most of tl'le G,lmm fairY own work you don't understand 8 __31, A..... l 8 6:30 p. m. Annual banquet and atrong likellhood that the nations permanent peace unless men of all tales. Later she producea ()ne ()f that of others. I like Picasso and' II- p. nr.. &Ini1rl be­ puppeteers gave shows for us. The done-lights, music, scenic design, to New Mexico. I hope they give olal council of the world organiza­ in the drive to bring home the im­ one o( the Passion Play was beau­ directing and acting." 'Faust,' 'Cal'men,' 'La Troviata' , mLD BOUSE WOMEN'S RECREATIONAL came 50 wrapped up in her "Blue­ SWlMMlNG tion. State department advisers portance of the subject to heads of beard;' show that sh.e came neai' tiful," she remarked, "and they As a child Pinky was alone a and "The Barber of Seville.''' Studentl and faculty must ar­ ot the American delegation regard state everywhere. These men are to hysterics durlng the scene with had a Punch and Judy show that great deal of the time. She had As for the future, Pinky- sais, range for lodt.... before 6 p. m. at 4-5:30 p . m. Monday, Tuesday, the council as the place to Lix re­ Ralph McGW of the Atlanta Con­ all of the heads. was very good . I Jearned a ter­ no brothers or sisters and was ill "I'm at the piace wnere I'm going the flel~. Thursday and Friday. sponsiblllty for developing a stitution; Dean Carl Ackerman of Trick devices seem to have rific amount; it took me years to so that she could not play out­ to sit sun and let fa te make the All uolverslty men may use tbe 10 a, .".-12 M. Saturday worldwide free exchange of inlor­ Columbia university; and Wilbur sort it all out." doors. The natural result was next move. I want to go into 'act­ field house floor. and facilities Recreational swimming periods mation as an essential step in pre­ B'orrest of the New York Herald­ been Pinky'S specialty. She once had the scheme of having a char­ In the junior division Pinky books and reading, She developed ing or directing. It sounds pre.tty from 1:30 to 9 p.m. Tbey must be are oPi!n t() all women students, serving future peace. Tribune, a committee of tbe faculty, faculty wives, wives of acter appear in a cloud of smoke. gave a little show with a hand a voracious appetite for anything ambitious but I'd Ilke to do Lady d&-8IIIed 10 regulation IY m IUit of Secretary StetUnius has said he American SOCiety of Newspaper graduate students lind administra­ Although she had never smoked' puppet. Later a lady who won a in print. None of the Bobl)sey MacBeth and Hedda Gabler." i:>lack shorts, wbite shirt, and rub­ "earnestly hopes" the genel'al sub­ Editol'!!. hand puppet made by a profes­ ber-wed arm shoes. tive stall member!!. Students ject may be acted upon favorably Of course, the united nations before, she lit a Cigarette and should present their identlficati!ID blew a pull of smQke thl'ou¥h a sional and raffled of! at the con­ II. G. SClJaom•• at San Francisco, after the "long conference at San Francisco is Dot cards to tile matron for admittan~. tube to the stllie. The result: ventiOn gave it to the girl because step forward" at Mexko City, going to wrlte 81 peace treaty. The I MUSEUM 01' NATURAL M. GLADYS SCOTT ot her good performan·ce. where he and Assistant Secretary conference has been called to form she became violently ill and could . IUSTQRY not continue .for !Ive minutes. What will probably turn out to Baruch Confident of Servicemen's Future Nelson A. Rockefeller, achieved a world organization aimed at pre­ be a "break" for Pinky happened In order to save coal and co­ mGRLANDERS PRACTICE the first formal international ac­ serving future peace. The peace In her inteTJh'etatit>n of "FaUst" ...... SCHEDULE she made a black sponge crow when she gave a puppet style LON DON,* Thul'sday* * (AP)- to war again." Also we've got to operate in the "brownout" the ceptance of this prinCiple. conference, at which the vietor na­ museum will be closed Sunday TUl!l5day >l-5 p. m. pipers. which new on Stal!!!, Ricked up show for a gepartment store in L 0 0 kin g conCldently into the see that those subsidized slave That acceptance was a unani­ tions will deal with the van­ until t o'clock untlllUrther notice. Wednesday-4-5:30 p. m. drum· a, piece of paper ('aust's con­ Marshalltown. Some people who future, Bernard Baruch, advis~r labor countries do not again flood mous declaration by the inter­ quished, probably will not come saw it and considered it outstand­ to President Roosevelt, asserted in U' wltl be open frQm 1 o'clock until mel's. tract wlt~ the Devil) and flew the world .with their cheap l:?1'0- American conference ot foreign until long alter San Francisco. oU. ing wrote about the talented young 5 o'clock and the custodian wiu _ Thursday 4-5:30 p. m. everyone. What appeared tb bl! black magic an interview published today that ducts, lowering the standards of ministers calling for the tearin, What is hoped for at San Pran. miss to a puppeteer-scenic de­ American servicemen would not be' ·there to show visitors the ex- WILLIAM ADAMSON had been achieved lh a mainet on living in the united nations!' ' down of all artificial barriers of Ci:sCOI by newspaper and radio men signer-friend in California. He have anything to worry about hibltlr PIpe MaJor the crow's feet and a pop-er cItp After Lasky's version of the censorship and government con­ as well as by Unlted States Il!Jv­ will be in Albuquerque, N. M., this when they got home, that "there B. E. DD.r. painted whUe and attached to the story had been pllt into type and trol. It enunciated this prin.ciple: ernmenl officials, is progress to­ summer and has asked Helene will be more work in the United Director THE SANXA Y PRIZE paper. an abstract had been transmitted "Freedom of commUnication of ward international,uarantees. Jean to come there for the sum­ States than there will be hands This is an award 01 $500 to the thought, oral as well as written, The state department itsel.t, fac­ "You can fool the publk on I\.ow by the Associated Press to the' ROBER'll T. SWAINE mer to direct a children's show at with which to do it." senior, a native or re ~ ident of Iowa, js the. essential condltlon to the ing the job of implementation, fs many puppets are on the stage I:>y United States, where it was widely SCJK)}'ARSHIP the Albuquerque Little Theatl!r This wave of prosperity, he told pub li s h e d, Baruch's secretary who gives the highest promise of development of a watchIul public concerned with working toward havin, hangers to hang controls and to teach classes in the juvenile a reporter for the army newspaper This scholarship is available for opinion throughout the world to some united nations agency that on; this way you can have any asked that it be withheld from a high ranking senior who wishes achievement in. graduate work:. It division of the theater, Stars and Stripes, would carry publication. However, after dele­ guard against any attempt of ag­ might serve as a clearing house number of characters on stage but to pursue graduate study or law in is not available to students in pro­ "The Camel With the Wfinkled over for ti ve to seven yea rs after tion of the two fore-going para­ gression." for the special problems that arise !l).ove only the few who have Knees," which she presented with the war "no matter what is done Harvard university next year. Ap­ fessional schools. The holder of this In this campaign, men have for­ in respect to international ex­ speeches," Pinky rev e ale d. graphs, it was published by Stars plications and recommendations five others at the University thea­ or not done." prize may pUl'sue graauate work gotten all diUerences, poUtical and change of information. Hence the (Dropplnt controls Just isn't being and Stripes. must ~C'in the IIradIJate office be­ ter last Saturday, is her latest The 75-year-old financier, who in this university or any other 'Otherwise. Is a campaign started consideration of the economic and t'G Lasky said that during the In­ fore April 12. n done. According- Pintty, it's the effort with puppets. Two of them, has held several conferences with standard universit.y dUl'ing the and built up and kept going with social council. terview, in Baruch's sulle in th~ . CAB..L E. SEASHORE cardinal sin in the realm ot pup­ Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy, Prime Minister Churchill, was coming year and the stipend will petry.) she made herself using red yarn reluctant to talk about the exact Claridge, the telephone rang and The Graduate CoDe.e Baruch's secretary told him the be paid Ior that year. Applications .. 'Faust' was the best puppet I for the hair, buckram for the nature of bis mission to London. prime minister was calling. Ba­ and recommendations must be in ever made. He had a neW type f.aces, sawdust stuffing tor the But he spoke Ireely in expressing CANi)ltJATES FOa DEGREES Tales of Allied Atrocities Only Weapon ruch, Lasky said, gave Churchill the graduate office before April 12. of control-shaped like the spade hands and legs and black oil cloth con f ide nee in the immediate All etuden. who expect to reo­ CARL E. SEASHORE on a playinl' card. That type is for the shoes. future, and added: a mlld brushoff to continue his ceiv!!' a dell'ee or certificate at the talk with the soldier reporter. . The Graduate CoLlere v@ry flexible, and the PQppeteer In fitting voices to the different "What happens after those five APl'il 22 Commencement should Remaining in Goebbels' Arsenal- "Hello, Winston, this is Ber­ can hold three In nch hand characters Pinky uses a falsetto, or seven years depends on the make formal application immedi­ GE'RMAN EXAMINATION easily. But the character I m()!t normal and bass and 101' additional peace the big boys are preparing nie," Baruch said into the phone, atelY in the office of the Reglstrat , (Godfrey H. P. AndM'son tells Others said the Germans fought according to Lasky. "Look, Wi,,­ The Ph.D. reading test in Ger· enjoyed makin, was my first at­ characters makes use of such de­ for us now." Ulliversity hall. man will be given Monday, April here the desp rate ,~ traits of well on Iy so long as at least two ston, I'm busy this afternoon. I'll tempt, a clown. He's wonderful. vices as speaking slower, stutter­ Bauch's interview was given to RA.BY G. BARNES 9, at 4 p. m , in room 104, Schaeffer officers were present. As soon as drop over later." Nazi lcadet's as they tt·y to ,·e· He never pts tangled. He n~v@r ing, lisping and dialects. A. Victor Lasky, Stars and Stripes Reclstral' hall. Information l'egarding this store th o fightinu spi"it of G(,I" one officer was killed and the second no longer feared being re­ falls to cllarm the audIence. And "Puppeteering isn't the child's staff writer. As originally pre­ or subsequent tests may be had by UNIVERSrrY VESPERS ma7~ soldiers and civilians, .An· ported lor cowardice, fie woUld he's wonderful to pose. I'v~ done play that it looks like; it's stren­ pared for publication it quoted 'ciearlnc Ou' Slopes seeing F'red Fehling, 101 Schaeller dflrlOIl, a71 AP toar COI·'·6spon· pack in with the troops under his him in water colors, charcoal, oUs uous work," she asserted, "When Baruch as saying at this point: WITH THE 158th REGIMENTAL Dr. Preston Bradley, radio hall or by calling X580 daily at 10 I do shows by myself I work six dint fDas freed frOt71 a Germa71 command. and pastels." "And one reason I am over here COMBAT TEAM ON LltGA8PI, preacher and pastor of the People's o'clock. Churcib of Chicago will speak at priMo" cal/tp lCJ3t week and this There were many other is to hold the big stick over the Luzon, April 3 (Delayed) (AP)­ F, L. FEHLING stans UalveIlJit)" Vespers Sunday, April is the seconcL of four .~ tori s in of growing demoralization ia the Big boys 10 make damn' sure Japaneses modal'!! and rockets 10 In&truetor Opinion on and 0" .he Campul- they're not going to foul up the the hills 01 the Bicol peninsula 8, at 8 p. m, in Macbride audi­ which he describes cond'itions Wehrmacht. One non-commis­ peace. to,ium. His subject wiH be "A Re­ inside Germany.) sioned officer told me "You are have prevented Americans use of HQUISEHOLDERS ligion tor Today." The university hoping for release from prison. I "We've got to so de-industria­ captured airfields so far bub tl1& Householders who will have What ',peof Magazine Do You Like to Re.d~ community is invited, and no tick­ By GODBEY H. P. ANDERSON am hoping to. be made prisoner. r lize Germany and Japan-af least doughboys are graduaUy clearina rooms for tent during the summer lor a generation-so they won't go ets are necessary. PARIS (AP) - The greatest reckon it is better to live for the Japanese fr om wooded slopes. session are asked to call the st\j­ Don PI~rce, At 01 towa Clt;y: quenUy oversleep and don't get a M. WlLLARD LAMPE mystery among many surrounding fatherland than to die .for it." He denl housiog bureau (extensiolr "I like mall1 differeni kinds of chance to read the morning paper, Chal.rman, l1itlversity Nazi Germany today is why the got his wish a week lalAlr. OKINAWA INVADERS GET NIP MONEY 277) between Thursday, April & magazines, but my favorite lis and when this happens the news Board 01 Vespers and Saturday noon, April 7, in Germans continue to fight at all. A guard, one of a party ~scort­ probably the digest ma,azine be­ magazine comes in handy." order that lists of rooms for prO!!· The fanatical "Kampfgels!," or ing French priaoners back from c_ It hH sueh a variety of ar­ ACUIEVEMENT TESTS pective students can be complied Trier, laughed when he told me fighting spirit, carefully built up ticles." Rita Berson, Al of Des }lomes: and available to stUdents enterinf by the Leaders, showed signs of that more than one quarter of Tbe' achievement tests in for­ "Fiction magazihes. The stories are tl'le summer semester April 23. being sadly bent io recent weeks them had escaped en route. "Why eign languages will be given on a ....e S•• Al .r aoc'Is .... , short and easY to read." the- following datl!s: MRS. IMELDA MURPHY and the crudest forms ot threats don't you go, too?" 1\e ~d. a: "111M neW8ftUIIIIEines becauae are now being applied to bludgeon "I'll not shoot." Richard. Antes, A.% of West Spokert, April 1., 9 to 12 a. m. Director, Honainc Se"lee ~ ~ en.ttwbt~ as well Ill! RMd~, April HI, 3 to 5 and (See BULLETIN Page 5) the war-weary populace into con­ Bombings, lind the faet thai 1Jntoll: "1 like magazines wi 1h en~rtaintnc, aeid the news com­ t t9" p. tinuinl resistance. many foreign workers are 1.yln, short stories and at·t1cles about m. mentaries are Quite easy' tu u.... - Sttfdents win not be excused NOTICE TO PRE· Alain and a,ain the props­ down their tool!!, Is throwiq wet stWnd:1' , .. current events. Piehu'e mllgazines b'Mil other cllls! appointments. MEMCAL STUDENTS poda edifice 110 pain&takinlly production Into a hopeTen fan_. are also a 'favorite." rooms see bulletin boards of The Association of American erected. by GoebbeJa haa been When munitions lire produced 'or n "II MaIlar7, i. ~ ...... CKJ': , A ..... MeCe1, All of, J\hsea4itte: 1\ledlcal Colle.es' Aptitude Tat ahattered. often is impossible to move them the !orellJft lenjuace departments. ". like dJ,est mlllBzin~ I have "1 Like digest maiazines because All students Intendin, to take the Will Be

Summer Registration to Begin Aqril 9 118-124 South Clinton 81. Phone 9607 STRUB-WAREHAM Classes 10 Convene 1011'0 Cit !J's l} pa,.;ml'll t fore--Esf. 1 67 Pre-Medics ,Art as Way of Life' I April 23; Second To Be Last Lecture Session, June 13 To Take Tesl Lamar Dodd, Art Students May Obtain Lecturer, Instructor, St,.,tb's The Association at American Complete Materials Medical colleges, aptitude test will To Speak April 9 Fa.shion At Registrar's Office be given April 13. This test should be taken by all stUdents who ex­ Floor Complete registration materials pect to apply tor entrance to a tor t.he summer school session be­ TO medical school during 1945 or the ginning April 23 will be available spring of 1946. at the Office of the Registrar be­ WED The te:;t has been adopted by ginning AprJl 9 at 1:30 p. m., ac­ the association as one of the nor­ cording to an announcement made APRIL 21 mal reQuirments lor admission. It 1 yesterday by Harry G. Barnes, measures one's ability to learn ma­ 'registrDr. terial similar to that which he will To obtain the registration ma­ have in medical school. It also terials each old student must pre­ measures his general information sent his identification card and and scientific background and his each new student his admission ability to draw accurate conclu­ statements, Atter 'obtaining his sions from a given set of data. materials each studen t is respon­ The test will be given April 13 , sible for making an appointment at 2:10 in room 5 of the law build­ for a conference with his adviser. ing and any student who wishes These conferences should take to take it should make applica­ place between April 11 and April tion Immediately to the Office of 20. the Registrar. This is the only Each student in the college of MR. AND MRS. Dale C. Chance of Redfield announce the engage­ ment and approaching marriage of their daughter, Joan, to Dr. Wen­ time the test will be given this liberal arts should g6 immediately year. aUer securing his registrailon ma­ dell A. Johnson, Lieut. (j. g.) U.S.N.R .. son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred V. sltillP to terials, to the Liberal Arts Ad­ Johnson, 809 Seventh avenue. The weddlnl' will take place April 21. A fee at $1.50 is required at each visory office, Room 4, Old Capi­ Miss Chance Is a senior In the collece of liberal arts at the University student taking the test. Lamar Dodd 011 r 1U1II tol, to make an apPointment for a Dr Iowa and she will receive her decree In the April convocation. She coed conference with his adviser. is affiliated with Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Dr. Johnson received hIs Dr. Bach to Speak Lamar Doda, professor and hend fasM01ls of the art department at the Uni­ on display' Students in the college of com­ B. S. degree from the college of liberal arts at the/Unlventiy 01 Iowa Dr. Marcus Bach will be the merce should follow instructions and was graduated from the collere of medicine at the university In versity at Georgia, will speak on guest speaker at the Sunday aft­ "Art as a Way of Life," at the relative to conferences with ad­ 19,44. He was affiliated with Alpha Kappa Kappa, medIcal fraternIty. ernoon vesper services at the lie Is now serving hIs Internship In Johnstown, Pa, last lecture on the university visers as announced from the of­ Pre byterian church. He w ill series to be given Monday, April iice of the dean of that college. speak on "Little Known Relig­ 9, In Iowa Union. Monday and Graduate college students should Appoint Gerald Pearson ions," and will use recordings he Tuesday, Dodd will visit c1asess in see the head of thElir major de­ has made of these religious groups. the art department, and at two partment. Graduate students wit.h­ Convocation Gerald B. Pearson, 230 S. Dodge Maunis Goddey is student chair­ o'clock Tuesday afternoon, he wm out a major department should street, has been apPOinted an ac­ man in charge of vespers. The sup­ give a demonstration of portrait consult the dean o~ the graduate countant with the oftice of price oer commHtee is under the direc­ painting in the lecture room of conege. tion ot Elizabeth Brinker, assisted the art building. .: Before the student goes to con­ odm:inistration district account­ Scheduled­ by Roger Willey, Douglas Brad­ Studying under such ouistanding fer with his adviser he shouid pre­ ing division in Moline, Ill., ac­ shaw and Phylli$ Russell. A recre­ pare a summary of the work com­ cording to Robert M. Harper, di­ teachers as George Bridgeman, ational hour will be held after George Luks, Richard Lahey, pleted thus far and an outline of rector of · the Quad-cities dis­ supper, with Wiima Wooley in his further plans, A preliminary John Stuart Curry, Boardman For April 22 trict. charge. Robinson and Jean Charlot, Dodd schedule of studies should be pre­ Pearson was formerly with the pared on the class schedule sheets. won recognition with his water­ war food administration in Chi­ The fox leeds upon birds, ro­ colors and held a one-man show No student is allowed to register The 85th spring Convocation lL:dling cago. dents, fruits and berries. in the Ferargil Galleries in 1933, for more than seven hours during will be held by the University at After establishing a reputation This one-piecer in periods the period from April 23 to June Iowa Sunday, April 22, at 1:45 in water color, Dodd turned to the "Salyna" .. a Crown 9. Undergraduate~ may enroll for p. m. in Iowa Union, marking the medium of oil, winning the Nor­ not more than 9 semester hours end of the second semester. Tested fabric by during the period from June 13 to Degrees and certificates will be man Waite Harris silver medal and cash prize of $500 for his painting, St. George. Com­ Aug. 8. Graduate students may awarded to candidates in the cere­ "Railroad Cut." plete yok., of enroll for not more than eight mony in all units except medicine semester hours during that period. and nursing. In 1940 he was awarded second matching lace. Undergraduate students may not Each candidate will be allowed prize in the International Busi­ iny cap sleeves, enroll for more or Jess credit in four guest tickets. No admittance ness Mllchine's Exhibition of 9 to 15. , any course than is printed in the will be allowed without tickets. American Art, collected for show­ f Summer Se:;sion catalogue. Grad­ The Convocation speaker wiU ing at the New York World's fair, uate students, with the approval be the Rev. Charles W. Gilkey of for his paintlng. "View of At.hens." 22.95 of the instructor of the course in the University at Chicago. Harry In this same year he had his sec­ question, the advise~ and the dean G. Barnes, registrar at the univer­ ond one-man show in Manhattan, at the graduate college, may en­ sity, will act as master of cere­ followed by the Metropolitan roll for · Jess, hut not for more, monies and Prof. M. WJIlard museum purchase of his painting, credit than print~. Lampe, head of the school of re­ "Sand, Sea and Sky." For courses in which credit is ligion, will act as chaplain. Dodd has been represented in printed as "credit arranged" the the Southern States Art league, exact amount of credit to be Philadelphia Water Color society, earned must be written on the American Water Color society, registration card by the advIser as Single Ring Ceremony New York Water Color society, approved by the respective de­ Pennsylvania academy, Carnegie partment. Unites Befty Pokorny, Internationals, St. Louis Annual When students go to the confer­ exhibition of American Artists, ence with their advisers they the COl'coran and Richmond Bien­ should take all of their registra­ Ralph Hatfield nials, and the Whitney annual. tion materials. Further needed in­ formation will be given at the con­ In a single ring ceremony yes­ Friendship Circle ference. After necessary signa­ terday afternoon, Betty Pokorny, tures have been obtained from daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Of King's Daughters other departments and the ad­ Pokorny, 917 N. Governor street, 118-124 South Clinton Street Phone 9607: viser has signed the cards, they To Have Luncheon became the bride of Ralph Hat­ Mrs. John Howard Dawson are to be returned to the Office of field of Iowa City, son of Mr. and The Friendship Circle at Kings STRUB-W ARE HAM the Registrar. Mrs. Earl Hatfield of Rockwell MRS. JOHN H. DAWSON, the former Betty ' June Brunton of Daughters will meet at 10:30 this Completed registration materi­ City. The Rev. A. C. Proehl per­ Boulder, Col., whose marrla,e took place Saturday In the First morning in the home ot Mrs. K. , Iowa City's Depa.rtment Store - Est. 1867 I als in the college of liberal arts, formed the ceremony in the Zion Christian church In Boulder. The vows of t.he double ring ceremony M. Winters, 14 S. Clinton, for .. commerce, education and the Lutheran church. were read by t.he Rev. Sherman B. Moore. The bride, daughter of sack-luncheon. Mrs. O. N. Riggs Graduate college must be filed in Doris Dolezal, niece of the bride, Lieut. Col. and Mrs. L. J. Brunton of Boulder, Is a. gradua.te of the and Rose SchmJdt will be assis­ the Office of the Registrar by served as maid of honor. Janet University 01 Colorado. Mr. Dawson, Son of Dean and Mrs. F. M. tant hostesses. The program will April 20. Dolezal was ring-bearer and Dawson, 723 Bayard street, was rraduated from the University of include a discussion oC the "Silver Students in the college of en­ flower girl, and Dick Wood, cousin Iowa and received his M. S. from Lehigh university In Bethlehem, l'a. Cross" magazine and devotions wiil gineering c~(l secure registration of tbe bride, was best man. be led by Mrs. L. C. Jones. The materials, beginning April 16, at He Is now serving as Instructor In the department or clvll englneerlnr Given in marriage by her father, at the University of Colorado. group will sew for the Iowa City the advisers' offices and completed the bride was attired in a white Children's Convalescent home. regIstration materIals must be taffeta and net floor-length gown filed in the office of the dean of and a white veil. She carried red the college by April 20. roses. Registration materials for stu- The maid of honor selected a . dents in the college of pharmacy may be secured Apirl 5 in the of­ blue taffeta and net gown and fice of the dean of the college. wore a corsage of carnations. The At this time they will also regis­ ringbearer wore a white chiffon ter. dress and carried a lily. ;-: • for Dress, ", • Students in the college of law For her daughter's wedding may secure registration materials Mrs. Pokorny chose a red dress • • • for Sports ( \ and register in the office ot the with black and white accessories, dean of the college April 19 and The bridegroom's mother wore a • • , for Business 20. green dress wi th contrasting ac­ cessories. • •. tor Evening ( Tuition is to be paid in full at Ettn p, W.sIII, Jill fa ..u ,.SIII .. ,at the age of 24, walked . Wear / - - the office ot the treasurer, Uni­ The bride attended Iowa City versity hall, on Monday, April 23, high school. Mr. Hatfield attended from Bo~ton to Wa.ahington in 10 day•. In hia 72nd year, be Tuesday, Apirl 24, or Wednesday, Rockwell City high school and is walked from Coast to Coast and back, doing .. much April 25. Thos:se who fail to pay employed by the Varsity Cab com­ tuition before 5 p. m. Wednesday, pany. 'The couple will reside at as 72 miles in a day. Among many other feat. AprjJ 25 are subject to a late 1730 F street. In his long career, be walked 100 milee in 20 boura aDd registration fine which is assessed Out - of - town guests included automatically by the treasurer. Mrs. Earl Hatfield and daughter, 38 minutes. Mr. Wntta enjoyed being a pedestrian. Many car The fine is two doUars for the Vera Lou, of Rockwell City. owners are becoming pedestrian. and they're not enjoYinc first day and on~ doJ1ar for each additional day of delay beyond the Freshm'en Will Read it. Their can axe wearing out! If you don't want to due day. join them, give your car the care it needa to keep it I'UDJlinI All holders of tuition exemp­ 'Merchant of Venice' New styles designed by famous tions, including graduate students On WSUI Program right, running longer, and running farther on every and veterans, must go to the treas­ ,allon of guoline. Right now it'. time (or your Stuadud makers . . . of fme quality urer's office on days indicated to The freshmen will again hold Oil I)ealer's 10 Star Sprine Tune-up. ,J materials and in top flight styles sian t.heir tuition vouchers, the spotlight down center staee For further information regard­ this Friday night at 8 o'clock when priced to meet the need ot Ine registration in tne college If The Freshmen Takes the Platform liberal arts, contact Pro, H. C. over WSUI under the direction of your budget. Harshbarger at the liberal arts Robert Caponigri, instructor in the advisory office, Roo"" 4, Old Capi­ English department. Choose from comfortable casuals, tol. The first scene from the fourth act of Shakespeare's "Merchant of Ranaals, step-ins, oxfords, ties a Chess Tournaments applie • Venice" will be read by Peggy and strapped effects. offfee of Cowan of Laurens, Barbara More­ To Continue Tonight B"", ....IIY )ODII'" ...... will be house, Barbara Berse of Wood­ ...... IIUdcA /h;. livery pair is fitted by experts. p. m. ID The round robin and rating bridge, N. J ., Ina Fay Williams 01 "..tOt'mon ..' ng. Tbil tournaments will be continued by Burlington, Joyce Boehmler 01 (Soe .ry oboi.w, ri,Mi Viait our 1'.ew Mezzanine Shoe Shop t witt be members at the Hawkeye Chess Hampton, and Mary Rohner from Buy more War Banda f $1.60 it . club tonieht at 7:30 at a meetlng Iowa City . like mauy hundreds of others are t taitIJII In the recreation rooms of the USO _... , ..r car Filling str.ng.r ••• I.... rl I bulldi",. All persons interested in Mexican mythology says the do~ • • • benefit by genuine playing chess arjl Invited to 8t­ cacao plant was airborne Into values! tend. Beginners WiU be instructed Mexico by Quetzalcoatl, God of STANDARD OIL· DEALERS.' 10 STAR SPRINa TUNE-UP =-JkilLJ by advanced chess players. • the Air. 10". CII¥'. Dep.rtmaat Store-Eat. lU1 Meuanlue .Iloe allop ...... ~ ....•...... ITlltJB'. .."olld I'IDu ! ,. ~ Slate UDlm"lity of jg~ LIBRARY: '. PAGEFOUJ( ~ ' ••• AUT IOW·AM, IOWA CITY, IOWA. THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1946 Maybe So went)' Hawkeyes Open WSUI T ",UI (ft, i.rie Still IfIIC-:WB Hawk' N I:nsid WII e·, cu- BegiDl Dumont will off' Dandy Spring Football Practice every he • broadcOE inStalled To Play Badgers Friday A. TIGER 1\(1 to Its Ii! maY keE BT BOB KRAUSS • Kels~ ; Selkin happens Dally Iowan SJIOI1s EdUor news eV CLASS By Jack Sot@. " Mr. Ric!J.y'l- WE WERE Just a trifle surprised throug,hc Wisconsin Has a whiJe back, alter we opened a upon re­ Injurea Press. rather official looking envelope, • It· when the enclosed material asked 10 Veteran Team Brooklyn us, in big, black letters, it we Iowa Mehtor Stresses Tli,eM would like to have bigger crowds, be featu better support, and more interest Conditio"n in Opening of [oWO for our baseball team. We don't 5: 15 p. r Davis Expects Team Dodgers happen to have a baseball team. Warm.Up Drills rell, sup But the idea intrigued us. give an To Be More Steady Some 2()o l1awkeyes answered lIT WIUTNIY... * '*IlA&TlN n seems that the letter was from principa Than in OHumwa Tilt lhe National Baseball Congress. Coach Clem Crowe's call for tbe also bal NEW YORK (AP)-The Brook­ opening of $pring practice Ybs­ This is an organization, headed by the BY BEnYE NEAL lyn DodI~r ICOre cards this yea!" terday afternoon, and despite the should carry a notation to the ef­ a man n~ed Ray Dumont, which Dall lo",.n sports WrI&er chilling wind; and the hint Of fect that any resemblance to the is the voice for amateur and semi­ The weatherman, after livin, snow in the air, went through It ij,um.s of ouier years · is strictly pro baseball throughout the land. long warming-up drill, which as the Hawkeyes three weeks ot out­ Its headquarters are in Wichita, comcidental, and Mr. Rickey will one player putr it, "Will certainly door drill , has gone back to Kan. And Mr. Dumont and his bls take care of luch a situation in have us in shope In no time." last year's tricks of issuing rain due time. group are not digging ditches, ei­ and chilly wind, and Iowa'. ther. The gridirbg aspirants, attirants, "'ancb Wckey and Uncie Sam attired in sweat suits and footbaU diamond men have returned to nave beel) doiOf a strip tease with Idea Series their old Iieldhouse grounds for shoes, spent considerable time oli. ~'! Broold,yn roster, unUi today it Let it be said that, previous to warm-up drills and wind-sprints. their lInal practices before the bears ~ut a hazy resemblance to his present plan, which wi 1 I Big Ten opener with WlscoDlln Crowe had his backs pitchini 1f:00 what it was in the glory da,ys when shortly be unfolded, Mr. Dumont passes and Jater on in the sessIon here ~riday and Saturday. !.be borouli1 of B,rook)yn was just has had a series of ideas which, 8:15 had them try' their talents against 8:30 A muddy diamond which won't one big baseball park 8S far as en­ to put it mildly, have bordered actual game tbndilions. dry well unless the sun comes out thuslasm was concerned. slightly on the lunatic fringe. He 8:45 and the wind warms up, the lrl­ Sold DOWJI 'lfe alver had a couple of plans for night Fynllamentals 8:55 gid norU. gale, and the general Npw WhiUow Wyatt has joined bastball which, if nothing else, The former Notre Dame line 9loo win trine s of the weather yester­ the list of Camillis and Medwiclcs would have made the game dif­ coach divIded his squad into two 9:15 9:30 day worried Coach Waddy Davis, and Vauabans and Hermans and ferent. telims and ~g~n teaching them but he optimistically predicted at B,eiser. u ,one-but-not-forgotten First of all the scheme was to the (undamentals of the "T" for­ 9:45 Least one more outdoor workout /Jeroes. Wyatt has been sold down have the ball painted with phos­ mation. Crowe said in a meeUne 9:50 .:55 for his men before their !irlt COll­ the river to the PhUlies, a tate that phorous paint so that it would last night wit~ the players, that 10:00 leren.. c game. a~ one lime would have been con- show up belter In tbe poorly Iowa would use lhe "Tn exolu­ 10:15 Fle:ders Need PracUee 5.Id,ered worse than baseball death, lighted parks of minor leagues. sively throughout the season , although this year it could even With balters complaining now that "because it was fast and spectacu­ Meanwhile, indoor practices for 10 :30 the past two days have been con­ be' a break. Who knows the Phll­ the apple comes up thcre like II lar and scored touchdowns." lies might win the pen~ant. golf ball with attached searchlight 1l:00 fined to mere limbcrina of the Casualties Strike 11 :15 , already the strol1lesi Anyway, the sale of Wyatt either the effect of such a move Is ghastly Casualties have already struck indicates that Rickey is convinced to contemplate. 11:30 part of the team. If the Hawks get the squad as Jack Kelso and Dean 11 :46 outsi-ie today, and Davis seemed the 36-year-old is through, Next Gem. Selkin, both veterans of last year, or that he's getting rid of him Mr. Dumont's next gem may 1l :50 to think they would, the session ran together during the drill ses­ 12:00 will be concentrated on a stiCf under hIs policy of youth, which have had possibilities. He wanted sion and suffered deep cuts over he carried to something of an ex­ to have home plate outfitted witb 12:30 workout lor the outIleldcrs, with their eyes. B6th Keiso and Selkin 12:45 the Inner de(en e also getling a treme last year. Wyatt was of Iit­ a lighting system so that the were taken 10 the hospital, where t).e help except to opposing teams pitcher could see it more clearly. 1:00 good share of the much-needed it was reported several stiches 2:00 fly snagalng pract!ce. play six of the eight conference last year, and it he came back What with some of the wild men Swimming Coaches were taken in order to close the with a sound arm this year it among pre ent day hurlers this Cubs' Passeau 2: 15 Even il the Ottumwa Ult didn't tilts as double-headet·s. cuts. It is expected that they wiU would be something of a miracle. might not have been too bad. 2:30 show the Hawkfjyes to be a well­ Coach Waddy Davis also ap­ both be back in a few days. 2:45 Blue Hawksj Fractle C.reer But his last proposition would Praise Halldorsson balanced team, it did give the peared confident that the liawks Crowe expressed !=oncern over 3:00 coaches a good insight into the wlU have settled down as a more The decl1ne of Wyatt trom a have, to say the very least, revO­ highly-paid slar of 11141 and 1942 lutionized the diamond sport. Evi­ May 9'-fch the weather" I but said that the 3:15 most vulnerable diamond sports steady and tougher team by the For NCAA Marks squad would work out every day 3(30 and a chanCll t~ make the neces­ time they face their first Big Ten to bls present status of a property dently the theory bel).ind it was Drill for Meel of little assessed value again dem­ that baset)all should be made that it was po ~s ible until the en 3:35 sary shUts in players be:ore meet­ opponent. "Sure, we were shaky Performances of Jonas Halldors­ of the semester- hinting that, 4:.00 ing the powerful and experienced in our first game, but we expected onstrates the fragile and fleeting more entertaining, if not confus­ qualities of a pro baseball career. ing. Mr. Dumont's suggestion was A nina ~ay · son of the Iowa swimming team in regardless of the weather, prac­ 4.:30 Badgers this weekend. that with young and inexperi­ Coach Carpen'er Just :four years aeo he was a that, following a hit, a batter taking fifth places in the two tices would continue. 5:00 L1nup Switches enced men. They showed little 5: 15 lack in hitting, and those rough Confident of Victory maJOJ: factor in the Dodgers' should have the choice of l"unnihg ~f Jerry Uska. longest distance events despite his Although !;pmplet~ly tired out 1n accordance with what hQ match to the pennant, and he was to either first base or thlt·d, de­ at the end of the drill, all of the 5:45 learned In Monday's game, Coach spots in fielding should be pretty I" Triangular Event CHICAqa {AP>-Tl'le pitcher- 31 years impressed swimming 6:00 well ironed out, now that they as independent as a mouse in a pending on what he had had lor poor were cheered coaches at lhe National Collegiate players expre5S~p confidence in Davis has decided to put Jack ch~ese faclory when it came to breakfast that day. As far as we Crowe to Pllt qllt a winning team. 8155 know what to expect In actual yesterday by report that the sore 7:00 Kelso in left field in place of Qt·. M. F. Carpen~er, coach of talh f~ 1942 contract. He held out know Mr. Dumont n~glected to tossing arm of ve\eran Claude championships last weekend. Paul Fagerlind, regular r i gh.t George Knack, with the ho.Pe of competition," he pointed out. the Unlverslty hlab track team, Veteran Bad&'ets un.I,J1 March 22, 1942, and signed say what would take place it two Passeau may ~ mended in time Oldest. Swimmer guard on last year's squad, said: increasing the hitting. Jerry Wat­ announced yesterday that 22 mel) tor a reported $17,500. runners should reach second base for him to hurl the season openel· Coach David Armbruster said "At the rate we're going we will lier and Leo Caballta WlU trade No one on the team is under­ will be entered In the 16-event estimating the toughness of the He had another good year in at the same time. But enough of against the cl1amplon St. LoUis that the Icelander is believed to be in shape in a week.' He cer­ Infield positions tor the forth­ outdoor track meet to be held at 1942, so didn't slen his next con­ that. Cardinals April 17. be the oldest swimmer evet· to tainly knows his stuff." com i n g games, playing second Wisconsin toe, which will come the City high at1"\letic (leld tomor­ to Iowa boasting seve" regulars tract until Match 12, 1943. In 1943 Deflnlte Merit 'Not So Bad' enter the NCAA meet and the Satisfied ~ase and third basc respectively. row afternoon at 4:15 Jj. m. Op­ from last year's nine. Coach he won 14 while losing five, but Now, however, the would-be Dr. John F. Davis, club physi- coaches were surprised at his abil­ Crowe said that he was com­ Gene HoUman, who looked good ponents wlll be Iowa City hlab last year he was an almost total idea man has come lip with Some­ clan, said the lIrm was "not so Ity to beat much younger men. during his three innines against Arthur Mansfield's Badgers have and West Liberty. pletely satisfied with the opening also had several weeks Of outdoor loss, with the result that this year, thing which appears to have defi­ bad" as Passeau feared when he Halldorsson, the only Iowa rep­ driU, but wiShed that he had more Ottumwo, will be the pitcher Fri­ Has Confidence if he decides to play, he'll prob­ nite merit. The supposition is that, left the Cub training camp in resentative In the meet, swam the day. Max Smith wlll start Satur­ practices, and as a result the men to work with. "The boys all Professing a good deal of COD­ ably play for what amounts to aU over the country, there are French Lick, tnd., Monday to have 440-yard free style in 5:20, his best day, with Wilmer Hokanson in squad Is much further advanced looked good, considering that it than in normal-weather years. fidence in the outcome of the peanuts. Four years from the top boys who would like very much to it examined het.e. time and stroked through the I·eserve for relief duty either day. to the bottom. was their first time out. The thing The Wisconsin men have · also meet, Dr. Carpenter stated he play baseball, but they are unable Describing the ailment as a cal- 1,500-meter event in 22 :26. His that pleased me most was tbeir Paul Fagerlind, previously men­ Four Actives Len to do so because they can't con­ tucked a victory away in pre­ hopes for almost half of the total sifieq area develo\Jeti from an old two points enabled Iowa to tie for wilingness to work-somethin~ tioned as a possible slarter, will points po sible tomunow after­ The departure of the Georgian tact any team, or because they probably not see acUon on the conference play, taking an easy elbow chi!> fracture, Dr. Davis said 12th place in the meet. that I demand in a fo otbaU win over the Milwaukee Road noon . It will be the first outdoor leave just tour active players on can't organize one themselves. an ' X-ray examination indicated May Compete Next Year player," the -Iowa mentor said. mound in the contests, due to meel for the Blue Hawk thlnclads. th~ 1941 championship club silll Mt". Dumont wanted to do some Davis' decision to pit his two most Hlawathas last Saturday. that surgerY ·was not necessary The 1936 Olympic water polo The starting lineup and hatting Decisive V!~~rT on tl1e roster. They are Dixie Wal­ thing about this, a laudable senti­ and that 'treatment will be con- pl~yer had been out of competl­ able hurlers against the heavy­ The decisive U-high victory in ker, Mickey Owen, Curt Davis and ment on his part. So, last Satur­ hlUing veteran Wisconsin team. order of the Bodgers will prob­ lined to a few days of deep X-ray ·tlon for more than four years be- ably find Bob Sutton at [jrst base, the Eastern Iowa conference l1leet AU4ie Galan. Of these only Davis day was designated as Nation­ applications. fore he repot·ted for the Hawkeye THEBESToF Field Dr,lnr last Saturday pleased the coach has reported. Wide Baseball Registration Day. Led 110und Staff 'Swimming team. It is possible he Aft e r inspecting the soggy Jerry Thompson or Orville Zim­ THE no lltUe, as he stated he had So time is marching on in At that time all youngsters who Manager Charley Grimm had ~1lJ continue . his studies at Iowa BLUE diamond yesterday afternoon, the merman at second base, Eric Kitz­ underrated his men. Dr. Car~nter Brooklyn, aided by a few well­ wanted to play baseball were to been counting on Passeau who m 1945-46, In which case he coach erased the possibility that man at left field, Jim Ackeret at had expected the event to be much placed kicks by Mr. Rickey. The register with Mr. Dumont's Na­ will be 34 next Monday t~ take could compete again here, Coach Friday's game would be post­ short stop, Bob Perthel at center­ /5+0 closer than it was. West Libert)' fans who have been absent in the tional Baseball Congress. Some the mounC\ on opening 'day and Armbruster said. poned. "The acid has dried out field, Nelson Walty serving In the right Held, George Wirtz or Phil was one of the Rivermen's op­ service since 1941 or 1942 will rec­ time in tile future the Congress otlierwise /lell> the Cubs off to a --- so.oop WATTS some already, and it It doesn't og,llize their beloved Bums only by will inform all these young men Nelson at third base, Don Murphy ponents Saturday, placing fourth good sta.rt. Passeau las~ season dId rain again, we will be able to use their unUurms when they return. as to where they can play baseball, Fritz to Stay behind home plate, with Gene in the six-team contest. not join the dub until they were MUNCIE, Ind. (AP)- Pltcher "TIlUNDERHEAD" it by then, besides having another And, judgin, from the nigbt game and for what team. The boys reg­ LAST Jaroch and WaUy Pearson doin~ EntrlC$ planned lor the meet, deep in theIr :lamed 13-game iosin~ Fritz Ostermueller, one of three prllctlce. or two belore the game," u~ifol·ml they wore last year, there DAY! -IN COLOR- the hurling. Jaroch will pitch which had been originally sched­ istered at any sporling goods store streak and then lini611ed with 15 to get Ule latest he predicted. mllht be II little diWculty in iden­ Ot· department in the United States Friday and Pearson Salurday. uled Cor to day but was post­ victories against nine defeats to nod from Uncle Sam, decided yes­ Doors Open 1:15-10:00 P. M. However, if the Friday game poned because oC the Inclement tifica tio.n there. or Canada. As soon as various cannot be played, an eUort will Iowa's lineup in batting order top the Bruin staff. terday to remain with his team­ is: Pau.! Greiwe, cl; Leo Cabalka, weather, are as follows: leagues and leams are formed the Tbree Regular Hurlers mates until his induction date is be made to play a double-header Congress will promote interest and 3b; Henry Quinn, S5; Bob Schulz, . &Dirlea .The shelving of Passeau, along fixed. rrileL:1t~ Saturday afternoon. Last season, lOO-yard dash-Wilson -ad install certain protective measures. Iowa was forced by weather to Ib; Jack Kelso, If; Allen McCord, WIth Ed Hanyzewskl's arm trou­ rl; Jerry Walser, 3b; Jack Spen­ Williams. Dick~y, 'o Head Great Idea ble leaves Grimm with only three TO·DA Y F::AY cer, c; Gene Halfman, Friday p; Z20-yard da~-Wi~n aDd Well, It all impresses us as a loss-::rs ht regards as starters­ Max Smith, Saturday p. . Willia.ms. erellt idell'. Mr. Dumont has hit Bob Chipman, Hank Wyse and I [.1 ~'l!1 THE SEASON'S TOP ... 44Q-yard 'dash-Wilson aad th e jackpot this ttme with a re­ af/ing . TO·DAY MUSICAL ROMANCE! NEWSOM PHONES MI\CK. Harper. Nayts Padfic sounding crash. Now if he only Another non-camp development doesn't decide that baseball uni­ ENDS FRIDAY HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP)­ 880-yard r un-MutTa, and Har­ was P1~ repor~ of the Chicago in­ forms should be made of medieval HENRY FON()A Manaeer Connie Mack of thq P~il­ ney. duction station t hat infielder and adelphia Athletics received a tele­ Mlie run-Terrell and Hel~ . armor or something of that nature Johnny Ostrow/lki underwent a everything should be just line. MAtlREEN O'HARA phone call from Bobo Newson, 120-yard high ljurdles-Mrers Baseball physical examinalion yesterday, in. now training' ih 1iartsvllle, S. C- and Sayre. but the outcome won't be known "I see by the papers w~ere som~ 2QO-yard low hllrdles-Morrls ,GREAT LAKES, ru. (AP)- The {or a week. ot the boys ain'l been looking so an~ Myers. navy will concentrate its ath­ Thompson 'Resigns good," he told Mack. "Well I'll High jump--Yoder and Carl- letlc'laIlent 1n tombllt ateas rather L4JtGf;ST ENTRY be in Baltimore Sunday 'to ':"'ork strom. ' than m the United States for en­ N'\!:W YOltK (AP)- The largest • ADDED HITS­ &ialnst the Orioles." . Pole vauH-Martin and Carl­ tertainment of servicemen during From Manager Post wartime entry [or the national ENEMY STRIKES strom. lhe remainder of the war, Comm. AAU men's senio ~ indoor swim­ "S'peeial" Broad jump-Wilson, Harliock ming championships has been re­ Ro~ R. M. Emmet of the Great Of Blackhawks. DRAFTY DAFFY "Cartoon" Pal l'IoM«ecI, PwfecMd CItICI ...... and Williams. Lakes naval training center said ceived for the meet here Friday Popularo' SC1imce "Novel HIl" ed IIIe Hollow ~ blade-••- J Shot put~McDonald, Follett yelterday. CHICAGO (AP)- Paul Thomp­ and Saturday with 181 individuals -Latest News- and Morgan. and 20 relay teams en tered in ten fef"ent, modem blad.. ~ .... , ~, &0 Be Hea. son resisned as manager of the eCO-HITe lust a "Feolller Toudt" "- Pal Wall vote a8 regulau achve ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Edward 8. ROIe-PharlUClat America's Town Meeting !)'Iembers, bull may however, be '- (KXEL) elected to serve as tl'easurer, CO!'- ROOM FOR MEN ======l 7:.5 j resJ;lOnding secretary, and as a ~ath Valley SheviU ~1fMT) 9.fofessional Legal advisor on tbe Single & double $10,00, Call 3583, Fine Baked Good. Dinah Shore (WHO) CQwwiL Any active membel' who Theta Tau fraternity. Graduate Plel Cak. Br" AJnerica's Town M~ 'wishe" to become an associate studen ts preferred. Bolla Paairl. ' (KXEL) member may do so by designa.ting Special Orderl ., . 8:00 his intentiom," WANTED Major Bowes (WMT) City Bakery , . Bing Crosby (WHO) Wan led ~ Fuqli ~ hed apar:t.ment !!1 •• WaUJqio.· b,.l .... Allerica's Town Meeting Five Freshmen Enter near campus. May 1st. Phone (KXEL) 3135. FURNITURE MOVING ' 1:15 roSy AND t'OUND Major Bowes (WMT) Lafeyre Contesl Final Bing Crosby (WHO) llOOM AND BOARD Lost-Brown Eversharp :(oun~aln By GENE AHERN OLD HOME TOWN 8y STANLE V America's Town Meeting MAHER BROS. TRANSFER Five university freshmen wiU pen engraved Patricia A. Klng. (KXEL) FoJ' Efficient Furniture 140vm. compete tonight in the final con­ Finder call X8750. 8:30 test for tbe Latevre Memorial Ask About. Our . ,LIM .... W~~.. r"5 TillS LEAKING , " MY 'ROOM I~ Corliss Archer (WMT) prize of $15 in the senate chamber Lost: Monday-green blllfold con­ WARDROBE SERVICE WH!;N iHE GORILLA ~Hor RIGHT ABCNE HI;REf Bob Burns (WHO) , ~ Old Capitol tonight at 7:30. The taining valuable identification. DIAL - 9696- - DIAL :RE'vOlVER,THE "'I'LL BH'l'HE BULLET Spotlight Bands (KXEL) public is inviled to attend. Reward. Call 4161. TER~'5 8:t5 Students have been working on BULLET WENT l'1-lF,U,THt= HIT A JUG UNDER MY CEILING / ... ITlCANT ·SE BED, "'l..IM.A1j .. A JUG Corliss Archet- (WMT) their original speeches, which are Bob Burns (WHO) A WATER.PIPE DRIPPING,--· - , OF CUBAN AAIR 1ON1C, limited to 10 minules in length, , ••• SNIFF --THIs :STUFF . USE/"·AH.M!;··· Spotli,ht Bands (KXEL) I for the past month, In the prelim­ • SMl;LLS LlK.~ VARtJISH-REN('M;R! 9:" inary contest held Tuesday night IT GETS RESULTS The first Line (WM'J,') aU bLrt five were eliminated. Abbott & Coslello (WHO) These freshmen from courses in liIJ-i' ' Fred Waring (KXEL) comunicative skills: Virginia Jes­ You'll be mlghty happy with . 9:15 aen of Exira Bpeaklng on Unem­ The First Line (WMT) ployment, Bernadino Greenberg of the results of a DaU~ Iowan AbbOtt and Costello (WHO) Waterloo with he rspeech on Ra­ Pred ;Wlring (KXEL) cial' ~rjudice, Ealani Hoyland of Want Ad. Besides savinq time. Station Break & Sian Off OakalOO68 discussing The . Negro, you can .aye money on oW' , . 9:30 ' , Mary Lou Poorbaugh of Cedar 'Home Town PhiloSQ»her (WMT) Rapids expounding Airways, and low rate dauWed ada. So Rudy Vallee (WHti)..I. ! Patricia Betsworth of Sergeant don't put it olf - Insert yoW' March of Time (KXfW) Bluff speaklng 011 The Peace will I 9:45 compete in tonlght's final round of ud toduy. F1'ank Sinaiser Npwl tWMT), the Llf.yr. Memorial contest. R\Jdy Vallee (WI!?!_ll March of Time (KX,I;li) Black-eyed persons can see bet­ " 10:00 , t(\r In dim light I han cnn persons News \Vith Do.ug Grant (WMT) with hazel. ' gray , or other light- DAILY IOWAN. colored .,... • . , ; il • Supper Club (WHO) ., - . i 1 • c PACEm THE D A I L Y lOW A H, lOW A CIT Y, lOW A THURSDAY, APRIL 5,1945

!HELLCAT GETS BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF OKINA W ~ Former Student to Leave- SUI Exceeds Quota .J Book Collector Gives Sorority Burns In Red Cross Drive University Bound File For Home in India 542 Contributors Give Mortgage Of Morrell Magazines the sixth Industrial nation in the By ALLENE GLEASON ~ $3,062 to Aid County Da.lly (owan Stan Writer world. Her supply or manpower T. Henry Foster, an officIal of is almost unlimited. The heroic Highlighting the annual Found. rn Boost Fund Total the J ohn Morrell company in Ot­ After six years ill the United Chinese resistance would crumble er's day dinner of Alpha Delli = tumwa who talked on his hobby States, Baboobhai Bhoots is look­ If Jndia were lost. Furthermore, Pi sorority Monday in the ROle University divisions went over of book collecting at Iowa Union in ing forward to returning to his there would be no more land bases room at the Jefferson hotel wu their 52,500 Quota in the recent January, has presented to the Uni­ home, Sihor, Kathiauuer, in India tram which to launch aitacks on the burning of the mortgage by 1945 Red Cross War Fund drive versity of Iowa library a bound about 200 miles from Bombay. Burma and Mandalay. The people Clara M. Daley, guest of honor who by $5(2 according to Prof. Wil­ Jile of all earlier issues of Morrell "Bob," as he is usually called, re­ of India are all tor the victory a? was active In establishing the Al­ liam J . Petersen, director of the Magazine (volumes 1 to 20, 1924 ceived his M. A. degree from the pha Beta chapter house here. Johnson county drive. the united nations. They want to to 1940) and a gift subscription to University of Iowa in 1940 and his help all they can in the present During 1he Founder's day cere­ Some 542 contributors gave future issues. Ph. D. in 1942 in hydraulic engin­ tight for decency and democracy $3,063 to help Johnson county moni es I d by Velma Martin, A4 Morrell Magazine Is a "house eering. Visiting in Iowa City the against the dark forces trying to of Laur ns, following the dinner, realize Its total of $48.151 which organ" at John Morrell and com­ first of the week, he had stopped engulf the world. But they have was raised in 22 days. Mrs. Marian Taylor, Alpha Bet, pany, covering not only the Ot­ here before returnIng to New York got to be satisfied thaI this is their a I u m n a, pl'esen ted schoiastle The university report Is as tal­ tumwa piant but its other branches to say good-bye to his former tight as much as any at the other lows: awards to yV(Jnn~ Franzke, Al as well. Emphasis is on company teachers and a few triends still on united nations. It is rather strange of Brookings, S. D., and Barbara The Dally lewan and Publlc!atJo.... activities and personnel, but arti­ campus. that Americans who value free­ Jones, Al of Columbus Junction, I cles on history (as a recent series contrlbulOrs. 29; contribution, Prefers Mlddlewest dom and democracy so much who tl~ for the I"re~hman award. $62. on flags which have been import­ Bob, who has traveled all over should !:turl the chnrge of black­ Marilyn Nesper, A4 of Toledo, Journalism department. contrib­ ant in American history), on sci­ the United States and who received mail against those who are also OhiO, was given the senior award entific and technological develop­ utors, four; contribution, $33. his B. A. in 1940 from the Massa­ fighting tor it. The present unfor­ for a straight 4 point, and MIl hemlstry department, contrib­ ments (aviation, refrigeration), chusetts Institute at Technology, tunate monotony of Silence on the Cords, All of Rudci, I'ecieved hon­ sketches of American cities, gov­ utors, 28; contribution, $295. says he still prefers living in the part of the United States people orable mention for R 4 point aver. ernment agricultural poliCies are Home £eonomlca depal1lDent, con­ middlewesl. "At least, he smiled, and government has to be broken, age last semester. included as well. Recent issues "I enjoyed my stay in rowa City tributors. seven; contribution. and for the good of all, a solution Jean Collier, A2 of Freeport, Ill, $54. contain articles on the war. Bio­ more than my slay in the east." A must be found." graphical articles on plant per­ pres nted un inscribed gavel and Pbyslcs department, contributors. student in the days when elvilian sonnel are a userul feature for students lived in the Quadrangle, a lavalier to Miss Daley after sev n; contribution. $29. which lhe hislory ot the mortagale Iowa Ubl·aries. Bhoota noticed little l~hange in the Iassical Lalll'uares, contributor.>, This gift h::ls stimulated the Uni­ was read and the mortgage burned three; contributions, $22. Iowa campus except the scarcity of Triangle Club P-Ians versity Iibral'y to begin the acqui­ men. Since leaving here, he has Mary Ellzabeth Bell, A3 of Colfax, Mathematles sition of a colleclion of the lead­ been employed by the Don- Manu­ spoke for th e active chapter on MathnnaUes department, contrib­ ing "house organs" of major Iowa facturing company In Its main of­ formal Dance, Picnic the idea ls ond aims of sorority. utors, 10; contribution, $50. industrial and business firms. fice in New York. On returning to "All The Things You Are" was German department, contributors, A nationally known collector of Sihor, which is about ~he size of The final formal dance of the sung by a trio composed of Doro­ five; contribUtion, $26. rare books, manuscripts and book­ Iowa City, he plans to take up year will be held by the Triangle thy Arm IJl'uslel' and Beverly Ta)'. Psycbolocy depariment. contrib­ plates, Foster spoke on "A Busi­ sanitary and water plant desianing. club tonight in the Triangle club­ lor, both A 1 of Iowa City and Phyl. utors, 23; contribution, $74. nessman Looks at Books and Lit­ War Effects India rooms in Iowa Union. Bob Horne lis Kadel, Al of Tipton. At the con· Education department, contrib­ erature" to students at Iowa Union cusion ot lhe program, Miss Ka­ utors, 10; contribution, $J06. Judging from letters received and his Avalon orchestra will play in January when he was a guest from home since he came to this from 8:30 to 11 :30. del sang "The LOI'!! Is my Light." Denlstry, contributors, . 26; con­ of the school of journalism. tributions, $189. country, Bob says the war has The club will hold its monthly affected it, like the United States; picniC Supper Tuesday, April 10, Tungsten carbide is so hard Commerce department, contrib­ ONE LONE HILLCAT 1.11 pictured here aa it roars over the mottled terrain ot Okinawa island where.. numbers. more than ]00.000 American troops. under the command of Lt. G .. n. Simon Buckner, Jr., are invading . . with increased pric~s and a greater at 6:30 p.m. in the clubrooms. Mrs. that it will scratch sapphire. utors, 19; contributions, $147. Among the other numbers Resistance, JO rar. has been weak and casualties surDrlsingly light. , ., - _(International) played by the band, the favorites scarcity of materials, especially William J . Peterson will serve as Enrlneerm,: coil ere, contributors, metals. generai chairman and aSSisting her 13 ; contributions, $40. of the audience were Romberg's "Desert Song" and Conrad-Magid­ Most people, Bhoota commented, will be Mrs. Byron Lambert, Mrs. Speeeh son's "Midnight in Paris." Both of know very lltlle about India, think­ E. T. Peterson, Mrs. Robert Mar­ 8~h department, contributors, Eleanor McCabe, Ralph Donohue Exchange Concert Audience...... these are modern selections with ing of it mainly as a land of snakes tin, Mrs. John Russ, Mrs. Stanley 14; contributions, $61 .50. lilting rhythm and are always and jungles. He suggested that Harris, Mrs. A. A. Kalinske, Mrs. Political Science department, con­ popular throughout the country beller understanding of the coun­ Arthur Klaffenbach and Mrs. tributors, five; contributions, Marriage Vows in Ceremony April 3 with band audiencell. try would involve lmowing some­ Richard Myers. $31. Lauds 11'01l0wing the first number after thing of its ancient culture and its History department, contributors, Before an altar decorated with J~seph Donohue, uncle of the intermission, Professor Righter philosophy of life. "The Indian seven; contributions, $86. Easter lilies, Eleanor M<;Cabe, bridegroom, and Robert J . Mc- presented live gold keys to mem­ people." he explained, "are s~k­ Slate Histortcal Society, contrib­ daughter ot Mr. Edward F. Mc­ Cab.e, brother of the bride. bers of the band who have given ing a compromise between their utors, eight; contribution, $68. Cabe of Cosgrove, became the Concerto three yeal's of service. These philosophy of life and the material­ White Taffeta Gown Romance Lanruaces, contributors, bride of Ralph J . Donohue, son or -9 v ___ awards are made possible by the ism ·of the western world." He be­ 16; contribution, $70. Mr. and Mrs. Dan P. Donohue, For her wedding the bride chose By MARJORY SWANSON Alumni " r" club and are given lieves that the United States shoulO. route 7, in a single-ring ceremony Veterans' Office, contributors, (lve; a while Laffeta floor-length gown, Hans Koelbel's violincello and each year. take a definite stand for the Inde­ contributions, $21.50. performed by the Rev, F. P. Kelly the fitted bodice at which was the University band proved them­ pendence of India, the sixth-rank­ in St. Peter's church In Cosgrove This year's awards were pre­ Extension with a sweetheart neckline, and selves a successful combination sented Dorotha Jane Becker, A4 ing industrial nation in the world Extension Division ,,"ad Correspon­ April 3. three-quarter length s h i r red last evening at the spring band of Sheridan, Wyo.; Royal Burk­ rich in undeveloped natural re­ dence division, contributors, Vernon Brogla sang "Domine sleeves, and extended Into a boul­ concert in Iowa Union. hardt, E2 of Montezuma; Owen sources. MONDAY APRIL 9th. seven: contribution, $25. Non Sum Oignus," "Heart of tant skirt. Her long lace- edged As far as is known this marked Peterson, A3 of Parker, S. D.; Bob explained: "America will Dancln, 8 10 12. Bureau of Education Researcb, Jesus," nnd On This Day, Oh veil was held in place by a cor­ the first attempt to combine band John Fatland, A3 of Colfax; Allen have a leal,ling roli! in the inter­ Advanre ticket. on sate contributors, three; contribu­ BeautifUL MOlller," accompanied onet or orange blodssoms and she and violincello in concert perform­ Sigel, A3 of Ottumwa. national sphere and for the stabil­ b.x oUlce-ro.n tions, $7 .00. by Sister Mary Cellone at the carried a shower bouquet of white .:mee. Prof. C. B. Righter, direc­ Susan Showers, P3 of Jowa City, ity of peace and tranquillity it order!ll tilled. Bureau of Visual IJLltructlon, con­ carnations. tor of the band, wrote the adapta­ organ. received one of the keys last year would be to the advantage of the -all amU ••? Adml •• lon : Aldl'" n c. tributors, five; contributions, $6. Attending the bride was her The maid of honor was aUired tion of the Boccherini "Concerto and is still with the band. It is cus­ whole world if the ]ndian question SiLJe $1.(,0 tax Inc1uded.. Experimental IIChools, contributors, sister, Betty Lou McCabe. Francis in f1or-Iength gown of sky blue in B-flat Major" SUitable for the tomary to present between 12 and is peacefully settled. The Indian You b.1I AdmJllfon: At door $1.65 I 41 ; contribuLions, $143.50. tax Included. Donohue served his brother as taffeta with a fitted bodice styled violincelJo solo with band accom­ 15 keys but due to the war the people are looking to the Arneri~ " Botany department. contributors, best man. Serving as us\'!ers were with a square-neckline and three­ paniment. members of the band are con. cans for bringing about that solu­ KELLEY'S are h.lpmc;J with DANCELAND fou r; contributions, $24. quarter length sleeves edged with The concerto is written in three stantly changing and the eligible tion and can be at mutual help A r ~ department, contributors, the blue net ruffling. Her shoulder­ parts and each successive move­ members are few. towards India's industrialization." .prtnq clean1Jlc;J. even; contributions, $23. length veil was or a matching ment seemed to bring about bet­ Other composers represented on Wrote in 194:l Electronics and PhyWICII, contrib­ Society to Sponsor- blue. ter coordination between the solo­ the concert program were Boro­ Writing tor The Daily Iowan in tors, 86 ; contributions, $88.50. ist and his accompaniment. The dine, Bach, Gounod and Delibes. 1942, Bhoota said then: "The im­ The bridegroom's mother wore Institute or Hydraulic Research, fervent applause from a large and A faster ara-angement ot: the "Mid­ portance of India both materially a powder blue dre 's with white contributors, nine; contributions, appreciative audience recalled night in Paris" was played as an and psychologically cannot be and navy blue accessories and a $55. Professor Koelbel lor two encore encore. overemphasized. lndia is right now Emblem corsage at pink carnations. MiWc Music department, contributors, Weddlnc Breakfast eight; contributions, $71. After the ceremony a wedding M cha.nlcal enr-hleerlnr depart­ breakfast took place at the bride's Day 1 ment, contributors, one; contri­ home, Bnd at o'clock a dinner butions, $30...... was served at Reich's Pine room. Enrlneerin,. omce, contributors, Giving aid ond protection to A three-tiered wedding cake cen­ four; contributions, $28. children is the principal purpose tered the table which was set with Electrica.l Enrlneerlnr depariment, or the Iowa Children's Home so­ blue and white loce nutcups and contributors, five; contributions, ciety which is sponsoring "Emblem decorated with bouquets of white, $37. Day" to be held Saturday, April blue and pink carnations .. Maln Enrlneerlnr department, 7, In Iowa City. The couple then left for a short contributors, eight; contributlon, Proceeds [rom this annual sale wedding trip and lor travelling $57. are used to help finance the work the bride chose a navy blue and Pharmacy of the society in finding homes for white print dress with which she Phannacy department, contrib­ normal, dependent children as well wore navy blue and white acces- utors, nine; contribution, $64. as caring 10r maladjusted children sories. Chlld Welfare Researeh station, and aiding others through super­ Mrs. McCabe, a graduate of contributors, 25; contribution, vision ln their own homes. In Cosgrove hIgh school and Brown's $58.50. charge of the "Emblem Day" will commerce college, has been em­ UnJted Slates (leolorloal Survey, be Gladys Briggs and Esther Rein­ ployed as a secretary in the de­ contributors, five; contribution, king, whose headquarters will be partment or obstetrics and gyne­ $23. in Hotel Jef!erson. Mrs. D. M. cology at University hospital In RadJo .laUon, contributors, tour; Lierle of Iowa City is chairman of Iowa City. contribution, $11. the first district for the Jowa Chil­ The bridegroom attended St. FleldboUlle, contributors, 14; con­ dren's Home society, and Mrs. Patrick's high school in Iowa City. tribution, $51. Fred M. Pownall is a member of The couple will be at home on Law the state board of managers. a farm near Moorse where the Colle,.e of Law, contributors; six; The society accepts children for bridegroom Is engaged in [arm­ contributions, $33. care on a temporary or permanent ing. Educational Library, contributor.. , bas i s, according to individual nine; contributions, $35. needs, and while it is not equipped Reclamation of clothing and LlbraJ'l' Annell, contributors, 11; contributions, $69.50. to care for the feebleminded or equipment representing 85,000,000 Enrllsh department, contributors, physically handicapped, it does ac- yards of textile fabrics each year 10; contributions, $112. cept certain problem or delinquent is being effected by the Quarter­ The 5,.400-horsepower Diesel ress we pranned yesterday mad. Libra..,., Macbride ball, contrib­ children for care in foster homes. master reclamation program in utors, 16; contribUtions, $84. Ages of children cared for by the the cODtinentsl United States. freight locomotives of the ROCK us ready for today's big job ..• MUlleum of Na&ural HIRor7, con­ society range from Intants to 16 i=-=:=iii::======tributors, three; contributions, years of age. Placement of chil­ ISLAND LINES pull 125 loaded ready to perform a vitol service $21. dren in adoptive homes is one of. Graduate. its major functIons. freight cors-approximately 6,400 in this war emergency. The Pro­ Speaking of Operations! Gradate otflcle and EumlnaUon While it is privately supported, tons-':'at a speed of 70 miles per service, contributors, two; con- it cooperates closely with county gram of Planned Progress of the tributions, $2. supervisors, child weUare wor~­ houri ROCK ISLAND LINES has been, and PhyaJcal Eduea&lon depu1mee, t. ers, juvenile court judlel, and In- An invasion fleet of several hundred warships uee. women, contributon, 11; con- divlduals throulhout the statl!. Its This is but one example of is, a continuing effort. It has held some 48,000 telephones-from 1',500 on a batde­ tributions, $120. funds are derived from endow­ Sludent Alfaln. contributon, 111; ments, bequests, donations, ern- what ROCK ISLAND, one of Amer­ the railroad in a .position of lead· ship to 10 on a motor tOI'pedo boat. That'. a. I contributions, $97. blem day sales, community chests, many as are used by most cities of 160,000! PhUOIOPIlJo d.,...e.aeat, contrlb- and payments for board, clothing ica's railroads, is doing to estab­ ership and promises even greater Our figbting men are using telephones, wire, utors, four; contributions, '59. and other direct expense by par- lish outstanding perFormance development in future years. Ilel..-n enls or counties. Iwitchhoards, and other communications equip­ School 01 BelirlOll, conrtlbuton, The SOCiety is a member of the records in the handling of war traf­ four; contributions, $48. Child Welfare league of America, A. ye"erJay-anJ 'Hay-so ment in huge quantities. And Western Electric GeoIou deDU1meDt. contrlbuton, the national orlanlzatlon for chil- fic .. : records never dreamed of, tomorrow, ROCK ISLAND'S .0/. workers, peacetime suppliers to the Bell System, seven; contributions, ,411. dren's a,eneles, the Des Moines let cilone approached, in the past. are busy meeting those needs. ZeeItIu department, contrlbuton, Community Chest, and Is IIce~ purpose is proviJ. lin•• ' leVen; contrlbutlon., $33. by the state board of lOCial wel- '0 ,It. That is wby there are Rot enough home tele­ l'enWetd'. ernee, contrlbutoN, fare in Iowa. Since Its oriBniza- We are proud that the prog- in fran sporfaf;on. one; contributions, $30. tion over 50 years a,o, it has cared phones right now. But we are looking forward to BIBI_ offlee, contributors, 210; for 9,000 Iowa children, 22. of the day when the Bell System ('an again provide contributions, '425.28. whom have come from Johnson telephone Bervice to anyone, anywhere, at any time. BulkUna' and Oro...... contrlb- county. WORlD'S FIRST AI.UMINUM BOX CARSI utors, 96; contributions, ,1111. Saturday" emblem .ll8le hu the Aluminum bolt carl a r. now In ..rv· ROC'K ISLAND · Also connected with but not approval of the Chamber of Com­ Ice 01\ tit. lOCK ISLAND LINES. They going Into the true universltJ total merce, and a committee Includlnl or. mode of tlte lam. Ipeclol high were the followinl: Mayor W. J. Teeters, Mrs. E. T. 81rnal Corps Photo 'en.lle aluminum alloy used in .·29 Vntvenl17 ...... contrlbuton,l Hubbard, Supt. I. A. Opstad. the S.r(t. P. B.lble, Guttenberl', N. LINES , : aom ..... I .. O.ad weigh'''" reduced 736, contrlbutina, $2,203.74. Rev. and Mn. ilion T. Jones, Mrs. J .. olea... "-Ineb lens of 100 mil­ . r BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM a. much 0 • .4~ 'on. per car. A 'rain A.r'mr A.S.T.P., contributors, 147; C. A. Bowman, Rev. P. J. O'Reilly, lion e and. e-p 0 w e r Jearebllrbt of 125 aluminum carl would r.duc. contributions, ,1111.311. Mn. C. Van ~pPl, Mn. Marjorie boaaht wUb belp of War Bonds tit. weight of the trait! 56216 ,_. NaY1 V-D, contributors, 141; con- Yetter, Johnson county walfare d!- t. war In Europe. . wltlt nor.duc'lon In tlteload carried, ~ACK SICUI.lY '0' tributions, .158.110. rector and Mrs. 1'. B. Ollan • ~. .HIP'INO .. s.mce w lIN Nation in PeaC4J and War" 11. TreaaIllT Dellllrtment AnotIIer ...p '" II.ner follrvo dlll,1 ',.'ICI •