1.1945 . ~ .

rATS, M ·ATS, boolt 'o'lr r.d .Iamp. QI thr•• ,. UI ,ood Ihr.nrh All,. al l VZ Ib .... h ZI Ibr.o,' 8 .... lW; "I Ihroo,b tl r.o. Ib ...,.. Oel. al. ••• rl Fair Ihroorb Xl rood Ihro.,., Nov. N. LI Ibr.o,h Ql b.­ .om' va.. d 8epl. I and are ,.... I"r•• rb D... at. suo"a. lIamp 1111 r •• e Ihr ... h Ao,. II 'or '1 .. pound.. SlImp 88 ,0041 8.pl. l I ....' .. D ••. II '.r DAILY IOWAN IOWA: Fair: coallnaed ",'arm: flv. p •• n.... 8H01l8. h.ek Ibr., al...... Ita... I. THE RUler b1UDld.. ~. a and , aro valid Indonall,I,. Iowa City's Morning Newspaper ~:=·Nt===C=EN==T=S======:==~·~======:T:BI~A~~~O~C~~~T~I~P~P~&~I':'~======~======~IO~VV~A~C~rrY~~.~IO~VV~A;===~F~R~u)~A~Y~,~A~U~G~U~S~T~3~1~,~1~94~5~====~======~======T.=&==A='1=0~o=~=T~&a~~==="====~~~~~~'='='======~==~~ • an'atics reatene apan's .... nvoys ~~~----~~--~------~------~--~--~~----~~------~ NIPPON'S WARRIORS SURRENDER IN MANCHURIA Cordell Hull For Yank Pri50ners- .Expansion , Bestial lap Beatings Nips in Turmoil

Of Airport . Denies Pearl TOKYO BAY, Friday (AP)­ him up and took him to Rabaul, After Emperor Hunger, humiliation and ·"bestial beatings" was the story oC 500 al­ where he was denied any medical lied prisoners of war, including treatment tor 10 days. To Start Soon Harbo-r CHarge ace Maj. Gregory (Pappy) Boy­ [n March, 1944, he was t.rans­ Sued for Peace ington, safe aboard mercy ships ferred to a camp near Una, Japan. American Public t.oday after being rescued from Beaten WIUl ..., CAA Representative Japanese prison camps. "It waa there," he added, "that Courageous Gamble Here for Conference Partly to Blame The first contingent oC liberated [ was given the basebaU bat treat­ Against Army Men Declares Truman prisoners included crewmen of the ment. It consIsts of standing with With Contract Bidders late Capt. Colin Kelly's Flying your hands tied while a ,uard By Hirohito Won slugged my back and legs wlt.h the WASHINGTON (AP) - The Fortress who told how Kelly met Construction work on the $322,- his dpath early in the war. bat as hard as he COUld. My rump B7 aVSSELL BaINES 500 ex pansion of the Towa Citv Pearl Harbor controversy boiJed n 1J esUmal.ed there are 36,000 was so swollen I could 'See It over (Russell B r in e 5, Associated Munici pal airport may begin up at top government levels last my shoulder. Then I got slugged .in prlsonerl, In6ludln, 8,000 Amer­ Press correspondent, has returned "about the latter part of Septem­ night amid two developments: the jaw about 300 times." 1. Publica tion oC a letter by Icans, at camps s c a U ere cl to Tokyo. He left Japan in March, ber." throul'hout Japan. PCc. Robert Altman of Sanford, That was the encournging new:> Cordcll Hull flatly denying his Conn., told how Colin Kelly met 1941, was captured by the Japa­ pre - war counter-proposals to Boyington declared hew a s given Vern Bales, chairman of the his death- In his burning Flying nese in Manila In January, 1942, municipal airport commission, by a J apan constituted "in any sense an Fortress after scorln« a direct and interned a year before his re­ ultimatum," representative of the civil aero­ 1,494 MISTREATED bomb on the Japanese battle­ patriation.) nautics au thority office in Kansas 2. President Truman's news con­ ABOARD USS ANCON, Off ship Haruna. TOKYO (AP)-Some fanatical City, Mo ., yesterday. ference assertion that !.he Ameri­ Yokosuka, Frlda7 (AP)-All of The B-17 was attacked by two elemente In Japan were so deter­ The CAA representative was in can public was as much to blame the 1,494 allied prisoners of Japanese fighters over the Philip­ mined to continue the war that Iowa Ci ty to confer with bidders for the Japanese surprise aUack as war. liberated in the Yokohama pines as it was returning to base. they publicly threatened to shoot for cllntracts on the expansion nro­ any individual. This statement area, were lufferln, from mal­ Altman parachuted to safety. down the surrender envoys sent lIram and to explain details of tbe . "v.S riled so me legislators while Rome nutrition and man), showed Kelly and Starr Sergt. Delehany to General MacArthur's headquar­ others took the president's side. specifications to them. evidence of brutal treatment. wcre killed. ters In Manila recently. Bids Opened JAP TROOPS under supervision of a Soviet oiiicer maren up In platoons to lay down \j le~.· a:-n;..s. -fhe sur- . Thus, the wide breach of opin­ COl1"dr. Harold S~sen said The consensus of many well in­ The bids will be opened at the render occurred in th~ impOrtant Manchurian cIty of Harbin. . . . Iion among highest Washington oC- today. formed J apanese with whom I Kansas City CA A oerice at 10 ficials and some of the military talked yesterday on my :fIrst vlsl, a. m. Sept. 4. The officials there · . b over respo'nsibility for the great i' to Tokyo in more than four years will review the bids and send D T military ca lamity was accentuated ~ beaten with a bat, among Production Is their recommcndalions to Wash­ 'p en ... ease e truman__ amid fresh demands for courts I other forms of mistreatment. was that Hirohito broke a lonl militaristic (rip on his throne to ington, D. C. Dro • L j'd L martial of those in the armed serv- Others declared "bestial beatings If a competent bidder is awarded - _____.,;,.:,______ices blamed for errors of judge- were common." All told of hun- sue for peace. the contract, the project will be In High Gear The emperor won "a courageo\Js opened for construction probably gamble," these Japanese added • ch!ef exccutive said has and . by Ocl. I. The time limits set up llon,POllnts Asserts UI S. Already Federal Budget m~~no object~. Ion to a court martial~e but !:~io:srif:~:n~fPlanes Drop ~~~~:rt~~n Food WASHINGTON (AP)- News of They had no reason to propagand­ In the specifications are 40 days Rat Ize me. does not intend to order one. He They were evacuated to the the speeding change to peacetime for grading and 30 days [or laying . . . .. P 'd Th hV" t \ -some rosy, some good, some Public Uproar Died al roug IC ory C118 B'III added that he doubted he had lhe navy transports Reeves and Com- Alter the emperor made his sur­ the concrete runway extensions. authority to order trial. Inspection (ort and other ships aCter :sober- burst over Washington late , ore I Ion mere~ render broadcast on Aug. 15, pub­ If · u actual construetion work can of army and navy regulations, being freed trom a prIson camp at today. be I, OB uy M lic uproar died quicker than had started by Oct. it is hoped Total Expenditures however, disclosed he does have Omori, near Yokohama. Here are the big pieces: that most of the work can be com'­ 1. Chairman J. A. Krug of the been expected by the Japanese Were $42 Billions WASHINGTON (AP)-Victory such authority. Food and other supplies were with whom I talked, pleted this fall. Perhaps seeding WASHINGTON (AP) - Red over J apan resulted yesterday in Hull's denial was ('ontained in a being dropped f~om American war production board made l a of the field may have to be de­ Tbe people were shocked by the points will go further beginning a cut of $18,500,000,000 in the hitherto unpubli hed 1944 letter. I Supertorts to the thousands still gtowlng forecast of prOduction ferred !ll1 til next spring. Under Aid Program sudden change from eight years Sunday. budget for the fiscal year begun Released on order of Secretary of confined. whipping back fast and outdoing Extend Runways itself. of consistent propaganda empha­ Virtually all meats, all cheeses, WASHINGTON (AP)- Presi- July 1. This reduced it to $66,- State Byrnes, it was written to Th~ prisoners were delirious sizing that the people would die The specifications call for the dent Truman told congress in ef- 400,000,000. Secretary of War Stimson last with joy, many of them weeping, 2. A record number of men, moving or 154,000 cubic yards of fighting ra!.her than capitulate. creamery butter and margarine fect yesterday that lend-lease a1- On Aug. 1, beCore Japan's sur- Sept. 28. as the long-awaited liberallon thrown out of jobs, have ~ Jgned up aoil and extensions to the present for (uncmph.'Iyment PAY till they At Ihe outs t, fanatical elements will require tewe paints. Canned ready has been repaid in victory render the budgcl. bureau had, esti- It was t.nRde l'''hlic appat ntly (,li me. Some wearing (jill y &hortJl, runways so that the Iowa City tind other work. kept the country In a turmoil. milk no longer will require any. and hinted strongly that most of mated total spending in the CUI'- in answer to the army Pearl Har- hoisted American, Brltlsh and field will have three concrete ­ 3. To get the help of consumers It can be revealed now that The reductions, announced yes­ the giga ntic American outlay rent fiscal year would be $84,- bor board's implied criticism of the Dutch flags a.s they cheered, Ways more than 4,000 teet long. in fighting price Increases, OPA kamikaze units flooded Tokyo ..,.th Other contracts for improved yesterday by the OPA, average 28 should be written off. 900,000,000 _ assuming the war former secretary of state. The waved and jumped wildly about. pamphlet. urlLnll continued fllht­ He reported United States ex- would continue until the year ends board in its report prepared in Sufferln, Wounds is issuing "anti-inflation shopping lighti ng equipment will be let. per cent for meats, 25 per cent for lists" for housewives. Lng and publicly threatened to The money for the expRnsion of butter, 50 per cent for cheese. penditures in the mutal aid pro- next su mmer. 1944 but released only Wednesday, Commodore R 0 g e r Simpson, shoot down the emissaries to gram as $42,020,779,000 through Actual spending ip the last fiscal said Hull "touched the button" commanding the evacuation force, By the end of !.he year, Krug the local airport was allotted by They result from larger alloca­ said, !.he production rate of peace­ Manila. the CAA some time ago. The war tions by the agriculture depart­ last July 1, plus $788,603,000 in year was $100.100,000,000. starting the war with Japan. reported that many ot the prlson- Falsified Schednle goods assigned to commanding Under a revised budget Issued Hull said his counter-proposal ers were sutlering from fractures, time manufacturing Industries will production board had ruled that ment and improved distribution, be 12 per cent higher, In dollar The emissarIes slipped from construction could begin at any the OPA said. generals in the field, 10r a total yesterday by Harold D. Smith, handed the Japanese Nov. 26 0(- 0 pen wounds, co ncussion and Tokyo by falsifying an advance of approximately $43,000,000,000. budget director, war spending is fered the Japanese "substantially burns. Most were malnutrition value, than in the "normal" pre­ time since no crillcal materials The average point cost of meat war years of 1939-41. announcement of their departure A partial oUset appears in reverse estimated now at $50,500,000,000. the economic and o!.her advantages cases. would be used. Only a war labor will be the lowest since the acute But- and it's a big but-this from the field and retumed by lend-lease amounting to $5,600,- The Aug. 1 estimate was $70 ,000,- they sought in Asia provided they "There never has bee'1 a board ruling prevenlcd the project shortage developed last March. doesn't mean that men thrown out publicly proclaLming an Inaccurate 000,000 through last March. 000,000. Actual war expenditures would give up their aggressive blacker hell hole than the ]Jri- from being started. Butter, at 12 points, down 4, will or jobs now and in the months lichedule. Mr. Truman set up the lrame- in lhe fiscal year 1945, just ended, policies." now evacuating," he said re- The end of hostillties with Japan cost the fewest since May, 1944 , ahead will aU be pouring back into This was done with the full sup­ work of a case for writing off were $90,500,000,000. , He called the proposals of a now evacuatJon," he said re- brought about the dissolution of and only half as many as a few jobs by December and that unem­ port of General MacArthur, who most of the dollar balances with Receipts fpr the present fiscal plan of "a broad but simpte set- ports received by him Indicated. WLB and so the local project months ago. Margarine drops lrbm ployment will disappear. was fuUy appraised ot the facts. automatically received a green 14 points to 12. . these statements: year now arc estimated-under tlement covering the entire Pacific Boyington credited with 26 Jap Krug said it may take industry Today, the kalJllkazes arfd other light. Despite the improved meat sup­ In a letter accompanying the re- existing legislaiton-at $36,000,- area," and said they "did not con- planes, missing for nearly 20 ten months or longer to absorb­ fanatlcs appeared to be Impotent. Employers Di atlsfled ply, Administrator Chester Bowles port-"with the defeat of the 000 ,000 . If congress reduces taxes stitute in any sense an ultimatum." months-since he was shot down If they are absorbed-the people Hirohito had avoided civil war Several local employers have said the end of rationing is not Axis powers, whose ruthless plan J an. 1, this estimate would have Inspection of naval regulal.ions over Rabaul, New Britain, Jan. 3, thrown out of jobs by the end of or pronounced upheavals among expressed dissatisfaction wi!.h !.he yet in sight. for world conquest aJ)d enslave- to be ('ut again. showed that the president has full 1944-said that he came down in the war. the excitable people-possibilities speclfications for the airport ex­ ment came so close to succeeding, In the Jast fiscal year receipts authority to convene a general the sea. He was wounded in 20 His statement was based on a pansion program because they call the United States has realized the amounted to $46,500,000,000 . The court martial lor any member of places and had a broken ankle. survey of 42 industries by WPB. (See HIROHITO, Page 2) \ [or a minimum wage o( 85 cents Local Offices major objective for which lend- Aug. 1 forecast for receipts in the naval service. So has the navy A Japanese submarine picked He said this survey "gives us our an hour [or unskilled labor. Bales I lease aid has been extended." fiscat 1946 was $39,000 ,000 ,000. secretary, the commander-in-chief .-- first real indication of wbere we * * * expla ined that the wage scales on An"ounce New Hours Also in the letter- "each of our of a fleet or squadron, and the .are heading in reconversion." federal projects are set by the de­ principal fighting partners has AIII"es Plan to Keep commanding o(ficer of a naval sla- it Isn't Going to Be I He forecast tremendous produc­ American Flag partment of labor. The local ration boa rd and rent contributed to the pool of armed tion beyond the continental limits l Any Cooler Today tion for peace by next June, al­ The local labor markel probably control offices have announce-d might in accordance with its full 0 T G of the United States. ways noting that a gigantic prob­ new office hours. Neither office will not be greatly affected by abilities and capacities." napping erman The naval articles do not pro- No, it isn't going to be any lem facing the nation is to ~et men the expamion program because not will be open on Saturdays in the In the report itseU- "it would vide, however, for any officer to cooler. back into jobs and that doing so Flies in Ruins much unskilled labor will be future and !.hey will also be closed have a disastrous effect upon our Industry for 6Years demand a court martial for him We might have had some thun­ takes tlme. needed, most of the labor and on all holidays. trade with the United Nations and self except where an officer has derstorm activity in this area Some hourS before Krug's state­ equipment wlU pro b a b I y be The ration board office at' 218 hence upon production and em- been dismissed by order of the early this morning but it probably ment, Arthur Altmeyer, rhairman brought in from outside and be­ E. College street will be open t row ployment at home" if such a huge W ASHlNGTON (AP) - Edwin president. didn't amount to much. It will be of the social security board, dis­ Of Lost Japan cause the work will be of such noon until 4 p. m. Monday !.hrough debt were added to aJready-bur- V. Pauley, American member of clear loday, as usual; !.he humid­ closed !.his: short duration. Friday. dened nations. the reparations commi ssion, dis­ 29rooo Japs Give Up ity will be hlgh, as usual, and it That In the week ending Aug. The hours of the rent control A commitment by all lend-lease closed yesterday that the allies will be hot, yep. YOKOHAMA, Friday (AP)­ LONDON (AP) - The Soviet 25 more than 596,000 men, becom­ The American llag waved in tri­ office on the second floor of the nations to joillain promotion of plan to keep tapping German pro­ YesterdaY the mercury jour­ high command said last night that ing jobless, had Wed initial claims umph today (Thursday United Iowa State Bank and Tru;st com­ postwar jnterna""l'l'onal trade on the duction to mcet war claims for neyed way up the scale 96, for unemployment pay. an additional 2!l,OOO Japanese of­ to States time) over the ruins of Japs Had Only pany building are from 10 a. m. basis of iowered barriers was listed perhaps six years. ficers and men and two generals which nobody in Iowll City en­ This was the greatest number to Yokosulca naval base and Tokyo's untIl 4 p. m. Monday through Fri­ as a major credit item in the lend- That is in addition to repara- joyed. But early yesterdaY mor­ file initial claims since the govern­ have surrendered to R u s s I a n once-proud port of Yokohama, day. Jease accounting: tions already being extracted in forces, running the total Soviet ning the mercury got down to 66 ment put its finger Into the unem­ ployment pay problem back In now General MacArthur's head­ the form of machinery and other bag to date to 571,000 Japanese of­ and at midnight last night It was quarters for his occupation forces .~ Undamaged equipment and through seizing only 75 . 1938. ficers and men and III generals. pouring in by sea and alr. Charges High Jobless Benefits German assets in other countries. "From Melboume to Tokyo was Russia is to get about 50 percent SUNSET OVER SAGAMI BAY SILHOUEnES BAnLESHIPS a long road," MacArthur told of all reparations and share with c he e r in ( parachute troopers Battleship Lelt Would Encourage Men to Loaf Poiand. The other allies will split shortly after his silvery transport thp other h!l lf. plane landed at 2 p. m. yesterday WASHrNGTON (AP)-In the WASHINGTON (AP) - Chair- country who would rather loaf How much the claims will total man Dougbton (D., N. C.) of the than work, but he voiced vigorous (Tokyo time) at Atsugl. air base, last week of the war J'apan's navy has not been de~ermined, Pauley 18 miles from the imperial palace 11/88 meeting the combined might house ways and means committee opposi tion to adoption of a gov­ !!'Ild a news conference in the declared yesterday legisla(ton em- ernment policy that he said would in the heart ot the bomb-ruined of the allied fleet with exactly one White House. But 14 or 15 nations capital. u,damaged major ship, the cruiser bodying President Truman s pro- encourage men to do so. Members have been asked to file claims and posal for greater unemployment of the committee joined in critical The supreme commander de­ Sakawa. the navy said yesterday. send representatives to a meeting clared: benefJts-up to $25 a week for 26 questioning when Altmeyer and to be held somewhere in western The Japanese surrender delega! "It has been 8 long, hard road, tlon told American officers at weeks-"puts a premium on loaf- John W. Snyder, reconversion di­ Europe in October. lng." rector, went to capitol hill to plead but this looks like the payoff. Sur­ Manila that the Japanese navy had Just back from a meeting of the The legislation encountered vig- tor the Iiberallzation of jobless­ render plans are going splendidly. not a single major ship capable of reparations commission in Mos­ In, all outlylnl theaters fighting orous, and possibly latal, opposi- ald, admonishing that 6,000,000 cow, Pauley said-he had presented being ma de ready lor sea In ten Uon on itJ first appearance before may be unemployed by Jan. 1 and has practically ceased and every days. formal ly there an American view the house ways and means com- 8,000,000 by spring. area i, preparing to capitulate." that only convicted war criminals The apparent contradiction led mittee. Representative Knutson (R., Headqurten In Hotel should be used for forced labor. to speculation that the Sakawa Doughton told Arthur J. Alt- Minn.). senior ways and means Without deigning to see Japa­ was the shi p the lIa vy reported as meyer, social security board chalr- Republican, asked Snyder: "If we There is no intention . to use nese liaison officers from the im­ damaged the day th\l Japanese man he introduced the adminis- pay a man $25 a week for not forced labor in this country, perial general staff, MacArthur opened su,render negotlatlons. tration jobless pay bill only "by working, what wlll we have to pay Pauley said. drove by automobile the 15 miles Othe; major ve~8e l s l'emalninll requeat," and he declared that if to get him to work?" The American position on this from Ateuai to his headquarters in on the Japanese register Included !.he government is going to pay a Dough on said the greatest need problem is at variance with what the undamaged New Grand hotel \lne battleship, the Nagato, badly man to sit down In one place he is is for a redistribution of wOl'kers Russia and France are said to in Yokohama. damalled by navy carrier phmes not gqlng to another place to look away from war production centers want. There, as the first allen boss of at Yokosuka; three damaged air­ (or work. where the jobless are now concen- In a formal statement, he said Japan since it became a modern craft carriers, and two damaged "I don" know a single business trated. no decision could be made on the JllIUon and embarked upon tbe cruisers. In my part of the country," he Altmeyer said the government amount of or time limit on annual, ruinous career of conquest, the au­ said, "!.hat is not in dire need o.t could not compel a worker to re­ recurring reparations taken from preme commander will confroat D. Gaulle Satl,fled help. We need farm 'help, carpen- turn to his pre-war home to accept current production until "the hia old enemies of the imperial PARIS (AP)- Gen. De Gaulle, ters, bricklayers, painters, me- employment. character and amount of removals staff and live them orders which Nturnlng yesterday from an elght­ ch\lnlcs. Until this need is met Altmeyer gave the senate fi­ of Industrial capital equipment . henceforth wtll supercede those of day trip to the United States and how do you have an unemploy- nance committee estimates of the have been determined by the al­ AT ANCHOR in Sa,lmi b.y near Tokyo, baUlewlfonl of 'he Unlied States ThIrd nee' are lliboueiW Emperor Hlrohlto. Canada, expreMed complet~ saUa­ ment problem?" expense of the expanded program lied control council and the future ...In,' seUlng sua 'hat outlines Mt. FaJlyama, Japan', volcano, In center back.. roand. Advaace United Then Sunday will come the su- tacllon with the achlevementJ of Doulhton added he did not mean based on low, intermediate and economy of Germany is more States oeC11pa~lon forces now have landed in Japaa and nee' anita have moved Into Tokyo 1ta7 proper. lib vlait to I8Y there at;e many men In the , hl1lh unemployment condltions. clearly defined." Oftlclal UnU" Stake U8V)' radlopbQio, (See OCCUPATION, pap 8) ..

PAGE TWO THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY,·, IOWA FRIDAY, AUGUST 31. 1945 Japanese Atrocilies- COMPULSORY EDUCA TIO".. Navy Held Up Story OfFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN ~~~~ ..... I. , ... UNlVI ....ry O ... L.ND..... ro ~.h •••'.a I. lb...... News ~_~ ...,'. 0111 ... 01. C.,lIol. .1..... , .. llao OINI."L NOTIOII "" Revelation of .Japanese cruel­ ship (the U. S. S. Oahu) for d.p ••II.d wllb lb ••• nlp •••dllor ., Tho Il.Ut 10WI. or _r .. It Knew Had Been (f ,1••• cI 10 '10. lin pr•• I... I.r 'M.I, .....11 10 lb. 0111 ....1 ,.. ties comes as a sobering shock ~hanghai, the writer watched , DIll, 10 .... O.N_AL KOTIC.I ..... t b ••1 Tbe D.n, I ..... ~ to a nation which in the glory of ,et 4:lIt P. m. 'bo dl, pr•• e.IDr II .., pu~II •• U.nl ••U ... ",Ill NO't " the execution of 200 men on ., •• oopled II, 1010pboDI, ••• mUll b. T\'PIJO o. LEOIDJ.l' Want.. In Tokyo for Days "-".L...... victory had haU-forgot~en that Behind '1 ••• alGNIiO b, ••oopoo.lbl. P.roo • • the Bund. The killings took the Nips had perpetrated such Friday, AUJUst 31, acts. 10 minutes. The men were By JACK STINNETT Vol. XXI, No. 2027 1141 lined against a wall and shot. WASHINGTON-Your capital We mus~ make a solemn The News CJ'. bIIormatloD .....r.ID' •• '" be10Dd u.t. acbeilale, ... . vow !bat the men responsible Then a number of Japanese, in peacetime: ~l&loDl bl abe efftce 01 tbe Presldenl. Old VlpUoL) for thoae acts--fr9m the hlrh­ armed with pistols, trod non­ Generally speaking, war tim e est eovernment and miUtary chalantly around the crumpled By Paul Mallon censorship has gone by the boards leaders oft down-must answer bodies, pumping bullets into (some government officials are GENERAL NOTICES for their crimes. any that were still kicking. emerging pretty l' luctantly from The Japanese have carried on a The army men preforminl the WASHINGTON* *- *The accounts thut safe foxhole). But s'bme of the IOWA UNION SCHEDULE deliberate campaign of brutality gruesome job had invited navy say that when we landed the J a­ Only the Lobby, Information desk UNIVERSITY LIBRARY HOU" since the rape of Nanking in De­ men from the war s hip s panese met us with an invitation little asiJ1inlties it gave birlh to and director's offices will be open Aur. 9-Sept. 22, 1945 cember, 1937. ARROGANTLY anchored off the Bund to view will linger long in memory. to a cup of tea. The surrender has from Aug. 9 to Sept. 10. The Main reading rooll1-Macbrldf THEY HAVE BEATEN AND the scene. A large &roup of This . one was on the navy. It thus become known as "the tea Union will reopen for public serv­ hall. TORTURED, AND THEY HAVE military spectators apparently cup surrender." followed the unfortunate- sinking ice Monday morning, Sept. 10, lhe Periodical reading room-Lib. HEVELED IN THE SUFFERING greatly enjoyed the spectacle." Not with swords exchanged, this of the Ara Maru, Japanese relief cafeteria w\J) rl!open at 11:30 a. m. raryannex. I Tuesday, S~pt. 11. THEY· CREATED. It has been estimated that as time. Not with an initial laying ship. Government documents depute 'Oteir arrogance...survived even high as 60,000 to 100,000 Chi­ EARL E. HARPER down of arms. But with two weeks As is customary_among civilized men1.-Library annex. defeat. Yesterday it was reported nese were killed in the city. Director, Iowa Union Education - philosophy - 1)11: of delay aft~r terms were drawn, nations, even in the mldsl of bar­ that Japanese guards had the un.: Every home was looted. Old and a proffer of tea. chology library, East Hall. barities, the state department GRADES-TERM 1945 mitigated nerve (stronger words men, women and children were This wlll make the end 01 the n, Monday -Friday prepared an explanatory note and SUMMER SEMESTER would be better suited) to try to Pacific war unique lorever In M. used by Japanese soldiers as hastened it off to Tokyo through Grades for Term II of the 1945 8:30 a. ni.-12 history. The tea Incidentally was 1 p. m.-5 p. m. bar American newsmen in army LIVE DUMMIES F'OR BA.Y­ neutral channelS. summer semester for students in uniforms from visiting tortured ONET PRACTICE. rejecled. Saturday There has been some talk here, Behind Schedule the colleges of liberal arts and fliers. That Is LkUee mall, tlmes The note explained that the 8:30 a. m.-12 M. but no alarm, about the 14 days commerce and the graduate col­ If they think they are some oyer. AIIIIi with Ie .. proyoea­ Ara Maru was running fal' behind' Reserve reading room-LibuQ', grace General MacArthur granted. lege are avaihlble at the office of kind of a supremjt race, and if tbe punll5hmen& aIBo UOIL Lee The word was passed around schedule without our being noti­ the registrar upon presentation of annex. '." they are going to persist in that be ....ny times over what Is fied, and should have been out of the student identification card. Closed Aug. 9-Sept. 22, 1945 through Washington, t hat he Schedules of hours for othef de­ notion, THE STERNEST MEAS­ jomr to be administered to the thought they probably really ~. ______those waters long before. Professional college grades will parlmental Ubraries will be post~ URES SHOULD BE TAKEN It explained lhai contact had be dtstrlbuted as announced by Nuls. needed that much time to adjust on the doors of each Jjbrary, 'II AGAINST THEM. The men who were rescued their people from the war propa- been made by other than visual the dean of the college. Result of War­ lJARRY G. BARNES If for nO other reason than that yesterday told almost unbeliev- ganda line which had concealed means in a heavy fog that resu lted R. E. ELLSWORTH 1'.1 \ Rerls\rar he is one of our heroes, Major able stories of cruelty at the from them even thl! news of the in visibility zero and that our sub­ Dlrectot '1. marine commander had no way of .., Boyington should be avenged. hands of their Japanese captors. atomic bomb. They were wounded, sick and Home Adjustments 'One World' Detroit knowing or determining that he 't""'...... --- ...... ""'l~..,..,--- ...... --..,..,---,..,..- ...... -"""_,(I Personally. we would let Major was lorpedoing a relief ship. Boyington strike a Jap w~th a malnourished. Some of them had Unless they had been granted NotLfied that the explanation time to change their home front to By DAVID J. WlLJUE will pUrchase abrond many other l;laseball bal just as many times withstood their pains tor years. had been delivered in Tokyo, the Crippled Ships Used 10 Try 10 Trap Japs as he was hit, bul we doubt that It seems inconceivable that the the facts of the situation, MacAr- AP Automotive EdItor • materials it previously impoded. thur thought there might be trou- DETROIT _ Because it takes In the highly competitive postwar state def>arlment prepared a news the great American airman - Jap government and high mili­ release on it and out of courtesy ble in the occupation. His word much more than carbon steel to market "reasonably satisfactory sen! it over to "the navy for okay. NEW YORK* *(AP)-The * navy Imiral Halsey,* hoping* * that the Jap made of the fibre of which he is tary authorities were unaware of has been accepted even in the make automobiles, . American car substitutes" will not be enough. The navy immediately ordered the made public. I yesterday the storY admirals might believe th.el.r ow)\ -COUld bring himself to do that the action of the army. In many quarters of congress where you manufacturers ..still are hancli- So the tin the car makers fo(­ rele'llse help up-on the grounds 'of how Admiral William Halsey comm ntators and try to {!DIsh against a human. instances there is evidence to be­ F. 011 might expect suspicion. capped in their efforts to get back rperly obtained from Bolivia, lhat it contained the forbidden re- U¥!? two badly-damag d heavy the crippled surVivors, ordered the , If there is any legal doubt that lieve that barbarous' acts of en­ The Hiatus nevertheless gave into production. China, Mexico, Canada and Alaska terrence to radar in that phase crUisers, Houston and Can.berra, as Ho~ston Dnd . Canberra to hold ~9 the Japs are guilty, the testimony listed men were inspired by of- the Jap oflicials time to whip up During the latter months of 1941 for refining in Texas, undoubledly "other than visual means." decoys to draw the impenai ~apa- their course In Japanese water!. could be compiled in volumnes ficers. more than a oup of tea in their lhe demands of war forced motor will again come from lhose coun­ The sedale state department nese neet inlo near des~ruchon. at The trick almost worked. T~e ;1 that probably would be endless. Those who are guilty should own interests. They could destroy vehicle manufacturers to resort to tries. official asked mildly what harm the hands of the Amerlcah Third Jap fleet e~erg d, but when less every record in the nation of in- substitutes for many vital metalJ, Similarly the industry will have F. Tillman Durdin, a New I be sought out ana punfshed. NO there was in that? The navy re- fleet. . . than 200 mIles from .the waiting terest. to foreignefs. They could with what most of them termed to depend upon Canada. Holland York Times correspondent, wrote LIVING JAPANESE ARM Y red th t ·t d th "'d The navy told for the fIrst tune trap, and an equal distance from organize their underground for J'reasonably satisfactory" results. and Africa [or its ferro-chrome re­ p I a I came un er "e al 01 the succession of ea fights last Halsl!y's formidable main force, about Nanking: MAN SHOULD BE PERMITTED d what the emperor told all Asiatics Permitted now to return to lim- quirements; upon India for its fel'­ anh COmtfOrdt to \he ente~1i .cllau1se October which cost the lives J( 78 the Japanese fleet swung abruptJi T "Just before boal'ding this TO FORGET. was a "temp l'ary condition" of ited production of passenger veh- ro-tungsten; Rhodesia, Turkey, . e sta e epar men 0 uCla osi men aboard the two ships. Both about and fled to Japan. . defeat. icles-uif they can obtain the re- Africa, New Caiedonia, Yugo­ hIS sedateness. ships, like the light cruiser Marble- The Canberra w the first \0 They could plan their whole quired materials"-the car builders slavia, Greece and the Philippines " W~~ in Tokyo head, made perilous v 0 y 3 g e s be damaged. While engaged oni Inner campaign for the occupa- will be forced again to use at least for chromium, and upon China, " But ma~, he fa!rl;y screamed, through 13 ,000 miles of fighting mission against the Formosa naval Continued Draft ,Essential- tion. Perhaps I am overly suspl- some substitutes because of con- Mexico and Alaska [or its re- the war m Europe IS over and and rough :seas to reach a haven In base on Oct. )3, seven Japanese llevin" this was their tinuing shortage. During Ameri- quirements in antimony Russia, this note has been In Tokyo for the United Stales. plan dived down from an over- New York Times: President In the United States and other clous In be e I primary objective, but I do be- ca's war years, no materia.l of any Canada and South Africa w 1l con- days!" Previously the navy maintained cast to strike the American torce,.ll, Truman is entirely right in in­ areas. Jleve H. kind, domestic or Imported, was tinue to supply much of necessary The na~y refused lo surrender. strict censorship on the story of Every plane was shot down, bU! sisting that selective service is As against this figure/the best My defense is that my fault, and av~i1able for the product.ion of asbeslos, and cork' largely will It took time and an order from the two damaged fighting ships, not before one had plunged a tor­ estimate in the war department is the faull of this nation up to now, clvll1an passenger automobiles. . continue to come from southern higher-ups to let the public in on although navy officials permitted pedo into the Canb na's hull. needed both for the period of that the maximum number of has been that we did not suspect War-devel?ped m~nufactunng Europe and North Africa. this little secret that Tokyo had reporters to go aboard the Houston The Houston then stepped into redeployment and at least for the volunteers that could be obtained the Japs enough. What has proved and processmg techmques prob- While the car makers still are been handed days before. last April at the Brooklyn navy the fight in the Canberra's plaCf. initial stages of occupoation, and by next July is 300,000. true of J apan in the past has al- ably WIll supply some of the ma- somewhat conservative in tneir * * * yard to inspect the wreckage and On the pitch-blaCk night of Oel. Some smaller war plants and to hear from her skipper, Capt. 14, fourteen torpedo planes at­ he is right in urging congress to WE SIMPLY DO NOT DARE ways been beyond our worst sus- terials fo~mer~y 'obtained solely appraisals of synthetic rubber ADOPT AN ATTITUDE OF Ici ns (witness the Pearl Harbor from fo.relgn Ileld~, ~ut generally tires, they are emphalic in their veterans administration officials William H. Behrens, the accounl.i tacked the task force. The ship'S face this issue promptly and in a POt ) they Will be of limited number, praise of the artificial rubber used feal' that returning veterans will of heroism and determination that gun crews brought down three or responsible manner when it re­ WAIT-AND-SEE, on the theory repor s. d'ng t tr de xpert in virtually every other part of make mistakes in judgement in distinguished her crew-members. four planes-over 50 were downed that the war department e.sti- Yet it is plain there should, be aC~~n~ane~e ~fer: an s~xample the car. There is more than a prob­ using funds obtained under loan When "Tokyo Rose" and other by all the American ships partirl­ convenes. y mate may prove to be too low ..nl 0 ea.rl cause for alarm. We went of war-developed t\!Chniques. The ability thal all postwar inner provisions of the G. I. Bill ot Japanese broadcasters jubilantly patlng- but another torpedo bro~" His letter to th e chairmen of aq.d that a much larger number n With enough power to handle Ford Motor company used to get tubes will be made of synthetic Rights. They are telling each heard of damage to the two cruis- through, caused a power failure, thet house and senate military of volunteers may be forthcom- any traps. And J apan, nbw, has all its manganese from Cuba, rubber. other thjs story of G. 't. George, ers, they informed the Japanese tore up deck armor and let several committees Is obviously AN AN­ mg.. suddenly 11beco~e t a small nation, a Oz:echoslovakia and Russia. But The synthetic lubes have shown whom they don't wanl the veteran people that most of the T ird fleet thou ~ ond tons of water pour ;nto SWER TO THE IRRESPQNSI­ We musl be aboslutely certai\1 very sma na Ion. manganese became necessary to greater tear resistance and, being tll imitate. had been put out of action. Ad- the ship. G. uarante.e Of. Peace the production of war weapons, less porous than natural rubber BLE TALK THAT HAS BEEN that our armies of occupation are Th I t th George, discharged, returned to e SlJlg e pam m e surren- and an improved smelting process tubes, remain inflated much longer COMING OUT OF CONGRESS his small hometown. He was a adequate to any possible emer- del' terms which limited Japan to was developed and supplies from without attenlion. Synthetic rub­ fine fellow and weJl liked, but so since Japan's orfer of surrender, had been demobilized and were re­ gency; we must trust the judg- her homeland was the greatest Utah and Colorado became usable. ber al so seems superior for such lazy he had never been able to laps Take Occupation turning to their homes. about "stopping the draft at ment of our commanders in this guarantee of peace in the impend-I Still Ulere is every Jndicalion items as muffler brackets, tan belts hold a job before selective serv­ It is impossible to estimate ac· once" and relying henceforth on matter; and we }lIust, in all fair- ing future. She was never power- that the American car industry and electric wire insulation. ice caught him. The army had Shocked Bul Peaceful volunleers to fill the ranks of the ness, give the best assurance we ful at home where she is short in . ------~------­ curately the extent of the dama8~ changed him little. in the areas 1 have vi sited, in- . army and the navy. can to the men who have done raw materials and could not pos­ Cannon Polisher TOKYO (AP) - T~e people of eluding the most modern parts of The president points ouh that • the actual fighting, alt these si bly build power. It was her east His cI'onies, how vel', we r e this battered Japan 'e capital the city. The lamed Gin~a, Tokyo's the situation in the Pacific con­ grim and bloody years, that re- Asiatic expansion program which eager to do something for him. went about their daily tasks on gave her the resources with Inlerpr·eting I,he War News prinCipal shopping street, is virtu­ tinues to have many elements of lief lor them will be forthcoming which to make war against us. Twenty-two of them agreed to thig. momentous day with shocked ally flat except fo r a few major danger;. that wartorn and disor­ SO THAT THEY MAY COME As far as I can Jearn she has Jap* *Interpreter * Admits War * *Was * chip in a dollar a week to give impassability but no outward sign department stores, the UP per ganized Europe !IIces a difficult HOME AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. no uranfum and no atomic George a job. They bought a brass of hostility toward the rew Amer­ stories of which were burned but winter, and that me size of our Mr. Truman does not over- bomb formula. n she deveJoped Won aefore Atomic Bomb cannon Jor the town square and ieans who reached the city. which remain in business with made George officiaL cannon pol- American bombs cut a wide, meag r stocks on \'ne gr{)\mo. t\{){)'n. occupation forces in both these state the ca~e when he says that these things she could cause By JAMES D. WHITE button shoes, the teacher went on: isher. ugly pathway throughout mo t of areas must be left to the descre­ "tragic conditions 'would result if trouble and no doubt she will Mo t ot the stores and banks af. Things went a long fine for sev- the best known districts of the Marunouchi, the financial and bi« tion of the commanders on the we were to allow the period of cause as much trouble as her 11- Associated Press Starr Writer "Our people are dejected, but their hearts are warm. I am sure no eral months, but one day George capital and hammered many in­ business district, are stili standi .. mmtary service to expire by mtted perimeter permits. The tongue of a grey little Japa- spot, General MacArthur and one will attempt to make trouble." came to his lriends and told them dlt:ltrial areas on the edge of the and useable, including the offices Eisenhower. operation of law while a substan- This thought may well have ne:se school teacher was freed in Just how "warm" the hearts of he had decided to quit his job. cily into rusted rubble. of the National City bank of N'ew Their presellt estimates of tial pottion 01 our forces had not lain unspoken in President Tru- Japan yesterday. the Japanese people are today re­ Sure, he liked it a lot; the work However, a few of the finest York. what we shall need by next yet· been returneo from over- man's mind when he excused his He spoke lhrough an American mains to be seen, but it i:o refresh­ wasn't too hard; the pay was all buildings, including the imperial One wing or the famous Imperill July call for a total of 1,200,000 seas." proposed 18-25 draft with the sug- correspondent, Richard K. O'Mal­ ing to learn that at least one Japa­ right. palace, rise grotesquely {rom the hotel, built by the American archi­ men, exclusive 01 the large ad­ "ThlB ourht to be the first gestiofl th at, of course, we might ley of The Associated Press. nese knew the score before the "But you see. men," he ex* ruins which have long grown tect Frank Lloyd Wright, hIlS 'been have trouble in the Pacific. Let Ui listen closely, because 3 ditional numbers tllat will be business on the calendar of a end came and is not afraid to say plain ed, "I'Ve saved little money shoddy from neglect. burned but the remainder Is belne Now Japan has become our re- this apparently is the nearest thing so now- even though his watchful and I've decided to buy a brass t rode to Tokyo in a jammed u ed. I lunched there and talked required lor sUPPOrtln&' troops reassembled conrress.. sponsibility. China and Russia to the common man of Japan talk­ gendarmes and "thought police" cannon and go in business for my-I street car alongside housewives, to employes remaining from pre­ have settled their Asiatic main- ing we have heard so far. What are still all about him. self." stude.nts, fishermen, farmers and war lime. pott ' ot peace wMn he began his land differences, at least to the he thinks-Qn the basis of what , HIROHITO- unprecedented surrender broad­ extent of a presently peaceable he knows or doesn't know-about cast. 'Nearly everyone had ex- working agreement. the war may b~ more important 'SKINNY' WAINWRIGHT, HERO OF BATAAN, AFTER HIS RESCUE (Continued from page 1) Pacific Differs than the vague rescripts of his em- peeted him to urge more war. The Pacific peace is therefore peror, the sudden self-criticism of wh ich he ~,ad tried to toresta11 by The Nipponese said the emperor on an entirely different plane 'some of his militarists, or the his carefully worded rescript. undertook that broadcast on his than the settlement in Europe. We groping of his regimented press. Some SQurces expressed surprise own responsibilJty. That would have nothing in the Asiatic con tin- Won Hard Way ent, but have taken the islands of Hideyo:shi Kasuga, instructor in at such pro m p t capitulations mean for the first time in more the Pacific and the Japanese EngJish at the high school of abroad as the fanatical Kwantung than a decade, Hirohito was speak­ homeland. presumably intending Meiji university and now serving army, which promptly suppOrted ing for . the throne and not for the to withdraw eventually when as an interpreter to Japanese sur­ the throne. militaristic group that had ruled peace is restored, but keeping is- render ceremonies at Yokosu"ka New Political Vista anonymously behinq it. land bases we consider essential naval base, modestly confirms Ad­ The fact that the Japanese were to our military safety (either miral Nimitz' s tat e men t of able to discuss such things with­ For the Japanese, the atomic under the trusteeship system Wednesdtly that the war was won out peering around pillars for bomb was the final lactor deter­ through the United Nations, or 'by the hard way. eavesdroppers itself was an indi­ mining peace. My sources said it actual direct control as recehtly After the lall of Okinawa, still weighed over the country and cation of the new political vistas recommended by a hpuse commit- said Kasura, "WI! knew that our for Japan. ,.. was far more important in the tee.) fate had been sealed; we knew Japanese with whom I talked final outcome than Russia's entry On the mainland are only that the war was 10!It.", yesterday , said the country was into the war, which Ions had been Bul8la and China as major In- ' So much for Tokyo's claims that unprepar~d for the emperor's re- expected. flueaees there o~ the rround. only the atomic bomb and Russ ia's , ThroUlh Sinrapore India alld declaration of war did it. In.o China, the a~ntee British, Wearing a baggy grey suit and and "reneh are preaent to a les- THE DAILY IOWAN aer nunt. Th •• the probleJlll of Christian prinCiples, she is to the Published every mornln, octpt Monda' b1 Student Publieatlol1l Europe here take • dlllerent United States a natural friend. Incorporated .t 126-130 Iowa avenue. Iowa Cit1, Iowa. tor.. The development of &1Iese , ~ussla is rising in Asia a_ a principles of soundnesa and Board of truatet.: Wilbur Schr~ Kirk H. Portar, A. Cral, major power, as In Europe, but C1Iriatlanily t1lere becomes the Baird, Pllul R. Olson, Donald OHUI" II." Ju. Neville, Ibn Beth China wlli be a more. tormldable prlmarl post-war talk lor China Almer, Karalyn Keller, J."k Mo)'llrl. offset to her than any local power -and for ua. In Europe, if China can piece her For the present there is greatet • Fred M. Pownall, PubUaher broken country together and be- stability in a way in Asia than in 10ho A. Stlchnoth, Editor Wall, Str1npam. Adv. MJr. come a strong nation, Untortun- Europe' because of China's posi­ , ately she has not only been over- tlon in victory, her area and her Entered as second dau m.U SUblcrlptiOD rata-B, mall $11 ridden by seven years ot war, but raw materials now restored to 'her matter at the 1)Ostoffice at Iowa ptr ,ear! b1 eam.. 111 eftU II in the depths ot tremendous In- in Manchuria. Her opportunities CI\)" Iowa, unoer the act of eon­ wllklJ .•, 1*: ,Iar. nation and politically faces har- ahead are greater than the Euro­ areas of March 2, 18711. assment trom the Comm\lnlsts, pean nations. Wisely led, she can The Altoelatfd Pt. II nelu­ above or beloy{ board, no matter really build herself into a Tfiajor TELEPHONES dvel, .ntitl~ to \III for republi­ What peace is made. democratic influence. Editortal Ottlc...... _.__ 41112 cation of all nl.. dlQ)8tch.. Never Orderll At the same time, the threats credited to it or not otherwise Society Office ...... _ .... _. ___ 41113 In fact she has liever .been an I and exisling weaknesses I have LIEUT GEN. JONATHAN (SKINNY) WAINWRIGHT, hero of the lut Albert Wedemeyer, rleht. A cloaeup of WalnwrlrM II shown, ,.... credited In thll paper and . also orderly nation. Her struagle Is to mentioned require me to repa" daY8 of Bawn and Correrldor, II pictured In Chunrklnr, the Chinese above. Walnwrllht IlIrrendered to the Japan," on Correlldor, AI., .. I3~lness Ottlce ..... _ ... __ 41111 tM loeal D81N publllbect hmlD. get on sound ground and as she peace in the east Is yet tar trom provllllollal capital, after hi, a~rlval by plane Irom Mancnurla, wher~ 19U, alter a rallanl but hopeleal defenH of th.t .tronrho\tL TJa ...... FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1945 represents to a considerable ex- allured. It i. O~y promiled; an4 be had been held In a prlloner Df war cam... WalnwrleM I•• hown oUI~ta1 Unl..... tatea arm), llenal IlQrPl pbo'- radl0e4 4&r.. ' ... - tent a lincere appreciation of polllbll!. above, center, with Dr". Oe.. I. C. Beebe, left and Ueut. Oen. ClulII,kiq to lia. Fraaelleo. FRIDAY. AUGUST 31. 1945 - THE DAILY IOWAN. IOWA CITY, IOWA PAGE mREE ====~======Home Economists OHer Advice- thing new in legislative measures. Hancher Sees Need 41 Escaped Boys Commissioned as a second lieu­ IWAC Gathers Information on Axis Criminals tenant Dec. 5, 1942, she became a member on the staff of Col. Oveta For Trained Minds Pot, Pan Cleanup Can Be. Easy From Eldora School By JANE EAD8 democracy iI deaUn, with what', Culp Hobby in Washington as a *** *** lawyer. WASHINGTON-Maj. Catherine left over from a d~tonhip. E. Falvey of the Women's Arm1 Fair TrIal After serving as inspector at the In Postwar World * * * * ... * Still Hiding Out WAC trainina center, Ft. Ogle­ H's hard enough to do the dishes CUT CORNERS ON K. P. corps has her pret~y blue eyes on "B\1t by the fact that we have thorpe, Ga., she went to England a[tcr cooking a meal, but the pots a pair of high-heeled toeless red a fair trial instead ot indiscrimi­ Relponsibilitlcs and values of ELDORA (AP}-Forty-one es­ as a first lieutenant in the sum­ and pans are realIy the utensils sandals and a hat that's a diller. natelJr dlsPGIina of war criminals, hI,her education, heightened by caped boys from the Eldora stale mer of 1942. She served on the poIt-war needs for trained minds, that get most women down during She also wants to climb a moun- we an provina that the ends of K. P. Is there any easier way training school for boys still were staff of the WAC director. have 'been stressed by President tain. justice are best admJn~red by to whisk lood off the pans and hiding out last night altf'r an in­ Raised to the rank of captain Vir,l1 M. Hancher 1n a messtlge But Major Falvey will have to demoCratic processes." get them into the cupboard, clean tensified search during which later that year, she was assigned to prospective University of Iowa go on wearing those "sensible" She says this doesn't prove that and shining, in just· a few minutes others of the 179 who fled from to the control dIvision headquar­ .tudents. time? • the institution Wednesday were brown oxfords and that khaki democracy is 10ft - "n proves ters, army service forces, in 1944. "In this new age, you will need captured or volUntarily surrend­ chapeau for some time. As to that democracyIB flexible, strollJ in the office of the inspector gen­ to have access to all oC the ac­ Home economists who have scaling an Alp, she doubts the and endurln.... studied the problem say, "Yes, ered to officers. eral here. cumulated knowledge and wisdom army will let her go lalavanUng Born and reared in SomerviJJe, indeed." They add, "It's not hard Darrel T. Brown, assistant su­ She was promoted to major In ot' mankind. You must help to perintendent, reported that most about that way. Mass., where her mother, Mrs. February, 1945, and before the create a social ordcl' lhat will worK if you work according to tried and tested rules." Of those back in the Institution WAC Officer EUubeth ralvey now lives, Major Paris assignment was on tempo­ compare with the scientific order 115- rary duty at the oWce of the chief Parcels in enameled utensils were returned Wednesday night or She is the first WAC officer Falvey joined the WAC because which men have established," signed to the oUice of counsel for ahe thouaht It w .. patriotic. of council. are among the easiest of kitchen­ yesterday morning with fewer PreSident Hancher said. than hall a dozen returning yester­ the prosecution of Axis war crim- De-.eratlc. Member "My biggest scare 01 the war lie added that the atomic bomb wares to clean because their was caused by a mouse that skit­ mirror-smooth surface does not day afternoon. lnals at Paris. She was· a demoeraUc member may be the herald of a rtcw age­ No report was yet available of the tered over the floor 01 m.r fiat in pC I'm it food to cling stubbornly Despite her hankerings, Kay-as of the state lealiialure at the time one which will call for men and autopsy performed yesterday aller­ London," she says. lo Il. Rere are ,the tips which she is known to her associates an~ was. ~p fpr reelection. wotnen of greater knowledge and noon on Ronald Miller, 17-year-old have been used with greatest suc­ -Is full of zest for her new job. Her orders to '0 to Pt:. Des morai purpose than those of any inmate, whose death was said to She'll probably question some of Moines, la., came in July., 1942, 'j, cess: other age.. . have pr~ciPitated yesterday's mass the criminals, but her main as- seven rnillUtes before the clly As soon as food is served, place "The great question is whether escape after a noon dining room signment will be compiling evi- clerk's ouke clOlled on the last day the awful power that now has porcelal n enameled pans to soalt riot, Which aufhorities said appar­ dence against them. This assian- she could apply for papers for '0 been unleashed may be harnessed to loosen burned or dried parti­ ently was planned. ment is not entirely out of Une withdrawal from 'Domination. to serve man's peaceful needs. You cles or rood. They will wash much FOODS WHICH HAVE burned or dried on pereelain ena.meled utensils Miller's relatives said yesterday with what she did fo ... 16 years be- In frantic baste she phoned the must help us to learn to mastel', more quickly after this prelimin­ vanish easUy If a .small amount of water and soap cbips are simmered they were asking a "full investiga­ lore she enBsted in the WAC in clerk to wan for ber. He closed lest we be destroyed," the presi­ ary soaking. in tbe utensil for a few minutes. Careful, consi.stent cafe will help tion" ot the incident. The boy's August, 1942. at 5 p. m. wUly-nUly, and ahe dent declared. In place of grimy, gray; luke­ kUehenware give long, satlsfacklry service. father, Harold Miller of Chariton, Praeilced Law didn't make It. The nomination President Hancher this fall be­ warm water, make a new dish­ said he saw "big red marks on She practiced law in Boslon and went throuah. pan full of mild soapsuds and Ilns his sixth year as Lhe state both Ronald's arms and a large from 1941 to 1942 was a member She heard of her re-election uniyerslty's president. Hc was water. This will banish the drud­ Peace Ends Contracts brui:se on his left thigh" when ha of the Massachusetts state leglsla- whUe at the WAC olflcer candl­ appointed Sept. 10, 1940 and took gery of washing pots and pans to Forensic Program arrived at the institution after he ture. She is a member of the date PHILADELPHIA (AP}-Com- IChool. office Nov. 1. a great degree. In most cases, had been informed of Ronald's Massachusetts bar, federal dilbict "1 didn't _ how 1 was ,oina soapsuds and water are the only panies engaged in war production death Wednesday. He said also court bar and the bar of the su- to do both," she say., "so of course 'leaning treatment that most To Be Expanded were left witn $22,153,674,000 in he would order II second autopsy pl'eme court of the United States. I stayed in the ariny." porcelain enameled ware needs. New unfilled war contracts at the end after the body was turned over to She has always been interested Bills IDtrMlIC!ed 4-H Projects Save back-breaking scrubbing An expanded program in foren­ him in an effort to determIne in outlawing corruption from poll- Some of the blllB she Introduced in loosenIng burned foods on pans sics is planned by the University of hostilltles, tne securities and ex­ whether his son's death might have lies. have been put throuah while she by soaking overnight. Then, finjsh of Iowa for 1945-46, with the change commission disclosed ycs­ Open for Enrollment been the result of a beaUng. "What I have to do now Is the has been in the WAC. One of loosenjng the food by si mmering stress upon debate and discussion, terday in the first of a series of a small amount of water with a according to Prof. A. C. Baird, same sort of thing In a way, only Ithese wu a bill for the care of In­ Enrollments are open for the reports on cutrent sales and un­ [ew soap flakes in the pan for director if the program. The Federal Reserve System on a broader scale," she SaYS. ebrlatea. Her hobby, abe saya, filled war orders of 321 firms. newly inaugurated fall market about five or ten minutes. Finish The university will sponsor its was inaugerated in 1914. "It's going to be ditficult when h .. been in inaUl\U'atJn, some- litter project and the weslern cleaning by regular washing and annual inter-collegiate debate = lamb feeding contest, two 4-H rinsing. tournament in December, with dub projects with market shows Common bakJng soda is the some dozen universities and col­ which will take place Cedar at salest powder for cleaning coffee leges as participants. In March, Rapids next February and March. and tea stains, etc. on porcelain Enrollment for the market pig 1946, the intercollegiate student and enameled ware. Rub the senate will be held. proJec' closes Sept. ]0 and thal powder on with a damp dish Dual debates, participation in for the lamb project Nov. 1. cloth and watch the satiny, tournaments, radio broadcasts, Johnson county 4-H members gleaming white finish return to and formation of the students can enroll at the farm bureau of­ the utensil. ••• fice In Iowa City and receive speaker's bureau are included detailed information aboul the • . .1 among the activities. , prcJects. Utters {or I.he fall market pig Young. Pig Causes 14-H Heifers Colts project, starting this summer for Great Commotion 1 To Be Exhibited \he first time, must be farrowed • between Aug. 15 and Oct. 1 • At Police Station l At Club Show Inclusive. The litters may be pure~ A sm'all pig, weighing about 25 , bred, cross breeds or grades and or 30 pounds but extremely active. Four-H dairy heifers will be ex­ . . may be owned by lhe member was the center of quite a commo­ hibited by Charles and Eugene hlmsell. or in partnership with tion at the local police station yes­ Jenning:;;, and two 4-H colts 'will his father or guardian. The litters terday morning. be shown by Tom Nichols, all of must be earmarker within one About 10:15 a woman opened Iowa City, at the Dairy Cattle Con­ week alter farrowing and this the door of the sta tlon far enough gress 4-H club show, largest in the , marking reported on the enroll­ to say to the desk man "There's a history of the state, at Waterloo . ment report. dog chasing a {!ig up Washington Sept. 1 to 3. Lambs in the :feeding contest street!" At the 4-H dairy judging conlest will be judged and sold at Hawk­ Before the patrolman couId at Waterloo Sept. 1, Johnson eJe Downes, Cedar Rapids and radio to the squad car, the tele­ county will be represented by an . , will be fed until after Feb. 1. A phone rang and BiU Olson, propri­ Iowa City team composed of member may feed one or two etor of Olson's D-X station at Col­ Eldon Moss, John Carson and units of market lambs, eaeh unit lege and Linn streets, reported Charles and Eugene Jennings. 10 consist of 16 lambs. The lambS that h~ had captured a pig. After the judging contest, the wllJ cost about $14.25 a 100 pounds Two patrolmen in the squad car boys will attend a banquet in the delivered at Cedar Rapids. apprehended the pig an~ incarcer­ Electric Park ballroom at 6 p. m. ated it in the basement of the city and later will be guests of the Meeting Rescheduled hall. Dairy Cattle congress at the eve­ The scheduled meeting of local Asked what would become of the ning shQW at the Hippodrome. No. ll!, Lhe university buildings captive young porcine, Assistant and grounds employes union, has Chief Joe Dolezal replied, "I! no- The 40,000 horse-power electriC been postponed irom Monday body calls for him, I'll dispose of. motor in the Wright Field, Ohio, night until Friday night at 7 p. m. him and there won't be any points wind tunnel is believed to be the at the Knights of Pythlas hall. involved either!" largest in the United States. 'STEWARTS PREPARE FOR ,JIMMIE'S HOMECOMING WeD, ben it is 1955! And Tom in business Cor himself-already beadhig fpr a real stiCteN,

Se~ bimaeH up with thoee JDltured WIf Bonde 've bought back in the 1940's-Jour doUars lor every dam we u.ved originallyl Back in 1945, eveD, we knew it would turn out tbis way, Buyiq aU the Booda we could, And laving them! TOOt's. wooderlul huaband. And be deserve. aU the credit. WeD, almost all!

'I'bm IUIJS a time-that WII back in 1945, too, I guess­ wbeh he needed a Iitt~ help from me. I round he'd let down OIl ~ Band buyiq. Not only tbat, be actually almOllt angested we casb in • Bond or two to pay (or IOmetbing we wmted,., ADd M'; where 1 put my foot down!

lIyOU LISTEN TO III, Tom Lapham," I told him. "Don't you know that the hipt difference between a tlucce&e and a (ailllnl ia that the auceeea sticks to his -plane? I don't waDt to be married to a man who bun't the reeolution (or maybe I aaid 'pmptioa')·to alack off OIl wbat be know. is right! You're DQt PD« to I8hota~ 0fJI' future I" I ,.--:r:r huabaad aeeda a wifely dreMing down onoe in a wbUel 'And thank beano Tom Ii*ned to mel We 1t6pt our Boada-and boupt more arid more of 'eml FiNt tbiq we kuew, w~ bad eJlOU&b 10 we began feeling .tf!CU1'e. That ,ave Tom roafidence-belped him. get ahead. And tAi. year, eDoup boodi DYtuted to DYke our drellDlA come true! 10M'S A SUCCESS-yet be might have failed i£ I badn't spoken. And, of CDW'R, he'. forgotten. I wouldn't ..... or ",""indinl him-it'•• ~l between De girla.

aoih:,~ it! ytJur julure-luJnjJ on to your bond.! And keep Ob bUYtai ~! Victory Bondi . • • • • • 10 have and 10 hold '"' QUIlT 11m. TOWN ot Indiana, PI., t•• tartlng to buzz with aotlvlty In anticipation of the retum Ior Ita mo.t famoul IOn-<=Ol. Jamt. st.wart, the lanky, drawling movie actor, top left, who !'Ole trom a buok private to hi. pre.ent rank In the Il,hth Air Fqrce. · In the Stewarts' .paclou. home on Vine.' ear Hill, ' Jimmie'. proud mother, left, and hie alater, Mra. Robert Perry, top right photo, duat off the Th~ Daily Iowan actor'. accordion, while at the family hardware Jtore hll falller, Alex M. Stewart, lower lett. Ihow, the . dlJpl&, of clipping. and picture. which ttll tbe .tory of the colonel'. movie and Army career •. \ Tbe' tI d photo81'aph ' tower rl'htl:dfplctlJlJt.aotor'~l.dl'r,· who_I._ 01'1. hlI_way_ bome from England, when' riu i8 _ of/ictal U. S. TrelUNry advertiseme"t--prepared .' . ~ ffilWDltJOl'.D. . ",,,der (It&apicea of Trea8u"y Departme ..' aM W (lr Advertiai1lg Co""cit p~G~rOUR . - THE DA,lLY ' rO.wAN, IOWA ,CITY. rOWA' ... ~ . .. FBIDAY,·AUGUST·31. 'l9~6 ' E 'a 9 .ree ·.n I _~~q. ~y -----'--· I?~a . c~,. k,_er_,s D.efeat qoUeg~ · .»; II-~··t9 ·rS, ··19 .. 7 I • • White Sox Weaken Don.Hulson AtideJson Not ' 1 "Rei lie" __ Bwilder;· of Basketball 1 Pirates Rally' In Ninth to Tie Tribe Star ·of Alfack Oii Troopship . 8 , JOHN STICHNOTH •• In· Sevenlh; Almost Snap lOling . 'D ' T Editor. Tbe Dally Iowan , (b . Streak but Pitching - Provides Highlight [' ocking oday ro~O~i~n~~:~~:;s~I7::=eat;:;!~~: ip US, 6·4 Slows in Final Of Game With 82.Yard is the center of speculation these days. is one of most highly re- CHICAGO . (AP)- The Chicallo' Jaunt to Touchdown . The troopship which hls wile garded figures in basketball circles PITTSBURGH (AP)-In a close White Sox came within a few was "hoping" might bring Dr. Ed- in the midwest. contest featured by Stan Hack's pitches of :snapping a six game' losmg streak here yesterday, but Br Ch~rlel W. Dunkley ward N. Anderson back to the A builder of good basketball 2.000th hit of his big league career. the pitching weakened in the ninth CHICAGO (AP)-Green Bay's states will dock in New York teams and a great sportsman. he the iirst place Chicago Dubs bowed Packers. champions of the na­ 'today-but the "good doctor" is respected and admired by his innln~ and they had to settle tor a 4-4 tle with Cleveland. In a tional football leag'ue. upheld pro­ 'won.t be on it. colleagues and the fans in the Big 6-4 to the yes- The VIal' department said again Ten. He is one of the most popular terday and lost a half game in their game ca)led at the end at the fessional supremacy over the na­ ninth to allow the Indians to catch yesterday that as far as it.knows, coaches Iowa ever had. slender lead over the St. Louls tion's colJegiate all-stars in flood­ a trsln. lighted Soldier field last night Anderson's unit still is in England. Fans Wondering Cardinals. The Sox were off to a 4-1 lead The Queen Elizabeth. which Despite his popularity. fans are The windy city crew then en- by defeating them. 19 to 7. before in the fifth. and Orval Grove ap ­ Mrs. Anderson was "hoping" wondering if he will be restored a sell out crowd of 92.753. trained for St. Louis and their parently had his 13th iame of the' Most of the thunder in Green might carry Anderson home. is re- as head coach in view of Pops turning three medical units. but Harrison's bri41iant successes. The craucial tour-game series with the season won when he started the Bay's decisive triumph was pro­ ninth with a two-rUIl lead. After vided by 32-year-old Don Hutson, t/le 9]st general hospital, to which two men coach different styles of Red Birds starling tonight. Jeff Heath had popped out. Dutch rated ' as the game's greatest pass the former Iowa football coach play and. on the whole. employ Outbatled 12 hits to eight. the Meyer singled to left and then receiver. I . rlow belongs. is not among th~. different methods. Pirates staged a three-run splurge Grove tossed a "fat one" to Don "Just Hopln," Williams. now a lieutenant com- Ross. which he slammed into the :Hutson. playing his elevertth d . h d hi ' in the seventh inning to chalk up " I' was iust hoping he might be man er In t e navy an at ehc left field stands lor a . professional season with Green coming on the Queen Elizabeth." oCficer at Great Lakes. is believed their sole victory in the three- Grove had held the Indians to Bay. scored 11 of the Packer's Mrs. Anderson said. "r didn't to be due for placement on the in- ga me series with the league lead~ Beve.n hits before thnt ninth. giv ­ 19 pOints and hiS B2-yard touch­ know anything definitely. but I active status list soon. ers. down gallop on a pass intercep­ ing them a run In the fourth whel\ . tion provided the game's most was hoping," / Greatest Team Trailing 4-3. the Bucs started Al Cihockl doubled and Les Flem­ Mrs. Anderson declared she ex- His greatest team was in the their "lucky seventh" with 'i three- ing singled, and another in the' thrilling p1ay. 9 peels her husband back in this 1 41-42 season, with To m m y bose thump by little AI Gion- Itlxth on successive singles by As the 12-year-old series now country 1Iy fall. but emphasized Chapman and Wendell Hill at for­ stands. the cham­ friddo. Bill Salkeld doubled to Mickey Rocco. Fleming and Heath. that she bas nb idea when he will wards. Milt Kuhl. center. and Vic drive him in. A timely single by pions have won seven games. lost S Guy Ourtright hit his second be discharged. Published' rumors i e gel and Rudy Soderquist. Frankie Gustine brought in Jim three and tied two. It was the sec­ said she had con(irmoo a report guards and co-captains. homer of the season, into left ·t 20 Russell. who was hit by an in- field. in for one Chicago run. ond victory tor Green Bay in three that he would be discharged soon. Th a t team won 12 0 f I s appearances in the classic. d t · d f d ' 'h shoot. and Jeep Handley, who ran "r don·t know when he will be games. an Ie or secon m, e for Salkeld. Cleveland AB R H • Hutson's 20-yard place kick in discharged." she said. "I've no can ference with 10 wins and five the first period gave the Packers idea whatsoever. Right now. I'm defeats. Six straight conference Preacher Roe scored his 11th Cihocki. ss ...... 2 1 1 0 a 3to 0 lead and the professionals thirlktng mosUY' about his coming victories in the latter part of the victory against a similar number Weingartner', ss ...... 2 0 0 0 were in front the rest of the way. '* * season featured the campaign. of de(eats. He stepped aside for a O·Dea"· ...... 1 0 0 0 The Packers increased theit 1942 Club pinch-hitter during the triumphant Wheeler. SS u····.· .. ·. 0 0 0 0

lead to 12 to 0 in the second period That 1942 club set 12 new team ROLLIE WILLIAMS and VIC SIEGEL rally and Xavier Rescigno finished Rocco. Ib •••••••• h •••••• 4 1 1 0 when All-Star fullback. Bob Ken­ and individuall'ecords in its spree. * * * * * * with Al Lopez behind the bat. Fleming. rI ...... 4 0 2 0 nedy. of Washington State. was Its 721 points for 15 games was a Paul Derringer was relieved in MackiewiCZ. cr ...... 0 0 0 0 trapped and tackled behind goal new Big Ten scoring mark. and 1940-41 ...... 12 8 and 1923. he was all-western bas- the third inning aCter the Pirates Heath, If ...... 4 0 1 0 line for a safety. and halfback the 4B-point per game average 1941-42 ...... 12 8 ketball guard. all-conference foot- scored a run and had the bases Meyer. 2b ...... ,.. 4 1 1 0 German Rohrig pass~d 20-yards to lopped the league. Three of the ball halfback and star baseball full with no outs. Paul Erickson. Ross. 3b ...... 4 1 1 0 Roy McKay for the first touch­ team's losses were by a tolal of Totals ...... 124 ...... 124 outfielder. He is one of the Badg- called to the rescue. soon retired Seerey. cf-rf ...... 4 0 1 0 down of the game. Hutson con­ five points. Big Ten. Games Only ers nine-letter winners. the side. He was procJaimeJ loser Hayes, c ...... 3 0 0 0 verted the point with a place kick. All those 12 records-eight team 1930 ...... No conference schedule After graduation he coached at because he was on duly In the Center. p ...... ,'0. 1 0 0 0 The only All-Star score of the marks ahd four individual-were 1931 ...... , ..... 2 10 James Millikin college. Decatur. slashing seventh. Benjamin· ...... 1 0 1 0 game also come in the second per­ btoken by Pops Harrison's teams. 1932 ...... 3 9 Ill.. for a year and then came to The veteran Hack. the only lefty Salveson. p ...... 0 0 0 0 iod on a 62-yard pass play. The Williams record as head coach 1933 (tied for 3rd) ...... 8 4 the University of IowLl in the fall put in the lineup against Roe's McDonald·' ...... 1 0 0 0 thrill was provided by Nick Scol­ at Iowa for 13 years: 1934 ...... 6 6 of 1924 as assistant coach of foot- southpaw pitching. started his Klieman. p .. -...... 1 0 1 0 lard. St. Joseph College. Ind .• who All Games 1935 ...... 6 6 ball and basketball. Sam Barry team oft in the first inning with grabbed a 27-yard toss from Ken­ W L 1936 ...... 5 7 was here at that time. his 2.000th hit. a single. It was Totalll ...... 36 4 10 • nedy and outran the entife Green 1929-30 ...... 4 12 1937 ...... 3 9 In 1929 he was named head good for a run. • Batted for center in 5th Bay secondary 35 yards for a •• Batled for Salveson in 7th 1930-31 ...... " 13 1938 ·.. · .. · .... ·.·.·.·.. · ...... ·.. ·~ .. ·.·.. ·-:-.·.·.·.· .·.I.·...... 6 6 coach of basketball. and he held H E touchdown. 1931-32 ...... 5 12 1939 3 9 that position through the seLlson ... Batted for Weingartner in 9th 1932-33 ...... 14i 5 1940 ...... 4 8 of 1941-42 when he entered the The Packers' final touchdown Hack. 1b .' .... -, ...... 3 1 1 0 1933-34 ...... 13 6 1941 ...... 4 8 navy a s alieutenanL Chicago AB It H I was a hair raiser. Hutson inter­ Johnson, 2b ... _.-... _, 5 1 2 0 1934-35 ...... 10 9 1942 (tied for 2nd) ...... 10 5 Genial and soil-spoken, he is cepted a pass by Perry Moss of Sauer. rf .. -. . u.·_ 4 0 2 0 Moses. rf ...... " .. , . 5 1 5 0 1935-36 ...... 9 10 poised regardless of the situation - Tulso on the Green Bay 15 yard Nicholson. r! ...... -I 0 0 0 Farrell. Ib .. ', ... _..... 3 0 0 0 line in the fourth period. The 1936-37 ...... 11 9 Totats ...... 60 87 confronting him. Despite the tense- Patko. d ...... _ ...... 3 1 1 0 Schalk.2b 4 0 0 0 1937-38 ...... 12 9 Williams was born in Edgerton. ness which often grips him. he If 4 1 2 (I fleet-footed Pac k e l' star tore Lowrey. It .. -- .. ~ .. --.. - 5 1 2 0 Cul'tright...... straight down the sidelines 85 1938-39 ...... <...... 8 11 Wis,. Oct. 11. 1897. At the Univel'- consistently retains his even tem- Hughes. 3b ...... 4 0 0 0 Baker'. Sb ...... 4 1 0 0 yards for a touchdown. He had a 1939-40 ...... 9 12 sity of Wisconsi n between 1921 perament. Merullo. ss ...... 4 0 3 0 Hockett. cl .. _..... ~ .. 4 0 1 0 willing blocker in Clyde Good­ Rice. c ...... 3 0 1 0 Reynolds. ss ...... , 4 1 1 0 night. but was able to outstrip his Maybe It's Free Hot Dogs and Cokes But- Becker· ...... 1 0 0 0 Tresh, c ...... 2 0 2 0 closest llIlrsuer wit h 0 u t help. Williams, cf ...... 0 0 0 0 Mu Iler 0 0 0 0 Charles Mitchell of Tulsa was Derringer, p ...... 1 0 0 0 Grove. p ' .... _...... , 3 0 0 0 just a step behind all the way. but Erickson. p ...... 1 0 0 0 Popish. P ...... 0 0 0 0 couldn't come close enough. See- M eet Gillespie·· ...... 1 0 0 0 Dichshot'· ...... 1 0 0 0 25,000' Victory Track 0 Statistics of the All-Star vs. Vandenberg. p ...... 0 0 0 I DR. EDWA.RD ANDERSON Tolals ...... _...... 34. 4 11 • Green Bay Packer Cootball game. )f.. .. )f.. Green All concrete. The only drawback to he finished a forlorn third in the Totals ...... _...... 36 4 U O · Ran for Tresh in 9th back to this country so he can get By WHITNEY MARTIN • Becker batted for Rice in 8th .. Batted for Papish io 9th First Downs ...... 15 12 the layout is a 500-meter track 3.000-meter race. a furlough and come home," FRANKFURT-ON-MAIN. Ger~ • Gillespie balled for Erickson in Cleveland ...... 000 101 002-4' ' Yards gained by rush- There probably would have Mrs. Anderson said that when many. (AP)-You might say free WiliCi1 confused GI's no little in 8th Chicago ...... 020 110 000-4 ing (net ...... 132 68 been many more if transportation Anderson does get a discharge. she cokes. free hot dogs. and free ad­ distance events. (Game called end 9th to allow Forward passes at- had been avoilable. The stadium AD R H E believes he will resume coachin!. mission had something to do with The meet. as was the Nuern­ was far from town and the boys Cleveland to catch trLlin.) tempted ...... 24 22 Dischar&,e Only R1Imor Forward passes com- it. as Americans love their free­ berg event. was conducted with who could not get a ride could not Gionfriddo. cf .... " .. 4 o Meanwhile, it was learned by dom and will go far in any direc­ clocklike precision and with all attend. Barrett. rf ...... 5 o Dykes Fined-Alain pleted ...... 10 9 The Daily Iowan thut the original Yards gained by for- tion if the ride is free. but we trimmings of a big league event In fact. transportation is one of Russell. If ...... 1 o CHI C AGO (AP) - Jimmit' report that Anderson will be dis­ think the attendance or 25.000 at bnck home. Performances on the TOM: CDAPl\lAN Salkeld, c ...... 3 o Dykes. who makes freqeunt flnan- ward passes ...... 95 162 charged soon. also was based on the biggest problems over here. As the European theater-Mediterran­ wIJole were excellent considering GeneraL Eisenhower indicated, Handley' ...... 0 o cial contributions to the Ameri­ Yards lost. attempted rumor. The report was attribuMd Lopez. c ...... 0 \) can league treasury, yes\eraaj fprward passes ...... 0 6 ean theater track meet was due the limited training of the athletes, cverybody wants to go somewhere to ChicLlgo sources. and these Elli olt. 3b ...... 3 o discovered another $25 was ex- FofwBrd passes Inter­ largely to a growing interest in The individual star was Pic. and there just are not enough air sources turned out to be only Gustine. ss ...... 4 2 pected of him. The fine. President that sport. William Dilla rd of Cleveland. with or g,-ou nd vehicles to take them cepted by ...... 5 3 sports writel's conversing among .Th e Big Show Dahlgren. 1b ...... 2 Will Harridae said. was [or "ob- The estimated 25.000 may be three firsts and a place on the despil>e an unbellevable amount o Yards gained. run back themselves. Coscarart. 2b ...... 4 o sc;ene language" u ed during Sun- of Int. passes ...... 123 78 chamber of commerce figures. but winning relay team. Most inter­ of American motorized equipment. NEW YORK (AP) - M a j 0 r The war department, only of­ Roe. p ...... 2 o

.. ..