14, 1944 ~

RATION CALENDAB

..OC&IISkD rOODS blue ..ampo Aft throu,h Q8 v.lld Ind.!lnlloly; Cioucly IllAT red stamps A8 throUib TS valid IndeUnltel,.; SUGAR .tamp .. II (book 41 valid Ind"lInlloly,

t1VE CENTS TUII AIIOCI4TIID ..... IOWA CITY, IOWA TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1944. ,... .ulOOUftD ..... VOWME XlJV NUMBER 197 French, Yanks YANK AND JEEP TAKE 17 JAPS I Shred -tower China Opens' First -Offensive tlt Guslav Line Seven Years with Yank Aid Fifth, Eighth Armies ------• Doggedly Advance To New Positions Yank Heavies At a Glance- Senators Shelve Troops Strike ~ ALL lED HEADQUART­ ERS, Naples, CAP) - French Anti-PoD tax Bill lnd American troops shredded Bomb Coast With-Speed the lower half of the Germans' I Gustal' line yesterday and a break-througb by the British Small Formations Will AHempt to Slalh Eighth IIrmy appeared immi­ Through Burma, nent in the heavily-defended Blast Hitler's fort ...... WASHINGTON,--- (AP) - The sector below Cassi no. In 31 st Day of Raidl Allies ~aJD 60 square miles Join Stilwell's Units senate .1Ved the controversial Fanning out t h r 0 ugh 60 territory In Italy . squ81'e miles of rugged tab le­ LONDON (AP)-Unhampered anti-l)OU tax btll yesterday atter HUNGKTNG, (AP)-More CQffipuative lull hant; over land alld flat I'iver valleys by the German air force, amall opponent.. roUed up a .. to 36 ma­ - More than 20,000 hin se weS"cJrn air front as bombers which the y con trolled aft r formotions of American heavy ,orIty aPlJut • cloture petition troops hay plung d a ro the Hghtly hit coastal defenses. Salween river in western Yun­ fierce fil:!;hting since the push and medium bombers blasted Hit­ dnlped to fOftltJl\ a filibuster nan province at a, doz n points, opened Thursday night, Fifth and ler's sprawling c(lastal defense Sen.te sbelves controversial an­ by IIOUthem Democrats. Eighth arm y t roo p s slugged the Chinese high command an­ system yesterday, carrying the ti-poll tax bill The roll call, taken before doggedly forwa rd to new posi­ nouneed yesterday, 0 pen in g , pre-invasion air offensive Into the packed pUeriett, ended prospects tions. ClaW ller"" first real otfenslve Cbina's first real offensive in tor I the bill I1selt and "Torn to shreds" was Associated 31 st consecutive day. In seven years of war. vote on 8 yen yeaTS of war with th ob­ 'Press Corre~pondent E d war d A German raid on south EIli­ many of its aupporten joined in a j tiYe 0 junction with Lieut. J{ennedy's description ot the left land Sunday nilht !tilled. a half 8UbseqlA8llt U to 85 decision to Gen. J () S e p b W. Stilwell's flank of the Nazi line in a dispatch II dozen persons. At least 15 of the displace It with another measure. tl'QOPS Ilbout 150 miles away in from the field. IeCItII4I YN northern Burma. PeoeUat!on of ~he GU8~av attacl<;ers were reported s hot Union States both sid II down. 'l'be second vote came on a mo­ Co uolti on were line developed Into what was hea.vy along the l30·mile front reported officially as a "sl~­ Forts, Uberatorll tion by !enator Clark ~D-Mo) to as the Chinese, achieving an ex­ d nlfleant breach," but beyond Approximately 250 Flying Fort- take up a bill to provide artiIlclal New Demands tr.ordinary degree of surprise, It and up the Llrl valley lead­ limbs and other appliances lor Ip~ to the Hitler line the way WITH JUS GUN In one hand and the steerlnr wheel In the other, Her­ resaea and Liberators and an add i- LIEUT. COL. JOHN J . Denebr,. of forced a wide enemy deployment. FWd' disabled v8terana. Senators Pep­ Is studded with anU-tank schel Wilson of Los Anc-eles, Cal" sllli le handedly brou ~ht In 11 Jap tional forCe of Thunderbolts a.nd rom ar s Plainfield, JII" 26-year-old f1ytr Tbe Chinese were aided by prisoners who crowded his jeep on a road In Hollandla, Dutch New per (f)-Fla) and McCarran (0- positions and the Germans tighter-bombers bombarded ob-l ' wbo lIa been on at le~ t 118 msl- a unique military orr~nlza­ Guinea. He marched them ~h ead of the Jeep. Nev) protested that Clark', mo­ . at1l1 bold commandln~ ground lectives in northern France while SlObS In the PacifIc area and lor Uon, a "y torce," In the north 01 the valley. ------, A-20 Ught bompers drove clear whom Inkln ~ Jap shiPS Is no nov- tion did not oUer a clear test of, ) (Gen. Alphonse Juin anonunced powerful drive ordered by I to the Paris area and }lit an lIir- CHICAGO, (AP)-ThE' stew-I elty, is showll above. 11e hold. the sentiment on the poll tax issue. in a telegram to Gen. Oharles De iOn Olillciials AIII"ed AI"rmen Lash' Generalissimo Chillnl Kal­ 1 f· Id th ... dl b tt de " ard's council ot II CIO union dl t1nrulshed f1ylnr eros, two oalt However, M a j 0 r I t y Leader Gaulle at Algiers that his French Uni Ie nea r e "a y a ere reI. leaf cl u ters Shelt to break J apan's block­ railroad yards. Mal'lIuders bombed which won a recent election at ----.------Barkley (Ky), who made a fuUle, expeditionary corps had entered "pS on Wakde Island a railroad yard also. the Mont,omery Ward and com. acJe. Ultimate objective of the San Giorgio in the Liri valley, NI last-miDl-\te appeal for adoption of Not a bomber was lost of those puny plant last night announced I offensive I. to sla h 1hrour h seized a dominating ridge to the Rd P dN the seldom-used cloture rule to Involved in the operations-nor in Its formal demands, IncludIng a upper Burma, join with Stil_ south and captured Corino in a T Ak A very e s oun aZls limit further debate to one hour O S Bombers, Fighters the tar-tlune RAE night bombin, closed shop and checkoff system, general advance against the Ger_ per senator, threw his support to well 's Chinese and connect mans, who were retreating in dis­ attacks a few hours beore. British which Sewell L, Avery, board In Norwegian Port I Continue Pounding Mosquito bombers hit Cologne cbalrman, pt;evlously had said the Clark's motion. He declared that the Burma road with the order. He said the French had Isolated Pacific Bases Sunday night lind unspet'ified mll- company would not grant. two-lane Ledo hl~bway which laken 1,000 prisoners, 30 of them IIng further debate would be "a futile TO Mee ltary objectives In France, Bel- I?emands were announced after tIIwell hal built to his fron~ Communique Says waste of time." officers, with the number of cap­ ADVANCED ALLIED HEAD- gium and Holland. a nliht meeting at which the tives mounting steadily. Actin, Minority Leade White In the Marauilc valley. One escort plane was missing unJon decided to a~.lt John A. Barr, Soviet Planes Sink The Americans, after occupying CHICAGO (AP)-Officials of:\ QUARTERS, New Guinea, Tues- yesterday. company labor relations manager, I (Me), who voted agalnst cloture, The Chinese used American- Sanla Maria Infllnte, pressed to­ cro union S:lid yesterday Sewell day, (AP)- Allied airmen, press- The Paris radio went 011 the all' to set a. date today for II negoUa .: Three Tr7 Board ot Trustees: Wilbur L. Schramm, A. Craig Baird. Kirk H. • It:t . :30 p. m. the day preceding lim publlcaUon; notlc,," wW NOT .. ':5L/~j accepled by telephone. and must be TYPED OR LEGffiLY '!TIN Porter, Paul E. Olson, Jack Moyers, Je8Jll)e Franklin. Sarah Balley, She and Husband American Red Cross ~ and SIGNW by a real/Ooalble perllQn. Donald Ottilie, Charles Swisher. Erase Plymouth Scribe Pictures Vol. XXI, No. 1854 Tuesday, May Fred M. Pownall, Publisher Blitz Ravages Hospital Unit's Work Marilyn Carpenter, Adv. Mgr. Dorothy Klein, Ed[tor UNIVERSITY CALENDAR PLYMOUTH, England (AP)- Instances of the invaluable Entered as second class mail Subscription rates-By mail $5 "Hi, where are you from, soldier?" work of the army nurse corps for Thursday, May 18 Wednesday, May U matter at the postoffiee at Iowa per year; by carrier, 15 cents 12 M. Kensington and bridge 8 p. m , Concert by Universlt7 A trim little lady caUs up to an which the war department is seek- City, Iowa, under the act ot con­ weekly, $5 per year. brunch, University club. Symphony Orchestra, Iowa Union. gress of March 2, 1879. American G. 1. at the wheel of an ing additional volunteers were The Associated Press is exclu­ Saturday, May 20 Thursday, May 25 I army truck. "You from Virginia, disclosed today in an account of 3 p. m. A. A. U. W. tea and mu­ 3-5:30 p.m. May tea; elNUOII TELEPHONES sively entitled to use for republi­ cation of all news dispatcbes like me? I thought you didn't the labors of a hO$pita1 unit on sicaie, home of Mrs. Virgil M. of officers, University club. Editorial Offiqe ...... _..... 4192 credited to It or not otherwise speak like one of those damn the Nettuno-Anzio beachhead in Hancher, 102 Church street. 7:30 p. m. Society fOr E1lperl­ mental Biology and Medicine, Society Office ...... _...... 4l93 credited in this paper and allO Yankees." Italy. Tuesclay, May 23 Business O(fice ...... _...... 4191 the local news pu blished herein. The desCription of the experi- 7:30 p.m. Bridge (partner), Iowa Section, Room 179 Medical This is Lady Astor, who will be ences of one night for members of University club. Laboratories. TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1944 65 May 19, doing her Saturday an evacuation hospital unit short- (For lnformaUon rerardin.. dates beyond this schedule, see' morning's marketing in Plymouth, Iy after they had arrived from reaervaUons In the office of the President, Old Capitol.) ~ the most-blitzed city on ~ritain's southern Italy was written by invasion coast. Frederick Clayton, an American ABlack Mark Against Democracy- Red Cross correspondent. He GENERAL NOTICES The rain pours down as she asks wrote that his visit to the unit, , Monday afternoon the senate theory of the poll tax is in con­ if the soldier knows the soft- under the eommand of Col. Harry IOWA UN10N the offices of the deans of the col· ·toted to lay aside the anti-tax flict with our present conception drinks clubs she's sponsored, tells Blesse, "showed me how quickly MUSIC ROOM SCHEDULE leges. bill alter rejecting a deba te­ him where to go, warns him not and efficiently one of these war- HARRY O. BARN~ of democracy and democratic Monday- ll to 3 and 4 to 8. limiting petition in tended to halt to drink in the pubs. produced units [unctions. Speed, Registrar ; , Tuesday-ll to 2 and 4 to 8. southern Democratic filibuster government. co-ordination, cooperation and a a For Lady Astor as Plymouth's spirit of service does iL. In fa.ct, it Wednesday- ll to 3 and 4. to 8. against ' the measure. ThUl!, the. Yet, in eight ~o uthern statru, WAR WORK REGISTRATION member of parlia'11ent, and Lor(i could be compared to a vas~ Thursday- ll to 2 and 4. to 8. Women may register for war bill 'has met the sam e fate this flagrently unfair method of Astor, as its lord mayor for the C human assembly plant where lO$8 FrldaY- ll to 3 and 4. to 8. work at Iowa Union between 8 handed to its counterparts intro­ selecting tbe voters remains on Saturday- ll to 3. last five years (he lliso wiU be c'"' of time or motion or skill could be I a.m. and 3 p.m. duced in the past three sessions the statute books. And, what's 65 May 19), have added to their disastrous, and where the ob- Sunday- ll to 6 and 7 to 8. MARY ALICE D9~ of congress-slow death. more, it is used by the state ad­ jective of salvaging human lHe There may be l'mmy "behind­ miJ,listration as a definite 'tool of many official and unofficial jobs was never lost sight of." NURSING APPLICATION SWAINE SCHOLARSHIP the-scenes" angles to this poll manipulation to control the vot­ the important one of making the New s Be h i nd the New s The nurses, according to Clay- Women students interested in The date for applicatiOlls foL' the tax battle, but just the same, it ing. This has been proved all'aln American soldiers in Britain feei Ion, a.rri.ved at tl\.e beachhead alter entering the school 0 nursing Robert T. Swaine scholat~hlp, seems tha t the consisten t refu­ and again, by various inve&tiga­ at home. Three of their own sons a rough sea trip during which with the class which be,ins June yielding full tuition for one T,tar 12, 1944, shou id call a1 the oITice sal of our highest law making tions by private groups, leagues are in the service, and the other Digging Behind Major Domestic News their craft was subjected to 14 in any department of Harvard of the registrar immediately to se­ university, has been extended to body to pass a bill which almost for democracy and by senatorial dive-bombing attacks. They went is a member of parliament. You'll Find the CIO to work immediately, helping cure an application blank. Com­ June 1. aDd congressional probes. I everyone is agreed is necessary On down the street she goes" estabUsh the hospital facilities. pleted applications should be re­ C.E. SEASHOM: An amazingly large number of and essential, is a black mark stopping in an ancient sbop, sur-I .BY PAUL MALLON "The hospital was needed at turned to lhe registrar's oHice as Dean of Graduate Colleie against our democratic form of the poorer whites and almost all · "Y WASlIINGTON -- DIgging be- and no apparent agitation trom once," he wrote. "Patients began 5001'1 as possiblc. round c d b y bo m b d e b rlS. ou . . govemmenl. of the Negroes have been pre­ and I were in it together, weren't hmd most major domestIc news the A F of L. arrJving less than 36 hours after HARRY O. BARNES HAWKEYES AVAILABtJ.g The poll tax, except in very vented from voting by these re­ we," she asks the old woman. developments latA:ly, you will fjnd Democratic party matters havc the first nurses and the first medi­ Re.. lstrar Hawkeyes will be ava'~ble rare cases, is 08 outdated in our strictions. One . U(vey taken :four "How's the rheumatism? How's the CIO and its political action reached such a state that Senalor cal o.fficers had set foot on the loday after 10 a. m. Bring $ta\llped FRENCH EXAMINATION receipt oi' student iclent\ficljt!on 20th century system ot represen­ years ago, revealed that only the new grandchild?" committee. Bailey, of North Carolina, an- beach. The receiving and surgical The Ph.D. French rcading ex­ ca rd to south door of the west tation as the horse and buggy. four percent 01. the colored popu~ I to th k t h . th and supply tents were located in n e mar e were, smce e Behind the senate poll tax con- nounced if Hillman "and his CIO soggy field. Inside the tents amination will be givcn Saturday wing of East ha II. Originally it was' supposed to la tion of Mississippi ever voted blitz, wh~n 80 percent of the sideralion, the defeat of Congress- and Communists" dominated the doctors, nurses and ward men June 17 :from 8 to 10 a.m. in Room MA.RlliYN CARPENTIIl keep people who had no eco­ in any election. shopping district, was dcstroye<\, man Starnes in Alabama, the 314, Schaeffer hall. Application the bombed 04t retailers have Democratic party, he will resign talked in low, subdued tones. nomic stake in the nation from Other statistics are just as aP­ · t II - presentation of two new labor Litter bearers picked their way must be made before Wednesday, NEWMAN CLUB the polls. Back in the early days palling. But we don't need to thelr & a s. cases to the supremc court, ac- from it. Senator McKellar also carefully through the murk. June 14, by signing the paper Newman club wm hold a. mC\\\­ She stops to tease a rcd-faced t ' f th I b b d has. charged "CIO is balf Com- of th is na tion, such a practice spend any more time investigat­ Devonshire fisherman wIt h a Ions 0 e war a or oar, as "Inside every l.ent was feverish posted on the bulletin board out­ ing in room 107 Macbride hall at was considered to be in line with ing Ihe situation in the south. We , well as the celQbrated Monta'om- munist." Clearly, it Is not only in activity. Cots bearing casualties side Room 307, Schaeffer hall. 7 o'clock this evening. the politica l philosophy of the know it's bad. Wbat seems to young girl by his"h side. "You ery Ward case, I'S lhis aggressive the union and political, but in the filled every inch of tloor space in The next cxamination will be JOE P"ELAN naughty 0 Id man, s e says, labor movement working on the Founding Fathers. need investigating now, is Con­ .. , I g' I d ·th social reform business. the receiving tent, awaiting atten. given the last week of the eight President you ve a ways o. a a y WI one hand with l'ts regular bUSI'- But, gradually we have come gress, that "astute body" which " I 'd h hIt P . tion from the over-worked sur- weeks session. you. n an aSl e s ,e says e os ness, and, the olher underhand ractIcally all the [eadlng WEDNESDAY EVENJ~9 'to believe Ihal everyone, regard­ recognizes the rotteness of the 'd ed geons, and enduring their private one h ome In th e ral s, mov , with a political business to get Mr. sou thern senators attributed lhe SEMESTER GRADES MU IC BOUlt , whole poll tax set-up,' yet which • th "G db 1 " agonies while weary. men at type- less of race, sex, AND economic th en Ios. ano er. 00 ye ove Roosevelt elected for a fourth curt'cnt poll tax d 'lSc ussI'on to AVAILABLE Prof. Herald Stark, tenor, the . writers checked records !l nd filled ot position should have the rjgh t to refuses over and over to remedy h e ca II saIt' er h er as s h e h urnes term, and Ilself in the political Final grades for the second se- music department, will be. pre­ cast his ballot. Thus, the whole this "sore of democracy." on, only to stop again to silence a saddle. pressurc lrom Hillman's CIOPA. out admittance forms. Corpsmen mester of 1943-44 arc now avail- sented on the Wednesday Evenin, screaming baby. At ODe booth sbe While the natlonl was once The group has caused the senate were arranging blankets, lighting able in the office of the registrar Music HOur tomorrow at 8 p. m. asks acter an invalid, at another shocked at Jobn L. Lewis to wastc a week's time in what cigarettes, holding canteens of to sludents in the colleges of lib- over WSUl. Prof. Philip Greeley . s t f' d t bout water to parched lips of wounded s h e promise a m ou a lendfnw-spendinAr $500,000 Democratic Leader Barkley con- eral arts, Commerce, education Clapp will accompany Profe:;Jor 'd tl' f ne' .. to men. Beside one Iitler a chaplain INTERPRETING THE WAR NEWS ral compensa on or someo s re-elect Mr. Roosevel'• the ceded at the outset was a futile knelt to administer last rites to a and the graduate college. Stu- Stark in "Dichtel'liebe" (SqpU­ h ouse. second time, It secms llkely dents must bring their identifica- mann) in the program to be p[e­ Allied Attackers in Italy Break Through Probably two more different the CIO will spend a. far argumcnt. dying man. tion cards. sented in north music hall. An characters than Lord and Lady greater sum It [t keeps Its Indced, no one except the CIO, "In the great T-shaped surgical Grades for professional college uud ience is invlled. . Nazi Gustav line Defenses Astor never worked together. present unprecedented scale its political action and the Com- tent with its attached pre-opera- students are distributed through ADDISON AL~f~CII "Tbey're c plementar" said Uve section Colonel Blesse super- om Yh' of politica.l pressurlnc-all of mUftist groups,. seem any longer vised the selection of cases, giving By KlRKE L. SIMPSON a veteran membcr of t e city which must• come only from 10tere' te d in lhe poU tax. It is an priority to tb e h se hock had Associated Press War Analyst council. "She has the ideas and the workers whom It taxes os w 0 s two-inch piece of metal. A . pie~c IE' mploy'es I'n 44 """0 Paced by bard-fighting French tactical asset. The German fronl he tones them down and quietly with dues. out-dated issue, made even more been reduced sufficiently to per-' oC underwear embedded wllh It I . th t " b I I.e b th t 1 mit them stand anesthesia and elemenls of the Filth army, allied in Italy is stretched thin and prl­ carnes em ou . The man who defeated Demo- 0 so eye supreme cour ru- to attackers in Italy have broken marily dependent upon strong Nancy Langhorne, one of five cratic Representative Starnes in ing upsetting the southern pri- surgery." Nurses moved swiftly, c~~no~t:~t table was a soldier Iowa Plants Receive beautiful sisters from Greenwood, Alabama, for instance, was a CIO mary system. No one seems to checking pulses and temperatures, through Nazi Gustav line defenses natural positions and short in­ Va., hit the headlines when she attorney, and lhus on their pay- giving hypodermics when the pain fully conscious wilb his lower jaw Total of $151,303,41 below Cassino deeply enough in terior communication lines which married millionaire Lord Astor, roll. want the poll tax anyway. was too great to be endured, ad- shot away. He sat in a semi- II . three days to wring Crom Berlin permlt the Nazi staff to make the then Waldorf Astor, in 1906, after In two cases now presented to Apparently, these «roups ministering blood plasma. Medi- reclining posture. His tongue, ·th R b t G Id th ht th Id f th cal officers and nurses were 1'0- a significant admission oC "disen­ most of the limited forces at their her marr lage WI 0 er ou the supreme court (independent 01111' ey eou orce e palate and part of the throat were DES MOINES, (AP) - Back gagement" withdrawals on that Shaw was dissolved. She hit ptillworkers _ Utah _ Kennecott senate to fJUbuster and thU8 tated in the section, since it had exposed. The surgeons decided on wages totalling $151,303.41 were front. djsposal. Against that advantage them again in 1919 when she be- copper and Richwood clothespin), make the usua.l polltl'cal hay been round best not to leave any temporary treatmcnt. The nurse paid during April to 4,84" em· The deepest dent Is indicated Is to be set allied air power, con- came the flrst woman in parlia- the CIO is trying through thc na- for themselves, but the soutb- one group on permanent duty in south of the Liri river, although stantly harrying road and rail ment. She's been hitting them tional labor relations board to get ern senators decided to keep charge or shock cases. was ready with the anesthetic. All ployes In 44. Iowa plants, as the north of the stream an Eighth communkatlons, and tbe indicated ever since. a reversal of unjon elections which thelr long-winded men In the "Beyond in two long lents was knew that here was a job which result of enforcement of the minl­ army spearhead aimed at the vil- inability of the German high com­ Lord Astor, whose •'ather was an l·t lost. • background, and Senators Ilhe heart of a front-line hospUal- would involve much more work mum wage and overtime provi­ lage of Pignataro threatens to out. Amer.iean diplomat who became a In the Montgomery Ward case, Oonnally, Georce, Bankhead, tbe surgical scction. Brilliant later; metal plates, bone surgery sions of the fair labor slandards :flank ruined Cassino itself and mand to furnish additional troops British subject, and whose mother it won the election, but when it Bailey and McKeUar led off ovcrhead operating lamps hung and skin grafting. nct a nd the public contracts 'law, :force its evacuation. It is south of for the Italian campaign in view came from Philadelphia, was born loses, apparently, it brings the the debate to ar,u.e the case over each table. Small oil stoves thc river, owever, that French of expected greater battles else. in the United States, ("'as far as I election Into question bfore the on its merits. fIJrnished inadequate heat. A "A hand amputation case was James W. Arnold, of the Des 'forces on Uie right and American where. know, in New York," he says). labor board and courts in such a So m e Republicans bad plank floor was laid over the bare on another table. The nurses kept Moines office of the U. S. depart­ troops on the left are closing In on He was educated at Eton and Ox- way as to raise doubt as to served private notice tha~ earth. the soldier under anesthesia and ment of labor, reported yesterday. the Aurunci plateau. Capture of ford, and is a famous sporlsman wbether it can ever lose. they ml&ht join tbe Barkley "O ne of the most gruelling tasks tended lhe tourniquet while the that 6,000 Ioot hill m'ass would with a fine stable. He was mem- Hand in hand with this war- cloture move It the bellows of the busy night was that of a Substantially swelling the total surgeons sheared mangled flesh shatter the ,whole German defense ber of parliament for Plymouth time organizing agitation through boyS were lel loose, but the surgical nurse, diminutive 2nd of resUtution payments Arnold Will H-Hour of D-Day and bone fragments. front and possibly lead to an early until he succeeded to his father's the government labor boards to leading southerners we r e Lieut. Loretta Bass, Caspar, Wyo., said, were voluntary paymeMs by viscountcy, his wife took on the suprefe court, its Sidney Hill- willinr to undertake the ule- in charge of the surgical tent. "I marveled at the perfect co. junction !with forces holding the BJ¥i Iwo pac kin g companies, -rthe Anzio beachhead beiow Rome, Come, Asks Scribe his constituency. man'is far more active in political less argument anyway on a Even with her faCe covered by a ordinalion of two surgeons, Maj. Grey-haired, dignified, he has campaigning than the Democratic straight basIS beca\l&e of the mask and with a white cloth as a Cudahy Packi ng Co. and Jobn still 50 mil~s distant. Raymond S. Willis, Dallas, Tex., There has been no allied hint of W ASHINGTON- A new and half as many press cllppings as national committee, taking the threat of Ihe CIOPA to the cap for her hair, she was attrac- Morrell & Co. in restitutiQJr of and Capt. John F. Bond, Balti­ synchronized offensive action in startling tho ugh t Is creeping his wi1e, but twice as much space radical and Communist line, is- constitutlonal government- live with frank, intelligent gay wages i1iegally withheld (rom in " Who's Who." He has done ~uing a weekly paper witb pic- and their party as well. eyes. In her army shirt and slacks more, Md., who were caring for a the Am:io sector, although Berlin through ,washington. It Is this­ their e m ploy e s. The eu¥, dispatches tate that preparations much public work, but says of his tures showing M;r. Hillman direct- The Joul'th term front oftered covered by a white surgical gown, soldier with a deep abdominal the allied invasion of the continent Packing Co., Arnold said, Dplde for an attaek are under way tbere. wife: jng Negro organizers, not for the oiCi<:ially by Chairman Hannegan she remained always cool, capa- wound ... it was incredible tbat That is a' logical expectation, par- will never take place. The dreaded "I think I can say that I am \.Inion but for politics-and, in- in his New York speech took no ble, pleasant. She was every­ paymen ts totalling $.3,224.34 to two minds and lour hands could ticuiarly if lhe main attack in the D-Day will never come to pass. a help to her in her con.stituency. peed, pressurlng evel'\ Mr. Roose- notice of Hillman and CIOPA, or wpere at once, checking on tbe 1,276 employes in Sioux City; aacl Sometimes I'm introduced as the velt himsell directly through Phil its social reform line, but followed cots and litters in the 'pre-op' work together so perfectly. Each south forces the enemy to shift At least a dozen people- most $99.74 to one employe in Dliven- troops from the Anzio region to husband of Lady Aslor; and per- Murray to upset Ule government's an opposite one. Hanne,an did tent, servinl in the attached x-ray man seemed to anticipate the of them regular al'my men-have port. bolsler his already tottering Gus­ ~o nally, I'm such an admirer of "little steel" formula. not mention the New Dea l which and lIurlli-cal supply tents, yet thoughts and movemenls of the tav line or the Hitler line above it. exprCSled this astounding Ic;lea: her work, that I would be quite Never III aU the history of Mr. Roosevelt personally has al- never going so far away from the "Perhaps It Is only a hunch anct. satisfied with that." this democracy has there ap- ready announced is pead, but operating tables but that she could other. The nurse, with equal Payments by John Morr~ " So far as either allied or Ger­ sureness, foresaw the needs of lhe man advices yet indicate, the Nazi the army should never have peared such a dual b\&5mess founded his case on the in lerna- anticipate a need of one of the Co. in Iowa include $92,874.eo to surgeons, thus completing a front­ commanders are using only local hunches-but I can't chase this and political movement op- lional considerations. surgical teams. Two surgeons, a 3.239 employes in Otturowa. ' To Send Out Ballots enly seekin.. , spendlnc aDd T h us, the Roosevelt - Hull- nurse, a nurse anesthetist and two line team which had learned to reserves to meet the southern particular hunch away-I just drive. DES MOIN)!:S, (AP) - Iowa pressur[n, to dominate the Byrnes-Hannegan top is riding tbe corpsmen worked at eaah of six function as a single machine." Other state restitution totals tor As the battle progresses it be­ don't think there will be an in- county auditors today will begin politics, the decisions and foul'th term horse in one direc- lables. Nobody bothered to look April in the mid-west re&l0ll u sllJlding out absent voter baUots to Clayton wrote that an air raid 'comes clearer that the Nazi com­ vasion. even war economics of tbe tion while CIO and the Hillman up when I walked in. I stood by were: Nebraska, $1Ifl,923.57 to m andt!rs in Italy have been In­ The allied strategy will be civilians who have requested them counlry. The wolves 01 Wall CIOPA and Communists are rid- to watch. alert was ignored inside the op­ 1,971 employees in 26 planlij Ln­ :formed by Berlfn they can look something different, these officers for voting in the June 5 primary. slreet, when they bad a bite ing Ihe same horse harder in the "The first ·table supported a ~ratilli tent as the work of lend­ :for no SUbstantial 'reinforcements are saying. And what is the basis Civilians may not begin voting ab­ III years past, were cubs by oppo He direction-and I mean man with a sbell fragment deep in ing the wounded continued. Only sas, $94,452.12 to 3,409 empKJ,ea in from otber continental fronts in of this conclusion? Well, it isn't sent voter bal lots perSOnally in the comparison. riding it, through WLB, NLRB, the back of his thigh. The nurse a lew days after hi s visit German 24 plants; Misouri $28,363.62, to view of impending Anglo-Ameri­ logical to talk about an invasion <>lices 01 the county auditors un til By contrast also there has been the White House, 1he supreme gave the anesthesia. Quickly the bombs and shell fire killcd I I 63(1 employes in 60 plants; Colo- can Invasion thrusts from the west liS much as the leaders have talked May 22. little unusual political activity court, co ngress and the ballot box. sUl'geons cut, removed the rough, doctors, nurses and enliste4 mcdi­ rado $24,679.57 to 515 employps ~ c arid the certainty of new Russian about this one 11 more than talk ------.. ------.------~~~ cal men on the beachhead. Clay­ I drives from the east. Russian air Is actually intended. ton watched for hours that night 29 plants; and Wyoming, $l,m.a lII1 power has opened up in behind­ For months there hjIve been and saw "surgeons, nurses and to 8 employes in Ii plants. Ch the-line raids on Nazi communica­ promises: "We shall invade when -By Kenneth Dixon corpsmen d ri v in g themselves Uo tion centers in 'Poland and the the sprinl thaw seta in." without rest Until relieved by S. other surgical teams who had Baltic states in obvious prepara­ The ~1Dg thaw does &et In. Sees Tommygunners lIII tion for that. Moscow indicates There is no invasion. But more • lIept earlier." Pal also that regrouping of various talk, Judi as this: WITH THE AU IN ITALY night and the pinning up they forced to publicly unbutton their on tHlr jacket. unbUJtiaDed DI' Hours later tired officers and NEW YORK, (AP)-RalPh Il~"'­ du Ukrainian armies for an assault on "We sAa.ll invalle when sprinc is (AP)--One of the m.~est lripes have in ' mind concerns his hide shirts for evidence-because they eJ.se JJOt zipped up properly. the chief nurse, planned lor new . ~~ the Galati gap in Romania has farther advaD(ed." ot the aver... combat soldier in and some convenient barn d.00r. weren't wearing underllhirts. Also • . Failing to salute a 1~1Il' problems of tbe next day. A few ard, NBC reporter .attbe Italian thl been virtually completed. Spring advances, comes p1}op­ Italy is the ,rowinll total of strict He is known variously as the it was OK to smoke cigarettes on oUieer {which IOUDds ouy uatil minutes of relaxation followed front, radioed last night thwt be Sa the streets but ~ot pipes or cigars. you realize \here are thousands 01 ",ith laughs, jokes, wisecracking. ~n the light of subsequent Ini up and alJllOllt py. There is reaulationa he runs into .. soon as "King of Casablanca" the "Oracle saw a group of German ·t011llll1- ~ events in Italy, German with­ still no invasion. of Orlll," the "Allab of Algiers" In hl&jeIs, army sponsored officers on the' streets of N..,. "Staffs of h 0 s pit a I s which he crawls out of his front-line gunners, retreating from ' Santa WQ drawal from the Sangro bulge Settilll the season and almost foxhole and heads rearward for a and now the "Hero of Naples." shows sometimes were a !ew and continual Ailuting .M long handle brutal casu a lUes 'day atter til some days before the allied mass the hour of the bi, ~ in the shave and balh and a little fun, Tbe reason, of course, is that his minlltes alter the cur:few letting since ,iven up as im~; day bave to learn to rest, to relax; Maria Infante, deliberately lire .l1li attack on the cassino-lo-the-sea manner the allied forces have i1 poeisbLe. reiln of regulations has followed out aL njgbt. Military policemen hence the soldier ia at the mercy to erase from their minds the grim a column of their own men wllo flank was opened now looks like a been followiDl is rather Wte I8Y­ Tbey call it "GI nonsense." the fiehting in that IOrt of patb­ (mostly aaai.ost their will, it ot anyone who decidea to make realities ot the preceding hours," had been taken prisoner and' were he wrote. d8llpera te eUort to shorten their illi to a burllar: IOU you really They admit it may he an right in way through the Mediter.ranean should be said) were stationed an example of him). , being escorted to a prilon stockade line and accumulate reserves. If want to rob my hou.!!, I lIhall be some garrison back home, but tbeater. outside the door at one theater to 5. Having illY one 01. a bundred He discovered, however, in con­ by American guards. ' that is true, it again stresses Nazi away ~t Tueeday night at 11 what they think of it over here Officers who were in Casa­ pick: up the men who attended. or mOl'e minor details wrOll.l about versation with the chief nurse. 1st lack of reserves to meet either the o'clock. Thoullht you'd like to even Hemmingway wouldn't dare blanca have told me they were in­ Here in N.aples I have seen men bil Wliform. Lieut. Dorothy F. Meadors, Alma, "There is little doubt tlte ~~ . present allied attack to break know, so you could make yow put in prill t. structed to turn in a certain quota just back from the front 00 three- Needless to say, theae relUla­ Ark., that the nurses thrive on through the Liri valJey gateway, plans." As a nlau.lt, the base section (or Of names eac:h day for soldiers day Pjlsses-olten Ibe tirst they've tiona .clon't get mu.ch .ttentian on tbelr hard work. could have mistak,en their , at.-. Lieut. Meador told him that soldiers ior allied troops, and_ or , a possible synchron~ lunge What lbe future holds for na­ rear area) general )Vbom, rightly who failed to salute them-sol­ had in nearly two years of war- the combat line or reach thek Cli from the Anuo beachhead. tions and indlviduaI8, ,PiUl'!Illy, or 'WnI1lll7, tUy colllicler t:elPOO­ ijlien from the front included. arreated and fined heavily for: height unUl loog afteF the area "one of our girls worked from 15 can only assume that their I*­ 12 to 20 hours a day during the big It is quite clear that willI" the no Qne ~W8. :&.At, reprdieaa of .ible

From the Clyde Shoun Pitches Side THI' DAILY IOWAN Sports Season's 2nd NJ()-Hli~teri Lines SPORTS Trail • • • By • By WHITNEY MARTIN Y.oke NEW YORK, (AP)-If the COl· lege football rules are changed J( Down this year, tbey'll have to chance Reds Bray,es, "1-0 This issue will take the form, rllt CINCINNATI (AP) -C lyd e , ------:--~--- we hope, of reflections on Satur­ Schroeder Vows No.11 . SLUGGE By Jack Sords the chairman of the rule! commit­ 000, day's encounter between the Sea­ tee first. bY' Shoun spun the no~hi~ bottle yes- Yanks Pound hawks of . the Iowa Pre-Flight That's the stand of Lieut. Col ecut Cards Pulverize Phils terday as the Cmclnnati Reds . To Continue Iowa William J . Bingham, the chainnao /ina downed the Boston Braves, 1 to O. school and the Ames Cyclones. in question as well as editor of the The losing pitcher was Jim Tobin, The locals certainly ha ve bene­ t reP! In 9-Run Firsllnning Sports Program in '44 I the only other major leagUe fited by this last week of practice, official NCAA football guide. Col quOI Bingham outlines his ideas 00 pitcher with a no-hiller this year, ChisOl, 10-l ror they looked q ulte professional Continue the intercoliegiate driv St. Louis Nationals, and Jim was the only Brave to code tinkering at the present time, T in their aclion. The infield has a sports program even on a some­ Bat Around in 1st ; get on base. He drew a walk in and there is no "maybe" or "per. p. the third inning and first base lot oe drive that shQ uld shape it what reduced scale in 1944-45- Walt haps" about it. He's ag'in it, and Verlian Leads was as far as he got. Dubiel Spoils up into one of Lheir best of the and then be "over the hump"­ that's that. Evcn with giving the mathemat­ Lopot's Homecoming; three years. that's the determined intention of ST. LOUIS (AP) - Breaking Wc've frequently expreued ical minimum of hits to the Holds Sox to 5 Hits Especially exceptional in the Director E. G. (Dad) Schroeder of away for their biggest single in­ Braves, Clyde, a reuet and spot lhe Univel'sity of Iowa depart­ si mi.lar views, and for similar rea· pitcher la t year, barely got his short field was Herb Anderson ning of the season, the St. Louis NEW YORK (AP) Three big ment ot athletics. sons, to wit: the game-any game game, for a homer by rookie who moved around with a rapidi­ Cardinals yesterday scored nine innings did the trick for the "It may be a hard struggle-and -today is being played today with Cruck Aleno in the !lfth was all ty that reminded us a lot of Jeep it already has been that-but hav­ runs in the Cirst off Dick Barrett a great number of the nor~ll pol­ the Reds cou ld produce to support league-leading New York Yank­ Handley, the 20,000 dollar third ing kept OUI' heads above water and Chet Covington and won 11 him. Shoun got two of the Rcds' ee ycsterday as rookie Walt Du­ ticipants ab~nt, and to cbanae to 6 over the . baseman Pittsburgb has. so far, we definitely intend to sur­ the rules under the circumstances five hits, one a double, to round biel sprinkled five Chicago singles vive," Director Schroeder empha­ Philadelphia thl'eatened with out his day. We might also give the nod to would be something like taxaUon four runs in the eighth but the for h is second maj or League vic­ sized Monday. without representation, to give a The 29-year-old Tennessean's Russ Whendland, who once again Thanks to the determination of ninth inning batters went out in tory 10-2, in a series opener general idea. performance climaxed two days of proved that good athletes consist­ Director Schroeder and the acqui­ order. Tony Lupien drove in three tigh t pitch ing for ttle two tea ms playcd betore 3,797 Yankee sta- "The game is being played enbly repeat no mattel' what sport siUon of "Slip" Madigan as foot­ under abnormal conditions," COl. runs, two dUl"ing the eighth-in­ and was just one hit better than dium customers. ning rally. they arc playing. ball coaeh, Iowa, depsite its lack Bingham says. "The time of prac­ ' record in winni\g of service trainees for the team, Emil Ve.rban batted twice for Don Savage's two-run homer tice is being cut down; a the first game of Sunday's dou­ • • • did not become one of the 603 in­ .000 the Cardinals in the !lrst and hit Bnd Ed Levy's double were the Biggest laugh of the day of many colleges are opera tin, with bleheader. Bucky had a no-hitter only extra basers for the world stitutions to abandon foootball be­ safely each time, once for a triple. until the eigther, when, with two course was Wake!ield's miscue In smaller staffs; transportation has champs who neeeded but eight tween 1941 and 1943. cut out the opportunity to do ef. Philadelphia ABRIlPOA away, Connie Ryan singled. hits to spoil the home coming of the outfield. He danced back to Praises Madlran Shoun, a southpaw, is the first fective scouting; and coaches have Ed Lopat, Chicaio's rccruit from take a. long !iy and with a grandi­ "We have in Coach Madigan come to the conclusion tb.ey Mullen, 2b ...... 4 o 2 2 3 Red to pitch a no-hit game slnce one of the greatest in the nation. bave the Bronx, and his successor, ose sweep of one hand attempted to spot the other team somethiDc. Adams, cf ...... 4 222 0 had a pair His enthusiasm and energy ilre Johnny Humphries. to get the ball. There was only They are kicking the ball out ot WasdeJl, 1C ...... ••....•• 4 101 0 of them one June Jl and 15, 1938, Atrer yielding a run In the first b.ig hel~s in. this trying period. Northey, rl ...... 5 o 2 1 . 0 against this same Bost n club and We have a fine eigh.t-game foot­ bounds on the kickoff, and this, of on singles by Thullman Tucker one catch to this, he missed the co urse, has upset the public. Lupien, Ib ...... 4 o 2 1~ 1 Brooklyn. J ohnny is now "pitch­ and Hal TIosky, and an infield catch. ball schedule for 1944 and late Finl y, c ...... 1 000 1 ing" for the navy. this month will complete plans "It is not a part of footbaU out, Dubiel's only trouble was a Looked like a bad case of back­ and will not be a part atter tile Semi nick, c ...... 3 1 140 The Braves hit Shoun hard from streak of wildncs! in the eighth to-the-bush-leagues.l:lamour more for six-game Big Ten cards tOL' Cieslak, 3b ...... 5 o 2 0 3 time to time, and his teammates 1945 and 1946," he declared. war. But I am not soid that tile when he passed four men to torce than anything else. But he did re­ answer IS a change In the rulel, Hamrick, ss ...... 5 1 123 had to jump high and throw fast In a run. The husky freshman WOll' deem hImself at the plate wIth one Dilrectot Schroeder said that Barrett, p ...... 0 000 0 ones twice. Long flies and line Iowa also would be represented penalizing the kicking team, Ile­ 16 foe Newark in 1»43. of the tour hIts of the day. Three cause the ball may be kicked oul Covington, p ...... 2 000 1 drives also sent the outfielders Lopat turned back tbe Yanks walks and a hit will give you in basketball, baseball, t r a c k Letchas· ...... 1 o 1 0 0 back, and the infield had only wrestling, and swimming, al­ accidentally, and if it is then put without a hit tor three frames 1.000 anyday in any man's league. in play in the middle of the field, Matthewson, p ...... 0 000 2 seven assists, three by Shoun him­ but they climbed on him for three • • • though the number ot a thleies it is pretty tough. Triplett...... 1 1 100 selJ'. in the fourtl). Geowge Stirnweiss Our adopted son, Don Aires did may be few and schedules cur­ Donahue, p ...... 0 o 000 Only l ,OOO-odd fans saw Clyde's tailed in all except basketball "I can assure you I am not a walked, took third on BUd Meth. nothil)g to make his step column­ stand-patter and that when we Stewart"· ...... 1 o 0 () 0 feat, but lew went home until the eny's si ngle and scored' on Ed ist ' prolld as he went completely 17-Year-Olds to Play last Brave was officially declared Much of the lalent for the 1944 have a meej.ing of the committee Levy's fly to Tucker. Then Sav- out on four trips to the plate. Sea hawks Score Win we will certainly go at this with Totals ...... _.... 40 6 14 24 14 out and the Reds were heading age hit his second homer of the Now the excuse for this ob- squads, especially in football, Washingtonl our coals off. I am not commi1lted · Batted for Covington in 6th. Shoun for a celebration in the year into the left field stands. viiJusly !fes in the new shoes that must be drawn from the ranks of to any restrictions, and I am will­ uBalled fot· Matlhewson in 8th. clubhouse. Singles by , the navy has prepared for him. 17-year-oLds just out of hlgb Over Iowa-Illinois ing to present for adoption any- ···Batted for Donahue in 9th. Tobin hurled hi s no-hilter Mike Molosevich and Roll i e They took a pair of track shoes of school. against Brooklyn April 27. Hemsley, following an err r by ihe right size, (13 and 1-2) re­ "Coach Madigan and his staff, Wins4 to3 For their second win in as many thing that any of the other rules S~. Louis AB R PO A n Tony CuccinelIo, routed Lopat in soled them and put baseball spikes as well as myself, have great con­ makers have found to improve the Boston A8 R H PO A fidence in the ability of these days, the Iowa Pre-Flight school game, whelher they have been Verban, 2b ...... 6 2 2 3 3 the seventh. The Yanks continued on them. Of course, you can't ex­ baseball team blasled the Iowa- thought out by the pros or the Hopp, cl ...... 3 1 I 3 0 Holmes, cf ...... 4 0 0 3 0 to pound Humphries, scoring live pect a man to get used to shoes youngsters. How they can stand up against veteran players with­ Illinois all-stars 7-4 at Davenport high schools. Musial, IT ...... 5 1 2 4 0 Macon, Ib ...... 3 0 0 12 0 runs with the help of singles by right away aLter having played Over Indians out injury and play good football Sunday afternoon. "One thing that 1 feel they 111m!" O'Dea, c ...... 5 1 2 7 0 Ross, Ie ...... 3 0 0 0 0 Stirnweiss and Metheny, and ala natural for a while. without conceding anything but Kurowski, 3b ...... 4 1 1 0 0 WOI'kman, ri ...... 3 0 0 2 0 Skeeier Webb's error. As soon as he gets used to those The Seahawks rallied in the last lost si.ght 01 is that men who were experience was proved by our WASHINGTON (AP)-Wash- coachmg the game are now Fallon, 3b ...... 1 0 1 0 1 Masi, c ...... 3 0 0 2 1 Three walks and Dubiel's fly to shoes we predict he'U get back 'grid kids' of 1943," said the two innings to makc up a three I scattered all over the world, and Litwhiler, l! ...... 5 1 1 3 0 Ryan, 2b ...... -,- 3 0 0 3 3 Tucker boosted the home total to that batting form that has put him lngton won a 4 to 3, 11 inning Hawkeye director . run delici t, scoring four in the they al'e playing the game under Sanders, 1b ...... 4 0 0 6 0 Phillips, 3b ...... 3 0 0 0 5 nine in the eighth and Leroy at the top Of the list so far. victory last night over the Cleve­ eighth and two in the ninth after the rules which up to 1942 were Marion, ss ...... 3 2 2 1 2 WielelmanJl, ss ...... 2 0 0 2 5 Schalk's wide throw on Stirn- • • • land Indians in thcir series op­ Ho!ferth, x ...... 1 0 0 0 0 the Ali-Stars had "put the game considered okay." Gumbert, P ...... 4 2 2 0 1 weiss' bounder yielded the ten Bob Raniszewski, the Detroit ener when Hillis Layne singled to p u •••••••••••••• Schmidt, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 Tobin, 2 0 0 0 3 runs. flash pitcher, seems to have set on ice" witll a three run rally in .The colonel adds that the com- Giants Smash Bucs score Fermin Guerra. , mlttee voted almost unammo1l81y - - --- AB R H 1'0 A some kind oC modern record with the seventh. They battered three not to hold a meeting this year, Totals ...... 39 il: ~ ;.; -:; Totals ...... 27 88M 17 ChleaK"o :I 0 his 36 strike-outs in the past 3 Cleveland . ..' ... AB .. R HPO .A All-Star hUI'Lers lor a total of 16 but that when it next meets he ill­ Philadelphia 000 001 140- 6 Cincinnati AD R H PO A Moses, rf ...... 4 1 1 games. That, as near as we can In1S .. Hif, 8·7R ush hits over the nine inning route tends to keep it in session until all St. Louis ...... 902 000 00·-11 0 0 2 Tucker, cf ...... 3 0 1 01· 15 20 figure it is about.. an even dozen Hockett, c! ...... 6 l 1 3 0 Clay, ci ...... 4 0 Schalk, 2b ...... per lilt. Which Isn't bad In any PITTSBURGH, (AP)-Eighteen Rocco, Ib ...... 4 0 0 9 3 while two navy pltchers gave up things that have been brewin, the Williams, 2b , ...... 3 0 0 2 1 Trosky, Ib ...... _...... 2 0 113 0 league. Pittsburgh Pirates saw action yes- Cullenbine, rf ...... 3 1 1 4 0 10 safeties. last two years have been dis- Walker, rf ...... 3 0 0 2 0 Curtwright, If ...... 3 0 0 0 0 If you want to see something in terday as the New York Giants Boudreau, S5 ...... •.. 4 0 1 3 3 Al Epperly, Chicago White Sox cussed. Known, Unknown McCormick, Ib .... 3 0 0 8 0 Cuccinello, 3b ...... 4 (} 1 1 6 a new type ot curve ball come out clubbed out 15 hits for an 8-7 edge I Kellner, 3b ...... 5 0 1 3 3 property, and starting pitcher for Far lrom gelling panicky over Tipton, If ...... 3 0 2 5 0 Webb, SO ••. •...... •.. 4 0 0 1 3 to the Iowa diamond at the next and Ace Adams' fourtb victory. O'Dea, If ...... 4 1 3 1 0 the home team, was relieved by the growing popularity of the pro Lead Dodger Camp ~ Miller, ss ...... S 0 0 4 S ITurne r, c ...... 4 0 0 0 0 game and see that boy work. The Phil Weintraub paced the New Seerey, If ...... 1 0 0 1 0 Matlock in the fourth who was game, Col. Bingham says that if ALeno, 3b ...... 3 1 1 0 0 Lopat, p ...... 2 0 0 0 2 curve breaks about 2 feet and sort York attack with a tripie, two Peiers, 2b ...... 5 0 2 0 3 credited with the loss. the college game can't stand on ils doubles and a single for a perfect Susce, c ...... 5 0 0 6 0 The Davenport outfit carried a own feet, well, it's just too bad, CHlCAdo, (AP) - The most Mueller, c ...... 3 0 0 4 0 Humphries, p ...... 1 0 0 0 1 of wraps itselt around the batters day and Billy Jurges collecied Harder, p ...... 4 0 1 1 0 lalked-of players with the Brook­ Shoun, p ...... 3 0 2 0 3 Dickshot x ...... 1 0 1 0 0 waist. There wasn't anyone who 1-0 lead going Into that eventful that's all. The public, he belleves. three for four. Klieman, p ...... 1 0 0 0 0 lyn Dodgers these days are well­ ----- could touch it in Saturday's tilt. eighth and came back into the will have more confidence in the Total ...... 28 1 5 2'7 7 'rolallII ...... 31 2 5 24 13 Frankie Frisch started Max ----- known Dixie Walker and little game again in the seventh with rulings of a body that takes ita BOston ...... _. .. 000 000 000-0 x-batted for HUJIlphries in 9th Butcher but Art Cucurullo wbo Totals 42 ... 3 lOa21..12 known Calvin Coolidge McLish, three tallies. time and refuses to be stampeded Cincinnati ...... 000 010 OOx- l came on in the second was a One out when winning run The navy had complete control into hasty action. an 18-year-oLd Choctaw Indian ABRHPO A New York charged with the deteat although scored. from Oklahoma City. from there on out with Wakefield, All of which is sound reason inC. , Dixie says he's hitting the ball spot Man age r Leo Durocber Stinrweiss, 2b ...... 4 2 1 3 2 The Majors helping the Pirates score five in -W-a-S-b-In- '- to- n----A-B- a- H- P- -O A Tourek, Sieuber, and Brookfield . pretty well and possibly may be picked to send in the Indian Metheny, rf ...... 5 1 2 1 0 Ithe second trame. smashing out a triple, double and I** *.*********" novice. If ...... 4 0 1 3 0 singles in that orded. 108 Ibe. or .n.t• Levy, New York AS a II PO A Powell, If ...... 5 0 2 3 0 on a batting spree. The 34-year- It was McLish's first appearaftce Etten, Ib ...... 4 0 0 11 1 Myatt, 2b ...... 6 0 1 2 5 ,aper w\ll maloe old outfielder, who has a .298 bat- in organized baseball, and when Savage, 3b ...... 3 3 1 2 1 Ortiz, rf ...... 5 0 0 3 0 ' 290 containers l or At a Glance Rucker, cf ...... 5 0 2 2 0 blood plasma. So ting average in 12 years as a he walked to the hiU he found Lit­ Lindell, cf ...... 3 2 1 4 0 Jurges, 3b ...... 4 2 3 1 3 Spence, cf ...... 5 0 0 3 0 major leaguer, now is leading the whiler grinning at him from the Hayes Lea dS AS .Iarl savlnr now. Milosevich, ss ...... 3 0 1 0 5 Gardella, rf ...... 5 1 2 2 0 Kuhel. lb ...... 4 1 2 12 1 n will help .ue • National league with .407. He ,got plate, confidently.leveling oU his 3 1 2 0 five blows in nine trips lo the Hemsley", c ..... -...... 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE Medwick, If ...... 5 0 0 2 0 Torres, 3b ...... 6 1 1 0 2 plate during a doubLeheader with big bat. "Choctaw Cal" returned Dubiel, p ...... 4 1 0 1 3 W L Pet. WeintraUb, Ib ...... 4 1 4 8 0 Guerra, c ...... 5 2 2 8 0 To 6-2Vi ctory .!?~~~~! •• !.H the Cubs yesterday. the grin and calmly fanned the New York ...... 14 6 .700 Lombardi, c ...... 3 0 1 3 2 Sullivan, ss ...... 5 0 4 2 1 home run leader! Totals ...... 3 3 II 8 27 12 St. Louis ...... 14 10 Luby, 2b ...... 5 1 2 6 4 Niggeling, p ...... 4 0 1 0 2 PHI LAD E L PHI A, (AP)- "Can't explain it, though," he McLish is almost as effective .583 Gentry, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 comments, "except maybe that Qhicago ...... 100 000 010- 2 WaShi ngton ...... 12 9 .571 Kerr, S5 •...... •...... 3 2 1 3 2 Layne • ...... 1 0 1 0 0 Frankie Hayes smashed out his New York ...... 000 300 52x-10 ----- a nny camp trip last fall to the throwing with his left hand as PhiladeLphia ...... 12 10 .545 Fischer, p ...... 1 0 0 0 0 -- - - second homer in as many days Totals ...•••...... •... 3"5 2 9z2~ 15 Aleutians with Frankie Frisch. with his right. A fast ball is his Chicago ...... 10 13 .435 Adams, p ...... 1 1 0 0 0 Totals ...... 44 4 14 33 11 and led the Athletics to a 6·2 vic- · Ran for Swift in 9th. may have something to do with it. main weapon. He is a switch Cleveland ...... 10 13 .435 Polli, P ...... •...... 1 0 0 0 0 • Batted for Niggeling in 11th. tory over the Detroit Tigers al zTwo out when winning run Guess we told the boys how good hitter. Boston ...... 8 13 .~1 Cleveland ...... 100 100 010 00- 3 I ~hibe Park yesterday before 5,921 scored. we were and now have to prove Bums Sink Detroit ...... 9 15 .375 Totals· ...... 37 8 15 27 11 NATIONAL LEAGUE Washillgton ...... 010 000 002 01-4 a ~~e Tigers tied things up in the PlIlladelphla AB R U '. it." I PlUsbur ..h 1'0" Sl. Louis ...... 18 6 AB R RPO A Error-Susce. RUns batted in- first half of the. ninth inning 2-2 I .750 On that same tour were Danny Burgo,- rf ...... 4 0 3 5 9 Cincinnati ...... 13 9 .591 o Boudreau, Sullivan, Harder, Kell- and Bob Gillespie had two outs on Litwhiler and Slan Musial of the Barrelt:, rf ...... 5 1 1 1 Garrison, l! ...... 3 1 1 I 0 St. Louis Cardinals and Hank (ubs, 1~3 Philadelphia ...... 12 9 .671 CoscaraJ·t, 2b ...... 5 1 3 3 6 ner, . Guerra 2, Layne. Two base the A's and the bases loaded when Estaiella, cf ...... 2 1 0 4- 0 Pittsburgh ...... 10 10 .500 Zak ...... 0 0 0 hi~Kuhei. Home r un-Guerra. Hayes blasted the ball into the Borowy of the New York Yankees. o o Hayes, c ...... ~ 2 1 a BrookQ'n ...... 11 11 .:100 Russell, It _...... 5 1 They, too, are among the leaders CHICAGO (AP) - S cor i n g 1 1 1 Stolen bases-Myatt 2, Kuhel, stands in the A's half of the last Siebert, Ib ...... 3 0 1 e• 0 New York ...... 12 1'3 .455 Elliott, 3b ...... 3 1 2 3 3 frame . -Musial is hitting .346; LltwhUer seven times in the sixth inning, Hall, S8 ...... 4- 0 2 2 J Boston ...... 11 14 .(40 Gustine, ss ...... 4 0 O'Dea. Double plays-Keitner and It was the Athletics' fifth con­ is tied for National league home the Brooklyn Dodgers submefged 1 L I! Kell, 3b ...... 4 0 0 2 I Chicago ...... :.... 3 17 .150 Dahlgren, Ib .... _...... 2 1 o Rocco. Left on bases-Cleveland secutive victory and their seventh run production with four and the cellariie Ch icago Cubs, 14-3, o 12 Rullo, 2b ...... 4 0 0 3 J DiMaggio, cf ...... _... 4 1 o 10, Washington 10. Bases on balls triumph in the last eight games. Borowy shares the American knocking Ed Hanyzewski and 2 :I Christo1.lher , p ...... 4 1 1 0 Camelli, c ...... 1 0 league pitching lead with four Claude Pas eau otf the hill in Gregg, p ...... _...... 4 0 I (} 1 o 2 1 - Niggeling 4, Harder 1. Strike- Detroit AD a If 1'0 A Wilkins· ...... 0 1 0 0 •0 O'Brien • .... _...... 1 0 wins and no losses. their big splurge. o 0 o outs- Nlggeling 7, Harder 4, Klie­ Lopez, c ...... 0 0 o 0 o McLish is a former American While Hal Gregg was handcuff­ ToWs ...... _...... 4 3 1~ 17 27 13 Oman 1. Hijs-off Harder 11 in Cramer, cf ...... 5 o 1 3 o Totals ...... 32 6 9 21 • Legion pitcher who joined the I Colman ...... _.. 1 0 o 0 Hoover, ss ...... 4 o 2 2 ing the Cubs with five safeties, o 8 1/ 3 innings, Klieman 3 in 2. 6 .Ran for Burgo in 9th. Dodgers 10 days ago after ~rad~-I Chicago AB R H PO A Davis, C •••••• •• ••••••• ••••• 0 0 o 0 Mayo, 2b ...... 4 o 2 I 2 Detroit ...... 010 000 001- 2 his mates helped him to his fourth Butcher, p ...... 0 0 o Wild pitches-Niggeling 2. ati.ng from high school. HIS big victory with a 17-hit attack. o 0 York, Ib ...... 4 o 0 11 1 Philadelphia ...... 001 000 Ot4-8 Schuster, S5 .•....•..... 4 112 4 Cuccurullo, p ...... 2 1 1 1 2 Losing pitcher-KHeman. moment came last Saturday in St., Dixie Walker and Luis Olmo Higgins, 3b ...... 4 o 0 0 1 Cavarrelta, I h ...... 4 1 0 10 o Rubeling ...... 1 0 o 0 o Time-2:08. Louis. Brooklyn held a 2-1 lead, each collected two hits in the sixth Goodman, If ...... 3 022 Metro, If ...... 4 012 o but the Cards had the bases loaded o Rescigno, p ...... 0 0 o 0 o Umpires-Rommel, Grieve and and Olmo homered in the eighth, Nicholson, rt ...... 2 0 0 2 Hostetler, re ...... 4 I 1 1 o and only one out. That was the o Sewell ...... 1 0 o 0 o Weafer. 0 1 4 2 running his batting streak through DaJlessandro, cf .... 4 o 0 ' 3 o A ttendance-7 ,300. Swift, c ...... 2 nine games. Walker went three Richards, c ...... I o 1 1 o Hugheos,3 b ...... 4 o 1 0 4 Totall! ...... 35 7 If 27 18 for six and upped h is average to Overmire, p ...... 3 001 3 Johnson, 2b ...... 3 00 7 3 • Batted for Camelll in 7th...... Ran for Coscarart in 9th . FALSE TEETH .414. Holm, c ...... 4 () 0 1 Gorslca· ..•...... 0 I 0 (J o Fra~6i1 Appcrt o •• Batted for Cuccurullo in 7th. Score by innings: Glllesple, p ...... 0 000 o invented the II~ HELD FIRMLY BY Brooklyn ABRHPOA Hanyzewskl, I) ...... 1 1 00 4 ... Batted for Lopez in 8th. • New York ...... 1l1 004 100- 8 PasSdu, p ...... 0 000 o •••• Batted for Rescigno In 9th. Pittsburgh ...... 050 000 020--7 CanainS Ea[omfDrt Cushion Bordagaray, 3b ...... 6 2 4 0 2 Fleming, p ...... 0 o () 0 o Procell Walker, rf-lf ...... 6 1 3 1 o Ostrowski· ...... 1 00 0 o ~( NOW WEAl YOUI 'LAlUMir IAr Olmo, c(-2b ...... 6 2 3 5 o Miklos. p ...... 0 0 0 ., I Today and VVednesday Pol pa'on'od 'ho H.II.w HElD COMFOITlIL YSNH TlflSWAY Galan, If-cf-rf ...... 4 0 o 1 o Sauer" ...... ; ...... 1 0 10 o I [.1~7!. ~ Ground II.do for coolor. It'll 80 easy to wear your plates all Schultz, Ib ...... 5 2 2 10 o LAST TIMES TOMTE The World's s trallJ"est and ...... "hothorTouch" ...... day wben held firmly in place bl Hart, ss ...... ,.. 3 3 o 4 4 Totals ...... 31 3 11 27 18 t llia "comfort-c:lllhioo" - a dentin • . Most Explo Ive s.oret! formula. . Bragan, c ...... 5 I 2 5 o 'B:itted for Fleming in 7th. Ankenman, 2b ...... 2 0 o 0 6 '·Batted for Miklos In 9th. n.1Il1Jll I. Dr. Wernet's vent IIOre gum8. Powder lets you 2. Economical ; P. Waner, rf ...... 2 2 2 I o Brooklyn ...... 110 007 311-14 enjoYlIOlid fOOda email amount L. Waner, cf ...... 4 0 1 0 I Chicago ...... 1 00 020 000- 3 ILUDJi -avoid em bar- lasts longer. IUfCNDS! !HR! rusment of loose a. 'Pur.!, harmlesa. p1aQli.Helpspre- pleaalDt taaiinc- lor1UIIIIS RIDDE Al4h.'h IO¢...... " ...... PI • • ! PLt1S ----j "8u." RUIlft)' and Uenry 1IuMe'", a.wcl Co-Bft! The :I Bear!!" lJI "JUt Tllne Serenade" "Castfe in the Desert" Cartoon-Novo l~-New . "Our Italia n FronUer" . 'TUESDAY, M.AY 16, 1944 THE DA ILY I O WA N. I O WA C ITY. lOW A PAGE FIVB

where in Iowa Cily?" that would keep me .outdoors." in the Rose room lor the Dew On and Off Campus- the (ounty Quota U. S. Navy Will Be Temperature Miss·ng Woman Erich Funke. head of Ger­ Ph, U Hecl&"~ , 3 of Iowa memben;, actives, and f.our alum­ man depar~nt.: "J would like to CU,: "Sitting in the middle ot nae. Big Enough to Handle • found After Assault read a nice book in the shade of Lake Macbride." Those initialed wcre Norma my garden." Hans TboIBgen: Silting beside Emms, P2 of Savagelon, Wyo.; Opinion-- AprU BoIUneer. sakseJet"k of the river fishing. For Fifth War COUNCCL BLUFFS, (AP) Marybeth Hartman, P2 or Vin­ World Policing Alone Early 51gn it Ball ry: "I'd like to go Marton ea, 5 ere t ar,. ton; Avonelle Ro heim, P3 of Mrs. Pearl WeatherilJ, 27, of HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO for a hike down to th lakes." haillber of _cree: "It would Scarville; Susan Showers, P2 ot WASHINGTON, (AP) - The Council Bluffs, who vanished after SPEND THIS AFTERNOON? E. J . Walkllls, owner of Wat- be nice if our new swimming pool Iowa City; Mary Jane Vande Loan, Named United States navy will be big Of Illness a dance Saturday night and was 8IU Ummel of Cit hleh Klns' meat m rllet: "I'd like to go were builL" Voort, P2 of Pella, and Vernonica en.ough to handle the w.orld police fO\lnd slain five hours later, was &chonl: "I think I'd ralher -leep out .and hunt m~hrooJJ\$. There's Jeska, P2 .of Erie, Pa. The new Wl1enever a member of the a mee palch out 10 the Amanas." associate member is Mrs. Grace Johnson's county quota for the j.ob al.one when . this war ends, cri"llinally assaulted, P.ottawatla- than anything else becaure 1 Alice Traerer, AZ of Wesi { family complains 01 feeling lU, .or Mutchler. Artemus L. Gates, assistant secre_ mb COl~nty Coroner L. H. Tyler didn't get In very early last night." I nion: "Sleep! I just came back ruth War Loan drive is $2,054,- the mother observes signs of ill­ Kappa Epsilon Holds An installation ceremony also oC said today. Allen 1,1'1, A3 of Ottumwa: fr.om a hard weekend." took place (or newly elected offi­ 000, it was announced yesterday tary tbe navy for air, testl!ied ness, the temperatur~ should be yesterday. Her clothing was badly torn and "I'd like to go Swimming, but Charlotte KoenJc, AZ of Cbl- cers with Mrs. Gloria Landon, re­ by V. L. Clark of Des Moin~s, ex­ taken once or twice a d.y, pre­ cqo: "If a certain soldier, now ferablY morning and afternoon. Initiation for Seven tiring president, presiding. Those ecutive manager of the Iowa war Gates, a former pilot of navy inj:Jries on her throat indicated stationed in New Guinea, were installed were Marie Noe, P2 of Almost anyone can recogniu finance committee. This amount and army planes, appeared before sh~ had struggled with her assail- Sergei Dies here-but as things are, I'll just Amana, president; Miss Rosheim, slgns of illness w hen it has ani belor being overpowered, he LONDON, (AP) - Metropolitan ba. k in the un." Six pledges and one a ocillte vice-president; Helen Turnbull, represents nearly double the a house c.ommittee studying the reached the advanced atages. It postwar military setup. He em­ added. Sergei, 78, patriarch of Moscow Eleallor And~l'IIO n . J3 of ROC!k member were initiated la. t night P2 of Burlington, Wis., secretary, Quola for the Fourth War Loan often requires keen observation and all Russia died yesterday of a J land, 111.: "I w.ould like to go into Kappa Epsilon, pharmaceuti- Miss EJJ\$, treasurer, and Kay Mc­ drive wbicb was $1,756,000. phasized he is against merger of to detect early signs, however, and Tyler said a doctor's examina- I the armed f.orces, as proposed by brain hemorrhage, TaJis news ag- canoeing ?,nd just relax and get a cal sorority, al a cerem.ony in the Intire, P3 of Waseca, Minn., his­ The drive will open June 12. F. the severity .of a symptom is not lion showed Mrs. WeatheriU had ency reported yesterday rrom good tan torian. Phyllis Smith, alumnae D. Williams, county chairman, some war department oftlclals, always a true guide to its import­ been stranged by a locket chain Moscow. His Cuneral will be beld Don J~nes, A3 of Iowa OIty: H.otel Jefferson. Following the inl- but if the committee feels that from Davenport. was a special said he will attend a meeting ance. However, pain in the chest worn ar.ound her neck. May 18. "Playing a game of golf-anything lIation, a formal dinner look place guest at the affair TUesday, May 23 in Des Moines, such a step should be taken: or abdomen. IIOre throat, chills, "It seems to me that you should Nyal Weatherlll, 28, the vIctim's at which time extensive plans for vomiting, dlarrbea, or sldn rash POPEY E the campaign will be made. Coun­ look Into merging the wh.ole mili­ frequently toretell onset of an ill­ husband, who told police he and ty bond chairmen from the entire tary organization into the existing ness requiring prompt action. brother James Weatherill had stale will be present. navy." A thermometer that has not found ihe body, saId he began his Gates added: Theme of the new campaign is been thoroughly cleaned should search a few minutes after Mrs. " We wlil have tbe largest" navy never be placed back in the case "Back the Attack-By More ·Than Weatherill left the dance hall. lle(ore." lhe w.orl hdas ever known. Wilh or in the glass .of alcohol. The state quota is $228,000,000, it, we will have the naval alr force In prolonged illness. this may A graduate of Ihe Valentine, the greatest amount ever asked by and the marines with many years best be done by placing a glass Neb., high school, Mrs. Weatherlll experience in the c.ond uct of two the treasury department. The na­ of alcohol, a bottle .of liquid soap was the daughter .of Mn;. Rose and three dimensional wa rfa re. (made of white soap and water), tional qu.ota is $16,000,000,000 of Garner, who operates a ranch near which $6,000,000,000 w ill b e It can .operate .on sell, under the a gtass of clear water and a small sou«h! Crom individuals. sea, in thc air, in amphibious op­ paper bag, on a tray or cake pan, EI1, Neb. The WeatherUl's have Johnson county has exceeded erations and on land. .or flat tin candy box. Put a piece tw.o children. Virgini Mae 6, and each of the [our quotas in the suc­ "This force by itself can police of COltOIl in tbe bollom of one Donald Nyal, 3. cessive campaigns. Purchases in the world. It is the nucleus glass, fill with 81cohol and cover the Fourth War Loan drive passed ar.ound which can be built one witb a piece of clean paper, held the $2,106,000 mark with a quota force." on with a rubber band, to keep 01 $1,756,000 . Explaining why he lavors keep­ the alc.ohol from evaporating. mg separate forces, he declared Thrust the clean thermometer War Prisoners Work the British had to break down thr.ough the paper, makin~ the their single air force into a num­ h.ole JUBt large enough [or the In Illinois Fields ber 01 striking units to obtain the thermometer to go through. The CHIC YOUNG , Two-Period Basis e[ficiency which repelled the luft.­ clear water Is to rinse the thermo­ CAMP GRANT, Ill., (AP)-A waffe. meter after taldng it from the al­ group of Gcrman war prisoners Used in Allotmenf c.ohol, and before giving it to the patient. wenl to work today in the aspara­ Of Canning Sugar Marion High School gus Cields near Rocb 11 ODd "sev­ Seniors Spend Class Army Engineering eral hundred" more are expecled Applicants who file canning Day in Iowa City to tollow in a lew days. Brig. G n. sugar requests from the present Students Entertained James E. Baylis, commanding time until July 15 will be granted .....A-n-ot-h-e-r-g:..ro -u-p-o-f-I-o-w-a-h~i-gh. At Peb;er Cabin general of Camp Grant, /In­ a maximum of 10 pounds pcr pcr- school seniors spent their class nounced today. sop for this period instead of the day in Iowa City yesterday. Sixty Twenty-six men from Company maximum annual quota of 20 students from Marlon high school E, sections Ci ve and iix 01 term The army announcement said pounds per person for the cntire made a toUI' of the unIversIty six of civil engineers in the army the assignment of prisoners, many canDing season. specialized program, and their Applicants receiving the first buildings and points of Interest. of. them veterans of the Afrika wives and friends, were enter­ period allolment of 10 pounds per The student's, accompanied by corps, was expecled t.o make UI) tained Sunday a!lernoon at the person may apply to their local A. W. Salisbury, principal of the summer cabin of Pr.of. and Mrs. the labor shortage r porled by of­ boards Cor an additional 10 pounds high school, and AmeHa Petrusch, ficials of canning compan! s in in Ute second period, extending class adviser, were conducted Louis Pelzer. H.osts and hostesses for the the Rochelle area. from August 1 to October 15. through the university by John R. Last year soldiers and WACs HEN R Y The primary purpose of the new Hedges, acting director ot the afternoon were Pro!. and Mrs. Ned L. Ashton, Dean and Mrs. {rom Lhe camp helped sllve the plan is to prevent immediate with- bureau of visual instruction of the asparagus and pea crops which SURE-I'U CUT VOU A _ALL drawal 01 lhe maximum aUowable extension division. Francis M. Dawson and Prof. and Mrs. Earle Waterman. were r.otling in the fields be ause PIECE -HENRv-euT quota of canning sugar from avail- The afternoon was spent in hIk- oC insufficient labor to harvest IT TO GOOD USE.' abie stocks. The two-period plan ing, playing baseball and other them. of handling applications will Collect Traffic Fines . oOWoor sports, followed by a perm ·tI th e Ioca . I b oar d s t 0 rIml ' t T ra crIC r mes were co 11 ec t e d b y picnic lunch served on the lawn allowance .on the basis of the the local policc department as fol- Supreme Court Issues amount or fruils

~ A grass fire in a vacant lot at Th.ose receiving thcir ratings state during the tax year. Leaves for Induction 1302 Gnler avenue at 3:15 p.m. were: Adolph Barson, first ser­ The five-to-fout" opInion by BRICK BRADFORD John Harold GaLens left yesler- yesterday was quickly extin- geant; Marion Anderson, warrant Justice Frankfurter upheld a per­ day morning for Des M.oines f.or guished by the local fire depart- sonal property tax which Minne­ 0 Weer; Marlon Means, staff ser­ Bl ND AND GAG TI.1EM TAKE. THEM TO T~E CELLAR AND,NOW/WE 5EEK BI GGER induction into Lhe navy. ment. g eant; William Watson, sergeant, sota levied in 1939 against the en­ SECURELY - nEN PLACE TIlEM BENEATH MY ~ OU5E! GAME - ~E WI-\O CALLS !-11M- a nd Helen Watts, corporal. tire fleet of Northwest Airlines ON OUR BeASTS OF BURDI;:N! Promotions lor C. A. P. cadets Inc., whrch has its headquarters in 5ELF , BREKK! were also received, and included: St. Paul. Lawl'ence Conover, technical ser­ The decision was one .or a series g eant; Kenneth Bishop, sergeant; on state taxation in which the Daily Iowan Want Ads KenncLh Price, sergeant, William court also: upheld the validity of Marshal, corporal; Peggy Kemp, an Iowa law imposing a two per­ cent tax .on personal pr.operty CLASSIFIED I WANTED p rivate first class, and Wanda ADVERTISING Span, private firsl class. bought for use in the state and WANTED- Plumbing and heaUnI. Attendance, ability, attitude and making a retailer resp.onsible for RATE-C ARD Larew Co. Dial 9681. c lass ratings were considered the collecti.on of the levy. INSTRUCTION basis for promotiqn of b.oth regu­ CASH RATE I ar members and cadets. 1 or 2 days- In both organizations there will 10c pel' line pel' day GIRLS- WOMEN be regular promoti.ons among the S consecutive days- non-commissioned oWcers, which 7c per tine' per day BE A PRACTICAL NURSE BIG DEMAND - HIGH WAGES will rotate lo enable each member 8 consecutive days- JIIgh ."hool not n..,essary. £ ••y to S howi ng the above qualifications 5c per line per day learn In spare time. Agctt18 to 60. W .. demands havo caused ig short- and the desire to learn the C. A. P . 1 month- age. Prepare now for this InlereSl· program to be advanced. 4c per line pet' day tng. profitable and patriotic work. Write lor FREE infOTffiAtion. Wayne Although n.o 0 - commissioned -Figure 5 w.ords to line- lI!ehool 01 PraellcHI Nurslnll, c/o personnel may be given ratings by Minimum Ad-2 J.lnes Dally Iowan. I the local wing, c.ommissloned ol'fi. 3 5 9 cers must be app.ointed by nation­ CLASSIFIED DISPLAY al headquarters. 1 1 0 50c col. inch o ... 0 For a Foothold- The Iowa wing headquarters at Or $5.00 per month On Yeur F.~ltre 1 ... a Des Moines appr.oves each nOll­ Enroll Now For commiseioned rating. 1 8 0 All Want Ads Cash in Advance 2 2 r EHlclent Business Tralnbl&' Payable at Daily Iowan Busi"" at o 2 1 ness office daily until 5 p.m. o 3 I (owa City C_rc:lal CoDece zoa ~ E. WMblncton Telegraph Centenary 1 0 • Cancellations must be called in o 0 0 belO1'e 5 p. m. Responsible f.or .one incorrect DANCING LESSONS - baUrooJD, To Feature Issue insertion only. ballet tap. Dial 72.8. Mimi Youde Wuriu, Of Postage Stamp OLD HOME TOWN By DIAL 4191 A new three cent stamp to com­ ~~~~~~-=~~~ Brown'. Commerce Con. memorate the hundredth anniver­ 't'UH SURE ARE A ~ Iowa City'. Accredited sary .of the first message trans­ GUY !--I'LL ~ET YUH PlIT Busine.sa School mitted by electric telegraph will SALT ON 'fER F\..ON'ER5 1UH HELP WANTED Establiahed 1921 be placed OD sale May 24th, a t SFOlL PA BEES' HONEY! '" WANTED-Janitor. Larew Co. Da7 School Nllht School Washington, D. C. and Balitmore, yi.:.NON SUMPIN ; MISTER 1 "Open the Year 'Rotmcl" Phone 968l. Md., between which cities the YER~v.ouLD Dial (682 WHERE TO BUY IT - original message w.s sent. MAKE A GOOD , . Depicted OIl the sbunp as the TIRE , WANTED TO BUY central desil'l is the upper por­ TREAD, For Your , ti.on .of a telegraph pole with cross arms and wires attached, with the WHlll 'OLICI IN CHICAGO quu­ SUlDllle1' Recreation SUppU88 BICYCLE in A- I condition for boy aged seven. Dial 3650. I lines extending into the distance. tloned Riec&rdo Mora, above, In Camp Stoves Cots connection with the mYltet\oUl Picnic Boxes Superimposed over lhe wires in Golf Archery FOR SALE two linea is the word In, of tht tnlnk murder ot • woman, LoI B~b ,, 11 Badmint.on first telegraph message, " What Angeles authoritiea, who tound / flIIESTONE STORE FOR SALE-Remington Standard hath God wrought," in dark the woman'. body In the trunk at typewriter, No. 10. Dial 5981. l.othic lettering. In the upper right • raUway expreaa agency, contin­ , hand corner iJl the title, "Century ued their Investigation IDto the FURNITURE MOVING of the Telegraph," in dark gothie,. bamlng crime. Mora retllded In the CURTIS THE FLORIST Stamp collectors desiring first Fleetwood hotel In Chicago. towe" day covers may send a limiled of which were found In the death 127 South Dubuque MAHER BROS, TRANSFER number of addressed envelopes, trunk which had been shipped to For EIficlent Furniture Moving Dial 6566 not in excess .of ten, to the post­ Loa Angel.. from ChIcago. The , , Ask Ab.out Our masters at Washin&t.on, 13, D. C., expreaa company clerk, who ac­ I Greenhouse Npar Airport WARDROBE SERVICE or Baltimore. 33, Md., with cash ~pted the trunk at the oIIlee III , DIal 2465 or money order remittance to Cblca&,.o. saId l1Iat Hora WU not DIAL - 9696 - DIAL lb, man wIIo !lad brouJ1!t It to ~ cover the cost of the stamp re­ quh'ed for af!1x111l. ~~ , ....-I.""J. PAGE SIX THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA- CITY, ' rOWA .TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1944 Junior High UNIVERSITY HIGH PLANS SUMMER SPEECH COURSE SergI. Robert R. Cox FORMER STUDENTS WINS D. F. C. County Tuberculosis Receives Promotion Seal Sale for 1943 Speech Work Robert R. Cox, son of Mr. and Totals Mrs. Ralph A. Cox, 912 7th ave­ $1,302.84 nue, has been promoted to the Johnson county's 1943 Chrilt­ Scheduled rank of sergeant in the cavalry. · mas seal sale attained a total of Sergeant Cox has been in the cav- i $7,302.84, which is nearly I.\lrft aIry three years and overseas five The dates set for the annual months. He is stationed in Eng- I thousand dollars more \han \be • ummer speech course to be held land . total for the previous year, it WIJ at Universi ty high school are announced yesterday in a final reo June 19 through July 21, annonced Ptc. Vincent Gaffey, son of Mrs. port from the Jowa Tuberculosis M. J . Gaffey, 130 E. Jefferson Dr. Karl F. Robinson, director, street, is stationed somewhere in ' association. today. Italy. Private Gatfey has beeJlI This county was one of five The course is open to all sev­ overseas one year. I which led the state in per capita enth, eighth and ninth grade stu­ sales of 20 cents or more. JWlllSon dents in Iowa City and to those Pfc. Arthur Hansen, son of county sales averaged 22.6 cents students who will enter these Oscar Hansen, 440 Kirkwood ave- . grades in the fa II. Phases to be nue, is stationed in New York. He I, a person, ranking second to Audu. covered this year will include has been in the al'my for a year bon with 24 .9 cents per capita. fundamentals, dramatic interpre­ and received his basic training at Of the nine counties wJth pop. tation, discussion, radio, radio Camp Adair, Ore. ulation ranging from 30,000 to shows and clinic appointments for LIEUT. JOHN W. DREW, US. N. R., Is shown above, rlcht, just after 60 ,000 Johnson county reported speech correction. Lieut. Thomas C. Daniel, son of recelvln .. the dJslIll&'ulshed f1yln, cross from Rear Admiral C. T. the top per capita sa le. DurinI' the course, the pro­ Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Daniel, Dur,ln, commander of the United States naval air station, Quonset Christmas seal funds will fi. ,ram will loolude radio shows 407 N. Dubuq~e s tr~et, will soon Point, R. I. The award was made lor Lieutenant Drew's acUon as a nance a new rehabilitation pro­ over WSUI twice a week and complete an mten s lv~ course ~n I pilot of a navy conll'ol plane protectinll' a convoy acalnst enemy alr- gram by which recovered tuber­ the production of a play with combat . flyi~g at the Alexandria craft In nortllwest Alrlcan walers July 12, 1943. Flylnl' In a relatively culosis patients ~re helped to re­ appeal to s tudenL~ and par­ I armr alr {Ield, Alexandria, La. slow and 1I,II11y armed plane, Lieutenant Drew successfullY broke UP turn to normal IlVing. Counselinc ,.nb. AmonI' 'he titles beln, ,He 15 a member of a Flying Fort- I repeated attempts by two enemy Fooke-Wull bombers to reach the of patients and vocational train­ considered for Ihlli play are ress crew, and will go overseas convoy. Lleuttnant Drew 15 the son of Mrs. Marean. E. Drew of Des ing are important phases of the "Tem Sawyer," ".Jack and the I Beanstalk," "Heidi," "The soon. IMoines and attended the unlvers"y from 1938-40. The award was . program. presented Feb. 2, 19U. This Is an official United St.tes Navy photo- Funds from the annual sale Knave of ·Hearts" and "Six BerJ)ard F. Driscoll, son of Mr. JUNIOR HIGH school radio students Usten to last m.lnute Instructions before the final "on the air" sll'nal craph. also make possible intensive x. Who Pass." and Mrs. F. E. Driscoll, route 5, raying programs throughout the Each student will be given ex­ Is ,Iven. These students were members of tbe 1943 Junior hiI'll school summer speech course to be offered has been promoted from staff ser­ for the second time this year. Seen here from left to right a.re .James Ca.nnon, St. Patrick's school, Dan state, a~sistance to men rejected or periences in all of these areas of geant to the rank ot technical ser­ Citian, has successfully completed discharged from service because speech training, said Dr. Robin­ Dulcher, City junior hll'h scllool, Charles Beye, City junior high school. Melanie Snider, City Junior Jllch geant. Sergeant Driscoll is sta­ his course at the airtorces oUicer Joseph IE. Gilroy · school, and Karl Robinson, University hiI'll school. of tuberculosis, and year-round son, and those who have special tioned somewhere In England as candidate school, Miami Beach, health education. a member of a Liberator bomb interests and abiH ties will be able • Fla., and received his commissio n The state as a whole attained a to focus their work on that inter­ group. He is a radio operator Services Tomorrow 42 percent gain over the previoUJ Prof. Herald Stark as second lieutenant. His duties est as well as become acquainted gunner. He enlisted in the army Funeral services will be held at year's sa le with a record total ot wi th other aspects of speech To Sing Song Cycle leigh Hunt Collection Offers Information Pec. 12, 1942. wiJI be to direct vital administra­ work. tive and supply operations of the 9 a. m. tomorrOw at St. Mary's $279,574.29.------Those who enroll for the speech By Heinrich Heine Lieu!. Dean E. WlJliams, a for­ army air tor c e s. Lieutenant church for Joseph E. Gilroy, 69, cprrection courses will have indi­ About Outstanding English literary Figures . mer university student, has re­ Peck's wife and daughter are re­ 328 E. Washington street. MI'. Divorce Granted vidual training and special clinic Prof. H'1rald Stark, tenor, ac­ ported for .duty at the Carlsbad siding in Aurora, Ill. Gilroy died at Mercy hospital Sun­ companied by Prof. Philip Gree­ army air field, Carlsbad, N. Mex. A divorce was granted Mar,. apPOintments with statt members A lock of Keals' auburn hair, sold, and Brewer was able to ob- day at 12 :15 p. m. following • aret Prizler from George Prizler and will do group work with Lieutenant WilUams was commis­ Corp. Andrew M. Brown is vis­ ley Clapp, head of the music de­ a letter in Carlyle's handwriting, tain it. iting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. lingering illness. Burial will be yesterday morning by District other members of the course. sioned April IS, 1944, at Pecos, in St. Joseph's cemetery. The ro­ partment, will sing "Dichterliebe" and many intimate views of fam­ Brewer died In 1933, and the J ohn Scheetz, 1026 E. Washlng­ Judge Harold D. Evans on the We feel that our speech collection was acquired by the Tex. sary will be recite da t the Hohen­ (Schumann) on the Wednesday ous 19th century literary figures ton street, his wife's parents. Cor­ grounds of cr'1el and inhuman correction work has been UniverSity of Iowa library in schuh mortuary at 8 p. m. today. treatment. bl,hly successful ," Dr. Robln- Evening Music Hour at 8 p.m. to. Lieu!. Donald H. Long, a for­ poral Brown is stationed at Camp may be found in the Leigh Hunt 1934. Mr. Gilroy was a member of The couple were married in 80n said. Many students come mer university student, Is now San Luis Obispo, CaJif. and will the Knights of Columbus and had morrow. This song cycle is a collection in Macbride hall. Since then, many scholars have return there when his 15-day fur­ Cedar Rapids, Nov. 3, 1937 and from outside of Iowa City and station~ at the Carlsbad army air resided at the Knights of Colum­ series of 16 short poems by Hein- Here, in the world's largest and called upon this library for in­ lough expires. separated April 10, 1944. attend for correction courses field, Carlsbad, N. Mex. He wa~, bus hall for t!:le past 12 years. rich Heine, all dealing with the most complete collection of items formation on the literary life at Mrs. Prizler was awarded the only. Last year ell'ht stutter­ the 19th century. commissioned March 12, 1944 at Pvt. Harold Youkey, son of He served the council as assi:stant ers wer.e enrolled. Each of sentiments and reactions of a re­ pertaining to this well-known Ft. Sumner, N. Mex. household furniture. Brewer himself had planned to Mrs. Elise Youkey, 212 N. Dubu­ steward during that time. At 8:30 Swisher and SwIsHer repre. them was unable to say more jected poet-lover, set to music by Engl ish author, critic and journal­ publish three volumes concerning que street, visiled his home ovet· p. m. today the Knights of Colum­ than a few words without be­ ist, are many first editions, letters Wmjam J . Peck, a former .Iov:a bus will assemble at the mortuary sented Mrs. Prlzler, Jack C. White Schumann (181 0- 1856) .' the collection. The first and most the weekend. He is stationed at was George Prizler's attorney. comlnl' confused, but by the from Elizabeth Barrett Browning Camp Dodge in Des Moines. to recite the rosary. The program will be broadcast important, "My Leigh Hunt Li­ Dickens caricatured Hunt in a end of the course, all or them and Chal'les Dickens, and intimate brary, the First Edition," was pub­ SUrviving Mr. Gilroy are three delivered speeches before from north music hall. glimpses into the lives ot the Ht­ book, "Bleak House," and al­ Stall Sergt. Ru ssel R. Holder- broth.ers, Michael T. Gilroy of lished betore his death, whil~ two tither croups. erati ot the 1800's. others remained in press. though he later denied it, the ness, son of Mrs. Martha Holder- Yodel', Colo.: Patrick L. Gilroy of Oscar McArtor Fined Tuition during the entire five­ Vance M. Morton, associate The collection, which totals harm had been done and a series ness, 1036 Third avenue, has re- Iowa City, and Daniel A. Gllroy Oscar McArtor, who was under Later, upon the suggestion ot indictment by the grand jury on week period is $5, and classes will professor of dramatic art. 2,259 volumes, some of which con­ members o( the English depart­ of arguments ensued. turned to Camp Breckinridge, of Vinton; one Sister, Sarah GiI­ a be held from 9 a. m. until 12 M. An all-state speech course has tain manuscripts ahd letters, is ment here, the Unjversity of Iowa • Hunt collected hair as a hobby, Ken., after attending the memor- roy Hartsock of Iowa City, and charge of operating a motor ve­ daiiy with the exception of the housed in specially built cases be­ and is said to have had a lock lal services for his brother, Har-I several nieces and nephews. He hicle while Intoxicated, was fined been conducted by the department printed "My Leigh Hunt Library $150 and costs yesterday atter­ radio shows to be scheduled at 5 hind a grilled iron door. - the Holograph Letters," and from the head ot Napoleon and ley, who died overseDS. Sergeant was preceded in death by his par­ of speech for 14 years. Last year, noon by Harold D. Evans, judge p. m. Wednesdays and Fridays. Luther Albertus Brewer, Cedar that volume is now in the collec­ one from Milton. Holderness is attached to an en-, ents, three brothers and three sis- Final registration anti fees must however, numerous requests from Rapids publisher, teacher and col .. tion. Hunt died In 1859. gineering unit. ters. of the district court. c be in by June 19. Parents, how­ parents of younger children, espe­ lector, started the Hunt library in James Henry Leigh Hunt was l' ever, may make advanced regis­ cia Ily of junior high school age, 1920. born in 1784. He attended school I tration arrangements now by flll­ Until then, Hunl had not been were received and the junior high 8 iDg out the application bianks sent considered an ou tstand ing collec­ Tay/or Coleridge and Charles t to them or by calling 2111, exten­ school CO Ul'se was begun. tor's item, but he is now consid­ Lambat Christ's received hospital, their where early Samuel train- :~=~;=~===~======;:====:===~;;======~======5 sion 312, said Dr. Robinson. In 1943 , a lota l of 32 students ered one of th most important ing. The staff tor the !peech sources' of information about the were enrolled in the project, and He laler became a clerk in a law l' course wllJ consists of rel'ular transi tion period between the similar requests this Yellr have led office, but deserted this field for S member or the speech depart­ Georgian and the Victorian liter­ literature. ment at the university. Tbls to arrangements for the second ary ages. 1 He is supposed to have laid the n Includes Dr. Robinson, assist­ junior high school course. To date, At the time the collection was foundation lor modern newspa­ ant professor s pee c h, In a 15 students have enrolled, re­ started, the Buxton-Forman li­ per criticism by his work as a cMrce or the coqrse, and ported Dr. Robinson. brary of English classics was being I. drama critic on the "News," Il founded by his brother. J Later, as editor of the "Exam­ b Lieul. Harry A. Slemmons to Be Honored Over WS.UI iner," he dabbled in political questions and was fined and thrown into prison. 'Ulll (810) WilT (1&0) 10:00 Week in the Bookshop Mystery Theater (WHO) While there, he became the ,. II.. (l411O ) , (Il10' CBS n .., most important news editor in the 10:15 Musical Favorites Famous Jury Trials (Blue) WOO 11(40) IIIB8 (1M) 10:30 The Bookshelf country. His prison callers repre­ A winner of the distingUished 11 :00 Waltz Time 8:15 se nted the most famous literary Burns and Allen (WMT) figures of his day, Including such a flying cross, Lieut. Harry A. 11 :15 Between the Lines c Slemmons, son of, Mrs. Mary 11 :30 America Sings Mystery Theater (WHO) men as Lord Byron, Shelly, Keats, Coleridge and Lamb. " E Slemmons of Iowa Ci ty, will be 11 :45 Musical Interlude Famous Jury Trials (Blue) Later, Hunt founded the "Tat­ P" t. honored on the program, "For 1 J :50 Farm Flashes 8:30 - b Distinguished S e r v Ice," at 8 12:00 Rhythm Rambles Is That So (WMT) ler," a daily newspaper, and in o'clock this evening. Slemmons, a 12:30 News, The Dally Iowan Fibber McGee (WHO ) 1837, he headed the "Depository," iJ • C lieutenant in the army ~ir corps, 12:45 Our Boys in Service Spotlight Bands (Blue) a periodical. won the flying cross at the age of 1:00 Musical Chats 8:45 An essential factor in the de­ 23 for bombing missions over Eur­ 2:00 Campus News Is That So (WMT) velopment of Victorian enlighten­ ~ ope. 2:10 Recent and Contemporary Fibber McGee (WHO) ment, Hunt himself was a versa­ Sacred Musl'c Music Spotlight Bands (Blue) tile writer of verse, essays, biog­ The day of Allied Attack f Mrs. Helen Jongewaard will be 3:00 Fiction Parade 9:00 raphy, controversy, and criticism. heard on her "Evening Musicale" 3:30 News, The Dally Iowan The Lighted Lantern (WMT) The weatlh of intimate intor­ ( program this evening in a pro­ 3:35 Union Radio Hour Bob Hope (WHO) mation on famous authors that is gram of sacred music including 4:00 Elementary French Raymond Gram Swing (Blue) found in the collection grew out of informal evenings of sonnet Europe. "In My Father's House Are Many 4:30 Tea Time Melodies 9:15 on Hitler's Mansions," a sacred classic by 5:00 Children's Hour The Lighted Lantern (WMT) writing contests, literary talk and n MacDermid and two hymns, 5:30 Musical Moods Bob Hope (WHO) criticism planned by Hunt. Among the manUscripts in this I: "Sweet Peace the Gitt of God's 5:45 News, The Dally Iowan Chester Bowles (Blue) c Love," by P . P. Bilhorn and "Does 6:00 Djnner Hour Music 9:30 collection are portions of Hunt's correspondence with his ~ife and 0 Jesus Care?" by J . Lincoln Hall. 7:00 United States in the Twen- Congress Spe a k~ (WMT) a group ot autographed letters , I II 'Blithe Spirit' tieth Century Red Skelton (WHO) II Loretta Young and Edna Best 7:30 Sports time Creeps by Night (Blue) written him by Dickens, Elizabeth will co-star with Ronald Colman 7:45 Evening Musicale 9:45 Barrett Browning and Samuel when Colman brings the Noel 8:00 For Distinguished Service Congress Speaks (WMT) Coleridge. II There is also a cbeck endorsed The Daily Iowan, Member of t:he tJ Red Skelton (WHO) Coward 1antasy, "Blithe Spirit," 8:15 Wesleyan Chapel hour by Lord Byron. to the air lanes over NBC tcnight 8:45 News, The Dally Iowan Creeps by Night. (Blue) tl 10:00 One of the most interesting Ii at 10:30. Miss Young will take items in the collection is .a paint­ the role of Elvira who not only , NETWORK HIGHLIGHTS News (WMT) 11 6:00 Fred Waring (WHO) ing of Ravenna, Italy, done in it comes to dinner, but stays for­ miniature on the gilt-ed,e pagel ever. I Love a Mystery (WMT) News (Blue) Associa~ed Press, will carry the of Hunt's poem, "Story of ..Rim­ It's a critical housing problem Cliff and Helen (WHO) 10:15 II ini." sl that faces Colman when he finds Let Yourself Go (Blue) Fulton Lewis (WMT) This painting is known as four­ his first wife, that blithe spirit. 6:15 Bob Burlingame (WHO) edge, and the pages of the book Lum and Abner (Blue) returning from the beyond to Passing Parade (WMT) must be held in a special position • r move in on him and Edna Best, News ot the World (WHO) 10:30 to make the painting visible to of. i,nvasion. as wife number two. For its ini­ Let Yoursell Go (Blue) Music You Love (WMT) .the eye. Everything lor the Boys (WHO) tial radio performance, the Cow­ 6:30 Here, too, is the history of the ard stage play has been translated American Melody Hour (WMT) Duffy's Tavern (Blue) Skim pole controversy between into what promises to be a hilari­ Bob Burlingame (WHO) 10:45 Hunt and Charles Dickens. ous laugh-test. The Green Hornet (Blue) Music You Love (WMT) This controversy aroSe when Following their presentation of 6:C5 Everything tor the Boys (WHO) "BlIthe Spirit," Colman, Mis s American Melody Hour (WMT) Dulty's Tavern (Blue) Young and Miss Best will hold a Jimmy Fidler (WHO) 11:00 two-way short-wave talk and try Captain Midnight (Blue) News (WMT) tc bring a touch of home to a pair ':H News, Music (WHO) of fighting men stationed at an Bjg Town (WMT) Tommy Dorsey (Blue) allied base In New Guinea. The Johnny Presents (WHO 11:15 ' overseas talk Is a weekly feature News (Blue) Tiny Hill (WMT) of the program. 7.:15 Roy Shield (WHO) , Big Town (WMT) Tommy Dorsey (Blue) • Hera'. aD equaUoa to be __. bend 1 A .art IIrl ",.tII • eoIro,. TODAY'S PROGRAMS Johnny Presents (WHO) . 11:30 educatloo railed , 10 'O~ IWftr 8:00 Morning Chapel .. ,Lum and Abner (Blue) Jimmy :ijililard (WMT) equala • PCIlIltI.,.. ot Prom .. P~ henCle, ~_'!.P_ ..enee. Ploof: tlllr­ 8:15 Musical Miniatures . 7:10 Garry Lenhart News (WHO) 'PI the ..-fear 111. ea/II tor 0ftIIIe 1:30 News. 'he Dally Iowan ~udy Canova (~T) Pat Trapani (Blue) Ml!l'etafi.1 SpeclIlIIlOllr- tor aaI­ 11:46 .... _en bertn Julr 10 and Sept. 8:411 Program Calendar IA Date wlth Judy (WHO) I.. A~ CoIIep Count ' PeeP. . 8:511 Service Reports Duffy', Tavern (Blue) Jimmy Hilliard (WMT) 9:00 Service Unlimited 7:45 Music, News (WHO) 9:15 Music Magic Judy Canova (WMT) Pat Trapani (Blue) r\.alharlne lZ:ot qib~~ 9:30 Treasury Salute A Date with Judy (WHO) "PI YOII. " ...... 9:45 Keep 'Em Eating Duffy's Tavern (Blue) . Press News (WMT) M!I1'OII tI •• Lu CHICAGO It .. .::ell_IIIto JlllIIIIIiIH ...... 9:50 Treasury Song I:. Words at War (WHO) PIIOVIOCNCi i ...... til ...... ':55 Newt, '!'be DalI, low.. Bunu and Allen (WMT) News (Blue) t