:R21 . 1945 =~ ~ther Good Morning lOWA: Cloudy &ad ~ld Wax • Iowa Qty &Dd SlIDIlay. ~rles • Iowa City', Morning Newspaper ~d FIVE CENTS TO AIlSOClA't81I PIlalll lOW A CIT Y. lOW A SATURDAY. DD:EMBER 22. 1945 ...'ROTO VOLUME xxn NUMBER 76 t . education gIven in the . . Ind Electric announce(( ~orge Petsel the Parent: :he series is ow it he Horne in ~fton Smith :ation. child SAYS KJMMEL ERRED PATTON-STEPS IN HIS RISE TO FAME 'Iowa Insti_ Gen. Marshall, iIIl~o!",ed ,Sources Say Fad Finders Recess Meeting r ' ~rs. LYlllan IClal studies MIDIsters Conference • .' , I ,_'~' lers. ' Preventative Chiang (onfe~ i Af'Posilive Siage' Delay Negotiation sCollapse . Tomorrow" '0 • Jdenl health II, TO. A OClAT D PIl - alion at Hy_ Diplomat Is Greeted Big Thr.. Appear I .\ 11" po "iblc llowuown between gO\' rnm~ot J .. I;' - 'jnl) and I Medicine. Warmly; Begins Talks Closer on Issues "Junior Red Otlleral ~fotoM::l Will> averted at least t mporarily 10 t uight by the l'O"g, Jun ior Vital to China Peace Than Ever Before uuuen rn: ioft of lll'ariogil in tlle wage trik until Dee. 2 . ve, St. Louu, The company had t!treat ed to bolt the bearing ir it , profits NANKING (AP)-Gen. George MOSCOW (AP) - InCormed \Iere t:ul\"iut,!"Cu in conllection with th '10 union' dem ud lor 8 ~andicapped C. Marshall arrived here yesterday sources 1'10 I' to Ille big three tor- 30 p rc Ilt WII' iuer' . Dr. C. R. by plane il'Om Shanghai and WflB elgn minis ters said last night a The }Jt~uriuf,!. c ming lift 'r Pre idclJt TrumaH' dt.'<:lllralion that ,Ira. lessor o{ greeteq warmly at the airport. by "positive stage" had been reached ability to pa.... i .. rei \'lInt" in 8 ca ,wa adjourn d Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, in their talks, and lhat Russia, Ille proml)tJ~' ufter UI!! £8 ·t-Cilldill~ :ommitt I' chairman read I tat "Religion in ment thllt (1M" bility to Jl ,v would be con id red a. 00 ractor who cast protocol aside to welcome United SUItes and Great Britain Jard Lampe, ill d tE'rmillilll! lillY Will!' adju tml'ut. X it h 'I' th OUlpany in pel'son the special American appeared closer now on vital In nor . of religion. ternational Is ues than before the the union W8 caliI'd upon flJr comment on th announ ment. ill, fonnerly envoy. • conference opened. 'I'he auminh;trution Jllill Jown i blueprint for fact-finding >1oines WPA The two men and Madame ""'--.;;;; I Considerable suspicIon appears procedure Yet>terda.Y, authorlzJ.ne lrent educa_ Chiang left at once for the Gen- , to have been dlspel1ed on all sides boards to recommend wqe in in charge of eralisslmo's o{~ieial resi~ence,. to APPEARING BEFORE THE Jolnt these informants said, as a result I ereu whicb rna)' 01' may not re 111- ~ discussion begin talks WhICh may Vitally con.... ~loql 'Pearl Harbor tom- or the talks between United States sult tn pri~e boosts. lluence strlIe-torn China's hopes mlttee yesterday Adm. R. K . Tur- S t f State J m F New Cold Wave However, an investl,ation panel of internal peace and unity. ner naval amphibious comll'__ nder Becre ary 't°Ish Fa I as es ,_ . es has been must determine whether employers h 1 ed h d N k · ' I 'h· R Admiral H I yrnes, s 1'I re gp eereLdry I a L. Mathes T ey c. asp an. s?n an IIlg 5 allSer. • a. ear UB- Ernest Bevin and Soviet Foreign Moves Il!fo Midwest could ral e wa,es at emUn, m chairman' dusty, wmdswept 8lrileld at a mo- band E. Kimmel. HawaUan naval Co . V M MIt h ,__ I mmlssar . . 0 0 ov W 0 prlc and to ascertain thil "must TIll I BOW GEN, GEORGI!: . PATrON JR. appeared a three Iq In h carHr an armY offleer. it chairmen~ ment when all Chlna and a large ohler at the time or the Jap at....,1ri t r th i . th . 't 8 , TUE A . 0 ' 1 T 11 1'•• necessarily Inquire into the em part of the Orient watched tensely did not comply wUb "entlJ'ely me or e I' SIX session yes er- A new cold wllve with tem At rlfM a • major In the cavalr" eentu as a brJpdJer ,eneral white lralniq taDJi; linUs In 11141 before City high ' ployer', abIlity to pay." ryan, Roose for signs that Marshall's mission ~Iear" orders. (AP WIREPHOTO) daY' 'd th t th O d I peratures liS low as 48 below tho Vnlt>ed tata en~red the "ar anel leU a one 0 r the naU.n'. top war heroes pealrim,. laat JUDe at • • q .' Observers sal a LS 0C3 The statement ot policy, Issued b.meeo...... celebraUon In hla honor In Ibmllj.on. M (AP WIREPHOTO) Crow, jun lrught bnng an end. to the co un- not mean th at all obstacles to un- I zero :starled movin, toward the midwest from we t central by Seerjltary of Labor Schwe11tn '. A. Dooley, try's undeclared ciVi l war. 'F · Sh ' f H . I:>ach, directed a fact-flndl'" panel ...... Chiang's presence at the airport derstandings on internatJonal IS- I Canada last night bringing the and Mrs. D. air are 0 omes to "draw .. lich inferences a. It may In itself was regal'ding as ~ signi- . . sues hod been removed, but thot prospect ot continued col1 for Other unit choo~e" wben an employer ~ [elen Clark, 1lcent gesture 01 fricndshlp for the B B "II W·,I C I there were good reasons for be- I much or the country. United States. According to prolo-I' , f · 1Ie~ing some agreements were The weather bureau salej the fu to l up$'ly evIdence of Its America's 'Most Colorful' Commander Dies Mrs. J. M. O· e UI OS I col in · such matters the Genel'al- . gOlllg to be reached. abllit,y to pay. ~chool; Mrs. mercury dropped to -48 at Keg "It may, If It wish ,take the issimo would have awaited Mar- Both and BeVin . were River, Alberta, and thaI tem Sl. Mary's Less Than S10 000 ' Byrn~ union', evIdence and such evidence HEIDELBERG, Germ'any (AP) ler, his! mlly true nd d voted "fierce attacks on th southern ld Franklin, shall at his olflclal residence in- , sald to ~e anxJous ~ot to rai.;e the peratures from 20 10 30 below side the walled city. expectaltons of theIr people too zero were likely for Minnesota as the panel itself wf.h to .ecure, -America.'.. great master of tank husband and father." flanks of the gr t batt! of the or It may rely on the fallure of the wartare, Gen. Ceor&e S. Patton Patton's 'ob was w r, and he "Tell him I am deeply honored," WASHINGTON (AP)-Clvilian much In regard to definite results and the Dakotas by Sunday II~ bulie, and th t the Germ n d I company to cont~ thil i.lSue liS an Jr., died peacefully in his 11e p Marshall said to Chiang's personal Production Administrator John D. from the conference. the cold wave moves in. establishment of the fact of nbH- y terday of a blood clot which h d worked at it with amadn, suc_ vance, which HIll r prom ed chiel -of staff, Gen. Shang Chen. There WDS no oUieial ~ord on Sl.Ib.zero weat.her air dv ity to pay," the litatement Id. developed gangrene In hi' lung!; I' for mor than 30 years. But would r ach Paris by Chl'lstmns, who was acting us jnterpreler. Small saic;i yesterday the govern- progress of the millisters confer- ~o extended Irom Montanll It wal empha~lzed, however, and w kened bls w rrlor h rt. he wall .tr l' to lbe world of had b n lowed. Chiang replied simply: ment will sce to li ~hat" fair ence, which had been slated tJ northern lUinou, but the n w 11, !pair "1 welcome you to Nanking." share" of homes built next year discuss control. 01 atomic energy thot "abnHy to pay i a Umltallon Mra. Patton, who was al his side, diplomacy, and hll r mark and Th /'Iemy br' klhroullh had cold air mas \\AIlS expecteq to on ane! does not nec arHy consU- decided Immediately U\a\ the gen- actions off the n Id of b Ule k pt hed 40 mll aero Bel,lum; The two men met tor the first will sell lor less than $lO,ooO. and ot~er subJoct held VItal to drive temperatures lower. ,Ie f tute 8 measure oC the omount ot eral would be burled In EUrope, him In hot water. bad brok n throl.l&h Luxembourg, time since the Cairo co. nfe['ence In Here ore highlights of the 1'1 .. " ItI,e mamtenance of ~orJd peace. Meanwhile the south enjoyee! falr increll e." along the loried route of the The lirst iT at criLiciJ;m rose had cut allied supply lines and was 1943. which will go into effect Jan. ~t;: ~ome sort o~ eommuntque or an- nversion job relief trom the cold wave lind F 0 I J 0 win g Sch.wellenb ch's powerful Third army h drove to wh n Patton slapped a ho pitaUzed drlvin& on Sedan, when Gen. ~uadrangle," The Chlang-Marshall talks were 1. T. en criUea lly SCllrce kinds of Ilouneemelll [5 anticipated when heavy mow which have cau ed statement, which was given d1r- victory. soldier who was sulrerln, from Omar N. Bl'adley called Patlon, ~erinte nden t expected to covel' a wide rllM" "f building materiul will be· restored the conference closes .. at least 101 death In 18 ta~ . ectly to the oll waee fact-finding "Tbe exact place of burIal has battle fnUllIe, durin, the Slcllton and asked how loni It would wke topics, most pressing of which to a priorlties system designed to In th!S connection It w~s su, .(enance and Tempcratur were r turnlne board, thllt body recj)Ss~ until not been decided, but presumably campaign. Gen. Ei nhower made to shill the Third army Cram the 'ersity phy. were the question of halting In- channel them to homes to sell at I (ested III Am rlcan circles again to normal in the we. tero half Jan. 7 and the 011 oompanl and it will be in F.rnnce," UnJted Patton llpoloalze pubUcly, but kept Saar tu the bulge. ternal hostilities anQ the possible $111,000 or Ie s or rent at no more I that Byrncs sUll hoped to leave I or the ,ul[ stules and were ex CIO OU Worker union announced Stat beodQuarl rs onnounced. him ·ror hi a Jllnment lat r to the "Sir," old Patton, "U w n'l Jot-motion of a coalition govern- than $80 a month. Moscow by Christmas, but ob- :angle was I pected to rl e In f10rld and they would rllUlDe n tiDUonl on The fun ral probablJ" wilt be Mon- Third army. tall m s lonlf a. y u would menl luklng in all major political 2. During .the period ot con- . vera aid il wos unlJkely thllt 'y," he con other parts 01 the southea.;t.. a plant-by-plant basIs on Une 30 day. Three months a 0 Palton was think." groups. stnlc~ion and ror 30 days there- thc ministers would conclude their d partitions perc nt wll~ lucrea e t, ue. Plltton died aln10 1 a ycur la the removed fl'om command of hl. b Patton ltew b ck lo his head ially in the A formal dinner in MarshaU's after, builders wJU be required to' meetings by then. Byrnes plllnJ Spok men for several oll com- day after one of the greut.e!;t mlll- loved Third army a a rOliull ot quorlers at Noncy, lind called In :d to a sick honor was scheduled for last night. oCCcrs these homes excluslvcly to to relurn to the United SUItes be- panl IndIcated a settlement wa tal'Y Ieala In h1&tory-th 78-mlle erillclsm of hi cllons In c rry his .Ulrt. Meanwhile, Associated Press veterans. fore attending the leneral. asscm- 1 the parti· I po ·~Ible In private negoUatJons 00- plun"e by h1l thled ormy to the , Inlf outlhe denod[JcatJon progrum "G ntJem II," h ·old, "I hovo Correspondent Fred Hamp on l'e- 3. Applications [0[' govcrnment I bly of the Unltcd Nations /0 Lon- here will be fote the board reconveJ1es. 1 rellet of the battered men or Bas- i In Bavaria. He wa5 ploced In com called upon you b ror to do the ooms in the porled from Shanghai that the aid in obtaining materials will be Idon scheduled to beeln Jan. 10. Hitch-Hiker The General Molars faet-llndlne lo8lle, In la t winter's "BaWe o{ I mand of th llllh army, which had dllLlcult. This lime I'm asklnll the e when ci- continued lull on the north China I handled by the 52 Lield offices of Foreign qUarters said the [01- board allO rec cd atter recom-I the BuLae." b ome lllriely a "paper army" Impos Ible." And It was done. ~i1itaI'Y situation was regarded as the lederal housing administriltion eign mtnisters of the big thrce I ~. " mendl"( a r umption of collee- Lt. G n. Lucian K. Truscott, who COmpiline a hi ·tory of American Pnllon also I sUI'vlved by his at least partly attributable to Mar- which will issue so-called "HH" have no Intention of dominating /faxing and I live bar,aJninlt. IUCCe«led Pallon 81 commone! I' campa lens In the war. son, Lt. George S. Patton, HI, and , university shall's arrival in the country. The priority j'atings to builders who the United Nallons organIzation, Slayer Hunted Board Chairman Lloyd Garrison 01 tbe Third army. saId "we per-I Ju.wt II year ugo, on D .22, G r two ·dauahter., Mr•. James W. Tot ving navy conflicting factions in the unde- qualify. nor Is there any move afoo! to aie! It the strike was not lIetUed sonally lost a Ireat frl nd and the m n broadcasla announced thal ten and Mr . Jam K. Walers, mtal chairs dared civil war seemed to be 4. FHA wlll examine builders' dIssolve the council of foreign HOLLAND,' Mich. (AP)-Search by Dec. 28, hearingS' would be re- country a (reot clUzen and sold- Ptton's Third army h d beaun both of Wa hinllton, D. C. I reconvert marking lime, he said, while Wl!ry to (!Cure [ull under tanding TUJ'llcr, 1941, chic! of navy war "I didn't swim that river; I ported serlous)y ill In hospiUlls. III1d hot, approached the lrl4cker, 1,000 a ~ay during the last week dug (rom the cemetery here con the Dane to earch the luggag of and CQmpli8nce with baic prcm- plllns, asserted that the top offi wadpd it," The fil'Sl of the deaths occurred Delbert Dempsey of Frawonl, - but the numbers arrlvln( by cers here anticipated a possible tained 00 more than half the ash 60Wiers of the German army who aIr ady t f rth." The it'uth of the matt.er, Rankin Wednesday, and Thursday com- Mich., made u casual remark to ship from the Pacific Inc:rea;;ed are nl from Denmark to Ger- Observing that Jupan's main ob- Japanese blow in 1941, got the aid, was that Pattol)., seeklng to pony officials and poliee began hIm, and flagged a ride ill a car at an even gre.ter rale. that could be expecled from the cremation of a body the sixt! of many. sta Ie Js "a lack of sulticient qual- fleet "prepared for war" and issued encourag~ his men as they ap an eUort to reach all 01 the per- headed Ilorth. "Flew, ir alU', of the troops Mrs. Carpenter's "A former senior lieulelUlIlt of lflod 1 oders," the statement said "entirely clear" action orders. He proached the Sure river in Lux sons who had drunk any of the Beh's body was round, seated to now on the west coast wlll be added that Admiral Husband E. The to:xieologi5t suld he had nol the HIUerite army, Gerha.rdt Mar- poUtical power inthc future will embourg in the sPI'ing of 1945, alcohol to advise lhem to seck I the rIght of the front Stilt o[ his home for Cbrlstmr.;," said the tin categoricolly reCused to open be won by tile party "which spon Kimmel, Pacific fleet commander, wadcd into it and walked across. treatment. enr. about 9 u. m. ye erday. war d~parpt)enl in a statement. completed bis analysis of the ashes did not. comply with those orders. to detet'mine wbether trec of ar his (luggage) Clll> , maintaining IMlrs tile greotesl lmplementation to San F,rancuco-scheduled ar that he was a \gnals office.r at- give cffed to low and eonsUtu Had Kimmel complied with in rival of 2.,423 men on 31 .hips. senic were present. The mUrder structions to take deployment melt charge filed again t CLLoe in Dal tached to the Brilish troop ," the tional changes," creatill!! a govern FIVE KILLED IN CAR CRASH Expected backlo, for Christmas radio added. "The DanlJih frontier menl envisaged by lhe Potsdam Am sures, Turner contended, damage (the Joes Silting out the bolldav las, Tex~ staled that his alleged on Dec. 7, 1941, would huve been victim there was thought to bave guards were compelled to usc declaration and MacArthur direc still Car frOJD home) more than ann. The German Marlln was tiv . with "matel'lally reduced." 40,000. died from poisonini. Rep. Murphy (D., Pa.) noted s rio u.... ly wouncted." "The chang as dJreeted are ex- ,.erve Los An(eles--«beduled ar • • • The broodcast said the Germans peeted to be assimilllted rapidly, that a navy eoul't of inquil-y into \ rival of 12,239 men on 16 ships. Pearl Harbor report.ed that the ef LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sail "considered themselves under a re- because iL h been shown that our fectiveness 01 Hawaii's defense OhrisUnal package o( abo u t Francisco's district attorney, Ed- gime of special protection and do the Dveraee Japane is very anx plans "depended entirely upon ad 20,000. mund Brown, con1erred y tcrday not wish to submit themselves to iom to be oul (rom under the yoke vance knowledge that on attack with Fred Howaer, district attorney the demands of the Danish frontier of militarism," headquarters sald. was to be expected within narrow here, in an investigaUon to deler- lroops." • • mine. what connection, if any, Al- "On Dec. 18 alone, Qarush Iron limits of time." We're Busier; Bees 1 Should not some (urUler wa!,ning !red L. Cline, 56, had with the lier troops confiscated several tons been sent after that of Nov. 27'1 he I Ar. in Hibernation I deaUlS and disappearllnce of !leV- of Dani h good [rom German 601- asked. • • eral elderly women. Idiers and oUiccrs," the radio "That was done with the code SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A CUne, held in San Francisco, is added. message," Turner replied. In elII')y desert news reporter wrole a pre charged in Dallas, Tex., willl the ------Decembel' word was dispatched to Chrlstmlls story, detailing prepa murder of a woman in a Dallas Cleaners Back KJlnmel that the Japanese were rations by schools, churches and holel in October, 194.4. WA~HlNGTON (AP)-Hou c- bumiJ1g theu' codes. other ,roups lor Yuletide observ Brown said hc and his assistant, bold vacuum cleaners and attach Turner had testified earlier he ances. Harding McQUire, took 8 state- ments will come back on lhe mar had understood from Admu'al At the end of her story she at ment from CUne's son, Marion kel at retail prices of March, 194.2, Leigh Noyes, chief of naval oom- tached It reD)8rk intended only lor Cline, unlverl>Jty law titudent the OPA announced yesterday. . munlcations, on three occasions the city cJesk, but it slipped past He saId the son ha"d no eonnec- The agency authorized an in- that Admirlll Kimmel was gettipg copyre,ders and proofreaders to lion with the ca.ses under investl- crease o{ six-percent over Oct. 1- at Pearillarbor aU the information ONE OF FIVE PERSONS Wed when &he car In which &hey were rldln, ,1UJlfed over an em"nkn=~ appear In thf paper like tbfs: llllion but was questioned respect- 15, 1941, manufacturers' prices, Washington was getting from reue! I tbree mil. w.1 of OUve, Is carried from &he wreeka,e. The vlcUml were aU ldeaUfted .. De. ~es "Gad. ,rea't we busT lilUe ing numerous property transac- but said tbIs boost would have to II IB~U~Y!...!(!/M~=t.='4~fIIII=4:4"';::!!:::~ In: J apllnese ~i.x!es. r~id\mll. (AP WlB"JlgJO) ~?" lions of bls Cather. be ab50rbeci by dWell, .. PAGE TWO SATURDAY, DECEMBER' ~~, isis' s Editorials: OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN s Fallacies About Our Occupation Policy Keeping Up Japanese Spirit p The problem of what to do with Germany h'ine, 0 deep-rooted in tl1e mind of German youth, would nevel' permit the simple enjoy * * * It's Labeled 'Education,'* * * But It Really * * * has evid~tly caused one congressman to g ive of up in de. pair. enator Jame. O. Eastland, ment of industrial po weI'. lndu. t1'ial capac Means Maintaining Morale of ity to Nazi Germany was wal'making power Vol. xxn No. '16 D emocrat of Mi is ippi, ha called for an and notbing more. SAIGON, Indochina-The main By CHARLES A. GRUMlCH chological warfare oUicers never n' economically strong Germany as bulw rk leo a The econd fallacy in enators Ea. tland's tenance of Japanese morale has AP Newsfeatures theless'realisticaUy face the possi_ UNIVERSITY CALENDAR pi against RUASia. The term "despail·1I is ap become a cubous burden shoul bilities of individual Japanese argument is 1hat European recovery is im Saturday. Dee. 22 . tion~ senate chamber, Old C'lIiwl plied to this sugge tion becau e it so clo. ely dered by the allies under the label crack ups that may 1urther harm possible wi~hout German recovery. For too dance program Y{hich was insti 8 ):1. m. Basketball' Iowa vs. Tuesd~y, Jan. 1 I VI l'esembll'S t\le cry of the short-sighted" fix long Germany stifl d the illdustrial gl'owth of "education." tuted as soon as the first re-occu the allied efforts before the sur sci rendered enemy can be taken to Illinois, fieldhouse. 8 ll. m. J3asketb"aI\: st. LoUis ers" after World War L of other cOLHltrics through her notorious in. Allied authorities have aeknoW tlation troops of southeast Asia university Iowa, fieldhouse. DI the home islands, months hence. nursda.y, Dec. 27 vs. Senato1' Eastland told the senate t11at Rns mationsl ca~'tc l s. German industrial re IMged that keeping surrendered stepped 'ashore. 2 p. m. Partner bridge, Univer j\{ollday, Jan. , th' t Rara-Klri Forgot~ n sill. Wlis a" pJ'edll tory, aggressor nation." covel'y might m an European di aster. personnel's spirits up, as a pre Although dealing witl1 an ap sity club. 8 a. m. Class s resumed of ventive against violence, deser parel\t lack of imagination and This is a far cry from the popu Communism, 11e Raid, oon would take control 'rhe third fallacy in the senatoJ"s argu lar concern, noted as late as three FrIday, Dec. 28 8 p. m. Basketball: Wisconsin tion and gun-smuggling, has be probably the best wooden-soldier Conference on Veterans Educa- vs. Iowa, fieldhouse. TIl of aU Germany unle. the United State ments is that Bus ia should be regarded as come an essential part of the gui- like discipline in the world, psy- months ago, over how many J apa abandons its "sadistic" policy toward "this a "predatory, aggressor 11lltion. " Rns ill nese would committ suicide. Hara tb (1'411' lDf...... tIoII reprdlD, dates be,ond. til.. lebec"ale, ... late en my state." II Bugge tcd II. new pro k.iri is an almost Jorgotten term tic made treme11dou sacrifices in this war, and ...... UODJ ID the .rnce of the Pres.ldeD~. Old ell/llel) gram to permit the Germans to find "con now around the surrender cil'cuit ra , I i'> going t.o be kept eXlremely busy recon tal , tentment in prosperity," and thns remain in structing its own devastated country f01' of southeast Asia. : Sho~tld We Have 6Sc Minimum Wage lawt OE~ERAL NOTICES po western civilization. peacetime living. a I The Japanese morale problem is As Deba.ed by: expected to increase when sur Inl H e charged that the United tates was In te,td of re~ntding Russia; as Senator I rendered personnel fills the cOn jlOLmAyo UBllAltY HOURS HANClIER ORATORICAL Uc Rh!.rvin~ the German people, and letting their Eastland su ....ge ts, with reproachful clistrust, RERBERTS.THATCBER• ALLEN W. llUCf[m\ centration camps in a small Brit_ 'rteaqing rooms, Macbride haH CONTEST iudu trIes be canied off, It this is continued wq mll. t H'y to hnngine how OUl' actions mu t Associate' Counsel, American Author of "Labor's Road to ish-ruled area north of Saigon. aYid LIbrarY ajlnex; 'Dec. 21, 8;30 Manuscripts for the Hancher 51 much · lon~ el·1 he said, it will drive Gel'rtl'any a\lpear to them. WllO should be expected to Federation of Labor Plenty"; President, EddY-Rucker There isn't enou.gh work to pass a. rn. - 12 M., 1 - 5 p. m., Dec. n, oratorical contest will'be due In into Communism. And he cautioned that be more undel . tandIng, !l. nation that ha had Nlck'els Oompany, Management around among the 70,000 to 80,000 8:30 a. m.-12 M .; Dec. 24 and :It, room S, Schaeffer hall, by 5 p. m. llbrari~ closed; Dee. 26-28, 1l:30 "there CIIll be no permanent Europeon re almost 100 yem'S of public education or a . Counsel in the camps, or to reql4il'e their Monday, Jan. 21. Students inter tn,-12 M., 1-5 p. Dec 29, 8:30 covery withOlH Germany recovery." nation tlll'it 'has been considered li ter ate for presence on labor parties outsid e a. m. ested in discussing mqnllljcrlpls a. 'm.-12 M.; bec. 31, 8:30 a. m.- are invited to arrang'e cbnfer. There are three ba ic fallacies in Senator only yeal' . MR, TIlATCIl'ER OPENS: De MB;. RUCKEll OPENS: Without under all ied supervision. a 25 12 M" 1-5 p. tn.; .)'an. 1, libraries ence. E a Uand's arguments. The first is that the '1'JlC only chargo Senator Eastland has partment of labor studies indicate an equal increase in productivity a It is axiomatic that any army an hourly rate of 87 cents for a 40- whether a going concern or Sl4r ciosed; Jan. 2-4, t30 a. rn .-12 M., FRANKLIN H. KNOWER. German wou ld find "contentment in . pros made tbllt )l8.S any basis of fact is that the 60 percent increase in mjnimum rendered~deteriorates in idle Ipel'ity".. again by becoming indu, trinlly policy of thc Allies jn Germany i. unsatis hour week is necessary to provide bare subsistence for a family of wage\frah!s can bave but one re ness. l-;:~:i; ·~~~.s5, f~~3~:pa~i~:n~i !ltrong.Perhaps they would find ;pl'ospel'ity, factory lind ma.y lead to stlll'vation of thou libraries will be posted 'on the CANDmATES FOR Anv ANCED four. Obviously, a 65 cent mini sult-to increase unit costs. In The Japanese are notorious DEGREES AT THE FEBRUAlY hlit contentment for Germany and the rest of sands. 'l.'hls is by many as a situ doors of each iibrary. l'~cogl11zed mum is socially desirable if it is turn, there can be but two conse eager beavers and apparently are CONVOCATION 1!:urope would be impo. ible. Th Nazi doc- ation that must be J'ctl'lcdicd. economically so u n d. Economists quences: (1) prices must be raised; anxious to show the allies their Reserve 'b09k$ may be with Note the following: agree that to increase purchasing abilities in carrying ou t prescribed drawn lor the 'holiday vaca't.ion be if so, this means exploiting 135 1. Copy lOr the doctoral Ilro power in the lower income brack duties. tween 1 and 6 p. m. bee. 20, and gram is due in the graduate o!!ice minidn consumers to benefit a few should be retu1'ned by 12 M., J an. hills the light$ begin to gleam in the dusk as ets is not only economically sound Prison Lite Tough on Dec. 21. Afitis 0' China Reds 7, ]946. . the kerosene 1 mps are takeh from the oil but economically necessary if this million workers; or (2) i1 prices Concentration camp life will be 2. Theses are due for checking C4ine e at the Yenan Communist head- RALPlI E, ELLSWORTH 9.uilrlers hold that only with Bu sian cloth covered sh~ l vcs abpve the kitchen sink. nation's productive capacity is to are not nised, payments for the Spartan, and the Japanese com in the graduate office on J1Jn. It par be realized and a sound prosperous Dlrectnr t\~ipatioh call" a final and t horough. solution There 1s s0111elhillg aboht the mellow glow use Qf tools must be reduced, thus manders will have to find tasks to For doctoral candidates, tl'le ' ~b fl'olh a lanib iJla~ is c1lfferent ftom the economy to obtain. A considerable keep their personnel out of mis of fh e Pacific problems" be reached. exploiting 50 million tool-owners. COMMENCEMENT stract and $25 publication deposit b 'ightness of electl·jcity. As the farmwife segment of the consuming public chief. They likewise will have to are due also on th is daie. . That .l].as been the tenor of party and milf (2,500,000 1.n manufacturing alone) Either way, there is no net gain in keep them inside the perimeter of ANNOUNCEMENTS PlUS gr~y birch in t)lC stove for a hot, quick 3. Theses mUst be . finally., d~ tary nlen the last three ¢eeks, and it wlis defI receive less than 65 cents per 'hour. Students graduating . at the fiL'e to fry potatoes and to bake johnnycake national purchasing power, only a tl1e camp, for the allied forces are posited at the graduate offiC;e at nitely stated by party chairman Mao Tse Without adequate national capa different distribution. Either way inadequate to guard against either February commencement may . Tung's report to the seventh party congress for RUppel', she likes one lamp on the cooking city to consume, neither manufac order announcements at the least 24 hours before convQc~tJon. workingmen lose, for: If consum- Japanese escapes into innumerable CARL SEASHORE before the end of the war. table near the range, anotber on the table turrs nor farmers can sell all they alumni office, Old Capitol. Ord!'rs E. near the window wllE't· the 1'e 1 geraniums are capable of producing. Workers ers feel prices are too high, de- country-side hideaways or the in must be placed by noon, Jan. 12. Dean, the Graduate Coll~re "We lIold," Mao said then, "that th mand declines and so do employ- trusions of the Annamites, who in Kuomlntllng (nationalist party) should end . Ilnd begonia~ stand, and tIle big brass-bowled and farmers must !:eceive a luller Announcements are six cent.~ each ment and payrolls. All labor loses. some cases welcome Japanese col LANGUAGE ACllIEVF;MENT , it hostile attitude toward Ule Soviet Union lamp with the shad on tbe checked cloth share of the wealth they prOduce and cash should accomp~ny order. tl1at covers the dining table. -that is the lesson of the 1923- Or, it. tOOl-owners feel payments laboration against the French re F.G. HIGBEE TEST IN GEltMAN and immediately improve relations between tor the use of tools are too low, in- occupation forces. When, the countryman comes home latc 1929 era when an increaSingly Director of Convocations A language achievement test in China and the oviet Uuion." vestllJjmt in new tools declines. The allied forces ate spread frolb. a trip to thc Irrain mill it's good to see wider gap between volume of German (spoken or reading) will Mao allserted that Ru. ia was not only the wages paid and value of goodS pro Tha~ ~auses loss of employment in too thin at present to give the FRENOH READING be given Saturday, Jan. 19, froD\ the golden shaft shining out into the dark heavy industries depending on in- Japanese the altention they re first nation to renounce unequal treaties with ness from the windows. At tllC end of thc duced resulted in the great de EXAMINATION 9 a. m. to 12 M. Students who are pression. Increasing min i mum vestn]j!nt in new tools for jobs and quire - although that is the ready and willing to take this test China and make new ones, but wa the first day, a. the R. F. D. man is fini hing the long The Ph.D. French reading exam to supply aid to China in the war with Japan. rates will not raise prices nor jeo wages security. Either way work- avowed aim of the British com should report to the head of the route through the "alleys and among the ination will be given Saturday, 'rhe Communists hel'e llave given whole pardize profits. In manufacturing ihgmen lose. We need unlimited mand-and it is up to the Japa Jan. 12, 1946, 10 to 12 a. m. in room German department (room 106 11 ill s, he takes cheer from t.he pictures in the sale endol'Sement to the Sino-Ru.. ian tr aty generally wages comprise only 16 opportunity for the workingman to nese commanders to keep the cap 314, Schaeffer hall. Applicatlons Schaeffer hall) not later than lighted windows. Atld when the chotes are ihcr~e his productivity and thus tives from going "A.W.O.L.," per which gives the Soviet half of the control of percent of the value of products, are to be made by signing the sheet Wednesday, Jan. 16. For particu done for another day and a farmer comes his pay. Only more and better tOOls haps enforcing the rules by shoot the important Changchun railway in Man and in no industry more than 28 posted outside room 307, Schaef lars (rooms, etc.) see announce· across the daL'k yal'd, with the milk pails on percent. Price Adm i n i s t rat 0 r will jp.creases productivity; hence, ing the "deserters." churia as well as commercial rights in Port fer hall. No applications will be ac ment board of the German depart- one al'm and the lantel'll Rwinging by his side, Bowles recently stated that a 65 it is vital to encourage tool-owners Japanese desertions, gun-run- Dab'en and the right to fortify Pod ArUlUr. cepted after Thursday, Jan. ]0, ment. the light from the windows is a promi. of cent minimum "would have no ith adeC{uate payments :for the ning and dealings with Annamites f ERIC FUNK~ They insiRt the Kuomintang ha . hown no e 1946. the. ecuri1y and peace of l1Omt'. significant price consequence and lise of their toots. This stimulates hostile to the resumption of colo S. n. BUSfl lIead of the Genna\l such confidence in Russia a lthough recent in the long Tun would have the investment in new tools, thus ex- nialism are believed (0 be far lIead of Romance Languages Department gestures of help by Russia in the national effect of cutting prices." Corporate pand,iTlg jobs, payrolls and pur- fewer in Indochina than in In government effort to regain Manchuria prob. profits after taxes are now at an chasi\1g power to the benefit of all donesia. ably eased some suspicions. Covering alJ-Ume high of 10 bi1lion dollars, worl!:ingmen and women. There is However, the allied command While accepting Btl. ian profe.. ionR of 3 billion more than such profits in no ¢t/1er way. here consistently declines to in- amity as wI·itten in the Sino-Sovipt treaty, 1929. • . , . vestigate the scale of continued Chine. e Communist neverthele . reque. tAl • • • M , T H A 'r C IE R C Jl A L- Japanese opposition to the con The Capital MR, RUCKER CHALLENGES: Mr. I LENGES: Rucker wrongly as- qUerors. The same authority Iike !~;~~~no~e~~~ ~~U~~~~~'~~[~:k~,~~~~~,"~~~h~ lied governmontR "not to allow t/leir foreign an interpreter in The Associated cutting center of u maintaining ulll'emitting pre, ure against the and there was a strong feeling that is to raise mass pw'chasing power. * • • to pacify the people who have been That night the alert was still on. plot for world revolution which the e nations Japanese, thereby preventing them from be Japan was a divine country. Tokyoans went to bed fearfuUY still fear, They cite in support of the later Thus, any experiment in an in MR. RUCKER REPLIES: Mr. stirred to revolt by Japanese war "The gods are on our side," the coming entrenched in theil' stolen empit'e and creased minimum with the em and in th.e middle of the night an contention the Anglo-British reluctancc to Thatcher 1irst says (adjOining col- time fomentation and the oppor beople thought. enabling our timely advances acr09 the Pa ployer, such as unions (incident urnn), "increasing minimum wages tunity offered in the post-surren other air raid warning sburlded. share ihe secret of the atomic bomb. cific. " ally, non-profit organizations), em will not raise pricesi" now (above) der transition period. Reports of British prisoners There were not many ail' raid They claim tbat these fears of Husaia are Navy men recall widely published state ploying a comparative handful of he says, "some price increases sweepi.ng the streets in Singapore shelters, and people ran desper were received with joy. hardly worth debating and that the suspicions ments latc In attributed to a ,pokes employes, would be inconclusive might be necessary." Thus, in his ately about, woriderlng what to 1943, "Race \Var" are unfounded. mnn for General Douglas MacArthur, that even assuming, contrary to fact. confusion, he urges expoiting con do. There was another warning Mao says the Ru sian-brand of Commu that unions paid less than 87 cents sumet's (including labor - union "That's right," people said. "This before noon the following day. 1\ the outhwest Pacific had less than five per is a race war against the white was plain that air raid officials nism with a proletarian clictatorship and a cent of Amer\ca's military resources aud starting rate. With a 65 cent mini members) by price inflation, and, From All mum, over two and one-half m£! simultaneously reducibg payments man," were nervous. So were the peOple. one-party system llas no part in tbe plans of wa receiving Ie s than 10 percent of what Chine e Communists, who believe China lion workel's will be able to buy for tool use. One way he reduces Since there was an alliance with Alert warhings continued 10r America was shipping overseas. Germany, the idea of calling the needs a democratic state embracing several many products of farm and factory demand and job secw'ity; the other A~ound several days, but no rl1ids comt ecretary FOl'l'cstal touched on that sub heretofore denied them, and a vast prev~nts war a nce war was banned offi ·democratic classes. way jle tool expansion, I and private mumblings by some ject recently when lle te tified beforll the domestic market, heretofore un incre3sed productivity and pay. clally, but people wel'e saying: against the bad aim of the anti· The Communi ts also endorse the jnde senate' military affairs committee in opposi avaUable, will be opened to the Both ways, he limits job opportun "The next war will be with Ger- aircraft batteries anc:j Uui)nelfici. pendence claims of Korea and India. 'l'll y tion to the \var depal'tmen t 's consolidation benefit of our entire economy. ity, pay and future advancement The State many." ency of air raid authorities soon profess to hope that Grcat Britain, the United plan. Only thus can the American of all workingmen. All this to avoid disappeared. • States, France and the Netherlands will give • • • e e The argumcnt has been made before standard of living be maintained the real an5Wer~more tools, more ELDORA *(AP)- * *Dean Bishop, Some ~0II1e expected that. )a_ Time passed, and so dId tl1e Year ~ndependence to Burma, Malaya and French ths committee,'" he said, "that a single source ahd improved. /nore income for all. 15, l:>es Moines, was missing last panese trOO)l!i WOUld lal1d on the of 1urther air raids .. • tndoehina. As to Siam ('l'hailsnd), tl1ey be of deci iou Oll both military and civilian night trom the Eldora training United States west coast around Yanks }Jetter W/)rkers lieve it should be dealt with e e the same as . ide a oppo ed to the .joint cbief of staff schol tor boys, Superintendent F . Ihe lutn.mer of 1942, and ex By this tiMe therl! wer~ Allied prisoners in Japan. Pe6ple !lW the Fascist satellites in Europe. " paltel'n is desirable. Here again think the N. Cooper reported. pected the United States would I them being transported in !.rueD -John Roderick (AP). argument fail::;. Two other inmates who escaped fold up all SOOn as the lal1dlngs were made. to and from work. The J a~ aniis~ "It is my firm belief that victory in the ysterday had been returned. They were Harvey Longmeyer, 14, Dav • • * laborers who worked with lb. The lighted Window Pacific '(Va accelerated by many months and enport, and Kenneth Truesdale, , Amerlcans in nnloadlng freilbl (New York Times) Dusk falls ea rly theRe possibly by M much as a year by the navy's 15, Waterloo. That feeling of invincibtl1ty Was cars said the Americans were mott oadly shattered by the bombing 01 efficient and did twice I!!J much da~- s. As soon as the SUll drop below tIl e continuous and implacable insistence that a Cooper said Longmeyer and vigorous offenfl ive. against t he Japanese could l'oltyo April 18, 1942, by a group woork as the Japanese. The. Xmeri. horizon darknp s closes in quickly on the Truesdale hid in lockers in their led by Lt. Col. (now Lt. (}en.) ,L countryside. 'l'hen up and down the valley be prosecuted without doing injury to the cottage yesterday morning when Jllmes Doolittle. cabs were cheerful ~nd easl-iloinL ahd along the roads that curve around the succes. of our effort in Europe. other inmates were taken to break and waved to people as they The raid caml'! around noon. passed. The Japanese couldn't 'e The eyes of the army and its representa fast and to a work detail. Th!!y iiD. later walked out the main door, he t~ere was tlo aIr r~ld whthihg. der ;tand this attitude and thJ)u~1 THE DAIll' IOWAN tives on the joint chiefs of staff were in AbbLit lunch time, distant bbomlng it funny. e\'itably and qtlite properly fixed on Europe said. Both were picked up yester guns was heard and pliOple • • • Entered a8 Ie<.ond ctaas Iball matter at the day afternoon in Cleves, and re ot as the great central plain of battle, but I Lhougbt .maneuvers were in prog- One Japanese womail iit .. ~ post office at Iowa City, Iowa, under the act of submit thflt it was a wise thing that the turned 0 lnstitutiOh. congress ot March 2. 1879.1 Bishop, Cooper said, apparently tess. But the sbUhd of the g~ms class created an neldent w,,~ navy's eyes were turned toward the Pacific hid in bulldings on the grounds came closer a~d as the Doolittle was widely rep art eII. Alta Board of trustees: Wilbur Schramm, Rirk H. and a fort unate one that Admiral King was throughout the day. JJlahe~ ~ppellri!d qvel' 1'0j(~0, sirens watching Allied prisoners " Porter. A. Craig Baird, Paul R. Olson, Kenneth free to insist upon tho navy's point of view No trace has been fbUnd .o.f Earl ~ouhded . 1'h~ plnnes \l~p:mntly w/)rk, s h ~ said "okawatMl," Smith, Louise Johnston. Jean Newland. within the joint chiefs of staff." Stewart, Des Moines, and Richard tame irJ ftorn. bellind tokyo. Pene- me:ut/IIC', "I feel so sorr, tet Similar idea have also been expressed re Trauefter, Davenport, both ~Il, Ll'atlhg the city's perlm~ter ,,1 them." Fred M. Pownall. ptbll.her wlnts opj:)b ~He the waterfront • • * John A. Stlchnoth. Editor cently by other high ranking naval officers. who escaped Friday with a watcb Wally Stringham, Business Manager Naval commandel's in the Pacific, particul man's cnr, clothi'!S and bliltold, he 1'hl!y were flying low. Some army oificer Or ardlmt P.l' Claire DeVine, Circulation Manager lady Admiral William F. "Bull" Halsey, said. Ahtl-A rerart ~1I9r lriot is supposed to have over. made hi tory during those lean days by Vlew~d trhm the southwestern heard her remark, and rurnQts hid The Assoclated Press II e~clualve1y entitled scraping the bottom of the barrel and using nES MOINES (AP)-Dtstril:i it she was either slapped or glvtn to use for republicatlon all new. dlspatcbeJ!l ot anything that would float or fly to under court testimony disclQs~d yester- ernment and entb,cetnent bt 11- a scvere lecture. credited to It or not otherwise credited in thia take daring thlllsf where the enemy wasn't dllY that Pau1 W. Walters, p~s ~bor arid rambilng lrtws." By the time Saipan wa~ llJsi, paper and ~ the local new. herein. Moines civic ad Ion commJttee most people thought the sltiiillolt looking. They sUClceeded in large part be vice-pr~sldent, planned iln~ or- ~OONE double- was "serious." When the ftnl 'l'ELEPHONES cause of their very unorthodoxy. dered last Saturday's liquor raid at (AP) ..:. The Chinli-based. B-29's hit Ryu~ Editorial Office .... __... _.. _..... _ .. _ .. _.. fill! Had the more conservative theory of Babe's taproom. trtlck LIne !It the r0rfhwestern the fears of the days after 000:' Society Office ...... __...... _ ... ___..... fJ93 simply mail1taining a "holdhig op~ration" Walters, an attorney, is one at was bloc1Ce tor a snOrt little r!!turned. When .t!)e, aUlinea Office .. _.... __ ...... _._._._._.___ f1ll1 r~ilway !I~ prevailed, naval officerS contend, the war in three members and officers of the time yesterday, by the derailment rec~m n al$~ance B-29's ~~gan JI': committee, which was incorporated of sev(m cars of an castboun~ peal'lng ovel' Tokyo, mll ny fdieJ SATURDAY, DEC~MBER 22, 1945 t he Pacific would have been infinitely worse whcn offensive operations were resumed. last July to promote "better gov-I freight near Jordan Thursday. they were in..£Qt:..it. 'r .. _ m22 l'ali .. ' ~S SA TURDA¥. -DECtiMBER 22, ·1945 THt· D·A-t.LY -10 WAN• .10 W A .C.l T. Y. lOW A PAGE THREE ===~ ; liN PRESIDENTIAL CHECK ON SNOW Mai. Edward McCloy T.II, of China Experiences- llnd to Shanehai, where J was s. L. Miller Accepts born. In fact, I've been debating about etUin: there permanently. Position in PiHsburgh Former Frivol Editor Visits Old Haunls U's qwte a pI ce." Dr. Sidney L. Miller, professor of transportation at the Univer.dty By ANNETTE AVUY :;:d o~ se\"~ of $5000 dmomi- Funeral Rites Pending of Iowa since 1925, has been "Bein, born in Shan,hai and named professor and head ot raised In Nankin., 1 was p~ed transportation at the University of for wbat we found in China," said w!O ~~~:~ M~~~:;.':i,: IFor Charles Zager M.aj. cCloy. IOn of Prof, and Pittsburgh. the Chin cooks and interpmers 1I'S. H. This was announced by Dr. C. McCloy, 1 Oak Ridge, .....ere dubbed JlDuny. Alfred, Mor- Funeral arran ements ha\'~ not who has just returned home after Vincent W. Lanfear, dean of the timore, Woodrow, or whllle\'er yet been m de for Charles Zager, 15 months duty in the car tbester. school of business administration. eemed to fit. "Speakin of 81 who died in a local h~pjtal at "Most of the boyS had read too Dr. Miller Is HOW the assistant to much about Chinese tnandarins nam ," added 'ajor cCloY. 1:30 p. m. Thunday. He had been the deputy director of the office I .. there are only about forty Chl- a patient at the h pita! since Oe and paJodas. and they just didn't n .e surnames. There are probably «mber 5. of defense transportation. I find lhem," continued Major Mc more Wones In China than Smiths, Beginning his duties in Feb Cloy, e)Cplainl~ that most Ameri in Am ruary, Dr. Miller will coordinate can UwPl entered China, as the , Jones, and Gr rica." the university's program of avia malor did, from India. \brouab Wan To Go Baek tion and will give courses in air, China's "back door." The bare rice .. y ,I do want to ,0 back to raU, highway and water transpor fields and Un,y huts of tbe peasants China," ended the maj r. I def tation. An authority on trans in We5tern China were a ereat initely want to go back to north portation, he was caUed to Wash. " disappOintment to IllaIlY wldlers China, which 1 have ne\'er Inglon, first with the war produc expecting something straiaht out tion board and then in 1943 as of Marco Polo, or th~ Tal of Fu assistant to ODT Deputy Commis Manchu. sioner General C. D. Young. Before entering the armY in Dr. Miller directed the Unlver- j; ' " ~, March, 1942, Major McCloY at s1ty of Iowa's bureau of business ;" tended the university. where he research and served as economist [I t' ,,;';~!','" was editor of Frivol for hl.s last for the United Light and Power i ~ •. two years. At the university, he BASKETBALL Co. and for the Association of ii ," wa a member of Delta UpsUon American Roads. He was consul- I '" social fraternIty, Order of Artists. FIBST CONfERENCE GAME or THE SEASON I tant for the Iowa commerce com- , :~ . , . Beta Gamma SiiJlla. Union board, mission. I· AFI, Inter-fraternity court, and Born in Ravanna, Kan., he at- ! was captain of the IYmnasUcs tended Kansas State Teachers col- tearn. He JrlIduated in 1940. IM41. EDWAIlD eCLOY, lormer Frivol ecUtor of '3' to 'U, dl.sc: IOWA lege and received his Ph.D .deeree ' St1ld.le.l Chba_ ...... e eluula'es aDd former publlcaUoD procedur "ith PI' ent ecUtor, Kay from the University of Wisconsin. I ' He entered the army as a second Keller, J4 of 101lX Uy. VS. He was superintendent of schools Lieutenant and wu later sent. to 1------ I ' ll of Kansas and taught at Wisconsin ~: I '1~ t • < ~ the Yale university lanlU le transl4tlon 01 gan-bei jl 'dry pction tour of a rtaln regiment before coming here. . ,. :., ..'" • _ . .".' _ _ _ schOOl for four months, where he ,10. " or the American 'bottoms wh n the news of Mr. Roo velt' His writings include two books, s tUdl~ the Chinese lan,uage. He up'. Since the Chin e use very de th reached his section of the ILLINOIS "IJallway Transportation" and PRESIDENT HARRY S. TRUMAN takes a few momenta from bll 01. went 0 China as liaison ollicer high alcoboHc content rice wine Interior. He wa a ked to po k "1 n I and Transportation" and fielal duties to ee lor himself the heavy fan of now that blanli:e with tbe Eirhth Chinese dIvision, (120 proof) for their partl ,you at a unri. I.' m morlal rvic many articles in economic jour. Wuhlneton. The cbld executive rolls a .nowbaU on the White Bouae and sine. his was the tirst Uaison really know It wben you've been h Id for the late pr ident, and nals. C1'0~d8 . Now where's the topper tareet! unit attached to that particular dl- to one. Whoever named it ' wine' upon returnin, to town, he found TONIGHT Dr. Miller is a member of the vision, there were mls,lvnp on the mu t have certDlnly h d a (I' t another one takJng pi ee "All Mid-West Economic society, serv parts oC both American and Chl- en e ot humor." To lIluslrat~ the over China th t day, Chin h Jd Fieldhouse Ing as its president lour years. He nesc personnel. Imajor's stotement, rice win 1· memorial rvlc" aid Major Former SUI Student 5 Barriers Hinder "Our commanding ,eneral was calied Jln&-Ba (Air rald) juice, McCloy. Is also a member of the Ame~ican 8 P.M. EconomiC association, Order of a line man, and he seemed very Ior 'white llghlnlo,' by the Chinese. I Inflation erlous Artus and Alapha Kappa Psi. Receives Bronze Star World Peace-Kertzer pleased with the results. We had Accordlng to Major McCloy. a . IiPLendld cooperation from the Gan-Bel party waS given upon Inft tlon In China took on &1- . The MiUers bome in Iowa City troops. In laet, our outilt wu ny pretext. On Insp tion toUI'l> ganllc proportiol\li dUrLn, th Is at 422 Grant street. Sta1! Sgt. Lowell Matson, for Five main burrlers stand beCore ADMlSSION- mer student In the department of world peace and global under probably one of the best in Chino," he tried to make sure his vi III major's slay th reo "When w ar speech and dramatic art at the standing, according to Prot. Mor said the major. "But just the would be unannounced, 1 avln, rived we paid $10 (Chln e mon y) I·Book CoUPOD No, 10 University of Iowa, was recently ris Kertzer of the school of r - same, it 11 a funnY' situation, an litUe time for preparation. But on apl e tor egg ," he n ld. "Whcn or G.Dero1 AdmIuloo--$l. awarded the Bronze Star medal Iigion, who served for more than Amerlean lecond Ueutenant telUng everal occa Ions he was uraed 15 1w left t:'ey were lIin, tor $1<40 iElevator Relaxes for mer ito rio u s achievement two years as a Jewish chaplain ir. a Chinese colonel what to do." minut.es oft r arrival, to ltay l~r a dollara ch . Th blO t bill 1/' ChUdreD 50c Student TraHic against the Japanese on Luzon. the European war theater. SPolle ChlneM Before Eqllab celebration, hill host insisting "It's aw In circulation when I c me to Good Seat. Availabl. I Matson, a veteran of two years According to the m Jor. he waS all prepared, It's all prep red." that particular ecUon was a Chl- ExhQusting Profess Keruer, again teaching In the school of religion, listed the ~m~S~~h~wdllv~~~~ ~dlt~wQswR nn:~~~o:O~~~t~I.~B~u~t~w~h:e:n~I~I~f~~=I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ king untll he was seven. "And "At II gan-bel party everyone barriers as follows: (l) language, = suppa edly spoke Chinese belore sltJ around a Circular table lind During this vacation period I (2) historical occIdent, (3) short . ..:....-...... ~ ...... I spoke Engllsh," he added. lO t eots out of the same bowl," ex from Dec. 21 untll 8 a. m. Jan. 7 I sighted policies, (4) dlIferent cul , even went to Ii Chinese klnder- plalned the major. "Mo t Am rl the old elevator in East hall will tural levels and (5) charity. , larten. And yes, I was raised by can. Ie TIl to U e chopsllcks In FUNK~ have II rest too. Of course jani "The only road of life I the , Gennall a Chinese ahma." hurry, ond like to u e them. They tors may be using it regularly, or path intelligence-the path of ot His retum to Chino, however, are very convenient and very I OrU , a few 01 the faculty members who enlightened understand!ne of our want to catch up on some work was under dlUerenl clreurrulanc tary, except. tor the use of the com , selves and our fellowmen. All we than his d parture at the ag of munlty dl h. Each person has his may go up and down a couple of have won in the war Is freedom , seven. The EIghth dJvislon WIIS own bowl of rice, and th n • .... times. But it won't be the regu Lrom the nightmare of slavery Dnd , lar run-of-the-mlll elevator traf stationed In liOutbeastern China, ther Is the wine." 'i Night freedom to work out an cnllght and according to MIIJor McCloy, h vallable ,10. >es t uch part- I flc. cned pattern of living," he said. Maybe some are unfamiliar for day In, day out living, th t was usually varied considerably in .. "This lour last chance. Thnt probobly the most uncomfortable size, anywhere from a small wine with this old elevator- those who truth ha como WiUl the atomic "'1 t= have used only the nice shiny new theater of operations. gla to a tar£e water tumbl r. "It I bomb. Unless we seille our HI knew one man who had been wus always race to Ie who one that takes no trategic maneu. troublcs with InleJ1ll:ence lnstead I vel'ing at aU to shoot him to his In Chino tor 27 months, and hod could e t the smaller glru first, .. of by armed conflict we will b b n to Kunmln, on e. 'that was becau e when someone says I: dQstlnallon. "oun' I'" . the ploy rs on the swgo tor th whe(\ he arrived. Th r ,t ot tho be!!" you arc suppo ed to comply I i Students who have classes in final curwin," he continued. UJne he WIlS out 1n the weeds. regordles of size or quality of IIt l' , East hali, classes on the third, Prole or Kertzer believes that fourth, fifth or sixth floors, have Thre just im't any place in China your container," lau,hed the III' the salvation of civilization lies in perfected a foolproof, or nearly so, to go for art., so they ju t stay major. "The one red mine leo- I ~ the halls of hundred of unlver formula for making this elevator out In the hills and !leld . I've ture is that you are permitted to I' siUes and colleges all over the seen men los 50 poundJ IIvln& on have someone repr t'nl you, a II do their bidding. Stalf Set. Lowell Matson world. This elevator is no ordinary one rice and ,rass," Mal or McCloy tact that dcllnltely hod its ad- I -one which you merely step into, in the PacaIic, also wears the Com "We have hod many trial continued. van\.ages." I I: press a button, and at the end of bat lnIantryman's badge. chanc and [ailed; this ls our last With \lte army, hla chief dull ProbablY his blU t tr at, auid chance to think through a 1>lon Cor were o!!iclally divided Into two the major, was the arrival of , the ride step out on the desircd While a combat tnlantrymon he II humnn living that will work," de ports. The firlll was conductlnll Arn rlclIn hOrB ', Chin hors, I , floor. Oh no, ihis elevator lakes a edlled and compiled a complete certain amount of ingenuity, a clared Profe 'or K.eruer. schools for Chinese oIflcers IJnd according to th major, ill SUI II , history or the military partlclpa- enusted men, m8klne up IruinIng footed, but badlY suited 1I1l1 II certain amount of per son a 1 , ton of his unit in the Solomon's Boil salmon wrupped in. a while 1)[ t- wheedling, and sometlmes though schedul nd supervising lrain- crcaturca aooul Ih sue a Ioh battles. After completing J65 con- ing, and Lho second was supervl Ing laod pony. Aller looking at them - , of course not often, even a mild secutive days of Iront line duty cloth in about n Quart of salted issues of American weapons to thc for so long, lh n w Amcrlcon I , curse to produce t.hc desired re with the 25th division in the Luwn water for each pound or llsh. Chinese. They received American hOnl looked tremendous. _ , sults. campaign, his work in combat in-I After 15 minutes, drain and ro still on, r1fl , machlnc guns mortanl, 37 blJ1e Retlpec~ ROO8eveU • The great feat of stepping into telligence and in the compilation move fish Irom cloth. , Eear!ully mm's. engineer', suppU ,medical Iff the elevator is accomplished only of op~raUonal hlstol'Y covering the I suppUes, and a ,ood deal or radIo "B lore trrops went In, Am d- _: , night an· sbtu\ded. by the most persistent ellort. campaign won hlm the citation. equipment. They did not, however, cans hlld a (InC) r puwllon luna," _I , aii- raid Fh'st the student must get the ele Sergeant Matson left the Uni_ receive any American (ood or litatcd Major McCloy. nul some of .t , desper· vator to s top at the floor he's on. versity of Iowa in 1942 to enter the clothing," COncluded MnJor Me- the boy ' took udvflnwsr. or the s:::: what to Then he must open the door qulck service. He is now a member of the Cloy, uniform to eXi)loll th peopl, ,H1d _, like-a-flash before some other im Sixth army historical seclion and Gan·8ell'llriles they w l quick to L n~ n. Th y • patient "bell-pusher" on another is, stationed in Kyoto, Japan. "Our third main dUly moo bnd a vel")' d I> r peet lor the . I: floor rings, and he sees his ride Ito be attending Gan-Bel parLles," latc Pfeljldent Roosevelt, how v r. I shooting up or down without him cation nearly as much as the stu the major laughed. CIA Ut.eral Major McClOy was out on an in- • leaving him to walk to class or be dents who ride in it. Alter nearly late, lour months of having its sign, • Mer."' ChristzrLos To AlII: Now, for the most crucial part- "Capacity 8 to 10 people" ignored suppose he wanis to go up, this is by busy students, It will welcome .J . ~ used as an example because it is the holiday respite and be ready - the easier. He presses the button to' continue its journeys when .,- for the floor he wants. Then he Jan. 7 ro)\s around. -..., May your holidays be happy and remains with his weight against I ======~======.: ., it until he reaches his floor, at _t which time he must grab fran~ I .!!,tt.C"_~~~~M~~Et«(t4lt4Et4~(tjaIt!Q~~Il~~ . _ . _ _ _ . . _ _ . _ _ _ _ . , tically to pull the door open. If The Iowa-Illinois Gas . bright, filled with the friendliness , he fails to heed these two warn , ings, he is apt to shoot up and :1 , down intermittently at the will of and Electric Company -i and JOYs of aworld at peace. Borne person or persons waiting ., tor the elevator on different I _t , floors, The most difficult work comes A extends best wishes to if he desires to take the elevator =1 The Iowa Water Service Co. appre- ,= down. The student follows the ' Merry Christmas same procedure to get into it. But you and your family since the elevator won't respond and ~,t ciates your patronage, and 100 kfs or- 1," to II simple punch of any certain down button, he must punch a Best Wishes for floor higher than he is. After he jor a joyful Iwliday Iff.~! th' I'T has lltarted up, he must quickly ward fo serving you in e commg punch basement and hope that he A Joyous Holiday -I r, wlJl eet down liS far as first. season . .. ••• ~t So yOU can understand how the . Jfr year. It, old elevator needs a Christmas va- Season ~ J'I Ice Skating rNa will be clOMd Monday • ~ Iowa ~ throuqb Thursday, Dec. 24, to 28th.) ~ Melrose Lake ~ e~ DeU)' ~-5 P. M. (wer.Uter 1·1' P. M. pcrmUUn&' ) ~ ~ REICH'S CAFE It Waler Service ~ Dial 2448 or 6483 It il "" ...... , ...... ~ ...... , •.. , ...... """'""""""'" '! --_ ..- .. -- .. . ------Wil~cat Ineligibl~ Hawklels Bow State Tourney May Be Held Here The Daily Iowan King, (age Star, Ruled EVANSTON, III. (AP)-Leroy. western campus w h i c h inter sllldium last nl,ht. Kin,'s home aOONE. (AP)-The University of Jowa fieldhouse in Iowa City KIng, 6-foot, 7-Jnch Northwestern changes classroom courses with the Is at Denver, Col. or the Drake ! leJdhouse in Des Moines last night appeared as pos univel1;ity basketbl1ll center, yes- university. Previollllly, the Big Ten LoSs of the towering center is a To Dubuque sible sites of Iowa's 1946 state high school basketball toumament. '!'he Dairy Catue Congress hippodrome at Waterloo, intended sight terday was ruled ineligible by the had sanctioned King's eligibWty. serious blow to Coach {\rth)ll' (D u t ch) Lon borg's conference of the tourney, might not be available. school's faculty comrpittee on the A &ransler from Monmoulh grounds that the bibllcan student (Dt,) college, King bad scored 35 chances end probably will neces The State High School Athletic association awarded the site to SPOR'fS l was not a lull-time enrollee at the points In two Northwestem sitate a shift 01 Max Morris from Rally~ 38·33 Waterloo last month, providing the hippOdrome could be improved ...... •• "\. t ~ university .ames to date, He did not play forward back to the pivot positiOll in time for the tourney, which wi~ be held March 20, 21 and 22. SATUJU)AY.l>ECEMB£R 22. 1945 PAGE FOUR King is enrolled at the Garrett In Northwestern's pme with at which he led Big Ten scorln, DUBUQUE (Special) - De- Biblical institute on the North- Western Mlchl .. an at the CbJcago last season, fensive lapses in the secOnd half cost Iowa City another' Missis * * * sippi Valley conference Kame here last . niaht as Dubuque's Rams rallied to a 38-33 victory, Title Tsnig "hf W,Udcal ~illiy City high IIPBni to an early Illihi Challen lead in the game with Forward ___ . Trips Weslern Carson showing the way with • • • * * * three quick field goals. The ~CO NG LEADERS COMPE E TONIG~ Little Hawks led once, 15-9, but Dubuque Q1field goal by opened .. streteh drive that won night by dropping the determined Five of Iowa's "first. ix" men who won the champion hip will ___ ~oryn, II . .. 0 0 2 Chuck Lindgren. But it was two the pme. GreYhounds of Immaculate Con start tonight. 'l'he quintet wilt be risking not only the title de- 1'01 ..11 ..... 1111 13 rolals ...... 20 7 H lightning-fast goals three minutes The last half had a wild and ception, 22-17, in a tight defensive ·To Many times outs. wooly complex that reached a f cn, e, but a 1so a perf eet record thi eason and a home victory "Falled 10 report. earlier by Max Morris, all-West- battle. Bill Sueppel, Rambler for string of 16 atro ight. Score by quartero: ern conference center last year, climax 'When Bob Freeman, who ward, banged in six of St. Mary's 81. Ambrose ...... 16283047 h t Nth' I started at guard for the Little Iowa and I llinois have been bitter arch-rivals of the hardwood St. Patrick's ...... 1 6 22 30 t a put or western m a pos- nine field goals and added a free lor many yeats, but this year the • • • OUlcla lB: Lind; Graham . tion to get out in front. Hawks, was ejected lrom the throw to lead the scoring with ]3 game for slUgging. points, Illini again are handed the pre- .. - -, St, Patrick's Shamrocks made a Only five minutes before the Ferguson, brilliant Dub u que The score at halftime was tied game role as underdogs on the . ' TIP.OFF DATA desperate last half attempt to Broncos bad held a 3'7-26 ana guard, led the nams in scoring at 10 points each as both defenses fieldhouse floor, Illinois has lost .------... overcome a 28-6 halftime deficit, then a 39-28 lead before the its last live starts here, and has STARTING LINEUPS but the lead was too great and the WUdcats finally got thel\" of. with 10 points and played a fast, effectively throttled the other 1...... POI. J11lnels clever floor game, Johnson and won only three times in 15 games. Joel ...... f' ...... Cral, Irish fell before St. Ambro~e of fense untracked. team's ofiensi"e play. ;rhe Ram '-' h ded b WI.r ...... f' ...... D"'er D e po t 47 301 t 'ght Herzog trailed him with nine blers pushed into the lead in the , The Dluu are ea y a c. Wllklnloo .... c...... R.w. av n r - as n1. Morris had started the scoring in veS4:ran cuard. 6-foot 2-lnch POl 1e11 ...... G...... Burm ... ler Coach Johnny Oldrich placed a \ the first period with a tree throw. points each, tqird quarter, but COUldn't widen -_.. B ... t1 , WllkLnson ... . G...... Seyler Van Deusen's nine points the gap much duri/lg tl;Ie final heat. J ___ unnuter, only mem"",r TIm., PI,.c.: TonlrhL a' 8:Ot P . M. AI six-foot two hundl'ed pound club to put the Wildcats ahead, 1-0. l h 1- ed The Iowa FJeldbo.se. th fl d d topped the Lit;Ue Hawk scorers Inumr.culate Con c e p t .1 0 n of th e s tarlln. g f ve W 0 p ...y Tlckels: Only Oen.ral AdmJ •• lon Len, on e oor an they completely That was the only lea they en· and ~.reeman contributed eight Icored only three coals from tbe ..alnst Iowa last season. How- Broadcasl: WSUI and WILL, Cham- dominated the first half play. The joyed until Lindgren dumped In before leaving the game. (Ield all evening" and Forward ever, freshman Bob Doster is pal,n. ttl. * * * Saints led at the quarter 16-1 and his goal in the closing minutes. • • • DeShawk accounted for those. IOWA'S MURRAY WIER ILLINOIS' BOB DOSTER tbe team's leadlna' scorer with 28-6 at the half. Western Michigan ran the count to City high's freshman-sopho,.. ~t. Mary's stingy derense kept 79 points in six non_conference Mason Returns Whatever Cliff Kritta said to his 10-1 for the Broncos in less than more team lost its share of the ~he Cedar Rapids team's scoring .ames. Three other first year Irish squad between halves was foul' minutes and while the Wild. Mississippi Valley sophomore ridiculously lower tban the 61 - men wUl be In the lineup, but a very effective for an entirely dif. cats occasionally threatened-they league lead by bowing to the ~Int total they amassed In drub GDT Warns Bowl Crowds oouple of these have had experi· Sf · U ferent team took the floor to begin had the count at 18-16 and 20-18 Ram juniors, 34-27, in a prelim "lng St. Wel;lcelaus of the same ence at other schools. George la US nsure' the second half of what had looked -they never could catch the inary game. Despite the playing city, 61-15, recently. WASHINGTON (AP )-Football icemen are "piled up" along the Leddy. one Of Coacb Dou,. Mills like a rout, Michigan club until the fi nal per- of Gene Hettrick and Don Forward Andy Chuckalas potted fans who go to the west coast for Pacilic seaboard due to lack of cuarJl cboices, played with the The Shamrocks carried the fight iod . Iowa ,8eabawks season, to St. Ambrose controlling the re- Woods, who scored eight points two ~ield goals and a pair of char New Year's Day games run the transportation eastward, J. Mon last Morris scored 19 points to pace eacl1t, the Dubuque sophs led ity tosses for the Ramblers, and risk of temporarily being stranded Doster will match shots with Charles Mason Jr. returned from bounds and what jumped balls roe Johnson, ODT head, said in a the Wildcats to their victory, Mel most of the way, The victory E Brown that sparked the foot four-inch center, were out services of guard Warren Amling, Pacific coast during the holiday I as averaged 75.4 points agamst an drive when it appeared to be lagg By JACK HAND ill with the flu, lind forward Bob season Iaverage of 31.8 by non-loop foes. Big Ten leams Drop standing, Miller was high point NEW YORK (AP) - Tommy NEW ~ORK (AP) - Mildred ing. In addition their deadly ball Bowen, now in Toledo completing "If Pullman or coach equip- Iowa all five Holmes of Boston, who lost the (Babe) pldrickson ZaharJas has ~ny Wh~le \~as win~ing hawking completely upset the man (or the game with 17 points batting title to Phil Cavarretta of ' been voted the women athlete of the job of being discharged frqm ment is used in special service to Of. Its, game ~mp:esslve margms, smooth working St. Ambrose of- while ReHman controlled the St, the navy, Bowen was Ohio Stat~'~ the coast, I will take steps to have ~llino ls w~s wmnmg four B:nd lo~ Most Non-Loop Foes Chicago by three points: salvaged 1945 by spor~ writers ~articipat fense. Ambrose share of the rebounds in the National league slugging cham- ing in the annual Associated Press leading scorer in the first three this equipment loaded with troops 109 to OhlO state and Wrlght .Blr A check of the non-conference Bill Seemuth, Charlie Belger. addition to bagging six points. games of the season but Ray Sny- as soon as equipment arrives and field, Nebraska lost to the Ilhm, pionshjp with an average of .577 pOll and in. doWg fO equllll~ one records of Big Ten teams, including , and Tom Hoye along w~th Hoye's der, midget forward, took ovel' U)e is serviced for the return trip." 62-51, and to Iowa, 61-35. on 367 total bases in 636 times at record and set two others that may last night's games, revealed that I replacement Mer! Herdhska stood scoring chores ably last night and California's annual postseason bat. , stand t01; all time. Ithe conference has compiled 43 Rookie Bill Salkeld of Pitts- A3 Mildred pi.drick~n ~he won tallied 22 points. games are the Rose Bowl at Pasa- The Webfeet jumped out in edna and the Shrine all-star ch'lr victories against only five defeats, I LAST "FALLEN I burgh, who played in only 95 the honOr in ~932 beciluse of her Iowa, Michigan, Indiana, Purdue, DAY! ANGEL" games, was second, followed in track ability. Now, .13 years later, front and made quite a game of it ity contest at San Francisco. DePaul Dumps IMinnesota and Northwestern are ordr by Whitey Kurowski of Sl she repea,ted because of her prow- for half the first period before th~ The ODT said that travel condi. undefeated against non-loop com- Doors Open 1:15-10:00 p, M. Louis, Cavarretta and Mel Ott of ess as a golfer. j combination ot Snyder and Wayne tiona would not be "so pinched" at petition. New Yor1!:.Mrs, Zaharias, wile Ql wresUer Wells got hot and pulled the other games such as the Sugar The complete records of Big Ten Bucks away, Bowl in New Orleans, Cotton Oregon Slile Dixie Walker of Brooklyn, de. George Za)lari!\s, thus becomes the teams in non-conference play: I ~ : (~ ~ ~ il ), throwned baUIn&" champ, made second womlln to reign twi~e, Alice In those first minutes the score Bowl in Dallas and the Ol'ange W r. Pel. pt. OP STARTS up for it somewhat by annexlni MaJ'ble domJJrating th~ field in was tied four times and the lead Bowl in Miami, Fla, CHICAGO (AP)-DePaul uni- Iowa ...... 5 D 1.000 37T 159 SUNOA MlchJgan ...... 5 0 1.000 290 210 his tiM title in runs batted In 1939 and 194() when she was the changed hands four times until In.,lana ...... S D 1.000 284 2" with 12George Mikan, like . , D1RIC'ft:D , • I ·· a partial explanation of their dis- q'j:I I CAP- 0 (AP)--O,hicago appointing season, ,Amerioan Gears qOllstfi!d ~o iii 5"- and it was no contest from Lhere bigger margin than , has actuallY a leec;h, Oregon never was ahead, on in, decided 8JIY game played in the and the only time the Beavers ~~~~~~~ I l ~l~~~~~K Mel Ott added two more marks 43 victory over the indianapolis .;; I f 111M r..... Kil l" SIItu to the books by walking 71 times Kautskys, after trolling in the first Ohio SLal. (57) Or e~o n ( II) bowl. were in the game was after a Box Office Open 1:15--9:46 Ir fl pI I, lL pI Local bet-takers yesterday were minute and a half of play when AllHE10P • lim mAN , HIS TYMPANY A~ upping his lifetime total to 1,700 quarter. Stan Pat~i(:k, Gears for Snyder, 1 .• lD 2 4 Wilkins, I ., 0 0 3 l OE YOUR and by driving in 79 runs increased ward, who collected 20 pojnts, Kuhn. 'I. ••• 1 0 2 Hol1lne, 1 .. . 3 3 2 offering 12 points against St. the score was tied at 2-2. DePaul 1);3 i ;,.j¢II'~ Dagwood SlNGSI Goldman , I 0 0 0 Stamper, f • 0 I 0 Mary's and asking 14 against the ran the count up to 16-4 after his league record total to 1,856 began hitting in the second stanza Risen , .... . 2 ~ 1 Bray, t . .. . 2 D , Blond'- SWOONSI RBI's, and spelled the difference. Underm'n, c. 2 3 Hays, c .... 2 6 • Aggies, eigh minutes of play and the west ~,!~:,I\/.:: g ~ g~~:!ilt~n :' g' ! ! t I Most of the bookies were hazy coast club neve\, could get into Hu.ton, , .. D I 5lWrt"ht , g ., 1 0 0 Iabout the reaso~ tor the odds, for Ithe swing of things after that. r.b r~~~.:n, . ii: ~ ~ g although they can tell the mater- The Beavers did hold Mikan's STRICTLY AN Telal...... ;, iS lfolal ' ...... IS i; ii n~l great-gran~sire of every bang- scoring to one of his lowest tota~s I ' Halltirne Score: Ohio State 35 ; Orellon tall at the faIr grounqs, tew of of the sea~on, however. The blg Fir· 17pr" Throw. MlBsed: Qhlo State-Sny- them know a lateral Pll$S from a DePaul center, who next week is COWMIIA der, Kuhn 2, Ri sen " Huston, Under- le!t tackle, "The odds came down to be awarded trophies by the PICTURES Old Time Danne man. O,.."on-Wllklns " Hays, Wrllht 2. the line" was the only available Helms foundation as the outstand- Officials: Earl Town.end (Michigan) , and Jewell Younl (Purdue). explanation. in« collegillte basketball player of 'ISc ' And a Wonderful Time However, they were following 11945 and as the outstllnding col Ic. Fisherma n the gamblers' old rule of riding legian on the Maples for the last Is Predicted I.eive it :( with a winner. The Aggies have decade, scored 24 points to lead his Catches Queer Prey A Recill/Good Old Days" beaten their last 18 collegiate op· mats, Only six of the points ca me By With{ Strangle Ttackie ponents; the Gaels were upset by in the first half. • to1l1ondie Christmas Party Featuring UCLA in their most recent start. Little Jaisohn Hyun ot Oregon ...... ,...... _ ....p ...... "Eno OSHKOSH, Wis. (AP)-Arden Moreover, the Cowboys have State, almost a midget compared ' ...... ~ CMc YIIIIII E. Chellow went ice tishing on great advantages in weight, matur- to the rest of his teammates and I the Ins ilnd His 9 Piece Band ..... '-'"'l -- ...., Red Steele Lake Butte Des Morts- and caught ity, experience and res e r v e most of the Demons, was the star SINGLETON· LAKE' SlMIiS -NOW- tnen v strength, of the Beaver club, He tallied but a wolf. IN Ends Monday! 1IIrtIriI._· ...... · .... , City's j Riding his motorcycle on the Of the 44 Aggies who helped si~ pOints from his guard position, You've Heard on SLEEPY Worlds Latest News th~m frozen lake, Che\low saw a timber beat Texas Christian in the Cotton bu~ repeatedly sped throu&h the said M TIME Cartoon Fox and Houncla wolf leap from the bank find start Bowl last January, 11 returned DePaul defense to whip the ball the cor the Air , Now See Them GAL ~ for the opposite shore. Chellow this season-and if Coach Jim to a mate in scoring position: ------Be Sure to See Our terday. cqased the wolf back and fort.b Lookabaugh had handpicked tnem "The Kiddie Cartoon Show ai:(oss the. ice, Finally, tiring of the he would havl! chosen arjitOit te~ . BASKITBALL lip to ~ TONIGHT "t. Sheridan 84, CMlp MCCOy 31 ,arne, ,the WOlf hlilted abroupty same 11. SlX returnmt servlce~n SOulhern JIIlnols Normal 72, ArkIn ... Sa&. M'ornJq Dec. Ifill at "and at -tour ot them ftrst.atriniers-aTso St,le 4f ' '. 10 O'Olock. Same Prices ana was run down by the motor': Northwestern Un iversity 41, Western . Ing she have bolstered the quad, . necessa cycle. Mlehlgan 46 We Close Xmas Eve. CheUow grabbed the injured St. Mary's on the other hand VJllparalso University 65, Pepperdlne 'Sports Go to War' success, 10p~ighl BalirdOhl ColI.. e 110 6:00 p. m. Dec. 24th animal by the neck and plunged a starts nine fteshrTien lind two jun !!:au Claire Teachers ..... Stevens Poln t Edrar Kennedy Comedy The i.ors, and uses only about 15 men Teachers 30 Colortoon - Late News ended ' screwdriver into its heart. Chellow SI. t.ouJs University 50, University 01 Merry Xmas reglstered for a $20 state bounty, in its tougher games. Millourt 35 staged . SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22;-1945 ,THE DAILY IOWAN, l.QWA CaTY, IOWA PAGE FIVE B"S hOIlle The" Daily Want Ads Get Results Y .. are atwu- -..e __ , ANNOUNC~ I POR~______WORK WANTED FURNITURE MOVING uel PJUC are ... at u.. Callin<;J us for movlnq WOULD you rather live in a base- RAVE PICTURES taken of the HIGH CHOOL GffiL win look ;;;;;----;;;;;;;---- day, •• ment with lleat and running gang at JOur Chrtsunas or New af~r rblldren during holidays.. MAHER BROS. TRANSFER Assures a move that's really watB earnin& part ot your rent Ye r's party. Group hots made Phone 4104. Etftdnt Fumltur. KoviDI DRUG SHOP okay, thlJ1 in a trailer without Ad- in your bome. Jack 1. YOIl~, rar dress N. Iowan. 1l9~ E. College, phone 7771. WANTED AU About Oar WARDROBE SEBVlCB WANTED TO RENT WHERE TO GO WANTED: Puppy dog tor chil- dren. Writ Wilson Buertin, Thompson WANTED TO RENT: Two bed- WE HAVE a \nat in store tor you DIAL - 9696 - DIAL 6~ S. Dubuque. rftol1l fUmbhed house or apart wben it comes to load food. Transfer & Storage Co. I'bt'nt by C!i9clIaraed army pby i Open every night until 10 p. m., DIAL 2161 dan, \Vlr~ and daughter. Perma- c. O. D. CLEANERS nenl ltefMJl Dial 7312. undaYJ. until 8 p. m. THE AIR 509 SouUl GUbtl1 Street PORT INN t the airport 106 South Capitol FOR SAlE Cleanlnq Pr .... nq FOR SALE: Encyclopedia Brit ELECTRICAL SERVICE It's no secret --- aDd Blockhaq Hat. - tanica, 13th In 18 paper edition JACKSON ELEOl'IUC CO: Elec Our Spe c alty Buckram, good condltlon, $50. trical wirinI. appianees and Pickup and delivery service DIal 3872. radio repalrtnl. 101 S. Dubuque. that poi. e and charm STOKERS Dial M85. DIAL DIAL TRANSPORTATION WANTED come lrith good qroomiDq...... ••• DAY SEBVlCB INSTBUcnON 4433 4433 Immediate Delivery & STUDENT WANTS ride to Corpus " __~ ______- We pa~ 10 each for.u h.tacera______- .. ______.. ... Installation Christie after Christmas. Will DANCING LESSONS: Ballroom. To look your beIat at aU share expenses. Dinl 20~7. Dial 7248. Mimi Youde Wuriu. • Domestic - Commercial times have your cloth.. to8T ARD FOVIQ) w e 1e an e d and laundered tosif: Gold pin with blue ets. UA.N TO no'r Liberal reward. all 8898. Ground and nlCbt c 1ust Itart- olte~ Larew (ompany ___ me. can 1.Oda7. D\Ial ~ FOR SHOES OF MERIT roUND: Parker $1 pen on cam- liveD. TraIn1D. PIanft t~ lien\. 9681 pus. Call ext. 525. Shaw AJraaft Co. DtAI. '131 LOST: 'Black onyx ring wIth dia- ..._iii .....iiiii.,; ciiiJ~_..iiiiii llDd _ ...._.~ ___ J AND STYLE mond and initialed D. Senti KELLEY'S mental value. Reward. Call 3147. ANNOUNCEMEN1S 12t S. GI1bert Visit Strub's Mexzanine LOST: Black Qnd white SheaUer Behind the Mikes. pen Monday afternoon near 2nd Floor • • business dl.strJct.. Reward. Betty Ehlke, ext.. 626. DIAL 4161 By Helen Huber TODAY" paOeaAIM S Air Conditioned 8:00 Mornln. Chapel 8:15 MuslMlMlnlalurf!I LOST: Tan bfllf01d on bus. Con "let ("., ClM-WDII cfti, ' :Sf New., Tbe Dally I." .. tains important credentials. Re ~W1IO 11_' IOlI-WOM (,., 8:45 Prolram Calendar ward. Finder phone exl 8292. POPEY E CBS-WMT (MO) ABC-ItXBL (1IMI :;~ ~!,"~c:;t!:~~CMn MOM. llecord Play.,. for lteDt 9:30 Wha"a New In Book. LOST: Brown leather zjpper wal You radio listeners are in 10 a 9:f~ N ...... Til. Dall, 10".. Badlo a.palrInQ 10:00 Pa.ln. Mri. Amerlc. let on Dubuque between Wash PubJic AdOt.u for aD treat when Bob Crosby, recently 10:15 Aller Breakfast Coffee ington aDd Faircblld. Call 7823. . Ig:;tG FamoUl Sh~ Siory ID.door or Outdoc. discharged from the martne corps, 1 :C5 Yeoteroay·. "Mulleal Favorite. . b d d' 11 :00 Sports Time LOST: Wine Sheaffer Lifetime Oceaalou brmgs a ran new ra 10 pro- H:ji You Were There fountain pen, Trlu.mph. En- DIal 3265 Iowa City gram to the air beginning Jan. 1. B;~g ~~~~~P~lerlllde ,raved Elizabeth Beloker. Re • Eaat COU~ Sn.t The show will be heard Tuesdays 11 :110 Farm Fllllhe. wnrd. Call e.xt. 8257. "'ST C"S 0 12:00 Rl\)Ithnl Rarl)blel and 20-18 at 10 p. m. (.o. ) over D. n It,5I Ne ..., Til. DIll, to ..ln Christm3s day, Bob and his Bob- 11:45 Chl!lter BowIe. catch the 1:00 MuJlcal Chill! final per· cats will be featured on "Two %:01 New .. The nal1y I .... Hours of Stars" which aits over 2:10 81en Off !!v~nl", : CBS from 4 to 6 p. m. (EST.) 7:30 Drum Parad. While you're gathered around 7:5S Baa1cetb.lI Came the fire in your own home on nTWoall: luoIIl.lOIIT8 Christmas Eve, you'll be able to • D. Ill. 8,M , .... HELP WANTED WMT Helen HlY6 WHO Jubilee AND YOUR TEACHERS hear the Christmas Eve cere- WHO clla C10rl KXI!:L Stamp Col. FULL TIME BILLING cl rk and 1IIonies during which President KXEL ~n. 8.u t .•• bookkeeper. University Otti~. rll (41) .,16 P. mp...... WMT Mel. Crulle WILL THANK YOU IJ pt " Truman will light the big tree in WHO Ed McConnell WHO Saddl. S·md Dial 2111-6111 tor interview. I .• 4 0 I he nation's l:apital and deliver a KXEL H. R. Qro.. KXEL Hoedown I ~ I 0 8:S1 p. m. 10 ,...... 8 3 4 oliday message to the country. WMT FI,..t NI.tlter WMT NeW1l. Orant LEARN QUICKLY g .• 0 I , he fesliv lties will be broadcast WHO New•. Nelton WHO Sun..,t Frolic g .. 1 0 I ~ KXEL. Tr.... SaluteKXEL NeWI. 0...,.. AT I . 3 I I by the Mutual network tor a full 8:45 , . 10. 11:15 P .... . • 0 0 I VETERANS· LOOK HERE! IOWA CITY COMMERCIAL II 1 0 I half hour (5 to 5:30 p. m. EST), ~J i!r~ ~~!.rWo ~!!t:.r~ef:,; .... Men and women wanted t.o start Monday, Dec. 24. KXEL J . & A. n'bl lI:d It. m. COLLEGE 1 p . m. WMT Slnllln. Sam in business on our capItal. SeU Don't forget to listen t.o the WMT DIck Hayme, WHO Judy Cano I 8¢lne 200 Farm-Home Producu. Sunday night "Beulah" show WHO RIley', Life KXEL Nazare"'~ Hr. KXEL Woody H~r . lO : 4~ D.... Thousands of our dealers now when the versatile Marlin Hurt 1:80 p. 10. WMT "000 Club" make quick sales, big proms. For WMT Mayor of T. 1L p. m. ~dds a fourth role to his collec- WHO Truth, Con- WMT Newl particulars write Rawleigh' s, Dept. lion o! voices, that of the Rever- KXEL M. Fron\ G·2WHO New,. Muslc 8 p . m. KXEL New! IAL-284-193, Freeport, 111. end Harris. But even :tour roles WMT lilt Parade 1I:1~ , . m . ------Stokers are no strain for Hurt, who has WHO Barn Donee WMT Olf R""ord • CASHIER WANTED: Port-Ume dozens of other voices tucked KXEL Oan"b u.t~ .. KXEL Rey. Pfel.ltch or full-time. Experience not DOME TIC WHO 8:~ . 'Ba":,; D. WMT1I6~ Vie:-ni .. necessary. Iowa Thent r. 4way in his flexible larynx be- KXEL Boaton Sym. KXEL R'V. Pfel.ch -AL 0 COMMERCIAL sides tha t of himself, the sopranO 8:45 p. m. W I O p. m. Beulah and the baritone Bill. They WMT Fr., Oppt'" WHO New•• Lenhart ROOMS FOR RENT 8 p . m . 11 :4$ p. m. lMMEDlAT DELIVERY Include Gypsy Rose Levy, the vil- WHO Bam Danee WHO New. Mu.le ROOMS FOR RENT:---- Double Jage constable Jeff Higgins and ._inn p. m. KXEL Dance Orch. , w..... Celebrity CI'b , ~ III. rooM.. Call 2698. enough other assorted characters WMT Pc.,.. N w. I FOR RENT: Rooms for men now 10 populate a good-sized t.own. ~~L ~:~~l We Larew (0. vacant at the McBulre • 309 N. Rlverside drive. Phone 11432. Radio Service Sound System Rented for Partie. Carroll's Radio Service 20'7 N. LInn aus
TIme for winter cMnC_ver ali ETTA KETT A' Our VlrrU', StaDdarcl 8erY1ee Christmas Comer 01 LInn .. Colle... Phon.... ''It your tire', fiat.- fTrA I-IASN·r HAD Vatues DOD" e .... ea.U UL" A DAlE WITH At.N On.lEI2 Electric Razor" Ice katee. Un eo>' BUr Me 1"012 A r.emed dJ.. oad rlnn, Elec WESIG.'IeOUGHT tric Corn Poppers, FOUDialn Pen "EXCJ,.USIVE PORTIlAITS" "THE EVENINGS.' aDd PencU Se", Wrf t WaCcbea BY aDd Pocket WaCches. WARNER-MEDLIN STUDIOS S S. Dubuque Dial nil HOCK·EYE LOAN Speclalblnr In low-kef PorlraUure LOOKING LIKE THE QUEEN tha.t she ls, Queen Naill, motber of KInr No appolJdmeDt D~ 'arouk of Egypt pauses tor a moment with her dautbter. FaMIa. \vho Is a.lso a. queen, beln, the eonson 01 Itlq, or 8hah. Mohamed his bicycle the victim of a hit and Rna Pahlevi of Iran. Queen Fawaia., who Is on a Journey ,cross run driver. EIYpt, stopped In Cairo to see Queen Nazll. Pollce were able to locate the CLASSIFIED elr the next morning in the Nail BATECARJ: garage, and identiUed it through OLD HOME TOWN by STANL£Y !lOOM ANP BOARD by GENE AHERN 'rst sisted of classes every Monday. tire tracks lelt in the anow, and Poll'te Wednesday and Friday nights from CASH RATI ~I 7 to 10 p. m. by matching pieces of broken t HEAt> POFt "ffi.. 6US fOR.. 'tOUR FIRST ATOM The classes covered nearly every headlight found in the scene of •• Jdap- AN'( ~~ER J1~INc;. AROUNP BAFtt: El OuT A ..... AlL B,Rc>"'/N TODAYS CRow'> ended yesterday wibh a trial of a port streets. The investigators troduced sbould be in the same O~ 5"'OPPE~S - staged hit and run accident, con- found "Joe O'Toole" lylng. under condition OIl found. IIAG£ SIX THE D ~ ! L Y 1 ~ W~~, lOW A CIT Y, lOW A SATUWAY, DECEMBER 22.1945 . , £ - , ,. snted by the depa~tm~nts of the tory service lor communicants. be under the direction of Mrs . servIce for the convenience of today a t the regular hour. All church school The beginners and 10:30 a. m. Christmas festival Fred Bendull. parents with small children. dcpartments will partiCipate in (ii, Council CHURCH CAlENDAR primary departments will 'present scrvice in which the pastor will Thursday, 8 p. m. Prayer meet 6 p. m. oUr annual ChrislmllS the family Christmas service. their program around the tree in speak on "The Wonder of It AlII" ing and Bible study. prosram presented py the church 10:30 a. m. Family Chrls_ For Tomorrow and Next Week the social rooms of the c)lUrcb. Holy Codununion will be cele sc1}ool wl.1l occur .in the sanctu- serVice. A pageant, "Bethlehem' Junior. junior hlJll and youllJ brated. FIrs~ UnJl&rian Church ary. 7')1.' Clu'lstmas party for the will be presented by members 01 First. Chrl:stian Church . and for the postlude, "Gesu Bam'" people's groups will present a RefQses Vels ~hursday, 7:30 p. m. Young Gllberi and Jefferson streets wilolc family .will",toUo.w in Fel- the church school. The entirt , :::: 211 Iowa av~nue blno" by Yon. Christmas tableau in the church People's Christmas party in the The Bev. Evau A. Worthey, lowshlp · h~11. Sant~ will be there. junior department will sing in the r: The Rev. Donavan G. Hart, The choir under the dJrection of sanctuary. All will meet again aft church parlors. Dr. Harpel' will lead th.e carol , pageant choir. A story sermon, Prof C. .M . Stookey will sing for Paslor ::: minister erward in the social rooms of the singing around the Christmn..; "The First Christmsll Crib" b) Permit Request the anthem, "A Quest," by Charles church where there wHi be treats i 4:30 p. m. Chaplain Robert S. tree, and refreshments will be Dr. Pollock will follow the pq. 7 a. m. The Christian church Lutton. For the offertory, a solo 'l'be Rev. Leonard J. Brulman for the children and refreshments served. ea n t. There will be a special 01. hour over WMT. by Mrs. J. E. Waery, "He Shall The Rev. J. Walter McEleney I Mlller, USN.. who has been in the for all served by the Sarah Wick The 'kev. J. Ryan Belser, Ph.D 7 p. m. Town students, nurses fering for fOI'eign missions. "Can, The city council of Iowa City Feed His Flock" (I'om the Messiah ham group of the Baptist Women's Aleutians for the last two years, 9:30 a. m. Church school for all Sunday masses at 5:45, 8:30 and and Iowa City students who have tique de Noel" by Adam will be refused for the second time to by Handel. association. will be the speaker at the Christ •grant a class B club beer permit to age groups. Otis McKray will lead 10 a. m . been attending other colleges, and sung by Eugene Oliver lind "Thert 7 p. m. The University of Liie, 7 p. m. Universio/ of Life for mas vesper servlce. the Veterans of Foreign Wars post the devotionals. under the leadership of Mrs. Boyer Weekday masses at 7 and 8 a. m. The Rev. Mr. Worthley an others of collr:,e age are invited Were Shepherds" by Scott by Pa. high school young people at the to an it}forma.L Chri~tmas fireside trlcia Miller. Prof. H. O. LYle No. 2581, when it voted last night 10:30 a. m. The morning worship and the Rev. Mr. Waery, will meet F'jrst Friday masses at 5:45, 7 nounces that there will be no reg Congregational c h u I' C h. T his hour at the Student center. Dale will pIny organ numbers "Christ. at a meeting to accept the recom- senlice and serving of the Com at the church to sing carols in the church joins with the Christian, and 8 a. m. ular morning service either to. mendation of a committee that the munion. The Rev. Mr. Hart will community. Holy day masses at 5:45, 7 and DJlts Will give Ii digest of a mod- mas Partorale" by Core1li ; "Gesu Methodist, Presbyterian and Con morrow nor during the month of ern Chri:stmas story,' "The Good Bambino" and Yon and Christlnir petition be rejected. speak on: "Christmas, \vpat Is It Wednesday, 7 p. m. Choir prac gregational churches in SpOnsoring 8 a. m, and 12:15 p. m. January. The vesper service will The petition was presented at a to You?" Mrs. Ralph Sellhorn and tice. Shepherd" by Gunnar Gunnars- March" by Merkel. this youth program. Confessions from 3:30 to 5 and be substituted in its place. son. Refreshments and a variety meeting of the council Dec. 10, and I Mrs. George Spencer will sing a 7 p. m. Comrades of the Way, 7 to 8:30 a. m. on all Saturdays, Soak a rolling pin used lor the members moved to refer it to duet, "Jesu Bambino," by Jon. junior high group. of entertainment will follow. St. Paul's Lutberan UniVersity days beCore first Fridays and holy First MetbocUst Church rolls or pie crust in cold water "the committee" which considered A junior choir is in session dur Cburch days. Jefferson and Dubuque fU'eets First Presbyterian Church and scrub with stiff brush dipped the post's request for a permit tor ing the morn'ng worship service. St. Patrick's Church Jefferson and Gllbe" streets Newman club meets every Tues Dr. L. L. DunuJlI6ton. th" Rev. V. 26 E. Market street in warm water. Rinse off weD their clubrooms at 204% S. Du- A nursery service is maintained 22. E. Court street The Rev. John Beairam. VataDCy day of the school year at 7:30 V. Goff, ministers buque street earlier this year. The for all cradle age young people, Dr. P. UewisoD Pollock, minuter with boil ing water and set in The Rt. Rev. MsIT. Palrlck pastor p. m. in the Catholic student cen 9:15 a. m. Church school, Mrs. There will be no church school warm place. location desired in this petilion under competen~ care. . O'Rel1ly, pastor 9:30 a. m. Sunday school, . ter. Lowell Boyer, acting superin L was 22'h W. College street. 2:30 p. m. Children's Christmas The Rev. George Snell, a88lstaD~ 10:30 a. m. Dlvine worship in tendent. Each department meets in This committee was composed party will take place in the church pastor which the pastor will speakJln the Coralville Bible Church separate session. 1 h i .. \\ t't' k ~ OLD MIL Special ••• of the entire council and Mayor school auditorium. Treats for the 6:30 a. m. Low mass. theme, "Rejoice in the Lord Coralville I 10:30 ' a. m. Morning worship Teeters ex-officio. children will be distributed. 8:30 a. m. High mass. Alway'" Affiliated with service With sermon by Doctor An appJicat10n to st.art a new The churcp wpl be open Christ- 9:45 a. m. Low mass. 11 :30 a. m. The Lutheran hour 'e Evall6eJJcal Free Church 01 Dunnington, "Night Over Bethle- cab company, The Iowa Cab Co., mas day lor prayer and meditation. Daily masses at 8 p. m. over WMT or at I p. m. over America I hem." The cho~r, directed by Prof. and an application for a permit for Saturday masses at 7:30 a. m. KXEL. an additional cab from the Limited Trinity Episcopal Church • The Rev. Rudolph MtSlltrU, IHerald Stark, and WiUred Lee, Cab Co., were deferred until the 320 E. Collece street St. Wenceslaus' Church 2:30 p. m. Sunday school Christ- PUtor baritone, will sing the anthem, mas program rehearsal in tb 9:45 II. m. Sunday sehool with "Gesu Bambino" by Yon. Shirley next meeting of the council. The Rev. Frederle~ W. PutnaD}, 830 E. Davenport B~reet The Varsity-Hawkeye Cab Co. redor The Rev. Edward Neuzll, paslor chapel. classes for all ages. Leo Berg- Ann Harper, soprano, and choir, was granted permission to oper- 8 a. m. Holy Communion. The Rev. Joseph W. Hines, Monday, 7 p. m. Sunqay school thold, superintendent. will sing for the offertory. "They ate another cab. 9:30 a. m. Upper church school. assistant pastor Christmas program entitled, "The 11 a. m. Morning worship serv- Call Him Jesus" by Yon. Mrs. E. Light of the Gentiles." The publi~ The council discussed the pos- 10 a. m. High ~ c:hool class. 6:30 a. m. Low mass. ice. The pastor will present the W. Scheldrup, organist, has chosen sibility of cab inspections before 10:45 a. m: Morning prayer !\nd 8 a. m. Low mass. .is invited. . Cbl'istmas sermon on the subject to play: "Noels for :F'lutes" by permits were granted in order to sermon. Lower church schoo~ jn ~O a. m. High mass. Tuesday, 10:30 a. m. Chri$tmas "The Mystery of Godliness." D'Aquin, "Pastoral Symphony" keep defective and unsafe cars the parish house. Dally masses at 7 and 7:30 a. m. festival worship in which Pastor There will be no youth fellow- from "The Messiah" by Handel, WITH from being operated in Iowa City, ." p. m. Special rehearsal of sen- Saturday confessions from 3 to John Bertram will preach on the ship meeting this ··Sunday. finn "POstlude in 13 Flat" by Rob- HOLIDAY ICE CREAM but no official action was taken. ior choir in the church. 7 and from 7:30 to 8:30 p . m. subject, "Great Is the Mystery ot 7:30 p. m. Presentation of the ~ts. . " II"I-I!I (4! TREE AND BELL CENTERS The council granted a cigarette Monday, a:30 p. m. Junior choir GodLiness: God Is Manifest in the Christmas program by the entire I A church how' kindergarten is Flesh." . Sunday school. This program will maintained during the worship PInt QuaU permit to the Quadrangle soda meets at church to vest for car St. Mary's Church Ilc Pkr. 34e Pkr. fountain, and approved renewal of oiling at the University hospitals. 22Z E. Jefferson street a class C beer permit for Aaron 11 p. m. The midnight Christmas Rt. Rev. MlCr. Carl H. Meinberl', Zion Luthqn Chureh ola Mill', rumouJI 'rMt nnd 1w-1I I"Pnlf'r ,~ ....am 1>n cka"'JI Are A dPllrlou. holJd., Braverman, 101 S. Clinton street. Eucharist. The Eucharist will be pastor JohDaon and 81oomlncton Uef!;lPrL I Rirh, rl't'am7 ..... lIll1n let' • rCAn! An ordinance rezoning the area preceded by 15 minutes of carpls The Rev. J. W. Sclunlb, uslstaDt s1.reets l urroundlll • Iree SAO JOAO DEL REY, Brazil - This little town o[ the Brazilian interior, ... ,. ,