. - .... 'GOOD MORNING, IOWA CITY! Again the weatherman declares today will be fair and warmer. The high temperature should range at OWGI1 between 70 and 75 degrees. Low tonight about 45. EIItablished 1868 Vol.79. No. 8-AP News and Wirephoto Iowa City. Iowa, Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1946-Five Cents --~ • • • eport...... - I Ion u get U. S. Official'S Show Concern Over Dardanelles-Dispute R~queslNearly

8, JOHN. M. HIGHTOWER. ed the Turkish foreign office that that this view of the matter has 2. Said that the American rov­ any help as a result of the latest sador of thcir governments' basic leaders, Acheson declared simply ~ifty Percent the continuing policies of their been approved by President Tru­ ernment Intends to remain in note from Russia on the Dardan­ views. • that they were going over Lhe WASHINGTON (JP)-Underse­ governments are to oppose Rus­ man and represents basic Amer­ Korea-which presumably means elles and the United states has Askcd specifically about whcth- entire situation. crelary of State Acheson disclosed sian military e~pansion into the ican thinking on the Turkish issue. to keep troops there-until it his not held any discussions with Tur­ The only new question raised by critical waterway . between the Acheson discussed thc situation er the present situation in the . yesterday that state department brought about a unWed indepen­ key on this subject. the Russians is whcthcr the Turks More Annually Mediterranean and the Black sea. at a news conference at which he dent nation. Russia presenUy re­ Othel' informants explained Dardanelles is considered here to officials are holding a series of also: be a threat to peace, Acheson said should enter into direct negoti­ conferences on RUssia's latesL In fact, top American officials fuses to discuss unification of the Turkey has been kept constantly 1. Said that American naval country divided between the tha t American interests are con­ ations with them prelimiary to demand on Turkey for military contend that the real issue in the advised of both. British and Am­ State Board Hears forces have been operating in the Soviet and American armies. erican support for her opposition ccrned wlth questions which might any I more general convention of forces In the DardanEl/les. case goes far beyond control of Medi terranean since the beginn­ 3. Welcomed a declaration by to the Russian demands and would develop a threat to peace. powers under the Montreux pact PresidQnt Hancher At the same time Acheson the waterway and centers around ing of the American republic and Argentine foreign minister Bram­ not necessarily need be told that He told questioners he had no which has controlled the straits B4?fore Taking Action tenely defended the presence of the · independence Of Turkey. The he saw no reason why that should uglia that his government pro­ the Londqn and Washington poll­ information to show that the for the past ten years. Every in­ United States naval forces in the Turkish army is presently so con­ argum~t Qf these American be changed now.1 This comment poses lo speed thes clean-up 01 elliS still stand. However any in­ dication is that the United States DEf:J MOINE. (AP) - The Mediterranean. policy makers is that for Russia came in a passing reference to pro-Axis remnatnts in Argentina. formal or 50-called unofficial in­ stituted as to be ready for war on and Britain, whose policics arc University of Iowa WIIS reported Diplomatic authorities sa i d, to Iiave an adequate share in the Navy Secretary Forrestal's state­ Acheson declared flatly that quiries along that line would be instant notice. following parallel courses, will yesterday to have I\$ed appro­ Dt-anwhile, that American and defense of the straits In an air age ment Monday that these forces contrary to some reports and ru­ promptly met with a rea[firma­ As to thc nature of the confer­ stoutly oppose any such bilateral British embassies in Ankara pre­ she would have to occupy all of are in the Mediterranean to help tAors the Turkish government has tion by the American ambassador cnces within the dcpartment and talks and that the Turks will re­ priations of nearly $4,000,000 a IUmably had automatically advis- Turkey. There is reason to believe carry out foreign policy. not asked the United States for in Ankara and the British ambas- if necessary with army and navy lect that Soviet proposition. yeal' for the two yeol'S begin­ lung next July 1. That amOullt is up nearly 50 TENSE MOMENT IN FILM STRIKE BATTLE pet'cl!nt ovel' the $2,697,000 the Hint F.ederal Ailing Hull Death Sen.fence Ends Nazi Trial institution received from the last legislature. President Vil'gil M. Hancher Move 10 Ease. Sees Danger of tile university conferred yes­ For Twelve Hitler Lieutenants terday wi lh mem bCl'S of the state board of education on the 'lskings. What action the board Meat ·$~o,lage. To World Unity NUERNBERG, Germany (iP) - By G. K. HOD ENFIELD chenko, dissented on the ac­ took on the university's request Twelve men, headed by shabby, quittal of the trio and also de­ was not disclosed. clared that Hcss should have frozen-Ioced Hermann Goering, helm Keitel, ErJle~ KaItenbrun­ President Charles E. Friley 01 been sentenced to death instead Secretary ' ~nder50n Former Statesman now faced death on the gallows­ ner, Alfred Roscnberg, lIans Iowa State coHere al!K1 met wUh Frank. Wilhelm Frick, .JuJius of life imprisonment. the state board yesterday after­ _ll!9sests Possibility Suffers Stroke Day the end of a hideous trail of con­ Streicher, .' ritz SauckeJ. Col. The Soviet justice also asserted noon. The Iowa State appropri­ quest and deception which ran Of NtlHlt Requisitic;n Before 75th Birthday Gen. Alfred JodI, Arthur 'ey~s­ that the court erred in not dcclar­ ation last time was $2,720,000 a. ov(.r the broken bodies and shat­ lnquart and Martin Bormann ing that the Reich cabinet and year. The college's aSkin .. s also tered cities of millions of people. (tried in absentia). general staff and high command By OVID ·A. MARTIN By ALEX H. SINGLETON werc I;elleved to be SUbstantially Behind them now was the 10 were criminal organizations. higher. That also Is believed to WASHINGTON (tP)-Cri tically months suspense of their trial. • • • WAiSHlNGTON (A»-Govern­ Sentenced lo prison were Hess, Justice Robel·t 11. Jackson, chief lie true for Iowa State Teachers ment action to ease. the meat ill on the eve of his 75th birthday, Alone in their cells they knew Walther FUnk and Grand Admiral college which had an a.,nual Cordell Hull last night solemnly they probably had only until oct. U. S. prosecutor, said in a state­ shorlaae bobbed · up a posslblli~y Erich Raeder, life terms; Baldur appropriation of $740,000 last charged the big 5 powers with a 16 to live. The death sentences ment that he regretted that the yesterday as the agriculture de­ Von Schirach and Albert Speer, 20 time. "special responsibility" to cooper­ assessed against them yesterday tribunal had aequited Schacht and partment reported that production years; Con ltanlin Von Neurath, 15 President Malcolm Price of State at!! for world peace and warned by the four-power military Lri­ years; and Grand Admiral Karl Von Papen and had "declined to is only 27 percent 01 'what it was that failure to produce Lhat unity bunal in Lhe first international Teachers was among those who Doenilz, 10 years. declare the criminality or the gen­ conferred with the board. a year ago. would iead to "incalcuable disas- war crimes trial were expected to eral staff." He did not refer to ter." • Goering, whose guilt was de­ The budget askings for the var­ IndicalJons that" the, administra­ be carried out at tha t time in the the acquittal of Fritsche. Less than 24 hours after he Nuernberg jail. They hAve unUI clared by the court to be "unique ious state departments were sup­ Con is conSIdering' steps to m­ sllHel'ed a stl'ilke, the wartime sec­ midnight Sa turday to resort to In its enormity," put hiS' head in However, Jackson praised the posed to .have been in.by Sept. actilon of Lhe court loin sustaining crease supplles ~or home dlnner retary of state put forth his birth­ their last slim hope of clemency his hands and appeared lost in 1. The dlladline ordinarily isn't lhought, but his expression re­ and applying the principle that met by many departments, how­ t~bles and hospitals came from day mcssagc at-in his wOl'ds­ -appeal to Lhe four-man Allied mained immobile as Chief Justice aggressive war is a crime for ever. The legislature meets in ,Tan­ two sources - Representative "one of the most perilous juncture3 control council for Germany. in history." Sir Geoffrey Lawrence continued wbich statesmen may be individu­ uary. Spence (D-Ky.), chairman of the It was a message of confidence A redoubled force or Ameri- reading in a monotone. ally punished." The state board of control wlU house banking committee, and that the world's statesmen "will * * * . . .. have the same kind of a problem can guards surrounded the Jail • • • "I personally regard the con­ Secretary of Agriculture Ander- not fail in this critical test"-the where tbe condemned men were Shortly after their acquittal, to thresh out for the 13 institu­ viction of individuals as of sec­ 60n. task of forcing world peace. But housed. The guards had orders Schacht, Von Papen and Frit.s - tions under its control. Opinion is it was tempered by grim reminders che strolled smilingly out or the ondary lo."ortance cOlDJ)ared general that the various institu­ Spence told reporters that he to shoot to kiIJ on provocation. Witb the significance of the of the difficulties in the way of jail and held a tur~ulent news tions will wind up with a third "gathered th~ impression" at a that goal. conlerenee at which Schacht commitments by the four nations more money to spend than they got The doomed men- their' days of to tbe proposition tbat wars of conference with President Truman A DEPUTY SHERIFF stands with cocked pistol In his hand, near a • • • strutting power* * behind * them­ was as cocky and belllrerent as two years ago, fallen fellow officer, holdlnr back a crowd of demonstrators at the it agresslon are criminal and that ')'est.erday that the' government And noted plainly the Inter­ were lieutenants of Adolf Hitler. ever. M-G-M studio In Hollywood yesterday until the Injured man could national differences which al­ persecution of conquered minor­ may "take some xeme~ilal action" They were convicted for their part • • $ Budget askings from the state be helped to safety'. The tense moment carne during a clash between ready have developed-dlfllcul­ Ities on racial, religiOUS or po­ * * * to increase supplies. lje said he in helping Hitler scourge the The financier 01 Hitler's war educational inslitution:s are usually police officers and some 400 paradlnr pickets who said they were ties which he termed "danger- litical grounds is likewise crI­ was not at liberty to 'discuss what world with the greatest war of machine said that there used to be divided Into two general classifi­ ex-servicemen. (AP Wirephoto) ous." minal," Jackson said. the action migh t be. '" all time. "laws and free opinion in Ger­ • • • cations: general support, which in­ Sanest Reqalsltlonlnl' . . Seven other defendants - in­ many," but "there appeared to be cludes teachers' salaries and buil­ The defendants were tried under "It is perfectiy clear to me," neither laws nor free opinion ding and grounds maintenance, Secretary Anderson had earlier * * * * * * he said, "that all nations must, cluding black-browed R u dol f a bill of indictment containing four Iluggested that the go" ~rnment Hess, the posturing crackpot of the now." counts. All of the prisoners were and capital improvements, includ­ wtth whole-hearted devotion, eon·­ ing all academic building expan­ might requisition Ii vestock arriv­ Hnue to base their relations upon war crimes trial-were sentenced Theil' freedom may be short­ accused of at least two of the ing ilt markets. He raised this Clash to prison by the tribunal. Three lived, lor they face possible trial sion. Pickets, Police counts and some were accused of the paramount fact that the pri­ possibility in an address to New mary interests of each them men - Hans Fritsche, the propa­ before denazification boaI'M. Dr. all four. After the askings are submitted .-f to the sta te board, they are re­ Mexico cattlemen at Albuquerque alike lie in the assuring of its se­ gandist, Franz Von Papen, the Wilhelm Hoegner, German minis­ The counts were conspiracy, Monday. curity in a world at peace, and diplomat, and Hjalmar Schacht, ler-president of Bavaria, said that ferred to the board finance com­ In Hollywood crimes against the peace, namely mittee for approval before the Strike the financial wizard-were ac­ Spence said .that du~ing his visit the fostering, in such a world, of any of the three who remained in planning, preparing, initiating 01' board takes final action. From 10 the White House he had lalked the economic and social well-being quitted, with the Russian repre­ the Am~rican zone would be waging aggressive war; war the board, the askings are refel'­ to Mr. Truman about the QPA and HOLLYWOOD- (AP-- Night­ could help him und hold them off of its peopie." sentation on the tl'ibunal dissent­ hailed promptly before s u c h crimes, namely murder, exterm­ the "dissatisfaction of the peopie" sticks, bottles, rocks and clubs until others arrived was to draw For the last two weeks Hull had ing. boards and added that "this cer­ red to the state comptroller, who ination, enslavement, deportation makes up the state budget which with it. wielded yesterday in a bloody my gun." been in the process of pr~paring • • • tainly means several years at hard or other inhumane acts against Senteneed to hang. besides labor." the govel'nol' submits to the legis­ Evtdence that supplies are lm- clash between peace officers and Armed with photographs of the statement for J;'elease on his civilian populations, before or dur­ lature. proving very ' little was provlqed -tOO movie pickets, sent 19 men to rioting, 10 movie executives later birthday today. He entered th~ Goering, were Joachim Von The Ru!sian member or the ing the war, or persecutions, 'DO­ by an agriculture depa.rtmel')t re- hospitals and 13 to jail. U. S. naval hospital at nearby Rlbbentrop, Field Marshal WH- tribunal, Maj. Gen. I. T. NikU- litical or religious. For the last five years. the govev. apeared before DIstrict Attorney Bethesda, Md., 20 days ago, part­ nor's budget has been accepted by port that meat produced b)' feder- When the battle ceased the Fred Howser. They included Jo­ al\y Inspected slaught.rers last strikers yeJled that they would ly for a check-up, partly for a the legislation as a bona fide re­ seph Schn~k, Eddie Mannix, Jack * * * * * * week totaled only 80,000,000 turn out today in larger force. rest from the steady strain of work ACQUITTED * * * quest. Each state department has Warner and Y. Frank Freeman. NUERNBERG DEFENDANTS RECEIVE FREEDOM followed the pr.actice, according to poullds' compared with 292,000,000 The fierce melee broke out as of preparing a massive account of Their spokesman, Attorney Men­ his long experience in the making instructions from the governor, of in the corresponding week iast sherlfrs deputies attempted to del Silberberg, declared: asking only for such an amount as year. force, 400 paraden back from of history. "We are demandIng that the Expresses Concern is absolutely necessary for its fi­ While both Spepce and Ander- the studio ....tes at Metro-Gold­ nancial support. son raised the possibility of go v- wyn-Mayer. The plcke'" _rl­ dIstrict attorney take action. We Last night he suffered a stroke. ernment lIction, meat authoritles ed they were ex-service .men obla.lned court orders and we The first word of it came in a rot injunctions but apparently at the agriculture department eQlPloYes of M-GK navy statement which described I the strlken don't believe In law professed to have no knowle(ige of Officials of the conference of the attack as "slight" and said his Government Agents and order. We feel it is time condition was "satisfactory" but ~h 'd th d t be studio unions said a totai of 28 that a vtgOrou8 prosecution friends later described it as cri­ ey sal ere. appeal'e 0 union demonstrators were hurt, should berin." tical. They expressed grave con­ Investigating Reports OIlly two ways of incre.asing sup- most of them suttering head in­ piles: Howser promised trials for all cern for the man whom President (U ·Llftln .. 01 controls or rals- juries. those arrested and asked strike Roosevelt once styled "the father Of Bund-Klan Link ing price cellings to eqcQural\e Ihe Deputy Sheriff Dean W. Stal­ Jeaders to assist efforts to main­ of the United Nations." Late this afternoon, the hospital marketing of more grass-fattened ford, 28, was beaten into uncon­ tain order. He added, however: WASHINGTON (iP) - Govern­ cattle. Reports [rol'\1 the cattll': sciousness. A fellow officer, Gilbert reported that Hull's condition had in peaceful picketing and their ment agents are investigating re­ country indicate that many pro- O. Leslie, told newsmen: "Strikers are entitled to engage "become more serious during lhe ducers are holdln~ their livestock "They were yellng 'kill him! kill right to do so will have my sup­ day." ports that the old German-Am­ untll price ceilings arll removed. him! Get the -.' The only way I port." In his statement, Hull asserted erican bund Is renewing its activi­ (2) Government requiaUlonlnr that all nations must act on the ties and has formed !In alliance principle that the great common of meat animals from farms. with the Kfl Klux Klan, Assistant Claims have been made by iar~e interests "cannot be attained ex­ Attorney General Lamar Caudle feilerallY-(inspected sla",ght~rs Nav.y Captures World's Non"Stop Flight cept by the practice of justice and that price controls w~re dlverting fair dealing toward each other, and said yesterday. mUch livestock into the hands of through mutual confidence and This disclosure followed a jus­ Mark as Bomber Ends 11 ,236-Mile Hop mutual respect." black market slau.htei'ers and to tice department s~atement that it llllall, loca I meat producE\fs. Hull declared: The mllitary se\'vlces, most hos­ COLUMBUS, Ohio (iP) - The the b\ack patrol

-==< (i). The Dally /OWQM OFFICIAL DAI LY BULLETIN Supreme Court Feud Again in Spotlight ...... a.. tlNIV1!.II~ CALIlNDAa .,...... 4.1.1 ,. , U ...... m.. I]"I~ ILf>pootft _"bUIb_ 1_ 2'IIe 0d7 Jo_ 'l'.: .eat·. Otrl~ •• 01. CIP"." lIe ... 1 r.r I~. OIlN.a"" NOTICII "" ...... Wa 'b•• alD,.1 e411 •• or Tla. DIU, lo ..a ••• _, lit ', fl ~) ...... , Ia_ .. tk..... ,.nld"d to. 0..1 •••p • • 11 h. lhe ow . .. or .,... .'''' , • DaII, ...... OINl:UL NOTICES mutt b ••, The D.nT I.".. " t:. , . .. lb. 4., P••••• I.~ 'I,.", pllbU'allo'D: DOli ...... III NOT" _ As New Chie f Justice Opens· FQII Session ' _ ,loot loy \.I.p~.n ....01. mR.t b. TYl'I'lI oa ... QUU.Y WIUHIIII • ... 1I01liD by • relp.ulbl. porIOn. • 01 VOL. XXIII Ne. I Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1948 By JOHN F. 8E)1BOWER * *'. *" ..... """"'1 WJIIIar IIcIInIam ··Ac TELEPBO JtJrIt R. Poner. A. Cralc 8aJrd. l'auJ 1l Central I"re!!!I C~nden' UNIVERSITY CAL ENDAR ...... ,.,..- ....-- 0"'-"''''' .... • .... • • • ...... 41.1 Bob0'->. Fawcett. Kenneth -.ny SmIth Lou, .I.....1JeblDjdt. New_ WASHINGTON-With all eyes &oda t4ttorIal OUk:e •••.•• •• •. .••.••••.•. 4J82 focused on it, thc United States , conc 80dety Of11ee ...... R. Publbhed dally ~ Konday. En- Supreme Court reconvenes for its lVednesday, Oct. 2 Dr. Van Potter, room 314 chern. coWl Subeertl>t1on nt_By m.II, "" 1~recI as B«Ond class mall matler .t the first session since Frederick M. 4:30 p. m. Y. W. C. A. meeting istry building. total ,.... ; b7 eard«, l.5 tftlla wee1ll7. S$ "" .,.,.to""'" .t low. CIt)'. Iowa. under the 7:30 p. m. Humanities soQiety,' ~. ad of con_ of March I, 11'1'. Vinson was named the 13th chief fot; upper classwomen, senate senate chambcr, Old Capitol. 1.'c1la:,' Tuesday. October I, 1946 justice and the nation reverberat­ chamber, Old Capitol. ed to charges leveled at Justice Frida)', Oct. 4 Tuesday, Oct. 8 Yc Robert H. Jackson. 3:30 and 8 p. m. Universlty salef 4:30 p. rn. Tile University FUm ture by Frank Buck, Macpride vah( Once more the ~upreme Court .oeiety presents ' The Maltese . , is top "box office" for those who auditorium. YA Falcon," auditorium, art building. Satllrday, Oct. 12 Is it Yes or No, Mrl MartinI follow the ever-changing drama of 8:00 p. m. The University Film BreI the national capital. Attendants 2 p. m. FootbaU: Nebraska mat.« nlZ;r man Thotrul. E. Martin was given another chane ~ocietf presents "The Maltese Iowa, Iowa stadium. expect the longest lines of specta­ Falcon." auditorium, art building. beer. :\Iondny to rl'pudiftl hi l'ndormnasium. asked to contact Mrs. John M. cpi In the pre ·eM cri. i on both the international and domcstic had in mind Vinson's reputation as HODorary TeMis clUb-tryouts Russ, chairman oC the membership., Recoe, it Qehoov our public official t'U make their stand elenT. an effective conciliator. 'oday and tomoorow 4:30 p. m. commitlee, or Mrs. Hom,er Di\I, 0 Wessel words !lnel vagne gcnl'I'aliLi<'S mlly win elections. bl1t thcy Now tbe Question arises whe­ ,t women's gymnasium. president or the associatioD. Yor will I1c"er lead thi nation ot· the world to pellce and eeurit.y ther Chief Justice Vinson act­ Seals- TI·youts today and bet. of t: I, 7:30 p. m. women's gym­ INFORMATION FIRST wllich 011 people (1('. h·c. ually will be able to re.,ncUe tics nasium pool. HOSTESS COM:MlTEE The Americlln public def;cryCS to be informed so that they tbe feudlnc elements of the CHIEF JUSTICE VINSON, right; Justices Black, center, and Jackson, right. Pictured in the upper Interviews for Information First' Ute court, whose bitterness was 0 may votr int('lligently. Till' ·"oters of Iowa'. first district deserve broUCht into the open by Jus- left is the United states sUJlreme court building in Washington where the J1atio~'s hl~hest tribunal sits. Oolphlns- today, 7:30 p. m., Riv­ ho ~tess committee will be Thurs", to know whcthcr Mr. Mortin accept or rcjectR the upport or er room, Iowa Union. day, oct. 10, from 3 to 5 p. m. and , :Ru ~ fascist element . • tlce Jackson's turnlnJ a.way of argument lurning into biUer- least a partial answer In the courtifluence th !'ough his stating his Tuesday, Oct. 15 from 1 to 3 p. m. neu from his duties as United states nes, the justices have for years term about to opcn: Assuming that views in each case without inter­ at the U.W.A. desk in Old Capitol. V~TI Thj~ is not a. CllRC of yeo and no; the issue is too clear; the im­ prosecutor at the Nuernber, war observed· a little ritual of'shaking both justices will remain on the ruption before the olhers give Women's Recreation association ron plication is too. ignificant. 'I'he foscism which threat ns the very ~day, 7:30 p. m., women's gymna­ erl_ trial to Issue a prepared hands all around just belore they bcnch, will the highes.t court in the theirs. Then if he is in the major}. TUITION PAYMENT DATES tiea fibre of our American democracy, the fascism which seem to be statement bl3lltln, Justice Black gather their black robes about land be able to maintain the confi- ity, he assigns the writing of the ;ium. 'A croppinlZ( lip all aCl·O. s the laud must be repulsed. It mu t reo First Semester 1946-47 .,y b~ fol' not dis4uallfylnr himself to them and quietly lile to their seats dence and respect without which majority opinion. IOWA MOUNTAINEERS Studenls whose last will Pai .. pul ed by Rtrong word and courageous actions. sit as a. ~mber of the court in while the baillf( clears his throat it cannot hope to fulfil] its role as The box score of the court'~ re The Iowa Mountaineers will names begin with: tuition on; 'j Sc It must be repulsed c\'rn if It few votes ore lost to tho!';e who a case plcaded by a. former Ia.w to sound the "Heal' yeo hear ye.-" the pinnacle of the judicial branch decisions during the 1944-45 term ·ide at the Vpmeir stables tomor- A.-B ...... today . . c· dar OppOSl' it. }1artner. WlII They Shake Rands? of the government. I·evealed a lessening in the trend ·ow evenipg, in two groups. The C-D ...... tomorrow b~ In the ISO-year history of the Will Jacltson and Black be able An explosive atmosphere si cer- toward dissenting opinions for the first group will leave the engin- E-F-G ...... October 4 G" court, there have been many wide to choke back their anger and ex- lain to prevail, according to most 150 years of court history durin!, 1ering building at 4:3 0 p.m. and H ...... DetoueI' 5, ,1.!tlJ J: gulfs between the members of the tend the l·ight hand of fellowship o! the close followers of the court. the previous term. This gives Vin­ he second at ~:30 p.m. Rese~va- I-J-K-L ...... octo~~" aud highest bench-more of them over to each other in this ceremony? It seems to be the concensus of son something to work in in hif AVictory for the Public Good tions must be in by tonight. Mar- M-N ...... ~' . Oc el' J: philosophical rather than personal When members of Congress still opinion among the lawyers who 'ampaign for greater harmony lJ NebraRka, finlt stat to adopt the nnicameral legislature plAn, cha Ann Isaacs, phone 116-29F5, O-P-Q-R ...... tob " disputes-but never · was the were considering taking action in watch the court intently tbat even iespile the personal row between will take the reservations. S ...... October 10 sci,= has scored allot her first. A delll annonnced the other dav ut court's "dirty linen" so washed in the wake of the Jackson accusa- with Black and Jackson removed, Jackson and Blacle. Members of the lowa Moun-· T-U-V-W X Y Z ...... October 11 Omaha means thnt NE'braskn soon will be the first state in wnlcb public as in Jackson vs. Black out- tions, Senator Lucas (D) ot Illi- a great tug-of-wal· would con- Dissents were written in less taineers who wish to spend the Tuition must be paid In SuU at it~ all electric power facilitie. at publicly o,vned. burst. no is echoed the views -oC many linue. iha.n half of the 135 cases of the er,; IJeekend at Devil's Lake state the treasurer's office, University ..' , Thr Omaha properties are scheduled to be tl'llnsferrl'd .ool'l to Consequently, can Justice Black when he warned that "since this The strains and stresses with- 1944-45 term. Jackson and Ro 1ark climbing, hiking, horseback hall, according to the above sched­ . . and Jackson suomel'ge their pel·- feud is in the open, no one is going In the court have steadily herts had been the chief dlssent- a ncw public power district, which will eliminate the ]3 t pri­ riding and camping should cllll ule. Those who fajJ to pay tuition vat('ly.own!'d ('l('ctric facility in the state. sonal feelings sufficiently for them \ to have much confidence in the mounted since 1944, when it ap- ers, with the laUer delivering- 54 Eugene Burmeister, 8-0467, be- for the Cirst semester, by 5 p. m., l'~ to work together in the close inti- court any more." parent thai even witb an ovcr- in the Ilrior term. With both a- tnc The tL'ansff.'I' will complete n. transformation which had its b('­ rore tomorrow evening, deadline Oct. 11, are subject to a late re­ : i macy of the COllrt? That statement raised the fourth whelming- m:~Jorlty of thc mem- wa.y Frankfurter took over the for registration. The party \IIill gistration fine of $2 fOr the jjl'st ~inning in a bitter and 10n~·fong11t contest between advocates of Acutely aware of the possibilty big question which may receive at bers appointed by a singlc presl- cllief'role of dissenter with 17. 0 , '.eave the engineering building at day and $1 for each additional day fr ~ a public hydro·el etrie and irrigation program and the combined dent, the late President Roose- Supreme Court justices lead a ", 1 p.rn. Friday. of delay beyond the due date. The . forcCl; or 8 hi1Jf·do?'('n or , 0 private power companies. ' ~ veil, the~e was no ccrtainity 01 ·trange life. Chief Justice Mar- All active and assoeia.te mem- trcasurer's oCfice is open Monday The pow!!!' companies refused to concede the need for new gen· \1II1",I~ty amollf the hldividual hall sel a precedent for the Spar· low '>ers of the Iowa M;ountaineers throukh Friday from 8 8. 'm., to It • crating <.'Ilpncity. 'l'hl'Y lobbied against enabling legislation and jusUccs. un living by the judges. In hiE will meet at 1:30 Thurs4ay night noon and 1 to 5 p. m. and Satur­ alia 1hen held np work oru 1he public power and irrigation projects for The late Sen:)tor George W 'ny they did not even take their 1he' in studio D of the Engineering day from 8 a. m. until noo~. \ tile several years with injunction actions. Finally the public power Norris, during the fight over th' lives with them to Washington ':luUding to plan for the open proponent. eliminated the opposition buying out the private By LAWRENCE E. DENNIS court's rulings on New Deal legis ut instead lived the lives of '1ouse meeting, Oct. 15. Anyone Students should keep cash re ­ Ci~ by lation warned thaL "you canno )Dnks. They boarded and roomec ·nterested in joining tbe Moun- gister receipt permanently and compani<.'. with mon('y bOrl'owcrl in Wall Rtreet. Writing in last Sunday's New has publicly proclaimed his confi- tell how a man will act when h 't the samc rooming house, nne '.aineers is welcome La attend the obtain student ic.'ientitiClltion cards son Some doubt has been raised as to the financial wisdom of the Y(,t·j{ Times, Arthur Krock, dean dence in Marshall's ability as a dons the ermine." So independen ept aloof from almost everyonr lleeting. The members seLHng the ing tuition aIter 5 p. m. Frlday, l8lit "p11bli c di ·trict. , but recognized authorities iTl the field insiat that of Washington political column- diplomat ahd, on one occasion are the justices of the presidenl 'se. memberships should check in their after paying tuition. Students'pay­ tra1 1he pnrchase 'Price wer r rasonllble imd that the district will pay Ists, notes that the 66-year-old during the war, F.ranklin Roose- who appoint them, with their life The "Nine Old Men" who pre- :nemberships. Oct. 11, wil not receive a student bad out. American taboo aaginst military velt said that "the nation could time tenures "during good behav ~ded Lhe present crop of judgef identification card in time to be , 1: If nn.tor Ocorge W. Jorris werc alh' today l1e wo\\ld in­ men as presidentlal candidat never repay its debt to George C. ior," that their innermost selve ere so aged that they too Jived UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN admitted to the Iowa-Nebraska Cit: football game on Saturday, Oct. dl'cd be pleascd witb thc fltep hi~ ~tl1te has takrn. He once said, appears to be on the wane. Marshall." scem to emcrge and sometimt 1art. But wilh ' the comparativ( All undergraduate women liv­ p'er.. "This natural. reRouree (water) was gi\'en by an all-wise Crcator Three outstanding World War II On a trip through the South- they behavc in unpredictable fash outh and physical vigor of thr ing in pr~vaie homes who are 12. aec to His pcople and not to organizations of p:reed . .. E\·ery drop generals - George C. Marshall, west Pacific war theater in the ion. 'lrrent judges has come a natural ~ligible for senior hours must sign All bc.\de-rs of. iu\tiol\. ~x~m~­ \ls,V Dwight D. Eisenhower and Doug- winter of 1943-44, the 1 ate When fate gave Roosevelt th ~luctance to withdraw so com· tions, including graduate students ' C that faJ~ from the he[jven~ sbo\'e to the earth beneath Sh011ld per· 1t the U.W.A. desk on the ground , las MacArthw·-are currently be- Scripps-Howard columnist, Ray- opportunity to do what Congres letely from the ordinary affairE and World War II veteran's, must . form its prop('r share 01 preserving the blessings Cod intends to 'loor of Old Capitol by Thursday. ing discussed as mond Clapper, wrote that General had denied by voting down hi Cmen, and out or this has spru n~ 1\11 senior women will observe go to the treasurer's office on the ~e l be!!tow upon Hill people." tront-rank 1948 MacArthur had indicated that hc court-expansion proposal, a cour Jme of the criticism or · the court regular closing 110urs until written (See BULLETIN, Paje 5) pelJ Senatot· Nor(is envisioned the fnll flowering of his dream in W hit e H 0 use ','would not refuse' 'the G.O.P. with a controlling viewpoin n recent years. nn extension of the TVA plan 10 the MissoLrri watershed and the po s sibilities by presidential nomination should the and near-perfect harmony was i· Keep Political Interests other great watel" heds. But ironically enoug'h, the peop} of Ne­ prominent politi- opportunity ever present itself. prospect. Yet the court which re Black, Douglas and Murphy .. braska, already enjoying mnny of the blessings of such a program, cians in both ma- MacArthur informed Republican sulled has been the very opposite ave kept their interest in politi- RADIO CA LEN DAR '9f have been cool "toward the MV A ideo. and and are stringing a10ng j 0 r par tie s. political leaders to the 1944 bid. Frankfurter, Roberts and Jack al affairs, and the latter is a WSUI (910) WHO (1040) WMT (600) KXEL (1540). with th 11' con A' t·c. ional 'dl'l('gation which OppOSl'S MV A and fa­ Krock points out Since that time, MacArthur's po- son veered. to the right as conserv 1uch sought-aftel' social guest. At that, s h 0 u I d . Utical destiny has dropped from alives. Black, Douglas and Murph: 1yrnes resigned from the court to 8 I. "'. WMT Farm Markets KXEL Dairy CaWe Congo Y01'!! thc I('I:;,,~ comprehensivc Pick·Sloan plan. WSUI Morning Chapel KXEL R. F. D. 1540 G p. m. 'V EYen more ironically, this Tebl'sska attitude plays directly into President T· r u- the headlines and he has com- assumed the left-hand stance, witl ecome secretary of state. Murphy WHO The Songfellows I p. m. WSUl Dinner Music pletely engrossed himself in his Chief Justice Stone frequently i: Jok leave of absence to take an 'NMT Pat Patterson . WSUI MUsical Chats WHO Melody Parade Cit: the hand of the privat power lobby in Washington which has KXEL Breakfast ClUb WHO Guiding Light WMT Mystery of the Wetl stu, man decline to tasks as Supreme Allied Comman- theil' camp. Reed and Rutledg ctive part in the military during 8:15 p ...... WMT The Peabody. KXEL Slar Time made the dE-feat of rivl'l' valley authoriticll a first business. again in dcr in Japan. were in-between. he war. Jackson temporarily dof- WSUl News KXEL John B. Kennedy 6:1~ p. m. WaO Clllf & Helen 1:1~ p. m . WHO World News t~f i! But the evolution of public ownersbip in Nebraska is eneour· 1948 - and there Time 11111 Return Yet it is dangerous to try t ~d his judicial robes to become WHO Todav'. Chlldreh WMT .rack Smrlh Show WMT Mary Mlle. hel aging, IH)\"erthel('~.. The power companies may delay £llllutiliza­ is growing spec- Not long ago, though, former over-simplify the court by draw rosecutor at Nuernberg. a.1Ie a. '"' WMT Big Sisler KXEL H. R. aross·News tinn of natural rcs01Jrc('S, bllt. they lire only stalling pnblie de­ WSUl Greek Literature KXEL Home Time 0:30 p. m. lasl ulation on that Interior Secretary Harold Ickes ing up mythical t "teams" on tho Such activities· ·· would have WHO Meloil), Madhouse 1:1Ift p. m. WHO M. L. Nelson News ,;( mand temporarily. eon t ingency - EISE'NHOWER flatly predicted that. MacArthur ri~ht and left, for Justices Frank hocked the great majority of WMT Muslcll Clock WHO Woman In White Wll1T Sweel and !wIn" S:4G •• "'. \VMT Lone Journey KXEL Did You Know I vic, Nebraska is the fir t state to completely lick the private con- the Democratic chieftains could would time his "triumphant re- furter and Jackson have had thei ·udges who have served in th KXEL Quesllons & Opln. 0:4~ p. m. WHO Cene Coot-News i ~ eerns but it certainly will not be the last. easily resolve the question of his turn" to the United States to co- difCerences. Jackson, a firm be· he past. The American Judiea­ 9 ... in. 1 :45 p. m. WHO Clifton UtleY-News G" WHO Jack Berch-Music. WHO Masquerade KXEL Raymond G. Swing 1" successor by selecting a man incide with the pre-convention liever .in upholding "stare decisis,' ure Society, composed of leading WMT Cattle Congress 6:M p. m. ,j ta~ ; WMT Boll P[el[fer NeWS ,I Economics association executive such ~s Marshall or Eisenhower. campaigns· of Republican presi~ or the power of precedents, ha: awyers and judges, this ' month KXEL My. Tn.e Story WSUI Jo~n:;n m . New. WSUI New .. ' :\5 a. m. Co 7 p. m. thi! Professors to Attend Icommittee at Ames Saturday. ·And if a · Dewey-Taft deadlock dential candidates in the spring of sharply criticized the "sweepinf 'rilicized the makeup of the pre­ WHO Liff! Can Be Beau. WSUI SpecJ8l. intervieW· I, WHO Lora Lawton WMT Perry Mason .. WHO lIcIr. and Mrs. North I, ot Convention in Ames The committee of which Prof- should threaten to split the next ]948. The former Southwest Pa- declarations" of Frankfurter whe :ent court for having only three WMT Listen Ladles KXl:L Ladles Be Seated WMT Jack Ca rson Sho," I essor Woodruff preSident, will ~epublican national ~onvention, a cHic commander has indicated, in is supposed to have tried to gel ustices with prior experience as ,:2. I. lb. 2.;15 p, m. KXEL Lum An' Abner A Ira is WSUI News WSUI Visual Aids 7:15 p. hi. Prof. Sybil Woodruff and Prof. plan the program of a meeting of ticket headed by either Elsen- rather guarded press statements, Truinan to name Jackson chief ·udges ;lnd for lacking "judicial KXEL Croc.ker WHO MIl Perkins WSUI Reminiscing TIm. .. gi~ B.I~y ber Pauline Rodgers, both of the home .the Iowa Home Economics asso- hower Ofl MacArthur could con- that he "seeks no public office." justice. temperament. 0:80 • • m. \ W1\{T Cattle Congress KXEL Listen to LaGuardl1 • WSUl Paging M.... Amer. KXEL A &; L Jamboree 1:80 p. III. economics department, will at- elation to take place Nov. 8 in Des ceivably heal the breach. And yet, discounting any political In the newest . lincup of the During the months ahead, the , lend a meeting of the Iowa Home Moines. Ranks vitriol which may have accom- court, Chief Justice Vinson is just ")upreme Court may in a sense ;~~ ~e:1y~f~~~ers WSUl r1t::O& ~;' t. Mu,. ~'t] ~~e~t'G~~~Iee"ve ; ., - The H~h I KXEL Hymns of All Ch . WHO Pep Youngs Family WMT Or. Christian. P, Eisenhower, you'll note, ranks panied Ickes' forecast, one is in- "donning the ermine," and no one 'illd itself "on trial." Although the 9:.' I. In. WMT Speak Up alrls lurl 01 Ml.s. Hein oi , either of the other two lIenerals scope seems relatively certain. one way or the other. hey will watch closely. WMT Cattle ·Con4ress n: 18 p. m. 8·SO II III " mentioned and is generally con- President Truman will have to de- However, those who know Vin- The America\l Bar Association KXEL Tqm Breneman WHO Stelln Dallas WHO 01 i"J tAt' " Btu II:L. p. .... KXEL Irene Oll Mond WMT DI~:he Sho~m y. ' •. ' 1l1~ ceded to be one of the few U. S. cide on his own candictacy within son best, expect him to be diplo- '1as named a committee to study WSUI Yesterdays Favorltes . a:20 p . m. KXEL To Be AnnOl",.cd • military men able to "get along" a few months after the opening of malic and to use his "balance of the federal judiciary, including the WlIIT Libby Vaullhn WSUI News 01 Other Lds H:4~ p. m. the 10:30 a. \ft" • 8:30 p. m. WSUl News ace with both Russian and British of- the eigptieth Congress. If he de- power" position as a potent wea- Supreme Court. But in keeping WSUI American Literature WSUI News t p. m. ficiaJs. Although he has ~onsist - cides to run again, hc will Mve to pon in an attempt to bring decor- with democratic government, the WHO Barry Camerson WHO Lorenzo Jones WSUI Sign Off set J ently renounced any ~ljtical am- concern himself primarily with ous unity back to the supreme court may find tllat its severest ~,wL GJ:r.dHs.:~~ Edition ~~L ~\~~~~~o ~~~ ~~d~"yedX\Vanl bltions, publlc pressure for a' remedying the defection caused by l5ench. test is before "Lhe bar of public M WHO Da~~·'k:n:"m WSUI A ·Loo:~:"Au stralia K~EL f'ii~r.k~ ;arle steady, forthright American f.or- the withdrawal of Henry Wallace Judge Harold M, Stephens, for opinion." WMT Melodic Moods WHO Young Widder Brown WHO Kay Ky.-ter· in. ellll policy miibt culminate in a and qther New Deal holdovers five years an associate justice of ------KXEL Ted Malone WM'I: Beconn Mrs. Burton WMT Informallon Please "qraft Eisenhower" movement in from his ad\11inistralion. T hat Vinson's on· the United States Cir­ Union Board Setects WHO JU~~ a& 'iane WSUl LI;hr- 8'p.,ra Airs KXEL P:::~ ;nl... man either party by the spring o:li 1948. means building up several strong cuit Court oC Appeals, Washing- WlllT Kale Bmlln WIfO When. Cirl Marries KXI!:C, Ml;.le by Adl.m KXEL Glamollr Manor WMT BQrden'. Ballroom •• p m Being a Virginian, Ma(shall is vice-p res ide n tial possibiUtJeli ton, D. C., has writlen in the Jour· Ceh ubar' as Member H:18 •• m. KXEL Bride & Groom WHO Slipper ·Club p~sumed to be a Democrat, al- within Democratic ranks. If he nal of the American Bar Associa­ WHO Young Dr. Malone 4nG , p. .... WMT acne Clau"",," WMT Aunt Jenn; WHO Por~la Faces Life KXEL H. R. Orolll.t{ev,:' though, as far as I know, he has does not . run, he may well find tioll that Vinson "is .a believer in George Cebuhar ~A3 of Center­ 11:30 •• m. 4.SO p. m. 10·1~ p m never declared himself PQlitically. that only Marshall or Eisenhower government according t(l law and ville was chosen lo replace Her­ WSUI Ma.ter Wk•. 01 M"";. , WSUI Tea 'I'lm~ M.lodles WHO M. L. N~lso~.Newl ' \ WHO Edith D. Webber . WHO Just PUlln Bill WM'r J'tl\ton Lewis ' Nonetheless, he does stand close could unite the party- in suWcient regards it the duty of judges to man Robin, A4 or Waterloo, as a WM'J: Helen Trent WMT Mrs. Wilson Says KXEL Sporj8 Edition to the to~ 'of the Democratic pres- strerlgth to carry the .required apply Jaw', not to make it." Union board member last nigh,t at KXEL Josh Higgins KnL Campus Visitors ;~ ]0:31/ p. m,. ' 11,45 • • ... 4,411. p. m. WHO Tho: BlllboJlrd. idential list 'because, more tlian e1ec.toral vote. VlnllOn's Appointment a board mceting. Robin was auto­ WHO Th~ Buckaroos WHO Front fagc FarrPlI WMT O~n Hearlhg any other, "citizen. bred to the Right now, a G.O.P. internal In naming an outsider as chief matically di squalified as a mem­ WMT Our Gal Sunday WMT Stanley Dixon-News KX~ Palll Hutchens ' " profession of arms," he is coriSJd- split would seem tq be just as justice, Tr uman avoided giving the ber when he transferred from the 1I:11t •• .... KX!L G~rl~ng:.. Trio . ]01~5 p. Ia. l , ', WSUI tl:!~eS WSUJ Children'; Rour WHO :rerraee Rooln (j~1Vt ereel a truly I1'8at soldler-states- likely as a rupture within the nod either faction. This has college of liberal arts to the col­ 7'ar,:: to WSUl Rhythlll Rambl~s WHO Jim ZabeL·News WHO Bta~:I'::t ;:"'d .,. ~ mao by. thou who have worlled Democratic party. But, if Arthur been a strong factor in lhe ap­ lege of commerce. WHO Farm News WMT Crosby Tlme~, . wM'r Voloe 0' lowa KXEL Terry " Ihe Pirale.1ir. C. B, ~~ !fews , with hbri,tince he .first Iliined l\IlP Krock's analy.is Is correct, the ns- pointment of almost all of the 13 Winston Lowe, L3 of Cedar Ra­ Kxt:L Laind O'Corn '·'5pm" L NeWs'MllIile , Uoi1aI. aUen'tloa 1ft, 1040. . llii- POR- tio~ dis.taste for·, a "man . on chief , justices from Washington's pids, president of the board an­ II:tS ,. _. WHO Th"; Peabody. IUtt p'r' Ji uliiHb · a1,... 084, wliVe' he . Ii .now- hor..ebaCk"l a. a preilcietiU.r eilli': tUne down to the present, for only nounced that letters containing WHO Sa4dle Mt. Roundup WMT .Y01l .. SetenadO ~~L Of! ~~IIc::"~ ': H:.,j' "-" .. ~ • tIIi ~t'l ~ diilate- .... to . be ~.. two. of them have boon elevated aplication blanks fOr menibenhlp m~~. ~t.=New. K~t. H~ ~~~y ~!' J,j{ · 1 I , 12· .. P _ WBUI M··· 'caJ'rM ~-... eWl ClVO)' to China, is exceded only Hence, rather than risk a conven- from the court memebership when on the Union board sub-cOnUnlt­ WBUI lITe";. . • WHO c.~Ut

...... -'--- _.. ..- ' • - . T!'-=-· ... . __ ... lO. ... -~--- --. - '"""'": - ...; --..:...... :..;------*-..---.....- .'"'.~,... .;,<,.;;.o ...;.;;. .. . •• ., , .. , ' , • ,r • THE DAILY IOWAN, IOW,A CITY, JOW A' ~AGE THftEE fWEDNESDAY, OCT. 2, 1~4~ .' , sistant in the department before German Department the war and former instructor at Fd~ol Nam•• Head McGrath Returns Announces Promotions, the University at Wyoming, has £ugat -Ticket I returned from a chaplainship In • ~(PrcMludlon Board ~ From 3S.Day Tour Faculty Appointment the armed forces to become an in­ structor in German. 118-124 South OUntoD Stne& PhOOI ., Dentob Yeast, Uo of Ft. Madison, Of G S h I An apPOintment and two pro­ was',elected.chalrman of the Frivol Dr. Fred Fehling, formerly an Dtive Endsl erman C 00 S motions to the German depart­ 1948 producUon bOard yesterday after- Instructor, has been pomoted to noon~,;:The board, which consists ment faculty were announced yes­ an assistant professorship, and "Advance ticket sales will end of e\jlht ' members of magaJ:lne Dean Earl J. McGrath of the terday by PrOf. Erich Funke, de­ Mrs. Gerta Barrett, a graduate as­ todiy for the Nov. 4 Xavier Cugat work~hop class, edits and produces college of liberal arts returned to partment head , sistant last year, has been named concer~ sponsored by the Student the campus magazine. Iowa City yesterday morning af­ Milton Zaegel', a graduate as- an instructor. council. Ticket receipts to date Yvonne Livingston, 'A4 of Iowa ter 35 days in Europe inspec'ting Make the mOlt .,. I total $3,083.50, including tax, Citi, ~ was previously named man­ the school systems in the Ameri­ Ui'c* Yoakam, G of Pittsburgh, ager. ~, Other members include: can-occupied zones in Germany of a ~auti,ful 1'.... said yesterday, John;' Silntnons, ' A3 ot Osceola; and Austria. Yoakam said that with today's Jack-" Schroeder, .\3 of Ft. Mad­ A member of a state department ..lel! he beJ1eves the $3,500 ad­ iSo~'; ;':' Steve Drlttmier, C3 of mission whose task was to dis­ v.bee guarantee will be met. Shenpndoah; Marian Crews, A4 cover to what extent militarism Be Sure to Attend the Y.esterday's ticket sales at the of Fl. Dodge; Katheryn Larson, and nazism have been eliminated Bremer booth totalled approxl­ A4 ol,Sh;lUX Falls, S, D. and Mari­ from the German school system, Scan.'" ma~elY $500. Receipts bave not yet dee Hill, A4 of Moline, Ill. Dean McGrath said he would not be free to make a statement about Ta.ke a huge square ... drape b4!en turned In from dormitories; " J fraternities and some of the sor- , conditions in Europe until the of­ AII·Lutheran Mixer it mysteriously around .; orllles. ficial state department report on head and shoulders for evenlpg lit a wire received yesterday Shrader Weds the trip is published in about three , •• tie two ends and there! Rose.. weeks. , .. you have a blouse. Fold' in frOm the Music Corporation of .' I ~ 'l r- :America, the councll received "I can say, tho~h," he com­ balf ... loop it like a 'sash defl~ite word that the, concert Wi1liam~ Hunzinger mented yesterd.lY, ·'that we ' River Rooni' .1 to change a dress . . ' I . . '.,. came away feello.- that our mil­ WOUld be presented as scheduled. Here are handpainted ' ,l'lck'ets will be sold today tor In,~of~ng Service itary rovernment In Germany 2 98 the advance sale price of $1 at the is conductlD&' affairs there as et- Student Union ones of fine crepe at ...... • it' tlclently as they possibly could J;Jrefoer booth and at the Union At. 7 o'clock yesteroay morning with the staffs avalla.ble and Clinging, printed crepe scarfs during meal hours. Starting the . altar candles were lit by the condItions .. they are." tickets will be $1.50. 'i'h~r8day, acoIijes at St. Mary's church for Divided into groups of i",o or ~:I:;~~7~'~""00 ... ,.. ", .. 1098 :: . The concert wlll be held in the the v,'wedding of Rose Marie three, members of the mission ll'lldhoUse at 8:30 p.m., Nov. 4 ~ Shra&er, dau,hter of Mr. and Mrs. spent three weeks inspecting Friday, October 4 Soft woolen and rayon scarts; Truman Shrader, 314 S. Dubuque schools and interviewing German white as snow, comfy 'for the S'mantics Society stree I and William Hunzlnger, son educational and political leaders Appoints Officers; of Mr. and Mrs. ,Lawrence Hun- in every large center of pop Jation :;:r~:g~~~~...... "." 1.00 UP zJnlter, 513 Grant street. zone. ·'8:00 ,P. M. epi,ducts Discussion The. ' ring cete,mony was Dean McGrath headed the group performed by Rt. Rev. Msgr. Carl which inspected universities. Oth­ :::St!O,~ .. ~~~~~~.. :.,..... 8.98 . Oliver Bloodstein, G of New MeJnberir ~and the music was fur- er groups covered the youtb ST~UB'S-Firs& Floor. York City, was elected president nished by Esther Thoman. groups, elementary and sec ndary of tpe SOCiety for General Seman­ ~trude Shrader, maid of honor schools, teacher training institutes, tics at the group's first meeting of and. sister of the bride, ;preceeded religious education and teohnical •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• the year last night. the . bride and ber fat\ler to the and trade high schools. I J.:. Other officers elected were Dr. altar~' They , were met at the altar After the commIssion COM­ Hu~seJt Meyers, chairman of ihe stePs.i l:iy' ~he bridegroom a1,ld the pleted Us report In Berlin. Dean neurb-surgery department lit Un­ best ;man, George Rummelhart, McGratit was one of five mls· v~rsit.y hospital ,secretary; and I ,unchi \ of the bride. The company slon members asked by Gen. 1pm Olin, A4 of Springfield, Ohio, thel} .: entered tnt! sanctuary where Mark. W. Clark to make a. slnd­ • tJ:e'lsurer, solepin wedding vows 'were ex- lar 'inspectlon trip In the AJn­ • 'A pTogram comittee appointed • chal)ged, ' , erlcan zone In Austria. Wlth • .,y Bloodstin includes: Chandler The bride wore a 'two piece Dean McGrath as chairman, the • Screvens, G of Tacoma, Wash.; white' Wool dress with' asters in rroup completed the AusUian tnarJes E. Swanson, G of San II hei' ii~lr and 'ca'rried a bouquet of Inspection in a week. ' bttgp, Cali!.; RIchard Cannicott, wi1R~pOnoi.!Poms and 'orchias;' The' ' 0 ;Most of the schools in the Am­ II at I o~. Lo~ Angeles, Calif; Eloise These new sleek-as-real rtJlPper.Oxtaoby, G of .Iowa ,City, mal~ 'of hoqor . w!1r~ a . ~olc;l woOJ' ~r~can occupation zone, he said, dri!Sswilli asters in her hair imd will be ' closed from December to II rain fabrics take colors IIhd George Wischner, G of Iowa carrlM a co~nial aster boUquet. April because of the fuel short- II so beautifully no day t, 0 , tlr. l'IIeJlers led discussion on the nrtriledlately' after the ceremony ages, need be dimmcd. a wl!ddlng-bieakIBst, took ,.place· at ------­ S ~ il\nUIic m!!thOd as applied to se­ Dressmaker models dominale this the~home · of Mr. and Mrs. J . D. left for a short trip to Chicago. I ¢antl~s, and its utility ' in our collection ... but there are R~elhaCt, . 320 · S. , J 0 h'n s.o n they plan to reside at the May­ i!Yes: The group meets every oth­ tailored types, too. er·1uesday. str~~, grandparents of ' the , bride: flower club where the bridegroom ' f,. . ., FollOWing·the ,breakfast the couple is employed. II!I'" • ! , J NEW "WEATHA-WARE" RAIN t~~ffic Violations COATS - water and wind resist-

tilerease 30 Percent ~ .. 'f.. Iowa City's Fashion Store 0' t ' i :~~r:I.~.~,~00~.~~ ...... 0000 ...... 17 .95 OVer Previous Month ~ ' ~ EXYLIN RAINCOATS - ,of pure "ATrests for traffic violations in plastic. Extremely dura- 4 98 ;. : Tovl.rier~s , ble, waterproof and resi- • Iota, City duTing Septli!mber . , . shOWed a go percent increase over '. , lient .... " .. " , ...... previous month, according 1. S. Clinton, Street th.~ to Others at $7.98 and UP. the monthly report of the Iowa

City police department. ~ . 1 STRUB'8-Flrst FloOT , A total of 472 of the 548 per­ ! sonS who appeared in police court biBt month were charged with traffic violations. Of these, 419 bad violated parking regulations. There were 22 accidents in Iowa City during the month. Seven lIersons were injured in six of the a,ccigents. The other 16 accidents involved only property damage. THE REQUIRED SUBJECT ',Charges against 37 of tbe 548 persons who appeared in court and majored in by Town­ were' suspended, dismissed or are .'"" ,-- er's Sportswear depart­ pending dispOSition. t ment. To see them is to Benjamin Elected Head love them! Of Chemi.cal Engineers At Initial Meeting William Benjamin, G of Iowa City, was elected president of the , . ~tudent chapter of the American ln~titute of Chemical Engineers at the first meeting ot the semester held in the chemistry auditorium Just .What Yon~re/ last, night. Charles Wright, A4, was named vice-president and Herbert Grove, G, of Davenport was named secre­ ~:J i ~ I ~y-treasurer . Looking forI' ::;. . •Prof. C. S. Grove, advisor for , I the group, explained the program I • • of the club. Graduate and under­ I I graduate students ot chemical en­ Ripeerlng are ellgJblc tor mem­ Our slack of Alpagora Coats never J lasts ~ long· , j• bership. , enough to salisfy any good proportion of · our cus­ P4in.OrthodoxGroup Tb Open Fall Meettng. tomers. But it is equally true that those men who do The Pan-Orthodox club, a relig­ gel Alpagora Coats here-whether in Fleece, in iQus-social organization composed TIE I of Greek, Russian and Syrian Tweed, or in Covert-are getting exactly what most students, wlll hold Its first fall meeting tonight at 7:30 p. m. at men want. Which is: a coat that is moderate in the Trinity Episcopal parish 1I0use, "TURTLE ·NECKER" according to Angeline Karrls, secretary of the club, price, looks smart, and keeps that smartneaa for a John Liambeis will preside at th~ meeting. Nominations will be tong time to cornel If that's what you're looking inade for new officers to be elect. at the next meeting. for, too, may we suggest that you keep coming here?

i ,-- - ~ sO'S.. rt .. ,~ i .. Iftd ot~erwil~' • Scift·.·i·wllisPer sweaters of 1001 virgin ALPA'ORA High voltage hala at an exciting weeI. CtidclIe iI; tilt,. co/()rs .•. Caramel $30,50 low coati Btilliant with aequina, coats metal and }ewel Irlma , • • in I' 95 , ".. BlICk .• , EIMt.1d .•. Red ••• $5. brand new silhouettes to pay you compUmenta the wibter . . ~~ , .. whHe I s~es 34 to 40. }f' , thru. , .',...... , Iowa ' (lIt,'," Fashion store " ~' 10. .. ' " ,~ . If: Nut be.t thing -Towner's BREMERS I STRVB'S - Fashion Floor ,... . 'to a long distance col~ QuaUIy - With NatloDally Ad.ertlMd Bnmd8 F~t ' .' only 5¢ to .ay It "across from campus" J , , I , .• ~, II'~' ~I.I'~""~~~"------""""-~ ...... , ..... I

t •• 'U'\T' JOW"XN, JOW'A 'Crrt, IOWA wt:DNESDAY, OCT. 2, 1948 ~ ¥ :; - = - x x Pollet Stops Brooklyn -•In Playoff, 4-1 ~~------'------. . r *** *** _____-IJB Y C HAD B ROO K S,_,,--,-,-__, 1Moore, Garagiola lead 12 Hit The boys are starting to wise up! Hawkeyes Work on Defense The boys, football's so-called experts that is, had us pretty gloomy a couple weeks ago. Headed by the infallible Dick Dunkle, they con­ ceded Iowa's Hawkeye grldders a ninth place finish in the nine team AHack; Second Tilt·Tomorrow conference race. It seemed that everybody was gOing to be loaded this To Halt Michigan"s DerricoHe yeoI' except the Hawkeyes-who would be lucky to escape with lite * * * and limb. ~re~ wa~ the watchword thrust came on a pass from . Pele I By GAYLE TALBOT Box score: Now however the tune has changed. It was a really great Old Gold SPORTSMAN'S PAR K, . st. eleven' that Purdue's high-regarded Boilermakers yesterday as Iowa's surprising ElUott, another star haUback, to :t:;;~~;b Ar ~ ~ I ~~';.;';. 2:~ ~ J~ ma~-hl\ndled last giant end Lenny Ford. LOUIS, Mo. (JP)-The Cardin.alS LaV·lno. 3b 3 0 0IMoore. cI 5 1 3 Saturday and the boys had to admit it-even though it really hurt Hawkeye gridders settled down to roared out of their batting slump Medwlck. Lr 4 0 1 MusIal, Ib '2 1 Anderson summed up scout h ·t fxxxTepolc 0 0 0 Slaughter, rl 4 0 2 some of them to say so. serious work in preparation for yesterday to smas I1 a d ozen I S IWhllman . IF 0 0 0 KuroWski. 3b 2 I 0 te B t McGrane and we ean Maury Kent's report of the Wolv­ of! five Brooklyn and Y . W·ker. rf 4 0 OOaraclolll. c 4 0 3 One of our few eady suppor rs was er , their first out-of-town engage­ · II , Furlllo, c! 4 0 0 U . W·ker. l! 3 0 1 er~ as "another typical Michi­ b e hmd HOWle' P 0 e t' s smoo' th' I Reese, • 4 I 2 Marlon. os 4 0 0 see the veteran Des Moines Register reporter g'loatlng as he wrote: ment of the 1946 football season­ ,.n team. Apparently there is twirling trounced the Dodgers 4 I Edward•. c 4 0 % Pollet. D 4 0 0 "Iowa the team that was scorned by the experts, strnck and n little trip up to Michigan where great depth of material and Cris­ to 2, in 'the opener of th4!ir thr~- I :,.~~~~~. ~b ~ ~ ~ engulfed Purdue with the savareness of a mounUnr slor~, leavln, Pritz Crisler is supposed to have ler .I\1ld his attack working in pre­ game play-ofr tor the National Hlgbe P 0 0 0 the Bollennakers stunned and beaten In a 16.0 conquest . .• lhlt xRoje k 0 0 0 " the number one team in the con­ w81' . $tyle to $core three times league flag. Grelll. P 0 0 0 was more decisive than the score reflects. ference this feAr. . • • xxRam'zotll 1 0 0 • ' . • aga\.nst Indiana." Lcd by their veteran captam, Loljlbardl. p 0 0 0 The Hawkeye linemen, cur­ Trip plans caU for the Iowans, Ten'y Moore, and their prize Melton, D 0 0 0 I More power to you, Bert. We may never win another game-all:d rently the hottest group of "up­ totaling about 36 players, to leave YOl.mg rookie catcher, Joe Gara- Tot"1 8 1 ! I Total, nobody is denying that Michigan is plenty tough-but at least we front" performers in the loop, . I h h bl ted th ".sailed tor Hlgbe in 5th Friday at 9 a. m. The players may glO a, eac 0 r w om as ree xxBalled for Greli In 7fh showed lhem last Saturday. worked aplnst an unbalanced work out at Chicago on Sta" field safeties, th e Redbirds sewed up xxxRan for Medwlck ill 8lh Then there was Tait Cummings, the rotund sports editor of the line, the first of its type that Iowa the contest by shelling Ralph Brooklyn ...... 001 000 100-2 in the afternoon, beCore boarding St. 1 nulo ... _ .. _. _... _. . . .. 102 000 10x-4 Cedar Rapids Gazette. Tail is on record as predicting an Iowa finish has run into this year. a train for Jackson, Mich. I Branca, 20-year-old Dodger right- ERROR- Pollet. RUNS BATrED IN - Gsrorlol. 2. Schultz 2. KurowskI. U. this year "anywhere below eighth." We have a Jot o[ respect for Tait'$ , Meanwhile, the backfield corps The sta rling Ii neup probably handel', from the hill in the third Walkler. TRREE BASE HITS-Musial. judgement so were very unhappy to read this bit of prognostication. spent some time perfecting their will remain little changed from round, when they scored the sec- HOME RUNS-Schuh... SACR IFICES - . Schultz. QOUBLE PLA VS-Polle\. Ma- But listen to Tait now. "Iowa's gridiron Hawkeyes tood a giant • pnssing attack-with Emlen Tun­ that of the Purdue game, except and and third 0 r th elr runs. rlon and ]'.1uslal ; Schoendlenst. " Marlon stride down the long road back to a respected position in Big Nine and Mu.'al 2. EARNED RUNS - nell, Bob Sullivan and Bob Smith at center, where Di~ Woodard is Howie Schultz, elongated Dodger Brooklyn 2 St. Louis 4. LEFT ON BASES football . . . Saturday .. . by shredding the Purdue Boilermakers, 16-0 dOing most of the tosslng-belore sidelined with a shoulder separa­ first boseman, accounted for both -Brooklyn 0; 81. Louis J I. BASES ON .. . Dr. Eddie Anderson determined to wipe out the indignities heaped tUrning to a defensive drill of MJUtTr ~lA.KION, st. BALLS-O{f Branca 2 (Kurowski. Mu· tion, and at right tnckle where Louis Cards shortstop, leaps high to avoid the the losers' runs off Pollet as the slall ; Pollel 3 Rojek. Lavagetto, Stanky); on Iowa during the lean years of wartime football, sent out a team :for their own. Jim Cozad may replace. Bruno spikes of the sliding Brooklyn runner, l:d Stanky, after making the left-hander racked up his 21 st off Gregg 1 Kurowskll; off Melton 1 this one that met every test of greatness in the Big Nine or any other IH. Walket!. STRIKEOUTS-by Branca Biggest problem facing head Niedziela. Sullivan, Mr. Power, torce out on a throw from in the third innin~ game of the yeor. Schultz led off 3 Schoen<;lIenst. Musial. pone\); by conference-rock-ribbed in the line and briJiiant of offense," conch Dr. Eddie Anderson and his and Tu'nnell, Mr. Scat, will once yesterday, Marlon gets of! the throw to the Dodger third with a mighty P"llet 2 (Branca. Schultz,; by Gregg 1 (Garaglolal. • • • nssistants will be in finding a cap­ again share the left haltback to complete the double play on Cookie Lavagetto's grounder to Pollet. clout into the left field bleochers, PITCHING SUMMARY: oCt- Branca 6 And Harry Warren, writing for the Chicago Tribune-a paper that oble defense against the thr.ee-way duties. (AP Wi rephoto) 11is third homer of the year, and hit. 3 run~sIn 22·3 innings; Ulgbe 1 hit, • o runs in 1·3; Gregg 1 hit. 0 runs In was anything but complimentary about our Chances-said, "Univer­ threat of Gene Derricotte, 20-year­ Otherwise, the likely starters drove Peewee Reese across with 2; L.omb. I 1 hll. 1 rUIl In 1-3; Melton sHy or Iowa's football, something discussed only in whispers in old tailback, who practicnIly . th th 3 hits, 0 r s In 12·3. WILD PITCtfES- West­ are Bob Phillips and Tony Guzow­ the 0 th et' t a1 1y ID e seven Melton. LOSING PITCHER-Branca. ern conference circles for the last three years, soared to 0 tumultous mined Indiana's title defense last ski at ends; Bill Kay, left tackle; Johnny Neun Signs round on a clean single into right crescendo CSaturday) ns the Hawkeyes rose to the heights to beat weekend wlth his spectacular run­ Russ Benda and Dave Day, guards; field. ning and passing. Hawklets'Hit Michigan Drills back a favored Purdue ... " Lou King, quarterback; Bob Except lor those two instances, Finally, there comes Francis J. Powers, sports editor of the Chicago DerricoUe tossed a touchdown Smith, right half, and Dick Hoer­ ANN i\.RBOR, Mich. (JP)-The As Redleg Pollet kept eight Brooklyn hits University of Michigan football Daily News-who's sports desk board of 'experts picked 'Purdue to pnss to veteran right halt Paul ner, fullback. well scattered for the most part trim the Hawks by scores ranging from 7-() to 27-0. Now Mr. Powers White and raced 51-yards down teom went through an intensive In practice yesterday Hoerner By Injuries CINCINNATI (JP}-Johnny Neun ond, upon the several occasions drill yesterday . polishing up its says, "Comes the revolution in football. AlLer three seasons as the the sidelines to account for two seemed to be completely recovered will manage the Cincinnati Reds when he appeared to waver, he plays which coaches said failed to well-stomped doormat of the Big Nine, Iowa rebelled. There'll he no , of the Wolverines' three touch­ in 1947 and 1948, Warren C. Giles, was saved· by sensational fielding greater surprise around the conference this season than t.he Rawke-ycs' , .•, downs. from the injured shoulder that That old injury jinx that makes show proper f inesse in the In­ Redleg general monager, an­ behind him. diana game last week. Tackle Bill ambush of Purdue. In beating the Boilermakers, Iowa introduced one The other Michigan payo!t held him out of action Monday. or breaks ball clubs has reared its nounced yesterday. of the many newcomers you'll be hearing about as the season develops. familiar head at the Iowa City Three swift double plays pulled Pritula, who was injured in the Neun, a vetcrlln oC 26 years in him out of threatening spots, and Hoosier engagement, reported lor "Pacemaker of the Hawkeyes was Emlen Tunnell . , . w ho pro­ high following the tough Daven­ organi zed baseball- 14 of which duced the best ]Iasslng and running Iowa has hail sinee before the port. tilt last Friday. Two regulars a beautiful throw by right fielder practice yesterday as the team of the undefeated Hawklets mny were spent in the New York Enos "Country" Slaughter in the prepared for the Iowa game this war. Yanke organization-succeeds Bill "Iowa's J 6 pOints look even larger when !he statistics are meas· not be oble to see action against seventh almost certainly saved the weekend. Dubuque this Friday while the McKechnie who resigned last slim southpaw's bacon. ured ...." Plain Whife week aIler nine yenrs at the Gln­ , . PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL . numbel' t.wo right end may be Yesterday's viclory, won before sidelined for the rest of the sea­ c\nnali helm in which he won two New York Giants 17, Boston Yank. 0 Well boys, its about time some of you were catching on Ill. ~ fact , pennants and a world champion· a disappointing crowd of only 26,- son. 332, made the Cards solid favorites DIXIE SERlE that we hove a pretty good outfit out here ... and we are very ship. Donas (Texas League) 13, Atlanta pleased, even a little gloatingly so, to hear you admit the error of - CoHon Ribbed Bob "Chugger" Wilson, star Giles did not disclose the terms to take the play-oC! and meet the (Southern A ssociation) 3 in the world your ways. fullback was shifted to right half of the two-year contract. last week, is sUIl nursing a leg in­ series. Manager Eddie Dyer said jury that may keep him oui of the hc expected to send Murry Dick­ ~Doors Open 1:15 - 9:45" -STARTS- - Little Hawks third Mississippi son, a right-handel', out altet· the ..- -- • Valley struggle. Leo Zeithamel is Teddie Injured, May clincher in Brooklyn tomorrow. To-Day 'r Shirts -- bothered by a severe charley horse Lco Durocher was expected to "ENDS FRIDAY" but should be ready to go for the call upon Joe Hatten, a southpaw, @tim i]iJ II@) Rams. N'ol Play in Series to try to cany thc series to three ALL STAR - ALL THRILL HITS! -Personal­ Another bad break for the· Cor­ gomes. Hatten was one of the few Dear Joe" Jane-- Sizes: small, medium, large mackmen is the news that Joe Ci: BOSTON-(AP)-X-ray films Dodger hurlers who didn't see oc­ Grandmother Is fine except lek: may be out for the rest of the revealed that the tion somewhere yesterday, either for the hand she sprained ap­ season. Clerk aggravated an old eoston Red Sox Homerun sl ugger, on lhe hill or in the bullPen. plauding for the two ali-time $1.00 cartilage injury ln his leg. It was sufer~d a bruised right elbow favorites the other nirht at the he who grabbed a fumble in the when struck by one of Mickey Ha­ Pastime. .. closing minutes or the Davenport efner's southpaw slants today 'dur­ 8i11 McKechnie We've pulled another IIsl oaf tilt to stop the final Imp drive. . in an exhibition clash with an A­ To Coach Tribe or ye olde request box for stu­ merican league allstar team. dent nltes lhls week. The re­ The team physicion said it CLEVELAND-CAP) - P resi­ quest favorite "The Awrnt would be a few days be[ore he Truth" starrlnr Irene Dunne would predict whether Williams dent Bill Veeek of the Cleveland BREMERS Black Market would play in the wOl'ld series, but Indians tonight announced the and Cary Grant. It's a howl olficials said that they were posi­ signing of Bill McKechnie, form­ from start to finish. " tive thflt T~d 'wol1ld be. ready for er Cincinnati Reds manager, as a For. drug store cowJ!oys •• ~ , In College Football the opening ' game. member of the Tl'ibe coaching cowgirls, you can See at the. Dr. Ralph McCarthy, the Red staff. same time an action miUsI~1 Says Educator Sox team physician, described Veeck said thal the 59-year-old featurlnr the Dinnlnr Sisters "WHere WiliIams' injury as a contusion McKechnie, who resigned Sept. 22 and the Hoosier Hot Sboti. W4SHINGTON- CAP)- The and publicity director Ed Doherty as manager of the Reds, had ac­ It's a bra.n-new movie, YDU.'Ve modern college football player, called it a bruise. cepted a two-year contract. Paul F. Douglass, president of Am­ never seen before. Il's full of The phySician ordered Willians songs, new and old, fun and erican University, said today, is a to remain out of the remaining the (rowd "human slave" caught in the laughs ralore. So put em J'Mlr games with the all-stars, a series "biggest black . market operation" cowboy boots, let yoar J¥afr arranged overnite to keep the A­ dowrt and ride old Nell down to in the history of higher education. merican league pennant winners I[.l~·l!' - Doors Open 1:15 - 10:00 - - STARTS "A human slave market extends on playing edge until their Na­ Last Times Tonite the hitchlnr POllt in front of 'Goes" from the Atlantic to the Pacific tional league rivals TO - DAY the Pastlmt!. We'll have ,hm! and from Canada especially to A­ qualify. Il's and all laurh program. ' labama," Douglass said in a state­ fititiili. "Ends Saturday" Yours strictly for laughs, " . ment. It'. a campu tracUtloil 10 sIqp In at Reich'. for dinner "Day by day young men come Pastime or a bite afler the mow. stwt.DtII tor decad.. have been to the auction block for sale to the Fresh Dressed Poultry P. S. It's still a world premier retumlnCJ for more 01 our meala and abort ordera. Youll highest bidder. The bidding is bit­ Phone your order! I ) The Picture of the Moment until you've seen It, Hey! You a9J'M too, afler you've taated ~ur delicious Jood. We're ler, determined, violent, and un­ We Dellver -From Today's Great Beat-Selling Novell- Cruoners sll in the front row. happy to ..rve you !rpm 8 a.Ql. to ,9 p.m. Monday scn.:pulous. JOHNSON HATCHERY 719<1 throuCJh Thursdays, Wltll 12 mldlllCJht F~a and Sat­ "The country is ridden by a­ I urdays, and 12 noon.to 12 mlc:tnu,hl on Sundays. gents and scouts directed by coaches who receive salaries hi gher than university presidents." AT rHE TOP i( The Picture of the Week And that is why, he sald, Am­ OF yOIJR teich~s ~(afe erican university, which last had D/Aa.. -In Life Maqazine - In Look Magazinel- J • a team in 1941, definitely will hot 21 -soulh Dubuque ~ran'l return to college fo.otball. 1540 SAN FRAN cltarn~n J! i( The Picture of the Month Ancelts and Francisco, tI - In Cosmopolitan - In Redbook Maqazinel_ '. feated for tht Ends 2 Big NOW' ~ with little di' mTS! I Friday fint mund ~ Coast Tennis . terda11 • The -Pitt·ure·, of the Year! \ , • .. Hear -With the Great Star·Team of this yearl- Kee.hir It. ·Sides IRENE DUNNE CHICAGO Keeshln ot 1 CARY GRANT laid 7eaterd! In $250,000 libel cqach Gtorge Waler, FranChise Queslion GENE TIERNEY "The Awful cqo !ears a alle'edly mQ( .in,g K~shin 's HENRY FONDA Truth" qUarterback In Rtleket coach. 1:00 p. m. TOIIlht PLUS "TEXAS WIa,Serv JAMBOREE'" CHICAGO , " .. Which I - 1st Ruu Co-Wt -­ of 50, ..• THE FALCON IS 11eJemi'lnh CO ~ FRAMED FOB MURDER! .. It h . PETER ' LAWFORD ..~. HElEN WALKER Rf8~ALD GARDINER KC\:II~AlO OWEN

"Double Ryihm" musical Parade "In Color" Great .PI", Bank RcJbber Cartoon" - News fiU" DAitoy I6l-WAH. IOWA CI'''t/iOWA pAGE iIVB

, , ~CAL SERVICE RADIO SERVICe WHERE TO GO TYPING - MIMEOGRAPHING Ct.ASStFISD ____N_O _ _T_I _C_E__ ....l- __ 1~R SALE'::-ew-S:::: rule. Prac- JACKSON ELECTRIC CO.: Elee­ ~TBC~ RADIOS WATCH TlUS J . tlcally new suit, size 35. Dial trical wiring, appliances, and TIlE ! MILE INN NOTARY PUBLIC MAHER BROS. TJlANSFER CASH RATE CORNER 3141. 'repaidng. 108 S. Dubuque. Di911 We have radlOl, record players, TYPING 2 clIy_ 5465. amalL appliances. Guaranteed E. 'AI Rome OU Co. BIIli. MIMEOGRAPHING "or 8IfIcIeIR hnaJtare 1I0YiIII lor Ask AIMIut Our 10e per Ube per cia;, Anlrela's FOR SALE: Boy's clothing, 11 to Service. 630 Iowa Ave. ' MARY V. BURNS Beauty Shop i lOIIMCuUve dap- 14 yr. old's. All wool suit and INSTRUCTION S " K ."'0 ShOJI 601 Iowa State Bldg. WARDROBE SERVICE- 'e per Une per dr.1 329 E. Market Phone 72'S5 mackinaw, shoes, light jacket, Phone 11185 Burllle), Hotel Bldr. Come lit ye down in fair re,­ Dial 2658 DIAL - W.1)6 - DIAl • eouncutf,ve ~ sport blouses, union suits, vests, pose, wUh food and drink, good pajamas, 2 pro trousers. Phone Ie per lIIle per da7 HELP WANTBD friend'ship groW!. IlIIObth- 8-02&5. ENROLL NOW! 4c per 11M per da1 W ANTE}): An organist. Call ext. Suttoa Railo Service WlIlle care for your car proc­ -"Ion s worda to l1D... 730. FOR SALE: :Florescent study Special Classes All Makes Home · and Auto esses with "Pegasus" (!lying C. O. D. CLEANERS · IIIDIIDum Ad-1 Un.. lamp. Like new. Call 4883. Starting in Radios Repaired hOl'sepewer) and the breath STUDENT wanted to help with ShortbaDd, TyplD, I Pick-Up & Delivery o'Pan for your tires. Dial 3365 106 South C~pitol CLASSIFIED DISPLAY evenlng meal and weekends. FOR SALE: Gas stove, ice )wx, aDd BookkeeplDc 1331 Eo Market Dial 2239 for A.A.A. 1I-lotor Club Services. Home cooked meal and good sal- roller curtain, table. 606 E. Bur- Cleaninq -- . Pr8.8ln9 aoc col Inch DAY and NIGHT and Blocklnq Hats­ or •.00 per IDODa ary. Dial 4242. linlton. . OJ .... WAJn'EI) TO It1YI SHOE REPAIR Our Specialty W ANTED: Stenographer wanted, FOR SALE: Small two room ho se la. CIt., COIDIIlercLJl AI Willt Ad. Cub lD Advance half-time, lor university depart­ located in Oxford. Built e­ Free Pickup and De!ivery Service PIfIble at DallJ Iowan Bud­ CoUeqe ment. Call Ext. 70l. cently. Insulated, e I e c tr i c ~ y. DIAL DiAl _ oftlee dailJ until e Po IB. Easily moved. Price $1,500. I wa 203~ E. Wash. Phone '"4 CASH WANTED: Lady to---- do laundry. Land Company. Dial 9624. 11433 48 HOUR SERVICE 4433 ~Uoaa mUit be eal1e4 III Phone 4754. -We pay 2e each for ilcmqers-:- • before II p. m. , FOR SALE: Simmons day ed, FOR SECOND HAND I IIIQIOIIIIbl. f( - oae lDcorrec:t W ANTED: Housekeeper; good ar­ one iron bed, coil spring, wo UNIVERSITY InIertton onlJ. rangement lor student couple. mattresses, room size grass Dial 6261. davenport. 331 North Gilbert TEXT BOOKS ~------~-- that are in current use Sldlled labor • . • modern equipment W ANTED: Cook at Sorority house. FOR SALE: Attention Student DIAL 4191 Dial 2947. Veterans! Solve your hou Lng ReBult ••• A Good Move situation with a new 1946 Pr ce­ Rie, Iowa Book Store Dial 2161 ton House trailer fully equip ed. 30 So. Cllnton St. WAITRESSES Owner being translerred ou of ROGERS RITE-WAY LOANS City. Call at 1619 1st Ave. est, Shoe Repairing Cedar RaDlds. Iowa. I TYPING-MIMEOGRAPHING Thompson - HALLS Is the headquarters Your WOrD shoes made Uke - WANTED FOit SALE: G. E. Radlo camp ete- lor personalized items new by o.r workmanship. Or­ ''''''$$$$.$$ ly overhauled, violin, I dy's PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER, Typ-I Transfer & Storage Co. and I'ift r\vinc thopedic Service ••• our spec­ Full or Part· Time English riding boots and bre hes, lng-Mimeographing. CoIl e Loans of All Types Stationery - - Bookmatca.es gel IaIb. DIAL 2161 Day Work, Sundays Off. fur Coat, men's leather jacket. Ex­ Typewriter Service, 122 Iowa COMPLETED · IN A FEW Bridce Sets - - Party Sets 128 E. Conere 109 South Gilbert StrMt MINUTES AT Good Wages. cellent condition. Leaving t wn. Ave., Dial 2571. .!------Phone 9363. Apply in Person Hall's Novelties & Gifts MISSISSIPPI POPEYE INVESTMENT CORP. MAID-RITE CAFE 304 N.Unn (Owned and Operated - BUY- by Veterans) WANTED! Lady who can drive TYPING Service. By appoint­ MICHAEL D. MAHER her own car lor part time work. CIGARmES ments only. Write R. New­ Manner Extra good earnings and no can­ burger, Apt. 24, 130 E. Jeflerson 1.. 11 SeJmelder Bldlr. Dial 5662 vassing. Mrs. John Yossi, R. No.1, BuS' the Carton or dial 80266. Hwy. 149 S. W. Cedar Rapids, '1'85 All PIANO Tuning and RepairIng. Iowa. Phone 3-2121. Popular Branda Mone, $ $ $ $ $ Money Dial 3214. loaned on jewelry, and most Superior Oil Co. articles of value. FOUNTAIN GIRL For Walklnr Comfort RELIABLE LOAN CoralvDle. Iowa have your shoes expertly re­ '" JEWELRY CO. paired at (f.leensed pawnbrokers) (Rerlltered Watchmaker) WANTED BIJACK'S SHOE REPAIR 110 S. Linn St. Complete Insurance Service (next to city till) 226 E. Washlncton Full Time Auto Fire Bonds No Night or Health II Aceldeni Sunday Work HOCK·m LOAN CO. G. W. BUXTON AGENCY Griff Offers You Apply in Person Palll-Helen Bid&'. Tel. 3%23 EltleleDCY In I Car paln&lnc, Tire Repair bu,. - IeOs aIUl ttacles MAID-RITE CAFE Greasinr FOR SALE: A very nice large GRIFFS TEXACO SERVICE Alll1Pes of merdlandlse WANTED: Woman for housework I choice corner lot. Size lOOx125 Corner Unn and CoUece GII4S. ".., »encu,. Watches, and care of three year old child on the corner of Oaklnnd and Cen- ~~~~~~~~~~~~ While mother teaches. Meals, room ter St. One block from Longfel- FOR G i . low school. Abottt siX blocks from CLOG ED dra ns or sew- rInts, typewriters, addlnr and salary prOVided. Dial 5796 City h'd'- h 1 N' . hb ers call electric Roto-Rooter .t 5 M Th km _,.BC 00. lce nelg or- . . a< er p. m. 1'5. roc orton. hood. See "Punch" Dunkel, 528 serVIce. No muss and no digging. JIII(lhinH. FREE ROOM plus meals and sal- Iowa Ave. Work guaranteed. Free estimate. 111 % E. Washington st. ary for woman who can care for -======:;=- Dian______7166. _ three year old child ~nd do house- 1 THE FIRETENDER ------, work. References. Dlal 5796 alter 5 p. m. MI·s. Throckmorton. AUTOMATIO Dance to Recorded ROOMS FOR RENT STOKER Music FOR RENT: Room ior stUdent lnuD~ DeUver.r BUllETIN- girl Call 9498 . We have the Ja&est recorda eontinued from page 2 ONE SINGLE and five double days Indicated above to sign their rooms for rent to students in our Larew Co. Woodburn Sound tUition vouchers. - house on South Summit on bus PI1UDblDr II HeatiD, line. Will rent to either men or Across from city haD Service FlANK BUCK LECTURE women depending on number Dial 9681 Prallk Buck will lecture on making most request.!!; Phone Ext. 8 Eui Collere Dial 8731 "Jun. Adventures," illustrated 8912 until about 7:00 p. m. Wed­ by motion pictures, in Macbride nesday; thereafter phone 5615. INSURANCE ball, Tuesday, Oct. 8, at 3:30 p. m. WANTED TO RENT LOST: Five keys, one which is and 8 p. m. Each faculty member Automobile Insurance and student is entitled to a free TWO WOMEN students in dire bent. Dial 7250. Fire Coverare on ticket to one lectUre. Tickets will need of a room. Can you help LOST: Green and white umbrella Honsehold Goods be available at the Student union us? Write Box 1-50 Daily Iowan. at Purdue game. Phone 2226. Conslllt Dorr Hudson desk beginning tomorrow at 8 H. I. JENNINGS AGENCY a. m. Sigma Chi Pledge Class LOST: Golden Retriever called 214 I.S.B. & T. Bid. Dial !5!5 "Mike." Reward. Call 3167. CAril- ('l Elects Bob Pence Head WET BASEMENTS "Dr1 u a AI'IDER.':>OH- 10-2 " LOST: ldentifi;cation bracelet, Desert" wIth Armor Coat wa- Hawkeye Meeting At the first formal meeting of signal corp insignia, probably at terproofing. Choice ot colors. O. P AU L ROB 1 N S 0 R Allatudents interested in work­ the Sigma ChI pledge class, held the Purdue game. Engraved Rob- K. Appliance, 111 South Olnton. ing on the photography staff of at the chapter house Monday ert S. Homes. Reward. Call 2036 DINk­ OISGUISED the HawkeYe should meet this art­ night, the following oflicers were after six. DELIVERY SERVICE, baggage. AS OIVE OP ernoon at 4 o'clock in room W5, elected: 11ght hauling. Strong's Repair 'M!A!AY&~ East ball, Bettye Neal, 4A of LOST: Yellow gold Elgin wrist Shop. Dial 3545. ANOWITH Hawkeye 'editor, Bob Pence, South Bend, Ind., watch between Davenport St. -:::::=::;;;;;;;;;===:; ACAMEDA Pierre; S; D;, arr.: pr ' ident; John Roe, Evanston, II- and Whetstones on Clinton St. Re- :- WE REPAIR nounced yesterday. I-/IOO£N linols, vice-president; Dick Peter- ward. Dorcas Voight, Ext. 8975. Aato BaeUOI Bome Bac1l0l t/NDtJ2 son, Council Bluffs, secretary- Ilecorcl Players AerIAJI I-IIS~, 'ramer Advances treasurer; Norm Goenne, Daven- LOST: Black and gold Eversharp WOODBURN fIOUND liAS K port, nnd Bud Holloway, Evanston, fountain pen. ,Name Margaret SERVI • SNE~D SAN FRANCISCO (JP)-National m., social chairmen. Erb in gold printing. Dial Ext. 674 . • East CO~I'" IN roGEr thamplon Jack Kramer of Los :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;:==;;:;;;=;;;;;;===;;;;====~ Dial 8731 MOVIES OF Angrles and Tom Brown of San l' 71GSliCQEr Fnnciaco, the man Kramer de- for everrW.., ill l81Ula PtAY fsled tor the title, both advanced It's the L1nLE Things with Uttle difficulty through their Q] \ . ' lint round matches in the Pacific That Count ••• Iowa City ~uinblnl 1114 Coast tennis championships yes­ Heallill terdny. Don't For,et Those Small Details Nor,. AppllaDceI OLD HOME TOWN- ROOM AND BOARD by a 'ENE AHER .. About Your Automobile- PlumbiDl HeaUn, 114 S. L1Jm Phone 11870 See "DON" and Let Him Check Your Car 5INC!: ALL'vOU CROVIS ARE VEIlY WELL ' .. BUT Kitshin Sues Halas THROWING THE BOOT AT KNCiM' S'EFdREHAND, CHICAGO (JP)-Owner John L . for MY COOKING · .. I'LL TELL 1111: PLEBEIAN 'TASTE Keeshln of the Chicago Roclcets Greasing Battery Service 'tOll WHAT. " ''' ''VOU TAKE OF YQU OAFS WONT Gas Tires OVER: 'TIlE THROTTLE ON said lesterday he had filed a Typewrilera CIN Va1uab1. THI: STOVI: AND RUN APPRECIATE THE $250,

Duncan, Johnson Prof. Croff Returns Four Worthless Checks Truman Approyes Purchase Judge Orders Cashed on Local Bank Join Law Faculty From 'UN Meeting By Unidentified Man Every Day Is l Prof. H. O. Craft. head of the Two appointents- to the colleg,: $39 Pension • Azrunidentified man, using th~ For Veterans Hospital Here ' mechanical engineering depart­ name of Edward B. Saunders, has 01 law faculty were announced ment, returned Monday after at­ cashed at least four checks on the Beauty Day '•. ======~. yesterday by Dean Mason Ladd. tending a meeting of the national Iowa State Bank and Trust com­ Univers:ty Sells Site University to Enforce fIlo)ld Duncan, 125 GoUview, commiSliion of the United Nations pany in widely scattered Iowa For 500-Bed Building was appoint.ed lecturer in law and For Mulherin Educational, Sc1entific and Cul­ Cities, bank officials said yester­ Regulations on Use will conduct classes in contracts tural organization in Washingt.on. day. To Cost 4 Million Of Identification Cards and trusts, Dean Ladd said. G. J. (Danny) Mulherin, Iowa D. C., Sept. 23 to 27. They are unable to find an ac­ at Corwin Johnson ot Centerville, City, was granted a monthly re­ Specitic plans for world educ­ count ~ listed in Saunders' name, Purchase of a 12-acre tract ot • Enforcement of th'e unlVerSl · t·y has accepted an Instructorship and tirement sum of $39.09 yesterday ation were formulated and recom­ but c~s from banks in Oskaloosa, land at. the northwest corner of ruling limiting the use of identi­ will teach property and torts. mended to the seven American Fort Dodge. Newton and Le Mars the university campus by the vet fication cards to the persons to in his district court suit against B~ The appolntments were made delegates. who will take the pro­ indicate that the man has casbed erans administration for a 500- whom they were issued will go to meet demands of increased en­ trustees of the Iowa City Police posals to the Paris conference in a tot"l of $1,200 in worthless bed general and surgical ho pltal int.o eftect immediately. Dr. Earl ",TOWNER'S rollment. Dean Ladd explained. Retirement fund . November. checks on the local bank. was approved yesterday by Presi­ E. Harper, director of .the school Thes~ plans include education dent Truman. First year classes. which number Judge James P. GaIfney ruled, Amounts of the checks ranged of fine arts. announced yesterday. more than'2oo students. have been by radiO, moving pictures and The new veterans hOS1»ltal Is Students wishing to obtain tick­ however, that the sum ot $101.88 from $250 to $350. In one case, P.rm~nent Waves divided into two sections. and the printed mattel' published tor the m~n cashed his check alter in­ to be buill at a CO!It of $4 ..... - ets to concerts, lectures and other Mulheim paid to the retirement world-wide distribution; by pro­ .... _rdln&' to an Associated new faculty members will help formi a bank ollicial that he ~ni,;ures Hair Tints T university functions must present fund during the 15 months he moting exchanges in the arts and Press dispatch received wt their identification cards person­ with these sections. intcnd d to make a down payment served in the armed forces was not scientific information. and by or­ u t.omobile. Fa.cial. Cold Waves n1abt. The land wa old to the ally in order to obtain tickets. Dr. Duncan received a B.A. degree to be refunded. He ordered that VA})y the university. with state from Iowa Wesleyan college and ganization or •pilot" centers to efinite description of the Harper said. the monthly payment of the pen­ train instructors. executive council approval. for The one exception will be mar­ graduated from the. University of man uld be given by bank em­ Call 9634 sion. be authorized to begin last ployes of other Cities. local bank '133.045. ried students. each ot whom may Iowa college of law in 1917. Jan. !. The site is bounded on the north obtain an additional tlcket for his With the armed forces in both ollicia said. by highway 6. on the west by world wars, he served in World The order. which must be car­ Democrats Nominate wife at the time he piCks up his ried out by the trustees by Oct. WooU avenue and on the south­ own. Dr. Harper added. War II as a lieutenant colonel in west by Newton road. University the inspect.or-genera}'s depart­ 14. involves tile back Payment prpoerty adjoins the tract on the ment. He was stationed at Camp of $351.81 for the tnonths of Messer for Vacancy east and southeast. Ellis, Ill., and at the port of em­ January throu&'h October. To Remove BuUdlnfll State Aid Needed barkation at San Francisco. The court action was started by On Supreme Court Buildings to be removed from Johnson took his preliminary Mulherin after a monthly retire­ the site include a university dor­ work in liberal arts at the Univ­ ment sum granted by the trustees Frank ~. Messer. Iowa City at­ mitory, formerly Kellogg school, For Iowa Schools, erslt yof Iowa and was graduated was later withdrawn on the torney and former state repre­ the botany laboratory building and Crom the college of law with high grounds that Mulherin wasn't a sentative, yesterday was unani­ greenhouse. and three residences, Davies Declares distinction in 1941. member of the police force for mously nominated by the demo~ occupied by Robert W. McCollister, After a year of g~ac;luate work five years, the minimum require­ cratic central committee to fill the Prof. Wilbur A. Robbie and Otto at the Yale university law school. ment for pension eligibility. vacancy in the Iowa Supreme J. 'Leonard Davies, research di­ court created by the resignation of Vogel, SUI baseball coach. rector ot the Iowa State Educa­ Johnson joined the FBI and com­ Ju~e Gaflney ruled that Another piece of land north or pleted four years' service as a Justice Fl:ederick M. Miller of Des tion association. declared last Mulherln's time In the armed Moines. :Oordon Felkner avenue not owned by the night that Iowa lost 9.000, or 35 special agent before accepting the forces counted toward the five university has been appraised but appointment as instructor in law. In the Nov. 5 election for the percent. of its teachers during year requirement. because he post Messer will oppose former not purchased. the war and urged that more state He is a member ot the bar in Iowa was on leave of absence. district Judge Norman R. Hays of Title to the property wllJ be financial aid be given to Iowa and California. transferred to the V A and will Mulherin was wounded in the Knox"ille who was named Repub­ schools. service and doctors's reports lican candidate yesterday and a remain with the administration He spoke belore nearly 50 edu­ lor the sole purPO e of main­ claimed him permanently disabled few hours later appointed by Gov. ., , cators represeot.i.ng ISEA units ~he was discharged Oct. 19, tainJng and operating a general Robert D. Blue to step lnt,"'-...... '-HI of nine surrounding counties at an 1945. vacant position until the election. and urglcal hospital. association-sponsored school of in­ Milk Raised-­ Attorney D. C. Nolan repre­ Hays served on the bench of the can help y·ou! Iowa City was first mentioned as struction held in the audit.orium of a location aftet· pre ~ idential ap­ City high school yesterday. sented Mulherin. fifth district for 15 yearS proval was announced Oct. IB, "We desperately want and need Miller's resignation became ef­ 1945. by Gen. Omar N. Bradley, ~uarl fective Monday midnight. The re­ a more efficient school program (enl per When "~tudy fatig,ue" gets ypu. down and you feel like throwing veterans administrator. tor the children of Iowa," Davies City High to Choose tiring justice is reported to have Offer to Sell declared. "as well as a more equit­ left the bench to enter private The price of milk in Iowa City Homecoming' Queen practice. your grode-point out the window· STOP· think again, then The University of Iowa, With able program for teachers." was increased one cent ' a quart state executive council approval, Messer. 5B, now is associated phone Gordon for favorite sandwich, cold "Property tax is the soundet5t yesterday. and the prJte·of cream The City high school homecom­ Sand~kh·ShOp -your offered to sell the 12-acre site thing for the support of schools," with the law firm of Messer, Ham­ last March. was raised , two centl! · ~r half log queen will be chosen at the ilton and Cahill here. A graduate drink, ice cream ,or o.her'snac·l(itrecit. We specialize in midnight he continued. print. There WilL be rel!\tiv'e price ' homecoming dance in the school The purchase agreement states Dr. Karl H . Berns. Washington, of the University · of Iowa law increases 'on 1/-11' oth,er "~iry pro- gymnasium Oct. 12 from a list of school in 1909, he was admitted to deliveries, so ne?Ct time you need fls-econd wind" phone 3521 ; that the university shall remove D.C .• assistant executive secretary ... ~ " r· , the buildings from the 10caUon. ducts, local'dairymell Say. • seven attendants announced Mon- the bar that year and has been a of the National Education associa­ According · t.o K . .A. Deming of day by the senIor class. let Gordon's make studying , ~a$jer. . Although it is thc practice of the tion, cited the ingenuity of the Am­ prominent trial lawyer. serving . the Iowa ity Mllk:malers associ- The attendants elected by the '. veterans administration to keep erican GI as a tribute to educat.ors. C: once as a special assistant attor­ architecture and construction in "The inventiveness. the well­ t~on, the flse j~ p~lCr . was ~eces- senior class are: Sarah Records, ney general. tone with the prevailing style of sltated by the Jncre~Slng pnce ?f Carolyn Covert, Virginia William­ ------developed sense 01 humor 01 butter fat-and of: protem son Laura Mac Ham Sue Funk, B.P.O.E. TO MEET TONIGHT the sites cho en, no construction the American GI far outshone the ~lack fc:eds. which p~~!'lp~d n:a!ly No;ma Gerard, and J~yce Meyers. The regular semi-monthly meet­ plan COl' the new hospital have that of his Australian and Enll'­ farmers to feed skim nulk to live- been announced. ing of thc Benevolent and Pro­ 3521 llsh allies." Berns stated, "but stock and to sell only cream. tective Order of Elks will be held his utter disregard lor property The butter faf price in Iowa tonight at B o'clock in the Elks I rights is a bllll'M on our educa­ City yesterday was ~1 cents per Scout Heads to Meet home. Orchesis Holds Meetings tional system." pound. At North EngLish , thjl price A roundtable meeting [or scoul­ For Students Interested Ruth Wagner, field representa­ had risen · to $1.03 •. per pound, masters, cubmasters and senior tive for ISEA, described the 'op­ Deming slud. " , unit leadcrs will be held in the In Modern Dancing erations of the Iowa Pupils' Read­ Ceilings - have been off dairy Boy Scout headquarters tonight ing Circle as a "valuable force in products since OPA lapsed June at 7:30 p. m .• according to word Orchesis will hold open meet­ developing the reading taste of 30. from the local office. ings for all students interested in children." The reading circle is an modern dance and ballet at 7:30 evaluation service that annually 1 tonight and at 4:30 tomorrow aft­ recommends 270 new titles for ernoon in the Mirror room. wom­ children's reading lists. # en's gymnasium. Ellen Lyga. A2 of LaCrosse, Wis., publicity manager, Baumgartner Fined. said yesterday. J.A. Membership is open to both In local Police Court men and women students. There will be opportunity for students J. A. Baumgartner. Davenport, without experience as well as with was fined $100 and costs yesterday experience in modern dance and in pOlice court by Judge John ballet, Miss Lyga said. The latter Knox on a reckless driving will make up Senor Orchesis and charge. the tormer Junior Orchesis. Of 25 persons paying fines for ReqUirements Cor tryouts, t.o be traffic Violations, 16 were charged held October 16, 17 and 19, will with overtime parking. Four were be ' discussed at these meetings and charged with parking in prohib­ meetings to be held October 9 and ited zones and two were fined for 10. AU those interested are to parking on the wrong side of the bring activity clothes. street. '

I

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...... l,l~e, your pip. an~ easy chair,. "'.'. re.tful -htion .... MII'OOII or brOWII wiIIt· ~. liIred, house .lIp~.rs qr~ , frl.,n4Jy companions with your GIl us, a ... wIIII ...... I~ terrible .mole., dr.~mln~. Get a parr today from hll\ds . "I'm SIMULATED -not LEATHER our bla M~I at q ~rlce Y~'II like. Ple-I Ihtm. Yeite1'~ -STORE HOURS­ Brown Everett OpeD Dally 9:30 A.M. Men', Sizes Alwaya The Home Owned Store 10 5:30 P.M. OpeD Sat­ 58th Year urday 8:30 A.M. to 8 DUNN'S 11 5-117 Eaat ~aahington P.M. \ III I. Colle,e Phone 11., PboDe 2141 Iowa City, low.