9,lS.r • ~ "''''1'1, 'PAri, N. "'a.," II U".. ,II II BtW ,.alli. lies ••OCEII8ED rOOD8, blue Ilampa 1>12 IIt •• Ulb Z2 and Partly Cloudy 0\1 I •••• ,b 81 a ... ,0". IIUOA., boo .. I ••, .I.mp 8. ,0.1 I., II .. ,00n', Ih, •• ,h AUI. 81. BaOI8, ' ••11 lit,... I,pl ...... p. I, Z and S lood Indell.II.I,. IO"'A: Partly eload)'. Seat­ OAIOLINI. la"A C•• pOll, ,ood ror '.ur ••Uoa. each tered llumder-showers. 8-ft, 8-1, D 'AILY IOWAN, I.,•• ,h h •••1 a" 0-8 ODd 0-7 ,.0" I •• Cooler• fly. ,.110..... b . 'UEL OIL. porl04 .ne Ihr •• ,h ,. •• THE• ••• pon. , ••• III ...,,, Au •. '1: I." y •• r'. p.rlod ••• , Iowa C I' t Y, I M 0 r n I n 1'1 ... a w I pap. r ••• ft •• a •• p ••, .1 •• Ispln ...,.,. IU. • ~~==. ~C=~==~~~~~~~~~~~=====: ·~ftn===A=~====ft=D=nmd======~======~~~IO~W~A~C~I~T~f;,~K)~W~~~:=~~~~NES~~D~A~Y~,~nrnm~~W~'~l~94~S~==~======:=~na~:~~~~~~ftW~~-:"~======~V~O~L~~~~X~XI~NUMrn~~~ER ~8· House Speaker May Succeed Marines Sm'ash Lessening 1o Presidency

, Truman Waives Right To Name Successor Jap Okinawa Opposition In Case of Death \YASHINGTON (A P ) - Paintingl in Summar Art Show- President Truman yesterday Third Inter-American Enemy 'roops waived the power to name his 1IUccellllor in the event of his Affairs Conference death 01' disability and asked 12 Recommended for purchase Leap off Cliffs congres.'J to place the speaker of the. house fi rst in the succession Starts ' Tomorrow From a group ot 127 paintings line. are done in oils or water color by Ten paintings by former stu­ to be exhibited in the Iowa sum­ contemporary artists. either Amer­ dents at Iowa have been mcluded The president's mes.,>age, de­ Chilean Pianist, Two mer art lihow opening Sunday, a Marine Drive Splits icans or artists now living in in the exhibition, According to livered after his departure on Speakers to Promote judging committee has recom­ America. The show is contempor­ Nips Into Two the first of a-scl'ies of lonl\' OPrial mended 12 for university purchase. ary in a rather strict sense, Pro­ artists who have already viewed trips evoked comments of ap­ Friendship, Helpfulness These 12 paintings, to be an­ fessor Longman expiained, in that the entire group, the student work Disorganized Pockets proval hom Republicans and wlll is equal in every way 10 the re­ nounced later, be reserved the paintings are examples of 20th .1 A~{, W In day (AP)- Demof:rats in both chambers. The universily's third annual from other buyers until the unl­ century art. majnder of the show. .1I!pan l' troop~ Iraped into the /. lew hours later, Senator conference on inter-American af­ verslty has made a choice. The emptiness of this area in Paintlngs were chosen accord­ LleuL Loren Hickerson llrf from Okinawa cliff!; yester­ IIrtd,e. (R., NU.) Inlroduced a fairs tomorrow through Saturday Pr9t. Henry Hope, head of the art showed the need for such a ing to standards in metropolitan 11111' lollowln* .u"'&antlallr the * * * ..... is designed to "strengthen the art department at the University show, he said. Radio and concert art centers, Prol sor Longman day as two mal'in ,. g1ment ,ftlldenl'. IUllestlonL The line bonds of friendship with our of Indiana; Lucile Blanch ot courses answer the demand tor sa id . Some of the leading artists dl"()v through w ak ning mi­ " ,ueeesslon, under Brid,es' mea­ Lieuf. Lor·en Hickerson Tells of Carrier American neighbors" and to "fur­ Woodstock, N. Y., a summer lec­ music, but there has been little in the country are represented( hmer to the sou thern tip of lhe ....e. after Ute ,resident and vlce­ ther a long-term program for bet­ turer on the art staft. and Prof. L. opportunity to deveiop an inlerest though others have been omitted island. ..,elldenl, would be: speaker of ter understanding of inter-Ameri­ D .. Longman, head of the Univer­ in art in this part of the country. because it was Impossible to e­ The mannes' pll h split the tile house. president pro tempore Aclion During Major Pacific Ballies can afafirs," according to Presi­ sity of Iowa art department, were The art department has had to cure first class exomples of their tJopane. r mnnni. into two ., die senate, secretary of stale, dent Virgil M. Hancher. the judges who selected the paint­ depend on slides and reproductions work. disorp-unized I>IlL still fanati­ _retar)' of lrellur" seeretary of By JOE MATHER ' ations officer on the carrier ,said The conference represents an­ Ings from which the university 101' teaching. Professor Longman The first summer xhibition at cally re isting pock t. a 11 d war, attorney reneral, postmaster Dally Iowa.n City Editor that he saw much of Bill Green, other step in the efforts of the will ml\ke purchases for its per­ continued. With increa'led interest the University of Iowa, the show poe,al. navy aecretary, Interior recipient of those famous Kinnick­ university to promote good rela­ brou~ht Crom FI ('t dmlral "Our carri"'r was the luckiest manent collection. in art, it is hoped that the Uni­ will be on a par with the best llest(,f W. Nimitz thl' triumph­ MeI'~&ary. ship in the Pacific," Lieut. Loren to-Green pa:sses in the football tionship between the Americas, versity of Iowa will eventually shows of the country in scope and For several years Iowa has offel'ed Most of the paintings chosen by Republicans and Democrats Hickerson, now on leave from the seasons of '39 and '40. Green Professor Longman for the show have a big coliecHon. quality. anl 8nlloun' m nt : "'fh ene­ ,like applauded when the presi­ navy, said yesterday. Lieutenant graduated from the university in courses to furnlsh students with my 's delenF s were in the procell8 dent's message was read in thc Hickerson is a former editor of The '41 and was landing signa is officer information about other American of collapsin," by Dlghtrall yester­ house. Speaker Sam Rayburn Daily Iowan. on the sister ship of Lieutenant nations. day. Tbrou(h the bureau of vlsu.al At a Glance- "Numf'rou en e m T personnel ID:, Tex.), who would be the "We were in every major en­ Hickerson's carrier. Commission Vote Yanks Cross Cagayan Two other SUI graduates were Instruction of thl' extension dlvt­ were reparnd to be Jumpl", off liI£cessor - designate under the gagement from January, 1944, cliffs neaf the eoa Louth of Udo proposal, referred the message to flrhter pilots on the same carrl". sion, films on Inler-Amerlcan af­ through May, 1945, and although fairs have been shown on the Bars Franco Regime River on LUlon lown," Nimitz added In today'. the judiciary committee. They were Llcut. (j.(.) BlII Mear­ many shells and bombs came close, don of Iowa. City and Lieut. Rob­ campus .. and .. distributed .. widely Today's communiQue. we were only hit once and lhen Mr. Truman said in his message ert Edmundson. throughout the state. The colle,e Australians Gain However, the Jap nese sUU Ihat the question of succession is only slightly damaged," he ex­ The most amazing factor in the of education has been a center lor Propolal to Exclude were lighting stubbornly on lhe of g~eat importance now because plained. Pacific was, according to Lieuten­ distribution of Informallon about Governments Aided In Borneo, Near southeastern coa!!t in the 96th and lil*re will be no elected vice­ Lieutenant Hickerson joined his ant Hickerson, is that many crew LaUn America to Iowa schooll!. Iowan Seventh infantry divisions' sectors president for nearly four years. ship, a ligh t airCraft carrier of the members go into action without PUrposes of the conference, By Axis Accepted Seria Oil Fields and everal thou ands r mained The present lIne of succession, Independence class which must re­ having been on as much as a which will bring to the campus to be eliminoted belore Nimitz SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A MANILA, Wednesday (AP)­ ....bUshed by an 1886 law, Is main nameless, in Juiy, 1943, be­ shake down cruise at sea. They such persona lities as Rafael de Yanks push* through* * weakening could report Okinawa mllJtarily United Nations conference com­ Under cover of a lurious artillery Ihroua-h .. the .. presidentially .. ap­ lore it had been commisssioned. learn quickly how to do their work Silva, famed Chilean pianist; E. A. resistance on Okinawa. secure. After a shakedown cruise in the and do it well. mission last night voted unani­ barrage, Maj. Gcn. Robcrt S. "Inled eabind, bertnnlnr with Gilmore Jr., of the division of BeightJer's 37th diviSion spanned D spit the confusion li nd com­ south Atlantic and arrived in the About Japancse suicide tactics, mously to bar the J,l'ranco govern­ Truman recommends h 0 u se IIJe seeretary of state, a post now River Platte atlairs in the state ment of Spain from future mcm­ the Cagayan river of northern plete disofgonlzation of the Japa­ PacHic in December, 1943. Lieutenant Hickerson said that department, and Dean Robert speaker as next in line to presi­ nes ,C'Xccptfor small unf , Amer­ IleId by Eclward R. Settlnlu5 Jr_ bership in a new world organlza­ Luzon in O~SIlUlt boats Sundoy and The ca.rrler and her crew spent thcit suicide planes wcre only a RedfisJ,(l of th~ (Jniver~it.y of ~b1- dency. ican troop cont.inllcd to meet "It now lies witbin my power," 495 days outside the tates' and tion. s ped northward for' n total Ilain Xr. Truman said, "to nominate "damncd nuisance." -- cago, are to promote Inter-Ameri­ Of 13 miles, liberating the town mod I'at to h uvy fIre Crom auto­ more tha.n 16 months In the ad­ "Our forces are so superior that The commission, after a cheer­ Oonference commission voles to the person who would be my im­ can friendship and cooperation; to of NaguiJian. matic weapons, mochm uns and vanced a.reas west of Pcarl Har­ there is nothing that they can do, stimulate a study of inter-Amer­ ing, laughlng session, approved a bar Franco government from small arms. In one sector, Okl­ ~iate successor In the event of The advance, announced by bor. no matter how desperate the at­ ican affairs; to insure more accur­ Mexican proposal to write inlo the future world organization. nawan clvlllons join d the bottle. my own death or Inability to act. "During those 16 months we had conference records in connection G neral MacArthUr In today's tempt, that can aiter the outcome ate knowledge and understanding l communique, placed the Buckeye hurling hand gr n d s among ad­ "I do not believe that in a demo­ no fresh vegetables or milk," Lieu­ of the final victory," hc said. of our neighbors to the south, and wlth charter provisions on mem­ Iowa. CltlanlJ form preliminary vanCing Yanks. cracy this power should rest with bership, an inlerpretation barring organization for safety counel'!. division within three miles of tenant Hickerson said. "When I to bring about a general aware­ Hogan , city of 30 ,000 and capital Col. lanne Wallace's El,blh the chlet executive. got back to Hawaii the tirst thing ness as to how the American re­ governments set up with axis help. marine rerlmentlLl combal Ieam­ MexIco and France, one a de­ of Isabela province. . "Insofar as possible, the oflice I did was to sit down to a big publics are cooperating to win the Japanese casualties continued a 1rc h outfit that f'nlered Ute bat­ of the president should be filled plate of radishes and onions and scendant and the other a next door lie onl Monday to help bilUle­ .s...,.., U. S. Troops war. neighbor of old Spain, led the at­ heavy as the Yanks drove up the with an elective officer. There is lots of milk." The conference program, open­ productive Cagayan vall y. They weary troopS uln complf'te vfc­ t~,. ,r1 During her stay in the Pacific, tack on the F'ranco government. tI.", Pri no officer in our system of gov­ ing officially tomorrow atternoon 8·29's Strike totaled more than 1,600 dead and tory-reached lhf' uth rn coast .S •• an'" the Anoymous, which is not hpr The dramatic scene was the 700 yard south or Komesu town. th •• Pri ernment. besldes the president with an inspection of exhjbits In nearly 500 prisoners in thc past alld vice- president, who has been name, engaged in every major op­ formally-arranged and brilliantly­ That put the u"iment (In. the .. s.... Uncover Nazi the senate chamber of Old Capltol, lighted Opera House. The prin­ week. 'hr, Ftl elected by all the voters of the eration, including includes disclIsslon meetings Fri­ Australian forces on northwest­ southcrn hore III almost the exaet .s.tu,_ cipal ~haracters were Luis Quin­ thr. pri country. The Marsha.1l Islands Inva.slons. day morning on "Postwar Outlook Three Cities ern Borneo meanwhlle advanced cenler of the I land's UP. .. s•• The Inva.slon of northern New tanilla, former Mexican ambassa­ th ... Pri ~e speaker of the house of re­ for South America," led by Gil­ in ali seeton, driving closer to the Wollacc's combat team tought Guinea. ' dor to Moscow, and Joseph Paul­ its woy through aco llered fire as .S.tu,. ~ntatlves, who Is eleeted In Treasure Lool more; "Race and Class In Latin Seria oil fields. t.,. pli The raids on Truk, Palau and Boncour, former prime minister of GUAM, Wednesday (AP) ­ it crossed the road linking Komesu th •• Pd hlr .wn district, Is &Iso eleeted to America," led by Dean Redfield France. Infantrymen mopping up in the .Sltur'" Wolel Isla.nds In the Carollnes. and a symposium that afternoon Great fires-the enemy admitted newly captUred area south of the and Nagusuku on the southwestern , ... Pri lie' Ute presldln, office of the The Marianas invasions: Guam, PARIS (AP)- American troops Their off-stage target was Gen­ some raged fOf four hours-were IMiue by a vote of ali tbe repreen­ on "What Should Students Learn Cagayan river killed nearly 200 coasL .8.· .. ~ " Saipan and Tinian. have uncovered a vast Nazi trea­ eralissimo Franco, whose govern­ set today in a strike by The fifth regiment or the First .. 8...., IatJves of all the people of the About Latin America?" wit h ment they declared had no right Japanese and captured 447, one of u 5_ The reccupation of the Philip­ sure hoard valued at $5,000,000,- about 450 B-29's at two "back­ the rare instances in which the marine division also drove through .. 80 • .., eOllJltry. As a reauU. I believe that members of the university faculty to United Nations fellowship be­ yard" industrial cenlers on Honshu inES, boU1 the first and second 000 (B). including the main na­ participa ting. number of prisoners exceeded the to the Bou th coast, east of the •T W'".. 1''''n UIe apeaker Is the official In lhe battle for the islands. tional wealth of Austria and Ba­ caus!! of the help it got from Hit­ island and one on Kyushu in the .Sot... A talk by Georee V, Denn,. Jr.. enemy deod. Many of the prisoners Eighth combat t am, In a pressing felenl I.venunent, whose selee­ . The Third fleet strikes in the varia and loot 'stolen from death­ ler and Mussolini in coming to enemy homeland . ... S...., tlen next to that 01 the president moderator of Amerlca's To"" were Formosa n troops, not usual1y maneuver that completely split the China seas against French Indo­ cam p victims and desecrated power. The Superforts hit Shlzuoka and Japanese remnants inlo two malor .... vlce-prelldent, can be most MeelillC of Ihe Air, on "III This Before the meeting was over, the found holding frontline positions. China, the China coast and churches. It was revealed yester­ Toyohashi on Honshu and Fukuoka pockeL~ . _anteII' old to .tem from the Hainan. America's Century?" will be the United States saId it was "In com­ day. hlghllrht In the conference for on Kyushu, raising to 13 the home­ One of the main concentrations _Pie themselves." The invasion of Iwp Jima. Announcement of the find was piete accord" with the Mexican Friday evening. Scheduled to be land cities scorched by 25 such IAnother Thunderstorm I ot 5urvlvinlil Nippon e appeared The president recommended Strikes against tile Japanese made by communications zone position. mass incendiary raids. to be in the Hill 81 sector at the held on the west approach to Old QUintanilla. a tall man in the tM If there were no qualified home islands in February and headquarters and was based on Tokyo radio sald fires broke out I Coming Our Way southw tern edge of Yaeju es­ rpeaker, the succession pass to the March of this year. Capitol, the lecture will be pre­ uniform of diplomacy, quoted information fro m the United in a "number of places" in Fuku­ The nice weather Is all ovcr for carpm nl. This force was under president pro tempore of the sen­ The invasion of Okinawa. States 12th corps, whose troops sented In MacBride auditorium If from Franco-Hitler and Franco­ the weather 15 unfavorable. koa ; the big bombers worked it a while and we are in for another attack from the west by elements ,teo If neither offlcer was quali­ "The tou,hest flcht 110 far wa.s discovered thp treastlre. M""t nt Mussolinl mesages 10 back up his of the Fifth marine regiment. Dr Denny will also lead a round thesis that the three were Fascist over for two hours-and "most" one of those violent summer thun­ fied, Mr. Truman suggested that Okinawa," Lieutenant Hickerson, it was in securities and zone head­ fires were extinguished two hours !he succession pass to the cabinet who left the walen around Okl. table discussion on Inter-Ameri­ bedmate.>. dershowers. At midnight last nigbt quarters said it lacked intorma t10n after the raiders departed. Des Moines was getting a heavy IS at present, until 8 qualified nawa about three weeks ago, said. as to how values were estimated can aUairs Saturday morning at 9 o'clock in the senate chamber of The enemy broadcast did not hail, rain and thunderstorm. When De Gaulle Asks British 'Peaker was elected. "The toughest spot our ship was and whether they were f ace Old Capitol. A panel discussion on comment immediately on the other that gets here, it will still be vio­ He expressed the opinion that in was for two days, Oct. 24 and values or aetua i clIrren t market 25, 1944, during the invasion of "Inter-American Understahding two targets hit but said 10 B-29's lent but not long in duration. Hail To Aid in Settling 110 successor to both the president worth. Ike Sees New York laid mines in the Kanmon strait is such tricky stuff we may not Leyte. At one time we were at­ Far greater in estimated value Through Cultural Coeration" and IIlce-president Should ser~e will be held at 10 :30 Saturday between Kyushu and Honshu. get any_ longer than until the next con­ ta cked by 150 Jap planes." than the cache of 200 tons of gold City Outdoes Itself The job of the Nameless, which morning with students from Latin The mission was the second in Alter noon today conditionlJ will Levantine Dispute tresslonal election or a special found April 7 at Merkel'S, 18 miles In Welcoma three days of the newly launched s tar t improving. Temperatures is also not her name, and her southeast of Hersfeld in Thurin­ America now enrolled in the Uni­ ~\'ealdential election could be versity participating. Prot. Bruce campaign of Maj. Gen. Curtis E. will go down somewhat. Yester­ PARIS (AP)- France's consul­ held. crew was to provide long range gia, the new trove was discovered tative assembly and General De support for invasion forces. As Mahan, director of the extension NEW YORK (AP)-New York i.e May 's 21st bomber command day's temperatures were a high ot by troops of the same 12th corps City took General of the Army against secondary war production 76 and a low of 49, one 'of the GauUe himself extended the olive a part of Task Force 58 or the that unearthed the gold hoard division, will preside over this branch to Britain on the Syrian Third fleet, she would cover the meeting and Margaret Ems, coun­ Dwight D. Eisenhower to its' heart target:s in the Nippon homeland. lowest readings for weeks. from a salt mine. yesterday and outdid Itself in dispute yesterday in a surprisln, Leader of Polish invading torces by preventing selor to foreign students, wilt be finale to an acrimonious debate enemy rel'nforcements from getting in charge. showering on him a rousing. emo­ tional welcome. between the French leader and to the scene of the invasion. Due to ODT regulations, the Pierre Cot, a former Frenc cab­ .Home Army Testifies Whlie Salpan was belne In­ President .Truman conference this year will be local The greatest crowds the metrop­ Former Student Named Pubic Relations olis has ever seen-estimated by inet minister. vaded, the lIupportl~ force was in character, instead of statewide. In a speech to the assembly De police at more than 7,000,000, OJ' At 'Sabotage ' Trial aUa.cklnc Iwo Jlma. then an enemy Visits Governor Several sessions. includihg the Officer at· Lockbourne Army Air Base Gaulle proposed that France and supply bue. Durin, die Invasion Friday morning discusslohs on about twice the size of all United States forces in Europe at the peak Britain settle the Levantine prob­ MOSCOW (AP)-The comman­ of Iwo Jlma, the lonr raqe force Soutb American economic outlook First Lieut. H. Eugene Goodwin. lem between themselves, and said atruck a~ hues In the Tokyo bay In Olympia, Wash. an drace and class, and the Sat­ of the war-turned out to pay * * * der o( the Polish home army, Maj. tribute to the Kansas boy who di­ former University ot Iowa stu­ that a solution could be "found Gen. t. Bronislaw Okulickl, testi­ area. urday morning panel on inter­ without difficulty." "Yes, we hit Tokyo on several OLYMPIA, Wash. {AP)-This American understand in" will be rected America's mightiest mlU­ dent and city editor ot The Daily Bed at his "sabotage" trial yester­ city 01 15,000, nestling at the tal')' success. The assembly then adopted a day that the supreme Polish com­ occasions. I've been as close to broadcast over station WSUI. Iowan, has been apPOinted public resolution calling upon the gov­ Tokyo as l want to be," Lieuten­ southern tip of Puget Sound, be­ . The \nod est hero told more than lnender In London told him Rus­ came the temporary capital of thE' 2,000.000 persons jammed around relations officer of the Lockbume ernment to redouble its efforts to­ Ii, Intended to absorb Poland, Bnd ant Hickerson said. ward conclusion of a J,l'ranco-Brlt'­ Lieutenant Hickerson, air oper- nation last night when President Raise for Congress city hall: army air base at Columbus, Ohio. ordered him to take his army un­ Harry S. Truman stepped from WASHINGTON (AP)-The sen­ l'n we are going to live the He returned last March from a ish trea ty along the lines of derll'ound to help preserve Po­ Gov. Mon C. Wallgren's car at the ate appropriations committee de­ yeats of peace, we must be strong France's treaty with Russia. lind', Independence. nine months' tour of duty overseas De Gaulle said today: "Let us door of the executive mansion, ai­ cided yesterday that meffib@rs 0; and we mUBt be ready to cooperate with the Eighth airtorce. As a Okullckl Is the principal defen­ most in the shadow of the state the next congress and the presi­ in the spirit of lrue tolerance and seek a solution worthy of us and navigator on a B-17 bomber, Lieu­ let it conform to the friendshlp we dant amona 16 Polish underground capitol building at 8:30 p. m. CWT. dent's cabinet should have more forbearanee." tenant Goodwin won the Disting­ itadera arl'l!lted by the Russians Ite was barely 13 hours out of money. Eisenhower, who received a spe­ bear for England. A solution can uished Flying Cross, the Air Medal be found without difficulty in a _lid belna tried by the military Washington, D. C., after the first The committee reported a bill cial city medal and honorary cit!­ with four Oak Leaf Clusters and tollealum ot the Soviet supreme cross country aiJ'p1ane trip ever increasing: aenship In the city, · received an mutual eftort by Britain and the European Theater ot Opera­ France whkh would satisfy inter­ tOUrt on charaea of aubverslve ac­ made by a president, and less than Senators and representatives ovation when he asserted: tions ribl>on. tivities behind Soviet liens. an. hour from McChord field, 20 from $10,000 to $15,000; the vlce­ "It isn't enough thal-' we devise national harmony." The 49-year-old Pollsh comman­ miles north, where his special president from $15,000 to $20,000; every kind of international ma­ A journalism major at the uni­ dtr Idmltted that he had hoped to C-54 transport plane I and e d the speaker ot the house from chinery to keep the peace. We versity from September, 1940. Chinese Near Liuchow Itt a weslern European bloc of smoothly at 7:40 p. m. $10,000 to $20.000 and the cabinet must also be IItrong ourselves. until February, 1943. when he en­ CHUNGKING (AP) - Chinese a,tlOIlII, Includlnl Germany, ai­ Starting hi.! brief vacation here from $15,000 to $17,500. Weakness cannot cooperate with tered the alr corps, Lieutenant troops have rolled within 19 miles Ulned aallnat RUIIla. but he told as guest of the governor, a short The increases would be effective anything. Only strength can co­ Goodwin served first as city editor of the south China alrbase and raU lie court that he had taken "no rest before he goes to San Fran­ with the 80th congress, starting operate." and later as night editor of The city of Liuchow, the Chinese com­ action toward this tlnd." cisco to address the United Na­ Jan. 3, 1947, From La Guardia field to Cen­ Daily Iowan. He was olso presi­ Lleut. U. E. Goodwin mand said yesterday, while the avert dent ot the AliBociated Students of fbla WI. ont! ot the prinCipal ac­ tions conference, the president was By that time all the metnbers ot tral park, alon, flag-bedecked Japanese were reported preparine allle/ona levelled a,alnlt the to dine with his host immediately the house and one-third of the grounds, cheering men, women and Journalism. former Frances Prudhon, a 1943 to abandon the southeast coast Pol. ill the ItIdlctment apjnat, and then attend an organ concert senate will have stood for reelec­ chUdren expreaed their Il'atltude Lieutenant Goodwin now resides Iowa graduate, and their four­ ports of Amoy and Swatow, 430 them. In the capitol buildin,. tion, he pointed out. to the lupreme aWed commander. in Columbus with his wife, the month-old dauahter. Oeri. mUes northeast of the PhillppiJiet, .AGETWO THE DAILY IOWAN. IOWA CITY, IOWA WEDNESDAY. JUNE 20,1945 ~ : oft::: New Thr~at of Inflalion O'FFie IA L DA1 LY BU ll:E TIN t.!!:t;.", 9.!-lJ.I•. ,! 2~~.~, Paul ' AI II.",. 'I! Ibe UI'llVI!.lIl'l'l' ~ALINDA ••re ,e...... I •••,.... incorporated at 126-130 ~owa aveDuf!, Iowa qty, Iowa. ~'I',~£lISjT"f d •••'. Offl ... 01. c., ..... It.... ,., '''' QINI!."L NOTloal '" Causes Genulne arm .., do, ••lted willi lb. una" .. edllo, ., 'h. n.'I, 10 ...... , ~ ,~ _n?-I .Ia.~" 10 Ih. II." 'flY'''. I,. n•• I. • ..,111 I. Ikl .111 • ., ., no Board of trustees: Wilbur Schramm, KIrk H. Porter, A. Craig ' t C' I 11'1 ", 0&11, 10 .... OINE•. 1. NOTIOE' ... ~~I II, al Til. D.II, I."... , Baird, Paul R. Olson, Donald Ottilfe, Mary Jane Neville, Mary Beth . .:10. II· m. u.~ d., pre •• dla, 1Ir.1 ,latill'/llloDi ..II ... will NOT .. In Was hIng on Ire es ....pl.d b, 101.,lIon'. a.d Dlu.1 II. TyreD 0. LIGIBLY WalTtIll Pilmer, Karalyn Keller, Jat'k Moyers. Mallon ••" 8IGN EO br • te'.oallbl...... Fred M. Pownall, Publilher By JACK STINNET'.r Vol. XXI, No. 1966 Wedneaday, Jue II, IN. J'ohn A. Stlchnoth, Editor Wally StriDlbam, Adv. Mil'. -Chinese Situation I WASHINGTON- Not since we 8tar\~ o\\r q fe\1~ pro g l' Jl m UNIYERS..ITY CALENDAR Entered as second class mall Subscription .rates-B1 mall $5 * ~ * neArly five years lIgo hos there B, PAUL MALLON mntter at the tlostofflce at Iowa per year; by carrier, 15 cents bljel1 ~o rn4ch genlline alarm ilere W,c1n,.,. Jqne ,,0 AIfainl, senate chamber, Ol~ C'III. Pity, Iowa, untler th" act of con­ WHitty, .~ peF 7~r. W~HINGTON -rh~ C. hlne~ Qv~r t"e threat Qf in(iallpn. 3 p.!D. I..eqtl.lre by P.ofessor tol. Fess of March 2, 18'18. fccounts Pllve been ~,8l}y descrl~­ MelI\bers of congress, gO\lerp- Chlll'les~. ~~yes, Qn 11~[abl~ation JO a. m. Speech and Hearin.. JIe. The Associated fresa exclu­ .8 Ipg Jipw they are "'i&htiIlj t~elr ~ent eCQnomists, e~perts i{I Llle Sites pnp Thqir Prodllct~,1 ' Cherp- habilitation Conference, h 0 u •• ,. TELEPHONES siveiy entitled to use for republi­ way .orward." .' ~epa.r\ment of ugriClll\ure n~ J~\ry A\lQitQrlllm. chamber, Old CapItol. cation of all news dispatches Editorial Office ...... 4192 This is a nice way of putting it. trea!l4ry, tl)e Whlte~oll se lind of ~""r"'»" J\lne :n Moncl&y, June 211 credited to It or not otherwise Society Office ...... 4193 A more accurate way would relate , C;Qurse the OPA, hay!! ,expressed Contllrenc;e on Intllr-Arnerlc:an Peace otlicera short course. credited In this paper and ~.o that the Japs are giving up central ~ears in recent (:lays thpt the floQd Aff!\irs, SC\1l1te chamQllr, Old Capi- 't...:eclay, June 18 3usiness Office ...... 4191 the local news published herein. pnd southern China. tol Peace Ortlcers Short Course. gates whioh have i10ld bllOk tile 8' p' 't 1 b R' I 1 p. m. Luncheon bridge, lInl. This strategic Jap retreat is torren~s 01 tl\npwpr prices Are p. m. lllnp reCi a Y A,ae bursting. De Iowa Ul\19\1. vcrsity club. '. tremendously important to us. ~t SnVfl, FrkiaY, June a2 4 p. m. Lecture: "PosiUi!h 01 means they are drll,wlng back their T he im\Tledi!\te reasons tor t h ese, C tIt A I Russia in the Present-Day World," vast numbefs for a final stand of fears are: 1 o.n erenae OP n Ilr- I1Ulr C:an . 1 . The Whel'rv "e"s' pl"s" /l.fflllrs, se\1l\te ohllJ"flQer, OW Cllpi- by Dr. Andrei Labanov-RoiJto'vsky Postwar Jobs for Wometl- the war against 0 u r massing . q ',1 ,,. , ,. tol. senate cn1lmbel', Old Capitol: ' power. ameq em~nt Lor all 1arl\l produqts 4p. m. Speech a.--fl lIonring Wednesday, June 27 I e 3 l The end of the war in Europe ent jobs. In other words, of the My information is they will re­ In ex.tensHUl Qf. t~e OI?A., S 11 - RehAblUil\tion COI;)(erence, house Peace Officers Short Course. Mnd tJ1~ heartening progress of 75 percent who want to keep on tire all the way back to the ~or :S4cas of IllinOIS hps 5.31(\ thfl,tl chalT\blll', Old Capitol, .t WIll :mean ohllljls In pnce con- 8:30 p. m. Unlvllrslty leol"!:e by 3 p. m. Lecture on "Mound ••nc! the war in the Pacil'lc hl\ve working. a &reat percen~~ will Yangtze river and Shanghai, there to establish an empt>rer's line, or trols. Director Chesler B~wles. sa~s GllOrge V. Oenny JI·., We~t Ap- Their Contents," by ProftllOr brought into sharp focus the be emll}oyed elsewhe~e. whatever £hey choose to call It. !Il\tly thll,t the qo~se, Will. 11.111 It. prOl\oh to Old Capitol (Mllcbride Charles R. Keyes, Chemistry .llIdi_ problem of lapor's "reconversion" A~ COllCerns the 85 percent who South ot the line they will hold ,But oppo,nents dldn t think the /1udltoriuW- In case of rllin). torium. to peacetime employment - and said they had t~ support them­ only the China ports with suicid\! amendment hlld a chance in the Sa~llr4ll¥. ,J\4he as . 'th1UMlay, June a. consequently much attention has selves and others, it is fair to squads (as Hitler did in France.) ser;l8~e. Conterence on Inter-American Pellce Officers Snort Coun,. 2. Tne alarming growth of Qll\<;k centered on the future of women IIBSUll)e that this f!lUrl! will not , Un~iles"onably Ute, wUl mar~ets. (The lalest is in e~s.) 1 ",...,IAIjU'.-aACID r..,.. lIa," be70nd Iblt ICbe4aJe, ... .' workers. hI! as high in normal times. SOJTl1! ir)' M hold Honrtonr, 8wa­ Many more millions of women En.fo.rce.ll\ent agencies have b.e~ ~v""" ill &lui ..,Iae 01 the Pr...... t, Old O.pI.... ) 01 tj"le women now workin, 'OW and Amoy' and 1JOIIIIlltl, The Future Pr~,s~"ts:- .unab\e to check ,11em, on9 !lb'eady -- -- are employed today than w~re ot"er polnl/J-luat &0 preYe.' doubtless could live /It home iqd ,Uier \Ire bposting tl\e co~t of liv- iHE.AL NOTICES " employed before the war, Lllr,e. be ass,ured pf SUbsistence, but UI from uSlnr these needed ,i.J:lg'lar Qeron4 Lhe 9I"\e-~hirll in­ Iy, they hav~ ta!<-en jobs which . j)a.. e~ lor Aalatlo operations. they go to WQrk eitfler becausp' ciea~e since 1940 shown in ,tlie st\l­ C,4.NDlDA'J',ES FO~ DEGREES CLASS SOHEDULES · ordinarily would have been tilled I This is what General Sti1w~ll tistics in which legitimate prices an additional worker'.s earnings P,oslwdr Living All students who expect .to re­ All stUdents reglstereq in Child I knew w)1en J:ie startM talkine in by men. In fact, thjl necessity of improve family living standarc;ls, are used. ceive a degree or certificate at the Welfare 5:254, Problems in Dis­ print the pth~r tlay about tl}e \Var 3, The farm land and real estate ., rj!lying or women to rjlplace men or pecause theY want III} inde­ Aug. 8 Commencement should lasting two ·years. He does not ap­ By RANK GAItIY Sp~ci~ qualities Qf pl~stics , such seminaUon, and Journalism 19:254, !las opened great new fields of pjl11denCe anll social surroundings booms. It is now estimated that make formal application immedi­ Science Writing I, should lea. 'pareptly expect bombing will (Flr,at IB A Serl. Of Four as tr(lJlSP..arency and resistancj! to prices are rising at the staggering .. j!IPployment for what had beep ately in the office 01 the regis­ copies of their clIU$ schedule. In they otherwise could not ~f!ord. bring surrend~r earHer, 6t antl­ . . . ArtlCia> . . chemical action, will fit tnem fol' average rale of oen per cent a cOllsider d the "weaker sex." trar, Univ rsi!y hall. W613, East ball. They unquestlona/lly lIst them­ c1p/lte that ' business leaders will WASHINGTON' - Dresses made vEiried u:s~s in in,dustry, the labori\- month, Farm land prices already WHAT WILL THESE WOMEN HARR~ G. BARNES selves /Is tor~d to be $eJt-sup­ take over the Tokyo government of aluminum mesh ... ; 40ry and tJ1e nome. Continued use have increased more than 50 per Registrar PROF. RALPHOJ~ANN 00 APTER THE WAR? DO porting ~ltnougb t~ey ar~ not. ~n!;l ~!!ek peace. BathtUbs' made of ply.wood. . . . of pli\stics ,for structul'al p{lrls ,md cent since prewar days, and the THEY WANT TO CONTIrWE Transparenl refrigeralots made other articles in ~ircrilf.t and auto- Detroit's women war workers, In case the J aps fjght ~o tn!! speculation in both farm property HELP NtEDED ot ·plastreS. , . . '- • . mQbi,les is ~xpecteO. WEDNESDAY,EVBNJNG TO WOR . AND IF THE¥ DO, like thOSe cities, di(l not 1llSi, YlI! will" nav~ to iO in and alJd real estate is slipping steadily Students mOlY earn summer ot o~~r Auto!,!qblles with mil.ne8~UI1l f.nd Yea rs \lf~r the war, we may MUSIC HOUR I, WJLL T1fERji: BE JOBS FOR c;lean them out in China as well pI! toward the danger point. board by working three hours a just spring out ot the b!4e. They engine and body parts. . . . eve~ see automobile bodies made Tbe music department preeenll T~EM? THESE QUESTIONS I.jppn the mainlimd":and there ar!! The reasons lor the great pres­ day. Waitresses, especiall y, are Were attracted br ~ood ~ages Such visionart products 01 'he ~ntJrely pl~stics. John P. Celentano, violinist, Inc! BOT 1i I N INDUS­ ot sure on the flood gates now aren't needed, but various jobs are avaH­ ARE E R G and the prospect that by working Ill~ny who suspect their fight for post-war world ar.e .either in the On the other hand- Prot Philip Greeley Clapp, pian. Tn I A LIS T S /\ND LABOR Manchuria Will be bigger Ihal\ in hard to find. They are: able. Inquire at the office of stu­ overtime they would have more design or experimental sta.e, or "The future IJl ' the plastics in- 1st, in a sonata recllal includln( qehalf of their mainland. 1. A national income of nearly dent affairs, room 9, Old Capitol. ~EADf.RS . mO/1ey to spend than they had they're bei~g talked about as pos- dustry Will l?,e governed I\lrgely by the Mozart sonatll in B lilt 11. large numbers ot lhe women Estimates of their troops in $160,000,000,000, of which taxes ROBERT L. BALLANJYNE before or may ever havS; !lgp/p. sibilities. economic factors," says the report. and normal spending can take Division of tudent Placement (K: 454) and Brahl)1s' opus 100, Ia Who, during the war, became north China (incluoing those re­ Theirs has peep art abnormlll But the extent to w)1lch the>, "The price per pound of most plas­ away only about 125 billion. A major. The program will Ilt workers for first time desire treating northward) run as high might come into'use deepnds upon tics>emains hIgher than that of given in the \1orth rehearsal hall tfi prosperity, due entirely to th~ 2: Accumulated savings since OANDIDATES FOR ADVANOED • to It~p on working, a potentiqlly as 2,000,000 men ,:ompared with v.llrious factors. Not tne least PI Illa,?y materials Wi/h which plastics at 8 p. ID. Wednesday, June 20. war. 1,600,OQO pn the mainland, al­ 1940 of more than $120,0.00,000,000 pEGUES AT 'l'lIE AUGUST much g rea ~ e r une1pployment tti~ · do/lar sign. compete. AJ)DI ON AL8PAC8 though "these estimates are' not to -four times what it would nor­ ClQNVOCATION problem is in the offing. It may IN TULSA, APrROXIMATE­ DllIeussi~n 01 the I ~'w.r "Desplte th ~'ac~ th.t aril- mally be. Following is a list of require­ Mullc Depar.it be depended upon. outlook for such war--dI!Vel- elM of plastics /U'c usually in 1111 J)ither that great numq!!rs L Y 50 P E ~ C E N 'f OF ~IjE 3. Millions of persons wit h ments to be met: The retreat strategy was nel)es­ oped materqal. ~ ,...,alci., 1"1Jter &han t~ose metal and " Of e mploy~ble women ~ill be out WOMEN LAID OF,. DUE TO 0' money hungry for the things of 1. Check your record at the of­ sary because of their weak ex­ "l~~nu'P' ~esl"p1 ! piy. that economies may be .1- Of:RMAN IlEADlNG ,.EST of worlt, or ti)at many employ· CUTBACKS ~~E~DY ~AVE Which they have been dep~' ived fice of the registrar nnd in your BEEN SENT Tq NEW JOBS. tended positlpn, but It will be a wood .nd "'''"tllelfe t1lbber, 11 leeied in ,abrle.llon, the prIce major department to assure your­ The German Ph. D. readin, tett ., able men will be idle because contained In'1t repon. Uwle by IIl1lerentlal bdween plastics for more thn three years. As an ABOUT 90 PER'CENT OF costly business for th,em. They wiil outgrowth of lhis ' last has come self that you can qUlllify at the will be given Wednesday, June 20, women are holding the jobs they the dellartinent 01 labor's bu- and, lor ex.n,pJe, steel Is so at 2 p. m. in room 1M, Schaeffer THOSE MADE ID1--E WANTf:D lose (abandon is a more precise resentment at price controls I\nd a August convocation. once held. word for it) the railroad trom feau 01 s~t"'tlC8 ~ ~ se~ ,reat as te diaeourace larre- hall. There w ill be apoUler tfSl TO REMAIN IN THE TULS~ dissatisfaction with OPA that re- 2. Fill out a formal application Already the Federal Women's Hankow down ' to Hongkong, ilDd IIllbwipD\IUee o~ war' 1Il9htli- scale tUbMitutlon. for graduation at the office 01 the at the end of the summer SesSIOD. AREf.. . &aUon. 'i1;'heie nevertheless remains a sults in a tremendous pressur~ on burea~ has maqe a survey of fr.e therefore all Ijmd connection with the lawmakers to abolish that registrar. For Information, see Fred Fehljns, The latter ~TOUP, a branch of the multitude of applications in which petroit i ndu:;t ri~1 area and has Manl( expresJlj!d wll1ingp~s to their 200,qOO troops now r~main­ 3. Secure from the graduate 01- room 101, Schaeffer haJI. Office senate military atfair~ comn)itte~, plastics are highly economical, be­ agency or at least curb its acti vi­ l;uud that 75 of the accept jobs paying low~ wages. inlt in Malaya (overestimated fice the instructions for typing a hours are dally at 10 a'. m. pe~cent qe5cribe(J tq!! report liS "th~ fir~t cause of special properties not ties. This was true of men as well as generally in public commen~s to thesis, F. L FEHLlNO wqm n mployed there want to . comprehellSive statement. of war- elsewhere attainable or because of New plans for tightening con­ . qe 31-5,000,) , 4. I f you are n candidate tor Oel'm&U DePll'-tlI fO rigth on working. In Tul~a, women. time develppments." great savings in fabrication time ttols to halt or at least slow down rhey ollnn~' very weU IUP­ the Ph.D, degree, deliver copy for Okla., where 6,000 laborer,s were Most significant was the fact "The extent ~o which th~" new and costs. the threatened inflation are pretty laid off because of cutbacks in a lar,ge nu)"ber rlltufned to th~j.r ply ijle~e by /l4!a under 01lr much in the blueprint stage and your examination program to the WOMEN'S RECREATIONAL air and ' tublnllrbU! bloctl'de. !ilf,lteri!lls will be I:e~erally ~.do,Pte~ l'pe report points out that the gradua te otflce by July G. war orders, it was discovered that home tow\1S to re3l1me Olp jobli, fS difficul,t to i6retell," saf~ the "r<>ductlon of aluminum and mag­ most of them deal with plans for SWIMMING 'Bence, tile strateI)' put. their extending controls to prevent in­ 5. Submit your thesis to the as many women as men desired lllthouih they nad s/1ld ~hey report. . . ~l!'Sfum JlX~anded tremendously '-5:30 p. m. Daily. whole 1I0Utl) Asia lorce in a flation during the POStWBI' recon- gradua te ofrice for checking before would have pr1~ferred to reJl1~in "I~ Is apP.are~t that mllny of during wartime and says both ma­ 10-11:30/1. m. Saturday. new jobs. )IOIIItl8n ,'or .ulcldt, of au ..~ version era. July 23. If you are a candidate for f THE RESULT QF' THESE in Tuisa. fhem ~ill lind I~r,e mark1!ts th~n terials may · come into greater use the doctorale. submit your abstract RecreaUo'1al swimming ~rlod. rresslve or voluntary nature. In the pre-war period ,blJt it Is lIJso In the future. . The experts here are al1post 'TWO SUR V E Y S INDICATE It is almost certain that not all But If you have been looking at and pay the $25 publication de­ are open to all women shJdenil, virtually certain that not all 9t While the annual produ~tion of unanimous in the belief that aU of faculty, faculty wives, wivetl 01 -'M Y WOMEN WILL RESIST the women who left h~!lles to go their narrow escape corridors in this adds up to plenty of reason posit. the f/lclJlUes built durIng tl)~ war magnesium before 1939 was 4,­ 6. Arrange with your depart­ graduate students and admlniJlJa· :- TIlB TEMPT A'fION TO RE~ to war plllnts wiIJ retL!rn to their China: and suspecting the Chinesll fo~ the production Pt these mate- QOO,OOO pounds, prpduction in 1943 for worry about what's just ahead tive staff members. Studtatl .. . TURN TO THE HOME AFT.ER homj!s. The deslr~ tq be ind\!­ cou1d cut off large bodies of {heir in the inIlation front. ment for the orl\l examinations­ rtals will be needed. Comparisons was 368,000,000 pounds and the na­ July 30-Au,. II. inclusive. lbouJd present their idenUtlcatiGD pendent has been keenly a~cen~j!c;I troops by driving wedges across THE WAR. of costs pf various IT\;lh;rlals, tiOJl h~s production capacity for 7. Leave the original and th!! carda to the rna tron 10r admltllDm. during the war. Many women the Hongkong-Hankow railroad, III th e Petroit industrial region w/1icl! have not oeen of th~ great- rnucl) morl!. Switzerland's Biggest first copy of your thesis at the M. GLADY8 8Con -covered in the first survey, five haye discovered that th~y do ~Qt you must abandon any sucb hoP.,e. est sigrlificance d,url/1g the WQt, In!llea'~ uses for alum- True enough the Chinese are graduate ortice at least 24 hours n~ to ).'ely on 9~h,rs. at­ will again becom~ importadt w!len JPIfJfI, the rellO" Bay~, are ror Customer Is America times as many Women are em­ before Convocljtion. S~NGPOOL tacking in some spots, but even in peace tetut~s." Jlu ..., .utomoJlIlIlfl, paiJHJ1fer ----- ployed in manufacturing as were UNDOUBTEDLY WE WILL those the Japs are managing to . CARL E. SEA HORE, DEAN The fieldhouse swimrping ' pOQl SEE MORE WOMEN IN INDUS­ And the report adds: ~IPIt an4 tlJr the manufac&ur, AP Newsfeatures The Graduate Collere employed in 1940. The survey'~ keep I;:ontrol of the situatiop by "The costs of production I'll' 01 hqWJebllld appllanceti, lur- BERNE-The United States is will be op n to summer schobl slu­ TRY ' IN THE POSTWAR 'ERA cOllcJusjons w ~ r e interestJng, eounteratiacks, and in general the/ie n~wj!r materl!jls will be In- Ilitur", bleYIlJes and burial Call- Switze~land's best customer, re- RAFAEL de SILVA CONCERT dents and faculty Monday, Tues· day, Wednesday, Thursday and startling in some instances, and THAN IN THE PHEW AN ERA. t)1e Chinese are not st,rong enough lluenced not only by purely I1CO- ~ffs. put mosi uses, it adds, placing Germany, France and Rafael de Silva, noted Chilean Friday from 6:30 p. m. to 9 p. m. almost alarmiug when consid­ IN M.{NY I~STANCES, IN­ ~o do Ilnythint: impo~t~nt. norrilc factots ~ bt!t I:>y many pollti- ':~e 1I0~'~,.nt upon a 5UI&- Great Britain. pianist. will playa recital in the and Saturday from 4 p. m. ered ;b:om other angles. DUSTRY Mf.Y J'l} E F J: 'R TP All the Japs would have to dp ca't considerations...... a4JJlBtme,-t of the price of In the first detailed trade sta- main lounge of Iowa Union to iI Students should present activity .' The facts are tbese: 75 perce\1~ H~VE WOMEN fOR CERTAIN to s~op any ChiN~~e ambition~ is 'Of prlmaty importance wili be .Iuminum relative to that of tistics made public by Switzerland Thursday, June 21 at 8:16 p. m. t9 mQve troop~ dowp thj! ralu-oags the pollices followed in Ih!! dis- lltamlea steel, pl.II'lea, mat- in five and a half years, it also is Free tickets are available at Iowa tickets. of the women e..'(pressed a desire JOBS W H I CH TJi~Y HA~ E. O. 80HI0101I to continue working; 85 percent SHOWN THEMSE;l..VES lJET­ from Hankow, where they have position of government-owned '8. .... I... or ' ~er com.petb..- obvious that Argentina, Brazil and Union desk. plenty unused reSjilrvj! pow~r. Dlreetor 01 Athlelld said they were working now be· TER ADAPTED lPR TlIAN ot cilitles. F'or /iOU)e materials, pot- ...~Ia.Is." British India are coming to the EARL E. HARPER, Director The", call cqntrol ~ny area ~ey ~~Iy synthetic; Tubper, lJIuch will J)eslgllS have been prepared fol' tore as buyers of Swiss goods. The School 01 Fine Artl ca)lSl they J)1 US,l support ~heJIl­ MEN, . v r1!ally want. Chin~se Ilggres~iv~­ depena~k from th!! a. W,U ~ W1~ ohler ~'~.I. developl'l\\!nt of in!!xpensive mass- dlcated that Switzerland was find- in Iowa Union and the art build­ LlbrarJ' Annex ar a when the war began. sey{se of lreeclom likely will cause {lurrria front ' for this operat,on. ior partIcular aaea-tot' elr- production methods of working ing her export market overseas ing Sunday, ,June 24 at 2:30 p. m. Monda,-Thunda, · These figures, at first ,lance, th'l mta ilc;C~P~ lQwer ~i~es to.! Our Fourteenth airforce iJl iet­ ~.nple, · ' pias&l~, .I~um, with the metaL" whereas her imports came chie!ly At 4:30 Prot. L. D. J"ongman will 7:60 a. m.-12 M. .-• rpight seetn to indjcate large- thl! ~ake of !I!malniljg- Ifl4!!­ ting more plal\j!s l\oW, and mov­ m&61lellllin, and plywood." The outlOOk tor plywood in the trom the contillent and from the speak in the mllin 101lng~ of [QWI! 1·6 p. m. ing Into (heir' lost pases. However, The labor department's glance pos~wa.r world "is promislnll" says Argentine. ~~ale un!!rnployment wheJl' e~­ pendent. ~nd W9!De~ jllreaqy Union interpreting lhe exhibition 7·10 p. m. : perienced men return to the 're­ have shown themselves slowef to no~hing much can be done until into the J\lture !,Vas part ot a com- th :ieort, but it, too, will haVe During that month the United and' discussing trends in contem­ 1'1'10, WIJ Bj!t pQwef .in . therjl, and th'~ pr~)lensive stu9Y of /lome 1400 to cq wilh cO!llpetition.". : States took 29.7 pel' cent of S~ll­ porary art. ... converted flutomobile p1anls. But o~ganjze l~r colle~~ive baf'IJ!J!I~1 7:50 a. m.-12 M. )V1ll ~a~~ !pant mon~$, es~c11!1J1 tecllnpJoliCII! (Ie eloPI'l!!nlj IT!!Id~ A ,ong possible uses arc private zerland's total exports as agalIlSt EARL E. HARPER, Director 1·6 p. this is by no means true. ~all men. ,. ... m. with the ports still in ~ap hpnds. in ,jariolis fields during warUme. pitp ne~, lightweight boxcars, 6.9 per cent in April, 1938. School of Fine ~rt. atUl'lla, Many of the women I"!OW work­ The problem I)f how to take The AlIs~ralian mgve" intQ Bor­ Of plll$tic~, . iNs , pic 11f" Wap ffefabril!a~ chi~kep houses ano 7:60 a. m.-12 M. ing in DelroH's war plants will care of women ' war work~'r9 peQ has cenJered atteJ)tiQ~ on Ma­ given: . ,aUinpl(lbilf bOdie_~, 1-5 p. m. once more becom!! saleswomen, won't b~ e~silY ' $olv~. ~ui " i~ laya, and caused JIlany to suggest MACARTH~R INS~ECT5 BEACHHEAD GoverlUDen' DOIIu_ne. Def'., Q9mestic s e r van t s, waitresses, de~ands r;areful ~onsldeflltton we may hop In tllerf! n~;rt. This Library Annex ·c1erl~al , workers anel tepchers it becau~ of !hf/ cOn$Fqufnces i~ complOn Jnterptetatiop tep~'lsents Monda,-Frlday they ~re ousted from their pr(!.- may hav!!. too-easy antWipaUqn. - 8 a. m.-I~ M. Wei ~!!n& In Born~o 10, C!1I 1·6 p. m. an.. b.su--oniy thou two . ~:r .,.p. L. 8p.q'~(J~ opjec'tiv~ Is Okinl!wl!. Tht bl~gest 8atur.a7 thlnp. .The wells are In bad AiIIotlI ..~ .re.., ft"~~~ ~.11!* isl~'ld · or the RY!lkyu ch/lil\, it lies 8 a, m.-12 M. condltlop, bu~ can. be [~P&lr'di Toltyo reports tl1!l~ ' ¢.Jl'Ietl~llf1 lit th, Bouth,rp ~ip . ot a nearly 1-5 p. m. In "me to lie .1 ,rea lit".,. supl'l\arines /lP~lIr,:ptw !lr~ :o~efat- equilatera,l air trianele. It is vir­ Education - PhUotOph, - p~Jelltl· }ack At~ention N ii t ion a 1 Safety ing her head at ~~ ~¥Ie (th!! ~­ to ~s In .he lipa} drivel of ~~ ing il) th~ Sea of Japa~ vllrl- GlY Library, lu& Hall ficat/oll b4t if tr~j! . it mllal"J.s 1I111t tuaJly the same distance, 550 Pacl,k. war, '1'li~ alrtlel(l.' .a Monda, -Frida, ~(luncil! gree varies) anc;l roiling her ~y,s Borneo ,Ive us ,ood bombin, " JlrilT!~ ~tr"teil~ qpjec~iv!\ {of p!:l.les,1 from ~outhern Okinllwa to 7:50 ~ . m.·l0 p. m. either right or l.ft. She contorts ThiR Sugif/sUon is made seri­ ran,e radiu. over everythlnr qperatioljs in 4J~ tpl' Pal)ifjc an- till! northerp sror!! of Kyushu is­ 8a& ....I187 1On ously, in the interests of publig her ~oulders in ~p~ opposite 41. ij!l~ 01 vl~~f! Is ll~req. · · drown lOr overl\lahl use af 5 p, /II. into t\l. Philippine., as we con­ as co-commander with ~,,!!r~l ShaOlhaJ. on, Fridays and at • p. m. WJ &41- Bllt in the nl} ~ pI Uje abov! qf cour~fiI 11 Ut! la~y, s.I~!l'l trol th, sj!a lanes from there to MacATtrur 01 Am,rielll) "fln-to'- ,," "b~ 4.. lane" ar~ I~por- urday ~. !lIE'ntioned interests (we'd llll:e 10 Chilla al)d -Japan. Tqe . lo~~ will Tllkyo" tQrCllII $0 cu' · J.~allr8 . h9ll!1l 1,,1 up l~ I!H tP,~ S~d!pp'ln, ~h. f •. 8. ILUtWOI'" p It i~ in the name 01 sotnething therefore not· be irppotta'l~ to Isla04s oft (:Ol1lPltltelY, . n9' Qn}1 ~Qt , ~~ *~y r~re~n& a just ~ttps br'fhl), Int9" If!~ f,r!!~! DIr.1If ~(ron~c r, but tl).~t wouldn't l(l~k .wllhpu) a thol-!iht. WJ1tr.eupon ~ltem, but the lain will be n"lp!ul from ~~th. Cj"liJl~ .~u~pply lines ft. V,7t.'t .~poutJ all the our plans.' . Jn usuajlf !s,?'t I!I long from Brun~i to inawli , Wlib Ra f ..... and the north China - . women's hats ~ o that th~y could 011 lre~J~r~ c~. eolll',e of ducatlon are Invited to qan~ero!Js whfn ~~ woman with see where they're walking. facing ASia. In geenra) the contlr­ to Ohfba wltIIIa eeo ..,...., General Arnold, chieftain of attend the Phi Delta XaPlla smoll* '. 'the proa4 brJiPht~ ha. js ;arl~(;r. \!nt is ~nly 40.0 to ~OO miles a ay. 'BIlr...... OIJlaawa ' t« AltJerican air power, has stated QI. . , . Wednesday, June 20 at 8 p. III Tak~ a woman saunterinB up !I car~ qen'er~h; Jp,~re ~4S~ /sr'l ...... ' ...... W", II¥' that within another II monlhs QiN. DOUGLAS MACI\RTHUR Is pictured crouln, a swanap area the river room of Iowa UnIon. fb' the street, for instance. The brito ~noullh he~d r~1TJ. for such ~ .u....."... , ....~lN ' .... ,aIt thete will be no tarlets worth Itl BrUlsh Borneo dlU',nr an In.pecUon of tile lIeaoh.head "tabllahetl prolfam will consist of a talk b1 of her new summer bon net ~r1!mendOIl5 />onn", 8C:! &J1Jt ~as t9 ~rjSf~t Thq"lfflt m...... lillO' Ih~ die· ... bombln,le1t In Japan if she I'per_ there. Shown wl.h M.cAfth~r Is Air Vice H.~lhal Bo.~, loral Coach Lowrence (Pops) H.,~jacII .. droops 50 low over her eyes she t~~$! 11 off and fay IJ pn Jb, If~J. .., ~."'If 'IMlf, .... &I •••~- sists" in fi,hUn, that 10111. That Alr Foree comm.nder. Ausiranan Infantr,men continue &0 patrol and 'he sho\Yin, 01 sport$ 111l1li. .' . clm bee only a few feet ahead. but there ilre some who IIUCCeed, SKEGNESS, Llncoinshite, En,­ U. to...... aaa,·.. ~_ ' ~. '. prob~blY Is' an extreme outside 'he Brunei ~Y area. An AUltrana" broadoa.' .lated that the JoIlnth Smokes and refrllllhrneh\l wUl lit laM (A P)-Skegness, remember­ ~ . She comes to II corner. Are thete by hook IIr crool,l, ~ drivin, baDd whell ~e enemY"~ ~&lmate 01 the time it will take Illvilion In'anlrYnaen had pushed lou&hweat Irona BruM wlthla provided by the fraternity, In, how 'Its streets vlere lit up I>y n'l be 'able \0 ...., • _ to Neillce Japanese hom. war in- Imy cars cpming. Without removlnl their hat-and •• mile. or 'l;ou~nl, 011 retlnlnr center, '\1I14!4 IIomllen contlnuell sellrehll,nts durh'lg air raids, Is ev ... fellOilht'rn ~"...... dustti'iI t p. m. lhe cadets may use the evening 10 the CSA hllll. Mrs. pounds, thal'lI about enough to can ring service before an altar banked Paas Difficult Feats oanteen in the Quadrangle. Be- Luella Zahner wUl be In charge of 28 quarts of frui t. with gladioli and delphiniums. Besides these three sports pro- fore :; o'clock It is used for the refresbments. Attending the bride as maid of grams there are other physical fit- ships' company and omclers. honor was Helen Gemmell of Wa- ness programs, including the ob- The ship's store Is located In terloo, and serving as best man stacle course, a common sight on COOKING WILD ]\lEAT he obtained on a forage 01 the countryside, a cadet "Uves oft the land" whJJe 'A' Card Motorilts was Charles W, Wheeler of Water- every military training ground. Hillcrest. Wives and dependants 100, brother of the bride. This course must be run a mini- on a mJd-Winter hike. of th e men ma y be p u rc h ase May Use All Gas Wea.rs Silk Crepe mum 18 times during a cadet's commodltys at the store. All profit For Vacation Trips The bride was attired in a training. Often it is more. It in- 25 miles out of Iowa City. Half lic service is at 8 a. m. and Is at- Cross and In case ot an emergency is given to welfare and recreation street-length dress of heavenly cludes many difficult feats of the distance they hike, cal'rying tended by more tqan 300 men. The at home the chaplain acts as a and used to improve the base and DES MOINES (AP)-"A" card blue silk crepe, designed with a strength and endurance combined full packs. While on sUI'vival they Rev. Father L. J . Brugman, head liaison officer between the cadet pay tor special entertainments. motorists planning vacation trips i round neckline, short sleeves and to test and to give confidence to live off the land except for army of the Catholfc student center of- and his home. There is a medical department by auto were assured yesterday by I a peplum, trimmed with lace in- the man who completes it. "K rations. They learn how to trap, ficiates at the mass. The Protest- Cadets arc divided Into three at the base located in the Quad­ the Des Moines district office of sets. Her acces~orics were black There is mass exercise when a kill and cook thcir own meat. They ant service is at 10:30 a. m. and groups. One group stays at the rangle. An efficient staff of doc­ price admlnlstra~jon that it 18 their and white anQ, her shoulder ~or- supervised exercise progl'am is are taught what is saCe to eat and is attencied by morc than 500 ca- base for four weeks for a refresher tors, nurses, dentists, pharmacists prlvlle,e to use the ration as lhey sage was of sweetheart roses. practised. One of the interesting drink and what to leave alone. dets. Chaplian William L. Woodall course. These cadets have had the and technicians keep a close check see lit. The maid of honor wore a street- things the boys learn is how to They learn to make use of plants is 'in charge. training and were released when on the health of the Individual lenght dress of brown silk print, relax. It is a systematic proeess in and insects fol' food, clothing and Cadets may bring their friends the program was cut do~n. An- cadet and the base as a whole. "If the 'A' ration motorist wants fashioned with a V-neckline and which thy learn to lie down any- shelter and how to hide and cam- and families to this service. There other group stays for an ll-week Even though, Iowa University to use it all on one trIp, he can short sleeves. White accessories where and fall into restful sleep ouflague. They learn how to save are services also for the Christian period and are called student pi- is gOing into the last summer do It, and if he wants to spread it and a corsage of white carnations in five minutes. Knowing this themselves, not only if lost on land, Science members and the J ewish lots or SPS. These men are picked under the war accelerated pro­ out over the three-months ration completed her ensemble. trick has saved many a man's life. but if lost on the sea. church has services. The Mormons from the fleet and have all seen gram, there Is no sign of a slower period oLr normal use, that's okeh, For her daughter's wedding, It is extremely important to a During aU this physical program have services at the Congrega- active duty. Many have TOWS of program on the other side of the \00," eIlplalned Philo Chamber­ Mrs. Wheeler selected a brown flyer who must have full control a fitness index is kept 50 that tiona I church in the afternoon. service ribbons to show foreign river this fell. They are still lain, district ;a.oline representa­ print dress, complemented with of himself and his nerves every when a cadet leaces he can tell Rellglous MusJc action. The third group stays for training naval aviators quickly tive. while accessories and a corsage of minute. exactly what improvement and There aT!) two fIne choirs. The 26 weeks. These are the new ca- and efficiently. Their Skipper, white carnations. The bridegroom's Included also are the military progrcss he has made in pre-flight. Catholic choir made up of 60 dets. Commander Fi~hugh, recently Business Machine. In Milwaukee, mother chose a green silk ensem- drills that are important in teach- The methods are new and the voices and the Protestant choir in- Live al Base or Qaad lold them tnat the navy's big spow Wis. ble accented with white acces- ing teamwork, coordination and program is rough, but the result;; eluding 80 voices. The navy band The cadets live on the base in Is still to come in the Pacific:. Lieutenant DevIne was also IOrles, and her corsage was of red discipline in any group. prove it is a good one. plays lor the Protestant sel'vics, Hillcrest or the Quadrangle. They What kind of a show it will be Iraduated from Iowa City high carnations. Another test the cadet must pass Our naval aviators are superior, Once every two weeks a Christian live four in a room, sleeping In wa 8 determined at pre-flIlht school and attended the Unlver­ After the ceremony, a reception is the survival trip al)d hikes. stronger and more mentally alert Science camp worker visits the double-decker bunks. Their rooms schools such as Iowa City's when Ilty ot Iowa where ne wal affili­ JAIl, was held in the home of the bride's Survival TralnJnl' than any the enemy is turnillg out. base. are immaCUlate. they develop the best by moldln, ated with SI&ma Nu fraternity. mother. Centerpiece of the serving Survival is the part of the train- The cadets' spiritual needs are Chaplain Woodall acts as an ad- The married cadets live outside tine characters, keen minds, alert Durin, the past six months he has CAPI, table was a three-tiered wedding Jng where they practice what they well taken care of. Each Sunday viscr and spiritual helper to the the base, according to their own pilots and producing the navy'll been ItatiOned all navigation in­ DI.llti l cake topped with a miniature bride have learned. The cadets are taken there are two services. The Catho- cadets. He also works with the Red choosing, as long as it is within best hard-hitting avlatot'S. . structor at San MarcOi army air lUll. II , and bridegroom. Anne Hertz 01 _ ------______-,-_ field, San Marcos, Eex .• and is r...... I~1a Denver, Col., llister of the bride­ ; ... Ball ... look. To _ ~ ~. read poetry in English and Ger­ now lakin, advanced tralnJng at ... 100 whlr __ ... ..wr- 10- ,room, served as hostess. Barksdale field. For their weciding trip to Chi­ man, and Mrs. Myers will play Two O'Clock Ceremony in Methodist Church piano selections. Marion Murchison MacEwen Becomes Bride Tht couple wlU reside at 607 .,'· IAU •.....r '''''.'', ....., .... cago, the bride selected a black Wilkinson in ShreVeport. ~ Illk dress, with which she wore an Later thc couple wili leave on ...... orchid topcoat. To Unite Eva Marie Swann, Dr. H. J. Ruff a wedding trip, and for traveling Of lieut. G. D. Devine Jr. in ·Post Chapel AUend. Unlvenlt, the bride has selected a black street-length dress, accented with .y Gr.efe AIle. The bride is a graduate of a Before an altar decorated with of seed pearls and her only jewelry In the post chapel at Barksdale a white Bible completed her en­ melon and black accessories...... e ...... Weterloo high school and the Uni­ gladiolJ, delphiniums, palms and will be a single strand of pearls, a field, Shreveport, La., Marion semble. versIty of Iowa school of nursing. lighted candleiabra, Eva Marie gift of the bridcgl'oom. The bride is a graduate of Murchison MacEwen, daughter of Her bridal The matron of honor selected a lUUltrllr8 by Ed Reed Recently she has been employed at Swann, daughter of Mrs. Ollie Barnard high chool, and received Dean and Mrs. Ewen M. MacEwen, bouquet will be of calla lilies. two-piece street-length dress of Allen Memorial hospital In Water­ Swann of Barnard, Mo., will be­ her B.S. degree from Northwest 315 Fairview avenue, became the The matron of bonol' will wear a sea green linen crash, designed loo. come the bride of Dr. Henry J. floor-length gown of aqua taffeta Missouri State Teachers college in bride of Lieut. Glenn Daniel De­ Mr. Hertz, a graduate of Iowa Ruff, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. J , Maryville, Mo., where she was af­ vine Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn with a round neckline, cap sleeves and nel, designed with a sweet­ and a peplum. Her white eyelet City high schoo, attended the Uni­ Ruff of South Aamana, this after­ heart neckline and three-quarter filiated with l{appa Omicron Phi, D. Devine, 1154 Court street, Sat­ versJty of IO'f4, aDd was recently noon at 2 o'clock in .the First Meth­ national home economics sorority. urday at 4 p. m. Chaplain Ernest straw hall-hat was edged with length sleeves. She will weal' a black velvet, and her flowers were discharged from the service after odist church. Dr. David Shipley halo of pink rases in her hair and She also took graduate work in A. Israel read the vows of the Bt!rvlng 40 mont)1s in the European of tbe university school of religion a colOnial bouquet of Peruvian h~r bouquet will be of matching dietetics at the University of double ring service before an altar will read the vows of the double lilies. theater. He wl(\ re-enter the uni­ roses. Iowa. banked with white carnations and versity college Of phllrmacy aa a ring service. The bridesmaid wore a lime yel­ Mothcrs' Ensembles Graduate 01 University gladioli. senior this tall. Nuptial organ selections will be low street-length dress, and her Dr. RuCC is a graduate of South Preceding the ceremony, Corp. The couple wlu reside In Iowa presented by Mrs. E. W. Scheldrup Mrs. Swann has selected for her hat was designed similarly to that Amana high school and received H. A. Russell Jr., played nupUal CJty. preceding the ceremony, and Prot. daughter's wedding a black and of the matron of honor. She car­ his organ selections, including "I Love Guests 11'00'\ Iowa City at the Hans Koelbel of the music depart­ white dress with matching acces­ B.S. and D,D.S. degrees from ried a colonial bouquet of Texas wedding were Mr. and Mrs. George sories. The bridegroom's mother 'the University of Iowa, where he You Truly" (Bond), and "0 Per­ • ment will play cello selections in­ fect Love." bluebells. J . Hertz al1d Sophia Hertz. cluding "Meditation from Thais" has chosen a blue ensemble, com­ was affiliated with Psi Omega For her dau,hter's weddln" JAKE5 dental il'aternity, and Omicron (Masaenet) and "I Love Thee" plemented with black accessories, Mrs. Frank L. Bauer of Iowa Mrs. MacEwen selected a street­ l{appa (G.rieg). and each will wear a shoulder cor­ Upsilon, national honorary City attended her sister as ma­ length green leaf print dress, com­ "PAWN Senate Okays Promotion dental fraternity. He expects to Bridal Pariy sage of gardenias. tron of honor and serving as plemented with black acceuorles SHOP For General Geiger Attendinl the bride as matron of Immediately following the cere­ be called into the naval service bridesmaid was Anne Waterman, soon. and a corsale of Peruvian lJIIes. honor will be her sister, ' Mrs. mony, a reception will be held in also of Iowa City. Capt. George K. The bridegroom's mother chose a WASHINGTON (A P) - T b e Martin Myel', of Beaman. Walter the Rose room of Hotcl Jefferson. Out-oC-town guests at the wed­ Devine served his brother as best dusty rose ensemble with whlcb lenate approved yesterday the Skallerup of Chicago will serve as A four-ticred wedding cake topped ding will include Mr. and Mrs. F. man ,and usher was Lieut. Clifford she wore black accessories and a promotIon of MoJ. Gen. Roy S. best man and ushers will be Bill with a miniature bride and bride­ J . Ru(f and Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Ketcham. corsale of a,aphanthus. Geiger, comm/lnder of American Turner of South Amana and Bob groom and surrounded with white Selzer and sons, all of South Wean Dretlllmaker 8alt After the ceremony, a wedding forces In OkJnllwa, to the rank of Lundquist of Cedar Rapids. tapers will center the serving Amor~a, Mrs. Ollie Swann and Mrs. The bride, who was given in supper was held at Hotel W8Ih­ lieutenant general In the marine The bride will be attired in a table. Hostesses will be Marie Ruth Davis of Barnard, Mo., Har­ marriage by her father, was at­ Ington-Youree In Shreveport. old Swann of Kansas City, Mo., corps. 'floor-Ienlth lown of white mous- Turner of Eau Claire, Wis ., aunt tired in a dressmaker suit of UDlvenUy Gradute oind Mr. and ·Mrs. Martin Myers Geiger took command on Ok In- seUne de sole, which was worn by of the bridej Mrs. Theodore Setzer white gabardine, trimmed with The bride Is a lI'aduate of Iowa of Beaman. Iwa when Lieut. Gen. Simon Boli- her sister at her wedding. The of South Amana, lIunt of the bride­ pearl buttons. Her hall-hat was of City hllh school and the UnJver­ • . Vir Buckner Jr. was killed two fitted bodJce la illllhioned with a groom, and Mrs. Graham Bradley white straw, and she carried a sity of Iowa, where ahe was affiH­ dlY. ago by a Japanese Ihell. A sweetheart neckline and bridal of Iowa City. Winston Churchill was a pro­ handkerchief that had been car­ ated with Kappa Kappa Gamma tiler, he wa commander of all . point.> sleev8I, and Is trimmed with During the reception, Dr. Erich fessiona I soldIer in the British ried by the bridegroom's mother social sorority, and was a member allied alrcrllft in the Solomons lace Il1IIta. Her fingertip veil of Funke, head of the German de­ army and fought with the Bengal and grandmother at their wed­ of Mortar Board. She haa been durin, the auadaleanal campal,". nc ind lace wlll tall trom a tiara partment of the university, will Lancers in India. dlnjs. A white orchid centered on employed recently by International • IAGEFOUB TKE , D:1UL¥ .{OWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA WEDNESDAY. JUNE 20r 1945

••Il .,eo Sec-ond, · Geflera1'lke I W'ctche:s ---TI the IG'qess brOS ,"pP JOhl Braves Dump Giants,. 9-2 In t II... "" 1_' .alld 8'1""'_ the . M;nor l:eag'Uel- play . Ott Men lose sral MAKING GOOD By Jack' Sord. 8:1 Will Assume. ,Figh,ing 8: Dldrlkson Tops CIC!se Baffles fourfh'Sfra'ighl 8:: '. B, LUcI* 8: ' DaU, towan 8port. UHot "We lire in first place. weren·t 8:! Duties, July 1 First' Round we? " Ducky Medwick Gets 9:1 Anyway, it's a healthy situallon when a league can corne up with n Revenge by Banging "9 :1 Was ~II-American tight penant race. In the case of Out Three Singles 11 11 Of W r the minor leagues it mans the 10 Center at Notr, Dame; stern 10 clubs have gucssed accurately the NEW YORK (AP)- Even the Coached at Detroit U. proper classiriraUon of the players presence of Gencl'ul ot the Army they have signed. That is, if II Dwight D. Eisenhower, master Arthur (Bud) Boeringer, 1926 class D league race is close you strat gi~t o{ Ihe L:uropean theater \Ill-American center at Notre can be pretty sure the boys are of the war. rOiled to stem the New Dame and for 16 years University class D pl aye , and no learn Is YOl'k Giants rupid retreat yester­ of Detroit line coach. will report slipping in a bunch of class B day, as Mel Olt's skidding athletes at the University of Iowa July 1 athleles. lost to the Boston Bra ves, 9-2. as Hawkeye football line coach. Naturnlly that si tuation does not A crowd of 27,026, including Director E. G. (bad) Schroeder hold in the majors, Wh re the thousand3 of service men, paid Baid yesterday. teams get the best players they can tribute to the Gener~ll, who was Employed on a seven-months put their hands on and hope for forced to vaC'nte his box in the contract. Boeringer will be an as­ the best. Classification does not third inning bectlues of an inces­ sistant to head Co a c h Clem matter. Maybe nobody told the sant rain. Eisenhower watched Crowe. He was center on the 1925 Phils about lhat. the game, from lhe third inning Irish eleven captained by Crowe. unlil the eighth, from President Boeringel' graduated from Notre Horace Ston ham's oHice. He was Dame in 1927 and that fall began not around ot the finish, which his line coach duties at Detroit marked lhe Giants' fourth straight under Coach Gus Dorais. He defeat and their 18th in the lost 23 served there until Detroit sus­ games. pended football for the duration The Braves gnve General U[ke" after the 1942 season. their own personal welco'me, a The new assistant will come 13- hit salute. including a pall' 01 here from Park Rapids. Minn. He' salvos by Dick Culler is married and has one ch iH:l . and pitcher Jim Tobin. Boeringer's first work with Iowa Joe M dwick, traded Jast Friday players occurs Aug. 6 when the to the Bravcs for catc er Clyde four weeks of summer football Kluttz, made three Singles against drill opens. his former mo I R :md ~cored Ollce. Tobin so[tbal1 d the Giants with eight hits, home runs accounling [or both New York runs. Johnny Jeep Tunes Up- Rucker hiL ;m in~ide the park homer to startlhe sixth frame, and George HaURmonn followed with a drive into the upper left field strmds. Ra~ing Tommy Holmes, league leading batter, stretched his ('onsecutive furlongs over a muddy track in hiUing sh'enk to 16 games With a Roundup 1:12 2/ 5 and paid $12.60. Tiaers Squeeze Hiilldorsson Starts si ngle off reli vel' Bill Voiselle in the ninth. • • >I< Red Sox Spill Jockey B. Nichols took the lime­ ~ork as Counsellor Boston AB R B E NEW YORK* (AP)* *- Col. C. v. light at Hawthorne by riding four Wh itney's Jeep. making his first winners, Isaiah Girl $6.80, Short P Ib 4 3 In Boys' Camp Culler. 55 •..... 5 I 1 Q start since [ailing to run to expec­ Li[e $4.00, Gallantry $7.00 and Yankees, 110 0 as r e, .. Balmes. rl ...... ,.._.. 5 I 1 Q tations in the Kentucky Derby, Workman, 3b ~ ...... 4 I 1 Q Martian $6.00. Work os a cons('l1or in a boys' tuned up {or Saturday's $50,000 r. C. Michler's Light AbeOlm " Medwick. l[ .,. .. .._ ... 5 1 S 0 BOSTON (AP)- Little Clem summer camp near Gaubun, Minn., Belmont Stakes yesterday by Gillenwater. _ 3 1 1 Q snared the feature race by three Hausmann turned In his secorid Tigers moved two games out front has been started by Jonas Hall­ cr . easily defeating seven other three­ lengths over the favored Corydon. Mack, Ib ... • ... <4 2 3 Q straight 1-0 shutout for the Bos­ In the American league by defeat­ dorsson, the Icelander who is co­ year-olds in the Peter Pan handi­ The four-year-old ran the mile and Masi. c ...... ( . ... 5 1 I 0 ton Red Sox while making the ing the , 4 to 3, captain of the Universi ty of Iowa's cap at Belmont Park. one-sixteenth in 1:483/5 Ilnd paid Drews, 2b . 'u .. 4 0 1 Q victims of his In n twilight game last ni~ht be­ 1946 swimming teom. Q Carrying top weight of 122 Tobin. p ~ . .. 4 1 1 $21.80. Rush act was third. straigh t pitching triumph wi th a ...... pounds, the Whitney colt was for~ 20,351 fans. Frank (StUbby) Halldorsson and his wife, also an • • • three-hit performance last night clocked in 1:511/ 5 for the mile and Overmire. third Detroit pitcher, athlete. will work at the camp run Totals ...... _ 39 9 13 Jockey R. Edens rode five win­ before a 10,579 twilight game took over in the ninth to save the by Niels Thorpe. University of one-eighth paying $3.80 for $2 in ners at Charlestown. He was crowd. decision for starter Zeb Eaton. Minnesota swimming cooch. They New )!ork AU R "E picking up the purse o[ $6,650. astride All Crystal $3.60 in the Eaton, leading 4-1 after five in­ will return to Iowa in September Jockey Johnny Adams. who did Iit'st; Renowned $1l.40 in the I 2 0 nings while giving one hit but when the Icelander will begin his Rucker, cf '1'~' .. 4 not have a. mount in the feature, third; Zac Pam $7.00 in the fourth; Hausmann, 2b ...... 4 1 0 seven walks, was touched for two !inal yeilr as a physical education 1 won four of the six other flat Valley Dirk $3.00 in the fmh and D. Gardella, J[ ...... 4 0 runs in the sixth when Jeft Heath major. o o races. He was up on Col. Steve Great Play $7.00 in the seventh. Ott. rf . 4 o 0 singled, doubled ahd In the 1945 swimming ~eason. o $10.20 in the first; Brevithorn Weintraub, Ib ... • 4 I Jim McDonnell singled both home. Halldorsson scored 37 points in the o o ~5.60 in the fourth; Knockdown Lombardi. c ...... 4 o 1 0 The Tigers bunched three hits di stahce events and placed in the $17.40 in the fifth and Sorisky National Colle~ io te 440-yard and Reyes. 3b ...... _... 4 o 1 0 $13.70 in the seventh. for one run in the second !tnd 1.500-meter events. He competed Kerr, S5 3 o 1 0 A crowd of 23,636 wagered three more blows, including Rudy in the 1936 Olympics and Mrs. ,mmerich, p _.. ,_ 2 o I 0 $2.358.007. York's two-run triple. foJ' three Hnlldorsson is a veleron of inter­ Fischer, p 0 o o 0 • • • runs in the third In pinning the national gymnastics competition. Kluttz- ...... !. 1 o 1 Q Mrs. James L. Moore's six-year­ defeat on . who Ill­ Voisellc, p ~...... 0 o o Q old Saxon PauL captured the fea­ lowed nlne hits. Harlow ReturllS tured War Bond Purse at Delaware Hank Greenberg, expected to re­ CAMBRIDGE, Moss. (AP)-The Totals ...... 34 2 8 Park before 10.883 who wagered port to the Tigers yestetday after return of Head Coach Dick Harlow • Batted Cor Fi ('her in 7th $954.627. T. Albert Sears Tagej hls army discharge, failed to ar­ Crom the navy and the continuance was second, half a length behind. rive but may join the club today. of intel'colleglale football on an in­ with the Edgehill Stables' Theseus p Jevelan.d AD R H E [omal basis was nnnounced yest r­ THE third. day by the Harvard Athletic nsso- BfSTof Saxon Paul ran the mile and Meyer. 2b ...... 2 1 1 o ciation. THE BLUE one-sixteenth in 1:471/ 5 and paid Rocco. 1 b ...... 4 0 o o The 55-year-old Harlow. on $6.20. O~Dea. rl ...... 4 0 1 o leave oC absence since Dec. I, 1942. • • • Heath. If ...... 3 1 1 o received his navy dischorgc as a 15+0. .. A 5 to 1 shot, R. B. Carroll's Boudr eau. ss ...... 3 1 2 b lieutenant commander on June 12 50.000 WATTS Winsome Lad beat H. Guy Betl­ Hayes, c...... 2 0 o o and will report here in August to well's Hammer-Lock by a head in McDonnell. c ...... 1 0 1 I conduct three weeks of pl'e-se030n the Lafayette Purse at Suffolk Ross, 3tJ ... :...... 4 0 o o practice. Wh ile in lhe navy, Ha r- Box OfficI' Open 1:1~9:t5 Downs. The 2 to 5 favorite, Joe Hoag, cf ...... 2 0 o o low was stationed ot various Tucci's Nowadays. was blocked in Carnett· ...... 1 0 o o polnls in the Pacific thealer (IS well the stretch and finished third. Mackiewicz, ct ...... 0 0 o o as in the United States. Winsome lad sprinted the six Gromek, p ...... 3 0 o o ~ Wliliams" ...... 0 0 o o RTAR'l" TO DAY t:ND3 Wheeler'" ...... 0 0 o o -FRIDAY rt*'1t#tF I First Tlml' - t 'irst Run Tobls ...... 29 3 6 1 NOW ends FRIDAY • Batted for Hoag in 8th • .. Batted for Gromek in 9th • •• - 'Ran tor WlIIiams in 9th • • petrol, AD II R I The Big Show Webb, ss ...... 4 0 0 0 • • • ---"---- MayO. 2p ...... 1 3 0 • National Leape 4 Cu)lenbine, rf ...... 3 1 0 • Teama W L Pet. 0 York, Ib ...... 4 1 1 Brookiyn ...... 31 21 0 PLOS • .590 Cramet. 0 2 fashion model Pittsburgh ...... 30 23 cf ...... 4 0 EDGAR KENNJo:py COMEDY .56~ Outlaw, If ...... • St. Louis ...... 29 24 .549 4 1 0 1 COLORTOON - LATE NEW Maler, 3b ...... 3 0 2 0 New YOrk ...... 30 25 .!l 4~ • Swift, Chicago ...... 26 22 .542 c ...... 3 0 1 0 , EatoTT. p ...... 2 Boston ...... ,...... 26 25 .510 tl 0 0 Mueller, p ...... 1 0 0 \ CipcinnaF ...... 23 27 .460 0 Overmire, p What a dilf.renc. betw • .., 1M Wright brotherl' plan. and the Philadelphia ...... 14 42 .250 ...... 0 0 0 0 pla_ that or. maldn, "'story today ••• and b.tween an ordinary American Leape 10&..1...... 3. 4 9 saf.ty razor b'ad. and th ..... Pal Halaw Graund-a dlff.r.nl, Detroi t ...... '. 30 21 ' .58~ 1 IIIOdwn "'ad. far a dlff.rent, mOdern thav•. Pal Is flexible 'n the Nl!w York ...... 23 Cle~eland ...... 100 002 000-3 reizar, 'ada' contours, whlslcJng away whlslC.rl with lust a 2~ .549 Detroit ...... 013 000 00x- 4 .oioWI Boston ...... , ...... 28 21 . ~38 "F'U1her Touch". No "bearl"" down" 10 no Irrltallon to tender Chicago ...... ~8 2Q Ilcills. o..~t. ·blad.: .dll" last Iong.r, fOo. Try a pack 'toddy. .!lid Washington ...... 26 28 .4~O St: Louls ...... 24 25 .449 Cleveland ...... :...... 21 27 .• 3~ Brooklyn at PhUacielpl'liB' (2 twl­ PAL PlO MUUD, WASHINGTO~ (AP)- Wosh­ PhlLadelphia ...... 20 32 .~~ 4 night) -~udolp" (jl~ O) or Her'r,Jig In,ton's ROller Wolft turned In one 4 (,r 10' YESTERDAY'S RESULT8 ' (0-0) ana ba\lls (II-b) vs. Barrett PJ~FECTED AND Of t~e ma16rs' fanciest pitching 10 .... 25' fATt~rED tHE Totals ...... 28 1 8 0 NatiGria~ Learue ( 4-7) and Sproull (1-4) Pltts'burgli al ChlC1lg()-Strlnce­ per10rmar'lCes ot the. season last HOllOW IROUMO New York 000 000 000-0 Boston 9. New York 2 hi,h!. a one-hit G-O victOry over I Brooklyn at Philadelphia, ram vich (8-3) V9. Chlpnlan (2-3) SINGLE OR Boston 100. 000 OOx-l Philadelphia Athletics. DOUBLE EDGE IUOR '~ADE Cincinnati 1. St. Louis 0 (only games 8cheduled) th~ 'AllUDE co.'" T. Chandler Takes Over only gan'les sctJeduled ~r1_ Leepe ~n~ thl:s sO Inspired the Senators , (\.•. :.:~.... . :...... WAS1UNGTON (APl-SenBtor American Leap. New Y6tk 'at 'Boa\On-Dubiel they put on a couple of rallies in A. B. ' ("Happy") Chandler said Boston i; New York 0 (4-5) and Donald (5-2) va. Fetrls8 fhe second aame to win 5-3 Dnd yesterday that he has "forma1!y Detroit 4, Cleveland 3 (/1-1) arid o'N~1I1 (4-0 ' . sweep the twin bill. taken over" the oftic~ of baseball Was/lington Ii-S, fhiladelphl. Philadelphia at" Washington "':' The hltt off Wolff. who hurled commissioner."I have completed 0-3 Newsom 1-8) Vi. Haefflyf (3-6j his seventh victory against three the process of taking charge," he CIllcago 5. St. Loui:3 • Cleveland at Detroit-Reynolds 4efeats. waR a double by Hal Peck told a reporter. "There will be no T~nA~'~ qAMJi:i (1i.1I~ or Ba.by (1-6) VI. New- In the fourth. Only 2Q men faced ADDll)...Io>LI"'I ~ litra.... er formal swearing In, and only a . l'I&tl_( L ..... h6uae (9·.) ,Wolff. Five of Washina!on's six "earWIGn" few routine maUers remain to be Boston at New York (niaht)­ Chicalo' at St. Lou~.-Qrov. rUM 01" ~9U Knerr were un- -Lltwt N.w_ . worked out." (3:-2) (8.4) VI. SbttIn' (3-*) ...rn~. . flutc~nf. v•. ~r~!er (l:n II· ... , • •• ~;W=ED==NE~S=D~A=Y,=J=UN=E~2!~~~4:5.==~======__====~~==~======~~~e~~~= !~~~x~I~D~A~IL~Y~IO~W~A~N~.~IO~W=A~C~I=T~Y=.~I~O=W==A======~==~======~======P=A=G=E==~~:3 BUllETIN Government Prepare, WSUlto Broadcast Faculty Recital- (Continued (rom pa•• I) Double Ring Ceremony·in Dubuque to Wed to Draft Trucke" .,Im (tl') O1l_W"IIlIM /,., fIlIO-WRO (INt. .1I_WON ('III. 8:30 SOUND MOTION P1CTUllE8 Striking in Chicage -'"""...... ( Blae-JUIOIL <.... ) Helen Mary Boble, Pic. Charles Griffin Jr. .... Detect and Collect (WMT) Sound pictures, including "The Mr. District Attorney CHICAGO (AP)-Tbe govern­ The faculty recital prl.'sented by (WHO) Boss Didn't Say Good Morning," In a double ring cerem~ny,1 bridal bouquet will be of white the music department wlll be Jones and I (KXEL) "Maintaining Quality Standards," Helen Mary Boble, daughter of " ment prepared lor speedy draftin. broadcast at 8 o'clock this evening. 8:45 "The Supervisor as a Leader" Mr. and Mr£. Frank T. Boble of gladloia and sweet peas. of striking Chicago truck drivers Mpearing on the pI'ogram will be Detect and Collect (WMT) (part I) and "Supervising Women Dubuque will become the bride of The matron of honor wi\) wear last nlllht while army drivers ~nd John P. Celentano, visiting lecturer Mr. District Attorney (WHO) Workers" will be presented PIc. Charles C. Griffin Jr., lion of an ice blue floor-length gown of military police escorts trucked in the music department, violin, Jones and I (KXEL) Thursday, June 21 at 1 p. m. in Col. and Mrs. Charles C. Grilfin of marquisette, styled with a fitted goods on a priority buis. JlPd Prof. Philip G. Clnpp. he~d ot ':00 room 213, University hall. The Greeley, Col., this morning at 9 bodice. full skirt, and square neck­ The federal manager of 1,700 Oreat Moments in Music (WMT) tne department, pinno. They will public is invlte~. o'clock in the Sacred Heart church line with rume trimming and lines seized by the office of de­ play selections by Mozurt and Kay Kyser (WHO) at Dubuque The Rev. J. Fr1!d three-quarter length sleeves. Her fense transportation, E 11 is T. Brahms. To Be Announced (KXEL) GEORGE M. HITTLER Kriebs wlll read the vows and will shoulder-lenllth veil will be caught Collen 01 Commerce Longnecker, announced that Ben TODAY'S PROGRAMS 8:15 offer the nuptial high mass. The by a crown of blue flowers in her Miller, ODT manpower executive, Qreat Moments In MUsic (WMT) 8:00 Morning Chppel altar will be decorated with while hair and she will carry a colonial was en route from Washington to Kay Kyser '(WHO) peonies. bouquet of yeJlow and blue !low- handle cancelation of draft defer­ 8:15 Musical MinIatures To Be Announced (KXEL) PI LAMBDA THETA 8:30 News, The Dally Iowan Pi Lambd. Theta will have a Prof. J. J. Dreher will serve as erSt ments. 9:30 organist, and Martha Kool of Iowa For her daughter's wedding, 8:45 Program Calendar Let Yourself Go (WMT) business me e tin g Wednesday, City will sing "Ave Maria" and Mrs. Boble has selected a sheer H Is estimated that one of every 8:55 Service, Reports Kay Kyser (WHO) June 20, at 7:3 0 p. m. in room 332, "Pani:; Angelicus." navy blue and white dress com- 259 working people in the United 9:00 Shakespeo1" 's Comedies, Woods and Fields (KXEL) University elementary school. States is employed in some form Prof. Hurdin Craig 9:45 Members will submit names for Attending tbe bride as matron plimented with white accessories. of honor will be her Sister, Mrs. She will also wear a corsage of red of printing or publishing. 9:50 Keep 'em Eating Let Yourself Go (WMT) new membership at this time. '155 News, The Dally Iowan Kay Kyser (WHO) EDA ZWlNGGI James L. Lord of Midland, Mich. carnations and whitll sweet peas. 10:00 Here's An Idea Concert Miniature (KXEL) Publicity Chairman John Bannon of Dubuque will Reception ai Z O'clock cago. Recently she has been a Even the 10:15 Yesterday's Musical Fa­ 10:00 serve as Best man and ushers will A reception will be held in the supervisor in St. Mary's hospital the Army vorites Doug Grant News (WMT) be Ptc. Kenneth Kaol and Walter home of lhe brlde's parents at 2 in Kansas City, Mo. master 10:30 The Bookshelf Supper Club (WHO) IOWA UNION Brauer, both of Iowa City. o'clock. The serving table will be The bridegroom, a graduate of theater 11 :00 The Study of Literature. H. R. Gross, News (KXEL) MtJSI() ROOM SC&EDUL. To Wear WhIte Net decorated with white snapdragons. Riverside Military academy in Prof. Bardin Craig New 10:15 MondaY-1l-2, '-I, 7-9. The bride will be given in mare Later the couple will leave on Gainesville, Ga., attended Loras yester_ 11 :50 Farm Flashes Fulton Lewis News, (WMT) Tuesday-He2, 4-8, 'I-II. riage by her father and will wear a wedding trip to Chicallo. For college in Dubuque and is now 12:00 Rhythm Rambles athletes News (WHO) Wednesday-n-2, 4-8, 'I-I. a white net gown, designed with traveling the bride wj)] wear a a student in the University 01 011"". WITH THE THICK•• Umy OJdnawa mud. Pte. Paul lloore 9-2. 12:80 Newl/, The Dally Iowan H. R. Gross, News (KXEL) Thursday-1l-2, 4-8, '1-11. a high neckHne and a yoke of. sheer navy blue dress with w1u 1e Iowa college of medIcine. 12:45 Religious News advances throu,h the rubble durin, an all-"I",' atlaek on Yona­ 10:30 FridaY-Il-2, 3-fi, 8-8. chanti11y lace, and btidal point accessories and a cOrlmge of gar­ The couple will reside at 115 N. baru, on the east .de of OkInawa. It Ia 1I . ~2 a. m. and the w ary inclUding 1:00 Musical Chats men, paid Symphonette (WMT) Saturday-H-2, 3-5. sleeves. Her full skirt is fash- denias. Dubuque street in Iowa City. Seventh divlalon Infantryman. his rlfte ready. leaves the town tJe. '\ 2:00 Viclory Bulletin Board War Service Billboard (WHO) Sunday- I-5, 6-8. ioned with insets of chantilly lace Tve bride is a graduate of Im­ Iowa City guests at the wedding hind him to continue toward the objectlye. The photoc-raph r who who Was 2:10 Enrly 19th Century Music, in the Paul Hutchens (KXEL) The Philharmonic and NBC and extends into a senior train. maCUlate Conception academy at will be Mrs. Donald Roacke, Mrs. accompanied the men Ln lhll attack wu wounded whil reconllna Prof. P. G. Clapp 10:45 symphonies may be helltd in the Her veil of double illusion fin- Dubuque and a graduate of SI. Ralph Kraus and Eugene Hoff­ Jheae plct\U"Of. , ..;.... - - - , (lnr rmltionllJ !In inces_ 3:00 Lest We Forget I wntched SYlllphonette (WMT) music room Sunday afterhoofl at gertip elnglh and will be caught Joseph's school of nursing in Chi­ man. I 3:15 Reminiscing Time _ Mu:sic tor Millions (WHO) 2 and 4 o'clock respectively. to a coronet. Her only jewelry ------~------:------''----'----''------­ inni ng 3:30 NeWli, The Dally Iowan Pre~ident Paul Hutchens (KXEL) EARL E. HARPER will be a strand of pearls, Which POP EYE I 3:35 Music of Other Countries 11:08 Director, Iowa Union were a gift of the bridegroom. Her lIe was 3:45 Afternoon Melodies which News (WMT) 4:00 Behind th eWar News Starlit Road (WHO) straight 4: 15 Child Play the last 23 News (KXEL) 4:30 Tea Time Melodies 11:15 5:00 Children's Hour Off the Record (WMT) 5:30 Musical Moods Starlit Road (WHO) Daily Iowan Want Ads 5:'5 News, The DaUy lowaa Rev. Pietsch's Hour (KXEL 6:00 Dinner Hour Music 11:30 WORK WANTED 6:55 News, The Dally Iowan Music for Millions (WMT) 7:00 Treasury Salute CLASSIFIED News (WHO) RATE CARt Work Wanted: Lawn mowing. 7:15 France Forever Rev. Pietsch's Hour (KXEL) Must supply mower. Call 36011. 7:30 Sportstime 11:45 Experienced lawn mower. 7:45 One Mun's Opinion Everett Hoagland's Band CASH RATE 8:00 Mus ic Hour (WMT) lor J Cla~ 8:45 News, The Dally Iowan MUSic, News from NBC (WHO) IOc per llne per .tat 9:00 University Plays Its Part Dance Orchestra (KXEL) • conaecutive days- 7c per Une per daJ WANTED: Farm hand or high 12:08 • eonaecuti ve school boy able to operate trac­ NETWORK lUGULIGHTS Press News (WMT) da,_ 6:00 lie per Itne per dQ tor. Johnson County home. Es­ Midnight Rhythm Parade sential work. Dial 5022. ...v~ Jack Kirkwood's Show (WMT) (WHO) 1 month- Lucia Thorne & Co. (WHO) Sign Off (KXEL) 4c per line per da, Grain Belt Rangers (KXEL) -FiIu.... II word. \0 11ne­ WANTED: Student help at Mad CHfC YOUNG 6:15 Iilinlmum Ad-2 llDee Hatter tea room. CaIJ 11791. Music That Satisfies (WMT) Mrs. A. C. Moyer , News of the World (WHO) To Discuss Missions CLASSIFIED DISPLAY WAITRESSES WANTED H. R. Gross, News (KXEL) IOc col. Inch Part of FuIJ Time 6:30 For Congregationalisf1 Or 111.00 per mODtla Good Hours- Good Pay Ellery Queen (WMT) BARNES CAFE News (WHO) "Missions in This Wartime All Want Ada CMh 10 Advance 210 East Washington street 1 1 Did You Know (KXEL) World" will be discussed by Mrs. Payable at Daily Iowan BUlle (Next to Varsity theater) 1 1 6:45 A. C. Moyer at a meeting of the D_ office daily until II p.m. DlAL 7822 1 I Ellery Queen (WMT) Women's Association ot the Con- \ 1 S News from NBC (WHO) gregalional church this aCternoon CabcellatloDJ must be ea1led In 1 1 Preferred Melodies (KXEL) at 2:30 in the church lounge. Also before II p. m. 2 3 7:00 participating in the program will Reeponslble 1<>r one incorrect 1 I Jack Carson (WMT) be Mrs. T. R. Reese, who will ex­ \nsertlon only. WANnD 0 I Mr. and Ml""3. North (WHO) plain the proposed merger of the 1 1 Raymond Gram Swing (KXEL) 'Evangelical-Reformed and Con­ 7:15 gregational churches. 9 13 Jack Carson (WMT) Devotionals will be led by Mrs. DIAL 4191 Students to wcdt tabl.. for Mr. and Mrs. North (WHO) Merton Tud6r. Co-chairman in R Lum an' Abner (KXEL) charge of the meeting will be Mrs. board. Men or wom.n. Ap­ 7:30 Moyer and Mrs. Reese, and assist­ ply at Currier haD. aoulh en­ 1 2 0 ing them will be Mrs. W. F. Mc­ 1 1 0 Dr. Christian (WMT) WMC Regulations The Gay Mrs. Featherstone Roberts, Mrs. A. L. Sahs, Mrs. O. Advertisement. for male or ee­ trance. HENR~ CAllL ANDERSOa 0 0 0 O. Sharp, Mrs. E. F. Gerkin, Mrs. 0 0 0 (WHO) sentlal lemale worken are ear­ Counter Spy (KXEL) Ira Houston, Mrs. W. A. Wifsler, rled In theM "Uelp Wan&ecl" 0 0 I Mrs. Eunice Beardsley, Mrs. W. A .. 0 1 0 7:45 eolulJUll with tile undentallil­ Dr. Christian (WMT) McKee, Mrs. Leonpina Murphy Ina" that blrln, proeeduree ahaIl 0 1 0 and Adelaide Goodrell. 0 1 0 The Gay Mrs. Featherstone eontorm io War Manpower 0 I 0 (WHO) Commission Re,ulatioDl. Dancing Lessons-ballroom, bil­ 0 0 0 Counter Spy (KXEL) let, tap. Dial 7!lt&. MimI. Youde 8:00 Presidential Power 0 I 0 WASHINGTON (AP)-Legisla­ Wurlu. 0 0 0 Ray Noble (WMT) WANTED Eddie Cantor Show (WHO) tion extending until June 30, 1946, Wanted: Anyone with a car to sell. WHERE TO JUY IT The Road Ahead (KXEL) the president's power to requisie 2 8 tion property and material needed Call J. A. Buchwalter-Unlver­ 7th 8:15 Ray Noble (WMT) for the war effort was passed slty Hospital-3Ul. ------PLUMBING AND BDTlN'U Eddie Cantor now (WHO) yesterday by the house and sent WANTED: Small furnished apart- The Road Ahead (KXEL) to the senate. ' after Aug. 15. Box C, Daily bJlel1 _.,'...... Iowan. LA"WOO. NEW HOME MEMORIAL TO FATHER WANTED: Apartment with living 227 E. Wash. Phone Hl1 room, bedroom, bat hand ______kitchenette for two girls. Call 4192 Yea are ,hrl" we ...... LOST AND }-'OUND and PRICES ate Id " ale £TTA lET! PA UL ROBJNSO II LOST: Silver identification brace­ let engraved Margie. Reward. DRUG SHOP Dial 2186. EclwardS...... ~ LOST: Sel of keys on linked chain and ring. Call X8330 or leave at '-======'- Currier south desk. Reward. LOST: Gold-capped Parker "51" fountain pen. Dial 3147 or 4191. Also, Wilson tennis with initials H. R. H. Reward. WANTED TO BUY WANTED TO BUY: Army officer's summer blouse. Lieut. Hogan, 6901 or 7670. FURNITURE MOV1NQ FOB RENT MAHER BROS. TRANS'. FOR RENT: Approved rooms tor I'or Efficient l'urnltlJre IIoviDI BOOM AND BOARD I,. aBMB ASlall OLD HOME TOW .. By STANLE" university women. 215 E. Fair­ AIlt About Our child. WARDROBE SERVICB W~AR~YOU For Rent: One comfortable room. I DIAL - 9696 - DIAL AN'WHERE'S Call 4647. 420 N. Dubuque. ...;i. DA LITTLE GUY WHATS L\VIN' IN THERE ? Let Me See Now-

It doesn't maHer where­ or how - lhe'll find what ,he MRS. J. C. PRlvm of Blytheville, Ark., and her eight children, above, have moved Into a brand new 10-room hOUle, .hown Ln bottom photo, wants. YOU which wu purchaaed and completely fuml.hed II a mell\orlal to their hU8band and tather. Wben Private Firat C1a.u Privett WII will too, in kllJed In action lut January at Luxembourg, BlythevllJe'. gro,cer, JOdie Naberl, propoaed the eltabllihment at a memorial tund. The IUm grew to $7,000 plu. an additional ,2,000 donated In labor and material., with contribUtiona Iowtn, In from avery It~te 'and from DAILY IOWAN WANT ADS (all 4191 ..rv1eemen all flY" the ,lobe. ' (111'''111';01111 SolUlAf,.1JOfQ)

. , 'AGE sm l' H E D AlL Y lOW A N. lOW A CIT Y. lOW A WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1945 ====~~===-~$=-=~======~~P=====~======-======7======T=~====~~== Complete Workshop Lieut. J. Felton Delcribes- SUI Library Exhibits Prof. E. E. Harper Iowa Citians Plan lewis Graf Becomes (. R~ Keyes To Lecture in Omaha Local Safety Council Coast Guard Ensign Aids Understanding Inter-American Show Pr ot. Earl E. Harper, director 01 Capture of Carrier lawa Union will give two lectuf" . Of Parents, Teachers Keyed to Conference To Lecture today at Omaha university on tb, Dorr Hudson Elected "The Japanese caught the car­ subject of fine arts in American only 35 miles off the Jap Island 01 liCe and education. He will elao Outstanding results of the home­ rier at its most vulnerable mOin­ Temporary Chairman, Kyushu . A display depicting all the The first In Il series of lectures confer wi th Omaha news publish. school cooperation w 0 r k s hop ent," said Lleul. John Felton, a "We were really scared when Appoints Committee survivor of the U. S. S. Franklin, American countries and their cus­ by Prof. Charles R. Keyes, na­ ers and authorities of the J06Il'n which ended yesterday are a Lhey told us we were heading tor museum con cerning lhe contem. in a talk to the Kiwanis club yes­ toms is now being shown in the tion.slly recognized authority on clearer conception of how far lhe island at 10 knots. The ship porary arL exhibit, which Opel\l Preliminary organization for terday at Hotel Jefferson . reference library in Macbride hall. the anthropology and archaeology the formation of an Iowa City apart teachers and parents are in finally stopped and lay dead In Sunday In Iowa Union. appreciating eaeh other's prob­ Lieutenant Felton went aboa rd th e water and we helped fight On either side of the d l:s play are or this area, will be given this aft­ safety council was set up last ernoon at 3 o'clock in the audl­ lems and some effective means of the Franklin March 14, 1945, pre­ [ires on the ' hangar deck," Lieu~ stands holdIng miniature flags of night by 20 Iowa Citlans who at­ bringing them together. Sessions torlu mof the chemistry bulldinll. tended a meeting called at the city ceding the Invaslon of Okinawa tenant Felton said. each country. Court Imposes of the course helped to bring about arid the aerial strike against "Habitation Sites And Thrir hall by Mayor Wilber J . Teeters. "At 10:30 the cruiser Santa Fe The display includes phamplets a basic understanding between the Kyushu, one of the Japanese home came along side and evacuated Products" Is the subject of -the i1 . Three Fine. Dorr Hudson was elected tem­ two groups, according to . Prot. islands. illustrating economic gifts of the lustrated lecture. Professor Keyes porary chairman of the group and part of the crew. I left the ship Ralph Ojemann of the child wel­ "At 3:30 a. m. on March 19 we Americas to the world, a s ele c ~ed will explain how the implements Orion L. F'ranlz, 20 W. Prentiaa appointed a committee to formu­ around 7 o'clock by jumping from fare research station, coordinator were called to general quarters. th e fli ght deck of the Franklin list of Latin-American song books and prodUcts found In the habita­ street, wns fined $10 In police late plans of organization for the of the workshop. The situation seemed to clear and one book telling of the na­ tion sites-determine the culture of court yesterday for dlsturblnl the safety council. onto one of the Santa Fe's tur­ Special projects were developed around 6:30 and I went to the rets," Lieutenant Felton said. tional heroes of Latin America. the peoples who lived there. peace. Bert L. Woodcock, director of by teachers, parents, school ad­ wardroom to eat something," " I saw the carrier again in Also in the good-will display The lecture series wlll continue Di ck Moo"e, 317 N . Rlvenlde the division of safety education ministrators and faculty members Lieutenant Felton related. Pearl Harbor and it is impossible are sheets of Latin American every Wednesday tor six weeks drive, was flncd $1 for overtime of the Iowa department o( safely, of teacher training institutions who "At 7:08 as I was coming out of Lo tell how the ship looked. The musIc and book jackets from books with a discussion of different types parking. gave a brief talk on the activities Ens. Lewb Graf attended the course. Examples of the wardroom all hell broke hangar deck was practically de­ written about noted places and of cultures. Clarence Millard, Iowa CIty, of safety councils following a tile projects studied by workshop loose-one big explosion and th en stroyed, with supported "I" beams customs of South America. Maps was fined $3 for making Il. "U" short moving picture entitled members during the period from a flash that knocked me into a twi sted in all shapes. Below decks in color and in black-and-white turn. "Traffic Jam Ahead." Among the* officers * * recently re­ June 14-19 were mentioned by corner. it was a mess that no one could illustrate products and industries Man Fined $15 "The state council is organized ceiving commissions at the Coast Ojemann: "Explosions were gOing off a 11 walk through," he said. of the Americas. For Leaving Scene for all kinds of safety, not just Guard station in New Lond\lO, 1. Preparation of a series of the time, along with small arms Lieutenant Felton had great The display tiES in with the traUic safety. More people were ammunition. We counted 60 or 70 Conn., was Ens. Lewis Qraf, grad­ units for teaching stUdents in praise for the captain and crew of university's inter-American con­ Merle M. Arnold, 233 S. Lucas killed in their homes last year uate of the State University of teacher training institutions. large explosions and then lost the Frank]in, and the skipper of ference which opens tomorrow. street, was 'Cined $15 in police than were killed on the high­ [owa in 1942. Ensign Gra1's home 2. Fundamentals of parent­ count," Lieutenant Felton con­ the San tat Fe who risked his ship ways," Woodcock stated. tinued. court yesterday for leaving the is at Lockridge. teacher work. in rescuing the survivors of the scene of an accident without giv­ A' h_-;'n, .. o ...-Dollc ..... - ...... Graf, a member of Alpha Kappa 3. Preparations of units for use "0 n e tremendous explosion carrier. -No Ic • .".,g •• -...... "'--...... He di splayed an outline of the Lions to Elect ing hi s name and address. whlppln,-No ocore ...... ".,-1 ... - organization of the state safety Chi and the YMCA, was emplo~ed in teacher training institutions to blew one of the 200- ton elevators Inu,••• I ••-20 , ..lpe.l ...... 1M .... council on which was listed the at the Burlington Steel Craft com­ develop a parent education pro­ into the air and it seWed back The annual Lions club election Arnold's car collided with one 0' •. rI.o.. alii ~_ .'_ ,., types of safety in which the coun­ pany prior to his entry into the gram. sideways. The ready-fire ammu­ MQrriage License of officers will be held at today's driven by O. A. Edgeworth at 503 cil is interested . •They are home, service. 4. How teachers can establish nition in the pLanes on the ilighl luncheon in Reich':s Pine room. Of- S. Van Buren street yesterday morning at 1 o'clOCk. LOnDODDERRY traffic, fire and recre ~ tion . He enlisted as a seaman in June, good relations with the parents of deck sounded like strings of Chi­ A marriage license was issued to ficers are elected for the year be­ Damage to th