ON TH6-INSIDE THE WEATHER TODAY . , Dodgers Win at Home ...... Page 2 Fair and HOT weather is predicted for Iowa Belated Assault Prob& (Editorial) .... Page .5 at City today with high around 100 and low to­ Intervie~ With E. S. Cooper ...... Page 6 owal1 EatabUahed 1868-Vol. 79, No. 211-AP News and Wirephoto Iowa City. Iowa. Satwday. August 9, 1947-Five Cent. night about 7.5.

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· h 'R - I p' R·· Give Accounts of 'Unmercifult H, ane er egrets etersqn eSlgnatlon Beating in Iowa City Hotel State Investigator Enters Case, Joins With Dr. Peterson, Siegel's 'Friend' Pop's Buzzing Karachi County Atty. White in Quizzing Witnesses Odom Passes I An eye-witness to the May 6 attack upon E.s. Cooper by two a. yet unidentified assailants described It yesterday as " unmerciful,"~ consisting of "beating the victim to the floor with fists" and "kick­ Quits Over· Karachi, India, ing him in the head, midriff, In tact, his whole body." The eye-witl'\ess was one of two making statements yesterday to The Daily Iowan. One desired his name be withheld. He said thtt. county attorney had his name and statement. I Medical Plan Nears Halfway The second eye-witness, Melvin Allison, night manaaer of th. Huddle at the Jefferson hotel where the attack took place, said he 'There is No Crime Br The Associated Pr- was "positive I can identify the two but don't know their names." H. In Fighting for a Round-the- world fiyer William ------...said one of them was Involved !n Principle,' He Says P. adam, nearing the halfway a fight in the hotel lobby a couple mark In his attempt to halve Wi­ of months ago. President Virgil M. Hancher is­ ley Post's 1933 solo recorded land­ Three Die In This development arose whixe sued a statement late last night ed at Karachi, India, last nlgh.t the state of Iowa was taking an fllLlowing the resignation of Dr. and departed an hour and 15 min­ active interest in the attack. Frank R. Peterson, head of the utes later after refueling. D.O. Bender of the state burea~ surgery department of the college Plane Crash of investigation was In Iowa City of medicine. The president's state­ Flight offieials in Chicago, NEW YORK (JP)-A two-en- ment said: where Odom took otf at 1:53 yes t e r day collaborating with "It is with regret that I have p. m. (CST) Thursday, said they gined American airlines radar ex­ County Attorney Jack C. White ~cepted the resignation of Dr. were informed by the CAA in perimental plane plunged Into the In taking testimony of witnesses Frank R. Peterson as head of the New York that Odom put bls East river all La Guardia field to the Incident. Bender could not department of surgery of the col­ speeding Bombshell plane down at be reached for a statement last last night and compaDY spokes­ night. lege of medicine. He has rendered Karachi Friday at 6:10 p. m. men said three of five airline per­ mlmy years at valuable and fajt1J­ (CST), nearly eijfht hours after he A description of the start ot the sonnel aboard were presumed Incident was given by Allison, tul service to the college. left Cairo. dead. "Dr. Peterson's reference in his After leaving cairo, 22 hours The plane was aJempting an who was on duty in the Huddl. ruignatlon to a reorganization and 46 minutes out of Chicago and emergency landing shortly alter at the time. "It was late In the evening:' plan in the college of medicine a third of the way around the taking off. concerns the new mediaal services world in his flight, Odom rode Allison told a Daily Iowan report­ T..,o mechanics, James Till, 28, er, "and the Huddle was crowded. : plan which was placed in partial toward Karachi on a tall wind, and Chester J. Bali, were res­ operation on July I, of this year. Virginia Hill In a 55-minute stop here he took cued by the crew of a police See INTERVIEW, pare 8 "The medical services plan was Back From Paris on 500 gallons ot gasoline for his launch shortly before the plane tIIolved by a committee of the plane and a single glass of orange settled beneath the waters-scene with several persons, among them faculty of the college at medicine, juice lor himself. of two other plane crashes In the was approved by a majority vote Bugsy's Girl* * Lands; * Cooper (whom Allison knew by His converted U. S. army bom­ last two years. sight), waiting to get in." ot the faculty of the college and D~tectives Meet Her ber, the "Bombshell," checked out THE WIFE and two children of WIlUam OdoDl enerly foUow the Pforr... of his 1010 world mrM In An airline spokesman said the I-.ceived the unanimous approval tbeir hotel suite in Chlcafo yest.erda.r. WIUl Mrs. OdoDl are Boohelle, 6, (left) aud Ronnie, 3. Two young men, who accord!nr of Farouk airfield at 6:39 p. m., plane, a 18pe used in commercial to Allison, "had been drinking," at the Iowa State Board of Ed­ NEW YORK (tP)- Vir g i nia 10:39 a. m. CST just as the sun was (AP WIREPHOTO) passenger service but carrying ucation in the spring of 1946. approached him and wanted to Hill, friend of the slain gamhler setting across the Nile valley. only airline personnel, had Just enter the coffee shop. Allison said ' ''The plan is now in operation Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel but Ust­ Odom, still fresh despite lack of * * ed hotel suite.* With* her wer, the. taken off for Buffalo on a trip for a two-year trial period. It * * Will Appoint Morse he told them they had to walt ted as a "merchant" on the sleep, was confident he would be couple's .children, R9C~Il., 8, ~nd to experiment with radar when w!J1 be carefully observed in Bill Odom' s Wife their turn. plane's passenger manifest, arriv­ back in Chicago Sunday. The for­ ~QIl~d , 3. . To Labor Department one engine taJled. "The), said, 'Looks.like nobody's o'ptratidn and w1l1 be re-ev.aluated ed last night lrom ris and was mer British rwr, c6JlWla.nd ait'­ The pilot, Capt. Walter A. Da­ during the period to determine "We lire useq to his ~II}I ..way letting In but the Jew.,' .. Alli­ me~ by three detectives-two of man, now living in RoslYn, N. Y., And ~hildr~n Calm WASHINGTON (JP)--Secretary vidson, circled bilck, attempted to son said. He then told how they wrether or not it is a workable want to cut to at least 90 hours on II feny hap to some place I nev­ land but overshot the tield, the plan." New York: and one from Los of Labor Schwellenbach announc­ became mad, decided not to wait Angeles. the l86-hour solo record set by CHICAGO (JP)-Mrs. Bill ad om er heard of. Like many husbands airline said. Doctor Peterson, whose resigna­ ed yesterday that President Tru­ and started out throueh the north The detectives, who questioned Wiley Post in 1933 for around the said last night she couldn't "afford If he gets a br,ijrht idea, you mlJht Presumed dead, in addition to toyer, malting audible remarks Hon becomes effective In one world flight. as well go along with It. He's a man will appOint David A. Morse Captain DaVidson, were the co­ month, said in an interview, Miss Hill in customs quarters at to get excited" about her hus­ about Jews. La Guardia field, did not divulge He said he landed in Cairo in­ band's current globe-circling solo very impulsive young man." of New York as undersecretary of pilot, W. I. Zundel, and H. Hickey, Allison said he saw Cooper "there is no crime in fighting for A hotel neighbor yesterday ask­ a mechanic. All the personnel a principle." their purpose. stead of flying non-stop to Kara­ attempt. labor. approach them but didn't over~ ed Rochelle Odom, 6, if her daddy were from New York. Dean Ewen M. MacEwen of the Miss Hill dashed tram the plane chi }- Defiant furiously banging an ash tray and I walked around the foyer a while and then left, too," Allison stataiL trllversy has been underway con­ LAKE SUCCESS (JP)-Russia Howard Hughes testified yester­ dashing oft a couple ot subpoenas. The late summer "cold wave" cerning the university's program assailed the United States yester­ day that the government is getting In his statement, the second The "you're another" feud be­ dropped the temperatw:~ in Iowa eye-witness said he had been a to dB away with the part-time day for its treatment of American its money's worth from his $30,- City to 91 degrees yesterday, one work of department heads at Uni­ Communists, declaring that this 000,000 aerial cargo boat that tween Hughes and Senator Brew­ guest at the hotel and was leav­ degree lower than Thurs4ay's ing the lobby for the north door versity hospitl!l. treatment and recently enacted never has flowl\. ster (R-Me), chairman of the full high. A three-man standing commit­ "anti-labor" legislation were ser­ war investigating committee, re­ when he saw the attack. And the mHlionaire manutact­ Yesterday's high mark was "The tight had proceeded to the tee of the Iowa State Medical so­ ious violations of human rights. urer and flier of planes told a mained otlicia])y ended. It crew ciety on medical education and The attack occurred in the mem­ reached at 8:30 In the afternoon vestibule between the Inner and senate war investigating subcom­ out of ' Hughes' charge and Brew­ after the thermometer reristered a outer doors," he said, "ahd the hospitals was formed to look into bership cammi\tee of the United mittee he isn't makin, a dime the situation. Nations security council after U. S. ster's denlill that . the senator low of 60 degrees early In the two ·young fellows had the victim out of that project or any other mornloi. It was 88 degrees at .of their attack backed up agalntt This committee included Dr. representative Hayden Raynor had wartime business. offered to call off this inquiry it 7:30 last night. the Inller doors beating him with Qeorge H. Scanlon of Iowa City, opposed the admission of 'Bulgaria The subcommittee Is investjgat­ Huahes would ~mit merger of (~ Peterson Resigns Pag, 6) to the U. N. and criticized the com­ ing wartime contracts with Hugh­ TrilnSworld Airline and ' Pan A new heat wave started lJlOV- their fists. Howard Hughes jng Into the sun-.baked, heat- "Atter standing Inside for • munL

.tat... I "____ .. _ __--..---.. __~ lar... t alrplant-a aGO-ton flI- . "WeU.--," 11\1... ro~9. D8I8t" th'lr blda.bl Oct. .t 11 Dut wetka __ -+-1...-- (8" COOPER BEATING Pale'~ ...... -----' --• • 1 hE DAILY IOWAN, SATURDAY. AUOUST 9, 19''1-PAO£ TW~ , I':" ------_ ...... ,...... -.. - - riple .T PI,cy· Fea tures Cub Win Over Red'S.. B, . * * * * * * * * * · Taking Bosol 3 End of aTriple Play N.lcholson's ~------~~------~ e. - • Time Out Homers, (lip Homer Beats 8i l!======With Buck Turnbull==c-===:::J Yankees, 9-~ Blackwell, 2.-1 Most of the N;ltional league fans seem to be forgetting an important 0; BOSTON (.4»- Thanks to three poiDt in the two team pennant race in tbe senior loop. Mainly that CHICAGO (JP)-Bill Nicholson's lusty home runs the Boston Red there are two other teams besides the Cards and Dodgers who stand home with one out in the ele­ a chance of squeezing ahead in September and winning the :flag, Sox last night whipped the Yan­ venth and ~ triple play in tbe sev­ ., Rlrbt now the ever-sluu·ln .. New York Giants are six ..ames kees, 9-6, to move into second M place, 12'1" games in back ot the off &he pace and Billy outhworlh's crew up In Bosto_most recent enth gave the a 2-1 liE' aeeomplllhlnent. three straight frOID the Dodrers-are only eil'hi front running New Yorkers. The decision over Elwell Blackwell and J second largest nigh t crowd of the motio PIPe. beblnd.. the here yesterday season, 34,711 paid, howled as biclt Both the Giants and Braves will be playing in the east for the before a ladies day crowd of 25,- Great next month or so, most of the time in the friendly confines of their Bobby Doerr whacked a three run homer, Jack Jones stroked a one 258. tirda: ' home ball parks. It is not inconceivable that either one of the two run aHair and Sam Mele belted The defeat was the third in a · could put on a hot stretch drive with good pitching and hitting and ""nt a two run four bagger. Tommy row for Blackwell following his ' end up by shocking everybody. Henrich homered for the New string of 16 straight victories. He , Southworth has dooe a marveloWi job with a cast-all bunch of allowed the Cubs 12 hits, and , , ball players who managed to find their way to the Hub cUy. And Yorkers. The Bronx Bombers played would have had a victory Loses thlrd in row •• ,' , , 'he majority of them are Irom St. Louis, w.bere Southworth first wltbout 10ltlnr loe DiManlo except for 'Bert Haas' two-base er­ "'t- made the road to fame. whOle absence seemed to be a ror which led to Chicago's first rUD In fact, the only star ball player who built up his reputation at DlYS~Y to bo~h his fellow play-. in the second. :.Boston and is still around is Tommy Holmes, right fielder. The rest en and to spokesmen lor tbe went the dis­ Eddie Dyer Very .; ~ ' of the firit stringers-, , Frank M~r­ leape leaders. Blr DIMar sut­ tance for tbe Cubs, bolding the mick, Mike McCormick, Bob Elliot, Connie Ryan and Hank Camelli­ fered a stiff neck last Suflday Reds to ten hits. Toe victory 'are all former stars of other teams. And with this makeshift batch, and hasn't played since but his stopped a four game losing string Pleased With String : 'SOuthworth has built the best hitting team in the National league. absence last nl,hi was not ex­ for Chicago, and increased Cincin­ , Southworth. too. Is geUlnr the best balanced pUcillor of any team plained. nati's defeat streak: to four. Of R,edbird Victodes I ' In the learue with Rookie havlnl' a record of 14 The Sox were outhit by a 14-10 Len Merullo started the triple wins. Johnny Saln, 15, and , 9. Should the Braves I'M margin in last night's t>artisan play which cut off the Reds' big­ ST. LOUIS (.4» - The World lome decent hurling from Bill Volselle or -two tIIrow­ crowd pleader but they made gest threat in the seventh. A:(ter Champion Cardinals have packed aways from other teams--they could make It awfully tourh for the most of their blows count. Grady Hatton had reached second a mean box office appeal th~~,h Dodgers and Cardinals. After the Yankees took a two and Haas first on successive sin­ many a season because of tileir · As for the Giants, they still have a lot of question marks in thelr run lead in the opening inning on. gles in the seventh, Babe Young role as baseball's No. 1 thriU boil, lineup. Manager Mel Ott's main trouble is pitching. The Giants un­ a double by Snuffy Stirnweiss, but the facto,s giving Mana~r doubtedly have thl! most power hitters in either league with any ..J sent a hit-and-run liner over sec­ a single by and an­ ED WAITKUS, Chicago Cubs' first baseman, trots toward the 's mound altt!r tagging flrs.t lor Eddie Dyer his biggest lift y~~­ one of their starters capable of belting a at every turn. But other two bagger by the Veteran the third out of a triple play In the seventh inning of yesterda.y's game with Cincinnati at Wrigley ond. Merullo leaped high to spear day are their condition and att.e\l' in order to win a game, the New Yorkers have to score around ten George McQuinn, the Sox scored field. The play started when Babe Young (left) hit a hard liner to Lenny Merullo, Cub shortstop, In the ball with his gloved hand, dou­ tion to business. runs. once in their first on one hit and back of second base. Merollo then ta&,ged second to double Grady Hatton, Reds' third baseman, and bled Hatton by touching secotld, While baseball thrill-see~t,l1 is the only pitcher who seems to go with any consis­ added three more in the third then fired the ball back to Waitkus who touched the sack bcfore Cincinnati First Baseptan Bert Haas and threw to Eddie Waitkus at revelled in the latest comeba~k pI tency for the Giants. Monb Kennedy, Clint Bartunr and "Books" when Doerr poled his 11th four­ (rlrht) could get back, thus maklo, the third out. No.2' is Reds' Coa.ch Georlre Kelly. first for the final out. his get-up-from-the-fioor fight~ , " Iott aren't able to capitalize on he great slunln, of their team­ bagger at the season high into the (AP WIR&PHOTO) Nicholson counted the Cubs' Dyer took time out to discu,ss.,Ibe , mates. Joe Bergs, recently acquired fro~ Cincinnati, hun't done net atop the left field fence to first run in the second when Haas Redbirds' latest wil1n)ng su:~k · m¥ch to help Mel Ott's pli(ht, either, and stm hasn't dropped his fly to left-center. that has turned what looked like score Dam n.Maggio and Ted lound his former self, since belnr traded to the Big City from Bos­ Williams, both of whom had Anderson Announces 54-Man Roster After moving to third on Bobby a fading pennant race into ,­ ton, walked. Sturgeon's infield out, Nicholson other ding-dong battle. • • • • The Yanks evened the score in scored on a balt-swing single by Just a week ago BrooklYIl's In reading all the great things that are being sard about one Geo­ the fifth, one of the runs Hen­ Merulo along the third-base line. Dodgers cleaned up a three game rge Ratterman, former Notre Dame foOtball player, we begin to get rich's 14th homer, and added The Reds tied it up in the fifth series with the battling Cards to the idea of just how powerful a football machine Coach Frank Leahy their other two in the sixth on a when they loaded the bases on sin­ go ten lengths in front, yet lite ~lis building at South Bend. Gridders Report Sept. 2 gles by .Hatton, and Haas and a Champions are mOTe pennant· double, two singles and a fielder's ~ad Ratterman returned to Notre Dame in the tall for his final choice. walk to Yoting. augIe Galan just confident tban at any time-. this :y~r of eligibility. he would have been at best a second IIfrlng The Sox got their fifth in the beat a possible double-play relay season after swee!ling to &ev.en quarterback. And even then he would've had to baUle three oiber sjxth to pull within one run of a to first which allowed Hatton to straight victories while tho BUllIS top notch sirnal callers for the distinction of flUlnr Johnny Lu­ tie and then exploded tor four 32 Leltermen Major League (hisol Nip The count was one and' one were going into a tailspin . ..Tbe jack's shoes when the ace passer and field reneral was restlnr on against reliefer, and loser, Joe when Nicholson planted his high Cards trailed by only four games · the bench. Page in the eighth which Jake hois t into the L"ight field runway. going into last night's contest.:l , If a boy like Ratterman can jump to profeSSional football and step Jones started by lambasting his Lead1ars It was Nicholson's fourteenth pO­ "One thing that especlalb Into a first string quarterback slot for the Buffalo Bills. just how lOth homer. Will Be Back mer of the year. pleases me about tbls latest "LAYER, CLUB G. R. II . PCT. Detroit, 4-2 good are the rest of Frank Leahy's boys? But it's like one of the AB. Clnelnnall AB R RIChl •• ro ,AD R II succession of Cardinal viGtQr~ Singles by Birdie Tebbetts and The cream of Iowa's Hawkeye Wallitoher ·:ror the third spot. and 'ssing-all having J'oined the Kay. Walnut; Jim Cozad. Waterloo; Bob :went are ml Zender, Cresco nedy singled ahead of York's ho­ all t.he way 1'n three and, iD ,the • • • • and a double by Pitcher George professional ranks. Rl,ht Ends - Tony GuzowskI. Iron mer in the li(}th. fourth he had one man out in.the Iowa·s Business Manager of Athletics Frank Bav) cek said yes­ Munger gave the St. Louis Card­ Sept. 2, 'S J' ust 16 River. Mich .; Bob Phillip.. Arlington. The date I Va.: Herbert Shoener. Irvington. N. J.: Appling had a perfect day at Giants Homer Twice, ninth," said Dyer. "None of, AlY a terday that the football ticket sliu~tlon Is comin, alon,c as expected inals their first two runs as tbey practice days before the Hawkeye Bob McKenze. Tonkawa. Okla. bat, gathering four straight hits key men asked to have some OtIe with the schedllle muth ahead of last year. ' went on to a 6 to 0 victory over Quarterbacks - AI DiMarco, Mason opening game against North City; John Estes, Des Moines; Lou King. off Newhouser, who give up 14 in spell him off. . Frank also' passed along another note about Iowa's swimming team the -stretching Los·e to Braves, 7-S Dakota State. The university had Pen •• co.... Fl •. ; Jim McKinstry. Wa- all. Lefthander Frank Papish of ·twisted an ankle next winter. From what, Frank says he ha~ heard. the rest of the their current series of ttiumphs to obtain special permission from te1~1 H ..llb ...... -BIU Kersten. Logan : the Sox needed help from Earl NEW YORK (JP) - Johnny and had to come out and ,1 let conference fears the Hawkeye tankmen as much as any team in the to eight. Ml.lnger held the Pirates the Big Nine conference to play Bob Longley. Davenport; Willard Shaw, ountry.' .. Caldwell in the 10th but received Hopp's squeeze bunt followed by ' Terry Moore get a lillie reel. to three hits. "'· -"-h,11tnwn: .Hmmv ~mlth . Jackson, a game that soon after the start Mich.; Emlen Tunnell. Garrett HJlI. Pa. ; crcdit for the victory. Frank McCormick's single drove Those were the only cases where The Cards added another tally of fall drills...... 1 euulC. W.terloo The twilight crowd of 15,647 in two runs for the Boston Brnves changes were madc for any, .rea­ in the fifth on a walk and Frank RIJbl Ualfb ••I18-DelJ Bartell.. Den­ Dr. Anderson's announcem.ent Ison~ Duke Curran. Qtllncy. ~1I . : Oils fans put Detroit's home attendance in the 10th inning la'st night for son other than to add battiilg Gustine's overthrow then knocked wen t on to say that twice-daily Finney, Chicago. Ill.; WiWam Greene, over the million mark to 1,014,807 a 7-5 edge over the New York punch. starter Fred Ostermueller out of Iowa City ; Jack Legg, Oelwein drills will be held most of the ~·ullb ... kl-AI Baflo. Chicago. III.: ROil for 54 games this year. Giants. "That may not impress the IIHIS, the box in the eighth with their t · d d' th Headington. Decorah; Quentin Kaiser- I me, cpen mg upon e wea- shol. Milwaukee. Wis.: Bob Reynolds. , making his first ~ut it gives a manager a milllly last attack. , AIIlEJUCAN LEAG\!E ther and the condition of the Pacl!le PaUsades, Calif.; Bob Sllllth, got his thIrd players. Tulsa, Okl_a.______Ward Presses Keiser start against the Giants since he hft." , • W. L Pel. O.D. O.D, was traded to Boston for Mort . , )Ie. Y.rll: ...... 69 Sf!' ,/1.,7 straight walk to open the inning, _ ...... : • • • •.. 115 t7 .IIIIV 121' Brooklyn .....•...... 61 4' The rail drills will probably T b B B 4 1 For Esmeralda Golf lead Cooper, held a 5-3 lead when he Aussie Netsters Win. :pllr.li ...... G3 46 .1\3.~ IS • 1. Leall ...... lit U also took a pass emphasize defensive play. with ri e eats rowns, - .. " • was relieved in the eighth after MONTREAL (Al) - Au'stl'tjlia ~lIad~lphla •...... (1.' &I .51t 1~\' N •• Y.r" ...... 115 .ll3e .8 .4 to first and after Slaughter flied the Hawkeye attack-drilled al- CLEVELAND (A»-Cleveland's ... nll. . •...... f, 110 .470 181' Bo.lon ...... 11/1 48 .1113 8 SPOKANE, Wash. (JP)- Marvin I passing the first two batters. moved into the bavis cup h1ter- ubl.,t.n .. '" ...... • ~ /Ill .459 20\, out, Moore singled to center-the most to perfection during spring Indians scored four runs in the Cllld,.aU ...... JI iii .4611 15 (Bud) Ward, Spokane's curly- Howcvcr, the Giants picked up ~one final against Czechoslovakia EI'.ro ...... (8 t1 .411 ~ l CILI ..,. . .. . _...... • .,1 $(I .46:1 UI' end for 0sterl'nueller. practices-coming in for just a sixth inning last night to defeat 'IlL Lt.1a ...... 111!.., ..uo at pmlb.r,h .• .•. . •.. .. fl .... H head, lashed all the brilliance a run off Reliefer Clyde Shpun in Yesterday, with the winner tb t$e ~ - Yesterday'. Retlults ,- 4' A safe hit by Marty Marion brief brush-up. The offense show- the St. Louis Browns 4 to 1 in Phlladolphla ...... • . •41 (J.t .* »~~ yesterday that earned him two the eighth and tied the score in on the Unltcd Statcs for· 'the Chlealo 4, Detroit ! Ye.Lerday·, 1ltI1.lh and another bingo by Munger ac­ Be,tOD I, New York fl ed very. well in last May's intra- the opener of a five-game series. National Amatcur championships the last of the ninth on Jack trophy, 'as a doubles 'team ·frem ... Clo.eland 4. S\. Leul. 1 Chlca,. 2, ClneinnILll I counted for t.wo more Cardinal squad game, but tbe defense left Al Gettel held the Browns to Phlla'olphla·Wuhlar'on C.. no.Uo •. Bro.k)YA J, P_llad.tl.PlIl ... to roll up a 65 in the second round Lohrkc's home run. "down under" made up of "JlICk 1.•• 11 plilabarlb • runs. ..,n) , 81. 0, much to be desired from a Big six hits in winning his fifth vic­ of the $10,000 Esmeralda Open Hopp's bunt scored Dick Culler Bromwich and Colin Long swept • Today's Pitcher. Baston 'f. New Y.,.k .. 'Hank Greenberg got the first Nine team as the ¥ame went down tory. Ellis Kinder, who was re­ Now C,t-6) -T •• a,·. Plll»l .... golf tournament, but st.eady Her- wit.h t.he tie-breaking run in. th\! to an easy victory over ' Ca~~d~ York .\ Boolen_oynol•• saiety off Munger's pitching in fl. Deb •• n. (IZ-6l Bo,te. al III ... Yor .. _.ln (l5-1I '". to the wire in a 34-32 touchdown lieved in the seventh, allowed 10 man Keiser of Akron, Ohio, main- tenth and Frank McCormick's W.. hlnJ'on "t Pbllad.lphla-M.. 'er ­ kOllo (lS'ti) the fifth. and Billy feast. of the Tribe's 11 hits and suf- WE5TEaN LI!.\G\!E (',8) .... rlore. (1-1.'1) .r r ..... r "'''adelpbla at (8-8) tained his lead by adding a 69 third hit drove home Mike Mc­ I... Br ....I'.-.... Cox a1so singled in the seventh These arc Ihe men by posJtlons: fered the loss. He was succeeded Des Moines a.. De~veT' 2 '('7·A) • VI. Lombardi (8·8) Left Ends-Jack Dittmer. Elkader; to his {i'tst-round 65 Ior a half- Cormick with clincher. Omaha 14. Lfntoln 3 81. L•• I. al Clt.ollnd (2)-8anlor. Cla.h'D", a\ C.I_. (2) - ""onl­ and ninth re~pect1vely for the only Ralph Wmar(J, Ft. Dodlle; Harold by Nelson Potter. SIQUK CIIY 4. Pueblo # ~4-t) aa' Z.ldak C'·8) YI. Gromo" IZ-41 ber,er (t .., ••d Wallen III-I) n ....n way total of 134. 1 (I") and P_... (1·5) Pirate blows. Munger strUck out Shoener. Irvington. N. J.; Joe Van .... Lem.. CI·:I Eschen. Ackley; Jack Kelso. AllanUe . .. ChI!II>l' , II D.trol ...... Or •• o (t·e) .1. Pk"~u,1I .., II. L.. 10 ( ....,)- ... six men. ....1 (1-1.) ( ... t.) ••. P.W (7-8) Left T.... les-Jlm Shoaf. Grindstone • .. h Pa.: Don Winslow. Iowa Clly: Charles "Doors Qpen 1:15-10:00" Zle~e . C...:!ar Rapids; Joe Byrd, Iowa City talent is Swede lfatfie1d. Dodgers ae~t Phils A former Davenport high school t400$e Nine M~t~ ENDS TODAY star will be on the mound fol' NOW SHOWING! the Vets. He is Dick Keyoth, who As B~nca Wins 11th DOUBLE WESTERN pavenpo~t Tom~rrow PI,.. This Summer's Top has won quite a few games this BROOKLYN (JP)- Big Ralph "ENDS ( ... Jowa City Moose Lodge base­ season for the V.F.W. elubl!. Branca blanked the Philadelphia Serial • Cartoon Notch Musical Fun Fest! NOW WEDNESDAY" ),811 team will meet the Daven­ Another star hitter and all­ Phillies. 5-0 last niJht to PO.$t AtB. CONDITIOND- around player is Dick Kelling, his 17th win of the season and eh~w5 at 1:30-4:00-6:;JO ~rt Veterans of Foreign wars also a former Davenport nigh end a three game losing streak 9:06-"Feature 9;30 P.M," CAIY .mill! on the local City hi~h dia­ slugger. for the National league's front­ "mond in an effort to even the (ftl ~ it·]! The two teams will meet at )'u.nning Brooklyn Dodgers. GRANT ~ries at one all. 2:30 p.m. Branca allowed eil:ht hits and . STARTS SUNDAY ..lID .. Tqe local club has a ("ecord Moose Lo.dge joined the Old was in hot ater several inninrs, 2f 11-3 and will attempt to Timers fa): '" work-out 6n the but he pitched out of each Jam BERGMAN .ve~e 8 4-2 deteat at the hands City high diamond last ni~t. for his seventeenth victo},y again­ .. milD IITUCln'S ~f the Davenport -clul> earlier in it eliht losses and his fifth shut- tJle season. out. ' .. Familiar faces will be seen in Fox ,KO', Ko~han "M'e"'~I1~~ NEW yq~ vP)-Belijng Billy Emil Leonard, his opponent, was Jhe Davenport lineup, • _CLAIDE RAINS Fox, who makes a s~ecial~ of equally tough in the tight spots, _ Lyle Ebner, Iowa's baseball cap­ tillS t~lIU. • 1A1i. IItISUIIIII putting other ~iloWIl to sleep, but he was peppered for twelve -ta.iq and , sh.ould be In IMdIj II AlfI8 'TeaK chalked up his 4§th knockout'vic­ hjfs in the first seYen innings and Wntte" bw Beft M.. tlt behind the plate. . ~torm tory in 49 professional star~ last four of the Dodgers' five runs. .. A.aplher former Hawkeye ex­ nigt)t by stpppinl · aa~ 9eorgie Charley Schanz finlahed. ' ( PLUS ~~led to be with vis1tors is John This was the Dodgers' home­ Kochan in the touctp round ' of a SMOOTH SAIUNG ~no,.- . II • • coming game and Bruce Edwards, ten -roun(ler in ~dlaon Square "HUlieaI" In Color • Gene Baker of t}le Ottumwa garden. Fox acalej:l 171; Kochan with three Singles, was the "'U8- I J'>re-lJ~ght squad has played lor q • . lest batter. Howevet', Dixie WlIlk­ • PLUS. l JNCI-E TOM'S CABANA "Cillur Cartoon" ~e v.teran,S'-· club ip previous er and Carl Furfllo, each with a "A_rleaa Sportl Album" _ LATE NEWS _ am!!Il, too. • " ~.T~_-.-S-I -L-.-&-O-"-.""'­ iioubIe IlDd single, produced the Waterloo J, D8nvUl. I Latest Ne,,:s Event. . Another fellOW WiUl plenty oj Dnenpon I, Decatur '" most dama".g' blows• ...... -.- ...... : . I .....-._--..; '- ; l l'III D)dLY IOWAN, nTtmlfAY, AUGUST t, IN'-PX~ TRI.... Ricfure Industr.y Hi·ts Back ,At Mountaineers Teke Old Advice--'Go West'

.British. . Tax on Foreign Films • Ban Sending Brit.in's 'Uffle Men' Wed at Unitarian Church I, • • Protest Over Loss •

OfF· • · Fealures, Of U.S. Movie Diet WNDON (JP)- The icy wind of Movie ~ Shoris the econolllic crisis blpw smack down the neck of the s.~ ,Ish lit· , NEW YORK (.4» - America's tle man- and his little wlte-yes­ motion picture industry, hitting t~rd8Y with the news that no more biclt it a severe tax imposed by Hollywood movies would be Great Britain on U.S, films, yes­ crossing the Atlantic. IIrda), placed a flat ban 0'0' ship­ You Clln water his beer, up the mrnt of all feature pictures and price ot his cigarettes, cut his ,bon subjects to Britain, candy ration and still the little ',: . , man who dodged the buzzbombs '!rI,c A. . Johnston, presIdent of will grumble, grin, shrug and iii, Motion Picture AsSOCiation of carryon. But deprive him of his Ainerica (MPA), announced the weekly bath of celluloid blood· Aclslon after a closed three-hour shed and elamor? Hssion attended by 50 tlJm exe­ "This is the last straw," de­ cutives. · The vote on the ban was clared the wife of an electrical nbf announced. engineer. "Going to the film s is IWts. The ' tax, 'announced Wednesday the only recreation I have-and b7 Great Britain as a meqsure to If they tllke away American films COlnllat that country's dollar , . . well, I'm patriotic and all J.Ortage, was attacked by John­ that., but there's nobody like Clark Ii. "In, slOB who declared In a statement Gable in. British pictures." I OIlt it "in effect strangles Amer­ Motion picture theater. mana­ lean film shipments to England," gers echoed the harried house­ THE IDAHO TRAIL or the Iowa Mountaineer will take them from o&hers will join the mountalnee... at base camp at Little Bedl•• b The British describ4!d the levy wife's complaint and warned that Iowa City to Ibe Sawtooth mountains I.n Idaho (or a three-week lake, Idaho. Two members, Harold Swartz, Iowa City, and Dale Cor­ 9Jflcially as a 300 percent ad val­ hundreds of cinema palaces are rell, Central Clly, are hitch hlklnl'. After a vacation or bikinI', moUD­ or,m payment but Johnston said likely to close because of the campln,. trip. Thirty-two members will leave Iowa City today by lain climbinl'. swtmmlnl' and fllhinl', Ihe mountalneerl will return 10 W"confiscates 75 percent of the shortall8 of British pIctures. Bri­ iruck and car. A .econd ,.roup of 19 wlU 1'0 west AUf, 15. Twelve Iowa City Sept, 1. ,rUngs on future imports of toe , tain produces about 45 films a I .;merlcan film Industry to Brit- year to take up 20 percent of the screen playing time while foreign Univeflity Hospital Driver Calls- .~"IfI " the British do not want tilmll-prlncipally trom Holly­ I Am.,..ican pictures, that's one wood-provld,e the rest. PERSONAL NOTES tiilng," the MPA head comment­ Britain's big ' movie producers, Dally rowan Phot.o b, lIerb NJpIOD. ~ :: "If they do, they shouldn't worried' for fear a retaliatory tax IN A DOUBLE RING WEDDING service at <1:30 p.m. yesterday In the Driving Ambulance 'Fascinating' Visiting in the home ot Mr. and t~pect to get a dollar's worth of might be piliced on British films Little Chapel of tbe Con,re&,a"onaJ church, Doralee Kloppln, became Mrs. Sam. Shulman, 526 W. Park tnms for a quarter." In the United States, were..,t the bride of Gerald Scbroder, on of Mrs. H.R. Schroder, 420 N. Linn By CARL BERGER road, is Mrs. Harry Freedman of talking. street. The bride Is the dau&'hter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald K1opplnr, When a man's job has him Philadelphia, Pa, Tax May Have 'Calming' But the Hollywood film tamine Underwood, Iowa. The Rev, Evans A. Wortbley, pastor of the Unitar. chasing a nervous woman up the brought joy to several sections of ian chUrch, officiated at the ceremony. The bride was attended by stJoeets of Des Moines, then he's Mr. and Mrs, D. A. Armbruster. Mfec:t on U.S. Inflation the British population, including ')'.~ , Mrs. James Willard Coddington, Jowa City, matron of honor. Mrs. justified In saying that It 's "tas- 402 Melrose court, entertained last the higher brow critics who de­ :,.:WASHINGTON (JP)- Britain's Coddington's husband, James Willard Coddln,ton, wa best man, A cinaUng work." • night at a 6 o'clock bridal din~er plore Hollywood "slickness" and ~,s!(m:' to slash imports may reception held in the Hotel Jefferson followed the cereniollY. Mrs. at the Country club. Their the parent-teacher members }yho That was one of the Interesting tf4v~ , some mildly "calming" Schroder, a graduate of Underwood Consolidated school, 18 a June ex,periences Bob Rea, 21 E. Har­ daughter, Dorothy, will become effecjs on United States inflation blame the movies for everything rraduate of the Unlver Ity of Iowa. Her husband, educated In Euro­ the bride of Paul L, PeterschlmQt, from juvenile delinquency to rison street, has had since he ~~ps, government officials fore­ pean private schools, will be a graduate student In journalism at the son of Mr, and Mrs. Alfred Peter­ Brooklyn iproads on the King's started driving an ambulance for eNt Yl'sterday. university thJJI fall. Tbe couple will be at home at 324 Davenport. University hospitals 13 years ago, schmidt, Fort Dodge, at 2 p. m. to­ english. street, Iowa City, after Sept. 25. ~,\~ut the depressant impact on Rea tells how, on that one oc­ day In St, Thomas More chapel. #\!riCan . prices, if ap,y, will be "On the rare occasions when I mindr, officials of three agencies allow my children to visit the casion, he was bringing in a 30- cinema," a London vicar's wife Engaged year-old woman patient to the Allee Crlmmlngs, former teacher alr~ed : at Henry Sabin school In Iowa Ci­ , The .effect on United states ex­ said, "I want them to see a THE BETROTH­ University hospital. On the way Wholesome picture-none of that AL OF their in to Iowa City, he decided to ty, and now a teacher in the Des ~fts probably wiU not be felt IMoines public school system, left tor: three ' months or more, it was Hollywood slapstick or sloppy d a u I'Mer Jane stop tor lunch In Des Moines. He sentimentality, and certainly not Margaret Is be· parked the ambulance and, leav­ Iowa City for Des Moines yester­ eStimated, day morning, She was a guest In SJ'OUiciais of the commerce and that frightful nasal accent," InJ' a It It 0 unced ing the woman behind, went l:1to by Mr, and Mrs. a nearby restaurant to eat. the home of Margaret SChin

The Dally Iowan NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS ' ; ESTABLISHED lea fnstallmenf u.. Publlahed dall," except Morulay by MEMBER 0 .. TID! ASSOCIA'1'I!!D PRESS .udenl PubUer.. ons. lnc. entered. The Auoctoted Pre. II entitled ex­ _d e.... mall mltter It tho postof!lce clusively to tbe u.., for repubUc.Uon of It JOWl City. JOWl. under the act of In the /«al newl printed In tills new,­ _rHO of MardI J, 1879. pap'J. .. well .. ell AP ne... cIW­ Conlrols Future Tax Reductions potches. --- J'ItED M. POWNALL. Publisher By PAUL MALLON Creation by this congress of the economize, namely that they .~ I WALLY STRINGHAM. BusinHil , Kin.. Features SYndicate, Inc. Man.,.. Boord 01 Tnut... : KJrk B . Porter. A. new national science loundation. new to power, and therefore lIot Cra~ Baird. Paul R. Ol.lOn. KathryD R. BRUCE HUGHES, Editor Larson, Dorth.a DlvldllOn. WWIam But­ Are Ended WASHINGTON-Tax reduction was a major step intended to wrest fully acquainted with the triCks Of ler, LoulH Hutchlmon. By J. W. DAVIS looks certain for January. In­ that field from political control In the trade which the New Deal hac! SuMcrtpUon ... t...-By earner In IOWI, deed, certain Democratic directors City 20 cent.t w .... kly or fI per yelr .n this atomic era. Pure scientifiC developed. IIdvlnce; ,Ix months 13.G5; tllree montlls TELEPHONES WASHINGTON (IP)- President say Mr. Truman will consider that research and feUowshl,ps for stli· Yet congress resisted ihe T~, !1::.fIOo. By ~IIIOI In.!~~a '7.50 ~.t YOAlrl; Bu.ln_ Office ...... 41'1 Truman yesterday signed legi$la­ "the right time" dents of science were provided. Ellender-Wagner housing bllJ -.& m.,,"'th.,..... ; Ul..J~e month I othor mall aubsrnptionl f8 per ye!\.. &Ix EditorIal OUIce •.•.•. , ...... 4192 tion signalling an end to controls and he will then The portal-to-portal bill was the which would have Hberaliuci IIIOnthJo ".25; three months $2.25. ' So<:lety OUlce ...... 4le3 offer "the right over installment buying Nov. 1 first major Republican legisla- loans and also public hOusin. lot SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1947 kind." lion of the 8ession and economists sub-standard families and thia but rapped congress far not keep­ This Is as sure noted that since it passed in the will be the subject of the reeesa CL ing a rein on credit and urged all 3S thi ngs poIi tic spring, business i:ontinued to rise. investigation, with a bill in p'" - hands to avoid an "easy payment" go, because next Certain business authorities peet for next session. .' Infla tion orgy. year they will think business hope was first re- Also failing this time were"IIie, Belated Invesfigation of Assault Case all 'have to run kindled by this denial of another Iialized medicine, expansion of IOC· CAlL "Self restraint on the part of $6 lira 'lo ed, - for reelection. billion of back non-working ial security, and federal those who use credit as well as Therefore the pay which the unions sought III ucation. tate investigation of the brutal beating of E . S. Cooper' l1ere upon the part ot those extend it," Republicans and the courts. Something will certainly be on the night of )fay 6 hould help to apprehend tho ere ponsible. .he said in a statement, "will re­ Democrats are The approprlatons of more than done as between the adminiltra. expansion of installment credit MALLON likely to battle a billion for foreIgn aid will cer- tion plan for a payroll t-ax to lur. But it will not clear up entirely the que tion of why this inci­ each other to see who will give the tainly be enough beyond January nish medical aid and the Taft p~n which would inevitably be fol­ dcnt was no more vigol'ously investigated the time. taxpayers the most consideration. 1 in the estimation apparently of for large- appropriations to 'the :t lowed by severe contraction, The Reupblicans should win be­ everyone. states for medical aid It /lippeal'S to us that failure to investigate the ease i. the fault thereby contributing to unemplor­ cause they will then have more By that time the Republicans The movement to liberalize IOC- of Mr. Oooper, the local police department, the university office pressure on their side for votes un~ are llkely to develop an aid pro· ial security next session, however, ment and to reduced production." less there is another war scarce gram of their own out of the stu- is likely to be com'plicated Bti1l of . tudent affair, the wHnes who saw the whole thing, and Mr. Truman's urgings were in (real or quasi real). dies by congressional committees further I>y the increasing number thc pres itself. lin!! with those of many bankers Treasury receipts shOUld be authorized for the recess. of private welfare plans. Federal Mr. Cooper lIas consistently refused to coopemtc wHit Ruthpr­ who are worried dver possible higher from the higher doUar vol­ The Republicans have also au- aid to education will continue to abuse of credit facilities. ume of business, and more econo­ thorized recess investigations of be faced with religious objectlOlll. itie and ha 'con. iderably hampered tbeir action. He cannoL es­ mies in government OJ)eratlon will housing and prices on which new The universal military tl1llnll!c To the retallers, finance com· cape the blame for this. 11'0[' he knew the full delail.. certainly be worked out trom the legislation will certainly eventu- program to draft young men for a panles and the consumers, Mr. current high of $35 biUioh peace­ ate. year in t e armed services Isl!lit. And to a consid~rab le degree, hi failure is in part reflccted Letters to the Ed itor Truman's action. .yesterday means time appropriations authorized by The basic ;political defects in ly to fail next session also, unllSl in the failu['e of tho other parties. Certainly no one can deny an. end within a little less than congress lor the fiscal year to next their rent decontrol legislation are the military shows a genuine neecl that had he him If vigorously pressed his chal'ges, the public three months of federal credi t July. being traced by some experts to for the men, or a war scare deVe. curbs which have required: The union reform law will be the same cause as their. failure to lops a need. would not have had to wait for almo t thrce months to learn the Prof. Says University Tried A down payment of at least subject to revisions and correc· details ~ thc attackers might· already havc been apprehended , one-third, with the balance to be tions. Senate policy director Taft . and punished. paid off in 15 m(mths or less, on mentioned the matter only once, Memorial To Cancler Dead . But 1\11·. Cooper's failure does not entirely excuse thc others. , automobiles, stoves, mechanical as I recall, but all the leaders con­ Tile 'Americall Caltcer soci­ Police had a call at the time of the incident. It is incredible to To Hide Assault Incident dish washers, ironers, refrigera­ sider the bill to ibe only an initial wh ile the number of oeaths tors, washing machines, radios and step beginning their effort to solve ety has announced that during trom cancer has been growing think that by the time a squad car arrived from the police station some other items. the situation. the month of August it must steadily, 50 percent of tbose only a few blocks away that there was no longer anybody around (Readers al'e invited to 6x- t aggressors Is evidence that the in university itself was a cowardly A down payment of at least From experience with the new raise $385,251 to meet its $12 stricken cannot be sa.ved until who llad seon tlle beating. press the;,' opinions Letters to the Editor. All letters tnt,st bystander. one-!ltth, with the balance to be law, and the current congressional million goal for the 1946-47 new discoveries are made. Per· Police had an official repolt on the situation. In fact, as Mr. paid within 15 months, on furni­ study will come the final perma­ It ever there was cause fo~ vig. fiscal year. haps even mOre tragic is the be signed, and once receive(/, be- ture and rugs. Cooper first talked to univer ity officials, a local policeman by orous and forthright action by nent formula of the future for Tlus llloney will be spent for knowledge that another . 25 come the lJrOpel·ty of The Daily The controls were instituted government-union relations. chance happened to be in tho university offices and heard Mr. 01' research in America's scien­ percent wiU die Iowan. The right to edit with- such an institUtion, which unques· during the war as an ·anti-infla· The army-navy unification bill although they Cooper's relate what little he told the university. tionably had complete jurisdic. tific centers, for fellOWShips could be saved by early diag. tion, it lay in th is tncident. tion measure. Mr. Truman asked which was passed was largely a WllY, then, was thcre no police effort to apprehend the a - hold letters is "escrved and, of fot· ont tmlding young m dieal course, the opinions expressed Why, then did the university congress this year for a definite coordination bill, despite its title. no is and treatment. ' sailants ' Do they take the same position that Mr. Cooper does, ruling on their continuance, say· n will not as much money or minds, und for all the weap­ We feel a fitting mell\orlal that an individual can decide when the law has been broken Y do not necessarily "epresent fall to act immediately upon those of The Dail'!) Iowa.n.) learning of the affair and first ing hc did not want to take it on increase efficiency as much as the ons that Humanity and ci­ to the cancer dead is a con· Does the poLic c1 partment Of Iowa City say that violence i ence· cau turn again t ... "the discussing it with the victim? Or himself to extend them during genuine unific!ltion recommended tribu tion to th is fund 'Which all right if the one injured refuses to do anything.about it YIsn't peacetime by executive order. in early studies, and advocated by cruelest killer of them all" seeks to do 0 much for tlJe TO THE DAILY IOWAN: why did the university fail later violence a prima facie crime against all society, and not merely Con~ress responded by a resolu­ advanced military thinkers since ... cancer. Jiving. And we uggest that The press of Iowa City is to be to summon the victim, whose against. an individual T identity was known, and even be­ tion saying they should be ended the days of Billy Mitchell. Yet it n seems to us that tit is des­ th08e who have a dime or a complimented for directing atten­ by l'tov. 1. is something. Again, we insist that Ml'. Cooper's non·cooperation llind red tion to Norman Cousins' article, latedly-even now-obtain the perate fight is worthy of all dollar to spare s nd it at oDce the police. But did that prcvent tlleir independeut action ' Ap­ "Bystanders Are Not Innocent", very obvious and very simple in­ the p(lpular upport that can to the nearest cancer t>btlllnlt· pal'cntly several wiUles es have beon loca.ted since the official and for appra ising its readers of formatioh? be 111 ustered. Cancer kills· one tee office or mail ·it d\r~etly investigation has ~otten llOdel'way. Why conldn't that have the peculiar pertinency to them Certainly the prosecution of of­ in eigh t persons. Statistically, to the American Cllrleer sooi. been done at tllO lime Y of the article. fenders against society ~eed it claims one life from every ety, 47 Beaver Sfrect, New And what about the llniver ity. We simply do not boli vc, as never wait upon voluntary testi­ Inside two famil ies .. yours or your York 4, New YOI·k. My sense of shame and out­ Washington mony of witnesses, nor the lay­ has bt'cn charged, that thc official university administration rage upon flrsl reading the edi­ By THE CENTRAL PRESS neighbors'. Of the approxi­ Let's meet th is year's cancer tri d to covel' up this. incident. ing of a complaint by an indivi­ mately 700,000 cases in thc control goal. torial was in tensified upon learn­ WASHINGTON-A behind-the­ We know that upon rep ated occasions, the offi of tuclcnt ing that the disgraceful affair dual. turbing to Bradlcy, who, when he Unitcd tates, about 184,300 One is forced to conclude tha t took the unpleasant, irksome and affairs tt'ied to ~et Mr. Cooper to divulge more details. We know cited by COllsins occcurred in out scenes friendly rivalry in the SAUUEL GRAFTON is on vac· this lamentable failure to act, a generally thankless post as veter· will die this ycar. that on more than one occasion, rcque ts for him to appear in the own community. house is brewing a potent GOP ation. His column, "I'd Rather Be failure of the university, pto­ ans administrator, was promised Tlru true tragedy Of this sit­ Right," will be resumed sept. 2. office of student affairs were pa ed an to him by personal The revelation to me and others ceeded from a deficiency of moral political beverage that perhaps "something better" as soon as his uation li es in the fact that friends. Yet ]',fro Cooper reru ed. _ that we live in a community courage and the hope that un­ will not be tested until the Repub­ VA mission was accomplished. '1'0 make out a simplE' black and white case about failure to act which wili tolerate such an oc­ favorable publicity might be lican national convention in Phil­ The military powers..that-be is to ignol'c the very na1t~re of MI'. ooper himself. He simply is currence is a shock, but none· avoided by looking the other way. acted quickly to soothe Bradley's theless a genuine service. . adelphia next June. Jiving in a personal Platonic age. We agree that his pJ.'inciple:s, To dispel any charitable sus­ The principals are Speaker Joe ruffled feeHngs. He was. invited OFFICIAL DAILY BUllETIN, . if follow d by evcyyone, would solve the whole probl m. It is, however, regrettable that picion that the university is just Martin, amiable, hard-working to make an "inspection tour" of neither newspaper carried its functionally incapable of forth· I .. But there ad the mnrginal cases who will not.-and law gentleman from Massachusetts, Europe, a trip that could have no Q.1 Items In the UNIVERSITY CALENDAll a ...... 1 •• ra la ...... against violence are made for them. quotation from Cousins' editorial right action, let the summary de­ and House Republican Leader possible connection with his VA ~ den I', Ortlee., Old Capllol. lI,em. 'or Ih. OENERAL .q~ quite so far as it should have parture accorded the student who duties. \~ .hoald be dopollled ...11Il Ibe .lIy edllor ., The Da"r l.!J1II Those who arsume that tlle office of student affair. could have Charles A. Halleck, the "Gentle­ , De ...... '" In Ea.1 ".11. OBNERAL NOTICES •••• be .1 . sUlnmaL'ily diSffils,'led a student possibly involved miss the point. been. drove through PresIdent Han­ man from Indiana." The European trip, Bradley was r.wan by ! p.m. Ihe d.y p ....edlnl' llnl publlOllldb: D • Can it' have bcen some resi­ cher's hedge be remembered, Martin is regarded as "atomic" informed, was arranged so he , NOT b • ....,.p'n by 'olephoDe, .aDd mut b. TYPED OB LlGllLI How can you dismiRs a student who has not ven be 11 identified ' duum of the old idea th ai the Was the offense upon that oc­ ,.,.ITTEN and atONED b, • r'"oD.lbl. ,.'IOa. ., ; As we understand it, Mr. Cooper even refused to identify his as­ vice-presidential material should could gain first-hand familiarity king can do no wrong which led casion, possibly aggravated by with occupation problems in VOL. XXlU, No. 271 Saturday, AUl1ld ii, tN7 sailant to the university. the GOP presidential nomination to the 1'a ther significanL ommis­ earlier sophomoric misdemeanors fall to Ohio's Sen. Robert A. Taft. preparation for his assumption of Furthermore, no 011e would waQt student di miss d from the sion of: "One hesitatcs to con­ though it may have been, in any Halleck is regarded as much more the Army's top spot when Eisen­ UNIVERSITY CALENDAR univel'Sity even after identified as possibly involved in some in­ clude that th e university itself is way comparable to this brutal at­ than a possibility should the Re­ hower departs for Columbia's ivy­ Saturday, Au8'us~ 9 Wednesday, Autun -Z, cident unles someone i willing to stand lIP Rnd bc cOlmted, 10 a pu sillanimous byslandl)r, more tack. publicans renominate New York's coveretl ha lis. 1 p.m. Iowa Mountaineers: Ctose of Independent . stud! appear before the di 'ciplinal'y board and say "Ycs, that's th conccrned about avoiding unwel· Can it be that Cousins spoke Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. Bradley is onc of the most pop­ Eighth Annual Summer Outing to Unit. .•. guy. " come publici ly than aboul .i usti­ with more generosity than accur· The geographical factor rules lar olficers ever to wear the uni­ Sa\Vtooth Range ot Idahb. M"onday, Sept. 15 It is plain to sec what would happen were not this principlc lying lhe libcral tradition with acy when he caned our university out any possibility of Martin, the form and not only American but Saturday, AUl1lst 23 Beginning of OrientatJonand followed. Anybody could walk into Dean Tbompson's oWc , say whJch it is so often associa ted.?" "one of the great liberal u(liver­ New Englander, being a running Allied military experts regard Iowa Mbuntaineers: Overnight Registration. thai Joe ColJege attacked him but that he wouldn't be willing to The failure of the university to slUes ' of America"? mate for Dewey, the New Yorker, him as a master of strategy, tac­ outing to Backbone State Park; Monday, Sept.·22 say 0, either before the police or the univer ity diseiplinary procure from the victim that in­ EDWARD M. PARKER or Halleck, the Midwesterner, be­ tics and administration. Leader, Eugene Burmeister 7:30 a.m. Opening of Classes. ing a running mate Ibr Taft, the board. Would you want to be .m . Santy 8lIftIc. 11 :00 a.m. ~dyentur.. In Re_ rch 2:30 p.m. StGN 01'1' war anti" tb pl'esen'e human tlilifilrian government." A .senntor's integrity Ut worth ledged combat: record. rights Mld .iDsti c in their own only what a senator makes of it. • • • Third signer was RU!lSia When he acts the part of a char- As the scheme totters, Hughes lands as well as in other which ha abSorbed a vast por­ hitan or a mountebank'. he will ellters to ~in, down house of lands." - the WMT Calendar WHO Ct1en~r tion o~ Poland; who e Balkan be treatcd as such. When he Brewster-ferguson. He charges (OBS ChISel) • . (NBC 0uIIM) ,'. First to sign woo the U nited pro-consuls are charged be­ spends his ' time be~mirching t~e thlJt B.rewster had made him all 8:30 •. m. Musical Clock 7:00 a.m. New.. Dreier . States, which i. IlOW bu, ily de-. fore the UN with sponsoring character of the dead and tHe ignoble proposition IilJloQtrting to 8:30 a.m .•Tl\lelll Revue 11 :10 •. m. Gov, lSlu.e rllllll • veloping the atom bomb and 11:00 a.m. Granll c~tral at.tlon n:~ p.m. News. "helley , war in Gteece; whOse agents reputations of ~ living he ~an- ' t>lackmaiJ. He declares thac Bre'w. ~ : OO nQOl\.Vl'lCf lit rowa I : ~ p"". FlU.... and H""," HM .' other bombs which . weigh have captured La.tvia, Lithu­ not be allowed to take refuge in ster had pro~ed to call pH the 2:1'10 p,m. Ad,)ehtllrer'~ d\Jb . ~ioo ..\' ,rn. 10'11'8 "Roundtable (L4bOrl 3:08 p.m. C ...... SCt101l USA •. !on p.m. TotnIe ·'t\nie ,. 42,000 pounds; whicn has re­ ania, and Estonia, and tlle the .specious pl~a of senlttorjal ,:;enatorial investigation il ~e, .:00 J) .In. Campu. Pl\1'ade ' 3:tIi P.M: 11;11>. 'r~ Trl6 • \ . cently told tiLe UnitM Nations gdvernments of Outel' Mon­ dJgnity. 0 , .' o· HugHes, 'WOuld agree to met,. ' :15 J) .lIi. 'nItt CUnlnllns Sports . 4:111.p.m. RlI'.p.oay Qllloc;'klea 8:00 p.m. W.yn~ Kina 0. 111 p.m. Vew.." A~laor, that we will keep Pacific is­ golia, YUger time and, their general purpose IS to pro- the American breed association, """lnon by thfl Rev, Donavan G . Hart. 80848. complaining about the heat, sank mote recreational programs for the Iowa Breed association and the I ~~ °It.e~ ~~~~I~i~y~~Urc:.h . Subject: Set Funeral Monday back into an easy chaIr. Soon the lowa City children. state lair board. Eugene Devereaux ot Cornell collell" FLASH BULBS- U's, 22's, 40's. ... i t' . I ' . will pl.y two organ solos. Eudora Sbep- For Mrs. Iva Falk phone tang and a woman's voioe . Th e o.gan za Ion IS !' annmg a The slate fall' will be held lrom ard. contralto will sin, Iwo solos. , Jack I. Young Studio. 22 Y.. i S. asked, "Is 'Calcutta' showing field day August 31, With a base- Aug. 22 to Aug. 29 this year. Dubuque. there?" ball b t th M I b Trinity Eplloopal C ...... Funeral services for Mrs. I va game e ween e oose c u Tb. &ev..... d.rl. t W. Puln.... roelor Falk, co-owner of the Blue Top ca­ I FOR SALE:------1939------Oldsmobile.----- Ex- "Not from 11Iere," Taylor roared. and a speCial squad of "Old Tim- JC P' • P t d I 8 a,m. Holy Communion. ers," as part of the Labor day OS 10 :45 a,m. MomJnll prayer and ..,nnon. bins, just west of Coralville, will cellent condition. $900. Dial "Can you see it from there?" The l(nlC pone weekend celebration here. Cp- Due to an unexpected number of ~~Icc~ In the pariSh house dunna IbJa be held at 10 a. m. Monday in the 3562. lady hung up. • cnairmen of the event are AI- families vaCationing clUrlng the 7 p.m. Open hou.., tor .tudents ot lhe Oat.hout funeral chapel. The Rev. ROGERS RITEWAY At least Taylor's phone remains rectollY. 418 N. Linn sl~"l. FOR SALE: Black 1934 Stude­ They'll Furnish A I dermen' Charles Smith and Wi!- month 0 t August, th e J un I on Wednesday. AUlusl 13: Ralph M. Krueger will officiate. baker Dictator. $200. C a II Aeroaa ~m Swan' 'l'hea&er silent atter 10 p. m. Not so with liam Grandrath. Chamber of Commerce family pic- 8:45 a.m. HOly Communion. Burial will be at the Coralville Vaughn's. At this time his tele­ • 10 a.m, HOly Communion. 2679. Five-thousand tickets entitling DlC scheduled for Sunday, August 7 p .m. Senior Choir Reh,," .... I. cemetery. Roomer, Too! phone is just getting warmed UL)­ the purchasers to vote for a child 10, lias been po&tponed, according Mrs. Falk died yesterday morn­ Oh"reb ., the N&taren~ BLACK portable record player. BADIO SERVICB and so is Vau¥hn. "I get a bit hot deserving of one of the 16 bi- to Emil Trott, Junior Chamber 8v,IIncton and Clinlon slrect ing at Mercy hospital following a MUSICTRON 5 tubes. Very under the collar," he said cles to be given away by the committeeman. W.ller . 1II0rrll, p. I.r long illness. JOOd quality. Less than one year HELM RADIO SERVICE: Prompt 1:45 p,m. Church ,",hool. All night long people ring him ~ads have been printed. Motri Dicker, recreation chair- 2:30 p.m. Worship •• .vices SobJeel: She was born in South Haven, old. Brown leatherette record pick-up and delivery. Dial 6062. (ALL 4191 to aA tor a cab. He moaned that The tickets wilt be sold in the mlln, has issued a request that alJ "God', Ultlmole Purpose (or lhe World ." Mich., the daughter of Charles and carrying case. Call 4111 after 6 be rarely gets a full night's sleep 7 p.m. Youth meelln,," Lottie Comerse, and was married EXPERT RADIO REPAIR city and throughout the county famllies wat.ch for the announce- 8 p.m. Evangelistic services. Subject. p.nt. as people confuse him with two a!. each. Ten of the bicycles ment of 1l new picnic date for Sep- ["our Ben lor Cod '. Hllhelt:' to Gustave R. Falk September 26, 3 DAY SERVICE t l'RANSPORTATIOW WANTED ,l Wcdneod.~ , 8 \l .m. Prayer meeUn,. HELP WANTED cab companies. One error is due will be given to Iowa City boys tember. Annual ....,."bly and camp mocUnll. 1930, at Mtssion City, Ind. ,WORK GUARANTEED to the similarity of the two num­ d I I lth one going to the Au,. 11 throUlih 17 In 0 Moines. l"Jrsl Surviving are her hu band; a an g r s, w . Church 01 lhe Nala""ne. and al camp ARTICUL'i\.TE graduate students PICKUP & DELIVERY DESIRE ride to Wyoming alter bers; the other one is because the daughter by a previous marriage, Aug. 6. Call Dan Rogers 8-0735. boy and girl of each ward re- Bruins Win Again "",,und on Hlthway 90, two miles welt with high grades to take lecture WOODBURN SOUND names are so close together in the celving the highest number of DES MOINES (JP)-A six-run of Des Moines. Mrs. Patricia McAllister, Coral­ notes in large enrollment courses SERVICE directory. • voteS. d I' r t d b thO d 81. P.ul's Luth.ran ch.pcl ville; and two sisters, Mrs. Otto In their major fields this fall. WHERE TO BUY It Vaughn stated that Oll one occa­ Six bikes wl1l be awarded to secon nrung, ea ure y Ir Mi ...... i Synod Beck, Janesville, Wis., and Mrs. • E. (lOLLEGE ~IAL 11 -8151 baseman Lcs Peden's three-run Jobn F. Choill. pa lor Good pay on royalty basis. Phone sion, belore he had a chance to 101- the three boys and t.hree girls in homer, gave the Des Moines cl:~:? a.1T\. SUllday . ehooi and Bible Foster Dillman, Foster, Mich. 8-0757 immediately. low his "no" with an ex,planation, Johnson county receiving the Bruins their eleventh Western 10:30 a,m, Divine ..,rvlc ... 8U'ITON BADIO .,EBVlVII the man wailed, "But this is emer­ highest number of votes. Ii . . Anyone de.Jrln" the rvic"" of a Issue Four Licenses WANTED: Cosmetic girl and Values Next meeting of the organiza- league baseba WID ID II row,. 8-2, pa slor durinll the vacation ot pi tor fountain help. Apply in person. Guaranteed Repllir1Dl gency." Marriage licenses were issued Pick-up & Delive17 lion will be held Friday, Aug. 15, over thc Denver Bears last night. ~~~ J:hn C~~~~m~'I~~~~ ~urtIO.tr~:~ Lubin Drug Store. At Morris Furniture "As much as I'd lUte to help you, to four couples yesterday. LU)lOS-PDONOOB.ura r can't," came Vaughn's reply. in the City council chambers. h Phone 7924. They were Robert F. Colllns, WANTED permanent saleslady in .tock: for 181e Porch Gatea 4 It. 1.50 "I don't even have a car." Lesnevic To Fight Firal ChrisU.n Church Davenport, lind Beverly D. Ben­ lor afternoons. Experience UI .. Market DIal _ 6ft. 1.95 Taylor and Vaugtln agree that Des Moines Wins Vet Tilt I NEW YORK (JP)- The 20th oo". :~~ ~·;::I ·1;:~I~·" t.r son, Orrmha, Nebr.; Richard Yen­ preferred but not necessary. Ap­ something must be done about ST. JOS~PH, Mo. (JP)-Des Cenlury Sporting club yesterday U~ a.m. The Christian Rad io hour. ler and Mary Ann Sprlngmire, · I atatlon WMT. ply mornings at Hand H Hosiery Play Pens 3.95 this matter, or they']] have to Moines eliminated Batavia, N. Y., announced a ten-roun d non-ht 9:30 a.m, Chureh school Rnd Commun. both of Oxford; Elmer E. Joerger Store. Criba 16.95 change their telephone numbers. yesterday from the youth division liiht at Madison Square garden Ion 8ervice. Services or COlnmunion will and Cecilia Kosha, both of Min­ WHODOESrr of the National VFW softball Oct. 31 between Ilgh' t heavyweight ChTI.lIanbe eacl\ Lordchurch'. daybelore mom 1I0ing in. into thethc onk, Ill.; ,md Gerald W. Schroder, tournament here. It was Batavia's Champion Gus Lesnevich and Union locv lcel in Ih. Methodist church. Johnson county, and Doralle F. FULL COVERAGE auto insur­ Morris Furniture Co. 10 :$0 .,m. Union ch«rch rviee. In second defeat Taml Mauriello. Melhodill church, Klopping, Underwood. WANTED ance. Fred V. Johnson. Iowa \ D1~1 7212 217 -219 S. Clinton State Bank & Trust Bldg. Dial Platter Paller POPEY[ 2002. • Fountain Help. ORDERS wanted for Avon prod­ Crosby and Shore Apply ;n person ucts. Post Office B~ 763. ARMY-NAVY Lead Favorites LOU'S Repair and Equipment I AVIATOR TY'E at Racines. ShQp. Authorized dealer, sales This week the "Wiffenpoof and service. Power lawn mowers. SURPLUS Song," with Bing Crosby, broke Demonstration by appointment. the favorite list of "populars" with LOBT AND FOUMD Dial 3323. 1124 Muscatine Ave- SUN GLASSES Iowa City record fans. nUB. "Tallahassee," with Dinah Shore LOST: Horn rimmed glasses. I $5.95 $6.95 and Bing Crosby, which sales­ can't see either. Paul Puckett. WASH"our own car eveninis. SOc 4 base 6 base people in local music stores pre­ Call Daily Iowan. charge. Truman Johnson's Tex­ dicted would come Into the top aco. Corncr Linn and College. Dial STUDENT SUPPLY bracket, is holding its own along 7243. roUND: Fountain pen-Stadium 17 S. Dubuque Dial 6913 with the long time favorite, "Peg Park. Call 2782 from 5:30 to ;:::======::::; 0' My Heart." 7:30. Popular novelty records this Wash Your Clot .... week are: WANTED TO BUY Dwight Fiske, "Party Records." WANTED TO BUY: 1941-42 the LAUNDROMAT way STOP AT CLEMS Phil Harris, "Smoke Smoke Buick in very good condition. MEATS Smoke." . . apd Call 7514. 9 dry Ibs. 3Sc GROCERIES E II a Fit z gerald, "Lady Be BEVERAGES Good." LOANS AD Yo~ Clothes S..-n.... CLEM'S GaOCIBY Continuing on the favorite $$$$$$$$$$$ loaned on cameras, 1222 Rochester Dial 2197 classical list i£ "The Warsaw Con- . CleaD In BaH aD DOH. IWls, clothing, jewelry, etc. certo," with the London Sym­ Reliable Loan, 110 S: Linn. ' ptiony orchestra. LAUNDROMAT Two other single classical re­ GIFTS OF DlSTlNC1;ION WANTED TO RENT Dial 8-0291 It S. VaD Barela cord favorites are: Fine Linens - Wood Carvin,. "Lohengrin"-Prelude to WANTED: Furnished apartment Wood Salad Bowla III, fo r elderly woman. Aug. 15 to .------Sept. 25. Call or leave message APPLIAN(lE "Rhapsody in Blue," with Al Margarete's Gift Shop Goodman. (or Paul Puckett, Daily Iowan. and , AUTOMATIC HEATING 5 ~ s. DubuQ.'le Dial 9i39 Albums of Grofe's "Grand CanJ yon Suite," Dvorak's "New World WORt WANTED REPAiR. , r' Symphony" and selections !r o~ SEWING and hemstitching. Mrs. Quinn.'s Applian.ce Stern's "Humoresque" lead the , Charles Sherman, Coralville. 323 E. Market Dial 9221 GIFTS . classical album favorites. Dilll 5958. Watch for these records FOR EVERY to be out: WANTED: Laundry and curtains. STORAGE, cleaning, glazJn,. fur OCCASION Ethel Smith's "Album of Org n Dial 80169. reI!air!ng. Condon'. Fur Shop. Music." • Dial 7447. . FOB BINT a lastlnl Al J olson's new album. ~OTOR SERVICB fro. our • ••• l'PR RENT: Apartment in town Dur ing World War II, 100 mil­ , . 'ot Riverside. Dial 9590. ' lteck 01 lion cotton spindles in Europe, ~~--~"~~--~--'---I • IGNITION Japan and China, tour ti mes the • • TWO SINGLE, one dOUble room • CARBURETORS number in the United Sta tes, turn-' • for men for 4 weeks session. .GENERATORS .STARTERS Mulford Electric Service ed out less than hall as much cot-' Close in. Dial 6336. • BRIGGS & STRATrON 115 8. ClIDtoD ' Dial 130 ton goods as the spindl es in the MOTORS POR RENT: Nice Six room home. United States. close Pyramid Services Furnished in. Available ROOM AND BOARD' Sept. 1. Write 7Q-l Daily ·Iowan. 220 S. ,CUnton DIal 5713 By GENE AHERN F'V':=-:-==~":':7.';;-;::; I nYING INSTRUCTION AT LAST···· FAME' AND RJlUUNE ~AVE lOOClIED MY AnENTION G.I.', SHOULDER WIiH nro...... , OF Learn to fly UDder the G.L biD of ric;rhta. at DO COlt to fOIL For ParUculan CaD ..,~ TIRES! SHAW AIRCRAFT CO. GEORG·E'S MUNlOIPAL AIRPORT STANDARD SERVI(lE Dial 7831 Da, '6852 l'fllM Cor. CllatoD & Barllaa10D PHOTOGRAPHY P1JRNlTURB 1I0VINQ

, KE,NT I PHOTO ,Service MAHER B~OS. TRANSFEB . Baa, ~ PlC$" no ..... : r. £fftcIent rQrDlIuM . Weel .. l'IIo~ MoYiDq . AJjpU tloD Plcli... QaaUb S5mm De\'. "" EbI... . ~ .\lid lDi. OtbeJ' IpeelaU...... , ". IAQGAGE TRANSFER pa- DIAL - 9896 - DIAL 115~ Iowa Ave, Dial nil , TID DX!LY IOWAN. B~D'AY. ~lJQ1YI'f I. IN'-P~GI .. - e r elng. Lot 0 t r Oxford Youth Exhibits :4·H ~ . Council OK's Pc rk P Ion Grand Champion BabyBeel --~~------~--~~------~~------Grand chall\Plon rlbbon for baby and Robert Jensen, Iowa CliJ, $40,000 Buy; 'Snooky' Unique Pet I:tl /IJIIIJ/! ,JJ ,' 1/ I " beef went to an entrY by Lyle third place. I PETERSON RESIGNS- Zimmemum of Oxford at yester­ Jack HotfJnan, (Continued from Page I) day's show in the Il1th annual Steinbrech, Solon and Ellen JlIIr.i Johnson county -l-H festival. phy. Iowa City, took fint, aeeOIIII Soun,ds Reveille at Six Dr. R. F. Birge of Des Moines and third prizes r ..pectivelJ in lilt Parking Space Raccoon Runner-up was a Hereforci en- junior Angus class. and Dr. J. V. Treynor of Council By PIlYLLIS WHITE Bluffs. tered by Dean Steckly, Oakdale, In the Intermediate AJlIUI CUi There's a Texas raccoon called which became reserve grand Dean Steckly, Oakdale. won In a meeting with President lint. "Snooky" living at the Hochstetler champion. The lIT_nd champion Edgar Colony, Iowa City, IeCIIIId, Hancher, Pean Ewen M . Mac­ For 85 Autos house and they "love him." calf was classifl.ed a& a senior An- and John M. Colony, North Liller. Ewen of the college of medicine By ART H1IJUSINXVELD Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hochstetler, gus. ty, third. • 2109 I street, purchased the eight­ and other faculty members the committee presented Its findings Thirteen classes of baby beeVes In the senior AnlUs lfouP, LIlt An option to buy $40,000 worth week-old animal from a Dallas, were shown yesterday wblch in-, Zjmmerman'. calf, which 1111 of land for an oft-street parking and recommendations. Texas couple who passed through It was pointed out that the eluded Hereford, Shorthorn and made grsnd cham.plon, won lint. lot at 317-325 E. College street town about a month ago. President and the dean had the Angus breeds and junior cattle Dick Davin, Oxford, ·won ~ drew unanimous city approval "He runs around the house all responsibility of maintaining an feeders and purebred beef heifers. place and Vivian Lacina, Wen day and plays with our dog, Tiny, I Top winners for junior Herelord 'Branch, won third. last night at a special meeting in outstanding medical school. They I Mrs. Hochstetler eJqplained. were also faced with the problem class calves were Ladonna Stubbs, Keith. Hemingway. Iowa CitYi Mayor Preston Koser's office. When Tiny is taken out for a walk, of losing some of the younger Iowa City, firsti Ruby LaCina, Charies Frese, Oxford, and Ken. The mayor and City Clerk Snooky is led along on another men due to Insufficient pay and West 'Branch, secondi and Wilbur neth Lacina, West Branch, w~ George Dohrer signed the con­ leash. lack of future · promotion and in­ Young, North Llberty, third, first, second and third prius in thi tract tor purchase after aU seven A raccoon's diet, according to surance of future security. Of 51 entries in the intermediate heavy Angus class. aldermen adopted a go-ahead the Hochstetlers, consists of dog Hereford class, first pizl!' went to Seven entries were made in IIIf In January of 1946, President DR. FRANK R. PETERSON resolution. Action had been de­ food, milk and crackers. "He's Hancher presented his conclusions Carl Raymond Jensen, West Liber- junior cattle feeders clau, IlGII layed Thursday night when sev­ easy enough to feed, but he just as to the cause of the troubles. counc;], the faculty of th college tYi second to Robert Jensen, Iowa Johnson, Oxford. took first p!act; eral council members asked for keeps growing". They were: of medicine and was unanimously 'City, and third to Arlene Llicina, Earl Johnson, Oxlord, second, aa4 further consideration of the pro­ "It was all the children's idea," 1. Overemphasis of private prac­ accepted by the board of educa- West Branch. Esther Hemingway, Iowa ClIJ. posal. Mrs. Hochstetler added. When tice. tion. The three highest prizes· lor the third.. . Under te~ of the option, they heard the anmial was for sale 2. Too great a discrepancy be­ There was a difference of opin- senior Hereford class went to Dean First, second and third prilel ill' fldal COlt of the 106 by 150- they insisted upon having it." tween the income of the chief of ion howevel as to whether the Steckly, Oakdale. fist; Lawrenc, the purebred beef heifer clw loot lot cannot exceed $40,'00. The children, Donald 12, Betty, 13 , a service and the men under him. Pla~ voted o~ was the same one Barnes, Iowa City, second, and went to Thomas Wi1lial1ll, Io'li~ An Initial payment of $6,000- and Sherman, 14, have not yet tir­ 3. The young men felt their in­ Houghton drew up. Keith Hemingway, Iowa City, CitYi Marllaret Ann Burr, LoG, '3,500 from the off.treet park­ ed of playing with Snooky. come was less than it would be if Under the new plan, a ceiling third. ' Tree, and Donald Burns, 1'UfIa. I in.- fund and $2,500 fTOm the Snooky will remain in the HOCh­ they were out in private practice. was placed on the amount of pri- For heavy Herelords, LaWrence Judl,ln, the show ye$IerdQI ' clty's parkln.- meter fund­ stetler household, "We just 4: The younger men wanted vate practice allowed to heads of Barnes, Iowa City, won first plaCfi was J . C. Hollbert of Wlllhm,ton. was authorized to make the couldn't part with him, even if we some definite and guaranteed as­ departments. The plan also al- Robet Jensen. Iowa City. won sec- J. T. Bunu, Oxford, acted u au· contract biudlD&". had to." surance of security. lowed junior members ot the ond, and John. M. Colony, North perintendent. Now owned by Cora M, and There is only one habit Snookey As a result an eight-man com­ stalf to have a limited private Liberty. won third. Nearly 11',000 people are exPecW Calvin T. Hoskinson, the 16,000- has that seems to bother the fam­ mittee was formed to draw up a practice to augment their salaries. Nineteen entries were madll! in to attenc;l the Iluetlon sale today of square-foot lot is site of a building ily. Every morning about 6 program which would aid in over­ Doctor Peterson was lncluded each of the junior Shorthorn and the baby beef entires•• ccordin( ~ which must be torn down before o'clock he wakes up and insists coming the problems. The original in the minority group which op- senior, Shorthorn classes. Ken- Extension Director Emmett Gard· parking can begin. It will ulti­ upon waking the whole househoid. group was compo~ed of Doctors posed the plan, and this opposi- neth Krueger, Oxford, too.. first nero Fred Albin of West Brwh mately hold an estimated 65 cars. They haven't decided yet if this Is Nathaniel G. Alcock, M. E. tion culminate(! In his resignation and third prize and Lyle Lord, will be the principal auctioltti. Alderman Max S. Hawkins pre­ a typical raccoon habit, but after Barnes, J . S. Gottlieb, P. J. Lein­ yesterday. Iowa City, took second (or the jun- About $"5.000 worth of cattl., Ii! faced the council's approval with all, they "love him." felder, Everett D. Plass, FTlmk R. Doctor Peterson had been head ior Shorthorn class, head, will be put up for sale. Tilt a statement that funds to pay for Peterson, Dabney H. Kerr and the of the surgery department since For senior Shorthorns, FranCis sale will be held at 1230 p. m. at the area have been earmarked for late Fred M. Smith. 1936, succeeding the late Dr. Nuezil, Tiffin, won first prize, the sale b.rn. , off-street parking and can be Brookhart Divorce Suit . This committee of three part­ Howard L. Beye. His entire ;nedi- Lloyd Burr Jr., Lone Tree, !IC!OOnd, spent, for no other purpose. Clarence V. Brookhart filed suit time and five full-time men failed cal career had been confj.hed to and Margaret Ann :Burr , Lone Full Time Jobs Ope" A one-hal! mill tax levy brings for divorce in . Johnson county to arrive at an acceptable solu­ the University of Iowa cj:lliege of Tree, tnird. There are full-time jObS avail· district court yesterday against in about $6,000 annually, it was tion. Dr. Henry S. Houghton, medicine. There were 67 entries each in able for mille laborers trom ~w Floy I. Brookhart, alleging cruel­ pointed out. This would make Dally Iowan Photo by PhylUI White former dean ot the college of His plans for the future -are un- the light weight Angus, junior An­ until the opening of the fall tetm ty. payment of the full price a seven­ medicine was called in to assist in certain, but he did state he has gus, intel1lJlediate Angus, senior of school, Elbert E. Kline. man·. Attorney Will J . Hayek is re­ Donald Hochstetler and 'Snooky' year process, but added revenue the program. no intention of retiring. Angus and heavy AngUs classes. ager of the Iowa employment presenting the plaintiff. "It Was All the Children's Idea" from parking meters will prob­ The program devised was made Top winners for litht weight An­ service, announced yesterda),. ably shorten the period. up by the committee of men most The use of tobacco is more wide­ gus calves were Esther Heming­ The employment service abo Hawkins also emphasized. affected by it. It was approved spread than that of any other nar­ way, Iowa City, first place; Dean lists several permanent cltril:ll that "defInite rules and re,ula­ COOPIER BEATING- by the majority of the medical cotic or stimulant. Steekly. Oakdale, second place, jobs for women. tlons" will have to be drawn up (Continued from Page 1) to Insure that offstreet parralll' A'20th Century.Christian' facilities are not "~ed." Be four other persons watched to see I conunented. that '" a v 0 red if the attackers would resume. .-roups" nearby ml.-ht otherwise Says, 'Peace is All ~ I Want' "If they were," he said, "I felt be able to use the lot to their I should notify the police at once own advalltare. inasmuch as the hotel apparently "It we do buy the lot," the al­ By JACK O'BRIEN hadn't. You Invited To: See-, . derman declared, "we're not going As every reader of this paper existence, remains adamant in his "The two attackers, seeing and to let It be run in a ha))hazard must suspect, E. S. Cooper, is a stand against prosecuting the hearing several peopie, including manner!' pretty unusual sort of a person. case against his assailants. "I'm myself, discussing what to do, Purchase ot the lot was origi­ This man, victim of an attack not going to be run by an article," stl!pped back inside the lobby. tn City's Newest, Mosl Modern l1a~ly recommended by the Com­ by two unidentified persons who he said. Isn't there such a thing Iowa a few minutes the victim was able , . munity Parking committee. A called him a "Jew" and then pro- as forgiveness? Well, then for­ to get up and 1 recognized, him , public hearing July 31 ill the City ceeded to beat him up, is a rarity givel" for the first time but didn't know hall brought protests from 10 oc­ cation of the Christian philosophy "Good lawyers always try to his name (although I do now). I cupants at the structure at 317- cation of the Christian philosphy settle cases before they come to took him by the arm when he I 325 E. College street. They ur~ed embodied in the suggestion to court, don·t tbey? A.nd they do came through the outside door the council to choose some other "turn the other cheek." It because there should always and said, site in view of present-day hous­ The motto or our times is a be honor and humanUy between " 'Dldn't you kind of get the ing shortages which would work "tooth for a tooth" and the fact people. Im't there humanity," worst of that? What can I do for a hardship on the dozen or so that readers throughout the city "This isn't a moral issue any you?' Because, from the bldOd evicted families. are finding Cooper's attitude both mort. It's become a newspaper is- on his face and the beating I had In line with our policy of complete modernization, our lcit. But parking committee Cllair­ mystifying ,a n d disconcerting sue." seen him take, I knew he couldn't man Dan C. Dutcher told them a amounts to a comment on the Cooper refused to generalize his help but be injured. grocery firm would probably buy morals of our day. attitudes against anti-Semitism. "He ihought in his dazed con­ est step was the installation of a new, moder~ dry cleanini the land if the city rejected it. The oft-repeated remark is "I'm deaUng with these youths, dition that I had asked him what Other spokesman said the occu­ "Well, he's right 01 course, but he said, "not making social plans, the fight was about. He told me, pants will probably be allowed to ..." and there follows a variety evolving a social philosophy." 'There were a few remarks made plant. Our new cleaning equipm~nt is th~ be.t and lat.st typ' stay longer under city ownership of qualifying statement.a which He feels that Cousins was not about the Jews,' " than they would otherwle. reach the general attitude that concerned with this one issue but The eye-witness said he went c Last night"s action followed legal action Is necssary if this with the problem of intolerance directly to the police station, available. further study and investigation by sort of thing is to be stamped out. generally. "He'd agree with me aiter he had seen Cooper leave I·t· dty oliicials. But leu! aoUon is the one (against legal action) if I could the hotel, and gave his story of I Cooper I. opposed to now talk to him." the aUack. .hI .... " a!l he was three month' a.-o And as he sought escape "I informed them that while 1 Our dry cleaning manager, Wallace E. Davis, ha, had • when the attack occured. through the door, he stopped long got slapped gOing out of the hotel. Tall Iowa Corn Blinds I Meeting him, one is first im- enough to leave one remark that it wasn't any ot my affair at aU pressed by his sincerity and then summed up his attitude on this except to be just going out of many·years dry cleaning experience and has an enviable r.Pu· Drivers-Crash Follows by the realization that he is ap- one incident, and that pretty well the hotel." • • parently unaware of just how lm- defines E. S. Cooper's philosophy He said when he left the police Iowa corn may not have been porlant this issue has become in general. station he saw the squad car had tation for turning out the highest quality cleaning ....vice. knee-high on the fourth ot July, both locally and, through an edi- "I will always try to do right," already answered the call which but it was high enough yesterday torial in The Saturday Review he said. "That will plellse some was sent out immediately at the tQ cause an accident resulting in of Literature by Norman Cousins, oj the people and astonish the police ' station. ,I $350 damage to two cars. nationally. rest." , According to a report filed in "All I want is peace," he in- He quoted Mark Twain and he Thomas Torquemada, confessor . OUR TWO PROMISESI t Sheriff Albert J. (Pat) Murphy's sists. ':1 want to be lett alone to keeps the quotation on his desk, of Queen Isabella and inquisitor­ office, a car driven by Deo VlIlo­ write my book-a book about an- next to the book he's working on. general of Spain, is reputed to /, (AND WE MEAN THEM TOO) ' , hauer, 515 Jefferson street, side­ tlqulty and peace problems, the have been responsible for the swiped an auto driven by Roy things I spoke to Cousins about. In the late 15th Century, Peter, burning to death of 10,220 persons Warson, route 6, shortly after noon I didn't mention this incident to tsar of Russia, went to England and condemning 6.860 to be burn­ yesterday. hhn, you know." and worked in shipyards to learn ed in effigy during the 18 year~ The accident occurred a half He's surprised that the affair how to build a navY. ot the Inquisition. 1. Real Quality (Ieanlinl mile north and five miles east cf should have become so important ~::~~~~~~;:::~~::~=~~~~~~::~::~~~ Iowa City on highway 6. Warson. so late. And he's a little uneasy ~ driving east on the hllhway, was about discuss In, the situation in f' ~ ,oin, to stop at a mail box and general and seemlJ distrustful of , . was in the middle of the road the press in particular. It·s appar­ WE will be tlosed 2. 3~Day Cleaning Ser~lce when Villohauer came over the ent that the publicity has embar­ crest of a hill going north on a rassed him. county road. Tall corn and weeds "Do you know what I was sup­ for at the intersecUon prevented ei­ posed to do this week? I wanted . ther driver tonn see in, the other, to learn to detassel corn," he said. '. the report said. "I love Iowa City, I love The r1gh~ side of Warson's car Iowan, and rm afraid thia pub­ REDECORATING DIAL 4177 received damage amountin, to licity "b' drive me baok $(I $200 and Vlllohauer's auto receiv­ Connecilcu&. For one cdmlDr For Fr •• Pick.Up and D.livery Service ed $150 worth ot dama,e to its left from Connecilc.' that·, Dewa, side. because Connecticut is &be ftnt for 1 week August 11th state lor beauty." "I didn't think I was important 2 Boys, 2 Girls Born enough to .tart all this," he kept 'J OR sayin, and repeated his stand that 10 August 18th... At Mercy Hospital the only remedy allainst thll sort of intolerance li.. In better educa­ Use ,~r New, Convenlttnt DRIVE·IN At 313 S. Dubuque Four blrths were reported at tion. • Mercy hospital in the laB~ two "Through correct procedures in .OPEN for business as usual There's Always Parking Space At dan, education we can reclaim many ., A girl weigh In, eiaht pounds. liv..... he laid. "You can't leilslate ) Monday, I August 18th t~ree ounces was born Thurm,y tolerance. Look at th4t problem of , . . , , , to Mr. and Mrs. HertJert Davia, the NeJI'~ in the SGuth. It must Iowa City. be done throullh the slow, difficult Mr. and Mrs. Howard Enlte, procell of education-And 'throah to lerve Iowa City the best in rdute 2, beeame parents of a six honest PI'8llll," he added with PROCESS) Grocery & Meat Value •. . pound, one aance dauJhter born rather obvloua emphasis. Thunday. "I bave lreat confidence In the An elJht pound, five ounce IOn honesty. intellipnt!e and good­ 302 E. Bloomington Dial 9143 was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas ness of the people. I like evary­ LlAtJNDRV ·· ~ CLEANING, I'le. Patterson, 530 S. Dubuque .treet. one.tI I Prlday. The quiet. mild-mannered little Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Ranp. We.t man who I. 80 Imbued with hi. at­ Self ~fYe grocery . 313 S. Dubuqu. ' Liberty, became parents of • six tltud.. on rellIion tha' they hava I ROwacl, two owac:e lOA, lfidal.! btc;ome ~ ~ibl ~ ~ y.."